277 Guests Invited to Opening of Surb Khach Church on Aghtamar

277 GUESTS INVITED TO OPENING CEREMONY OF SURB KHACH CHURCH ON
AGHTAMAR ISLAND

ISTANBUL, MARCH 26, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The Turkish
government sent invitations to participate in the opening ceremony of
Surb Khach Church on Aghtamar Island of Van to 277 organizations and
persons from 13 countries. According to the Turksih newspaper
"Zaman", among those invited are representatives of the mistries of
culture of Georgia, Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan, clergymen
representing various countries, Armenian Diasporan figures,
ambassadors accredited in Ankara, etc. 25 French reporters were
invited. The newspaper "Marmara" calls attention to this fact
reminding that denial of the Armenian Genocide is forbidden by law in
France. 80 invitees have already confirmed their intention to
participate in the opening ceremony. It is expected that Armenia and
Georgia will be represented by deputy ministers of culture at the
ceremony. No response has been received from Azerbaijan so far.
Turkey has not yet made a decision on opening the Turkish-Armenian
border for two days.

Ni direct Yerevan-Van flights will be organized. It was decided that
guests will be transported by private planes from Istanbul and Ankara
to Van.

Don’t give your passports to anyone

Don’t give your passports to anyone
Editorial

Yerkir.am
March 23, 2007

The political parties use all possible methods to collect the votes of
people in the pre-electoral period. They have already started using
new methods.

One of them is collection of citizens’ passports and other personal
information. This constitutes a serious violation of the law. During
this week’s announcements session at the National Assembly member of
ARF’s Bureau, Deputy Chairman of the National Assembly Vahan
Hovhannissian expressed his concern on this practice.

`The electoral campaign will soon be officially launched but this does
not mean that political campaigning is not in process now. This is
very natural, but we should at least try to minimize violations of the
law. There are several practices I would like to draw our attention
to. Some individuals collect databases of personal information of our
citizens introducing themselves as representatives of NGOs or
political parties.

Some people collect this information on the phone. We cannot stop such
practices. But we have the Law on Personal Data and those who collect
peoples’ passports should know that they are violating the law.

Let me give you some explanations. You are not obliged to give your
passport to anyone. Moreover, your passport is the property of
Republic of Armenia that is issued to you as an identity document. You
should not give your passports to anyone no matter how they introduce
themselves or no matter what they promise in return.

Of course, you are free to give your passport data to these people,
but I can say that this data is protected under the law. If your
voluntarily give your passport data to someone, that can cause serious
problems for you.

They can take loans with your passport, or make some purchases on the
internet ` this will cause problems for you. And you will not be able
to hold anyone accountable because you gave your passport data
voluntarily.

And the most important warning ` no matter who collects your
passports, no matter who writes down your passport information you
will be free in your choice. No one can check how you have voted. This
is the freedom that is ensured for the voters.

The vote is secret. Vote freely and do not give your passports and
your personal information to anyone’, Hovhannissian stated.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Socialist International’s regional convention in Yerevan

Socialist International’s regional convention in Yerevan

Yerkir.am
March 23, 2007

The Women’s Organization of Socialist International held its regional
convention in Yerevan upon the invitation of the ARF Supreme Body’s
Women’s Committee.

The regional convention covered the Eastern Mediterranean, the Middle
East, the Caucasus, Central and Eastern Europe. Representatives of
countries from this region discussed in Yerevan issues related to
gender aspect of international migration.

Chairwoman of the Socialist International Pia Locatelli thanked ARF’s
Women’ s Committee represented by Maria Titizian. Stressing the ARF’s
important role in creating a socialist society and empowering women,
Locatelli noted in her opening remarks that Armenia is a transition
country where Armenian women suffer from domestic violence,
trafficking, and have to survive in very difficult conditions. The
issue of women’s participation in politics is of special concern.

Locatelli stated that only 7 out of 131 members of the parliament are
women. Only 19 out of 900 community heads are women, there is only
one female minister, etc.

Armenian women participating in the convention learned that their
rights are violated in what concerns healthcare services,
reproduction, women in Armenia were presented to be victims.

Despite this statement, Locatelli stated that the Socialist
International would help us eliminate our traditions and conservative
customs, and will help us bring up a new generation in which it will
not be men who will be doing barbeque, carrying heavy weights and
ruling the country¦

Representative of ARF’s Supreme Body, National Assembly deputy Armen
Rustamian welcomed the participants of the convention and stressed the
importance of integration with European standards and protection of
women’s rights.

`We worship women as mothers, sisters, daughters but are not very
happy about their presence and representation outside the family. We
must eliminate this discrimination. Family is the cell of the society
and the women’s role should be equally important in the family and in
the public and political life,’ Rustamian said. He noted the topic of
the convention is very important since Armenia is a country with a
high rate of migration.

Socialist International unifies the women throughout the world

Secretary General of the Socialist International’s Women’s
Organization Marlene Haas is visiting Armenia for the forth time in
the past five years. She has a good understanding of the overall
situation in the country and the role of women.

Last year Haas participated in the conference organized by the ARF
Supreme Body’s Women’s Committee. She spoke with appreciation of the
education level of Armenian women. Haas believes that cooperation
between women NGOs, political parties and authorities will gradually
yield positive results and increase the number of women at all levels
of decision making.

Haas presented a brief overview of the Socialist International, `The
Socialist International is a non-governmental organization that is a
member of the UN Council on Economic and Social Affairs and an
associate member of the Council of Europe. Currently, SI has 148
member organizations. An international secretariat was formed in 1907
in Stuttgart by 58 delegates from European and other countries headed
by Klara Tsetkin. SI has contributed to liberalization of women which
in its turn resulted in a struggle for women’s rights.’

Death Caused By Violation of Blood Circulation of Coronary Arteries

RA PRIME MINISTER’S DEATH CAUSED BY VIOLATION OF BLOOD CIRCULATION OF
CORONARY ARTERIES OF HEART

YEREVAN, MARCH 26, NOYAN TAPAN. According to the conclusion of the
commission having made forensic examination, Prime Minister Andranik
Margarian’s death was caused by sudden heart stop due to violation of
blood circulation of coronary arteries of heart. Noyan Tapan was
informed about it from RA government Information and Public Relations
Department.

Kasparov’s next move

d_entertainment/games_and_puzzles/chess/article154 3157.ece

The Times
March 24, 2007

Kasparov’s next move

As the world’s greatest chess player, Garry Kasparov was an idol of
the former Soviet Union. Today he has more powerful opponents

Occasionally I get asked who is the most charismatic person I’ve
interviewed, and, for the past 14 years, I’ve given the same answer:
Garry Kasparov. A chess player? People reply. Absolutely, I
say. Chess, like boxing, that other great blood sport, like, indeed,
Russian politics, is about directly destroying your opponent; Kasparov
did that over 64 squares more effectively than anybody else. Up close,
you could see why. Intellectually, physically, the man known as the
Beast of Baku gave new life to the cliché animal magnetism.

Having met him again, I see no reason to demote him. He retired from
professional chess, no longer world champion, but still ranked number
one, in 2005. He is now a writer, politician and ardent opponent of
Russian president Vladimir Putin. We met in Stockholm, where Kasparov
was about to give a talk based on his new book, How Life Imitates
Chess, to 250 businesspeople. "We’ve met before," he said, "in
1993. In Moscow." I can’t deny I was impressed.

His book is more interesting than it sounds, though its title is
rather undermined by the author’s admission that "an aptitude for
chess demonstrates nothing more than an aptitude for chess". Indeed,
coming on 44 as opposed to coming on 30, Garry Kasparov has added, if
not quite humility, then a measure of charm to his other
qualities. Back then, his conversational style was combative in the
extreme. He brooked no disagreement. I remember falling out, for
instance, over the precise dates of the Spanish Inquisition.

I hadn’t been surprised when I had read over the years of his two
divorces, his custody row with his first wife over their daughter, his
recriminations against IBM following his defeat by its Deep Blue
computer in 1997. His enormous self-belief, necessary no doubt to
become world champion at 22 and to stay at the top for 20 years,
tipped into arrogance. And, even allowing for the simplifications of
speaking a language not his own, he’d been macho, a little flashy,
keen, in the way of many of his newly enriched countrymen, to
demonstrate that he’d made it on Western terms.

But Garry Kasparov has grown up. During our day together in Sweden,
his company was as pleasant as the early spring sunshine. His surly
niets had turned into emphatic das, he sought to build a conversation
rather than deliver a monologue, he laughed a lot, and not just at his
own jokes, although one of them, about local giants Ikea, wasn’t
bad. "How are Ikea able to compete so well with Asia? They’ve
outsourced their labour to the customer." Maybe you had to be there:
the Swedes, at least, had a chuckle.

The reason for his good humour is obvious: he isn’t playing chess any
more. Not serious chess, anyway, the sort that saps energy, manners,
perspective. "I play for fun on the net," he admits. Doesn’t he win
really easily? "You can find strong players." Do they know it’s you?
"They can guess, probably." Does he miss the competition? "I have much
larger competition now. I will not go back."

Kasparov’s speech lasted an hour. The strategy/tactics,
calculation/evaluation, trust-your-instincts decision-making spiel
wasn’t bad, as these things go. His erudition is considerable, his
argument peppered with human interest, from Mozart to Edison, Tolstoy
to Verdi, Galileo to Adam Smith, with Count Bernadotte and Alfred
Nobel, or Nobble in Kasparov’s accent, thrown in for local colour. He
regards it as a challenge never to give the same talk twice, weaving
in the facts that on this day, March 14, Albert Einstein was born in
1879, Karl Marx died in 1883 and the Treaty of Ulm was signed in 1647.

He might also have added, but possibly prefers to forget, that on
March 14 in 2004, Vladimir Putin was re-elected for a second term with
almost 80 per cent of the vote. Putin continues to enjoy 80 per cent
approval ratings. Kasparov shrugged when I put this to him. "If a
pollster calls someone in Russia and asks them about Putin, they
should not expect a true answer."

Putin’s reputation has, of course, like Chelsea FC and property prices
in Kensington, benefited hugely from high energy prices. "But," says
Kasparov, "I travel from Vladivostock to Kaliningrad, Murmansk to
Krasnodar and people ask, ‘Why is the country getting richer and we
are getting poorer?’" As for the 2004 poll, "Every election since
Yeltsin’s in 1996 has been rigged."

Kasparov was known as an ultra-aggressive player, and his political
style owes much to his approach to chess. He repeatedly denounces
"Putin’s corrupt regime" from the rostrum in Stockholm, calling it
"disastrous" and his country "devastated". He hasn’t met the
president, he says. "I’ve met enough KGB lieutenant-colonels, one
more, one less, it won’t make any difference." He is a leading player
in a new anti-government coalition called Other Russia, which earlier
this month held a rally in St Petersburg, violently broken up by the
police, but not before Kasparov and others had addressed the
crowd. Other Russia’s manifesto, he says, is, "Free and fair
elections, no censorship, decentralisation, the dismantling of the
current regime." More rallies are scheduled to take place in a
fortnight.

Kasparov’s own pressure group, United Civil Front, has published
investigations into the Beslan school carnage and the Nord-Ost theatre
siege, which ended with hundreds debilitated by a mystery
government-produced gas. He has established a fund for the victims of
terrorism.

Inevitably, before long, our conversation turned to Alexander
Litvinenko, the KGB-officer-turned-Putin-critic who was poisoned in
London last autumn. "When I heard about polonium I had no doubts,"
says Kasparov. "I know the address where you can find the true
killers, it’s the Kremlin. But there are many groups there. I don’t
think it was Putin who ordered it. I don’t think so. But I believe
that those who ordered it, they see Putin probably every day, it’s his
inner circle. Each head of a KGB department can run his own operation
because they’re so rich and so powerful. I don’t want to waste my
intellectual power trying to unveil these spy games."

Spy games is right. In Russia, he is regularly followed, tending to
meet colleagues in cafés, "And then we have about an hour before they
[the police] set up something [surveillance]." His phones are
tapped. Unlike Anna Politkovskaya, the journalist who made her name
investigating Russian war crimes in Chechnya, shot dead in Moscow last
October, Kasparov employs armed bodyguards in Russia. "I’m lucky I can
afford it, so direct physical assault probably will not work. State
terrorism is another story." Does he mean poison? "Yes, I try to avoid
situations where this can occur. Such as not flying by Aeroflot. And
if I do, I don’t eat any food. There is a risk of being the victim,
but I have to reduce the chances. But, if they want to get you, you
have to be philosophical. I take it as part of this moral duty that
I’m carrying through."

He isn’t complacent, he says, but "I don’t have any business in
Russia. I pay my taxes." So did Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the billionaire
chairman of the oil company Yukos, now serving a nine-year jail
sentence for, it is widely believed, daring to fund Putin’s
opponents. Yukos, meanwhile, "is under the control of Putin’s guys".

Does he think Putin is personally corrupt? He laughs. "How rich is the
man who can put a billionaire in jail in one day?" There are,
officially, 61 dollar billionaires in Russia, the infamous oligarchs,
more than Germany, more than Japan, not many fewer than the US. "Putin
can put them all in jail if they threaten his business interests. He
is a businessman. He isn’t about ideas. He could be liberal, he could
be nationalist, he doesn’t care. He supports Iran and Syria because he
needs tension because tension helps oil prices."

Kasparov says he sees the Khodorkovsky affair and the recent bout of
assassinations as evidence of increased political
instability. "They’re getting nervous," he says. "One month of free
Russian TV, one month of pictures of Abramovich’s villas, and the
regime would be gone and Putin knows that. The country would not
tolerate it."

When we discussed his own ambitions, Kasparov was less forthcoming. He
thinks the candidate to oppose Putin’s chosen successor in next year’s
presidential elections should come from the centre left and he, as his
articles in The Wall Street Journal have made clear, is a man of the
right. He was, however, scathing about the war in Iraq. "I don’t like
incompetence covered by arrogance. I’m not against fighting, but as in
chess, the threat is stronger than the execution. You don’t want to
pull the trigger. Bush squandered all his advantages."

And on the subject of wealth inequality in Russia, Kasparov, mindful
perhaps that a millionaire in a Brioni suit can be accused of being
out of touch, sounds a lot like an old-fashioned socialist. "In
Yakutsk, for instance, there are diamonds, gold, oil, coal, but 100
yards left or right of the main street, no roads! In the middle of
this total misery is a five-star hotel. It’s Third-World stuff. In my
country, expenses are nationalised, profits are privatised. Gas enters
a pipeline as a state monopoly, when it comes out the profits go into
private pockets. A lot of villages in Russia don’t have gas."

We talked about the bad reputation many rich Russians have gained in
London, and indeed across Western Europe. "They behave the best they
can," he snorts. "They’re arrogant because they make money out of
nothing. It’s wild money. The new Russian elite, they despise the
intellect. They buy this yacht and that yacht, it’s easy come, easy
go. It’s not like America in the 19th century, Carnegie, Morgan,
Rockefeller, they built something new. These people, they were just in
the right place when the national wealth was being redistributed."

To be involved in Russian politics is, he admits, "exciting, dangerous
and risky. But I feel motivated." Meanwhile, his family is
anxious. When I saw him in 1993, Masha, his first wife, was about to
give birth to Polina, their first child, in Helsinki, where wealthy
Russians tended to have their babies at that time. Five months ago,
Dasha, his third wife, 25, an economics graduate, gave birth to Aida,
his third child, in New York. "Finland was a matter of
convenience. This time, New York was a matter of safety. We didn’t
want to take the chance of our daughter being born in a hospital in
Russia."

Dasha and Aida are still in America, at Kasparov’s flat in
Manhattan. They will join him later on this European lecture
tour. Vadim, his ten-year-old son from his second marriage, lives near
him in Moscow. "We build relations, very close, I hope they will never
be broken." Masha and Polina, naturalised Americans, live in a further
property in New Jersey. Relations are still strained.

Neither Polina nor Vadim show any appetite for chess. Kasparov isn’t
concerned. "Polina is a good student, number one in her class." And
Vadim? "Ah, he’s bright, but he’s a bit lazy, he’s a boy. A friend
told me, ‘If your son studies all day, call the psychiatrist.’"

But study all day is precisely what he did, growing up in Baku,
capital of the then Soviet Socialist Republic of Azerbaijan. "Yes, but
I had the aptitude, and I learnt the work ethic strongly from my
mother." (His father died of leukaemia when he was seven. His mother
Klara, now 70, is still "my top manager".) "It’s difficult
today. There are so many diversions. In 1970, TV in the Soviet Union
was a joke. No computers, not many books, you had to find something."
And his chosen game was heavily promoted as a source of intense
imperial and ideological pride. Now, "nobody in Russia cares about
chess".

Russians under 30 he says, "would recognise my name but not my
face. I’m not on the TV any more." (Except to be denounced as a CIA
spy, as he was after the St Petersburg rally.) To older generations,
however, he is still a major celebrity. Part of his political clout
resides in the fact that, "To the left, I’m still the Soviet champion,
to the nationalists, I’m the intellectual pride of Mother Russia." His
ethnic origins, half-Jewish, half-Armenian, long considered a barrier
to political success, "are far less important than they were".

Other Russia hopes, he says, to run a candidate in next year’s
election, when, as things stand, constitutionally, Putin must step
down. Kasparov is coy as to whether the candidate, in 2008 or after,
will be him. "I don’t feel my personal ambition would be helpful to
the coalition." But he does have personal ambition? "My ambition is to
make a difference, to help my country, to be useful. I have energy, I
have strategic views, I want them to be invested in something
positive."

How Life Imitates Chess by Garry Kasparov is published by William
Heinemann on April 5 and is available from BooksFirst priced £18 (RRP
£20), free p&p, on 0870 160 8080; timesonline.co.uk/booksfirstbuy.

An exclusive extract from How Life Imitates Chess will appear in
Business on Monday
From: Baghdasarian

http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/tol/arts_an

Primate Galstanian leaves for Spiritual Retreat in Quebec City

Mon, Mar 26 2007

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Canada
615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont-Quebec H2V 3H2
Contact: Deacon Hagop Arslanian,
Tel: 514-276-9479
Fax: 514-276-9960
Email: [email protected]
Web:

Primate Galstanian leaves for Spiritual Retreat in Quebec City

His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian left for Quebec City, on Sunday
March 25, 2007 to spend a week in prayer and contemplation at a Jesuit
monastery. Our Primate left Montreal following the celebration of the
Divine Liturgy and presiding over the Annual General Assembly of Saint
Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Cathedral of Montreal. He will be
returning on Saturday March 31, 2007=2E

Primate Galstanian chose to have a "silent moment," to rediscover the
divinity that exists at the center of our lives, and to contemplate the
mission of our Church in Canada, as we prepare to mark and relive the most
significant days and events of Christ’s earthly life. Lord’s entry to
Jerusalem-Palm Sunday, the Holy Week, the Last Supper, Crucifixion, and
the Victorious Resurrection represent this most inspiring and blessed
season. In his book, A Place for God, author Timothy K. Jones, suggests
participating in a retreat so we may "recollect a scattered life and focus
on the one who calls and seeks and invites us to communion."

"Through prayer that gives up self, we seek to open ourselves up before
God, and to hear anew the call "Come unto me!" We seek to recognize and
respond afresh to God’s presence in our lives and in our world. We seek to
place our needs, our fears, our failures, our hopes, our very lives in
God’s hands, again. We seek by abandoning ourselves in Jesus’ death to
recognize again, whom God is, to allow His transforming grace to work in
us once more and to come to worship Him on Easter Sunday."

May our Primate observe a prayerful week of reflection and meditation=2E
26 Mar 2007 by Press Office
Read More ..=2E

©2004 Diocese of the Armenian Church of Canada. All rights reserved=2E
powered by: Technologies Lunasoft

http://www.armenianchurch.ca/

Holy Etchmiadzin Will Not Send Delegation to Aghtamar

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
March 27, 2007

Holy Etchmiadzin Will Not Send Delegation to Aghtamar

An invitation to participate in the opening ceremonies of the Church of the
Holy Cross on the island of Aghtamar (Lake Van), scheduled for March 29,
from Governor of Van Mehmet Niyazi Tanilir addressed to His Holiness Karekin
II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, was received in the
Mother See via the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia.

The Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin will not participate in the ceremonies
after having considered that the Holy Cross Armenian Church, recently
renovated by the Turkish authorities, will not operate as a church under the
spiritual authority of the Armenian Patriarchate of Constantinople and
instead will be designated as a museum; and that the opening ceremonies will
be conducted solely with a secular program and not in accord with the
canonical rites of the Holy Apostolic Armenian Church.

In this new century, when there is a universal desire for mutual
understanding and collaboration between peoples, as well as in the context
of dialogue between religions and cultures, this action of the Turkish
authorities against the pious Christian beliefs and emotions of the Armenian
people cannot be perceived as a positive step on the path of bringing the
two nations closer.

www.armenianchurch.org

ANTELIAS: Condolence letter from HH Aram I to President Kocharian

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Holy See of Cilicia, sent the
following condolence letter to the President of the Republic of Armenian,
His Excellency Robert Kocharian, upon hearing the sad news of the sudden
death of Armenia’s Prime Minister Antranig Markarian.

His Excellency
Mr. Robert Kocharian
President of the Republic of Armenia
Yerevan

Dear Mr. President,

We heard with great regret the sudden death of the Prime Minister of the
Republic of Armenia, Antranig Markarian, in Yerevan.

We have come to know closely Prime Minister Markarian, his work and his
commitment to our country and nation. In the last few years and particularly
after his appointment as Prime Minister, we followed his work both in the
local and international arenas, through which we saw reflections of such
high values as patriotism, efficiency and dedication. His death is a great
loss both for the Armenian nation and the Republic of Armenia.

On behalf of the Catholicosate of Cilicia, we offer our condolences to
Your Excellency, to the government and the National Assembly. On this sad
occasion, we express our deep condolences to the late Prime Minister’s widow
and his family.

We pray to God to rest his soul in peace and give you strength in
consolation.

Prayerfully,

ARAM I
CATHOLICOS OF CILICIA

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm

ANTELIAS: Pilgrimage Day and Saint Gregory’s Entry Into "Khor Virab"

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

THE PILGRIMAGE DAY AND SAINT GREGORY’S ENTRY INTO "KHOR VIRAB" (DEEP
PIT) CELEBRATED IN ANTELIAS

The last ten days became historical for the Armenian Church and the
Catholicosate of Cilicia in particular. The "Pilgrimage Day" in Antelias,
the placement of Saint Gregory the Illuminator’s relics in the Cathedral,
the meeting of the Cilician Brotherhood and the Primates, the full session
of the National Executive Council, the session of the Mixed Assembly- all
provided opportunities for spiritual renewal and administrative
organization.

Furthermore, the Holy Liturgy held every year on "Pilgrimage Day" marking
the start of Saint Gregory the Illuminator’s imprisonment in Khor Virab
(deep pit) and the procession with the Saint’s Right Hand Relic became
unique and historical events this year.

The large crowd of believers gathered in Antelias on March 25 experienced
great spiritual satisfaction when His Holiness Aram I placed Saint Gregory
the Illuminator’s relic in its new resting place in the Cathedral. Believers
followed the service emotionally knowing that from now on they will be able
to kneel before the relic of the Armenian Church’s Patron Saint any time.

The celebrant was Archbishop Gomidas Ohanian. The Catholicosate’s
"Shenorhali" Choir performed the badarak under the guidance of Rev. Magar
Ashkarian.

In his Pontifical address, His Holiness first spoke about the life and
sacrifices of the Armenian nation’s greatest Saint, moving on to the
Armenians’ conversion to Christianity, which he considered a Spiritual
Revolution. The Pontiff stressed that Saint Gregory’s legacy is for his
nation to continue this revolution.

His Holiness warned all Armenians from those foreign movements, which
under the "spiritual" label, offer "spiritual experiences" that aim to
foreignism and are unacceptable by our Church.

"Yes, we will live spiritual renewal, but through our church and remaining
loyal to its traditions. If we want to be loyal to Saint Gregory the
Illuminator, we should engage in a spiritual revolution with a renewed faith
and a committed will. This can not be done by following false experiences
and cheap propaganda; this can be done by reevaluating our church’s values
in the life of our nation," he said.

"As in the past, today and in the future as well, the Catholicosate of
Cilicia will be the torch-bearer for the holy mission of our nation’s
spiritual renewal. A renewal with religious and moral teachings, responding
to the needs of the poor and the deprived, but always through our church’s
traditions and values." He added.

Finally, the Pontiff spoke about the placement of Saint Gregory’s relic in
its permanent resting place on the Holy Trinity Altar of the Cathedral in
Antelias. He pointed out that the faithful will receive the blessings of the
Saint with his gold-coated Holy Right Hand once every year on the Antelias
"Pilgrimage Day". However, the Patron Saint of the Armenian Church will,
from now on, be a daily presence in the faithful lives as a relic from his
remains will be placed in the Cathedral, where the faithful can visit him,
kneel down and pray.

At the end of the Service the procession of Cilician Brotherhood members,
priests and Seminary students headed by His Holiness Aram I made a round
tour in the courtyard of the Catholicosate. Returning to the Cathedral, the
Pontiff and the priests went up the Holy Trinity altar, where His Holiness
ceremoniously placed Saint Gregory the Illuminator’s relic in a stone-carved
box. The box was first washed with water and wine and then anointed with
Holy Chrism by the Catholicos.

The priests then guided the Catholicos to the main altar where the
water-blessing service was held with the Right Hand of Saint Gregory the
Illuminator. The Cilician Brotherhood members participated in the service,
blessing the faithful with the Righ Hands and relics of other saints.

The Catholicos then said the "Paradia" prayer for the sick and a special
prayer for the strengthening of belief.

After the water-blessing service Saint Gregory the Illuminator’s Right
Hand was placed on the main altar under the supervision of Cilician
Brotherhood members. Armenian and foreign faithful continued visiting the
Cathedral until late at night to kiss the relic. The faithful also visited
the Holy Trinity altar where they knelt down before Saint Gregory’s relic,
praying to God.

##
View the photos here:

*****

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Photos66.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Photos/Photos67.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

GenEd: Announcing the Call for Entries for Aharonian Award

PRESS RELEASE

The Genocide Education Project
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
(415) 264-4203
[email protected]
www.GenocideEd ucation.org

Contact: Sara Cohan – [email protected]

THE GENOCIDE EDUCATION PROJECT ANNOUNCES THE CALL FOR ENTRIES FOR ITS
AHARONIAN AWARD
25_2007.htm

San Francisco, CA, March 25, 2007 – The Genocide Education Project is
pleased to announce the Call for Entries for the 2007 Aharonian Award.
The Aharonian Award recognizes and rewards a secondary level educator
who has developed a particularly effective lesson plan for teaching the
Armenian Genocide. The lesson plan must have been used in a classroom
during the current academic year and will be selected by a panel of
educators.

This is the second year that a national award has been offered to
secondary level educators who teach about the Armenian Genocide. Last
year’s winner, Ron Levitsky of Illinois, was the recipient of the award
with his lesson plan – Send Messages of Hope: Postage Stamps and the
American Response to the Armenian Genocide. Levitsky is a educator
dedicated to teaching about genocide and has been an ardent supporter of
the Illinois mandate regarding genocide education.

"We are looking forward to reading another set of outstanding lesson
plans this year," stated Raffi Momjian, Executive Director of The
Genocide Education Project. He continued "It was exhilarating to see how
teachers were incorporating this important subject into their classrooms."

The deadline for the award is June 1, 2007 and the full criteria for
entering a lesson plan can be found at
The recipient will receive a $500 award, resources on the Armenian
Genocide for him/herself and the affiliated institution’s library, and
the publication of the lesson plan on

For additional information, contact The Genocide Education Project at
(415) 264-4203 or [email protected].

The Genocide Education Project is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization
that assists educators in teaching about human rights and genocide,
particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and distributing
instructional materials, providing access to teaching resources and
organizing educational workshops.

http://www.genocideeducation.org/pr/2007/03_
www.TeachGenocide.com
www.teachgenocide.com/aharonian.
www.TeachGenocide.com.