Heritage Charges Through Weekend

PRESS RELEASE
The Heritage Party
31 Moscovian Street
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (+374 – 10) 53.69.13
Fax: (+374 – 10) 53.26.97
Email: [email protected]; [email protected]
Website:

April 16, 2007

Heritage Charges Through Weekend

On Saturday, April 14, school principal Anahit Bakshian, Yerevan State
University professor Vardan Khachatrian, and other Heritage candidates
joined Raffi K. Hovannisian on a campaign tour through Karakert, Dalarik,
Baghramian, Miasnikian, Nalbandian, Metsamor, and other cities and villages
in the Armavir region. At Etchmiadzin, the final stop, hundreds of Heritage
supporters packed one of the city’s largest halls to listen to the party’s
program for a new Armenia. (Needless to say, having witnessed the size and
spirit of the crowd, the government’s H1 television journalists quickly
escaped; the footage was not shown.)

On Sunday, April 15, as buses of volunteers distributed campaign literature
in Dzoraglukh, Ttujur, Chknagh, Vardenis, Aparan, Avan, Oshakan, and dozens
of other cities and villages across the republic, Raffi K. Hovannisian
walked through Yerevan’s Shengavit district; for four hours, he talked with
citizens about Armenia’s problems and the solution we must find in ourselves
and together.

On Monday, April 16, Heritage’s campaign bus "Toward Victory" carried Raffi
K. Hovannisian to Aparan, Kuchak, Saghmosavank, Ohanavan, Mughni, Kosh,
Ujan, Byurakan, Agarak, Voskevaz, Oshakan, and Ashtarak, where Heritage
representatives walked the streets and spoke with the people. These talks
often evolved into larger public meetings, where Hovannisian and his fellow
citizens engaged one another with questions and suggestions. At night, Raffi
and Armenouhi Hovannisian had supper with the Indian and Dutch ambassadors
to Armenia.

Tomorrow, at Heritage Headquarters, Raffi K. Hovannisian will receive
officials of the OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission led by Ambassador
Boris Frlec. Also at Heritage headquarters, party spokesman Hovsep
Khurshudian will hold the first of Heritage’s biweekly press briefings,
which are open to all media and the public.

Founded in 2002, Heritage has regional divisions throughout the land. Its
central office is located at 31 Moscovian Street, Yerevan 0002, Armenia,
with telephone contact at (374-10) 536.913, fax at (374-10) 532.697, email
at [email protected] or [email protected], and website at

www.heritage.am
www.heritage.am

Twelve New Priests Ordained in Holy Etchmiadzin

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: 
April 16, 2007

"Go into all the world and preach the Gospel…" (St. Mark 16:15)

Twelve New Priests Ordained in Holy Etchmiadzin

On New Sunday, April 15, twelve new priests were ordained in the Mother See
of Holy Etchmiadzin.  His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and
Catholicos of All Armenians, presided as His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan
Derderian, Primate of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North
America, celebrated the joyous liturgy and anointed the new priests.

The previous evening, during the Service of the Calling, the twelve deacons
on bended knees before the Holy Altar of Descent in the Mother Cathedral,
professed the true faith and renounced the false teachings of heretics and
schismatics.

As the Divine Liturgy commenced on Sunday morning, the twelve candidates
stood before the bema of the main altar.  Prior to the reading from the Holy
Gospel, the deacons ascended the bema and approached the celebrant bishop to
begin the service of ordination.

The candidates faced westward and raised their arms in renunciation of the
secular world as the deacons and choir sang a hymn confirming that the men
are worthy of this responsible calling.  The bishop then vested them with
their stole and cape as a sign of their putting on the `yoke of Christ’ and
laid his hands upon them in accord with the tradition of apostolic
succession.

Afterwards, the candidates were clothed in their liturgical vestments and
presented themselves, one at a time, for anointing by the ordaining bishop. 
His Eminence consecrated each forehead, then the right and left hands of the
new priest with Holy Chrism (Muron), granting him a new name.

Deacon Armen Khatchatrian became Fr. Jirayr, Deacon Hovhannes Amirian was
renamed Fr. Arakel, Deacon Gevork Haroutiunian became Fr. Yeprem, Deacon
Garnik Kirakosian was renamed Fr. Haroutiun, Deacon Artak Ohanian became Fr.
Hovel, Deacon Hmayak Manoukian was renamed Fr. Vigen, Deacon Andranik
Minasian became Fr. Soghomon, Deacon Hayk Amirian was renamed Fr. Maghakia,
Deacon Garik Grigorian became Fr. Sipan, Deacon Vahe Poghosian became Fr.
Armash, Deacon Ogsen Mirzoyan became Fr. Aram, and Deacon Gevork Zeynalian
became Fr. Manouk.

His Eminence then handed them the chalice, transferring to them the right to
administer Holy Communion.  Prior to the Kiss of Peace, the Catholicos of
All Armenians and the members of the Brotherhood of Holy Etchmiadzin
ascended the bema and congratulated the twelve newest priests of the
Armenian Church.

In his sermon, Abp. Hovnan addressed the new priests and noted, "For many
years, your souls, minds, hearts and your very beings were nourished and
filled with the sacred faith of our fathers, with the teachings of Christ
which emanate and live in the Gospels.  The Christian, the priest, the
clergyman, the true pastor grew and developed over time within each of you,
all in preparation for this moment.  From this point on, you will become
spiritual consolation for our holy Church and her faithful sons and
daughters through your devoted service.  Your lives shall become the new oil
that burns in the lanterns of Holy Etchmiadzin and thereby you shall
transmit new light, new joy, new excitement, new strength of faith and
spirit to the children of our nation."

In attendance for the Divine Liturgy and ordinations were bishops from the
Catholicosate of All Armenians, the Catholicosate of the Great House of
Cilicia and other high ranking clergymen.  Also present for the service were
guests from the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America and
the family and friends of the new priests.

Later that same day, prior to evening services, the Granting of the Cowl
service was offered for two of the twelve.  Fr. Haroutiun and Fr. Maghakia,
having chosen the ranks of celibate priesthood, were vested with their cowls
and became members of the Brotherhood of Holy Etchmiadzin.

The twelve new priests began their traditional 40-day period of seclusion –
a time of mediation, prayer, fasting and spiritual preparation prior to
their first divine liturgy.  At the conclusion of their forty days, the
priests shall be assigned to serve in the various dioceses and departments
of the Armenian Church.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armenianchurch.org

HH Karekin II Work Project April special builds in Khor Virap

Habitat for Humanity Armenia
Cholakyan street, No. 38, Yerevan 0037
Tel: (+ 374 10) 24 60 23
Email: [email protected]

Gohar Palyan
Building on Faith project manager
Habitat for Humanity Armenia

His Holiness Karekin II Work Project April special builds in Khor Virap

YEREVAN, Armenia, (April 16)- Many hands make the load lighter and
volunteers lightened the load and spirits of one family in the village
of Khor Virap on Friday, April 13, when they joined with Habitat for
Humanity Armenia in the second annual "His Holiness Karekin II Work
Project." Nearly 40 volunteers from the Armenian Apostolic Church, as
well as people representing Armenian and United States organizations
participated.

10 employees of "Ameria" consulting company spent the working day in the
building site. Investment in the community is an expression of corporate
social responsibility for the company. "We encourage the private sector
to involve more actively in the community development process in
Armenia. Financial assistance and volunteering are the milestones of our
company’s philosophy. Moreover, participating in the Habitat project as
volunteers is also an opportunity for Ameria staff to have an individual
input in the well-being of Armenian families." said Ara Hayrapetyan,
Financial Director of "Ameria" CJSC.

"This is a way to touch somebody personally," said Gregory Avedissian.
He and his son, Alex, 17, are from the city of Alpharetta, near to
Atlanta, U.S. state of Georgia. It was the first time in Armenia for
the Avedissians.

We’re contributing our sweat equity to someone directly and we’re doing
it together. It’s been a great experience," Avedissian said. "What
better way to experience and connect with Armenia than through the local
people," said the younger Avedissian "After all, it’s all about the
people."

That’s exactly what His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of all
Armenians, and Habitat for Humanity Armenia want to see happen this
construction season. About 40,000 families across Armenia lack permanent
shelter. His Holiness has called on the all the Dioceses of the Armenian
Apostolic Church to support Habitat for Humanity Armenia in assisting 37
families to help lift them out of poverty housing. Their homes are
remnants of the economic collapse Armenia experienced in the early 1990s
in the wake of a devastating earthquake, a war and the collapse of the
Soviet Union. The 37 homes represent the 36 dioceses of the church
worldwide, as well as the Holy See of Mother Etchmiadzin in Armenia.

Taleen Ghazarian knew about Habitat for Humanity’s work near her
Waltham home in the state of Massachusetts. Then during her first visit
to Armenia two years ago, she toured a home built through Habitat for
Humanity and was impressed. It convinced her that a second trip to her
fatherland had to include more than just tours.

"I decided that was too distant for me and that I wanted to come back in
a grassroots fashion. It’s important for me to directly help people in
this country help themselves, and Habitat for Humanity fosters that kind
of thinking," she explained.

Others joining the homeowners in the Friday efforts that completed the
home’s concrete floors were Nani Oskanyan, president of the Diplomatic
Spouse Association; Lilit Asatryan, president of the Armenian Young
Women Association; other members of both organizations; the Right
Reverend Archbishop Vicken Aykazian who is a member of the board of
directors of Habitat for Humanity International; monks from the Armenian
Apostolic Church, employees of "Ameria" consulting company which is
also one of the His Holiness Karekin II Work Project local donors, Khor
Virap Village Mayor Norayr Voskanyan, Habitat partner families and their
neighbors.

During four days of special building events of the project opening, more
than 100 volunteers joined, sharing the happiness of the Misakyan and
Haroyan families to moving their construction work towards completion.

With the will of God, the homes will be completed by August dedication
by the end of the August month. This can be done only by the help of
more people in terms of donations and helping hands.

The largest local corporate donor to date in this year’s initiative by
the Catholicos is K-Telecom CJSC, which operates VivaCell in Armenia.

About Habitat for Humanity

Habitat for Humanity is a nondenominational Christian charity dedicated
to eliminating poverty housing. It has built more than 200,000 houses;
more than one million people are living in Habitat homes they helped
build and own through low-cost, no-profit mortgages. We have positively
affected lives in nearly 100 countries around the globe.

For more information about Habitat for Humanity in Armenia, please
visit:

http://www.hfharmenia.org
www.hfharmenia.org

Armenian Chess-Players Do Not Receive Permits To Euro Tournament

ARMENIAN CHESS-PLAYERS DO NOT RECEIVE PERMITS OF PARTICIPATION IN
WORLD CUP TOURNAMENT AT EUROPE CHESS INDIVIDUAL CHAMPIONSHIP

DRESDEN, APRIL 16, NOYAN TAPAN. Europe Chess Individual Championship
finished on April 15 in Dresden.

In men’s tournament each of 7 participants gained 8 out of 11 possible
points and shared 1-7th places. Among representatives of Armenia
Tigran L. Petrosian, Artashes Minasian, Tigran Kotanjian took 45th,
48th and 127th places, respectively, with 7 points each. Zaven
Andriasian, Gabriel Sargsian, Ashot Anastasian gained 6 points each,
Rafael Vahanian, Karen Asrian and Arman Pashikian 6 points each.

Tatyana Kozintseva (Russia) was recognized as the only winner with 10
out of 11 possible points in ladies’ tournament. Among representatives
of Armenia Elina Danielian took 20th place with 7 points, Lilit
Mkrtchian 43th place with 6.5 points, Siranush Andriasian 74th place
with 5.5 points.

403 men and 150 ladies took part in the Europe Championship. The
chess-players competed for permits of participation in World Cup
Tournament to be held at the end of the year in Khanty Mansiysk, 33
permits for man chess-players and 13 for ladies. The representatives
of Armenia won no permits.

European observers present findings, note shortcomings in polls

European observers present findings, note shortcomings in Armenian polls

Arminfo
13 Apr 07

Yerevan, 13 April: "The forthcoming parliamentary election will be an
exam to assess Armenia’s democracy level," the Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe [PACE] observation mission says in a
statement.

The statement was made public by Leo Platvoet, head of the mission, at
a news conference in Yerevan today.

The statement points out that the PACE observers note Armenian
officials’ readiness to conduct free and democratic elections and
underscore that responsibility also lies with all the political
parties and interested parties to hold elections in line with
international standards. The observers also indicate that Armenia’s
current legislation is a good basis for democratic elections if
applied in full in practice.

The observers condemn the recent blasts in the Prosperous Armenia
Party offices and voice concern about some shortcomings on the voters’
lists. The observers also expressed regret that many participants in
the election process took a negative stance on a PACE initiative to
use special ink in order to thwart multiple voting. "Besides, we are
concerned that voters do not show a significant interest in free
elections, and what’s more, it gets to cynicism sometimes. The
impression is that the forthcoming election is viewed by many as a
struggle of political elites, not of political ideas. We are also
concerned that in some of the constituencies under the
first-past-the-post system non-alternative elections will be
conducted," the statement says.

The observers also note the lack of serious differences in the
platforms of political forces. Based on their monitoring of media
outlets, they expressed concern over the campaigning process and a
very high number of political advertisements on Armenian TV
channels. They are also unhappy with the ban on voting outside
Armenia.

The observers also point out that the fraud and violations committed
during the past elections were never investigated, saying that the
2003 elections did not meet the Council of Europe standards. They urge
the Armenian authorities to investigate any protests and violations
during the forthcoming election. "If Armenia wants to be a part of
the European community, it should take a step towards free elections,"
Platvoet said.

Author retells tragedy of Armenian genocide

Author retells tragedy of Armenian genocide
By Nicky Loomis Correspondent
Pasadena Star-News
Article Launched:04/16/2007 12:00:00 AM PDT

SOUTH PASADENA – April 24th is marked as the beginning of the Armenian
genocide and is commemorated as a day of remembrance at the site of
memorials raised by Armenian survivors around the world.

Local author Kay Mouradian unveils one family’s experience of the
Armenian genocide, told through the eyes of a 14-year-old girl, in her
novel, "A Gift in the Sunlight, An Armenian Story," now published by
Taderon Press.

Mouradian, a South Pasadena resident for 49 years, "loosely based" the
novel on the experience of her mother, who survived the slayings before
escaping to America after the war.

Her mother only unveiled her harrowing story during the last five years
of her life, Mouradian said.

"My purpose was to really tell the Armenian story," she said. "I was
thinking that the characters would be representative of every Armenian
family that was deported."

Between 1915 and 1918, during World War I, the Turkish government
ordered more than 2 million Turkish Armenians to leave their homes and
march hundreds of miles into the deserts of Syria.

It is estimated that 1.5 million Armenians perished between 1915 and
1923, according to the Armenian National Institute.

Mouradian, a retired professor of health and physical education,
conducted research for her book by drawing on the works of journalists
and historians during World War I.

"I would go to the history section and biography and if I saw the word
Constantinople, I bought the book," said Mouradian, referring the
Turkish capital now called Istanbul. She later walked the same route as
her mother and ancestors did as she researched her story.

After 10 years, the final product is a heartfelt, coming-of-age story of
her mother’s life as she grew up in a time of turmoil.

The main character, Flora, and her family are forced to leave their
sleepy village in the Taurus Mountains and walk hundreds of miles
through the barren deserts of Syria.

Amid the horror of genocide, Mouradian weaves in acts of heroism in each
character’s journey and makes a human connection to a historic tragedy.

Mouradian will read from her book at the Los Angeles Times Festival of
Books at UCLA on at 11 a.m. April 29, and at

7 p.m. May 24 at the Sardarabad Bookstore, 111 S. Glendale Ave., Glendale.

[email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

(626) 578-6300, Ext. 4911

Armenian Weekly On-Line, April 14, 2007

The Armenian Weekly On-Line: AWOL
80 Bigelow Avenue
Watertown MA 02472 USA
(617) 926-3974
[email protected]

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

* * *

Armenian Weekly On-Line, Volume 73, Number 15, April 14, 2007

Commentary:
1. The TARCification of Noble Goals?
By Khatchig Mouradian

2. Is He Talking to Us?
By Garen Yegparian

Features:
3. Armenia’s Architectural Language: Getting Lost in Translation
An Interview with Jane Britt Greenwood, AIA
By Khatchig Mouradian and Jason Sohigian
(Joint Exclusive: Armenian Weekly/Hetq Online)

4. Plankton at the Edge of the World
An Interview with Antarctic Marine Biologist Dr. Deneb Karentz

Letters to the Editor:
5. ‘Giavour Slave’
By Kevork K. Kalayjian, Jr.

6. Relative Search
By Najda Sadyan

Community
7. The Long Road to Cleaner Ways
Edik Baghdasaryan and Margaret Hovhannisyan talk on Citizens’ Rights in
Armenia
By Andy Turpin

—————————————— ————————–

The TARCification of Noble Goals?
By Khatchig Mouradian

NEW YORK (A.W.)-Fourteen Chemistry, 14 Physics, 12 Medicine, 6 Economics, 5
Peace and 2 Literature Nobel laureates co-signed a letter drafted by the
Elie Wiesel Foundation for Humanity and addressed "to the peoples of Turkey
and Armenia," urging tolerance, contacts and cooperation.

The letter (see p.3), dated April 9, calls on Armenians and Turks to
encourage their governments to open the Turkish-Armenian border, generate
confidence through civil society cooperation, improve official contacts and
allow basic freedoms-doubtless, all noble goals. It also refers to the
killings of Armenian in 1915 as the "Armenian Genocide."

Yet, the wording of the letter and its timing has led many Armenians-and
Turks, but that’s another story-to take it with a grain of salt rather than
welcome it wholeheartedly.

Here We Go Again
Commenting on the letter, ANCA executive director Aram Hamparian said, "Here
we go again. If there’s one thing we learned about David Phillips [the
former moderator of the now-defunct TARC and current executive director of
the Elie Wiesel Foundation for Peace] during the past seven years-through
his involvement in the discredited Turkish Armenian Reconciliation
Commission (TARC) enterprise, including the International Center for
Transitional Justice (ICTJ) study and a variety of other incarnations, it’s
that he will use any means-honest or dishonest-to prevent U.S. recognition
of the Armenian Genocide."

"The ICTJ-a group tied closely with the U.S. State Department-was asked by
TARC to prepare a report on the Armenian Genocide. ICTJ asked someone to
write this report. They will not say who. Very likely the U.S. government
was deeply involved. The report concludes that the Armenian Genocide is a
true historical fact. This is not new. The whole world already knows this.
The report also says that the Armenians have no rights to reparations under
the Genocide Convention. This is not true. Clearly, the people behind TARC
in the U.S. and Turkish governments used the ICTJ report to try to create
the false impression that Armenians cannot legally regain their rights,"
Hamparian added.
I spoke with David Phillips about the identity of the author of the report,
and he again declined to answer. "I’m not in a position to share that
information with you."

Nobel Goals?
I also asked Phillips why the letter was drafted. He said, "It was drafted
subsequent to the assassination of Hrant Dink in order to provide a set of
recommendations for Turks and Armenians to carry his life’s work forward,
his life’s work being on Turkish-Armenian reconciliation and on freedom of
expression in Turkey."

That the letter was drafted following and in reaction to Dink’s
assassination may fail to convince many. Dink was killed almost three months
before the letter was released. Instead, the timing may have more to do with
the upcoming vote on the Armenian Genocide resolution in the U.S. Congress.
For, the letter addressed "to the peoples of Turkey and Armenia" suggests
that this is an issue Armenians and Turks should figure out alone, and that
third parties should only encourage dialogue.

I asked Phillips what effect passing the Genocide resolution would have on
Turkish-Armenian relations. "The appeal doesn’t address the Armenian
Genocide resolution, so I’m not well qualified to answer that question," he
replied.

"Turks and Armenians have a huge gap in perception over the Armenian
Genocide," the letter reads. Yet the letter refers to the International
Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS) and a 2003 legal analysis conducted
by non-Armenians. Since both the IAGS and the legal analysis have concluded
that what took place was genocide, the "huge gap in perception" lies between
Turks and the rest of the world, not between Turks and Armenians. The
wording of the letter also gives the impression that Turkey and Armenia
share equal responsibility in the continued blockade against Armenia.

Test Tube Solutions
I pointed out to Phillips that some scholars and analysts have publicly
expressed surprise to the large number of signatories-40 out of 53-that come
from the hard sciences and thus have little, if any, knowledge of the
intricacies of Turkish-Armenian issues. I asked how the signatories were
selected. "We contacted laureates with whom we have collaboration and
provided some information about Armenian-Turkish issues," he said. "We asked
if they would associate themselves with the recommendation in the appeal."

TARC-2 Diplomacy
David Hovannisian, a member of TARC, told Iskakan Iravunk that the letter
will be taken very seriously by the international community. Hovannisian
added that the laureates’ call on Armenia to "reverse its authoritarian
course" shows just how closely the West will be watching the upcoming
parliamentary elections.

It Doesn’t Work that Way
In many Armenian circles, TARC is widely regarded as a State Department
initiative to derail the international recognition of the Armenian Genocide.
On March 31, at a symposium organized by Armenians and the Left at Harvard
University, Turkish-born professor Halil Berktay made the following
revelation about TARC:
"I’ll tell you something funny about TARC. In, I think, March 2000, the
first ever conference on or between Turkish and Armenian historians took
place at the University of Chicago, initiated by professors Muge Gocek and
Ron Suny. And I took part in that conference and went back to Turkey
afterwards and one thing led to another.
"An atmosphere of stifling hypocrisy sadly had overtaken Turkish society at
that time, precisely because at that time there was yet another motion
before the French parliament to recognize the Armenian Genocide and
simultaneously another motion before the U.S. Congress to recognize the
Armenian Genocide, and the atmosphere in Turkey had become absolutely
suffocating.
"Day in and day out, large numbers of journalists, media people, etc., were
towing this national line so to speak, not to say party line, of ‘the
so-called Genocide’ and ‘Armenian slanders’ and ‘baseless fabrications,’ so
on and so forth. This vocabulary, this verbiage was being repeated ad
nausea.
"It was in that atmosphere that to a large extent out of sheer anger and
irritation, when a leading journalist contacted me and wanted to do a very
long and full-page interview with me in the pages of the Left-Center Daily
Radikal, I consented.
"As a result, without realizing it, I seemed to have become the very first
established Turkish historian inside Turkey to speak out on the Genocide in
a mainstream publication, in a mass circulating daily, and then all hell
broke loose.
"But one thing that happened was that one of the American organizers of TARC
came to me in unbelievable and unexpected anger to tell me that I had
virtually ruined their pet project, and that I had, in fact, dealt a
devastating blow to the TARC initiative. I said, ‘Why? I would have thought
that the presence of the realization that there are many, many dissident
intellectuals and scholars inside Turkey who do not abide by the
establishment line on the Genocide would facilitate reconciliation efforts
like TARC.’
"I was told, very brutally, ‘That is not how it works. That is not how
Turkish or Armenian dialogue should work. That is not how second track
diplomacy works. You have just made things very, very complicated and
difficult for us.’"
***
Did the Nobel laureates who signed the letter have any knowledge of the
anti-reconciliatory behavior of TARC and its "American organizers"? How
would they view a letter from a group of (otherwise brilliant) individuals
who have little idea about their work, yet offer a "road map" on how to get
things done?
——————————————– —————-

2. Is He Talking to Us?
By Garen Yegparian

I really wondered whether Sam Harris, in his Letter to a Christian Nation,
was addressing Armenians.

We certainly do make loud and proud pronouncements about being the first
Christian nation. Most of that is bereft of substance though. I know of only
a relatively small percentage of Armenians who are serious in their
Christianity. Much of what passes for faith among us often seems more like
superstition. Not that we’re exceptional-many adherents to other Christian
denominations also take the CYA "just in case approach" to faith and
religion.

An excellent example of this artificiality is the e-mail I received just a
few minutes ago. It was one of those "read this, then send it on to a
bjilliion people and you’ll get your wishes granted" messages. But, in this
case, it was a prayer that included all the supplicant’s friends, including
the one that sent the message. The enticement? Sending it on assured that
others would be praying for you. How phony!

But I digress. Harris’ analysis is blistering and logical. While addressed
primarily to the whack jobs who bequeathed us George Bush, he also
challenges "moderate" believers. He draws parallels among all religions. And
we could probably learn a few things from his analysis.

The examples he cites from the Bible are chilling. The circularity of
accepting the "Good Book" as the basis of one’s own morality is elegantly
exposed (though this is nothing new). Very interesting is his unapologetic
counter positioning of science and religion as irreconcilable, despite
efforts, many in recent years, to demonstrate how the two can and do coexist
and are not mutually exclusive.

While the Armenian Apostolic Church serves far more than the propagation of
Christianity, there are those among its flock who would degrade that to a
strictly religious job description. That mindset underlies the activities of
those Armenians who are taken in by the fundamentalist sects of Christianity
who then turn around and, for all intents and purposes, attack our national
institution on the grounds of deviation from Christianity. You might
remember I’ve mentioned these destructive creatures before for their
essentially anti-Armenian, anti-national, anti-common sense approaches.

This last group of people might profit most by reading Letter, unless of
course they are so blinded by their fervor that all reason and logic has
left them. It’s a very quick read, a whopping 95 pages of children’s book
sized print. Everyone reading it would probably see things in a different
light.

Do yourself a favor, pick up the book.
——————————————– ——————

3. Armenia’s Architectural Language: Getting Lost in Translation
An Interview with Jane Britt Greenwood, AIA
By Khatchig Mouradian and Jason Sohigian
(Joint Exclusive: Armenian Weekly/Hetq Online)

WATERTOWN, Mass.-Jane Britt Greenwood has seen some of Armenia’s struggles
first-hand. An associate dean at the College of Architecture, Art, and
Design at Mississippi State University, Greenwood and her husband went to
Armenia after the earthquake of 1988 to assist in the establishment of the
American University of Armenia (AUA).

After leaving Armenia, Greenwood began looking for ways to be involved in
the reconstruction of the country she had come to love. As an architect, the
rebuilding of Armenia’s infrastructure interested her, but she was
disappointed to find that the new buildings generally lacked the traditional
Armenian character.

Working with the environmental organization Earthwatch Institute, Greenwood
is now organizing four 11-day architectural research expeditions that will
take international volunteers to Gyumri in June and July 2007.

Volunteers will identify and document the historical architectural elements
and patterns in the historic districts, which will contribute to a database
of architectural information that can be accessed by planners, architects
and designers in Armenia.
For more information about this project or to join as a volunteer, visit:

Th e following interview with Greenwood was conducted by phone on April 4.
***
Armenian Weekly-How did Earthwatch Institute become interested in the
Armenia expedition?
Jane Britt Greenwood-I proposed a project to Earthwatch a few years ago in
Haiti related to vernacular architecture. They were interested in that
project, but there was a coup in Haiti so it was put on hold. My program
manager for that project knew about my interest in Armenia, and he asked me
for another proposal that dealt with architecture.
Earthwatch gets a lot of proposals for projects that do things like work
with endangered species like turtles and manatees, but they don’t have many
projects that deal with architecture. When Earthwatch tries to promote
sustainability and the environment, they recognize that architecture is a
part of the issue of sustainability, so they asked me to write another
proposal that dealt with vernacular architecture. Since my interest has been
in Armenia for so long, I wrote a proposal for this Armenia project.

AW-What specific observations do you have about Armenia’s architecture? What
are the traditional features and what is being built today?
J.G.-From a scholarly point of view, the information that is being been
written has been mostly about churches. That is part of the cultural
identity of Armenia, but there are other smaller structures that have just
as much to do with establishing the identity of this country. People often
don’t see the value of smaller buildings such as houses and municipal
buildings, but they have a lot to do with placing a country within a context
of social and political issues.
In recent years there has been an economic boom in Armenia, especially in
Yerevan, and I have seen a homogenization that is taking place within the
architecture there. Near the Opera, the buildings are like a mini Times
Square where you have billboards that are illuminated and you’ve got these
modern office buildings going up with the horizontal ribbon windows. And
when you take photographs of them they could be going up anywhere in the
world.
My fear is that-and this is typical for many cultures that are trying to
move forward from an economic point of view and trying to position
themselves on the world stage-they look at what is being built in other
parts of the world and they think, "We need to build glass boxes, we need to
be like everybody else." While that is certainly good, it causes people to
not understand the value of their history and their architectural history
and heritage.
>From my point of view, a lot of that heritage in terms of housing has
already been destroyed in Yerevan-you just don’t find it anymore. In Gyumri,
in the Kumayri Historic District and the old Alexandrapol area, there still
are existing examples of Armenian architecture from the early 20th century.
And I haven’t seen anything like that in other parts of Armenia.
In the long term, I would like to see this project branch out into other
areas, because I think Goris has great a vernacular cave typology, and
Dilijan has a different type of housing typology. You start to see that the
architectural structures are really specific to a location and the different
regional influences of the community and the people. From an architectural
point of view and a research and an academic point of view, that is
information that needs to be documented and preserved.
It would be a terrible shame for Armenia to lose that part of their culture
and history.

AW-In some historic parts of the U.S., you can’t even paint your house a
certain color. Yet in a place as old and historic as Armenia, it seems like
you can build just about anything. What is going wrong with architecture in
Armenia?
J.G.-There are a few factors, from a housing point of view, and at least in
Gyumri. People fundamentally want shelter, and they want shelter that is
safe, dry and comfortable. In Gyumri, a lot of people are still living in
domiks, or in one or two rooms of a house because the rest of house was
damaged in the 1988 earthquake. Many of these families don’t have the
resources to repair the houses, or when they do they are not as concerned
with maintaining this sort of historic character. It’s not a high
priority-and I certainly understand that.
While there is the Ministry of Culture and there are some entities that deal
with preservation, I don’t know how well standards are enforced. It really
has to occur at the local, municipal level, but a lot of people are still
struggling with the day-to-day issues of living and surviving, so these
issues really aren’t in the forefront for them right now.

AW-What are you expecting to get out of this expedition? What could it lead
to?
J.G.-It is fundamentally an educational process, it’s a way to educate
citizens of the value of historic structures. There is value in the long
term. There can be tourism value, if it can be promoted so people will
travel to Gyumri to look at the houses in this historic district.
But we also have to be careful. Through the development of a "pattern
language," I would like to be able to establish design guidelines and a
strategy for growth. When people want to build in this area, it’s not that
everyone has to build like historic Alexandrapol. But there are qualities
and components about these buildings-in the way windows are designed, for
example-there are sustainability issues that need to be maintained. There is
a lot that we can learn from these structures that will help the planning of
the future of Gyumri.
If and when the border of Kars and Gyumri opens up, there is going to be a
big economic boom in Gyumri. So, that historic district is at risk of being
destroyed through this whole notion of economic development, and if we go
through this process of education and documentation and look at restoring
some of these structures, we can get a foothold in helping people recognize
the value of what they have.

AW-What are the prospects of getting work done on the ground in terms of
implementation? Is there a framework for future suggestions for approaching
the government or municipalities?
J.G.-One of my long-term goals is to purchase one of these historic
structures and actually go through a preservation/restoration process. This
is a way to create jobs in the area, because there are a lot of skills in
masonry and ironwork.
Gyumri has a rich history of artists, so there is an artistic culture and
crafts culture that is being lost. It’s a way to create jobs for people, to
create a niche in the country for creating these kids of artifacts,
returning to ironwork, stonework, masonry work, and educating the public and
educating people with specific skills. Through that we can approach the
government, if we can show that we are creating jobs and creating an
environment that is becoming pleasing for people.
I think Gyumri is a welcome relief from the heat and smog of Yerevan in the
summer. It is a matter of trying to sell the vision of what Gyumri could be.
I’m just one architect with these ideas-all I can do is start with my
project. And with awareness at the grassroots level people will become more
interested in this and we can see where it goes.
The politics in Armenia are very complex and I’m not the person to get into
that, but through this project and by raising awareness maybe someone can
work from these ideas and help move the government, or at least the Gyumri
government, toward these ideas. I know it is not going to happen
overnight-it is a very complex problem from a political point of view-but as
an architect all I can do right now is try to document, preserve and gather
oral histories from people about their lives in these houses, what has been
important to them about these houses, what is the social structure of family
life as a result of these houses.

AW-There is pressure on people if they speak out about these matters and
say, for example, that construction projects are destroying the heritage of
Armenian cities. The atmosphere in Armenia is difficult in that respect. Do
you have local partners in Armenia that are helping you with this work so
you can be successful?
J.G.-I have been working in Gyumri with the City Research Center. Over the
past 5-6 years, they have been developing a digital database of the
buildings-they have been photographing and cataloguing the buildings, which
has been great. But they have not been analyzing the buildings, looking at
trends, and looking at it from a social behavioral point of view. So my
research is trying to take that to the next step. But I have heard that it
is difficult if people try to speak out, so all I can realistically do is
document it.

AW-Are the construction projects in Armenia following any guidelines or do
you think they maintain the heritage of the country?
J.G.-My impression is that there are some guidelines but they are not being
followed. But it is the complexity of the political system and the building
codes. And you find that in the U.S. as well, so it is not something that is
specific to Armenia. Even developers in the U.S. know there are rules but
they try to get around them, and it really depends on how strong the entity
is that is trying to monitor it. If you don’t have a strong municipal
government or preservation group, you really don’t have a way to find out if
the preservation guidelines are being followed.
Quite often money speaks louder than anything, especially in a country that
has been deprived of economic development for so many years. And it is hard
to argue with that-I understand that. So it is a matter or trying to take
one step at a time so we can document this. These buildings could be
destroyed by earthquakes-and a lot of the buildings have been damaged by
water over the years. There may be a point where someone says it is not
financially responsible or feasible to maintain the buildings. Even in the
U.S. when they look at restoring a structure there is a financial bottom
line.

AW-You mentioned earthquakes-is it true that some of the new buildings going
up begin to crumble before they are even finished? Is the new construction
being built to withstand earthquakes?
J.G.-It is my understanding that things are supposed to be built to meet
earthquake standards, but whether or not they are, I can’t answer without
speaking to architects and building inspectors there. But that’s what I find
interesting about these historic buildings. A lot of the buildings in the
Kumayri Historic District have withstood two earthquakes, while those built
after the Second World War didn’t. There are a lot of things we can learn
about the way those buildings were constructed-there are thermal qualities
to those buildings, and there are a lot of lessons we can learn from that to
help guide us in the future.

AW-How is this expedition being promoted in the international community? How
are you trying to recruit volunteers for the trip?
J.G.-Earthwatch has an aggressive marketing strategy for all of their
projects. They are contacting people like yourself and other Armenian media,
promoting the expedition among their own volunteer networks internationally,
and there is information about the expedition on their website,
In Armenia, we are going to distribute material at
hotels around Gyumri and Yerevan, and we are hoping to do a TV spot when we
get there in the summer.

AW-If this trip is successful, is there potential for other Earthwatch
expeditions in Armenia?
J.G.-Absolutely. There are plenty of archeological areas that could be
investigated. Earthwatch has expeditions that document flora and fauna. From
my point of view, Armenia has some beautiful flowers and wildflowers. There
is a lot of opportunity for Earthwatch to be involved in Armenia-it is just
a mater of finding other individuals like myself who are interested in
trying to do something like this.

AW-How did you get interested in Armenia?
J.G.-My husband and I were living in Boston and he was teaching and saw an
ad in the Chronicle of Higher Education about an American university
[American University of Armenia] that was being initiated by the Diasporan
community in California. His background is in business and engineering, and
those are two areas in which they were starting programs, so we went over in
1992.
The Armenian government had given AUA some property in Abovian to build a
new American style university, and they hired me to be the university
architect. So I was the liason with architects from the University of
California.
There were a lot of changes. The original site we looked at was a munitions
storage area, and the site literally blew up the day after I went to look at
it, so we spent a lot of time looking for another site. My final
recommendation was that they stay in downtown Yerevan because transportation
was an issue for people and no one knew what the future would look like.
Being there for a year and a half, I found the people to be very warm and
everyone makes you a part of their family. It is a beautiful country, with
so many different facets-it is so small with a varied landscape. I really
fell in love with it and was fascinated with it, and I was looking for some
way over the years to get involved architecturally with what was going on
there.
I left in 1993 and I didn’t return until five years ago, and I have been
going back every summer since then to develop partnerships and look for
projects. And I finally connected with the City Research Center in Gyumri
(). I have a real passion for the country and the people
and I am interested in learning about the culture that built this
architecture.
AW-In the Earthwatch Institute’s catalogue you say, "Join me on this
exciting expedition to Armenia-it will truly be a life changing experience."
How do you think people’s lives will change if they participate in this
expedition?
J.G.-They will have a better appreciation of another country and they will
learn a lot about themselves. Going to Armenia was a life changing
experience for me at many levels-I realized I was stronger than I thought I
was both emotionally and physically, and I think other people will find this
as well. It is still a hard life in Armenia, and people will understand from
a sustainability point of view that, for example, you don’t need to take a
shower for 15 minutes and use that much water.
Those sorts of life experiences are what I mean-and with architecture we
talk about sustainability, green design and waste-but when you can
experience another culture that really does so much with so little, then
people will understand that you can do a lot with a little, and there are a
lot of things we can cut back on in our lives in the U.S. or in the UK or
Australia or wherever you are from, and you can still have a rich and
fulfilling life.
Volunteers will learn about themselves from this experience, and they will
learn about Armenia and architecture. It will make them look at their
environment in a different way. It will make them realize they can make a
difference in their own environment. Any time you have an educational
process, if you can reach one or two of your students each semester, you
have done a good job because they can go and reach other people. Whatever
little progress we make will be a big step toward change somewhere down the
line. I may never see it, but someone else might see the work we are doing
and carry on from there.
You have to start somewhere, and I think this is that start.
——————————————- ———

4. Plankton at the Edge of the World
An Interview with Antarctic Marine Biologist Dr. Deneb Karentz

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-Marine biologist Dr. Deneb Karentz is currently a
U.S. representative to the Group on Life Sciences for the Scientific
Committee on Antarctic Research. Speaking about her prosperous career as a
scientist in Antarctica and how she got involved, she said of her interest
in marine biology, "I’ve just always been interested in it, since I was a
little girl."

Karentz has spent 17 field seasons in Antarctica, including research at
Palmer Station (U.S.), McMurdo Station (U.S.) and projects in the
Bellingshausen and Ross Seas. She first got to go to Antarctica in 1985 when
she was doing postdoctoral work. "I met a friend from graduate school who
was looking for volunteers for an expedition," she said. "I was just in the
right place at the right time." Karentz received her Masters degree from
Oregon State University and her Ph.D. from the University of Rhode Island.
A specialization of her research over the years has been the ecology of
plankton, though her work is now more related to the effects of ozone
depletion, particularly the effects of ultraviolet light.

In the Antarctic, she said, "there are three U.S. stations. McMurdo is the
largest one. It’s beautiful there and an incredible place to work. The U.S.
Antarctic Program takes care of everything. Someone is cooking my meals, and
they provide all the necessary clothes and equipment, etc. All I have to do
is concentrate on the work in the field and the lab."
When asked about how long polar research has been used as a yardstick to
gage global warming and climate change, Karentz said that "for at least the
last 20-25 years and longer, polar regions have been used as environmental
indicators. The waters of the Southern Ocean eventually move into the
Atlantic, Pacific and Indian Oceans, affecting global oceanic and
atmospheric circulation patterns. A lot of the information on climate change
comes from the scientists that study ocean circulation and currents, both
horizontal and vertical," she added.

"In terms of ozone depletion, there are a lot of regulations in place to
prevent further depletion; an example is the Montreal Protocol (1987). Over
the Antarctic ozone, depletion is cyclic and still continuing despite
declines in the use of ozone-depleting chemicals. Recovery of the ozone
layer is expected, but it will probably take 50-100 years."

Karentz was an instructor for the advanced international integrative biology
course taught in the Antarctic and a previous associate program manager for
biology and medicine at the NSF Office of Polar Programs. She’ll be
returning to Antarctica in December. "One of the things I’ve gotten very
involved in is teaching a graduate course at McMurdo Station," she said. "It’s
an international course with about 20 students who haven’t worked in the
Antarctic before. The course is funded by the National Science Foundation
and was initiated in 1994. It’s in its seventh season now."

The Montreal Protocol on Substances that Deplete the Ozone Layer is an
international treaty designed to protect the ozone layer by phasing out the
production of a number of substances believed to be responsible for ozone
depletion. The treaty was opened for signature on Sept. 16, 1987, and
entered into force on Jan. 1, 1989. Since then, it has undergone five
revisions: in 1990 (London), 1992 (Copenhagen), 1995 (Vienna), 1997
(Montreal) and 1999 (Beijing). Due to its widespread adoption and
implementation, it has been hailed as an example of exceptional
international cooperation. Kofi Annan was quoted as saying that it is
"perhaps the single most successful international agreement to date."

The U.S. Committee on Antarctic Names recently honored Karentz for her
scientific contributions over the years by naming an Antarctic lake after
her. Lake Karentz lies West of Mount Swinford and Ringer Glacier.

(Photos of Antarctica by Deneb Karentz)
—————————————– —————–

Letters to the Editor

5. ‘Giavour Slave’

Dear Editor,

The feedback received from many readers of my letter to the Secretary of
State Madam Condoleezza Rice was primarily encouraging and supportive. "I
couldn’t have said it better" wrote one; "your courage is commendable," said
others. I thank all those who had words of encouragement for me.
My thanks and gratitude also goes to all those who were startled with my
letter, those few who found my tone "angry", those who thought my
comparisons and analogies to slavery were "irrelevant, objectionable or flat
out insulting" both to Madam Secretary and to Americans of Armenian
extraction.
This explanation is intended to all my American friends who happen to be of
Armenian descent, and who do not realize that they are still "Giavour
Slaves" of Turkish oppression. Giavour is a Turkish word meaning infidel,
and was used for Armenians under Turkish occupation, just as Kaffer was used
for blacks in South Africa, and "nigger" was used for blacks in America.

1- You are a "Giavour Slave" as long as the government that committed the
Genocide against your ancestors can come here to your country and convince
your own government to deny the fact that your ancestors experienced such an
injustice.
2- You are a "Giavour Slave" as long as your own tax dollars are used to
deny your own history and to make a villain out of you.
3- You are a "Giavour Slave" as long as you think that the Armenian Genocide
is a political issue and you do not get involved in politics.
4- You are a "Giavour Slave" as long as you think that you are not an
Armenian anymore and this genocide issue is not your problem, it is someone
else’s problem.
5- You are a "Giavour Slave" as long as you think that now is not the right
time to pursue the genocide recognition issue; that you should wait till the
next Democratic or Republican landslide, or wait till you have developed the
atomic bomb.
6- No matter how successful you are in your art, intellect, professional or
financial accomplishments, you are still a "Giavour Slave" if you cannot
make your own government honor its promises to you.
7- You are a "Giavour Slave" if you believe that you are spiritually so
connected that you have overcome this genocide issue.

Kevork K. Kalayjian, Jr.
Palisades, N.Y.

6. Relative Search

Dear Editor,

I am contacting you from Turkey regarding a relative search. I hope you can
help me. My aunt is looking for her brother-in-law who moved from Istanbul
to Boston in mid 1900’s.
My aunt’s brother-in-law’s name is Robert Krapos Lazar. He is most probably
deceased. However, his children, Barbara Lazar, Norman Lazar and Bobby
Lazar, should still be living in Boston. Their ages range between 50-60, she
supposes.
Robert Krapos Lazar’s wife’s name was Gladys Lazar.
I would be thankful for any help you can offer.
Thank you,
Najda Sadyan,
On behalf of Sona Lazian
——————————————- —————————-

7. The Long Road to Cleaner Ways
Edik Baghdasaryan and Margaret Hovhannisyan talk on Citizens’ Rights in
Armenia
By Andy Turpin

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-On April 2, HETQ [Investigative Journalists of
Armenia] Online news magazine editor Edik Baghdasaryan and Tufenkian
Charitable Foundation director Margaret Hovhannisyan presented a talk on the
issue of "Citizens’ Rights in Armenia."

The Tufenkian Foundation sponsored the talk, and Antranig Kasbarian of the
Tufenkian Foundation provided introductions to both speakers.

Hovhannisyan gave a brief slide presentation on the lack of legal rights
facing the Armenian consumer, and the virtual nonexistence of protection for
pedestrians and motorists in Armenia. She described the wide range of unsafe
products that pervade the retail market, including children’s toys made from
hazardous materials in factories that no longer face strict regulations or
inspections following the Soviet era.

Regarding the roadway, Hovhannisyan emphasized that there are little to no
driving laws in Armenia, and that the traffic officers who should be
enforcing the laws are exceedingly corrupt. She advocated the the Foundation’s
grassroots efforts with both the "Achilles" and "Consumer Union" NGOs, which
champion the above causes for change in Armenia.
Baghdasaryan then spoke about a number of disturbing issues that have been
the subject of journalistic investigations for HETQ Online. "Our
correspondents did investigations of 80 firms in Lorri Marz," he explained.
"Not one had a bathroom or kitchen facilities. After our report was
published, several of these firms were closed. HETQ performed similar
investigations of women’s perfume and found many came from China and had yet
to be tested, resulting in a great many breakout cases on faces." He added,
"Many children’s toys contain harmful chemicals in materials."

He commented on the many stories that have been covered by HETQ, saying
modestly, "I am by training a TV journalist, but as no TV station will have
me, I’m forced to stick to print journalism."

"We’re under constant surveillance by the government," he added, which is
due to HETQ’s sterling reputation for investigating injustice everywhere,
including within the Armenian government. "If one thing were out of place,"
he continued, regarding the strict licensing and business permits needed to
operate in Armenia, "they’d pluck our feathers."
He said international organizations operating in Armenia are often selective
in what they choose to expose to the world, and that many problems-such as
the abysmal conditions that exist for the elderly, homeless and mentally
handicapped in Armenia-are often passed over or neglected.

Baghdasaryan then showed a short expose film created by HETQ that
illustrated the plight of the Armenian homeless. In the film, we see how the
majority of Armenia’s homeless are former Nagorno-Karabakh veterans,
comparable to the high numbers of Vietnam veterans who compose U.S. homeless
population. One man shown is even a five-time Armenian team champion and
triathlete.

Many in these invisible populations keep dogs as companions and as their
sole sources of warmth during the cold winter nights when death by freezing
is common. One man, once a former playwright and poet in better days, said,
"These dogs are more faithful than my wives, my brother or my children. They
come to wake me."

In perhaps one of the most crushing documentary moments I’ve ever seen, a
homeless woman in her 50s declines food offered to her by HETQ journalists,
asking only for a chance to call her son on a cell phone. Speaking lovingly
into the receiver from a pile of rags, she asks, "Can you come today, or
tomorrow? Mom is there, will you come? Do you know the place, by the bazaar?
Mom will be there."

Following the film, Baghdasaryan spoke about the issues confronted therein,
stating, "Generally, nobody knows who lies in the [pauper] graves [in
Yerevan], and they are marked only with a serialized number. There is no
state body dealing with the homeless in Armenia or counting their numbers."

Relating the uphill battle of getting recognition for such issues, he said,
"We wrote for more than a month on this. The authorities responded by
saying, ‘Armenia doesn’t have a homeless problem.’ Eventually, though, they
felt obligated to create a dormitory for them." Another result that came
from HETQ’s investigation was that "Some of the elderly women were taken in
by their grandchildren. This was a small result."

Baghdasaryan continued, "Many of these people are veterans who suffer from
post-war syndromes. But the government ceases to acknowledge these issues as
existing. Also in Armenia, there is no such thing as Alcoholics Anonymous or
any similar structure."
He was lightly self-deprecating of the nature of his journalism, saying,
"Some people criticize me for always focusing on negative stories. I’m
sorry. I’ve done positive stories, but my own publicity has been primarily
negative."

"The justice ministries do not in fact deal with justice," Baghdasaryan
said, in an attempt to trace the root of the above problems. "They reach
verdicts with money."

During the question and answer session that followed, Baghdasaryan presented
the best incremental options he knew to combat these problems. "One solution
is for young Armenians to learn values abroad and bring them back to
Armenia. In this way, the responsibility for reforming Armenia lies with the
Diaspora."

Mixed audience reactions followed this comment; Baghdasaryan explained that
uncorrupt moral values may be exported to Armenian youth, but younger
generations are still responsible for reclaiming Armenia on their own terms.
He quipped with sincerity, "I’m teaching at a university and I tell my
students to start the revolution."

When asked if he is optimistic that change would be enacted as a result of
the upcoming May 12 parliamentary elections, Baghdasaryan responded
skeptically. "The first parliament was much more educated than the second,"
he said. "I anticipate the future parliament will be less educated than the
one we have today."

He reasserted his opinion that younger Armenians must pick up the gauntlet
of politics, saying, "The revolution has to start through the local people
and not from the outside, not from international organizations.
Unfortunately, the youth are very passive. They are more concerned with
leaving and having a comfortable life."

He noted the large number of young Armenians who left Armenia before 2000 in
search for opportunities, and said, "They had the same capability to do
things within Armenia."
Returning to the topic of elections, Baghdasaryan stated, "I’m a bit of a
pessimist towards these elections. There is no real opposition. I’m always
telling Diasporans not to trust the officials and put faith in them. Even if
you like them, don’t trust them."

www.earthwatch.org/expeditions/greenwood.html
www.earthwatch.org.
www.alexandrapol.org

Armenian Weekly On-Line: Armenians and the Left Symposium

The Armenian Weekly On-Line: AWOL

80 Bigelow Avenue

Watertown MA 02472 USA

(617) 926-3974

[email protected]

http://www. armenianweekly.com

Armenians and the Left Symposium Takes on Pressing Issues in Armenia and
Turkey
By Andy Turpin

Armenian Weekly On-Line, Volume 73, Number 15, April 14, 2007

CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (A.W.)-On March 31, less than a year after the hugely
sucessful Armenians and the Left (AATL) conference in New York, scores of
activists, students and intellectuals from across the Northeast converged at
Harvard University for a one-day symposium organized by AATL. Co-sponsored
by Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, the symposium featured
leading Armenian journalists and media critics, groundbreaking environmental
activists working in Armenia today, and outspoken proponents of meaningful
Armeno-Turkish dialogue.

The panelists criticized the ruling elites-oligarchs and plutocrats-in
Armenia, whose complicity in perpetuating endemic corruption has created
enormous inequality and has placed Armenia’s very sustainability at risk.
They also took aim at the Turkish state which has created an environment of
impunity for vigilantism, as was recently seen in the assassination of the
Istanbul based Armenian journalist and human rights activist, Hrant Dink.
Members of the audience engaged in active dialogue during lively and heated
question and answer sessions, which were often as substantial as the
presentations themselves.

Conceived by the ARF USA-Eastern Region, the series of public forums and
conferences organized under Armenians and the Left strive to present
Armenian issues in a global, progressive context. They are meant to appeal
to all those-Armenian and non-Armenian-who have an activist mindset and an
appreciation for what binds the various plight of dispossessed groups, and
are alarmed at the menacing trends that are threatening the world and its
people.

Panel I
Oligarchs, Social Injustices and Media in Armenia

A panel on "Media and Social Injustice in Armenia," moderated by Antranig
Kasbarian, featured Armenia’s foremost investigative journalist Edik
Baghdasaryan of Hetq (), Khatchig Mouradian of the Armenian
Weekly, professor Gayane Torosyan of the State University of New York and
Steve Kurkjian of the Boston Globe as discussant.

Dr. Gayane Torosyan, assistant professor in the Department of Communication
Arts at the State University of New York-Oneonta, spoke first." The
so-called public sphere in Armenia is strongly dominated by various
political parties and interest groups instead of being a truly public place
for societal discourse, she said.
Torosyan said that a major factor was the monopolization of the media
industry by businesses. "Instead of paying for advertising on TV, radio or
newspapers, the most successful businesses choose to buy, bribe or influence
those media in bulk to turn them into their mouthpieces."

A successful Armenian businessman, she continued, could buy the entire
Armenian media several times over for much less money than the cost of a
Super-Bowl ad.
Torosyan quoted a recent report issued by the European Journalism Center in
the Netherlands that assessed the plight of Armenian journalists; it said
"that the biggest enemy of journalists in Armenia is the lowering of
professional standards." She added, "The public trust towards media is hard
to gain and easy to lose, with that trust vanishing day by day."

Torosyan then explained how journalism has been forced to transition and
evolve since the fall of Soviet Union, primarily through professional method
trainings exported from the U.S. and Europe. "The core of that transition of
the new practices was the concept of objectivity," she said, adding that it
can be difficult to break the cultural trends that are still ingrained from
the Soviet period. She quipped, "Is Armenian media democratic? In principle,
yes, but the notion of objectivity should be viewed as the cornerstone of
interventions into post-Communist media."

She explained that some, bolder Armenian journalists are trying to enact the
Western style and act as watchdogs, but that there is fear of retaliation.
"The shyer ones are simply respecting authority and using that as their
hindrance," she said. "The low self-esteem among Armenian journalists can
only be cured with assertivity, honesty, patience to avoid selling
themselves to the highest bidder, and finally becoming an institution on
their own."

Khatchig Mouradian, editor of the Armenian Weekly and former editor of the
Lebanese-Armenian newspaper Aztag Daily, spoke next. He prefaced his
remarks, titled "Free, But Not Independent," by sharing an anecdote about
negligent writers in Armenia once publicizing Peter Balakian’s acclaimed
book The Burning Tigris, as the misnomer The Burning Tigress. "I wanted to
give this example to follow up on the professor’s remarks on being thorough
when dealing with news reports, trying to be objective, and gathering as
much information as possible," he explained. "Or at least trying to deal
with the information in a decent way."

During the Soviet period, he said, "There was a lack of interest for
empirical truth and definitely no space whatsoever for investigative
journalism. In the 80s and early 90s, however, we always speak about the
Golden Age of Armenian journalism and media. This has been reflected also in
other countries of the former Soviet bloc."

Yet, what contributed to the media’s decline soon after independence was the
gradual inability of the newspapers, radio and TV stations to sustain
themselves. "They first came under the influence of the state, and
eventually the influence of the state and oligarchs."
"The real investigative journalists in Armenia are the readers," he said,
"[who] realize that they can’t trust the media and that what they have to do
is read different sources of information and to try to come up with a
conclusion" of what’s really going on.

Recounting a remark by another Armenian editor on the issue, Mouradian
quoted him as saying, "The amount of money I receive for printing one
article about a specific leader in Armenia is much more than actually
increasing my subscribers by 200."

"I don’t want to give the impression that the media is utterly controlled
like in some totalitarian countries," he clarified. "The main problem is
that different forms of pressure exist and there are different ways of
self-censorship for personal gain."

He characterized the underlying problem among Armenian journalists. "They’re
free to say anything, but they’re not independent and they’re definitely not
socially responsible. For them, being free is being free of moral obligation
and social responsibility."

Making a quick comparison with Diasporan newspapers, Mouradian noted that
they "are controlled by political parties, churches and cultural
organizations. There is very little criticism and a lot of collective
silence."

He then discussed the options for countering these trends, pointing to blogs
and online publications like Hetq for inspiration. "There has been an
increasing number of blogs dealing with social, political and economic
issues in Armenia. They create this very essential small space where people
can interact, get information, news, and give insight that is not sponsored
by this or that leader. . These can provide readers with alternatives."

The final speaker of the panel was veteran Armenian journalist Edik
Baghdasaryan, editor of HETQ Online and head of the Investigative
Journalists of Armenia NGO.
Panel moderator Antranig Kasbarian translated his remarks from Armenian to
English.
Baghdasaryan opened by saying, "The current circulation of Armenian
newspapers is 40,000; meanwhile the population of Armenia is said to be
three million. There’s a disconnect here." He continued, "Ninety-five
percent of these newspapers are circulated in the Yerevan environs. This
means that essentially hundreds of villages outside of Yerevan and in
Karabakh, have not seen a newspaper in years."

Baghdasaryan said that the majority of Armenians rely on TV for their news
and information. "The public television station is viewed essentially as the
property of the President of the Republic of Armenia," he added. "According
to those news reports, everything in Armenia is just fine. Based on the
facts from those channels, every day new factories are opening, every day
presidents of other countries come and go, and every day there are new
concerts."

He said that this purveyance of a distorted reality was greatly affecting
the well-being and morale of the Armenian people. "In this programming, no
Armenians are shown to exist outside of Yerevan. People feel isolated
outside of Yerevan. They despair. They feel no one addresses even their
existence."

He clarified, "This phenomenon applies to TV as well as newspapers. The
people of Armenia are found in an information blockade."
Baghdasaryan said that the TV media in Armenia are under the supervision of
the government. "There are private owners, but they purchase these networks
at the behest of the government. The supervision of TV media often becomes a
detailed affair. The presidential apparatus or administration will manage
and micromanage who gets interviewed in the government, and how much time
and space will be given to opposition voices."

He shared why this is reflective of a more dangerous, "more painful"
cultural trend, against those who speak out with different views. "The media
is gradually losing its influence within Armenia," he said. "In the United
States, every so often a scandal will come out in the media and it will
force people to resign from their positions amidst scandal. Unfortunately in
Armenia these sorts of publications have no effect whatsoever."
He challenged journalists and citizens to speak out with hard facts and
follow through. "The papers are constantly talking in general terms about
corruption in Armenia. But they don’t speak with specific forms of evidence.
The problem is that when you start introducing certain forms of evidence,
the state prosecutor’s office is obliged to act on it." And so far, it has
been unwilling to do so.

A very dynamic question and answer session followed. Baghdasaryan expressed
enormous disappointment with the recent, large-scale investment of the
Armenian-American Gerard Cafesjian in Armenia’s media sector, decrying how
the extremely banal nature of his programming without any role for
monitoring Armenia’s centers of power was only reinforcing the decaying
influence of the press and the growing apathy of the Armenian public.
Answering a question by the Armenian Mirror-Spectator, Baghdasaryan said,
"No one has done more damage to the media [in Armenia] than Gerard
Cafesjian. You have to see his broadcasts to understand [what I am talking
about]."

Baghdasaryan also talked, with examples, about the importance of Diaspora
pressure in the fight against corruption. Following up on this comment,
Mouradian noted that Diasporan Armenians are actively involved in e-mail
campaigns to obtain genocide recognition or to try and influence Turkey to
democratize, respect human rights and the rights of minorities, etc., but
they rarely engaged in similar actions to democratize and fight corruption
in Armenia. He stressed the need for a coordinated effort to assist Armenia
not only financially but in becoming more democratic at the same time.

Panel II
Environmental Politics and Energy Needs

A panel on the fragile state of Armenia’s environmental conditions and
energy needs, titled "Environmental Politics in Armenia" and moderated by
Jeff Masarjian, featured president of Armenian Forests NGO Jeffrey
Tufenkian, nuclear power industry expert Robert Kalantari, and founding
director of Armenian Environmental Network Ursula Kazarian.

Jeffrey Tufenkian, president of the Armenian Forests NGO, spoke about the
environmental zero-hour that Armenia is in right now.

"It feels kind of like we have our finger in the dyke. There are huge
problems coming from every corner of the environmental front in Armenia," he
said.

Describing the republic’s lack of facilities, he said, "Besides
deforestation and desertification we have solid waste issues. There’s not
one proper solid waste disposal facility in the whole country. Trash is
being burned openly. Sewage waste, and to some degree toxic waste from
industry, is going untreated into rivers and lakes. Again, there’s not one
proper waste sewage treatment facility in the country."

Tufenkian explained that these problems were no longer side effects of an
energy crisis but the overt results of rampant corruption and slight of
policy. "The current problem is based much more on a few wealthy oligarchs
and other powerful people who are taking in trucks into the forest and
taking out truckloads of trees. They’re hiring local people, but it’s a much
more systematic illegal business operation."

"That’s not to say they don’t have permits," he continued. "They have
permits for sanitary cutting, getting the dead trees out of the forest. But
they’re taking that one permit for getting dead trees out of the forest and
using it for these healthy valuable trees in multiple places."

If you project at the current rates of destruction, in a few short years
Armenia could be almost forestless, he said. "We see a lot of cutting and no
new growth."
Speaking about other qualities of life that were at stake in this tipping of
the balance, he explained, "Deforestation is not just losing trees. This is
home for precious biodiversity. Over half of the six thousand different
plants and animals of the Caucasus region are in Armenia. .We lose the
forest, we lose habitat."

"We’re moving to Armenia becoming a desert. Over 80 percent of land surveyed
is under desertification. Myself, I’ve seen scorpions and snakes in Yerevan.
It’s literally a process you can see happening."

Tufenkian praised the past victories of environmental NGOs but reasserted
the need both for more environmental activism and stronger anti-corruption
measures to combat a political leadership that has no accountability to the
public and the ravages of those who seek to profit off the land.

He ended by saying of the upcoming May 12 elections, "One of the biggest
reasons for someone to vote is so that somebody doesn’t steal their vote.
There’s a huge problem with that kind of corruption."

Robert Kalantari, an electrical engineer with 25 years experience in the
nuclear industry, spoke about alternative energy solutions for Armenia with
a succinct assessment of the current situation.

"Reliable electric power, as we all know, is vital to national security," he
said. "You need electric power to be a country. Metzamor [Armenia’s sole
nuclear power plant] supplies 40 percent of Armenia’s power needs."

He outlined the use of thermal energy produced from fossil fuels, which has
a very negative environmental impact. "Burning oil has to be trucked in.
That gets very expensive. You need lots of oil, thousands of gallons an
hour."

Given Armenia’s politics and budget, he said, this option was the least
reliable, despite the recent pipelines in place from Russia and Iran. "When
you pipe, you’re at the mercy of foreign governments. Right now we have one
friendly government, Iran."
He praised the low output/low risk but also high-cost option of wind power.
"Armenia has the potential for wind farms. . [It] has actually completed the
first wind farm in the Caucasus. It is in its early stages and it’s costly."

Regarding solar power, he said that large amounts of sunlight, which are not
always available in Armenia, are needed, and that solar panel production is
toxic to workers, although it’s currently used primarily in Korea.

Geothermal energy is another option, Kalantari said. "Armenia should have
some potential for geothermal. But we have to do further research on where
to put these plants. .Funding has been provided, believe it or not, for the
construction of a 150-megawatt geothermal plant in the Sunik Marz.
Supposedly it will be completed by 2009."

He appeared to be most in favor of maintaining or increasing Armenia’s use
of nuclear power, due to its higher output and lower long-term cost ratio.
He weighed the consequences of nuclear energy, beginning with the bad news.
"Armenia is right now storing all their waste on site. Russia is not taking
it right now. That’s a concern."
Assuaging possible concerns about the presently used Metzamor plant, he
said, "It is not a Chernobyl-style reactor, and I want to emphasize that.
The Armenian reactor is not an RBMK, the one that exploded. It’s scheduled
to be closed in 2016, that’s the end of a 30-year life."

Kalantari defended the use of Metzamor as logical power source for the
moment. "If you shut down Metzamor, it’s going to be a major blow to the
country’s resistance [to the energy crisis]. . Metzamor must continue to
operate until there’s an alternative, and we hope that alternative is in the
near future. 2016 is around the corner."

Kalantari ended his remarks with a stress on the use of all options. But he
reiterated that decisions must be made on future polices. "Armenia needs to
include all viable options for safe and reliable power. But you can’t build
these plants overnight. Every option has pros and cons to be discussed. Cost
would be a major issue, same with construction time."

The final panelist to discuss environmental issues, specifically the role of
activism, was Ursula Kazarian, director of the Armenian Environmental
Network NGO.

She initiated her remarks by universalizing the issue of Armenia and the
environment. "Armenia is not specific in environmental problems," she said.
"We can learn so much from other countries that have had similar issues and
have done many things to improve their situation. And we do have a unique
resource at our disposal in having the Diaspora. Most countries that have
these problems don’t have such an active Diaspora, the human capital to make
things better."

She said the sectors in Armenia that need the most emphasis and support are
public health, transparency and economic development. "The truth is, the
environment is extremely and intricately connected to our everyday lives."

Kazarian added, "When you read in a newspaper, for instance, that in Yerevan
there is a large rainstorm and the next day a hundred people go to the
hospital, that’s connected. Why? Because the pipes broke and the water was
contaminated. People drank the water and got sick."

Kazarian also praised the great potential for environmental activism in
Armenia, provided ordinary people are given real information on how crucial
the issues are to their well-being. She said, "Once they know that their
water is contaminated, they get active. They don’t want to be sick."

She concluded by suggesting low impact farming techniques and training
initiatives that could be implemented in Armenia given enough grassroots and
government support. "A lot of times we talk about economic development
versus the environment. That doesn’t have to be the case."

During the question and answer session, Edik Baghdasaryan noted that the
environmental NGOs do not lobby political parties in Armenia, which is why
none of the parties give any priority to environmental issues in their
platform. The panelists acknowledged that fact.

Many questions also concerned Armenia’s energy needs and the situation with
the Medzamor plant.

Panel III
Asymmetry of Power, Recognition Politics and Coalition Building

During the final plenary session, moderated by Dikran Kaligian, professors
Peter Balakian of Colgate University, Halil Berktay of Sabanci University in
Turkey and Henry Theriault of Worcester State College explored the
controversy of how Armenians and Turks can honestly deal with the legacy of
the Armenian Genocide and Turkey’s ongoing, violent campaign to deny it.

In tribute to Hrant Dink, a clip based on a poem titled "Letter to Hrant,"
written by Khatchig Mouradian, was shown.

Henry Theriault, director of the Center for Human Rights at Worcester State
College, spoke first about the under-discussed dynamics of Armenian-Turkish
relations.
Professor Theriault opened by indicating that reconciliation cannot be the
goal of Armeno-Turkish dialogue, as this presupposes a relationship that was
once horizontal and equitable, whereas Turks up to the present have
preserved a dominating one. Theriault also warned of allowing recognition
of the Armenian Genocide to become primarily a means for reforming
contemporary Turkish society. While that aim is important, he noted that it
cannot supplant the more profound need for restitution and reparation for
the victim group.

"There’s nothing that can ever make us, in my opinion, feel OK about the
Armenian Genocide," he said. "We can deal with it better, but it’s a part of
history that we have to accept. That’s true from the Armenian and the
Turkish perceptive."

He continued, "It doesn’t mean they [Turks] can’t move forward, and it doesn’t
mean there can’t be very positive social changes that make sure that it can’t
happen again and that they begin to repair the damage to the relationship
with Armenians, but it’s still going to be difficult. And I think that is as
it should be. That’s part of what keeps us aware of how horrible genocide
is. You can’t ever really get over it. There is no way to say I’m sorry,
there is no way to resolve it."

Theriault compared the assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
Dink to that of American civil rights movement leaders. "We have to
understand that he was not standing up to stand above Turkish society. He
was standing up to be equal. To be treated as an equal human being, with the
right to say what he wanted to say…"

Professor Theriault’s presentation focused on ways in which failure to
recognize the power imbalance in the Turkish and Armenian relationship has
undercut dialogue efforts while supporting the maintenance of a
Turkish-over-Armenian dominance relation itself. Armeno-Turkish dialogue
efforts over the past decade have taken various forms, from informal e-mail
discussions to academic conferences. Yet, all have shared the same
structural assumption: Armenian and Turkish participants, taken as
representatives of their respective communities, are treated as equivalent
parties in a balanced structure. Theriault stated that this assumption
ignores the basic nature of the Armenian-Turkish relationship, which has
been and remains a dominance relationship. He argued that meaningful
positive change in Armeno-Turkish relations can occur only if the dominance
issue takes a central focus.

"Armenians and Turks today exist in a dominance relationship," he continued.
He traced its roots to the long-held Ottoman millet system that placed
Armenians as second-class citizens in the Ottoman Empire. "This gave way to
a period of hyper-domination in the form of the Armenian Genocide, in which
it wasn’t just control and power that were the issue, it was such a total
domination of Armenians that it became eliminating Armenians from the land."

The post-Genocide era, he said, has served to consolidate the
hyper-domination hierarchy evidenced during the Genocide. "The Genocide has
never been dealt with, which is maybe what the movement towards dialogue is
about, to deal with how the Genocide transformed the Armenian-Turkish
relationship."

He noted that Turkey and Turks must stay conscious of their prejudicial
attitudes of superiority over Armenians. "In genocides, when the killing
ends, the dominance relationship does not end. .Many progressive Turks, even
though they want a productive relationship with Armenians, still maintain a
sense of superiority over Armenians."

Theriault said that both camps must stay vigilant to not only foster good
relations in the future but be aware of the relationship dynamics. "When the
Armenian Genocide just becomes an issue that’s really about Turkish society
[and its democratization] and not about the victims or the victim community,
Armenians become instruments in another process. That’s a very dangerous
path to go down."

Peter Balakian, professor of humanities at Colgate University and author of
The Burning Tigris, spoke next.

Balakian noted how much prevalence the Genocide has enjoyed in mainstream
politics and media after so many years of being marginalized. "And yet, as a
kind of leaping process has happened, there’s also been a violent backlash
from forces inside Turkey. This has created a quandary, a conflict, and a
problem to be solved or at least dealt with."
Commenting on the murder of Hrant Dink, he said, "He was taking democratic
society seriously, and for this he was murdered. He inhabited a delicate
civic space in Turkey’s complex world."

He then explained how power dynamics still motivate all aspects of the
Genocide. "In the ongoing dialogue between Turks and Armenians, it seems
important for Turks to acknowledge the issue of power, and how asymmetrical
it was in 1915 and continues to be between our two cultures."

"Armenians often felt, and do feel, trapped in a syndrome of reactiveness,
because of the inherent asymmetry of power," he continued. "Not to
acknowledge this is to de-contextualize the history. I must say, I hope not
to spend the rest of my life reacting to the mess of Turkish denial. I would
even love to play golf someday."

Regarding the Turkish government’s efforts to prevent passage of the
Genocide resolution in the U.S., he said, "Congressmen have told me that in
their several decades on Capitol Hill, they have never seen a foreign
country come to our halls, our government to intervene or try to intervene
on any issue as Turkey is doing now."

He spoke about both communities moving, how "Armenians must always be
seeking ways to heal and move forward and not get stuck in the rut of their
rage or rigidity." And, he said, "Armenians need to listen to Turks talk of
their issues, their anxieties, their traumas and their different
worldviews."

Balakian ended on a note of universal and progressive solidarity among young
Armenians and Turks, saying, "Armenians both in the Republic and in the
Diaspora must divest themselves of stereotypes and essentialist notions
about Turks and open themselves to the complexity of Turkish society. Only
last week, more than a hundred students at Bogazici University in Istanbul
staged a protest with the slogan ‘Against the Darkness’ and chanted Hrant
Dink’s name and their solidarity with Armenians. These are forces that
Armenians want to join with, if they can, and work with."

Following the Balakian’s remarks, Halil Berktay, professor of history at
Sabanci University in Istanbul and visiting scholar at Harvard University,
spoke about his own experiences and perspectives on Armeno-Turkish
relations.

He laid the groundwork for his analysis by giving his personal and
ideological background. "I feel that since this is a panel and symposium
called Armenians and the Left, it is part of my personal history that I seem
to have belonged to the Left-or just a Turkish Left, but probably a more
international kind of Left-from time immemorial," he said. "My family
history, from a very early age onwards, was one of persecution and
suppression. I was four years old when my father was taken away in the
Turkish fallout of the McCarthy era in the United States and spent some of
my childhood years in prison."

Berktay said that during the 1960s and 70s, beginning with his involvement
in Yale University’s chapter of Students for a Democratic Society, he
quickly became entranced in the anti-war movement, and following his return
to Turkey in 1969, the militant Turkish Left movement.

Since then, his worldviews have become more moderate and analytical. "I have
still retained certain notions of strategy and tactics for building
alliances in pursuit of admittedly peaceful and democratic goals."

"By talking to each other, talking about what our relative strengths and
weaknesses might be," he continued, "we can perhaps evolve a more
comprehensive and sophisticated roadmap for removing that stone [the Turkish
state’s denial]. . From this, we stand to gain a genuine emotional, mental
recognition and therefore closure for Armenians all over the world. For
Turks, this can mean a comprehensive and genuine democratization of Turkish
society."

Berktay attested that much of what he believes is contradictory to the
opinions of Henry Theriault, and that as a Turkish historian who
acknowledges the Genocide he would talk little about that historical reality
and more about the "civil society politics" of recognition and obtaining
recognition.

To make his views on the Genocide clear, Berktay spoke in great detail,
saying, "If you want to pose the question, ‘Does it fit the existing, the
available definitions of genocide?’ [my answer would be] of course it fits,
and of course it is genocide. . Leave aside the massacres that then ensued,
etc. Just by the deportation law and orders, because no discrimination was
made as to whether these Armenians were Dashnaktsutiun supporters, whether
they were involved in Hnchak activity or this or that, and no evidence was
so defined or given, and because they were targeted as an entire
ethno-confessional group, simply as Armenians, in terms of the 1948
Convention-even if there had been no deaths-this is tantamount to destroying
the social, cultural mold social existence of an entire social group, or
religion, or minority, or whatever you choose to call them."
He talked about the formation of the Special Organization to implement the
policies of genocide concocted by Talaat, Enver and Djemal Pasha, noting,
"It is fairly clear that [the Genocide] happened as a result of two
different sets of orders from Istanbul," one for deportations, another for
killings.

As a thorough historian he admitted, "Do we have direct proof of these
secret orders? No, we do not. That is to say, we do not have a single
telegram or two that we can point to as actually ordering state
functionaries or operatives to slaughter this or that group of Armenians.
But we do have an enormous amount of indirect evidence, of circumstantial
evidence, so that in fact whether things that surface from illegality or
extra legality, it is fairly clear what happened. We have something very
close to a smoking gun, in terms of present American political idioms." He
deemed the massacres of 100,000 to 150,000 Mamara region Greeks by the Turks
from 1913-14 as a "dress rehearsal" for the Armenian Genocide.

Berktay then chronicled the story of Turkish denialism and revisionist
history regarding the Genocide. "One interesting aspect of late 20th, early
21st century Turkish nationalist denial is that its spokesmen or proponents
have, it seems, stopped to read or forgotten about all the Turkish memoirs
and media journalism accounts that were published in the 1920s and 1930s. In
the 1930s, denialism did not exist. There was no question in Turkish society
of the late 1920s and 1930s that Ottoman Armenians had by and large been
uprooted, exterminated or annihilated. There were basically two opinions:
Was this good or was this bad? But there was no question of this having
happened. These sources are easily available today. They are not archival
documents we’re talking about."

Bringing home how Turkish society and denialism became so prevalent today in
Turkey, Berktay recounted, ".With the national education apparatus and the
media basically in the hands of the nation state, you can see how completely
amnesia can develop over a generation or generation and a half. . On top of
this, it was from the late 1960s and 1970s that a much more comprehensive
denialist discourse was constructed and began to be systematically
propagated. At least in some part related to the-at that time-assassination
attempts on Turkish diplomats."

Berktay described the status quo of the Turkish state, stating, "This
denialist discourse became more and more established, absolute, proceeding
way beyond its tactical objectives. After a point, I would like to suggest,
the Turkish political class started comprehensively believing it. The more
it was repeated the more it became a kind of national line with a political
impossibility from breaking away from it."

He continued, "Turkey’s biggest weakness is the enormous gap that has
developed between domestic knowledge and world knowledge, which has enabled
the establishment to constantly maintain that these are all baseless
fabrications and slander being imposed on us from the outside. We have to
keep struggling to inform and educate Turkish society. I don’t mean
convincing every one of 80 million Turks that it was genocide, but at least
we have to be able to democratize and normalize the conversation inside
Turkish society."

Berktay asserted that there were larger numbers of liberal and like-minded
or dissent-minded Turks who need to be approached, saying, "Turkish society
is big and therefore it is heterogeneous. It is enormously more
heterogeneous than what most Armenians or Greeks realize from the outside.
This is not just in terms of region differences but in terms of enormous
educational and political differences."

Lastly, he praised the Armenian Diaspora for producing copious amounts of
literature and memoirs about the Genocide and advocated their continuance.
But he warned, "Don’t take short cuts and reduce everything to the word
genocide so that it becomes a buzz word and cliché that summarizes all the
previous evidence but also substitutes for it so that it becomes too much of
a cryptic short-hand to the uninitiated."

(Sevag Arzoumanian and Doug Geogerian contributed to this report.)

***
(c) 2007 Armenian Weekly On-Line. All Rights Reserved.

www.hetq.am

Memorial to victims of the May 3 air crash to be raised in Yerevan

Memorial to the victims of the May 3 air crash to be raised in Yerevan

ArmRadio.am
16.04.2007 15:40

A monument dedicated to the memory of the victims of the Yerevan-Sochi
plane that crashed on May 3, 2006 will be raised in Nor Nork 5th
block. Chief Architect of Yerevan Samvel Danielyan told `Noyyan Tapan’
that the project of the monument has already been presented to RA
Government. Other detail about the monument will be reported after the
project is confirmed.

In Samvel Danielyan’s words, after the confirmation by the
Government and correspondent financing the construction of the
monument will start.

Was Dagestan’s Amnesty a Fiction?

A1+

Was Dagestan’s Amnesty a Fiction?
[01:26 pm] 14 April, 2007

Fighting between police and militants continues, despite
four-month-long amnesty.

Three months after an amnesty for armed militants expired in the North
Caucasus, experts are questioning whether the measure achieved
anything in the region’s largest republic, Dagestan, as violence
continues between local security forces and underground groups.

Reports about the killing of extremists are part of the daily diet of
news in Dagestan. In the last month, reports have been aired about the
killing of three extremist leaders, who apparently were planning to
carry out major terror operations.

While the level of political violence has declined recently in
neighbouring Chechnya, it has remained at around the same level in
Dagestan.

A Dagestani police official told IWPR that Khasavyurt region on the
border with Chechnya was an especially dangerous area. `We often find
arms caches and bases of fighters,’ he said.

Another source, who works for the FSB counter-intelligence service,
told IWPR, `We’ve established that the Shariat terrorist group which
the famous Dagestani fighter Makhach Rasulov used to belong to was
well financed from abroad. And certainly they weren’t doing charity
work. I’m struck that certain people come out in defence of these
people and suggest that they suffered for their religious
convictions.’

On September 21 last year, the lower house of the Russian federal
parliament, the State Duma, declared a new amnesty for the North
Caucasus, which covered crimes committed both by `illegal armed
formations’ and by federal soldiers. Serious offences such as
terrorism, banditry and murder were not covered by the amnesty.

`Basically it covers a category of people who have not committed
particularly grave crimes with the aim of returning them to civilian
life,’ Dagestan’s interior minister Adilgerei Magomedtagirov told a
press conference. `But we should note that not everyone understands
this and some treat the amnesty as a manifestation that a weak state
is forgiving everyone and return to their criminal activities.’

Official data says that across the entire region 546 people took up
the amnesty, which expired in January, of whom 470 were in Chechnya
and just 41 in Dagestan. In Dagestan, half of those who surrendered
were in the Khasavyurt region.

`On the whole, these people were from the circle of the fighters; they
sought out apartments for them; transported things,’ said Angela
Martirosova, head of the interior ministry press office. `Their
average age was between 20 and 45.’

In contrast to Chechnya, the amnesty in Dagestan was not hailed as a
big triumph. Local analysts have different explanations for why larger
numbers did not give themselves up.

`This amnesty is a measure, worked out exclusively in the interests of
[Chechen president] Ramzan Kadyrov,’ said human rights activist Geidar
Jemal. `It’s obvious that it’s changed nothing in the North
Caucasus. As for Dagestan, the fight between the interior ministry and
society has only intensified.’

Arslanali Murtazaliev, deputy head of Khasavyurt administration, says
that in his experience few people took up the amnesty because they did
not trust the authorities.

`No one wants to give firm guarantees to those who are ready to
return,’ he said. `And people simply don’t believe what some leaders
of law-enforcement agencies tell them.’

Makhachkala resident Magomed Akhmadov speculated, `Evidently
information about the amnesty did not reach all the fighters. After
all, fighters don’t walk the streets and read the newspapers.’

`Amnesties announced by the authorities are not capable of returning
fighters to peaceful life,’ said lawyer Karim Akhmednabiev. `I think
the only people who surrendered were people who had already given up
fighting and who had legalised themselves in towns and villages.’

Another Dagestani expert was more outspoken, calling the amnesty a
`fiction’.

Akhmednabi Akhmednabiev, investigations editor for Novoe Delo
newspaper, pointed out that the amnesty was not designed for people
who had blood on their hands. `Then who is it for?’ he asked. `For a
couple of dozen relatives of fighters, their wives or those who worked
as cooks or drove them to their safe-houses? Do these people pose a
real threat to Dagestan?’

`Recently several members of the jamaat [Islamic militant group] from
the village of Gimri appealed to the leadership of the republic,
asking the president to guarantee that if fighters from this village
repented and surrendered, they would not be persecuted. The president
rejected the offer.’

There have been a number of cases in the last couple of years where
Dagestanis have accused the law- enforcement agencies of falsifying
charges of militancy or terrorism against them.

They include the human rights campaigner Osman Boliev and Abas
Kebedov, brother of alleged terrorist Bagauddin Magomedov.

Recently, the federal Supreme Court in Moscow cleared a Dagestani,
Khanali Umakhanov, who had been wrongly convicted of taking part in an
act of terrorism in May 2002 in the town of Kaspiisk.

Dagestani president Mukhu Aliev, who took office last year with a
programme of reform, has made a sober assessment of the problems
facing the republic.

`Terrorism in the North Caucasus is with us for the long term,’ said
Aliev. `That is so particularly because there is high unemployment in
the region. Amnestied fighters will swell the ranks of the unemployed
because, in contrast to Chechnya, there are no presidential regiments
and security services in Dagestan designed for this part of the
population.’

Officials and experts in Dagestan even differ about the most
elementary information – how many militant fighters there are in the
republic. Estimates range of 20-30 to a thousand.

More precise is the number killed and detained. Last year, this was 60
and 145 respectively and for the first three months of this year it
was 13 and 28.

This shows that the Islamist underground is still relatively powerful
in Dagestan. The authorities hope that the amnesty has at least given
them greater knowledge about how to tackle it.

By Diana Alieva in Makhachkala

Diana Alieva is a correspondent for Svobodnaya Respublika newspaper in
Dagestan. She is a member of IWPR’s Cross-Caucasus Journalism Network
project. Institute for War and Peace Reporting’s Caucasus Reporting
Service

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress