Bringing legends to life

Burbank Leader, CA
April 7 2007

Bringing legends to life

Fourteen artists join in exhibition fundraiser to help two animators
create a trailer for film idea.

By Joyce Rudolph

Two local filmmakers have a vision for an animated film loosely based
on Armenian legends, but just making a trailer to sell it to
prospective investors will be a financial stretch for them.

So two local artists are helping them raise money.

Hayasa Pictures’ director Hayk Manukyan, of Burbank, and Glendale
producer Henri Hovhanessyan want to produce "David of Sassoon." The
filmmakers have received donations of about $10,000 to begin
production on the trailer, but need $40,000 more to complete it, they
said.

Glendale artists Arpine Shakhbandaryan and Addis Zaryan, who are fans
of Manukyan’s, are organizing the art exhibition on Thursday at the
Kalaydjian Hall at the Western Diocese in Burbank.

"We have collected 14 artists," she said. "Each will have one to
three works in the show on sale. They will donate a portion of
proceeds to Hayasa Pictures to help the company create a trailer for
the ‘David of Sassoon’ production."

The story is about a child of royalty who becomes separated from his
family and tries to find his way back, Hovhanessyan said.

There is no political message, Manukyan added.

"It’s a story about a man who had to figure out who he was and how he
could save his country from extinction," Manukyan said.

"The sub-story is about introducing the Armenian culture and history
into film. That has never been done before through the eyes of a
legend," Hovhanessyan said. "It’s not based on a specific time or
specific person. He’s a mythical character.

"And throughout the movie, the style is not going to be
straight-forward characters. We are going to push the envelope. We’ll
have ogres and not-so-real characters, so it doesn’t portray someone
specifically."

The filmmakers are thrilled that the artists are helping them realize
their dream.

"I’m grateful to them," Hovhanessyan said. "They have done extremely
great work getting these artists together in such a short time. They
have stepped up and put us on the map in the Armenian community in
Glendale and Burbank."

Shakhbandaryan first saw samples of Manukyan’s work on his website,
she said.

"I thought it was ingenious," she said. "It is something never done
before in our culture. It is extremely professional and
high-caliber."

Zaryan, who is helping put on the show, is equally impressed with
Manukyan’s work.

"What Hayk is doing is very professional and high-caliber," he said.

"I’ve never seen such a good quality when it comes down to Armenian
animated story telling. By supporting him, I encourage everyone to
get involved and support his epic project."

Zaryan has himself worked in animation.

"I mainly did background, location or backdrops for the characters,"
he said.

His animation work will be on display Thursday at the show, as will
Shakhbandaryan’s, whose specialty is painting watercolors embellished
with 24-karat gold leaf.

"It’s very labor intensive," she said.

"It’s very thin material. You can’t touch it because the oils in your
hand ruin it."

Shakhbandaryan is happily surprised with the support she has received
for the exhibition, she said.

"At the beginning, it was just Addis and me," she said.

"And there was this incredible snowball effect. We started to tell
people about it and many people wanted to help."

Photo: Arpine Shakhbandaryan has been painting illuminated
manuscripts at the family dining table for the last eight years. Her
work will be auctioned with 13 other Armenian artists this week at
the Western Diocese.

07/04/07/entertainment/blr-artist07.txt

http://www.burbankleader.com/articles/20

Turkey Punishes France for Recognizing Armenian Massacre

NaharNet, Lebanon
April 7 2007

Turkey Punishes France for Recognizing Armenian Massacre

Turkey, reacting to a French bill on the World War I massacre of
Armenians, has suspended talks with Gaz de France (GDF) on the French
firm’s possible participation in a major pipeline project, the
Anatolia news agency reported Thursday.
Turkey’s energy ministry and the state-owned oil and gas company
BOTAS, which is part of the Nabucco consortium building the pipeline,
refused to comment on the report.

The five-company consortium plans to build a 3,300-kilometre
(2,000-mile) pipeline that will carry natural gas from the Middle
East and Central Asia to the European Union via Turkey and the
Balkans, bypassing Russia.

The other partners in the venture are Austria’s oil and gas group
OMV, Hungary’s MOL, Bulgaria’s Bulgargaz and Romania’s Transgaz.

The consortium had been in contact with GDF for some time as part of
its efforts to find a sixth partner in the six-billion-dollar
(4.5-billion-euro) project, which is expected to become operational
in 2012.

The four other partners approved GDF’s participation, but Turkey has
opposed it because of a French draft law that considers denying the
genocide committed by Ottoman Turks against Armenians in World War I
a legal offence.
The bill was adopted by the National Assembly in Paris in October but
must still go before the Senate, then back to the lower house before
becoming law.

Turkey had threatened unspecified measures against the bill, which it
denounced as a "heavy blow" to bilateral ties.

In November, the Turkish army froze military ties with France.

Armenians claim up to 1.5 million of their kin perished in systematic
deportations and killings between 1915 and 1917 under the Ottoman
Empire, modern Turkey’s predecessor.

Turkey categorically denies claims of genocide and says thousands of
Turks and Armenians were killed in civil strife when Armenians took
up arms for independence in eastern Anatolia and sided with Russian
troops invading the crumbling empire.

Several countries have recognized the killings as
genocide.(AFP-Naharnet)

Favorable conditions for young scientists needed in Armenia

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
April 6 2007

FAVORABLE CONDITIONS FOR YOUNG SCIENTISTS NEEDED IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, April 6. /ARKA/. Favorable conditions for involving young
people in science should be created in Armenia, President of the
Armenian National Academy of Sciences (ANAS) Radik Martirosyan stated
at the ANAS annual meeting.
"Also, the Government must elaborate a comprehensive program to
ensure change of generations," he said.
According to Martirosyan, the number of ANAS staff members has
recently considerably decreased, and one of the reasons is a rather
slow process of staffing. "Young people do not want to go to
science," he said.
The ANAS President believes that the managers of scientific
institutions are to a great extent guilty of this as well. They do
not want to take on young specialists.
"On the other hand, a more negative phenomenon is taking place as
well – poor interest in scientific work and a poor reputation of
research workers," he said.
In this context, Martirosyan pointed out that the decrease in the
number of workers of science and in the volume of scientific research
has decreased. As a result, various scientific institutions have free
premises.
"The Government could allow the sale of premises and forma Fund of
Science, which would direct funds to the creation of necessary
conditions for scientific structures," Martirosyan said. This can be
observed in research institutes of Yerevan, Abovyan and Ashtarak.
By January 1, 2007, a total of 3,731 staff members had been
registered at ANAS, with 2,171 of them being research workers against
8,633 and 3,040 respectively in 1991. This testifies that the number
of people involved in Armenia’s scientific sector has decrease over
two times since 1991. P.T. -0–

Armenia population income growth rate higher than GDP growth rate

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
April 6 2007

ARMENIAN POPULATION INCOME GROWTH RATE HIGHER THAN GDP GROWTH RATE

YEREVAN, April 6. /ARKA/. Armenia’s population income growth rate is
higher than the GDP growth rate, Armenian Deputy Minister of Trade
and Economic Development Tigran Davtian reported. In fact, GDP growth
has had effect on the population’s incomes, he said. According to
him, economy gains momentum, and the economic development tells upon
the population. "It’s another thing that we want it to tell upon all
the layers of the society," Davtian said.
He pointed out that today’s average salary in Armenia is almost
equivalent to $200 (AMD 68,000), with GDP per capita in USD
equivalent exceeding $2,000 ($500 ten years ago).
"We want to have European standards of life, but we should take into
account also objective factors – the average salary has never reached
this level in Armenia before," Davtian said.
According to him, also the car imports point to the improvement of
living standards.
According to Armenia’s National Statistical Service, the population’s
money income totaled AMD 1,722,253.7 mln in 2006 – a 19.8% increase
against 2005. The population’s money expenditures amounted to AMD
1,650,686.8mln – a 18.9% increase. A 13.4% economic growth was
recorded in Armenia in the period. N.V. -0–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Pipeline talks with France on track, says Turkey

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 7 2007

Pipeline talks with France on track, says Turkey

There was no official suspension decision made by Turkey regarding
talks with Gaz de France on the French firm’s possible participation
in a major gas pipeline, diplomatic sources at the Foreign Ministry
said Friday.

The remarks came in response to a media report on Thursday saying the
state-owned Turkish Petroleum Pipeline Corporation (BOTAª) had
suspended talks with Gaz de France in reaction action to a French
bill on the mass killings of Armenians during Ottoman rule.

`There is no suspension decision yet. Besides, this is a commercial
issue, but it is not a political one and companies involved in the
process will make the final decision on the basis of financial
evaluations,’ the same diplomatic sources, speaking on condition of
anonymity, told Today’s Zaman.

The four other countries involved in the project, Bulgaria, Romania
and Hungary, have already approved their partnership with Gaz de
France in the project, which will transmit Caspian and Iranian gas to
Western Europe, bypassing Russia. The other partners reportedly
approved Gaz de France’s participation, but BOTAª opposed it because
of the French draft law on the killings of Anatolian Armenians.

The French National Assembly infuriated Turkey last October by
backing a bill making it a crime to deny that Armenians were victims
of `genocide’ at the hands of the Ottoman Empire, though it is
unlikely to become a law due to opposition from the Senate and
President Jacques Chirac.

Ankara said the legislation would strike a heavy blow to
Turkish-French ties and also accused France, one of the EU’s founding
countries known for championing liberties, of staining freedom of
expression with the bill.

Slamming the proposed legislation, the Turkish Parliament then
released a joint declaration, signed by all the parties with
parliamentary representation, and said that the bill was motivated by
calculations of domestic political gain. They said the bill would
also harm prospects for the normalization of relations between Turkey
and Armenia. Turkey also illustrated how seriously it takes the issue
when it said it would suspend military operations with France after
the vote.

07.04.2007

Emine Kart Ankara

Feuding monks in bad odour over sewage leak at crucifixion site

The Daily Telegraph (LONDON)
April 7, 2007 Saturday

Feuding monks in bad odour over sewage leak at crucifixion site

by Tim Butcher in Jerusalem Old City

PILGRIMS visiting the site of Christ’s crucifixion and resurrection
in Jerusalem this Easter may experience an atmosphere rich in smells
other than incense after an inter-denominational row over the Church
of the Holy Sepulchre’s latrines.

A blockage to the lavatory block’s solitary outflow pipe caused
sewage to leak just yards from Golgotha, the rocky outcrop where
Jesus is believed to have been crucified.

With Jerusalem’s summer heat fast approaching, there are fears of a
major health risk. But in spite of the site’s status as the most
sacred shrine in Christianity, tension between the denominations who
share custodianship of the church precincts has prevented repair work
being carried out.

"It’s disgusting in every meaning of the word,” said Fr Jerome
Murphy-O’Connor, a renowned Biblical scholar and long-time critic of
the denominational rivalry.

"It is symptomatic of the silliness and pettiness of what happens in
the church and gives it such a palpably unchristian atmosphere.”

The 10 lavatories were built in the first half of the 19th century to
service the needs of the 30 Greek Orthodox, Armenian and Franciscan
monks who live all year round inside the Holy Sepulchre. They are now
also used by visitors.

The outflow pipe has slowly become overwhelmed, leading to calls for
a major restoration of the facilities with perhaps a new pumping
system.

Money is not the problem, with various pilgrim groups saying they
would be willing to pay for the work.

It is the Armenians who are currently withholding their agreement
because of a row with the Greek Orthodox over the protocols of the
ceremony of the Miracle of the Holy Fire.

Size, beauty and a sense of history why I call capital home

The Scotsman, UK
April 7, 2007, Saturday
1 Edition

Size, beauty and a sense of history are reasons why I call capital
home I have a giddy appreciation of Edinburgh and all it has to offer

by Lee Randall

PEOPLE keep asking: "Now that you’re getting divorced, are you
planning to go home?" I always pause, mildly confused, then joke that
with my lousy health I can’t be parted from the NHS. OK, maybe it’s
not such a joke. I am still paying off the New York hospital that
saved my uninsured self with an emergency appendectomy in 1995 (the
other dollars 20k in doctors’ bills I settled by liquidating
retirement accounts). But the reason this persistent question baffles
is because, as far as I’m concerned, I am home.

I was 15 the first time I visited Edinburgh and even then – it’s one
of those curious, clinging memories – I felt this was a liveable
city. Yet it seemed inconceivable that such a change of address would
ever happen. When life surprised me by bringing me to Britain to live
after all, I settled in Glasgow and thought, well, that’s that. Don’t
get me wrong, Glasgow’s another great city. Maybe it’ll lure me back
one day. Maybe London will call, or my beloved Durham. But, right
now, there’s nowhere else I’d rather live – not even mad, magical New
York.

What makes somewhere a liveable city, as opposed to a holiday
paradise or the ideal dirty weekend destination? That’s a tough
question and maybe one that can only be answered personally, one
gal’s meat being another’s poison, and all. Why did a day trip to
Verona leave me with the same sense that a person could easily build
a life there, even though Venice is much more fun?

Partly, it’s a sense of scale. Edinburgh is navigable and accessible.
I’ve not explored it end to end yet, but I’ve covered a lot of
ground, much of it on foot. While Manhattan’s not tremendously large
either, people tend to stick to their neighbourhoods, much as they do
in London. One of the things I loved about living in Hoboken was that
it comprised only a square mile, so you could inhabit it entirely.
Plus, the gossip in me loves the slightly inbred, small-town quality
of such cities. In a good mood, I welcome the sight of the same old
faces at parties and business functions – familiarity that breeds
contentment. In a bad mood, I just stay home.

Then there’s Edinburgh’s breathtaking beauty. VisitScotland should
give me a commendation for the way I go on about it to anyone who’ll
listen. Every morning, crossing the Meadows, I gaze left across the
greensward and then right, taking in Salisbury Crags and Arthur’s
Seat, which also forms a dramatic backdrop to our offices, making it
a more looming constant in my life than the equally imposing castle.

And walking home the other night from the National Gallery, I was
struck for about the millionth time by the soft, opalescent quality
of the light. At 8:30pm, the sun was mostly down, but night had yet
to fall. It was the end of a glorious day that had seen the city’s
parks buzzing with life (I love parks that are properly used – that’s
what they’re there for!). Now, the Meadows was winding down, but
there were still bongo players clustered on the grass and some
joggers livening the place up. In the azure sky a single star (was it
Venus?) blazed with a diamond’s intensity. Bliss.

Edinburgh is also a city of sly sideways views. Down an alleyway
you’ll catch a sudden glimpse of history, an unexpected bow window, a
hidden garden. Walking to an interview in Polwarth I stood on the
canal bridge for ages, entranced by the presence of water, a disused
barge, an old boathouse. On Sunday I entered a building I’d presumed
to be a deserted outpost of Holyrood Palace and discovered Miss
Havisham’s restaurant – actually the Armenian Aghtamar Lake Van
Monastery in Exile, populated, for one night, with a marvellous group
of eccentric academics gathered for a plentiful meal and a spin round
the dance floor led by a man in a woolly hat. How does this place
exist? Thank goodness it does!

I haven’t even mentioned the festivals or the year-round cultural
feast on offer, the good shopping and dining, the views over the
Firth of Forth, or the psychedelic blast when you’re on the Mound
overlooking the blaze that is Winter Wonderland lit up at nighttime.
Nor have I described the absurdity of fuming in a slow Tesco queue,
only to feel my anger dissolve when the cashiers and customers
spontaneously broke into song. It was Yellow Submarine.

I suppose in spring a (not so) young woman’s fancy turns to thoughts
of love. In this transitional phase of my life, those twitterpations
are finding an outlet in this giddy appreciation of my home. And
that’s Edinburgh.

Russia’s Orthodox patriarch sends Easter greetings to pope

Agence France Presse — English
April 7, 2007 Saturday 11:09 AM GMT
Correction Appended

Russia’s Orthodox patriarch sends Easter greetings to pope

The head of Russia’s Orthodox Church, Alexy II, put aside
long-running differences with the Roman Catholic Church to send
Easter greetings to Pope Benedict XVI, in a letter quoted by the
Interfax news agency Saturday.

"I … wish you blessed peace, good health and the Risen Saviour’s
help in your lofty service" on the "ever-joyful holiday of Easter,"
the patriarch said.

Alexy also congratulated Armenia’s Catholicos Garegin II and
Archbishop of Canterbury, Rowan Williams, who also celebrate Easter
this Sunday.

The patriarch had been locked in a bitter row with the Vatican over
alleged Roman Catholic proselytism in Russia and so-called Vatican
"expansionism" in this predominantly Orthodox country.

Catholics, numbering around 500,000 in Russia, represent a tiny
minority of Russia’s 145 million-strong population, most of whom will
celebrate Orthodox Easter on Sunday.

Spanish police detain members of int’l ring trading in people

ITAR-TASS News Agency, Russia
April 7, 2007 Saturday 02:36 PM EST

Spanish police detain members of int’l ring trading in people

Police in the Spanish province of Catalonia have detained members of
an international criminal ring that traded in people.

The detention took place in the resort region of Costa Brava, police
officials said.

The grouping that engaged in trafficking East-European women for
sexual slavery in Spain included citizens of Albania, Russia, Armenia
and residents of Kosovo.

A spokesman for the Russian Consulate General in Barcelona told
Itar-Tass Saturday there had been no official notifications on the
issue from the police or local agencies of power, although Russian
diplomats managed to use personal connections and to find out that
three men from among the criminals had Russian passports.

“Also, there are Russians among the 40 released women whom the
criminals forced into prostitution,” he said.

U.S. criticizes Turkey for strategic partnership with Iran

PanARMENIAN.Net

U.S. criticizes Turkey for strategic partnership with Iran
07.04.2007 15:32 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The United States expressed its concern and
objection regarding Turkey’s plans to establish a strategic alliance
with Iran in the field of energy Turkish Daily News reported citing a
diplomatic source from U.S. Embassy in Ankara. ‘We’re watching the
situation with concern,’ said a U.S. diplomat who wished not to
mention his name.

Turkey and Iran have agreed to build a long-term cooperation in the
energy sector, namely drilling oil and natural gas and transferring
Iranian oil and gas to Europe. According to the newspaper, this new
step by is considered as vitally important by Turkey in order for it
to become a global player in the energy market.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress