"Black Irish" Wins Three at Method Fest

"Black Irish" Wins Three at Method Fest

Indiewire.com
April 6, 2007

Brad Gann’s "Black Irish" won best picture award at The Method Fest
Independent Film Festival, which closed Wednesday night, while the
audience prize for best pic went to "Destiny" by Vage Khacatryan. "Trade
Routes" director Jim Loftus won the best director prize as well as best
foreign film, while Australian film "Plum Role" by Zak Hilditch took the
fest’s award for "high quality in low budget filmmaking." Best actor
went to Michael Angarano for his role in "Black Irish," while "Tomorrow
is Today"’s Scout Taylor-Compton won the award for best actress. Best
supporting actress went to Dagmara Dominczyk, ("Mentor") and Tom Guiry,
("Black Irish") took best supporting actor. "Across the Hall" by Alan
Powell won best short and "Steel Toes" writer/co-director David Gow won
best screenplay. The 9th annual the Method Fest screened 26 feature
films and 46 shorts from U.S. and international filmmakers from March 29
– April 4.
[Brian Brooks]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Reporter – 4/7/2007 – front section

ARMENIAN REPORTER
PO Box 129
Paramus, New Jersey 07652
Tel: 1-201-226-1995
Fax: 1-201-226-1660
Web:
Email: [email protected]

April 7, 2007 — From the front section
All of the articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter
For photographs, visit

1. Serge Sargsian is Armenia’s new prime minister

2. Aghtamar reopening becomes a celebration of Turkey (News analysis
by Tatul Hakobyan in Van)
* The former seat of Armenian catholicoi is now a Turkish museum

3. Holy Cross survives, diplomacy dies (by Talin Suciyan in Istanbul)

4. From Washington, in brief (by Emil Sanamyan)
* Rep. Watson warns colleagues of Turkey’s Aghtamar ploy
* Rep. Hoekstra looking for intelligence in Azerbaijan
* State Dept. plays down Caucasus missile defense talk amid tensions with Iran
* Georgia’s NATO membership increasingly likely

5. Russia’s foreign minister, in Yerevan, is upbeat about Karabakh
peace deal (by Armen Hakobyan)
* Speaks in favor of stability in Armenia and the region

6. Russia to send a full contingent of OSCE observers

7. Armenia is second only to the United States in Grant Thornton
International Super Growth Index

8. Catholicos Karekin II announces the date for the next
chrism-blessing ceremony

9. Gyumri mayor wounded in drive-by shooting; 3 bodyguards dead

10. New trees for Republic Square

11. Commentary: Ziya Buniatov (by Ivan Arakelov)
* The contentious life, mysterious death, and toxic legacy of
Azerbaijan’s foremost historical revisionist

12. Commentary: Traffic jams are a new fact of life in Yerevan (Living
in Yerevan by Maria Titizian)

13. Letters
* Support for Armenian concerns? Or lip service? (Berge Jololian)
We can recognize the Genocide and work with Turkey (Rep. Michaal Capuano)
* Turkey won’t sever ties to United States (Ross Vartian)
* Turkey and its past (David Boyajian)

14. Editorial: Numbers count, too

********************************************* ******************************

1. Serge Sargsian is Armenia’s new prime minister

YEREVAN – President Robert Kocharian on April 4 appointed Defense
Minister Serge Sargsian, 52, as Armenia’s new prime minister, thus
filling the post that was left vacant with the death on March 25 of
Prime Minister Andranik Margarian. The president was constitutionally
required to appoint a prime minister by April 5, even though
parliamentary elections are only five weeks away.

"I have known him personally for a long time," Mr. Kocharian said.
"He is a hard-working, honest, and diligent individual. I am convinced
that he is in a position to lead the government in this responsible
time, especially as we have no one [else] with his level of
experience." Mr. Sargsian joined the government in 1993.

Mr. Sargsian was nominated for the post by the Republican Party of
Armenia, the leading member of the three-party governing coalition,
which also includes the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (the Dashnak
party) and the United Labor Party. The new prime minister joined the
Republican Party in mid-July 2006 and was elected as chair of the
party council on July 22. He had no party affiliation before then.

The prime minister will have to step down after the parliamentary
elections on May 12. He may be re-appointed if the Republican party
wins a majority of the National Assembly’s 131 seats, or if it is able
to form another majority coalition. Mr. Sargsian is a leading
contender for the presidency at the expiration of Mr. Kocharian’s term
in 2008.

A native of Nagorno-Karabakh and a philologist by education, Mr.
Sargsian rose to prominence during the 1991-1994 war with Azerbaijan.
He commanded Karabakh Armenian forces before being named Armenia’s
defense minister in 1993. He later served as minister of the interior
and national security, and briefly headed Mr. Kocharian’s staff until
the start of his second stint as defense minister in May 2000.

In appointing Mr. Sargsian as prime minister, the president also
relieved him of his duties as defense minister. Under Ministry of
Defense rules, Chief of Staff Mikael Harutiunian will temporarily
serve as Armenia’s minister of defense.

**************************************** ***********************************

2. Aghtamar reopening becomes a celebration of Turkey

* The former seat of Armenian catholicoi is now a Turkish museum

News analysis by Tatul Hakobyan

VAN, Turkey – On March 29 the renovated and restored Cathedral of the
Holy Cross on Aghtamar Island in Lake Van was re-opened. The church
was built in the early 10th century, during the reign of the Armenian
King Gagik of Vaspurakan, and served as the seat of the Armenian
Catholicos of Aghtamar from 1113 through 1895.

Turkey’s Minister of Culture and Tourism Atilla Koc, Van governor
Özdemir Çakacak, Archbishop Mesrob II, the Armenian Patriarch of
Turkey, ambassadors accredited to Ankara and representatives of
embassies, and an official delegation from Armenia headed by the
Deputy Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs, Gagik Gurjian, attended
the ceremony, which ended up as a celebration of Turkey.

On the day of the opening, Aghtamar Island and the mainland shore
across from it were covered in Turkish flags, and only the Turkish
language could be heard. Minister Koc, Governor Çakacak, and Patriarch
Mesrob spoke, and then, as the Turkish national anthem rang out, they
cut a ribbon – which like the Turkish flag was red, the color of
blood.

Turkey spent close to $2 million to renovate and restore the Holy
Cross Church, but inaugurated it not as an Armenian church but as a
Turkish historical and cultural monument, in which no church services
will be performed. Moreover, the government, in spite of requests from
Archbishop Mesrob, did not allow a cross to be placed on the church.
It was with this fact in view that the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin
and the Catholicate of the Great House of Cilicia both turned down
Turkish government invitations to attend the opening. And rightly so.

* Catholicoi not present

The Mother See announced on March 27 that it would "not participate in
the ceremonies after having considered that the Holy Cross Armenian
Church, recently renovated by the Turkish authorities, will not
operate as a church under the spiritual authority of the Armenian
Patriarchate of Constantinople and instead will be designated as a
museum; and that the opening ceremonies will be conducted solely with
a secular program and not in accord with the canonical rites of the
Holy Apostolic Armenian Church."

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

Levent Bilman, a representative of the Turkish Foreign Ministry,
told journalists that the Foreign Ministry – yes, the Foreign Ministry
– is studying the question of whether to place a cross atop Holy
Cross.

Archbishop Mutafyan did say in his speech at the opening ceremony
that the Holy Cross Church is an Armenian church. He used the terms
"Aghtamar" and "Holy Cross" rather than the Turkified "Akdamar"
(meaning "white vein"). He entreated that the
church-turned-into-a-museum be the site of at least one religious
service per year.

* "Respect the history"

Mr. Koc and Governor Çakacak stressed in their speeches that Van is
the most likely magnet for tourism in eastern Turkey because many
civilizations have thrived in the area over the centuries. They
represented the renovation and restoration of the Holy Cross Church as
an example of Turkey’s respect for history and culture. Everywhere in
Van there were signs in English and Turkish reading, "Respect the
history, respect the culture."

But how can one speak of respect when Holy Cross – stripped of its
cross, and with its historic name altered – embodies Turkey’s utter
contempt for history and culture?

Turkish television covered the ceremony at length. A clip that was
repeated over and over showed Turkey’s minister of culture and
Armenia’s deputy minister of culture sitting side by side, sharing a
chuckle. Mr. Gurjian told reporters that Turkey is "a multicultural
country," and expressed hope that the opening of Holy Cross could be
the beginning of a "cultural dialogue" between Armenia and Turkey.

Official Yerevan participated in the festivity on the level of a
deputy minister, which was a message to Ankara that Armenia is
dissatisfied. It is not clear, however, whether any delegation should
have attended the opening.

On his return to Yerevan, Deputy Minister Gurjian said that in 2008
Turkey plans to begin a five-year restoration project in the ancient
Armenian capital of Ani, just across the border from Armenia. Mr.
Gurjian said that Mr. Koc had not ruled out the possibility of the
participation of Armenian experts in the project.

"Seeing the ruined state of the mother church in Ani, the Arakelots
Cathedral, and some other churches, we were once again convinced that
the participation of Armenian architects in the restoration is
strictly necessary," Mr. Gurjian said.

Pavel Avetisian, director of the Institute of Archeology and
Ethnography at the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia, who was
part of the Aghtamar delegation, believes "cultural dialogue" with
Turkey is necessary, as it is the only way to save Armenian cultural
and religious monuments in Turkey from destruction. "If the churches
of Ani are not restored in the next 20 to 25 years, there is a danger
that they will be lost forever," he said.

* "A never-ending process of gestures"

In a statement issued the day before the opening, Armenia’s Foreign
Ministry said, "This is a positive move and holds the potential of a
reversal of the policy of negligence and destruction." (See full text
below.)

"We hope the same kind of approach will extend to cover the nearly
collapsed churches of Ani, Mush, Tegor, and a dozen other priceless
examples of Armenian medieval architecture, which have been abandoned
at best, or more often, intentionally vandalized, simply because of
their Armenian identity," the Foreign Ministry added.

"Turkey’s announcements about the opening of this renovated church
do not include the word ‘Armenian’ anywhere," the statement noted.
"This is an evasion of the Turkish government’s responsibility not
only to history and memory, but to its own Armenian minority.

Noting that pictures of Aghtamar are being circulated by Turkish
lobbyists in Washington, the Foreign Ministry said, "Armenia and
Armenians wish for substantive progress with Turkey regarding our
painful past and a potential of a shared future as neighbors. Armenia
and Armenians do not want to be played in a never-ending process of
gestures that do not intend to make real inroads in reconciliation,
and instead are simply public relations moves."

Like the catholicoi of Etchmiadzin and Antelias, official Yerevan
too could have skipped the opening of Holy Cross as long as the
Turkish government declined to place a cross atop the church and treat
it as a place of worship, where the faithful could light candles and
the clergy could perform services.As noble as Prime Minister Erdogan’s
original reasons for ordering the renovation and restoration of the
church may have been, there is no doubt that the opening ceremony was
nothing more than an attempt to undermine the Armenian Genocide
resolution under consideration in the United States Congress. The date
of the ceremony was shifted around a few times. At one point, a
cynical decision was made to hold the ceremony on April 24, the day
Armenians around the world pay their respects to the memory of the 1.5
million innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide. After Archbishop
Mutafyan made a strong protest, the date was shifted to the week of
April 11 to 15. But the date was changed again, this time to March 29,
which made it timelier for Washington lobbying purposes.

After the official opening ceremony, regular citizens on the shore
of Lake Van were allowed to cross over to the island on the boats used
to transport the official delegations. A few dozen locals, ranging in
age from 15 to 55, arrived to throw rocks at rabbits, the weakest
residents of the island. Thus concluded the day’s sad and repulsive
Turkish celebration.

************************************ ***************************************

3. Holy Cross survives, diplomacy dies

by Talin Suciyan

ISTANBUL – "We started our journey to Aghtamar Island. Lake Van is
mysterious, its color changing moment to moment, as we approached the
island in a small boat. The little chapel next to the church was
almost totally destroyed, but the church’s turn had not come yet. The
captain commanded [the workers demolishing the church]: ‘Until I come
back you won’t touch the church. I am going to the governor.’ The
workers came to attention, and their leader said, ‘With pleasure
commander!’ Arriving back in Van, we called [the newspaper]
Cumhuriyet, and two days later, Mr. Avni Basman, who was then the
Minister of Education, sent a telegram to the governor to stop the
destruction. This happened on June 25, 1951: the day Aghtamar Church
survived."

This is a quotation from the book Ya sar Kemal Kendini Anlatiyor
("Yasar Kemal Narrates Himself"). It was Yasar Kemal, the legendary
Turkish writer, who back in 1951 went to Aghtamar Island as a
journalist and saw the workers destroying the church. He immediately
called his newspaper, got to the minister of education, and managed to
stop the destruction.

Yasar Kemal was not present at last week’s unveiling of the
renovated Holy Cross Church on Aghtamar Island. He probably was not
even invited. But if there was a church left to renovate, he’s the one
to thank.

Turkey was hoping to have a grand inauguration ceremony, with many
guests from the Armenian diaspora and Armenia, hundreds of other
visitors, international groups, and the like.

Not one of these expectations was fulfilled.

The border with Armenia remained closed. The cross and the bell were
conspicuously missing atop the church. The edifice was opened as a
museum, not a church. And so, Armenian religious leaders from outside
Turkey skipped the ceremony. Diaspora Armenian groups didn’t bother to
make the trip.

The name of the church was changed – with the abetment of Turkey’s
mainstream media – to "Akdamar" instead of "Aghtamar" or "Akhtamar."
And with that name change, no one even thought to mention the name
"Holy Cross Church."

* Çandar: "Cultural genocide"

Cengiz Çandar, writing in the English-language Turkish Daily News and
the Turkish Referans, had this to say: This is the day of the opening
of a ‘church-museum,’ which the Minister of Cultural Affairs turned
into a mess. Whatever the intention was, it looks like a ‘cultural
genocide.’"

Çandar continued, as if to Ministry of Cultural Affairs: "What you
do is simply ‘cultural genocide.’ How come you have the right for
that? And why?

Ultranationalist Turkish groups, on the other hand, organized some
protests. The daily Yenicag announced the opening ceremony with this
headline: "Freedom to Church, Prohibition to Mosque." According to the
ensuing news item, a memorial service had been proposed for what the
newspaper called "Turkish martyrs killed by Armenians," to be held on
the day of the opening. But the authorities had withheld permission.

On the day of inauguration, Archbishop Mesrob II, Patriarch of
Armenians in Turkey, went to visit Nareg Monastery in the village of
Yemislik – the former Narek village. In the place where Nareg
Monastery once stood, today there is a mosque. Six years ago, there
were still some remnants of an archway of the monastery. In Sevan
Nisanyan’s book, Eastern Turkey, Nareg Monastery is called a very
important remnant of Armenian architecture, destroyed in 1951.

The renowned Istanbul-born Armenian pianist Sahan Arzruni offered to
perform at the opening ceremony, saying that he is a descendant, 36
generations removed, of King Gagik Arzruni, in whose reign the church
was built in the year 951. He sent a piece composed by his cousin
Sirvart Karamanuk, an Armenian composer based in Istanbul, titled
"Akhtamar," to the Ministery of Culture. But the ministry decided that
Tuluyhan Ugurlu, a Turkish pianist, should play on the occasion.

*No translation for Armenian visitors

A day after the ceremony, on March 30, Milliyet – one of the rare
newspapers to dedicate an entire page to the opening – noted that no
translation service had been provided for the Armenian delegation,
which thus could not follow the Turkish speeches.

Gagik Gurjian, Armenia’s Deputy Minister of Culture, headed the
Armenian government’s delegation, which made a 16-hour land journey
over Georgia. Mr. Gurjian told Agos, the Armenian-Turkish weekly, that
the Armenian government has offered to renovate Turkish monuments in
Armenia jointly with Turkish experts. Mr. Gurjian said, "For us, all
restorations are important. Some years back we renovated the mosque to
its original form, in Yerevan. It is important to keep the original
form."

In the end, Aghtamar’s highly-touted inaugural ceremony turned out
to be a local event. And as a news story, Aghtamar seems to be dead
again. For the moment.

***************************************** **********************************

4. From Washington, in brief

by Emil Sanamyan

* Armenian-American organizations offer spending recommendations to Congress

The Armenian Assembly of America (AAA), the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA), and the U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs
Committee (USAPAC) submitted recommendations for the March 29 public
hearing held by the House Appropriations Subcommittee on Foreign
Operations about spending in Fiscal Year 2008. The subcommittee, along
with its counterpart in the Senate, sets U.S. foreign assistance
levels.

The three organizations’ recommendations were nearly identical on
four items: (1) no less than $75 million in economic assistance for
Armenia; (2) no less than $10 million in humanitarian and development
aid to Nagorno-Karabakh; (3) equal amounts of Foreign Military
Financing ($4.3 million) and International Military Education and
Training ($1 million) to Armenia and Azerbaijan; and (4) strict
monitoring of the conditions to the waiver of Section 907, which
restricts U.S. assistance to Azerbaijan.

For the first time, the three organizations have also requested that
the U.S. Congress take a closer look at the $100 million 8-year
Caspian Security (Guard) initiative which has been underway since
2004. Under this program, U.S. has helped upgrade sea and air bases,
install radars, and train special forces in Azerbaijan.

Additionally, the AAA requested U.S. support for Armenia’s energy
security and Armenia’s participation in regional development projects.
Both AAA and USAPAC specifically recommended congressional funding for
confidence-building measures to support Karabakh peace. For its part,
ANCA requested U.S. funding for the California Trade Office in
Armenia.

* Rep. Watson warns colleagues of Turkey’s Aghtamar ploy

On March 29, Rep. Diane Watson (D.-Calif.) sent a letter to
congressional colleagues titled, "The Truth about Armenian Churches in
Turkey," the Armenian National Committee of America reports. The
letter came in response to Turkey’s efforts to advertise its
renovation of the Holy Cross Church on the Aghtamar island in Lake
Van. (See front-page story.)

Ms. Watson noted that while the Turkish government "is holding an
event to tout the rehabilitation of an Armenian Church . . . hundreds
of [such] Churches in Turkey, some dating as far back as the 4th
century, have been neglected and even egregiously abused." She added
that this was part of "a desperate and malicious campaign, which began
in 1915, to erase the Armenian people’s physical and cultural
existence in their historic homeland."

For more information about the issue see
ites.htm.

* Rep. Hoekstra looking for intelligence in Azerbaijan

Rep. Pete Hoekstra (R.-Mich.), ranking member of the House Permanent
Select Committee on Intelligence, was in Baku this week. Official
reports suggested that Mr. Hoekstra’s April 3 meetings with
Azerbaijani officials focused on the "development of
inter-parliamentary relations," but the representative is better known
for his concerns about Azerbaijan’s southern neighbor.

In a March 4 television interview with Fox News, Mr. Hoekstra
complained that "we still don’t have the intelligence community
overall to give us, as policy-makers, the information that we need to
make good decisions in North Korea, Iran and other places." On March
27 he told Holland Sentinel, his hometown paper, that his frequent
foreign travel helped him fill in the gaps.

* State Dept. plays down Caucasus missile defense talk amid tensions with Iran

Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matt Bryza was in Georgia last
week. Speaking to the press in Tbilisi on March 30, he said, "the
United States does not intend to deploy missile-defense system in the
Caucasus," the Azerbaijan Press Agency (APA) reported.

Earlier this year, the United States announced plans to place parts
of a European-theater missile-defense system in Poland and the Czech
Republic. U.S. Missile Defense Agency Director Gen. Henry Obering
added on March 1 that the United States would like to be able to
deploy mobile antimissile radar in one of the countries of the
Caucasus.

Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia have all denied receiving any
deployment requests from the United States.

A retired U.S. Air Force planner, Col. Sam Gardiner, told the
Armenian Reporter that while Iran does not yet have missiles capable
of reaching Europe, U.S. missile defense plans were clearly part of an
overall effort to put pressure on Iran. He added that having mobile
radars in the Caucasus might make sense to provide additional early
warning to U.S. allies.

"This is a game of strategic chicken," Mr. Gardiner said. It entails
ratcheting up of U.S. pressure, including a military buildup in the
Persian Gulf and the detention of alleged Iranian operatives in Iraq.
In recent months U.S. official have also expressed concerns about
Iran’s policies on ethnic minorities, including Kurds, Arabs, and
Azeris.

* * *

While in Tbilisi, Mr. Bryza noted that the United States would "want
to have an opportunity" to use air bases in Azerbaijan "in
emergencies," according to APA. As part of its Caspian Security
(Guard) initiative, the United States helped modernize several of
Azerbaijan’s air bases.

(A day before, on March 29, the Azerbaijani government invited
foreign diplomats to Haji Zeynalabdin Tagiyev (previously Nasosnaya)
air base to showcase MiG-29 fighter jets it just acquired from Ukraine
(see the March 24 issue of the Reporter for details). On March 30,
muscle-flexing continued as Azerbaijani aircraft flew near Karabakh.)

In response to speculations that the United States would like to use
Azerbaijan for strikes against Iran, the Azerbaijani Defense Ministry
issued a statement on April 1 confirming Azerbaijan’s previously
articulated position that it "will not create opportunities or
conditions allowing foreign countries to use its territory against
neighboring countries," RFE/RL reported.

Meantime, Vafa Guluzade, top advisor to at least three Azerbaijani
presidents (1991-99) predicted that the United States intends to
destroy and dismember Iran because it is an anti-American state that
is "ignoring UN resolutions, which makes war inevitable," day.az
reported on April 3. Mr. Guluzade went on to warn that "since the U.S.
is trying to weaken regional states, [in the future] Turkey might end
up in the same situation as Iran today."

* Georgia’s NATO membership increasingly likely

On March 30, Mr. Bryza confirmed that the United States and Georgia
share a common goal: "Georgia’s membership at a right time in NATO,"
Civil Georgia reported. The "right time for Georgian membership in
NATO is when Georgia has completed all of its reforms . . . and has
continued what it’s been doing now for several months, which is
pursuing constructive and peaceful [efforts] to resolving separatists
conflicts in Abkhazia and South Ossetia within Georgia."

NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer had said on February 9
that the alliance should be "coming closer to honoring the ambitions
of Ukraine and Georgia." Both chambers of the U.S. Congress have voted
to support the two countries’ accession to NATO financially.

President Mikhail Saakashvili of Georgia in turn recently promised
to more than double Georgia’s force in Iraq to 2,000, which would make
it one of the largest contingents in the U.S.-led coalition there. Mr.
Saakashvili is optimistic that Georgia could become a NATO member by
2009.

Cory Welt from the Washington-based Center for Strategic and
International Studies told the Reporter that there has been more
enthusiasm for Georgian membership lately. "They still have a lot to
do, but 2009 possibility is more realistic now."

Last month, Georgia’s parliament voted 160-0 in favor of joining
NATO. This policy is supported by most Georgians but has caused
lingering tensions with Russia. In apparent reference to the northern
neighbor, Mr. Bryza assured Georgians last week that "no country that
is not a member of NATO has any say over Georgia’s future within the
alliance."

Neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan has expressed a desire to join the
alliance yet, but Mr. Welt believes that the two will likely "reassess
their current position in light of Georgia’s membership."

******************************* ********************************************

5. Russia’s foreign minister in Yerevan is upbeat about Karabakh peace deal

* Speaks in favor of stability in Armenia and the region

by Armen Hakobyan

YEREVAN – "The UN Security Council has set an international legal
framework for influencing Iran, and it fully rules out the use of
force. We call on those who have such ideas to fulfill the decisions
of the Security Council and remain on the firm ground of international
law," Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov of Russia, who was in Armenia for
a two-day visit, said on April 3 in reference to recent media reports
about possible U.S. strikes against Iran.

Mr. Lavrov was in Armenia to mark the 15th anniversary of the
establishment of diplomatic relations between Armenia and the Russian
Federation. He made his remarks during a joint news conference with
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian of Armenia.

The visit also marked the 10th anniversary of the bilateral Treaty
on Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual Assistance. The scope of
relations between the two former Soviet republics is broad, and the
visit was an opportunity for the two sides to synchronize their
watches.

* Regional stability

Russian forces are stationed in Armenia and protect Armenia’s borders
with Iran and Turkey. At the news conference Mr. Oskanian said, "The
presence of Russian forces especially on the Armenian-Turkish border
is very significant for us in terms of security. We believe that in
the present circumstances their presence is indispensable for
Armenia’s security."

It is also in Russia’s interests, Mr. Lavrov added. "It is in the
interests of Russia to ensure stability in Transcaucasia, in this
region that is vitally important for many countries, us among them."
He said Russia wants to see the Caucasus become a region of
cooperation and "joint prosperity." Russia is therefore pursuing
constructive relations with Turkey, Iran, NATO, and the EU, all of
which have interests in the region.

"Their interest is understandable to us," Mr. Lavrov said. "There
are natural resources here and transit routes that are geopolitically
important. We want the interests that are understandable to us to be
realized by methods that are understandable to us, not along the lines
of a zero sum game, but along the lines of joint engagement, which
will benefit all." In this matter, too, Armenia’s interests coincide
with Russia’s, the Russian foreign minister said. "Stability in the
region is in everyone’s interest."

* The Karabakh conflict

Representatives of Russia, the United States, and France jointly chair
the OSCE Minsk Group, which is charged with mediating a solution to
the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict. "Russia plays a very important,
constructive role in the resolution of the Karabakh conflict," Mr.
Oskanian said. "We are very pleased with Russia’s role and its
willingness not only to mediate the conflict but also to guarantee the
agreement, once it is reached. Russia’s participation in this process
is very important to Armenia."

The Russian foreign minister spoke very optimistically about the
matter: Karabakh is "unique" among conflicts in that the "interests of
Russia, the United States, and the European Union absolutely do not
contradict each other or the interests of the conflicting parties
themselves." He added, "So concrete a package to untie this knot has
been devised that participants of any other talks on the settlement of
any other conflict can only be envious. It is nevertheless up to the
leaderships of Armenia and Azerbaijan to have the final definitive
say."

The Russian foreign minister expressed hope that "this unique
unanimity, not only in principles but also in detail, which exists
among the cochairs," will help Yerevan and Baku arrive at a mutually
acceptable agreement. He reaffirmed that Russia and other countries
"will in full measure act as a guarantor of these agreements."

If everyone’s interests are so well aligned, then why is no
agreement in place, journalists wanted to know. Mr. Oskanian responded
with restrained realism: "There are indeed broad areas of agreement on
the principles in the negotiating document. Nonetheless, there is not
full agreement. On the level of principle, it is true, there are
common approaches on most of the issues, but there remain one or two
principles around which agreement has yet to be achieved. When we go
from principles to details, we see issues there too." The Armenian
foreign minister added that there is "positive movement, and as Mr.
Lavrov said, we hope that we can really continue our work on the basis
of this document and reach some sort of positive conclusion."

Mr. Oskanian emphasized that the "positive movement" is clearly in
the direction of continued self-determination for Karabakh.

Mr. Oskanian said another meeting between him and his Azerbaijani
counterpart will take place preferably in late April or, failing that,
in early May. A meeting of the presidents is expected in June.

* Regional integration

In response to a question about the Kars-Akhalkalaki railway project,
which was inaugurated in March and would connect Baku to Turkey by
rail over Georgia, Mr. Lavrov said, "I have heard that this isn’t
happening so far. Such plans exist, but there are others as well,
concerning development of railways and other infrastructure in the
region." Such plans, Mr. Lavrov said, "must not create difficulties
for Armenia."

What makes it difficult to achieve regional integration, Mr. Lavrov
said, it the absence of a final settlement in the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict. "Until long-term agreements are reached," he said, "we shall
use every possibility to alleviate the present situation." The
situation has been exacerbated by the continuing Russian transport
blockade of Georgia.

He pointed specifically to the upcoming launch of a rail ferry
service between the Georgian Black Sea port of Poti and Russia’s
Port-Kavkaz. The ferry link will be primarily used by Armenian
exporters and importers.

* You cannot split Aram Khachaturian

Russia has in recent years taken possession of five major enterprises
in Armenia in lieu of $100 million in debt. In addition, more than
half the shares of Armenia’s electricity delivery grid and Armenia’s
natural-gas distribution grid belong to Russia, which also owns the
Sevan-Hrazdan hydroelectric cascade, the Hrazdan thermoelectric plant,
and other significant properties.

Mr. Lavrov noted that Armenia and Russia "have become so intertwined
in [their] destinies that it is very hard at times to sort out where
one country’s culture, history, and heritage ends and the other’s
begins. How can Russia and Armenia split Sergei Paradjanov, Aram
Khachaturian, and Frunzik [Mher] Mkrtchian?" he asked, referring to
Armenian stars of the Soviet firmament. Indeed, Mr. Lavrov had
revealed in July 2004 that his own father is an Armenian from Tbilisi,
Georgia.

Mr. Lavrov visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial at
Tzitzernakaberd and planted a tree there. (The Russian parliament
recognized and condemned the Armenian Genocide in the mid-1990s.) He
did not, however say anything in Armenian. Mr. Oskanian, on the other
hand, surprised correspondents by making his opening statement in
Russian.

************************************* **************************************

6. Russia to send a full contingent of OSCE observers

YEREVAN – For the first time, Russia will exercise its right to
include Russian observers as part of the OSCE mission that will assess
Armenia’s elections.

At an April 3 press conference in Yerevan, Foreign Minister Sergei
Lavrov said Russia is "sincerely interested in seeing Armenia stable
and prosperous and advancing along the path of continued reforms."
Results so far, he said, inspire confidence, and Russia would like to
see the constitutional process lead to "the creation of conditions for
continued movement" in the same direction.

In the past, Russia has sent observers to Armenia’s elections as
part of CIS observation missions. The OSCE and CIS observation
missions have usually reached different conclusions about the
elections.

"Russia is interested in seeing the international community form an
objective picture of how the pre-election campaign is unfolding in
Armenia," Mr. Lavrov said. Each OSCE country is entitled to send up to
10 percent of the total number of observers, and Russia will use its
quota fully, the foreign minister said. Of the 300 observers expected
on election day, Russia will send 30. In addition, Russian
representatives will participate in the long-term OSCE observation
mission that has already arrived in Yerevan.

"Of course, our observers will to a maximum degree participate in
monitoring the elections under the auspices of other organizations
too, including the Inter-Parliamentary Assembly of the CIS and the
Parliamentary Assembly of the OSCE," Mr. Lavrov added.

"Armenia is our friend," he concluded. "We want it to develop in an
ongoing way in accordance with its constitution and with the choice
which, in the end, the Armenian people will make."

— Armen Hakobyan

**************************************** ***********************************

7. Armenia is second only to the United States in Grant Thornton
International Super Growth Index

Armenia has achieved the second position in the Grant Thornton
International Super Growth Index. The index measures the proportion of
"super growth" companies in a country. Grant Thornton Internation
defines "super growth" companies as those that have grown considerably
more than average.

The United States tops the index for the third year running, with 44
percent of companies qualifying as super growth. This year Armenia
(where 38% of companies qualify) has replaced India in second
position. Indian companies suffered a dramatic drop to 14th in the
table as the country’s proportion of super growth companies halved
from 34 percent to 15. Ireland has maintained a top five ranking (29
percent; third place) and is joined by the United Kingdom (26 percent,
fourth place) and South Africa (25 percent, fifth place), up from
tenth place last year. Of United States companies 44 percent qualified
as super growth.

To identify ‘super growth’ companies, Experian Business Strategies,
an economics consultancy, took four key indicators to create a
weighted index. The four indicators were: absolute growth in turnover
(adjusted for inflation); percentage growth in turnover (adjusted for
inflation); absolute growth in employee numbers; and percentage growth
in employee numbers. By this measure, 23 percent of all privately held
businesses surveyed worldwide were classified as super growth.

Other significant climbers in the Super Growth Index include Russia,
which has moved from 29th to 18th in the rankings; the Philippines,
from 23rd to 8th; Argentina, from 27th to 15th; and Italy, from 30th
to 21st.

Hong Kong, the other strong performer in 2006 at third place, has
fallen out of the top ten this year, coming in at number 11. Other
fallers in the chart include Malaysia, from 8th to 26th, and New
Zealand, from 15th to 28th, its worst performance in four years.

The Super Growth Index, now in its fourth year, is a research
project that forms part of the Grant Thornton International Business
Report (IBR). The report covers the opinions of 7,200 privately held
businesses in 32 countries and represents 81 percent of global GDP, a
press release from the Grant Thornton International press office
states.

A ‘super growth’ company is one which has grown considerably more
than the average measured against key indicators including turnover
and employment.

The full survey is to be released in June 2007.
ain/index1.php?page=118&lang=en&id=119915& amp;country_id=0

******************************** *******************************************

8. Catholicos Karekin II announces the date for the next
chrism-blessing ceremony

VAGHARSHAPAT, Armenia – Karekin II, the Catholicos of All Armenians,
has announced that the next Blessing of Holy Muron ceremony will be
held on September 28, 2008.

The Catholicos made the announcement during a scheduled session of
the Supreme Spiritual Council – the church’s governing council of
bishops – convened under his presidency March 7 through 9 at the
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin.

Muron (from the Greek myron) is the chrism, or oil, employed in the
church’s various anointing ceremonies, which include baptism,
matrimony, ordination, and consecration. Typically, the officiating
priest will daub sanctified oil in the form of a cross on the person
or item being blessed.

This chrism is confected, using a centuries-old "recipe" of fragrant
spices and herbs, by the catholicos during the muron-blessing
ceremony. During what is inevitably a major public gathering, the
catholicos gathers the ingredients in a large cauldron (along with a
residue of chrism from the previous ceremony), and blesses them with
the Relic of St. Gregory, a vessel in the shape of a man’s forearm,
believed to contain bones of the saint. Following the ceremony, the
newly sanctified oil is distributed to Armenian churches across the
world.

The ceremony is performed at the discretion of the Catholicos of All
Armenians, generally every seven years, but also at moments of great
national consequence. In 1991, Catholicos Vasken I broke the
seven-year cycle to bless "the muron of independence" in honor of the
establishment of a sovereign Armenian republic, and Catholicos Karekin
II did so again 10 years later, during the celebration of the 1700th
anniversary of Armenia’s conversion to Christianity.

The newly announced date will evidently resume the cycle, falling
seven years after the 2001 blessing ceremony.

*************************************** ************************************

9. Gyumri mayor wounded in drive-by shooting

* 3 bodyguards dead

YEREVAN – Vardan Ghukasian, who is the mayor of Gyumri, Armenia’s
second-largest city, and an investor in local businesses, was wounded
on April 2 in a drive-by shooting along the Yerevan-Gyumri highway.
Three of his bodyguards were killed, while his driver and the deputy
mayor were seriously wounded.

According to the prosecutor general of Armenia, at 10:20 p.m. on the
Yerevan-Ashtarak highway, a grey vehicle without license plates
overtook the mayor’s two-car convoy. Occupants of the vehicle fired
two rounds of ammunition from two submachine guns at the two cars.
Investigators found 77 spent cartridges on the scene.

The mayor’s official Mercedes 600 was carrying Mr. Ghukasian, Deputy
Mayor Gagik Manukian, and the head of the city’s civil construction
department, Hovhannes Grkikian. A second vehicle was carrying the
mayor’s bodyguards.

Artyom Adamian, 22, Misak Vardanian, 26, and Hovhannes Mirzabekian,
36, the mayor’s bodyguards, died on the spot. Mr. Manukian and the
mayor’s driver, Varazdat Ghukasian, were seriously wounded.

The mayor underwent surgery and was said to be recovering from a
bullet wound in his abdomen.

The heads of law-enforcement agencies were summoned to an emergency
meeting with President Robert Kocharian. They were instructed to solve
the crime as a matter of urgency.

The mayor was returning to Gyumri from a meeting of the council of
Republican Party of Armenia, which had just agreed to nominate Serge
Sargsian as Armenia’s prime minister.

In a written statement, the Republican party suggested that the
shooting was an attempt to undermine the "stability of public life" in
Armenia. One member of the board, Ashot Aghababian, claimed that the
crime was specifically directed against the party, RFE/RL reports.
"Why would it happen right after the board meeting?" he said.

However, the mayor was not in Yerevan solely for the meeting of the
party council. He was accompanied by his deputy (a member of the
Communist party) and the head of civil construction, neither of whom
were eligible to participate in the Republican party meeting.

A similar incident happened on the same highway on August 8, 2006,
when Aleksander Ginoyev, an underworld figure, was killed. The crime
remains unsolved.

President Kocharian visited Mr. Ghukasian at the hospital to wish
him a speedy recovery.

— Armen Hakobyan

**************************************** ***********************************

10. New trees for Republic Square

YEREVAN – In an eerie flashback to the days of Armenia’s energy
crisis, trees are being cut down in Yerevan, and in Republic Square no
less. But Yerevan’s chief arborist, Suren Maksapetian, assured the
Armenian Reporter that there is nothing to worry about.

"These trees are 40 years old or older," Mr. Maksapetian said. "They
have caught Dutch elm disease, which is incurable. It causes yellowing
of the foliage and defoliation, and ultimately the trees die. In any
case, they have lost their decorative function."

There were 60 trees in the square, ten of which are healthy and will
stay, he said.

The city is replacing the diseased trees with 3-year-old acacias.
"Before starting the project, we asked 8 professors for their written
views," Mr. Maksapetian said. "The acacias are just right for Yerevan.
They deal well with the cold, they deal well with dryness, and they
resist contagious diseases."

According to the chief arborist, the project is costing the city 5
million drams ($14 thousand).

— Armen Hakobyan

**************************************** ***********************************

11. Commentary: Ziya Buniatov

* The contentious life, mysterious death, and toxic legacy of
Azerbaijan’s foremost historical revisionist

by Ivan Arakelov

WASHINGTON – Ten years have passed since the assassination of Ziya
Buniatov, vice-president of the Azerbaijani Academy of Science, who is
widely esteemed in his country as the "father of Azerbaijani
historiography." Outside of Azerbaijan, he is best known for
controversial revisionist views on the history of the Caucasus.

Buniatov’s publications and the works of his associates have been
widely criticized, in part for their role in stoking up the Karabakh
conflict. The product of Buniatov’s career is an apparently
intentional misinterpretation of the region’s past, in which
Azerbaijan is featured as a country identifiable since antiquity, and
its neighbors characterized as impostors and conspirators. These works
have since been utilized by official Baku as academic cover for its
territorial claims on Armenia, and for its program of marginalizing
Armenians in territories that were forcibly made part of Soviet
Azerbaijan in the 1920s.

Buniatov’s death was as controversial as his academic career. In
February 1997, he was assassinated at the entrance to his apartment in
central Baku.

* Warrior-Academic

Buniatov was born in 1923 in the town of Astara, in the southernmost
corner of modern Azerbaijan, on its border with Iran. His mother was a
local subbotnik, a sect of ethnic Russians that mixes principles of
Judaism and Christianity, and had settled in the area since the 19th
century. For his military accomplishments during World War II,
Buniatov was decorated with the title of the "Hero of the Soviet
Union," a distinction that put his career on a fast track.

After graduating from the Moscow Institute of Oriental Studies in
1954, Buniatov defended his doctoral dissertation and returned to
Baku. There, he began working at the Institute of History of the
Academy of Sciences of Azerbaijan, rising from the position of
research associate to an academician and vice-president of the Academy
of Sciences. Buniatov was a leading representative of what was known
as the "academic nomenklatura": a privileged group of intellectuals
whose close ties to the leadership of the Communist Party provided
them with substantial influence in cultural and political affairs.

Buniatov’s position was enhanced further through his personal ties
with Heydar Aliyev, head of Azerbaijan’s chapter of the Soviet KGB,
who in 1969 became the republic’s Communist leader. Such political
capital sheltered Buniatov’s botched methodology and nationalist bias
from exposure – and his research from censorship.

* A flawed thesis, and its purpose

Buniatov’s work focused on so-called "Caucasian Albania" (no relation
to the Albania in the Balkans). In Soviet and Western scholarship this
term came to designate the Kingdom of Aghvank, an ancient
Armenian-dominated state in the Caucasus. For a time Aghvank was ruled
from the territory of present-day Nagorno-Karabakh by local kings and
princes, who despite their Armenian roots (or possibly precisely
because of them) tried to retain their political autonomy from the
Kingdom of Armenia.

The Israeli journalist Yo’av Karny, who visited Buniatov in 1995,
describes his impact on Azerbaijani nationalism in his 2000 book,
Highlanders: A Journey to the Caucasus on Quest for Memory. Karny
writes sardonically that Buniatov "had an important mission: endowing
Azerbaijan with a history…. [The] task was particularly daunting: his
nation’s very name had not existed only seventy-five years earlier,
and its enemies were still assailing its ‘artificiality.’"

Buniatov’s effort was essentially political, since historical
belonging was and is seen in the Caucasus as the basis for modern-day
legitimacy. The resulting research is a textbook example of
pseudo-science, both because of its factually problematic material,
and the serious flaws in methodology it employed. Buniatov’s arguments
often hinge on conspiracy theories that he substituted for his absence
of evidence.

For example, the lack of any specifically "Albanian" culture or
historical record was arbitrarily blamed on medieval Armenian clerics
and governors of the Arab Caliphate, who – according to Buniatov’s
contention – destroyed the entire body of "Albanian" literature to
solidify their grip on "Albania."

British journalist Tom de Waal, the author of the Black Garden, a
2001 book about the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, noted that: "Buniatov’s
scholarly credentials were dubious. It later transpired that the two
articles he published in 1960 and 1965 on Caucasian Albania were
direct plagiarisms. Under his own name, he had simply published,
unattributed, translations of two articles, originally written in
English by Western scholars C.F.J. Dowsett and Robert Hewsen."

U.S. historian George Bournoutian adds: "In his edition of the
Russian translation of an eighteenth-century history of Karabakh by
the Armenian patriarch of the Holy See of Gandzasar in Karabakh,
Academician Ziya M. Buniatov has blatantly and systematically replaced
the noun Armenian with Albanian. Several travelers’ accounts have also
been subject to the same tampering by Buniatov."

Buniatov achieved notoriety by turning "Caucasian Albania" into a
means to rob the Karabakh Armenians of their historical heritage.
Buniatov claimed that because the Armenians of ancient Karabakh
sometimes described themselves as belonging to "Aghvank" they were not
Armenians at all. This would be similar to claiming that Venetians or
Genoese were not Italian because in the Middle Ages their territorial
identity – as citizens of Venice or Genoa – was more important than
their linguistic identity.

After disassociating Armenians from Aghvank/Albania, Baku’s
academics proceeded to declare as "Albanian" all Armenian historical
monuments found on territories incorporated into Soviet Azerbaijan,
including Karabakh – even those with extensive Armenian lapidary
inscriptions, uniquely Armenian designs, and well-documented role in
Armenian history. Medieval Armenian poets and scholars born on the
territory of modern-day Azerbaijan were likewise re-baptized as
"Albanian."

Buniatov’s other claim was even more bizarre: Prior to the 19th
century, he argued, there were simply no Armenians in Eastern Armenia.
In the words of the Russian historian and political scientist Victor
Schnirelman, in his two-pronged assault on common sense "Buniatov
tried to cleanse Azerbaijani lands of Armenian history."

De Waal writes in Black Garden: "The subtext of [Buniatov’s] history
was obvious to anyone who lived in the Caucasus. [Armenians] were
either guests in Azerbaijan (nineteenth-century immigrants) or
Azerbaijanis under the skin (descendants of Albanians) and should
behave accordingly."

* Buniatov’s "Elders of Ararat"

With the start of the Karabakh conflict in 1988 Buniatov’s suppressed
hate instincts came into full motion. His 1989 article called "Why
Sumgait?" widely circulated throughout Azerbaijan, became a manifesto
justifying anti-Armenian violence in Azerbaijan, and sounded eerily
similar to the "Protocols of Elders of Zion," an early 20th-century
Russian invention alleging a worldwide Jewish conspiracy.

The article, according to de Waal, established Buniatov as
"Azerbaijan’s foremost Armenophobe." Its publication coincided with
the announcement of criminal indictments by a Soviet court against
several Azerbaijani participants of the anti-Armenian pogrom in the
industrial city of Sumgait, near Baku. Those events, which took place
in late February 1988, overnight transformed the Karabakh issue from a
legal and political dispute into a violent ethnic conflict. Dozens of
ethnic Armenians were killed or maimed, and the entire Armenian
population of Sumgait – around 14,000 people – fled the city in panic.

But according to Buniatov, the pogrom was masterminded and executed
not by Azerbaijanis but by undetected Armenian agent-provocateurs who
aspired to nothing less than the creation of a giant "Greater
Armenia." At the helm of that plan, argued Buniatov, stood several
prominent Armenian intellectuals and clergy, as well as Soviet
administrators of Armenian origin, all of whom he collectively
described as "Dashnaks."

Among those attacked by Buniatov was Vasken I, Catholicos of All
Armenians, who was called a protégé of the "international Armenian
mafia"; the prominent Armenian poetess Silva Kaputikian, incorrectly
described as "a daughter of a leader of the Dashnak Party"; and the
early 20th-century military hero Andranik Ozanian, dubbed a "one-eared
bandit." The article also revealed Buniatov’s deep aversion to several
Soviet pro-democracy activists, particularly academician Andrei
Sakharov, who supported Nagorno-Karabakh’s request to secede from
Azerbaijan.

* The ideologue of Aliyev’s regime

Following Heydar Aliyev’s comeback to power as a result of the 1993
military coup, Buniatov’s fortunes seemed to receive a boost. After
all, it was Aliyev who promoted Buniatov in Soviet times. The ageing
academician became vice-chairman of Aliyev’s ruling New Azerbaijan
Party, reinventing himself as an ideologue of the new regime in what
was described as a transition from Leninist "scientific communism" to
post-Soviet "scientific nationalism."

In 2001, in several interviews with the Azerbaijani press, Aliyev
confessed that during his tenure as a Communist boss he led a
20-year-long campaign aimed at squeezing Armenians out of
Nagorno-Karabakh and replacing them with Azerbaijanis. Since
Buniatov’s revisionism provided a "scientific" justification for that
program, it was not surprising that many of Aliyev’s nationalist
concepts developed in the 1990s were either inspired by Buniatov or
were direct borrowings from his earlier works.

In the time since, "Caucasian Albania" has become a universal
political tool used by Baku for a variety of purposes: from advancing
irredentist claims against Armenia, Iran, Russia, and Georgia, to
schmoozing with the European Union. Buniatov’s purported thesis of
Armenians’ "guest status" in the Caucasus is publicly aired in
speeches of Heydar’s son and successor Ilham Aliyev, while his
lieutenants call for the wholesale elimination of Armenians from the
region.

Billed as "Albanian" are all Armenian monuments in areas of
Azerbaijan’s actual or desired control – including the recently
destroyed medieval cemetery in Nakhichevan’s Jugha region, and even
the 19th-century church in the capital of Baku, as well as the ancient
and medieval monuments in Armenia’s southern province of Siunik,
against which Azerbaijani leaders advance occasional territorial
claims.

Just this week, one of Buniatov’s modern-day followers claimed that
the unmistakably Georgian monastery of David Gareji, which lies on
legally disputed land along the Georgian-Azerbaijan border, is also
"Albanian" – and hence non-Georgian.

* The end

Buniatov’s life ended abruptly on February 21, 1997, when he was shot
twice and then stabbed multiple times at the doorway to his apartment,
in what looked like a contract murder. The government pointed the
finger at an Iranian-linked group, which was purportedly outraged by
Buniatov’s translation of certain Islamic texts. A crackdown on
Azerbaijan’s Shiite Islamists ensued, with five people arrested and
sentenced to long prison terms.

The Islamist hypothesis, however, made little sense to anyone who
was familiar with Buniatov’s generally respectful attitude to Islam. A
theory developed later by a group of independent Azerbaijani
journalists led by Einulla Fatullayev offered an alternative
explanation: by 1997 the impatient and easily irritable Buniatov had
become a liability for President Aliyev. Witnesses told the
journalists about increased tensions between Buniatov and Aliyev, and
about several emotionally-charged encounters between the two.

Perhaps Aliyev was not sufficiently nationalist by Buniatov’s
standards. Or was Buniatov threatening to expose the widespread
corruption network that Aliyev’s second coming helped bring back to
life? No one really knows for sure.

* * *

Ivan Arakelov is the pen name of an author and consultant in the
Washington, D.C. area.

******************************************* ********************************

12. Commentary: Traffic jams are a new fact of life in Yerevan

Living in Armenia by Maria Titizian

When we first moved to Armenia, driving was a daunting daily ritual.
Not so much for the cars, but for the abundance of potholes one had to
be careful to avoid or risk facing substantial car repairs. That of
course was no consolation for the shocks on our car that had to be
changed frequently because on most dark, rainy nights we invariably
ended up in a pothole. Strangely enough I don’t recall ever changing
the shocks on my old Japanese car which I abused while I sped along
the absurdly smooth streets and highways of Toronto. But of course,
nothing is ever simple in this complicated corner of the world.

Thanks to the Lincy foundation, most streets in downtown Yerevan
were repaved a few years back and for a short time our car seemed to
breathe a sigh of relief. And then came the harsh winters and rainy
springs and new, never before seen potholes emerged. One could pose
the question of whether the repaving of the streets were done with any
care or professionalism, a term which has yet to find its way into the
Yerevantsi vernacular. But I digress and that is an article for
another day.

While I was doing the research for this month’s piece, which
included reading reports on the transport sector in the South
Caucasus, I decided to forgo statistics in exchange for some humorous
stories that I swear are not fabrications of my imagination, but
actual real life encounters with potholes, pedestrians and traffic
police and the new phenomenon of traffic jams.

I have come to the conclusion that driving in Yerevan is not so
different from the dizzyingly fast paced video games my son plays. By
now it’s abundantly clear that you must not only know where all the
new and old potholes are, but you must also try and figure out where
the traffic lights are situated – usually conveniently hidden behind
overgrown trees or strategically placed billboards. I can’t tell you
how many times I have driven through an intersection when the light
was red. So now, if I can’t see the traffic light I look at the
opposite side of the intersection to see what color the light for the
oncoming traffic is and then map out my course of action.

Then there are the obnoxious drivers who insist on cutting you off
and if that fails try to run you down to make it to the next set of
lights before you. It’s almost as if a competitive driving streak is
wired into the brains of Yerevantsi drivers and regardless of whether
they are trying to make it to an important meeting or not, the
overriding impulse is that they must win. You must also be wary of
pedestrians because they cross the street whenever and wherever they
feel like without looking to see if there are cars coming, or whether
it’s their right of way. They don’t run to avoid getting hit, they
don’t even break into a jog; they just casually stroll across 6 lanes
of traffic.

Now let’s add stray dogs to the mix. Sometimes these poor creatures
have adapted and cross at a green light with other law abiding
citizens, and other times they come at you out of nowhere and bark at
you for disrupting their repose. Sometimes I think everyone and
everything is out to get me.

So we have potholes, pedestrians, dogs and now no scholarly article
on driving in Yerevan would be complete without the traffic police.
Thankfully they no longer stand at every street corner, baton in hand
with the signature cigarette dangling from the corner of their mouths.
No, they have been taken off the beat and now are replaced by cameras
that will capture any traffic infraction and fine the owner
accordingly. I don’t know if this new measure is working; I have yet
to receive a ticket. The likelihood that I will is strangely greater
now because previously whenever I was stopped by the traffic police, I
was always let off because I am a woman, and subsequently don’t know
how to drive therefore should be let go. I once argued with a police
officer, demanding to be fined. Of course, I had violated some traffic
law, which one in particular eludes me at the moment, but he refused
to fine me because I was a woman. At the end of a 15-minute argument I
told him that it was their fault I was violating the law because I
knew I would get away with it. Had I been a man they would have
automatically demanded the standard 1000 AMD bribe, but even that
‘privilege’ was denied me.

Another time I was stopped once again but this time I was on my best
behavior. The officer couldn’t have been more than 20 years of age and
kept lamenting how he didn’t want to fine me (even though I had done
nothing wrong) because I was a woman and a guest in his country – I
speak western Armenian. I told him to either fine me or let me go. At
which point he said, "You must be a new driver". Incensed by his
comment I calmly told him that when I started driving he was probably
still in diapers, grabbed my driver’s license from his hand and drove
off without a second glance.

Sadly traffic police stories will now be few and far between.

Thankfully when I moved to Yerevan six years ago there weren’t so
many cars on the streets. It was hard enough after a lifetime of
driving in a country whose drivers are sickeningly law abiding to
adapt myself to the culture of aggressive driving. Trust me; the meek
will not inherit the streets in Yerevan. In order to survive, you have
to recondition yourself and yes, perhaps become a little more
aggressive. But now, there is so much traffic in Yerevan that if the
aggression factor is not removed, there will be serious consequences.
This past year over 29,000 cars were either imported or purchased in
Armenia as opposed to 13,000 the previous year. As the economic
situation of the country improves, more people will be buying cars.
Add the shortage of parking space, driving has become a test of one’s
patience. One time my husband and I got caught up in a crazy situation
at an intersection because some drivers had not heeded the lights and
cars from all four directions were facing each other down, not able to
move forward or reverse. As much as we tried to see the humor of the
situation, it took us over 20 minutes to crawl out of that gridlock.
Urban planning, studying traffic flows, the development of innovative
solutions must become a priority for city officials, otherwise pretty
soon we’ll all be working out of our cars.

* * *

Maria Titizian’s column appears monthly.

**************************************** ***********************************

13. Letters:

We are grateful to reader Berge Jololian for the following letter,
which we forwarded last week to the office of Rep. Michael Capuano
(D.-Mass.) to give the representative a chance to respond. Mr.
Capuano’s response appears below.

* Support for Armenian concerns? Or lip service?

Sir:

As an American and a resident of Massachusetts’s 8th Congressional
District, I attended a public forum given by U.S. Representative
Michael Capuano on February 24, at Somerville City Hall. The event was
videotaped, and the audience of about 90 people was allowed to ask
questions.

After publicly thanking Mr. Capuano for co-sponsoring the Armenian
Genocide Resolution (H.R. 106), I asked if there was more he could do
to work for its passage.

"Nothing," he replied.

Capuano did say that the Genocide was a fact and that he did not
know why Turkey would not acknowledge it. He stated, however, that he
had "no problem with Turkey" and that it was an important ally in a
strategic location.

I reminded him that Turkey had not allowed U.S. troops to transit
its territory at the start of the Iraq war in 2003.

Capuano countered that that was a very small and unimportant
example. Germany, he added, had not sent troops to Iraq, yet was a
good ally.

After I remarked that, "Genocide denied is genocide repeated,"
Capuano asked, "Well, so?"

When the forum ended and Capuano was leaving, I approached him and
shook his hand. "If Germany denied the Holocaust," I asked, "would you
do business with it?" He said, "Yes" – repeating it twice for
emphasis.

Capuano clearly pays no more than lip service to Armenian-American
issues, and his unqualified support for Turkey is disturbing. I
question whether he cares that his district – previously represented
in Congress by J.F.K., Tip O’Neil, and Joe Kennedy – is and has long
been home to many thousands of Armenian-Americans.

I suspect that many other Congressmen and elected officials are,
like Capuano, fooling their Armenian constituents by doing little more
than occasionally giving a speech on April 24 and co-sponsoring a
Genocide resolution. With rare exceptions, they will not expend any
political capital whatsoever, or make any real effort for us.

To the readers of the Reporter, I would ask: Is your own Congressman
or Senator getting away with paying mere lip service to
Armenian-American issues? I bet the answer is yes.

Very truly yours,
Berge Jololian
Cambridge, Mass.

* We can recognize the Genocide and work with Turkey

Sir:

Thank you for the opportunity to respond to the letter submitted by
one of my constituents. I have actively supported the Armenian
Genocide Resolution since being elected to Congress and am hopeful
that this year the U.S. House of Representatives will have an
opportunity to record U.S. indignation at such a sad and shocking
historic tragedy.

Additionally, I have traveled to Armenia to learn more about its
history and culture, and have met with many groups and individuals
over the years to talk about issues important to the Armenian
community.

I have also traveled to Nagorno-Karabakh and have brought the
Armenian government’s position on this territory to the President of
Azerbaijan. There are persisting tensions between Armenia and
Azerbaijan and I believe those tensions cannot be resolved without
engaging both parties.

I understand that recognition of the genocide remains a
controversial issue in some circles and among many Turkish citizens.
The Turkish government has suggested that passage of the Armenian
Genocide Resolution will harm relations between the U.S. and Turkey
and could jeopardize the cooperation our nations have enjoyed as
allies. I do believe we must maintain a strong and respectful dialogue
with Turkey. Turkey’s cooperation will be essential if Iraq is to be
stable after U.S. troops are withdrawn.

In no way does my commitment to cooperation with the Turks diminish
my commitment to the Armenian community. I firmly believe that we must
correct historical inaccuracies and properly record the U.S. position
on the Armenian Genocide while we continue to work with the democratic
government of Turkey.

I regret if any of my comments during this particular community
meeting were misinterpreted or misunderstood. Genocide is never
acceptable and genocide or Holocaust denial is contemptible. We must
never forget any historic genocide and we must strive to prevent it
from happening wherever we can. I am working diligently to end the
atrocities in Darfur, a cause to which so many Armenian-Americans have
so generously contributed.

I thank you for the opportunity to express my views and I look
forward to working with the community in the future.

Very truly yours,
Michael E. Capuano
Member of Congress

* Turkey won’t sever ties to United States

The following letter was published in the Baltimore Sun on March 31.

Kenneth Ballen’s column "Wrong resolution on Turkish killings"
(Opinion* Commentary, March 15) falsely suggests that Congress holds
the key to U.S. relations with Turkey.

Citing a recent poll by his organization, Mr. Ballen asserts that
congressional passage of a resolution reaffirming the fact of the
Armenian genocide would give rise to increased anti-Armenian and
anti-American opinion among Turks.

However, poll after poll in Turkey – including recent Gallup, Pew,
BBC and Transatlantic Trends surveys – show extraordinarily high
levels of negative opinions about America, even before consideration
of the Armenian genocide resolutions before the House and Senate.

Should relations between the United States and Turkey deteriorate if
these resolutions are enacted, the responsibility will reside solely
with the Turkish government.

But I would note that there has been no enduring negative
consequence to Turkey’s relationships with countries such as France,
Belgium, Switzerland, Canada and Argentina as each nation acknowledged
this crime against humanity.

Turkey will not sever relations with the United States over
Congress’ telling the truth about the Armenian genocide. The
U.S-Turkey relationship is of mutual benefit, and the United States
has traditionally been Turkey’s leading supporter in the West.

Mr. Ballen was incorrect when he stated that Turkish Armenian
journalist Hrant Dink was assassinated for trying to promote
reconciliation.

He was murdered after being serially prosecuted by the Turkish
government and receiving death threats from Turkish ultranationalists
for writing about the Armenian genocide.

Tragically, Mr. Ballen himself might be prosecuted in Turkey or
receive his own death threats for stating that "the genocide of
innocent Armenian civilians in the waning days of the Ottoman Empire
must be universally acknowledged."

The Turkish government is solely responsible for the dysfunctional
level of intolerance within its society today.

Mr. Ballen and others who are concerned about Turkey’s future as a
Western, secular state would be better served by supporting the
progressives within Turkey who are risking their lives by speaking
truthfully and encouraging universal affirmation of the first genocide
of the 20th century than by criticizing the genocide resolution.

Ross Vartian
Washington
The writer is executive director of the U.S.-Armenia Public Affairs Committee.

* Turkey and its past

The following letter was published in the Washington Times on March 29.

Turkey’s Deputy Prime Minister Abdullah Gul is worried that the
House of Representatives will pass an Armenian genocide resolution
("Politicizing the Armenian tragedy," Op-Ed, yesterday). He’s a bit
late.

You see, the House already has passed three resolutions (in 1975,
1984 and 1996) that explicitly reaffirmed America’s long-standing
recognition of the Armenian genocide.

President Reagan’s official proclamation of April 22, 1981, also
affirmed the factuality of that genocide.

Turkey took no action against the United States on those occasions
and cannot do so when the current resolution passes, as Turkey is
infinitely more dependent on America than America is on Turkey.

That it would threaten the United States with retaliation over a
mere resolution disproves Turkey’s contention that it is a loyal ally.

Finally, Mr. Gul’s call for a "joint commission" to study the 1915
Armenian massacres is disingenuous, to say the least. He knows very
well that such a joint study was undertaken by the Turkish Armenian
Reconciliation Commission and released in 2003. Its conclusion: Turkey
committed genocide.

Turkey is in denial and must confront its demons.

David Boyajian
Newton, Mass.

14. Editorial: Numbers count, too

It’s not the 90th anniversary this year. Nor the 95th. Those "round"
figures seem to draw the biggest crowds to the annual Genocide
commemorations.

This year, many of us may be content to mark April 24 in private,
saying a prayer, reading a poem, remembering the atrocity, mourning
our losses, and giving thanks for our collective survival and for all
that we have achieved since 1915.

But at this year’s 92nd anniversary events across the U.S., the
spectacle of sheer numbers of people may count more than ever before.

As the Reporter has documented these past weeks, the Turkish
government has been making strenuous efforts to derail the Armenian
Genocide resolution. They seemed demoralized and resigned last month;
but they’re now showing optimism that their efforts are working – and
whether it’s bravado or not, Armenians need to take notice. Naturally,
since deniers cannot win on the historical facts (and increasingly,
their allies find it too distasteful to fight those facts), they are
using pressure and blackmail to keep the resolution from ever reaching
the floors of the House and Senate.

This week it was revealed that "major" Turkish protests will be
organized in New York (on April 21) and Washington (on April 22); in
the former case, the protest will occur one day prior to the Genocide
commemoration in New York’s Times Square. What "major" constitutes in
the Turkish-American community remains to be seen; but Turkish rallies
in Washington have been significant in the past. This year the events
have been widely publicized, and people are being encouraged to board
buses to attend the anti-Armenian rallies. No doubt they will find a
few sympathetic and pliant ears in the media.

We have urged readers to get involved and contact their
representatives about the Genocide resolution. It remains true that we
can take nothing for granted. Members of Congress will support the
resolution and the leadership will schedule a vote only if they see
how deeply their constituents care about this issue.

Let us all make the time and go out of our way to attend the public
Genocide commemorations scheduled for the week surrounding April 24.
This is a cause that unites Armenians across all sorts of divides, and
it is heartening to see the leaders of our organizations acknowledge
that fact and encourage the community to gather at full strength.

Furthermore, the upcoming commemorations should not be exclusively
populated by Armenians. This year more than ever, we should make an
effort to bring our fellow American citizens to the events, to show
that Genocide recognition is not just an "Armenian" issue, but an
issue that speaks to the heart of everyone who believes in the
American experiment.

And that brings us back to the Genocide resolution. Many Armenian
activists have asserted that the resolution, though obstructed in the
past, has its best chance of passage in the present Congress. But only
if we make it happen.

A strong show of popular support at the Genocide gatherings across
the U.S. will send an important message to our representatives in
Washington at this critical moment. We Armenians have justice on our
side, but that is not always enough. In a democracy, the show of
numbers matters, too – and rightfully should matter, certainly more
than the chummy insider relations of foreign operatives and former
diplomats, on which our opponents rely to advance their anti-Armenian
agenda. That’s why, for this 92nd anniversary, visible public support
for the large-scale commemorative gatherings across the country has a
special urgency, and no Armenian-American can afford to stand on the
sidelines.

For a detailed, worldwide listing of events commemorating the 92nd
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, log onto

For a current list of cosponsors of the House and Senate
resolutions, go to or If your senator or
representative is not a cosponsor, ask them to be. If they are, send
them a thank-you note.

******************************************* ********************************
Please send your news to [email protected] and your letters to
[email protected]

(c) 2007 CS Media Enterprises LLC. All Rights Reserved

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.reporter.am
http://www.teachgenocide.com/background/hist_s
http://www.internationalbusinessreport.com/m
www.reporter.am
www.GenocideEvents.com
www.anca.org
www.aaainc.org.

Armenian Reporter – 4/7/2007 – community section

ARMENIAN REPORTER
PO Box 129
Paramus, New Jersey 07652
Tel: 1-201-226-1995
Fax: 1-201-226-1660
Web:
Email: [email protected]

April 7, 2007 — From the community section
For photographs, visit

1. Aris G. Sevag is honored for his 40 years of translating (by Sylva
Boghossian)

2. John M. Mugar dies at 92

3. Abp. Choloyan’s 40th ordination anniversary will be observed during
three regional celebrations this May (by Iris Papazian)

4. In Chicago, Ara Tekian describes the journey of a lifetime:
climbing Ararat (by Gary Rejebian)

5. Orange County’s PBS station breaks a 13-year pledge drive record –
with help from local Armenians

*************************************** ************************************

1. Aris G. Sevag is honored for his 40 years of translating

by Sylva Boghossian

QUEENS, N.Y. – The New York chapter of the Hamazkayin Armenian
Educational and Cultural Society paid tribute to Aris G. Sevag on his
40th anniversary as a translator of Armenian texts, during a refined
and joy-filled gathering on March 23.

The large hall of the Woodside Armenian Center was filled to
capacity with admirers of Sevag’s work, who had traveled from as far
away as Montreal and Florida to honor the former managing editor of
the Armenian Reporter and present managing editor of AGBU’s Ararat
quarterly literary magazine, who still finds time to make obscure and
overlooked Armenian works accessible to a broad public through his
translations.

The evening began with Master of Ceremonies Dr. Herand Markarian,
who thanked the guests and gave a brief biography of the honoree.

Dr. Markarian also read selections from the numerous congratulatory
letters that had been received for the occasion.

A wonderful feature of the evening consisted of dramatic readings of
memoirs, novels, and poems Mr. Sevag has translated. An excerpt from A
Survivor’s Memoir, by Hagop Kalayjian, was read by Hrair Seropian in
Armenian, and then in English by the author’s granddaughter, Anahid
Ugurlayan. An excerpt from Shahan Shahnoor’s novel Retreat Without
Song was read by Liza Yessaian, with Mr. Sevag’s English translation
read by his stepdaughter, Aida Zilelian-Silak. Parouyr Sevak’s "A
Mother’s Hands" was recited in Armenian by Asdghig Boudakian, followed
by Lara Milian-Bardizbanian’s reading of the English translation.

Dr. Armen Sevag, the honoree’s son, and a member of the band Aravod,
entertained the crowd with a lovely medley of songs on the oud.

* Master of an inexact science

The roster of speakers began with Dr. Nishan Parlakian, retired
professor of drama and speech at John Jay College. He recalled turning
to Aris for a translation of Kach Nazar (1923) by Derenik Demirchian,
for his book, Modern Armenian Drama in English. "Aris, working as an
artist, became as it were a playwright, a stage director, a scene
designer, a sound specialist, and so forth in order to create in
English a work worthy of the original," recalled Parlakian. "For me,
Aris is a one-of-a-kind artist."

Another touching tribute was given by Ardavast Avakian, an
89-year-old contributor-turned-friend, who made the long trek from
Florida with his wife to be present for Sevag’s tribute. Mr. Avakian
told how he had approached Aris to improve a poor translation of an
inspiring speech given before the Karabagh War Patriots in Yerevan.
After completing the project, Aris suggested having a native Eastern
Armenian speaker, who was very well versed in English to edit it. The
scholar they found "was most impressed with Aris’s efforts," said Mr.
Avakian. "He could not believe that an Armenian born in Philadelphia
could translate Eastern Armenian so well."

Keynote speaker Agop Hacikyan, author of A Summer Without Dawn, and
coordinating editor of the three-volume Heritage of Armenian
Literature, offered the modest proposition, "What distinguishes a
saint from a translator is that the former does not translate, whereas
the latter does and is rightfully entitled to public veneration."

Ruminating on translation as an "inexact science" with several
genres, requiring artistry as well as technical proficiency, Dr.
Hacikyan applauded Aris Sevag as being "technically correct in the way
he translates a text, but in the meantime, conveying the feel and
spirit of the text. As a truly accomplished translator of Armenian
into English, he goes a step further than merely rendering what’s in
the original. He becomes two persons in one – which can only be done
by people who have actually lived in both cultures, which is entirely
different from knowing two languages."

Remarking on Mr. Sevag’s respect for the Armenian language, Dr.
Hacikyan said, "Like a truly accomplished linguist, Aris is a lifelong
student of the language, closely following its growth and changes,
dedicated to its many nuances, checking and rechecking his utilization
of its words."

The most emotional speech of the evening came from Aris’s daughter,
Ani, who took to the podium with ease and conviction to give the
audience an insight into the Sevag household and the man she called "a
lover of words, books, and language." She painted a picture of a home
filled with books, where her father is dwarfed by a towering "fortress
of volumes" he builds whenever he is deeply at work (a visualization
that will amuse those who know Aris Sevag personally).

Ani went on to say, "In life, we encounter people who are our great
inspirations. They sit on top of a mountain of knowledge and
experience: artists, writers, and musicians who have a whole life’s
worth of work behind them. They are both inspirational and
intimidating. Dad, you’re one of those people. . . . I feel so honored
and humbled to have you as my father, my friend, my role model, my
inspiration, and my fuel."

* The freedom, and duty, to translate

When the time came for the guest of honor to speak, a noticeably
emotional Sevag advanced to the podium to convey his philosophy about
the translator’s craft, to acknowledge his inspirations and
motivations, and to return the gratitude expressed towards him during
the program.

He described his early years growing up in a multilingual household
led by his parents, the late Manasseh and Helen Sevag. He recalled his
schooling in his native Philadelphia, and credited his tenure teaching
at the Ferrahian Armenian school in California as leaving a lasting
impression on him.

Alternating between deep, often thought-provoking insights into the
meaning of translation, and personal anecdotes expressed with his
characteristic good humor, Sevag noted the need for a translator to
"suppress one’s own ego, in order to let the author come through
without intervention and alteration by the translator." He also said
that this kind of work can easily slip into an obsession, and
recounted his own experiences, mentally translating billboard messages
or songs playing on the radio while driving.

Especially delightful to the crowd were his forays into the vividly
colorful world of Armenian popular sayings, of which Aris Sevag is an
acknowledged connoisseur. At one point, erroneously believing he had
misplaced his papers when they were actually in front of him, he said,
"Marteh ishoon vra nesdads, esheh guh pundreh" – literally, "Sitting
on a donkey, the man looks for the donkey." Later, he mentioned Dr.
Vartan Gregorian as having chided Sevag during his post-college days
with the phrase, "Vras aliur desar, indz djaghatspan kartsetsir?"
Literally, "Seeing flour on me, did you think I was a miller?" Or in
English vernacular, Don’t judge a book by its cover.

Mr. Sevag culminated his remarks by saying how lucky he is to be
living in the United States, "where there are no restrictions on what
can be translated and published" – unlike the situation in Turkey,
where there are currently three translators, two editors, and a
publisher facing charges which could land them in prison.

"In light of this reality," he continued, "it is quite disgraceful
that we are not taking advantage of the freedom of expression enjoyed
in this country, and commissioning more translations of valuable
works. . . I personally know of some 50 books that various
individuals or organizations would like to have translated but are
held back due to the lack of funds. But even if the necessary funds
could be found, the problem would not be solved because there is a
real paucity of translators."

Offering a catalogue of figures he considers trailblazers in
Armenian-to-English translation, Aris Sevag asked: "Who is going to
take their places in the near future? What steps are being taken in
our schools to produce the translators of tomorrow? These are
questions which need to be addressed, especially if there is ever
going to be a concerted effort to produce translations on a consistent
basis."

He concluded by thanking the New York chapter of Hamazkayin chapter
for organizing the tribute, and offered a special thank-you to his
wife, Asdghig, "for her sacrifice, and her compassionate understanding
of my need to work long hours at my craft. Without her support, I
would not be able to continue this work."

Following the program, a lavish mezze was served, which had been
prepared by the Hamazkayin ladies.

***************************************** **********************************

2. John M. Mugar dies at 92

* Was an innovator in the supermarket industry and trustee of Tufts University

GLOUCESTER, Mass. – John Martin Mugar, a major and innovative figure
in New England’s supermarket industry in the 1950s and 1960s, died of
natural causes at the Seacoast Rehabilitation Center in Gloucester on
March 23. The longtime resident of Belmont, who more recently resided
in Marco Island, Fla., and Gloucester, was 92.

A substantial Boston Globe obituary called Mr. Mugar "part of a
family credited with helping change the marketplace for grocery
shoppers in New England by turning traditional stores in the 1970s
into one-stop massive markets with bank outlets, florists, and books."

What became known as the Star Market empire began with his cousin
Stephen Mugar’s family store in Watertown. It was Stephen who offered
John a job in the store in the 1930s, where the two developed the idea
of one-stop shopping.

In a 1980 Boston Globe profile, Mr. Mugar fondly recalled the
personal service he could provide when he was working with his cousin
in Watertown. "I miss the close contact with the customer, and getting
to know the family," he said, "I’d ask, ‘How was the roast that I sold
you last week?’ That was important to me."

By the 1960s, Star Market had expanded into the suburbs and had
become a leader in the grocery industry in Greater Boston. In the
previous decade, John Mugar had proven himself a leader in the
supermarket industry, by introducing many merchandising and management
innovations, including unit pricing before it became mandatory in
Massachusetts. Star Market was the first in the industry to introduce
in-store banking, florists, and book sales. In 1955, Mr. Mugar
instituted a profit-sharing and retirement program for full and
part-time employees.

He was chairman of the Star Market Company when he retired in 1978,
after more than 40 years at Star.

Asked by the Armenian Reporter to describe her father, Mr. Mugar’s
daughter Elizabeth Mugar Eveillard, of New York City, said that it
would be hard to find the right words. "But everybody we’ve spoken to
these past days has used the same term: ‘gentleman.’ He was indeed a
great gentleman."

She added that her father was "a leader in his industry, and a
leader in developing programs for his employees. He broke new barriers
in so many areas, and for him, that was the exciting thing" in his
business career.

"He was beloved by his family, and he loved them back," Mrs. Eveillard said.

Mr. Mugar’s friend John Baronian, a trustee emeritus of Tufts
University and a past president of the university’s alumni
association, emphasized that Mugar was "the first person of Armenian
extraction to become a trustee of Tufts; and his cousin Stephen was
the first Armenian to receive an honorary degree" from the university.

Baronian recalled a "warm, very popular man. . . highly respected,
low-key, with a very nice family. John Mugar was a remarkable guy."

Mugar was born in Boston in 1914, the son of Armenian immigrants
Martin and Anna Chooljian Mugar. He graduated magna cum laude from
Tufts University in 1937 and continued a lifelong affiliation with the
university, serving Tufts for many years as a Life Trustee, as well as
being on the board of its Fletcher School of Law and Diplomacy.

During the Second World War, Mugar served as a Senior Lieutenant in
the U.S. Naval Reserve Acorn 44 division in Okinawa. His beloved wife
of 60 years, Helen Gienandt Mugar, who served as a Navy Nurse in New
Guinea during the war, survives him. They met at Portsmouth (N.H.)
Naval Base in 1943.

A keen student of international relations, Mugar was a member of the
Foreign Policy Club of Boston, the Center of International Affairs at
Harvard, and established an internship program that brought Europeans
and Africans to work in the Star Market stores.

His deep interest in current affairs inspired his idea for what
became a long-running television program, "Starring the Editors,"
which brought together a panel of Boston newspaper editors to discuss
developments in the news. The program was sponsored by Star Market.

Mr. Mugar was also a seminar speaker at MIT’s Sloan School of
Management and went to Washington to speak on behalf of a program
called "From the Seed to the Table." He enjoyed working with young
people and hosted dinners that brought together policymakers and
college students.

At his retirement in 1978, Star Market operated 61 stores in the New
England area. After Star Market was bought by the Jewel Company in
1964, Mugar continued as president and later chairman of Star, as well
as serving on the Jewel board. (The company is now a part of Shaw’s
Supermarkets, Inc.)

His business and motivational skills showed up at an early age. At
12 he sold the Saturday Evening Post in Harvard Square, and soon
became the manager of a sales force of about 25 boys. His group won
every sales contest that Curtis Publishing held in the Boston area.

He encouraged women and minorities to enter business and served as a
founding advisor for the Graduate Program in Management at Simmons
College, in which capacity he worked closely with minority businesses.
He also served on the President’s Council at the University of
Massachusetts, and was president of the Minuteman Boy Scout Council,
as well as serving on the boards of the National Association of Food
Chains and the Food Marketing Institute. He was on the board of the
Castle Hill Foundation in the 1960s, and helped broaden the appeal of
its concert series by bringing in folk and jazz acts. Mugar was also a
longstanding member of the Algonquin Club.

John Mugar was a member and supporter of many Armenian
organizations, and was a founding member of the Armenian Executive
Club and the Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA). He was
also a supporter of the Armenia Tree Project, led by his niece,
Carolyn.

In addition to his wife, Helen, Mr. Mugar is survived by his
children Elizabeth Eveillard, Martin Mugar, Ellen Mugar, and Louise
Grubb; by seven grandchildren; and by two sisters, Mary Tatoian and
Beatrice Fye. He was predeceased by his sister Irene Pike.

The family has directed that in lieu of flowers donation be sent to
the Armenian Tree Project (65 Main Street, Watertown, MA 02472),
Project SAVE (P.O. Box 236, Watertown, MA 02471), or the Tufts
University Arts and Sciences Scholarship Fund (P.O. Box 3306, Boston,
MA 02441).

***************************************** **********************************

3. Abp. Choloyan’s 40th ordination anniversary will be observed during
three regional celebrations this May

by Iris Papazian

NEW YORK – The Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of
America is preparing to celebrate the 40th anniversary of Archbishop
Oshagan Choloyan’s ordination to the priesthood. The milestone will be
observed this May in three different locations.

Archbishop Oshagan has been the Prelate of the Eastern Prelacy since
1998 and last year during the National Representative Assembly was
elected to a third four-year term. A national steering committee,
under the leadership of Jack Mardoian, Esq., chairman of the Prelacy’s
Executive Council, is guiding the three events with the coordination
of local committees.

The first of the commemorations will take place in New England, on
Saturday, May 5. The Sts. Vartanantz Church of Providence, R.I., will
host the evening, which is expected to draw attendees from throughout
the region. The banquet will take place in the evening, beginning with
a reception at 6:30 p.m., followed by dinner and a program, at the
Marriott on Orms Street in Providence, located right off Interstate 95
and easily reached from all areas of New England.

One week later, on Saturday, May 12, the Mid-Atlantic communities
will honor Archbishop Oshagan with a gala banquet at the Marriott at
Glenpointe in Teaneck, N.J. A cocktail reception will begin at 7:00
p.m., with dinner and a program at 8:00 p.m. The Marriott’s location
is conveniently located at the crossroads of major highways and is
easily accessible from New York, Philadelphia, and Washington.

In the Midwest, the anniversary event will coincide with the
Prelacy’s National Representative Assembly (NRA), hosted by the St.
Sarkis Church, of Dearborn, Mich., on Friday, May 18, at the
Doubletree Hotel, in Dearborn. A cocktail reception will begin at 7:00
p.m., with dinner and a program beginning at 8:00 p.m. This event will
by an opportunity for Midwest parishes to attend, along with the NRA
delegates in Dearborn for the annual gathering.

* Three identical programs

The program at all three events will be largely identical, with some
variation for local artistic participation. Mr. Mardoian will be the
Master of Ceremonies, and Judge Sarkis Teshoian will be the keynote
speaker at all three events. A video message from His Holiness Aram I,
Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, will be shown, as will a
short video presentation on Archbishop Oshagan’s life and service. The
Vicar General, Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, who is hosting all three
events on behalf of the Religious and Executive Councils, will
introduce the Prelate.

Judge Sarkis Teshoian, a distinguished Massachusetts jurist, devoted
church member and close friend to Archbishop Choloyan, will deliver
the keynote address at all three events. Judge Teshoian has served in
many leadership positions, including as chairman of the Prelacy’s
Executive Council. He has been honored by the Holy See of Cilicia for
his devoted service by both the late Catholicos Karekin II, and
Catholicos Aram I, who presented him with the highest civilian award,
the Prince of Cilicia insignia, in 2005.

* A gifted clergyman

Archbishop Oshagan was born in Aleppo, Syria, in 1947, with the
baptismal name Manoog. He is the third of six children born to
Antranig and Marie (nee Kasbarian) Choloyan. He received his primary
education in Aleppo’s Haikazian School, and in 1960 was accepted into
the Cilician See’s seminary in Antelias, Lebanon. He was ordained a
deacon in 1964 and a celibate priest in 1967, and given the name
Oshagan by Bishop Karekin Sarkissian, who in 1994 as Catholicos
Karekin II of Cilicia ordained him to the episcopal rank. He 1998, His
Holiness Aram I elevated him to the rank of archbishop.

He holds degrees from the American University of Beirut and
Princeton Theological Seminary.

In the 1980s, as pontifical legate to Kuwait and the Arab Emirates
serving under the appointment of Catholicos Karekin II Sarkissian, he
organize the region into a jurisdiction of the Catholicate of Cilicia,
and was subsequently elected to serve the new diocese as prelate. In
1998, he was elected as prelate of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian
Apostolic Church of America, and is in the midst of his third
four-year term.

Archbishop Oshagan has been a vital force in preserving the music of
the Armenian Church. Together with the late Archbishop Zareh
Aznavourian, he prepared five volumes of sharagans. The two also
collaborated on a new translation of the New Testament from classical
into modern Armenian, and were in the midst of translating the Old
Testament when Archbishop Zareh passed away. Archbishop Oshagan is
currently leading the continuation of this monumental work in tribute
to his late spiritual brother.

Throughout his service to the Armenian Church Archbishop Choloyan
has been guided by his intense faith in the mission of the church and
his dedication to the Armenian nation, always guided by the words of
St. Paul, "Therefore…be steadfast, immoveable, always excelling in the
work of the Lord, because you know that in the Lord your labor is not
in vain."

A commemorative book is being published for the 40th anniversary
devoted to the life and service of this gifted clergyman. Donations,
which Archbishop Choloyan has requested to benefit the Prelacy’s fund
for clergy recruitment, training, and education. as well as for
religious publications, will be acknowledged in the commemorative
book. Inquiries about this should be directed to the Prelacy office in
New York City.

General information on all three events can be obtained from local
parishes, or from the Prelacy headquarters at (212) 689-7810, or on
the Prelacy’s website ().

********************** ************************************************** ***

4. In Chicago, Ara Tekian describes the journey of a lifetime: climbing Ararat

by Gary Rejebian

CHICAGO, Ill. – Some people dream of going to the moon. But for two
prominent Armenians already at the peak of their careers, the journey
of a lifetime led them to the summit of Mount Ararat.

In an engaging talk at the AGBU Chicago Center on March 4, medical
education specialist Dr. Ara Tekian, a professor at the University of
Illinois-Chicago, described the pilgrimage that he and epidemiologist
Haroutune Armenian (President of the American University of Armenia,
AUA) made to Ararat last August, delivering a riveting presentation
illustrated by more than 300 images.

The two professors were joined by Dr. Armenian’s wife Sona, Dr.
Varduhi Petrosyan (assistant professor of Public Health at AUA) and
her husband Arsen Krikoryan, and Dr. Arthur Melkonyan (a former
professor of Public Health at AUA).

For Tekian, who in his childhood began drawing Ararat and even
dreamed of discovering Noah’s Ark, the sojourn to the summit had
become especially compelling in the last dozen years during which he
had made annual trips to Armenia to teach a course at AUA. He and Dr.
Armenian thus decided the best way to celebrate the 15th anniversary
of both Armenia’s independence and the founding of AUA was "to raise
the Armenian flag on Mt. Ararat."

For the group of six Armenians making their way through eastern
Turkey, however, not only the climb but the trip there and back became
a spiritual journey.

Coming to the mountain required a more than 500-mile drive to and
from Yerevan – all to reach a destination that was less than 50 miles
away as the crow flies. Regional politics are, of course, in the
driver’s seat for the entry into Turkey from Armenia, with the group
having only two options to reach Ararat from Yerevan: either travel
through Iran, or take their selected route north to Georgia to double
back along the sealed Armenian-Turkish border, which would afford them
the chance to visit the ruins of three of the most significant
locations in Armenian history.

Their pilgrimage began six months prior with extensive training to
prepare for the strenuous climb.

* You need to brainwash yourself that it’s possible. . .

"The commitment to climb Mt. Ararat is both mental and physical,"
Tekian commented. "Mentally, you need to brainwash yourself that it’s
possible. Then, physically, you need to be in great shape."

Tekian began dieting and exercising daily. He took a cardiac stress
test. His colleagues suggested "spending a night in your garden," so
the cosmopolitan Beirut-born academician could decide whether he could
endure camping outdoors in the rocky terrain. During the Chicago
lecture, Tekian gleefully showed a photo of the bathroom facility at
the first campsite: a hole in the ground behind a lean-to tarp.
(Higher up, he says, "it’s all barren and there is no place to hide.")

Meanwhile, Sona Armenian secured an official government permit for
the climb – a process that takes at least three months – and made
arrangements with a tour company that provided a guide, a van from the
town of Dogubeyazit (the only starting point allowed by the Turkish
government), and horses for the first two stages of the ascent to
10,560 and 13,800 feet, where there were campsites along the way. They
had a different Kurdish guide for each elevation and campsite. The
final hike started at 2:00 a.m. and they were at the peak (17,040
feet) at 6:30 a.m.

Once at the summit, "the sense of achievement and pride was
overwhelming," Tekian said. "You feel so blessed and empowered – we
were no longer looking upward to see the peak: we were at the peak.
The first thing I did was to thank God for giving me the strength and
opportunity to realize this dream. I prayed for my [late] parents who
had always inspired me to visit historic Armenia one day. I prayed
that my sisters, niece, nephew, and close friends could one day climb
this mountain. So that was the first five minutes."

"We had plans to dance an Armenian folk dance and to drink the
Armenian cognac that Arthur had carried all the way up, but we only
had some iyran (yogurt diluted with water) because of the altitude.
The temperature was minus 30 Fahrenheit, and our fingers were freezing
in the wind. We stayed only 20 minutes. You can see three countries
from the peak: we spotted Turkey and Iran, but it was foggy over
Armenia so we could not see Yerevan."

Tekian explained that descending the mountain is more difficult than
climbing; their return took them almost 12 hours. Along their way,
they encountered two other groups: a large group of Iranians
descending at the second campsite (13,800 ft), and another six Britons
camping an extra day for acclimatization.

On the way home, the group continued tracing their cultural roots by
visiting four illustrious relics in Armenia’s glorious past: the ruins
of the 1st-century royal capital of Ani, the Varagavank monastery
(former repository for a fragment of Christ’s crucifixion cross) and
the Holy Cross Church of Aghtamar at Van, and the once cultured,
diverse and wealthy city of Kars. While not expecting to find any
breath of Armenian life among 1,000-year-old ruins, the natural and
especially the man-made desecration to the sites stirred passions in
them for all that had been lost in the Armenian culture.

* Among the ruins of Ani

"After seeing the most beautiful churches in Ani totally destroyed, we
were repulsed by the lack of effort to save these precious historical
monuments," Tekian lamented. "Ani has for centuries been a ghost town,
but since the area is declared a Turkish military zone, no excavations
can be done. The Turkish government has not taken any measure to
protect this world treasure. Negligence and vandalism have taken a
heavy toll on Ani’s monuments."

Indeed, on four consecutive occasions from 1996 to 2002, the World
Monuments Fund listed Ani among the "100 Most Endangered Sites" on its
World Monuments Watch. Only one other site ever, in Serbia, had been
listed as many times. Especially in the last 30 years, the Armenian
monuments of Turkey have also been subjected to cultural cleansing of
their Armenian origins.

"There was no mention either at the gate of Ani or in the directory
of the history of Ani that this city had been the capital of Armenia a
thousand years ago. It was almost unreal to see so many churches
renamed as mosques, and their Armenian identities just obliterated.
This is the moment that your ‘Armenian-ness’ comes to a climax: when
you decide you need to do something – anything – to protect your rich
heritage."

In the end, having reached a pinnacle and nadir in feelings about
his ethnic identity, would Tekian say the trip was really worth a mere
20 minutes of wind-chilled ecstasy followed by desolation and
heartbreak?

"This trip was a spiritual journey, climbing a sacred mountain and
visiting some of the most important religious centers in Western
Armenia. It was a pilgrimage for me to trace my roots," Tekian
reflected. "Dreams do come true! Finally I climbed Mt. Ararat, and
when the journey was over, I was a different person. I acquired such
strength that gave me confidence, courage, and determination that
there is nothing impossible in life. I now believe you can conquer any
height and overcome any difficulty in life if you have the
determination."

* Connect:

Dr. Ara Tekian’s first presentation on climbing Ararat was delivered
in Armenian in Geneva, Switzerland, last February. Schedule
permitting, he welcomes invitations to give this talk elsewhere.
E-mail him at [email protected], or call (708) 445-0311.

AGBU Chicago is considering the possibility of arranging a group
tour to climb Mt. Ararat in the summer of 2008. If you are interested
in joining the group, contact AGBU Chicago Board chair Leona Mirza, at
[email protected], or call (773) 588-2844.

For a historical and contemporary tour of Ani, including background
on the Turkish "restoration" of the monuments, visit

*********************** ************************************************** **

5. Orange County’s PBS station breaks a 13-year pledge drive record –
with help from local Armenians

ORANGE COUNTY, Calif. – Last week, Orange County’s public television
station KOCE broadcast the acclaimed documentary, The Armenian
Genocide, by Emmy Award-winning filmmaker Andrew Goldberg, who was
present in the studio as co-host during the station’s live membership
drive.

Collaborating with KOCE were the Armenian Festival of Orange County
and other local Armenian organizations, who had invited their members
to volunteer to answer telephones from contributors during the live
telecast.

The results astonished everyone. The three-hour event turned out to
be a stellar fundraiser for the broadcaster, amassing a final total of
$118,535 from 902 pledges, breaking the 13-year record set in 1994
when the Three Tenors "Encore" performance in Dodger Stadium aired
during a six-hour on-air pledge drive.

Encouraging, supporting, and participating in the effort were
leaders from the Armenian Festival, the Armenian Relief Society Karni
chapter, Forty Martyrs Armenian Church, Orange County Armenian
Professional Society, and St. Mary’s Armenian Church.

During the live telecast, various Orange County organization
representatives were interviewed by KOCE’s "Real Orange" broadcast
news anchor, Ed Arnold. These included Arthur Aykanian, Serge
Tomassian, Jason Kizerian, Ara Malazian, Lina Tufenkjian, Thomas
Kalajian, and Angie Kardashian.

Volunteers from throughout Glendale, San Fernando Valley, Santa
Monica, and greater Orange County answered the call to participate.
The overflow response to work the phone banks prompted KOCE staff, for
the first time, to double up on training. Nearly 50 people responded
to the invitation for 20 volunteers, and more stepped forward to
accept positions on a standby basis if needed.

Paul Aslanian and Tom Kalajian, of the Orange County Armenian
Festival, coordinated the evening’s activities together with committee
members.

KOCE received donations from across its broadcast area, due in large
part to Armenians who helped saturate the community with e-mails and
phone calls, informing friends and family to watch and contribute.

Institutional donors who issued on-air challenges, included the
Armenian Festival of Orange County, the Orange County Armenian
Professional Society, Provident Financial Services, Inc., and the
Provident Group.

Organizer Paul Aslanian stressed that the KOCE pledge drive was a
"Pan-Armenian" event, outside the orbit of established Armenian
organizations, which showed that Armenian communities could support
and collaborate with each other, across all lines, in a spirit of
congeniality. He said plans are in development for future
collaborative projects based on the friendships forged during the KOCE
event.

************************************* **************************************

Please send your news to [email protected] and your letters to
[email protected]

(c) 2007 CS Media Enterprises LLC. All Rights Reserved

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Armenian Reporter – 4/7/2007 – arts & culture section

ARMENIAN REPORTER
PO Box 129
Paramus, New Jersey 07652
Tel: 1-201-226-1995
Fax: 1-201-226-1660
Web:
Email: [email protected]

April 7, 2007 — From the Arts & Culture section
All of the articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter.
For photographs, visit

Briefly
1. Guediguian’s film returns to Toronto
2. Aram Khachaturian four-CD box set released
3. Four Armenian films at the Syracuse film festival
4. Silent auction fundraiser for David of Sassoon animated film
5. AGBU Armenian Youth Association’s Genocide commemoration
6. ADAA launches $10,000 William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting

7. Film: Seaching for identity in a multicultural world (by Paul Chaderjian)
* Filmmaker Tamar Salibian goes behind the curtains with Beautiful Armenians

8. A musical journey in avant-garde folk: Arto Tunçboyaciyan and the
Armenian Navy Band (by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian)
* Sidebar: Merin siroon Ararat (Our lovely Ararat)
* Sidebar: In memory of Hrant Dink, for the truth

9. It’s all about the ice cream: Leading man Hrach Titizian teases his
audience with talent (by Paul Chaderjian)

10. In their own words: Online entertainment magazine logs 4 million
hits a month
* Three best friends turn Hollywood buzz into dreams come true

11. Celebrating a decade of chamber music: The National Chamber
Orchestra of Armenia is ten years old (by Betty Panossian-Ter
Sargssian)

12. Essay: Up the hill but not over it. A story about my mom (by Armen D. Bacon)

****************************************** *********************************

Briefly

1. Guediguian’s film returns to Toronto

Armenian-French filmmaker Robert Guediguian’s latest film, Le voyage
en Arménie (Voyage to Armenia), was featured as part of the 10th
annual Cinefranco French-language film festival in Toronto last
Sunday, April 1. Le voyage en Arménie was one of 45 films from 12
countries screened. It tells the story of Anna, a French cardiologist,
who reconnects with her Armenian heritage. Anna’s journey begins when
her father runs away to the homeland. She is forced to follow him to a
foreign country and a culture foreign to her. The 2006 film was shot
entirely on location in Armenia. It was scored by Arto Tunçboyaciyan
(see page C6) and stars Ariane Ascaride, Gerard Meylan, Chorik
Grigorian, and Simon Abkarian. Le voyage en Arménie was also featured
at the 2006 Toronto International Film Festival.

connect:

* * *

2. Aram Khachaturian four-CD box set released

The Hamazkayin Music Committee in Los Angeles has released a four-CD
collection of Armenian composer Aram Khachaturian’s piano solos.
Performing the genius composer’s music is world-renowned pianist Armen
Babkhanian.

The music notes on the box set explain Khachaturian’s uniqueness by
saying that he created a new aesthetic dimension in music "by blending
his individual creativity with the distinctive features common to West
European art forms, the style of medieval monophony, Armenian
folkloric traditions, the art of ashughs and the purism of artistic
expression of the great Komitas [Gomidas]."

With the release of this set, Hamazkayin has concluded a series that
offers those who value Armenian music history a collection of keyboard
compositions and arrangements from three titans of Armenian music:
Sayat Nova, Gomidas, and Aram Khachaturian.

connect:

* * *

3. Four Armenian films at the Syracuse film festival

Several Armenian and Armenian-themed films are scheduled to play at
the 2007 Syracuse International Film Festival from April 18-22. Three
are on the film festival program, and Carla Garapedian’s Screamers has
been added to the prefestival schedule. Screamers, which will be
screened on Sunday, April 15, is an examination of the reoccurrence of
genocides through the perspective of the world-renowned rock band
System Of A Down.

The three films to be screened as part of the festival include
Memories about Sayat Nova by Levon Grigorian. This documentary bears
the name that Sergei Parajanov wanted to use for his classic The Color
of Pomegranates. Memories features 30 minutes of censored and unedited
scenes from Parajanov’s original work of art. The second scheduled
film is Return Of the Poet by Harutyun Khachatryan. This 85-minute
documentary from Armenia is about the creation of a statute to honor
legendary artist Jivany. The final film from Armenia is a five-minute
animated piece titled Unemployed.

connect:

* * *

4. Silent auction fundraiser for David of Sassoon animated film

A group of young California Armenians are planning a silent auction
next weekend to raise funds for the production of a trailer for David
of Sassoon, an animated feature film for theatrical release. The
filmmakers hope to use the trailer to secure funding for the
production of the entire film.

On the auctioning block will be artwork from Sophia Gasparian,
Kaloust Guedelekian, Haik Melkonyan, Alexander Sadoyan, Arpine
Shakhbandaryan, Addis Zaryan, Arpine Alexanyan, Azad Derbedrosian, and
Lousine Karibian.

On Thursday, April 12, at 7 P.M., the public may view the art and
meet the artists at the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, 3325
N. Glenoaks Blvd. in Burbank, California. The art will remain on
display at the Diocese on Friday, from 10 to 10, and on Saturday, from
9 until noon.

connect:

* * *

5. AGBU Armenian Youth Association’s Genocide commemoration

The Armenian Youth Association of the San Fernando Valley will be
commemorating the Armenian Genocide on Saturday, April 21, at the
Nazarian Center, 6844 Oakdale Avenue in Canoga Park, California. The
event will feature the Hye-Herosner Marching Band, the Sartarabad
Dance Group, and the bands Sight of Sound and Silent Noise.

connect:

* * *

6. ADAA launches $10,000 William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting

The Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance (ADAA) and the William Saroyan
Foundation will hand out ten thousand dollars to the winner of the
William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting. The submission deadline for the
inaugural competition is February 15, 2008, and the winner will be
honored in August 2008 – the 100th anniversary of Saroyan’s birth.
Contest rules are posted, and all scripts must have an Armenian theme.

connect:

*** ************************************************** **********************

7. Film: Seaching for identity in a multicultural world

* Filmmaker Tamar Salibian goes behind the curtains with Beautiful Armenians

by Paul Chaderjian

Tamar Salibian set out to make a documentary about how 20- and
30-something Armenians dealt with being Armenians in America, how they
felt about issues like marrying non-Armenians, and how they connected
to their cultural heritage. When the 30-year-old finished her
documentary, Beautiful Armenians, she had given birth to a much more
personal film.

"It became personal," she says, "because my connection to the
culture is very personal. I’m not involved in the Armenian community,
per se. I don’t go to events so much, but my connection is through my
family and through memory."

The exploration of her personal connection to her culture took Tamar
to Europe, the Middle East, and the homeland. She interviewed her
grandmother, cousins, and friends to figure out how those close to her
were connected to the culture to which she was connected through them.
>From 30 hours of footage, she pieced together a 59-minute answer to
her questions.

Beautiful Armenians was Tamar’s thesis film in graduate school, the
California Institute of the Arts in Valencia, an hour north of
Hollywood. The private institute was funded by the likes of Walt
Disney to help students like Tamar explore the visual and performing
arts.

"I graduated from Cal Arts in 2004," she says, "and since then, I’ve
been working in reality TV and independent film postproduction,
assisting editors and producers, directors."

Among her credits are work on Donald Trump’s Apprentice reality
show, Survivor, and American Inventor. "There is a group of us," she
explains, "who help the editor by organizing the footage. We make very
specific and succinct notes on each tape; then editors use our notes
to piece together the script and the episodes."

Tamar is currently working for a small production company called
Allentown, which is coproducing a series called Sahara. "It’s about
these three individuals who are ultra marathon runners," she says.
"They have decided to run across the Sahara Desert. It’s a mission to
see if they can do it, and it also highlights the current situation in
Africa."

Her personal mission is to exhibit Beautiful Armenians at more film
festivals. During the entire month of March, the documentary was
screened on local cable in the Boston area. It was also screened at
the Golden Apricot Film Festival in Yerevan last summer.

"I didn’t go," she says with a smile. "I was working. I had to pay
my bills." Since then, Tamar’s film was also screened at the San
Francisco Armenian Film Festival in February. "It was also screened as
part of an anthropology series at Eastern Washington University in
Spokane," she says. "It was really great for me, because it will
engage people to learn about their family history and to question
certain things about their culture."

Tamar says in examining the essence of her identity, she came to an
awareness that she doesn’t consider herself only as Armenian. "I
consider myself Armenian-American, female, documentarist, living in
Los Angeles, from such and such place," she explains. "We’re
multifaceted individuals."

There is not just one answer to the question of how someone is
connected to his or her culture, says Tamar. "I found Armenians who
don’t speak the language," she says, "but feel very connected to the
culture."

Tamar also interviewed her grandmother, who died last year, to get
an oral history of how her grandmother’s parents survived the
Genocide. Tamar talked to her grandmother on tape about how her family
ended up in Jordan, lived in Jerusalem, and left during the
Arab-Israeli War in 1948.

"I made a very conscious decision not to show any of the footage
that I had shot in Armenia," she says. "I was going to include it, but
I realized this is a Diaspora film, and I am a person from the
Diaspora."

* Diasporan identity

Tamar’s Diasporan history began when her parents moved to Iowa to go
to graduate school. That’s where she was born. The family moved to Los
Angeles when she was three. Her mother taught at Ferrahian High
School, and Tamar attended Chamlian and Ferrahian until her parents
moved to Boston.

"My mom got a job at the Zoryan Institute," she says. "That was the
reason for moving. She is an English professor at Boston University
now. My father studied music. He’s a composer, and he has his own
recording company called Meg Recordings. He’s helping me with the
promotion and sales of the DVD."

Tamar received her bachelor’s from the Massachusetts College of Art,
then moved to New York City to work in publishing and photo sales. "I
moved initially to do an internship at Harper’s Magazine," she says.
"I thought publishing was a nice mix of photography and writing."

While working for a photography distribution company in New York,
Tamar realized she wasn’t doing anything to create her own art, so she
applied to graduate school.

"I moved from New York a week before 9-11," she says. "It was
strange not to be with my friends and coworkers [after 9-11]." The
film and video program she enrolled in allowed her to design her own
curriculum, and she focused on documentary filmmaking and film
history.

"I think my best film at Cal Arts was a very short piece was called
Home," she says. "It was the precursor to Beautiful Armenians, a
little bit more comedic." Tamar says she shot the short film during a
visit home when her parents were discussing taking a trip to Europe.

"On the one hand it was very funny," she says, "because my father
refused to go anywhere. You know how, Armenians, stubborn Marashtsis.
And the wife, trying to understand why this individual won’t budge."

The seven-minute short was a hit at school and around the
film-festival circuit, says Tamar. After filming her parents for more
than 90 minutes, she pieced together the film that showed the dynamics
and her father’s eventual agreement to travel to Europe.

Ahead for the budding filmmaker is a second documentary she will
call Arabic Lessons. "It’s about American individuals who are studying
Arabic and why," she explains. "I want to focus on the West’s
perception of the Middle East and the Arab world pre- and post-9-11."

Tamar says she wants to find individuals, as she did in Beautiful
Armenians, "who are towing that line between two or three or more
cultures."

**************************** ***********************************************

8 . A musical journey in avant-garde folk

* Arto Tunçboyaciyan and the Armenian Navy Band

by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian

The Armenian percussionist, vocalist, singer, and songwriter Arto
Tunç – boyaciyan shares with the Armenian Reporter his personal
philosophies about music, his roots, and Ararat. We had our
conversation at the Astral club in Yerevan, where the artist and his
band are currently performing.

* The sounds of music

The avant-garde folk music created by Arto Tunçboyaciyan and his
group, The Armenian Navy Band, is famous for its unique fusion of two
distinct musical worlds.

Arto’s sounds are rooted in traditional Armenian and Anatolian music
and energized with the dynamics of the present. The term "avant-garde
folk" best describes the musical character and dimensions of this
group, its perception of life and the range of its imagination.

"Folk serves our basic cultural needs," Arto told the Armenian
Reporter. "It is rooted deep down in our souls. It is our specific
flavor. Avant-garde folk does not have any national boundaries. It is
not limited by any definitive style."

Arto believes perceptions of modern life and national traditions can
be combined in any musical medium, be it symphonic, heavy metal, or
jazz. Therein lies the richness of his original creations, whose
ingredients include Armenian folk songs, Anatolian melodies, the tones
of jazz and the blues, and other musical experiences.

"My music has all the sounds of my life," Arto says. "It is the
voice of my life. What I live is translated into the sounds of my
music."

For Arto, "Sayat Nova’s or Gomidas’s music is also in a way authentic jazz."

How’s that? "Because they have written the music of the lives. The
only difference is that each has composed with his own sounds."

The path pioneered by Arto and the Armenian Navy Band in the woods
of jazz, folk, and a little from every part of the music world is
built with a fascinating assortment of instruments, played by twelve
musicians from Armenia, gifted with particular virtuosity. The
melancholy of the duduk counterbalances the animated thrill of the
bass guitar. The zest of a bottle full of pebbles or water murmurs
about the bond with nature. Along with the duduk, the very Armenian
kamancha, zurna, and kanon furnish the band with the folk idiom, while
the piano, keyboards, trumpet, drums, sax, bass, and trombone complete
the avant-garde.

* Three CDs

Since 1998 Arto and the Armenian Navy Band have released three CDs,
Bzdig Zinvor (1999), New Apricot (2001), and Natural Seed (2004). The
compositions are all original to Arto Tunçboyaciyan. In 2006 Arto,
together with the Armenian Navy Band, were voted the audience’s
favorite world-music artist on BBC. Arto was selected as the favorite
performer of the year.

Their music not only has elements from the cultures and sounds of
Anatolia, but also manages to dig out the Armenian soul, blend it with
the sounds and meanings of the contemporary world, and express it with
words and lyrics that touch the soul.

"My words flow like water into my songs," Arto says. "I prefer to
talk the way ordinary people talk, and then my words will be possessed
by the ordinary and the intellectuals because I don’t intend to teach
people. I just want to share with them moments of my life."

* Releasing inner tensions

Arto was born in Turkey in 1957 and raised in the outskirts of Istanbul.

"We studied Turkish at the Armenian school, and the history book
would teach us that we, the Armenians, are a bad nation," he says.
"Neither our Turkish was perfect, nor was our Armenian the way it
should be." This created volcanoes of inner tensions and conflicts.

Arto was not among those who would keep such feelings locked inside.
He preferred to cry out, "in an Artoyan language." And that is a good
thing because the listener, "be it my mother or someone Japanese,
finds a common path in my music. They may not both understand the
lyrics, but pay attention to the meaning. But my mother may penetrate
into the real meanings of those sounds because they are dear to her;
they belong to our native lands."

The artist stressed, "I am from Anatolia, not from anywhere else,
and this means being exposed to different cultural elements." He
rejects the contention that his music is Turkish.

"To me there is no such thing as being genetically a Turk.
Turkishness is an imposed ideology, because they do not really know
what they believe in. I do not say this to offend anyone, as I often
have asked Turks to explain what it really means to be a Turk, but
still haven’t got an answer. Who are walking now on the lands of
Turkey?! Close your eyes and pick randomly anyone and you find their
ancestors to be Armenians, Kurds, Central Asians. I can prove this by
hundreds of examples."

* Climbing his way up

He wanted to be either a Caesar or nothing, but was certain that
playing in the streets would get him closer to the Hall of Fame.

The turning point in the artist’s life was moving to the United
States in 1981 to explore new musical dimensions and to give free
expression to his inner sounds. After being a well-known professional
musician in Istanbul, where he "couldn’t get all the meanings out of
the words," Arto preferred starting from zero in the Land of
Opportunity.

"Those of our friends who thought playing at weddings was a better
start than the street are still entertaining wedding guests," Arto
says. Playing in the streets is the hardest thing for a musician, he
says, because "you have to capture the passersby’s attention, you have
to make them stop and listen to you."

* A musical journey

To listening to Arto’s music is to be carried away on a journey, one
where freedom spreads its wings. But that is only a facet of the
relationship between this musician and his band on the one side, and
their audience on the other. "I like to have eye contact with my
audience. I want to know who they really are. I feel excited about
what each meeting with my audience will bring to me and teach me. It
is my way to discover life," says Arto. Sometimes a group of ten fans
may fascinate him and his musicians and carry them away, he says.

The journey is not only from the past to the present, but also
involves time travel into the future. It aims to be the starting point
for the next generation. "I want the climax of my music to be the zero
point of the next generation. I am waiting for the Armenian youth to
pick the music up from where I have reached."

* Improvising on the way

A musical journey with Arto and the Armenian Navy Band may have many
unexpected turns and twists.

Improvisation is a vital part of the creativity of this artist and
his group. "When I play on my own 75-80 percent of my music is
improvised," Arto says. Often the whole band starts a musical
expedition that leads them to new and unknown spaces, from where it is
sometimes hard to find a way back home.

"In a way life is improvisation because when you wake up in the
morning in reality you do not know what is going to happen next. But
the most important is being part of the moment, helping it and being a
leader, learning how to react," Arto says.

And with this, Arto Tunç – boyaciyan headed backstage to raise the
sails for yet another voyage with the Armenian Navy Band.

* * *

Sidebar: Merin siroon Ararat (Our lovely Ararat)

The song "Ararat" has mesmerized listeners all over the world with its
simplicity. It is hitting the right chords, the emotional chords of
Armenians everywhere. Arto tells the story of the song in his own
words.

"Ararat is not simply a word, a song, but a true story. Although we
had seen the mountain from the Turkish side, it doesn’t have the same
majestic look from there. It fills up your entire life. And I am
fascinated with it.

"When I first came to Armenia, the first morning I woke up at dawn
and saw a picture of Ararat hanging in my room, and I thought what a
beautiful and real-life picture they had made. Only when the sun rose
and the colors of Ararat changed did I realize that it wasn’t a
painting. It was the real one! In my song I am telling that story:

Beautiful, so beautiful,
You’re Ararat, hey jan!
Your picture is so different
>From the Armenian side.

"And what I want to say between the lines is that it’s preferable to
see the mountain from the green side of Armenia, than to possess it
from the other side and have it covered with blood and black."

* * *

Sidebar: In memory of Hrant Dink, for the truth

Politics have always been a part of Arto Tunçboyaciyan’s songs. His
latest project, currently in preproduction, is inspired by the
assassination of Hrant Dink and addresses the hatred that took away
his life.

"Hrant Dink was my good friend. The difference between us is that he
spoke a local language, whereas I use a global one," Arto told the
Armenian Reporter.

The song dedicated to the memory of Hrant Dink is not an end in
itself. It aims to mobilize hundreds of thousands of people in Turkey
around a struggle against hatred and anger. "Hrant was the victim of
hatred and resentment," Arto says.

The song will be in Turkish and is addressed to Turks. "Singing it
in Armenian would not make any sense, because Hrant wasn’t killed by
Armenians. I’m telling Turks that what happened was bad for Hrant, but
is bad for them, too. That Hrant can be killed in the flesh, but Hrant
Dinks never die."

Arto is not alone in his musical cry against hatred. A well-known
Turkish singer, Yashar, joins him to scream, "this huge amount of
hatred between our two peoples is caused by a concrete history, and we
have to do something about it."

Yashar senses the danger of the hostile sensitivity between the
Armenian and the Turkish people and "Hrant Dink’s murder is evidence
of it."

As an artist and a human being, Yashar thinks he can do something
about it and mold other people’s feelings because, "Hatred is a
serious sickness. The Turkish government doesn’t want to talk about
the stories and we want to know the truth. Turkish people have to know
the truth about the Armenian Genocide. There is a reality behind all
this talk and I want to know what it is. I see people from Kars, from
Van. I see you and know that there are stories behind your eyes. We
have to be able to look into each others eyes, get to know each other
again. That is my vision," Yashar says.

Yashar is not afraid of being involved in all this because it
reveals the humane, it fights against hatred.

He sings about war, yet he thinks about peace: "I want to explain
what war is in reality, because we more often than not see it as a TV
program, but the reality is much more horrible. I try to explain the
extent of atrocities that war may reach."

As a Turk who believes his roots are Armenian, Yashar reacts to the
fog around it by screaming about the truth. My ancestors "came from
Batumi and preferred to keep a lifelong silence about their origins.
And we, their children, are trying to dig up our past and reach our
Armenian roots. My father was afraid. They were all afraid and that
explains their silence," Yashar said.

Unlike his father, Yashar is not afraid to talk about his origins or
about the Genocide.

He will shout to thousands the truth about history.

**************************************** ***********************************

9. It’s all about the ice cream

* Leading man Hrach Titizian teases his audience with talent

by Paul Chaderjian

When the owner of a Glendale ice-cream parlor finds himself in the
middle of a messy separation from his wife, the manager of his shop,
Gevorg, offers him a place to stay. The only problem is that a former
employee, fired by the owner, is also staying with Gevorg. Now,
between sundaes and paydays, Gevorg and his two new roommates are
forced to deal with each others’ personal issues.

How will this all work out?

We won’t know until Float, the movie about these three odd bachelors
opens in theaters. Principal photography for the film completed in
Glendale last month, and now the filmmakers are engaged in the
laborious editing process.

Producing the film is none other than one of its three handsome
leading men, veteran actor Hrach Titizian. The 27-year-old and his
costar Johnny Asuncion, who directed the film, met in acting school
and decided they wanted to make a comedy and a drama, mixed into one.

* Resident entertainer

Hrach was born and raised in Southern California. His parents are from
Lebanon and Jordan, both Armenian; and ever since he was a child, he
says, his parents would ask him to entertain relatives and guests who
came to their house for a visit.

"When we had coffee or dessert," says Hrach, "it was always like,
‘sing this song, say this joke, imitate this person.’ I was always the
entertainer when I was a kid. I always had an interest in it."

In high school, Hrach was focusing mostly on his involvement in the
Reserve Officers Training Corps (ROTC). He says he didn’t participate
in any plays or musicals at Crescenta Valley High because he was busy
"trying to be cool." Even though he enjoyed the ROTC, he says he knew
he would never join the military. "I’m not the military type," he
says.

Hrach used the discipline and training he exercised in the ROTC,
however, to pursue what he always wanted to do – act. After taking a
couple of acting classes at Pasadena City College and proving to
himself that he had a chance, Hrach dropped out of college to pursue
his passion.

Before telling his parents he was dropping out of college, Hrach
enrolled in acting school and started looking for opportunities to
audition for roles. Soon, he found work as an extra – a background
actor seen behind principal actors.

* Extra work with benefits

Working as an extra kept Hrach busy for a while. Among the shows he
acted in were the Fox Network’s hit series Felicity. Hrach also worked
on the TV show Las Vegas and a feature film called All Over the Guy.
Hrach’s first appearance on the silver screen was in this 2001 flop.

"I am one of the people at an Alcoholics Anonymous meeting," he
says, but his appearance was not-so-anonymous. Even now, says Hrach,
when the film is on cable, friends and family call him and cheer him
on.

"The camera pans and you can see my face on the screen," he says.
Hrach quickly adds that he wishes he had not taken the role because
the movie was a terrible one, and he was featured as an extra.

"A lot of people think that acting is something that you naturally
have or don’t have," he says. "I think it’s true to a certain extent,
but you always have to develop your technique."

Acting classes and background roles on a long list of shows and
movies, says Hrach, gave him a chance to get up in front of people,
cameras, and directors, to try different characters and learn what
worked and did not work. The extra work also opened more doors.

After taking on enough extra roles, Hrach was able to join the
Screen Actors Guild (SAG), a union actors must belong to in order to
work on most mainstream Hollywood productions.

"If a show likes you," he says, "they’ll bring you back over and
over again. You can try to negotiate with them. When you show up for a
job, you ask for a union voucher instead of a nonunion voucher. You
say, ‘I’m really trying to join the union. Is there any way you can
get me a union voucher?’"

* Union membership

Felicity and Buffy the Vampire Slayer casting directors helped Hrach
gain membership in SAG. "I joined the union and then stopped doing
extra work," he says.

Hrach says he did not want to be known as a professional extra.
"It’s a tough thing," he says, "because a lot of people get stuck in
that. They get comfortable. They’re getting a lot of work. They’re on
the sets. They feel like they’re doing something, but it’s just a
joke. They’re just background and they’re doing crosses and stuff."

By the time he was 24, Hrach says he was working on about three
television shows a month. He changed the agent who was representing
him, had new photographs taken, and soon he had speaking parts on
shows like CSI, where he played Osama bin Laden’s son-in-law. He was
also hired for an Aaron Spelling show, which promised him a recurring
role, but the show was canceled after eight episodes.

"There’s a show called The Shield," says Hrach, "and they had a
season where there was a story about an Armenian drug cartel, and I
got to play an Armenian. That was cool. I played a truck driver that
was working. Basically, I got pulled over and got roughed up before
they sent me to jail. It was cool, because the scene was with Michael
Chiklis."

Some of the other projects that Hrach has recently appeared on
include Kiefer Sutherland’s series called 24 and The E-Ring, with
actors Benjamin Bratt and Dennis Hopper. Hrach was also on Alias and a
show called The Nine, which was about a group of people who witness a
bank robbery and what happens to their lives after the trauma. This
show, unfortunately, was also cancelled.

After many speaking parts on television, Hrach also scored a
supporting role in the upcoming Peter Berg movie called Kingdom,
starring Jamie Foxx, Chris Cooper, Jennifer Garner, and Jason Bateman.
The film will open sometime this month.

* Actor’s playpen

When Hrach was trying out different acting schools, he realized that
he wasn’t sticking around one school because he didn’t like the way
the schools were managed. "I stuck around the Beverly Hills Playhouse
and was active in class for a while," he says.

Hrach decided to start his own acting school. He leased a warehouse,
hired a couple of coaches, and recruited students. Over the past three
years, his school in Hollywood has a steady group of students, offers
weeknight and weekend classes, and offers its space as a rental
theatre for playwrights and directors.

"Our school doesn’t follow one specific school of technique or
method," says Hrach. "Each of our teachers has his or her own style
and approach. The classes do scene study, monologues, practice
audition techniques, and do exercises to build self-confidence and all
that stuff."

Hrach is also a student at his own acting school, where he met his
Float partner Johnny Asuncion. The two decided to shoot a short film
called First Sight and then collaborated on producing the ice cream
parlor comedy-drama.

Float, which was shot with the help of the Armenian community in
Glendale, also stars Gregory Itzin, Lauren Cohan, and Ashley Peldon.
Making a special appearance is none other than the hardest-working
Armenian actor in Hollywood these days, Ken Davitian.

Look for Hrach this month in The Kingdom, and coming soon to a
theatre near you, Float, where it’s all about the ice cream.

****************************************** *********************************

10. In their own words: Online entertainment magazine logs 4 million
hits a month

* Three best friends turn Hollywood buzz into dreams come true

Hollyscoop.com is one of the hottest entertainment news sites in the
world. With more than 4 million hits a month, Diana Magpapian, Nora
Gasparian, and Ani Esmailian bring readers up-to-the-minute
entertainment news, inside scoops, video reports, and exclusive photos
from the hottest spots in the world of entertainment. The Armenian
Reporter’s Paul Chaderjian asked the hottest entertainment reporters
in Hollywood about their work, their lives, and their dreams.

PC: How did you start your site?

DM: The site literally started as a joke. Ani Esmailian was in her
senior year at Cal State Los Angeles trying to get a job at US Weekly,
while Nora Gasparian got a monotonous job straight out of college
working for GE, and I was working at Paramount Studios for
Entertainment Tonight and The Insider. I would always invite Nora and
Ani to Hollywood parties, where we would mingle with Hollywood’s
elite. Ani would write stories to other bloggers and it would end up
in national publications. At one point she realized that she wants to
get credit for her stories and there came the idea – joke – of
creating our own blog. Nora jumped in on the idea while I was still
juggling my career at ET and trying to get a job outside of Paramount
as a reporter. The idea of Hollyscoop came about in January of 2006
but didn’t really go live until April of 2006. Hollyscoop has come a
very long way considering the short amount of time it has actually
been around. It has definitely not been easy considering the fact that
we all had full time jobs, and tried to juggle a million things at
once.

PC: How often do you update the stories?

DM: The stories on our website are updated 24 hours a day. Our day
consists of waking up at 5 A.M. and working on the morning stories. We
are competing with New York and London news sources, and in our
business news gets old quickly. So, we must always be on top of it.
Our day is pretty intense whether it is Hollyscoop breaking the news
or reporting breaking news. We are usually called on radio shows from
London to Chicago to discuss hot topics of the day. We were recently
given our own weekly radio show which is broadcasted live on
nowlive.com, where our listeners can chat with us while we report the
weekly newscasts. At the same time we do commentary work for our local
news stations for any breaking news stories. We must always stay on
top of things or else we lose credibility with our readers. There are
times when we are covering an event in the evening and need to rush
home to update the pictures and write the story before anyone else has
it. Most of the time, we are on three to five hours of sleep with our
hectic schedules.

PC: How do you decide whether something is worthy of coverage?

DM: We like to write about stories that we think are interesting and
are hot topics. Also through experience we have learned what stories
work with our demographics and what stories don’t.

PC: How often do you shoot videos for the site?

DM: At this point the video segments depend on what’s going on in
Hollywood. During award-show season, we have more video content.
However, that is something that we are working on. In the next couple
of months, there will be more videos. Stay tuned.

PC: What kind of popularity is the site enjoying? How many hits to
you get on an average day?

DM: The popularity our website has been enjoying has been
overwhelming. We get over 4 million hits a month. When we are out in
Los Angeles or New York and get recognized by our readers, that for us
is a huge success. We can’t stress how exciting it is for us to meet
our readers. After all, without them we wouldn’t exist. It’s
interesting when we are at events and some of our favorite celebrities
recognize us and know who we are. We are still trying absorb all of
that. Also, it’s very flattering when networks contact us and want to
work with us or use our material for their shows. We are getting our
stories linked from US Weekly, the New York Daily News, the Drudge
Report, the Washington Post, Fox News, and newspapers from Australia
to Canada. Our video content has been seen on shows for VH1.

PC: Where do you want to be in ten years?

AE: I see myself having my own shoe line, perfume, and magazine.

NG: To have franchises all over the world and have commercial and
residential investment properties.

DM: I see myself having my own TV talk show and following in the
footsteps of my idols Oprah and Anderson Cooper. We want Hollyscoop to
change the way people get their information. We want it to be a place
where our generation’s pop culture can be heavily influenced. We want
to see a Hollyscoop TV show, fashion line, and magazine and to be one
of the largest Internet sources for news.

PC: If you compared yourself to TMZ or Perez Hilton, what would you
say you do better than those sites?

DM: We are big fans of those sites and in some ways they influenced
us to create our own website. However, our website differs in many
ways – from our story content to our videos. Our videos are segments
and we try to make people feel like they are watching a segment from
an actual TV show. You will never see us stalk celebrities on the
street with our cameras or write derogatory comments about people. At
Hollyscoop, we like to bring out the positives and add a little humor
as well. We always get e-mails from our readers telling us that they
are living vicariously through us with our video content and our
blogs. That’s what we want to do. We want to make our readers see what
goes on behind the scenes at most of the events we attend and make
them feel like they are actually there.

PC: Do you get a lot of Armenian stories in your site?

DM: Our site is strictly about entertainment, music, and fashion. If
there is an Armenian celebrity, artist, or designer that is making
news, we will be covering it. We have written about Kim Kardashian,
Sylvester Stallone wanting to make a movie about the Armenian
Genocide, and Screamers with System Of A Down. We do a weekly write-up
called "Artist of the Week," where we cover up-and-coming artists. We
have written about a lovely Armenian singer named Mariette Soudjian,
who singes R&B, and Maria, who is a young aspiring singer. We also
wrote a story about the Armenian rapper Capitol Z and will be writing
a story about C Rouge, who is a DJ and mixed Armenian trance songs. We
have actually used his music in some of our video segments.

PC: Tell us about your Christmas Special for Horizon Armenian TV.

DM: I do freelance for Horizon TV, and the Christmas Special was
something that I was asked to be a part of. It was a fun and lively
segment, and I thought it would be great to be a part of it. Horizon
has now launched a new show called "Hye on L.A.," which is a type of
travel show, and you will be seeing more of me as the host of the show
in the coming months.

PC: Will we see more of you on television?

DM: You will definitely be seeing more of Hollyscoop on television.
I can’t reveal much on this because everything is in the works, but we
aren’t going anywhere and this is just the beginning.

* * *

Who’s who?

* Ani Esmailian

Ani was born in Tehran, Iran, in 1982. Her family moved to Germany
when Ani was three and made the big move to California a year later.
Although she attended American public schools, her parents made sure
she was involved in the Armenian community. Ani participated in team
sports through Homenetmen and took private Armenian classes. Although
she moved to the U.S. over 20 years ago, Ani’s parents still insist
that Armenian be their primary language at home to ensure that she
never loses touch with her heritage and culture.

* Nora Gasparian

My mother and father moved from Armenia in the 1970s. They met in 1977
and got married one year later. My brother and I both attended an
Armenian private school from age three. Under no circumstances would
my parents agree to let us go to a public school because they felt
like we would lose our identity as Armenians. In school, we
continuously volunteered for telethons, fund-raisers, and it didn’t
stop there. After graduation, my two best friends from Alex Pilibos
school and I moved to UCSB, where we continued to be active in the
Armenian Students’ Association. We also organized events to raise
awareness about the Genocide.

One thing I am aware of is the fact that I am very proud the be
Armenian. Every time the girls and I go out or travel, the one line
that never goes unsaid is, "Thank God we are Armenian." It gives us so
much pleasure to speak about our background to people that are not
familiar with our ethnicity.

* Diana Magpapian

My father moved to the U.S. from Armenia in 1976, and my mother
followed in 1980. The two met in 1981, and they married shortly after
that. I was born and raised in Los Angeles and attended Rose and Alex
Pilibos from the tender age of 3. My little brother Manuel was also
enrolled in Pilibos from the same age. We were always instilled with
Armenian values and were always reminded to never forget our heritage.
During my high school years, I was very active, sang in the school
choir, did volunteer work for Armenian organizations, telethons, and
politicians. I also danced for Hamazkayin’s Ani dance group and was
involved with Homenetmen TV, where I did hosting and producing.

I attended the University of of California Santa Barbara with my two
best friends. We were very active in the Armenian Students’
Association, where we organized events for the Armenian Genocide and
made documentaries, which were featured all over the campus.

I am extremely proud to be an Armenian! I think this feeling truly
developed when I was in Armenia on my senior class trip and just being
on the Armenian soil was surreal. I don’t think I can ever deny that I
am Armenian or forget my heritage and hopefully I will be able to
really give back to the Armenian community and my country.

**************************************** ***********************************

11. Celebrating a decade of chamber music

* The National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia is ten years old

by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian

"How much time do we have?" smiled maestro Aram Gharabekian as I sat
with him in his office in Yerevan and asked him to evaluate the
decade-long life of the National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia.

"Throwing a retrospective glance at the ten-year life of the
orchestra, I can say that it has been loaded with surprises and
amazing situations. To start with, ten years ago I could not even
picture that soon I’ll be living and working in Armenia as the
artistic director and conductor of the orchestra. It seemed so unreal
that even now I still keep wondering at that serendipity."

In 1997 the Armenian minister of culture extended a special
invitation to Gharabekian, a celebrated Armenian-American conductor,
appointing him artistic director and principal conductor of the NCOA.
The maestro, who according to the Boston Globe critic Richard Dyer,
"knows how to inspire an orchestra to give him what he wants," had
already made a name for himself in the international arena with his
critically acclaimed performances in major American venues, including
the Carnegie Hall, the Dorothy Chandler Pavilion, and Boston’s
Symphony Hall and Jordan Hall, winning honors and awards.

Until 1997, there were two national chamber orchestras in Armenia.
The first was founded in 1961 by Zareh Sahakiants and was the second
chamber orchestra in the whole Soviet Union after the Moscow chamber
orchestra. The second chamber orchestra was founded in 1977 by Zaven
Vardanian and was known as the Yerevan Chamber Orchestra.

"In reality I inherited two orchestras with two experienced
personnel," the maestro recalled.

A decade is not a high age for any professional orchestra, but the
new National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia has benefited from the
prestigious artistic traditions of its parents.

Back then the orchestra had no money. But rehearsals went on anyway.
"I remember that during our first rehearsal we didn’t have enough
chairs for the musicians. The first administrative meeting was held on
the stones surrounding the fountains in Republic Square, because we
didn’t have our own place," recalled Gharabekian.

But the absence of funds, other resources, and even a proper place
did not hinder the musicians’ work. The orchestra had embarked on a
mission to establish itself and achieve international standards. "One
needs to earn the necessary resources with one’s own sweat, and to
this day we are guided by that motto," the maestro said.

During the past decade the NCOA has appeared in various
international venues, including a November 2002 concert in Berlin,
celebrating Aram Khachaturian’s centenarial, and performances in
Tbilisi, California, Toronto, and Montreal, as well as the Halle
Festival in Germany.

During the past decade NCOA has commissioned and premiered more than
40 new works and encouraged the integration of traditional Armenian
musical instruments such as the duduk, zurna, shvi, and kamancha in
works written especially for the orchestra.

In addition to the international classics such as Bach, Handel,
Brahms, Rossini, and Mozart, the orchestra’s repertoire includes
Armenian classics such as Gomidas, Khacahturian, Babajanian, and
Mirzoyan.

* A smooth transition

The generation change in the orchestra was achieved smoothly and
without conflict. Seven of the musicians were in the previous chamber
orchestras since the day they were founded. But they have earned their
continued place, because being a member of this prestigious orchestra
requires success in repeated, demanding assessments. Once a year the
artistic board of the orchestra invites its musicians to new auditions
and only those who pass are included in the next term of the
orchestra.

During that period public auditions are held. There are many
musicians who would like to be part of this orchestra, but few make it
to the top of the short list. "During the past four years, I am glad
that the orchestra has maintained stability in personnel and this has
had a definite impact of the professional performance of the
orchestra. The minimum demand is that they must have completed the
conservatory – the Komitas (Gomidas) Conservatory in Yerevan. Some of
the applicants, young and promising musicians, have grown into musical
maturity under the wings of the orchestra," said the maestro, who
likes to speak of the orchestra as an organic body, with its own
heartbeat.

Mr. Gharabekian said: "This may be the only orchestra in the world
where all the musicians have the same nationality and have completed
the same conservatory. There is no other such professional orchestra.
I cannot picture such a thing in today’s global world."

And what does that mean for the orchestra? "The musical traditions
and directions keep continuing. In that sense it is interesting, but
of course it may have its drawbacks."

The maestro is at the core of all this action, but all the same he
steps aside to throw the glance of an outsider. "I can honestly say
that I am glad about the achievements of the orchestra and I am really
proud of my musicians. We can take pride in our orchestra in the sense
that it can effectively compete with chamber orchestras of so many
developed countries. And our résumé proves that," Aram Gharabekian
said.

This does not mean, however, that there are no new horizons to
reach. "My personal motto is that what we have achieved today is
unsatisfactory for tomorrow, and I try to inspire the orchestra with
this approach. We always have to surpass our limits."

The orchestra has matured and secured itself a fair position with
its virtuosi musicians. Much is still to be achieved, but the
ten-year-old orchestra faces serious challenges. The clear skies of
today may be dark and cloudy tomorrow. "One of the most important
challenges we face is to improve the quality of our musical
instruments," says the maestro, adding that by playing on the current
worn-out instruments the orchestra cannot live to fullest potential.
"Providing the musicians with instruments in line with professional
norms will no doubt carry the orchestra to higher levels."

If the instruments are worn out, does the orchestra owe its
reputation to the virtuosity of its musicians? "It is definitely so,"
Mr. Gharabekian agreed, adding that apart from mastering musical
compositions, the musicians of the NCOA learn to understand and veil
the faults of their instruments. "They are musical acrobats!"

The other major challenge facing the NCOA is that of sponsorship.
The orchestra is state funded, but that barely covers any of the
orchestra’s actual expenses. The Vatche and Tamar Manoukian Foundation
of London has been the orchestra’s biggest sponsor. "They believed in
the orchestra; they believed in our work. We are indebted to them for
our milestones," Mr. Gharabekian said.

The orchestra boasts of having the best-paid musicians in all of
Armenia. "It was one of the traditions of the chamber orchestra and we
have been able to continue it thanks to our sponsors," Mr. Gharabekian
said.

But the foundation has been scaling back its grants over the past
two years, Mr. Gharabekian says. "This is understandable, since no
funding is eternal."

And he added, "I can honestly say that currently this institution is
unable to purchase even a single pencil! All of our allocated funds
are directed toward paying the wages of our musicians."

But NCOA is not alone in its mission. Since 2004 a project-oriented
foundation, Friends of NCOA, has organized special projects, such as
concerts in the regions of Armenia and concert tours. "We support NCOA
activities on a project-by-project basis," said Maria Titizian, the
executive director of Friends of NCOA. (Ms. Titizian is also a
columnist for the Armenian Reporter.)

Shake Havan, a member of the board of Friends of NCOA told the
Reporter, "NCOA informs us of what they need for a special project,
and we take care of that through campaigns."

Today Friends of NCOA has 67 members, including Armenians and
non-Armenians who live in Armenia and Armenians in the diaspora.

Hope is the last thing to die, and the faith the maestro has in his
orchestra is contagious. "We have the potential of a full-fledged
future and of international achievements," he believes.

* The tenth anniversary

The uncertainties of the future, however, do not slow down the
celebrations of a decade full of milestones.

The anniversary celebrations of the NCOA were to be set in motion on
April 5 with a gala concert and presentation. In conjunction with the
concert, a photo exhibit,"Ten Years at a Glance," was to highlight the
achievements of the orchestra. The gala was to include a screening of
the DVD of an open-air concert at the Zvartnots temple last year. Aida
Amirkhanian, a dancer and choreographer from the United States, who
was the soloist at the Zvartnots concert, was to be present on stage.
World-famous Italian virtuoso saxophonist Federico Mondelci was to be
another special guest of the orchestra.

The venue was to be the Russian-Armenian State University Concert
Hall. "It is a wonderful concert hall unlike any other in Armenia. In
every aspect, it has the qualifications of internationally acclaimed
concert halls," said the maestro. It was to be officially opened to
the public with the anniversary concert of the NCOA.

Over the coming weeks and months, the orchestra will continue its
anniversary celebrations. A four-concert French tour will be launched
in Lyon and culminate in Paris, as part of the year of Armenia in
France program.

During its ten years of existence, the NCOA has regularly toured the
regions of Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh, taking chamber music to the
wide public. During the past few years, at the end of the season the
orchestra has chosen a remote region in Armenia and has toured cities,
villages, and monasteries. The anniversary year will continue this
tradition, and the orchestra will tour fifteen cities in Armenia
starting from Meghri in the south, reaching Ijevan and Berd in the
north, and Gyumri and Spitak in the northeast, and of course, Artsakh
or Karabakh. The following station for the anniversary locomotive is a
return invitation to Saint Petersburg, where in July the NCOA will
perform two concerts at the 15th anniversary of the prestigious Saint
Petersburg Palaces Festival.

The celebrations will recommence in the fall, when, aided by the
United Nations, the orchestra will stage a special concert to
celebrate UN day in October.

The orchestra plans to stage yet another magnificent open-air
concert at an Armenian historical site. This year it may return to
Shushi, where it first started this tradition and which was followed
by two special open-air concerts, in Garni (2004) and in Zvartnots
(2006). One can picture such a concert in, for instance, Amberd. "Yes,
Ambert would be a fantastic potential site for a concert, but there
are huge problems to be solved first. It is enough to mention the
electricity. Of course in that sense the orchestra has achieved what
it seemed impossible only few years ago in Armenia. In Zvartnots we
built an amphitheater with room for a thousand spectators."

The maestro has big dreams for the orchestra. "We have spoken
through our work, and now present it to the judgment of the world,"
said Aram Gharabekian, and concluded: "Once again I step aside and as
a third person think that it would be a real pity for such an
institution to cease to exist."

connect:

************** ************************************************** ***********

12. Essay: Up the hill but not over it: A story about my mom

by Armen D. Bacon

I will let you in on a little secret – my mother just turned 80. She
started a list earlier in the year of ‘things she wanted to do for
this milestone birthday.’ If you happen to know her, you’ll understand
me when I tell you she wasn’t a bit shy about letting her daughters
know she wanted a special celebration. In case you don’t know her,
here is a hint: her birthday wish list included wearing a strapless
gown, flying first class, and at the last minute she added that she
might like to have Barry Manilow croon in her direction, maybe even
calling her up on stage to share the spotlight. It didn’t take us too
long to figure out that a trip to Las Vegas might accommodate her
‘wishful thinking fantasy.’ Much to our chagrin, however, she took a
fall a few months later, so we had to abandon the Viva Las Vegas idea.

Plan B began to evolve. We decided on a road trip ‘up the hill’ to
the nearby casino. There were 17 of us in all – well, 18 if you
include ‘lady luck.’ Twelve of her closest girlfriends, along with her
daughters and granddaughters were invited to board the private deluxe
bus to enjoy a day of friendship, lunch, and gambling. They had a
combined age of 1,120 years – but truthfully, as I closed my eyes for
a few moments on the bus, I realized that their spirit and spunk made
them little more than budding adolescent girls making an adventurous
getaway without their parents’ permission. They laughed and giggled,
recounted their first kisses, and shared beauty secrets as I quietly
marveled at their unwavering passion and lust for life.

She had met each of the remarkable women along her own life’s
journey. Some were old and dear family friends; others were part of
her card group; a handful were church friends; one shared her passion
for quilting; and the newest of the group was a classmate in her
Wednesday writing class. The youngest of the group was her neighbor, a
self-professed fourth daughter, who we learned would sneak into her
house without her knowledge to change light bulbs and do occasional
housework and maintenance as needed.

Most of them were retired now, but none of them was tired of living.
Au contraire. They were feisty and gregarious, laughing and singing
all the way up the mountain. As I studied their faces I realized that
these women had lived through wars and depressions. They had given
birth to and raised a generation of baby boomers. Each of them had a
unique life story. They had survived catastrophic illnesses, the loss
of husbands, and yet they continued to live for life – cherishing and
savoring every single moment. Today they were putting their troubles
behind them, and in honor of my mother, they filled her day with pure
happiness and joy.

I am still awestruck by the sisterhood that seemed to glue this pack
of women together. What they had in common was their friendship with
my mother. The bus trip conversation was a testament to their
knowledge of my mom – we entertained them with memory games that
included questions about her favorite color, first boyfriend, farthest
destination, favorite dessert, birthplace, and number of siblings. By
the last question, they were howling and hysterical, eager to share
new and untold secrets about my mother. As well as I thought I knew
her, I learned a lot about her on that bus ride (much of it
unsuitable for print).

What I learned about most was the incredible power of women and the
value of female friends. This group had become the band of angels
that lifts my mother and keeps her in flight. They encourage her to
soar, even on the days that are filled with the aches and pains of
senior life. Their unspoken promise to each other was to keep each
other young. They were a fountain of youth, a special club that on
this day convened solely to celebrate the woman, their friend, who is
my mother.

From penny slots to dollar poker, it was a lucky day for us all.
How fitting that we had gone to a casino. Life had been a gamble for
each of them – a game of chance. But it was their chance meeting that
brought them good fortune. My mother had hit the jackpot on her day of
celebration.

We had taken a bus trip ‘up the hill’ but by day’s end, it was
evident that despite their age, none of these wonder women was
anywhere close to being over the hill.

(May 21, 2006)

******************************************* ********************************

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Western Prelacy: Commemoration of Maundy Thursday

April 6, 2007

PRESS RELEASE
Western Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
H.E. Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate
6252 Honolulu Avenue
La Crescenta, CA 91214
Tel: (818) 248-7737
Fax: (818) 248-7745
E-mail: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
Website: <;

DURING THE WASHING OF THE FEET CEREMONY
LET US FOLLOW THE EXAMPLE OF JESUS
OF HUMILITY AND SERVICE

Maundy Thursday is one of the most poignant days of Holy Week, a
day when we commemorate the Last Supper and the betrayal of Jesus.

On the afternoon of Thursday, April 5th, H.E. Archbishop
Moushegh Mardirossian, Prelate, conducted the Washing of the Feet services
at St. Sarkis Church in Pasadena, assisted at the altar by parish pastor
Rev. Khoren Babochian. Later in the evening the Prelate conducted Vigil
service at Holy Cross Cathedral in Montebello.

During services in Pasadena, the Prelate washed the feet of
children, the parish pastor and deacons, to symbolize Jesus washing His
disciples’ feet at the Last Supper. He called on the parishioners to follow
in the example of Jesus and to be led by His teachings on love, humility,
and service. "Let us live in humility and dedicate our lives to the true
path of our Savior," stressed the Prelate.

During vigil services in Montebello, the Prelate speaking on the
earthly mission of Jesus Christ, stressed that Christ was subjected to
betrayal, arrest, and torture for our sins, therefore we as Christians must
continue to follow in His example and atone for our sins.

The same services were also conducted in all of our churches.

http://www.westernprelacy.org/&gt
www.westernprelacy.org

Carolina Activists Meet w/Reps to Encourage Support For Genocide Res

PRESS RELEASE
Date: April 6 2007
Armenian National Committee of America
Eastern Region
P.O. Box 1066, New York, NY
Contact: Karine Birazian
Tel: [email protected]

CAROLINA ACTIVISTS MEET WITH REPRESENTATIVES TO ENCOURAGE SUPPORT
FOR ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

Greenville, S.C. & Charlotte, N.C.- In efforts to expand Armenian
activism in growing communities Armenian National Committee-Eastern
Region Executive Director, Karine Birazian, visited with Armenians
in Greenville, South Carolina, and Charlotte, North Carolina.
Together, they met with staffers for Senator Jim DeMint (NC-R), and
Congressmen Bob Inglis (SC-R-4), Sue Myrick (NC-R-09), and Mel Watt
(NC-D-12) in their district offices to discuss the Armenian
genocide legislation, the genocide in Darfur, and other foreign
policy matters, reported the ANC-Eastern Region.

Upon the warm arrival in Greenville, South Carolina, Birazian met
with activists Haro and Mariam Setian and three generations of the
Enjaian family: Mike, his son Steve, and two children, Bethany and
Andrew, who spent the afternoon visiting the staff from both Rep.
Inglis and Senator DeMint’s offices. Birazian, along with others
in the meeting, had an opportunity to spend time educating the
staff about the Armenian genocide, the need for the passage of an
Armenian genocide resolution as well as urging both offices to make
a moral decision and do the right thing.

Birazian also enjoyed the warm company of other Armenians and non-
Armenians in South Carolina during a community gathering on current
Armenian issues. Following the events, Setian commented, "We were
grateful for the warm reception that DeMint and Ingis’ office
showed us; our main concern is that justice be served. We, as
American citizens, can talk a good game about equality and justice,
but we need to follow through."

Similar to the meeting with activists in South Carolina, prior to
the congressional meetings in Charlotte, Birazian met with several
community members and spent the afternoon discussing key issues
facing the Armenian American communities today. From utilization
of the ANCA website to empowering them to take action, the trip was
an opportunity get to know members of both communities.

Joining Birazian at Rep. Myrick’s and Watt’s offices were community
members Jack Hagopian, Pierre Arbajian, Charles Diamond, Dr. Sylvie
Bastajian, and Dr. David Boyajian. The delegation had an
opportunity to meet with the staff of the two congressional offices
and spent time discussing many issues of concern to the Armenians
of Charlotte as well as the various activities they are
undertaking. The many issues raised during the meeting was of H.
Res. 106, divestment issues in Darfur, the ongoing blockade in
Armenia, and the support for foreign aid to Armenia. Jack
Hagopian, a community leader and retired military officer,
discussed efforts the Armenian community of Charlotte is pursuing,
including a health fair that was organized by the Church last year
by Bastajian and the growing population of Armenians, both new
immigrants and retirees that are settling in the Charlotte area.
Hagopian also shared the recent article printed in the Charlotte
Observer about the Armenian community and the need to pass this
legislation.

"It is impossible to believe that in today’s America intelligent
Americans would make the choice not to speak out on an issue like
genocide. This is no different than those Turks who stood by as
this happened in their country. Although the Armenian genocide
happened almost a hundred years ago, these `leaders’ make
themselves complicit with the leaders of the Ottoman Government in
1915…I am proud that the Armenian community, having suffered
through such a horrific event, has not just focused on themselves
but has tried to teach about how these horrific acts develop and
attempted to stop those events occurring today," commented
Hagopian.

Reflecting on her trip, Birazian stated, "This was a wonderful
opportunity to meet Armenians and non-Armenians in both Greenville
and Charlotte and discuss what the ANCA does, and how they can take
part in the Armenian cause. I welcome their enthusiasm and thank
them for their generous hospitality. I look forward to continue to
work with both communities to build a strong foundation of
activism."

Following Birazian’s visit, Dr. Sam Danagoulian from Greensboro, NC
joined the ANCA and the Genocide Intervention Network during their
Washington, D.C. grassroots advocacy campaign to end the cycle of
genocide. During his visit, Danagoulian and ANCA activists visited
all 13 North Carolina Congressional offices and had an opportunity
to meet with Senator Burr’s office to raise awareness about the
Armenian Genocide and divestment issues in Darfur. Currently the
genocide legislation, H. Res. 106, has 184 cosponsors in the House
and the resolution in the senate, S. Res. 106, mirrors the house
resolution has 26 cosponsors.

The Armenian National Committee of America is the largest and most
influential Armenian American grassroots political organization.
Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters, and
supporters throughout the United States and affiliated
organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the
concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of
issues.
####

Photos
Armenian activists from SC, and ANC ER Director Karine Birazian
joining Legislative Director Assistant Dr. Brenda Ballard,
Constituent Liaison Manager Julie Wilson for Rep. Bob Inglis’
office

Left to Right: Jack Hagopian, ANC ER Director Karine Birazian,
Dr. Sylvie Bastajian, Chief of Staff, Hal Weatherman for Rep. Sue
Myrick’s office, Pierre Arbajian, and Charles Diamond

ANC ER Director Karine Birazian, along with NC Activists Dr.
Sylvie Bastajian, Pierre Arbajian, Jack Hagopian, Dr. David
Boyajian and Community Liaison, Torre Jessup for Rep. Mel Watt

Assemblymember Krekorian Genocide Res to be Heard by Senate, Asmbly

PRESS RELEASE
Office of Assemblymember Paul Krekorian
Adrin Nazarian Chief of Staff
620 N. Brand Blvd. Suite 403
Glendale, CA 91203
(818) 240-6330
(818) 240-4632 fax
[email protected]

April 6, 2007
(818) 512-4045 cell

Assemblymember Paul Krekorian’s Joint Resolution in Commemoration of the
Armenian Genocide to be Heard by Senate and Assembly

GLENDALE – Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) is the author of
Assembly Joint Resolution 15, commemorating the 92nd Anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide and demanding justice from Turkey and formal
recognition of the Genocide by the US Government. The entire State
Assembly and Senate will vote on the joint resolution during their
session in Sacramento on Monday, April 9th.

As the first genocide of the 20th Century, the Armenian Genocide
claimed the lives of a million and a half Armenians living in the
Ottoman Empire, upon the orders of its Turkish rulers. To this day,
the Turkish government refuses to acknowledge its responsibility for
the annihilation of its Armenian population during World War I.

Authoring this resolution has special significance for Assemblymember
Krekorian, as he and his wife both lost members of their family in the
Genocide.

Assemblymember Paul Krekorian (D-Burbank) represents the cities of
Burbank and Glendale, and the Los Angeles communities of Atwater
Village, Los Feliz, North Hollywood, Silver Lake, Toluca Lake, Valley
Glen, Valley Village and Van Nuys.

# # #

‘I am Armenian’

‘I am Armenian’

Elementary school’s new Clovis location won’t change its Armenian-English
curriculum.

The Fresno Bee
By James Guy
04/06/07

(Picture Caption)
Holding high the Armenian tricolor, Careen DerKalousdian and Razmig
Markarian, both 3, recited the poem, "Hye Em Yes" (I am Armenian), in a
performance that seemed to capture the spirit of the Armenian Community
School of Fresno.

The elementary school, which is proud of its bilingual Armenian-English
curriculum and its ranking on achievement tests, is the only Armenian school
between the Bay Area and Los Angeles.

It’s also on the move — a Tower District fixture since 2001, the school
plans to relocate to Clovis in the fall because St. Therese Catholic Church
is renovating church grounds, leaving no room for the school.

The school’s new location won’t mean a change of academic direction,
Principal Rosie Bedrosian said; instilling an appreciation for the Armenian
culture is an essential element of the school’s goals.

"We want them to know their roots and where they came from so they don’t
forget who they are," she said.

The school does that through the classroom, celebrating important dates in
Armenian history and through talent shows like the one in which the
preschoolers recited the poem.

About 90 students attend Armenian Community, which has classes from
preschool through sixth grade. Students spend about an hour a day studying
the Armenian language and heritage in addition to regular elementary school
subjects.

School officials tout the school’s academic performance: each year, grades
one through six collectively rank in the upper 20th percentile on the
Stanford Nine Achievement test, which measures aptitude in reading, language
arts, math, science and social science, according to Randy Baloian, chairman
of the school board.

Kindergarten teacher Jackie Chekerdemian credits much of that to small class
sizes.

"There is lots of one-on-one teaching, because there are only 11 in the
class," she said of her students.

In Chekerdemian’s class, Michael Mazman, 5, recently focused on an Armenian
alphabet workbook.

"Look at my writing," he said proudly to a visitor.

Asked to choose between which of two alphabets he enjoyed more, English or
Armenian, Michael did not hesitate.

"I like the Armenian," he said.

The 36-letter alphabet was developed by Mesrob Mashdots in the late fourth
century, language teacher Maral Markarian said. Two more letters have been
added to the modern alphabet. Like Michael, other students at the school
said they liked the alphabet’s elegant flowing letters.

"Armenian is more fun to write in," said Arthur Basmajian, 9.

"It’s more challenging," said Nareg Apkarian, 8.

The various backgrounds of students at Armenian Community are a reflection
of the Armenian diaspora. Some of the students’ parents were refugees from
the Lebanese civil war between warring Christian and Muslim factions in the
1970s.

Other students’ parents arrived from Iran after the overthrow of the Shah in
the late 1970s. Still another wave of students came to the U.S. in the
aftermath of a catastrophic 1988 earthquake in Armenia that killed nearly
50,000 and left 500,000 homeless.

Other students come from families who arrived in the first Armenian
migration in the early 20th century.

Since the children come from different parts of the world, the students
become familiar with two different dialects. Those from Lebanon and the
Middle East speak the western dialect. Those from Armenia speak the eastern.

The circuitous routes leading to Fresno are also reflected in faculty
histories. Principal Bedrosian’s Russian family was among Armenians on the
Black Sea coast who were forced by German occupiers during World War II to
become forced laborers in Germany. After the war, her family came as
refugees to Fresno.

Markarian, the language teacher, is a survivor of the Lebanese Civil War.

"We were caught in the middle," she said. "We suffered a lot."

She said the school carries on an Armenian tradition that has led to
Armenian churches in far-flung locations such as Singapore. "Wherever
Armenians go, the first thing they will do is build a church and a school,"
she said.

One of the first poems Markarian teaches is based on the history of St.
Vartan, a hero to the Armenian people. Historically, Persians and Armenians
enjoyed fraternal relations, but when a Persian emperor demanded Armenians
renounce Christianity and adopt Zoroastrianism, Armenians under Vartan
refused.

Vartan was slain in the ensuing battle and the Armenians were defeated by an
overwhelming force of Persians equipped with war elephants. But the
Armenians were able to keep their Christianity.

The poem proclaims, "I am Armenian. I am Armenian. I am the grandson of
Brave Vartan."

A relocation of the school to Clovis would be the fourth move since the
school began in 1976 in the basement of Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic
Church on Ventura and M Streets in downtown Fresno. Four years later, it
moved to Fresno Street and Weldon Avenue, then to the St. Therese site in
2001.

Baloian, of the school board, said the Clovis location is on a 21/2-acre lot
near Herndon and Willow avenues. Plans call for placing temporary school
classrooms on the site. School officials also hope to eventually offer
seventh- and eighth-grade classes as they once did.

The reporter may be reached at [email protected] or (559) 441-6339.

www.ancfresno.org

Requiem Service in Holy Etchmiadzin for PM Andranik Margarian

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 7, 2007

Requiem Service in Holy Etchmiadzin for Prime Minister Andranik Margarian

On Sunday, April 1, during the celebration of Divine Liturgy in the Mother
Cathedral of Holy Etchmiadzin, His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All
Armenians, presided over a special requiem service offered in memory of the
late Andranik Margarian, Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia.

His Grace Bishop Ararat Kaltakjian, Grand Sacristan of the Mother See,
celebrated the liturgy. In his sermon, Bishop Ararat reflected on the
legacy of the late Prime Minister, and specifically noted, `Andranik
Margarian, in spite of his position and office remained the same man, with a
kind disposition and caring attitude toward all. Throughout the episodes of
his life, he did not lose faith, instead his faith greater strengthened him,
granting him hope and drive to continue his service to Armenian statehood
and our nation.’

Bishop Ararat concluded his remarks, stating, `Prime Minister Margarian has
departed from us and taken the road which will take him to eternal life – to
God. We are confident that through his worthy labors, good reputation and
love for family, friends and neighbors, he will receive the just rewards
which are promised to every Christian.’

Present for the Divine Liturgy and Requiem Service were diocesan primates
and priests of the Mother See; family and friends of the late Prime
Minister; Tigran Torossian, President of the National Assembly of the
Republic of Armenia; ministers and members of the government; and members of
the National Assembly.

www.armenianchurch.org

Ready For Military Actions

READY FOR MILITARY ACTIONS

A1+
[04:59 pm] 05 April, 2007

"America-Iran military actions will have its immediate influence
on us. I don’t exclude Azerbaijan to take advantage of the situation
hence they will try to conquer Nagorno Karabakh. Consequently, we need
to be ready for military actions," says Turkologist Ruben Safrastyan,
director of the Institute of Oriental Studies in RA Academy of Science.

According to Mr. Safrastyan, at present no further military operation
is likely to start between America and Iran by the end of May. Though
Iran has great diplomatic experience, a serious diplomatic battle is
going on between America and Iran.

"Armenia should start active political relations during this battle. If
UNO Safety Security Council did not approve of the operations we
should condemn to them," the Turkologist claims.

He assures that Armenia might lose its allies and get no other instead
because of our Russian-like policy.

In respond to the question whether America will punish Armenia
referring to its relations with Iran, Ruben Safrastyan has stated,
" No country has the right to impact on Armenia. If Armenia quits
cooperating with Iran, the economic conditions will get worse in our
country. Why should America punish RA if it has no influence either
on National safety, or on the country law?