India loses out to Armenia in number of super-growth companies

Times of India, India
April 1 2007

India loses out to Armenia in number of super-growth companies
[ 1 Apr, 2007 1022hrs ISTPTI ]

NEW DELHI: With domestic firms announcing new M&A deals every other
day, showing a huge appetite for growth backed by a robust economic
expansion, India has surprisingly lost its place as the world’s
second largest home to "super growth" companies to a relatively
unknown Armenia.

While the US has retained its top position on Grant Thornton
International’s Super Growth Index for third year in a row, India
suffered a dramatic drop to 14th position as the country’s proportion
of super growth companies halved from 34 per cent to 15 per cent.

India has been replaced by a newcomer Armenia at the second position
with 38 per cent proportion of super growth companies there, as
against 44 per cent in the US, said the study, released on Sunday, by
global consultancy major Grant Thornton.

There was a huge 56 per cent plunge in the number of super growth
companies in India. These are the companies with significant
above-average growth in areas like turnover and employment, it said.

The other top five countries in the league include Ireland (third),
the UK (fourth) and South Africa (fifth), all of which have improved
their rankings.

Other major climbers on the index include Russia, Philippines,
Argentina and Italy.

However, Hong Kong — another strong performer in 2006 at third
place, has also dropped out of the top ten list to 11th position this
year. Other major fallers in the chart include Malaysia and New
Zealand.

According to Grant Thornton International’s Alex MacBeath, the fall
of last year’s two strongest performers India and Hong Kong was the
most significant finding in the survey. "We expected continued strong
performance and may be one of them would possibly take top spot this
year," MacBeath said.

He added, however, that a drop in the number of super growth
companies should not be necessarily considered a bad thing for an
individual economy.

"Growth in employee numbers and turnover can only realistically be
expected to grow rapidly for a limited time before responsible
businesses take stock and review their growth strategies," he said.

There could be a consolidation in Hong Kong and India with those
super growth businesses of the last few years probably concentrating
on profitability rather than simply on high levels of growth,"
MacBeath said.

The Super Growth Index is published by Grant Thornton in its
International Business Report (IBR), which is based on opinions of
7,200 privately-held businesses in 32 countries and represents 81 per
cent of global GDP.

Analysts Speculate Armenian PM Margaryan Might Have Been Murdered

ANALYSTS SPECULATE ARMENIAN PRIME MINISTER MARGARYAN MIGHT HAVE BEEN
MURDERED

2007/04/01 12:35

Press Release from:
Mass Wire Media Association

The sudden death of Armenia’s Prime Minister Andranik Margaryan, 55,
on March 25 has set off red flags amongst veteran Armenia-watchers,
some suggesting foul play. Whatever the cause, the politician’s death
resulted in overnight changes for the fragile Armenian democracy and a
host of other issues including the European Community’s quest for
energy security in the Caucasus region and enforcement of
international sanctions aimed at Iran.

With Presidential elections approaching, Margaryan was increasingly
seen as a viable alternative to the powerful Defense Minister Serge
Sarkisyan, an ally of current President Robert Kocharyan, who is
moving toward the completion of his term of office. Both men come from
Nagorny Karabakh, an enclave inside the territory of neighboring
Azerbaijan. Armenia’s armed seizure of this area in the 1990’s remains
a volatile point of contention with Azerbaijan, a flash point in the
Caucasus that continues to destabilize the region and slow down
cooperation in economic development.

Prime Minister Margaryan assumed office in 2000, following the murder
of his predecessor. He had lately leaned toward addressing the
consequences of Karabakh’s occupation to the Armenian economy. This
conflict prevents Armenia, among other things, from enjoying normal
relations with powerful neighbors such as Turkey and of course
Azerbaijan, specifically precluding the option of Armenia’s serving as
a transit country for Caspian oil and gas.

Margaryan’s position conformed with the EU’s wishes to resolve the
conflict and ensure a higher degree of energy security in the area, a
stance strongly opposed by Armenia’s President and Defense Minister,
both of whom had been guerilla fighters in Karabakh, steadfastly
rejecting any compromise with the Azerbi demands.

Margaryan’s position also flew in the face of the current President’s
policy of energy cooperation with Iran, which often skirted
international sanctions and the EU approach to Iran that Margaryan
also supported. Observers report that Magaryan and his family have
recently received a spate of threatening phone calls and letters,
along with others in his Republican Party of Armenia, demanding his
resignation as President and head of the party.

There is also talk in Armenia that Margaryan had compromising
documents regarding corruption in the armed forces, illicit real
estate dealings by top military brass and illegal expenditures by the
defense establishment which he intended to make public before the
upcoming Parliamentary election scheduled for May 12th.

Eurovision Song Contest: Armenia – Hayko launches revamped site

esctoday.com, Netherlands
April 1 2007

Hayko launches revamped site
Armenia: Meet Hayko

Having qualified automatically for the finals, this year Armenia will
be represented at the Eurovision Song Contest by Hayko with his
romantic ballad Anytime you need.

Hayko was chosen at the Armenian national final by a professional
jury. The competition was open to songwriters from all over Europe.
At the same time Hayko was also selected as the favorite by the
Armenian televoters, something that did not have any direct influence
on the selection of the entry by the jury, though.

Hayko is one of Armenia’s biggest music stars. First he was trained
at the music school by T. Chukhadjyan. Before attending the Yerevan
state Conservatory, he was educated in the music college under the
guidance of Romanos Melikyan. Having been awarded the first place at
the Moskva 96 (Moscow 1996) Music Festival, Hayko achieved more
victories in the following years. In 1997 he won the 1st prize at the
Big Apple Festival in New York. In 1998 he was acknowledged as the
best singer-songwriter at the "Ayo" competition. In 1999 Hayko
released his first album, called Romances in which Armenian urban
songs were included. In the same year he was nominated for the best
singer award in Armenia, followed by 2002 nominations at the National
Music Show, in the categories the Best Singer, the Best Musical
Project and the Best Album. A year later, in 2003 he released his `
best of’ album on DVD, and gave his first solo concert at the `Alex
Theatre’ in Glendale, California USA.

Returning home with the energy he received from his American fans,
Hayko gave a solo performance in Yerevan in May 2003 and recorded his
` Live Concert’ DVD. In the same year he released his first album
written by himself, Norits (Again), and received the best singer
award at the Armenian National Music Awards. A year later, in 2004
Hayko released his fourth album In One Word, followed by his 2006
Best singer Award at the Armenian National Music Awards.

Hayko’s big efforts and decisive steps in his career established him
as one of Armenia’s biggest singers and songwriters. The Music of
Anytime you need is composed by Hayko, himself. The lyrics of the
song are written by Karen Kavaleryan who is a well-known songwriter
for the Eurovision Song Contest. Kavaleryan was the author of the
lyrics of Russia’s 2006 and 2002 Eurovision entries Never let you go
and Northern Girl. This year he has achieved a remarkable double as
along with the Armenian entry he has written the lyrics of Belarus’
Eurovision song Work Your Magic.

Anytime you need is predominantly in English. The chorus in the
Armenian language, which will be heard at the contest for the first
time. Along with two other automatic finalists Armenia has chosen
it’s position in the running order: Hayko will perform second last at
the final.

Hayko’s revamped official site can be found here. In his site we are
informed that he is planning ”crazy tours all over the world", so
stay tuned!

http://www.esctoday.com/news/read/8113

Nairobi: Journalists do not just make up stories

Kenya Times, Kenya
April 1 2007

Journalists do not just make up stories

By OBWOCHA JOSELYNE

Sometimes reporters are left with no option but to speculate.

Take a case where there has been a closed door meeting with no press
briefing at the end. What is a reporter supposed to do?

We simply round up issues leading to the meeting and try to come up
with the most logical reason such a meeting is taking place.

Journalists have a difficult task. The media must provide the public
with answers which sometimes the journalists themselves do not have.
All we can do is to raise questions surrounding the issue and leave
the public to make their own conclusions and judgments.

Journalism is, and has always been one of the most dangerous careers.
In countries where freedom of speech is not tolerated, reporters who
are determined to reveal the absolute truth about public officials
and the government are ever in trouble.

The leaders understand the power and influence of the media, and will
often come out strongly against a free press, accusing it of all
manner of evils.

The matter of the raid on The Standard and Kenya Television Network
is yet to be put to rest. Pro government politicians were more than
ready to lead demonstrations all over the country in support of the
government, urging the media to be responsible, threatening to ask
Kenyans to boycott The Standard if the paper doesn’t stop
`fabricating’ stories.

The insults hauled at journalists covering the event must have left
those who understand the role of the Fourth Estate wondering if these
people really knew what they were doing. Do these politicians really
love this country?

When our artists came up with the Jaza Lorry initiative to raise
money and food for hunger stricken millions, where were these
politicians? Or were there bigger issues taking away their attention?

Why didn’t they donate at least part of their huge salaries to help
the hungry? How many of these politicians were at The Carnivore
supporting the Dettol Heart Run?

Coming up in arms supporting a government that a majority of people
believe is a huge let down and attacking the media has only
trivialised the incident to a battle between the government and The
Standard Group. Why is the government being selective?

Let us be realistic. There are countless other media houses in this
country where the words, impartiality, responsibility and
professionalism are alien, Yet they have been left to operate without
any interference from the government.

Why now? Why The Standard? Is it because most of its shareholders and
gate keepers are supposedly from the opposition, in this government
of national unity?

Yet even if they were, don’t they have a right to criticize and push
the government to keep on its toes, to deliver to Kenyans? Isn’t this
the main role of the opposition and the press, anyway?

The media has more freedom these days, and it will be ever more
difficult to take away even an inch of this freedom.

What International Security minister John Michuki goes a long way to
prove how civil former dictator Moi was. Moi had his faults with the
media, but they did not come so soon in his career, and not so
brutally.

While he created torture chambers for those who opposed the
government, let us not forget that it is the media which first
revealed the horror therein.

Do you remember how strongly the then government denied these
allegations yet in the long run, before they all turned out to be
true?

Then there is thing called the Kenya Union of Journalists. Where did
this outfit come from with the suggestion to give all foul mouthed
politicians a media blackout? Publicity gives power to politicians
and popularity to entertainers.

Denying politicians publicity may send them to the world of oblivion,
but won’t this give them a field day to continue with their vices
with impunity, away from the glare of the media.

We should not forget the kind of people we sent to parliament nor the
corruption scandals that have erupted since Narc took power. Stop
covering them; they might as well engage in all kinds of mischief
that may cost Kenyans millions.

Is it not because of the pressure from the media that some ministers
implicated in corruption scandals have resigned, or stepped aside, as
they would have us believe?

The attack on the watchdogs is testimony to how powerful the dog is.
Journalists should adhere to their code of ethics and be there to
inform, educate, explain, nay even incite people against their
government. It should be understood that the media’s first
responsibility is to the people, and not to a bad government.

The burning issue this week has been about the two Armenians who have
surfaced from nowhere and are claiming to be businessmen, not
`mercenaries.’

The two claim to have been in contact with two ODM leaders; Raila
Odinga and Kalonzo Musyoka. They allege to have funded the Orange
group during the referendum, through a `personal loan’ given to Raila
Odinga.

There is an interesting twist to this incident. While it was Raila
who first spoke of their presence in the country, he now denies
having met them before.

How then did he get photocopies of their passports, which he showed
to the press? Then there is Kalonzo, who admits having met them
before, but `for a brief moment in the corridors of a hotel.’

Where on earth did lawyer Fred Ngatia get hold of these people to
organize the botched, infamous news conference? What business are
these people conducting in Kenya? How comes all useful files that
would substantiate their claims and, which should under normal
circumstances be easily available to the public, have suddenly gone
missing? Why are they being treated like VIPs? Who allowed them in
the country in the first place?

When ODM leaders organized a demonstration pressing for freedom of
speech, Mayor Dick Wathika, minister Maina Kamanda and Assistant
minister David Mwenje organized a demo in support of the government,
Raila produced copies of passports of the mercenaries. Then only a
day later, they emerged claiming a dubious financial involvement with
the ODM leader.

Coincidence? These are the questions. Where are the answers?

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Reporter – 3/31/2007 – 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]

March 31, 2007 — From the front section
All of the articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter
For photographs, visit

1. Prime Minister Andranik Margarian, 55, is dead

2. Armenian-Americans lead grassroots effort to promote U.S. response
to genocide (by Emil Sanamyan)

3. From Washington, in brief (by Emil Sanamyan)
* Prime Minister Margarian remembered in Washington
* Senate Committee approves amended resolution honoring Hrant Dink
* Major U.S.-Turkish military deal suspended (no relation to Genocide
resolution reported)
* Turkish lobby in the U.S. is upbeat on chances of stopping
congressional resolutions
* Business giants deny opposing resolutions
* U.S., United Nations aiding "special populations" displaced from Iraq

4. Interview: Rep. Adam Schiff is staying positive
* He’s upbeat about the Genocide resolution and U.S. support for
Karabakh’s self-determination

5. Just what is being inaugurated in Lake Van? (by Talin Suciyan)
* Catholicos declines to attend

6. In memoriam: Andranik Margarian (by Armen Hakobyan)

7. Letter from Moscow: Seventy Million Armenians? (by Gevorg Ter-Gabrielyan)

8. Editorial: The passing of a statesman

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

1. Prime Minister Andranik Margarian, 55, is dead

YEREVAN – Andranik Margarian, 55, prime minister and chair of the
Republican Party of Armenia, died on March 25 at 1:20 p.m. The cause
of death was heart failure.

"We have lost a statesman, a colleague, and a friend who for seven
of the fifteen and half years of our independence has headed the
government," said President Robert Kocharian. "And those seven years
have been our country’s best years. He was a man who remained modest,
tolerant, and virtuous in spite of attaining high office. All of us
will remember first and foremost Andranik Margarian’s human
qualities."

The government tendered its resignation, which the president
accepted. He instructed the ministers to continue in their posts until
further notice. Armenia’s constitution requires the government to
resign whenever the post of prime minister is vacant.

The president asked the Republican Party of Armenia, which leads the
three-party governing coalition, to nominate the next prime minister
within ten days. The chair of the party’s board is Serge Sargsian, the
minister of defense.

Messages of condolence were received from world leaders, including
President Bush, President Putin of Russia, President Chirac of France,
as well as regional leaders – including the prime minister of Turkey,
with which Armenia has no diplomatic relations. Turkey’s ambassador to
Georgia attended the funeral, as did U.S. Assistant Deputy Secretary
of State Matthew Bryza, and Georgia’s prime minister Zourab Nogaideli.

The late prime minister was buried with full honors in the Armenian
Pantheon. The Catholicos of All Armenians performed the requiem
service.

* * *

For more on the late prime minister, see "Washington in brief," "In
memoriam: Andranik Margarian," and "Editorial: The passing of a
statesman" in this issue of the Armenian Reporter.

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

2. Armenian-Americans lead grassroots effort to promote U.S. response
to genocide

by Emil Sanamyan

WASHINGTON – More than 100 Armenian-Americans from around the United
States came to the Capitol Hill last week to urge their elected
representatives to clearly affirm the Armenian Genocide and take steps
to end the ongoing outrages in Sudan’s Darfur region.

The "End the Cycle of Genocide" grassroots campaign on March 22-23
was organized by the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) and
the Genocide Intervention Network (GI-Net). The grassroots effort came
amid high-level Bush Administration and Turkish government lobbying
against the U.S. congressional affirmation of the Armenian Genocide.

In his talk on March 22, ANCA chair Ken Hachikian recalled that "in
1896, the former U.S. minister to the Ottoman Empire, Oscar Strauss,
convinced then President Grover Cleveland to ignore a House and Senate
resolution calling on the Ottoman Sultan to stop his killing of
Armenians. Even then, in 1896, our State Department was making
apologies for Turkey."

Mr. Hachikian termed the position taken by the Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice against U.S. affirmation "insulting." He said that
"in allowing Turkey to not face up to its history, and allowing the
government of Sudan to go scott-free the U.S. is not doing the right
thing. And it is our obligation collectively to call our government
on the carpet."

In meetings with members and staff from all 535 House and Senate
offices, the activists urged passage of the resolutions affirming the
Armenian Genocide, as introduced in the House and Senate, the Senate
resolution commemorating Hrant Dink, and legislation that would
restrict U.S. commercial relations with Sudan and fund peacekeepers to
stop the Genocide in Darfur.

"I think this [ANCA/GI-Net] partnership is huge in the fact that we
are combining the need to recognize past genocides to help stop
current genocides," GI-Net Executive Director Mark Hannis was cited by
the ANCA press release as saying. "We are trying to raise the
political cost [of inaction] and raise the political benefit to create
the political will needed to prevent and stop genocide."

Activist Greg Arzoumanian came from Rhode Island, whose two Senators
and Congressmen have been strong supporters of Genocide affirmation
and human rights issues in general. "It’s important to let your
elected officials know that you appreciate their support," he told the
Reporter.

Mr. Hachikian of the ANCA told the Reporter that he was satisfied
with the support shown so far for the resolutions introduced in the
House and the Senate (H. Res. 106 and S. Res. 106), backed by 183
members of Congress and 26 Senators respectively.

"We have strong support of significant players on both sides of the
isle – conservatives, liberals. We are of course anxious to have a
vote and we are looking to the Speaker of the House [Nancy Pelosi] to
give us that opportunity and we expect that she will," said Mr.
Hachikian. "We hope that some time in the next two months that we will
see a vote on H. Res. 106."

Asked to comment on Turkish media reports claiming that the House
Foreign Affairs Committee Chair Tom Lantos pledged not to bring H.
Res. 106 to a vote, Mr. Hachikian said "We have no reason to believe
that Congressman Lantos has taken a position on this issue as of yet.
We are waiting for a word from his office."

Contacted previously, Rep. Lantos’ office refused to comment on the issue.

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

3. From Washington, in brief

by Emil Sanamyan

* Prime Minister Margarian remembered in Washington

A steady stream of officials from the federal and Washington city
governments, a number of U.S.-accredited ambassadors and diplomats,
and Armenian-Americans came to the Armenian Embassy on March 28 to
honor the memory of Prime Minister Andranik Margarian who died of
heart failure on March 24.

Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Matt Bryza flew to Yerevan to
attend the funeral on March 28 and deliver a letter of condolences
from President George W. Bush. Co-chairs of the Congressional Armenian
Caucus Reps. Frank Pallone (D.-N.J.) and Joe Knollenberg (R.-Mich.)
issued a statement mourning Mr. Margarian’s passing. Heads of several
U.S. federal agencies and non-governmental organizations sent letters
of condolences.

* Senate Committee approves amended resolution honoring Hrant Dink

On March 28, the Senate Foreign Relations Committee chair, Sen. Joe
Biden (D.-Del.), secured committee passage of S. Res. 65 "Condemning
the murder of Hrant Dink," after amending several passages in the
resolution’s text. Armenian-American organizations, including the
Armenian Assembly, the Armenian National Committee, and USAPAC
welcomed Sen. Biden’s effort.

The original text said, "Mr. Dink was prosecuted under Article 301
of the Turkish Penal Code for speaking out about the Armenian
Genocide." The State Department and the Turkish government opposed
that statement. (See the March 17 edition of the Reporter for the
original resolution’s full text.)

"Ankara fears that a Senate approval of the original text may act as
a precedent for future congressional action," the Turkish Daily News
reported on March 26.

The amended version, which passed the committee and was made
available to the Reporter, said, "Mr. Dink was subjected to legal
action under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code for referring to
the 1915 massacre of Armenians as genocide."

A State Department reaction to the final text was not available at press time.

Another amendment was made to the part of the text that called on
Turkey to normalize relations with Armenia. The text that passed the
committee called on both "the Government of Turkey and the Government
of Armenia to act in the interest of regional security and prosperity
and reestablish full diplomatic, political and economic relations."
Unlike Turkey, Armenia has been ready to establish relations without
preconditions.

At this time it is unclear whether and when S. Res. 65 might come to
the Senate floor.

* Major U.S.-Turkish military deal suspended (no relation to Genocide
resolution reported)

Turkey suspended plans to purchase 30 F-16 fighter jets and associated
equipment from Maryland-based Lockheed Martin. The parties have
apparently not agreed on the price, variously estimated between $1.65
and $2.9 billion. There may be political reasons too.

Defense News on March 19 cited sources in the Undersecretariat for
Defense Industries, Turkey’s procurement agency, as saying that the
reason for suspension is Lockheed Martin’s inability to start
delivering the planes by 2010.

In the period 2014 to 2034, Turkey also plans to spend $10.7 billion
to buy 100 of the U.S.-made F-35 Joint Strike Fighters (JSF), also
co-produced by Lockheed Martin. Defense News’ sources said that Turkey
views the modernized F-16 purchase as a stopgap solution to fill
Turkey’s need for more modern jets before F-35 production begins. It
would be "meaningless" for Turkey to begin taking delivery of the
F-16s in 2014, as has been proposed.

But on March 26, blamed the suspension on a passage
inserted as part of congressional approval of the sale. The passage
specifies that the sale should "not adversely affect either the
military balance in the region or U.S. efforts to encourage a
negotiated settlement of the Cyprus question." It provides no clear
benchmarks or enforcement mechanisms.

This passage is similar to the restrictions on U.S. military aid to
Azerbaijan that it not "be used for offensive purposes against Armenia
or the Armenian communities in the South Caucasus." But Azerbaijani
special forces and air bases modernized by the U.S. are under the
control of a government that is overtly planning to use them for
exactly these "offensive purposes."

Meanwhile Turkey’s Zaman cited a military source as saying, "Rather
than the Armenian genocide bill, the [Kurdish] issue has the potential
to turn upside down Turkish-U.S. strategic relations…. If the U.S.
does not take action against the [Kurds] in northern Iraq or allow the
Turkish military to stage a cross-border operation, [Turkey] may even
[drop plans to buy] 100 JSF fighters from the U.S."

* Turkish lobby in the U.S. is upbeat on chances of stopping
congressional resolutions

Lockheed Martin, Raytheon, and Philip Morris were "silver sponsors" of
the 26th annual conference of the American-Turkish Council (ATC), held
in Washington March 25-27. Other ATC members include BAE Systems,
Boeing, Chevron, Citigroup, and Sikorsky.

According to the Turkish media, Ankara’s concerns with congressional
affirmation of the Armenian Genocide dominated conversations at the
conference.

The ATC conference featured a special message from President George
W. Bush. Secretary of Defense Robert Gates was the keynote speaker.
Mr. Gates was quoted by The Associated Press as saying, "Our two
nations should oppose measures and rhetoric that needlessly and
destructively antagonize each other. That includes symbolic
resolutions by the United States Congress as well as the type of
anti-American and extremist rhetoric that sometimes finds a home in
Turkish political discourse."

Turkish NTV cited Economy Minister Ali Babacan of Turkey as saying,
"things looked extremely dark two months ago, but thanks to the
efforts exerted by the Turkish Foreign Ministry and the staff at our
Washington Embassy, as well as our lawmakers and non-governmental
organizations, I see better chances that the resolution would not be
submitted to Congress."

ATC president Jim Holmes, a retired U.S. ambassador, told the
Turkish Daily News on March 22 that following intense lobbying by ATC,
he is "hopeful . . . that the leadership of Congress will not bring
either in the Senate or in the House of Representatives this
legislation to the floor for vote."

Mr. Holmes said in an interview with Roll Call, a congressional news
daily, that ATC member companies (including those listed above) are
working to stop the resolution. Roll Call’s sources in the companies’
Washington lobbies confirmed that such efforts were underway.

"At the end of the day, the U.S. policy will not change regardless
of what Congress does on this," U.S. ambassador to Ankara Ross Wilson
said during the ATC reception, according to the Turkish Daily News.
"We would like to see the resolution not pass."

Mr. Holmes served as deputy chief of mission in Ankara from 1992 to
1995. The ATC board is chaired by Gen. Brent Scowcroft (ret.),
national security advisor to the first President Bush. (For more
information, see )

* Business giants deny opposing resolutions

At the urging of the Turkish government, the American Business Forum
in Turkey (ABFT) – an entity separate from the ATC – sent a letter to
Congress opposing congressional resolutions on behalf of American
companies with business interests in Turkey.

The Armenian National Committee of America inquired with some 70
ABFT members, asking them to clarify their position on the issue.
Three companies that responded so far – Microsoft, Cargill, and
Johnson and Johnson – denied they were involved in Turkey’s efforts to
stop the resolutions.

* U.S., United Nations aiding "special populations" displaced from Iraq

According to the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees
(UNHCR), several million Iraqis have been displaced since the war in
Iraq began in 2003. U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Ellen Sauerbrey
furnished this estimate during the March 26 hearing called by the
House Foreign Affairs Subcommittee on Middle East.

Discussing U.S. and international assistance efforts, she referred
to "special populations," including "religious minorities such as
Christians" – that in Iraq include Arabs, Assyrians, and Armenians.
"We intend to ensure that these special populations receive the same
consideration and access to the U.S. resettlement program as others
and we are encouraging them to contact UNHCR to make their needs
known," Ms. Sauerbrey said.

On March 24, PanArmenian.net carried an interview with Baruyr
Hagopian, chair of the Armenian National Committee of Iraq, who
estimated that the number of Armenians in Iraq declined from 18,000 to
15,000 as a result of the war. Of those who left, most are now in
Syria, Armenia, and Jordan.

Since 2003, 28 Iraqi Armenians have died, and as many have been
kidnapped for ransom. Increasingly, Armenians and others from central
Iraq are moving to the relative safety of the Iraqi Kurdistan. (See
our story on page B9 about the new Armenian church is the area.)

Mr. Hagopian was also quoted as saying that "a significant part of
Armenians living in Iraq are not satisfied with their situation and
isolation from their historical motherland" and would like to become
Armenian dual citizens.

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

4. Interview: Rep. Adam Schiff is staying positive

* He’s upbeat about the Genocide resolution and U.S. support for
Karabakh’s self-determination

On March 22 and again on March 28, our Washington editor Emil
Sanamyan spoke with Rep. Adam Schiff (D.-Calif.)

Reporter: What is the stumbling block for H. Res. 106 [the proposed
House resolution affirming the Armenian Genocide introduced on January
30] going forward?

Rep. Schiff: I hope there is no stumbling block. Right now we are
still gathering supporters for the resolution. We are stronger than we
have ever been, with more than 180 cosponsors. It’s a very good start
and I like to think positive and I am very hopeful. I think the
biggest challenge is overcoming the power of the Turkish lobby, which
is very considerable.

Reporter: There was hope expressed previously that congressional
action on H. Res. 106 would come before April 24. Now a connection
seems to be made to the upcoming elections in Turkey. Do you see any
such connections in terms of timing?

Rep. Schiff: Right now the only timing consideration is that
Congress is focused first and foremost, as we need to be, on Iraq. So
every foreign policy is going to have to wait until we resolve at
least the immediate issues we are grappling with in Iraq. That’s the
more pressing timetable. Beyond that, I don’t know what the timing is.
I am much more concerned about having [H. Res. 106] taken up and
having it taken up successfully than whether it is on this or that
day.

Reporter: The Iraq issue is likely to stay on top of the agenda for
the foreseeable future. Do you see a possibility that the resolution
may not come up in this Congress (2007-2008)?

Rep. Schiff: I am keeping positive and pushing forward until I have
a reason to believe otherwise and I am going to assume the best.

* Support for Karabakh

Reporter: What do you think of the current U.S. policy on Karabakh?

Rep. Schiff: I think it is enormously important that we maintain
parity funding between Armenia and Azerbaijan. I am concerned that the
administration is making an effort to get away from that. Armenia has
been a steadfast ally [of the United States] and I think that should
be rewarded not penalized. I also don’t think we should be emboldening
Azerbaijan at the time that it is acting increasingly belligerently
vis-à-vis Karabakh.

I was hopeful some time ago when it looked like Armenia and
Azerbaijan and Karabakh were making progress in talks. But
unfortunately the Azerbaijani President [Ilham Aliyev] has not
followed through with his father’s efforts in that direction. I think
that the process has stalemated.

I certainly feel confident that U.S. will continue to support the
right for self-determination for the people of Karabakh. I had a
chance to visit Karabakh some years ago and I was enormously impressed
with the pioneering spirit of the people who live there and who formed
the government there. And I am determined to do all I can to support
their efforts.

Reporter: The U.S., however, does not recognize the Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic and says that Karabakh’s future status would be resolved
through negotiations. Are you satisfied with the status quo in this
U.S. position or do you see the need or room for change in this
policy?

Rep. Schiff: Some years ago I worked to free up to $20 million in
funds for Karabakh. And I am determined to continue to advocate for
the right of self-determination for the people of Karabakh. I think
that facts on the ground speak for themselves – today this is largely
an Armenian community that chose to express its self-determination and
I think they should be supported in that. And I will continue to keep
our Administration’s feet to the fire in support of that right for
self-determination and make sure that in our funding decisions
vis-à-vis Armenia and Azerbaijan we are not sending mixed signals in
terms of the rights of the people of Karabakh.

Reporter: Other than supporting funding, do you see any
congressional role in developing closer relations between
Nagorno-Karabakh and the United States?

Rep. Schiff: I would certainly like to see closer relations. There
are many efforts where we can work collaboratively. One of the issues
that I am pursuing now vis-à-vis Armenia, but I think would have
application in Karabakh as well, is efforts to strengthen the rule of
law, democratic process, increase transparency to let people know that
if they invest in Armenia, in Karabakh that those investments are
good, sound investments that would be protected and rewarded.

Reporter: Armenian-American organizations have called for increasing
the overall volume of annual U.S. assistance to Karabakh and expanding
such assistance to include pro-democracy programs as well as economic
development. Is that something you will be championing as a member of
the Foreign Operations Subcommittee?

Rep. Schiff: I will be championing strong economic support to
Armenia and continued support to Karabakh. We are just at the
beginning of the appropriations process for Fiscal Year 2008, but my
top priority is that there is at least parity in funding between
Armenia and Azerbaijan.

I am also working to secure funding for the California trade office
in Armenia, which is an effort that I initiated while I was a state
senator and I hope will continue.

Reporter: In terms of security assistance parity, when that’s
discussed, the issue of a separate multiyear $100 million U.S.
security program [the so-called Caspian Guard initiative] which has
focused on upgrading Azerbaijan’s airbases and training its special
forces is generally not made part of that equation. Should Congress
take a closer look at that program to see how that’s impacting the
balance in Karabakh?

Rep. Schiff: Certainly, Congress has a very important role to play
in making sure that any assistance in whatever form doesn’t negatively
affect the balance of power in a region that is very important to the
United States or disadvantage our ally. There are often competing
goals as to where we need to make investment in the war on terror or
in support of economic development of our allies. So, all of these
things need to be examined and appropriate action taken.

* Millennium Challenge Compact

Reporter: During a recent hearing in the House Foreign Operations
Subcommittee you raised concerns with the administration about the
Millennium Challenge Account funding essentially supplanting the
Freedom Support funds, which are being reduced to Armenia and other
states. Has that issue been addressed to your satisfaction or is that
still is an ongoing process?

Rep. Schiff: Yes, that is still an ongoing concern. When we
initiated the Millennium Challenge assistance we never contemplated
that we would take funds from existing efforts in order to fund that –
to rob Peter to pay Paul, so to speak. So I am concerned that this may
be what the administration is contemplating in Armenia and elsewhere;
that funds that would have ordinarily gone to these countries anyway
are cut back in order to fund Millennium Challenge efforts. I am not
sure that advances the [overall] cause. I have not got a satisfactory
answer yet and we are still going to be pursuing this.

Reporter: What’s your sense of the elections coming up in Armenia,
how that might impact the Millennium Challenge assistance?

Rep. Schiff: The important thing is that the elections are held in a
credible way, that they are transparent to a degree that outside
election monitors are able to come in and verify that the elections
are conducted well. I think this would be a very positive development
for Armenia. A lot of folks will be watching the elections carefully
to make sure they are held appropriately. None of us, of course, are
in the position to say what the result should be; we just think that
the process needs to be sound and people should have an opportunity to
express what their choice is in a free and unfettered way. The world
will be watching and it will be very important for us in Congress that
the rule of law is observed and democratic institutions are given a
chance to prosper.

* Representing Glendale

Reporter: How does it feel being a Congressman from Glendale,
representing such a dynamic Armenian community?

Rep. Schiff: Well, it is wonderful to represent Glendale, Pasadena,
and Burbank, cities with large and vibrant Armenian communities. I
would tease one of the Glendale city council members, Rafi Manoukian,
after he and I went to Yerevan some years ago and had a great many
people stop us in the streets [recognizing and greeting us], that we
developed an international reputation.

Rafi, who was then [Glendale] mayor said: "Don’t let this go to your
head, Congressman. These are our Glendale constituents." Of course,
these were our constituents on vacation in Armenia.

The Armenian community has added so much to the quality of life in
my district. To the arts, to medicine, to law, to humanities, and I
have really benefited from the rich Armenian cultural heritage that my
district has.

* * *

Facts about Rep. Adam Schiff (D.-Calif.)

Constituency: Represents 29th district, located in the northeastern
suburbs of Los Angeles, including Glendale, Pasadena, and Burbank.

Role in the 110th Congress: Member, House Appropriations
Subcommittee on Foreign Operations; original sponsor, House Resolution
106 affirming U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide.

Personal details: Born 1960 in Framingham, Mass.; Jewish; J.D.
Harvard University, 1985; attorney, educator; married to Eve
Sanderson.

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

5. Just what is being inaugurated in Lake Van?

* Catholicos declines to attend

by Talin Suciyan

Istanbul (March 28) – The inauguration of the newly restored Holy
Cross (Surp Khach) Armenian Church on Aghtamar Island will be held on
Thursday, March 29.

There is no confirmed list of guests as of today.

The head of the Armenian Church in Turkey, Patriarch Mesrob II is
traveling to Aghtamar for the opening. Turkish media reported that
Archbishop Khajag Barsamian of the Eastern Diocese will be there too.
The archbishop’s office says he has no plans to attend, however.

Karekin II, the Catholicos of All Armenians, turned down the Turkish
government’s invitation, considering that the church "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."

Armenia’s deputy minister of culture, Gagik Gurjyan, will lead a
delegation from the Republic of Armenia. The delegation is meant to
include 10 specialists in medieval architecture and five journalists.
It arrived in Turkey over Georgia on March 28.

Over the last few weeks and to this day, the Turkish media have been
discussing two issues related to the church: the absence of a cross
atop the restored edifice, and the name of the monument.

Architect Zakaria Mildanoglu was a consultant on the renovations
from the very beginning. On March 26, he held a presentation at the
Nazar Sirinoglu Hall of Saints Vartanants Church in Ferikoy, Istanbul.
He said the cross was part of the original project. But it was
excluded from the restoration plan. "We informed the Ministry of
Culture, and they told us they will investigate the matter," he said.

But there is no need for an in-depth investigation, Mr. Mildanoglu
said. It is only a matter of intentions and mentality.

Mr. Mildanoglu had noticed that a wrong type of cross base was
constructed and fixed onto the roof of the church. "I called my
colleague Jan Gavrilof to go immediately to Armenia and talk to the
experts, to make the necessary technical drawings, and if possible to
fetch a master for us. He did so, and a new base for a cross,
according to its original shape, was prepared by this master and put
in its place."

Yet a cross never made it onto the base.

* Community appeal

Some members of the Armenian community in Istanbul (Arman Artuc, Murat
Bebir, Rafi Bilal, Aret Cicekeker, Ari Demircioglu, Selin Evrem, Aram
Kalenderoglu, Hosrof Koletavitoglu, Sibil Pektorosoglu, and Nadya
Uygun) wrote a letter to Atilla Koc, Turkey’s minister of culture,
requesting that a cross and a bell be installed, and that the church
be blessed. The authors of the letter added that the name of the
island is not "Akdamar" but "Akhtamar," and the name of the church is
"Akhtamar Surp Khach Church." The Turkish media have been using
"Akdamar" as the name of the church. All press releases from the
Patriarchate mention the "Surp Khach Church on Aghtamar Island"; the
Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos calls it the "Surp Khach Church on
Akhtamar Island."

On March 16, a statement by Patriarch Mesrob II appeared in the
Turkish daily Posta. Patriarch Mutafyan wrote: "If there will not be a
cross upon it, could it be a church? [Apparently] there will not be
any religious ceremony at the inauguration. If I will not have any
role as a clergyman, my participation will be meaningless." On March
21, however, the Patriarch made another statement, this time to Agos
weekly, saying that he had received an official invitation for the
opening and he would be going to Van on March 28.

* The Patriarch is "astonished"

Writing on March 9 in the Turkish daily Vatan, columnist Mehmet Z.
Ozturk asked whether the church should not be under the authority of
the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, the Armenian Patriarch
in Jerusalem, or the Catholicos of All Armenians. The Armenian
Patriarch of Turkey touched upon this question in his statement to
Agos, saying, "Should the church be under the authority of any
patriarchate, why would this authority be out of Turkey and not the
one established by the Fatih Sultan Mehmet in 1461 in Istanbul? I am
astonished."

On March 23 the daily Zaman reported that the Armenian Patriarch of
Turkey had written a letter to the Ministry of Culture, requesting
that a cross be put on the church to protect the original form of the
church. According to the news item, the ministry could not decide what
to do and forwarded the request to Ministry of Foreign Affairs. This
raises interesting questions: Isn’t this renovation being done under
the authority of the Ministry of Culture? What is the role of the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs?

In the same letter, the Patriarch had offered to organize an
"Aghtamar festival" in September, with the participation of choirs
from Istanbul and folklore groups from Van, and to hold a religious
ceremony at the church. Mr. Koc responded to the offer during a show
on CNN Turk on March 28. He said, "It would be inappropriate for me to
comment on this. The Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of
Interior will deliver their opinion on the matter."

* The border issue

Turkish officials openly discussed opening the border with Armenia for
this extraordinary occasion. Another option on the table was a direct
flight from Yerevan to Van. The daily Milleyet reported on March 24,
however, that the General Staff of the Turkish armed forces decided
not to open the border, arguing that the area is a military one.
Meanwhile, Turkey’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not confirm the
possibility of a direct flight from Yerevan to Van. Consequently, the
Armenian delegation arrived in Turkey through Georgia.

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

6. In memoriam: Andranik Margarian

by Armen Hakobyan

"I envy the man who can live forever through his work." – Hovhannes Tumanian

One of the police officers maintaining order at the demonstration of
young people in favor of protecting the environment and historical
monuments asked the demonstrators to stop the march.

"Why? We have a permit."

"The prime minister has died," the officer said. "Please end the
march; you’ll continue it another day."

I did not believe the officer, though it was obvious he was telling
the cruel and sad truth. I called the prime minister’s press
secretary, Mary Harutiunian. Her voice left no doubt as to the truth
of the matter. Andranik Margarian’s heart had betrayed him. It was
2:30 p.m. on March 25.

Later I would learn that Andranik Margarian’s heart had stopped
beating less than an hour earlier. Later, a day later, a commission of
respected physicians would declare the cause of death: "Prime Minister
Andranik Margarian, 56, suffered from ischemic heart disease with
arteriosclerosis . . . with postinfarctal cardiosclerosis, hypertonic
sickness, pronounced enlargement of the heart muscle, for which an
aorta-coronary shunt had been installed in the past, with two stents.
Death was as a result of the blood not reaching the heart, and the
heart suddenly stopping."

Later, too, would it become widely known that Andranik Margarian had
not been feeling well for the last few days. But he continued to work
on his normal schedule, from morning through late night, although the
physicians had advised him to take some rest. He was supposed to leave
on March 27 for France for a routine heart examination and, if
necessary, surgery. He didn’t make it.

As a journalist, I had many opportunities to meet Andranik Margarian
and ask him questions. In different situations, in different places, I
did so, especially since he was one of the rare political figures who
never avoided questions – reporters’ questions, citizens’ questions –
even when he was busy or in a hurry. He answered friendly questions
and hostile ones with the same willingness. So there’s a lot to
remember about him.

He accepted the position of prime minister on May 12, 2000, at a
difficult and tense time for Armenia. After calming the situation
somewhat, he made his first official visit abroad as prime minister.
He went to Belarus. The reporters accredited to join him had already
filed their stories with their editors and looked forward to some
rest. At 10 p.m., a colleague told us all to go down to the prime
minister’s quarters for an interview. Once we got there, we figured
out what had transpired. Andranik Margarian had asked whether the
reporters had been taken care of. He had learned that no one on his
staff had dealt with that. After reprimanding one of his aides, he
asked the aide to reserve a table at a restaurant in Minsk for the
group. Belarus’ security service had not wanted the prime minister to
go back into the city, however. So Andranik Margarian arranged for the
food and the reporters to come to his quarters. And when we all sat
down together, he wanted to know what we thought, what we suggested
for the country, and he listened carefully.

* The young patriot

The people, the government, the Republican Party of Armenia, and the
Margarian family are receiving letters of condolence from all over the
world. The one from the National Self-Determination Union and its
leader, Paruir Hairikian, caught my eye:

"Personally and on behalf of the members of the National Unity Party
and the National Self-Determination Union, I express deep condolences
to Andranik Margarian’s relatives and friends on the occasion of his
untimely death.

"As his comrade in his teenage years and his youth, I can testify
that in 1967, he dedicated himself to the task of our people’s
liberation, and became one of the most important figures in that stage
of our history. At age 17 he was the leader of one of the 4
constituent branches of the Yerkunk organization, and on February 18,
1969, by the eternal flame at Tzitzernakaberd, he took his oath as a
sworn member of the National Unity Party.

"Thanks to lessons in patriotism he received from his worthy
forebears, his high level of consciousness, and his practical and
unstinting dedication to his homeland, Andranik Margarian in 1973
became the leader of one of the five constituent branches of the NUP
and a member of the NUP Council. It was this council that adopted the
‘Independence through referendum’ strategy for the Armenian people.

"We have had many prime ministers and may God grant that we will
have many more. But it is the fact that Andranik Margarian was one of
the leaders of 1973 that makes him eternal. It is hard to imagine that
Andranik Margarian is no longer with us. Patience to his family."

For the generation that has grown with an independent Armenia, it
must be hard to imagine what it meant not only to think about but also
to struggle for the independence of one’s country in the dictatorship
called the USSR. Patriotism was a precondition for enlisting in that
struggle, but hardly enough. What great force of character was
required of those 16-17 or 18-20 year-old youth who had to continue
the independence struggle of the 1960s and 1970s when the leaders of
the underground National Unity Party were rounded up by the Soviet
authorities.

"In 1967, I was the leader of the Shant organization of the NUP,"
Mr. Hairikian recounted to me. "Shant’s purpose was to prepare young
people to join the party in the future. We knew Andranik Margarian had
a group, ‘Teenage Students’ Union," which had not organized any
activities yet. I asked Karapet Chghlian, one of the boys from the
Erebuni district, to join us, and he said he had a friend, Andranik,
and we invited him to join us too. What made Andranik remarkable was
his patriotism."

The leaders of the NUP, including founder Haikaz Khachatrian, were
arrested in 1968. That left the young members entirely on their own.
They established two organizations, each with youth and teenage
suborganizations, Mr. Hairikian recalls. One organization, Yerkunk,
had 4 member branches; the other, Tsasum, had 6. Yerkunk published a
paper – also called Yerkunk – with the lead article, "Independence as
a vital demand," and the motto, "Death or Free Armenia." They printed
5,000 copies, which was amazing in those days, and they distributed
the papers in the three main cities of Armenia, Yerevan, Leninakan
(now Gyumri), and Kirovakan (now Vanadzor), by leaving batches of them
in colleges, cinemas, and apartment complexes. Andranik Margarian was
the leader of one of the branches of Yerkunk. Mr. Hairikian says that
Yerkunk and Tsasum were both uncovered in 1969, but Yerkunk had
accomplished much by then.

"They arrested me and four others in 1969," Mr. Hairkian continued.
"Among the five of us was Ashot Navasardian," who went on to become
the founder and leader of the Republican Party of Armenia. "Andranik
Margarian was made to testify, and he kept himself well, as did the
others. At about the same time, he was expelled from the Communist
Youth Organization," Mr. Hairikian added.

"From prison, until Ashot Navasardian was freed, I communicated
primarily with Andranik Margarian and Vazgen Karakhanian, sending them
materials and instructions," Mr. Hairikian said.

In 1973, the underground party adopted its strategy of promoting a
referendum on independence. Mr. Hairikian said he convened a council
comprising those leaders who had autonomous, underground groups.
Andranik Margarian was one of the five members of the council.

The council held its first session on August 11, 1974. Later that
year, Andranik Margarian was arrested. He was sentenced to three years
imprisonment. He served closer to two years, but none of the prisoners
who had worked for Armenia’s independence had requested a pardon, Mr.
Hairikian stressed.

Years later, on the eve of the movement that began in 1988 and the
achievement of independence – by referendum – in 1991, these men
parted ways politically. But, Mr. Hairikian says, Andranik Margarian
was "a good comrade, a good man, from a good family."

* Torosian: People remember his love

A sad coincidence: Andranik Margarian’s funeral took place on the
birthday of his senior comrade, Ashot Navasadrian, who died ten years
ago – leaving Andranik Margarian at the helm of the Republican party.

The Speaker of Armenia’s National Assembly, Tigran Torosian,
delivered a eulogy for Andranik Margarian. Mr. Torosian, who is the
vice-chair of the Republican party, said: "To understand Andranik
Margarian’s being and his political work, it is not enough to know his
political history. You must go to Moush [in Western Armenia], to his
ancestral village and his family home, and hear outsiders who now live
there recount worshipful stories about his grandparents’ love of the
homeland."

It was the patriotism he inherited that drew Andranik Margarian into
underground political struggle for the freedom, independence, and
territorial integrity of the homeland, Mr. Torosian said. A struggle
that "seemed like madness to some in the days of the cruel repression
of the Soviet machine, but for Andranik Margarian and his comrades in
arms, it was the only way. And the reestablishment of the Armenian
state, and Andranik Margarian’s high position and successes in the
young state are testimony to the rightness of that path and a monument
to his memory."

The ten years in which Andranik Margarian led the Republican Party
of Armenia, Mr. Torosian said, were years of transformation and
success for the party. "The foundation was Andranik Margarian’s hard
work, day in and day out, his faith in success, and the patriotism
inherited from his forebears.

"It was that patriotism that led him to dedicate himself, from the
first days of Karabakh’s war for survival, to meeting the needs of
that endangered part of the homeland and to participating in the
fighting.

"It was that love that helped him avoid the biggest pitfall of
political life, that is to allow hatred of political rivals and evil
to take root in one’s heart and in one’s party.

"It was that love that made him accept political responsibility for
the fate of the country in a tragic and fateful time.

"It was that love that suggested the next step, accepting the post
of prime minister when the economy was still weak and seemed destined
to collapse. Not only was that danger overcome, but thanks to his
outstanding humanity and his undeniable management skills, the
governments he led saw seven years of unprecedented economic success.

"He knew that the results of his work might not be seen for years,
and he worked quietly and consistently to help everyone: the cultural
worker, the scientist, the farm worker, the teacher, and the freedom
fighter, because he could see people’s concerns and the road that had
to be traveled to reach the Armenia of his dreams. He sometimes
quipped, ‘All the same, they’ll remember what I didn’t do.’

"But the people have remembered his love for them and are returning
it copiously.

* To be worthy of his legacy

Of course, Andranik Margarian’s political legacy, built over 40 years,
will be the subject of analysis for years. The verdicts may vary.

It is impossible to avoid the obvious, however: the polarized
political atmosphere of Armenia, steeped in mutual intolerance, had in
the person of Andranik Margarian a leader who offered balance, held no
grudges, and exuded tolerance. These are qualities Armenia will
continue to need.

It is sufficient, perhaps, to recall the terrible assassinations of
October 27, 1999, and the days that followed. As leader of the largest
party in parliament, Andranik Margarian had an enormous role in
reestablishing the stability that had been undermined. With the same
sense of responsibility, some six months later, he took on the job of
prime minister, when the economy was going downhill, and the budget
deficit was in the billions of drams.

After seven years, Andranik Margarian leaves his successor an
economy that is in incomparably better shape, seven years of growth
indicators all pointing up, and a state budget that is expected to
surpass $1.5 billion in expenditures in 2007, up from $360 million
when he took over.

The warm words being said these days about the late prime minister
are genuine and heartfelt.

He was truly good, caring, and attuned to his compatriots’, his
neighbors’, his fellow citizens’ concerns, and he did what he could to
address them. We don’t have many people who reach high office and
continue to live in ordinary apartment complexes. With Andranik
Margarian’s death, we have even fewer.

We are grateful for his contributions over the course of 40 years
and hopeful, indeed confident, that others will continue his legacy.

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

7. Letter from Moscow: Seventy Million Armenians?

by Gevorg Ter-Gabrielyan

"’A thousand Mozarts would be horrible,’ said Saint-Exupery – and in
so saying, he became one more." –Hrant Matevossyan, Hangover

MOSCOW – Former President Ter-Petrossian used to complain about the
shortage of people to fill civil service roles in the new national
government: "Mard chka!" ("There are no people") he would say.

Hundreds of thousands were leaving Armenia to survive. Then-prime
minister Vazgen Manukian justified the exodus in economic terms:
Armenia could not feed so many people; those leaving the country were
taking a burden off the shoulders of those who stayed, giving them,
one might cautiously say, lebensraum ("living space").

Indeed, those who left became a major source of income for those who stayed.

Armenians ventured to Russia from Armenia, Karabakh, Azerbaijan,
Georgia, and Central Asia. From Georgia alone, the migrating
population included Tbilisi Armenians (especially educated
intellectuals), a substantial part of the Javakhk population, and
Armenians from Abkhazia. If we add to that the number of Armenians who
were already living in Russia prior to the great migration that began
in 1988, we have in Russia arguably the largest Armenian community in
the world.

The Russian census of 2004 is unreliable: on a single Statistical
Ministry website, one page gives a figure of under 800,000 Armenians
in Russia, and another gives a number well over 1.1 million (see
). Precise numbers are not available. The head of the Union
of Armenians of Russia, multimillionaire Ara Abrahamyan, claimed in an
interview last year with Ekho Moskvy Radio that there are between 2
and 2.5 million Armenians in Russia.

No one knows for certain, but it’s likely that there are between 1.5
and 2 million Armenians in Russia. The pre-1988 community was
estimated at about 400,000. About half a million more came from
Azerbaijan, Georgia, and Central Asia. Up to a million may have come
from Armenia – although many subsequently went back. As usual,
families proliferate – not in huge numbers, but two children is a
standard. They have settled mostly in the three southern regions of
Russia and in the capitals, where there are established Armenian
communities. But Armenians are also thinly spread over the entire
Russian Federation. Some of them are here for good; others come and
go, or may leave entirely at some point.

What all this means is that Armenians now constitute the
sixth-largest national minority in Russia. Armenians are more-or-less
well placed, and can make ends meet; they do not feel terribly
threatened, and therefore have no motivation to suppress their ethnic
identity by absorbing themselves into the larger Russian nationality.
They have difficulties in the southern regions of Russia, in Krasnodar
and Stavropol Kray, which include the biggest Armenian communities
after Moscow and St. Petesrburg. In the south of Krasnodar Kray, there
is an entire town and several small townships and villages where
Armenians comprise an overwhelming majority; in the north, they have
been threatened several times over the last years. The causes have
been the nationalist policies of the region’s governors, or clashes
with ethnic Russians or other minorities living in Russia.

* Dual citizens, if not de jure, then de facto

While the Armenian government slowly legalized dual citizenship (the
law passed a month ago), the Armenians of Russia went ahead and
received their Russian passports while keeping their Armenian ones.
This is reminiscent of the Karabakh issue: the world argues, the years
pass, and the issue is resolved in a practical, de facto way for the
people actually involved. The dual citizenship of many Armenians in
Russia is publicly acknowledged, and does not affect their standing.
Even those who don’t have passports feel themselves as de facto
citizens of both countries.

The Armenians who have relocated from Armenia itself do not rely on
the help of their embassy. Official events like last year’s "Year of
Armenia in Russia." are mostly attended by the "traditional"
(pre-1988) community.

Migrants do have a genuine interest in the way Russians regard
Armenian culture: the controversial "Blabr," an interpretation of the
legend of Hayk and Bel by Russian writer Anna Rulevskaya (available on
the Internet), is hotly debated.

The migrants cooperate with each other and help each other out.
Successful businesses ventures are often based on ethnic partnerships
and ethnic trust.

* "Everybody is Armenian"

Recent years have seen a decrease and stabilization in the number of
Armenians migrating to Russia; and the number of returnees, though
still relatively small, is increasing.

Among the latter are rare instances of people who were not
originally from Armenia, but have now chosen to live there. One such
person is Alexander Iskandaryan, a political scientist from Moscow,
originally from Baku (but not a refugee). He went to Yerevan with his
family and became the director of the European-funded Caucasus Media
Institute.

Alexander says half-seriously that there are 50 million Armenians in
the world, and about 15 million of them in Russia. According to him,
Armenians are shrewd and careful, many have mixed ethnicity, and
therefore do not show up in the census in their full numbers.

Professor David Hovhannisyan agrees with Alexander and tells me
about his visit to an Armenian restaurant in Kaliningrad (the former
Königsberg, on the westernmost edge of Russia).

Gagik Avagyan, an NGO leader and former Karabakh fighter, tells a
story about an impressive Armenian restaurant in Vladivostok, on
Russia’s easternmost edge.

We are sitting at David’s place in Yerevan. I comment that if you
walk down the streets of Adler (you might call it the Glendale of
Russia) in Krasnodar Kray, or if you watch Russian television,
Alexander’s words ring true.

Restaurants in Moscow serve Armenian meals. The chain similar to
Starbucks in Russia is called "Coffee-Tun" (that’s the Eastern
Armenian pronunciation of doon, as in the Armenian word for "house").
Lavash and tan (sometimes called ayran) are sold in every store. The
only product lacking is thyme (urts). But one can find tea with thyme
in an Armenian restaurant.

In almost every notary office the service of translating Armenian
passports is readily available. In South-West, an upper-middle class
neighborhood in Moscow, Armenians inhabit several buildings.

Television is full of Armenian names. A notorious doctor who cruelly
cut the hand of a newborn baby in the Rostov region – yet another
cluster of the Russian-Armenian diaspora – had an Armenian last name.
Many other medical doctors and scientists (of greater competence,
certainly) have Armenian names.

Tina Kandelaki, a TV and tabloid star, belongs to a plentiful but
rather secluded group with a complex identity: Tbilisi natives of
half-Georgian, half-Armenian stock. She was recently involved in a car
accident alongside Suleiman Kerimov, a multimillionaire parliament
member of Dagestani extraction, in Nice, France: his newly bought
Ferrari was speeding and turned upside down. They both survived, but
Tina, who hosts a TV show about talented kids and enjoyed the image of
a good wife and mother, found her reputation ruined. She turned that
to her advantage, using it as a PR opportunity. People probably do not
realize that she is half-Armenian, but she speaks Armenian when she
interviews her compatriots on her daily radio broadcast – thereby
forcing her audience of millions of Russian car drivers to listen to
an Armenian conversation without translation. Such realities of
Russian popular culture give a new meaning to the oft-repeated and
irritating joke that "everybody is Armenian."

Many other famous people have a partly Armenian identity – such as
Garry Kasparov, the chess champion who has abandoned chess to become
an opposition politician. From the perspective of the governing
powers, he is considered an outcast and his name is censored from
television and many print media outlets.

Then there is Sergey Kurginyan, a leading political theorist with
extreme right, pro-imperial views, who is often seen on TV. Another
personality, Andranik Migranyan, who in the Boris Yeltsin’s day was
the author of the so-called Monroe Doctrine for Russia – the idea that
Russia should make the former Soviet states into its satellites – does
not show up as frequently.

As in the story of Pandora’s Box, lift the lid on any public
personality in Russia and "Armenianness" is liable to fly out
unexpectedly. Recently, the singer Irina Allegrova suffered a nervous
breakdown, and in an interview revealed that she was from Baku, and
that her father was Armenian. Allegrova’s revelation may be as
irrelevant as the Armenian and Ossetian origins of the talented
theatrical director Valeriy Mirzoev, who emphasizes his Zoroastrian
rather than his Armenian roots. Nevertheless, Armenians hungrily
(though not without a touch of irony) play the game of digging up
Armenian roots for everybody.

Another showman with a skyrocketing career in Russian TV was Garik
Martirosyan, the host of Yerevan’s "Club for the Fun and Smart" (KVN),
a Soviet-era cabaret show-competition, which survived the collapse of
the USSR and is still thriving. Garry became the host of "Comedy
Club," the major alternative comic show on TV. Its rival, more
"mainstream" show is likewise in the hands of an Armenian: Baku-born
Yevgeni Petrosyan, from a famous troupe of satirists of the Soviet
era. He is currently reviled for having established a monopoly on
humor on the state-run channels. By contrast, Garry’s show may be
crude, but there is still a touch of freedom in it. When Garry
recently became a candidate in the Armenian parliamentary elections,
it turned out that this icon of Russian TV wasn’t even a Russian
citizen.

* Ideas without consequences

What might be called the "cultural strength" of the Armenians in
Russia could be a huge asset; but it is not utilized in a serious way
to advance the interests of Armenia. In 2005, a strategic "creative
conference" was organized in Armenia, involving the participation of
Russian Armenians, including this writer. Issues of the nation, the
region, and the country were discussed. As we envisioned the apparent
destiny of the Armenian nation, one of the ideas that emerged was to
move towards a "virtual state" (tsantsapetutyun), in which statehood
would no longer be defined solely in terms of territory.

But we Armenians are famous for having great, imaginative ideas,
which have little consequence in the real world.

In Moscow, the richest Armenians govern banks, mutual funds, and
trusts. They do mergers and hostile acquisitions. The only lucrative
arena in which they are conspicuously absent is the notorious Russian
oil and gas business. Some say that’s because these industries are
monopolized by other nationalities. But given the past and present
troubles of some of the country’s oil and gas extraction tycoons, it
may be that Armenians were simply smart to steer clear of this
strategic Russian asset. Or alternatively, perhaps Armenians are more
environmentally conscious.

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

8. Editorial: The passing of a statesman

Andranik Margarian, 55, a Soviet-era pro-independence activist who
went to prison for his beliefs and went on to become independent
Armenia’s longest-serving prime minister, was a political leader who
had earned the affection and respect of the Armenian people.

He is remembered for his humanity, for his role in maintaining
stability during difficult times, and for his contribution to
Armenia’s economic progress during his term as prime minister.

As a young man in the Soviet Union, he went with his secret comrades
in arms to the Armenian Genocide Memorial at Tzitzernakaberd, and by
the eternal flame took an oath to struggle for Armenian independence.
He upheld his promise through the 1970s and 1980s.

When Azerbaijan started a war to crush Nagorno-Karabakh’s
independence, Mr. Margarian helped organize volunteer units in
Armenia, worked to coordinate aid, and, on several occasions,
participated in the actual fighting.

His fellow veteran of the Soviet-era independence movement, Ashot
Navasardian, formed the opposition Republican Party of Armenia in
1992. By the time Mr. Margarian took over as leader, on Mr.
Navasardian’s death in late 1997, the party was part of the
government’s majority coalition.

Finding that there was ideological affinity between the Republicans
and the Karabakh veterans that had organized themselves under the
Yerkrapah (Protectors of the Land) banner, he formed an electoral
alliance with that group, led by Vazken Sargsian. To bring the group
under the banner of his party, Mr. Margarian ceded the party’s top
post to Mr. Sargsian, who went on to become prime minister. This move
helped maintain long-term stability in the country.

On October 27, 1999, gunmen entered the chamber of the National
Assembly and assassinated Mr. Sargsian, Speaker Karen Demirchian, and
others. The tragic event had the potential to lead to further
violence, as recriminations began. Mr. Margarian is credited with
being a calming force, insisting on patience and dialogue.

Several months later, President Robert Kocharian invited Mr.
Margarian to become prime minister. He inherited a multibillion dram
deficit, teachers and other government employees who had not been paid
in months, and a dejected country.

A soft-spoken man, he did not change the mood by lofty rhetoric. But
under his management, surpluses and robust economic growth accompanied
a return to normalcy.

Mr. Margarian’s background was in computer systems. He insisted on
long-term planning with benchmarks along the way. On his watch, the
Armenian government adopted various long-term plans, including a
poverty reduction strategy and a strategy to develop the
information-technology sector.

Till his death, Mr. Margarian lived in his apartment in a multistory
building in the working-class district of Avan. He was often seen
playing backgammon with his neighbors. A hard worker, he was also fond
of feasting, drinking, and good company. His death is mourned by his
wife, their three children, five grandchildren, his friends, his
rivals, the people of Armenia, and Armenians around the world.

A young patriotic man who became an activist, Andranik Margarian
carried his passion forward and developed into a statesman who helped
build the independent Armenia for which he fought all his life. He is
an inspiration to all of us to work harder to forge a brighter future
for free and independent Armenia.

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

Please send your news to [email protected] and your letters to
[email protected]
(c) 2007 CS Media Enterprises LLC. All Rights Reserved

http://www.reporter.am
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www.gks.ru

Armenian Reporter – 3/31/2007 – 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]

March 31, 2007 — From the community section
The articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter.
For photographs, visit

1. Joseph Ariyan wins Democratic nomination for N.J. State Senate

2. Western Diocese fetes Richard Hovannisian
* Celebrates six volumes on historic Armenian cities and provinces

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

1. Joseph Ariyan wins Democratic nomination for N.J. State Senate

HACKENSACK, N.J. – On March 22, Armenian-American attorney Joseph
Ariyan handily won the District 39 Democratic Convention, to become
the party’s candidate in the upcoming State Senate race. Ariyan won by
a margin of 80 to 20 percent, and will now go forth to face incumbent
Republican Gerald Cardinale in the 2007 general election.

The 41-year-old Ariyan has been active in Bergen County Democratic
politics, and is currently the county’s Public Advocate for Land Use.
He has already begun raising money for his challenge to the
72-year-old Cardinale, who was first elected to the State Assembly in
1979 and moved up to the Senate in 1981, and who was re-elected to an
eighth term in 2003 with 62 percent of the vote.

New Jersey voters will go to the polls to decide between the two on
November 6, 2007.

Ariyan, who lives in Saddle River, N.J., with his wife Susan and
infant son, said, "It’s an honor to be elected by the party to run for
State Senate."

On the subject of Armenian-American political concerns, he said,
"Legislators have been slow to act on issues key issues of interest to
Armenian-Americans. Now, New Jersey’s Armenian-Americans … can have
one of their own to champion their core political issues."

Ariyan stressed that he would make it a priority to have New Jersey
officially recognize the Armenian Genocide at the hands of the Ottoman
Turks.

"Anyone of Armenian descent knows about the terror of the 1915
Genocide," said Ariyan. "As we all are taught from a young age, we
have an obligation to teach others about our history to ensure that it
is not forgotten. This will also help to prevent future atrocities
from occurring."

"As a community, we have an obligation to our ancestors to ensure
that our state and country recognizes factual history. As state
senator, I will tirelessly fight to ensure recognition of the Armenian
Genocide both at the state and national levels."

Ariyan’s political platform also will include key cost-saving
methods to reduce local governments’ reliance on property taxes and a
proposal for more technological training in grades K through 8. "My
wife and I recently had a baby son and he has forced us to see the
world differently," said Ariyan. "We need to stabilize property taxes
while still providing the best education for our children. We cannot
let the best and brightest of our young people leave the state in
search of a better future."

Ariyan’s supporters include Congressman Frank Pallone, Jr., from New
Jersey’s 6th Congressional District, who was the guest of honor at a
kickoff event held at the home of David and Ani Kasparian (covered in
the Reporter’s Feb. 3 edition). At that time, Congressman Pallone
urged Armenians nationwide to support Joe Ariyan.

The Hackensack-based campaign is actively seeking people to help in
Ariyan’s race to win the state senate seat. Those interested in
joining can contact Joe Ariyan personally, at (201) 358-0020.

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

2. Western Diocese fetes Richard Hovannisian

Celebrates six volumes on historic Armenian cities and provinces

LOS ANGELES – The scholarly accomplishments of Richard Hovannisian are
impressive beyond doubt. As professor of Armenian and Near Eastern
History and holder of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in
Modern Armenian History at UCLA he symbolizes the importance of the
study of Armenian history like no other.

While in the course of his career he has written more than fifty
scholarly articles and contributed to twenty seven books, his latest
published endeavor is perhaps an achievement in itself.

On February 16, the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church hosted an
evening to celebrate the publication of the first six volumes of
"Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces" edited by Prof. Hovannisian
from the UCLA international conference series.

The international conference series began nearly a decade ago to
explore the many aspects of Armenian influence in the historic
homeland. Historians and scholars from around the country and the
world presented papers exploring the historical, political, cultural,
religious, social and economic influences of Armenians in their
historic homelands.

The first six volumes of the series include Van/Vaspurakan,
Baghesh/Bitlis and Taron/Mush, Tsopk/Kharpert, Karin/Erzerum,
Sebastia/Sivas and Lesser Armenian and Tigranakert/Diarbekir and
Edessa/Urfa (Mazda Publishers). Each volume contains the proceedings
of the conferences offering important scholarly writings from some of
the most leading authorities on the subject of Armenian history.

The result of these efforts are extraordinary volumes of work which
"will be a permanent mark in our cultural life, and will certainly
serve as the best and most valuable archival documents for historical
research" Archbishop Hovnan Derderian.

Each volume offers a glimpse into the many facets of Armenian life
in these historic cities. The essays survey the geography,
demographics, art, architecture, religion and economy of once great
cities and provinces now ruined and nearly vanished.

The international conference series on the "Historic Armenian Cities
and Provinces" also includes Cilicia, Kars and Ani as well as the
Armenian Communities of Constantinople, the Black Sea-Pontus Region,
Smyrna/Ismir, Caesarea/Kesaria, New Julfa, Iran and Jerusalem.

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

Please send your news to [email protected] and your letters to
[email protected]
(c) 2007 CS Media Enterprises LLC. All Rights Reserved

http://www.reporter.am
www.reporter.am

Armenian Reporter – 3/31/2007 – arts and 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]

March 31, 2007 — From the arts and culture section
All of the articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter.
For photographs, visit

Briefly

1. Trio Nareg at Western Diocese on May 23
2. Always happy hour with Steve Odabashian
3. Minnesota Book Awards finalists
4. Hamazkayin Educational and Cultural Society announces cultural forum
5. Taner Akçam Book TV lecture now available on DVD and VHS
6. National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia celebrates its 10th year
7. Taline is taking her children’s show on the road
8. The Reporter wants your art briefs

9. Bits of flavor in "Grape Leaves" (by Aram Kouyoumdjian)

10. The art of life and the life of art (by Paul Chaderjian)
* Vahe Berberian’s milagros come in words, images, and emotions

11. "Gor": It’s okay to say it (by Paul Chaderjian)

12. Through the lens of Kaloust Babian (by Gregory Lima)

13. Concert marks composer Adam Kudoyan’s 85th anniversary

14. In Illusion, Michael Goorjian tells a tale of tragic love (by
Tamar Salibian)

15. Women in action and in pain (by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian)
* Women in Armenia open a window with alternative art

16. Essay: Two girlfriends celebrate life (by Armen D. Bacon)

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

Briefly

1. Trio Nareg at Western Diocese on May 23

Trio Nareg, three renowned Armenian musicians will come together on
May 23 at the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church to perform Arno
Babajanian’s "Piano Trio," Tigran Mansurian’s "Five Bagatelles," and
keyboard trios by Franz Joseph Haydn and Felix Mendelssohn. Trio Nareg
brings together Ani Kavafian, one of America’s most versatile
violinists; pianist Armen Guzelimian, a celebrated virtuoso soloist,
ensemble member, recording artist, and accompanist; and the brilliant
young cellist Ani Kalayjian.

connect:

2. Always happy hour with Steve Odabashian

Friday Nights at Cascamorto Piano Bar in Philadelphia will never be
the same, thanks to the piano player who apparently knows the name of
everyone who walks in. The name of the man behind the keyboard is
Steve Odabashian. The 37-year-old is a comedian, pianist, singer, and
. . . a lawyer. Steve says he plays everything by ear and his
repertoire includes more than 300 songs. He knows the lyrics of each
of the songs by heart, and he’s learning 30 more songs a week. You do
the math and tell him the Reporter sent you.

connect:

3. Minnesota Book Awards finalists

This year, for the first time, there are two Minnesota Book Award
finalists of Armenian interest: Taner Akçam’s A Shameful Act: The
Armenian Genocide and the Question of Responsibility and Susan Deborah
King’s Coven. (Ms. King is married to Rev. James Gertmenian of
Plymouth Congregational Church in Minneapolis.) Judges will award
honors in eight categories, and Minnesotans are invited to vote online
for the overall Reader’s Choice Award now through April 15. Winners
will be posted May 6.

connect:

4. Hamazkayin Educational and Cultural Society announces cultural forum

The Hamazkayin Educational and Cultural Society is accepting
applications for its 2007 Cultural Forum to be held in Yerevan July
15-29. All college-aged individuals are encouraged to apply. The
annual forum began in 1995. The aim: to unite young Armenians from
around the world to learn more about Armenian art, history, culture,
society, and modern life in the homeland. It is a unique opportunity
for people to visit Armenia for the first time – or as a returning
visitor – and meet with fellow Armenians from around the globe who are
interested in learning more about their people’s past as well as where
they are headed.

connect:

5. Taner Akçam Book TV lecture now available on DVD and VHS

Turkish historian and University of Minnesota professor Taner Akçam’s
December 16, 2006, lecture at St. Sahag Armenian Church in St. Paul,
Minnesota., is now available from C-SPAN for $29.95 plus shipping. The
lecture, broadcast on Book TV on February 12 and 19, 2007, examined
how the Ottoman Turks responded to the charge that they were
committing genocide. Professor Akçam, author of A Shameful Act: The
Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility, also
discussed how the current Turkish government describes what happened.
The lecture was hosted by the Armenian Cultural Organization of
Minnesota and cosponsored by the University of Minnesota. Ask for "A
Shameful Act," product ID 195948-1.

connect: ; (877) 662-7726

6. National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia celebrates its 10th year

The National Chamber Orchestra of Armenia (Aram Gharabekian, artistic
director and principal conductor) will celebrate its 10th anniversary
with a special gala concert and presentation on April 5, at 7 p.m. at
the Russian-Armenian State University Concert Hall in Yerevan.

The anniversary concert will feature special guest artists Federico
Mondelci from Italy (saxophone) and Aida Amirkhanian from the United
States (choregrapher-dancer).

Photographs from the last 10 years will be exhibited in the same
venue. There will also be a premiere presentaion of the orchestra’s
Zvartnots Gala concert DVD.

The orchestra is preparing for a French tour and a 15-city tour in
Armenia. The anniversary celebrations will conclude with two concerts
at the prestigious St. Petersburg Palaces Festival in July.

connect:

7. Taline is taking her children’s show on the road

One of the most loved and celebrated Armenian children’s singers,
Taline, is planning three concert tours this year. The spring concert
tour starts in April and will include concerts in the United States.
The singer’s next concert in on Sunday, April 15, in Orange County,
Calif. The fall tour will include concerts in Europe, and the 2007
Christmas concert tour will include a finale at the Alex Theatre on
Armenian Christmas Day, January 6, 2008. Taline also has a new CD and
DVD. Look for a profile of the singer in the upcoming issues of the
Armenian Reporter.

connect:

8. The Reporter wants your art briefs

The Armenian Reporter newspaper’s new weekly Arts & Culture section
wants your arts, entertainment and cultural news headlines and story
ideas. We want to know what Armenian artists and community and
cultural organizations are up to, what your accomplishments have been,
and what your future plans are. Write us if you know of or have heard
about Armenians doing anything that you feel is interesting for other
Armenians to know about, and we’ll follow up.

connect: [email protected]

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

9. Bits of flavor in "Grape Leaves"

by Aram Kouyoumdjian

The notion that a review of a play would take longer to write than the
play itself seems anomalous. Yet "Stuffed Grape Leaves," a one-act
piece that ended its brief run at the Luna Playhouse on Sunday, March
18, was apparently written "in an hour." So claimed playwright Jacklyn
Narian during a question-and-answer session with the audience
following that final performance.

To be fair, Narian was trying to emphasize the urgent need she had
to commit her play – long brewing inside of her – to paper. Whether
her claim was meant as a boast or an excuse, I cannot venture a guess;
perhaps, it was not even literally meant (especially since Narian made
more than one flip comment, best attributed to youthful inexperience,
at the session). It did, however, offer an explanation for various
shortcomings in her modest, unpolished work.

"Stuffed Grape Leaves," which clocks in at a mere 30 minutes, is a
pastiche of four scenes that depict the Armenian immigrant experience
in California over a century. Its vignettes are only nominally
connected through the titular motif and the theme of ethnic identity.

The opening scene, set in the 1920s, situates Grandpa Nubar (Armen
Kerasimian) in the vineyards of Fresno, as his grandchildren frolic
around him and pluck delicious grapes. The fruit and its gently
textured leaves awaken memories of the old country in the old man, and
he reminisces with his immigrant laborer, José (Arshavir Steven
Saryan), who toils nearby. "Things are always perfect in the old
country," they agree – at least, in the way they choose to remember
it; surely, neither man would have left such a paradise for foreign
soil. The soil, indeed, is different, Nubar observes, as is the air,
"but the sun is the same." Kerasimian’s heartfelt delivery of such
lines captures their poetic lyricism; the brevity of the scene,
however, abbreviates their resonance.

The second scene jumps fifty years forward and shifts to a backyard
in Hollywood. An Armenian woman named Mariam has ventured onto her
neighbor’s land without permission to pick some grape leaves. When the
neighbor, Frank, discovers her, they strike up a conversation, which
Mariam conveniently turns into a lesson in Armenian history. The
writing quickly turns sentimental, which hampers Sossy Varjabedian’s
otherwise engaging portrayal of Mariam, who exists less as a character
than as a conduit for speechmaking. Fortunately, Jonaton Wyne’s
natural ease as Frank helps minimize the pedantic aspects of the
scene.

A modern-day Mediterranean restaurant in Burbank serves as the
setting for the third scene, in which a brother and sister mull
questions of ethnicity and its preservation through language. Ramela
(Elizabeth Saryan) feels proud of her brother Vahan’s success as a
restaurateur but fears that he is veering away from his roots. A
telltale sign? His menu offers "stuffed grape leaves," failing to call
them dolma or sarma. When Vahan (John Mardoyan) points out that
neither alternative is an Armenian word, Ramela’s response is an
unconvincing argument that such words have somehow become Armenianized
by usage. The scene sacrifices drama for debate, which is often
preachy and, worse yet, unsound – as when Ramela obliviously insists
that a sweet confection known as Turkish Delight be properly called
lokhum; apparently, that Turkish word has been Armenianized as well.

The final scene, set in the future, returns to the restaurant, which
is now shut down. A nameless Armenian Woman (Maro Parian) addresses
her absent mother in a monologue that ruminates on assimilation – and
its avoidance both through simple acts, like stuffing grape leaves, or
loftier tasks, like building an Armenian museum. The austere scene –
accentuated by the black and gray colors of the woman’s clothing –
touches on intriguing ideas of pain and guilt. Just as intriguingly,
it toys with a surreal structure, as an Armenian statue comes into
view, symbolically carrying the grapes that will provide tender leaves
of renewal.

Narian astutely conveys this circularity in the concluding moments
of the piece. As the woman starts singing "Cilicia" while exiting,
characters from earlier scenes return to echo this song of yearning,
exacting genuine emotion through subtlety and nuance that are sorely
missed in much of the script.

If "Stuffed Grape Leaves" were being judged solely on effort, it
would deserve high marks. But theater that commands an audience’s time
and money must deliver more than effort. "Stuffed Grape Leaves" offers
some flavorful morsels but, for the most part, tastes undone. Perhaps
it should have been cooked longer than an hour.

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

10. The art of life and the life of art

* Vahe Berberian’s milagros come in words, images, and emotions

by Paul Chaderjian

Before we enter his second-floor studio, painter, performer, writer
Vahe Berberian insists on serving oranges and mandarins from the trees
that line the apartment building’s driveway. Vahe has been nurturing
these trees for more than a decade, and you can tell he’s proud of
them. He likes green things, he says.

Three of the units in the white apartment building – a few miles north
of the San Fernando Valley’s arterial Ventura Boulevard, in the flats
of the Valley – are where Vahe paints, lives, and stores his works of
art.

Six months out of the year, however, here’s not here. The tall and
thin 51-year-old, with salt-and-pepper braids, spends a lot of his
time taking his performance art and his monologues to Armenian
communities as far away as the homeland and Australia.

On this Tuesday afternoon, Vahe is in the Southland and plucking
oranges off his tree with a long-handled fruit picker’s pole. He
retrieves about a dozen oranges and mandarins, placing them in a
plastic grocery bag. Once he is settled in his sunny and airy upstairs
studio, peeling an orange, we begin our interview.

* The Casitas warehouse

The peg on this cover story in the Armenian Reporter, dear reader, is
that on March 31, Vahe will transform a 16 thousand square foot
warehouse in Atwater Village, south of Glendale, into a gallery. The
hundreds of fans expected to attend will also receive a copy of this
very issue you have in your hands. Perhaps you’re one of the ones who
attended. How was the show?

On display at the warehouse on the 31st will be dozens of Vahe’s
milagros – small, thin and thick pieces of metal, meticulously painted
and individually framed by the artist himself. We have come to his
studio to find out about the milagros.

"We call them milagros," Vahe explains, "because in Spanish, it
means miracle or surprise, and they are a little of both. The miracle
and surprise Vahe is talking about are four inches by four of
aluminum. He began experiments with metal when he received a request
from a film producer to create a ‘wall of voodoo,’ made up of a
hundred individually painted pieces.

"They needed it for a film," he says. "I did it, and I realized that
I liked the process. I knew that it was going to take me somewhere. So
I spent months and months working on the series, all one hundred
pieces of metal, almost like tarot cards."

Vahe says when he began the project, he had no idea what occult and
voodoo figures were and what he would draw and paint on these small
pieces of metallic canvas. Once he began experimenting, Vahe says, he
discovered he would use acrylic and that the size was dictating his
style.

The art of discovery with the milagros was that he couldn’t create
abstractions and abstract images as he does in his larger-than-life
paintings. "When they’re so small," he says, "abstraction doesn’t
translate well. So the milagros are more études (studies). They are
figurative, colorful, whimsical."

To paint fifty pieces of metal for the film, Vahe says he tapped
into his Jungian subconscious, coming up with figures he didn’t know
resided in his mind. "A lot of them are symbols," he says, "but I’m
not using them as symbols. I generally don’t have names for the
pieces, but this one," he says, pointing to one with two female
figures, "is called Pari Passu. It means with the same step. It’s
Latin."

The exhibit at a warehouse at 3191 Casitas Avenue – where a
burgeoning community of artists, architects, filmmakers, writers, and
photographers have set up their workspaces – will present the milagros
for one night only.

Vahe has priced the pieces lower than the works he exhibits and
sells exclusively at the Gallery Saint Germaine in Los Angeles. He
says he wanted to give fans of his work who wanted Vahes but cannot
afford them, a chance to own one of his originals.

Among those who can afford and collect Vahe’s painting are a Who’s
Who from the arts literati – from Hollywood, Paris, and New York.
Among Vahe’s patrons and collectors are Los Angeles Opera director
Peter Sellars, architect Frank Israel, publishers Alain and Raymonde,
actresses Lucy Liu and Mariette Hartley, football Hall of Famer Marcus
Allen, artist Tanya Hovnanian, and filmmaker Atom Egoyan.

* Abstract expressionism, à la L.A.

Vahe’s works of art are big, like everything American. His pieces
range from fourteen feet by fourteen to four feet by six. "The larger,
the better," he says, and that’s why Vahe does not plan to create any
more of the four inch by six milagros.

"When I started working years ago," he says, "I was using my
fingers. Gradually, I started using my wrist. Then I started using my
elbow, and then I started using my shoulder, and now my entire body
paints. It’s a ritualistic thing. It’s almost like dancing, and you
achieve that only when you’re working on large pieces. I want to
achieve the freedom of working on a large piece."

I ask him if he had to label his work, what school or genre would
classify his work. "I would say I’m an abstract expressionist," he
answers. "My work is abstract. Not Jackson Pollock or Gorky. Probably,
the closest are Cy Twombly and Antoni Tapies."

"His work is about who he is," says Caroline Lais-Tufenkian from her
home in Glendale during a phone interview. Caroline studied Vahe and
five other Armenian artists as the subject of her graduate school
thesis. Her focus was how Armenian artists bring to their art their
cultural background and create a new hybrid cultural identity.

"Several components have been the key in the construction of
Berberian’s complex and rich aesthetic identity," says Caroline, who
was the curator of one of Vahe’s nearly three dozen one-man and group
show. "For example, his Armenianness, cross-cultural background,
modern abstract expressions, and him being a Los Angeles artist.
Berberian offers a new dialect to the western artistic style of
abstract expressionism."

Caroline says this new western style does not identify with any
specific style. However, she says, it specifies a personal and
spontaneous attitude. "I think his work is so spontaneous and
definitely shows his personal attitude."

I ask Caroline how the modern critical and curatorial studies world
explains the simplicity of abstract expressionism. She says that with
abstract art, people sometimes do say, ‘a child could have done that.’
However, Caroline explains that an artist has to go through many years
of intensive art training before he or she can something that is
childlike and works as a piece of art.

* Berberian’s peers & his evolution

Vahe says when he began painting, it was during the years that another
well-known, modern-day abstract expressionist, Basquiat, was also
painting. Vahe says if you look at his work and compare it to
Basquiat’s, they are very close, almost identical.

I ask him how his work as a Lebanese-Armenian now living in Los
Angeles could resemble the work of an African-American living on the
streets of New York. Vahe says he believes the similarity between his
work and Basquiat’s is due to the political, social dynamics of the
times.

"Then I gradually evolved into more of a minimalist style," he says.
"When you’re younger, you have this tendency to show off. Your colors
are bright. You want to say, I can do this. I can do this, and I can
do that."

The older an artist becomes, says Vahe, the more mature his or her
work also becomes. "And hopefully," he says, "you create your own
palette of colors. It’s ironic, because you work all your life in
order to create a language of your own, and then you get upset when
that language is not understood. It’s funny in a way."

Vahe says he feels fortunate that he can make a descent living off
his art and that success is not something he expected. "We grew up
with that notion of artists dying poor and hungry and starving," he
says. "However, now I realize that with acknowledgement comes a sense
of liberation. Your work changes. It becomes freer, more powerful,
more raw, because you do not need to please anyone anymore. Your work
becomes less adornmental, less decorative, and more immediate. It
becomes you."

* The ritual of painting and the movies

Vahe says he is a creature of habit, and that process of creating art
for him is walking into his studio without any concepts or ideas. "The
whole concept of having an idea and materializing the idea turns the
work of art into an illustration, he says, quickly adding that he is
not an illustrator.

"I start somewhere and work with the assumption that art is a series
of mistakes," he explains. "I stand in front of the canvas and make my
first mistake. Then, I go on and on, and I stop when I think I like
what I see. I stop when I think that I can’t make any more mistakes."

Vahe’s body of work, his canon so far, is made up of hundreds of
paintings. Every one, except the few his wife Betty has saved, have
been sold. "I am very happy that she has kept one or two from
different periods or phases," he says.

"The ones that I own are rented and used in different films like the
three Spiderman movies. I know they’re going to make Spiderman four
and five, and they wanted to buy the paintings, but I didn’t sell.
Because I know they will come back to rent them."

Vahe says the paintings his wife has held on to have been rented
dozens of times over the past fourteen years by movie production
companies and used on film sets. It must help if one’s wife is an
expert set designer; but the artwork has to be powerful enough to
stand on its own, especially when millions of movie-going eyes will be
forced to focus on them through the lens of a 35-mm camera.

In Hollywood, Vahe is represented by an agency called Film Art LA.
His agent submits his art to dozen of films or television shows a
year. "I have five films coming out this year. I have ‘Spiderman 3.’ I
have ‘Ocean’s 13.’ I have ‘I am Legend’ with Will Smith. I have
‘Enchanted.’ I have ‘Holiday’ and a few more."

* Duality of introvert and extrovert

According to Vahe’s mother, when he was a year-and-a-half old, he
began to doodle, pretending to be writing words and sentences. "After
50 years," he says, "I sometimes think that was the ultimate
translation of what I stand for – writing, almost writing whatever’s
coming."

With more than a dozen film scripts, almost a dozen plays, and
several monologues in his credits, Vahe is also a published author.
His two novels, Letters from Zakhtar and In the Name of the Father and
the Son have been well received.

"I think, Paul," he says to me, "that I’m realizing that I have this
split personality. One part of me is the entertainer, the one who
seeks attention. That’s the part of me that is the actor, that does
the monologues. The other part of me shies away from attention, loves
putting on the music and painting without interruption or writing for
hours and hours. I love it. I love it."

Vahe says his monologues, which he has performed all over the world,
on Armenian-themed cruises at sea, on the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund
telethon, at churches and fundraisers, are the perfect combination of
the two sides of the artist in him. "Because, I sit down and write,"
he says, "and then I perform. It’s the perfect combination."

Vahe says painting can be a stage for him as well. He often has
friends come to visit while he’s painting. "People come, hang around,"
he says, "have coffee and watch. I talk to them, but at the same time,
I paint. And I love that. I love that. It’s like, on those days, I do
not entertain, but I welcome their presence, and I get entertained by
them, and I incorporate everything that happens in this room in that
painting."

* Monologues

"I love people and the situations they find themselves in," says Vahe,
explaining his monologues. He has written, performed, and videotaped
three of them already. His DVDs and videos of "Nayev," "Yevaylen,"
and "Dagaveen" are distributed all over the world, are available on
, and have a loyal following in the homeland.

"I don’t make fun of people because I think weak people make fun of
others," he says. "I like to laugh with people instead, and I want to
point at certain things that are funny like ideas, situations, and
circumstances that put us in situations."

Vahe says his Spalding Gray-influenced monologues are primarily in
Armenian because if he performed them in English, he is certain they
would take over his life. "Sometimes, I feel like my art is suffering
because of the performances."

When Vahe is on tour, his painting has to take a backseat to his
monologues. He says monologues hurt his pocketbook because his
painting are more lucrative, and because there is a lot of traveling
involved. "Last year, six months out of the year, I was away," he
says. "I performed in Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, New York, New
Jersey, then San Francisco, Florida, Toronto, Montreal, Yerevan,
Paris, Marseille, Valance, Lyon, London, on the ocean, Beirut, Sydney,
Melbourne, and it takes its toll."

* Starbucks

"Since I spend a lot of time in Europe," says Vahe, "and I love the
Paris culture, the cafe culture, I started going to the Starbucks in
my neighborhood when they put two small tables outside. There were no
other coffee shops around, so I was always at Starbucks. I did a lot
of my writing there."

Vahe says his both of his novels were composed by hand at the corner
table at the Starbucks on Ventura Boulevard near Van Nuys. "Then
gradually, it became almost like a meeting place for everyone who
wanted to see me."

Part of the his motivation to hold court at the coffee shop, says
Vahe, was due to his simple unwillingness to wash coffee cups at his
studio. "I didn’t want to clean up after people," he says.

"Something very, very important," he continues. "A lot of people,
they want your undivided attention, and after a while, that becomes
very draining, especially with the young people who come and spend
time with me. So, I think unconsciously, I created a situation where I
would bring people together, and it would give me a chance to dilute
the situation."

This Starbucks tradition has not spanned more than a decade. Vahe
says on certain days and nights, as many as 25 friends and
acquaintances will gather around his table. "A lot of people will just
stand there," he says. "It’s sometimes an international event. You’ll
have Germans, French, people from all over and people of all ages."

* Journalism

Young and old, people from various generations of life coming together
is important to Vahe. He says he doesn’t see much of it in American
life. "When you see an 80-year-old talking to a 16-year-old," he says,
"you look twice."

Vahe says he wants to see more people from different walks of life
coming together, talking, exchanging ideas, and creating a public
forum and cross-generational, cross-vocational, cross-economic
dialogue.

Vahe immigrated to the U.S. in 1976 and earned his undergraduate
degree in journalism at Woodbury University in California. When he
began taking graduate courses in journalism, he realized that he was
never going to be a journalist.

However, Vahe did spend 12 years writing, reviewing films, and
working as the layout and graphics designer for the Asbarez daily
newspaper in Glendale. "I love the newspaper business," he says.

The frustration with the news business, says Vahe, has to do with
the impermanence of the medium. "You do something, and when the
curtains close like in theatre, it’s done. You can never repeat it.
The experience is finished. You do your work, when it comes back from
the printer, you have to work on the new issue. That’s it."

* Betty, Betty, Betty

"We grew up together," says Vahe of his wife, movie set decorator and
set designer Betty Berberian. "We married when we were very young. We
met when she was studying art history and was in theater. Over the
past 27 years, we grew up together. She knows my art better than I do.
She knows me so well, and I’m very lucky to have that. She is also my
conscience. She’s very sharp, and her sense of aesthetics is
unbelievable."

Vahe and Betty have collaborated on many stage productions as well.
Betty directed and produced several plays that Vahe has written and
acted in. "I admire what she does, and I’m very lucky because I’m
surrounded by fantastic people. A lot of these young people, who come
and spend time here, you know, they inspire you, they give you
energy."

Vahe says the bottom line is that he loves people. His love of
people and their love for him are perhaps why he was able to beat
life-threatening pancreatic cancer a few years back. He says he loves
people not just because they love him. "It’s the other way around. I
love them. I have genuine compassion toward people. The older I get,
the more of that compassion I find for animals and trees. I love
animals and trees. Green stuff," like the beautiful orange and
mandarin trees that greet visitors to his studio.

* * *

The Milagros exhibition party will be held on Saturday, March 31,
2007, from 8 P.M. to 2 A.M. at Casitas Studios, 3191 Casitas Ave.
Atwater Village, California

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

11. "Gor": It’s okay to say it

by Paul Chaderjian

gor (noun) — pronunciation: ‘gOr, ‘gor

1 : grammatically incorrect verb ending in Western Armenian.

2 : innovative musician, charismatic, acoustic Armenian folk star.

His name is blunt. Gor. Say it. It’s okay.

Gor. Say it again. You can, you know.

True. Many frustrated Armenian schoolmarms and parents have scolded
students to stop tacking a gor at the end of verbs. It may be
grammatically incorrect, but it’s also the name of the hottest music
act since [fill in the name of the last artist whose music you
downloaded].

Gor. Say it. Shout his name from rooftops, at church halls, and
kebob stands. Text message your friends. IM them with smiley faces.
Post his songs on your grandkids’ myspace page. Swap music files.
Blackberry – or even blueberry or raspberry if you prefer – this
breaking news story.

Sync up your iPod, because now, "Gor" is a more than an error in
Armenian usage. It’s the future, the present, a new age and new
beginning for Armenian music, and it’s making a mark in the diaspora.

"There are a lot of Armenians who are ready to listen to new kinds
of Armenian music," says Gor, "and I am offering them something new."
New and exciting, something that’s turning Generations X and Y on to
Armenian music.

Meet Gor Mkhitarian, former lead guitarist and second vocalist for
the hit Yerevan-based rock band Lav Eli. He taught himself how to play
the guitar, sang in the church choir in Vanadzor, writes his own songs
about life, love, about his struggles, about people living and
struggling.

Among his influences, he lists William Saroyan, Moby Dick, the
Beatles, one Aaron Stayman [more about his later], and the Armenian
culture. "When I was growing up in the 1980s, bands like Pink Floyd,
Led Zeppelin, the Beatles were censored," says Gor in perfect English.
"People couldn’t find these records, because they were called
‘bourgeois’ or capitalist music. You simply couldn’t find the music in
the stores."

Gor’s brothers scoured the black market and brought home bootleg
copies of Western music. He loved the sound so much that he formed a
rock band with his friends. "We were just playing and hanging out," he
says. "We loved the music, so we decided to play and record some
covers, and that’s how we started."

Behind the Iron Curtain, influenced by the history of the era,
inspired by Western rock, and seeded with the sounds of Rouben
Mateossian, Flora Mardirossian, Rouben Hakhverdian, and
then-underground star Arthur Meschian were the sprouts of Gor’s music
today.

What evolved from passion and love of music in 1995 was Lav Eli.
"The rock music we played was more like acoustic rock, more like the
Rolling Stones, the Dave Matthews band, that kind of music," says Gor.
"Not too heavy and not too soft."

Gor. Not too heavy. Not too soft. But blunt. 33. Tall, handsome, and
charismatic. A solo act for the past four years. Check the web. Google
his name. Search YouTube and Google Video. You’ll be surprised by the
buzz, the praise from a dozen publications, and the honors from
Armenian and non-Armenian award shows.

Now click on his album covers on gormusic.com, use the iTunes Music
Store to download his previous albums and pre-order his
yet-to-be-released fifth album, "Acoustic Folklore," from his
myspace.com/gormusic page.

"My work is all about Armenia, being Armenian, being a human being
in Armenia," says Gor. "It’s all Armenia, but with a lot of influence
coming from Western music. I’m trying to make a bridge between
cultures, especially between Armenians in Armenia and Armenians in the
diaspora."

Exhausted are the half-dozen remakes every Armenian musician has
sung once and then again. Enough already. . . . Gor sings the classics
too, but not in that old-fashioned way. This isn’t your grandmother’s
Gomidas or your uncle’s folk songs. Gor’s music is Armenian music
reinventing itself.

This is the music drafting into the Armenian culture young, savvy,
cultured fans, the MTV generation with sophisticated tastes. It’s
bringing back the comatose canon of oh-so-passé, circle-dancing tunes
from keyboard-generated duduks, oopman-doompa rhythms, wa-wa organs,
and drum machine-generated beats. [insert gagging noise here.]

Gimme a break. The folk that was dying a slow death is new again.
This is raw, new, and true. There is even a self-titled album, his
fourth, that’s all English. Supporting his albums are cutting-edge
music videos, like one directed by Roger Kupelian. There are also two
documentaries telling the story of Gor in the Lav Eli days, and the
story of Gor making it on his own in the U.S., making it by making
fans fall for his music one song at a time.

Power up your iPod. Listen to the accordion, the base, acoustic
guitar. You’re in a new world. A new age. Can you hear the violin? Can
you hear the flute? Those words in Armenian about a young man waking
up and understanding are poetic. Those heart-breaking words in English
are about the young man waking up in the shipping container he calls
home. These are the lyrics of the modern Armenian experience,
modern-day hayots badmutiun coming to life, words and music about the
unique experience of being Armenian.

Yo! You, the listener. Yo! You are special once again, in your
cocoon of an MP3 player, in your car, on the subway. Can you hear the
banjo? Turn it up. It’s all there, and it’s all Armenian, 100 percent.
Old folk and new folk, written, composed, and performed by a talented
musician from Vanadzor, whose chance meeting with a Bostonian created
the quantum leap in music.

"A friend of a friend, Raffi Meneshian from Boston, came to Armenia
for a few weeks," says Gor. "We had a party, and I played the guitar.
Raffi listened and told me that he wanted to release my first solo
album – just acoustic guitar and vocals."

The accidental meeting in 2001 led to the release of Yeraz by the
Boston-based Pomegranate Music label. That’s how the legend began, and
it’s caught on. What was recorded in bits and bytes was trail-blazing
Armenian music, fueled by the restless boredom and anxiety of a
culture sick of its parents’ and grandparents’ music.

In hotrods in New Jersey, on the freeways in So Cal, and on the 1
and 9 lines on the Upper West Side are random men and women listening
to revolutionary music, once underground, now energized by the rabid
getaway from years of take-me-seriously classical, estradayeen,
bee-bopping, Turkic rabiz, and whatever renovations of staid genres.

"The third album, ‘Episodes,’ is about episodes from peoples’
lives," says Gor. "There are a few acoustic songs, just guitar and
vocals like my first album. There are also experimental songs with a
lot of different musicians like in my second album."

Gor’s second album, Godfather Tom, showed off the musician’s uncanny
ability to take musical risks, mixing new instruments with his ancient
culture, using the cadence of the Armenian language with the backdrop
of Hillbilly, Rock, and Country all in one.

"If listeners like it, great," says Gor about his music. "If they
don’t, it’s just a matter of taste. We’re fine with that too. But I
think they’re going to like it, because the new generation is looking
for something new."

Gor is serving up original lyrics with pride. Candid lyrics.
Personal thoughts. "I don’t want to remember what I did the night
before," he sings, "but it’s evident who I am."

Now comes the fifth album, a return to his roots with folk songs,
while forging ahead with original creations. The album will be
released on Saturday, April 7, at Gor’s CD release concert at the
Barnsdell Gallery Theatre in Hollywood. If you live nearby, get your
ticket on itsmyseat.com.

"The album is a limited edition, performed with acoustic guitars and
featuring Djivan Gasparyan, Jr.," says Gor. Joining him on stage at
the Barnsdell, in addition to Djivan, Jr., will be several talented
musicians like Ara Dabanjian from the band Element and, drum roll
please . . . Aaron Stayman. [Remember his name from earlier in the
article?]

"I met my banjo player, Aaron Stayman, in Armenia," explains Gor.
"Aaron was serving in the Peace Corps in Armenia. I saw him in
Vanadzor and Ijevan. He is a great musician, so we got together, and
we recorded this album. Since then, we’ve recorded several of my
albums with him."

Gor says Stayman is his biggest musical influence. Stayman is a
medical student at Tufts and will be coming out to Los Angeles to
perform at Gor’s CD release party. "Without him, my music wouldn’t be
the same," says Gor.

It’s the old world meeting the new, the banjo-playing, future
doctor, Peace Corps volunteer meshing with the language of Mashtots.
The bridge between East and West. A liaison world music publications
are calling "Post-Soviet Alternative Folk Rock."

But Gor is beyond labels. He’s fresh. He’s new. He’s fun to listen
to, and he has the ethereal IT. Underground. No more. Gor is out
there, and his music is selling at Armenian record stores, on Amazon
and CDRama.com. Armenian music – Welcome to the 21st century, baby,
and turn the alarm clock off already.

"I woke up, I saw, I understood everything," he sings. It’s cutting
edge. It’s pioneering. And it’s unusually hip. Fans say Gor represents
a new generation of Armenians who are redefining what the culture
thinks of as Armenian culture.

"We started to sell my album ‘Yeraz’ not only in the Armenian
market," says Gor, "but also on the Internet, Amazon, and CD Baby and
CD Rama, and we’ve had a good response from listeners. Some say they
don’t understand any words, but they love it."

Yeraz, his first solo CD released in 2002, fused the unique sounds
and lyrics of ancient Armenian folk music with modern rock and
sometimes, experimental sounds. The innovative and original
combination quickly garnered global attention, winning Gor acclaim
from all over the world, as well as accolades such as "best
alternative rock singer" and "best world music album."

Thousands are now fans, chanting his name at small and large concert
venues in New York, Boston, Philadelphia, London, D.C., at UCLA, San
Francisco State University, Brown University, and Harvard. He has
played more than a hundred concerts since leaving Armenia, and fans
are sure more are ahead.

"The Harvard concert stands out as one of the more memorable
concerts," says Gor. "It was in a very cozy venue, and the audience,
mostly non-Armenians, wanted to know about Armenians and Middle
Eastern cultures. We had questions and answers, and it was more than a
concert. I was able to tell them about my songs, the homeland, and
life experiences."

Next month, Gor returns to the homeland after a four-year break. He
will join his brother Tirayr Mkhitarian and Mher Manoukyan, the other
members of Lav Eli, and the guitar-playing trio will play at Yerevan’s
Avangard Folk Club on April 27 and the State Puppet Theatre on May 5.

"I want to see how much has changed in the past few years," says
Gor. "Aside from seeing my family once again, I want to see the whole
scene, political, musical, social. I want to see everything." Count on
his muses to visit and another set of songs about the experience of an
earthquake survivor seeing the aftermath of the political and social
earthquakes taking place since the shocker that hit at 11:41 A.M. on
December 7, 1988.

Wait. There’s more on his plate. As always. There is Gor’s
appearance at the June 1 Children’s Day Festival at the Cafesjian
Center for the Arts at the Cascade in the heart of Yerevan. More than
40 thousand children and their parents are expected to gather at the
Cascade for the annual festival and concert. Among the headliners will
be none other than the man being celebrated in this article.

If the choice was Gor or no Gor, chances are you’d choose the
former. Why? Because it’s new. It’s fresh. It’s addicting. It’s Gor.
And he’s got banjos and Gomidas on one expressionist musical canvas.

So show the schoolmarms the birdie and start saying "Gor" as many
times as you want. He’s now part of the new Armenian lexicon.

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

12. Through the lens of Kaloust Babian

by Gregory Lima

You may never have met Kaloust Babian, but if you wish to look at our
world through the lens of someone who could be a warm friend with a
traditionally generous Armenian spirit and who is also a master
photographer, someone who says to you "I want no more of you through
this lens than to relax into your irrepressible self" then look him
up. He has been exhibiting in Yerevan but he will soon be showing in
San Francisco and later in Los Angeles.

On my first round in the gallery in Yerevan, the work on exhibition
showed a painterly portraitist with an eye for infinite shades of
black and gray who managed to coax a sense of the person’s own
intimate light out of the darkness. Each person seemed to be his own
candle in the dark. Walking on, portrait after portrait, out of its
shadows the light of a unique self, often someone you would like to
meet personally, seemed to emerge.

Was there not something very Armenian in these irrepressible bright
flickers in the shadows of melancholy here? These were very personal
pictures.

At an exhibition, time allowing, it has been useful for me as an
observer to generally make three rounds. The first may be rather
quick, seeking an overall first impression and a general theme or
particularity. On the second the focus is on whatever catches a deeper
interest. The third round is walking the exhibition with the artist,
if that is possible, seeking to be more deeply involved in particular
works at a personal level through the artist’s eyes. At this
exhibition in Yerevan, Kaloust Babian found me before I finished the
first round and he made me glad he did.

Born in Lebanon, he is a child of Genocide survivors, both of his
parents orphaned. At the age of twenty he left for Paris and later New
York where he learned his trade. For many years he has been living in
Toronto. In 1980, taking his cameras and lights along, he joined what
he called the first Canadian-organized trip to Armenia. The remarkable
photographs he took on this journey, largely of people he encountered
some quarter of a century ago, create a benchmark of personal style
and context against which the changes that have since occurred in
Yerevan may be measured. These archival photographs make up the bulk
of the exhibition.

At the gallery in the Yerevan Fine Arts Academy the exhibition is
organized in three parts. The first is a selection of photographs
taken in Yerevan in 1980. The second records an event upon proceeding
to Tbilisi. This is followed on the final wall by a selection of faces
photographed in the diaspora.

It was while pondering the Tbilisi photographs that Kaloust Babian
found me. I was standing there baffled, perhaps frowning. These
photographs were very consciously like stills taken of a film and
unlike the work that proceeded or, glancing ahead, unlike the work
that would follow. They showed a bearded man with intense eyes that
seemed to devour the camera. "Who is he?" I asked.

"Don’t you recognize him?" he said, as if I should be embarrassed.
He told me that is the greatest filmmaker that has ever lived – or he
would have been had the Soviets not crippled him by forbidding him a
camera, imprisoning him, and denying him any further use of the
resources with which he had produced his masterpieces! It is Sergei
Parajanov.

Yes, I replied, trying to recover some dignity; he did Shadows of
Forgotten Ancestors and The Color of Pomegranates, the color symbolic
of Armenia. But I know nothing of his history. How did you meet him?

* Parajanov’s last, lost film

It was 1980 and Parajanov had been released from long exile in
Siberia, he related. In Yerevan I searched out and found the composer
who had done the musical scores for his films. The composer had his
current address in Tbilisi. When the group arrived in Tbilisi, taking
my camera and my lights and wrapping that address around a $50 bill, I
gave it to the first taxi driver I could find. It was my passport to
his doorstep.

I was worried that I was intruding on him and he might slam the door
in my face, Babian continued. But he received me and I offered him my
sincere respect. As one Armenian to another. We found common ground,
and by a perception that needs neither words nor explanation, we soon
came to understand each other. It was then that I took out my camera
and the lights. It was an electrifying moment. The sight of camera,
lights, transformed him. These were instruments of his genius and they
had been and still were forbidden to him. At first he stepped back as
if he was being baited, but realizing it was otherwise, he seized the
possibilities.

From that moment on everything changed. Parajanov once again became
the filmmaker and Babian merely a camera operator under his direction.

A film requires a concept of what you are trying to achieve and the
means to arrive at a destination. It may require costumes. It will
always require a setting. The setting may have symbolic value. A flood
of ideas was apparently racing through Parajanov’s fertile mind. As
Babian set up his camera tripod and arranged his lights, Parajanov
changed into costumes, selected backdrops and set the stage for a
narrative that he now seemed to find compelling.

Among the many photographs of eloquent narrative value taken on this
day in Tbilisi, one particularly stood out for me. Parajanov stands to
the rear of a gate. Look closely. The bars, both vertical and
horizontal, are both real and symbolic. He was still under house
arrest. He had been in the Soviet Gulag and even after his release he
was still in prison.

Under house arrest he was not permitted to pursue his profession.
For a filmmaker, creating a scenario meant that to be viewed through
the lens of a camera will make possible something more than mundane
daily life. His costumes are choices that go beyond apparel into the
selection of identities. To select, to act out your choices and your
dreams, even if it can be only through a camera of single, isolated
images that may be arranged in a sequence, that is a taste of freedom,
even when you are otherwise behind bars. Through Babian’s still
camera, Parajanov was acting out his last, lost film. We can only
guess at the script that played in his mind.

"Hours passed like moments. It was not a photo session, it was a
celebration." he said. After the last roll of film he carried to
Tbilisi was used up and the camera lay there inert, Babian asked him,
"What does it mean to be an Armenian?"

Parajanov answered by drawing a sketch. It was of an uncompleted
face slashed by an imprisoning line that slanted between the ground
and the sky. This is what it means to be an Armenian, he said, and
beneath the sketch he wrote a single word. He wrote it in Russian.
"Pain."

Babian placed that sketch after the last photo in this section of
the exhibition.

* Black and white

As we moved on to more contemporary faces in the Armenian diaspora, we
talked about his style in taking his photographs and why almost the
entire exhibition was in black and white. He said the last part of the
question was easy. He started with black and white and became very
comfortable with it. In black-and-white photography you can control
everything in every part of the process. Also, he saw black as a
nuanced color, a color of many graduations and tonal values,
permitting lovely contrasts and highlights that can be worked as an
artist works on his or her pallette. He sometimes spends hours with
the light and dark in his negatives to bring out what he sees as
possible and desirable in the print. As for his style, to be a
photographer, he said, is to master light and dark and to calibrate
focus and composition. But he believes it all starts with attitude.

You start with simplicity as an attitude you bring to your subject.
Not simplicity in the sense of a technique. You begin with utter
naïveté, without a trace of cynicism. He discovered this attitude, an
openness to the fullness of experience, in the most creative people he
photographed. He learned that when he approached a subject as a true
friend approaches a friend, totally free of any demand, and should
that friend respond to him as a photographer with a camera in his
hands, the almost wordless dialogue that will become the picture has
begun. The rest is a matter of technicalities in the operations of the
camera. He truly believes this makes a difference in the quality of
the work. When simplicity as an attitude and love as part of the
alchemy informs the process, it transforms it.

Whether or not this approach will work for anyone else may still
have to be proved. But as we passed together before his portraits of
Armenians of the diaspora, I could see that it had clearly worked for
him and for his body of work. This was a collection of photographs of
thoughtful men and attractive women in contexts that were familiar to
each. For all the often very deep shadows, the hallmark of Babian’s
work is clarity, along with an ability to bring out the subject’s
energy and intelligence. Part of the charm of the exhibition is the
certainty that each person photographed was delighted in the process
and impressed with the result.

For all of that, my favorite photograph was not there or in any of
the three parts. It was in the entrance foyer and it struck me as
exceptionally lovely well before we met. Three faces nuzzle each other
in a triangle as individual and as similar as the petals of a flower.

If it seems to be a flower, it is one that is caught in a soft
breeze in the sunshine. I had to look up and find who these faces
were. It was a photograph of his wife and children taken when the
world was younger – Hasmik, Sarik and Varag. I suspect it was taken
before either fame or fortune. Which may prove his point. Take your
pictures with love and if you are Babian and have a darkroom you can
create beautiful pictures.

* * *

Photos: Kaloust Babian’s portrait of Sergei Parajanov, Tbilisi,
September 1980. See also his portrait of Vahe Berberian on page C1.

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

13. Concert marks composer Adam Khudoyan’s 85th anniversary

NEW YORK – On February 20, a memorial concert was presented in Yerevan
to mark the 85th anniversary of composer Adam Khudoyan’s birth
(1921-2000).

The event took place at the Khachaturian House Museum and featured
many of Khudoyan’s chamber music compositions. Among the performers
were violinist Edvard Tatevosyan and cellist Aram Talalyan of the
Komitas Quartet, cellist Levon Arakelyan, soprano Alina Pahlevanyan,
and pianist Sahan Arzruni.

The program, which was carried by Armenian State Television, was
organized by Armenia’s Ministry of Culture, the Khachaturian House
Museum, and Arzruni.

In addition to his performance on the piano, Arzruni spoke about
Khudoyan’s life and music. What follows is an abridged translation of
his remarks.

* Arzruni’s remarks

I remember very clearly – very vividly – the trip I made to Yerevan in
the fall of 1993, during which time I stayed at the Khudoyans’ home as
their guest. In those days, Armenia was in dire shape – there was no
running water, no electricity.

Edvard Mirzoyan, the composer, suggested that rather than staying at
the Armenia Hotel, I should live with the Khudoyans, so as not to feel
lonely, to be in a homelike surrounding, encircled by people with good
intentions.

We had a wonderful time over that entire week. Khudoyan himself was
a happy-go-lucky fellow, gregarious and giving, to the extent that he
and his wife made their bedroom available to me so my stay there would
be more comfortable and pleasant.

I remember the visit well. Ksenya would often prepare a dish which I
liked very much: diced boiled potatoes, sliced raw onions, fresh
cilantro (it is called "hamem" in Armenia) and bits of smoked
whitefish (named "sig" and found in abundance in Lake Sevan). Dressing
it in vinegar and vegetable oil, if available, supplemented by large
chunks of bread, we would devour it with a healthy appetite.

At some point it was the designated day to take a bath. Maybe once
or twice a week, one had a chance to bathe, for you had to collect the
water, and then wait until the electrical power was restored for a few
hours to heat the water. When the conditions were right on that day, I
immediately undressed, with the water pitcher in one hand, and the
washcloth in the other, to get cleaned.

And suddenly, without warning, the door to the washroom flew open
and Mr. Khudoyan entered, as if it were the most natural thing in the
world, and announced that he was going to scrub my back. I stood
there, naked, not knowing whether to be shocked or embarrassed; and
without even waiting for my consent, Adik (Adam’s diminutive name)
took the pitcher and washcloth from my hand and commenced with the
scrub down.

Now that’s hospitality.

In the music world, Khudoyan and his four colleagues – his musical
soulmates Edvard Mirzoyan, Alexandre Arutiunyan, Arno Babadjanyan, and
Lazar Saryan – established the Armenian musical school. I personally
find strong parallels between Khudoyan’s approach to music and that of
Mussorgsky. Like Mussorgsky, Khudoyan employed chordal progressions
that are unusual, unbounded, even unacceptable to the traditional
rules of harmony. However, after hearing such progressions several
times, they become perfectly acceptable and even agreeable to the ear.

Khudoyan’s oeuvre contains works of diverse genre, with a particular
emphasis on works for the cello. I remember asking Medea Abramyan, the
queen of Armenian cellists, why Khudoyan gave such significance to the
cello and wrote so much for it.

She related the following story: "In the 50s, when Khudoyan visited
Leninakan (now Gyumri) to attend a cello concert, suddenly a mouse
appeared on the stage, ran and sat right in front of the cello. There
the mouse settled down and listened to the sound of the cello as if in
a trance. When the piece was over, the mouse got up, ran off, and
disappeared. And in that moment, Khudoyan concluded that if a common
mouse could be transfixed by the sound of the cello, then surely human
beings, too, would find cello’s timbre mesmerizing. And that was the
genesis of his love affair with the cello."

Blessed be Adam Khudoyan’s living memory.

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

14. In Illusion, Michael Goorjian tells a tale of tragic love

by Tamar Salibian

"There’s no romance today," declares elderly filmmaker Donald Baines.
Baines, played by Kirk Douglas in Michael Goorjian’s film Illusion,
speaks to a journalist from his king-sized bed at the start of the
film. His speech is slurred from an unidentified illness. Donald
coughs incessantly, pausing only to ask the journalist to look at a
painting of the classic balcony scene in Shakespeare’s Romeo and
Juliet that hangs on the wall. Donald states, "Romance is found in the
space between people. That’s where you find the magic." What follows
is an intricately woven, intellectually driven film exploring tragic
love, family relationships, and the space between people.

Adapted from the 17th-century play L’Illusion comique by Pierre
Corneille, Illusion tells the story of Donald Baines and his son
Christopher. In Illusion, Donald embarks on a mystical journey to find
out what happened to the son he never acknowledged as his own. In the
original play by Corneille, the main character seeks out a magician to
help him find his son by presenting him with three "visions" from
various points in his son’s life. The play was often performed in a
grotto or cave in France to heighten the feeling of the mystical or
divine.

In actor-director Goorjian’s adaptation, co-written with Tressa Di
Figlia Brendon, Chris Horvath, and Ron Marasco, Donald is approached
as if in a dream by his deceased film editor, Stan. Played by
co-writer Marasco, Stan asks Donald to join him in a movie theater to
view some "film reels" from Christopher’s life. With Stan playing the
magician to Donald’s ailing central character, the movie theater
becomes the divine setting where a father is pulled through a
celluloid looking glass to discover the details of his son’s life.

As the first "reel" begins, Michael Goorjian appears as Christopher
Baines, a seemingly innocent young teen riding around town on a
motorcycle. Like Jean-Pierre Leaud’s Antoine Doinel in Francois
Truffaut’s New Wave films, Christopher is comfortable in his solitude,
and yet he anxiously yearns for companionship and love. Christopher
first seeks out the object of his affections in a schoolyard.

At first, Isabelle, played by Karen Tucker, is cautious. She worries
about what her friends will think if she speaks to Christopher, as
they all think he’s a "weirdo." Separated by a large wrought-iron gate
and a gaggle of females, Isabelle and Christopher begin a lifelong,
almost impossible romance which Donald watches on the film "reels."
Donald Baines understands the difficulties of love. "Love has to cost
something," he says. "The greater the love, the higher the cost. If
the film has to end tragically, you let it." However, as the film
progresses and Donald becomes more aware of the consequences of
Christopher’s love, his own views on life and love begin to change.
Donald soon begins to yearn to help the son he never met.

The young Christopher is inexperienced yet tenacious. Goorjian plays
the role well, pining and desperate for his love’s response.
Christopher often hears his father’s voice in his head scolding him
and putting him down. Donald is bewildered by the notion that
Christopher thinks he’s not good enough for his father’s approval.
Christopher’s internal voice repeats throughout the film’s
play-within-a-play motif, while Donald’s reaction to it intensifies.
"I’ve lived like a coward," he tells Stan. "My son, he’s not a coward.
He suffered and I lived like a king in a mansion, making movies."

Goorjian doesn’t forget that Illusion is based on a play. He
presents various theatrical motifs to the viewer throughout the film.
The physical space between individuals is constantly evident; from the
first "reel" as Christopher approaches Isabelle near the schoolyard,
to the second "reel" where an older, more reserved Christopher,
working for a performance artist, reconnects with Isabelle through a
twist of fate.

Goorjian is an experienced actor. Having appeared in films, theater,
and television since his teenage years, he also started the
award-winning Buffalo Nights Theater in 1991 with a group of friends.
Goorjian’s background in theater is clear and adds to the film’s
visual landscape, driving forward a magical quality throughout.
Goorjian’s transformations from young teen to disillusioned young man
to an older, more experienced individual reflect a studied and skilled
actor.

Playwright Tony Kushner adapted Corneille’s L’Illusion comique in
1988 to create his own hit The Illusion. In a 1996 interview, Kushner
noted that, "Playwriting is dialogic and dialectic and is
fundamentally always more about an argument than it is about a
narrative progression." In adapting the play to the screen, Goorjian
adopts elements of Kushner’s approach. The film is not excessively
plot driven, but rather it presents a series of events meant to push
the viewer to ask the same questions that Donald Baines asks himself.
Does love have to cost something? Must we settle for the tragic
ending?

The film’s main characters have lived with immense loneliness in
their lives because of their various choices and circumstances, yet as
the film nears its end, the main characters are challenged to question
these choices. Additionally, the characters discover that many of
their own illusory façades are often simply façades.

Donald Baines says, "Sometimes I wish I could rewrite my life." As
the film nears its end, Baines is given the opportunity to affect
change in his son’s life, to divert his son from harm. What results is
a touching connection between father and son that clearly resonates.
In this magical film, if the viewer is willing to take a leap with the
characters, the resulting notion is that sometimes, we can all rewrite
parts of our lives.

* * *

For showtimes and more information, visit the film’s official website,
illusionthemovie.com

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

15. Women in action and in pain

* Women in Armenia open a window with alternative art

by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian

Is a woman in action necessarily aggressive, resentful, and
vindictive? The experimental artists participating in an exhibition in
Yerevan titled "Women in Action" certainly seem to think so.

An installation and video art exhibition curated by Eva Khachatrian
at the Armenian Center for Contemporary Experimental Art in Yerevan,
which runs from March 9 to April 3, touches upon issues like
sexuality, gender relations, and life determined by a male-dominated
society in a rather cross mood.

Three video pieces and three installations by Armenian artists take
upon themselves the mission to open the eyes of society to what it
really means to be a woman. "Women in Action" aims to increase the
self awareness and confidence of women in contemporary Armenian
society.

A poster of a young girl by Diana Hakobian proclaims six new
commandments in English. These are repeated in Armenian through a
loudspeaker. "I have to believe in my strength, I have to be brave, I
have to believe in my opportunities, I have to . . ." and the
recitation goes on in a rather naive voice.

Another installation by Shushan Petrossian presents on a black frame
a new perception of women’s anatomy, where sex and desire, chocolate
and beating compose the "Mixture of my body." It may be the boldest of
the works on exhibit, one that may provoke thought and capture
attention.

Other works touch on the obsession of many women with diets and
desperate attempts to have a desirable form in an appearance-obsessed
male-dominated society (Diet, by Anna Vardanian, video art) and the
invisible wall that cuts short the flight of young women (My pain is
your wall, my freedom is your wall, by Mariam Vardazarian, video
art).

Women in action attempts to cry out loud the pain and resentment of
those trapped in the patriarchal society of today’s Armenia, albeit
without much originality.

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

16. Essay: Two girlfriends celebrate life

by Armen D. Bacon

We had taken this trip to New York on a whim. Months ago, I had
spotted the New York Times ad for a one-night-only Lincoln Center
concert performed by my favorite Broadway torch singer. Within
minutes, we had impulsively booked our round trip flights, found a
boutique hotel near Times Square, locked in aisle seats and were, as
they say, good to go.

Our friendship had spanned more than three decades. We had first met
as international students studying abroad. Young and adventurous,
carefree and curious, we had traveled through Europe together and
discovered not only ourselves, but also a unique and special
sisterhood.

Our friendship was the perfect complement to studying language and
literature, culture and cuisine. She was from Los Angeles; I was from
Fresno. She was Jewish; I was Armenian. She had two brothers; I had
two sisters. We were different and yet so much alike. Two young women,
oblivious of our future casts and about to come of age during a "year
in Provence."

A lot can happen in 30 years: marriage, children, divorce, more
marriage, careers and even grandchildren. We had both experienced the
blessings and unanticipated curses of life on earth. But here we were,
30 years later, still standing and eager to resume our travels as a
twosome — even if only for a long weekend in Manhattan.

On Day 2 she quietly announced that she had planned a secret special
activity. Not a hint or clue of its nature, not even after much
coaxing by me. I made her promise that it would not be anything
involving helicopters or tour guides. She assured me that it would not
as she escorted me to Grand Central Station, eventually arriving at a
terminal destination that housed a small, womblike, soundproof booth.

She invited me to enter. The room contained two simple metal chairs,
a matching table adorned with a lamplight and box of Kleenex. There
was also a pair of oversized and slightly intimidating professional
microphones placed on the table.

Off in the corner was an elaborate recording system. Her surprise
was about to reveal itself. She had decided that it was time to record
a piece of our life story — including a chronicle of our 30-year
friendship. She had intuitively known that this was a momentous period
of passage for me. Most of the interview would be about me. But our
chance meeting, our enduring friendship, the trials and tribulations
of life that test relationships and bring people together would all be
part of the story.

We had 40 minutes of recording time. She would conduct the
interview. And so, after a few deep breaths, the questions began. Her
open-ended questions would unfold the mysteries of my past. What was
it like growing up in an Armenian family? What were my favorite
childhood memories? What was my motivation for leaving Fresno and
studying abroad? How did I meet the love of my life? What were the
defining moments that challenged my everything? What were my hopes and
dreams for the future?

There. It was done. Together, we had chronicled the journey. She
told me a copy would be sent to the Library of Congress for
posterity’s sake. I was given my own audio CD version. The recording
contained questions and answers that touched on life from kindergarten
to college, adulthood and beyond. We had discussed and recorded it all
with eight minutes left to spare. I think we both realized the
significance of those remaining eight minutes: they signified that our
story was not yet finished. There would be more life to live.

And so, for the remainder of our trip, that is what we did. We
lived. And lived it up. We behaved (and misbehaved) like carefree
schoolgirls. We lifted our glasses over pizza and pastrami. We scouted
celebrities and experimented with new eye makeup. We shopped till we
dropped and bought pretzels from the street vendors. We walked the
Village. Soho. Chelsea Market. Bartered for street bargains. And then
stood in the middle of Times Square and made ridiculous poses while
the other person captured it on film. This would be the perfect start
of a new and next chapter.

We concluded that life is good. Worth living. A true cause for
celebration. As we boarded the airplane for our return flight back to
reality, we smiled, knowing that we had renewed the friendship that
had transformed us from college student to world traveler, from
acquaintance to trusted confidante, from sister to soul mate. We were
two women now bonded for life.

As if to mirror real life, the flight home was not without a few
bumps and turbulence. But we landed safely to blue skies and
California sunshine. We were exhausted and yet, exhilarated. It had
been the perfect weekend.

* * *

Armen D. Bacon was born and raised in Fresno, Calif., and is senior
director, communications/public relations for the Fresno County Office
of Education. She received her B.A. in psychology from Fresno State
and holds a master’s degree in organizational management. Since 2004,
her thoughts and writings have been published in the Valley Voices
section of The Fresno Bee and in April 2007, she will launch a daily
radio feature titled "Live, Laugh, Love" for K-JEWEL radio.

Armen Bacon’s essay begins a news series in the Arts and Culture
section that will feature short creative fiction and nonfiction pieces
from our community of readers. For consideration, submit your original
work to [email protected].

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

Plea se 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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Turkey Opens Restored Armenian Church

EURASIA INSIGHT
TURKEY OPENS RESTORED ARMENIAN CHURCH
Nicholas Birch 3/29/07

Abandoned since the slaughter of Anatolia’s Armenians more than 90 years
ago, Turkey’s best-known Armenian Church was reopened March 29 after
undergoing a high-profile restoration. Ankara hopes the highly publicized
gesture will improve tense relations with Europe, the United States and
neighboring Armenia.
The restored church reopened as a museum. The midday ceremony on Akdamar, a
craggy island on eastern Anatolia’s vast Lake Van, came two months after
Turkey’s most outspoken Armenian, journalist Hrant Dink, was shot dead in
Istanbul. [For background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
icles/eav020107.shtml The
event also occurred amid continuing European Union pressure on Turkey to
improve its civil rights climate, [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archive] and as the US Congress prepares to consider a resolution to
recognize the mass killings of Armenians in 1915 as genocide. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive].
Heading a 20-strong delegation that arrived in Turkey via Georgia due to the
closure of the Turkish-Armenian border, Armenia’s Deputy Minister of Culture
Gagik Gyurjyan sounded a conciliatory note. "This is an important step for
our two countries", he told reporters on the island.
Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual head of Turkey’s dwindling Armenian
community, was the guest of honor at the high-security event, which included
a concert and a brief fireworks display. "It is a joy to see the church
restored to its original grandeur", he told approximately 200 dignitaries
seated in front of the 1,100-year old, octagonal structure. At a time of
high tension in Turkey, he congratulated the government for "courageously
completing the project." The restoration cost Turkey $1.9 million. [For
background see the Eurasia Insight archive].

Despite the positive words, controversy seemed to hover over the
restoration/reopening event. It showed itself indirectly in the ceremony’s
patriotic undercurrent: speeches, for example, were preceded by a rendering
of the Turkish national anthem. And as they approached Akdamar Island on
boats, visitors – many of whom were foreign journalists invited by the
Turkish government – saw a huge Turkish flag draped along one of the island
spurs long before the church silhouette came into view.
Speaking against a backdrop of flags and a portrait of the founder of the
modern Turkish state, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, Turkey’s Culture Minister
Atilla Koc called for the protection of "the cultural diversity and assets
of the different cultures and civilizations in our lands" without mentioning
Armenia or Armenians by name.
Patriarch Mesrob was more outspoken, chiding Turkey for turning Akdamar into
a museum. "We all know Aghtamar is a church", he said, using the Armenian
pronunciation of the island. "An annual Divine Liturgy that could be
celebrated in this church… would gather believers from the four corners of
the world."
The secular nature of today’s ceremony prompted Catholicos Karekin II, the
Yerevan-based Armenian supreme patriarch, to reject a Turkish invitation to
attend the ceremony. For several weeks prior to the opening, Turks had been
debating the lack of cross on the apex of the church’s octagonal dome.
"There’s no need for a cross on a museum," today’s Turkish newspapers quoted
Koc as saying. Critics, meanwhile, pointed to the church’s original name –
the Holy Cross.
There are indications that the Turkish government has not made a final
decision on whether to permit the installation of a cross atop the church.
Turkey’s Ministry of Culture and Tourism has sought input from the Foreign
Ministry on the cross issue, Today’s Zaman, a Turkish news website, reported
March 29.
Religious leaders invited to the ceremony seemed inclined to let the
omission go. "Buildings are built stone by stone, and friendships too" said
George Marovitch, Papal Nuncio to Turkey. "But you cannot love what you do
not know, and Akdamar is an important start."
With the investigations into the Dink murder still continuing, it is far
less clear how the church’s restoration will influence opinion among Turkey’s
60,000 Armenians. "Only two things are keeping the Armenian community
going — this newspaper, and the hope that Hrant’s killers will be brought
to justice," said Etyen Mahcupyan, who took over as editor of the weekly
Agos after Dink’s death, said in a recent interview.
Sitting around a table in the Istanbul suburb of Yesilkoy a few days before
the Akdamar ceremony, a group of a dozen Armenian Turks of all ages largely
concurred. When they heard Dink had been murdered, they said, they feared it
might be the start of a pogrom like the one in 1955 that ended Greek
presence in Istanbul. "All the teachers at my school dropped what they were
doing and ran home", said one young woman who – like everybody else – spoke
on condition of anonymity. A middle-aged woman nodded in agreement – "I rang
my kids and told them to get off the street," she said.
Always close followers of the Turkish media, Armenians everywhere watched
with dismay the nationalist reaction to the huge crowd that turned out for
Dink’s funeral. "Am I living in the same country that I was born in",
Patriarch Mesrob II said in one of two uncharacteristically outspoken
interviews with Agos recently.
Following the arrest of two young men who fired shots into the air as
mourners congregated in a church to mark the 40th day of Dink’s death,
Armenians have been upping security around their community buildings. For
the Yesilkoy Armenians, Dink’s death and what followed signaled the end of
"the illusion" that outside pressure was transforming Turkey for the better.
"We have two choices," said one 52-year old woman; "Keep our heads down and
our mouths shut, or leave. I would leave tomorrow, but like everybody here I
have relatives who left Turkey, and none of them are happy."
"The first generation in exile is a lost generation."
In Yerevan, the Armenian Foreign Ministry applauded the Church restoration,
but indicated that the lack of a cross atop it diluted the impact of Turkey’s
goodwill gesture.

http://www.eurasianet.org/departments/insight/art

Holy Etchmiadzin Did Not Send Delegation to Aghtamar

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of Canada
615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont-Quebec H2V 3H2
Contact: Deacon Hagop Arslanian,
Tel: 514-276-9479
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Email: [email protected]
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Sat, Mar 31 2007

Christian Education Center
Prayer of the Week
"This day the creatures leap for joy;
they bless the Lord and rejoice,
Heaven and Earth in company dance and clap their hands.
This day on Mount Zion
the nard has spread its fragrance,
the rose is aglow with diverse hues,
in crimson, red, and violet…"
(Palm Sunday Ode)
30 Mar 2007
Read More …

Bible Reading of the Week
The Triumphal Entry

As they approached Jerusalem and came to Bethphage on the Mount of Olives,
Jesus sent two disciples, saying to them, "Go to the village ahead of you,
and at once you will find a donkey tied there, with her colt by her. Untie
them and bring them to me. If anyone says anything to you, tell him that
the Lord needs them, and he will send them right away."
30 Mar 2007
Read More …

Holy Etchmiadzin Did Not Send Delegation to Aghtamar

An invitation to participate in the opening ceremonies of the Church of
the Holy Cross on the island of Aghtamar (Lake Van), scheduled for March
29, from Governor of Van Mehmet Niyazi Tanilir addressed to His Holiness
Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, was
received in the Mother See via the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the
Republic of Armenia.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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New Grand Sacristan Appointed for Holy Etchmiadzin

His Grace Bishop Ararat Kaltakjian has been appointed as Grand Sacristan
(Lousararabed) of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin by the Pontifical
directive of His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch, and Catholicos of
All Armenians. Bishop Ararat will continue to serve concurrently as dean
of the monasteries of the Mother See.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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Primate will visit the Armenian Embassy in Ottawa

On Tuesday, April 3, 2007, His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian will
visit the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia in Ottawa to convey the
condolences of the Diocese of the Armenian Church. The clergy and parish
council members of Saint Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Cathedral and
Holy Cross Armenian Church of Laval will accompany His Eminence.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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THIS SUNDAY Official Launching of Family Support Services Hay Doun

The official launch and opening of the office of the Family Support
Services Hay Doun and the Blessing of the Board members will take place on
Sunday, April 1, 2007, following the Divine Liturgy celebration, at the
Diocesan Headquarters of the Armenian Church in Montreal. We invite our
faithful to attend this significant event and pray for the success of the
mission of HAY DOUN.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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Holy Trinity Armenian Church General Meeting (Mona Selyan)

The Holy Trinity Armenian Church 84th Annual Parish Assembly was called to
order at 2:30 pm on Sunday, March 18, 2007. Members of the Women’s Guild
had prepared light refreshments for the membership so that the meeting
could take place after Divine Liturgy, and were on hand to offer coffee
and beverages during the entire meeting.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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Divine Liturgy Celebration and Annual General Assembly in Ottawa

On Sunday March 25, 2007, Rev. Fr. Myron Sarkissian, celebrated Holy
Divine Liturgy in Ottawa. In his message, Der Hayr greeted the faithful
and prayed that the Almighty God may "grant them health and courage to
better serve the Church of God." During his address, Father Myron spoke
about the nature and the structure of the Church.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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ACYOC Annual Assembly and Sports Weekend 2007

This year, ACYOC Golden Horseshoe (Mississauga/Oakville) will be hosting
the annual ACYOC sports weekend on Friday, June 29th to Sunday, July 1st.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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Support CYMA 2007 on Palm Sunday

PALM SUNDAY

Blessing and procession of children and youth

HOLY DIVINE LITURGY

Sunday, April 1st, 2007 @ 10:30am

31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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Ararat Summer Youth Camp 2007

Join us this summer for another
"Experience to Remember"
at Ararat Summer Youth Camp.

See our flyer for further details.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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"A Musical Journey to Armenia" enchanted the audience! (S.K.)

March 11, 2007 will remain a memorable day for the Armenian Community of
Montreal. A capacity crowd was on hand at the prestigious Claude-Champagne
Hall to witness an unprecedented concert dedicated to the centennial
anniversary celebration of the Armenian General Benevolent Union. In her
opening remarks Dr. Rita Kuyumjian, chairperson of the Montreal Chapter,
stressed AGBU’s relentless contribution to the educational and cultural
development throughout the world.
31 Mar 2007 by Press Office
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BAKU: Azeris mark "genocide day", burn Armenian leader’s effigy

Azeris mark "genocide day", burn Armenian leader’s effigy

ANS TV, Baku
31 Mar 07

Text of report by Azerbaijani TV station ANS on 31 March
The Union of Azerbaijani Veterans held a rally in connection with the
genocide [of Azerbaijanis]. The participants in the rally stressed the
importance of informing the international community of Armenian
atrocities in early 20th century.
At the end of the rally, the participants set fire to an effigy of
Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and the Armenian flag.
[Video shows the rally, protesters setting fire to the effigy and
chanting "Death to Kocharyan!"]