Armenian Genocide Issue Draws Close To A New House Vote

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE ISSUE DRAWS CLOSE TO A NEW HOUSE VOTE
By Michael Doyle

Miami Herald, FL
July 2 2007

CONGRESS

A resolution recognizing the slaughter of Armenians in the early 20th
century is again moving through the U.S. House of Representatives.

WASHINGTON — It’s crunch time for an Armenian genocide resolution,
where foreign policy meets ethnic politics and a familiar plot keeps
recurring.

As of Friday, a majority of the House of Representatives supports a
resolution recognizing the slaughter of Armenians between 1915 and
1923 as genocide.

With that important hurdle crossed, Armenian Americans and their
congressional champions now must see what congressional leaders have
in mind.

"We’re making sure we have all of our ducks lined up," said Rep. Adam
Schiff, D-Calif.

Schiff and Rep. George Radanovich, R-Calif., are the chief sponsors
of the genocide resolution, introduced in its latest form five months
ago. Radanovich acknowledged recently that he’s "a little concerned"
that the House Foreign Relations Committee hasn’t yet considered it.

Different concerns motivate the White House and the Turkish
government. Both vigorously resist the resolution that they say will
endanger diplomatic relations. Already, a new poll finds that 83
percent of Turkish residents view the United States negatively.

This year’s version is backed by 218 House members, a majority.

Backers secured additional sponsors in recent days, following a
telephone campaign through the Armenian National Committee of America.

Many historians, including the International Association of Genocide
Scholars, have concluded that the murders and forced deportations of
Armenians into the unforgiving Syrian desert amounted to genocide.

The Turkish government disputes the overall death count and says the
Armenians were caught in a tumultuous time of war.

"Unlike the Holocaust, the numbers, dates, facts and the context
associated with this period are all contested, and objective scholars
remain deeply divided," Turkish Ambassador Nabi Sensoy declared
last year.

To help spread this viewpoint, the Turkish government is paying former
Rep. Robert Livingston, R-La., $750,000 every six months.

In May, public records also show, the Turkish government signed a
$100,000-a-month lobbying contract with the firm of former House
Minority Leader Richard Gephardt, D-Mo.

A Democrat, and one-time presidential candidate, Gephardt had supported
versions of the genocide resolution when he was in Congress.

"The Turkish government is lobbying heavily," Radanovich said.

"They’ve been working it."

The current House speaker, Democrat Nancy Pelosi of California,
supported previous genocide resolutions when she was a rank-and-file
House member. Ultimately, Radanovich said, it will be Pelosi’s call
on whether the resolution gets a vote.

.html

http://www.miamiherald.com/509/story/157640

From Horrific To Joy

FROM HORRIFIC TO JOY
Frank Wilson – The Philadelphia Inquirer

South Bend Tribune, IN
July 2 2007

Poetry

All the tribes of humankind have had their sorrows, but the Armenians
— like the Jews — seem to have had more than their share. Between
1915 and 1917, deported and massacred by the Young Turk rulers of
the moribund Ottoman Empire, they became the victims of the 20th
century’s first genocide.

The memory of that horrific episode clearly resonated in Gregory
Djanikian’s family — for this book is transparently a memoir in
verse — and his portrayal of it in the first part of the book makes
for tough reading, in no small measure because of the understated,
pastoral tone he often employs to detail atrocity (one of the poems
is titled "Armenian Pastoral, 1915").

Consider "Deportation Song": "This one was given a week to get ready
… This one hired carts and mules … This one hid in the pantry
bin … This one carried his son on his back … This one was already
being led away … This one was butchered … and this one was crying
for water …"

Accident of birth spared Djanikian — who heads the creative-writing
program at the University of Pennsylvania — direct experience of the
1915 deportation, but not a later one, in 1956, after the French,
British and Israelis attacked Suez, when Armenians — including
Djanikian’s family — who had found refuge in Egypt after World War
I, were among the nationalities expelled by Gamal Abdel Nasser’s
government. And that is how 8-year-old Gregory Djanikian came to
America.

"Immigrant Picnic," with its catalog of his mother’s endearing
malapropisms, is both hilarious and touching, as is the account of
the card game he has with her. Before dealing, his mother declares,
"Let justice prevail." And so it does: She wins just about every hand.

It all comes together in the splendid penultimate poem, "Mystery Farm
Road," where two boys meet in memory and imagination thanks to "a book
read one summer … in Alexandria." That boy, Djanikian tells himself,
"reading a book / and mouthing the words "huckleberry and harvest /
that will cast a spell on him for years … that boy is you." But so is
"the boy by the river / baring his calves under the black willows."

For all its focus upon the lives and customs of Armenians, this book
makes you proud to be an American.

cs.dll/article?AID=/20070701/Lives04/707010439/-1/ LIVES/CAT=Lives04

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.southbendtribune.com/apps/pb

Boxing: Darchinyan In Connecticut For Next World Title Defence

DARCHINYAN IN CONNECTICUT FOR NEXT WORLD TITLE DEFENCE

EastsideBoxing.com
July 2 2007

(Bridgeport, USA: July 1, 2007) Australia’s best boxer and IBF/IBO
flyweight world champion Vic "Raging Bull" Darchinyan has arrived in
Connecticut in the USA for his next world title boxing defence this
Saturday night July 7 against Nonito Donaire at the Harbour Yard
Arena in Bridgeport.

"I’ve had some great training and sparring sessions in Los Angeles
during the last two weeks," said Darchinyan. "Everyone will see my
power again this weekend and I am ready for another knockout win!"

31 year-old Vic "Raging Bull" Darchinyan, the Armenia born 2000
Olympian and Australian citizen is trained by Billy Hussein and in
winning two world titles to date in his career, now has an undefeated
record of 28 wins, 0 losses and 22 wins by knockout.

p=11518&more=1

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.eastsideboxing.com/news.php?

ANKARA: Swiss Authorities Arrest Two Turks For Denying Armenian ‘Gen

SWISS AUTHORITIES ARREST TWO TURKS FOR DENYING ARMENIAN ‘GENOCIDE’

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
July 2 2007

Two Turks were arrested over the weekend on suspicion of breaking Swiss
anti-racism laws for allegedly denying that the killing of Anatolian
Armenians in the early 20th century was "genocide," police said.

The two were arrested on Saturday at a conference in the Zurich suburb
of Winterthur, where posters were hung up and leaflets distributed
rejecting that the killing was genocide. One of the Turks organized
the event and the other was shouting slogans before a crowd.

Switzerland’s anti-racism legislation, which previously applied to
Holocaust denial, was used earlier this year to prosecute a Turkish
politician for denying at a gathering in 2005 that the Turks committed
"genocide" in the World War I-era killings.

Last week, a Swiss cantonal court upheld the conviction against Doðu
Perincek, the leader of the neo-nationalist Turkish Workers’ Party
(ÝP). The case of Perincek has caused diplomatic tension between
Switzerland and Turkey. Ankara has called the case against Perincek
"inappropriate, baseless and debatable in every circumstance."

Perincek was invited to Saturday’s conference, but was prevented
from entering Switzerland because he had not applied for a visa,
said Dominique Boillat, spokesman for the Federal Office for Migration.

Police in the canton (state) of Zurich identified the two arrested
individuals as a 57-year-old resident of Germany and a 51-year-old
Swiss resident.

–Boundary_(ID_yTAk08CuOp44UFoClSEf9w)- –

International Broadcasters On High Alert: Key Channel, Support Group

INTERNATIONAL BROADCASTERS ON HIGH ALERT: KEY CHANNEL, SUPPORT GROUP THREATENED
Michael Hedges

followthemedia.com , Switzerland
July 2 2007

Foreign-originated broadcasts and foreign media support groups are
losing their welcome. Is somebody afraid of being bitten? Writing
new laws to hamper, discourage and foil foreign-originated broadcasts
from entering their ether-space is necessary, they say, for technical
reasons.

Armenia’s National Assembly passed (Friday June 29) on first reading
two amendments to its’ law "On Television and Radio." One amendment
specifically forbids Armenian Public Radio and Television from
broadcasting any programs they do not produce. The target, without
subtlety, is US-funded Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty (RFE/RL),
known in Armenia as Radio Liberty. RFE/RL is the only foreign
broadcaster offering news programs on Armenian State radio,

Amendment number two imposes a stiff tax on any broadcaster for
offering programs from foreign broadcasters. Second reading is
scheduled early this week.

Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, however, spoke out Friday, saying
"It will hurt me if (Radio) Liberty stops going on air."

There’s an old newsroom saying that "dog bites man" is not a story.

"Man bites dog" is. Governments seek control over media. Imperious
governments seek control over media imperiously. Armenia’s President
Robert Kocharian said he doesn’t like people listening to Radio
Liberty. Coincidentally, Armenia will hold presidential elections in
2008. Dog bites man.

In this media-enhanced world, State media’s clumsy or cheesy offerings
bore local listeners silly, causing the broadcast equivalent of
carpal-tunnel syndrome as listeners push one different button after
another. The choices may be maddening but not as much as another
politician’s speech.

Late last year Azerbaijan’s National Radio and Television shut down
radio and TV broadcaster ANS for disregarding "warnings." ANS was
an RFE/RL affiliate. New rules came into effect January 1st barring
all local Azeri broadcasters from carrying the BBC, Radio Liberty
and voice of America programs. Azerbaijan will hold presidential
elections in 2008.

Zimbabwe’s government bought Chinese jamming transmitters, originally
manufactured in France, to control foreign broadcasts saying mean
things. Iran’s culture control police are said to round up evil
satellite dish owners.

North Koreans have a hard time listening to any broadcasts other
than those State-operated since "authorized" receivers are fixed
to State-operated frequencies. Being caught listening to foreign
broadcasts results in hard time in prison. That idea didn’t originate
in North Korea. Nazi Germany in 1933 imposed prison sentences – or
worse – for listening to foreign radio broadcasts. Fortunately for
Germans those laws have been remanded to the dust-bin of history,
with the exception of radio and TV (and now internet) license fees
to pay for public broadcasting. ("And how many radios do you have?")

Hostility toward message bearers – over the air, over the internet
or over the transom – increased on two events. Most cliche is the
universally accepted meme that "9/11 changed everything." Media expands
to the horrification presented, particularly when unanticipated.

More directly, Ukraine’s Orange Revolution is a source of continuous
reflection for every government – East, West, North or South. Media
trainers sent to develop journalists’ skills succeeded. Media freedom
advocacy NGOs got results.

Internews is well-known in developing and transitional regions as
an advocate for upgrading local media skills as a means of forming
a strong working platform for free and independent media. They
assist media infrastructures Afghanistan to, almost, Zimbabwa,
always supporting local efforts and best practices. Tin-pot despots
would rather not see Internews trainers showing the secrets of good
news video.

Russian tax authorities recently froze bank accounts of the NGO
Educated Media Foundation (EMF), formerly known as Internews Russia.

Additionally, EMF President Manana Aslmazyan faces criminal charges
for smuggling and may face others. NGO’s of all stripe and color
have been in the sights of Russian authorities, many being stripped
of legal grounds for operating in Russia.

Mrs Aslazyan’s most recent trials stem from the day last January
when she arrived in Moscow’s Sheremeto airport from Paris carrying
cash, discovered in a random inspection. Arriving in Russia carrying
more than US$10,000 requires disclosure. She had not and "higher"
authorities were called. Her explanation was not accepted and charges
were filed though she managed to return to Paris where she’s taken up
work with Internews Network. The authorities turned their attention
to EMF, functionally closing it down.

In May the Azerbaijan government ended cooperation with Reporters
Without Frontiers (RSF) after the press freedom NGO named President
Ilham Aliyev a "Press Freedom Predator."

Changing perspective just a bit (still "dog bites man"), this
story is also about money. State broadcasters in recent decades have
invited, with the full approval of their funding governments, foreign
broadcasters to provide their programs, offering air-time, sometimes
significant, on State channels. The reasoning is quite simple: cheap
(read: free) well-produced content. Some governments have gone so
far as to offer foreign broadcasters a frequency or two, very often
outside normal licensing rules. Again, cheap, well-produced content
fulfills a particular need.

The new media rules proposed in Armenia do not, precisely, forbid
foreign broadcasts on local frequencies. For local broadcasters to
air programs from foreign broadcasters there would be, in these times
of need, a fee. For RFE/RL that fee would be about $200 per hour. Do
the math: 4 hours a day, 365 days a year means more than $300,000,
sufficient for a personal assistant or five and that new BMW.

nia02072007.htm

http://followthemedia.com/conflictzones/arme

Murderer Of Turkish Journalist Hrant Dink To Stand Trial In Istanbul

MURDERER OF TURKISH JOURNALIST HRANT DINK TO STAND TRIAL IN ISTANBUL

Focus Information Agency, Bulgaria
July 1 2007

Istanbul. The criminal proceedings against Ogun Samast, the alleged
murderer of journalist Hrant Dink, start on Monday, the Turkish
media write.

Hrant Dink, who is of Armenian origin, was murdered on Jan. 19th in
Istanbul outside the editor’s office of the Agos newspaper. The trial
against Ogun Samast (17) and the other 12 defendants will be tried
behind closed doors, because Samast is under age. The trial will be
public once Samast turns 18.

The prosecutor’s office demanded a murder sentence of 18 to 24 years in
prison and an additional sentence of 8.5 to 18 years’ imprisonment for
being a member in a terrorist organization and illegal arms possession.

Armenia’s Radio Liberty Faces Uncertain Future

ARMENIA’S RADIO LIBERTY FACES UNCERTAIN FUTURE
Marianna Grigoryan

EurasiaNet, NY
July 2 2007

Dozens of demonstrators took to the streets in Yerevan on July 2
to protest draft legislation that they say could stifle free speech
ahead of Armenia’s 2008 presidential election. The legislation, if
passed, would enable officials to terminate Armenian broadcasts of
the US-funded Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, government critics
contend. Government supporters reject the outcry as misdirected.

On June 29, parliament voted by 79 to 16 in the first reading to
pass amendments that would ban the foreign media outlets from using
Armenian public radio and television airwaves. They would also impose
a 70,000 dram (about $205) fee for each rebroadcast via private radio
and television stations. There was one abstention from the vote. A
second and final reading of the amendments is scheduled for July 3.

Some representatives of local media outlets maintain that certain
senior government leaders have long distrusted Radio Liberty, and see
the legislation as a means of curtailing the station’s operations
in Armenia. During his traditional 2007 New Year reception for
journalists, President Robert Kocharian criticized the station for
allegedly spreading "unbalanced and negative information." Prime
Minister Serzh Sarkisian has expressed similar misgivings.

Yet senior members of the ruling Republican Party of Armenia maintain
that the amendments have nothing to do with RFE/RL and are not dictated
from "above."

"The government has no goal of closing Radio Liberty," said Republican
Party parliamentarian Armen Ashotian, using the popular name for
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. "If it had, it would have done so via
the Board of the Public Radio and Television Company, without so
much transparency."

While refraining from commenting on the amendments’ implications,
Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanian, voiced strong support for the
station. At a June 29 press conference, Oskanian told reporters that
"[i]t will hurt me if [Radio] Liberty stops going on air," according
to a report posted on the Panorama.am information portal. "Liberty
makes its contribution to democracy."

Parliamentary Speaker Tigran Tirosian has argued that the amendments
have as much to do with Radio Liberty as they do with this year’s
bad apricot harvest.

RFE/RL, however, is the only foreign broadcaster that uses Armenia’s
public radio frequencies for domestic broadcasts. The Prague-based
radio station’s Armenian service relies on the frequencies to broadcast
its news programs nationwide several times a day. If the amendments
pass, the radio station could have to pay approximately $250,000
to $300,000 per year to maintain the same broadcast schedule. Local
observers worry that the changes, if voted into law, may result in
a serious curtailment of the Armenian Service’s broadcasts and even
the Armenia-based station’s closure.

"These new laws clearly restrict access to a crucial independent
news source for many Armenians, and deal a serious blow to RFE/RL,
and to freedom of the media in general," RFE/RL President Jeffrey
Gedmin said in a June 30 statement.

Armenian Public Television and Radio Company (PTRC) Board Chairman
Alexan Harutiunian, told public television’s 360 Degrees program on
July 1 that the conflict boils down to financial issues. Radio Liberty
has failed to pay rebroadcast fees "since February," he claimed.

"If the goal was to shut down Radio Liberty, there was no need at
all for a law to do that," Harutiunian said. The alleged failure to
pay retransmission fees gave sufficient cause, the PTRC chairman
continued. The board refrained from such action "for different
reasons," he added, and "to avoid speculation."

Representatives of Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s Yerevan office
declined to comment.

Government critics see the legislation as connected to the upcoming
presidential election. A similar move was used against popular
private television station A1 Plus, which was shut down before the
last presidential elections in 2003, commented Suren Sureniants,
a member of the political council of the opposition Republic Party.

"[I]f the very first legislative initiative of the newly elected
National Assembly is aimed at the restriction of democracy, then
the idea of parliamentarianism is being discredited itself," said
Sureniants, who does not hold a seat in parliament. "For me it’s not
only a political, but also a moral issue."

"This is not to protect Radio Liberty, but against the violence
that reigns among us," commented Amalia Kostanian, board chairwoman
for the Center for Regional Development/Transparency International
Armenia, who took part in the July 2 demonstration. "Yesterday it was
A1 Plus, today Radio Liberty, tomorrow it will be non-governmental
organizations, newspapers."

Parliamentary Speaker Torosian dismissed criticism as "no more than
a provocation spread by deputies and journalists."

On June 28, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe’s
Representative on Freedom of the Media, Miklos Haraszti, condemned
the amendments as "incompatible with OSCE commitments to safeguard
pluralism and the free flow of information in the media." The New
York-based organization Human Rights Watch voiced similar worries,
saying that the amendments’ passage would undermine Armenia’s
"international commitments to freedom of expression and the media."

"As Armenia prepares for presidential elections in 2008, the world
will certainly be watching to see if the government respects freedom
of the media and other freedoms necessary for a free and fair vote,"
said Holly Cartner, Europe and Central Asia director at Human Rights
Watch. International observers said Armenia’s May 12 parliamentary
elections as the first vote in the country’s post-Soviet history
that largely met international standards. [For background see the
EurasiaNet special feature, Armenia: Vote 2007].

Editor’s Note: Marianna Grigoryan is a reporter for the independent
online ArmeniaNow weekly in Yerevan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Trial Opens In Turkey Over Editor’s Murder

TRIAL OPENS IN TURKEY OVER EDITOR’S MURDER

EuroNews, France
July 2 2007

Eighteen men have gone on trial in Istanbul in connection with the
murder of ethnic Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink. The trial
is throwing the spotlight on Turkey’s justice system and the issue
of freedom of speech. Dink had angered hardline nationalists over
comments about the killing of Armenians by the Ottoman Turks in 1915.

The Dink family’s lawyer says they continue to doubt whether the trial
can be fair. They also demand that "control over the legal system
be removed". Supporters of Dink have complained that death threats
against him were not taken seriously enough by the authorities. There
have also been accusations that people in positions of power may be
implicated in the killing, claims denied by officials.

Dink was shot outside his Istanbul office in January. A 17-year-old
man later confessed to the killing. As the trial opened against him
and his alleged accomplices, about a thousand protesters gathered
outside the court demanding a fair trial. Security was tight, with
about 500 extra police officers drafted in.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

OTTAWA: Dion’s Leadership Campaign Borrows Heavily From Little-Known

DION’S LEADERSHIP CAMPAIGN BORROWS HEAVILY FROM LITTLE-KNOWN INVESTOR
Juliet O’Neill, Ottawa Citizen

Ottawa Citizen
July 2 2007

Mamdouh Stefanos is the largest lender to Stephane Dion’s Liberal
leadership campaign.

OTTAWA – Nine days after the Liberals were defeated last year and
Paul Martin announced he was stepping aside as party leader, Stephane
Dion had a $200,000 loan from Montreal constituent Mamdouh Stefanos
in the bag.

"I volunteered," says Stefanos. "I told him, ‘Whatever you need,
you can have it from me.’"

Dion would borrow another $150,000 from him for his leadership
campaign, making Stefanos the biggest of eight lenders to what was
then a long-shot candidate to replace Martin.

His $350,000 was half of the total $705,000 loans that Dion arranged in
order to augment the $953,396 he raised in donations from individuals
for a campaign that ended up costing him nearly $1.7 million.

Most of Dion’s other lenders, including such high-profile businessmen
as Stephen Bronfman of Montreal, Rod Bryden of Ottawa, and Marc de
la Bruyere of Edmonton, are well known in Liberal circles and to the
local public.

But when Stefanos’s name was disclosed to Elections Canada, the Liberal
documents erroneously spelled it "Stephanos," and prompted a question
that lingers on political blog sites: "Who is Mamdouh Stephanos?"

The Egyptian-born investor is a 50-year-old family man with a low
profile and a generous streak. "I invest and when I win, I give,"
he said in an interview. "I keep what I need, that’s all."

Examples of his investments range from the 2005 purchase and sale
within a year of Quebec’s largest eyewear chain, Farhat Lunetterie,
and current investments in Montreal’s award-winning Green Cafe.

He has incorporated numbered companies that he says will emerge soon
with names and products, one company supplying biometric cards and
another commercializing a patent on an environmentally friendly engine.

Stefanos said his conversations with Dion have revolved around his
excitement over commercializing environment-related patents, rather
than politics.

"I follow politics but I don’t get involved," he said. Asked if he
is confident Dion can repay the loan within the time limit set by
law, Stefanos replied, "I think, yes." But he was not clear about
the deadline, asking if it is six months from now when, in fact,
it is a year.

He pulled ID from his wallet to prove the correct spelling of his name,
shrugging off an error that has happened before. When the Armenian
Diocese of Canada honoured him last year with a medal for a $400,000
donation to help build a new church in Montreal, he says the banner at
the ceremony also misspelled his name as Stephanos, an error that was
repeated in an Armenian church newsletter. That report of his "princely
donation" is one of the very few references to him on the Internet.

Stefanos’s donation to the Armenian diocese, even though he is
not Armenian and does not belong to that diocese, was made on a
similar basis as his contribution to Dion’s campaign: as a gesture
of friendship and faith in an individual.

His friend, Bishop Bagrat Galstanian, the Canadian head of the Armenian
diocese, describes Stefanos as a "modest, humble" man of faith.

Stefanos belongs to a Coptic Catholic church, Notre Dame d’Egypte,
where he was bestowed in 2004 with a high honour from the Pope. The
award, the order of St. Gregory the Great, is granted for exceptional
service to the church, community and country.

It is mostly at church-related functions in Dion’s
Saint-Laurent-Cartierville riding that Stefanos came to know the
party leader when he was an MP and cabinet minister in the former
governments of Martin and Jean Chretien before him.

Stefanos regards Dion as "honest and straightforward" – the two
qualities he requires in friendship.

"When he has a target, he follows slowly, slowly, and he gets his
target," Stefanos said of Dion. "That’s the way I do business. That’s
the way I have grown up in my family. I respect these kind of people."

While he says he is not involved in politics, he follows politics and
counts some politicians as friends – Dion and the late Montreal Senator
Shirley Maheu among them. Some friends wrote a letter to then-prime
minister Chretien, urging Stefanos be considered for the Senate, he
says with obvious delight. But, Stefanos adds, "I’m not dreaming to
be a senator and I’m not dreaming to be a garbage collector either,
you know."

Stefanos says Dion is independent and that’s one of the reasons he
believes he makes a good leader. "Nobody can go back to him and say,
‘I helped you to be prime minister, I helped you to be the leader of
the Liberal party.’"

Stefanos also shrugs off rumours he has close contact with one of
Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi’s sons, Saif al-Islam Gadhafi, an
artist who runs a charity and is considered heir apparent to the
presidency. Stefanos said he has never met the son personally but
has, along with other Canadian business people, attempted to foster
trade links with Libya after then-prime minister Martin’s visit to
Gadhafi in 2004. Martin was among a string of foreign leaders who
visited Libya when Gadhafi’s relations with the West thawed after he
renounced terrorism and his chemical weapons program.

Stefanos, who recently returned from a three-month trip to the Gulf
region, seeking out investment opportunities in such things as hotels
and condominiums, says he believes Canadian business is far too shy
about international trade and business opportunities.

He also believes Canada does not fully welcome the talents of
immigrants, a belief based on his personal experience. He came to
Canada in 1991 when his father in Cairo told him to get out of his
hair for six months.

He did not fall in love at once with Montreal, but he did fall in love
with a Quebecois woman and settled down, after the kind of rough start
that many immigrants face. Today, the couple have a 12-year-old son
"who loves being Canadian and Egyptian."

Stefanos’s Egyptian credentials as an architect were not accepted
in Canada when he arrived. The only way he could get a contract
was to get a Canadian architect firm to sign it and put him down as
an employee. He wanted it to be the other way around. He found it
insulting, unfair and frustrating.

"I said, ‘Are you crazy? My contact, my business, I give it to somebody
and work as an employee? Forget it. I’m doing my business alone.’ And
that’s what I did."

"Egypt is not the desert, Canada is," he says now, referring to the
bureaucratic barriers to immigrants with professional credentials.

Stefanos says his first business in Canada was a personnel placement
agency. Many investments later, he says his family lives a comfortable
life and has established a private foundation to channel funds to
community social causes and churches.

Not all his investments pay, of course. He was one of the people who
lost money when the National Press Club in Ottawa recently declared
bankruptcy. But he says he doesn’t know how much he spent or lost on
the club and it’s not important. He did come to Ottawa to collect some
press club memorabilia for his collection of Canadian history books,
artifacts and art.

He describes his loan to Dion’s campaign as an act of personal
confidence. "What if nobody believed in me one day, I was not going
to be as I am," he said.

Haigazian University’s 47th Commencement Ceremonies

Haigazian University
From: Mira Yardemian
Public Relations Director
Mexique Street, Kantari, Beirut

Haigazian University’s 47th Commencement Ceremonies

On Friday, June the 29th, 2006, Haigazian University graduated a record
number of 142 students, in the First Armenian Evangelical Church courtyard,
Beirut, in the presence of the President of the Supreme Council of the
Evangelical Community in Syria and Lebanon, the Armenian Ambassador to
Lebanon, H.E. Vahan Der Ghevontian, in addition to a number of former
deputies and ministers, clergy, university representatives, diplomats,
members of the Board of Trustees, parents and fellow students.

The ceremony started as Faculty and graduates marched through the crowd of
parents, relatives and friends in a remarkable processional march, followed
by the Lebanese National Anthem, and the Invocation by the Campus Minister,
Rev. Nishan Bakalian.

In his word of welcome, Haigazian University President, Rev. Dr. Paul
Haidostian considered the past year as academically fruitful. "Fruitful
years are not always easy years or joyful years. But when you end up with
good fruits, you know that you/they had the ability to stand firm against
the winds and storms, hail and heat of the surrounding environment,"
Haidostian said.

Haidostian also talked about the role universities should play, especially
during these hard days Lebanon is undergoing. "A university has a message.
Our university has a message of hope especially in the current conditions.
Our hope is rooted in our faith in God’s grace and immanence, which then
becomes real in the fruits of the whole educational experience, in human
interaction and creativity," Haidostian noted.

The guest speaker of the ceremony, Dr. Ahmad Al-Jammal, Director General of
the Ministry of Higher Education, tackled the issue of Higher Education in
this global world.

"Higher education plays an essential role in shaping the present, and the
future of nations, through building human expertise on all levels, be it
social, cultural, or technical", Al Jammal stated. The speaker considered
that in this global era of knowledge, universities play a vital role in
societies, that’s why their role is more and more important in becoming the
central place of openness, dialogue, creativity, and tolerance.

Afterwards, Registrar Roubina Artinian and Deans Fadi Asrawi and Arda
Ekmekji presented the graduates who received their degrees from President
Haidostian.

In their valedictorian addresses, Ani Nadjarian, speaking in English,
acknowledged how Haigazian University shaped her life and character,
transforming her into a more responsible and self-confident person.
"Haigazian granted us the gifts of knowledge, self-confidence, aspiration
and hope. Through its academic, social, and spiritual dimensions, it shaped
our personalities, transforming us into students who are ready to face the
challenges of life", Nadjarian said.

Whereas valedictorian Muhannad El Muhtar, speaking in Arabic, addressed his
fellow students saying, "Lebanon is in deep need of us. Let’s get armed with
what we’ve learned at Haigazian, and face all the difficulties of the future
by the power of our knowledge and faith in God".

After singing the Alma Mater, the ceremony was concluded with the
Benediction given by the President of the Union of the Armenian Evangelical
Churches in the Near East, Rev. Meguerdich Karageozian.

The class of 2007 threw their caps and marched out proudly with a unique
recessional, while celebratory balloons flew high in the skies.