Around 270 Diaspora Students Apply For Studying In Armenian State Un

AROUND 270 DIASPORA STUDENTS APPLY FOR STUDYING IN ARMENIAN STATE UNIVERSITIES

ARMENPRESS
Aug 11, 2008

YEREVAN, AUGUST 11, ARMENPRESS: About 270 Diaspora Armenian students
have applied to the Armenian Education Ministry to study in Armenian
state universities. An official from the ministry Amalya Kocharian
said that the majority of applicants are from Georgia, Russia, Iran,
Syria and CIS countries.

She said for the first time they have received applications from
two citizens of Mexico who want to study in Brusov State Linguistic
University and in Armenian State Architectural University.

This year state-funded places have been provided for Diaspora Armenian
applicants who want to major in Armenian, Culture, and Pedagogy.

The documents of the Diaspora Armenian students are being received
from July 1 to August 20. The interviews for entrance will be conducted
from August 22 to September 6.

Big Powers Urge Russia To Accept Truce

BIG POWERS URGE RUSSIA TO ACCEPT TRUCE
By Matthew Lee

Associated Press
Monday August 11 2008

WASHINGTON (AP) – The world’s seven largest economic powers on Monday
urged Russia to accept an immediate cease-fire with Georgia and agree
to mediation over the crisis as Russian forces continued advances
into Georgian territory.

With conditions deteriorating despite similar repeated calls, Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice and her colleagues from the Group of Seven
leading industrialized nations pledged their support for a negotiated
solution to the conflict that has been raging since Friday between
the former Soviet republic and Russia, the State Department said.

"We want to see the Russians stand down," deputy spokesman Robert
Wood told reporters. "What we’re calling on is for Russia to stop
its aggression."

President Bush has criticized the violence, calling it unacceptable
and that Russia’s response was disproportionate. Bush planned to
make a statement about Georgia on Monday evening at the White House,
shortly after arriving back in Washington from Beijing where he was
attending the Olympics, the White House said.

Ahead of that, Rice and the foreign ministers of Britain, Canada,
France, Germany, Italy and Japan spoke in a conference call, during
which they noted that Georgia had agreed to a cease-fire and wanted
to see Russia sign on immediately, he said, adding that the call was
one of more than 90 that Rice has made on the matter since Friday.

They called on Russia to respect Georgia’s borders and expressed deep
concern for civilian casualties that have occurred and noted that
Georgia had agreed to a cease-fire and said the ministers wanted to
see Russia sign on immediately as urgent consultations at the United
Nations and NATO were expected, according to Wood.

The seven ministers also backed a nascent mediation efforts led by
French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner, whose country currently
holds the rotating presidency of the European Union, and Finnish
Foreign Minister Alexander Stubb, whose country now holds the chair
of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, he said.

The Group of Seven, or G7, is often expanded into what is known as
the G8, a grouping that includes Russia, but Russia’s Foreign Minister
Sergey Lavrov was notably not included in the call.

Wood said the United States was hopeful that the U.N. Security Council
would pass a "strong" resolution on the fighting that called for an
end to attacks on both sides as well as mediation but prospects for
such a statement were dim given that Russia wields a veto on the
15-member body.

A U.S. senior U.S. diplomat, Matthew Bryza, is now in Tbilisi and
working with Georgian and European officials there on ways to calm
the situation.

Bryza plans to stay in Georgia for several days and doesn’t plan to
travel elsewhere, according to Wood.

Meanwhile, the State Department said it has evacuated more than 170
American citizens from Georgia. Wood said two convoys carrying about
170 private U.S. citizens along with a number of family members of
U.S. diplomats based in Georgia left Tbilisi on Sunday and Monday
for neighboring Armenia.

The U.S. Embassy in Georgia has distributed an initial contribution
of $250,000 in humanitarian relief to victims of the fighting and
is providing emergency equipment to people in need, although those
supplies will run out later Monday, the department said.

The developments came as swarms of Russian jets launched new raids
on Georgian territory outside the initial conflict point of South
Ossetia and Georgia faced the threat of a second front of fighting
with Russia demanding that it disarm troops near the breakaway province
of Abkhazia.

The Pentagon said it had finished flying some 2,000 Georgian troops
back home from Iraq on C-17 aircraft at Georgia’s request.

It said it had informed the Russians about the flights before they
began in order to avoid any mishaps, but Russian Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin harshly criticized the step, saying it would hamper
efforts to resolve the situation by reinforcing Georgian assets in a
"conflict zone."

Wood rejected the criticism, saying: "We’re not assisting in any
conflict."

Defense Department spokesman Bryan Whitman said the U.S. flew the
Georgians out of Iraq as part of a prior agreement that transport
would be provided in case of an emergency.

Pentagon officials said Monday that U.S. military was assessing the
fighting every day to determine whether less than 100 U.S. trainers
should be pulled out of the country.

There had been about 130 trainers, including a few dozen civilian
contractors, but the civilians had been scheduled to rotate out of
the country and did so over the weekend, Whitman said. The remaining
uniformed trainers were moved over the weekend to what officials
believe is a safer location, he said.

Whitman said Defense Secretary Robert Gates had spoken in the last few
days to both his Georgian and Russian counterparts, but he declined to
say what they discussed. He said Gates also spoke twice to Georgia’s
president – both times about U.S. help in getting the Georgian troops
back to their country.

The conflict began there on Thursday when Georgia tried to regain
control of the breakaway region. The United States recognizes it
as part of Georgia but it has been under de facto Russian control
for years.

Member Of NKR Parliament: ‘An Attempt Of Forceful Resolving Of Any C

MEMBER OF NKR PARLIAMENT: ‘AN ATTEMPT OF FORCEFUL RESOLVING OF ANY CONFLICT IS DOOMED TO FAILURE’

arminfo
2008-08-11 16:37:00

ArmInfo. ‘Hard situation appeared in the south Caucasus region
because of an attempt of the Georgian authorities to settle the
south Osetia conflict by means of force. Today one can say the
attempt failed. After such events one san say that Georgia itself
and its negotiating positions have not become stronger than before
this adventure. One should conclude that an attempt of forceful
settlement of any conflict is doomed to fail’, – chairman of the
permanent parliamentary commission on foreign relations of the NKR
parliament Vahram Atanesyan said at today’s press-conference, as
ArmInfo correspondent reported from Stepanakert.

He also added that "Georgia’s such adventure was supported by
Azerbaijan".

"Several Azerbaijani politicians said that if Georgia gains success
in South Osetia, in that case the arguments of the intermediaries to
settle the Karabakh conflict peacefully will be led to minimum and
Azerbaijan will get an opportunity to repeat Georgia’s experience. But
Georgia fails, this will prove once again that conflicts should be
settled only by means of talks ensuring equality of the parties and
taking their interests into account.

There is no other way for the conflicts settlement in the world’,
– Atanesyan said. He welcomed ‘harsh but adequate position of the
Russian political leadership’. He also said that by such its actions
Georgia reduced an opportunity of its joining NATO. ‘I don’t think
that NATO is interested in worsening of relations with Russia and
South Caucasus states>, – member of the NKR parliament said.

Vahram Atanessyan: Mediators Must Be Honest With Conflicting Parties

VAHRAM ATANESSYAN: MEDIATORS MUST BE HONEST WITH CONFLICTING PARTIES

arminfo
2008-08-11 12:59:00

ArmInfo. Nagorno-Karabakh Republic is ready to join in the negotiating
process and to undertake its share of responsibility for peace,
stability and further cooperation between the two nations, the
chairman of the Standing Committee on Foreign Relations of the National
Assembly of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Vahram Atanessyan said during
a press-conference today.

Atanessyan said that both the conflicting parties and the mediators
believed that the last meeting of the foreign ministers of Armenia and
Azerbaijan was constructive. He pointed out that, unlike the restrained
joint statement by the OSCE MG co-chairs, in an interview to Interfax
the US co-chair Matthew Bryza expressed his personal opinion, which has
received wide response in Azerbaijan, Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh. In
that interview Bryza said that Nagorno-Karabakh would decide itself
if to be part of Azerbaijan or to be independent. But in his later
interview to the BBC office in Azerbaijan he tried to correct his
earlier statement by means of vague diplomatic wordings.

Atanessyn believes that the mediators must be honest with the
conflicting parties and must inform the public about the proposals
that are presently on the negotiating table. "Any proposals coming
from the internal political situation in one of the conflicting
states are inadmissible. When giving an interview to BBC office
in Baku Bryza was trying to avoid escalating the internal political
situation in Azerbaijan before the forthcoming presidential election,"
Atannessyan said.

It may seem that Nagorno-Karabakh has already given its consent to
some future referendum. But in fact it has not.

NKR has repeatedly said that it will show interest in elimination of
the consequences of the armed stage of the Nagorno Karabakh-Azeri
conflict if Azerbaijan shows interest in recognition of
Nagorno-Karabakh’s independence.

Since the establishment of cease-fire in 1994 Nagorno-Karabakh
has been a full party to the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and is
responsible for the balance of forces in the region. This balance
cannot be changed without consideration of the national interests of
Nagorno-Karabakh. And the national priority of NKR is international
recognition of its de facto independence. All other issues can be
discussed in this context only.

Estonian Embassy In Georgia Evacuated Estonian And Finnish Citizens

ESTONIAN EMBASSY IN GEORGIA EVACUATED ESTONIAN AND FINNISH CITIZENS TO ARMENIA

arminfo
2008-08-11 12:06:00

ArmInfo. Estonian Embassy in Georgia has evacuated Estonian and
Finnish citizens to Armenia. As Estonian Foreign Ministry reported,
at present more than 40 citizens of Estonia and 4 citizens of Finland
are in Yerevan, capital city of Armenia, waiting for departure home.

Finnish Foreign ministry does not have strict information about the
number of its citizens in Georgia. As Finnish radio reported there
are still two citizens of Finland in Georgia. To recall, on Sunday
Foreign Ministry of Finland disseminated a challenge to all its
citizens to leave Georgia immediately.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Australia: Arshak Galstaun Funeral Notice

HAMAZKAINE ARSHAK & SOPHIE GALSTAUN COLLEGE
5 Chiltern Road, Ingleside NSW 2101, Australia
Tel: 9970 6984 – Fax: (02) 9970 6778
Email: [email protected] – Web:

HASG Logo NEW.png

11 August 2008
Funeral Notice: Arshak Catchatoor Galstaun AM

The Australian Armenian community’s most noted philanthropist, tireless
community advocate, and former World War II veteran, Mr Arshak Catchatoor
Galstaun sadly passed away on the morning of Saturday, 9 August 2008.

Mr & Mrs Galstaun, benefactors of the Hamazkaine Arshak & Sophie Galstaun
College, helped establish the College in 1986.

In recognition of his services to the Armenian Community in Australia, the
Australian government in June 2002 honoured Mr Galstaun in its Queen’s
Birthday Honours list by making him a Member of the Order of Australia.

Mr Galstaun was born on 16 February 1912 in Iran in the region of
Charmahal’s Livasan village. He was the eldest of six children having three
brothers and two sisters as his siblings. He studied at the Armenian College
and Philanthropic Academy in Calcutta – India, as a boarder.

Following his graduation from the Armenian College, Mr Galstaun undertook
studies at St. Xavier’s University as the recipient of a scholarship from
the Armenian Church in India and graduated with honours in literature.

In 1937 he sought his fortunes in Singapore and worked in the Edgar Import
Export Company. With the onset of World War II, Mr Galstaun joined the
Volunteer Corps in Singapore and suffered injuries during the bombing of
Singapore by the Japanese. With the fall of Singapore to the Japanese
forces in 1942, Mr Galstaun was taken prisoner and served as a prisoner of
war until his release in 1945.

In 1957, Mr Galstaun established his own firm, expanding his business to
include trade in Southeast Asia, Europe and Oceania. He succeeded in
becoming one of the biggest merchants of crocodile skin products in the
world. Mr Galstaun established a branch of his business in Sydney and in
1982 decided to move permanently to Australia with his wife.

Mr Galstaun was also instrumental in the establishment of the
Austral-Armenian Centre in Frenchs Forest which to date bears his name.

Mr Galstaun is survived by his wife of more than fifty years, Sophie, and
remembered and honoured by students of the Hamazkaine Arshak and Sophie
Galstaun College and the Australian community.

Funeral service details are as follows:

Date: Wednesday, 13th August 2008
Venue: Armenian Apostolic Church, 10 Macquarie Street, Chatswood
Time: 10am

The funeral service will be followed by the burial service at Macquarie Park
cemetery, Delhi Rd, North Ryde, and the wake which will take place at the
Nalbandian Hall, Hamazkaine Arshak and Sophie Galstaun College, 5 Chiltern
Rd, Ingleside.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.hasg.nsw.edu.au

Raffi K. Hovannisian’s Keynote Address at Fifth Heritage Congress

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

Raffi K. Hovannisian’s Keynote Address [*]

Heritage Party Fifth Congress

11 July 2008, Yerevan

"The princes shall unite with thieves, bandits, and plunderers; the judges
will be corrupted and render unfair judgment; the monks will abandon their
deserts and sanctuaries, and they will engage in worldly affairs: The
princes, too, likewise infected with that great and foul vice, will turn
impudent and will travel along the wrong path. Leaving aside the obligation
to keep their homes in good stead and the worries of completing a job
successfully, they will become perennial drunkards because they will love
and desire that evil and foul disease: They will honor the traitors and
thieves, will unjustly seize the laborer’s property and will pass merciless
judgment against them."

Matteos Urhayetsi who, in his work Chronicle, showcases these jewels–which
were written between 1023 and 1030 by Hovhannes Vartapet Kozern–continues:
"That was the end of the land of the Armenians: When the good times come,
when God in later times gives the believers that which he has promised,
bestows upon them blissful days, their contemporaries will record and leave
as memory for future generations for them to know that, behold, this is the
fruit of the sins of our fathers which were sown and reaped sevenfold."

Distinguished compatriots, Mr. President, Mr. Prime Minister, ladies and
gentlemen:

Our national heritage truly is a mixed, bittersweet totality. This legacy is
composed of great dreams, an ancient civilization, and a rich culture which
has nourished the world, and it includes also a lost Fatherland, inadequacy
and inability in the governance of our own state, and the smallness of
Armenia–measured geographically, politically, and in every other sense.

Nevertheless, the important issue right here and right now is our future; it
is the Armenia which we will hand down to the coming generations. This
Armenia imperatively must be founded on the registration of and aspiration
for truth, which itself requires political valor, mastery of rights, and
moral determination.

When speaking about the foundations and prospects of the Republic, we must
face the truth–at least from time to time during congresses and
meetings–and take a very detached, stern, and complete look into the
political mirror.

We always have deviated from the nation’s God-given road to democracy and
the rule of law. And, in modern times, we have done so especially since
1995. These disgraceful deviations further deepened and became systematic in
1998, and specifically after the unprecedented and horrendous national
tragedy of October 27, 1999. The details are known to everyone, whether
engraved deep in our spirit, in our consciousness, or in their permanent
reflection on the everyday life of each true Armenian.

The track record of the Heritage Party–which is a young and
newly-established collective force–leads to a civic proposal replete with
struggle, ascent and descent, forged with ebbs and flows. As you may
recollect, the Third Congress was convened in May 2005–within this very
hall and under these historic arches where the independence of Armenia was
declared. But after the fraudulent referendum for a "new and improved"
Constitution, this place became a forbidden fruit for us and many others.

This was followed by never-ending harassment and already-familiar pressures,
even the inspection of my children at the national airport, where customs
officials tried to find state secrets inside their Armenian History
textbooks and other school folders. And this parade of cowardice and
unlawful actions was crowned with the forcible lockdown of Heritage’s
headquarters, the theft of information from the computer database at the
headquarters, the organized persecution of the party’s members and
supporters, the investigations, and the summons of the most modest of
contributors, likely landlords, and even simple friends to the agencies of
the national security service and office of the prosecutor general for
questioning and "guidance."

Our Fourth Congress was held in August 2006 at the auditorium of the Writers’
Union of Armenia. We therefore are forever indebted to our writers, who gave
us "shelter" at a time when–in fulfillment of countless administrative
directives—we formally were a persecuted political party. But not in the
Soviet Union or Turan; in our own country–Armenia.

Even so, we then vowed together that our internal fire of faith and
fatherland is inextinguishable and our spirit of struggle for progress,
unbreakable. You remember all too well that it was with a long-standing
media blockade and a locked-down headquarters that last year we ventured
into the next uneven and unjust ordeal. It was the parliamentary elections
and, after making a call for unity–which, sadly, was not answered–we
nonetheless participated in these elections and triumphed. Despite unequal
campaign opportunities and unfair election results, we entered the National
Assembly and continued our quest there in the name of the people, together
with our fellow citizens, in pursuit of the protection of each and every
fundamental human right.

Then elections again, this time presidential. Not having our own candidate,
we made yet another strategic appeal for unity, which yet again was poorly
grasped. Then came the infamous February 19, with its nationwide coercions,
clearly improper methods of political battle, and the resulting affront on
our republican legitimacy. But February 19 came also with the renaissance of
the people’s spirit, a civic consciousness, and an important public
empowerment.

During this Congress we welcome not only the Armenian Republic’s Prime
Minister but also Armenia’s first President Levon Ter-Petrosyan, former
presidential candidate Arman Melikyan, and party leaders–from the ruling
administration and the opposition alike–who have contributed to the nation’s
recognition of the long-awaited mastery of its own rights.

But the series of regrettable events is not over yet. Inexcusably we allowed
the arrival of the national tragedy of March 1-2 when, against the
background of essentially illegal and imaginary foundations for declaring a
state of emergency, the authorities carried out a premeditated crackdown
against peaceful citizens and demonstrators who were exercising their
constitutional rights, and, in actual fact, an anti-liberty operation was
carried out at Liberty Square. Slaughter ensued as the heart of Armenia’s
capital became a stage for the murder of Armenian by Armenian–another great
calamity indeed. Not one mastermind, perpetrator, or even suspect has been
exposed to date and instead statements have been issued to the effect that
the people themselves opened fire on the police. Heritage, again true to its
essence, called for unity, designed programs for discourse and
understanding, and initiated invitations for dialogue and conciliation which
to this day remain unanswered. All these measures carried the purpose of
achieving justice through discovery of the plain truth.

Fellow countrymen, Heritage members and supporters, Armenian citizens,
friends:

I am proud of each and every one of you, both absent and present here today.
I am proud of our executive board, which today will submit to you its
plenipotentiary powers, the parameters of its public service, and the
accounting of its activities. I am proud of our parliament members, who
never sought a secure corner, did not desert the cause, and instead insisted
on staying upon the front lines–at that place where they found under threat
the interests of the Armenian people and the citizen of the Republic, and
thus their task of fulfilling his rights, hopes, and beliefs. They strived,
and will continue to strive, to guarantee the rule of law and all
rights–liberty, life, speech, assembly, clean air, proprietorship, and
dignity–in our native land. Many stood by us on the front line; they are
the salt of this earth, its backbone, and its tomorrow.

And today in the presence of two individuals, I would like to pay my
respects to the national heritage: Parandzem Mairik, a hero’s mother who at
all times has stood firmly in her fallen son’s living memory, and, in the
face of his life partner Grizelda, the incomparable and immortal Rafael
Ghazarian–the pioneer, the intellectual, the soldier, and the general–who
is with us always.

Dear citizens:

The March 1 tragedy really stands as a crucial divide in modern Armenian
history. Those who conceived, ordered and executed the official crackdown,
as well as the ensuing state of emergency, have their share of
responsibility in the deepening of illegitimacy and distrust in the country.
The truth, and nothing but the truth, will eliminate the growing abyss and
allow Armenia and the Armenians to advance toward national, democratic, and
civil horizons.

>From the very beginning, we have wished the best for the parliament’s ad hoc
committee, and we have done everything to ensure that it functions and earns
its portion of public confidence. To that end we have we have sought to
clarify both the reaches and depths of its authority, and also the scope of
its power and responsibility. The new board will make its decision with
respect to this matter, but you know very well that Heritage had nominated,
as its delegates to the committee, two fellow MPs–Miasnik Malkhasian and
Sasun Mikaelian–who, because of political directives, are in prison, whose
legal status is innocent, and whose participation would have brought a
comprehensiveness of substance and process to the activities of the
aforesaid committee.

If this committee is to carry out its extremely important mission, it is
essential that it invite all possible witnesses, experts, and
officials–both former and current. As I already have urged, the committee
must invite Armenia’s three presidents, and specifically the second
president together with his security chief and senior staff, to offer their
full testimony.

In this connection, there is a burning question which followed me to
Strasbourg: Is it possible to attain a high level of faith in the National
Assembly’s ad hoc committee when the parliament itself is an accomplice to
the March 1 tragedy and the ensuing events? The committee, too, should ask
that question of itself. The alarming concern sounded by this query was one
of the underpinnings of our position at Strasbourg. Let us recollect that
while on October 27 it was the National Assembly which received the coup d’etat,
today it is complicit in and responsible for the crime against our people.

I do not wish to predict or prejudice this process at all, but some
observers might indeed reach the conclusion that those who forcibly locked
down and broke into Heritage headquarters, those who harassed you, our
opposition partners and rank-and-file citizens alike, those who carried out
illicit surveillance through wiretap and other cowardly means, and those who
searched our children are the same people who gave the order for, and
executed, the March 1 tragedy.

Yes, it is time to forge the promise of unity. The bell has tolled, but we
will accomplish that unity solely by way of the truth. And we are very proud
that we have in our country a true bearer of the fight for truth, dignity,
and human rights, someone who is free of any political affiliation and
partisanship. I welcome Ombudsman Armen Harutiunian, who is among us today.

Fellow countrymen:

Many things have been said with respect to our push for democracy, for the
importance of instituting a universal system of values so as to overcome the
flaws and internal obstacles which have a directly adverse effect on Armenia’s
foreign policy, state interests, the Artsakh question, and on the entire
constitution of our national security. I repeat: Notwithstanding the
injustice of the parliamentary elections and a public consensus over the
farce that was their official result, Heritage adopted–at the National
Assembly, on the streets, in prisons, at police stations, and elsewhere–a
substantive approach flowing from the precept of participatory democracy. At
the parliament, it raised issues concerning the socioeconomic, scientific,
and educational domains, fought for the protection of human rights, and also
launched initiatives and draft legislation with respect to good governance,
separation of powers, and other national priorities.

Having accurately tracked the momentum and trajectory of international
developments in respect of the Kosovo issue, Heritage presented to the
National Assembly a draft law formally to recognize the Mountainous Karabagh
Republic (MKR). But after continual delays and a variety of self-interested,
partisan, and small-spirited statements, the parliament was too poor even to
approve the draft law for inclusion in its official agenda so that Armenia,
alone in this world as Artsakh’s guardian, could have gained yet another
opportunity to declare–through discourse with the body politic,
consideration of the citizens’ views, and in conversation with national
interests–that yes, MKR deserves to be recognized as a free, decolonized,
self-determined, and sovereign state.

We are not searching for the guilty; everyone is entitled to his opinion. We
also can–and do–take blows and insinuations, and criticisms, too, even
though we choose not to honor polemical, parochial, insidious, and
dishonorable allegations with our right of reply. The real issue here is not
Heritage, but rather the future of the Armenian people. If you yourselves
follow up on this, you will see how the events unfolding in the
international arena gradually are transforming to the detriment of Artsakh.

A one-sided, anti-historic, and juridically unfounded document was adopted
by the United Nations General Assembly with the intention of annexing
Artsakh and our ancestral homelands to Azerbaijan. This was followed by the
infamous retreats at the Council of Europe, where the UN document was put
into circulation in its chambers as well. Subsequently, the Parliamentary
Assembly of the Council of Europe’s (PACE) President Lluis Maria de Puig
went to Baku. And there he, my colleague and friend, who was intentionally
misinformed of our issues, apparently allowed himself several baseless
expressions–which were unworthy of the Council of Europe, its standards and
values, its President and its members–and for them we definitely must
receive an explanation.

Yet this was not the end of the long chain. The president of the Russian
Federation, Armenia’s strategic ally, went to Baku and signed an accord of
mutual commitment, interstate friendship, and strategic partnership. And it
was here once again that the alarm sounded and we realized that, among the
issues of our friends, adversaries, and neighbors, we also have our own
sovereign foundations and the imperative of securing our own national
dignity and vital interests through unselfish sacrifice and enduring
dedication. What does this mean? Armenia’s strategic partner goes to Baku
and officializes commitments which should have been part of a treaty signed
with Armenia, whereby our boundaries and territorial integrity would be duly
underscored based on current realities and under international law. This is
unbecoming of an ally, of a mediating country from the OSCE, and, sadly, of
a good historic friend.

National dignity is an eternal value and we cannot allow anyone, from within
or abroad, to play games with that dignity. We will demand explanations, we
will see to it that the positions are reviewed and reversed. We will
attempt to do our share in the historic and contemporary mission of bridging
the East and the West. We also will pursue the imperative of improving
Iran-US relations, which stems from our interests. But this can be effective
solely in the case when we ourselves are inherently legitimate and endowed
with a democratic and united public mandate that is inalienable, strong, and
sourced in right.

And as we contemplate the lessons of freedom and honor, I am most pleased
that Zhirair Sefilian, the devoted soldier of Artsakh’s quest for liberty
and self-defense, has finally returned to us and is now sitting among our
party faithful.

Alongside our sovereign tricolor, the Heritage Party certainly can and will
raise the flag of the European Union. This priority direction is
underscored in the platforms and charters of Heritage and several other
parties. After all, our civilization, which was born in the Armenian
Plateau, is one of the ancient springs of European culture. This, however,
can come true only if Europe honors its own values and criteria.

Armenia and Europe must deserve one another. Indeed, this challenge relates
primarily to the assessment of Armenia’s domestic conduct, its democratic
present and future, and its dilemma of choice between playing a leading role
in the region and becoming alienated far beyond. But in order to make a
comprehensive analysis, we must expect from Europe that it too remain true
to its own principles and benchmarks and, when it speaks about the rule of
law, it makes sure that this law is applied evenly, everywhere, and in all
domains–protection of human rights, institution of democracy, prevention
and condemnation of genocides, recognition of newly independent states, and
preservation of cultural heritage. And our tortuous history as witness, this
has to be done without excuses and justifications and without geopolitical
predilections or agendas.

Yes, Azerbaijan will come to answer for its crime committed in broad
daylight against Armenian and hence European cultural heritage. I am
speaking about the destruction of the medieval Armenian cross-stones of
Jugha, Nakhichevan. And they are even bold enough to deny the Council of
Europe’s official rapporteur access to that site where, during the term of
its membership, a member-state of the Council carried out an official crime
against fundamental European values. Azerbaijan likewise will ultimately
accept–perhaps not openly, but at least in the deep within–not that it
lost Artsakh, but rather that it never had it in the first place. Yes, we
agree to dialogue and pacific resolution of conflict through meaningful
negotiations of various kinds. However, Azerbaijan must be the first among
the world to understand that in the late Soviet expanse, the fall of the
Berlin Wall was Artsakh’s fight for freedom as they both shared the
blood-stained standard of identity, unity, and peace.

In constant reminder of the anguish of anti-Semitism, it behooves all humans
to join in that movement and say "no" to anti-Semitism and to all xenophobia
in its every form and everywhere. But the aggressively discriminatory, often
violent conduct against Armenians likewise must be impermissible for all,
and Azerbaijan similarly will be held accountable for its anti-Armenian
policy which in recent times has deepened further and turned epidemic.

We wish all the best to Turkey, our important neighbor, because on its road
to Europe it has a broad and deep divide to bridge; it is the most terrible
abyss of its modern-day history. It is the fact that the Republic of Turkey,
which aspires for Europe, was founded not only on the genocidal exclusion of
the Armenian people but on the destruction of its ancestral heartland known
as the cradle of civilization. Therefore, it is necessary that not we, nor
Europe, but rather Turkey itself follow the example of post-war Germany and
ponder the future of European Turkey, what it must do to normalize relations
with Armenia, to accept and teach about the Great Armenian Dispossession, to
restore and return the Armenian patrimony, and to resolve all divisive
issues by means of direct and good-faith discussions. From Strasbourg to
Washington and from Berlin to Ankara, it must be careful when using the word
"occupation." Because one day someone might ask Turkey, or its delegates,
how many homelands were occupied to create today’s Turkish republic.

And, in this light, there is a lot of talk these days about committees and
boundaries. All Armenian administrations very wisely have pursued the policy
which posits that Armenia is prepared to establish relations with Turkey
without any preconditions. This notwithstanding, Armenia’s border with
Turkey is not merely closed. The unilaterally imposed closure of the
frontier in itself constitutes an illegal blockade, an act of enmity, which
violates not only international law but also the very treaties of Moscow and
Kars on which Turkey depends to delimit its eastern boundary. Tread with
caution. These are all things to bear in mind, and we again wish them well.

Georgia also has unfulfilled obligations with respect to the identity,
security, and integrity of Javakhk and its Armenian majority, and also in
connection with various properties belonging to the Armenian Church and
minority rights in general. Effectively to resolve these matters, however,
we need to deliver a society and authority which are democratically united
and therefore capable of carrying through our collective quest in pursuit of
our vital national interests.

And it should never be like what took place in Strasbourg recently when,
during the PACE discussions of the resolutions on Azerbaijan and Armenia,
our state’s entire administrative, intellectual, budgetary, and
organizational resources were directed toward covering up our democratic
shortfalls and saving the face of the ruling administration. And all this
was done at the expense of the national interest of the Armenian people and
the Republic of Armenia.

And what are we doing in the meantime? We have political prisoners and
prolonged detentions of political figures, members of parliament,
intellectuals, and ordinary citizens including women. President, prime
minister, prosecutor general, security chief: Our downfall starts right
here. Shame on us! Our downfall is right here.

There abides an extraordinary imperative, and an urgent need, to surmount
this crisis of lawlessness and public distrust through an essential
transformation of the political paradigm. Yes, the judicial system in our
country must be independent, but not just with words, interviews, and
interventions. Its independence must be evidenced by the deeds of the
president, and not by continually promoting those officials who, in their
recent years, have abused, mocked, and violated the independence of that
judicial system.

It is only by way of the rule of law and by holding the "princes"
accountable that we will be able to wage an anti-trust war and liberate the
national economy so that an impetus can be given to industry and to small
and mid-sized entrepreneurship together with relevant tax incentives. At the
same time we must protect the environment, our clean air and surrounding
nature, and thus guard this last sliver of God-given Armenia against the
likes of the Teghut mining project.

Certainly the rule of law, certainly a campaign against corruption are in
order. But this is not the Soviet Union; it is the independent Republic of
Armenia. And everyone must come to understand that corruption is not a mere
giving and taking of bribes. Corruption is also the conflict of interest and
the abuse of official power for private gain. Let them speak–and they must
speak–and we welcome it, but at the same time they should start that fight
from the top down. Everyone must commence with himself, his brothers,
family, staff, and only then will we see how Armenia turns into a lawful and
rightful democratic country.

To view corruption it might prove necessary first and foremost to visit
Yerevan’s Northern Avenue, the new city center which was born of injustice
but now hosts the aspiration for freedom. And an inventory must be made of
the properties there which belong not only to the officers of the Service
for Mandatory Execution of Judicial Acts but also to current and former
high-ranking officials who have homes, offices, stores, and foundations on
that site. At what cost, and on what contractual and legal grounds, did
those buildings rise and were those properties allotted therein?

This is why Heritage and other associations that work with us demanded long
ago the establishment of a special prosecutor’s institution in Armenia, as
well as constitutional and legislative amendments which will enable the
special prosecutor to apply the law with an independent authority, pursuant
to the letter and spirit of the law, and from the highest to the lowest–in
the very same prosecutor’s office, the national security service, the
government, the presidential palace–among opposition circles, and
everywhere and without any exceptions.

Furthermore, the opposition and NGOs must oversee the activities of the
audit chamber and other institutions of public oversight. And both inside
and outside the parliament, under the law and in real life, the opposition
must be empowered fully to carry out its constitutional and national
responsibility to act as restraint, check, and balance.

Dear compatriots:

We are in immediate and urgent need of that all-inclusive breakthrough
anchored in real discourse, national solidarity, and democratic
transformation. Otherwise, only new elections will be able to resolve the
crucible of national crisis and to heal the pain and trauma of tragedy.

The Heritage party’s at once regular and extraordinary challenge is to
remain as ever in the undivided service of its country and people, without
necessarily aspiring to platforms, stages, offices, rewards, or blessings.
And it is up to us, and we are so obliged, to demonstrate from this very
moment that Heritage does not turn on a one-man pivot and that it has
matured to become a democratic, civic, and Charentsian unity of collective
force. We now set foot upon the most responsible, accountable, and difficult
period in our test of Heritage’s selfless devotion, committed leadership,
conscientious service, and institutional performance. And so let us be
worthy of our heritage, however bitter or sweet.

In the name of faith and fatherland, and bringing life to Siamanto’s
exhortation, the end of the age-old Armenian trek is victory, for one and
for all, for citizen and nation, and for the twin peaks of our eternity.
Said Charents: "Like the path to unattainable glory.:"

* Unofficial Translation

www.heritage.am

UAF’s 148th Airlift Delivers $5 Million of Aid to Armenia

UNITED ARMENIAN FUND

1101 N. Pacific Avenue # 204
Glendale, CA 91202
Tel: 818.241.8900
Fax: 818.241.6900

For Immediate Release

August 9, 2008

UAF’s 148th Airlift Delivers
$5 Million of Aid to Armenia
Glendale, CA – The United Armenian Fund’s 148th airlift arrived in Yerevan
on August 9, delivering $5 million of humanitarian assistance.
The UAF itself collected over $4 million of medicines and medical supplies
for this flight, donated by AmeriCares ($2.7 million); Eli Lilly & Co. ($1.4
million); the Catholic Medical Mission Board ($110,000) and Health Partners
International of Canada ($25,000).
Other organizations which contributed goods for this airlift were: Armenian
American Medical Society of CA ($117,000); Dr. Stephen Kashian ($76,000);
the Armenian EyeCare project ($72,000); Society for Orphaned Armenian Relief
($52,000); Armenian International Ophthalmic Association ($51,000) and
Armenian Missionary Association of America ($45,000).
Also contributing supplies to this airlift were: Armenian Relief Society
($27,000); Michael Derboghosian/Boston Medical Center ($21,000); Hershey
Medical Center ($20,000) and UCLA Medical Center/Salpy Akaragian ($11,000).
Since its inception in 1989, the UAF has sent $534 million of humanitarian
assistance to Armenia on board 148 airlifts and 1,598 sea containers.
The UAF is the collective effort of the Armenian Assembly of America,
Armenian General Benevolent Union, Armenian Missionary Association of
America, Armenian Relief Society, Diocese of the Armenian Church of America,
Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America and The Lincy
Foundation.
For more information, contact the UAF office at 1101 North Pacific Avenue,
Suite 204, Glendale, CA 91202 or call (818) 241-8900.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Armenian Weekly; August 2, 2008; AYF Section

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

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 30; August 2, 2008

AYF Section:

1. The Music of the Movement
An Interview with ‘Heghapokhagan’ Singer Kristapor Arabian

2. This isn’t a Trip to the Marriott!
By Taleen Mekhdjavakian

***

1. The Music of the Movement
An Interview with ‘Heghapokhagan’ Singer Kristapor Arabian

Kristapor Arabian is an active member of the Washington "Ani" AYF. Since the
age of eight, he has had a passion for singing heghapokhagan (Armenian
patriotic) songs and, today, is pursuing his ambition to perform and sing on
a professional level. We took a moment to sit down with Arabian and ask him
about his music and involvement in the community.

A.W.-What motivated you to seriously pursue singing heghapokhagan songs?

K.A.-What motivated me was all the stories I had heard while growing up
about the Lebanese Civil War and the involvement of my grandfather, Simon
Marsoubian, and my uncle, Hagop Marsoubian (Pasha), in the defense of the
Armenian community in Beirut. I was inspired by the examples of heroism they
set and, as a result, became drawn to songs about the Armenian revolutionary
movement.

I also saw how heghapokhagan songs and the stories that they tell us were
not capturing a lot of the younger generation like they used to. If
anything, I would love to get the message of these songs out to the youth
more prominently.

A.W. -What do you think it is about patriotic or revolutionary music
specifically that has captivated your attention and interest?

K.A.-Well, of course, in the beginning I didn’t know much about the true
meaning of these songs, but as time went on I got more and more interested
in them. I began to actually study the music. I would sit down and read the
song as if it was a book and figure out the story. If I needed an Armenian
dictionary, it was always beside me just in case there were any words I
didn’t understand.

But those stories and the way they are told throughout the song-detail by
detail-is what captivated my attention and interest. The fact is that these
songs have profound meaning and, if you listen closely, there is always a
certain message being sent out in every song.

A.W.-Which singers have influenced you the most?

K.A.-Karnig Sarkissian has had the biggest impact on my singing and is
definitely the one who has influenced me the most. When you listen to Unger
Karnig, I just think there is something beautiful there. The way the words
come out, the way they are sung, the way he makes you feel the pain and the
sadness that he is expressing while singing patriotic-revolutionary songs.
Actually, I would love to personally meet with him one day soon and just
take in some of his ideas and advice.

A.W.-When was the first time you performed in public? Can you tell us about
that experience and how it felt?

K.A.-I was at a pretty big family get-together and I was initially very shy.
It was my first time so the only thing that was going through my mind was,
"Are they going to like my voice? "What if they don’t like it?" I drank
lemon juice and water all day thinking it would do something.

When I actually started singing, the feeling I got was a whole new
experience for me. I began feeling the music; I was feeling the pain and
sadness that our ancestors had felt during all that they had gone through.
Since then, that’s the only thing I feel when I sing. When you’re in that
state, there is nothing more you can do but sing from your heart.

A.W.-What is your favorite heghapokhagan song?

K.A.-My favorite song is "Trcheyi Mdkov Doun," also known as "Zinvori Mor
Yerke." The reason is because when a human being is born, the first thing
that they notice is their mother. I always think about the mothers of those
who gave their lives, such as the Lisbon 5, for example. If our martyrs were
to come down from heaven, what would be the first thing they would want to
do? I would think it would be to see their mother because to me there is
nothing in this world that has as much value as one’s relationship with a
mother. Yes, a father has his own place in a child’s heart too, but the bond
one has with a mother is something special and it’s reflected in songs like
"Zinvori Mor Yerke."

A.W.-Obviously, for the AYF and ARF, heghapokhagan songs are an important
part of our organizational culture and history. How do you see the
relationship between your involvement in the AYF and your singing?

K.A.-Everything I do is for the Armenian people and the AYF/ARF. By singing
heghapokhagan, I feel I am informing more people about our history and
struggle. By showing my drive for our culture and people, I am hopefully
encouraging other youth to join these organizations.

A.W.-Do you have any upcoming performances? Where can people go if they want
to find out more about your singing?

K.A.-Yes, I am going to be singing on Oct. 11 at the AYF 75th Anniversary
Gala Weekend in Boston, along with Sevag Khatchadourian and the AYF All-Star
Band. I am also working on having a CD out soon and hopefully the Armenian
public will be hearing more of my singing in the near future.

A.W.-Are there any final words you want to give to our readers?

K.A.-I just want to tell the youth that it is important to stay connected to
Armenian culture and learn our history because without that we are nothing.
The richness of Armenian history is what inspired me to pursue my dreams and
I’m sure it can do the same for others. Always remember the youth is the
future!

To find out more about Kristapor’s singing or to contact him for a future
event, email him at [email protected].
—————————– ——————————

2. This isn’t a Trip to the Marriott!
By Taleen Mekhdjavakian

What would you do if everyday, at around 8 p.m., the water in your house got
turned off, or if you lived in an extremely hot city with no air
conditioning? These things may seem surreal to many Americans but to
Armenians it’s a part of their everyday life. If you come to Armenia as a
tourist you wont experience this, so the best way is to either move here or
stay for more than a month. You will truly get to know Armenia this way.

Deciding to go on the AYF Internship this year was probably the best
decision I’ve ever made. Being in Armenia is an experience in itself, let
alone living in a different country with five strangers. The bond we all now
share can’t be described in words.

This being our fourth week here, we’ve already formed routines. During the
week we got to our internship and, later on in the day, we usually go to
Armenian language classes or different lectures at the Birthright Armenia
office. After that, we tend to go out for dinner and, on the weekends, we go
on excursions. Our daily routines have truly become part of my life and I
can’t imagine going back home. Armenia feels like the place I need to be.

Part of the reason I love it here so much is also because of my internship.
I work at Counterpart International, where I edit many of their documents
that have been translated to English. To make sure everything makes sense, I
also translate documents from Arabic to English. The people at the office
are great, they each have a story to tell, and it’s just so different to
hear about each person’s different background.

Weekends here are always the best because of our excursions. This last
weekend we went to see the temple at Garni, the only remaining pagan temple
in Armenia. It wasn’t the first time I had been there, but this time I
actually learned the history behind why it was the only remaining temple and
I saw something I never thought I would see in Armenia.

There was a huge group of people standing around a goat, and the man
sacrificing the goat was dressed in a coat and had a necklace with the
infinity symbol on it. It turns out that there are still pagans in Armenia
and that day they were having a ceremony similar to a Christian baptism. I
couldn’t believe what I was seeing. The man dressed in the cloak cut the ear
of a lamb off and then let a couple of drops of the bloody knife drip on the
baby’s forehead. It was such an odd thing to see. I had no idea that there
were pagans in Armenia, let alone did I expect to see such a ceremony.

Well, we have just hit our half way mark of four weeks here in Armenia and
it is going to be hard for me to leave all this. It’s not as easy to live
here but there is nowhere else I’d rather be.

Taleen Mekhdjavakian is a member of the Ocala "Keri" AYF and a participant
in the 2008 AYF-YOARF Summer Internship Program in Yerevan.

The Armenian Weekly; August 2, 2008; Features

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

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 30; August 2, 2008

Features:

1. Reaching Beyond the Wire
One Armenian-American Soldier Speaks out for Iraq’s Persecuted Christians
By Andy Turpin

2. Westward Ho! Backwards through Prussia
Bohjalian’s ‘Skeletons at the Feast’ Illustrates the WWII Eastern Front in
Moral Shades of Gray
By Andy Turpin

***

1. Reaching Beyond the Wire
One Armenian-American Soldier Speaks out for Iraq’s Persecuted Christians
By Andy Turpin

On July 16, upon his return from serving his second tour in Iraq as a civil
affairs soldier, U.S. Army sergeant John Merguerian spoke to the Weekly
about his experiences in Iraq, the reconstruction work he conducted with the
Iraqi-Armenian community in Baghdad, and the current situation facing Iraq’s
Christian minorities.

After graduating with degrees in Arabic and political science from UCLA, in
a joint program with the University of Egypt, Merguerian volunteered as a
teacher’s aid at Blackstone Elementary School with City Year, Boston’s urban
peace corp, from 1992-93. From 2000-02, Merguerian served with the Armenian
Volunteer Corps teaching English to disadvantaged villagers in Armenia.

A.W. What made you want to join the military? Where have you been posted
beyond Iraq?

J.M. Well, I have a younger brother and he joined in 1997. The following
year I decided to do the same thing. I thought it would be a good way to pay
for my schooling and get some good experience. Pretty much the only place I’ve
been to is Iraq. The tour I just completed was my second tour there. I was
there in 2003-04, during the invasion.

A.W. As an Armenian-American soldier in Iraq, tell us about your
interactions with the Iraqi Armenian community or the Armenian UN
peacekeepers there.

J.M. Oh sure. I had some interaction with the Iraqi Armenian community when
I was there in 2003-04. I actually went to their community in Baghdad. I
also started an Iraqi-Armenian fund. One of the churches in the U.S. helped
me with sending toys and books.

A.W. When were your last interactions with that Iraqi-Armenian community?

J.M. This current tour, from 2007-08. Because of the security situation, I
couldn’t reach out to the community, but I did try to help them out. They
had built a new Armenian school this year next to the St. Gregory Church. It
got into their jurisdiction because there are no more Iraqi-Arabs going to
their school.

The person who really helped me get things off the ground with helping the
community was Nubar Hovsepian, who is the head of the Iraq-Armenian
community in Glendale. He helped me with sending items to the school in
Baghdad. I only got to communicate through phone because they [in Baghdad]
had to come to the base to pickup all the items. The army didn’t want me to
go out there because of the security situation.

A.W. What part of Baghdad does the Iraqi-Armenian community reside in?

J.M. The majority of them are in the Camp Sarah district, which is what I’m
going to go ahead and call the "Christian Sector" of Baghdad because it’s
mainly the Armenians, the Assyrians, and the Chaldeans that live in big
communities there. The main, big church is the St. Gregory Armenian Church,
located right in the center of Baghdad, which is not at all a safe area
right now. That’s where the school is and from what I understand, the
parents take their kids there with a great deal of anxiety. It’s scary. I
also want to say that St. Gregory’s was closed for quite a time.

A.W. Has it since reopened?

J.M. They do sporadic services there from what I understand, but the
community now mainly uses the St. Garabed Church in the Camp Sarah district
for their services. Insurgents are also targeting a lot of Assyrian
churches. One of the head priests that was in charge of the Assyrian
community in Mosul was kidnapped, tortured, and killed.

To give you one story: When I was a soldier in Iraq from 2003-04, I met an
Iraqi-Armenian named Vartan Hamalakiyan. I met him after the invasion when
things calmed down at what was then the Saddam International Airport. After
we took over the airport, he was there to help the Americans get it running
again. He was a very nice man, he told me his wife had passed away maybe
four or five years ago from cancer. He was taking care of his two kids – one
boy was 13, the other was 11.

When I went back for this last tour in 2007-08, I was near the airport and
went there one time and met another Iraqi-Armenian. I asked, "Do you know
where Vartan is? I’ve tried to look for him. "The man said, "Have you heard
what happened to him?" What happened was, because he was working with
Americans, insurgents kidnapped him, tortured him, and then killed him. They
threw his body out into the street. The Armenian told me his children are
now living with their grandparents.

I also heard about two Iraqi-Armenians who were driving in the center of the
city in Baghdad and were accidentally killed by an Australian private
security contactor. It was two women who were driving and the Australian had
thought they were insurgents.

A.W. How do you feel about the representation of Armenian-Americans serving
in the U.S. military today? Do you feel Armenians are under-represented in
the military?

J.M. In this past tour I think I met only one and he was a captain from
Glendale. But in the first tour I met a few. I met another captain,
Martirosian, who was born in Armenia and moved to America. He decided to
join the army and became an officer. The other Armenian I met was a sergeant
named Hratch from Lowell, Mass. I’ve met a few here and there. They all seem
to enjoy serving their country.

A.W. What are your feelings about your service in Iraq?

J.M. I enjoy serving out there. I was very proud as an Armenian-American
that I could go out there and help the Iraqi-Armenian community. That was a
huge plus for me and I would hope that more Armenians and Armenian-Americans
could go out there, learn about the Iraqi-Armenian community, and help them
out. They’re in such desperate need.

A.W. So Armenian-Americans are a great resource to Iraq when they’re there?

J.M. Right. Well, I knew about the community in Baghdad and that was able to
convince my colonel to see and help-as a minority community. The main
question when we’re there as U.S. military civil affairs people is, How do
we help the Iraqi majority, the Sunnis and Shiite Muslims? The question
rarely involves the minorities that live there because they don’t know much
about them.

A.W. When you’re in Iraq, what does an average day for you consist of as a
civil affairs officer with an Armenian and Arabic background?

J.M. Well, which tour do you want to talk about, the first or second? During
my first tour, because it was a safer environment (the invasion was over),
we were ready to go out and do reconstruction. We would go out, practically
on a daily basis with the colonel, and help interpret with the local Iraqis
in the field and ask, "What needs to be done?" in terms of water, schools,
what’s going on in the city, what’s going on in the country, etc. The second
tour, again because of security reasons, I hardly ever got to go outside the
wire. I was mainly in charge of managing Iraqi interpreters and doing a lot
of documentation for the colonel, translating documents and also teaching
civil affairs classes to the Iraqi Special Operations forces and the Iraqi
army. That was all behind the wire.

A.W. When you say "behind the wire, "what do you mean?

J.M. Within the base, my base is Camp Liberty, which is near the airport. It’s
a secure base. The Iraqi army and Special Operations forces are also on the
same base with us. Because they work with Americans and because they’re part
of the Iraqi army, they don’t go out either. They’re targeted by the
insurgents and they home-school their kids on the base because they’re
getting threats all the time that [the insurgents] are going to kidnap and
kill their kids.

A.W. In the Metrowest Daily News, you’re quoted as saying," [Iraq] can’t be
democratized. "How do you view your day-to-day job there in Iraq as a civil
affairs soldier? What actually keeps you going when you’re there?

J.M. I think I was misquoted on that and it may have been my mother
speaking. But what keeps me going is a sense that we’re there, this is the
reality, and we have to make the best of what’s available there. Maybe
[Iraq] is not a democracy that we as Americans envision, but it’s their
country and they have to decide what’s best for them. [The U.S.] can just
help them facilitate that process through good communication and good civil
affairs work.

A.W. As someone who has daily social and logistical interaction with various
strata of Iraqi society, do you feel that the truth about the situation in
Iraq is reaching the U.S. public – either through the media or through
soldiers’ letters home? And is it accurate information?

J.M. It is accurate regarding the violence that’s going on there. However,
there’s more to it than that. There are a lot of safe areas where soldiers
are going out and [the media] doesn’t focus on a lot of the interactions
that are going on between the American soldiers and the Iraqi public, and
the partnerships they’re forming together. Things like basic humanitarian
aid to the schools, maintaining water pipes, maintaining electricity to the
medical facilities there. A lot of army doctors are opening up new clinics
with the Iraqis and the media isn’t focusing much on that. They’re mostly
focusing on "Howmany folks got killed today?" or the violence.

A.W. In your view, what should both the average soldier and American
civilian be doing to better the situation in Iraq?

J.M. Well, everyone’s under a command there and I trust our leaders and
commanders from General Petraeus down. I think as long as soldiers follow
their command, do what they’re told to be doing, and follow the leadership,
I think that’s the best a soldier can do to make a difference there. I can’t
speak for young Armenian-American activists – they have to form their own
opinions on whether this is a just war or not – but in my opinion I support
what we’re doing there. I support what the soldiers are doing there. So I’d
rather see Armenian-Americans saying, "Let’s support our soldiers, let’s
support the effort that is going on in Iraq." One thing I’d like more
Armenian-American activists to do is to know about the Iraqi-Armenian
community there, see how they can help them, because they do need a lot of
help. I recently talked to Nubar Hovsepian from Glendale and he told me that
just among his Iraqi community there’s a lot of activism, but that other
Armenians don’t know that there’s a community in Iraq. He said, "We don’t
get a whole lot of support." And many of our U.S. congressmen don’t know
about the Iraqi-Armenian community either. When they do their congressional
tours in Iraq, they mainly focus on the current government there, meeting
leaders and finding out what’s happening to the main Iraqi Muslim
population. I don’t think they even know about the minority communities
there. The only minority community they know about is the Kurdish community.
So the opportunity is with activists to write to a congressman, or if they
meet a congressman, to tell them about the Armenian community there and what’s
going on – that there are kidnappings! In 2006, they opened the new Armenian
school in Baghdad and right away there were already threat letters from
insurgents saying, "If you bring your kids to school, we will kidnap them."

A.W. Do you think that supporting the Armenian community in Iraq, and the
other Christian communities there is something that congressmen with more
ties to the evangelical lobby might be interested in getting involved with?
Do you see that in the future?

J.M. I do, I do, yes. I’m trying to push that right now. More than anything
else I’m trying to push for that. I have a friend here who’s a Glendale city
clerk friendly with the congressman and I want to see what we can do about
finding a Christian organization, maybe evangelical, who’d like to help out.

A.W. Would the Christian community in Iraq welcome such support?

J.M. I think they need all the support they can get.
——————————————— ——————–

2. Westward Ho! Backwards through Prussia
Bohjalian’s ‘Skeletons at the Feast’ Illustrates the WWII Eastern Front in
Moral Shades of Gray

By Andy Turpin

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-A beautiful 18-year-old iron-willed Prussian girl,
her strapping Scottish POW lover (reminiscent of a ginger-haired Sean
Connery), an aging aristocratic mother with her Hitler Youth castoff son,
and a death camp survivor who kills Nazis to steal their identity are all
part of the motley crew cast of characters in author Chris Bohjalian’s
lastest novel, Skeletons at the Feast (Shaye Areheart Books, 2008).

The setting is Poland and the Eastern Front in the last days of World War II
amidst a Western Europe in the wake of the Allied invasion of France and an
Eastern Europe in the grip of military chaos and a wave of refugees fleeing
the horrors of the ever-impending Red Army.

Caught in the tide of war and racing against the Soviet barbarian hordes
determined on taking brutal revenge for the Battles of Stalingrad and
Leningrad out on German and Polish civilians are the Emmerichs.

The Emmerichs are a noble Prussian family that represents all that is good,
kind, and chivalrous in a once-great Germany whose legacy has been forever
perverted by the Third Reich and its perpetrated Holocaust. Their quest,
like a Teutonic John Ford Western, is to stay one step ahead of Ivan and
reach the surrender and safety of the American and British lines encroaching
from Berlin and France.

In the literary vein of Joseph Kanon’s The Good German and the tradition of
Sam Peckinpah’s 1976 controversial cinematic tale of the Eastern Front Cross
of Iron, Bohjalian’s Skeletons at the Feast is a deftly crafted and
empathetically woven novel of survival and hope told from a German
perspective often negated or neglected by other novelists.

Today few are taught in schools what an abject corner of hell the Eastern
Front was during the Second World War. Certainly writers like Jerzy Kozinsky
and Elie Wiesel have written about the infernos of the death camps, but
overshadowed in the U.S. are the legitimate fears of death and gruesome
reprisal the civilian populations of Eastern Europe faced at the hands of
the Red Army (especially if you were at all German).

Prussian and ethnic German enclaves from the banks of the Volga to the
hinterlands of Latvia and Lithuania suffered rape and tortuous death at the
hands of Stalin’s legions. Much of the carnage went underreported due to the
Soviet Union’s Allied allegiance during the war.

As recently as last year, former Russian Federation president Vladimir Putin
re-opened old wounds wrought by the Soviet army upon civilians in the Baltic
when he protested Estonia’s removal of a memorial statue (of the Soviet
liberation from Nazi occupation) in the capital city of Talinn.

Many ethnic Russian communities are wrongfully subject to abuse and
persecution by local Eastern European populations because of the remembered
war crimes of the Red Army during the World War II and Soviet eras. With the
gross exception of those Holocaust survivor communities, more people in
Eastern Europe seem to remember the atrocities of the Russian army over
those of the Nazis-a disturbing and morally ambiguous historical sore that
festers in many former Soviet republics and calls out for more stories like
Skeletons at the Feast to be written so that a greater number of people
understand the realities of the Eastern Front, and that time and place.