Congratulatory Message From The NA Speaker Hovik Abrahamyan On The O

CONGRATULATORY MESSAGE FROM THE NA SPEAKER HOVIK ABRAHAMYAN ON THE OCCASION OF TRANSLATORS’ DAY

National Assembly of Republic of Armenia
10.10.2008
Armenia

Speaker of the National Assembly Mr Hovik Abrahamyan sent a
congratulatory message on the occasion of Translators’ Day.

"There are not many nations which have Translators’ Day in the state
calendar, which testifies to the fact that the Armenian people pay
great significance and importance to literature and translation. In
the fifth century after the invention of the Armenian scripts in
the schools founded by Mesrop Mashtots and Sahak Partev, the first
students, who learnt the Armenian alphabet, translated the Bible,
later the well-known books of the time.

The centuries-old traditions are going on also today, giving the
Armenian readers an opportunity to communicate with the world
literature and outstanding scientific works through the native
language. Paying tribute to the translators of the past and the
present, today I would like to express my gratitude to those for that
wonderful opportunity created for all of us. I am sure that from
now on the translators’ work will be the golden bridge that will
bring the world to Armenia, and present Armenia to the big world,
as the historian Khorenatsi said: though we are small in quantity
but worthy deeds are being carried out in our country."

Courting the multicultural vote in Laval-les-Nles

COURTING THE MULTICULTURAL VOTE IN LAVAL-LES-NLES
By Martin C. Barry

Laval News
October 9, 2008
Canada

Evereklian claims to have crucial support from many of those
constituents

Laval-les-Ã~Nles Conservative Agop Evereklian meets Mourelatos
supermarket owner Peter Mouleratos out campaigning in Chomedey
last week. Out campaigning on Melville Avenue in the heart of
Laval’s Chomedey district last week, Laval-les-Ã~Nles Conservative
candidate Agop Evereklian met residents of Armenian, Greek, Italian,
French, English and other origins. "What I like about this is that
I can communicate to my citizens in their language of choice," says
Evereklian, who is himself Armenian, but who is conversant in five
languages, and "manages" in two others.

Security on agenda In step with the Conservative Party’s agenda during
this election, Evereklian says, "One of the concerns I come across on
a daily basis is security, especially if you go to the western part of
Chomedey closer to Ste. Dorothée. Home invasions is one concern that
people have. Then lately in recent days we’ve been asked questions
about culture and about the juvenile criminal system."

In a riding that is among the most thoroughly multicultural anywhere in
Canada, Evereklian claims to have the crucial support of many of those
constituents. Earlier this week, in a bid to gain the support of Greek
voters, he was to release an important statement regarding his position
on the controversial FYROM/Macedonia recognition issue. Evereklian is
making as much as he can of the fact that he is a longtime resident of
Ste. Dorothée in the riding, and that his principal rival, Liberal
incumbent Raymonde Folco, lives on the other side of the Rivière
des Prairies in west end Montreal.

Lives in the riding "This is the difference," he says. "When you live
in the riding, even when you are just simply living, people can see
you, people can talk with you and be with you, and most of the time
when I’m out doing my personal business, I see citizens, constituents,
and we say hello, we exchange, and this is what I love about serving
the community … These are little moments that give me the courage
and the inspiration to go on and continue."

Perhaps more significantly, Evereklian says he has the support of
four former Laval-les-Ã~Nles Liberal riding association presidents
(Evereklian also served as president), who defected from the Liberal
ranks because of irreconciliable grievances against the party. In
all, as many as 650 former Laval-les-Ã~Nles Liberals now belong to
the local Conservative riding association, Evereklian claims. "This
is only the tip of the iceberg … I am receiving a lot of people in
my campaign office, citizens who claim to be Liberals, but they say
they need change and this time they are supporting our camp."

Recognition factor Stepping into the Mourelatos supermarket on Notre
Dame Boulevard, Evereklian is greeted warmly by its well-known owner,
Peter Mourelatos. "I’m a simple candidate," Evereklian says, noting
that he doesn’t have the fame and stature of an incumbent MP. "But
when I come to these places it’s amazing to see the number of people
who recognize me." From there, Evereklian is off for an interview
at a local multiethnic radio station, doing everything he can to
convince all the riding’s voters that he’s the right choice as
Laval-les-Ã~Nles’s next MP.

–Boundary_(ID_9Ub6ylqHO+R1TfVXgV1Dqg)–

Baku – Azerbaijan Presidential Candidate: "Azerbaijan Must Liberate

AZERBAIJAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE: "AZERBAIJAN MUST LIBERATE ITS LANDS BEFORE 2011"

Today.Az
10 October 2008 [12:10]
Azerbaijan

"Currently, there are no prospects for the settlement of the Karabakh
problem", said presidential candidate and chairman of the United
Popular Front Party of Azerbaijan Qudrat Gasanquliyev.

He noted that the military expenses of Azerbaijan must be raised to
25-27% for the resolution of the Karabakh problem.

Moreover, it is necessary to give Armenia a year for the unconditional
liberation of the occupied lands in line with the due resolution of
the UN Security Council.

"We must undertake steps for liberation of all of our occupied lands,
restoration of the sovereign rights of Azerbaijan and raising the
flag of Azerbaijan in Khankendi by no later than 2011.

We consider that today Azerbaijan has all opportunities for building
a professional army.

If we strengthen the state and public control over the army, use 80%
of the Oil Fund for the development of the defense industry, ensure the
most advanced military technique and ammunitions for the Azerbaijani
armed forces and strengthen the defense system of air offensive with
the use of the latest achievements of military technology, we will
be able to return our lands.

These actions will prove to Armenia and international organizations
that we are ready to return our lands by way of force.

In case the occupied lands are not liberated within the established
term, it is necessary to declare the ceasefire treaty invalid and
adopt an official declaration about the start of military actions at
any time.

We should not hope that the Karabakh problem will be settled by its
own. It is necessary to take definite steps", announced he.

Hasanquliyev also said that Azerbaijan must reject the mediation of
the OSCE Minsk Group.

Baku: Poland Highly Assesses Azerbaijan’s Role In International Anti

POLAND HIGHLY ASSESSES AZERBAIJAN’S ROLE IN INTERNATIONAL ANTI-TERRORIST COALITION
[email protected]

Trend News Agency
10.10.08 19:22
Azerbaijan

Azerbaijan, Baku, 10 October /corr. Trend News K.Zarbaliyeva / Poland
highly assesses the active role of Azerbaijan in the international
anti-terrorist coalition, the Head of Bureaus of National Security
of Presidential Administration of Poland, Vladislav Stashiak, who is
on visit to Azerbaijan, at the meeting with the Minister of National
Security of the country, Eldar Mahmudov.

The guest emphasized that the position of Azerbaijan in the
Armenian-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict is unconditionally
supported by Poland.

Azerbaijani Minister of National Security highlighted special
importance of larger development of mutual visits, inter-departmental
co-operation.

The Six Most Promising Security Startups Of 2008

THE SIX MOST PROMISING SECURITY STARTUPS OF 2008
By Tim Wilson

Dark Reading
OCTOBER 10, 2008 | 9:35 AM
NY

Judges unveil six finalists in the annual Global Security Challenge

Looking for the latest hot technologies in security? So are the judges
of the annual Global Security Challenge, a contest designed to help
seek out and identify the most promising startups in the industry.

Yesterday, the GSC judges announced the six finalists for the award,
which will be announced on Nov. 13. The winner will get a $500,000
grant in cash and mentorship from venture capitalists, courtesy of
the Technical Support Working Group of the U.S. government.

Some of these technologies seem more useful to a the Green Berets
or the CIA than to the average enterprise. However, there are some
emerging IT technologies in the list as well. Take a gander at this
year’s finalists — and start thinking about your entry for 2009.

1. Beyond Encryption

This Irish company has built and deployed an enforcement tool for
remote information security. It enables an organization to take an
offensive approach and pursue any device and its data, putting either
or both beyond the use of the current user. It is the first precision
information protection weapon with pinpoint accuracy for targeting and
protecting sensitive information on any device regardless of location.

2. Brain Fingerprinting Laboratories

Based in Seattle, this startup has developed a "brain fingerprinting"
technology. This humane, non-invasive, and accurate scientific
technology detects concealed information in the brain that can be
used for interrogations of criminal suspects (yes, really). It can
also detect Alzheimer’s disease and measure advertising effectiveness.

3. Hiperware

This Singapore upstart has developed a real-time decision-making
software that leverages cluster computing power for analyzing
enterprise processes to actively identify errors and monitor process
effectiveness.

4. Intuview

Based in Israel, this startup has developed a multi-engine "artificial
intuition" software for real-time categorization, summarization, and
intelligence extraction from large batches of documents in Arabic,
relating to the domain of Islam and terrorism with the goal of creating
a capability to interpret the hermeneutics of radical Islamic and
terrorist related texts without the need to have well versed Arabic
literate analysts on hand.

5. Precision Sensors Instrumentation

This Armenian company invented a single-layer, flat-coil-oscillator
absolute-position sensor that enables users to do more accurate
prediction of earthquakes and detection of armed activity in zero
visibility settings.

6. TRX Systems

A spinoff from the University of Maryland, this emerging company has
achieved a technological breakthrough for tracking first responders
both outdoors and within complex structures. The TRX system is
self-contained and requires no pre-existing infrastructure and can
even create virtual floor maps in real time.

Last year’s winner was NoblePeak Vision, which developed a breakthrough
technology for night video surveillance.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The Almanac

THE ALMANAC

Times of the Internet
Oct 10, 2008
Ohio

In 2007, a U.S. Foreign Relations Committee resolution labeled as
genocide Turkey’s killing of some 1.5 million Armenians during World
War I.

Turkish leaders responded by threatening to pull their support from
the war in Iraq.

Armenia In Need Of An Alternative Export-Import Route

ARMENIA IN NEED OF AN ALTERNATIVE EXPORT-IMPORT ROUTE
Ashley Corinne Killough

Georgiandaily
October 10, 2008
NY

Although talks of establishing security in the Caucasus had been
underway for months, the crisis in Georgia underscored a sense
of urgency at the September 26 trilateral meeting of the foreign
ministers of Armenia, Turkey, and Azerbaijan. Eduard Nalbandian, Ali
Babacan, and Elmar Mammadyarov met in New York to further discuss a
resolution to the Karabakh conflict, which has created obstacles to
the normalization of bilateral relations between Turkey and Armenia.

Economically bruised Armenia needs an open-border relationship with
Turkey now more than ever. Georgia’s Black Sea ports are Armenia’s main
gateways for foreign trade, with 70 percent of its imports and exports
carried through Georgian territory. This dependence on its northern
neighbor became vulnerable when the damaged Georgian infrastructure
caused a cessation of a large share of Armenian trade for more than
week in August. After a rail bridge near Gori was destroyed on August
16, Armenia experienced the country’s worst fuel crisis since the
early 1990s (, September 5). During a two-week
period at the end of August, hundreds of motorists were stranded,
causing higher gas prices and long lines at filling stations.

Artur Baghdasarian, secretary of Armenia’s National Security Council,
said that the damage to Georgia’s infrastructure had cost the Armenian
economy $680 million, mainly in delayed imports and exports (RFE/RL
Armenia Report, September 3). After the railway was repaired, about
500 freight cars with 54,000 tons of cargo moved from Georgia to
Armenia on September 2 (ARKA, September 2).

Armenia’s economic relationship with Georgia also played an important
part in its foreign policy with regard to the crisis. Moscow,
according to a senior Russian security official, had hoped that
Yerevan would agree to the accession of South Ossetia and Abkhazia
into the Collective Security Treaty Organization (RFE/RL Armenia
Report, September 3). The CSTO is a Russian-led military alliance of
six former Soviet republics that agree to abstain both from the use
of force or joining other military alliances. The charter–signed
by Armenia, Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan,
and Uzbekistan–claims that aggression against one signatory would
be perceived as aggression against all. Georgia and Azerbaijan joined
in 1994 but withdrew in 1999.

Despite its CSTO membership, Armenia, realizing the enormous political
and economic risks that acknowledging the breakaway regions would
carry, refrained from recognizing the disputed regions. The
presidential press office released a statement of neutrality
shortly after the crisis broke out, reiterating President Serzh
Sarkisian’s position: "The President once again stressed that the
Russian Federation is a strategic ally of the Republic of Armenia
and Georgia a friendly country, and that Armenia is therefore greatly
interested in the conflict’s quick, peaceful resolution." In an effort
to maintain regional stability, Sarkisian reached out to Saakashvili,
offering condolences and humanitarian assistance. Sarkisian is also
reported to have presented a comparable message of concern to Medvedev
(RFE/RL Armenia Report, August 14).

Kevork Oskanian, a doctoral candidate at the London School of Economics
and Political Science, is currently researching security in the South
Caucasus. "It [neutrality] was, really, the only decision Armenia
could make considering its dependence on Georgia for its commercial
relations with the outside world and its strategic alliance with
Russia," he said. "Yerevan was basically walking a tightrope."

Since the trade route was repaired, Oskanian said, the economy had
largely returned to normal; but the consequences of Armenia’s heavy
reliance on Georgia emphasized the need of establishing another
trading corridor to Europe through its western neighbor, Turkey.

The idea of easing tension with Turkey had already been brewing for
months, as Sarkisian had extended an invitation to Turkish President
Abdullah Gul in July to attend the Turkey-Armenia FIFA World Cup
soccer qualifying match on September 6. Gul’s symbolic visit was the
first by a Turkish head of state to Armenia and was also in concert
with Turkey’s proposal for a Caucasus Stability and Cooperation
Platform. The initiative is of utmost importance to Turkey’s Eastern
foreign policy, as a greater involvement in the Caucasus, a tenuous
region with ties to Europe, could augment Turkey’s credibility with
the European Union (Hetq, September 8).

While Turkey stands to benefit from improved relations with Armenia
on a political standpoint, Armenia’s advantage would primarily be
economic with a more stable trade link to Europe.

"Despite all claims to the contrary, even outside of periods of
acute conflict and instability, the Armenian population is paying
a high price for the current situation," Oskanian said, noting that
costly imports and a low volume exports had resulted in a significant
trade imbalance. An open border would provide Armenia with access
to the Turkish Black Sea port of Trabzon, as well as the prospect of
connecting Armenia’s rail network with Europe.

"This would open new markets and opportunities for Armenia’s producers
and foreign investors and ease price pressures on consumers through
dramatically reduced transportation costs and a generally more open
and competitive economy," Oskanian said.

Before any borders are opened, however, Turkey wants the disputed
Karabakh conflict resolved, an issue that also influenced Armenia’s
decision to remain neutral. Yerevan has yet to recognize the region
formally because of its current diplomatic efforts with Azerbaijan
under the aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group.

www.armenianow.com

The Week In Books

THE WEEK IN BOOKS
Dominique Guiou, John Dugdale and Maya Jaggi

The Guardian
Saturday October 11 2008

An ‘engagé’ wins the Nobel, betting on the Booker, and Istanbul goes
to Frankfurt

This year the Nobel prize for literature has been awarded to a real
French writer – a writer who started when he was very young and is
still going strong today. In 1963, Jean-Marie Gustave Le Clézio did
the unthinkable by winning, while still an unknown novelist of 23, one
of France’s top literary prizes, the Renaudot, for his debut novel,
The Interrogation. He has not stopped writing since, with some 30
books to his name, including Désert (1980), which received a prize
from the French academy. The Interrogation was the work of a young
man but, 40 years later, it is still as pertinent as ever.

That is not to say that his work has not developed enormously
throughout his career. He has gone from being a rather "difficult"
young writer influenced heavily by the avant garde to a more accessible
author who has made his voice heard on numerous political and social
issues from pollution to exploitation. Le Clézio has also managed
to do something very rare in France: to be loved by both the public
and the critics. To please both, and to know how to impress both, is
very special. He is what we in France call an "engagé", a humanist –
and, above all, a great writer.

Dominique Guiou, Le Figaro0D

Le Clézio was a surprise choice as winner of the Nobel – but,
fascinatingly, not to Ladbrokes. Evidently possessing an uncanny
ability to second-guess the secretive cabal of Swedish worthies
who pick the laureates, the bookies had made Le Clézio their 2-1
favourite, ahead of far better-known figures such as Amos Oz, Philip
Roth and Haruki Murakami. Even though the Academy picking a fifth
European author in a row – following Doris Lessing in 2007, Orhan
Pamuk in 2006, Harold Pinter in 2005 and Elfriede Jelinek in 2004 –
seemed unlikely.

The academy specialises in strange, windy citations, and true to form
hailed Le Clézio as "author of new departures, poetic adventure
and sensual ecstasy, explorer of a humanity beyond and below the
reigning civilisation".

That at least makes his work sound more exciting than that of his
immediate predecessors: Lessing was praised for "subjecting a divided
civilisation to scrutiny", Pamuk for disclosing "the melancholic soul
of his native city", Pinter "uncovered the precipice under everyday
prattle" and Jelinek revealed "the absurdity of society’s clichés
and their subjugating power".

Recent Nobel choices have provided bonanzas for their British
publishers – especially Harvill Secker who publish Coetzee, Grass,
Kertész and Saramago.

In the case of Le Clézio, however, they were caught napping. The
only English translation from the past five years listed on Amazon
is Wande ring Star, from the small US publisher Curbstone.

John Dugdale

An Indian or an Irishman will be named as this year’s Booker winner
on Tuesday, if the bookies are to be believed. William Hill makes
Sebastian Barry’s The Secret Scripture 5-2 favourite, with Amitav
Ghosh’s Sea of Poppies at 7-2; while Ladbrokes reverses the order,
offering Ghosh at 2-1 with the remaining four authors at 4-1 or
5-1. Paddy Power has Ghosh at the remarkably short odds of 7-4 and
Barry at 3-1. Don’t take this, though, as any indication of the likely
outcome. Until the shortlist appeared and both were omitted, the
bookies had Salman Rushdie and Joseph O’Neill as frontrunners. Last
year’s winner, Anne Enright, was a 12-1 outsider, and no favourite
has won since Yann Martel in 2002.

JD

Alice Munro appeared at the New Yorker magazine’s recent festival
in Manhattan, drily revealing to her interviewer that when her first
book appeared the local paper’s report was headlined "Housewife Finds
Time to Write Stories", and that her father decided to take up writing
late in life on the assumption that "if Alice can do it there should
be no problem".

Sticking to short fiction was not her original plan, Munro said,
but she now recognises she needs to know when a project will be
completed, and so is unsuited to working on anything more open-ended –
"you might die while writing a 500-page novel".

The Canadian writer talked of a per iod when she gave up writing two
years ago, worried that an author’s constant need to observe was
robbing her of experiencing life as "an ordinary person". Happily
she soon realised she "wasn’t very good" at this, managing only
"three months, maybe" of being ordinary.

JD

Istanbul’s bookshop windows are full of copies of Orhan Pamuk’s
first novel since his 2006 Nobel prize, with its retro photo of a
high-society family in a car tinted flamboyant pink. Artist manqué
Pamuk designed his own cover for the book, Museum of Innocence,
a filmic melodrama of a 1970s love affair in which a man collects
objects touched by his beloved before her death. For the first time
in so long, a relaxed Pamuk says on his balcony, "the media are sweet
to me". About 100,000 copies were sold in 10 days.

A swift German translation was commissioned for next week’s Frankfurt
book fair, which Pamuk will open on Tuesday alongside the Turkish
president, Abdullah Gul, marking Turkey’s year as guest of honour. The
tag is "Turkey in all its colours" – a seemingly bland coinage by
Turkish publishers that is revolutionary for the culture ministry
that signed up to it. In the teeth of an official nationalist ideology
guarded by the military since the Kemalist republic’s birth in 1923,
stressing a unitary Turkish ethnicity, publishers led by Muge Gursoy
Sokmen of Metis are proclaiming Turkey’s diversity, with Kurdish,
Armenian and Jewish a uthors – mirrored in art exhibitions and music,
from ghazals to jazz. Pamuk feels he is representing a book culture
led by "westernisers" and pro-EU intellectuals against stifling,
insular nationalism.

President Gul, a former radical Islamist whose AK party favours EU
membership, has been lunching writers and artists. Several authors
bound for Frankfurt, including Pamuk, Elif Shafak and Perihan Magden,
have been prosecuted under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code,
which prohibits "insulting Turkishness" – notably by mentioning the
Armenian massacres of 1915-17. Publishers say it is too early to
tell how the April amendments of 301 – sought by the president but
criticised by some as cosmetic – will bite.

Magden, "traumatised" by her trial and by "fascists and fanatical
Kemalists out in the streets", published a novel last year, Escape,
about a mother and daughter on the run, at a time when she had two
bodyguards. For her, the threat comes not from the AK party, but from
secular ultra-nationalists and a "military democracy". Headscarves
are an issue of a rising class threatening an army elite: "Girls who
were locked in their villages want to go to university and wear a
headscarf. It’s not a fundamentalist threat – I welcome it."

The lawyer who led the prosecution of Pamuk is among the 80-plus
people now charged in the bizarre Ergenekon case – an alleged
ultra-nationalist coup conspiracy involving death threats an d
assassinations, including the 2007 murder of Hrant Dink, editor of
the Turkish-Armenian paper Agos. In Dink’s office, where the walls
bear photographs of his funeral, when tens of thousands of Turkish
mourners marched under the banner "We are all Armenians", his lawyer,
Fethiye Cetin, says the "only way to overcome the trauma of the past
is to talk; being silent destroys everybody". Her 2004 memoir, My
Grandmother (out in Britain earlier this year), about the relative she
discovered had been Armenian, adopted by a Turkish officer after the
massacres, was a bestseller. She feels it left a "crack in official
state ideology in the minds of people".

An estimated two million Turks have at least one Armenian grandparent.

Murathan Mungan, a novelist and playwright who has Kurdish, Arab and
Bosnian grandparents, feels his plays were not taken into the state
theatre repertoire because he used Kurdish names. Mungan, who also
describes himself as the first openly gay author in Turkey, says his
fight is against "conservatives on the right and the left". Other
writers, including Shafak, seek to recover a language lost in the
1928 alphabet and language revolution which, in its drive to "purify"
Ottoman Turkish of Persian and Arabic words – perhaps two-thirds
of its vocabulary – sunders young Turkish readers from their own
literary heritage.

–Boundary_(ID_DdQ3F3tDbJf3+tTJdTr1TA)- –

Critics’ Forum Article – 10.04.08

Critics’ Forum
Theater
New Play Development: Birthing a Script – and a Community
By Lori Yeghiayan

Plays do not hatch, fully-formed, from the imagination of a
playwright, like Athena, the Greek Goddess of Wisdom (and War),
bursting forth from Zeus’ skull. No. A longer, more complex
birthing process is usually required to nurture a script from idea to
first-draft to a script ready for production.

I recently sat down with Los Angeles-based playwright Lilly
Thomassian, whose play Nadia just won first prize in the inaugural
William Saroyan Prize for Playwriting. Our discussion centered on
the function of community in the development of new work for the
stage and screen, and the role the diasporan Armenian community might
play in it.

Not surprisingly, the conversation also included a close look at the
playwriting process itself, one that Thomassian is intimately
familiar with, because she has used it herself on a number of
occasions. Understanding the intricacies of the process is key to
recognizing the diasporan Armenian community’s special role in
expanding the number as well as the quality of Armenian-themed plays
being produced and staged today.

Before a production of a new play can take shape – with a director,
actors, sets, lights and costumes – the script must be complete, or
at least nearly so. The process of getting the text to this place is
referred to by those in production as "new play development."

On any given day, there are staged readings or workshops of plays-in-
progress being produced by theaters big and small, in major cities
and small towns all across the United States. And, there are legions
of playwrights sitting alone at their keyboards working on the re-
writes that spring from these collaborations.

Why? Because it is common wisdom in the field that inviting a
director and actors into a writer’s process at various points in a
play’s development is the best way to cultivate new work for the
theater and to develop new talent. It is also the road to production
in the current U.S. model. Often a theater’s Literary Department –
assigned the task of scouting new plays for possible production –
will not even read a script submission unless the play has had a
development history, such as a staged reading.

This new play development process has only been applied in a limited
way within the Armenian diasporan community in the United States.
Often, there is ample support within the community for the results –
a film screened, a play produced – but there is less support for the
steps necessary to achieve those results.

A greater investment in new play development among the U.S. diasporan
Armenian theater community could translate into more playwrights and
screenwriters of Armenian descent, as well as more – and stronger –
scripts featuring Armenian characters and themes. It could also lead
to the next stage of maturation for a theater community still in its
infancy. The ultimate outcome: more Armenian artists making an
impact in the field and more Armenian stories being disseminated to a
wider audience.

Anais Thomassian and Joe LeMieux in Lilly Thomassian’s Thirst at Luna
Playhouse, 2006. Photo credit: Leon Parian.

The presentation of the three finalists for the William Saroyan
playwriting prize this past August is a commendable step in this
direction. The competition, established by the William Saroyan
Foundation in 2007, awards a $10,000 prize for the best full-length
play based on an Armenian theme. For this inaugural year, the
Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance – a Boston-based nonprofit
organization whose mission is to project the Armenian voice on the
world stage through theater and film – administered the competition
and produced a three-day festival to present the top three scripts.
Each play was assigned a director and actors and, after a short
rehearsal period, was presented to the public in a performance at the
renowned Fountain Theater in Los Angeles.

The value of such an enterprise to the life of a play and the career
of a budding playwright can hardly be overstated. When I asked
Thomassian whether she had ever had a play of hers go straight from
first-draft to production, she dismissed the suggestion: "No," she
said, "I can’t imagine."

As it turns out, Thomassian’s prize-winning play Nadia – about an
Armenian family living in modern war-torn Iraq – did not emerge from
her head dressed in full regalia like Athena, armed and ready for
battle. It took ten years, working on and off, and at least 30 drafts
for the play to reach maturity. Readings and workshops were an
important part of that process.

"I love what a director brings to a play," added Thomassian. "And,
the actors show you a side of the work that you didn’t even know you
were writing. That’s what I love. [In a staged reading,] you’re not
working on a production, but on the text and making it play better."

The great majority of the development process for Thomassian’s plays,
however, has taken place outside of the Armenian community.

For example, to develop Nadia, Thomassian worked with groups such as
First Stage in Hollywood and Playwrights Ink, a writing group for Los
Angeles playwrights. Her plays Let the Rocks Speak and Thirst – both
of which received successful Los Angeles productions – were similarly
developed, with support primarily coming from non-Armenian theater
groups.

Such support not only helps shape a particular piece of writing, but
it can also be a vital source of encouragement for early-career
writers. Feedback from the very community most invested in the
success of Armenian art and artists may be just what is needed to
encourage a budding playwright.

Greater support from within the Armenian community could also lead to
the development of a network of Armenian theater artists.
Connections made through such efforts would foster more collaboration
among Armenian artists and result in a greater impact in the field.
After all, the collective voice is stronger than the lone one.

A scene from the 2003 Fountain Theatre production of "Let the Rocks
Speak," by Lilly Thomassian.

Steps taken in support of new play development within the Armenian
community nurture Armenian playwrights and plays and are to be
applauded. Such efforts are not only a wise investment in individual
artists working in this powerful story-telling medium; they also
foster the growth and development of a diasporan Armenian theater
community in the United States.

An even greater investment in the process would help ensure that when
scripts finally do spring to life fully-formed – armed with the
literary equivalent of Athena’s mighty thunderbolt – the work is in
top form, showcasing Armenian talent and stories in the best possible
light.

And wouldn’t that be wisdom indeed?

All Rights Reserved: Critics’ Forum, 2008. Exclusive to the Armenian
Reporter.

Lori Yeghiayan holds a Master of Fine Arts degree in Theater from the
University of California, San Diego and has worked as a professional
actress in television, radio, film and theatre.

You can reach her or any of the other contributors to Critics’ Forum
at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
in this series are available online at To sign
up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
Critics’ Forum is a group created to
discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.

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"Faith & Heritage" Youth Compaign in the Province of Syunik

PRESS RELEASE
Land and Culture Organization
1435 Old House Road
Pasadena, CA 91107
Contact: Hilda Manjikian
[email protected]
Tel: (626)-688-8027

"Faith & Heritage" Youth Compaign in the Province of Syunik
By Davit Davtyan

This year, during the weekend of August 8-10, under the auspices of
the Land & Culture Organization, the Faith & Heritage Youth Campaign
became a reality once more. The campaign this year, the brainchild of
the late Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian, and in his memory, took place in
the direction of Sisian and Goris regions of Armenia.

Every year, during the summer months, for one or two three-day
weekends, a group of young men and women take to the roads to visit
monasteries and other national historical monuments located in various
regions of Armenia in order together, with the youth of local
villages, to clean the areas surrounding the monuments and thereby
instill the feeling of caring for the vestiges of our history and also
to bring it to a presentable state for all to enjoy.

This year, there were around 50 young participants of college age from
both Yerevan and other regions of Armenia. This group was joined by
participants from local villages and towns on the route to the various
sites visited.

The bus, carrying the participants left Yerevan on August 8 at 6:00 pm
in the direction of Shake Hydroelectric station where organizers who
were sent ahead, had already prepared the tents and other facilities
to spend the night. After a festive evening of food and music, they
settled for the night.

Early in the morning of August 9, the group had their breakfast and
started on their way to the historical monuments of the Sisian region.
First, they arrived to the city of Sisian where they were joined by
local youth and the historical monuments protection officials of the
area. They visited the local St. Gregory the Illuminator Church, a 7th
century temple where to their surprise, the surrounding area was quite
properly maintained. They visited the city museum as well as the
Karadaran, an open air repository of ancient Khatchkars, gravestones
and rock carvings.

The next stop was Aghitu village where they visited the 7th century
mausoleum. With the help of the group, the site was totally cleared
and restored from the wild vegetation growth and thorny bushes that
had covered the entire surrounding area. Later, the group arrived at
the splendid Vorotnavank monastic complex. After familiarizing
themselves with the history of the monument, the group cleared the
area of rubbish and vegetation and brought the debris filled into
large garbage bags to their waiting bus to be disposed of later. Soon
after, the group arrived near the high ground of Vorotnabert where
they were told the heroic story of the fortress. Here, they started on
a long hike along the Vorotan river bank. The beautiful summer weather
and the sublime scenery made the journey a memorable experience. Along
the road, the group went across the Melik Tank bridge that crosses
over the Vorotan river and visited the Ourouti mineral springs as well
as the orchards of Vorotan village.

At the end of the day, the group returned to their tents and from
there they hiked the little distance to the Shake waterfall.
Overwhelmed by the day’s impressions, the goop organized the evening’s
dinner and entertainment around a huge campfire with the accompaniment
of songs and dances.

At 7:00 am next morning breakfast was served. After taking down the
tents, they cleaned the whole area around the Shake Hydroelectric
station and deposited the incredible rubbish with the local
representatives who promised to dispose of them themselves.

The first stop on Sunday was to be the ancient site of Karahounj where
the participants were told in detail of the story of this paradoxical
prehistoric celestial observatory. The bus then left for Tatev
Monastery. As a result of the worn out state of the road climbing to
the top of the mountain, it was not possible to go to the monastery
itself as planned, but instead, they began a very interesting hike
from next to the "Satani Kamourj" (Devil’s bridge), to a not less
interesting and important monument in the gorge of the Vorotan: the
Great Tatev Anapat. The trail was long and steep down to the ravine of
the Vorotan where this late Middle Ages monastic complex is situated.
The trail was quite hazardous and went through an incredibly
breathtaking scenery. The group finally arrived at the monastery.
There they met with the village mayor of Tatev who had come to
welcomed the volunteers and promised to provide any assistance
necessary, being familiar with the Land & Culture Organization that
had renovated the St. Minas church of his own Tatev village during a
two-year campaign some 7 years ago. The participants were familiarized
with the history of the monastery and, since during the previous year,
the whole complex was refurbished with the assistance of the US
Embassy in Armenia, the cleaning work was much easier than at other
monument sites.
The group returned to Satani Kamourj that in itself is a very
interesting site and sat down to rest. The bus then left for the city
of Goris. They visited the local church, the ancient Goris caves, the
local geological museum and finally the Aksel Bakounts house-museum.

The final stop of the campaign therefore was the city of Goris, from
where the group started, late at night, the return trip to Yerevan.

It must be said that this three-day trip, with its participants of
close to 80 youth, counting those from local villages who joined the
group as it traveled on its itinerary, was not only a very rewarding
experience of collaboration, fun, work, education, but also was a
confirmation of Abp. Ashjian’s and Land & Culture Organization’s
legacy of safeguarding our historical monuments and maintaining them
in a proper and clean state of preservation for all to visit and to
enjoy.

It is always possible to go on different trips and campaigns, but if
during the course of those trips you conduct labors that are useful,
they not only revive the participant but also the moment. It gives a
breath of liveliness to those derelict and abandoned churches
scattered all over the mountains. Every time you witness one, you
become more amazed and wonder about the number of treasures that we
possess in far away places, built by our own ancient master builders.
By witnessing these wonders you realize that you are the heir of these
edifices and that it is your duty to preserve them and pass these
spiritual and cultural remnants on to the next generation.

The Land and Culture Organization, along with its other one-month long
projects of renovation and restoration of schools, hospitals,
monasteries, will continue this Faith & Heritage outings every year to
pursue its calling and its activities in the motherland.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

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