Baku Promises Prosperity To Karabakh Armenians After Conflict Is Res

BAKU PROMISES PROSPERITY TO KARABAKH ARMENIANS AFTER CONFLICT IS RESOLVED

Interfax, Russia
September 10, 2013 Tuesday 2:53 PM MSK

BAKU. Sept 10

Azerbaijan regards Karabakh Armenians as its citizens and promises
them a prosperous life after the Armenian-Azeri conflict is settled.

“We accept Armenian residents of Karabakh as our citizens and we want
them to live a good life,” says an article by Azeri Foreign Minister
Elmar Mammadyarov published in the parliamentary newspaper Azerbaijan.

Yet the presence of Armenian armed units on the occupied Azeri lands
is the main impediment to peace, he said.

“Armenia should realize that its salvation depends on the soonest
possible settlement of the conflict and normalization of its relations
with its neighbors, especially Azerbaijan,” the minister stressed.

Te cm

Armenian Genocide Memorial Approved In Pasadena

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL APPROVED IN PASADENA

Los Angeles Times, CA
Sept 11 2013

By Joe Piasecki
September 11, 2013, 4:36 p.m.

A proposal to memorialize victims of the Armenian genocide with a
monument in Pasadena received unanimous approval from Pasadena City
Council members Monday, a decision cheered by Armenian American
leaders in Glendale who have joined the effort to see it built.

Organizers of the nonprofit Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial
Committee are raising funds to erect the monument at Memorial Park
in central Pasadena before the centennial observance of the genocide
on April 24, 2015.

Garo Ghazarian, chair of the Armenian Bar Assn. and a member of the
Glendale Civil Service Commission, said Pasadena is a fitting home
for the tribute because the city was the first in Southern California
to embrace Armenian American immigrants before and after the genocide.

That a City Council without Armenian American members united behind
the proposal is “all the more reason to be encouraged that there is
hope for greater understanding and acceptance of what history has
documented so well,” said Ghazarian, who was among more than 150
supporters who attended the meeting at Pasadena City Hall.

The monument’s design will include a three-column tripod from which
drops of water will fall into a carved stone basin. About 1.5 million
of these symbolic teardrops will fall each year, representing the
estimated number of lives lost during the genocide.

The campaign in Pasadena has also rekindled talks of erecting a
genocide monument in Glendale, a conversation that began more than
a decade ago, according to the Glendale News-Press.

“Building a genocide memorial in Pasadena is setting an example for
what should be done in Glendale,” said David Gevorkyan, a member of
the Pasadena memorial committee’s board who also serves on Glendale’s
city Audit Committee.

Dan Bell, Glendale’s liaison to a community group that plans the
annual city-sponsored genocide memorial ceremony in the city, said
members are seeking to revive a dormant nonprofit board previously
in charge of plans for a Glendale monument.

More than 1,000 people signed a petition in favor of the Pasadena
monument and Glendale City Councilman Zareh Sinanyan attended Monday’s
Pasadena council meeting to voice his support.

Ghazarian, who co-chairs a committee planning Armenian genocide
commemoration events throughout the western United States, said
Glendale should consider a museum or permanent library exhibit focused
on the tragedy.

“Something significant needs to be done in Glendale,” he said.

,0,2573738.story

From: A. Papazian

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-armenian-genocide-memorial-approved-in-pasadena-20130911

Pasadena Approves Armenian Genocide Memorial

PASADENA APPROVES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MEMORIAL

U-T San Diego, CA
Sept 11 2011

By The Associated Press 8:46 a.m.Sept. 11, 2013

PASADENA, Calif. – Pasadena will commemorate the Armenian genocide
of 1915 with a monument in Memorial Park.

The Los Angeles Times reports ( ) the City
Council unanimously approved a design for the memorial, which will
include a stone water basin straddled by a tripod of three columns.

A single drop of water will fall from the highest point every three
seconds, with each “teardrop” representing one life lost.

The nonprofit Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial Committee is raising
funds to erect the monument before the centennial observance of the
genocide in April 2015.

Organizers say Pasadena is a fitting home for the tribute because
the city was the first in Southern California to embrace Armenian
immigrants before and after the genocide.

The memorial was designed by Catherine Menard, a student at the Art
Center College of Design.

http://lat.ms/1aqloD4
http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2013/sep/11/pasadena-approves-armenian-genocide-memorial/

Pasadena City Council Approves Armenian Genocide Monument

PASADENA CITY COUNCIL APPROVES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MONUMENT

Los Angeles Times, CA
Sept 11 2013

By Joe Piasecki
September 11, 2013, 7:31 a.m.

The Pasadena City Council has given unanimous approval for a public
memorial commemorating the Armenian genocide of 1915 in Memorial Park.

The central feature of the design — a carved-stone basin of water
straddled by a tripod arrangement of three columns leaning into one
another — is a single drop of water that falls from the highest
point every three seconds, each “teardrop” representing one life lost.

Over the course of one year, 1.5 million “tears” will fall into the
pool, representing the estimated number of people who died during the
Armenian genocide of 1915 to 1918, which occurred under the Ottoman
Empire, what is now the modern republic of Turkey.

The Turkish government disputes that a genocide occurred, claiming
the victims were killed in the chaos of World War I.

Organizers of the nonprofit Pasadena Armenian Genocide Memorial
Committee are raising funds to erect the monument at Memorial Park
in central Pasadena before the centennial observance of the genocide
on April 24, 2015, the Glendale News-Press reported.

Garo Ghazarian, chair of the Armenian Bar Assn. and a member of the
Glendale Civil Service Commission, said Pasadena is a fitting home
for the tribute because the city was the first in Southern California
to embrace Armenian American immigrants before and after the genocide.

That a city council without Armenian American members united behind
the proposal is “all the more reason to be encouraged that there is
hope for greater understanding and acceptance of what history has
documented so well,” said Ghazarian, who was among more than 150
supporters who attended the meeting Monday night at Pasadena City Hall.

More than 1,000 people signed a petition in favor of the Pasadena
monument, which was designed by Catherine Menard, a student at the
Art Center College of Design.

,0,4768119.story

http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-pasadena-city-council-approves-armenian-genocide-momunment-20130911

Armenians Gather For Annual Festival

ARMENIANS GATHER FOR ANNUAL FESTIVAL

Western Queens Gazette, NY
Sept 11 2013

On September 7, the Armenian Church of the Holy Martyrs at Oceania
Street and Horace Harding Expressway in Bayside, celebrated its annual
Oceania Street Festival in observation of the Feast of the Exaltation
of the Holy Cross.

Hundreds of area residents, many of Armenian descent, feasted on
traditional foods that included chicken kebabs, salads, a variety of
pita breads, baklava, coffee, imported teas, wine and beer.

A band provided musical entertainment with ethnic dance performances
and modern musical selections.

Children’s rides, games and festival foods lined Oceania Street, where
youngsters enjoyed slides, a bounce house, cotton candy and ice cream.

Candidate for Queens borough president Melinda Katz and her partner,
Curtis Sliwa of the Guardian Angels, shook hands and greeted the
festivalgoers.

Dozens of vendors sold Armenian themed novelties and gifts, including
books, music, movies and jewelry.

Admission to the festival was free and participants enjoyed good
times under a sunny sky. -Jason D. Antos

http://www.qgazette.com/news/2013-09-11/Features/Armenians_Gather_For_Annual_Festival.html

Conversation With…Dr. Israel Charny

CONVERSATION WITH…DR. ISRAEL CHARNY

Connecticut Jewish Ledger
Sept 11 2013

Posted by JudieJacobson on September 11, 2013

By Cindy Mindell

Dr. Israel Charny

A world premiere exhibition on the pioneering work of genocide scholar
and psychotherapist Israel W. Charny will open at the University of
Hartford on Monday, Sept. 23.

Born in Brooklyn in 1931, Charny has lived in Israel since 1973. He
completed his training in clinical psychology in the U.S. at the
University of Rochester in 1957. Over the course of his career, he
has become one of the world’s leading experts on genocide, a pioneer
in the field of genocide studies, and the founder of the Institute
on the Holocaust and Genocide in Jerusalem, all the while remaining
a practicing psychotherapist and acknowledged expert on marriage
and family therapy in Israel. Charny is now retired professor of
psychology and family therapy at Hebrew University of Jerusalem and
Tel Aviv University.

“Genocide: Israel Charny and the Scourge of the Twentieth Century”
will be on view in the Museum of Jewish Civilization at the University
of Hartford through April 2014. The presentation charts the life and
career of this pathbreaking scholar, while highlighting photography
of sites where three 20th century genocides took place: the 1915
Armenian Genocide, the Holocaust or Shoah of European Jewry, and the
1994 Rwandan Genocide.

A co-founder and past president of the International Association of
Genocide Scholars (IAGS), Charny is editor-in-chief of the Encyclopedia
of Genocide, (ABC-Clio Publishers, U.S. and UK, 1999) and author of
Fascism and Democracy in the Human Mind (University of Nebraska Press,
2006), both works selected by the American Library Association as
“Outstanding Academic Book of the Year.”

Charny is executive director of the Institute on the Holocaust and
Genocide in Jerusalem, which received the 2011 Armenian President’s
Prize, “in recognition of his decades-long academic work and activities
contributing to international recognition of the Armenian Genocide
and his researches of denials of genocides.”

He is founding editor of GPN Genocide Prevention Now,
(genocidepreventionnow.org).

On the eve of the new exhibition honoring Charny and his career,
he discussed his work with the Ledger via email.

Q: Why did you decide to devote so much of your professional life to
the understanding and prevention of genocide?

A: I had not planned as such to study genocide, but it came to
me, so to speak, and told me that I had to devote myself to this
subject. It was some six years after my PhD in clinical psychology when
I successfully passed the examinations for the highest certification
(the “Boards”) in my profession. I went to sleep happy with my success
and awoke with a dream about the Holocaust, and specifically the
pounding question of how could they have done what they did to us
Jewish fellow human beings – men, women, and children. I realized
with horror that in all of my wonderful training at an outstanding
American university and several psychiatric hospitals, in those
days I had never been trained in any aspect of human violence or
destructiveness, let alone any effort whatsoever to understand the
Holocaust and other genocides. It was then that I resolved that,
along with the practice of psychotherapy, which I love to this day,
I would devote myself to the study of genocide. In time my decision
became two-fold: first, in my own researches to contribute to the
understanding of the psychology of genocide, and second, to seek at
the same time to contribute to the development of an interdisciplinary,
as well as multi-ethnic, discipline of genocide studies.

Q: What has kept you engaged for so many decades?

A: Believe it or not, I have found that my deep devotion to the
subject of genocide studies has added perceptibly to my pleasures of
life and to my very deep commitment to the sacredness of human life.

Some Holocaust/genocide researchers indeed end up bitterly depressed
or burned out, but there are any number who are led to savor life’s
beauties all that much more. When I taught undergraduates a course
on the Holocaust and genocide I would tell them that there will be
nights when they will feel terrible over what they learned and saw
in films that day in class but then suddenly there may come a wave of
hunger for the best hamburger in town or a hunger for their boyfriend
or girlfriend, and my advice to them was to go get it- because that is
the point of our fury and condemnation of those who destroy human life.

Q: What are your professional experiences with and findings regarding
children and grandchildren of Holocaust and genocide survivors?

A: There have been many, many studies of children of Holocaust
survivors in particular; less of the children of other peoples who have
suffered genocide. The main findings make a lot of sense to me and also
fit my clinical experiences as a therapist: The second generation is
unbelievably successful in its achievements, and scared to death of
intimate emotions and especially wary of any kind of anger – including
perfectly normal anger – towards loved ones. It is also a generation
pursued by obligations. I saw one couple in treatment because they
were fighting too much and too strongly and the key turned out to be
that she – a second-generation daughter to two full-blown Auschwitz
survivors – had been so obligated in her childhood and teenage years
to tread softly on the floors of their house so that her nervous and
irritable parents would not be upset that she literally had a need to
explode now that she was free and married – and was she one powerful
and delightful fighter, but obviously too much so.

I am less knowledgeable about research taking place about the third
generation, but what I see in my practice are third generation
offspring who have grown up with parents who could not give them
the full range of emotions. Commitment? You better believe it –
overwhelmingly so. Caring? No doubt whatsoever. But intimacy in
tenderness and loving, including a freedom to allow angry emotions
both in the parents and the child, were not expressed sufficiently.

Q: At what point does behavior described as “civil war” cross the
line into “genocide?”

A: For me, genocide is the purposeful killing of masses of unarmed
civilians without there being a strategic military intention to
the attack. In other words, collateral damage to civilians in the
course of a military operation does not qualify immediately for
a concept of genocide, although if the collateral damage is very
large, the legal definition moves towards a possible definition of
“crimes against humanity.” There have been any number of Holocaust and
genocide scholars who have wanted to insist that genocide has to be
a purposeful effort to destroy a given people entirely – such as the
Nazis’ intention to destroy the Jews. But life is far more complicated
and genocide comes in many different packages. The Cambodians destroyed
one third of their fellow countrymen, the majority of whom had no
significantly different identity – the killers and victims were of
the same people. In Rwanda we are told that the distinction between
Tutsi and Hutu was a very artificial and recent construction by the
Belgian colonizers; moreover, there are a great number of accounts
of Hutu also slaughtering fellow Hutu in the process, let alone an
unbelievable number of accounts of the genociders slaughtering members
of their own extended family.

Some years ago I published a satire in a journal for social science
teachers in which I described several all-too-able genociders like
Hitler, Stalin, and Pol Pot seeking legal advice to help them continue
their activities because a kind of “heat” was beginning to build up
against genocide in the international system. I sent them to a firm
of international lawyers that was named “Whore, Satan, and Conformist
– Attorneys at Law.” The learned defenders of justice gave several
pieces of advice among which stood out the recommendation that when
the genociders want to kill a specific people – as called for by
the definitional purists – they should henceforth be careful to kill
them in a situation where they are mixed with many other peoples who
are not defined as specific targets of the genocide, and this will
complicate legal charges of genocide against them.

For me, civil war that includes killing of masses of helpless civilian
human beings is very much genocide.

Q: A propos, how would you define the recent use of chemical weapons
in Syria?

A: Yes, what is happening in the civil war in Syria includes a great
deal of out-and-out genocide. That certainly is the proper description
for the indiscriminate poison gassing of many hundreds of people, not
to mention the wildly indiscriminate shelling and shooting killings
of huge civilian populations in many Syrian cities. When the ugly
shebang first began, we at GPN Genocide Prevention Now proceeded
quite promptly to identify the murdering that then numbered in the
single-figure thousands as genocide, and we tracked the progressive
development of what we came to call “unfolding genocide” from issue
to issue. Incidentally, when it all started, one of the too many
virulent antisemites in academia in our times, who is otherwise a
very gifted scholar of many aspects of genocide, insisted publicly
that GPN’s criticisms of the killing in Syria were hardly the issue
in the Middle East, and that the only real source and risk of genocide
in the Middle East is – you better believe it – the State of Israel.

Q: How does the State of Israel define and deal with the Armenian
Genocide?

A: Shamefully. Cowardly. Disgustingly pragmatically. I too have made
decisions not to tell a truth when I felt that the truth could lead
to real harm to human beings. Thus, in 1982 when I launched the First
International Conference on the Holocaust and Genocide in Tel Aviv,
the Turkish government objected strenuously to our allowing several
presentations on the Armenian Genocide (six lectures out of a scheduled
300), and enlisted the efforts of the Israeli government to close the
conference down. The Turks made their characteristic wild threats that
sounded like Jewish lives in Istanbul and especially Jews escaping
from Iran through Turkey might really be at risk. For several months
I did not say a word publicly about what was happening, even as my
colleagues and I continued to work adamantly towards continuation of
the conference to include every one of the papers and a film on the
Armenian Genocide (the conference did take place very meaningfully).

When the time came, I told the whole story as it really was to the
world press and it received a good deal of coverage – including in the
New York Times – as a case history of standing up against governments.

Official Israel denies recognition of the Armenian genocide, but thank
God the Israeli people and the Israeli culture very much recognize
the historical validity of the Armenian genocide. One small example
is that to this day, the Forty Days of Musadagh is an inspiring piece
of Zionist education, let alone one heck of a great read.

So much of Israeli government denial of recognition has been
unnecessarily obsequious and downright cowardly and kowtowing even
in situations that hardly involved major security and political
considerations. When my late brother, poet, translator and editor, T.

Carmi (Charny) was editor of a wonderful multi-language magazine called
Ariel that was published by Israel’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs,
there was a touching story about the Armenian Quarter in the Old City
of Jerusalem, in the course of which there was all of a brief reference
to the Armenian genocide and the many orphans of that genocide who
found safety settling in our good old Jerusalem and elsewhere in
Palestine. The issue had already been printed in thousands of copies
in several languages – rare in those days, on expensive glossy paper
– and you wouldn’t believe it, but the Foreign Ministry stopped the
distribution to cut the page out, replace it and rebind the magazine.

The people of Israel, indeed the Knesset of Israel, have shown
themselves entirely ready to recognize the Armenian genocide; it
is the political leadership of Israel – of all political parties to
date – that has continued a realpolitik of currying the mad Turkish
insistence on denial.

Would any of us ever agree to denials of our Holocaust – for
any political or commercial or even less than critical security
considerations?

Q: One common characteristic arising from genocides or “ethnic
cleansing” is the semantic challenge exemplified by Bill Clinton
regarding what was happening in the former Yugoslavia, and the
resultant foot-dragging on the part of the UN countries capable of
helping. How do you explain this reluctance on the part of world
leaders to call a genocide what it is?

A: For quite a while, we believed that once a genocidal event
was labeled as a genocide in the international system, such as by
the United Nations or by the United States as the world’s leading
democracy, there would follow an imperative of intervention to halt
or reduce the ongoing genocide. The delays on such recognition were
unconscionable. At the time of the Cambodian genocide, the United
Nations Human Rights Commission called for a study of the dilemma
that the killers were destroying fellow countrymen and not an “other”
people, so how could it be genocide? They called for a report on the
dilemma to be given no less than a year later – during which hundreds
of thousands more, of course, were killed. In recent years we have
learned the further sad truth that even when proper recognition
of a genocide does take place, such as nowadays in greater Sudan,
the world as a whole does not necessarily take action – even to help
starving uprooted refugees in the Nuba Mountains as winter closes in
at this time.

The huge question is, why in hell has humanity avoided recognizing
the Number One killer of human life – genocide?

Genocide is a massive experience of death, and I think that so much
of our personal human machinery and our societies’ ways of organizing
our lives are devoted to an overwhelming denial of – what we all know
is totally true – the impending death of every one of us. Indeed,
one of the conclusions I have come to about terrifying readiness of
human beings to commit genocide is that it serves, unconsciously,
as a form of sacrificing others to a death we fear for ourselves:
I make you die because I am God-like in my powers and I will prove
it with your death, and since I am God-like I will absolutely ensure
my true goal of staying alive forever.

Q: Do you see signs of hope in our world regarding genocide prevention?

A: NO – and yes. My “NO” is unfortunately stronger than my Yes, but
thank God there is a degree of “Yes.” If we only have the time before
our quite stupid species destroys itself on this planet, then the
facts are that we have been making a great deal of, in fact wonderful,
progress over the last 30 years in identifying the previously unnamed
crime of genocide.

The word-concept “genocide” was first coined by a very special survivor
and escapee from the Holocaust, a Polish jurist, Raphael Lemkin, who
lost virtually all of his family in the Holocaust even as he made his
way first to Sweden and then to the US. After the war, he is credited
virtually singlehandedly with bringing about the United Nations
Convention on Genocide. Ever since there are new developments in the
legal system, including international courts that have functioned
with some meaningfulness in the cases of the former Yugoslavia and
Rwanda, and more recently the development of the International Criminal
Court in the Hague. There are increasing researches and professional
journals of genocide studies in the intellectual and academic world,
and we now have professional organizations of genocide scholars that
number in the hundreds. Back in the early 1980s, the best we could do
at first was to identify three American-Jewish scholars who published
works on the subject of genocide and then a handful more who joined
us in the continuation of that decade.

And if for many years the subjects of discourse in the field were
the definition and identification of genocide and understanding the
characteristics of the genocidal process, in recent years the word
“prevention” has been added to the focus of the genocide scholar. It
is, I suggest, something like a medical-scientific process where first
the phenomena of a disease – say, like cancer – are identified and
described, and then some years later major efforts begin at developing
treatment and prevention.

GPN Genocide Prevention Now is clearly dedicated to furthering our
human society’s very underdeveloped capacities to reduce genocide,
stop genocide, and prevent genocide.

Shana Tova from Jerusalem in our tumultuous conflict-ridden world.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.jewishledger.com/2013/09/conversation-withdr-israel-charny/

Greenberg Center Launches Its New Holocaust Genocide-Studies Initiat

GREENBERG CENTER LAUNCHES ITS NEW HOLOCAUST GENOCIDE-STUDIES INITIATIVE

Connecticut Jewish Ledger
Sept 11 2013

Posted by JudieJacobson on September 11, 2013
By Cindy Mindell

WEST HARTFORD – With the opening of its new exhibition and educational
program, “Genocide: Israel Charny and the Scourge of the Twentieth
Century,” the Maurice Greenberg Center for Judaic Studies at the
University of Hartford takes up the mantle created by Charny nearly
35 years ago.

Charny co-founded the first academic institution dedicated to
Holocaust and genocide studies in Jerusalem in 1979, together with
Shamai Davidson z”l and Nobel Laureate Elie Wiesel. Their Institute
on the Holocaust and Genocide may also be the first whose researchers
linked the two phenomena in their studies.

Earlier this year, the landmark institution joined forces with the
Greenberg Center, the result of a shared vision between Charny and
Greenberg professors Richard Freund and Avinoam Patt. The Greenberg
Center’s new initiative includes management of the Genocide Prevention
Now Teaching Website, created by the Jerusalem Institute, as well as
a host of programs designed for University of Hartford students and
faculty, area educators, and the community at large.

The exhibition, “Genocide: Israel Charny and the Scourge of the
Twentieth Century,” marks the launch of this new initiative, which
includes a series of courses, workshops, public programs, exhibitions,
and web-based projects, all designed for students and educators as
well as for the community at large.

The Greenberg Center has focused on Holocaust and genocide education
over the past two decades through annual workshops and exhibitions,
many designed for educators. The center will now work to preserve the
testimonies of second and third generation Holocaust and genocide
survivors for an international educational oral history resource,
“In Our Own Words.” A pilot project will be launched in the greater
Hartford community this fall by Dr. Avinoam Patt, the Philip D.

Feltman Professor of Modern Jewish History at the Greenberg Center,
and director of the Museum of Jewish Civilization. As part of his
course, “Responses to the Holocaust,” honors students will interview
some 20 children of Holocaust survivors through CT Voices of Hope,
a program of the Jewish Federation Association of Connecticut.

Patt is working with Karen Jungblut, director of research and
documentation at the University of Southern California Shoah
Foundation, who will interact with the class via Skype.

“We want to find out how being the child of survivors impacts one’s
own identity and life choices,” Patt says. After its inaugural year,
the oral history project will be replicated by Patt’s colleagues
at academic institutions in England, Israel, Australia, and Rwanda,
resulting in a global archive of interviews.

As part of its new educational initiative, the Greenberg Center
recently named Dr. Joseph Olzacki as a special advisor on genocide and
Holocaust education. Olzacki is co-creator of the Identity Project, a
Holocaust and genocide education program that launched at Bloomfield
High School in 2006. At the time, Olzacki was director of visual
and performing arts and public information for the Bloomfield Public
Schools, and he designed the initiative together with Rabbi Philip
Lazowski of West Hartford and the Jewish Federation Association of
Connecticut (JFACT).

Since 2010, Olzacki has established a relationship with the government
of Rwanda, working with human rights and educational organizations on
anti-genocide curricula. In March, he helped organize the inaugural
event for the Greenberg Center’s Genocide and Holocaust Education
Initiative, bringing Rwanda president Paul Kagame to the university
to participate in an academic symposium on the aftermath of genocide
and to deliver a public lecture.

Patt hopes that, through Olzacki’s work, the Greenberg Center will
be able to sponsor exchange students from Rwanda.

Olzacki’s photos of Rwandan genocide sites will be featured in the
new exhibition.

“This is not a morbid exhibit; our intent is not to show anything
that is grotesque or inappropriate for a young audience, but rather
three sites of genocide over the course of the 20th century and what
they look like today,” Patt says. “There are pictures of memorials,
sites where genocide happened. The exhibition reflects on the process
of destruction without showing the end results of destruction.”

Among the photographs is the work of University of Hartford professor
Mari Firkatian, a descendant of survivors of the Armenian Genocide.

Firkatian’s photos highlight the reconstruction of the Sourp Giragos
(Holy George) Church in Diyarbakir, Turkey, which is being restored
thanks to the efforts of the town’s mayor and Armenians who fled the
city in 1915. Photographs taken by members of the Greenberg Center’s
Sobibor Documentation Project in Poland show the Sobibor Extermination
Camp and nearby Wlodawa Synagogue, and the Majdanek Concentration
and Extermination Camp.

“These photos are meant to raise awareness, that these are places that
once existed, still exist, and have great meaning to the people who
suffered there,” Patt says. “The last stage of genocide is denial. By
showing images of the sites of destruction and genocide, we teach
that these are real places and that these things happened. It’s our
duty to raise awareness.”

The Greenberg Center will present several programs on Holocaust and
genocide education during the fall semester:

~U Monday, Sept. 23, 7 p.m.: Lecture and Exhibit Opening: “Genocide:
Israel Charny and the Scourge of the Twentieth Century” KF Room
and Museum of Jewish Civilization, Mortensen Library, University
of Hartford. (For an in-depth interview with Dr. Israel Charny,
see below.)

~U Monday, Oct. 14, 7 p.m.: Film Screening – Sneak preview of Deadly
Deception at Sobibor, in honor of the 70th anniversary of the Sobibor
Revolt on Oct. 14, 1943. Wilde Auditorium, University of Hartford .

Tickets: (860) 768-4228

~U Monday, Oct. 28, 8:30 a.m.-3 p.m.: 14th Annual Holocaust and
Genocide Education Workshop: “Learn from the Past, Teach for
the Future”, 1877 Club, Harry Jack Gray Center, University of
Hartford, Registration required by Friday, Oct. 18: (860) 768-4964
or [email protected]

~U Monday, Oct. 28, 7 p.m.: “The Nazi Universe of Persecution: Recent
Findings of the USHMM Encyclopedia of Camps and Ghettos” with Dr.

Martin Dean, Applied Research Scholar and Editor, USHMM Encyclopedia
of Ghettos, Wilde Auditorium, University of Hartford

~U Saturday, Nov. 9, 7 p.m.: Symposium on Archaeology and the
Holocaust: “70 Years after the Sobibor Revolt: Special Kristallnacht
Program” with Yoram Haimi, Israel Antiquities Authority, Ben-Gurion
University of the Negev, Wilde Auditorium, University of Hartford

~U Monday, Nov. 11, 7 p.m.: Kristallnacht Program: “Holocaust Denial:
A New Form of Anti-Semitism” with Dr. Deborah Lipstadt, Dorot Professor
of Modern Jewish History and Holocaust Studies, Emory University

UConn Greater Hartford Campus, 85 Lawler Road, West Hartford. Program
information: (860) 768-4964

http://www.jewishledger.com/2013/09/greenberg-center-launches-its-new-holocaust-genocide-studies-initiative/

Book: The Bible Wine Tour

THE BIBLE WINE TOUR

ChristianityToday.com
Sept 11 2013

Two highly imaginative experts explore viticulture, the Bible, and
Jesus’ taste in wines.

Book Title: Divine Vintage: Following the Wine Trail from Genesis to
the Modern Age Author: Randall Heskett Publisher: Palgrave Macmillan
Release Date: November 13, 2012 Pages: 288

In January of 2011, archaeologists announced the discovery of the
oldest known facility for producing grape wine. Working in a network
of caves in Armenia, they found fermentation jars, a 15-gallon basin
for treading grapes, and the remains of crushed grapes, leaves, and
vines. They dated the site’s age at about 6,100 years. This is not
the oldest evidence of grape wine-that would be the 7,400-year-old
chemical residues recovered in the Zargos Mountains in Iran. The
Armenian site, however, is the oldest known wine production facility.

Why mention this in Christianity Today? Because the “winery” was just
about 60 miles from Mount Ararat, where, the Bible says, Noah’s ark
landed and thus near where he planted the first vineyard. “After the
flood, Noah began to cultivate the ground, and he planted a vineyard.

One day he drank some wine he had made, and he became drunk and lay
naked inside his tent” (Gen. 9:20-21, NLT).

In Divine Vintage,Hebrew Bible scholar (and former wine importer)
Randall Heskett joins with oenologist (and president of the Institute
of Masters of Wine) Joel Butler trace the Bible’s “wine trail” from
Mount Ararat in the north to Egypt in the south. They devote the first
half of their book to the wine trail documented in the Bible and
other ancient texts, awakening the reader to the significance that
wine plays in the economy of the ancient world and in the religious
and economic life of Israel. The wine trail in the book’s second
half is literal rather than literary: the authors visit contemporary
wineries in the lands of the Bible, providing a helpful guide for
wine tourists in the Middle East.

The authors argue that wine is “a key protagonist for the evolution
of society from rootless and nomadic to settled, spiritual, and
cultured.” Wine, they say, “is the heart, soul, and body of Western
civilization.” While they don’t quite prove that exalted status,
they do link developments in ancient civilization to the evolution of
viticulture. Wine also played a very important role, both theologically
and culturally, in Israelite history. The authors have no time for
the conservative Christian belief that in the Bible, wine is always
a bane and never a blessing. (On the second page of the preface,
they announce that they simply will not treat “all of the pointless
claims that promote abstinence from alcohol or assertions that wine
in the Bible was not fermented.”) Their ultimate, light-hearted goal
is to answer the question WWWJD: What Wine Would Jesus Drink? The
authors saved their answer for the end of the book-so I’ll save it
for the end of this review.

In the Bible, wine appears far more frequently as a vehicle of God’s
blessing than an occasion of human folly. When Noah planted a vineyard,
it was an act of faith in God’s promises. So argues biblical scholar
Peter Green (currently pursuing a PhD at Wheaton College).

After the flood, the God who had just destroyed (or “de-created”) the
earth promised to permanently establish regular agricultural seasons.

“As long as the earth remains, there will be planting and harvest,
cold and heat, summer and winter, day and night” (Gen. 8:22, NLT). A
vineyard requires at least three years to produce its first usable
crop of wine grapes. Planting one means betting on a long run of the
right kind of weather and climate conditions. So when Noah took up his
role as a second Adam to cultivate the garden and populate the earth,
he was demonstrating faith in God’s blessing.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2013/september-web-only/bible-wine-tour.html

Soccer: Armenia Comes Up Short Against Determined Denmark

ARMENIA COMES UP SHORT AGAINST DETERMINED DENMARK

Football.co.uk
Sept 11 2013

Author: Armen Bedakian Published : 11 Sep 2013 09:21:06

The Build Up to the Game

Fresh off a last-minute win against the Czech Republic, Armenia
continue their quest to qualify for the 2014 FIFA World Cup in Brazil,
taking on Denmark in the capital, Yerevan. Only Denmark, Bulgaria and
Italy stand in Armenia’s way for a second place finish in Group B,
so three points is a must today, to put Armenia at 12 points.

They will also be hoping results go against Bulgaria, who face Malta.

While the full three points may be all but assured for Bulgaria, an
upset against Bulgaria would put Armenia in a great position heading
into the most crucial match of the group against Bulgaria.

Armenian goalkeeper Roman Berezovsky is not available for this match,
after he was taken off with an injury in the last game. Gevorg
Kasparov will replace him between the posts. Another notable change
in the starting XI is the inclusion of both Marcos Pizzelli and Aras
Ozbiliz, replacing Yura Movsisyan, who struggled against the Czech
Republic. Captain Henrikh Mkhitaryan starts once more for Armenia, with
pressure on his shoulders to score his record-breaking goal at last.

The last time these two sides met, Armenia went home with a 4-0
victory, something that Denmark manager Morten Olsen likened to the
“Denmark 9/11.” He later apologized for this statement.

So, with a full three points on their mind, Armenia take on Denmark
with one eye set towards Brazil, and a hope that results will finally
go their way and see them to a spot on a grand stage.

The First Half

Armenia started off the first half well, defending in numbers and
controlling the ball in midfield. In the second minute of play,
Varazdat Haroyan picked up the first yellow card of the game. Denmark,
in their traditional style, reacted to Armenia’s offensive pressure
with a cool, calm demeanour. The first 15 minutes was a relatively
even affair, with Armenia controlling a bit more of the possession.

However, neither side could open their scoring accounts early.

In the 23rd minute, Armenian goalkeeper Kasparov was forced to make
two big saves, but the number 12 came up big and kept Armenia’s goal
safe. Three minutes later, Artur Sarkisov was subbed in for Karlen
Lazarian, adding another element of attack to Armenia’s midfield. On
the half hour mark, Mkhitaryan caught sight of goal from well outside
the box and took a shot, but it went wide.

Armenia won a corner in the 32nd minute, which they drew short to
find Artur Yedigyan in midfield. His shot went high, and a few seconds
later, he picked up a yellow card for a rough tackle in midfield. Each
Denmark attack was met with a resilient Armenian defender clearing the
ball from the box, making it difficult for the Danes to connect up top.

Armenia won a foul outside the box in the 38th minute, and Denmark’s
Peter Ankersen was awarded a yellow card for the challenge. Ozbiliz
stepped up and curled the ball in, and met with the head of a Danish
defender, who cleared it for a corner. Mkhitaryan picked it up outside
the box, burst forward, and won another corner in the process. Ozbiliz
passed the ball in close, got the return pass and took a shot on goal,
but the shot didn’t test the keeper.

With five minutes to go in the first half, the Danes continued to
push forward with intent. At the 45 minute mark, Niki Zimling came off
for Casper Sloth. That would be the final bit of action for the half,
and the two sides head into the dressing rooms locked at 0-0.

The Second Half

Armenia kicked off the second half with a change, Sarkisov coming off
for Sargis Adamyan. Denmark earned a free kick right outside the box
in the 48th minute, which Christian Eriksen stood over, but he smacked
his shot against the wall and out for a corner. Armenia defended the
corner well. Ghazaryan and Ozbiliz connected up top well, and produced
a strong chance in front of goal, but the final touch was lacking.

On the hour mark, Mkhitaryan was pulled down in midfield by William
Kvist, who was shown yellow for the challenge. Armenia pushed forward
with intent, Ozbiliz performing a neat trick which won Armenia a
corner. He stood over the corner spot, whipped the ball in, and found
an Armenian head. The headed effort smacked the bottom of the crossbar
but was deflected out!

In the 66th minute, Viktor Fischer came in for Martin Braithwaite,
Denmark’s second change of the match. Armenia made their final change
of the game in the 70th minute, David Manoyan coming in for Marcos
Pizzelli. Ozbiliz muscled his way past a handful of Danish defenders
minutes later, cracking a shot at goal, which was saved easily.

In the 72nd minute, Armenia faced disaster, when Haroyan slid in
for a rough tackle in the box, giving Denmark a penalty and getting
his second yellow. Now down a man and facing a penalty, Armenian
goalkeeper Kasparov couldn’t prevent Denmark’s captain from slotting
home, Daniel Agger giving Denmark a 1-0 lead.Now down to 10 men,
Armenia pushed forward looking for an equalizing goal with 15 minutes
to go in the match. Armenia won a foul in midfield, but Ozbiliz

completely missed his mark, kicking the ball out for a goal kick. With
only eight minutes to go, Denmark made their final change of the night,
Niki Bille coming off for Simon Makienok.

Armenia grew more and more desperate for possession as the seconds
ticked down, Denmark maintaining control of the bell well and moving
around into open spaces. Ozbiliz caused problems in defence, drawing
Nicolai Boilesen to a foul and subsequently, a yellow card. Ozbiliz
took the free quick well, forcing the keeper into making a big save,
but could not connect on the rebounding cross. Two minutes of added
time was all Armenia would get, which went by far too quickly, Armenia
unable to equalize. The final score of the game: Armenia 0-1 Denmark.

Final Thoughts: Armenia Good, Not Good Enough

Armenia now has two games left to play in Group B: one against
Bulgaria, the last, against Italy. The problem Armenia now faces is
that they require a full six points to have hope at finishing in the
second spot in the group. Sure, it could be done with four points,
but any points will be hard to come by against those two sides.

This may be it for Armenia, who have matured beyond their years,
have grown together as a unit and produced some fine footballers in
the process. As a child, I remember Armenia as a team with plenty of
heart but little talent to go along with it. Those days are now gone,
it seems. The name Mkhitaryan is well known now, his time at Borussia
Dortmund just beginning, but there are new faces, too, that warrant
mention.Aras Ozbiliz has emerged as a real talent for Armenia, and
that was on full display against Denmark, as he danced around several
midfielders and defenders for the full 90 minutes. It’s not just an
emergence of talent, however, that makes this Armenia a pleasure to
watch; there is also a beauty in their physical play. Unlike many
physical sides, Armenia plays with technique and finesse. Sure, the
style of play may be rough, as is the tactical approach Armenia has
taken, but unlike other hard hitting sides, Armenia recovers the ball
with two parts physicality and one part technique.

It makes Armenia a good side, but not a great one. It keeps Armenia
from being blown out in matches, even when they lose. It makes
Armenia a side that bigger teams now fear, where once the name was
associated with teams like San Marino or Malta. This Armenia team is
young, capable and showing results. It is not to be taken lightly,
as Denmark learned during their last encounter, and as many other
teams have found out in recent years. Once more, Armenia exceeds
expectations but come up short. They, like many other underdog sides,
will one day have their day, too. However, it looks less and less
likely that that day will come in Brazil.

Perhaps, with a touch of experience gained in the Bundesliga for Heno,
and the maturation of players like Ghazaryan, Ozbiliz and Movsisyan,
Armenia will become a force to be reckoned with during the UEFA Euro
cup qualifiers. They may even make

it to the finals, as they nearly did back in 2012. One thing is
certain, though. Armenia is no longer a minnow in Europe. They have
proven themselves to be a threat. As they continue to grow, so too
will soccer in the country, a country born nearly two thousand years
ago and independent, now, since 1991.

Good, but not quite there yet for Armenia. Bring on the Bulgarians.

Starting XI:

12 Gevorg Kasparov

3 Varazdat Haroyan

13 Kamo Hovhannisyan

20 Levon Hayrapetyan

15 Hrayr Mkoyan

6 Karlen Lazarian

7 Artur Yedigaryan

10 Gevorg Ghazaryan

8 Marcos Pizzelli

18 Henrikh Mkhitaryan (C)

23 Aras Ozbiliz

Substitutions: Artur Sarkisov in for Karlen Lazarian (26′); Sargis
Adamyan in for Artur Sarkisov (45′); David Manoyan in for Marcos
Pizzelli (70′).

http://www.football.co.uk/armenia/armenia_comes_up_short_against_determined_denmark_rss4402069.shtml

Soccer: The Fall Guy: Watch Armenia Star Ozbiliz Take Probably The W

THE FALL GUY: WATCH ARMENIA STAR OZBILIZ TAKE PROBABLY THE WORST CORNER OF ALL TIME

Daily Mail, UK
Sept 11 2013

By Phil Gradwell

When taking a corner, the golden rule is: beat the first man. Oh,
and don’t kick the flag, fall over and flail around before handling
the ball.

Armenia midfielder Aras Ozbiliz seemed to be in a rush to take a
set-piece in the World Cup qualifier against Denmark on Tuesday night
and that proved to be his downfall.

The Spartak Moscow star put the ball down, which considering what
happened next, was a remarkably competent start.

It soon unravelled, though, as he connected with the corner flag before
kicking the ball a matter of yards, falling over and grabbing the ball,
Ivan Campo-style.

And, to put the tin lid on it, he was quite correctly penalised
for handball.

Armenia lost the game 1-0 thanks to a Daniel Agger penalty in the
73rd minute. Just three months ago the Armenians beat the Danes
4-0, a result which delighted American-Armenian reality TV star Kim
Kardashian, who tweeted: ‘Let’s go Armenia’ after that victory.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sport/football/article-2417299/Watch-Armenia-star-Aras-Ozbiliz-probably-worst-corner-time–Video.html?ito=feeds-newsxml