Travel: Nagorno-Karabakh: The Land That Doesn’t Exist

NAGORNO-KARABAKH: THE LAND THAT DOESN’T EXIST

Wanderlust /MSN
Feb 6 2015

“This is the miracle of Gandzasar,” said Galust, pointing to a
missile embedded in the 13th-century mountaintop monastery where
locals say John the Baptist’s head is buried. “It hit,” said Galust,
“but never exploded.”

It was difficult reconciling the loveliness of this medieval
treasure’s valley location and exquisite 16-sided tambour, with the
bulletholes peppering its facade. Yet given the breakaway republic
of Nagorno-Karabakh’s recent history, following 70 years of Soviet
atheism, the real miracle of Gandzasar is that it remains standing
at all.

Nagorno nowhere

Nagorno-Karabakh, which perches like a jagged crown above northern
Iran, remerged after the USSR went supernova in the early 1990s and
sent breakaway Caucasus republics spiralling out of control like
rudderless sputniks. Chechnya, South Ossetia and Abkhazia remain
volatile. But a ceasefire between Karabakh separatists, their
Armenian allies and Azerbaijan, which fought for six years over
Nagorno-Karabakh, has held since 1994, allowing travellers to visit
what has become a de facto (although internationally unrecognised)
eastern extension of Armenia.

Stalin sowed the seeds of conflict in the region in 1921, pursuing
a policy of divide-and-rule to combat ethnic opposition within the
fledgling USSR. He severed predominately Christian Nagorno-Karabakh
from Armenia, and spliced it to the mainly Muslim Azerbaijan Soviet
Socialist Republic. The enclave sank into anonymity until Stalin’s
Machiavellian legacy came back to haunt the USSR’s disintegration,
when simmering ethnic tensions resurfaced.

Cradle of Christendom

It was from Armenia’s sun-drenched capital, Yerevan, that I made the
330km drive east into Nagorno-Karabakh: the only access corridor. With
me was Armenian guide, Galust Hovsepyan, whose world-weary countenance
belied his encyclopaedic brilliance for history and art.

In Yerevan we visited several poignant reminders of the 1988-94
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, such as the Mother Armenia Military Museum
and Yerablur Cemetery, where 7,000 Armenians are buried from a conflict
that cost 30,000 lives.

>From Yerevan it was a magnificent day’s drive through the cradle
of Christendom to reach Stepanakert, Nagorno-Karabakh’s capital. En
route, along Armenia’s Turkish border, roadside vendors sold sweet
watermelons, peaches, dried apricots and demijohns of areni wine.

Behind, snow-capped Mt Ararat rose 5,137m to a summit that allegedly
received Noah’s ark.

Mt Ararat was also annexed in 1921 to pacify Turkey but remains highly
auspicious to Armenians. On its foothills, at Khor Virap Monastery,
I clambered into a coal-black zindan (pit dungeon) where St Gregory
the Illuminator spent 13 miserable years imprisoned before emerging
to convert Armenia to Christianity in AD 301 – making it the world’s
first Christian nation.

Beyond Ararat the road soared above 2,000m onto Syunik’s rolling
golden prairie. It then entered the contentious Lachin Corridor, the
umbilical cord connecting Armenia and 4,400 sq km Nagorno-Karabakh
through now occupied Azerbaijan territory.

As we crossed over the River Ahavno, a border sign proclaimed ‘Welcome
to the Mountainous Republic of Karabakh’. However, the locals here
tend to call it Artsakh – nagorno (‘mountain’ in Russian) and karabakh
(‘black garden’ in Turkic) echo years of historic foreign domination.

A matter of life or death

There’s no obvious wartime hangover in modern Stepanakert, a vibrantly
breezy little capital that’s been industriously reborn. A youthful
population frequents airy boulevards of boutiques and cafes in a city
putting down roots. Living in a ceasefire zone seemed forgotten every
evening around the Armenia Hotel; on the former Soviet parade ground
of Renaissance Square, goose-stepping soldiers have been superseded by
promenading crowds. At 7pm I joined the nightly migration to Stepan
Shahumyan Park, where a funky fountain spewed in sync to musical
eclecticism – from Shostakovich to Shakira.

Stepanakert Museum holds evidence of centuries of Roman, Persian and
Turkic conquest. But raven-haired museum guide, Gayaneh, was keen to
reaffirm the territory’s Christian heritage, showing me khachkars,
medieval memorial stones finely decorated by geometric patterning
reminiscent of Celtic crosses.

When the war started, Gayaneh – then aged two – was evacuated to
Yerevan. “My father was a mathematician and stayed to fight as a tank
driver,” she said. This petite young woman told me she too would
fight for Artsakh. It reminded me of something I’d read by Russian
dissident Andrei Sakharov: ‘For Azerbaijan the issue of Karabakh is
a matter of ambition; for the Armenians of Karabakh, it is a matter
of life or death.’

“No country in the world recognises them,” Galust explained to us.

“But the Karabakh people are very stubborn and will never leave
these lands.”

“We Are Our Mountains” monument (Shutterstock)

Cultural corners

Over the next few days we sought out far-flung expressions of
Armenian culture in the form of secreted monasteries, fortresses
and ancient cities. First we visited the former capital Shushi, 10km
from Stepanakert. This mountaintop fortress tops the awe-inspiring
Karkar River canyon, the cliffs of which concertina into synclines as
if squeezed through a cook’s icing bag. Shushi’s war-damaged streets
showed glimpses of what once was an elegant multi-faith cosmopolitan
city: there were Persian inscriptions, Moorish Arabian arches and
the tiled minarets of 19th-century mosques. Shushi’s resident Muslim
Azeri worshipped here until recently, fleeing only in 1992 after
being overrun by Karabakh fighters in a ferocious battle that turned
the war in the latter’s favour.

Shushi’s restored 19th-century Ghazanchetsots Cathedral highlights
an interesting dichotomy. Nagorno-Karabakh’s reviving self-identity
centres on its Christian heritage yet during Soviet times practising
religion was forbidden so worship dwindled and churches fell into
disrepair.

After visiting Gandzasar’s hilltop medieval church, we took another
sublime drive to Dadivank Monastery. West of 3,340m Mrav Mountain,
we skirted south of Azerbaijan’s border into the Tartar Valley’s
fertile mosaic of fruit orchards and walnut groves. Here, the sparsely
populated villages contained abandoned Russian T-72 tanks and defunct
Soviet kolkhoz (collective farms). Indicative of the ever-present
Karabakh hospitality, an old man halted his donkey to press hazelnuts
into my hand with a toothless grin.

Galust hadn’t made this journey often so stopped to ask three old men
seated roadside how far Dadivank was. “Fifteen kilometres,” said one.

“Seventeen,” growled another. “It’s 20km!” the third exploded. “You’ve
both always talked rubbish.” When we returned two hours later, the
trio hadn’t budged.

Dadivank is completely unsigned and invisible from the road. Accessed
by a steep track onto a mountain terrace, the terracottacoloured
tenth-century building possesses the austere orthodoxy of mountainous
monasteries I’d seen in Greece and the Holy Land. “It was abandoned
and decayed during Soviet Azerbaijan rule. Not one rouble was spent
maintaining it,” complained Galust.

But the monastery touches the very nerve-ends of Christianity. Dadi,
a pupil of St Thaddeus (Jude the Apostle), is said to have travelled
to Armenia two millennia ago, spreading the gospel. The church was
originally built in the fourth century but rebuilt in medieval times.

Its antiquated decor comprises sumptuous bas-reliefs featuring Jude and
archaic Armenian script including a testament of Queen Arzou-Khatoun
bemoaning her sons’ martyrdom to Turkish invaders.

Unknown world wonder?

My adventures in the South Caucasus ended around eastern
Nagorno-Karabakh’s militarily imposed buffer zone within seized
Azerbaijan territory. It’s accessed via Askeran, where the turreted
wall of Mayraberd Fortress infills a valley like a row of yellowing
dentures. It was constructed by 16th-century Persian occupiers to
block access into Nagorno-Karabakh from the Caspian plains eastwards.

The monastery of Dadivank, Nagorno-Karabakh Republic (Shutterstock)

As I scrambled among the overgrown ruins, 75-year-old Zhora wandered
out from his garden of pomegranates and black grapes. “We used to
share Askeran with Azeris. We helped each other,” he said. “But it
became dangerous here in 1988 when there was violence. I was born
here and will never leave because my son was killed and buried here.”

Galust struggled to interpret Zhora’s dialect, which was flecked
with Russian and Farsi diction. But he understood his sentiments,
strident enough to suggest rapprochement with his former Azeri
neighbours remained distant.

Beyond Askeran, the mountains melted into the Caspian plain stretching
deep into sovereign Azerbaijan. Galust tuned in to an Azerbaijani
radio station while we gazed over Agdam, an Azeri ghost town, once
home to 80,000 people before being destroyed by Armenian forces.

Abandoned minarets poked above the rubble of shelled buildings.

(c) Provided by Wanderlust

The object of our journey was Tigranakert, a 2,000-year-old city that
may one day be celebrated as an ancient wonder of the world. For
now though, a small museum hosts just a fraction of the treasures
trickling from recent archaeological excavations. These reflect the
power of Armenian king, Tigram the Great, whose once formidable empire
(95-55BC) stretched from the Mediterranean to the Caspian. Marc Anthony
and then seventh-century Arab invaders later occupied Tigranakert
before its descent into obscurity.

“Tigranakert is unknown because there was a Soviet prison here so
it couldn’t be excavated until after the war,” explained Varham,
an onsite archaeologist. Most of the artefacts, coins, weapons and
tools are being catalogued in Yerevan. “The richness of these finds
and this architecture demonstrates that several thousand years ago
this was a major trading city between China and Arabia,” he added.

I hiked up to Tigranakert’s mountainside citadel and rested on
the remains of its first-century foundations as blistering hot
winds rasped the dry grass. I was totally alone bar scurrying sand
lizards and looping vultures. Such a vast empire, I reflected,
so completely forgotten. Then distant artillery fire from Armenian
military manoeuvres jolted me back from my heat-hazed daze into the
modern realpolitik of Nagorno-Karabakh.

“This status quo won’t change for some time but maybe in 20 years,
when the sentiments of war have died down, there can be an agreement,”
hoped Galust.

Nagorno-Karabakh remains controversial. And I was aware that, on my
travels, I hadn’t heard the Azerbaijani side of the argument. But
for now, this obscure breakaway republic, so rich in hospitality and
history, provides an absorbing offbeat break away.

The author travelled with Regent Holidays. Includes UK flights,
time in Yerevan, transportation to and around Nagorno-Karabakh,
most meals and a guide.

http://www.msn.com/en-ca/travel/news/nagorno-karabakh-the-land-that-doesnt-exist/ar-AA8nrmS

"Armenian Genocide In Film" Series To Begin On CSUF Campus

‘ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IN FILM’ SERIES TO BEGIN ON CAMPUS

US Fed News
February 10, 2015 Tuesday 1:58 PM EST

FRESNO, Calif., Feb. 10 — California State University Fresno issued
the following press release:

The first of three free, public lectures exploring “The Armenian
Genocide in Film: Theoretical and Comparative Perspectives” will be
held at Fresno State beginning Wednesday, Feb. 11.

The talks will be presented by Dr. Myrna Douzjian, the Henry K.

Khanzadian Kazan visiting professor of Armenian studies, who currently
teaches comparative literature courses at the University of California,
Los Angeles.

She will first discuss “The Genocide as Allegory in Serge Avedikian’s
Chienned Histoire” at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 11 at the Alice Peters
Auditorium, Room 191, in the Peters Business Building.

There will be a reception with free hors d’oeuvres from 6:30-7:30 p.m.

in the University Business Center gallery outside the auditorium.

The series of lectures will explore three films and an audiovisual
art installation in the context of the tension between fiction and
history, said Dr. Barlow Der Mugrdechian, coordinator of Fresno
State’s Armenian Studies Program.

Douzjian’s other two lectures will be “Atom Egoyan’s Ararat: Traumatic
Histories and Transitional Identities” on Thursday, March 19 and
“Reinventing the Genocide Documentary: Memories without Borders and
Solemnity” on Wednesday, April 8.

“The lectures will demonstrate that these texts, though completely
different in terms subgenre, complicate notions about interpreting
the Armenian Genocide,” Der Mugrdechian said. “Taken together,
the lectures assert that the filmic arts have a serious role to
play in our understanding of the genocide, one that goes beyond the
fetishization of history.”

The inaugural talk by Douzjian depicts the eradication of stray dogs
in the city of Constantinople in 1910.

“The short animated film serves as a representation of the genocide
of the Armenians,” Der Mugrdechian said.

Douzjian, who earned her Ph.D. in comparative literature from UCLA,
has published translations of contemporary Armenian poetry and drama
and regularly contributes articles dealing with diaspora Armenian
film and culture to the syndicated column, “Critics’ Forum.” She has
taught world literature and philosophical thought in the Intellectual
Heritage Program at Temple University in Philadelphia.

Free parking is available after 7 p.m. at Fresno State in lots P5
and P6 near the University Business Center with a parking code from
the Armenian Studies Program office.

UCSB Armenian Student Association Protests Genocide Denial

UCSB ARMENIAN STUDENT ASSOCIATION PROTESTS GENOCIDE DENIAL

The Bottom Line
Feb 11 2015

Alec Killoran
Staff Writer
Photos by Hitashi Bansal

The University of California, Santa Barbara Armenian Student
Association held a silent protest on Feb. 5 across from Storke Tower
to denounce the Turkish government’s continued denial of the Armenian
genocide. 2015 marks the 100th anniversary of the genocide perpetrated
by the Ottomans that triggered a diaspora of the Armenian people.

President of UCSB’s Armenian Student Association and fourth-year
sociology and Slavic languages and literature major Hasmik Baghdasaryan
organized the silent protest. The goal of the protest was to bring
awareness to an issue that receives little to no attention in modern
classrooms.

“There’s this whole big chunk of history missing from people’s
knowledge,” Baghdasaryan said. “This is a big enough part of history
that we want to talk about it.”

The protest’s silent nature attracted curious passersby, and the
protesters engaged them in what they feel is a critical conversation.

“As someone whose family was directly affected by the genocide,
it’s more or less disrespectful to have people completely deny
the fact that this is part of history, that this was a genocide,”
Baghdasaryan said. “Not just some part of some war where people die. It
was sanctioned with the purpose of cleansing ethnic minorities.”

Protesters wore black clothing and taped coverings over their mouths,
meant to signify “the denial by the Turkish government and the silence
by everyone else who hasn’t accepted it,” Baghdasaryan said. Indeed,
the federal government of the United States has yet to recognize the
Armenian genocide, though 42 individual states, including California,
have officially recognized it.

The Armenian Student Association is a larger organization with
subgroups at universities throughout California, and it protests the
international community’s denial of the genocide on an annual basis.

ASA at UCSB has made it their primary aim to include the genocide in
the modern historical education lexicon.

“This year we started working with the Armenian National Committee
of America, which is a big lobbying organization to get the different
UC’s to pass a resolution about the recognition and education on the
Armenian genocide,” said Baghdasaryan. The University of California,
Los Angeles passed a resolution to divest from the Republic of Turkey
in January of this year. Though UCSB’s ASA chapter will not be pursuing
such a resolution this year, it hopes to continue raising awareness
on campus.

There is a large Armenian community on campus, and the ASA meets on
Wednesdays at 8 PM in the Middle Eastern Resource Center, which is
housed in the Student Resource Building.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

https://thebottomline.as.ucsb.edu/2015/02/ucsb-armenian-student-association-protests-genocide-denial

What Helps 100-Year-Old Nevart Stay Young?

WHAT HELPS 100-YEAR-OLD NEVART STAY YOUNG?

Daily Echo, UK
Feb 11 2015

(From Bournemouth Echo)

A BOURNEMOUTH pensioner celebrated her 100th birthday with family at
the Carlton Hotel on Sunday.

Nevart Dervishian reached triple figures yesterday, marking a full
century since her birth in Egypt in 1915 during the early part of
the First World War.

At the weekend she was joined by her son and daughter Paul and Louise,
along with five grandchildren and four great-grandchildren, for a
celebratory meal.

Born in Cairo, but of Armenian descent, Mrs Dervishian lived for much
of her life in Egypt where, after a short period working as a typist
for an oil firm, she married and settled down to start a family.

Later in life she moved to Montreal in Canada, before finally moving
to Bournemouth several decades ago to be near her daughter Louise
Garel-Jones, with whom she lived for many years.

“I feel good, life has given me plenty,” she said on Sunday.

“I’m very happy to see my family today, they are all good people.”

Mrs Garel-Jones said she believed it was her mother’s positive
outlook on life as much as her healthy lifestyle which accounted for
her longevity. “She is very positive and has always appreciated what
she has,” she said.

“And she has a keen interest in the wider world which keeps her young,
she has BBC Radio 4 on all the time and she always knows what is
going on with the young people.”

A vegetarian, who likes her food steamed, Mrs Dervishian speaks
English, French and Armenian, and worked for many years as a piano
teacher.

She loves fashion, and being up-to-date on current affairs and trends.

She also has a strong faith as a member of the Armenian Orthodox
Church.

Currently she lives at the Colindale care home in Richmond Park Avenue.

http://www.bournemouthecho.co.uk/news/11785738.What_helps_100_year_old_Nevart_stay_young_/

Facebook Doesn’t Enforce Its Own Standards On Hate Speech

FACEBOOK DOESN’T ENFORCE ITS OWN STANDARDS ON HATE SPEECH

Triple Pundit
Feb 11 2015

Gina-Marie Cheeseman | Wednesday February 11th, 2015

Hate speech and the Internet can go hand-in-hand, including on
Facebook. It recently came to my attention that Facebook does not
enforce its own standards regarding hate speech. While scrolling
through posts on my Facebook feed, I came across a post about an
anti-Armenian group. The name of the said group was “F-k Armenia.” The
posts in the group were very derogatory of Armenia and Armenians.

Using “F-k Armenia” as a search term turned up about 10 other groups
with that name.

There is a context to the proliferation of anti-Armenian Facebook
groups that many may not know. This year on April 24, Armenians
worldwide will mark the 100th anniversary of the beginning of the
Armenian genocide perpetrated by the Turkish government. About 1.5
million Armenians, or 3 out of every 4 Armenians living under the
Ottoman Turkish empire, were murdered. To this day the Turkish
government refuses to recognize the genocide and continues its
campaign of denial, even going to the extreme of stating that Armenians
murdered Turks.

There are over 11,000 members of the Facebook group “I am a Descendant
of a Survivor of the Armenian Genocide,” and judging by the comments
on the post regarding the anti-Armenian page, many, including me,
reported the anti-Armenian group. What we received back from Facebook
was the following message:

“Thank you for taking the time to report something that you feel may
violate our Community Standards. Reports like yours are an important
part of making Facebook a safe and welcoming environment. We reviewed
the Page you reported for containing hate speech or symbols and found
it doesn’t violate our Community Standards.”

Looking at the hate speech section of Facebook’s Community Standards,
it becomes apparent that the anti-Armenian groups are considered hate
speech by those very standards:

“Facebook does not permit hate speech, but distinguishes between
serious and humorous speech. While we encourage you to challenge ideas,
institutions, events, and practices, we do not permit individuals
or groups to attack others based on their race, ethnicity, national
origin, religion, sex, gender, sexual orientation, disability or
medical condition.”

Anti-Armenian groups are not the only racist groups on Facebook. There
are also groups called “F-k Mexico” and “F-k Azerbaijan.” I reported
every hate group I came across and received the same message that I
posted above.

Only one page was removed by Facebook, and that is the initial
anti-Armenian page I learned about. Many others also reported it.

Clearly, it takes a good amount of pressure for Facebook to take down
racist sites and adhere to its own standards.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.triplepundit.com/2015/02/facebook-doesnt-enforce-standards-hate-speech/

WWI, Armenia, Origin Of Modern Genocide To Be Examined During EMU Le

WWI, ARMENIA, ORIGIN OF MODERN GENOCIDE TO BE EXAMINED DURING EMU LECTURE SERIES FEB. 12

Heritage Newspapers
Feb 11 2015

Published: Wednesday, February 11, 2015

YPSILANTI – During the First World War, more than half a million
Armenians lost their lives as part of the Ottoman government’s
campaign to eliminate them from their historic homeland within what
is now Turkey.

Ronald Grigor Suny, an expert on the Armenian genocide, will discuss
this tragedy and other issues during his presentation, “The First
World War and the Origins of Modern Genocide,” from 5-6:30 p.m.

Thursday, Feb. 12, in room 300 at Halle Library on Eastern Michigan
University’s main campus.

The event, which is sponsored by Eastern’s history and philosophy
department, is free and open to the public.

Suny, the Charles Tilly professor of social and political history at
the University of Michigan, will look at why the Armenian genocide
occurred and how it helps our understanding of the 20th century’s
subsequent genocides.

He is an expert in the fields of the Soviet Union and post-Soviet
Russia; nationalism; ethnic conflict; the role of emotions in politics
and Russian, Armenian and Caucasian history.

Suny was the first holder of the Alex Manoogian Chair in Modern
Armenian History at the U-M and was the 2013 Berlin Prize Fellow at
the American Academy in Berlin, a research and cultural center that
works to foster a greater understanding between the people of America
and Germany.

His numerous works include, “The Soviet Experiment,” “The Making of
the Georgian Nation,” and “The Baku Commune 1917-1918.”

Suny earned his doctorate from Columbia University and a bachelor’s
degree from Swarthmore College.

http://www.heritage.com/articles/2015/02/11/ypsilanti_courier/news/doc54da8e083fe9b222137460.txt

ANKARA: Erdogan: Armenian Diaspora Hinders Peace Efforts And Dialogu

ERDOGAN: ARMENIAN DIASPORA HINDERS PEACE EFFORTS AND DIALOGUE

Daily Sabah, Turkey
Feb 11 2015

NURBANU KIZIL

Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan highlighted that Turkey
is ready for a constructive and objective approach to resolve the
tensions between Armenia and Turkey due to the 1915 incidents despite
the objection of the Armenian diaspora

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said that every time Turkey tries to
approach Armenia to resolve the issues between the two countries, they
have been left without a response as the Armenian diaspora continues
to block Turkey’s efforts to establish peace through dialogue.

As part of his official visit to Colombia, Erdogan spoke on Tuesday
at a symposium co-organized by Bogota Externado University and Ankara
University and urged Armenia to examine the 1915 events in a more
objective manner through the lens of science and not politics. He also
said that Turkey is sincere in its readiness to investigate the issue
in order to reach accurate conclusions. He highlighted that the 1915
events have not been properly examined or discussed.

“On the 100th anniversary of the 1915 events, as Turkey we repeat our
sincere call to Armenia,” Erdogan said, urging Armenians to take a
more proactive and objective approach and let scholars and academics
investigate the matter rather than politicians.

Erdogan said that Armenian leaders rejected Turkey’s invitation to
attend the ceremony organized in Canakkale to commemorate the 100th
anniversary of the Battle of Gallipoli in a discourteous manner
and that their offensive statements closed the doors of dialogue
once again.

“We wanted them to be in Canakkale on April 24 and breathe the spirit
in the air, try to comprehend what hundreds of thousands of Turkish
martyrs experienced,” Erdogan said, and reiterated that Turkey will
not give up its efforts to reach peace and dialogue with respect to
the 1915 events.

He underscored that Turkey has always been against conflicts and crises
in the region and has made rational and justified objections to such
attempts. “We want peace, justice, friendship and brotherhood in our
region,” he said, adding that Turkey is not requesting anything else.

In January, Erdogan sent invitation letters to over 100 world leaders
to take part in the ceremonies commemorating the 100oth anniversary
of the Battle of Gallipoli on April 24.

Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan reportedly rejected Erdogan’s
invitation as being a “short-sighted” attempt to cover the 100th year
commemoration of the 1915 events.

In a the speech, Erdogan said that understanding World War I was
crucial to comprehending the current state of events in the world as
it drew the borders of the current nation-states, which had serious
implications for today.

“Many of our global problems today are rooted in World War I,” he
said, explaining that the issue in Palestine and conflicts in Iraq,
Yemen, Egypt, North Africa, the Caucasus and the Balkans can all be
traced back to the war.

“The borders were not only drawn for territories, but were also imposed
on the people,” Erdogan said, arguing that abstract borders had been
forcefully imposed on people’s mentalities, cultures and religions
and that siblings had been made enemies.

The 1915 events occurred during World War I when a segment of
Armenians living under the Ottoman Empire supported the Russian
invasion and revolted against the state and were relocated to eastern
Anatolia. While Turkey refrains from using the term “genocide” to refer
to the incident, as many Turks also lost their lives due to attacks
carried out by Armenian gangs in Anatolia, the Armenian state and
diaspora are campaigning for the incident to be recognized as genocide.

Erdogan issued a letter expressing condolences for the 1915 events
on April 23, 2014, which was unprecedented in Turkey’s history. In
the letter, he urged for the establishment of a joint historical
commission to investigate the events and called Armenia to open their
archives as Turkey has done.

http://www.dailysabah.com/diplomacy/2015/02/11/erdogan-armenian-diaspora-hinders-peace-efforts-and-dialogue

ANKARA: Turkey Returns 1,014 Properties To Minority Foundations

TURKEY RETURNS 1,014 PROPERTIES TO MINORITY FOUNDATIONS

Daily Sabah, Turkey
Feb 11 2015

DAILY SABAH

Within the context of reforms toward different faith groups in
Turkey, 1,014 confiscated foundation properties have been returned
to minority foundations. According to information obtained from the
Prime Ministry’s Office of Public Diplomacy, a 60-acre property that
belonged to the Mor Gabriel Foundation was returned to the Syriac
community in 2013. A statement from the Office of Public Diplomacy
indicated that the land of the Mor Gabriel Monastery is the largest
land to be returned to foundations since the process of returning
seized goods belonging to minority foundations started in 2011. A
42,259-square-meter land that belonged to the Foundation of Yedikule
Surp Pırgic Armenian Hospital was one of the larger restitutions. The
Office of Public Diplomacy underlined that the evaluation process
for some other 150 properties is still ongoing. Furthermore,
the restoration process of houses of prayer used by communities of
different faiths also accelerated. The Sumela Monastery in Trabzon and
Holy Cross Church on Aghtamar in Van, St. Giragos Armenian Church in
Diyarbakır, the Church of St. Mary of Blachernae and Surp Vortvots
Vorodman Church, which belongs to the Mektebi Foundation, were also
reconstructed and opened to worship in recent years.

Currently, 165 community foundations are actively operating in Turkey.

Of these 165 foundations the Greek community owns 76, the Armenian
community owns 53, the Jewish community owns 19, the Syriac community
owns 10, the Chaldean community owns three, the Bulgarian community
owns two, the Georgian community owns one and the Maronite community
owns one.

http://www.dailysabah.com/politics/2015/02/11/turkey-returns-1014-properties-to-minority-foundations

ANKARA: Turkish-Armenian Artist Reveals Works For Venice Biennial

TURKISH-ARMENIAN ARTIST REVEALS WORKS FOR VENICE BIENNIAL

Turkish Press
Feb 10 2015

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

ISTANBUL – Art crossed new frontiers in Istanbul today with news
that an artist whose work will represent Armenia in an upcoming major
international exhibition will also represent Turkey.

Internationally renowned conceptual artist Sarkis announced Tuesday
that he would be representing Turkey at this year’s prestigious
International Art Exhibition — la Biennale di Venezia — between
May and November in Italy.

Talking to The Anadolu Agency, Istanbul-born Sarkis said that it was
the first time in Turkish history than an Armenian-origin artist had
been invited to the Venice Biennial to represent the country.

Sarkis, whose work will be included with 16 other Armenian contemporary
artists at the event, said that he had questions in his mind when he
was first invited to exhibit as 2015 is the centenary anniversary of
Armenians’ deportation from Anatolia during WWI.

Speaking in Istanbul, Sarkis said most people were “stuck” in the
debate over the 1915 events but added “I am trying to get over
this jam.”

“I am trying to open minds and sites continuously,” he said.

A prominent figure in the global art world, Sarkis added that
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink — assassinated by a Turkish
teenager in 2007 — was one of those who tried to open people’s minds.

“We have to go through an opening [on Turkish/Armenian relations],”
Sarkis said.

The Turkish pavilion’s curator is Rotterdam-based Defne Ayas. She
explained that Sarkis had doubts at first as he was unsure if he had
been chosen for his previous works or for his Armenian background.

“Few artists have combined artistic ingenuity with such a subtle
critique of history as deftly as Sarkis,” according to Ayas: “This
undertaking opens up a space in which the potential of art will
be reanimated.”

Sarkis’ installation at the biennial — called “Respiro” — will be
housed in a 12×48 meter area. In the middle of the venue he will use
a two-way mirror.

“In Respiro [Italian for “breath”], I will be reaching out beyond
geopolitics to a more expansive context of a million-plus years,
going back to the creation of the universe and the beginning of time,
back to the first-ever rainbow — the very first magical breaking
point of light,” Sarkis states.

Sarkis’ work will also consist of stained-glass panes and neon. Music
by Italian composer Jacopo Baboni-Schilingi, based on Sarkis’ drawing
of a rainbow’s seven colors, will accompany the exhibit.

Turkish artists have been participating in the Venice Biennial since
1991 and Turkey as a country has been represented since 2003.

Organized by the Istanbul Foundation for Culture and Arts, the Turkish
exhibition will be open in Venice between May 9 and Nov. 22.

Two separate installations by Sarkis will open May 7, one in Istanbul
and one in Geneva.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.turkishpress.com/news/422831/

ANKARA: Turkey-EU Parliamentary Meeting Delayed A Month Amid Cool Re

TURKEY-EU PARLIAMENTARY MEETING DELAYED A MONTH AMID COOL RELATIONS

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Feb 11 2015

ANKARA

A planned joint parliamentary meeting between Turkey and EU
representatives was postponed for a month due to lawmakers’ busy
agenda, the Turkish co-chair of the joint commission has said, after
a European lawmaker accused Ankara of delaying the event in order to
avoid criticism.

Turkey-EU Joint Parliamentary Commission (KPK) Co-Chair Afif
Demirkıran said a commission meeting planned to be held on Feb. 18
and 19 in Istanbul has been delayed to March because 25 KPK member
lawmakers will have to attend debates for the much-debated security
bill in Ankara.

EU ‘knows Turkey’s red lines’

Speaking to semi-official Anadolu Agency on Feb. 11, Demirkıran
ruled out claims that the decision was politically-motivated and was
a reaction to the 442 change motions filed about the Progress Report
on Turkey’s accession bid currently being prepared by the European
Parliament.

Some 442 motions have been filed by European Parliament lawmakers
to sharpen the tone of the report, including calling on Ankara to
recognize claims that the 1915 massacres of Ottoman Armenians amounted
to genocide, and removing the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK)
from the EU’s terror list.

Demirkıran said the European Parliament’s Progress Report called for
the reconciliation of Turkey and Armenia, but stressed that Turkey
rapporteur Kati Piri is “aware of Turkey’s red lines” on the issue.

‘Cold climate in Istanbul’

A day before, one of the European Parliament’s Turkey rapporteurs,
German Christian Democrat party member Renate Sommer, said the delay
request from the Turkish side was “incomprehensible behavior.”

In a statement, Sommer suggested that the Turkish government backed
away from the meeting because it feared possible reactions from
European parliamentarians, particularly over the issues of press
freedom and the ongoing Cyprus tension.

Hannes Swaboda, the leader of the Socialist group in the European
Parliament, posted a message on his Twitter account late on Feb. 10
indicating the tension between Ankara and Brussels.

“Cold climate in Istanbul – also politically. But we need to keep
channels of discussion and dialogue open,” Swaboda tweeted

February/11/2015

http://www.hurriyetdailynews.com/turkey-eu-parliamentary-meeting-delayed-a-month-amid-cool-relations.aspx?pageID=238&nID=78207&NewsCatID=510