Ascension Day celebrated in Javakheti

Ascension Day celebrated in Javakheti
23.05.2009 14:31 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian Apostolic Church celebrated Ascension
Day on May 21.
In Samtshe Javakheti, monk Manuk Zeynalyan chanted a liturgy in the
Armenian Church of Tsakhrut village.
As a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter came to know from Mitq analytical center
expert Vahe Sargsyan, villagers and representatives of Youth Center of
Akhaltsikhe were present at the event, where the faithful were shown a
handwritten Gospel According to St. John.

BAKU: Meeting between Presidents to give new opportunity for sides

Trend News Agency, Azerbaijan
May 23 2009

Meeting between Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia to give new
opportunity for sides to bring positions closer: EU
23.05.09 16:37

Azerbaijan, Baku, May 23 /Trend News, J.Babayeva /

The EU Special Representative for South Caucasus Peter Semneby shares
the hope of the mediators that the forthcoming Saint Petersburg
meeting between the Presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia will be a new
opportunity for the sides to bring their positions closer, said the
report on Semneby’s visit to Azerbaijan on May 19-20, which was
provided by Office of the EU Special Representative in Azerbaijan.

"The European Union supports the work now being conducted by the three
co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk group," the report says.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988
when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. Armenian
armed forces have occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan since 1992,
including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and 7 surrounding
districts. Azerbaijan and Armenia signed a ceasefire agreement in
1994. The co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group – Russia, France, and the
U.S. – are currently holding the peace negotiations.

The Presidents of Azerbaijan, Ilham Aliyev and Armenia, Serj Sarkisian
plan to meet in June in St. Petersburg within the participation in the
economic forum.

The EU Special Representative also discussed the Turkish-Armenian
normalization process and its implications for Azerbaijan. "He
outlined the EU’s vision of the South Caucasus, where the opening of
all borders would enhance regional security and permit the region to
develop its full economic potential," the report says.

Armenian-Turkish ties have been severed since 1993 due to Armenia’s
claims of an alleged genocide, and the country’s occupation of 20
percent of Azerbaijani lands.

However, during his visit to Baku on 12-13 May, Turkish Prime Minister
Rejep Tayyip Erdogan excluded the possibility of cooperation with
Armenia unless the occupied territories of Azerbaijan are released.

Reserve forgiveness for those who first repent

Glendale News Press, CA
May 23 2009

COMMUNITY COMMENTARY:
Reserve forgiveness for those who first repent

By Harry Zavos

Published: Last Updated Friday, May 22, 2009 10:39 PM PDT
Bob Harks’ letter (`Some people should learn to forgive,’ May 1)
presents a deeply flawed view of forgiveness and remembrance of
nationally sponsored atrocities aimed at minorities.

He asserts that Armenians, as Christians, are hypocrites by failing to
forgive the Turks for the genocide and thereby not following the
teachings of Christ; and further, that that failure shows no love of
`one’s fellow man or this country.’

I would ask him, and everyone who shares his view, to read the words
of Jesus in the book of Luke: `If your brother sins, rebuke him, and
if he repents, forgive him.’ Throughout the Bible we are exhorted to
call out and stand against, to rebuke, injustice. Jesus further tells
us that forgiveness follows only after repentance.

Harks, in support of his point, says that the children of Nazi
Germany, who were taught to hate Jews, matured and grew out of that
hatred. His analogy is not apt for Nazi Germany since, unlike the
Armenians, it was the persecutor, not the persecuted.

The real lesson of that black historical episode is that the German
nation acknowledged the enormity of the evil, of the sin, it
perpetrated against the Jewish people and disavowed it. There was
repentance.

For that reason, when Jews publicly commemorate and keep alive the
memory of the Holocaust, as well they should, they do so without
rebuking the current German state whose national policy prohibits
Holocaust denial.

But for a moment, imagine a Germany that, as a matter of state policy,
denies that the Holocaust ever took place and threatens with prison
any of its citizens who say otherwise.

I would expect all Americans, not just Jews, who love their fellow man
and love their country and the ideals for which it stands, not to
embrace with arms of forgiveness such an imaginary German state, for,
far from offering love of one’s fellow man, such forgiveness would
demean the Holocaust’s untold suffering and the sacrifice of six
million Jewish lives. But that imaginary German policy is exactly the
actual policy of Turkey.

When Hark asserts that those of Armenian descent do not love this
country because they feel deeply about the brutal Armenian genocide,
and the Turkish insistent denial of it, he unjustly insults all
Armenians, including those who have proved their love of country by
joining the armed forces and putting their life on the line (in some
instances losing it) in defense of the United States.

We are a nation made up of diverse ethnic cultural traditions and a
variety of religious beliefs. They not only enrich those who share
particular traditions and beliefs, but they enrich the entire nation.

A major factor that holds our diverse people together as one people is
our devotion to a group of ideals that we believe are at the
foundation of our nation; among them is social justice.

Every time we pledge our allegiance we affirm our belief in `liberty
and justice for all.’ Our ideals are not only an inspirational beacon
to people around the world, but also the engine that forces change
when we fall short.

It is an appeal to and being confronted by our ideals that led us to
end the shameful blot of slavery, to extend basic civil rights that
were for so long denied to women and black people, to acknowledge the
shameful treatment of Japanese Americans during the Second World War
and on and on. They are a motive force that pulls us toward a more
perfect union ‘ toward a union that more perfectly reflects the ideals
which we believe should define us as Americans. So when any American,
regardless of ethnic origin or religious belief, stands against
injustice ‘ when he rebukes unrepentant inhumanity, regardless of
where in it occurs in the world ‘ he vindicates one of the basic
values we believe defines us as the American people.

Justice, like liberty, requires eternal vigilance. When Jesus taught
that repentance should be followed by forgiveness, he did not teach
that it should be followed by amnesia.

Hitler provides a lesson as to why the remembrance and even the
commemoration of large scale, unjust and inhumane events is part of
the vigilance necessary to keep justice burning bright. When he was
questioned as to how the world and history might view his final
solution to the `Jewish problem,’ he replied: `Who remembers the
Armenian genocide?’

les/2009/05/23/opinion/community_commentaries/gnp- comment23.txt

http://www.glendalenewspress.com/artic

Year of Bulgarian culture will be held in Armenia

Year of Bulgarian culture will be held in Armenia
23.05.2009 17:49 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ In the framework of the Year of Bulgarian Culture a
number of concerts will be organized between May 29 and June 4 in
Armenia. Culture ministries of the two countries, Armenia and
Bulgaria, implement a cultural program involving well-known folk and
classic dance groups of Bulgaria.
Gala concert will be held on May 30 at the National Theater of Opera
and Ballet after Spendiaryan. The photo exhibition `Monasteries and
Shrines of Bulgaria’ will be opened at the House of Architectures of
Armenia the same day.
On May 31 the Arabesque ballet group, `Soloists of Sofia’ Chamber
Orchestra, `Bistritsi Grannies’ national ensemble and the `Nayden
Kirov’ folk dance theatre will perform in Dilijan and Vanadzor.
On June 1 Gyumri and Armavir dwellers will watch Bulgarian
performances, and a day later Yerevan audience will applaud them at
the State Theater of Comedy after Paronyan.

Karabakh Conflict Much More Glaring Than Others

KARABAKH CONFLICT MUCH MORE GLARING THAN OTHERS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
23.05.2009 10:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Between mid-1993 and May 1994, short-term cease-fire
was achieved 6 times, which was agreed by Baku and Stepanakert, under
Russia’s mediation. They were bilateral agreements, without Yerevan’s
participation, Vladimir Kazimirov, Deputy Chairman of the Russian
Diplomats’ Association, leader of the Russian mediation mission,
Plenipotentiary of the RF President on Nagorno Karabagh between April
1992 and September 1996, and a member of the OSCE Minsk Group from
Russia, told a news conference in Stepanakert.

According to him, an agreement on long-term cease-fire in the
Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict was achieved under Russia’s mediation,
the initial priority of which was in the soonest cessation of the
large-scale hostilities.

The diplomat excludes any military solution to the conflict. According
to him, the international community will negatively respond to
resumption of hostilities.

"Military activities will hardly resolve the issue: a new turn in a
madness spiral will pass, and the parties will sooner or later have to
negotiate, the losses being quite great. The approximate balance of
forces testifies that no blitzkrieg, taken place in Serbian Kraina,
can be applicable for this region," the diplomat noted, adding that
there would hardy be any great international powers fostering the
hostilities.

According to Vladimir Kazimirov, the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict
is much more glaring than any other.

"It has a great pre-history and is considerably burdened with it. So,
the goal in this case is more complicated than lifting mutual claims in
the conflict. The matter is not only to suppress the conflict, but also
to cease the century-old hostility and conflicts between the Armenians
and Azerbaijanis, to find a way to their historical conciliation."

The diplomat thinks that the region’s significance has considerably
increased for the last decades.

"The region is strategically significant and, at the same time,
highly explosive. These peculiarities of the region require extreme
caution in the actions," Kazimirov said.

Deputy From Prosperous Armenia: Small Clashes Between Activists Of R

DEPUTY FROM PROSPEROUS ARMENIA: SMALL CLASHES BETWEEN ACTIVISTS OF RPA AND PROSPEROUS ARMENIA MUST NOT BE REGARDED AS SERIOUS POLITICAL CONFLICT BETWEEN THE PARTIES

ArmInfo
2009-05-22 20:03:00

ArmInfo. The small clashes between the activists of the Republican
Party of Armenia and Prosperous Armenia party must not be regarded
as serious political conflict between the parties, the member of the
parliamentary group of Prosperous Armenia Naira Zohrabyan said in
the parliament today,

"The parties are rivals during the forthcoming elections and have
their own political interests. Such incidents are undesirable but not
always avoidable. In any case Prosperous Armenia has instructed its
activists not to yield to provocations. We are not going to initiate
any conflicts," Zohrabyan said.

Prominent Activists Rally Support For ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon

PROMINENT ACTIVISTS RALLY SUPPORT FOR ANCA ENDOWMENT FUND TELETHON

ent-activists-rally-support-for-anca-endowment-fun d-telethon/
May 22nd, 2009

BEVERLY HILLS-More than 150 invited guests gathered together at Lift
MD Aesthetics at the invitation of Dr. and Mrs. Garo Kassabian and
Mr. and Mrs. Carlo Ghailian for a cocktail reception in support of
the ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon.

In attendance were Assemblymember Mike Feuer, ANCA Endowment Fund
Telethon Committee members, ANC-WR Board Members, media outlets,
community supporters and friends.

"The ANCA organization is one that is dear to my heart due to
the organization’s tireless dedication to the Armenian cause and
future. Their active, grassroots efforts achieve such widespread
and national impact and their strength empowers Armenians. Now is
the time to come together to support the May 31st Telethon- we have
to remain vigilant and steadfast in our efforts to have our voices
heard and ultimately, for Armenians to continue to flourish."

"Amongst us, we have the artistic, scientific, literary and
entrepreneurial geniuses. We have the powerful, the talented, the
skilled and the creative," said Pattyl Aposhian Kasparian, ANCA
Telethon Endowment Committee member. "Individuals such as Dr. Garo
Kassabian and Carlo Ghailian have put aside daily work, family life,
business travel and social activities for several weeks to help the
ANCA Endowment Fund Telethon reach new heights."

"There is no better resource in the world for Armenia than a powerful,
engaged and motivated Armenian community. One Nation. One Future. One
Cause, said ANC WR Board Member Carlo Ghailian. "This organization
needs its jet fuel, now more than ever."

To make a financial gift today to support the vital mission of the
ANCA Endowment Fund, visit:

http://www.asbarez.com/2009/05/22/promin
http://www.2009telethon.org/donate.php

Doctors Say Swine Flu To "Reach" Russia

DOCTORS SAY SWINE FLU TO "REACH" RUSSIA IN AUTUMN

Panorama.am
13:02 22/05/2009

A flu, known as swine flu, is believed to "reach" Russia in autumn,
Russian media outlets report referring to the country’s infection
doctor Genadi Onishenko. The doctor said that most probably the disease
would be spread in the country when other infections start developing.

The doctor said that Russia is not going to close the doors before
those countries which suffered swine flu. He said that they are
getting prepared to overcome the disease.

Note that more than 11 thousand people in the world infected swine
flu and 85 of them died.

ArmenTel Targets 100% Digitization By 2010

ARMENTEL TARGETS 100% DIGITIZATION BY 2010

2009/0 5/22 | 16:49

Technologies

Armenian incumbent fixed line operator ArmenTel (Beeline) aims to
fully digitise its PSTN by 2010, according to Dmitri Pleskonos,
the vice president of business development in CIS for Vimpelcom –
the operator’s parent company.

Mr Pleskonos states the digitisation rate in Armenia is currently 67%,
putting it near the top in terms of CIS countries (Uzbekistan has the
highest level (with 69%) and the Russian owners "do not project to
cut investments into financially efficient activities in Armenia",
this year. Over the last two years ArmenTel has spent around $200
million to upgrade analogue network exchanges across the country.

Most recently, in April 2009, it completed the upgrade of three more
sites in the capital, raising digitisation in Yerevan to 90%. By
2010 the company hopes to have completed the full digitisation of
the fixed telephone network, he added.

http://hetq.am/en/technologies/10040/

Musa Dagh Photo Collection To Be Part Of The AGMA

Armenian Genocide Museum of America
1140 19th Street
NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
Web:

PRESS RELEASE

May 22, 2009
Contact: Carole Karabashian
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 383-9009

MUSA DAGH PHOTO COLLECTION TO BE PART OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE MUSEUM OF
AMERICA

Washington, DC – Rare and historically significant photographs of the
Armenians of Musa Dagh will be among the Genocide-era images featured in
the Armenian Genocide Museum of America (AGMA), thanks to the generosity
of a private collector who is providing the museum with exclusive access
to the photos.

This unique collection of black-and-white photographs, dating from 1915
to 1939, is the life’s work of Dr. Vahram Shemmassian, a Los
Angeles-based historian who is the world’s leading expert on the
Armenians of Musa Dagh.

"We are profoundly grateful to Dr. Shemmassian for allowing the museum
to use his priceless photo collection to help tell the heroic story of
the Musa Dagh Armenians against the backdrop of the larger and much more
tragic story of the Armenian Genocide," said Van Z. Krikorian, AGMA
Board Trustee and Building and Operations Committee Chairman. "In
addition, as the foremost authority on the subject of Musa Dagh, Dr.
Shemmassian is able to provide authentication of the evidence documented
in these photographs."

Krikorian said the Musa Dagh photo collection is the fourth significant
collection of Genocide-era visual materials which, in the past year,
have been made available for use by AGMA. AGMA has been granted access
to the archives of the Near East Foundation and the Armenian Genocide
Museum-Institute in Yerevan, Armenia, and has received a donation of a
privately-held research library containing books, maps, photographs and
other materials focused on the Armenian Genocide and its documentation.

Dr. Shemmassian has also undertaken pioneering research on the fate of
Armenian women and children during and in the aftermath of the Genocide,
another focus area of the museum. Shemmassian, who is currently
Director of the Armenian Studies Program at California State University,
Northridge, said the Armenian Genocide Museum in Washington, DC is a
"perfect match" for his collection.

"The thousands of people who will visit the museum will be able to look
into the faces of those brave Armenians of Musa Dagh and learn of their
unique story," Dr. Shemmassian said. "They resisted and most of them
survived, but they were forced to leave their homes. These photographs
document the trying conditions and difficult challenges that the
displaced Musa Dagh Armenians faced as survivors and refugees."

According to Dr. Rouben Adalian, Director of the museum’s research arm,
the Armenian National Institute, "The story of Musa Dagh is one of the
rare instances during the Armenian Genocide era where Armenian
villagers, who were targeted for annihilation by the Ottoman Turkish
Army, put up an organized resistance for 49 days and were eventually
rescued by Allied warships patrolling the Turkish coast."

Adalian said, "There are no known photographs of the actual defense of
Musa Dagh, however, the rescue and delivery to safety in Egypt of over
4,000 survivors made headline news." The Austrian author Franz Werfel
also immortalized the gripping events in his "Forty Days of Musa Dagh,"
which became a best-seller upon its release in 1933 and was subsequently
translated into numerous languages.

The AGMA recently received a copy of the Dutch edition of "Forty Days of
Musa Dagh" from a Canadian donor whose family had lived through World
War II. Adalian added, "The book is important supplemental material to
the Musa Dagh photo collection, and points to the world-wide impact of
the story of the resistance of the Armenians of Musa Dagh."

"Franz Werfel’s book was widely read in Europe and made the Jewish
author unpopular with the Nazi regime, prompting Werfel to flee Austria
in 1938," Adalian said. He noted that according to Professor Yair Auron
of the Open University of Israel, Werfel’s novel was a source of
inspiration and reflection for Jews who were trapped by the Nazi
occupation of Europe. In one historical account, a Holocaust survivor
from the Kovno Ghetto in Lithuania stated: "Our analysis of the book
indicated that if the world did not come to the rescue of the Armenians,
who were Christians after all, how could we, Jews, expect help? No
doubt Hitler knew all about those massacres and the criminal neglect by
the free world, and was convinced that he could proceed with impunity
against the helpless Jews."

The Armenian Genocide Museum of America is an outgrowth of the Armenian
Assembly of America and the Armenian National Institute (ANI), catalyzed
by the initial pledge of Anoush Mathevosian toward building such a
museum in Washington, DC.

###

NR#2009-02

Photo:

leadmin/aaainc/pdf_1/Q2_2009/Shemmassian015.jpg

[ Photo caption: Very few families survived the Armenian Genocide without
loss of life. Pictured is the family of Krikor Boursalian of Yoghunoluk
village, Musa Dagh. The picture was taken at the Port Said refugee camp
in Egypt sometime between October 1915 and summer 1916.
Copyright: ANI/AGMA – Shemmassian Collection]

http://aaainc.org/fi
www.ArmenianGenocideMuseum.org