BAKU: Ombudsman of Hungary to participate at hearing of trial ofAzer

Ombudsman of Hungary to participate at hearing of trial of Azerbaijan
officer Ramil Safarov

06 April 2005 [16:05] – Today.Az

Ombudsman of Hungary is to participate at hearing of court trial
of Azerbaijan officer R. Safarov, charged with killing of Armenian
colleague, agency Trend reports.

Azerbaijan Ombudsman Elmira Suleymanova, informed 5 April, after her
returning from Copenhagen, where she met with Ombudsman of Hungary V.
Lenkovich within frames of international event.

She said, Ombudsman of Hungary came to this decision on her request. 
Hungarian Ombudsman will keep informed Azerbaijan Ombudsman Elmira
Suleymanova about situation and conditions of keeping of detained
Azerbaijan officer every month.

The officer of Azerbaijan Armed forces R. Safarov is charged with
killing of Armenian colleague February last year in Budapest at
NATO courses.

–Boundary_(ID_6SuiqXb969VwoQlXwdoXbw)–

Armenian Soldier Captured By Azeris

ARMENIAN SOLDIER CAPTURED BY AZERIS

06.04.2005 05:01

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ April 1, 2005 an Armenian soldier born in 1985,
who was serving his service for a fixed period in the Noemberyan
region of Armenia was captures by Azeris, Arminfo agency reports
according to the international working group on search for missing,
hostages and prisoners of war in the region of the Karabakh conflict
(IWG). The IWG expressed hope that the Azeri party will return the
captured immediately after the essential examination in accord with
the agreements achieved March 18 in Tbilisi. At that the IWG members
inform of numerous appeals to the Karabakh leadership not to delay
the return of the POWs as it incites the other conflicting party to
retaliatory steps. They again called the NK authorities to pass Hayal
Abdulayev, Hikmet Tagiyev and Ruslan Bakirov to the International Red
Cross. The appeal says in part, “No sensible explanation can be given
on the prolonged detainment of three Azeri soldiers in Karabakh. The
IWG is a public structure and does not possess the right to demand
reports from the conflicting parties, however both the Armenian and
Azeri parties treated our efforts aimed at search for missing and
release of POWs with trust.” According to the report, Bernhard Klazen
has many times applied to Arkady Ghukasian, Victor Kocharian and Masis
Mailian and was assured that the prisoners will be released soon. “The
meeting of the Armenian and Azeri State Commissions held in Tbilisi
on March 18 established mechanisms for the further work. We hoped
that the NK representatives will join the activities and established
immediate contact with the RA State Commission. “The protraction of
returning the POWs will only deteriorate the relations and do harm
to those captured and those who can be captured in future”, the
IWG representatives say adding that the resolution of humanitarian
problems should not be complicated with political reasons.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Papal Candidates: Cardinal Francis Arinze, Nigeria

Outside the Beltway, VA
Tuesday, April 5, 2005

Papal Candidates: Cardinal Francis Arinze, Nigeria

Posted by Robert Tagorda at 17:19

Because he hails from Africa, Cardinal Arinze has attracted considerable
media attention and prompted questions about whether the world is ready for
a black pope. But his background runs deeper than skin color. As a convert
and a citizen of Nigeria, where approximately half the population is Muslim,
he can speak with authority on interfaith and cross-cultural matters: in
1985, Pope John Paul II tapped him to lead the Pontifical Council for
Inter-Religious Dialogue. But he’s equally comfortable in dealing with
internal Catholic issues, having spearheaded the Congregation for Divine
Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments. Thus his 1973 quotation, noted
by the Washington Post, is appropriate:

The Church has to be at home in every culture, while not being tied down or
imprisoned by any.

“Proposed, Not Imposed”

Buddha is “a great teacher of humanity.” Muslims and Christians are “part of
one human family.” Indeed, writes Cardinal Arinze, “Christians must remember
that God has also manifested himself in some way to the followers of other
religious traditions.”

So how does Catholicism distinguish itself? Cardinal Arinze highlights
“God’s salvific will” and emphasizes the Church’s role as “the universal
sacrament of salvation.” He then adds:

But there are people who, through no fault of their own, do not know Christ
and his Church. They also are included in God’s plan of salvation. There
are, however, conditions. They must be sincere in their seeking of God. They
must be open to the secret but real action of the Holy Spirit in them. They
should follow their conscience in all matters of right and wrong. Because
Christ has taken on human nature and somehow united himself with every man
and woman, God can in ways known to him put people in link with the saving
mysteries of Christ (cf. Gaudium et Spes, 22). He can give them the grace
needed for salvation.

But to say that the followers of other religions can attain salvation under
some conditions does not mean to ignore the fact that in these religions
there are limits, errors and shadows. As St Paul says: “Very often, deceived
by the Evil One, men have become vain in their reasonings, and have
exchanged the truth of God for a lie, and served the creature rather than
the Creator. Or else, living and dying in this world without God, they are
exposed to ultimate despair” (Rom 1:21,25). This explains why the Catholic
Church “painstakingly fosters her missionary work” (Lumen Gentium, 16) so
that, becoming full members of the Church, people may have access to the
fullness of the means of salvation, a fullness to be found only in the
Church which is the ordinary means to salvation.

In stressing respect for human dignity and recognizing religious freedom,
Cardinal Arinze not only reveals his conversion story but also aligns
himself with Pope John Paul II’s message:

This stand is in perfect line with the Catholic doctrine that the human
response to God in faith should be free. “He who believes and is baptized
shall be saved, but he who does not believe shall be condemned” (Mk 16:6).
Religion is proposed, not imposed. “The truth cannot impose itself except by
virtue of its own truth, as it makes its entrance into the mind at once
quietly and with power” (Dignitatis Humanae, 1).

There have been periods in Church history when this principle has not been
sufficiently respected in practice. Vatican II itself admits this: “In the
life of the People of God as it has made its pilgrim way through the
vicissitudes of human history, there have at times appeared ways of acting
which were less in accord with the spirit of the Gospel and even opposed to
it” (Dignitatis Humanae, 12). This happened, for example, when people
accused of heresy were imprisoned or burnt. In the 12thMarch 2000 ceremony
in St Peter’s Basilica, the Holy Father asked pardon of God for all such
acts.

“Culture Is Broader Than Religion”

According to Cardinal Arinze, “religion can be said to represent the
transcendent dimension of culture and in a certain way its soul.” But he
also acknowledges the “alienating influence” that religion can sometimes
have on politics and civilization. This realism is particularly evident in
his views on Christian-Muslim relations.

He recognizes the commonalities between the two faiths:

Among the values shared between Christianity and Islam, peace deserves
special mention. Both religions stress the pre-eminence of peace. “Peace I
bequeath to you, my own peace I give you, a peace the world cannot give,
this is my gift to you” (Jn 14:27), said Jesus to his Apostles the night
before he suffered and died. And after his Resurrection when he appeared to
them he generally began with the greeting: “Peace be with you” (cf. Jn
20:19, 21, 26). St Paul calls Christ “our peace” (cf. Eph 2:14). For
Muslims, Peace is one of the Beautiful Names of God. Does this fact not give
added significance to the customary greeting among Muslims: al­salamu
‘alaykum? Peace is necessary for individuals, within the same religious
community, between two or more religions, between peoples and between
States. Christians and Muslims have a duty to promote this tranquillity of
order. No right­thinking Christian or Muslim today should support crusades
or holy wars. Nor should they allow their conduct to be tainted by racist
considerations or give way to discrimination on the basis of race, colour,
condition of life or religion.

But Cardinal Arinze is unafraid to point out differences — even those with
serious political implications. Consider his thoughts on human rights:

Christians see human beings as having been created in God’s image and
likeness. They are brothers and sisters of Christ, the Son of God made man.
The Incarnation has ennobled the whole of humanity. This is the real
foundation of human dignity. Moreover, Christ died on the cross to redeem
all humanity. So we can say that love of God passes through love of
neighbour. The Muslim vision is different. The human person is the servant
of God, and remains so even when receiving God’s call to be caliph or God’s
vice­regent, among created things. This vision finds expression in the names
used. Many Muslim names begin with ‘Abd (servant) followed by one of the
numerous names for God. Christians see man as created by God with certain
inalienable rights. Prominent among these is the right to religious freedom.
“This freedom means that all men are to be immune from coercion on the part
of individuals or of social groups and of any human power, in such wise that
in matters religious no one is to be forced to act in a manner contrary to
his own beliefs. Nor is anyone to be restrained from acting in accordance
with his own beliefs, whether privately or publicly, whether alone or in
association with others, within due limits” (Dignitatis Humanae, n. 2).

Here’s the money quote:

[S]ome predominantly Muslim countries have their reservations regarding the
United Nations 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights which they see as
an expression of Western culture. The Universal Declaration of Human Rights
in Islam, proclaimed in Paris in 1981, does contain an article on the right
to religious freedom (art.13). It is however very short, merely stating:
“Every person has freedom of belief and freedom of worship in conformity
with his belief: ‘to you your religion, to me mine’ (Q. 109:6)”. The
following article treats of the right to summons (da ‘wa) and to
proclamation (balagh), but the content of the article remains vague. It is
not clear whether or not people of religions other than Islam have the right
to propagate their religion. There is certainly no mention of a right to
change one’s religion. So the question of human dignity and the rights which
flow from it is one on which Christians and Muslims who have learned to know
and trust one another can exchange views in the hope of greater service to
the human person and therefore to the world.

That’s a pretty firm criticism. It’s also highly relevant for a post-9/11
papacy. Whereas a different religious leader might struggle to make such
strong statements, Cardinal Arinze seems to have genuine credibility. At the
same time, it’s hard to confuse him for a bellicose neoconservative when he
asserts:

Poverty, underdevelopment, justice and corruption are fertile grounds for
the rise or growth of extremist religious tendencies. In such societies
those who reject the present situation, or who oppose the government in
power, may find it easy to get the support of the suffering poor who are the
vast majority, by making appeal to extravagant religious claims. The
temptation that the answer to these situations of suffering is a return to
what is presented as an original or pure form of a certain religion –
whether Christianity or Islam – is an easy one. The effective response is
not a crackdown on religious fanatics. It is rather a joint commitment of
Christians and Muslims, and other citizens, to justice, development, sound
economic programmes, honesty in private and public life, and willingness on
the part of the rich to show serious solidarity with the poor. Peace stands
on the pillars of love, truth, development, justice and solidarity.

“Sometimes It Shows a Lack of Faith”

When it comes to liturgical issues, Cardinal Arinze frowns upon departures
from approved rites:

The general approach is that the liturgy is the public worship of the
Church. It is not an area where individuals do their own thing, feed the
people with the latest production of their over-fertile imaginations. This
would do damage to the faithful and the liturgy. Sometimes it shows a lack
of faith.

Some abuses make the Mass invalid. For example – nobody did this – but
suppose a priest says, “I don’t like wine at all. I am going to use
Coca-Cola.” From the point of view of theology, it would not be Mass at all.
If he didn’t use bread made from wheat but uses bread from cassava or wine
from the palm tree and not from the vine.

These are abuses that affect the validity of the sacrament. But there can be
abuses that do not make the sacrament invalid. Like if a priest begins Mass
by saying, “Good morning. Did your favorite football team win?” That’s
banalization. Everyone would recognize that.

Suppose in preaching it is no longer on the Gospel and our faith but on
politics. Or suppose he says, “I do not like these vestments. I think I will
use my overcoat.” Or if he says, “I do not like some of the words in the
book, I am going to invent my own prayers. I composed these myself last
night.”

On the other hand, he stresses the principle of subsidiarity, as this
statement on liturgical dance makes clear:

In the last analysis, the bishops of each country must look into this
matter. It is not cut and dried. There are many rites: Ethiopian, Byzantine,
Greek, Armenian, Coptic, Chaldean, for example. The Latin rite has not
traditionally known dance. If you say “dance” to anyone in Europe, I leave
it to you to see what comes to their mind. They will say, “That has nothing
to do with the liturgy. When we want to see a dance, we don’t go to Mass. We
go somewhere else.” It is a cultural thing.

In the same vein, note his recommendation for addressing liturgical abuses:

Do your best to speak with those in the parish who can do something about
it. If there is no success, if it still very important, you can approach
your diocesan office. But the first thing to do is not to take paper and
write to the Vatican. There must be a better solution than that, although as
a last resort, people retain that right.

“Each One Will Have a Separate Story”

In the end, Cardinal Arinze seems strongly influenced by his conversion to
the faith. Though he shuns the term — “in Nigeria, we would hardly call the
person a convert” — he’s quick to invoke the “work of God’s grace.” “This
is,” he says, “God’s own mystery.”

–Boundary_(ID_9vQs7zuaDoVHK36C1BnIjA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Turkey causes disappointment in Europe: Lagendijk

Turkey causes disappointment in Europe: Lagendijk

NTV MSNBC, Turkey

Lagendijk said that government’s suggestion of setting up committee to study
the so-called Armenian genocide was positive.

April 5- The breaking up of a Women’s Day rally by Turkish police and the
call by a governor to confiscate the books of well known Turkish writer
Orhan Pamuk had been caused great disappointment in Europe, a senior EU
official said Tuesday.

Speaking to private television station NTV, Joost Lagendijk, the head
of the EU-Turkey Mixed Parliamentary Commission, said that the government’s
not having put forward a concrete reaction to these issues could not be
explained within EU, he said
The order by the governor of Isparta’s Sütçuler to confiscate Orhan
Pamuk’s books due to his having made a statement on the Armenian issue has
created a completely different perception about Turkey, Lagendijk said.
These are very sad events, he said, adding that these incidents are
more important than passing new laws.
Lagendijk criticised the government attitude to the incidents, saying
that either the Prime Minister or the Foreign Minister could have a
statement.
“(They could have said) Ok we do not agree with the views of Orhan
Pamuk but he is free to give his own views,” Lagendijk told NTV.
On the issue of Ankara signing the expansion of the customs union for
new members of the bloc, Lagendijk said that although this would not mean
Turkey politically recognises Greek Cypriot side it would mean giving green
light to recognition.

–Boundary_(ID_9CReqUoOZdSeq8amP8KAcg)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ANKARA: Unseal Our Borders?

Turkish Press

Unseal Our Borders?

Published: 4/5/2005

BY OKTAY EKSI

HURRIYET – Armenians in Armenia are in big trouble. Nowadays, each and
every one of them comments on how beneficial it would be for Turkey
to unseal its border gate to Armenia. Leyla Tavsanoglu’s interview
with Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC) moderator David
Philips was published in Sunday’s Cumhuriyet’s. Philips is obviously
one of those who seems sure that we’re too stupid to recognize our
own national interests. He mentions 10 times during the interview
how we could benefit from opening our border gate to Armenia. He’s
actually trying to say, ‘Just open your gates, the rest is easy.’

Not only Armenians, but also proponents of the Armenian ‘genocide’
thesis among us and especially the US have recently been dropping the
border gate issue whenever possible. Whatever they are going to say,
they begin with, ‘You should open your borders to Armenia…’

All these efforts surely serve a good purpose. Armenia had a population
of 3.44 million in 1998. However, by 2004 its population had fallen to
just 2.99 million. The reason why almost 500,000 people left Armenia
during this six-year period is purely poverty. The Armenian economy
is a shambles, and half of its population lives in poverty.

Once they persuade us to open the border gates, their next move will
be to try to open out to international markets and improve their
economy. Soon enough, they will be trying to corner us and get us to
admit their ‘genocide’ claims. Their constitution and declaration of
independence are full of hatred against us, and they will be trying
to realize their schemes at the earliest opportunity.

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul recently noted that over 40,000 Armenians
work just in Istanbul, which is a sign of Turkey’s good will. But
what do we get in return? Armenia pushes to make us recognize their
‘genocide’ claims. And next they’ll demand compensation and land
from us. They don’t even bother to conceal their aims. What kind of
a person would agree to this?

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Film Screening and Presentation by Tina Bastajian

PRESS RELEASE

April 6, 2005

The Lectures Committee-
The University of Wisconsin-Madison
Venue: Elvehjem Museum of Art
800 University Avenue
Madison, WI 53706-
Contact: Hrag Varjabedian
Tel: (608) 608-238-5610
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

“Notions of Otherness: Between the Margins, the Frame, and the
Translation”- A film screening and presentation by Los Angeles film/
video artist Tina Bastajian-

On Thursday, April 14th the University of Wisconsin Madison will
present, “Notions of Otherness: Between the Margins, the Frame, and the
Translation” a screening and presentation by Los Angeles film/video
artist Tina Bastajian. This program is free and open to the public
and is located on campus at the Elvehjem Museum of Art, L140- at 6pm.
Sponsored in collaboration with the Lectures Committee and the Visual
Culture Studies Program, Armenian Students Association, the Department
of Art, the Department of Anthropology, the Department of Communication
Arts, and the Department of Languages and Cultures of Asia.

Informed by exilic and diasporan cinemas, Tina Bastajian’s work
deals with challenging topics such as cultural identity, belonging,
displacement, race and gender, and the passing on of traumatic
experiences through oral stories. Finding one’s place inspires both
her narratives and visual strategies. The totality of Bastajian’s
work presents notions of Otherness, which become prevalent between
the boundaries and structures of cultures, and the translations that
take place between them, in the process engendering the construction
of identities.

There will be a moderated talk with the artist showing her three
selected works, which include: “Pinched Cheeks and Slurs in a Language
that Avoids Her” – A triangulation of themes positing layers of a
monologue, mirrored images and a conversation heard and overheard as
a young girl questions her belonging to a culture and language that
is both familiar and alien. An ironic twist challenges racial slurs
through the wisdom embodied in the making of Armenian coffee and the
reading of coffee cups.

“Jagadakeer … between the near and east” is a cinematic meditation,
which forms an intricate series of transitions to explore memory,
nostalgia, displacement, erasure and reconnection to articulate a
fragmentary vision of the Armenian Genocide as a visual/aural backdrop.
The suppressed traumatic oral stories of the filmmaker’s survivor
grandmother are a point of departure, juxtaposed with stylized
tableaus, found footage and home-movies with recurring but disparate
narratives that are interrupted and staggered. These starts and stops,
like memory itself, frame the invisible to evoke a sense of homeland,
a lost and enigmatic landscape.

“Garden Dwelling” is a video essay that (re) visits the lost homeland
of the artist’s family in Eastern Turkey. Rather than dwell on the
travelers’ daily itinerary and the big sights, this journey takes us
to the spaces in between: the awkward translations, the mystifying
exchanges, the unspoken tensions that still linger across the closed
border between Armenia and Turkey. The film becomes a graceful,
nuanced treatment of the filmmaker’s ambivalent relationship to her
historic homeland.

This event is free and open to the public.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.wisc.edu

Robert Kocharian And Herman De Croo Emphasize Necessity To ExtendArm

ROBERT KOCHARIAN AND HERMAN DE CROO EMPHASIZE NECESSITY TO EXTEND
ARMENIAN-BELGIAN POLITICAL DIALOGUE

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 5, RA President Robert
Kocharian received Herman De Croo, Chairman of the Belgian House of
Representatives, in his private house. The sides highly estimated the
level of Armenian-Belgian relations mentioning that the evidence of
this is also the fact that Belgium is Armenia’s main trade partner
among the EU countries. According to RA President’s Press Service,
the interlocutors attached importance to the necessity to extend the
political dialogue between the 2 countries, and the activization of
parliamentary cooperation may contribute to it. Issues concerning
Armenia’s integration to Europe, in particular, in the context of
European “New Neighborhood” policy, were also discussed. R. Kocharian
and Herman De Croo also touched upon regional problems and processes.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Accident Takes Place In Georgian Section Of Alaverdi Substation

ACCIDENT TAKES PLACE IN GEORGIAN SECTION OF ALAVERDI SUBSTATION

YEREVAN, APRIL 5, NOYAN TAPAN. As a result of the accident that
occured in the Georgian section of the Alaverdi high-voltage 220-kw
substation on April 4, the power suuply to Georgia has been cut off.
According to the director of the company High-Volatage Electric
Networks of Armenia Sahak Abrahamian, the power supply will continue
after the repair work has been completed.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Catholicos Of All Armenians Attaches Importance To Cooperation Betwe

CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS ATTACHES IMPORTANCE TO COOPERATION BETWEEN
PARLIAMENTS OF ARMENIA AND BELGIUM

ETCHMIADZIN, APRIL 5, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 4, Karekin II, Catholicos
of All Armenians received in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin
the delegation headed by Herman De Croo, the Chairman of Chamber of
Representatives of Kingdom of Belgium, paying a two-day official visit
to Armenia. His Holiness, welcoming the high rank guest’s visit to
Holy Etchmiadzin, expressed satisfaction with the friendly relations
formed between the Republic of Armenia and the Kingdom of Belgium, in
the strengthening of them marking as important the present cooperation
between the two parliaments. Catholicos of All Armenians acquainted
the Chairman of the Chamber of Representatives with the history of
the Armenian Apostolic Holy Church and its historical mission in the
Armenian people’s life. Thanking for warm hospitality, Herman De Croo,
the Chairman of the Chamber of Representatives of Belgian Kingdom,
particularly mentioned in his speech: “We know the importance of the
Armenian Apostolic Church, that, one may say, is the Armenian people’s
soul.” As Noyan Tapan was informed from the Mother See Information
Centre, religious situation present in the two countries, as well
as church-state relations were spoken over at the meeting. Touching
upon that the majority of Belgium’s population is followers of the
Catholic Church, Catholicos of All Armenians expressed his condolence
to the deligation members on the death of Pope John Paul II. Bishop
Paren Avetikian, the Mother See Administrative Business Manager and
Responsible for Museums, and Mher Shahgeldian, the Chairman of the NA
Standing Committee on Defence, National Security and Internal Affairs
were present at the meeting.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

David Phillips speaks at NYU

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian National Committee
Eastern United States
P.O. Box 1066
New York, NY 10040
Contact: Doug Geogerian
Tel: 917 428 1918
Fax: 718 651 3637
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

David Phillips Refuses to Disclose Author of Report

At a brown bag lunch on March 29 at New York University’s School for
Global Studies, David Phillips discussed what he saw as the results
of the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission, which he moderated
and wrote about in his book, Unsilencing the Past. TARC generated
world-wide Armenian opposition in both the Diaspora and the Republic
of Armenia for its role in interfering with international efforts to
gain recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

During his talk, Phillips highlighted a report, which the International
Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) commissioned an anonymous author
to write. The report alleged that the United Nations Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide could not be
retroactively applied to the Armenian Genocide. The author of this
report has remained unknown. When Phillips was asked who wrote the
report, he answered, “That will not be disclosed,” and would not
explain the reasons for keeping the author’s name a secret.

Phillips was joined by International Center for Transitional Justice
Legal Expert Paul van Zyl, who asked Phillips whether denying the
applicability of the Armenian Genocide to the UN Convention on Genocide
was not the same as denying theapplicability of the Holocaust to it,
as both genocides occurred before the Convention was adopted by the
United Nations. Phillips insisted that it was not the same thing,
referring to documents Bernard Lewis had shown him in an attempt to
shed doubt on whether the Armenian Genocide occurred. On June 21,
1995, a French court condemned Lewis for his statements denying the
Armenian Genocide in the French press.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.anca.org/