AGBU PRESS OFFICE: AGBU Schools Bridge the Gap Between SouthernCalif

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone 212.319.6383 x.118
Fax 212.319.6507
Email [email protected]
Website

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

Friday, March 25, 2005

AGBU SCHOOLS BRIDGE THE GAP BETWEEN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA AND ARGENTINA

Canoga Park, CA – The second visit since 1999, Argentinean Armenian
high school students from AGBU Marie Manoogian Institute in Buenos
Aires were invited to Canoga Park, California, to participate in
AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School’s Student Exchange Program from
January 22nd to February 12th, 2005. Through the exchange program,
AGBU schools of Southern California and Argentina foster AGBU’s
mission to provide Armenian youth with well-rounded educations that
also expose them to the common values that bind Armenians together.

“We were honored to welcome our Argentinean students,” said Hagop
Hagopian, Principal of AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School. “This was an
enlightening experience for everyone involved. As the Argentineans
became exposed to our Southern Californian culture, we also got a
taste of theirs. We hope, through this experience, all the students
created friendships and memories that will last a lifetime.”

Chaperoned by Miriam and Jose Tabakian, 14 Argentineans participated in
Manoogian-Demirdjian School’s integrated exchange program of academic,
cultural, and recreational activities, and were hosted by twelve Los
Angeles-area Armenian families. Over the three weeks, the 14 high
schoolers attended classes, including Armenian Cultural Studies,
English Reading Comprehension, English Composition, English Grammar,
Armenian Music, and a variety of elective courses, including Sports,
Computer, and Junior Achievement. Additionally, group outings were
planned to various destinations, including Disneyland, Universal
Studios, Rodeo Drive, Magic Mountain, AGBU Pasadena Center, and the
Western Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

During August of this year, the academic and cultural exchange will
continue when Manoogian-Demirdjian School students travel to Buenos
Aires for the first time to participate in a comparable program hosted
by AGBU Marie Manoogian Institute.

AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School in Canoga Park, California, and AGBU
Marie Manoogian Institute in Buenos Aires, Argentina, are two of AGBU’s
leading Armenian day schools and together offer instruction to over
1,300 students. For more information on AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian
School, please visit For more information on AGBU
Marie Manoogian Institute, please visit

AGBU is the largest Armenian non-profit organization in the world and
annually touches the lives of 400,000 Armenians. For more information
on AGBU and its schools, please visit

www.agbu.org
www.agbumds.org.
www.ugab.org.ar.
www.agbu.org.

Kyrgyz opposition figure claims control a day after president ousted

Kyrgyz opposition figure claims control a day after president ousted in massive protests
By BAGILA BUKHARBAYEVA

AP Worldstream
Mar 25, 2005

Kyrgyzstan’s interim prime minister, acting to fill a power vacuum
after the ouster of the president, named four acting key ministers
and a chief prosecutor Friday, the speaker of parliament’s upper
house said.

Kurmanbek Bakiyev chose mostly prominent opposition figures for the
posts of foreign, defense and finance ministers and chief prosecutor.
For the job of acting interior minister he picked a former chief
prosecutor who had been fired by deposed President Askar Akayev on
Wednesday, speaker shenbai Kadyrbekov.

By appointing them as acting ministers Bakiyev avoids the need to
have them approved by parliament’s upper house.

The opposition worked quickly in an effort to restore order a day
after protesters drove Akayev’s government from power, unleashing
widespread looting.

The new leadership faced an immediate challenge in halting vandalism
and looting that left major stores in the capital, Bishkek, gutted
and many others damaged by rowdy youths who roamed the city overnight,
with few police to be seen.

The drama of the events, propelled by widespread anger over disputed
elections, were heightened by Akayev’s sudden flight. It was not yet
clear where Akayev was.

Bakiyev emerged from the Parliament building Friday and said he had
been named Kyrgyzstan’s acting leader.

“Freedom has finally come to us,” Bakiyev told a crowd in the central
square of the capital, Bishkek.

Bakiyev’s appointment as acting president was endorsed by a
newly restored parliament of lawmakers who held seats before the
elections, which fueled protests against longtime leader Akayev and
his government.

The move set Bakiyev squarely at the helm of the leadership emerging
from the fragmented former opposition.

Kyrgyzstan became the third former Soviet republic over the past 18
months _ after Georgia and Ukraine _ to see popular protests bring
down long-entrenched leaders widely accused of corruption.

Another opposition figure, Felix Kulov, who was released from prison
during Thursday’s turmoil and appointed head of law enforcement,
said Akayev had fled to a foreign country after being turned away by
Russia. The Russian news agency Interfax said Akayev and his family
were in neighboring Kazakhstan.

“He had a chance to resign, but he fled,” Kulov said in televised
comments. “He wanted to go Russia, but the Russians didn’t accept him.”

Bakiyev told the crowd on the square that Akayev was “not on the
territory of the republic. I don’t know where he is.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin said, however, that the Kremlin
wouldn’t object if Akayev wants to go to Russia. Russia’s Foreign
Ministry spokesman Alexander Yakovenko said Friday that Moscow doesn’t
know where Akayev is.

Putin, speaking during a visit to Armenia on Friday, lamented the
violence and looting in Kyrgyzstan, saying that “it’s unfortunate that
yet again in the post-Soviet space, political problems in a country are
resolved illegally and are accompanied by pogroms and human victims.”

He urged the Kyrgyz opposition to quickly restore order, and praised
the Kyrgyz opposition leaders for helping develop bilateral ties
during their earlier work in the government.

Kyrgyz lawmakers met early Friday to consider the country’s new
leadership but were interrupted by youths throwing stones at the
Parliament building. Bakiyev then emerged and told about 1,000
demonstrators in the central square that he had been appointed “acting
prime minister and acting president” and would seek to form a Cabinet.

The crowd shouted his name in support.

Bakiyev urged opposition supporters not to allow looting, and
stressed that the popular opposition figure Kulov would coordinate
law enforcement. Bakiyev proposed that former Foreign Minister
Roza Otunbayeva be named the country’s top diplomat, and said,
“All intergovernmental agreements will remain in full force and are
in full effect.”

Bakiyev said he would fight corruption _ a major complaint against
Akayev’s regime _ and the clan mentality that roughly splits the
country between north and south.

“I will not allow the division of the people into north and south,”
he said. “We are a united nation.”

The square was the scene of swift political change Thursday, when
opposition protesters seized control of the presidential and government
headquarters. The takeover followed weeks of protests over disputed
parliamentary elections the opposition said were aimed at keeping
Akayev in power.

The Red Cross reported dozens injured in the turmoil Thursday, while
lawmaker Temir Sariyev said three people had been killed and about
100 injured overnight.

On Friday, a shopping center on the main avenue stood mostly destroyed
by fire and strewn with wreckage that spread into the street, as smoke
hung in the air. At another shop gutted by fire, a few elderly people
and children picked through what was left after looting overnight. Cars
were picked clean, their windows and tires gone.

The 60-year-old Akayev had led Kyrgyzstan since 1990, before it gained
independence in the Soviet collapse.

The takeover of government buildings in Bishkek followed similar
seizures by opposition activists in the country’s impoverished south.
The protests began even before the first round of parliamentary
elections Feb. 27 and swelled after March 13 run-offs that the
opposition said were seriously flawed.

The fractious opposition unified around calls for more democracy,
an end to poverty and corruption, and a desire to oust Akayev. There
was no sign the new leadership would change policy toward the West
or Russia. Unlike the revolutions in Georgia and Ukraine, foreign
policy has not been an issue.

Both the United States and Russia have military bases near Bishkek.

Kyrgyzstan has been a conduit for drugs and a potential hotbed
of Islamic extremism. There was no indication, however, that the
opposition would be more amenable to Islamic fundamentalist influence
than Akayev’s government has been.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Meeting of the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan is expecte

Today, Azerbaijan
March 26 2005

Meeting of the Presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan is expected in
nearest future

25 March 2005 [17:05] – Today.Az

The Meeting of the Armenian president Robert Kocharian with the
Azerbaijan president Ilham Aliyev is expected in the nearest future.

The agency Trend reports, the minister of foreign affairs of Armenia
Vardan Oskanian said to journalists.

He indicated two options of meeting are possible: within frames of
non- formal summit meeting of the heads of CIS in Moscow, 9 May or
within frames of summit of the states of the Council of Europe in
Warsaw, 16 May. V.Oskanian informed, “the presidents have their own
agenda”. “The ministers of foreign affairs introduced their own
corrections on some issues, and the presidents are to try finding
solutions on other issues”, said V.Oskanian. At that the MFA of RA
added, meantime there were no specific agreements about meetings of
the ministers of foreign affairs of both states and necessity of such
meeting may be would be non-relevant.

The next round of negotiations of the MFA heads of Armenia and
Azerbaijan Vardan Oskanian and Elmar Mamedyarov, scheduled 2 March in
Prague, was postponed due to illness of V.Oskanian. The last meeting
of the presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan was held 15 September
2004 in Astana within frames of summit of the heads of CIS. (“ÀRKÀ”)

URL:

–Boundary_(ID_ajS5e6rXykSu+jCYUEhxEg)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.today.az/news/politics/18848.html

Putin says won’t object to Kyrgyzstan’s Akayev coming to Russia

Putin says won’t object to Kyrgyzstan’s Akayev coming to Russia

Prime-Tass, Russia
March 25 2005

YEREVAN, Mar 25 (Prime-Tass) — Russian President Vladimir Putin said
Friday that he would not object to Askar Akayev, the ousted president
of Kyrgyzstan, coming to Russia.

“As far as Askar Akayev’s coming to Russia is concerned, if he would
like to do so, we will not object,” said Putin during his official
visit to Armenia, ITAR-TASS reported.

During violent riots in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek Thursday,
protestors seized the presidential residence, as well as the main
television center, demanding Akayev’s resignation.

There were numerous media reports that Akayev was at a Russian military
base in Kant, seeking political asylum, or that he had even fled
to Russia. He was also reported to have fled to Almaty, the former
capital of nearby Kazakhstan, about 250 kilometers from Bishkek.

“It is a pity that once again in one of the post-Soviet countries,
they are solving problems by non-legal means, accompanied by pogroms
and human casualties,” Putin said Friday.

He said he believes that “the situation in Kyrgyzstan is the result
of weak power and accumulated social and economic problems.”

But he also noted that the opposition leaders that are struggling
to establish control in the country were well known among Russian
politicians. He recalled that they had previously worked for the
Kyrgyz government.

“We hope that the opposition leaders in Kyrgyzstan can take control of
the situation as soon as possible and straighten it out,” Putin said.

The Russian president also said that Russia would do whatever was
necessary to maintain its good relationship with Kyrgyzstan.

Mass riots in Kyrgyzstan started several days ago following
parliamentary elections that were described as “flawed” by the
opposition and observers from the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe (OSCE).

In power since 1991, Akayev is prohibited from seeking another term,
but the opposition accused him of manipulating the parliamentary
elections to gain a compliant legislature that would amend the
constitution to allow him to stay in office beyond a presidential
election scheduled for October. Akayev denied the accusations.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Lecture: Armenia 2020 – Visions of a Nation

PRESS RELEASE
Analysis Research & Planning for Armenia (ARPA)
18106 Miranda Street
Tarzana, CA 91356
Contact: Hagop Panossian
Tel: (818) 586-9660
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

ARPA Institute and AESA present the lecture “Armenia 2020: Visions
of Nation” on Saturday, April 2, 2005 at 5:30 PM in the lecture
hall of the Armenian Society of Los Angeles (Iranahaye Miutiun).
The presenter is Dr. Noubar Afeyan.

The address is 221 S. Brand Blvd., Glendale, CA 91204. Directios:
>From the 134 FWY exit on Brand and go south. From the 5 FWY exit on
Glendale and go north, turns into Brand.

Abstract: The lecture will cover scenario planning as well as
socioeconomic research conducted by Armenia 2020 relating to the
future prospects of Armenia. Established in 2002, Armenia 2020 is an
organized network of individuals working to build a shared vision and
a prosperous future for Armenia. Participants include Armenians from
around the world, both in Armenia and in the Diaspora, supported
by other action-oriented professionals, researchers, experts and
problem-solvers dedicated to understanding and shaping Armenia>
‘> s future. Armenia, a small country of 3 million people, gained
independence from the Soviet Union in 1991, but faces persistent
poverty despite a highly educated and accomplished population and
a sizable, wealthy and compassionate Diaspora. This project is
part of an ongoing effort to build a shared vision among Armenians
both in Armenia and in the Diaspora, focused on creating successful
Armenian companies and attractive jobs as well as a shared strategy
in which Government, private sector and the Diaspora work together
to realize their potential. The lecture will cover several topics
including research into attitudes and mental models among Armenians,
research on productivity and competitiveness within Armenia’s economic
sectors, four alternative development scenarios and project ideas to
spur transformation.

Noubar B. Afeyan, co-founder and Board member of Armenia 2020,
managing partner of Flagship Ventures and senior lecturer at MIT Sloan
School, received his Ph.D. in Biochemical Engineering from MIT. He
is a recognized technologist and entrepreneur, having co-founded 18
life science and high technology startups over the past 17 years. He
is currently a director of two public companies and seven Flagship
portfolio companies, and serves on the Boston University School
of Medicine Board of Governors. Noubar is engaged with several
non-profit organizations focused on helping the development of
the newly independent country of Armenia. Since 2000, in addition
to co-founding Armenia 2020, he has helped found the Armenian High
Technology Council of America and YerazArt. He is also a trustee of
the Armenian Assembly of America as well as Vem Radio in Armenia.

For Information Please call Dr. Hagop Panossian at (818)586-9660 or
e-mail at [email protected]

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.arpainstitute.org

His Holiness Aram I visits French Ambassador

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V. Rev. Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS HAS LUNCH WITH THE AMBASSADOR OF FRANCE

His Holiness Aram I accepted a personal invitation by the Ambassador
of France to Lebanon, Bernard Emie and had lunch with him in the
French Embassy on March 23.

His Holiness and the Ambassador held a meeting before the lunch and
discussed the current situation of Lebanon and the possibilities of
brining the country out of the stalemate it faces.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
history and the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer
to the web page of the Catholicosate, The
Cilician Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is
located in Antelias, Lebanon.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Russian & Armenian presidents open year of Russia

RUSSIAN AND ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS OPEN YEAR OF RUSSIA

RIA Novosti, Russia
March 25 2005

YEREVAN, March 25 (RIA Novosti) – Russian President Vladimir Putin and
Armenian President Robert Kocharyan will participate in the opening
ceremony of Armenia’s Year of Russia, held in Yerevan.

According to a source in the Armenian presidential administration,
the main purpose of Putin’s trip to the country is to take part in
the festivities.

“This significant event meets the traditional ties of friendship
and spiritual and cultural closeness of the two peoples. It is
especially significant in view of the celebration this year of the 60th
anniversary of victory in the Great Patriotic War,” the source said.

The Year of Russia program includes about 120 joint events in
political, economic, humanitarian, scientific, technological and
inter-regional areas.

According to a spokesman of the Russian embassy’s press service in
Armenia, the Year of Russia will provide for trade and industrial
exhibitions and fairs, expansion of the exchange of economic
information and the holding of scientific and practical conferences
on various problems of bilateral and regional economic cooperation.

The Armenian public will be exposed to the best Russian theater
companies, achievements in the Russian musical, theater and art
schools, and today’s outstanding Russian performers in theater,
film and television.

Writers, poets, actors and producers will also meet during the course
of the Year of Russia.

The Bolshoi Ballet, The National Philharmonic Orchestra, The Moscow
Chekhov Art Theater, The Obraztsov State Central Puppet Theater and
The Alexandrov Academic Company of the Russian Army are all scheduled
to perform in Armenia.

“In the areas of education and science, the events under the
Year’s program will expand contacts between the higher educational
establishments of the two countries, to train and re-train specialists,
to hold scientific exchanges and events, aimed at strengthening the
position of the Russian language in Armenia and toorganize events
through the National Academies of Russia and Armenia, including all
kinds of forums on the priority themes of joint scientific studies,”
the spokesman said.

The opening ceremony of the Year of Russia in Armenia will end with
a big gala concert.

“A logical continuation of the Year of Russia in Armenia will be
the Year of Armenia in Russia in 2006. Its main aim is to open the
way for a public and business initiative, to establish direct human
contacts, to expand the informational and cultural exchange and to
deepen bilateral contacts,” the embassy’s spokesman said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: OSCE to hold frontline monitoring in Goranboy

OSCE to hold frontline monitoring in Goranboy
Baku, March 24, AssA-Irada

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
March 25 2005

Under the mandate of the OSCE chairman’s special envoy, monitoring
will be held on the contact line of Azerbaijani and Armenian military
troops in Borsunlu village of Goranboy District on Friday, the Ministry
of Defense told AssA-Irada.

The monitoring will be held on the Azerbaijani side by the OSCE
special envoy’s field assistants Imre Palatinus and Aleksandr Samarski.

The envoy’s field assistants Miroslav Vimetal, Peter Key and Torsten
Ahren will be in charge of the monitoring on the Armenian side.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ARMENIANOW.COM March 25, 2005

ARMENIANOW.COM
Administration Address: 26 Parpetsi St., No 9
Phone: +(374 1) 532422
Email: [email protected]
Internet:
Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact to Babken Juharyan)
Email: [email protected]
ICQ#: 97152052
OSCE REPORT: ARMENIA NOT IN CONTROL OF REPOPULATION NEAR KARABAKH

By Aris Ghazinyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

A report by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe
concludes that official Yerevan does not control repopulation of
disputed territories in Nagorno Karabakh.

The report “about the illegal population of occupied Azeri lands”
was presented in Vienna March 17, based on information gathered during
an OSCE fact-finding mission to the area in February.

It focuses attention on the territories of Lachin, Kubatli, Zangelan,
Jebrahil, Fizuli, Kelbajar and Aghdam – areas in which the Azeri
government has charged are being systematically repopulated according
to orders from the Armenian government.

Armenia’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Vardan Oskanian, praised the
report. “Yerevan hopes that their detailed, competent and objective
report gives a clear description to the situation on the spot and
in the region. Armenia deems that the most important achievement
of the fact-finding mission is that it put an end to Azerbaijan’s
accusations,” he said.

The mission was formed at the request of the Azeri government, which
raised three major complaints:

1. Territories around Nagorno Karabakh are excessively populated. At
different times the number of settlers fluctuated between 30,000
and 300,000.

2. The Republic of Armenia is immediately and deliberately involved
in the so-called process of settlement and conducts a corresponding
state policy with budget allocations.

3. An overwhelming majority of settlers are citizens of Armenia or
representatives of the Diaspora.

Population figures stated in the OSCE report are: Kelbajar region –
approximately 1,500 people; Aghdam region – from 800 to 1,000; Fizuli
region – less than 10; Jebrahil region – less than 100; Zangelan
region – from 700 to 1,000; Kubatli region – from 1,000 to 1,500;
Lachin region – less than 8,000 people.”

Regarding the second accusation, the report reads: “The Mission didn’t
establish that such a population is a result of the purposeful policy
on the part of the government of Armenia. The Fact-Finding Mission
did not see any evidence of the Armenian authorities’ immediate
participation in anything in the territories.”

On the third point it is said in the report: “The Fact-Finding
Mission concluded that the overwhelming majority of settlers are
persons displaced from different parts of Azerbaijan, in particular
from Getashen (Chaikend) of the Shahumyan (Geranboy) region, which
is currently under Azeri control, and from Sumgait and Baku.”

Deputy Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan and representative in the
Karabakh peace talks, Araz Azimov was not pleased with the report.

“Let’s take a look where Nagorno Karabakh begins and where it ends,”
he said, “where Armenia begins and where it ends. Nagorno Karabakh is
a territory of Azerbaijan. However, Robert Kocharyan, who had led the
separatists there, is now the president of Armenia, and Serge Sargsyan,
who lived there, is Armenia’s defense minister. It shows that the
separatists of Nagorno Karabakh do not act separately from Armenia.”

Later, Azimov would thank the Mission for their work and state that
“on the whole Azerbaijan had achieved its goal.”

“The facts established by the Mission are close to the data of the
Azeri side,” he said on March 18. “Whereas according to the data of
Azerbaijan’s government 20-23,000 people are settled in the occupied
territories, the Mission cites a figure of 15-16,000.”

Still, Azimov said Azerbaijan intends to push for the inclusion of this
issue into the agenda of the 60th session of the UN General Assembly.

Meanwhile, officials in Yerevan have requested the OSCE to hold a
similar mission in previously Armenian-populated territories now
controlled by Azerbaijan.

SOLDIERS’ STORIES: THE HARSH LIFE AND DEATHS OF YOUNG MEN IN SERVICE
OF THEIR COUNTRY

By Zhanna Alexanyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

The Helsinki Committee of Armenia has indicated in its annual Human
Rights Report for 2004 that there have been “no significant changes
in terms of informal relationships” in the Armenian army.

According to data from the Military Prosecutor’s Office of Armenia,
38 casualties were registered as of December 1, 2004. Three were
killed as a result of enemy action, three died during service, four
were brought to a suicidal condition, four were suicides, one died
as a result of violence in the ranks, eight died from breaches of
rules on the use of weapons, three suffered fatal illnesses, one was
an accidental death, and 11 died in car accidents.

But the report cast doubt on these figures. “Very often in the army
death is registered not as a murder, but as a result of illness,”
it noted. “The soldiers’ labor force is used in private house
constructions, illegal cuttings of forests, in agricultural works,
as well as in the workshops of private businesses.”

Injuries and deaths while working are not uncommon, and are registered
in official documentation as “accidents” or “suicide”.

Three years ago, soldiers at one military unit in Armenia sent an
anonymous letter to journalists, asking for their concerns to be
raised with the higher military command and “to the ministry and
other authoritative places.” The issues raised in the letter remain
unresolved today.

On November 27, 2004, the body of 20-year-old Yenok Margaryan
was brought to his parents in the village of Shahumyan in Ararat
marz. There was a bullet wound on his head and the investigator at
the Sevan military prosecutor’s office told the family that Margaryan
had committed suicide.

His parents do not believe the verdict. Five months after Yenok was
conscripted into the army in April 2004 his father Norik Margaryan
visited him for three days at his border unit some 400 kilometers
from Yerevan.

“Everything seemed to be alright. I did not notice anything bad in
soldiers’ relations. They worked all day long. I saw every day the
soldiers going up the mountain with saw and axe to cut trees. They
cut trees for the officers to sell the wood. They earned money by
soldiers,” says the father.

Yenok had a holiday from September 20 to 28, 2004, and made his way
home on a truck used to sell the wood.

His mother recalls: “We gave him money when he was leaving, of
course, he couldn’t leave without money. He told us nothing for he
knew we didn’t have money, but at the last moment said ‘Ma. That’s
compulsory’. We borrowed $50 and gave it to him. I knew they would
keep him down if he didn’t take the money. He said, ‘pa, I am not
alone, there are 14 of us, all will bring’. I said I care only for
your safe return.”

The Margaryans have no means to get the 110 kilometers from Artashat
to Sevan to follow the inquiry into their son’s death. They met the
investigator once, who told them that Yenok had committed theft in
his unit and material worth some $1000 is missing from the store.

According to the investigator, the authorities at the unit had
called Yenok down to give an explanation, but he shot himself with
a Kalashnikov rifle in a small house 800 meters away from the unit.

“They dragged my dead child from the small house and left him there
for a whole night until the investigator came. But the case materials
lack even photos of the place of the accident,” says the father.

The investigator told the parents that he had questioned 25 soldiers
and everybody had said the same thing. Three privates are charged
with intimidating him to suicide.

“He would never have shot himself,” says Yenok’s uncle, Hrachya
Margaryan, a Karabagh war veteran.

“I was proud of the Armenian army, but now I do not trust it. The
officers are engaged only in business.”

The preliminary investigation of the criminal case is not over yet,
but Yenok Margaryan’s parents do not believe the military prosecutor
general’s office will disclose the committed crime.

Investigator at the Military Prosecutor’s Office of Sevan Tigran
Karapetyan informed ArmeniaNow that the version of Yenok Margaryan’s
suicide “may be said to be confirmed” and the investigation will soon
be over.

The Committee report says most cases go unresolved or end up with
prosecutions against people who played a minor role, while those with
most responsibility go unpunished.

Garik Khachikyan’s body was delivered to his parents two months after
his conscription on July 17 2002. They had received a letter from
their son and a poem to his girlfriend only the day before.

The spring comes to our garden again,

But my heart doesn’t smile once again,

Taken by the beautiful dream of missing,

My heart flies away full of love.

My heart misses you,

And longs for you with all my soul,

Where are you, come, my wonderful fairy,

Don’t let my love fade away.

My beautiful flower I beg you

Come see your beloved as soon as you can,

If you don’t come and if you leave,

I’ll turn into unreachable dream as well.

The military men who attended the funeral said that Garik had died
during service. His mother, Sona Asatryan, says: “We became anxious,
was there a war? I wish my child was killed in the battlefield,
I would be much more proud.”

According to the official version of events, “the soldiers had been
doing field engineering works for newly built entrenchments” on a
1,868-meter high mountain and threw tree branches 20-25cm in diameter
and 2-3 meters long into the abyss. On an extremely dangerous place
on the reef, Khachikyan slipped and fell from a height of nearly
45 meters.”

However the trunk on a photo from the scene was much larger than
that described in the court decision. Sona says she asked the
investigator if her son died while cutting wood for officers to sell
for profit. “After that the photo and the whole page disappeared from
the case materials,” she claims.

Sona’s suspicions that her son had been killed were strengthened when
she saw the results of the criminal court forensics.

“All injuries were inflicted while he was alive, not long before
death by means of obtuse objects and have a direct causal connection
with his death. These kinds of injuries are classified as heavy body
injuries threatening to life,” concludes judicial doctor Vigen Adamyan,
assigned to investigate the cause of death.

“I always had a suspicion deep in my mind: there was not a single
mark on my child’s body. If he fell from a 45 meter height not only
his head and feet would be broken,” says the mother.

Some official documents in the case materials also show that Garik
Khachikyan died during “collecting, storing and transporting of wood”.

“To fortify the position the branches had to be taken up where the
unit posts were and should not have been thrown into the abyss,”
say the parents who went to the military unit after Garik’s death to
find out the circumstances.

The parents say the reason for forging the facts is that in reality
soldiers are made to transport wood not for the needs of their unit,
but “for the personal needs of officers outside the unit and for
selling.”

According to the parents, a specialist medical team was sent to the
military unit from Yerevan after the accident to move Garik to a
hospital to try to save his life. But the command of the unit did
not allow it.

Garik was transported to the “Omar” field hospital, where he died
without regaining consciousness. Four months after the accident,
the battalion commander Aramais Saroyan and representative of the
Military Police Manuk Harutyunyan (both relatives of the military
unit commander Seyran Saroyan) visited the Khachikyans and said:
“Don’t complain, we will bring workers to make the child’s tomb.”

The Khachikyans continue to complain but their voice is not heard. They
went twice to the first instance court at Tchambarak in Gegharkunik
marz (some 200 km from Ashtarak) to participate in the trial, but
the court sessions were postponed.

“Aramais Saroyan supervised the soldiers so that none says a word,”
Sona says. “All the evidence given by the soldiers is written in the
investigator’s handwriting and they don’t give us the stenography of
the trial.”

The trial was completed without the participation of the parents
and the court decision was sent a month later, depriving them of the
right to protest it within the 15-day limit.

Captain Hayk Mailyan of Khachikyan’s unit was sentenced to two years in
prison for dereliction of duties, to be served in the colony-settlement
for those convicted of crimes caused by carelessness. But according to
the Ministry of Justice, no such detention facility exists in Armenia.

Khachikyan’s mother says informed and reliable sources have told her
that Mailyan has remained in the unit.

OFFICIAL HOSTS: TOURISM INDUSTRY MOVES TO REGULATE GUIDING IN ARMENIA

By Gayane Lazarian
ArmeniaNow Reporter

Tourism guides are now being licensed in Armenia. The first 18 became
“legalized” last week.

“We have entered a legal field. From now on there will be prohibitions
against people engaged in this sphere without professional abilities,”
says Sahakanush Sahakyan, who was the first to be issued a license.

She is a philologist by training, has an experience of museum work
and journalism. She says that the experience of museum work was the
basis on which she has been engaged in guiding since 2001.

“To become a guide, one should also be a balanced, patient and flexible
person who is able to orientate in certain situations, because a
guide doesn’t mean only standing and telling,” Sahakanush explains.

Head of the Tourism Department of the Ministry of Trade and Economic
Development Artur Zakaryan says that a guide is the first person
presenting the country’s tourist product.

“We received complaints that low-quality information is provided on
the tourist market. There arose a need to raise the quality of these
guides and it was decided to introduce licensing,” says Zakaryan.

The guides taking exams answer test questions. If they give
correct answers to at least 84 of the 100 questions, then they are
licensed. Guides are expected to be well informed in history, culture,
geography, etc.

“First Travel” tourist agency director Karen Andreasyan says that
guides were also a big problem for tourist organizations.

“We are often asked: ‘And who is your guide? Who do you work
with?’ From now on we will show our customers the license. That means
that we will make less effort to convince a customer,” says Andreasyan.

The “First Travel” director is convinced that it is necessary that
tourism in Armenia be regulated.

“There are many who work in this sphere without having an idea of
what tourism is. It damages the country. All too often tourists come
here and leave dissatisfied. Foreign travel agencies demand huge
guarantees from us. Why? It is because their trust towards Armenia
is not high. Many in this field work covertly, offering lower prices
and low- quality services,” says Andreasyan.

Tourism Institute Rector Robert Minasyan also points out the same
problem. According to him, the state must know exactly who is engaged
in this sphere.

“I think that the people already involved in the sphere of tourism
must pass special retraining courses beginning from drivers and ending
with chefs. And guides must be licensed for two or three years and
then be reexamined to have their licenses prolonged,” he says.

Nevertheless, tourist organizations will not yet be licensed.

“Licensing will entail financial problems, and we don’t want to stifle
the field of tourist activities. It is free for all, especially for
the young,” Zarkaryan says.

According to specialists, this sphere is still in the making in
Armenia. Zakaryan says that the only positive thing inherited from
Soviet tourism is guides, and tourism development in Armenia began
from scratch.

Andreasyan is convinced that tourism has been frozen in Armenia
since 1988.

At that time the country’s hotel economy had a yearly workload of
70-75 percent on the average he says.

And Minasyan considers that the state should conduct an incentive
policy. It is necessary to ensure interest for the implementation of
investment programs.

“One tourist brings 5-14 jobs with him. It is necessary to raise the
level of services. Otherwise, they will not come to our country,”
says Minasyan.

According to the data of the Tourism Department, 263,000 tourist
visits were registered in Armenia last year. It is ethnic Armenians who
mainly visit the country and most from Western Europe, Iran, Russia.

“But we have much to do in the system of services. Hotels, restaurants,
transport, banking system. The use of credit cards is impossible
outside Yerevan, the quality of communication is bad, the roads are
worn out and dangerous. But all this notwithstanding, there is a
great interest towards Armenia,” says Zakaryan.

The presence of such problems prompted the establishment last year
of the Union of “In-country Tour Operators of Armenia” embracing 12
tourist organizations.

Minasyan says: “At the Union they will bring together problems, which
are the same among all. They will come up with one joint program and
will submit it to the state.”

Zakaryan says that Armenian tourist organizations began to operate
on the international market with regional packages.

“Situated in a small territory Armenia must develop regional
cooperation. Armenian and Georgian, Armenian and Turkish partners
appear on the international market with one common product,” he says.

The head of the department gives assurances that today the Armenian
tourism is going the way of stable development.

However, according to him, every geopolitical change has some effect
on every tourist destination in the world.

“For example, the influence of the tsunami in South Asia will cause
a certain redistribution of the market. People preferring South Asian
destinations could visit Armenia if we work properly,” he says.

FOR LOVE OF LANGUAGE: STATE AGENCY SETS OUT TO SAVE ARMENIAN IN
COMMERCIAL MARKET

By Marianna Grigoryan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

The State Agency for Language says the love of all things foreign
is endangering the Armenian-ness of Yerevan and other cities of the
republic where billboard and poster advertisements appear in foreign
languages.

In an attempt to combat a loss of language purity, this year has been
designated as the Year of Pure Native Language.

One of those measures aims at posters of shops and institutions
that should be mainly in Armenian according to the Law “On Language”
adopted in 1993.

“The posters are in English, Russian, Farsi, French, but not Armenia,
as the RA law on language requires,” says Lavrenti Mirzoyan, the Head
of The RA State Agency for Language. “We must do everything to revive
the Armenian look of the cities, while doing it is not an easy matter.”

Colorful, light, huge, gorgeous, fine and distasteful, sometimes
fashionable, and sometimes with odd names, the posters appear to the
passersby mainly in languages other than Armenian.

Mirzoyan says the agency is not insisting that signs only be in
Armenian “but this doesn’t mean Armenian should be discarded”.

Agency officials say foreign influence is so strong that shop keepers
prefer a grammatically incorrect poster in a foreign language over
one that is in Armenian.

To make Armenian language predominant, as the law requires, a
one-month term has been declared beginning March 15 during which
attention will be paid to the problem. The members of the Agency for
Language will make visits throughout the republic to make sure the
law is being enforced.

In case of infringements, the Agency photographs the offending business
and demands that corresponding posters appear in Armenian within
three days. If the offense continues charges are filed in court,
with penalties up to 300,000 drams (about $660).

“Business representatives who come to us try to convince us that the
Armenian language posters do not attract passersby and are unable to
bring them recognition,” says Mirzoyan.

Mirzoyan says there is too much work to do. During three day visits
only to the Kentron and Arabkir districts of the capital some 100
infringements have been found out, some two dozen cases have been
already forwarded to the court of the first instance.

In one case owners of the shop were not aware of the law; in another
they try to get around it by using connections; and one prefers to
pay fines rather than have to buy new advertisements.

“There are many who hamper our work,” Mirzoyan says, charging that
one shop took away the Agency’s camera and documents. “In some cases
they try to delay everything.”

Mirzoyan says the work is very difficult, because so many of the
offending shops are owned by Members of Parliament or other powerful
figures who try to use their influence to get around the law.

Mirzoyan also says that since starting the work he has even received
death threats from shop owners.

NEW YEAR, OLD TRADITION: PAGANS PRAISE THEIR GOD IN GARNI CEREMONY

By Arpi Harutyunyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

“We congratulate all Aryans, all God fearing, all sons of Vahagn,
all those who feel their roots in Mother Ararat with the New Year,
the near approach of the Cosmic Spring and the 9,588th anniversary
of Vahagn,” shouts Pagan priest Zhora, raising a dagger.

It is the Pagan new year and about 100 Armenians have gathered near
the temple in Garni March 21 to celebrate the birth of Vahagn, the
God of Power and Fire.

All together they spell.

The heaven was in torments of childbirth; the earth was in torments
of childbirth

And the crimson sea was in torments of childbirth

And from the torments of the sea,

A red reed came out,

And smoke came out from the rim of the reed,

And a flame came out from the rim of the reed

And from that flame, a red-haired youth runs out …

And they end their poem with the exclamation “Let Vahagn be
praised!”…

On this day,the Sun enters the constellation of Aries, and the day
and the night equal in duration: the Cosmic Spring begins.

For 16 years “The Oath of the Sons of Aryans” non-governmental
organization celebrates in Garni the New Year on Areg 21 (in the
ancient Armenian calendar March is called Areg). The group claims
more than 1,000 members.

On this day the sons of the Aryans hold on to the Pagan ritual fixed
centuries ago. And if someone appears suddenly nearby the temple
of Garni he will think for sure the time has gone back for hundreds
of years.

The Pagan priests of the order in golden, blue and white coats, with
daggers hanging from their belts open the ceremony. Their hierarchy
is differentiated with the colors of their coats: the one in a golden
coat is the Supreme Priest; the one in blue is the President of the
Priest Class and the one in white is the Priest.

Vahagn’s birth, torn from heaven and earth, is celebrated.

“He will be born to continue the tribe of his Aryan gods on Earth. And
those Aryans who will believe and wait for Vahagn will get power,”
shouts Supreme Priest Samvel. “And those, who will not believe,
will remain in their undesirable illness and will be destroyed,
for no gods are born from the ill.”

Then they burn Vahagn’s fire, make their daggers red-hot and plunge
them into cups of wine.

“Praising the Gods of my tribe, with their help, I consecrate this
wine…Drink it and get power,” says the Supreme Priest.

Everybody tastes the consecrated wine.

They consecrate willow fronds and distribute among participants. The
young fronds symbolize life.

Similar to other Pagan festivals, lambs are also sacrificed on this
day This time the president of the “Union of Armenian Aryans” Armen
Avetisyan made the sacrifice.

(Avetisyan stirred controversy in the National Assembly last fall,
with a series of charges against various groups who were “dangerous”
to Armenian purity. The word “Aryan” itself is frequently associated
with racism in the West. The NGO, however, says for their use, it is
simply a synonymn for “pagan”.)

“I myself have an ode to Vahagn and I dream of time when my soul
gets in touch with the soul of Vahagn – the Armenian god of Power. I
wish Armenian gods return to the spiritual world of our nation, only
they can return us to our roots and protect us from foreign gods,”
says Armen Avetisyan.

An apricot tree was planted in the yard of the temple, holding on to
tradition despite a heavy March snow. Pagan Armenians consider the
apricot a tree of life and believe the energy of that tree protects
Armenian families from evil.

The priests call on the gathered to decorate the apricot tree for
the fulfillment of wishes.

“I participate in all the events taking place here since 1990,” says
35 year old Pagan, Edik. “Christianity has once been something like
globalization. That is why we Armenians have also adopted it. But
in truth the basics of our religion is Paganism. The Mother Temple
of Etchmiadzin also has Pagan grounds and is built on the basis of
the sanctuary of the god Mihr. We consider Paganism is a belief,
and Christianity – a religion.”

Pagans and everybody else gathered were united not only by their
belief, but also by their age. They insist they are 9,588 years old,
the age they share with god Vahagn in whom the souls of all Armenian
Aryans have been living.

LOANING OPPORTUNITY: UMCOR PROGRAM HELPS WOMEN BREAK INTO BUSINESS

By Vahan Ishkhanyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

The Boryans live in Sevan, in a house where the walls have grown moldy.

There is a chicken coop next to the house. By comparison, the coop
is in preferred condition.

“In what condition is the house for the chicken coop to be good?” says
Karen Boryan, embarrassed by the comparison.

There are incubators in the coop, made by Boryan. And he recently
bought an electricity generator and a grinder, from a 180,000 dram
(about $390).

The loan was issued to his wife, Galya, through a program set up by
UMCOR (United Methodist Committee on Relief) in which groups of women
are assisted in setting up businesses.

UMCOR’s “Aregak” program issues unsecured loans, with the stipulation
that the group to whom it is issued is responsible for individual
default.

Galya applied with four acquaintances and all got the same amount. If
one of the five women cannot return the loan, all of them are
responsible and are to repay it. The motto of the three musketeers,
“One for all, all for one”, acquired viability in Soviet pioneer
organizations, but it was forgotten later. Now Aregak is revitalizing
it.

“It often happened so that one member of the group could not return
the money and the others repaid the loan for her,” says Aregak program
manager in Gegharkunik Levon Makhsudyan.

Aregak issues loans to economically active but low-income families. The
mission of the program is to reduce poverty.

The Boryans are refugees from Kirovabad, Azerbaijan. The couple used
to work as engineers at a plant. Now Karen works in Armenian Air
Navigation, where he makes 75,000 drams (about $163) a month. However,
it is very little for the family with three children (one daughter
is married and their son is in the army).

“Once I stayed at home for three days and made an incubator. Galya
was quarreling with me – who on earth has seen an incubator in an
apartment,” Karen says.

He was already getting chickens from the incubator in his apartment,
but he quickly sold them, since it was impossible to raise chickens
in home conditions. Seven years ago they had to sell their apartment
and it was then that they bought this small tumbledown private house
to engage in poultry farming. Running their business they managed
to get up to 500 chickens a month. It was impossible to get more. To
improve their business they needed additional funds.

Had any bank worker seen the walls of the Baroyans’ house, he wouldn’t
have given them a loan. Karen himself went to banks several times
to ask for a loan, but every time he was turned down for different
reasons. The matter didn’t go even as far as leaving a security. He
says that at one place they wanted a bribe from him, at another place
they told him that they issued loans only to registered organizations.

Two years ago Aregak opened an office in Sevan and Galya set up a
group of five women required for a loan.

“The recipient’s being an organization or not is not important to us,”
says Makhsudyan. “This person can barely maintain his family. How
can I tell him to go and register with the tax inspection?”

The most important work done with the first loan was the purchase
of a $100 grinder for birdseeds. “We toiled a lot before purchasing
this grinder,” says Karen. “We used to call a taxi and load 4-5 sacks
(of wheat, barley) on it. I am not a strong person. Now it saves me
a lot of effort.”

The Boryans returned the loan ahead of time and now have received the
second one – this time they borrowed 250,000 drams (about $543). Every
new Aregak loan exceeds the previous one by 40%. This way the size of
the loan grows seven times and reaches $2,000 at best. Larger loans
are not issued.

“I will buy eggs with 50,000 of the loan, I will buy nets to put them
under hens and will use the rest to buy birdseeds,” says Karen. “And
we need money badly, later when I get the loan I will build a new
chicken coop and a shed where I will keep my equipment to prevent it
from getting out of order. We don’t yet think about income, we invest
all money that we get into the business.”

The other three women of the group are engaged in trade. The fifth,
26-year-old Lilly Hakobyan is a cosmetologist. She worked in Sevan’s
Milena beauty parlor. The loan enabled her to set up a separate
business: “I wanted to be totally independent from my parents,”
she says. She spent 180,000 drams to buy two tools (worth $100 each)
and a mobile phone. She has 5-7 customers a day: “The tools brought
me large income, $180 a month only due to these tools,” says Leili.
She also began to keep apprentices, she teaches them for $200. Lilly
intends to use her next Aregak loan and the income she gets to buy
a house and open a beauty salon of her own. Now she doesn’t have
male customers, since she receives customers in an apartment room
and people will be seeing male customers coming to her. “They will
feel ashamed from neighbors to come, but if I open a center, there
will be a queue of men,” she says.

A total of 4,000 people in Gegharkunik marz and 900 in Sevan region
have already received loans. Seventy percent of loans are agricultural.

Why does Aregak loan only to women?

Aregak director Mariam Yesayan, who has worked since 1997, when
the program was launched, says that they had borrowed the model of
micro-crediting of women from international experience, since it is
effective: “Women are more active and more responsible. Besides, after
being deprived of initiative for so long, getting this opportunity
they try in every way to prove that they can earn money.”

The two main principles of Aregak – to loan to women and get social
guarantees instead of security – have turned Aregak into an effectively
working program. The loan repayment rate is 98 percent. Today Aregak’s
25 offices serve 18,500 customers from 400 communities. Currently,
recipients dispose of a sum of $7 million. Seven offices have been
opened at the expense of incomes (the loan is given at a monthly
interest rate of 2 percent).

UMCOR intends to register Aregak as a crediting organization in
2006. Mariam Yesayan says that even after separation Aregak will
not become a profit-seeking business and will continue its mission:
“The incomes in Armenia will be used to achieve the mission goals to
reduce poverty and we must continue to help people who cannot avail
themselves of traditional loans.”

THE RIGHT TO SIGHT: NEW COMPUTERS OFFER INFORMATION ACCESS FOR
VISUALLY DISABLED

By Arpi Harutyunyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

Blind citizens of Armenia no longer need rely only on the Braille
system of reading in order to become better informed.

With the financial support of Speaker of the National Assembly Artur
Baghdasaryan and Russian-Armenian philanthropist Ara Abrahamyan, 10
specially programmed computers have been presented to the Cultural
Center of the Union of Blind People.

Academician Arman Kuchukyan initiated the acquisition and created
the software for Armenian language sound in the computers, that will
enable the blind to hear newspapers, books and other written materials.

Such a system has been operating in other countries for many years. And
for Armenia it seemed unbelievable at least for the nearest decade.

“In our country there are not even minimal modern conditions for the
education and communication of the blind. Even using literature makes
big problems for blind students. I am really very happy we will have
such an opportunity to use computers now,” says Hakob Karapetyan,
22, student at the Department of Political Science, YSU (Yerevan
State University).

Hakob and other blind young people will now learn not only to use
computers but will also obtain specialty of programmers.

Baghdasaryan says computers will also go to Union affiliates in
different marzes of Armenia.

“I am confident, during the coming one to two years thousands of
blind people will have the opportunity to use the services of this
computer center for free,” says Baghdasaryan. “As a citizen and the
NA speaker, I am very concerned with the social and legal security
problems of disabled people. We plan to open computer centers also
in other settlements.”

According to the data of the Ministry of Social Security there are
9,300 visually disabled people in Armenia. About 5,000 are members
of the Union, which was organized in the 1920s.

During Soviet times jobs were provided for the blind as well as
special allowances for utilities and transportation. Also during
those years they were given free holidays at resorts and discounts
on airline and train tickets.

“Years ago our Union was quite wealthy. Many got the opportunity to
obtain apartments, get education, some made families,” remembers
its executive director, Gagik Harutyunyan. “One can say, we were
cared for. Now people’s love and care for each other has somewhat
decreased. The disabled feel it in a special way, for they need
more attention.”

Today the blind have almost no advantages. Many have found themselves
in poverty. Some have sold their apartments and now, as they say,
have been left hoping for a ridiculous pension.

Rosa Harutyunyan, 76, is a member of the Union of Blind since 1949. For
nearly 40 years she has worked in a factory for making wall outlets,
switch-on and switch-off appliances. Then she was fired.

“I have sold my apartment twice since I was fired: I have moved
from the center of the city to its suburbs. Now I get 5,000 drams
(a little more than $10) monthly allowance. But I haven’t received
it either for three months,” she says, bitterly. “I am an ill woman
alone; there is no one by my side to help me somehow. It seems to me
if I die I will have no one to bury me either. And there were times
when I went to resorts for several times a year…”

She recalls, too, entertainment for the blind staged in the Union
Cultural Center. But now…

“Once there were many drama groups, dancing, chess groups operating
in the Cultural Center. But now there are no opportunities to run
such groups,” remembers Hovhannes Grigoryan, librarian at the Braille
library. “Besides, the people’s interests, values have changed. A
blind man on the edge of poverty wants neither to step on the stage
nor to attend performances.”

Despite everything, the executive director of the Cultural Center is
most hopeful.

“When poet Isahakyan was asked, master, is there more good in the
world or bad, the writer answered: ‘if there was more bad, the world
wouldn’t exist now.’ Indeed, if there are still kind people doing
good things it means not everything is lost yet. I believe, we will
see bright days as well,” Harutyunyan says.

ART OF TRADITION: “AMERICANA” ART INSPIRES INTERESTS IN ITS ARMENIAN
VARIANT

By Gayane Abrahamyan
ArmeniaNow Reporter

A unique exhibition of quilts from the southern United States has
opened in the Academy gallery in Yerevan.

Where paintings might usually hang, instead there are 12 colorfully
patterned hand-sewn quilts made by African- American women from the
rural settlement of Gee’s Bend, Alabama.

Presented by the US Embassy in Armenia, the quilts have been brought
to Armenia by the coordinator of the exhibition, professional quilt
maker Karen Musgrave.

The quilts – for decades valued in the United States for their
“Americana” art – are sewn from a collection of usually- discarded
items of clothing cut into shapes to form a motif across the surface.

Some say, too that the quilt making is an expression of Black
Americans’ rebellion (though quilt making was not peculiar only to
African Americans).

“These are not samples of arts, but expressions of problems and
sufferings; I felt every small rag contains soul, suffering, history,
this is a protest call of a whole nation,” says Siran Kochinyan,
a teacher from Vanadzor who visited the exhibit.

The main motives of the patterns are taken from ideas seen in the Cuba
tribes in Central Africa, Asante tribes in Ghana and the inhabitants
of the Ivory Coast.

These blankets carry also a part of the family history; being made up
of different rags of clothes of different times of different members
of family, they reflect like a unique diary the tastes of the given
family, its style of sewing and abilities.

The quilts come to Armenia after having been exhibited in the Atlanta
Museum of Fine Arts in 2002, then in the Whitney Museum of American
Art in New York and other places.

According to Musgrave, the exhibitions in the three Armenian cities
Gyumri, Vanadzor and Yerevan are unique in that every visitor thinks
they also have such “art” in their own homes.

“I saw five Armenian blankets that could be hung there and take the
place they deserve; they are works of arts as well, just a bit of
imagination is necessary,” says Musgrave.

The tradition to make quilts from different rags is common in Armenia
and has old roots. According to Deputy Director of the Museum
of People’s Art of Armenia Adelaida Manukyan, this has mainly be
peasant’s art, especially typical to the poor class.

“There are such works preserved with us, that have had different names
– darn works, rag works, etc. Among us Armenians those have mainly been
used as thin covers, blanket or pillow upper sides,” says Manukyan.

Such thin covers were sewed to spread under the woolen mattresses
so that the metal wire netting of the beds didn’t harm the most
valuable thick mattresses. They have had various names, depending on
the location and the dialect, mostly known as “mindar” or “palas”.

“I can remember my grandma sewed such covers from our old cloths she
would use it mainly to spread on the grass in the field; you can
still find such soft bats made for chair pillows their upper side
made in this very way by joining rags,” says pedagogue Irina Galstyan.

Musgrave says this exhibition is important in that the Armenians have
thrown a fresh glance on the works that have lost their value in the
everyday usage.

Gor Vardanyan, Director of the Academy gallery is intended to collect
samples of this kind of arts from different villages and those kept
in museums and organize a separate exhibition this time presenting
the ideas and the expertise of only Armenian women.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armenianow.com

NKR Parliament Members Appeal To International Community To Consider

NKR PARLIAMENT MEMBERS APPEAL TO INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY TO
CONSIDER ARMENIAN MASSACRES IN SHUSHI 85 YEARS AGO AS GENOCIDE

STEPANAKERT, MARCH 23. ARMINFO. Regular plenary sitting of National
Assembly of Nagorno-Karabakh Republic was held Thursday. ARMINFO’s
own correspondent in Stepanakert informs with reference to the press
office of NKR parliament, at the beginning of the sitting in
commemoration of the 85th anniversary of the massacres in the town of
Shushi the parliament read the statement, saying: “85 years passed
since the tragic events took place on March 23 at the beginning of
the twentieth century – the massacres of the population of the former
administrative center of the region – the towns of Shushi and
bordering Armenian villages. The authorities of the Azerbaijani
Democratic Republic perpetrated this monstrous crime, as a result of
which over 30,000 peaceful citizens became victims. The authorities
of Azerbaijan acted under the direct patronage and assistance o the
Turkish expeditionary corps, which was in the territory of
Azerbaijan. As a matter of fact the March slaughter of the Armenian
population of Shushi was continued by means of various forms of
ethnic cleaning during all the years of existence of Nagorny Karabakh
as a part of Azerbaijan and was finished by mass deportation of the
last Armenian residents in 1988. Condemning the massacres of the
Armenian population of the town of Shushi and bordering villages on
March 23, 1920, National Assembly of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic
appeals to the international community with a call to consider this
bloody event as an act of genocide”.

During the sitting MPs also adopted the bills on notarial office, on
referendum, on amending the law on the charter of national assembly
and others.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress