USA to provide $75m in aid to Armenia

USA to provide $75m in aid to Armenia

RosBusinessConsulting Database
November 24, 2004 Wednesday 2:04 am, EST

The US Senate has passed a law on aid to foreign countries, which
provides for allocating $75m for the implementation of the US
government’s programs of assistance to Armenia in 2005. The Press
and Information Department of Armenia’s Foreign Ministry reported
that within the bounds of this aid program, at least $3m would
be allocated for humanitarian programs in the disputed region of
Nagorniy Karabakh. Additionally, Armenia will receive $8.75m within
the framework of military cooperation programs, the ARKA news agency
reported. It is pointed out in the Foreign Ministry’s press release
that the US Congress had confirmed the principle of parity with regard
to military aid to Armenia and Azerbaijan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Budapest: Azerbaijani officer pleads guilty for killing Armenianclas

AZERBAIJANI OFFICER PLEADS GUILTY FOR KILLING ARMENIAN CLASSMATE

Hungarian News Agency (MTI)
November 23, 2004

Budapest, November 23 (MTI) – The Azerbaijani officer who killed
an Armenian classmate during a NATO Partnership for Peace course in
Budapest last February has pleaded guilty in court.

Ramil Safarov, 27, used an ax to hack to death his sleeping colleague
Gurgen Makarian of Armenia, a year his junior, in the dormitory of
Miklos Zrinyi National Defence University.

Safarov said that his act was motivated by the long-standing conflict
between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Safarov who showed no repentance in court said the murder was a revenge
for a 1992 Armenian assault of Azerbaijanis in the Nagorno-Karabakh
region, which he witnessed as a child.

Safarov is charged with premeditated murder carried out with unusual
cruelty and vile motives.

The Azerbaijani officer said the Armenians he had met in the dormitory
and in excursions “were smiling mockingly and were behaving the way
members of a victorious army usually behave towards the defeated.”

The killer and the Armenian victim were attending a three-month
English language course in Budapest.

The trial was attended by both Azerbaijani and Armenian diplomats.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

TBILISI: Russia agrees to hand control of tank workshop to Georgia

Russia agrees to hand control of tank workshop to Georgia

Kavkasia-Press news agency
24 Nov 04

Tbilisi, 24 November: Russia signed an agreement on the handover
of the Tbilisi armoured vehicle workshop to Georgia at the Defence
Ministry today. The agreement was signed by Georgian Deputy Chief of
General Staff Col Levan Nikoleishvili and the chief of staff of the
Group of Russian Forces in the Transcaucasus, Col Andrey Popov.

The armoured vehicle workshop is located on Moscow Avenue in
Tbilisi. Until now only Russian and Armenian military equipment has
been repaired there.

After the agreement was signed Nikoleishvili said that the workshop
would be handed over by 30 January next year, until which time it
will be jointly guarded by Russian and Georgian personnel.

Andrey Popov said that the Russian side would take it upon itself
to pay salary arrears to workers, although the amount has not been
specified.

“The factory employees will retain their jobs,” Nikoleishvili said,
adding that their working conditions would improve after the handover.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azeri minister warns of humanitarian crisis in Armenian-occupi

Azeri minister warns of humanitarian crisis in Armenian-occupied Karabakh

Turan news agency, Baku
24 Nov 04

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov has said that Baku is
concerned about a “massive” settlement programme carried out by Armenia
on Azerbaijan’s occupied lands while holding peace talks to resolve the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. Addressing a UN General Assembly session,
he warned of a humanitarian crisis that may arise if the problem
persisted. The minister also said that Azerbaijan did not intend
to put the issue of the conflict resolution onto the UN agenda. The
following is the text of the report by Azerbaijani news agency Turan:

New York, 24 November: “The situation in the occupied territories of
Azerbaijan” has been discussed at the 59th session of the UN in New
York. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov addressed the
session. The minister noted that UN Security Council SC resolutions
Nos 822, 853, 874 and 884 issued in 1993 are the basis for resolving
the conflict, a source from Azerbaijan’s resident representation at
the UN told Turan.

Mammadyarov said that Azerbaijan has been abiding by the cease-fire
for 10 years, which testifies to Baku’s aspiration to settle the
conflict peacefully. He also informed the audience of a series of
meetings between the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia
in Prague mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group. During these meetings,
the parties discussed the main parameters of the settlement of the
conflict, including the liberation of all the occupied territories,
the return of displaced persons to their native lands, the restoration
of transport and other communications between Armenia and Azerbaijan
and the gradual solution of the political side of the conflict.

However, Armenia is massively populating the occupied territories
while negotiations are being held and this causes Azerbaijan’s
“concern”. Earlier, this used to be episodic, but Armenia has
recently organized a massive settlement programme. This programme is
being implemented by the department for refugees and migrants of the
Armenian government and is called “Return to Karabakh”. The programme
is financed with funds that Yerevan allocates to Karabakh separatists,
the Azerbaijani foreign minister said.

Causing special concern is the situation in Lacin District, where
Armenia has already settled 13,000 Armenians. The names of Azerbaijani
villages and settlements have been Armenified. The Armenian diaspora
is taking a direct part in this programme, which aims at populating
Nagornyy Karabakh with Armenian migrants.

The Armenian government is also using its armed forces located in the
occupied lands of Azerbaijan to set up new residential areas, and
two residential areas have been constructed in Kalbacar with their
participation. Hundreds of Armenians from Iran, Russia, Lebanon and
other countries are being settled there and get numerous privileges
from the Armenian government. In particular, they get material
assistance and long-term loans to restore the houses that were
originally owned by Azerbaijanis.

The Armenian government intends to bring the number of the Armenian
population in the occupied Azerbaijani territories to 300,000 by 2010.

Mammadyarov said these and other facts were reflected in the reports
by the US State Department and some foreign media. “The settlement
policy being pursued by Armenia contradicts the corresponding UN SC
resolutions, international humanitarian law and in particular the
Geneva Convention of 1949 and confirms Armenia’s claims to Azerbaijani
lands,” Mammadyarov said.

Azerbaijan introduced draft resolution A/59/L at the General Assembly,
the minister said. However, Azerbaijan doesn’t intend to put the issue
of the settlement onto the UN agenda. But if the issues disrupting
the peace process remain unsolved, it will lead to a humanitarian
crisis. Armenia should “deport” the Armenians that were settled in the
occupied territories and guarantee that this will never happen again,
the minister warned.

The representatives of Turkey and Pakistan supported Azerbaijan’s
position at the assembly. They said the settlement of the conflict
is possible only on the basis of observing sovereignty, territorial
integrity and international law.

Armenia’s representative Armen Martirosyan attempted to deny the
abovementioned facts. He said there is no need for the involvement
of the General Assembly in the issue. The Armenian diplomat also said
that Nagornyy Karabakh has never been and will never be a constituent
part of Azerbaijan. A US representative speaking on behalf of the
co-chairmen of the OSCE Minsk Group said that Azerbaijan’s concern
may be addressed at the OSCE. He supported Azerbaijan’s proposal to
establish a group of experts to investigate these facts.

Stressing that the discussions of the text of the resolution continue,
the chairman of the session adjourned voting.

Commenting on the hearings, Mammadyarov stressed their importance. “It
is difficult to talk about results yet, but Azerbaijan has managed to
tell the international community the truth about Armenia populating
Azerbaijani territories. Azerbaijan’s position in this issue remains
unchanged: all the occupied territories should be liberated and
displaced persons should return to their native lands.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: Azerbaijan-proposed draft UN resolution on Karabakh – full tex

Azerbaijan-proposed draft UN resolution on Karabakh – full text

ANS TV, Baku
24 Nov 04

Presenter Here is the full text of a draft resolution submitted by
Baku to the 59th session of the UN General Assembly.

Correspondent, over archive footage of the UN The draft resolution
entitled “The situation on Azerbaijan’s occupied territories” reads:

Based on the UN goals, principles and terms;

confirming the principle of respect for any state’s sovereignty and
territorial integrity, security of internationally-recognized borders;

preventing the use of force for seizing territories and confirming
international humanitarian law and principles, especially the 1949
Geneva Convention and protocols amended to it;

confirming international human rights standards;

referring to the Security Council’s resolutions Nos 822, 853, 874 and
884, as well as referring to resolution No 48/114 entitled “Emergency
international aid to refugees and displaced persons in Azerbaijan”;

expressing serious concern about the continuation of the occupation
of Azerbaijani territories, the current situation on Azerbaijan’s
occupied territories and its negative impact on attempts to reach
peace between Armenia and Azerbaijan;

being seriously concerned about reports on resettlement on Azerbaijan’s
occupied territories whereas the entire local population has been
evicted from there;

emphasizing that the moves of this type, as well as misappropriation
of lands and property, other illegal moves on Azerbaijan’s occupied
territories, is in violation of international human rights, especially
the Geneva Convention on protection of civilian population during
the war dated 12 August 1949;

advising the OSCE Minsk Group to boost efforts to find a speedy and
lasting settlement to the conflict in the Azerbaijani Republic’s
Nagornyy Karabakh region;

and welcoming the efforts by the Council of Europe, the EU and the
Organization of the Islamic Conference in this direction, the General
Assembly:

1. once again announces its unchangeable support to the Azerbaijani
Republic’s sovereignty and territorial integrity;

2. strongly calls on the conflicting parties to make efforts for the
peaceful settlement of the conflict in the Azerbaijani Republic’s
Nagornyy Karabakh region and around it within international norms
and legal principles;

3. confirms the right of refugees and displaced persons from the
conflict area to voluntarily return to native lands on decent terms
with the help of the international community;

4. strongly calls on the conflicting parties to seriously observe
and respect international human rights norms;

5. notes inadmissibility of accepting the legality of any moves to
formalize neither the current situation nor the status quo occupation
of Azerbaijan’s territories;

6. emphasizes that resettlement or similar moves on the occupied
territories are illegal and in violation of international law,
especially international human rights, and stresses the importance
of immediately putting an end to all these actions and restoring the
status quo;

7. proposes that the OSCE urgently send a multinational fact-finding
mission consisting of relevant experts from the member countries
to conduct an investigation and submit a report on all aspects of
the situation on Azerbaijan’s occupied territories and asks for the
necessary help in this from the secretary-general, if needed;

8. asks the secretary-general to submit a detailed report on the
fulfilment of this resolution at the General Assembly’s 60th session;

9. makes a decision to include the issue of the situation on
Azerbaijan’s occupied territories on the agenda of the 60th session.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Andranik Square In Meudon

ANDRANIK SQUARE IN MEUDON

Azg/arm
25 Nov 04

The French town of Meudon in the south-west of Paris became the first
foreign city to have a square bearing the name of the national hero
of Armenia Andranik Ozanian, known simply as commander Andranik. Among
the people witnessing the historical event were the Armenian ambassador
to France Edward Nalbandian, French generals Ferlius and Berrange.

Mayor of Meudon, Hervé Marseille, who was conducting the ceremony,
presented the life of Andranik, told about his fight against the
Ottoman Turks in Western Armenia and then in Bulgaria, about his
battle in Van in 1915 and his battles to stop Turksâ~@~Y invasion
in Eastern Armenia in 1918-19. In 1919 Andranik disbanded his army
and left Armenia with a group of loyal solders not to be involved in
political infighting. In 1922 he settled in Fresno (USA) where he died
in 1927. Some months later his remnants were conveyed to Per-Lashez
cemetery in Paris and then to Yerablur cemetery in Yerevan in 2000.

Ambassador Nalbandian expressed his gratitude to Mr. Marseille noting
that “the square is another evidence of the century-long friendship
between Armenian and French nations”.

State anthems of Armenia and France accompanied the ceremony.

By Petros Keshishian

–Boundary_(ID_S58XdM4F9ZhucWLKKwOQGA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

ASBAREZ ONLINE [11-24-2004]

ASBAREZ ONLINE
TOP STORIES
11/24/2004
TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
WEBSITE AT <;HTTP://

1) Azerbaijan’s Divisive Campaign at UN Threatens to Derail Karabagh Peace
Process
2) Congress Finalizes FY 2005 Foreign Aid Bill
3) UN Vote On Pro-Azeri Karabagh Resolution Delayed
4) Turkey. Cultural Genocide
5) ‘Beast on the Moon’ to Debut on Broadway
6) Tribute to Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian
7) Gorky Expert Discusses Influence of Armenian Culture, Genocide on Artist’s
Work

1) Azerbaijan’s Divisive Campaign at UN Threatens to Derail Karabagh Peace
Process

Rep. Pallone speaks out against destructive UN resolution; ANCA leads
grassroots campaign to urge the administration to oppose destabilizing measure

WASHINGTON, DC–On Tuesday, the ANCA issued an appeal to Secretary of State
Colin Powell urging him to “strenuously and publicly oppose” an
Azeri-sponsored
United Nations resolution, which would seriously undermine the Mountainous
Karabagh peace process. The action follows a strongly worded November 19 House
floor statement by Congressional Armenian Caucus co-chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ)
and an earlier joint letter by the Armenian Caucus Co-chairs calling the
resolution “ill-advised” and urging the US to take decisive action against the
measure.
Azerbaijan has pressed forward with its resolution, which seeks to condemn
the
repatriation of Armenians to their ancestral homes in Mountainous Karabagh,
despite opposition from the Co-Chairs of the Organization for Security and
cooperation in Europe (OSCE) Minsk Group. The co-chairs have noted that,
“introducing this issue to the United Nations General Assembly may have two
negative consequences. In light of the situation we have outlined, this
will be
detrimental to the efforts to find a just and lasting settlement of the issue,
particularly at this time. Secondly, it will fail to achieve consensus, a
situation that will not be helpful. We advise avoiding this situation.”
Azeri Ambassador to the UN, Yashar Aliyev, began lobbying in support of the
resolution on October 14, the day that he submitted a letter requesting
that it
be included on the UN General Assembly agenda. Both the UN General Committee
and General Assembly have voted to allow the matter to be considered. The
United States, along with Minsk Group Co-Chairs France and Russia, have
abstained on both votes.
In his November 19 remarks, Rep. Pallone expressed alarm that “the United
States has thus far failed to compellingly address the resolution…This failure
by the Administration now has the potential to undermine US interests and
American values in the strategically important Caucasus region.”
The November 7 letter from the Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Frank Pallone and
Joe
Knollenberg (R-MI) raised similar concerns, stressing that, “efforts to
reinforce stability and reduce the risk of conflict are in the best interests
of the US and the South Caucasus region. To this end, we urge that the United
States forcefully renounce this proposal, secure its retraction, and impress
upon the Azeri government that it should drop such counter-productive tactics
in favor of a serious and lasting commitment to the OSCE Minsk Group process.”
In the days leading up the vote, ANCA chapters around the country have
mobilized local activists to urge the US Ambassador to the United Nations to
actively oppose the Azeri measure. The ANCA launched a free WebFax campaign on
its website– Secretary Powell and US Ambassador to the UN
John
Danforth, calling for an unequivocal “no” vote on the resolution. The WebFax
letter explains that Azerbaijan’s resolution “works at cross-purposes to
America’s interests, which are best served by continued dialogue. In fact, the
only interests served by Azerbaijan’s resolution will be those of
hardliners in
Baku who seek the fragmentation of the OSCE framework, the unraveling of ten
year’s worth of negotiations, and the resumption of hostilities in the
region…The United States, as a co-chair of the Minsk Group and an honest
broker to the negotiating process, should strenuously, and publicly oppose
this
measure at every stage.”

2) Congress Finalizes FY 2005 Foreign Aid Bill

Reverses administration’s effort to break military aid parity for Armenia and
Azerbaijan; fails to include Schiff amendment on the Armenian genocide

WASHINGTON, DC–The United States Congress this past weekend adopted an
Omnibus spending measure including several provisions of special interest to
Armenian Americans–including the reversal of a White House proposal to tip
the
balance of US military aid toward Azerbaijan.
The Bush Administration, in the budget it submitted to Congress in
February of
this year, had proposed sending four times more Foreign Military Financing to
Azerbaijan ($8 million) than to Armenia ($2 million). The final version of the
foreign aid bill, adopted on November 20 during a lame duck session of
Congress, sets the total military aid figures, including three quarters of a
million dollars in International Military Education and Training, for both
nations at $8.75 million. “It is absolutely critical that the US maintain
parity in military assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan,” commented Armenian
Caucus Co-Chairman Joe Knollenberg (R-MI). “This is as important as ever,
particularly in light of the ongoing dangerous comments by Azeri leaders. I am
fully committed to ensuring that this policy continues.”
Congress–at the urging of Senator Mitch McConell (R-KY) and Rep.
Knollenberg,
both of whom serve as senior members of their respective chamber’s foreign aid
subcommittees–earmarked at least $75 million in economic aid for Armenia and
an additional $3 million for Mountainous Karabagh. Subcommittee member Steve
Rothman (D-NJ) welcomed the final numbers, stating “Armenia, as an emerging
democracy with a developing free market economic system, needs continued US
assistance to accomplish its objectives: regional peace and stability, a
successful transition to a free market economy and a flourishing democracy. I
will continue to work with the Administration to push Azerbaijan and Turkey to
lift their blockades against Armenia, which are placing oppressive and
unjustifiable obstacles in the path of Armenia’s continued growth and
development.”
“Armenian Americans value the foresight and vision of Congress in restoring
military aid parity, setting a $75 million earmark for Armenia, and continuing
direct aid to Mountainous Karabagh,” said ANCA Executive Director Aram
Hamparian. “Senator McConnell, Congressman Knollenberg and all our friends
deserve a great deal of credit for their tireless efforts on this spending
measure. We were, at the same time, disappointed that Congressional leaders
failed to respect the clearly expressed will of the US House in adopting the
Schiff Amendment. In failing to include this provision in the final version of
the bill, Congress missed an opportunity to send a clear message to Turkey
that
the US government will not tolerate its shameful denial of the Armenian
genocide.”
The restoration of military aid parity by the Congress was identified by the
ANCA in early 2004 as a major legislative priority following the President’s
budget request breaking the standing agreement between the White House and the
legislative branch that military assistance to Armenia and Azerbaijan remain
equal. Following the bill’s passage Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone
(D-NJ) cited the importance of maintaining military aid parity. “Even though
the President waived Section 907 in FY 2002, its principles and the
commitments
that were made at that time still remain fundamental to US policy towards the
South Caucuses. Moreover, because Azerbaijan continues its blockade of
Armenia,
it is more important than ever for maintaining Foreign Military Funding parity
between these two nations.”
The House version of the foreign aid bill, adopted this July, included a
strongly worded amendment, authored by Rep. Adam Schiff, on the Armenian
genocide. This measure, approved as an amendment by voice vote on the House
floor, aimed to restrict the government of Turkey from using any of the aid it
receives from this appropriation to lobby against the adoption of the
Congressional Genocide Resolution. The Senate version did not include a
counterpart to the Schiff Amendment, nor did the final text that emerged from
House-Senate deliberations.
Rep. Schiff commented on the removal of the provision from the final bill
stating: “Generations of Americans have long waited for Congress to condemn
the
murder of 1.5 million Armenian men, women and children. Even though the Schiff
amendment was not enacted into law, its passage by the House in July was a
seminal moment in the effort to recognize the Armenian genocide. While I had
hoped that this would be the year Congress would formally speak against the
evil perpetrated against the Armenian people almost ninety years ago, we will
redouble our efforts in the next year to pass the Schiff Amendment as well as
legislation recognizing and condemning all genocides.”

3) UN Vote On Pro-Azeri Karabagh Resolution Delayed

UNITED NATIONS (RFE/RL-Reuters)–Azerbaijan urged the UN General Assembly on
Tuesday to intervene in a long and bitter territorial dispute with neighboring
Armenia over the Mountainous Karabagh region.
But France, Russia, and the United States, which have been trying to resolve
the dispute on behalf of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe, asked the assembly to stay on the sidelines and not interfere with
their efforts. Azerbaijan has repeatedly accused them of doing little to
restore its control over Karabagh.
Talks “can only progress in an atmosphere of confidence between the parties.
Anything in the direction of building confidence and of avoiding a division of
the General Assembly is helpful,” said US envoy Susan Moore, speaking on
behalf
of the OSCE initiative led by Paris, Moscow, and Washington.
Azerbaijan’s foreign minister, Elmar Mammadyarov, said his government had
decided to take the issue to the General Assembly because Armenia was pursuing
an “illegal settlement policy” by flooding the disputed area with Armenians,
with an eye to annexing the enclave.
He called on the assembly to adopt a resolution affirming its “continued
strong support” for Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity and the right of Azeri
refugees to return to their former homes in the enclave.
The allegations were rebutted by Armen Martirosian, Armenia’s ambassador at
the UN. He reportedly reiterated the Armenian position that the seven
districts
in Azerbaijan proper were occupied as a result of Azerbaijan’s attempts to win
back Karabagh by force and that their return is conditional on a comprehensive
peace accord. He also charged that Azerbaijan itself pioneered ethnic
cleansing
in the conflict by unleashing pogroms of its ethnic Armenian citizens in
1988-90.
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian, for his part, warned on Tuesday that the
passage of the pro-Azeri resolution would reverse progress which he said he
and
Mammadyarov made during peace talks earlier this year.
The assembly put off a vote on the draft resolution until an unspecified
later
date.

4) Turkey. Cultural Genocide

Calendar documents destruction of Armenian Churches

The Research on Armenian Architecture (RAA) organization has published a 2005
calendar depicting the fate of Armenian churches in Turkey, which stood intact
at the turn of the of the 20th century, but stand effectively leveled today.
The RAA uncovers and researches Armenian architectural monuments in the
territory of historical Armenia–primarily Western Armenia and Cilicia, and in
the neighboring countries of Georgia, Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan, and Iran.
Their goal is to take photographs and map existing strictures in order to
rescue them on paper, and present Armenian public and international
community–before ultimate eradication.
The RAA began its activities at the end of the 1960s, and was established in
Germany in 1982. In 1998, it registered and operates as a non-profit
organization in Armenia. More detailed information on their activities can be
found on

5) ‘Beast on the Moon’ to Debut on Broadway

NEW YORK–Art has once again come to the aid of the Armenian Cause, this time
in the form of a play called Beast on the Moon. The beautiful and gripping
story by Richard Kalinoski, about two survivors who settle in the United
States
and seek to start a family in the wake of the genocide of their past,
powerfully discloses the true nature of the events of 1915.
The play–honored by the American Theatre Critics Association in 1996–has
been performed in 16 nations, translated into 11 languages, and won more than
40 awards around the world.
Producers of the developing New York production of Kalinoski’s play are now
aiming the work at Broadway in 2005. On November 12, in New York City,
producer
David Grillo of Stillwater Productions, spoke at a workshop meant to attract
the remaining investors needed to stage Beast on the Moon this spring.
The American play about Armenian immigrants still dealing with the shadows of
the 1915 Armenian genocide–even as they face hope and opportunity in their
new
home in Milwaukee”is an absolutely universal tale of love as a healing tool in
the aftermath of wartime loss,” remarked Grillo.
Armenian-Americans will be doubly compelled to see this play. On a purely
human level, the audience must grapple with the complexity of how love enables
the most deeply unexpressed feelings to emerge and be potentially healed,
while
an Armenian audience will connect with the pathos of what many grandparents
and
great-grandparents endured as they struggled to construct a life in the
aftermath of witnessing the vicious destruction of their families.
The work, billed as “a love story, and an American immigrant story,” is
set in
1921 Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Mr. Aram Tomasian first greets Mrs. Seta
Tomasian as
a fifteen year-old girl, who has been rescued from Armenia to live as his
mail-order bride. As these two very different people go through twelve
years of
marriage, they confront the challenge of merging their opposite approaches to
managing grief. Seta, open and talkative, strives to deal with the loss of her
family by sharing with her husband. Fiercely determined to replace his
slaughtered family by producing children of his own, Aram is quiet and
brooding. Because of the starvation she experienced as a refugee, Seta is
unable to bear children. Their relationship comes to an impasse; yet through
the darkest moments, it is clear that the marriage is infused with deep love
and need for one another.
The couple befriends a young Italian orphan boy, whom Seta has welcomed in
her home and Aram grows to love. By the play’s end, Aram sheds some of his
rigidity, and thanks to his extraordinary young wife, discovers the
possibility
of happiness.
By supporting this play, Armenian-Americans will participate in a form of
activism guaranteed to be deeply enriching on many levels. Members of the
audience will reflect on how love enables traumatized individuals to
regenerate
their lives through building a family, while they will learn about one of the
greatest injustices of the twentieth century.
“So much appeals to me about Beast that it is hard to find a place to begin,”
Grillo previously told Playbill On-Line. “It is an extraordinarily challenging
drama with a surprising number of well-earned laughs. The play takes its
audiences through an emotional cataclysm and delivers them, at its finish, to
joyful redemption. I don’t like plays that ask me to jump through emotional
hoops and then leave me beaten up by the side of the road. Beast is
redemptive.
The journey is hard, but one for which the audience is enormously grateful.”
To learn more about Beast on the Moon, visit
<;
For those interested in possibly investing in its Broadway production, contact
the producer David Grillo at 212-541-4502 or at [email protected].

6) Tribute to Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian

By Anahid M. Ugurlayan

An enlarged color photograph of Archbishop Ashjian holding a lamb at the
center
of the stage near the podium was the setting for what would prove to be an
emotional evening.
As Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan would later explain, the lamb was a
sacrificial
one, but Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian had asked that its life be spared and
helped
take care of it until it grew to be a sheep. A small gesture, perhaps, but it
is one that exemplifies Archbishop Ashjian’s kindness and charity that
would be
highlighted throughout the evening.
Family, friends, and supporters of the late Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian, who
passed away on December 2, 2003, gathered at St. Peter’s Church in New York to
honor and pay tribute to him. The tribute was organized by the Special
Committee of the New York Chapter of the Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and
Cultural Society under the leadership of Chairperson Arevig Caprielian and
under the auspices of Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate of the Armenian
Apostolic Church of Eastern US.
The program commenced with a video of Archbishop Ashjian’s pilgrimage to
Western Armenia–vivid images of centuries-old churches destroyed or left to
nature’s devices with no effort on the part of the Turkish government to
preserve Armenia’s cultural heritage–Archbishop Ashjian praying for the souls
of deceased relatives of pilgrimage-goers.
After the video presentation, Arevig Caprielian delivered the opening
remarks,
welcoming all in attendance and reminding them of Archbishop Ashjian’s
innumerable achievements for the Church and the Armenian people around the
world, especially as the Prelate of Eastern United States and Canada for 20
years and in Armenia, his home during the last six years of his life.
Dr. Herand Markarian, the master of ceremonies, remarked that those who mourn
the passing of Archbishop Ashjian are also “carriers of his memory,” and that
his spirit is ever-present as long as “we as a nation live his memory.” Dr.
Markarian introduced the video, Life and Times of Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian:
Road of Achievements, which was shown in two parts.
In the first part, His Eminence speaks of the importance of faith–how it
guides to become a source of strength in one’s life, without which the meaning
of life would be lost. He speaks of his childhood and his parents, both
orphans
of the 1915 Armenian genocide, who instilled strong Armenian values and the
spirit of the Church, which would serve as the foundation for his future
religious studies.
Archbishop Ashjian recounts his theological studies and his service to the
community as Dean of the Monastery in Bikfaya, Beirut, as Principal of the
Mardikian School in Antelias, Lebanon, as Prelate of New Julfa/Isfahan in
Iran,
and, finally, as the Prelate of the Eastern United States and Canada for
twenty
years (1978-1998). As Prelate of the Eastern United States and Canada, his
achievements included founding the Land and Culture Organization and educating
Armenian youth about Armenian history and religion through the Siamanto
Saturday program and the Datevatsi Seminars in Philadelphia each year in July.
The video presentation also included excerpts of the 70th anniversary
commemoration of the Armenian genocide in Washington, DC, where 800 genocide
survivors were in attendance, his placing of a wreath at the Tomb of the
Unknown Soldier at Arlington National Cemetery in honor of Armenian-Americans
who served in the military from WWI to the present, as well as a speech on
Armenian Independence Day where he spoke as both a clergyman and a patriot,
championing our national independence.
Despite Archbishop Ashjian’s humble demeanor, viewing himself first and
always
as God’s servant, his many achievements and his spiritual guidance left a
lasting impression on all who knew and worked with him.
One of these individuals, the Honorable Sarkis Teshoian, delivered the
English
message and spoke of his dear friend, brother, and leader. Judge Teshoian, who
served as chairman of the Prelacy’s Executive Council during Archbishop
Ashjian’s tenure in New York, recounted episodes from his many visits with the
Archbishop, recalling his wise counsel and his insatiable thirst for
knowledge,
having authored numerous articles and at least three dozen books in Armenian
and English. He spoke of how Archbishop Ashjian’s faith, hope, and love were
evident in his unwavering commitment to the Church and his parishioners.
The program continued with a heartfelt rendition of “Nor Dzaghig” and
“Yegeghetsin Haygagan” by mezzo soprano Hasmik Meikhanedjian, accompanied by
pianist/organist Janet Marcarian.
Following the musical portion of the program, the second part commenced
with a
video presentation of Archbishop Ashjian’s work in Armenia.
This chapter of his life began when His Holiness Karekin I Catholicos of All
Armenians’ offered, and His Eminence later accepted, the position of the
Executive Director for the celebration of the 1700th anniversary of
Christianity in Armenia. Among his memorable achievements from this
commemoration included his organized pilgrimages to Western Armenia to help
reintroduce Armenians to their usurped homeland.
At one point, His Eminence asks: “How can we celebrate the 1700th anniversary
of our Christianity and not visit our homeland?”
Among the numerous historic sites Serpazan visited was the Tiridates Stone,
where St. Gregory baptized King Tiridates as the first Christian king of
Armenia in 301 AD, and is especially noteworthy given that Serpazan presided
over the commemorative events marking the 1700th anniversary of
Christianity in
Armenia. Archbishop Ashjian also visited his mother’s birthplace, Havav. In a
private ceremony of symbolic unification of Sevan and lake Van, he poured
water
bought from Sevan into the lake Van, and returning to Armenia, he poured “Vana
jur” into Sevan. In addition, His Eminence officiated at an Armenian wedding
ceremony at Aghtamar’s Holy Cross Church. The sound of Armenian prayers was
heard once again at this church and among the ruins of other churches and
monasteries deserted during the genocide. One wonders what will become of
these
churches and monasteries in Serpazan’s absence.
While tending to his duties for the 1700th anniversary of the Armenian
Church,
Archbishop Ashjian diligently embarked on his charitable work, including the
baptism of thousands of adults and children, the renovation of the St. Gevorg
of Moughni church and monastery, the building of the Terchounian orphanage in
Gyumri, and the publishing of hundreds of historical and literary books. In
the
video, the pastor of the St. Gevorg of Moughni church recounts how Archbishop
Ashjian revitalized the village through the renovation of the church, the
building of a community center and other significant improvements. He notes
that His Eminence’s devotion was not forgotten by the villagers who, when
learning of His Eminence’s passing, renamed the main street of their village
“The Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian poghots.” Moreover, the local residents
collected $300 and hosted another “hokejash” in his memory on Merelots after
Easter Sunday.
The video continued with Archbishop Ashjian speaking of his last published
book, The Etchmiadzin Chronicles, written on the occasion of the 1700th
Anniversary of the Armenia’s adoption of Christianity, comprising excerpts of
travel journals of those who visited Etchmiadzin over the centuries. Notably,
His Eminence spoke of a flower that was mentioned by one of the travelers who
visited Etchmiadzin and how the uniqueness of the flower spurred Serpazan to
embark on a determined and eventually successful search for it. In fact, the
invitation to the evening’s Memorial Tribute included a photo of Archbishop
Ashjian holding a bunch of the coveted flowers–Iris Elegantissima. The
touching nature of this photo is heightened when one learns that this was the
last photo taken of Archbishop Ashjian in Armenia. Indeed, the photo reflects
both the beauty of Armenia and Archbishop Ashjian’s spirit. As His Eminence
speaks, one could sense the joy and satisfaction he felt in helping to
preserve
Armenian culture, as well as improving Armenia’s social condition.
The video presentation was followed by a message delivered in Armenian by Dr.
Ashot Melkonian, Director of the Institute of History of the National Academy
of Sciences of Armenia. Dr. Melkonian spoke of Archbishop Ashjian’s tireless
charitable and scholarly work in Armenia and how he regarded Archbishop
Ashjian
as an invaluable mentor and a friend. Dr. Melkonian, who is a native of
Javakhk, Georgia, explained that Archbishop Ashjian was the first clergyman to
visit Javakhk in over 20 years and bless the inhabitants. Appropriately, the
townspeople considered Archbishop Ashjian’s visit one of great
significance–as
if he were a Catholicos for them. Dr. Melkonian also spoke of a young man’s
future rescued by Archbishop Ashjian during his visit to a prison. His
Eminence
baptized the young man, offered him guidance, and provided a home for his
family, asking only one thing in return: that he lead a good life and attend
church each Sunday. Since then, the young man attends mass at Holy Etchmiadzin
each Sunday and visits Archbishop Ashjian’s library at the National Academy.
Dr. Melkonian recounted how this story illustrates Archbishop Ashjian’s
view of
humanity, namely that everyone is equal in the eyes of God.
The personal memories of Archbishop Ashjian continued by Archbishop Oshagan
Choloyan, who also delivered the benediction. Archbishop Choloyan
reminisced of
days as a student at the Seminary where he met His Eminence and their enduring
friendship, but also touched on the great loss that his death represents for
the Church, the Holy See and the Armenian community. He noted that His
Eminence’s memory will live on, adding that St. Nerces “Parekordzagan”
Organization, an organization that helps support orphans of the Karabagh war
and other needy children, would be renamed as the “Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian
Organization.”
The program concluded with the singing of “Cilicia” and Archbishop Ashjian’s
last message in which he spoke of how Christ helped everyone, regardless of
social status and age, and how all of us should strive to find the good in all
people. In addition, photos of His Eminence were shown on the screen, as well
as the final photo of him waving goodbye as he descended a hill in Western
Armenia–a symbolic farewell to the Armenian people and historic land.
Archbishop Ashjian’s work and accomplishments are too numerous too
recount–from serving as Dean of the Cilician Seminary, as the principal of
the
Mardikian School, to Executive Secretary of the 1700th commemorative events of
Christianity of Armenia, to his ecumenical appointments such as member of the
World Council of Churches’ Faith and Order Commission. The sense of shock of
Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian’s sudden death remains profound and is heightened by
watching him in the video, as one could not help but feel that he was still
among us. Yet his spirit remains and will endure, and his vocational
achievements and charitable work are surpassed only by his boundless
humanity.
Archbishop Ashjian will forever serve as a role model for all Armenians
and as
a shining example of the unrelenting resolve of the Armenian people to triumph
against all odds.

7) Gorky Expert Discusses Influence of Armenian Culture, Genocide on Artist’s
Work

WASHINGTON, DC–Renowned art historian and specialist on Arshile Gorky, Dr.
Melvin Lader, presented his insights at a public lecture at the Armenian
Embassy sponsored by the Greater Washington DC Chapter of the Hamazkayin
Armenian Educational and Cultural Society and under the auspices of the
Ambassador and Mrs. Arman Kirakossian. A standing-room-only crowd of over 150
people gathered on November 5 to hear Dr. Lader’s talk and slide presentation,
titled “Arshile Gorky: the Case of an Unlikely Modernist.”
Dr. Lader, a professor of art history at George Washington University, is a
respected authority on the works of abstract expressionist pioneer Arshile
Gorky, having lectured and published extensively on the life and works of the
artist. He most recently curated (with Janice C. Lee) an exhibition of Gorky’s
drawings at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York and the Menil
Collection in Houston in 2004.
Drawing on his research of Gorky’s work, the artist’s writings as well as
side-by-side visual comparisons, Dr. Lader highlighted various influences in
Gorky’s life that were eventually reflected in the artist’s work. These
included memories of Gorky’s childhood in Khorkom (a village near Lake Van in
Armenia), color and imagery from Armenian Christian art, Gorky’s haunting
sufferings and loss of family during the Armenian Genocide of 1915-1923, and
his feelings of exile after coming to America. He also cited the influence of
other artists such as Cezanne and surrealist Joan Miro.
In referring to Gorky’s famous Portrait of the Artist and His Mother, Dr.
Lader states, “Alone in New York, the memory of his mother, her tragic death,
and the genocide weighed heavily on his mind. And he undoubtedly conceived of
the painting as a tribute to his mother and her role in his life. As such, it
was the first major work he created descending from his Armenian memories
which
would become a central theme in most of his mature art.”
The formal presentation was followed by a question-and-answer period and
reception in the Embassy, during which Dr. Lader responded to specific
inquiries from the audience. In his opening remarks, Amb. Kirakossian stated,
“I want to thank Hamazkayin for organizing this event. Obviously we have good
cooperation with this society of dedicated people who are doing all their best
to preserve Armenian culture.” He went on to acknowledge Dr. Lader’s
contributions to the study of this pioneer in American art.
“Dr. Lader’s engaging talk brought to light the profound impact of Gorky’s
Armenian experience on his art, and by extension its impact on
expressionism in
general,” stated Maggie Simonian, Chairwoman of the Hamazkayin Washington
Chapter. “We are pleased to have been able to bring Dr. Lader’s insights and
research to the community and thank the Armenian Embassy for their gracious
hospitality and collaboration in this event.”
Founded in 1928, the Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society is
dedicated to the preservation and advancement of the history and the cultural
heritage of the Armenian nation. Hamazkayin has chapters throughout the United
States, Canada, South America, Europe, the Middle East and Australia, as well
as the Republic of Armenia.

All subscription inquiries and changes must be made through the proper carrier
and not Asbarez Online. ASBAREZ ONLINE does not transmit address changes and
subscription requests.
(c) 2004 ASBAREZ ONLINE. All Rights Reserved.

ASBAREZ provides this news service to ARMENIAN NEWS NETWORK members for
academic research or personal use only and may not be reproduced in or through
mass media outlets.

–Boundary_(ID_Gvx/Hqy3BcUwcEgfSEds8Q)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.asbarez.com/&gt
HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM
http://www.playbill.com/index.php&gt
WWW.ASBAREZ.COM
www.anca.org–to
www.raa.am.
www.playbill.com/index.php.

NK: UN General Assembly To Discuss Occupation Of Azerbaijani Land

Nagorno-Karabakh: UN General Assembly To Discuss Occupation Of Azerbaijani Land
By Robert McMahon

Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
Nov 23 2004

Azerbaijan is hoping a proposed UN General Assembly resolution on its
occupied territory will help resolve a key impediment to peace talks
with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh. The resolution, to be discussed
today (eds: 1600 Prague time), calls for reaffirming Azerbaijan’s
territorial integrity and seeks an investigation into Azerbaijani
claims Armenia is promoting a settlement policy in the occupied
lands. Armenia denies this and has said such a resolution could
undermine the peace process.

United Nations, 23 November 2004 (RFE/RL) – The UN General Assembly
was expected to open discussion today on a resolution seeking to
address Azerbaijan’s concerns about its occupied territories and
sluggish peace process with Armenia.

The resolution calls for a reaffirmation of Azerbaijan’s sovereignty
and territorial integrity 10 years after ethnic Armenian forces won
control over Nagorno-Karabakh and occupied several districts adjacent
to the enclave.

It expresses “alarm and grave concern” at the situation in the area
occupied by Armenian forces, alleging the violation of international
humanitarian laws. The measure also raises concern about reports of
Armenian settlers being transferred to the territories.

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov told reporters
yesterday that the persistence of such reports, from international
and Armenian sources, was a main factor driving the initiative in
the assembly. The resolution invites the Organization for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), which is directing peace talks,
to send a fact-finding mission to lands occupied by ethnic Armenian
forces to report on the situation.

“We get greatly concerned that the Armenian government is conducting
a settlers’ policy in the occupied territories, which we consider
as a pure violation of international humanitarian law, including the
Geneva conventions of 1949,” Mammadyarov said.

Diplomats at Armenia’s UN mission did not respond to repeated requests
for comment yesterday. When the issue was placed on the assembly’s
agenda in October, Armenian officials said there were no settlements
in the territories outside the enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh and denied
there was any policy to settle those lands.

Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian recently warned that
Azerbaijan’s initiative in the assembly threatened to undermine
mediation efforts under the OSCE’s Minsk Group. A French diplomat
speaking on behalf of the group told the General Assembly in October
that the group did not believe UN was the proper forum to discuss
the matter.

Mammadyarov said yesterday that his government remained committed to
the Minsk process but was looking to spur progress on issues related
to its large number of displaced persons. The resolution, though
nonbinding, would seek to expand international pressure for a solution.

“We do not agree that [the resolution] can create bad consequences
for the peace process,” Mammadyarov said. “We consider that even it
will support the peace process because otherwise you cannot conduct
sincere peace negotiations, and simultaneously behind the scenes [the]
Armenian side [is] conducting negotiations providing the so-called
settlement process.”

The initiative follows strong comments by Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev at the General Assembly debate in September. Aliyev faulted
the UN for neglecting the situation in and around Nagorno-Karabakh,
citing UN Security Council resolutions in 1993 that called for the
withdrawal of ethnic Armenian forces from Azerbaijani territory.

Mammadyarov said he also wants to see countries in the Minsk Group,
especially the United States, become more active in pressing for a
negotiated solution to the conflict.

“The conflict is very, very difficult. Of course, the settlement of
the conflict is not very easy,” Mammadyarov said. “What we’re calling
[for] is that it should be solved only by the efforts of [the whole]
international community.”

The war over Nagorno-Karabakh has driven an estimated 800,000
Azerbaijanis from their homes, about a tenth of the country’s
population. Azerbaijan’s internally displaced people cannot return to
Armenian-occupied territories, and many have been living in wretched
conditions for the past 10 years.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BAKU: 40 Armenian nationals ousted from Russian province

40 Armenian nationals ousted from Russian province

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Nov 23 2004

Forty Armenians have recently been evicted from Russia’s Krasnodar
province, Russian press reports said on Monday.

Officials of the province explain Armenians’ banishment with their
illegal migration and living in the region without any official
registration. However, the move was due to the fact that local
Armenians demand autonomy and claim that Krasnodar is a “historical
Armenian land”, a reliable source told AssA-Irada.

The leadership of Krasnodar, which is densely populated by Armenians,
began to oust Armenians from the province several months ago after
considering the increasing discontent of the local residents.*

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Italy’s deputy FM arrives in Yerevan

ITALY’S DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER ARRIVES IN YEREVAN

ArmenPress
Nov 23 2004

YEREVAN, NOVEMBER 23, ARMENPRESS: A high-ranking Italian diplomat
promised today a stronger boost to cooperation with Armenia, saying
her government will continue to support implementation of a number
of joint programs with Yerevan.

Margerita Boniver, Italy’s deputy foreign affairs minister, who
arrived today in Yerevan, was received by parliament chairman Arthur
Baghdasarian, who emphasized Italy’s assistance to Armenia in its
drive to closer integration with Europe.

The parties stated that both countries could develop effective
cooperation in small businesses, tourism and stressed the opening of
Casa Italiana in Yerevan, which is supposed to give a fresh muscle
to bilateral cooperation.

Boniver and Baghdasarian discussed also regional issues. Baghdasarian
suggested that Italy should organize a youth forum for young people
from Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia, which he said would help the
region’s nations to build an atmosphere of confidence.

Margerita Boniver was also received today by foreign minister Vartan
Oskanian and president Robert Kocharian.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress