Russian 201st division in Tajikistan gets new commander

Russian 201st division in Tajikistan gets new commander

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
31 Jul 04

Dushanbe, 31 July: Col Sergey Yudin has started his duties as the new
commander of the 201st Russian Motor-Rifle Division, based in
Tajikistan.

He has replaced the former commander of the division, Maj-Gen Yuriy
Perminov, who was appointed deputy commander of the army in the
Siberian Military District.

The new commander was presented to personnel by a deputy commander of
the forces in the Privolzhsko-Uralskiy Military District, Lt-Gen
Nikolay Yershov, who also conducted a regular inspection of combat
readiness at the division’s sub-units.

One of the battalions of the 201st division is a part of the
collective rapid-deployment forces of the Collective Security Treaty
Organization Collective Security Treaty Organization; members are
Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Russia . The
division’s tactical groups are also closely interacting with Russian
border forces in Tajikistan by backing up the Moskva and Panj border
detachments both on the Tajik-Afghan border with their heavy armament.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia’s intervention in S Ossetia crisis to damage Nat’l Interest

Armenia’s intervention in South Ossetia crisis to damage national interests

Hayots Ashkharh, Yerevan
30 Jul 04

Text of Vardan Grigoryan’s report by Armenian newspaper Hayots Ashkharh
on 30 July headlined “Games of strangers, our interests are different”

In the whole post-Soviet area, beginning from the Dniestr Republic to
Nagornyy Karabakh, political, economic and even military pressure on
unrecognized republics is growing day by day. In such conditions, some
people are trying again to deepen cooperation between South Ossetia,
Abkhazia, the Dniestr Republic and Nagornyy Karabakh, which started in
the 1990s, and even to lend it a military angle.

This could explain the recent statement by the leader of South
Ossetia, Eduard Kokoiti, who said that the aforesaid four republics
have made an arrangement to assist each other, including in the
military sphere. Undoubtedly, one can understand the aspiration of the
South Ossetian leader, in conditions of growing pressure from Georgia,
to increase by as many as possible the number of countries and peoples
that would be ready to support South Ossetia. Today it may be
absolutely realistic that for instance, the peoples of the
northwestern Caucasus and Abkhazia might support South Ossetia if the
settlement to the conflict turns into a military confrontation again.

But we think that it is not so serious to speak about Nagornyy
Karabakh’s possible intervention in the Georgian-Ossetian
conflict. The time of international brigades passed a long time
ago. The time has also passed when it was possible to use the forces
of foreign communities living in unrecognized post-Soviet countries
for their own purpose. In this sense, the recent statement of Georgian
Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili in Yerevan that in some way, the
settlement to the Abkhaz issue is connected with Armenia as well
should be taken into account and at the same time, regarded as
unacceptable. Undoubtedly, Armenia has some influence on its
compatriots living in Abkhazia, but it cannot use them as a tool for
turning the situation to Georgia’s advantage in the Georgia-Abkhazia
conflict. This is as dangerous as Nagornyy Karabakh’s intervention in
the Georgian-Ossetian conflict. And the point is not about promoting
or damaging Armenian-Georgian relations. The point is that today the
interests of unrecognized republics are becoming an integral part of
the general interests of the main nation that lives there. That is to
say, the interests of Nagornyy Karabakh are closely connected with the
Armenian nation, as integration into Armenia meets national
interests. Finally, in the modern world, the state which represents a
certain nation in the world expresses its national interests. So,
irrespective of whether the Armenian nation presents its interests to
the world community by means of one or two states, it is no longer
possible to separate them from each other. And today the national
interests of Armenia, i.e. of Nagornyy Karabakh require not support
for any party in the Georgian-Ossetian or Georgian-Abkhaz conflicts,
but the promotion of their peaceful settlement as soon as
possible. This could explain the recent efforts of the Armenian party
directed at bringing together the positions of Georgia and Russia on
lifting the blockade of the railway via Abkhazia and on ensuring the
return of Georgian refugees. Such a position is the only expedient
solution that stems from the current situation, irrespective of the
extent to which such a mission softens disagreements between the two
countries and prevents a possible clash between Tbilisi and Sukhumi.

As for Nagornyy Karabakh’s participation in the bloc of unrecognized
republics, Armenia’s direct or indirect (with the help of the Abkhaz
Armenians) intervention in the Georgian-Abkhazian conflict is
tantamount to destroying our national interests or even to
disregarding them.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Iranian, Azeri foreign ministers discuss ties, Caspian Sea, Karabakh

Iranian, Azeri foreign ministers discuss ties, Caspian Sea, Karabakh

IRNA web site
31 Jul 04

Tehran, 31 July: Iran and Azerbaijan discussed here Saturday 31 July
possible avenues for bolstering of bilateral ties in various fields.

Azerbaijan’s Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov, in a meeting with his
Iranian counterpart Kamal Kharrazi, expressed his country’s
determination and interest in further expanding ties with Iran.

He stressed the importance of the upcoming visit by President Mohammad
Khatami to Azerbaijan and said the visit would be a major stride
towards expansion of mutual relations.

The Azeri minister expressed satisfaction with growing economic
relations between the two sides and hoped new economic agreements
would be signed during President Khatami’s visit to Baku.

Mammadyarov assessed talks on legal regime of the Caspian Sea as
positive, adding: The Caspian Sea should be the sea of friendship and
cooperation among the littoral states.

He hoped littoral states would reach a consensus on the legal regime
of the sea.

He voiced Azerbaijan’s interest in joining the North-South Corridor
and stressed the role Baku plays in materializing the projects to this
effect.

Kharrazi, for his part, said Iran attaches special importance to
expansion of ties with neighbouring states, adding: President
Khatami’s future visit to Azerbaijan would be an indication of high
level of ties between the two countries.

“Tehran regards as important its ties with Azerbaijan Republic
particularly both from economic and geopolitical points of view and
considers the common borders as borders of friendship and peace,” he
said.

He outlined the background of relations between Tehran and Baku since
the independence of Azerbaijan, saying: “Iran attaches great
importance to a powerful Azerbaijan which safeguards national and
regional interests in this sensitive and strategic region.”

He urged the two sides to further try to achieve high level of
cooperation.

Kharrazi termed trade and economic cooperation between the two
countries as “progressive” and added: “Iran and Azerbaijan have
launched good cooperation in various fields including transfer of
electricity, development affairs, road-building, construction of power
plants and energy. “Such cooperation can further expand.”

He said Iran regards strengthening of popular bonds as very important
and underlined the importance of continued supportive policies and
easing travels of Iranian and Azeri nationals within framework of
policy to further expand mutual transactions.

The two sides also exchanged views on regional issues, including
Karabakh.

Kharrazi stressed that, as a friendly country, the Islamic Republic of
Iran is ready to contribute to settlement of Karabakh dispute.

He said: Tehran pursues settlement of Karabakh dispute within
framework of the charters of the UN and of the Organization of the
Islamic Conference (OIC).

The Azeri foreign minister arrived here early Saturday on a two-day
official visit to discuss bilateral ties.

Azerbaijan’s special envoy for Caspian Sea affairs accompanies
Mammadyarov in the current visit.

Mammadyarov is also to visit the northeastern city of Tabriz. He is to
return to Baku through the autonomous Republic of Nakhichevan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Jazz tzigane mardi avec Ferdi Zipci

Le Télégramme
31 juillet 2004

Jazz tzigane mardi avec Ferdi Zipci

Mardi soir, le musicien Ferdi Zipci offrira à 20 h 30 un concert de
musique tzigane jazzie au Centre de loisirs du Palais.

L’an dernier déjà Ferdi Zipci avait insufflé à un public conquis les
mélopées tziganes de sa composition, issues des Carpathes entre
Hongrie et Roumanie. Il y raconte l’histoire des peuples, mais aussi
la sienne, traduisant avec douleur et joie l’aspiration bouillonnante
d’une liberté.

Voix rocheuse et veloutée, Ferdi Zipci charme. Arménien, avec un nom
qui s’est réinventé selon les méandres d’un exilé forcé de
l’Histoire, il arrive à l’ge de 10 ans à Paris, arrivant de Turquie
avec sa famille.

Intégration, intelligence et sensibilité ont noué d’autres racines,
multiples et pétillantes, rares et déchirantes. Entre des études
supérieures, la guitare, la peinture, l’homme d’harmonie décide de
vivre ses trois existences, en alternance. Deux disques déjà. Et
comme les « Achours », ces troubadours arméniens, il chante dans les
langues des pays traversés. Il se fait tzigane. Le peintre musicien a
fréquenté le célèbre cabaret « La roue fleurie » appartenant à Serge
Camps dans les années 80.

Il y côtoie la communauté des musiciens tziganes et manouches, dont
Angelo Debarre.

La guitare décolle

Formée aux musiques orientales comme au jazz, la guitare décolle en
solo, rapide, concise. Elle sait aussi laisser place à la voix de
Catherine et aux instruments de ses musiciens.

Elle swingue, décortique l’émotion, violente, acre et fragile. La
voix typée de Ferdi Zipci chatouille les notes et caresse les larmes.

Comme dans son dernier CD, « Caravan » (D. Ellington), où
l’accordéoniste David Venitucci, invité spécial, balance
d’incroyables phrases très jazz.

Mardi, dès 20 h 30, la soirée promet une partition inventive et
chaloupée.

GRAPHIQUE: Photo, Legende: Ferdi Zipci, au Centre d’animation et de
Loisirs rue des Remparts, au Palais, pour un concert plein de chaleur
et de rythmes voyageurs et improvisés, mardi à 20 h 30.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Special Troops Sent to Armenian-Populated Village in Georgia

SPECIAL TROOPS SENT TO ARMENIAN-POPULATED VILLAGE IN GEORGIA

30.07.2004 13:28

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The other day special troops were sent to
Tapatskhuri village of Borjomi region of Georgia. The Ministry of
Internal Affairs of Georgia explains the step by the intention of the
residents of the mostly Armenian-populated village to impede the
construction works of the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline. As
reported by A-Info news agency, the villagers are displeased that they
have not been paid the compensation, assigned by the Borjomi regional
court due to the building of the pipeline. According to the source, no
incidents were registered between the military and the residents.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

The 9/11 Commission and Jihad

Frontpagemag.com
July 30 2004

The 9/11 Commission and Jihad
By Andrew G. Bostom
FrontPageMagazine.com | July 30, 2004

While I see some limited evidence of progress in the 9/11
Commissioner’s understanding of the global jihad we are facing,
ultimately their report resorted to the same tired and ahistorical
canards that distort the mainstream tradition – indeed which are
central to Islam – of jihad war. The report mentions the ad
nauseatingly referenced Hanbali jurist Ibn Taymiyya (d.1328), who
despite his Muslim orthodoxy, now serves as a convenient prop for
those who contend, either deceitfully or in blissful ignorance, that
jihad war is not a main tenet of traditional Islam. Once again a
distorted historical nexus is made between Ibn Taymiyya, but not
countless other seminal jurists and theologians who expressed
identical opinions, throughout the history of Islamic civilization,
and 20th century ideologues like Sayyid Qutb, and the Muslim
Brotherhood movement. This flimsy construct, reiterated in the 9/11
Commission Report, is completely untenable.

Jihad wars have been waged continuously for well over a millennium,
through the present, because jihad, which means `to strive in the
path of Allah,’ embodies an ideology and a jurisdiction. Both were
formally conceived by Muslim jurisconsults and theologians from the
8th to 9th centuries onward, based on their interpretation of
Qur’anic verses (for e.g., 9:5,6; 9:29; 4:76-79; 2: 214-15; 8:39-42),
and long chapters in the Traditions (i.e., `hadith,’ acts and sayings
of the Prophet Muhammad, especially those recorded by al-Bukhari [d.
869] and Muslim [d. 874]). The consensus on the nature of jihad from
all four schools of Sunni Islamic jurisprudence (i.e., Maliki,
Hanbali, Hanafi, and Shafi’i) is clear:

Ibn Abi Zayd al-Qayrawani (d. 996), Maliki jurist 1

Jihad is a precept of Divine institution. Its performance by certain
individuals may dispense others from it. We Malikis [one of the four
schools of Muslim jurisprudence] maintain that it is preferable not
to begin hostilities with the enemy before having invited the latter
to embrace the religion of Allah except where the enemy attacks
first. They have the alternative of either converting to Islam or
paying the poll tax (jizya), short of which war will be declared
against them.

Ibn Taymiyya (d. 1328), Hanbali jurist 2

Since lawful warfare is essentially jihad and since its aim is that
the religion is God’s entirely and God’s word is uppermost, therefore
according to all Muslims, those who stand in the way of this aim must
be fought. As for those who cannot offer resistance or cannot fight,
such as women, children, monks, old people, the blind, handicapped
and their likes, they shall not be killed unless they actually fight
with words (e.g. by propaganda) and acts (e.g. by spying or otherwise
assisting in the warfare).

>From (primarily) the Hanafi school (as given in the Hidayah) 3

It is not lawful to make war upon any people who have never before
been called to the faith, without previously requiring them to
embrace it, because the Prophet so instructed his commanders,
directing them to call the infidels to the faith, and also because
the people will hence perceive that they are attacked for the sake of
religion, and not for the sake of taking their property, or making
slaves of their children, and on this consideration it is possible
that they may be induced to agree to the call, in order to save
themselves from the troubles of war… If the infidels, upon receiving
the call, neither consent to it nor agree to pay capitation tax, it
is then incumbent on the Muslims to call upon God for assistance, and
to make war upon them, because God is the assistant of those who
serve Him, and the destroyer of His enemies, the infidels, and it is
necessary to implore His aid upon every occasion; the Prophet,
moreover, commands us so to do.

al-Mawardi (d. 1058 ), Shafi’i jurist 4

The mushrikun [infidels] of Dar al-Harb (the arena of battle) are of
two types: First, those whom the call of Islam has reached, but they
have refused it and have taken up arms. The amir of the army has the
option of fighting them…in accordance with what he judges to be in
the best interest of the Muslims and most harmful to the mushrikun…
Second, those whom the invitation to Islam has not reached, although
such persons are few nowadays since Allah has made manifest the call
of his Messenger…[I]t is forbidden to…begin an attack before
explaining the invitation to Islam to them, informing them of the
miracles of the Prophet and making plain the proofs so as to
encourage acceptance on their part; if they still refuse to accept
after this, war is waged against them and they are treated as those
whom the call has reached….

In Khaldun (d. 1406), jurist (Maliki), renowned philosopher,
historian, and sociologist, summarized these consensus opinions from
five centuries of prior Muslim jurisprudence with regard to the
uniquely Islamic institution of jihad:

In the Muslim community, the holy war is a religious duty, because of
the universalism of the [Muslim] mission and [the obligation to]
convert everybody to Islam either by persuasion or by force…The
other religious groups did not have a universal mission, and the holy
war was not a religious duty for them, save only for purposes of
defense…Islam is under obligation to gain power over other nations.5

By the time of the classical Muslim historian al-Tabari’s death in
923, jihad wars had expanded the Muslim empire from Portugal to the
Indian subcontinent. Subsequent Muslim conquests continued in Asia,
as well as on Christian eastern European lands. The Christian
kingdoms of Armenia, Byzantium, Bulgaria, Serbia, Bosnia,
Herzegovina, Croatia, and Albania – in addition to parts of Poland
and Hungary – were also conquered and Islamized. When the Muslim
armies were stopped at the gates of Vienna in 1683, over a millennium
of jihad had transpired. These tremendous military successes spawned
a triumphalist jihad literature. Muslim historians recorded in detail
the number of infidels slain or enslaved, the cities and villages
which were pillaged, and the lands, treasure, and movable goods
seized. Christian (Coptic, Armenian, Jacobite, Greek, Slav, etc.), as
well as Hebrew sources, and even the scant Hindu and Buddhist
writings that survived the ravages of the Muslim conquests,
independently validate this narrative and complement the Muslim
perspective by providing testimonies of the suffering of the
non-Muslim victims of jihad wars.

But surely the much-lionized Sufi tradition offers a healthy
corrective to the so-called `narrow strain’ of Islam epitomized by
Ibn Taymiyya, and the consensus opinions (cardinal examples cited
above) of many other classical scholars representing all four main
schools of Sunni Islamic Law. Indeed, the scholar and theologian
W.M. Watt wrote that al-Ghazali (d. 1111), the famous theologian,
philosopher, and paragon of mystical Sufism, had been:

acclaimed in both the East and West as the greatest Muslim after
Muhammad, and he is by no means unworthy of that dignity…He brought
orthodoxy and mysticism into closer contact…the theologians became
more ready to accept the mystics as respectable, while the mystics
were more careful to remain within the bounds of orthodoxy. 6

The 9/11 Commissioners, and those who accept the views stated in
their report, should read the lauded al-Ghazali’s writings on jihad
war to understand that they differ not one whit from the opinions
expressed by the demonized Ibn Taymiyya. Below is what al-Ghazali
actually wrote about jihad war, and the treatment of the vanquished
non-Muslim [dhimmi] peoples (from the Wagjiz, written in 1101 C.E.):

…one must go on jihad (i.e., warlike razzias or raids) at least once
a year…one may use a catapult against them [non-Muslims] when they
are in a fortress, even if among them are women and children. One
may set fire to them and/or drown them…If a person of the Ahl
al-Kitab [People of The Book – Jews and Christians, typically] is
enslaved, his marriage is [automatically] revoked. A woman and her
child taken into slavery should not be separated…One may cut down
their trees…One must destroy their useless books. Jihadists may
take as booty whatever they decide…they may steal as much food as
they need…. 7

The Commissioners might also find particularly edifying the writings
of two contemporary Muslim scholars of jihad, the late Majid
Khadduri, and Bassam Tibi. Majid Khadurri wrote the following in
1955:

Thus the jihad may be regarded as Islam’s instrument for carrying out
its ultimate objective by turning all people into believers, if not
in the prophethood of Muhammad (as in the case of the dhimmis), at
least in the belief of God. The Prophet Muhammad is reported to have
declared `some of my people will continue to fight victoriously for
the sake of the truth until the last one of them will combat the
anti-Christ.’ Until that moment is reached the jihad, in one form or
another will remain as a permanent obligation upon the entire Muslim
community. It follows that the existence of a dar al-harb is
ultimately outlawed under the Islamic jural order; that the dar
al-Islam permanently under jihad obligation until the dar al-harb is
reduced to non-existence; and that any community accepting certain
disabilities- must submit to Islamic rule and reside in the dar
al-Islam or be bound as clients to the Muslim community. The
universality of Islam, in its all embracing creed, is imposed on the
believers as a continuous process of warfare, psychological and
political if not strictly military. 8

And in 1996, Bassam Tibi wrote this:

At its core, Islam is a religious mission to all humanity. Muslims
are religiously obliged to disseminate the Islamic faith throughout
the world. `We have sent you forth to all mankind’ (Q. 34:28). If
non-Muslims submit to conversion or subjugation, this call (da’wa)
can be pursued peacefully. If they do not, Muslims are obliged to
wage war against them. In Islam, peace requires that non-Muslims
submit to the call of Islam, either by converting or by accepting the
status of a religious minority (dhimmi) and paying the imposed poll
tax, jizya. World peace, the final stage of the da’wa, is reached
only with the conversion or submission of all mankind to
Islam…Muslims believe that expansion through war is not aggression
but a fulfillment of the Qur’anic command to spread Islam as a way to
peace. The resort to force to disseminate Islam is not war (harb), a
word that is used only to describe the use of force by non-Muslims.
Islamic wars are not hurub (the plural of harb) but rather futuhat,
acts of `opening’ the world to Islam and expressing Islamic jihad.
Relations between dar al-Islam, the home of peace, and dar al-harb,
the world of unbelievers, nevertheless take place in a state of war,
according to the Qur’an and to the authoritative commentaries of
Islamic jurists. Unbelievers who stand in the way, creating obstacles
for the da’wa, are blamed for this state of war, for the da’wa can be
pursued peacefully if others submit to it. In other words, those who
resist Islam cause wars and are responsible for them. Only when
Muslim power is weak is `temporary truce’ (hudna) allowed (Islamic
jurists differ on the definition of `temporary’). 9

In 1916, the great Dutch scholar of Islam, C. Snouck Hurgronje
underscored how the jihad doctrine of world conquest remained a
potent force among the Muslim masses 13 centuries later,

[I]t would be a gross mistake to imagine that the idea of universal
conquest may be considered as obliterated…the canonists and the
vulgar still live in the illusion of the days of Islam’s greatness.
The legists continue to ground their appreciation of every actual
political condition on the law of the holy war, which war ought never
be allowed to cease entirely until all mankind is reduced to the
authority of Islam- the heathen by conversion, the adherents of
acknowledged Scripture by submission. Even if they admit the
improbability of this at present, they are comforted an encouraged by
the recollection of the lengthy period of humiliation that the
Prophet himself had to suffer before Allah bestowed victory upon his
arms; and they fervently join with the Friday preacher, when he
announces the prayer taken from the Qur’an: `And lay not upon us, our
Lord, that for which we have not strength, but blot out our sins and
forgive us and have pity upon us. Thou art our Master; grant us then
to conquer the unbelievers.’ And the common people are willingly
taught by the canonists and feed their hope of better days upon the
innumerable legends of the olden time and the equally innumerable
apocalyptic prophecies about the future. The political blows that
fall upon Islam make less impression…than the senseless stories about
the power of the Sultan of Stambul, that would instantly be revealed
if he were not surrounded by treacherous servants, and the fantastic
tidings of the miracles that Allah works in the Holy Cities of Arabia
which are inaccessible to the unfaithful. The conception of the
Khalifate still exercises a fascinating influence, regarded in the
light of a central point of union against the unfaithful.’ 10

Writing a quarter century after Hurgronje in 1942, Professor Arthur
Jeffery stressed why detailed consideration of the institution of
jihad remained essential, `not merely academic,’ for understanding
the contemporary Islamic world

for the theory of the world which it enshrines is still fundamental
to the thinking of great masses of Muslim people to the present day.
The troubles in India which lead up to the great Patna conspiracy
trials of 1864 were due to the fact that Syed Ahmad of Oudh had
preached against the Sikh cities of the Panjab a Jihad which later
turned to one against all non-Muslim groups. The bloody episode of
the Padri rebellion in Malaysia was due to the preaching of Jihad
against the pagan Battak tribes. The Fula wars in the Hausa country
[Western Sudan] in the early nineteenth century, which lead to Osman
Dan Fodio’s setting up the ephemeral sultanate of Sokoto, began as a
jihad preached against the pagan king of Gobir. The Moplah rebellion
in South India in 1921, with its massacres, forcible conversions,
desecration of temples, and outrages on the hapless Hindu villagers,
could be heard openly proclaimed as a Jihad in the streets of Madras. 11

With the resurgence of jihad military campaigns and major acts of
jihad terrorism literally across the globe in the last decades of the
20th century through the present, Jeffery’s additional insights from
62 years ago, resonate prophetically:

It is of course, easy to raise the objection that a Jihad in the old
sense is impossible of realization in the modern world, for Islam is
far too badly divided for anything like a general Jihad to be
contemplated and far too weak in technical equipment for a Jihad to
be successful even if started. This does not dispose of the fact,
however, that the earlier conception of Jihad has left a deposit in
Muslim thinking that is still to be reckoned with in the political
relations of the Western world with Islam. 12

Although time grows dangerously short, it is not too late for the
9/11 Commissioners and, more importantly, those who share their
assessment to broaden their understanding of the depth of the
ideological threat posed by jihad and consider more concrete,
expansive actions to be taken, such as the creation of the Alliance
of Western and Democratic Societies recently proposed by Dr. Raphael
Israeli.

ENDNOTES:

1 Ibn Abi Zayd al-Qayrawani, La Risala (Epitre sur les elements du
dogme et de la loi de l’Islam selon le rite malikite.) Translated
from Arabic by Leon Bercher. 5th ed. Algiers, 1960, p. 165. [English
translation, in Bat Ye’or, The Decline of Eastern Christianity Under
Islam, Cranston, NJ, 1996, p. 295]

2 Ibn Taymiyyah, in Rudolph Peters, Jihad in Classical and Modern
Islam, (Princeton, NJ. : Markus Wiener, 1996, p. 49)

3 From the Hidayah, vol. Ii. P. 140, in Thomas P. Hughes, `A
Dictionary of Islam,’ `Jihad’ Pp. 243-248. (London, United Kingdom.:
W.H. Allem, 1895).

4 Al- Mawardi, The Laws of Islamic Governance [al-Ahkam
as-Sultaniyyah, (London, United Kingdom.: Ta-Ha, 1996, p. 60).

5 Ibn Khaldun, `The Muqudimmah. An Introduction to History,’
Translated by Franz Rosenthal. (New York, NY.: Pantheon, 1958, vol.
1, p. 473).

6 Watt, W.M. [Translator]. The Faith and Practice of Al-Ghazali,
Oxford, England, 1953, p. 13.

7. Al-Ghazali (d. 1111). Kitab al-Wagiz fi fiqh madhab al-imam
al-Safi’i, Beirut, 1979, pp. 186, 190-91. [English translation by Dr.
Michael Schub]

8 Khadduri, Majid. War and Peace in the Law of Islam, 1955, Richmond,
VA and London, England, pp. 63-64.

9 Tibi, Bassam. `War and Peace in Islam,’ in The Ethics of War and
Peace: Religious and Secular Perspectives, edited by Terry Nardin,
1996, Princeton, N.J., pp. 129-131.

10 Hurgronje, Snouck. Mohammedanism. New York, 1916, p. 59.

11 Jeffery, Arthur. `The Political Importance of Islam,’ Journal of
Near Eastern Studies, Vol. 1, 1942, p. 388.

12 Jeffery, A. `The Political Importance of Islam,’ pp. 388-389.

Andrew G. Bostom, MD, MS is an Associate Professor of Medicine at
Brown University Medical School, and occasional contributor to
Frontpage Magazine. He is the editor of a forthcoming essay
collection entitled, “The Legacy of Jihad”.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

East European orphans hope visit to U.S. yields a family

Stamford Advocate, CT
July 30 2004

East European orphans hope visit to U.S. yields a family

Pavel `Pasha’ Ptushko, an 8-year-old orphan from Russia, is staying
with a Stamford family for a month while he waits for an adoptive
family to be found. (Paul Desmarais/Staff photo)
Jul 30, 2004

By Katherine Didriksen
Special Correspondent

July 30, 2004

STAMFORD — Pavel “Pasha” Ptushko is fresh-faced, blond and 8 — and
has come far to find a home.

An orphaned child from Russia, Pavel is staying with a Stamford
family for four weeks this summer through World Links Association, a
nonprofit international adoption agency based in Scranton, Pa.

World Links unites orphaned children from Russia, Armenia,
Kazakhstan, Moldova and Ukraine with American families. It has placed
about 450 children in the United States in the past five years.

In its Karing for Kids Host Program for Orphans, the agency brings
children such as Pavel from orphanages in eastern Europe to stay with
American host families for several weeks. The 56 children who visited
this summer will return to Russia on Wednesday.

The program, which began with 25 children in 1999, allows orphans to
learn about American culture and family life while the agency screens
potential adoptive families.

It’s easier to find the children permanent homes if they are in the
country, said Laureen Dempsey, coordinator of the host program.

“If they’re just a picture in eastern Europe, they’re no one,” she
said.

American families begin adoption proceedings for about 98 percent of
the orphaned children who come to the United States through the
program, Dempsey said.

All children must return to Russia after their stay. They go back to
the orphanage or are adopted by an American family in Russian court.

Born July 12, 1996, Pavel is one of the few orphans on this trip who
has not been placed. Left at an orphanage at birth, Pavel, who has a
partial cleft lip, never had a visitor there.

“Russia doesn’t have the social safety net that we have,” Dempsey
said. “When a parent can’t care for a child in Russia, they’re put in
the orphanage system. . . . Some children are in the orphanage a long
time.”

Pavel has seen his friends from the orphanage find families.

“He’s dying for a family,” Dempsey said.

His host parents in Stamford, who did not want to be identified, have
watched Pavel acclimate to life in Fairfield County during the past
three weeks. He particularly enjoys the beach.

“Just getting in the water was thrilling for him,” his host mother
said.

He is quickly picking up English words and phrases, flashing a “hi”
at visitors and easily getting his point across with hand gestures.

“He has a really good disposition,” his host mother said.

This week, Pavel fought a fake sword battle with the couple’s
4-year-old son, one dressed as a knight and the other playing a
pirate.

Some host families eventually adopt, sometimes taking in the child
they hosted, Dempsey said.

Barbara and Nick Rinaldi of Guilford and their 9-year-old daughter,
Alicia, will adopt Christina Nesterenkova, whom they have hosted
since early this month, as soon as possible.

The Rinaldis have talked about adoption for years.

“Ever since she could speak, she has wanted a sister,” Barbara
Rinaldi said of their daughter. “It was always kind of in the back of
our minds.”

The World Links hosting program “was a perfect test drive,” Barbara
Rinaldi said. “They’re truly sisters, sisters of the heart.”

A victim of parental neglect, Christina was removed from her home and
placed in an orphanage near Smolensk. She has a foot deformity, which
the Rinaldis hope to have corrected. They also hope her condition
will speed up the adoption process which can take several months.

When she arrived in the United States, Christina was wearing pink
jean shorts that were two sizes too small and oversize shoes. She had
no suitcase and carried only a plastic bag with an incomplete change
of clothes.

Her ordeal has taught Christina to take care of herself, Barbara
Rinaldi said.

“She is an independent, fiery spirit. . . . She’s amazingly happy,
given what she’s been through in her short life,” she said.

Like Pavel, Christina will board a plan for Russia next week. Her
host family is sad to see her go, even as they plan for her return.

“We’re dreading Wednesday, but we’re looking forward to the best
Christmas present our family has ever had,” Barbara Rinaldi said.

— Families interested in adoption may call World Links at (570)
344-8890 and ask for Laureen Dempsey.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter – 07/30/2004

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

Crossroads E-Newsletter July 30, 2004

ARCHBISHOP OSHAGAN WILL BE IN MASSACHUSETTS
Archbishop Oshagan will travel to Camp Haiastan, Franklin,
Massachusetts, where he will preside over the Andastan Service on Sunday,
August 1, during the annual summer picnic sponsored by the St. Stephen
parish of Watertown.
Andastan service is the blessing of the harvest and blesses the four
corners of the world, East, West, South and North and concludes with this
benediction: Oh Christ our God, guardian and hope of the faithful, protect
and keep in peace your faithful people under the protection of Your Holy and
venerable cross; their family, their home, the bread, the salt, and the
water. Save them Oh Lord, from visible and invisible enemies and make them
worthy to glorify You with the Father and the Holy Spirit, now and always,
forever and ever. Amen.

CHILDREN AND GRANDCHILDREN OF
ST. GREGORY THE ILLUMINATOR
This Saturday, July 31, the Armenian Church remembers the children and
grandchildren of St. Gregory the Illuminator: Saints Aristakes, Vrtanes,
Housik, Grigoris, and Daniel. Paganism and anti-Christian values were
prevalent in Armenia in spite of the missionary work of St. Gregory and King
Drtad. The sons and grandsons of Gregory continued the mission to spread
Christianity. Their efforts continued to strengthen the young church.
St. Gregory was succeeded by his son, Aristakes, as Catholicos.
Aristakes was martyred in 333 and was succeeded by his brother, Vertanes.
Housik, son of Vertanes, succeeded his father. Housik was succeeded by a
grandson rather than his son. This grandson was St. Nerses the Great who is
often referred to as the Second Illuminator. But, that is another story for
another day. Grigoris became the first Bishop of Georgia and Caucasian
Albania. Daniel, although neither a son nor grandson of Gregory, is included
in this commemoration. He was a student of Gregory and helped in the
conversion to Christianity.

JORDANIAN PRINCE VISITS ARAM I
His Highness Prince Hassan Bin Talal of Jordan recently visited His
Holiness Catholicos Aram I in Antelias, Lebanon, where the See of Cilicia is
located. The Prince and the Catholicos are actively involved in the
Christian-Moslem dialogue and both of them stressed the crucial importance
of deepening the interfaith dialogue as an important instrument for peace,
justice, and reconciliation.

CILICIAN THEOLOGICAL SEMINARY CONCLUDES 74TH YEAR
The Armenian Theological Seminary of the Cilician See in Bikfaya,
Lebanon, brought its 74th year to a successful conclusion on June 25. That
the fruits of the Seminary have had a worldwide impact cannot be disputed.
During the past 74 years thousands of young Armenians have passed through
the Seminary. Among its students have been future catholicoses, archbishops,
bishops, celibate and married priests, teachers, headmaster, and choir
directors, as well as writers and intellectuals. The history of this
institution is a tribute to the dedication and intelligence of the Armenian
people. Since its founding in 1930, the Antelias Seminary has produced four
catholicoses: Zareh I (first graduate of the Seminary); Khoren I, Karekin II
(later also Karekin I of Etchmiadzin), and Aram I, the current catholicos.
The 75th anniversary of this venerable institution will be commemorated
worldwide next year.

PAN-ARMENIAN EDUCATIONAL CONFERENCE
Last week we reported that the Executive Director of the Armenian
National Education Committee (ANEC), Gilda Kupelian, will attend two
upcoming conferences. We neglected to mention that Mrs. Nayiri Balanian,
chair of ANEC, will also be attending the Pan-Armenian Educational
Conference in Yerevan, Armenia.

IN NEED OF SPONSORS
The orphan sponsorship program started by the Prelacy in 1993 is now
well established and extremely efficient in its operation. Currently more
than 700 children are enrolled in the program. About 100 children are
waiting for sponsors. Annual sponsorship is only $180. We are so fortunate
to live at a time and place where we are blessed with many gifts. Please
remember that there are many people, especially children, less fortunate who
need our assistance. If you would like to sponsor a child in Armenia or
Artsakh contact the Prelacy office, 212-689-7810.
Here are some excerpts from letters we have recently received from
sponsored children:
From Datevig: I was born November 9, 1991. I was born seven months after
my father died, so I have never seen my father, nor have I seen his grave.
My father was a freedom fighter and a hero. My mother’s name is Irina. She
has been suffering from illness for many years. I have two sisters. Dear
sponsor, on behalf of my family I want to thank you. We are grateful for
your help. We wish you good health, happiness and peace.
>From Kevork: I was born March 10, 1990. I am currently in the sixth grade.
We have six people in our family. My father, Gabriel, was a freedom fighter
in Artsakh. He was killed on April 24, 1994. I am proud to be a son of such
a father and I hope I will be like him.
From Gohar: I am eleven years old and in fifth grade. It is true that I
am very proud of my father, but I must be truthful and say that I miss my
father very much, especially when I see my friends walking hand-in-hand with
their fathers. I am deprived of that joy. I am happy to have a benefactor
like you and I consider you to be a part of my family. I love you very much.

Do not withhold good from those who deserve it when it is in your power to
help them. If you can help your neighbor now, do not say, Come back
tomorrow, and then I will help you.
Proverbs 3:27-28

Visit our website at

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.armenianprelacy.org
www.armenianprelacy.org

Homenetmen Celebrates 25 Years

HOMENETMEN CELEBRATES 25 YEARS

NORTHEAST GLENDALE, July 30 (Noyan Tapan). Homenetmen Glendale Ararat
Chapter held a 25th anniversary celebration 27 July at Glandale High
School. The event included live cultural music, dancing and sporting
events. It lasted from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m., and by midafternoon,
organizers said more than 1,000 people had walked through the
entrance.The event was for the community but it also was a chance to
bring past and current membership together to see how the organization
has grown. “We wanted to create an environment in which the membership
would see each other and create a momentum for the 25th anniversary
gala in October,” Glendale News Press LATimes.com quoted anniversary
celebration organizer Armen Abrahamian as saying. This year, the
anniversary has already included reunions of past members and
volunteers. The chapter, the largest of its kind in the Western United
States, is celebrating 25 years of providing a place for
Armenian-American boys and girls – many from south Glendale – to get
involved in scouting and athletic activities. Homenetmen, also known
as the Armenian General Athletic Union & Scouts, is a global
organization founded in 1918. The mission for the local chapter has
remained the same since it started 25 years ago, when it started out
of small homes and rented space in Glendale. “I think we’ve done a
good job with educating kids while being able to give them enough to
do to help them not get into trouble,” Abrahamian said. Many members
are now in their 50s, and mentoring a new generation at 3347 N. San
Fernando Road. “This place is a second home for us,” said Andre
Pashai, a longtime member who is now coaching the basketball team that
Homenetmen officials said will represent Glendale this year in the
Pan-Armenian Games in Armenia. “It is a great idea,” said Narek
Shahmoradian, 13, who plays tennis and basketball. “It will stop kids
from getting into spraying graffiti on walls and getting into gangs.
It makes the community better.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenia’s only nuclear plant to begin capital repairs, refueling

Associated Press Worldstream
July 30, 2004 Friday 5:53 AM Eastern Time

Armenia’s only nuclear plant to begin capital repairs, refueling

YEREVAN, Armenia

Authorities said Friday they would begin capital repairs to and
refueling of Armenia’s only nuclear power station, the source of
nearly 40 percent of the country’s power and repeated international
concerns over safety.

Gagik Markosian, general director of the Medzamor plant, 30
kilometers (20 miles) west of the capital Yerevan, said the plant
will shut down early Saturday morning for at least two months for
repairs on the reactor core.

“We also plan to remove all nuclear fuel from the reactor and conduct
full inspection of the condition of the reactor’s metal container
shell,” Markosian said.

Last week, the plant took delivery of a new supply of nuclear fuel at
a cost of US$12 million, he said.

The former Soviet republic has been under pressure to shut the plant
down due to safety concerns; it was taken out of operation after a
devastating 1988 earthquake.

In 1995, it returned to service amid a severe energy shortage.
Armenia has since resisted shutting down the plant, which has one
working Soviet-made reactor supplying 40 percent of the country’s
electricity, fearing that alternative sources may be hard to come by.

Armenian officials say the European Union is ready to provide up to
100 million euro (US$120 million) for Yerevan to close the plant.
However, developing other sources of electricity could cost up to
US$1 billion (1.2 billion euro), Armenian officials say.

Russia’s electricity monopoly assumed financial control of the
nuclear plant last year in a deal that Armenia sought to get out from
under massive energy debts to Russian fuel suppliers.

The plant, however, remains the property of the Armenian government.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress