Vatican issues new stamp dedicated to Pope Francis’ visit to Armenia

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 19:13, 26 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS. The Vatican has issued a new stamp dedicated to the fourth anniversary of the Pope Francis’ visit to Armenia. The Holy See has thus joined the UN’s initiative, which has declared 2020 as the International Year of Plant Health (IYPH), Massis Post reports citing the Armenian Embassy to the Holy See.

The stamp depicts Pope Francis and His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians, watering the symbolic vine planted in Noah’s Ark, thus confirming that the theme of plant and earth health is a spiritual value.

Pope Francis visited Armenia in June 2016. In 2017 the Vatican issued stamps dedicated to the Pope’s “Visit to the First Christian Nation.”

Exposing the First 20th-Century Genocide: The Armenian Genocide

The Epoch Times
Literature

Interview with author and translator Siobhan Nash-Marshall
By Joseph Pearce
Updated:

Siobhan Nash-Marshall is uniquely placed to offer penetrating and illuminating insights into one of the darkest and most horrific chapters in human history.

The chair of philosophy at Manhattanville College in New York is the author of “The Sins of the Fathers,” a book about the Armenian Genocide, and translator of the newly published novella “Silent Angel” by Antonia Arslan, which is set against the backdrop of the genocide.

Dr. Nash-Marshall’s book exposes Turkish denialism about the genocide and shows how the dehumanizing effects of modern philosophy are responsible for the butchering of a whole people. Her translation of “Silent Angel” has provided readers in the English-speaking world with another book by Armenian-Italian novelist Antonia Arslan, whose earlier novel about the genocide, “Skylark Farm,” was an international bestseller.

<img class=”wp-image-3395918 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_Siobhan-Nash-Marshall-600×400.jpg”” alt=”Epoch Times Photo” width=”600″ height=”400″ /> Author Siobhan Nash-Marshall attributes the Armenian Genocide to modernist philosophy.

In this exclusive interview for The Epoch Times, Nash-Marshall speaks by email of the genocide and about her translation of Arslan’s latest book.

Joseph Pearce: “Silent Angel” is a novella set against the backdrop of the Armenian Genocide. Could you give a brief explanation and description of this genocide and when it happened?
Siobhan Nash-Marshall: The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th century. The triumvirate at the helm of the Ottoman Empire at the time (Enver Pasha, Talaat Pasha, and Djemal Pasha) took advantage of the World War I and launched a full-scale slaughter of the Armenians. A million and a half of them (that is, three-quarters of the Armenian people who lived in their historic homeland at the time, in what is today called Eastern Turkey) were slaughtered in the most horrendous ways imaginable.

The men were separated from their families. They were usually killed on the spot. The women and children were then forced to “relocate” by foot into the Syrian desert. Every sort of horror was visited upon them along the way. Most of them died of thirst, starvation, fatigue.

The genocide is a very well documented event. Newspapers from every continent chronicled it in gruesome detail. The Allies coined the term “crime against humanity” when they called upon the Turks to stop killing the Armenians. Pope Benedict XV, in his letter to the sultan, called it the “leading of the Armenian people almost to its extinction.” It was part of an operation that the U.S. ambassador at the time, Henry Morgenthau, called the “whitewashing of Anatolia.”

Mr. Pearce: Apart from being the translator of “Silent Angel,” you are also the author of “The Sins of the Fathers,” a book about the Armenian Genocide. Could you tell us a little about the book?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: My primary concern in “Sins of the Fathers” is modern philosophy. This is not strange for a Catholic. Pope Leo XIII railed against modernism. He also tried to protect the Armenians during the pre-genocidal massacres (1894–1896) perpetrated by Sultan Abdul Hamid. This is not a coincidence.

In my book, I tried to shed light on five crucial characteristics of the Armenian Genocide.

First, it was predicated on modern Western thought: All of its perpetrators read and carefully studied 19th-century European philosophers.

Second, it shows the price of modern political hypocrisy. The genocide did not happen overnight. It was preceded by nearly 30 years of negotiations in which the European Powers called for reforms in the Armenian provinces, signed treaties of all kinds with the sultan, but let the Armenians be slaughtered. Pope Leo XIII intervened and tried to mediate between the European Powers and negotiate with the sultan because he was well aware of the plight of the Armenians and the hypocrisy of the Powers.

Third, the Armenian Genocide highlights the historical engineering inherent in modern philosophy. Although the actual killing of the Armenians was mostly completed by 1923, the government of Turkey today is still trying desperately to rewrite Armenians out of the history of the lands of modern Turkey.

Fourth, the Armenian Genocide highlights the social engineering inherent in modern philosophy. The Armenians were killed in order to construct a “new Turkey” built along the lines dictated by French and German philosophy. [In “Sins of the Fathers,” Dr. Nash-Marshall shows how the intelligentsia of the “new Turkey” were inspired by Karl Marx and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and also by the French philosopher Auguste Comte.]

Fifth, the Armenian Genocide was violently anti-Christian.

The Armenian Genocide thus gives us a very good image in which to understand the problems that we are facing today. We too see historical engineering, social engineering, violent anti-Christianity. The Armenian Genocide shows what happens if we don’t pay attention to the signs.

<img class=”wp-image-3395928 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_cover-of-Sins-of-the-Father-600×902.jpg”” alt=”Epoch Times Photo” width=”600″ height=”902″ /> Siobhan Nash-Marshall’s book explores the underlying reasons for the Armenian Genocide, and how it is still not acknowledged by the Turkish government.

Mr. Pearce: The original title of “Silent Angel” was “Book of Moush.” Could you tell us something about the “Book of Moush” and how it relates to the plot of “Silent Angel”?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: Moush was one of the Armenian provinces in the Ottoman Empire. It was very important culturally and religiously. It had important monasteries, at one of which, for instance, Casper, one of the Three Kings of the New Testament, was buried, or so Armenian oral traditions tell us.

As the location was important, so too is the “Book of Moush.” It is called the “Msho Charantir”—the “Homiliary of Moush.” It actually exists. It is the largest extant Armenian manuscript. It is on display in the Matenadaran, the great library in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. One can plainly see its two pieces.

All Armenians know the story of the book. It was divided into two parts during the genocide and carried by two women who managed to save it. The names of the women who saved it are lost. “Silent Angel” gives the women names and tells their story.

<img class=”wp-image-3395898 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_antonia-Arslan-600×902.jpg”” alt=”Epoch Times Photo” width=”600″ height=”902″ /> Armenian-Italian novelist Antonia Arslan. (Courtesy of the Augustine Institute)

Mr. Pearce: The author of “Silent Angel,” Antonia Arslan, wrote a previous bestselling novel, “Skylark Farm,” also about the Armenian Genocide. Could you tell us a little about that novel and how it differs from “Silent Angel”?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: “Skylark Farm” (“La Masseria delle Allodole”) is Antonia Arslan’s first novel, and the first part of what is likely going to be a pentalogy. The second part is “Road to Smyrna,” the third “The Sound of the Wooden Pearls.” She dealt with part of it also in “Letter to a Girl in Turkey.” Alas, only the first has been published in English.

<img class=”wp-image-3395937 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_Skylark-Farm-cover-600×929.jpg”” alt=”Skylark Farm cover” width=”600″ height=”929″ /> The novel “Skylark Farm” is a personal account of the horrors of the Armenian Genocide.

“Skylark Farm” is a personal novel for Arslan, as can be seen from her dedicating it to her aunt, a survivor of the genocide, with whom she grew up. It is a difficult story. Like all descendants of families and cultures ravaged by genocide, Antonia Arslan has had personally to deal with what can be called the problem of Job since her birth. Her family has seen evil face-to-face and has had to understand how to hold on and deepen their faith through it. And so has she. In “Skylark Farm,” she shows that diabolical evil, sparing no details. It was horrendous.

Like a true classicist, Arslan weaves her family’s story in “Skylark Farm” as an epic. This is the perfect genre for a Joblike story. It allows Arslan to weave a timeless perspective in her story.

Both of these things make “Skylark Farm” very different from “Silent Angel.” In “Skylark Farm,” Arslan is trying to grapple with the horror of what happened to her family and her people. In “Silent Angel,” she focuses on the saving of her people.

Mr. Pearce: Who or what is the “silent angel” that gives the novella its name?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: Antonia Arslan loves the title “Silent Angel.” In Italian, as we’ve mentioned, her novella was published with the title “Book of Moush.” There are many silent angels in Arslan’s novella. One of them is the Book of Moush itself. It cannot speak, so it is silent. But it can show, and by showing it becomes a messenger of God, bringing the message of salvation.

Another angel is the angelic guide who guards over the people who are called upon to save the book. The angel plays an important role in the story. Yet another angel in “Silent Angel” is Zacharias, the sole survivor of his village, who leads the party carrying the book to safety. Two more of the novella’s angels are the Greeks, Makarios and Eleni, who protect the Armenians who are saving the book from those who would kill them.

“Silent Angel” is filled with angels, with messengers of God. Arslan has laced the story with them.

<img class=”wp-image-3395920 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_cover-of-silent-Angel-600×914.jpg”” alt=”&quot;Silent Angel&quot;” width=”600″ height=”914″ /> “Silent Angel” tells the story of how an Armenian treasure, the “Book of Moush,” was saved during the Armenian Genocide.

Mr. Pearce: Without wishing to give the plot away, could you give us a summary, not of the plot but of the principal characters?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: “Silent Angel” is the story of Anoush, which means “sweet” in Armenian, and Kohar, which in Armenian means “jewel.” They are simple women. Anoush is a wife and mother, and is shy and soft-spoken. Kohar is boisterous, has a fiancé, and is a decision maker. They are farmers. They come from a beautiful place. In their adventure they are joined by Hovsep, which is Armenian for Joseph, who is an orphan; by Eleni, the Greek midwife; and her sweetheart, the Greek Makarios.

Mr. Pearce: The literary landscape of “Silent Angel” illustrates the horrors of human cruelty and depravity but also the triumph of human endurance and virtue, as well as suggestions of God’s providential presence in the midst of darkness. In what ways does the novella achieve this, and what does it offer 21st-century Americans in the sense of its being somehow inspirational or applicable to our own times and culture?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: We are living in difficult times, and risk forgetting what is truly important in our lives. We are distracted by events, by violent emotions, by unrest. We also are always tempted to think that we are alone. This is especially true for us now, not just because of COVID-19, but because those links that once seemed to bind our society have loosened: families, parishes, communities.

“Silent Angel” reminds us what is important: the glorious Truth that saves us. It reminds us that that truth is not an abstract belief, but a real person. It reminds us that that person does not save us collectively. He saves us individually, and sends us beauty, messengers, hope, and strength.

Joseph Pearce is the author of “Solzhenitsyn: A Soul in Exile” (Ignatius Press).

26-year-old Azerbaijani man voluntarily surrenders to Armenian authorities – details

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 16:08,

YEREVAN, JUNE 12, ARMENPRESS. Today in the morning a resident of Azerbaijan’s Novosaratovka village Elshan Rasul Oghli Aliyev, born in 1994, was found in Areguni village of Armenia’s Gegharkunik province, Areguni village leader Sos Hovhannisyan told ARMENPRESS.

The first person to notice the Azerbaijani man was one of the Areguni village residents.

“He took the Azerbaijani resident to the administrative office. Our conversation took place without translation as I know the Azerbaijani language to some extent because I have lived in one of the Armenian-populated villages of Azerbaijan region for many years. Our village resident Nersik Poghosyan also participated in the conversation and he knows Azerbaijani better. The Azerbaijani citizen didn’t have any document or a weapon. According to him, he is Elshan Rasul Oghli Aliyev, born in Kalmykia. His father is Azerbaijani and mother is Ukrainian. His parents divorced when he was 6 years old. Mother left him and his brother, and they remained under the care of their father who returned to Azerbaijan and gave his children to orphanage. After leaving the orphanage Elshan had a nomadic life, then appeared in Getabek region to shepherd. He lived in poor conditions and decided to leave Azerbaijan. He said he has long examined the area via a map and decided that the closest and most convenient place is Armenia, therefore he crossed the border. After listening to his story I invited the representatives of the National Security Service of Armenia, and the Azerbaijani citizen who crossed our border was handed over to them”, Sos Hovhannisyan said.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 08-06-20

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 17:26, 8 June, 2020

YEREVAN, 8 JUNE, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 8 June, USD exchange rate down by 0.32 drams to 481.42 drams. EUR exchange rate down by 2.33 drams to 543.67 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate up by 0.05 drams to 7.06 drams. GBP exchange rate up by 1.71 drams to 610.15 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price down by 274.42 drams to 26056.46 drams. Silver price down by 2.82 drams to 272.1 drams. Platinum price down by 178.84 drams to 12738.4 drams.

Eduard Hovhannisyan appointed Chairman of State Revenue Committee

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 21:57, 5 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 5, ARMENPRESS. Eduard Hovhannisyan has been appointed Chairman of the State Revenue Committee (SRC) of Armenia, ARMENPRESS reports PM Pashinyan signed the decision.

Eduard Hovhannisyan was the Deputy Chairman of the SRC.

Former SRC Chairman David Ananyan resigned on June 4.

Edited and translated by Tigran Sirekanyan

PM Pashinyan feels well, continues working remotely – Spokesperson

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 20:53, 1 June, 2020

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. Mane Gevorgyan, spokesperson of the Prime Minister of Armenia, detailed on the health condition of PM Pashinyan, who has tested positive for coronavirus together with his entire family.

“Nikol Pashinyan continues to exercise his functions remotely. The Prime Minister is feeling well. The disease is asymptomatic. Nikol Pashinyan will remain in isolation all the way through the prescribed period of time and will fulfill his official duties remotely”, she said.




Asbarez: Editorial: A National Agenda Propelled Independence

The Sardarabad monument (Photo by Matthew Karanian)

In was a bleak time in history for Armenians in 1918. Centuries of oppression by Ottoman rulers had manifested into full-blown Genocide on the Western front, while the Bolsheviks who toppled the Russian Czarist regime that ruled over Armenia’s Eastern front had their own plans to oppress through invasion and integration. The time had come to fight for independence or risk being absorbed by the powers that had wrought havoc on the Armenian Nation for centuries.

This might be simplifying a complex geopolitical reality facing Armenians in May 2018, but the need to be independent from foreign rule was born out of a national agenda that sought to bring together all Armenians on our ancestral soil and allow them to determine for themselves their own fate and destiny.

Being in service to the people, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation rose to the challenge and carried the mantle of independence, making it a national mandate to organize Armenians from all over the world to fight for our homeland.
The valiant and heroic efforts of those who fought for independence 102 years ago in the battles of Sardarabad, Bash-Abaran and Gharkiliseh established the first Republic of Armenia and made the dream of Armenia’s Independence a reality.

The victories on May 28, 1918 were rooted in a national ideology that while advancing the universal concepts of freedom and self-determination were uniquely Armenian in nature and every decision taken the government at the time was grounded in the firm belief of advancing justice, security and prosperity for every Armenian.

The national agenda at play in 1918, once again, became a driving force 70 years later with the spark of the Artsakh Liberation Movement in 1988 and guided the Armenian Nation to victory when Artsakh was liberated and declared itself an independent state.

Today, the Republic of Armenia, having regained independence in 1991, has become the nexus for our national aspirations. That is why now, more than ever, a national agenda is needed to regroup our nation and ensure that every Armenian—wherever they might be—is a soldier for the homeland and will fight for the national interests of Armenia and its people.

When Armenia became independent again in 1991, its leaders sought to marginalize the people and make themselves the beneficiaries of our national wealth, causing detrimental damage to nation-building efforts and the creation of a national agenda, which prioritizes the individual Armenian as the critical focal point in advancing national interests. Taking a page from the Soviet playbook—or not ridding themselves from it—successive governments looked at the population as being dispensable—and at times disposable—in their self-serving mission to amass personal wealth at any cost.

So, 100 years after Armenia’s Independence, when the people of Armenia rose up to reclaim their destiny and homeland by toppling the despotic regime, a new opportunity was born for Armenians around the world to engage in advancing the homeland and ensuring the development of a more just and equitable society that can thrive and persevere.

Today, however, some remnants of the previous regime are leveraging the wealth they usurped from the people to create obstacles for the advancement of the nation in hopes of staging a comeback and reestablishing their egregious rule.

Since the people’s movement in 2018 that ushered in a new government there have been positive changes in Armenia, the most important of which is the optimism of its people who are now vested in the future of the country. However, there have also been steps taken by the new government that harken back to the divisive methods of past leaders, which will only alienate the vary people the movement empowered.

We cannot afford to squander the opportunity that the people of Armenia created for our entire Nation in 2018 through the popular movement. The current government is no longer “new” and must be held accountable for its actions and equally praised for its positive advancements. Our criticisms of the regime must be mature and come from a place of strengthening our nation and not sowing enmity. The same applies to government representatives who, sometimes, have used their position to create factionalism that has no place in our society.

One thing is certain: there is no going back to the past. This means that every Armenian must work toward the strengthening of the republics of Armenia and Artsakh, thus ensuring its security and social justice for its people. Together we must demand a national agenda that is free of Soviet vestiges and not only serves the individual Armenia, but also advances historical justice that can only propel a future United, Free and Independent Armenia.

`As we mark the 102nd anniversary of Armenia’s independence and we recall the decisive victories that created our country—and continue to embolden those today who are protecting our borders in Artsakh and Armenia—we must recommit ourselves as soldiers of the nation and work collectively to overcome challenges and celebrate new victories.

Armenia imports raw materials for production of Covid-19 tests

Public Radio of Armenia
May 15 2020

Armenian government to propose new mechanisms to investors soon

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 16:04,

YEREVAN, MAY 16, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian government has developed a new tool for the economic policy and investments, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during an online press conference today, introducing 100 facts about new Armenia.

“During the next session of the government a decision on a mechanism, which didn’t exist in Armenia before, will be adopted aimed at boosting investments. The discussions on one-two similar mechanisms continue, and I don’t rule out that new mechanisms will launch in the future”, he said.

He said at this stage they will propose a certain governance model of up to 50 billion AMD to economic entities, and concrete criteria will be set for that.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Medical staff at Armenia’s Maralik town hospital complains of attempts to reduce their salaries during self-isolation

News.am, Armenia

14:51, 12.05.2020

The medical staff of the hospital in Maralik town of Armenia’s Shirak Province is holding a protest Tuesday.

According to nurse Anna Ayvazyan, after COVID-19 was detected in more than 20 employees of the hospital, some of them were sent to an infectious disease hospital, and the hospital management had called on the rest to self-isolate.

“We had to self-isolate,” she said. “But now the management says that we shall get a salary based on a bulletin; this means that we will receive 80% of the amount due. (…). We want the Minister of Health to issue a message and clarify how legal all this is.”

Lab assistant Armine Ayvazyan, in her turn, added that at the very beginning of the pandemic, the medical staff was not provided with protective equipment, including gloves.

Anahit Hakobyan, an ambulance staff, said that the real increase in the salaries of medical workers from the promised 30 percent increase was only 20 percent.

And Vram Melikyan, former acting director of the hospital, stated that he had been asked to temporarily ensure the hospital’s activities so that the local population would not suffer.