The Fleeting Nature Of Armenia’s Political Parties

The Fleeting Nature of Armenia’s Political Parties
Gevorg Darbinyan

[ 2010/10/04 | 13:52 ]

A politics based on individuals not ideology

Putting forth the nomination of Samvel Balasanyan for the empty post
of RA National Assembly Deputy President, was just as normal for the
Prosperous Armenia Party (PAP) as its recent move to remove Arevik
Petrosyan from the same spot. Both moves were equally beyond the pale
of logic.

Samvel Balasanyan, who only this year registered with the PAP after
leaving the Rule of Law Party in 2007, is just as “devoted” to the PAP
as his predecessor Petrosyan. Just days ago Khachik Galstyan, spokesman
for PAP leader Gagik Tsarukyan, argued that the Balasanyan nomination
was in line with the party’s intention to revitalize its participation
in the parliament. As to how Balasanyan, a former Rule of Law member,
will revitalize the party is hard to imagine. Perhaps the PAP is
counting on Balasanyan’s rhetorical talents and his preference for
chest thumping when giving speeches. Such theatrics will come across
as even more absurd and pitiful from the podium of the deputy speaker.

Balasanyan’s nomination betrays once again the paucity of qualified
cadres within the PAP, and this has instigated Gagik Tsarukyan to take
illogical steps. This in turn, despite the party’s large number of
members and influence, reveals the fact that the party still hasn’t
consolidated internally. The other parties in the ruling coalition,
the Republican Party and the Rule of Law, face a similar problem. To
a great extent, this situation is particular to all political parties
in Armenia. In essence what we have in Armenia is politics without
parties or parties without politics.

Recently, political analyst Armen Badalyan declared in earnest that,
“A new force just needs six months to come into being. For this
reason experienced specialists are needed to mould and shape that
force. It’s not a problem. The creation of a political party is the
result of the work carried out by qualified experts.” Mr. Badalyan
humbly underestimates our potential. According to official data,
there are presently 74 political parties registered with the RA
Ministry of Justice.

The “Law on Political Parties” was adopted back in 2002. In other
words, on average, one new political force in Armenia is created every
month. This is why there is no need for experts. Put another way,
a new ideology, a new program to save the nation, comes to the fore
in Armenia on a monthly basis. Whether or not the public demand for
such a plethora of parties exists or not is another question.

As a rule, political parties in Armenia are formed to serve the
interests of individuals, or they are redirected to do so. For example,
oligarchs like Mikayel Baghdasarov or Barsegh Beglaryan can create
parties to defend their economic interests. Similarly, the PAP
was formed to serve the interests of Gagik Beglaryan, the Rule of
Law Party – Artur Baghdasaryan, Republican Party – Serzh Sargsyan,
New Times Party – Aram Karapetyan, National Unity Party – Artashes
Geghamyan, and so forth. These individuals are not the leaders of
the political parties, but rather their owners.

The very continued existence of these parties is dependent on the
individual owners. They are the ones who decide, based on a host of
personal variables, who is appropriate for what government post, etc.

PAP parliamentary faction Secretary Aram Safaryan, for example, when
speaking about the new nominee for the deputy speaker’s post, said
that, “…Mr. Tsarukyan will select a nominee, the political council
will ratify the nominee and our public will be informed.” That’s to
say the function of the political council is merely to rubber stamp
the nominees of the party boss and ratify any decisions from the top.

It wouldn’t be an exaggeration to say that the leaders of such parties
are idols to be worshipped. The entire party would collapse just by
bringing down the idol. Just as it has become so easy to create a
party, it is equally easy to bring about its ruin.

For example, Republican Party council member Razmik Zohrabyan states
with all due conviction that if they had wanted to weaken the PAP it
would have happened. And this, in fact, is the reality of the matter.

All it would take is to constrain Gagik Tsarukyan with a few choice
compromising factors and the PAP, in practice, would turn into a
political corpse and the next rat race competition would begin. The
Rule of Law Party lived that nightmare in 2007 when, after having
discredited Artur Baghdasaryan and stripping him of the post of
National Assembly President, the party stood at the precipice. In
the same fashion, the National Democratic Union, National Unity and
the Constitutional Rights Union have been relegated to the sidelines.

In the public consciousness, the political struggle has been
transformed into a continuing struggle among individuals. Average
citizens do not say that the Republican Party and the PAP are battling
it out, or that the HAK and the Republican Party are in competition.

Rather they identify the leaders; Serzh Sargsyan vs. Gagik Tsarukyan,
or Levon Ter-Petrosyan vs. Serzh Sargsyan.

As a result, political parties formed on an ideological basis lose
their public relevance and are quickly marginalized. In essence,
then, what we are faced with in the political arena is a complete
process of non-ideology.

All parties created on an ideological basis, without exception,
are facing a serious crisis. As yet, there is no foreseeable exit
strategy. On the national conservative front, the ARF finds itself
in this morass. On the national liberal front there is the Heritage
Party; The HHZh (Armenian National Movement). And then there’s the
Communist Party on the socialist front.

Given the level of public perception, none of these ideologically
based parties can, by themselves, garner the 5% vote ceiling needed
in the 2012 parliamentary elections.

Instead, the National Assembly will almost totally be full of
Balasanyan’s and his ilk.

No one will ever ask them why there was a need to replace National
Assembly President Tigran Torosyan with someone like Hovik Abrahamyan,
or Arevik Petrosyan with Samvel Balasanyan.

What will be required is not to forget who the owners are and when
is the most opportune time to replace them.

From: A. Papazian

http://hetq.am/en/politics/40664/

BAKU: Ilham Aliyev Will Visit Nakhchivan

Ilham Aliyev Will Visit Nakhchivan

NAKHCHIVAN. October 4, 2010: Azerbaijani president Ilham Aliyev will
visit Nakhchivan in the nearest future. The regional correspondent of
Turan reports that the local authorities are preparing to meet the
president Aliyev. As a part of those preparations, the local law
enforcement is trying to get a control over all the persons who could
potentially approach Ilham Aliyev with a letter of complaint during
his appearance in public. Ilham Aliyev is expected to attend the
opening ceremonies of Power Station in Ordubad region, cement factory
in Kangarli region and a few other production facilities (Turan).

From: A. Papazian

http://azerireport.com/index.php?option=com_frontpage&Itemid=1

Family plans public farewell for actor Tony Curtis

Family plans public farewell for actor Tony Curtis
By OSKAR GARCIA
Associated Press Writer

Associated Press
Oct 4, 1:32 PM EDT

LAS VEGAS (AP) — Celebrities, fans, friends and family members will say
goodbye to Tony Curtis during public funeral services to celebrate the movie
star’s life.

Curtis’ wife, Jill Curtis, planned to eulogize her husband of 16 years
Monday in Las Vegas, longtime friend and pallbearer Gene Kilroy told The
Associated Press.

The 85-year-old Oscar-nominated actor who starred in such films as “The
Defiant Ones,” “Spartacus” and “Some Like It Hot” died Wednesday at his home
in Henderson after suffering cardiac arrest.

Known for shifting from a pigeonholed pretty boy in the late 1940s and early
1950s to a serious actor, Curtis reshaped himself over decades of work and
make himself impossible to typecast. The transformation was completed in
1957’s “Sweet Smell of Success,” in which he played a sleazy press agent who
is manipulated by a ruthless newspaper columnist (Burt Lancaster).

In person, Kilroy said, Curtis loved giving friends and fans extra touches
that made their face-to-face moments more memorable.

“He had a certain way of making everybody feel like they were Spartacus,”
Kilroy said.

An hourlong funeral is to be followed by burial and then a reception for 200
invited guests at the Luxor hotel-casino on the Las Vegas Strip.

Kilroy, an executive at the casino, said billionaire investor Kirk
Kerkorian, actor Kirk Douglas and singer Phyllis McGuire are among seven
honorary pallbearers.

Jamie Lee Curtis, Curtis’ daughter from his first marriage with “Psycho”
actress Janet Leigh, is among family members expected to attend.

She was estranged from her father for a long period, but they eventually
reconciled and Curtis took pride in her on-screen credits that include
“Perfect,” “Halloween,” “True Lies” and new comedy “You Again.”

She said in a statement that her father leaves behind a “legacy of great
performances in movies and in his paintings and assemblages.”

Curtis was born Bernard Schwartz in the Bronx in 1925. His father wanted to
be an actor, but was hindered by his heavy accent.

Curtis found refuge in movies at age 12 after his younger brother was killed
in a traffic accident. He served on a submarine during World War II, then
enrolled in drama school on the G.I. Bill. An agent lined up an audition
with Universal, and Curtis signed a seven-year contract starting at $100 a
week at age 23.

The studio gave him a new name: Anthony Curtis, taken from his favorite
novel, “Anthony Adverse,” and the Anglicized name of a favorite uncle. He
later shortened it to Tony Curtis.

From: A. Papazian

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator 10/2/10

The Armenian Mirror-Spectator
755 Mount Auburn St.
Watertown, MA 02472
Tel: (617) 924-4420
Fax: (617) 924-2887
Web:
E-mail: [email protected]

October 2, 2010

1. ALMA Names Viktoria Kirakosyan as New Program Director
2. Legal Eagle Mark Momjian Soars in Pennsylvania
3. Kerry Kennedy Inspires, Dazzles at Inaugural Lecture on Human Rights at
Faneuil Hall

****************************************************
1. ALMA Names Viktoria Kirakosyan as New Program Director

By Siranush Khachatryan
Special to the Mirror-Spectator

WATERTOWN, Mass. – This town, which is second only to Glendale, Calif. when
it comes to its population of Armenian descent, is also home to the only
museum dedicated to all things Armenian in the US, the Armenian Library and
Museum of America (ALMA).

The newest member of the staff there is Viktoria Kirakosyan, who recently
was named exhibit and program director.

Kirakosyan was born in Yerevan, but she is not unfamiliar with Massachusetts;
she studied at Simmons College in Boston, from which she graduated with
joint degrees in economic and computer science.

`The funny thing is that the only reason I studied and graduated with those
degrees was because I knew I was going to go back to Armenia where there are
the most jobs available in those fields. I wasn’t very interested in either
of them though. I’ve always considered myself more of a creative

type of person, and always imagined that the ideal fields for me to work in
were marketing and

graphic design,’ said Kirakosyan.

Prior to coming to the US, she worked in marketing, including at investment
funds as well as a wine distribution company in Armenia and an international
food and wine publication. She moved to the US two years ago with her
husband, Armen Begoyan.

`I was living in Watertown and I would always pass by the museum but never
had a chance to go inside =85 . One of the board members who has known me for
many years knew that I was looking for a job. At the time there was an
opening at ALMA so she referred my resume and I went for an interview. The
next day I received the job offer. I never thought I would work in a museum,
but every day I like it

more and more.’

The job is not just dealing with logistics, however. `Although my position
states exhibit and program coordinator, I am also involved in the creative
aspects of working in a museum. For example, I get to work with various
renowned artists in organizing events for gallery exhibits for their
collections. I get to meet a lot of new people every day, which is probably
my favorite part of the job.’

Working at ALMA has made Kirakosyan feel closer to home. `I wish I could
share my life between both places, but I know many years from now I will
permanently move back to Armenia. Whenever I go back, a part of me will stay
here with all the diversity and various activities that are offered, but
when I’m here, I keep on getting homesick. I can’t live too far for too long
away from my parents and country.’

ALMA is a non-profit, while not flush with cash, is operating smoothly
thanks to its loyal army of volunteers, Kirakosyan said.

ALMA currently has about 10 exhibits on display and Kirakosyan says her
favorite is a traveling

exhibit titled, `The Ongoing Cultural Genocide,’ which will soon embark on a
national tour. `What I like a lot about the exhibit is that instead of
concentrating solely on the facts and history of the Armenian Genocide, its
main focus is on the Turks’ denial of the Genocide. It’s an impressive
combination of images and texts that is quite engaging. It has premiered at
the University of Rhode Island and my goal is to have it displayed in mostly
non-Armenian sites.’

*********************************************************

2. Legal Eagle Mark Momjian Soars in Pennsylvania

*By Aram Arkun*
*Mirror-Spectator* Staff

PHILADELPHIA – An attentive follower of the national media may have
encountered Philadelphia lawyer Mark Albert Momjian’s name in connection
with the divorce of reality television show actress Kate Gosselin. He was
quoted in many national newspapers and appeared on television shows such as
`Larry King Live’ and the `Today Show.’

Momjian is a nationally-respected authority on family law who has also
managed to actively participate in Armenian community life over a period of
several decades, and to develop a variety of rich collections of books and
ephemera dealing with Armenians and other topics. Interestingly, each of
these endeavors in one form or another is connected to the idea of family
and heritage.

The choice of law as a field certainly must have been at least in part
influenced by his family background and upbringing. Quite a few Momjians are
lawyers, including Mark’s father, Albert, a nationally prominent family
lawyer regarded by many as the dean of the Pennsylvania bar. In addition,
Mark’s two siblings (Carol and Thomas), as well as a number of cousins, are
lawyers and they specialize in everything from bankruptcy to securities
litigation.

After graduating from Columbia College (where he was a classmate of
President Barack Obama) and the Columbia University School of Law, Mark
Momjian worked for more than 25 years with his father, primarily in the
large Philadelphia law firm of Schnader Harrison Segal and Lewis, before
starting a specialized family law firm named Momjian Anderer this year.
Momjian has written more than 50 articles on family law topics for many
legal journals, and he also co-authored with his father the reference work
Pennsylvania Family Law Annotated (Thomson/West), now in its ninth edition.

In Pennsylvania, family law is particularly challenging because each
judicial district or county has its own rules. Momjian has argued many
important cases before the Pennsylvania appellate courts. One of his most
significant victories was in 2006. He explained recently that `I defended
the constitutionality of Pennsylvania’s Grandparents’ Visitation Act and got
it affirmed by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. That case went up [the
technical term is on certiorari] to the US Supreme Court, but thankfully was
denied. A biological parent was challenging the Commonwealth’s statute
allowing grandparents the right to visit their grandchildren when the
parents of the children were separated or divorced. In this particular case,
the ex-wife of the father died of cancer. The maternal grandmother was not
allowed to see her grandchild after her daughter died, despite having seen
her grandson on an almost daily basis for the two years leading up to the
mother’s death. This case was an important victory for Pennsylvania’s
seniors.’

He handled an important case involving civil rights for the Lesbian Gay
Bisexual and Transgender (LBGT) community in 2002 before the Pennsylvania
Superior Court (an intermediate appellate). Momjian explained, `This was
the
first case in the US that imputed a child support obligation on a former
domestic partner. The biological parent successfully sued her former partner
for child support, even though the former partner had never adopted the
child.’

Momjian is particularly interested in the intersection between family law
and biotechnology – different methods of reproduction, gestational
surrogacy, DNA distribution and frozen embryos. With modern technology,
family law is a rapidly changing field. Momjian lectures nationally on these
and other issues of family law, and teaches at area law schools in
Philadelphia. He is also an adjunct faculty member at Drexel University’s
College of Medicine, teaching mental health law.

His public service work focuses on problems facing non-traditional families,
as well as victims of abuse and domestic violence. He is a member of the
board of directors of both the Homeless Advocacy Project and Philadelphia
VIP (an organization working for equal justice for the poor).

Momjian’s father and his uncle, Set Momjian, have been prominent as leaders
in various Armenian-American organizations over the years, so it was natural
for Mark too to become involved. Mark related, `I interned with the Armenian
Assembly in Washington, DC when I was 16 or 17 years old. That was in 1979.
I was one of the youngest interns. When I went to Columbia, I was very
active in the Armenian Club, and eventually served as its president. I
remained active as a club member even in law school. After graduating, I
served on the board of the Armenian Assembly for close to 17 years. I also
served on the board of the Armenian Sisters Academy [in Radnor, Penn.].’

As part of his loyalty to his alma mater, Momjian has served on the board of
the Columbia Armenian Center for over a dozen years, as well as in various
non-Armenian alumni positions. He was formerly on the board of the Armenian
Missionary Association of America, and when co-chairman of the Armenian
Church Earthquake Fund in Pennsylvania he helped raise over half a million
dollars of aid for survivors of the 1988 tragedy. He is a former president
of the Philadelphia chapter of the Armenian Students Association, and as a
lawyer, was active in the Armenian Bar Association as former cochair of its
Armenian Rights Watch committee. Momjian is a familiar figure at public
events in the Philadelphia area, often serving as master of ceremonies or as
a lecturer himself.

*The Collector*

Mark Momjian’s dedication to his family and his past reveals itself once
more in his hobbies. He collects various types of Americana, and materials
connected to his alma mater, Columbia, but perhaps the pride of his
collections are the materials connected to his heritage as an Armenian, and
Armenian-Americans in particular.

To a certain extent, his family background led him to collecting. As Momjian
explains, `I must have gotten the collector strain of DNA from my uncle,
Set
Momjian. He is the penultimate collector. He has done a brilliant job in
bringing his collections both to the public through museums and to private
groups. He has been a great resource for me and a remarkable person with
whom to talk about issues of collecting.’

A specific purchase in 1983 triggered the start of a collection of books
that now number several thousand. Momjian reminisces, `It was the summer
before I started law school and I was in a used bookstore on South Street in
South Philadelphia, in a store that sadly is no longer there. It was a small
volume by Herbert Adams Gibbons, The Blackest Page of Modern History.
Gibbons was of course referring to the genocide of the Armenians. As I was
reading the book, I was so impressed by how forceful his arguments were. I
was delighted to find out that he was trained as a lawyer because the book
had a legal brief feel to it. I was also delighted to pay only $2.50 for the
book.’ Today of course such a first edition would sell for $400, but Momjian
was motivated to obtain it not as an investment, but `because of my
ancestry, and because of the period it covers, and the trans-generational
trauma that still affects Armenian-Americans.’

Most of his books are in the English language, and often are inscribed by
the author, giving it a more intimate dimension. Momjian gives some
examples: `I have William Saroyan’s inscribed copy of the Blue Book [one of
the earliest works on the Armenian Genocide, published by the British
parliament]. It is extremely rare, but this is a copy he acquired in London
in the 1940s. I treasure it. I also have a wonderfully-inscribed copy by
Franz Werfel’s The Forty Days of Musa Dagh. It was inscribed to Edith Snow,
his poet-translator. Werfel’s signature is a sight to be seen – a flourish
of flourishes, a stunning and bold signature at a time when authors did not
market their wares as they do today. The book also has critical and other
remarks by Snow in pencil. She did not translate this, but his other works
of poetry, but it is interesting to see her remarks. When she looks at the
English version she is comparing it to the German and writing notes about
the translation in her copy in the margins.’

After the first 10 or 15 years, Momjian began to focus on what he likes to
call `Armenian Americana,’ focusing on the immigrant experience in the
United States – `this is the experience that our ancestors endured, whether
they came here during the Civil War, up to and including the aftermath of
the genocide. It really fascinated me as a second-generation
Armenian-American to delve into this area which I felt was largely ignored.’

Momjian has salesmen’s copies of many of the books published on the
Armenians and the Hamidian massacres around the turn of the 20th century:
`These books were used in some ways to titillate readers. There were great
marketing opportunities – publishers would tell their salesmen that these
books would practically sell themselves. This is why you see on the title
page to Reverend Greene’s book that it is a thrilling account – it is almost
unseemly.’

Momjian also has some draft articles: `I have an interesting 19th century
manuscripts on the Armenian people – it is a 4,000-word essay, handwritten
by James Bryce on the Armenian question and published in *Century Magazine*.
It had a substantive impact on American foreign policy after it was
published. For one thing, the American Ambassador to Constantinople at the
time was pressured into interviewing Sultan Abdul Hamid II to make up for
the damage done by Bryce’s article.’ When he holds such historical pieces,
he is greatly affected, and explains this through the German expression
`fingerspitzengefühl.’ This literally means `fingertip feeling,’
but also
refers to a military commander’s innate sense of what is happening on the
battlefield though he is unable to directly see everything. Momjian, like
many collectors, `feels an electric charge when touching something with so
much history and importance behind it.’

Momjian did not stop with books: `I have collected pulpit notices – little
slips of paper handed to parishioners to come to lectures on the Armenian
massacres. I have a range of ephemera not meant to survive – from postcards
and pin backs, to sheet music and badges. It really reflects the social
history of what interested Americans in learning about the Armenian people
and what was happening to them.’

Momjian owns approximately 1,000 postcards, some of which are extremely
rare, like from Cilician Armenia during the period of French occupation and
coveted philatelic covers with Armenian associations, many from Armenian
merchants in the Ottoman Empire. He has many postcards with photographs, as
well as Near East Relief postcards. By and large the collection has been
more focused on the US and its connection with the Ottoman Empire and the
Armenians. In particular, Momjian has always been interested in materials
relating to how Armenians came to America, and, working hard, established
small businesses. He confided, `I have a 19th-century business card of an
Armenian who sold dry goods and clothing from Boston. I have bill heads,
specially engraved stationery, to sell products in the US.’ He also has
handwritten letters on Armenian issues by notables like Henry Morgenthau
Sr., James Bryce, Oscar Strauss, General Harbord, Vice President Eisenhower
and various congressmen, as well as a copy of William Saroyan’s first letter
ever to his artistic collaborator, Don Freeman.

Momjian expanded into collecting original 19th-century photographs. For
example, there are the products of a tour of an Armenian doctor named
Megerdich Attarian, who had graduated from Colgate University and then
medical school in New York. He went from city to city, mainly in the East
Coast, dressing up in costumes and selling photos, talking about what life
was like in the Ottoman Empire. Momjian feels collecting such material `is a
fascinating way to understand how Armenian culture was disseminated in the
US. This is a form of cultural history. These photographs are quite charming
when you look at them, but they are highly stylized. They did not accurately
depict the average Armenian living in the Ottoman Empire, but this was
common at the time, similar to the Orientalist approach to art.’

Momjian also has rare old photographs from the pioneers of photography, like
Garabed Krikorian of Jerusalem: `He took photos as souvenirs when travelers
from the West (mainly from North America) came to Jerusalem. They would
dress up as a Bedouin or a tradesman in exotic garb and he would create a
cabinet card which travelers would bring back as a keepsake from the Holy
Land. I just bought one from a seller living in Utah.’

More unusually, he has a collection of milk bottles from various
Armenian-American dairy farmers, and, `I have what I think is the largest
collection of fruit labels depicting Armenian growers and merchants. For
instance, I have a fruit label from an Armenian grocery store in Watertown
in the 1920s, with the kind of engraving that is quite beautiful in its
simplicity. These fragile ephemera somehow survived. I think that collectors
now look at these things and understand their importance in trying to tell
the story of Armenian immigration to this country.’

Among Armenian materials related to presidents of the United States, Momjian
feels that one of the most interesting items in his collection is an
appointment from the White House on engraved sheepskin with the Executive
seal, appointing Milton Seropian as the vice-consul to Persia. He adds,
`This is a marvelous document signed in the early part of the 20th century.
Milton was the son of Christopher Seropian, the Yale graduate who created
the dye for the American currency. The reason why this appointment is
wonderful is that it is signed by both Theodore Roosevelt and John Hay,
previously Lincoln’s personal secretary, but secretary of state at the
time.’

Having accomplished much in his career and fields of service, as well as his
hobbies, Momjian and his wife, Melineh (also a Columbia graduate), have
strived to provide their two sons with the same background and opportunities
that they themselves have enjoyed. They have taken their children to Armenia
and provided them with an Armenian cultural background. Momjian explains,
`The most important thing for us as parents is to see our children excited
to be in their ancestral homeland. You want them to love your homeland
instantly, the way that we do. We try to keep the language, music and
culture alive in our home. We go to see Armenian soloists. We’ve really
tried to raise our children with the deep appreciation that Armenia has a
remarkable culture and it is the duty of every Armenian to spread those
values.’

Momjian hopes that the new generations of Momjians – and Armenians in
general – will work together to overcome the difficulties faced by the new
Republic of Armenia and the inherited traumas of the Genocide: `I’ve tried
to lead by example, but my inspiration will always be my parents, Albert and
Esther, who have been very active and engaged in the Armenian community from
as long as I can remember. They have been wonderful role models, as are my
inlaws, Dr. Edward Vartany and his wife, Anik. It is a model that I hope our
children will follow as well. It is one that’s, above all, respectful of
the
major sacrifices made by preceding generations of Armenians, both in the US
and our homeland.’

*********************************************************

3. Kerry Kennedy Inspires, Dazzles at Inaugural Lecture on Human Rights at
Faneuil Hall

By Alin K. Gregorian

Mirror-Spectator Staff

BOSTON – Kerry Kennedy lived up to her family name at the inaugural lecture
in the human rights series sponsored by the K. George and Dr. Carolann
Najarian Fund on Thursday, September 23. The annual lecture series is an
endowed public program of the Armenian Heritage Foundation, which is funding
the construction of the Armenian Heritage Park.

Kennedy spoke for less than 20 minutes, but during that short time, she
recited several anecdotes and inspirational stories, which in turn charmed,
inspired and touched the audience.

A surprise to the organizers was the presence of her mother, Ethel Kennedy,
the widow of the late senator and attorney general, Robert F. Kennedy. She
received tremendous applause and after the program, patiently accommodated
the many fans that wanted to have their pictures taken with them.

Kerry Kennedy is a veteran campaigner for human rights. She established the
Robert F. Kennedy Memorial Center for Human Rights in 1988 and has worked on
diverse human rights issues such as children’s rights, child labor,
disappearances, indigenous land rights, judicial independence, freedom of
expression, ethnic violence, impunity and the environment. She is the author
of Speak Truth to Power:

Human Rights Defenders Who Are Changing Our World, which features interviews
with human rights activists including Marian Wright Edelman, the Dalai Lama,
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and more.

Kennedy started her talk by expressing her happiness at being a part of the
program, since serving on the board of the lecture series were a host of
people who were old friends and colleagues, including

Margot Stern Strom and Adam Strom of the Brookline-based Facing History and
Ourselves.

She praised Facing History’s teaching tools on the Armenian Genocide and
suggested that all those present should try to get local schools to teach it
using that program. From that point, she launched into the importance of
freedom of expression, which should not be taken for granted, and which does
not exist everywhere, including Turkey, where speaking about the Genocide
could get one arrested or worse – killed.

She said we in the US owe the right to free expression `thanks in large part
to the people who have spoken in this very hall’ during the time of the
American Revolution, she said.

`If we were in Istanbul, we could be arrested, tortured or if freed,
targeted for death,’ as was

Hrant Dink, Kennedy said.

She noted that last year she spent a day in Istanbul with Delal Dink, the
late Agos founder’s daughter.

`He dared to speak truth to power,’ she said of Dink.

Kennedy was able to go back and forth between serious and humorous topics in
her brief talk, holding the crowd’s attention.

Kennedy said that she got interested as a child in human rights because `I
had seven brothers,’ much to the delight of the audience.

She stressed that in her household growing up, little separation was made
between work life and home life. Her mother, she recalled, would pile all
the children, two dogs and a football in the family car and head to her
husband’s office at the Justice Department. She recalled that she and her
siblings took particular pleasure pretending to be spies in the tunnels
linking the Justice Department with the offices of the Federal Bureau of
Investigation (FBI). One day, her spunky mother noted an incongruous
suggestion box in the FBI building and quickly dashed off a note in `her
distinctive handwriting.’ By the time the children and their mother were
at
Robert Kennedy’s office, he was holding the note, which had been forwarded
to him by his nemesis, FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover. Roaring with laughter,
he shared Ethel Kennedy’s note, in which she had suggested that the FBI
`get
a new director.’

In another incident, she recalled, on June 11, 1963, her father sent her a
note, sharing the good news

that two African-American students had registered at the University of
Alabama.

Other incidents early in her life, she said, helped shape her dedication to
the issue of civil rights. She had a close friend who was gay, and in fact,
became one of the first people in the US to have died of AIDS early on in
the wake of the epidemic. Other friends were victims of date rape, or the
parents

of other friends were engaged in a violent relationship.

`I didn’t put these things together until I worked at Amnesty
International,’ she said.

Kennedy, who has worked to combat abuses by the Salvadoran government
against workers and

opposition activists, praised the change in the region. `All of Latin
America was under a right-wing military dictatorship,’ she said. Thanks to
grassroots activists, she said, not only is Latin America free of military
dictatorships, but so is the former Eastern Bloc in Europe as well as South
Africa, where apartheid ended.

Also, thanks to similar grassroots actions, she said, women’s rights issues
have entered the international arena. Kennedy highlighted some people whose
dedication to the cause of human rights in their respective fields have made
global changes, including Eli Wiesel, Margaret Mead and Digna Ochoa.

She quoted Wiesel: `It’s up to you now, and we shall help you – that
my past
does not become your future.’

Also speaking at the program was James Kalustian, the president of the
Heritage Park Foundation. In his opening remarks, Kalustian said that it was
a proud moment for the Armenian community, a group that `has experienced
and
triumphed over injustice’ and now is responsible for erecting a monument
that aims to pay tribute to its own and others’ suffering through this
lecture series.

Author, poet and professor Peter Balakian congratulated the
Massachusetts-Armenian community for the success of Heritage Park as well as
the lecture series.

`It is a great honor to be on this stage,’ sharing it with Kerry Kennedy, he
said.

He added that in particular, it was a delight to be at that particular
venue, where the first international outreach – toward Armenian victims of
the Ottoman massacres and then outright Genocide – by the US was born, as
well as the suffragette and abolitionist movements.

`It is a forum of humanistic thought,’ he said. Balakian paid tribute to
people like Alice Stone Blackwell, who worked hard to draw attention to the
Armenian situation.

In her comments, Dr. Carolann Najarian, who along with her husband, K.
George Najarian, has endowed the lecture series, paid tribute to her late
father, Avedis Abrahamian, a Genocide survivor who fled to the US at age 15.
`Injustice affects us all. In order to be effective in the struggle for the
abrogation of human rights for one, you have to fight all of them,’ she
said. She praised the speaker, Kerry Kennedy, as someone who has `for 30
years been a tireless advocate for human rights.’

Final speaker state Rep. Peter Koutoujian (DNewton/ Waltham), visibly moved,
praised Kennedy as someone who does `not rest on the laurels of a great
legacy [but has gone on] to create a new legacy every day.’

Kennedy, after the program, said she was `very deeply moved’ with the event.
`It was inspiring to see what the Armenian community has given to the
community and the effort the community is making to bring together all the
immigrant groups.’

A reception followed at the Old State House.

From: A. Papazian

http://www.mirrorspectator.com

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian Visits TCA Arshag Dickranian School

TCA Arshag Dickranian Armenian School
1200 N. Cahuenga Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90038

Tel: 323-461-4377
Fax: 323-323-461-4247
Contact: [email protected]

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian Visits TCA Arshag Dickranian School

Los Angeles, October 4, 2010 – His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian,
Primate of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, gave a two hour
long visit to TCA Arshag Dickranian School on Friday October 1, 2010, to
meet with and give his message to the upper grade students. The Primate
was accompanied by the Rev. Archpriest Fr. Manoug Markarian, Parish Priest
of St. John Armenian Church, and Rev. Fr. Avedis Abovian, Youth Director
of the Western Diocese.

The students had already gathered at the Walter and Laurel Karabian Hall
and taken their seats when the guests arrived to meet with them, after
which Principal Vartkes Kourouyan introduced them explaining the purpose
of their visit. He then invited His Eminence to address the students.

Archbishop Derderian first talked about the importance of Christian
Education, calling on the students to attend church and making the
teachings of the Armenian Church an essential part of their lives,
learning and growth. During his interactive conversation he touched upon
the kind of problems facing adolescents these days and emphasized on the
role of the church in helping those who seek guidance. `Sometimes it is
hard to solve our problems on our own,’ he said, `the church is here for
you, please don’t hesitate to call on us.’

Fr. Manoug and Fr. Avedis then took turns to greet the students,
expressing their thoughts as to how the church may help in dealing with
the worldly challenges nowadays facing the youth, each giving examples
from their personal experiences.

At the end, school board chairman Mr. George Mandossian addressed the
students, urging them to appreciate the messages and advice given by the
visiting clergy and apply them as well. `I am much older than all of you
and I learned a lot from these discussions,’ he said.

The students then split into three discussion groups gathering around
Archbishop Derderian, Father Manoug and Father Avedis to express their
personal thoughts and discuss issues in more detail.

Prior to concluding the session the Primate invited the students to the
Diocesan Headquarters (The Dickranian Complex) to visit the new cathedral
and its adjourning facilities.

Located at 1200 North Cahuenga Blvd., Los Angeles, the TCA Arshag
Dickranian Armenian School is a federally tax exempt, Pre-K to 12th grade
private educational institution. The school’s web site is

From: A. Papazian

www.dickranianschool.org.

ANCA: Rep. Andrews Calls for Expanding U.S.-Armenia Trade

Armenian National Committee of America
1711 N Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel. (202) 775-1918
Fax. (202) 775-5648
Email. [email protected]
Internet

PRESS RELEASE

October 4, 2010
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

CONGRESSMAN ANDREWS CALLS FOR EXPANDING U.S.-ARMENIA TRADE

— Urges Administration to Negotiate a Trade and Investment
Framework Agreement with Armenia

WASHINGTON, DC – Congressman Robert Andrews (D-NJ) has called on
the Obama Administration to negotiate a Trade and Investment
Framework Agreement (TIFA) with Armenia, in order to help “foster
economic growth in both the United States and Armenia while
strengthening our nation’s bond with the Armenian people,” reported
the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

Representative Andrews, who serves as a senior member of the
influential Budget and Armed Services committees, wrote, in a
September 7, 2010 letter to U.S. Trade Representative, Ambassador
Ron Kirk, that such an agreement would, ” build upon our current
economic dialogue with Armenia and establish a broader reach than
the U.S.-Armenia Joint Economic Task Force.” He added that, a TIFA
“would provide a more consistent platform for our government to
meet and consult with Armenian government officials regarding
economic cooperation and trade and investment opportunities.”

“We join with Armenian Americans from throughout New Jersey and
across the United States in thanking Congressman Andrews for his
leadership in fighting for increased trade between the United
States and Armenia,” said ANCA New Jersey Co-Chairman James
Sahagian. “This is a win-win opportunity. Putting in place a TIFA
will promote increased bilateral trade and investment, creating
export-driven jobs both here at home and in Armenia.”

In making the case for a U.S.-Armenia TIFA, the New Jersey
legislator cited Armenia’s progress in implementing economic
reforms and called attention to Armenia’s cooperation with the
United States on regional and global security priorities. He also
noted that the Administration, by moving forward with such an
accord, would embody the President’s campaign pledge to support
“Armenia’s growth and development through expanded trade and
targeted aid, and by strengthening the commercial, political,
military, developmental, and cultural relationships between the
U.S. and Armenian governments.

The ANCA has called on Ambassador Kirk to move forward with a U.S.-
Armenia TIFA, and has shared with the Administration and Members of
Congress its views on the mutual economic and foreign policy
benefits that the negotiation of such an accord would provide to
both the U.S. and Armenia.

#####

From: A. Papazian

www.anca.org

Our Choice: Singing The Lament Of The Lost Fatherland

OUR CHOICE: SINGING THE LAMENT OF THE LOST FATHERLAND
Edik Baghdasaryan

[ 2010/10/04 | 17:00 ]

No one is any longer amazed to read stories about Armenian officials
abusing their government posts.

You can no longer shock anyone by writing that this or that person has
spent $500,000 to buy a seat in the National Assembly. It comes as no
surprise to anyone if you prove that the real owner of a commercial
enterprise is actually a government official. It~Rs become the ~Snorm~T
and has entered the Armenian genetic code. Many can argue that this
is the way it has always been, or that the same situation reigns
throughout the world. And there~Rs not much in the way of response
you can tell such people. Such effort is pointless. Armenians aren~Rt
capable of creating their world. Here, naturally, we are not referring
to the ~SArmenian world~T as posited by Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan.

What~Rs actually going on with Armenians today? The myth of the
Armenian no longer holds water; it has long since turned to dust.

Armenians are destroying their own country, its natural environment.

They destroy and then flee the country.

Sometimes, it seems that all this is part of a conspiracy drafted
in some unknown place. Such thoughts are fleeting, since there is no
conspiracy at work. There is no need for one.

Armenia is being emptied. Armenians are fleeing from their country.

And this doesn~Rt seem to be of any concern to the authorities in
charge. They are only concerned with one thing ~V holding on to power
and accumulating more wealth. Their souls are money-driven.

Like curses uttered, depopulated villages are blocked up in the
country~Rs throat and no government can digest such a reality.

Neglected old folk drag their frail bodies through the dusty streets
of ghost towns. They cry out for their departed children in parental
longing and curse this country for their present plight.

It~Rs a simple fact. This continuing chain of injustice and lawlessness
has a price ~V an Armenia being emptied of its people. In the midst
of this crippling widespread poverty, the price paid for the parties
and nightly fireworks, the expensive jeeps, the huge mansions built
with monies ripped off from the taxpayer and a billionaire Robert
Kocharyan, has been an Armenia being emptied of Armenians. There~Rs
a ghostly specter haunting Armenia; the ghost of a dispossessed people.

People still have faith in one another when it comes to daily matters
of life. But broach the subject of this or that government agency and
that faith turns to unbelief. How did we get here, how did we push
the country to such an abyss? We have even screwed up the army to the
point of collapse and have made life a living hell for that eighteen
year-old facing the enemy on the frontline. Every Armenian once held
the national army as an institution to be revered and above reproach.

Now look at it.

All the apparatuses of the state and the political parties have a
hand in the process of emptying Armenia. Not one of them ever says
~V Hold on a minute, we can~Rt go on living like this.

Our type of Armenian is not capable of building a country. Armenians
like us only sing one song- the song of a lost fatherland. It~Rs a sad
song that demands no work in return. It was written a long time ago.

We, it seems, have made our choice and have broken down, singing the
song of the lost fatherland.

Over the years we have wasted it all, every square inch of independence
we won. Step by step, minute by minute we caved in without resisting
and swallowed one injustice after another.

This giant wheel is now rolling over us all; crushing each of us
under its weight.

It should come as no surprise that we are now standing on the
precipice. Who can honestly say that we don~Rt deserve to be where
we are today?

Photo ~V Ara Oshagan (The frontline at Askeran, Karabakh, 2002;
from the book ~SHayreni Hogh~T)

From: A. Papazian

http://hetq.am/en/society/election-17/

AAA: Assembly and Knights of Vartan Host Annual Summer Picnic

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
PRESS RELEASE
For Immediate Release
October 4, 2010
Contact: Press Department
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY AND KNIGHTS OF VARTAN HOST ANNUAL SUMMER PICNIC

Farmington Hills, MI – The Armenian Assembly of America (Assembly)
joined the Knights and Daughters of Vartan for the annual summer
picnic held at Heritage Park in Farmington Hills, Michigan.

Assembly Grassroots Director Taniel Koushakjian discussed the process
and prospects for H. Res. 252, the Armenian Genocide Resolution.
Koushakjian encouraged the community to take action and help ensure a
successful outcome this year. “The Assembly continues to press for a
floor vote on H. Res. 252,” stated Koushakjian.

Joining Koushakjian was ARAMAC Michigan State Chair Talar Hovnanian,
who currently attends law school at the University of Michigan.
Earlier in the week, Hovnanian met with the Armenian Students
Association to discuss internship opportunities with the Assembly,
reflecting on her experiences as an alumnus of the 2008 class in
Washington, D.C. and 2007 class in Armenia.

“It was a pleasure to join the Armenian-American community in Michigan
and discuss issues of mutual concern, such as the importance of
Armenian genocide recognition,” stated Hovnanian. “I look forward to
working with the community to meet the challenges ahead,” she
continued.

Later that weekend, Koushakjian and Hovnanian spoke at St. James
Armenian Church in Southfield, Michigan about the details surrounding
a floor vote on H. Res. 252, the current status of U.S. funding to
Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh as well as normalization of relations
between Armenia and Turkey, and the bold steps taken by Armenia’s
President Serge Sargsyan.

Established in 1972, the Armenian Assembly of America is the largest
Washington-based nationwide organization promoting public
understanding and awareness of Armenian issues. The Assembly is a
501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

###

NR#: 2010-070

Photo Caption 1 (L-R): Kenneth Khezarjian, Taniel Koushakjian, Talar
Hovnanian, David Terzibashian

Photo Caption 2: Taniel Koushakjian speaking to picnic guests

From: A. Papazian

Political Directives Also Needed to "Uncover" Known Criminals

POLITICAL DIRECTIVES ALSO NEEDED TO “UNCOVER” KNOWN CRIMINALS
Edik Baghdasaryan

[ 2010/10/04 | 15:00 ]

One year ago, National Assembly MP Karo Karapetyan opened fire on
Artur Zadoyan, a resident of Nerkin Dvin village.

“On September 28, 2009, at 10:30, you came to my wine factory and
proposed to pay an amount for some stolen cars; a Mercedes, a Touareg
and a Porsche. I accepted the offer and we went to look at the cars…”

This is what RoA National Assembly MP Karo Karapetyan (nicknamed
Youvetsi Karo) said during face to face interrogation with Artur
Zadoyan.

Read the above carefully; we are talking about stolen cars. Everyone
in Armenia knows that this MP used to sell stolen cars, and I believe
he still in the same line of work.

I wouldn’t be surprised if these cars are being tracked by Interpol.

In addition, the serial numbers and names of the owners of two cars
transported from Turkey are known. Why don’t the police launch a
criminal case? Why is this guy still serving in the National Assembly?

In a weird twist of fate, those who should answer such questions are
drafting a national anti-corruption campaign. This MP should have
been hit with a number of criminal charges by now, but he hasn’t. A
political directive from “on high” is needed first.

A political decision is needed for anything to happen in this country;
even to uncover a criminal wrongdoer.

Karo Karapetyan once served as the Police Chief in Ashtarak. Can you
imagine what he got away with during those years in office?

From: A. Papazian

http://hetq.am/en/politics/karo-karapetyan-2/

EDM: Ambassadorial Vacancy Disables Us POLICY in Azerbaijan and Beyo

The Jamestown Foundation

EURASIA DAILY MONITOR

Tuesday, September 28, 2010-Volume 7, Issue 174

AMBASSADORIAL VACANCY DISABLES US POLICY IN AZERBAIJAN AND BEYOND

by Vladimir Socor

Washington’s failure to send an ambassador to Azerbaijan for well over
a year—and now the hold on the ambassador’s confirmation—must look
like a case of systemic malfunction from the perspective of Azerbaijan
as the affected party, Turkey as a keenly interested observer, and
Russia as a potential beneficiary of any damage to the US-Azerbaijan
strategic partnership.

US Ambassador Anne Derse had completed her tour of duty and left Baku
in July 2009. By that time, Deputy Assistant Secretary of State,
Matthew Bryza, was rumored to be in line for nomination as ambassador
to Azerbaijan. However, the State Department waited until May 2010 to
announce the nomination; an Armenian advocacy group then launched a
campaign to block the nomination in the US Senate; and two Senators
(out of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee’s 19 members) placed a
hold on the nomination on September 21.

The hold seems opportunistically linked to the November mid-term
elections. However, one of these two Senators has had a track record
of blocking nominations including that of the US ambassador-designate
to Armenia from 2006 to 2008, asking that nominee and the
Administration to recognize an Armenian genocide in Ottoman Turkey
(`US Policy in South Caucasus – The Real Target of US Ambassador’s
Opponents,’ EDM, September 28).

Candidate Barack Obama had pledged to deliver the genocide recognition
if elected, but could not deliver it as president without antagonizing
the crucial partner Turkey. In lieu of this, the administration
proposed to deliver a unilateral opening of the Turkish-Armenian
border, at Azerbaijan’s expense. This move would have eliminated the
main positive inducement for a peacefully negotiated withdrawal of
Armenian troops from Azerbaijani districts.

With the ambassadorial post in Baku vacant, Washington urged Turkey to
open the Turkey-Armenia border, no longer conditioning this on
progress toward resolution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict.
Washington’s policy shift also risked undermining the package solution
proposed by the US-Russia-France trio of mediators. That package
envisages (inter alia) the opening of both Turkey’s and Azerbaijan’s
borders with Armenia, conditionally linked with the withdrawal of
Armenian troops from certain inner districts of Azerbaijan. The Obama
administration, however, sought quite a different trade-off through
the Turkey-Armenia October 2009 Zurich Protocols. In return for
re-opening Turkey’s border with Armenia, Washington expected Yerevan
(along with mainstream US Armenian groups) to help remove the genocide
recognition campaign from the US political arena. Ultimately,
however, Turkey refused to break ranks with Azerbaijan, while the
Armenian government proved unwilling or unable to desist from genocide
recognition efforts. Even after this, the administration failed to
invite Azerbaijan to the Washington nuclear-safety summit.

At least some of those missteps were soon acknowledged as such in
Washington. The administration seems no longer to press for an
unconditional opening of the Turkey-Armenia border. It announced the
Bryza ambassadorial nomination in May, then dispatched Defense
Secretary Robert Gates and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton for
brief separate visits to Azerbaijan in July (as part of a region-wide,
get-acquainted tour in Clinton’s case). Whether those visits were mere
box-checking exercises or intended to spur a US policy review, remains
unclear.

President Obama’s September 24 meeting with Azerbaijan’s President,
Ilham Aliyev, on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly session in
New York does not seem to have answered that question. The hold on the
ambassador’s confirmation has added an element of uncertainty,
although the administration does stand by its nominee (VOA, September
24).

Baku is watching these developments in Washington with concern over
the fate of the US-Azerbaijan strategic partnership. Azerbaijani
officials are characteristically restrained in their public
comments. Meanwhile, an analysis signed by Zaur Shiriyev from
Azerbaijan’s Center for Strategic Studies under the country’s
Presidency, published in the Turkish press, may offer a rare insight
into Baku’s concerns (Hurriyet, September 23).

Thus, from Baku’s vantage point, the long delay in the ambassadorial
nomination looks like `US disrespect and disinterest in the
development of bilateral relations…or dysfunction in the US
political system, or both. As a result, conclusions are being drawn in
Baku about the US capacity for leadership in the region. Following
the push to open the Turkey-Armenia border at any cost, the Obama
administration not only failed to develop, but even decreased the
importance of the US-Azerbaijan strategic partnership…On one hand,
Azerbaijan needs US assistance for resolution of the Karabakh conflict
and balancing regional actors like Russia and Iran. On the other hand,
a strong partnership with Azerbaijan answers to the consolidation of
the US presence in the South Caucasus-Caspian region’ (Hurriyet,
September 23).

If any policy review is quietly underway in the US administration it
must, first, stop viewing the policy through the prism of US domestic
politics, instead of strategic interests. Second, the US should
proactively advance the resolution of the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict,
as part of a region-wide US policy in the South Caucasus. Thirdly,
that policy operates at its best as an extension of US-Europe
relations, with focus on energy security as a common trans-Atlantic
concern. Fourthly, any US policy review ought to stipulate proactive
steps for reversing the perception of an incremental, undeclared US
disengagement from the South Caucasus. That widely perceived
disengagement adds to the region’s deficit of security.

— Vladimir Socor

From: A. Papazian