Congresswoman Jackie Speier Condemns Destruction Of Armenian Church

CONGRESSWOMAN JACKIE SPEIER CONDEMNS DESTRUCTION OF ARMENIAN CHURCH IN DEIR EZ-ZOR

12:20 25.09.2014

Congresswoman Jackie Speier (D-San Francisco/San Mateo Counties) today
released the following statement in response to the destruction of
the Armenian Genocide Memorial Church in Deir ez-Zor, Syria by the
Islamic State, or ISIL.

“ISIL’s actions can only be viewed as a barbaric act of terrorism.

Hundreds of thousands of Armenians were forced to march to the deserts
of Der Zor, where they lived in concentration camps until their brutal
extermination. The Armenian Genocide Memorial Church commemorates
these men, women, and children, along with the more than 1.5 million
Armenians who were systematically annihilated by the Ottoman Empire.

As a proud member of the Armenian community, my relatives and ancestors
are included in this figure. If my mother had been born in the Ottoman
Empire instead of Fresno, she too may have been a target.

This consecrated church stood as a reminder of the terrible
consequences of hateful ideology and violence. We must remember
these lessons as ISIL threatens Armenians, Kurds, Jews, Muslims,
and Christians today.”

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/09/25/32895/

Obama Slams Crackdown On Civil Society In Azerbaijan

OBAMA SLAMS CRACKDOWN ON CIVIL SOCIETY IN AZERBAIJAN

13:00, 24.09.2014

U.S. President Brack Obama slammed Azerbaijan for relentless crackdown
on civil society during his speech at at Clinton Global Initiative.

In his remarks, Obama touched upon crackdown on civil society in many
countries, including Azerbaijan.

“From Russia to China to Venezuela, you are seeing relentless
crackdowns, vilifying legitimate dissent as subversive. In places
like Azerbaijan, laws make it incredibly difficult for NGOs even
to operate. From Hungary to Egypt, endless regulations and overt
intimidation increasingly target civil society. And around the world,
brave men and women who dare raise their voices are harassed and
attacked and even killed,” he said.

U.S. President noted that for the sake of national security, the
United States works with governments that do not fully respect the
universal rights of their citizens.

From: Baghdasarian

http://news.am/eng/news/230530.html

AAA: US Condemns Destruction of Armenian Church & Genocide Memorial

PRESS RELEASE
September 24, 2014

ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
Contact: Taniel Koushakjian
Email: [email protected]
Phone: (202) 393-3434
Web:

*UNITED STATES CONDEMNS DESTRUCTION OF ARMENIAN CHURCH & GENOCIDE MEMORIAL IN SYRIA*

*Washington**, DC* – Today, the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan, Armenia released
the following statement on the recent destruction of the Armenian Apostolic
Church and Genocide Memorial in Der Zor, Syria:

*U.S. Embassy Yerevan joins the government and people of Armenia in
strongly condemning the destruction of the Armenian Church in Deir Ez-zor,
Syria. This senseless act of destruction demonstrates yet again the utter
disregard the terrorist organization ISIL has for the rich religious and
cultural heritage of the Middle East. As Secretary Kerry has stated, ISIL
has systematically committed abuses of human rights and international law
and presents a global terrorist threat. Faced with this threat, the United
States urges the international community to strengthen our united effort to
degrade and destroy ISIL.*

Middle East news media reported that militants belonging to the Islamic
State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) destroyed the Church and memorial on
Sunday, September 21st, which happens to be independence day in the
Republic of Armenia.

For more information on the Armenian Apostolic Church and Genocide Memorial
in Der Zor, Syria, click here.

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: # 2014-044
Available online at:

From: Baghdasarian

http://bit.ly/1uGUyPW
www.aaainc.org

F18News: Turkey – What will happen to state-confiscated places of wo

FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway

The right to believe, to worship and witness
The right to change one’s belief or religion
The right to join together and express one’s belief

===============================================
Wednesday 24 September 2014
TURKEY: WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO STATE-CONFISCATED PLACES OF WORSHIP?

The use and ownership of Turkey’s many state-confiscated places of worship
raises many questions, including how to address past injustices and the
present needs of religious communities and historical preservation.
Opinions are divided on who Christian churches converted into mosques
centuries ago and then turned into museums should be returned to. Many
Alevi tekke (dervish lodges) were turned into mosques under the control of
the government’s Diyanet or assigned to the use of municipalities. The many
current uses of such buildings, and the legal status of their potential or
past owners, also affects Turkey’s implementation of its international
obligations to protect freedom of religion or belief. With little or no
consultation with religious or belief communities and other interested
parties and no general guidelines, state decisions on this delicate subject
are bound to be taken on an arbitrary basis, Forum 18 News Service notes.

TURKEY: WHAT WILL HAPPEN TO STATE-CONFISCATED PLACES OF WORSHIP?

By Mine Yildirim, Norwegian Helsinki Ctte

For many years, in some cases going back to the 1920s, numerous religious
communities have been unable to use their places of worship as the state
has confiscated them. These buildings are under the care of, among other
state bodies, the Culture and Tourism Ministry, the General Directorate of
Foundations, the Treasury, the Diyanet or Presidency of Religious Affairs,
and municipality or village administrations. Forum 18 News Service notes
that this situation allows the authorities considerable discretion in how
these sites – in some cases of great historical importance – are cared for
and used.

Complex problems

The situation of each place of worship within the state’s control is
embedded within a complex series of legal and administrative decisions
taken over many years without the participation and consent of the relevant
religious communities. In many cases, more than one group has a legitimate
interest in a particular building, as historically the buildings in
question were often built as a church, taken over as a mosque, and then
taken over again as a museum.

Crucially, no religious or belief community of any kind in Turkey is
allowed to have legal entity status. This makes it very difficult to find a
legal body to which a particular worship place could be returned. Various
foundations and associations exist which do have legal status and which
have some kind of link to various places of worship. But these are not the
same as belief communities and handing over places of worship to these
bodies may cause different problems, even if these associations and
foundations request the building concerned (see Forum 18’s Turkey religious
freedom survey ).

All this makes the problems caused by state confiscations very difficult to
solve, even if the government decided to solve them.

Recent museum to mosque conversions

Much attention has been paid to government decisions to turn two former
churches into mosques: in 2011 over the north-western city of Iznik’s Hagia
Sophia Museum (from its construction in the mid 6th century until 1337 a
Greek Orthodox church, from then until 1935 a mosque); and in 2013 over the
north-western port city of Trabzon’s Hagia Sophia Museum (from its
construction in the mid 13th century until 1584 a Greek Orthodox church,
from then until 1964 a mosque).

This attention may have been sparked by the questions of whether and when
the government intends to turn Istanbul’s high profile Hagia Sophia Museum
into a mosque. Built as a Greek Orthodox Cathedral in 532, it was turned
into a mosque in 1453 when Ottoman Sultan Mehmet II conquered the then city
of Constantinople. It became a museum following a decree by the Republic’s
founder Mustafa Kemal Ataturk in 1935.

Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia

Turning Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia Museum in Istanbul into a mosque is not as
unlikely as it once seemed. The process would probably follow the one
applied in the cases of Iznik’s and Trabzon’s Hagia Sophias and is a
political decision. At the re-opening ceremony of the renovated Arap Cami
Mosque in 2012 (built in 1325 as a Latin-rite Catholic church, used since
1475 as a mosque), Deputy Prime Minister Bülent Arinc stated that mosques
should only be used as mosques, and it was wrong for them to have been
turned into museums. In 2013 he said that “the days that Hagia Sophia [in
Istanbul] will smile are close”.

Among Arinc’s responsibilities is overseeing the Vakiflar Genel Müdürlügü
(VGM – Directorate-General of Foundations). Among other things, the VGM is
responsible for implementing the limited but welcome 2011 Restitution
Decree allowing non-Muslim community foundations to apply to regain or
receive compensation for some property the state confiscated from them (see
F18News 6 October 2011
).

In February 2013, Talip Bozkurt, an individual from the city of
Kahramanmaras, applied to the Turkish Grand National Assembly’s Petitions
Commission for the opening of Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia as a mosque. Before
it decides, the Petitions Commission is collecting the opinion of relevant
parties on the request.

Contrasting opinions

Opinions on this application are divided. In recent years the youth
organisations linked to two political parties – Anadolu Genclik Dernegi
(Anatolian Youth Association – AGD), close to the Saadet Party, and Alperen
Ocaklari, close to the National Movement Party – have been campaigning for
the conversion of the Hagia Sophia Museum into a mosque. On 31 May 2014 the
AGD held early morning Muslim prayers outside Hagia Sophia. However, the
Tarih Vakfi (History Foundation) started a campaign on 12 May to keep the
Hagia Sophia Museum as a museum, in order to ensure that its historical and
cultural heritage is preserved.

The Greek Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch, Bartholomew I, told Milliyet
newspaper in February 2014 that “If it [Hagia Sophia] is to reopen as a
house of worship, then it should open as a Christian church”. He stressed
that it had been “built as a church not a mosque”. But Mehmet Görmez, Head
of the Diyanet, told Turkish Public Television news on 11 September that
“Hagia Sophia is not a museum, not a church. It is the common place of
worship of all Muslims.”

Political trend

The demands and debates concerning the proposed conversions of buildings
are best seen as a part of the trend under the currently-ruling Justice and
Development Party (AKP) to undo or compensate for the actions of previous
governments of the Republic from 1924 onwards. Observant Muslims have
regarded these earlier government actions as injustices which should be
corrected, although they also regard previous conversions by the Ottoman
Empire of buildings from churches into mosques as just under Islamic Law –
even though the Christian community sees them as unjust. One can speak of
an apparent web of injustices, with no universally-acceptable correction
yet proposed.

The General Directorate of Foundations (VGM) under Deputy Prime Minister
Arinc has emerged as a key institution in the highly politicised process of
giving new uses to these old buildings confiscated by the state. A recent
example is Istanbul’s oldest church building, St John the Baptist Church
built in 463 and turned into a mosque in 1486. The dilapidated building was
under the protection of the Culture and Tourism Ministry. The building was
transferred to the VGM in January 2013, which intends to restore it and
turn it into the Ilyasbey Mosque, Agos newspaper reported on 13 November
2013. According to VGM Director Adnan Ertem, the decision to turn the
museum into a mosque was made by the Turkish Cabinet and were it to make
the same decision for Hagia Sophia, the VGM would implement this.

What happened to the dervish lodges?

Laws passed in 1925 had an enormous impact on Alevis, who may amount to one
third of the population, banning their places of worship (see Forum 18’s
Turkey religious freedom survey
). Dogan Bermek, Deputy
Head of the Federation of Alevi Foundations, told Forum 18 on 8 August that
many tekke (dervish lodges) were turned into mosques under the control of
the Diyanet or assigned to the use of municipalities for a variety of
purposes, including as cemeteries.

Uncertainty surrounds the number and location of such properties, who their
owners were, and in what circumstances they were transferred to state
control. Much documentation that might clarify this may no longer exist.

Following the 2011 Restitution Decree (see above), numerous Alevi
associations and foundations, including the Federation of Alevi
Associations, have called for the return of property confiscated from them
under the 1925 Law No. 677 (“Closure of Dervish Convents and Tombs, the
Abolition of the Office of Keeper of Tombs and the Abolition and
Prohibition of Certain Titles”) (see Forum 18’s Turkey religious freedom
survey ). But there has
been no response to these requests.

Cases still occur of tekke being converted into Diyanet-administered
mosques. In July 2014 the building of the Kececi Baba Dergah in eastern
Turkey was converted into a mosque. The Dergah is thought to have existed
for 1,000 years until its closure in 1924. An imam has been appointed and
the Muslim call for prayers started.

The village muhtar (headman) Gürsel Gürbüz pointed out that villagers do
not worship in mosques, Cumhuriyet daily reported on 24 July 2014. He was
among a group of villagers who visited the Governor of Erbaa, Abdülkadir
Demir, asking for the imam to be removed and for the call to prayer to
stop. The Governor verbally rejected the request, stating that if villagers
want the call to prayer to stop he would doubt their Muslim identity.

The local mufti was unavailable to comment to Forum 18 in early September.

Places of worship – or something else?

The VGM must by law administer confiscated properties it holds in
accordance with the legal foundation deed of the relevant foundations. On
11 August the VGM told Forum 18 that 172 Sufi Muslim tekkes, 98 Christian
churches, 34 Alevi dergahs, and 3 Jewish synagogues are under its
guardianship.

But as the Norwegian Helsinki Committee: Turkey Freedom of Belief
Initiative’s (NHC:IÖG) January – June 2013 monitoring report notes, places
of worship handed to others by the VGM are not always used in accordance
with their initial purpose. A synagogue in Gaziantep was architecturally
restored but then assigned to Gaziantep University. Similarly, an Armenian
Protestant Church in Diyarbakir was assigned to the use of a carpet weaving
centre in 2012 (see
). The Armenian
Protestant community had asked for their Church to be returned for its use.

Municipalities also have control over the use of places of worship. Izmir
Greater City Municipality has recently architecturally restored an
originally Greek Orthodox church in Bornova. But despite requests from
local Protestant churches to use the building for worship, it is being used
as a cultural centre. The same municipality also recently architecturally
restored the 19th century Greek Orthodox Agios Voukolos Church (also since
used as a museum and rehearsal hall for opera singers) and in 2011 decided
it should be used for social purposes. A Greek Orthodox liturgy celebrated
there in August 2014 – the first in the city since 1922 – appears to have
been a one-off event. Bornova’s Beit Hillel Synagogue was similarly
architecturally restored, but not assigned for the use of the Jewish
community.

Government ministries, such as the Defence Ministry, also control
confiscated places of worship. The Sivas Ermenileri ve Dostlari
DerneÄŸi (Association of Armenians from Sivas and Friends – SEDD) have
since 2012 been asking to take over the Armenian Apostolic Surp Kevork
Church, which has been used by the army as an ammunition store since 1940.
On 9 December 2013, the Governor of Sivas, Zübeyir Kebelek, told Sabah
newspaper that the church will be architecturally restored. But Sebuk Koçak
of the SEDD told Forum 18 on 22 September 2014 that they are still waiting
for a response from the Defence Ministry.

Faith tourism?

Restricted possibilities for some to meet for worship are being permitted
in places of worship that are now museums under the Culture and Tourism
Ministry – especially it seems if the former place of worship has major
historical significance. All such sites appear to be confiscated Christian
churches. Occasional Christian worship is being allowed at a small number
of these confiscated churches.

A list of such churches and sites of historical long-ruined churches (such
as at places named in the New Testament) now used as museums where worship
is permitted once a year was prepared by the Ministry in 2000 and has been
added to since. The list has been made public. It is unclear what criteria
were used to compile the list, but it appears that no Turkish religious
community was consulted.

The Culture and Tourism Ministry has not responded to Forum18’s 8 August
request for the full list of all sites under its care that have previously
been places of worship.

Historically significant places of worship of Turkey’s Alevi community have
not been included in this list. One example is the Haci Bektas-i Veli
Dergah in Nevsehir, founded in the 13th century but closed in 1925. The
Dergah was opened as an Ethnography Museum in 1964, but the Alevis are not
allowed to perform their rituals in this place of worship which has been
significant for them for centuries. However, they are allowed to hold
worship and other religious ceremonies for three consecutive days a year in
the nearby Haci Bektas-i Veli Culture Centre.

Those who visit the Dergah Museum during these days do not have to pay an
entrance fee – but those who visit the museum churches when worship
services are allowed must pay an entrance fee. This further demonstrates
the arbitrary nature of the concession to some but not all religious
communities.

Among the museum churches known to be on the list since 2010 is Akdamar’s
Armenian Apostolic Church in Van and Trabzon’s Greek Orthodox Sumela
Monastery. Both were forcibly abandoned, in 1915 and 1923 respectively,
during the conflict and forced population exchanges that took place during
and after the First World War.

Permission for worship

Prior government permission is required for worship in buildings on the
Culture and Tourism Ministry list. The Ecumenical Patriarchate asked the
western Balikesir Governorship in April 2013 to celebrate worship in
September 2013 in the Taksiyarhis Church on Ayvalik’s Cunda Island. The
request was refused three days before the planned meeting for worship
“because Taksiyarkis does not appear on the list of churches where worship
can be held”, Taraf Daily reported on 8 December 2013.

The Church was built in 1873, converted into a mosque in 1927, and
abandoned after an earthquake in 1944. In 2011 the Rahmi M. Koc Foundation
for Musicology and Culture leased the church from the VGM to use as a
museum and concert hall. “They organise concerts in the church, so we find
it difficult to understand why it is a problem for us to hold worship
there,” an unnamed Greek Orthodox believer told Taraf Daily.

Way forward needed

The use and ownership of the many state-confiscated places of worship
raises many questions, including but not limited to how to address past
injustices and the present needs of religious communities and historical
preservation. The many current uses of these buildings, and the legal
status of their potential or past owners, also affects Turkey’s
implementation of its international obligations to protect freedom of
religion or belief.

With little or no consultation with religious or belief communities and
other interested parties and no general guidelines, state decisions on this
delicate subject are bound to be taken on an arbitrary basis. One way
forward could be to establish an inclusive commission to draft guidelines
for good practice for public authorities facing this issue, taking full
account of Turkey’s international human rights obligations.

The issue appears likely only to increase in importance. Previous and
current state approaches have already failed to address the issue
adequately, and could even lead to Turkey losing cases at the European
Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg. (END)

The Norwegian Helsinki Committee: Turkey Freedom of Belief Initiative’s
(NHC:IÖG) January – June 2013 monitoring report can be found at
.

For more background, see Forum 18’s Turkey religious freedom survey at
.

More analyses and commentaries on freedom of thought, conscience and belief
in Turkey can be found at
.

A compilation of Organisation for Security and Co-operation in Europe
(OSCE) freedom of religion or belief commitments can be found at
.

A printer-friendly map of Turkey is available at
.

All Forum 18 News Service material may be referred to, quoted from, or
republished in full, if Forum 18 is credited as the
source.

© Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855.

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.forum18.org/
http://www.forum18.org/archive.php?article_id00

‘The Duchess Of Sudder Street’, Keeper Of Kolkata’S Memories, Will B

‘THE DUCHESS OF SUDDER STREET’, KEEPER OF KOLKATA’S MEMORIES, WILL BE LAID TO REST TODAY

Scroll, India
Sept 23 2014

Violet Smith, owner of Fairlawn Hotel, passes away at 93.

by Sohini Chattopadhyay

The Duchess of Sudder Street was one of Kolkata’s most enduring and
endearing landmarks. With her striking, high-altitude, hairdo and
dark-glassed poise, Violet Smith was regarded as a keeper of the
city’s memories. She seemed to know everybody and everything. As a
consequence, the proprietor of the marvellously quaint Fairlawn Hotel
was a favourite of travel magazines and newspaper feature writers.

Much to the surprise of her daughter Jennifer Fowler, the Duchess
even popped up in a recent documentary about the city’s jazz scene,
holding forth the wild dances she frequented in the 1940s, at the
height of World War II.

Until she fell ill three weeks ago, eventually passing away on
Saturday, 93-year-old Vi Smith, as she was known by her friends,
was to be found every morning and evening in the portico of her
establishment on Sudder Street, greeting guests by name, chatting,
telling stories. “That was my mother’s gift: she loved people,” said
Jennifer Fowler, who has helped her mother run the property since her
father passed away 12 years ago. “She loved playing the hostess. My
father was the manager: he actually ran the hotel, kept note of the
accounts, exerted quality control on the then-continental kitchen. My
mother didn’t know where the kitchen was.”

Vi Smith inherited Fairlawn Hotel from her mother in 1962, and
lived on the premises after that. Her establishment was known for its
sepia-toned British colonial charm: flaming steak sizzlers on the menu,
memorabilia of the royal family on the walls and an attentive wait-
staff liveried in pugrees and cummerbunds. Smith was responsible
for the distinctive green facade of the hotel and the abundance of
potted plants on the property – she loved the freshness of green,
says her daughter.

The hotel’s motto, stated on its walls, is to “meet tourists as guests
and send them away as friends”. Vi Smith made plenty friends, many of
whom came back again and again. The English actors Geoffrey and Laura
Kendal, who played in a touring theatre company, stayed two years in
the 1950s and became family. Sometimes, they earned their lodging by
performing plays on the first floor of the hotel, says Fowler.

The Kendal’s daughter Jennifer met actor Shashi Kapoor in Kolkata and
the couple stayed at the Fairlawn for their honeymoon. For years,
room 17 was maintained as Kapoor saab’s room, said manager RN Pal,
who joined Fairlawn 38 years ago as an accounts executive. In 36
Chowringhee Lane, which Shashi Kapoor produced, the protagonist played
by Jennifer Kendal is called Violet Stoneham. The boyfriend she once
hoped to marry is called Ted, after Mrs Smith’s husband.

Other fans of the hotel include the late producer Ismail Merchant
and director James Ivory, Dominique Lapierre, whose book City of Joy
was made into the eponymous film, the Hollywood actor Patrick Swayze,
who starred in City of Joy, Nobel prizewinning writer Gunter Grass,
the actress Julie Christie and the musician Sting.

The hotel has always done good business. “At times, people slept in
the lobby because the rooms were all booked,” said Pal.

Refugee child

Violet Smith was the child of Armenian refugees who fled the horrific
genocide in Turkey early in the 20th century. She came to Kolkata
in 1933. Her mother, Rosie Sarkies first bought a hotel called the
Astoria, also on Sudder Street, with the four- and eight-anna coins she
had saved in kerosene cans. She ran this as a sort of boarding house
for Armenians at a price of Rs 150 a month. In 1936, she sold it for
Rs 6,000 to another Armenian and bought the Fairlawn, a few buildings
up the street from the Astoria. The hotel has been in her family since.

The hotel retains its gracious, faded-carpet charm but is also
well-appointed, and suitably modern. Four years ago, Fowler undertook
an extensive renovation: geysers and air conditioners were added to
every room, and the tariff plan that included breakfast, lunch and
dinner for every guest was discontinued. The gong announcing breakfast
and afternoon tea also went, perhaps even more striking, the pugrees
and cummerbunds were put aside to be worn only on Christmas. The menu
now comprises primarily Indian and Chinese fare. But you can still
order a sizzler or a British roast if you give the kitchen some time.

At the time Sarkies bought the Fairlawn, the Armenian community
owned several hotels in the city – the Grand Hotel, a regal, storied
property now run by the Oberoi group, the Kenilworth hotel, an elegant
four-star hotel in the heart of the city, the Russell Hotel and the
Continental Hotel.

Work has continued as usual since the midnight of September 20, when
Mrs Smith passed away in her room at the hotel. Breakfast was served,
beds were made and guests received. But on Wednesday, the hotel will
suspend service for two hours in the morning. The entire staff has
asked for time off to attend Vi Smith’s funeral service at Kolkata’s
Bhowanipore Cemetery.

‘The-Duchess-of-Sudder-Street’,-keeper-of-Kolkata’s-memories,-will-be-laid-to-rest-today
Content-Type: MESSAGE/RFC822; CHARSET=US-ASCII
Content-Description:

MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit
From: Katia Peltekian
Subject: ‘The Duchess of Sudder Street’, keeper of Kolkata’s memories, will be
laid to rest today

Scroll, India
Sept 23 2014

‘The Duchess of Sudder Street’, keeper of Kolkata’s memories, will be
laid to rest today

Violet Smith, owner of Fairlawn Hotel, passes away at 93.

by Sohini Chattopadhyay

The Duchess of Sudder Street was one of Kolkata’s most enduring and
endearing landmarks. With her striking, high-altitude, hairdo and
dark-glassed poise, Violet Smith was regarded as a keeper of the
city’s memories. She seemed to know everybody and everything. As a
consequence, the proprietor of the marvellously quaint Fairlawn Hotel
was a favourite of travel magazines and newspaper feature writers.
Much to the surprise of her daughter Jennifer Fowler, the Duchess even
popped up in a recent documentary about the city’s jazz scene, holding
forth the wild dances she frequented in the 1940s, at the height of
World War II.

Until she fell ill three weeks ago, eventually passing away on
Saturday, 93-year-old Vi Smith, as she was known by her friends, was
to be found every morning and evening in the portico of her
establishment on Sudder Street, greeting guests by name, chatting,
telling stories. “That was my mother’s gift: she loved people,” said
Jennifer Fowler, who has helped her mother run the property since her
father passed away 12 years ago. “She loved playing the hostess. My
father was the manager: he actually ran the hotel, kept note of the
accounts, exerted quality control on the then-continental kitchen. My
mother didn’t know where the kitchen was.”

Vi Smith inherited Fairlawn Hotel from her mother in 1962, and lived
on the premises after that. Her establishment was known for its
sepia-toned British colonial charm: flaming steak sizzlers on the
menu, memorabilia of the royal family on the walls and an attentive
wait- staff liveried in pugrees and cummerbunds. Smith was responsible
for the distinctive green façade of the hotel and the abundance of
potted plants on the property – she loved the freshness of green, says
her daughter.

The hotel’s motto, stated on its walls, is to “meet tourists as guests
and send them away as friends”. Vi Smith made plenty friends, many of
whom came back again and again. The English actors Geoffrey and Laura
Kendal, who played in a touring theatre company, stayed two years in
the 1950s and became family. Sometimes, they earned their lodging by
performing plays on the first floor of the hotel, says Fowler.
The Kendal’s daughter Jennifer met actor Shashi Kapoor in Kolkata and
the couple stayed at the Fairlawn for their honeymoon. For years, room
17 was maintained as Kapoor saab’s room, said manager RN Pal, who
joined Fairlawn 38 years ago as an accounts executive. In 36
Chowringhee Lane, which Shashi Kapoor produced, the protagonist played
by Jennifer Kendal is called Violet Stoneham. The boyfriend she once
hoped to marry is called Ted, after Mrs Smith’s husband.

Other fans of the hotel include the late producer Ismail Merchant and
director James Ivory, Dominique Lapierre, whose book City of Joy was
made into the eponymous film, the Hollywood actor Patrick Swayze, who
starred in City of Joy, Nobel prizewinning writer Gunter Grass, the
actress Julie Christie and the musician Sting.

The hotel has always done good business. “At times, people slept in
the lobby because the rooms were all booked,” said Pal.

Refugee child

Violet Smith was the child of Armenian refugees who fled the horrific
genocide in Turkey early in the 20th century. She came to Kolkata in
1933. Her mother, Rosie Sarkies first bought a hotel called the
Astoria, also on Sudder Street, with the four- and eight-anna coins
she had saved in kerosene cans. She ran this as a sort of boarding
house for Armenians at a price of Rs 150 a month. In 1936, she sold it
for Rs 6,000 to another Armenian and bought the Fairlawn, a few
buildings up the street from the Astoria. The hotel has been in her
family since.

The hotel retains its gracious, faded-carpet charm but is also
well-appointed, and suitably modern. Four years ago, Fowler undertook
an extensive renovation: geysers and air conditioners were added to
every room, and the tariff plan that included breakfast, lunch and
dinner for every guest was discontinued. The gong announcing breakfast
and afternoon tea also went, perhaps even more striking, the pugrees
and cummerbunds were put aside to be worn only on Christmas. The menu
now comprises primarily Indian and Chinese fare. But you can still
order a sizzler or a British roast if you give the kitchen some time.

At the time Sarkies bought the Fairlawn, the Armenian community owned
several hotels in the city – the Grand Hotel, a regal, storied
property now run by the Oberoi group, the Kenilworth hotel, an elegant
four-star hotel in the heart of the city, the Russell Hotel and the
Continental Hotel.

Work has continued as usual since the midnight of September 20, when
Mrs Smith passed away in her room at the hotel. Breakfast was served,
beds were made and guests received. But on Wednesday, the hotel will
suspend service for two hours in the morning. The entire staff has
asked for time off to attend Vi Smith’s funeral service at Kolkata’s
Bhowanipore Cemetery.

‘The-Duchess-of-Sudder-Street’,-keeper-of-Kolkata’s-memories,-will-be-laid-to-rest-today

From: Baghdasarian

http://scroll.in/article/680588/
http://scroll.in/article/680588/

BAKU: Iran In Active Talks With Armenia Over Gas Supply

IRAN IN ACTIVE TALKS WITH ARMENIA OVER GAS SUPPLY

Trend, Azerbaijan
Sept 23 2014

Armenia and Iran are actively negotiating on various issues, including
the supply of Iranian gas to Armenia, Iran’s Ambassador to Yerevan
Mohammad Reis told reporters.

He made the remarks commenting on Iranian energy supplies to Armenia
and the possibility of transiting Iranian gas to the West through
Armenia, the 1in.am website reported Sept. 23.

The ambassador said an Armenian-Iranian intergovernmental commission
is working on the issues related to the creation of an appropriate
infrastructure for the Iranian gas transit to the West through Armenia.

“Negotiations are being held in the commission to deepen cooperation
in various fields,” the ambassador said, hinting that there may be
novelty on this issue in the near future.

From: Baghdasarian

La Turquie Insiste Sur L’enseignement Religieux Malgre L’arret De La

LA TURQUIE INSISTE SUR L’ENSEIGNEMENT RELIGIEUX MALGRE L’ARRET DE LA CEDH

TURQUIE

Le Premier ministre turc Ahmet Davutoglu a denonce un arret rendu
la veille par la Cour europeenne des droits de l’Homme (CEDH) sur
l’enseignement religieux obligatoire a l’ecole, indiquant que son
absence radicaliserait le pays musulman comme en Syrie en et Irak.

“Si vous regardez les developpements autour de la Turquie, vous verrez
que (l’enseignement religieux) est une necessite”, a-t-il dit devant
la presse.

Il faisait allusion a la montee des actions du groupe Etat islamique
(EI), accuse d’atrocites, en Syrie et en Irak voisines.

“Si l’Etat (…) ne dispense pas une education religieuse correcte,
cela aura pour consequence de generer la radicalisation que l’on
observe autour de nous”, c’est-a-dire les jihadistes extremistes qui
sont aux portes de la Turquie et retiennent depuis plus de trois mois
46 Turcs en otage a Mossoul (nord de l’Irak), a estime M. Davutoglu.

La Turquie doit reformer “sans tarder” l’enseignement religieux
a l’ecole pour garantir le respect des convictions des parents, a
demande la CEDH en condamnant le pays officiellement a 99% musulman
pour violation du droit a l’instruction.

L’affaire en question concernait des parents de confession alevie,
une branche minoritaire de l’islam, qui estimaient que le contenu
des cours obligatoires de culture religieuse et morale mettaient en
avant l’approche sunnite de l’islam.

“La situation dans un pays de Scandinavie et en Turquie n’est
pas la meme”, a defendu M. Davutoglu qui dirige un gouvernement
islamo-conservateur, insistant que “meme une personne athee doit
acquerir des notions de la culture religieuse”.

Le système turc n’offre de possibilite de dispense qu’aux elèves
chretiens et juifs, seules minorites reconnues du pays.

Les Alevis, un groupe musulman heterodoxe et progressiste, sont
très attaches a la laïcite, mais l’Etat turc n’a jamais reconnu leur
confession, pratiquant la discrimination a l’encontre d’une communaute
qui represente environ 20% de la population de 76 millions d’habitants
a majorite sunnite.

mardi 23 septembre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

Reforme Constitutionnelle : << Manoeuvre >> De La Part Des Autorites

REFORME CONSTITUTIONNELLE : > DE LA PART DES AUTORITES OU REFORME INDISPENSABLE POUR LE PAYS ?

ARMENIE

L’ensemble de la presse rend compte de la conference intitulee > organisee par le parti
Heritage, a laquelle des deputes de tous les groupes parlementaires,
ainsi que des membres de la Commission ad hoc chargee d’elaboration des
amendements ont pris part. Les representants des partis ont presente
leurs positions contradictoires sur les changements constitutionnels
en cours d’elaboration. Armenie prospère et Congrès national armenien
rejettent ces reformes au motif que l’objectif principal des autorites
serait de se perpetuer a la tete de l’Etat. La deputee d’Armenie
prospère, Elinar Vardanian, a juge suspect le changement d’avis du
parti Republicain, qui considerait comme inapproprie, pour un pays
se trouvant dans une situation de guerre de facto, de passer a un
système parlementaire. Selon Mme Vardanian, c’est ce changement de
cap qui conduit son parti a s’interroger sur les vraies intentions
des autorites. Selon elle, il n’y a pas de crise constitutionnelle,
mais une crise socio-economique en Armenie. Le representant du CNA,
Levon Zourabian, a mis en garde contre un > prepare par les
autorites :
From: Baghdasarian

L’Azerbaidjan Organise Son Premier Salon International D’Armement

L’AZERBAIDJAN ORGANISE SON PREMIER SALON INTERNATIONAL D’ARMEMENT

AZERBAIDJAN

L’Azerbaïdjan a organise la première exposition internationale
de defense du pays, montrant les creations de son complexe
militaro-industriel et attirer des entreprises etrangères dans l’espoir
de profiter du budget militaire en expansion rapide de Bakou.

L’expo, ADEX , a eu lieu a Bakou la semaine dernière et a reuni 200
societes de 34 pays. Le profil est un peu semblable a d’autres expo
de la defense de la region, du Kazakhstan KADEX , avec les exposants
etrangers domines par la Russie, la Turquie, Israël, et la Bielorussie,
avec une poignee de societes asiatiques, europeennes, americaines, etc.

L’Azerbaïdjan, comme le Kazakhstan, met beaucoup d’efforts dans
la construction d’une industrie de defense locale en attirant de
grands partenaires etrangers, les plus experimentes afin de creer
des coentreprises avec des societes azeries. Elle essaye ce faisant,
de reduire sa dependance a l’egard des armes etrangères, a declare le
ministre adjoint de la Defense Yahya Musaev. >.

Malgre le fait que les entreprises americaines et europeennes soient
limites de vendre des armes a l’Azerbaïdjan, il y avait plusieurs
societes americaines exposeat a ADEX y compris Bell Helicopter,
Aerovironment fabricant de drones et un certain nombre de petits pays.

Parmi les fabricants europeens figurait MBDA et Thales et plusieurs
petites entreprises.

Il ne semble pas y avoir eu trop de grands contrats signes au cours
du salon ; Paramount Group d’Afrique du Sud a annonce la creation
d’une joint-venture avec AirTechServices Societe d’Azerbaïdjan pour
mener a bien la modernisation des helicoptères en Azerbaïdjan.

Il y avait, cependant, un bon nombre de visiteurs VIP de l’etranger.

Plus particulièrement, le ministre israelien de la defense Moshe
Yaalon a fait sa première visite en Azerbaïdjan a l’occasion du salon.

Le Premier ministre georgien Irakli Garibashvili a egalement visite
ADEX, comme l’a fait le ministre turc de la Defense Ismet Yilmaz et
de rang inferieur des representants du gouvernement de la France,
de la Russie, de la Bielorussie, du Pakistan, de la Malaisie et de
la Croatie.

mardi 23 septembre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=103304

Saga Du Syunik : L’Ancien Gouverneur Susceptible De Reprendre Son Po

SAGA DU SYUNIK : L’ANCIEN GOUVERNEUR SUSCEPTIBLE DE REPRENDRE SON POSTE APRES LA DEMISSION DE SON SUCCESSEUR

ARMENIE

La nomination d’un gouverneur du Syunik, qui est susceptible d’etre
l’ancien gouverneur, a provoque une vague de debat dans les milieux
politiques et sociaux du pays.

La semaine dernière, l’ex-gouverneur du Syunik, Vahe Hakobyan, a ete
limoge de son poste de gouverneur suite a une decision du gouvernement
et a ete nomme a la tete du comite de gestion des ressources en eau.

Lors d’une reunion avec des journalistes Hakobyan a dit que ce n’etait
pas une demission inattendue.

> a dit Hakobyan ajoutant que le Syunik a un vice-gouverneur
et que tout est gere naturellement.

Dans les coulisses politiques, ainsi que dans de nombreux medias
les rumeurs diffusent des nouvelles sur une eventuelle nomination
de l’ex-gouverneur Surik Khachatrian comme nouveau gouverneur. Il a
demissionne suite aux evenements du 1er Juin 2013.

Ce jour-la une fusillade près de la maison de Surik Khachatrian a
fait un mort a Goris l’ancien candidat a la mairie Avetik Budaghyan
et son frère Artak Budaghyan a ete blesse grièvement. De plus le
garde du corps du gouverneur Nikolay Abrahamyan a egalement ete blesse.

Le fils de Khachatryan, Tigran Khachatryan, et garde du corps Zarzand
Nikoghosyan ont ete arretes, mais plus tard, ils ont ete liberes
et les poursuites contre eux ont ete arretes car les enqueteurs ont
affirme qu’ils avaient agi en etat de legitime defense.

Le vice-president du parlement et porte-parole du Parti republicain
d’Armenie (RPA) Eduard Sharmazanov a reflechi sur les nouvelles d’une
eventuelle nomination de Surik Khachatrian en tant que gouverneur
lors d’une reunion avec les journalistes en disant que notoires en Armenie dont
le nom est lie a plusieurs affaires scandaleuses. Il y a deux ans
dans l’un des hôtels d’Erevan, il aurait gifle une femme d’affaires,
Silva Hambardzumyan.

Le nom de Khachatryan est paru dans > ainsi en 2008
quand le gouverneur aurait battu un jeune de 18 ans.

Au cours de l’annee dernière le nom de Khachatryan a figure dans
les medias dans le cadre de l’intention infâme de louer de vastes
pâturages alpins du Syunik aux eleveurs de moutons iraniens. L’idee
semble avoir ete abandonnee après une forte reaction du public.

Un ancien maire de Goris a dit Aravot que > a-t-il dit.

Selon les rapports des medias, ancien directeur de l’usine de cuivre
Zanguezour Maxim Hakobyan, le père de Vahe Hakobyan, a recemment
ete en relations tendues constantes avec l’ancien gouverneur Surik
Khachatrian.

Khachatryan a annonce lui-meme qu’il n’a pas encore recu d’offre pour
le poste de gouverneur, mais il ne refusera pas parce qu’il souhaite
servir le peuple.

Dans la liste possible des candidats il y a aussi ancien ministre de
l’energie et des Ressources naturelles, le conseiller du president
armenien Armen Movsisyan et le chef du Departement de l’information
Vardan Ayvayzyan du ministère de la Defense. Ce dernier est originaire
du village de Tegh dans la province du Syunik. Le vice-ministre des
Sport et de la Jeunesse Khachik Asryan est egalement dans la liste. Il
y a quelques jours, il a dit qu’il n’avait recu aucune offre.

Par Gayane Lazarian

ArmeniaNow

mardi 23 septembre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: Baghdasarian