PRESS RELEASE
APRIL 25, 2006
Western Diocese of
the Armenian Church of North America
3325 N. Glenoaks Blvd.
Burbank, CA 91504
(818) 558-7474
FUNDRAISER FOR MOTHER CATHEDRAL TO BE HELD MAY 20TH
Los Angeles, CA — Excitement reigns high as the Mother Cathedral
Fundraising and Celebration Gala of May 20th nears. This significant
event is an opportunity for all the Armenian faithful to participate
in this historic occasion. Under the Chairmanship of Antranik
Zorayan, the members of the committee comprised of distinguished
faithful members of the Armenian community, have been working for
approximately two years to meet the formidable challenge of raising
funds for the Mother Cathedral.
The primary objective of the May 20th fundraiser is bring the amount
collected thus far to a level that will enable the Diocese to launch
the construction of the Mother Cathedral.
The committee is proud to announce that Hovig Krikorian’s wonderful
voice and songs will ensure the night to be an evening of
celebration. Dr. Varoujan Altebarmakian, Chair of the Diocesan
Council, will serve as Master of Ceremonies for the gala.
The construction of the first and only Mother Cathedral of the
Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of North America will soon
become a reality since its inception 107 years ago. The Mother
Cathedral will further strengthen the bridge between the Diaspora and
our Motherland Armenia and Etchmiadzin.
As `Together We Build’ the foundation of our community and instill
wisdom and pride within our youth, we also continue the work of the
late Catholicos Khrimian Hayrig which began in 1898. At that time
with his Encyclical he called upon a handful of immigrants to
organize this Diocese.
The construction of the Mother Cathedral will be a new momentum in
the history of the Western Diocese. This can only be achieved with
the active participation of the Armenian faithful as `Together We
Build’ this sacred mission and project of Armenian life. The success
of this mission will give the new generation a vivid reflection of
our Christian faith and national pride, encouraging them to live a
meaningful life and to cherish the legacy of the faith of our
forefathers.
On Saturday, May 20, 2006 the Western Diocese, under the auspices of
His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Primate, will host an
evening of celebration that will strengthen our faith, enrich our
hearts with joy, and fill us with pride for the long and rich history
of the Armenian Church. `Together We Build’ and together we shall
celebrate.
The evening’s festivities will be held at the Arshag and Eleanor
Dickranian Complex of the Western Diocese in Burbank, beginning with
a reception at 7:00 p.m. in the Galleria, followed by dinner in the
Nazareth and Sima Kalaydjian Banquet Hall.
Attendance to the banquet is by invitation only. For your
invitation, please contact your local church or the Diocesan Office
at 818-558-7474.
For more information regarding the construction project, please
visit the Diocesan website at
Author: Dabaghian Diana
Ottawa: Media Barred From Covering The Return Of Soldiers Remains
MEDIA BARRED FROM COVERING THE RETURN OF SOLDIERS REMAINS
Lloyd Robertson
CTV Television, Inc., Canada
SHOW: CTV NEWS 23:00:00 ET
April 24, 2006 Monday
LLOYD ROBERTSON: Good evening. Governments here and elsewhere are
always concerned about negative impressions and seldom more so than
when it comes to casualties in military conflict. That’s probably why
the Harper government decided on a new policy today. For the first
time, the media will be barred tomorrow from seeing the flag-draped
coffins of Canadian soldiers being brought back from Afghanistan.
This comes amid growing debate over Ottawa’s insistence that no flags
on federal buildings will be lowered to mark loss of life, except
on Remembrance Day. It’s a plan many in the military agree with,
but as CTV’s chief political correspondent Craig Oliver reports from
Parliament Hill, it stirred argument on this first day back after
a break.
CRAIG OLIVER (Reporter): Lloyd, there was a moment of silent tribute
in the commons today, but it was for the Armenian genocide, not as
in past, for fallen Canadian soldiers. Hardly a word about them. And
on the Peace Tower, the nation’s flag was flying at full mast on
the order of the Conservative government. But that’s not good enough
for the father of Corporal Matthew Dinning, one of the four soldiers
killed on the weekend.
LINCOLN DINNING (Slain Soldier’s Father): Please support your troops.
Those of who you have Canadian flags, lower them, please, as a sign
of respect to the soldiers that were killed.
OLIVER: Throughout the years of the Martin government, the flags were
flown at half-mast whenever soldiers were killed in the line of duty.
Dinning has written his member of parliament requesting that this
practice be restored.
PAUL STECKLE (Liberal-Ontario): They made it very clear what they
felt Mr. Harper should do.
OLIVER: The Defence Minister sought to justify his decision.
GORDON O’CONNOR (Minister of Defence): It has been the tradition
for 80 years to treat every casualty of war or operations, no matter
when it happened or where it happened, equally, and we will do that
by lowering the flags on November the 11th, Remembrance Day.
OLIVER: What tradition? In October 2004, a naval officer was killed
in the crisis aboard the HMCS Chicoutimi. In that case, all MPS,
presumably including O’Connor, unanimously supported a motion from
this Conservative MP.
JAMES MOORE (Conservative): That this house demand the Prime Minister
instruct all federal government buildings to immediately lower all
Canadian flags to half-mast.
OLIVER: Moreover, Canadians will no longer be permitted to see scenes
like this. The Prime Minister’s office is barring coverage of the
ceremonies when Canadians killed in action are brought home for the
last time. This is standard practice in the US.
JACK LAYTON (NDP Leader): They’re modelling their approach a little
bit on the way that George Bush and the American administration has
approached it. I don’t think that’s the right way to go.
OLIVER: The countries in the conflicts in which Canada and American
armies are engaged are in no way similar. Canada’s is not an army of
occupation, and Canada has invaded no one. Still, the Prime Minister’s
office obviously fears that as casualties mount, Canadians will begin
to see Afghanistan as Stephen Harper’s Iraq. Lloyd.
ROBERTSON: Craig, is that an overreaction, as you see it? Is that
fear justified?
OLIVER: It’s an old syndrome. If support drops, blame the media,
but Lloyd, I think that even people who support this mainly, in many
ways, a humanitarian mission are going to now debate whether this
is the way to do it. Perhaps it’s better to say here are the dead,
and these people cannot be seen to have died in vain, which they
would have done, if Canadians leave the field.
ROBERTSON: Does any of what happened today have to do with the families
themselves asking for privacy?
OLIVER: I don’t think so. I think this is the Prime Minister’s office,
the Defence Department, to some extent, concerned that the reality
of this, the grim reality of war, may turn Canadians off on the
mission. In fact, we’ve never heard any members of the public who
are related to any of these people complain to us. On the contrary,
this network and others have been told a number of times that they
appreciate the sensitivity in which we’ve handled these cases. And
in any case, Lloyd, we will be covering the funerals of these dead
Canadians.
ROBERTSON: The family funerals, right. Thanks very much, Craig.
OLIVER: Goodnight, Lloyd.
President Robert Kochartian’s Message On The Genocide VictimsRemembr
PRESIDENT ROBERT KOCHARIAN’S MESSAGE ON THE GENOCIDE VICTIMS REMEMBRANCE DAY
Armenpress
Apr 24 2006
YEREVAN, APRIL 24, ARMENPRESS: On the occasion of the 91-st
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide President of Armenia Robert
Kocharian addressed a message today to his country fellows, which
reads as follows.
“Dear country fellows, today we are honoring the memory of the victims
of the Armenian Genocide. The government of the Ottoman Turkey and its
successor bear the entire responsibility for this crime. The Armenian
nation has been suffering the heavy consequences of it throughout
their post-Genocide history.
Our pain is stronger because we have to fight for international
acknowledgment and condemnation of this black chapter of the
history. As the mouthpiece of all Armenians of Armenia and Diaspora
the Republic of Armenia will continue this struggle. We are grateful
to those nations, organizations and individuals who support us in
it. The understanding that the recognition and condemnation of the
Armenian Genocide is the problem of all nations of the globe and the
most effective way to prevent its repetition in future is becoming
deeper and stronger with every year.
The struggle of Armenians for the recognition of the Genocide is
not driven by their desire to take revenge. We look forward because
a strong, prosperous and advancing Republic of Armenia is the best
response to the policy of denialism.
March With Lanterns Dedicated To The 91st Anniversary Of The Armenia
MARCH WITH LANTERNS DEDICATED TO THE 91ST ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
ArmRadio.am
24.04.2006 16:35
On the occasion of the 91st anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
a march with lanterns was organized on April 23 at the initiative of
the Youth Wing of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation and “nikol
Aghbalyan” Students Union.
2500 – 3000 young people, including 300 – 400 Diaspora Armenians
participated in the march that started 8 a.m. yesterday.
The flags of the countries that recognized the Armenian Genocide
were raised in the Square. The participants burnt the red flag of
the Turkish Republic.
Representative of the Armenian Supreme Body of the ARF, Head of the
Standing Committee on External Relations Armen Rustamyan noted in
his speech that the Amenian Genocide is not only an Armenian issue,
it has acquired a universal nature.
“Everyone realizes that if the world does not condemn the genocide,
it cannot be fair,” he noted.
The participants of the rally marched from The “Liberty” Square to
Tsitsernakaberd.
Indicator Of A Missing Society
From: [email protected]
Subject: Indicator Of A Missing Society
INDICATOR OF A MISSING SOCIETY
Lragir.am
22 April 06
The Indian and Arab students protesting in Yerevan for the death of
their friends were a topic for the people of Yerevan, as well as most
of my colleagues who had arrived there for news coverage, to joke that
if something is ever done in Armenia, the Indian and Arab students
will do. However, the protest of the Indian students would hardly give
rise to jokes. The protest even caused controversial feelings. They
had lost their 22-year-old friend, and the tears were hold back by
their fury against the leadership of the Medical University, the
Police, and the emergency. The students believe that their friend
would not die if the ambulance arrived on time. If the abovementioned
institutions worked properly, as they are supposed to. The Medical
University should have cared about their student, listened to the
protest of their students instead of forcing them to go out to the
streets, where the protest could undergo any provocation. The police
should have been careful towards a dying, as well as a dead citizen,
independent of his or her ethnic identity and nationality. After all,
congratulating the holidays of his subjects several days ago, the
first policeman of the Republic Haik Harutiunyan was advising them to
be guided by this principle. Let alone the emergency doctors. Not only
should they hurry not to let a person die, but they should also hurry
to save a dying person. After all they take an oath.
Everything is logical, however; if law is a trivial thing, what does
an oath mean at all? The doctors who `hurried’ to save a dying person,
are the alumni of a university which is part of the educational system
where a rector is elected on the preferences of the ruling elite,
where rectors are elected, who despite their sex can `fuck off’
students who ask them for help. As soon as one imagines this circle,
it is not a surprise that the student lay helpless under the window
for an hour. The opposite is surprising that he lay helpless for an
hour only. The context of the protest of the foreign students is that
their friend was left without aid because he was a foreigner.
I am not sure, however. The same might happen to an Armenian student
as well. In Armenia ethnic identity no longer determines attitude.
Presently, only the social status of a person dictates the manner and
degree of the society’s attitude towards a person. In those countries
where people”s actions are not guided by the rights and are
not dictated by the duties that are set down in the law, students
living in dormitories are left lying under the window.
The investigation will reveal how the accident of the Indian student
happened, if he fell or was thrown through the window, or if it was a
suicide. It has nothing to do with the subsequent developments that
became known thanks to the protesting foreign students. If it has
nothing to do, it cannot be an excuse or explanation for indifferent
deans, rectors, policemen and doctors. Whereas they have to give an
explanation why they failed to fulfill their duties. A policemen’s
duty is not just enclosing several dozens of protesting young people
in a circle of berets. And if the first policemen of Yerevan had
visited the place of accident, he might not have had to be in
Baghramyan Street.
No matter how discouraging this street is for policemen.
And for street passers-by the protest of the foreign students was
simply a topic for jokes, an exotic happening, the mini model of a
revolution that did not take place. In fact, an indicator of a missing
society. It would be logical if the passers-by, learning about the
protest, instead of leaving the place happy with their jokes, joined
the Indian and Arab young people. It would be real heroism if the
various youth wings of Armenian political parties, student councils
and organizations joined the foreign students. After all, the problem
is important for everyone. An Indian student said if his friend was
left lying helpless in the street, the same may happen to himself.
Therefore, all the Indian and Arab students stood up for their
rights. There was nothing heroic, nothing of a superman. What happened
was humane, for the sake of human dignity. What are our citizens are
thinking about? Or maybe all our society can do is to gather in one
place to get the autograph of Charles Aznavour or to go to the
memorial to the victims of the genocide only.
HAKOB BADALYAN
Karabakh Army Holds War Games
KARABAKH ARMY HOLDS WAR GAMES
By Karine Kalantarian in Stepanakert and Aza Babayan in Moscow
Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
April 19 2006
The ethnic Armenian armed forces of Nagorno-Karabakh ended on Wednesday
week-long large-scale exercises which the disputed region’s leadership
said highlighted their ability to fend off possible military action
by Azerbaijan.
Hundreds of troops, backed up by tanks, heavy artillery and helicopter
gunships firing live rounds, practiced defensive and offensive
operations at a training ground not far from the Armenian-Azerbaijani
line of contact east of Karabakh.
The war games, which will be evaluated by top military officials
on Thursday, followed a familiar scenario, with the Karabakh army
fighting back an enemy assault and then going on counteroffensive.
They also involved a rare call-up of local army reservists who also
took in the simulated fighting.
Armenia’s Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian and the chief of army staff,
Colonel-Lieutenant Mikael Harutiunian, monitored the proceedings
along with the leadership of the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic (NKR). “At first glance, everything is alright,” Sarkisian
told reporters.
Armenian and Karabakh officials insisted that the exercises are not
connected with Azerbaijan’s renewed threats to win back Karabakh
by force or aimed at affecting the ongoing peace talks mediated by
the Minsk Group of the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe. Sarkisian claimed that President Ilham Aliev and other
Azerbaijani leaders make such threats for “propaganda purposes.”
Sarkisian also said he looks forward to Aliev’s meeting with President
George W. Bush at the White House which is scheduled for April 28. “I
am confident that the president of the United States will urge Aliev
to resolve the conflict by peaceful means,” he said.
NKR President Arkady Ghukasian, for his part, remained skeptical
about chances of a breakthrough in the peace process. “In my opinion,
Azerbaijan is dragging out the negotiations,” he said. “Azerbaijan
is not prepared for a settlement. But this is a case where I want to
be mistaken.”
Ghukasian denied the existence of any major differences between
Karabakh and Armenia on how to resolve the conflict, saying that
the Karabakh Armenians “have no reason to mistrust” Yerevan. Still,
he renewed calls for the NKR’s direct involvement in the peace process.
Meanwhile, Russia’s chief Karabakh negotiator, Yuri Merzlyakov,
confirmed on Wednesday that he and the French and U.S. co-chairs of
the Minsk Group will likely visit the conflict zone early next month
in a bid to arrange another meeting between Aliev and his Armenian
counterpart Robert Kocharian. Speaking to RFE/RL in Moscow, Merzlyakov
said the two leaders have already been presented with the mediators’
revised peace proposals and are currently studying them.
He refused to disclose those proposals.
The Minsk Group’s U.S. co-chair, Steven Mann, is due to pay a separate
visit to Baku and Yerevan later this week.
Is this Diyarbakir?
Is this Diyarbakir?
By MEHMET KAMIS
04.17.2006 Monday – ISTANBUL 17:04
Bedri Mermutlu has made interesting findings about cities in the
preface to the book titled, “Seyahatnamelerde Diyarbekir”
(Diyarbakir in Travel Books). These findings are about Diyarbakir in
particular. Contemporary Diyarbakir is a lost city as if it has been
shaken and destroyed by the trauma of modernity. It is impossible to
understand this city just by looking at it from its present state. He
drew a perfect picture of Diyarbakir in the past describing the
vineyards that, 40 years ago, used to exist around the city. The
people who lived in that period could never have imagined the
vandalism that has turned these wonderful vineyards into a modern
ugly Baglar district of the city. The modern people living in Baglar
district today can never imagine that there were wonderful vineyards
in Baglar district 40 years ago, if someone does not tell them about
that. Diyarbakir is a unique city which existed in its own authentic
world, but unfortunately, its silhouette becomes indistinct day by
day. There was a neatly dressed, conversational Diyarbakir gentleman,
whose attitude we used to watch in admiration and his dignity in
trying to know what time it was by looking at the chain watch he
carried in the pocket of his waistcoat. If the things we are saying
about Diyarbakir today are not about its culture, accumulation or the
things it wants to tell modernity, then what are they about? Burned
tires, stone throwing children, red-yellow-green flags and highly
politicized people… A cosmopolitan city of civilization, where
Turks, Armenians, Kurds, Syrians, Keldanis, Jews and even Greeks
could live altogether in the beginning of the 20th century,
Diyarbakir has now turned into a weird city which cannot tolerate the
existence of anything different from itself. Southeastern Anatolia is
between the paws of terrorism and conflict again. Ethnic terror in
the region, which was almost ceased after [terrorist leader] Abdullah
Ocalan was captured in 1999, has been on the rise since 2004. It
seems reforms implemented in the European Union (EU) process and
politicians taking initiatives for the betterment of the region did
not please the PKK. The recent positive developments in the region
falsify the views of the PKK that the people there are poor and are
cruelly treated. This situation, of course, undermines the views of
the PKK. In order for the PKK to maintain its power, the conditions
that keep it alive should remain in the region. For this reason, the
rights of the people in the region must be taken away from them. The
PKK wants the villages to be evacuated, people’s native languages
to be banned, the state of emergency to continue and all the people
in the region to be treated as “terrorists.” Kurdish
intellectual Umit Firat said in his remarks published in Radikal
daily: “The PKK cannot exist in an EU member country. Trying to
solve the Kurdish problem like the problems solved in the EU is
something that the “hawks” on both sides do not want.”
The old Diyarbakir ought to rid itself of politicization in a bid to
help the old orient emerge. That profound mysticism can only surface
in this way. Thousands of years of accumulation of knowledge can
direct the modern world in many directions. What great stories are
there about Ahlat, Ercis, Mardin, Hasankeyf, Mem u Zin and
Ishakpasha. The re-emergence of those stories necessitates an end to
over-politicization and chauvinistic nationalism. This end must come
regardless of the warlords. Then it will be understood that we have
many things to offer to the whole world. These wise lands will have a
better chance to express the accumulation of experience over the
human spirit and the lifelong spiritual journey. The excellent and
awe-inspiring sunrise over the Suphan Mountain and centuries of
friendship in Adilcevaz will all be open to observation. The whole
region is covered in the dust of the ashes left over from the fire
caused by terrorism here. Once cleared, we will, perhaps, discover
that Diyarbakir gentleman, who is serious, conversational and wearing
a chain watch… April 15, 2006
Hungarian Court Passed Sentence Not Only To Safarov,But Also Azerbai
HUNGARIAN COURT PASSED SENTENCE NOT ONLY TO SAFAROV, BUT ALSO AZERBAIJAN
PanARMENIAN.Net
18.04.2006 22:38 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Hungarian court passed a sentence not only
to Ramil Safarov, but also to the Azerbaijani state, Armenian MFA
representative at the Budapest trial Hayk Demoyan stated at a news
conference in Yerevan. In his words, Azerbaijan has suffered a huge
moral and psychological, as well political damage in the eyes of
the European community. “Azerbaijan got second warning in 2006 that
medieval way of thinking has nothing to do at the EU.
You must not destroy monuments and kill. Azerbaijan will not be
included in Europe that way,” Demoyan emphasized.
BAKU: Mediator Cites New Proposals On Garabagh
MEDIATOR CITES NEW PROPOSALS ON GARABAGH
Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
April 18 2006
Baku, April 17, AssA-Irada
An international mediator says the OSCE Minsk Group brokering
settlement to the Upper (Garabagh) conflict has submitted proposals
to Azerbaijan and Armenia that have not been discussed so far.
“Official Baku and Yerevan are currently scrutinizing these options,”
the Russian co-chair of the OSCE MG, Yuri Merzlyakov, told Lider TV.
He said that although the co-chairs visit the region separately,
they share views on the conflict settlement.
“Our current proposals are new, as they have not been comprehensively
discussed yet. I can’t say how they will be accepted. But this is
not an accord of any kind yet. Some work remains to be done to reach
general agreement,” the diplomat said, noting that a given element may
suit one side and be rejected by the other. “Therefore, such elements
should be dealt with in a subtle and thorough way,” Merzlyakov added.
Robert Fisk Gives Talk Before Packed House In NYC; Discusses War,Imp
ROBERT FISK GIVES TALK BEFORE PACKED HOUSE IN NYC; DISCUSSES WAR, IMPERIALISM, AND THE MEDIA
By Lucine Kasbarian
NYC Independent Media Center, NY
April 17 2006
Coverage of Robert Fisk’s passionate speech in New Year on war,
politics and journalism.
In his nearly three-hour presentation, Fisk spoke frankly, expressively
and with sardonic wit about Western intervention in the Middle East,
war as enterprise, the horrors of war, the dearth of US journalists
willing to question authority, and the challenges of war reporting
in an age when official news reports are orchestrated by the US
government.
On Friday, April 7, Robert Fisk¬ — the award-winning, chief Middle
East correspondent for the British newspaper, the Independent —
flew in from Lebanon to address a crowd of more than one thousand
on the topic of War, the Middle East, and Journalism at New York
City’s Ethical Culture Society auditorium. Fisk was invited by the
Nation Institute and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation to kick
off a weekend conference called Armenians & the Left, and to discuss
his latest book, The Great War for Civilization: The Conquest of the
Middle East (Knopf).
This intrepid investigative journalist, who, in his more than 30 years
of war reporting, has seen enough carnage to last several lifetimes,
addressed global issues such as U.S. imperialism in the Mid-East and
Transcaucasus, and the implications for small, struggling nations
like Armenia. As his publishers rightly describe, Fisk has earned the
reputation for “being passionate in his concerns about the Middle East,
and relentless in his pursuit of the truth — traits that have enabled
him to enter the world of the Middle East and the lives of its people
as few other journalists have.” He is a seven-time recipient of the
British Press Awards’ International Journalist of the Year Award and
the author of Pity the Nation: The Abduction of Lebanon (Nation Books).
In his introductory remarks, Antranig Kasbarian of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation called Fisk “a man of integrity who has
put himself in the line of fire in countless wars and invasions,
including those in Lebanon, Afghanistan, and Iraq.” The capacity crowd
gave Fisk a standing ovation as they were told that Fisk “deserves
our appreciation — even before he utters a word — for continuing to
show a high level of courage in his factual, unflinching war reportage
at a time when it is considered unfashionable, if not prohibiting,
to criticize U.S. foreign policy.”
In his nearly three-hour presentation, Fisk spoke frankly, expressively
and with sardonic wit about Western intervention in the Middle East,
war as enterprise, the horrors of war, the dearth of US journalists
willing to question authority, and the challenges of war reporting
in an age when official news reports are orchestrated by the US
government. Known for injecting historical context and trenchant
analysis into his reporting and for advocating that it is the duty
of war correspondents to report from the perspective of the victims,
Fisk recommended that journalists and officials alike carry history
books with them to better understand the regions they are assigned to
cover; perhaps as a statement about collective ignorance and amnesia
toward empires who tend to repeat odious crimes of the past.
As a young man, Fisk was inspired to become a foreign correspondent
after watching an Alfred Hitchcock movie by the same name. “This sounds
like a bloody good job,” he said at the time. He got at least one
adjective right. In describing his mission as a reporter, Fisk quoted
Israeli journalist Amira Haas, who said it is “to monitor power and the
centers of power.” By contrast and to underscore the repressive climate
in which today’s American journalists work, Fisk spoke of how those
writers with the temerity to report truthfully about the facts on the
ground are painted as unpatriotic and therefore subversive. He charged
that mainstream newspapers such as the NY Times should be re-dubbed
“American Officials Say,” as a nod to the unfair and unbalanced way
in which today’s journalists rely upon state-sponsored sources to
convey information to the masses.
Fisk underscored how war correspondents do more than deliver the news
when he described how the longer journalists stay in regions embroiled
in war, the fewer civilians invaders can exterminate. He recalled how
military occupiers evacuated journalists from West Beirut so that the
reporters could not speak of the horrors they would have witnessed,
and saw this technique repeat itself in Iraq.
Fisk is one of few journalists who covered the Iraq war from the
field. He is a harsh critic of embedded journalism, which he calls
“hotel journalism,” to explain a manner of isolation and skittishness
with which correspondents report from confined quarters. Charging that
journalists who are embedded do the profession a great disservice,
Fisk questioned the purpose of war reporting in Iraq: “Reporting
for what story?” he asked. “When journalists report from within the
heavily-guarded Green Zone, they may as well be filing from Minnesota,”
he said.
Fisk spoke frequently and forcefully about the Armenian Genocide
of 1915 — a premeditated, governmental campaign to annihilate
the Armenian people and drive them from their ancestral lands,
now within the borders of Turkey. He expressed disgust that the
Armenian Genocide is today denied by not only the descendants of
the perpetrating regime in Turkey, but by the United States and
Israel, as well. Nevertheless, Fisk expressed certainty that Genocide
recognition is on the horizon. And to emphasize his hope for future
reconciliation, Fisk read passages from his book about an Armenian
Genocide survivor he’d met who, in his twilight years, prayed for
Turks who suffered in the recent Turkish earthquake. Fisk observed
how progressive Turkish intellectuals such as Orhan Pamuk and Elif
Shafak are struggling to unsheathe the long-suppressed truth about
the Armenian Genocide, and said that today more than ever before,
“the door is open…if Armenians can walk through it and encourage
the Turkish people to walk through it, as well.”
One comment by Fisk that was questioned by this writer pertains
to Fisk’s remarks that there were do-gooders during World War I,
such as missionaries, who campaigned for indigenous rights and even
a unified Arab confederacy. What Fisk failed to mention was that
even missionaries are not without motive, considering that they are
often brought in by colonial occupiers to provide the only sources
of food, shelter and education and hence, be in a position to subdue
and indoctrinate native populations.
Fisk’s talk at the Ethical Culture Society auditorium was conceived as
an opener for the Armenians & the Left Conference — which brought
together scholars, activists and opinion makers to examine how
progressive activists could build coalitions with other dispossessed
groups and progressive movements, explore strategies beyond the
dominant, conventional ones currently pursued by Armenian-American
organizations, and seek alternative ways of understanding Armenia’s
predicament besides the usual state-centered approaches. The Armenians
& the Left Conference, held at the CUNY Graduate Center in Manhattan,
featured panels about Globalization and the Politics of Empire;
Reparations as Justice; Human Rights in the Caucasus; Armeno-Turkish
Dialogue; Women & Political Power; and Armenian Political Identity. The
NYC-leg of the conference culminated with a plenary lecture on War,
Media and Propaganda which featured Fisk, Alternative Radio’s David
Barsamian and moderator Dr. Levon Chorbajian, Prof. of Sociology at
UMass Lowell. Fisk then traveled to Boston where he and leading critic
of U.S. foreign policy, Prof. Noam Chomsky spoke of War, Geopolitics
and History: Conflict in the Middle East to a spillover crowd at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
To hear Fisk and Chomsky online, visit:
–Boundary_(ID_LZNT9 e5uvpEu/Ujv6nH3DA)–