Asbarez: Turkish Racism

Garen Yegparian

BY GAREN YEGPARIAN

In case the ongoing, periodic, massacres of Armenians in and/or by the Ottoman Empire and its willing and eager collaborators weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the 1905 massacres of Armenians by “Tatars” (which were reciprocated), as Azerbaijanis were referred to back then, weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the Armenian Genocide wasn’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the simultaneous genocide of Assyrians and Greeks wasn’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the 1918 Baku massacres by locals and Enver Pasha’s “Army of Islam” weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the 1920 sacking of Shushi, a vibrant Armenian cultural center, and its accompanying massacres weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the 1937 massacres of Alevi Kurds, (or the Zazas, a term that no longer seems to be in use) weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the depopulation/expulsion of Armenians from Nakhichevan during the Soviet era by Azerbaijani authorities wasn’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case discriminatory practices in Azerbaijani controlled Artsakh during the Soviet era wasn’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the discriminatory Varlik Vergisi (a tax invented by Ankara in 1942 to impoverish and drive out Armenians, Greeks, and Jews) wasn’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the 1955 (premeditated and “fake-news” instigated) pogroms of Greeks (with some spillover on to Armenians) in Constantinople weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the mutilation of Greeks during Turkey’s 1974 invasion of Cyprus wasn’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

In case the 1989 February and later pogroms in Baku, Gandsak (Ganja as Turkified), Sumgait, and elsewhere weren’t enough proof of Turkish racism;

Then let’s look to this century for… more of the same!

How about Victor Bedoian’s septennial sojourn in Van as he tried to open “Hotel Vartan” and was blocked at every turn from the vali (governor) who boasted that no Armenian would start a business in Van on his watch to the Turkish Supreme court that shut down his final appeal?

How about Hrant Dink’s 2007 murder?

How about Turkey’s sealing of its border with Syria at Kobane, blocking assistance and escape for the Kurds of that area in their life-and-death struggle against Daesh/ISIS?

How about the mutilation of civilians and beheadings by Azerbaijan’s forces during the April 2016 Four Day War??

How about Erdoğan feigning outrage at being called an Armenian (which is a really bad slur in Turkey, it turns out)?

How about the hatred spewed against Jews from all corners of Turkey’s polity?

How about the episodic appearance of hate graffiti on Armenian institutions in Turkey?

How about the ongoing desecration of Armenian cemeteries and churches in Turkey?

How about the recent video from Azerbaijan with children expressing their hatred of Armenians?

How about the comment that “Raping Kurdish women is a moral obligation. No one should abstain” by a leader of a Turkish group in Holland?

How about the Estonian citizen who was Armenian being denied entry into Azerbaijan, just days ago, because of her ancestry, despite having travelled to Baku with a properly issued visa?

It’s not only unfortunate, but utterly tragic, that current Turkish identity (including Azerbaijan, less its persecuted minority populations- Avars, Jews, Lesghis, Tats, Talysh) is unimaginable without this all-encompassing racism, The only glimmer of light in that darkness is the small portion of the population which constitutes civil society and its efforts to defend human rights, in the broadest sense of the term.

This reality must permeate the halls of (at least) Western governments so their foreign policy for Azerbaijan and Turkey is more rational and effective. The above can serve as talking points during any encounter with our elected representatives. Use them.

And just in case anyone you’re speaking with has doubt as to whether there exists a significant difference between Ankara’s and Baku’s ethos, ideals, and morals, here’s a joke to help convey this reality:

“What’s the difference between an Azeri and a Turk?”
“Nothing.”

Art: Armenian artist Daron Mouradian opens first solo exhibition in Turkey

Panorama, Armenia
Culture 14:54 21/03/2018 Armenia

A solo exhibition of the paintings of Armenian artist Daron Mouradian has opened at the Kadir Has University in Istanbul, Turkey.

The exhibit titled “Open Hidden Game” is Mouradian’s first solo exhibition in Turkey, Panorama.am reports, citing Ermenihaber. The event is curated by Professor Hasan Bülent Kahraman.

Speaking about his works, the Armenia artist says: “I will not talk much, let my paintings talk. Let the visitors decide what my paintings are telling.”

The exhibition runs until 1 July 2018.

The Genius of Greg Asbed (Just Don’t Call Him A Genius)

Gulfshore Life Magazine
February 2018
 
 
The Genius of Greg Asbed (Just Don’t Call Him A Genius)
 
The MacArthur Fellow has worked wonders for local farm workers but shuns the attention to his considerable talents.
 
BY KRISTINE GILL
 
 
 
JOHN D. & CATHERINE T. MACARTHUR FOUNDATION
 
 
 
The first time Jon Esformes, a Florida grower with tomato fields in Immokalee, sat down with Greg Asbed, a leader of the Coalition for Immokalee Workers, he was firm about his aim.
 
“Look, I’m here to have a cup of coffee and decide if I like you and trust you,” Esformes said to Asbed, who was there promoting the CIW’s Fair Food Program.
 
“That’s all I’ve ever wanted,” Asbed replied.
 
It was the perfect response, Esformes recalls, because it set the tone for a laid-back conversation after weeks of back and forth between lawyers, as Sunripe Certified Brands looked to join the FFP, working with pickers and buyers to create a safe and fair workplace for all involved.
 
Esformes was pleasantly surprised to find that Asbed was a good listener, genuine and engaged. He was quick with a laugh and a smile, and even-keeled and truly present for the conversation. Esformes quickly realized: Here was a guy who believed wholeheartedly in his group’s mission to ensure basic human rights in the workplace for farmworkers. The two had more in common than not, Esformes realized, and from there joining the cause was inevitable. He was sold.
 
“All of my conversations with Greg have been that easy,” Esformes says.
 
Esformes was not surprised then to learn that Asbed was named one of 24 MacArthur Fellows (colloquially known as Genius Grant winners) for 2017 and the recipient of $625,000 for his cause. Of course, he didn’t hear it from Asbed himself.
 
“The thing about Greg that is really extraordinary is that in the face of opposition he remains loyal to his principles, and in the face of success he remains loyal to his principles,” Esformes says. “Both are dangerous places, right? You can fall into despair with the opposition, which he doesn’t allow himself to do; and you can get puffed up when people are patting you on the back and telling you how great you are and lose sight of your principles.”
 
Ever humble, Asbed is more keen to talk about the FFP than himself.
 
If Asbed won’t toot his own horn, the facts will.
 
There’s the standard biography, which lists his undergraduate degree from Brown University and his master’s from Johns Hopkins. He’s fluent in Creole and Spanish. One of his partners at the CIW, Lucas Benitez, said his dialect has rubbed off on Asbed over the years so much that native-Spanish speakers peg Asbed as Mexican.
 
Asbed, the grandson of Armenian immigrants who survived the genocide, grew up with a deep appreciation of human rights. That innate sense took form in Haiti, where he spent three years after college in a grassroots effort to bring democracy to the country.
 
Then there’s the fact that Asbed and his wife, Laura Germino, are quite the human rights power couple. She specializes in human trafficking and slavery, and they share a passion for the work, which they’ve dedicated their lives to since before CIW (she’s the third founder), when they were working for Florida Legal Services. In his free time, Asbed swears he also has time to coach junior pro basketball and Little League baseball. For fun, he harvests watermelons. Oh, and he is a Dallas Cowboys diehard. For the longest time, his neighbors didn’t know what to make of him between polite hellos from across the yard to the Sunday afternoon shouting matches with his television.
 
“Now, in my defense, that was during the Cowboys heyday years of ’92 to ’95, so the stakes were high and there was a lot to yell about,” Asbed says. “But yeah, that was me.”
 
Their son, Isaiah, also a Cowboys fan, is technically an eighth-grader but already taking classes at LaBelle High School through a specialized program. In the first grade, he was reading at a 12th-grade level. And last year, he visited his dad’s alma mater for the Johns Hopkins Center for Talented Youth’s annual event recognizing junior high kids whose SAT and ACT scores rival those of seniors in high school. And he’s taken up an interest in neuroscience. Fitting, considering Asbed’s undergraduate degree, the one from Brown, was a Bachelor of Science in neuroscience.
 
“I figured they asked for the wrong Asbed when they called,” Asbed says, referring to the MacArthur folks.
 
So yes, on paper, Asbed is smart. But what’s truly impressive is how all the nitty gritty details bolster the biography. The way, for instance, he and Benitez and Germino engineered a model for improving working conditions in the fields called “worker-driven social responsibility,” or WSR. It’s the bottom-up approach to ensuring a safe and fair work environment by educating the workers themselves (and it’s where they plan to put their grant money to use, furthering the model through consulting and traveling here and abroad to meet new partners).
 
The model works within what Asbed and the others call the FFP. Born out of their Taco Bell campaign of the early 2000s, which urged the fast food giant to consider abused workers picking their produce, the program requires a nominal fee from big buyers who rely on cheap produce, such as tomatoes, to fill their burritos and tacos. That fee—just a penny per pound of produce—goes to the growers who award it to their workers as a bonus.
 
It’s all kept in line by another one of the CIW’s creations called the Fair Foods Standards Council. Based in Sarasota, it acts as the judicial branch of the equation, overseeing all parties from the field workers to the growers to the buyers, making sure everyone plays by the rules. The workers set their own standards, and the council makes sure they’re met.
 
Germino says her husband has the ability to look at a problem scientifically to figure out how to fix it. But he has also mastered the art of relating to people from the fields to the CEO’s office. And in a business that is as much about changing hearts as it is changing minds, that’s key.
 
“I would call him a Renaissance man,” she says.
 
As Esformes puts it, Asbed “meets people where they’re at.” Maybe that’s by relating to them as fellow descendants of refugees. Esformes’ family came from Salonica, Greece, Jews amid the fall of the Ottoman Empire.
 
Or maybe it’s in his willingness to get his hands dirty with those fighting for their own rights. He picks watermelons, after all, often for 16-hour shifts in the heat, hurling the fruits into a moving truck without damaging them.
 
And once, when the CIW’s 15-seater GMC van broke down 2 miles from the nearest exit, Asbed volunteered to run the gas can to the station and back—this after a jog around the D.C. National Mall that same morning—so the group could make their meeting that day in Philadelphia with Aramark. The food service, uniforms and facilities provider is now an FFP partner.
 
As a youth coach, Asbed is known for his pre-game speeches.
 
He’s stern when necessary, but never gets mean,” his son says. “He congratulates people when praise is due, which makes them want to try even harder. He knows how to bring out the best in everybody.”
 
Something about the method or the man is working. So far, they’ve gotten major players such as Walmart, Whole Foods, Chipotle, Taco Bell, The Fresh Market, Trader Joe’s and Subway on-board. The best part about agreeing to work with FFP is that the group wants growers and buyers to succeed so that workers have jobs.
 
“Ours is a real human relationship,” Esformes says of him and Asbed. “On paper it looks real high-level, but at the basic level we’re all humans looking to take care of our families.”
 
Asbed doesn’t know who nominated him for the MacArthur Fellowship. If everyone plays by the rules, he’ll never know. The point is to keep everything hush-hush so that by the time you call a winner on the phone, they’re mid-Hurricane Irma prep, screwing on shutters, sufficiently shocked and confused to learn that they’ve won.
 
Asbed is still shocked, and of course humbled, to be among a group of jaw-dropping fellows. The 2017 class includes 24 individuals of all backgrounds. There’s a journalist, a painter, a poet, a fiction writer, a computer scientist and an immunologist, to name a few. Then there’s this human rights strategist.
 
“It’s a ‘Genius’ award, but the thing about Greg is he will deny that,” Benitez says. “But he is an amazingly intelligent person. We have learned so much from him and so much together over the years.
 
“But at the end of the day, he continues to be our dear ‘pelon.’”
 
Translation for you non-geniuses: “Baldy.”

Special presentation by Armenian author, former Minister of Rumania, Dr. Varujan Vosganian

Dear Friends,

Please attend (if you are in the LA area) the very special presentation by the famous Rumanian Armenian author, former Minister of Rumania, Dr. Varujan Vosganian. He will speak about his popular book the “Book of Whispers”, which is a fantastic depiction of post Genocide Armenian life. It will be held on Sunday, March 4, at 4:30 pm in Merdinian (13330 Riverside Dr., SH Oaks). Please see the flier below for details. For more references from well known journals, magazines and authors, please see the attached.
Also, please keep in mind our next Joint ARPA Institute and Armenian American Mental Health Association Presentation “Women in Contemporary Armenian Society: Cultural and Socioeconomic Predicaments, and Opportunities for Empowerment”Monday, March 12, 2018 @ 7:30 PM 
in the Aram and Anahis D. Boolghoorjian Hall of the Merdinian School: 13330 Riverside Dr. Sherman Oaks, CA 91403

Please view the videos of the Joint ARPA Institute-UCLA  Presentations on 1)….Activities of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, 2) …. Armenian Political Activism in Iran, 3) …Portraits of Het‘um II, 4) … Paleography and Handwritten Armenian

1) https://youtu.be/SPt5XMvAr0U ; 2) https://youtu.be/68Q-Cbz8OnI3) https://youtu.be/6x2UTPLyImA ; 4) 
Please also view the ARPA Institute 25th Anniversary Celebration Conference on “Armenia in the 21st Century: Strategy for Long-term Development”. You will enjoy it. Here are the Youtube links: 1. Part I: https://youtu.be/5cEpNtiW1os ; 2. Part II: 
In addition you can view the presentations on: 1) Armenian DNA: 

And 2) “ Railway Politics: The Effect of Recently Inaugurated Baku-Tibilisi-Kars Railway“:    
And 3) “Armenian preservation and the need for Armenian schools in the Diaspora“: 



ARPAPresentation-3418-Vosganian-1.pdf

Nalbandian Reiterates Yerevan’s Decision to Nullify Protocols

Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian at the European Parliament on Wednesday

BRUSSELS—Armenia’s Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian on Wednesday reiterated Yerevan’s decision to declare the dangerous Armenia-Turkey Protocols null and void, a pledge made by President Serzh Sarkisian at the United Nations last fall.

Speaking to the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee, Nalbandian said that the “normalization process with Turkey could have created new opportunities for both of our nations and the region at large.”

“Armenia spared no effort to see it succeed.” “Turkey has missed historic chance of reconciliation. Armenia does not resort to the language of preconditions, but equally, we shall never accept preconditions put forth by anyone,” said Nalbandian.

In his remarks, which also included a detailed assessment of the the Armenia-EU Comprehensive and Enhanced Partnership Agreement, Nalbandian delineated Armenia’s vision to advance relations with the European Union.

Armenia’s top diplomat, however, lamented Ankara’s continued policy to fuel conflict in the region.

“Almost 30 years have passed since the fall of the Berlin wall yet Turkey continues to keep its borders with Armenia closed,” said Nalbandian.

He added that not only Ankara has refrained from keeping its end of the bargain with the protocols it has “returned to the language of preconditions that it had used before the beginning of the process. Turkey has attempted to link the Armenian-Turkish normalization process to the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict based on ungrounded claims of the Azerbaijani side. Any Turkish attempts to interfere in the Karabakh process or to link the normalization of relations with the Nagorno-Karabakh talks, harms both processes. This is a position that the whole international community have emphasized several times.”

“From the beginning of the process we made it clear in our contacts with the Turkish side as well as publicly that Armenia will never put under question the fact of the Armenian Genocide or the importance of its international recognition. True reconciliation does not consist of forgetting the past or feeding young generations with tales of denial. Armenia did not require the recognition of Genocide by Turkey as a precondition for the normalization of the relations. Paradoxically it is Turkey, that for 100 years has continuously denied the Genocide, has attempted to manipulate that issue, using it as another precondition,” explained Nalbandian.

The foreign minister also addressed the issue of the Karabakh conflict resolution process, pointing out Azerbaijan’s continued use of threats and belligerent language toward Armenia.
“On February 8th the President of this country [Azerbaijan] declared that different regions of Armenia, including its capital Yerevan are historic lands of Azerbaijan, where Azerbaijanis must return and that it is Baku’s political and strategic goal. I will leave to your consideration if this is a territorial claim towards a neighboring country, saber-rattling, or something else. But, it is well known that Baku’s belligerence on use of force and threat of force have many times turned into real actions,” said Nalbandian.

Nalbandian said that Azerbaijan does not do its part in honoring agreements reached at various summits since the April 2016 War.

“The recent most illustrative case was the meeting of the Foreign Ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Krakow in January, where it was agreed in principle to implement the expansion of the Office of the Personal Representative. Armenia and the Co-Chairs issued almost identical statements reflecting this agreement while Azerbaijan has not made any reference to it either after the meeting or up to now. When the Co-Chairs returned to the region a few days ago, Azerbaijan again failed to honor the implementation of the agreement on the expansion,” said Nalbandian.

Sports: Alex Iwobi: Mkhitaryan is amazing player

News.am, Armenia
Feb 4 2018

Nigeria midfielder Alex Iwobi has lauded his Arsenal newcomer teammate, Armenia midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan’s astonishing performance during their English Premier League football clash against Everton.

“We’ve seen glimpses in training and we were just waiting to see it on the pitch. As you can see from today, he’s just an amazing player,” Iwobi said on Mkhitaryan’s three assists in the game, reported the Arsenal official website. “With the quality players we have up front, we’re always going to create [scoring] chances.”

At the match that was played on Saturday evening in London, Arsenal won at home by a score of 5-1, Armenia captain Henrikh Mkhitaryan started for the Gunners for the first time, played the full game, made three assists, and Whoscored.com named him Man of the Match.

Photo from Arsenal website.

‘Mirror, mirror on the wall’, letting ‘self-determination’ say it all

The Financial Express (Bangladesh)
January 9, 2018 Tuesday
'Mirror, mirror on the wall', letting 'self-determination' say it all
Bangladesh, Jan. 9 -- One-hundred years ago, almost to the date,
Woodrow Wilson put the old wine of self-determination into a new
bottle in such a way that the remaining 20th Century and also the 21st
continue to still reverberate. Presenting his 'Fourteen Points' to the
US Congress in his State of the Union address, Wilson helped
post-World War I peacekeeping by proposing to make the League of
Nations the vehicle. Governance of this sort, conducted previously
through the Concert of Europe, for example, turned out to be too
restricted in length, breadth, and depth at a time of imperial clout,
but that helped Wilson's broad-ranging vision be heard and heeded
across an equally wide segment of the world.
This is not to say the League of Nations was the medicine that the
doctor not only ordered but also pinned any cure upon. It was instead
what the Model-T was to automobile evolution in the first-half of the
20th Century, a prototype, in this case of global governance. Of
course, it floundered where it began, in Europe, but it was partly
fated to that culmination when its 'founding father', Wilson's,
proposal was abandoned by his country, the United States. Learning
from the many mistakes, its follow-up attempt, the United Nations,
still manages to stand on its own two feet. Obviously tottering with
membership exponentially climbing beyond the chart, global governance
nevertheless held on against so many other odds, diversifying methods
and instruments, but mostly becoming a part and parcel of everyday
conversation.
More important is the central idea behind global governance.
Sovereignty may be the name for it, but how it began under that
explosive 'self-determination' label supplies one strand to measure
its fate a century after its most famous advocate brought it into the
global lexicon.
When he articulated it, Wilson directly and specifically addressed
extant empires, ranging from Austro-Hungary's and the Ottomans' in
Europe and Asia Minor to Great Britain's and France's global empires.
That his own country emerged from such a trapping in 1776 served to
inspire many intellectuals in colonised societies across the world, as
if demanding US championship of their cause. Wilson's call would have
its immediate impact in Europe, where the nation-state was born almost
three centuries before: Austro-Hungary and Ottoman Turkey were
dismantled by the post-World War I Paris Peace Conferences, while
India and a string of African French colonies had to wait a generation
or more longer.
Dismantling empires posed an unresolved problem, indeed, complicating
matters as if to thwart any such outcome. This was the nationality
problem. The Treaty of Westphalia sanctified statehood in terms of
nationality, and since that was the medium and mode, it spawned
problems not just in Asia, Africa, and the Americas, but even across
Europe. Neither the Austro-Hungarian nor Turk empires could be
dissolved into 'nation'-based states since certain nationalities,
especially the larger ones, wanted to control the minorities: Turks
wanted to control the Armenians and Kurds, among others. So too was
the case of the Slavs over Bosnians and Croats. In short, dissolving
the Austro-Hungarian and Ottoman empires produced some vexing
problems: Yugoslavia's 1990s dissolution produced the most savage
European moments since World War II, out of which Bosnia-Herzegovina,
Croatia, and Serbia had to be carved out in the 1990s. Next-door
Czechoslovakia also had to be reduced, albeit peacefully, to the Czech
Republic, Slovenia, Slovakia; while, Turk consolidation almost
eliminated the Armenians and disseminated the Kurds into at least five
different states. Iraq and Syria continue that same struggle today, to
convert artificial state-nations into nation-states, with Shias,
Sunnis, and Kurds creating differently coloured but mostly
incompatible constellations in each.
India further illustrates what is at stake. Its well-known story began
when the 1947 independence created two major states, each congested
with too many nationalities to give any sense of stability.
Bangladesh's split from Pakistan became South Asia's Damoclean Sword,
just as Africa's thornier tribal yardstick not only presents an
alternate and more complicated statehood platform, but also predicts
far more volatile outcomes.
Whatever peace the nation-state brought to West Europe, cannot be
replicated elsewhere. This is the net result of rallying behind
'self-determination' slogans. Self-determination need not be
nationalistically-driven. Since self-determination, as a call for
freedom, rallies multiple nationalities simultaneously, how to tame
the competing nationalistic surges behind the self-determination
crusades becomes the sine qua non of state survival.
If Wilson's self-determination calls remain open-ended still, the book
on empires cannot be fully closed. From the Balfour Declaration and
the Sykes-Picot Agreement to the McMahon Line, we see divisions backed
by armies to such an extent that global security hinges upon them.
Self-determination has been snuffed or subjugated, nationalist fires
refuse to taper, and even consummated nationalism, as in Spain, hovers
close to another type of a cleavage, based on ethnicity.
Self-determination may be more problematic a label and reality now
than when Wilson elevated its call; but had he, or someone else, not
risen to the occasion, perhaps the 20th Century may have been far more
bloody than it turned out to be. If the 30-odd sovereign members of
the League of Nations had not multiplied to the near-200 UN members
today, we would have the perpetual war Thomas Hobbes warned us about;
and even if empires had broken down, dictators ruling state-nations
would have infested every continent to as abysmal a low point as any
colonial identity could.
It is for that reason that a salute is due to the man who stood out to
alert a far wider world of the basic human right being absent. When we
consider human rights issues today, behind the teeming millions still
not relishing them, the figure of Woodrow Wilson stands tall: he
helped motivate everyone to mould a more natural collective identity,
but also to institutionalise it in some way. He set the example by
drifting from his own country in order to push the nail home after
1918. Ultimately, by not following his 1918 lead, the United States
had to re-do the entire ball-game during World War II at Dumbarton
Oaks and other locations. Yet, once ensnared, self-determination
literally opened a Pandora's box of human rights that we must now
disseminate.
That he stood up from an isolationist premise redoubles his doubly
noteworthy contribution. As a forerunner of US internationalism,
though that status produced its own conflicts, and quite a host of
them, the United States still remains one of the most crucial
champions of human rights and self-determination today as they enter
their second century of inducing individuals to maximise their own
rights and values opens up. It is a salutary moment in a tribally-torn
21st Century when an individual identity-search has far outpaced its
nationality-based counterpart.
Dr. Imtiaz A. Hussain is Professor & Head of the newly-built
Department of Global Studies & Governance at Independent University,
Bangladesh.

Armenia‘s Q3 GDP growth quickens to 3.5 pct yr/yr

Jackson Observer
Jan 6 2018

Armenia‘s Q3 GDP growth quickens to 3.5 pct yr/yr

YEREVAN, Nov 30 (Reuters) – Armenia‘s gross domestic product grew by 3.5 percent in the third quarter of this year, official data showed on Thursday, better than the same period in 2016 when it contracted by 2.6 percent.

The Caucasus nation‘s economic growth slowed to 0.2 percent last year, falling well short of the government‘s original target of 2.2 percent.

This year‘s figures are better so far. GDP growth hit 6.5 percent in the first quarter of 2017, outstripping a 4.4 percent rise in the same period a year earlier. The growth in the second quarter was 5.5 percent, up from 1.5 percent in the same period of 2016.

The country of 3.2 million depends heavily on aid and investment from former imperial master Russia, whose economic downturn has hit Armenian exports and remittances from Armenians working there.

The government expects the country‘s economy to grow by 3.2 percent this year, helped by lower borrowing costs and increased exports to Russia.

Armenian‘s Finance Minister Vardan Aramyan told Reuters in September the economy was set to grow by 4.3 percent this year.

The central bank said on Wednesday it had raised its forecast for GDP growth to 4.4-4.9 percent this year, up from an earlier estimate of 3.8-4.8 percent. (Reporting by Hasmik Mkrtchyan; Writing by Margarita Antidze; Editing by Alison Williams)

Music: Maestro Constantine Orbelian among artists featured at Isrotel Classical Music Festival

Panorama, Armenia
Dec 29 2017

Maestro Constantine Orbelian, General Director and Artistic Director of the National Opera and Ballet Theater of Armenia, will be among the featured conductors and artists at the globally renowned Isrotel International Festival of Classical Music, which will be held from January 3 to 6 in Eilat, Israel, Asbarez reported.

“It is an extraordinary honor to be a part of the Isrotel International Festival of Classical Music, especially given the fact that we’ll be celebrating its 20th anniversary this January,” Orbelian said.

The Isrotel International Festival of Classical Music, also known as the Isrotel Classicameri Festival, is an initiative of the Isrotel Hotel chain in Eilat, and will be held in cooperation with the Raanana Symphonette Orchestra, under the baton of Maestro Omer M. Wellber. On the occasion of its 20th anniversary, the festival will offer a multifaceted program combining beloved classical masterpieces and innovative new music. The festival will host acclaimed soloists, ensembles, and conductors from Italy, Armenia, the United States, Bulgaria, Germany, Spain, Poland, France, Russia and Switzerland.

Representing the Republic of Armenia, Maestro Orbelian will participate in the festival along with a number of Yerevan Opera House soloists, comprising Suzanna Melkonyan, Julietta Aleksnyan, Gevork Hagobyan, Armen Badalian, and Hovhannes Ayvazyan.

Other famed artists participating in the festival include Italian pianist Davide Cabassi, soprano Anna Skibinsky, Russian pianist Tatiana Larionova, duo mandolin from Spain Yaki Reuven and Marie Carmen Simon, Polish folk ensemble Dikanda, Bulgarian Kaval player Theodosii Spassov, conductor Yaron Gottfried, singer and video artist Ofri Brin, and the Sesame band — an Israeli ensemble of Balkan, Gypsy, and Middle Eastern music.

The Isrotel Classicameri Festival is dubbed “Masterpieces of the Classical Repertoire in a Cross-Borders Merging,” reflecting the event’s rich musical and thematic diversity. “A key aspect that sets the festival apart is that it functions as a marvelous platform for showcasing a veritable mosaic of cultures and musical traditions — thus celebrating cross-border synergies and providing audiences with deeply rewarding artistic experiences,” Orbelian said.

The festival will open on January 3 in the grand hall of the Royal Beach Hotel in Eilat, with the participation of Israeli singer Ofri Brin. The program will offer a combination of Brin’s electronic pop and soul music with masterpieces by Sibelius, Holst, and Schubert under the baton of Keren Kagarlitzky.

On the second day of the festival, two major concerts will be held. The first will feature the great young conductor Omer M. Wellber and the award-winning Italian pianist Davide Cabassi, in a program in which Beethoven’s Symphony No. 1 and Shostakovich’s Piano Concerto No. 2 will be performed. The second concert, “The Songs of Naomi Shemer,” will be a nostalgic journey featuring the works of the Israel Prize laureate. Participating in the concert will be Omer M. Wellber (accordion), Michael Anochin (contrabass), Rami Freiman (percussion), and singers Einat Aronstein, Goni Canaani, and Suf Sela. The concert will be moderated and accompanied on the piano by David Sebba.

The two main concerts on the third day of the festival will pay tribute to the lush intersection of cultures and traditions linked together through music. At the “Gala Opera – From Yerevan with Love,” the Raanana Symphonette will host Maestro Constantine Orbelian and the soloists of the Yerevan Opera House under his direction. The concert will perform beloved arias and duets from major operas, alongside gems from the Armenian folk repertoire. The evening will continue with a layered musical encounter devoted to the deep connection between music and dance. The “Dancing” concert is dedicated to folk dances that have found their way to concert halls: from ballroom and folk to street dancing. Under the baton of David Sebba, the evening will be accompanied by the Raanana Symphonette Orchestra, including violinist Nitai Zori, the Sesame band, and the Polish band Dekanda.

The festival will conclude on Saturday, January 6, with a jubilant concert in which Maestro Orbelian and the Raanana Symphonette will host the festival’s artists.

Also on January 6, Maestro Orbelian will appear as a guest on the “Cultural Shabbat” program, for a conversation with television broadcaster Yoav Ginai, Omer M. Wellber, David Sebba. and Orit Fogel-Shafran. During the program, Maestro Orbelian will reminisce about his 20 years of musical collaboration with the late opera giant Dmitri Hvorostovsky.

In addition to its major concerts, the Isrotel Classicameri Festival will feature a complement of thematic concerts and musical encounters, performed by conductors, soloists and ensembles from across the globe.

Turkish press: Turkey has restored 14 churches, one synagogue since 2003

A total of 14 churches and a temple have been restored in Turkey from 2003 to 2017, an official statement said.

The restored worship places included Great Synagogue in the western province of Edirne, Aya Nikola Church in the Gökçeada district of the northwestern province of Çanakkale, Syrian Catholic Church in the İskenderun district of the southern province of Hatay, Armenian Protestant Church in the Sur district of the southeastern province of Diyarbakır, Fevkani Church in the Nizip district of the southeastern province of Gaziantep, Taksiyarhis (Ayanikola) Church in the Cunda island of the northwestern province of Balıkesir, Edirnekapı Aya Yorgi Church and Balat Iron Church (Sveti Stefan Church) in Istanbul.

The Sveti Stefan Church in Balat, which is the only iron church, will reopen after nine years of restoration with a ceremony to be attended by President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan and Bulgarian Prime Minister Boyko Borisov on Jan. 7. 

Turkey, restoration, church, synagogue