The existence of free and democratic Artsakh is an irrefutable fact – Eduard Sharmazanov

Panorama, Armenia

Aug 12 2017

The Deputy Speaker of Armenian National Assembly Eduard Sharmazanov has received today Portuguese politician, the member of the Assembly of the Republic Rubina Berardo, press service at the Parliament reported.

During the meeting, the deputy speaker has expressed hope that an Armenian- Portuguese friendship group will be formed in the Assembly of the Republic, highlighting the deepening of the ties with Portugal in the context of invigorating the political dialogue between the two states as well as development of the Armenia – EU relations.

Eduard Sharmazanov has commended Rubina Berardo’s visit to Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh) Republic, suggesting such visits would further bring the international recognition of the Artsakh Republic into reality.
To note, the Portuguese lawmaker earlier held a meeting with the Speaker of the Artsakh National Assembly Ashot Ghulyan in Stepanakert.

“The freedom loving people of Artsakh voted for a free independent and democratic statehood yet in 1991, and today the existence of free and democratic Artsakh is an irrefutable fact. We stand ready to make use of our parliamentary links to ready the fair cause of the Artsakh people at all parliamentary platforms,” the press service quoted Sharmazanov as saying.

Model from Kyrgyzstan mistakenly represents Armenia in World Next Top Model 2017 contest

AKIpress (press release)

Aug 9 2017


Model from Kyrgyzstan mistakenly represents Armenia in World Next Top Model 2017 contest

16:24, , 643

A model from Kyrgyzstan Susanna Egoryan, who participated in the World Next Top Model 2017, represented Armenia when reached the finals, organizator of the beauty pageant in Kyrgyzstan Tattybubu Samidin kyzy told AKIpress.

“I heard this information just today. I was shocked like everyone else. I sent Susanna on behalf of Kyrgyzstan, but I didn’t know that she will betray me and our Kyrgyzstan,” she said.

According to Tattibubu, Susanna is a citizen of Kyrgyzstan and the organizers of the World Next Top Model did not have right to give her the tape of Armenia to her.

“We will discuss this issue with Susanna, when she will arrive to Kyrgyzstan,” she noted.

Art: Aivazovsky at 200: Turkey’s Love Affair with a Russian-Armenian Painter

Asbarez Armenian News

Aivazofsky Self-portrait, 1874, oil on canvas

BY SCOTT ABRAMSON
Special to Asbarez

In late-nineteenth-century Russia, a speechless beholder of something very beautiful always had recourse to a popular cliche when a description was needed but inspiration failed. A sight “worthy of Aivazovsky’s brush” were the words with which the observer awed into silence could recover the faculty of speech. The hand that wielded this brush of such creative aesthetic power that it became the subject of cliche belonged to the Russian-Armenian Romantic painter Ivan Aivazovsky (1817-1900), the bicentennial of whose birth is on Saturday.

Aivazovsky’s celebrity in Russia has diminished little since his artistry was a synonym for breathtaking beauty. This is natural enough, inasmuch as the excellence of his work—like that of any masterful artist, writer, poet, or musician—is unaffected by the advance of time or the whim of fashion. As is also the case with other creative virtuosos, Aivazovsky’s genius has become the stuff of lore. One well-known legend tells of visitors to one of his exhibitions who, incredulous at his mastery of light, suspected trickery and accused the artist of hiding lanterns behind his canvases to illuminate the scenes.

If the longevity of Russian appreciation of Aivazovsky is nothing to puzzle over, then the celebration of this Russian-Armenian painter in Turkey, of all places, is another story. This is not just because in the person of Aivazovsky there combine the two peoples with whom Turkey’s relations have been—shall we say by way of understatement—troubled. Aivazovsky was indeed a patriotic Russian and a proud Armenian, but a circumstance more touchy from Turkey’s perspective was that he was also the “painter-in-chief” of the Russian Navy and, thus, the servant—and even a personal acquaintance—of four tsars, one of whom (Alexander II) was responsible for shrinking the sultan’s dominion considerably. But this is not all that would fail to endear him to Turkey. He was guilty of other acts of lèse majesté against the sultan, having both supported Greek self-determination devotedly and decried Ottoman aggression against Armenians in the last years of his life, amid the Hamidian prelude to the Genocide.

View of Constantinople and the Bosphorus (1856)

Even so, Aivazovsky’s labors in the service of the Ottomans’ Russian arch-enemy did not dissuade three sultans from commissioning him for royal portraiture or from decorating him with medals. At least one of these medals, it should be noted, he renounced in protest at the cruelties Abdul Hamid inflicted on the Armenians in the 1890s. Yet neither this nor his depictions of Ottoman brutality in some of the paintings he executed latterly—The Armenian Massacres at Trebizond, for example—has denied him the vast audience his works would find in Turkey. On the contrary, there, in one of the world’s most nationalistic countries, where offenses against national pride are prosecuted under the penal code’s notorious Article 301, many claim Aivazovsky as one of their own, as a sort of honorary Turk.

If an explanation for the apparent improbability of Turkish appreciation of Aivazovsky had to be reduced to a single word, it would certainly be “Istanbul.” Aivazovsky positively adored the Ottoman capital, which he journeyed to perhaps as many as eight times—and that in an era in which the cost, danger, duration, and general hardship of long-distance travel were far greater than they are today. Aivazovsky in fact painted Istanbul much more than he visited it, producing some 200 landscapes and genre scenes of the city.

It is the splendor of these depictions of Istanbul and the prolificacy with which he painted them—indeed, more than any of his Turkish contemporaries—that have won Aivazovsky the esteem of the Turkish public. In the past few years alone, this esteem has found rich _expression_ in Turkey in exhibitions, books, and digital slideshows all dedicated, in some form or another, to Aivazovsky’s ties to Istanbul. Nor has this appreciation been limited just to his renderings of Istanbul. Aivazovsky’s marine paintings, the most numerous works in his several-thousand-strong oeuvre and the species of composition for which he is best-known throughout the world, are likewise celebrated in Turkey.

Aivazovsky mania has even reached the highest echelons of Turkish officialdom, past and present, from Ataturk to Erdogan. The stark austerity of Ataturk’s bedroom in Dolmabahçe Palace (a building designed, incidentally, by members of the Armenian Balyan family’s dynasty of Ottoman court architects) is interrupted at intervals only by wall-mounted Aivazovsky masterpieces. One would not be indulging in wild speculation in supposing that an Aivazovsky painting was in fact the last sight to present itself to Ataturk’s eyes, given that it was in these quarters that he breathed his last. A visitor to Dolmabahçe today is even permitted a view of the room, Aivazovsky’s paintings and all, as it supposedly looked on that day in 1938 when the Turkish Republic lost its founder.

Such is Turkish admiration for Aivazovsky that it has not even escaped a vulgarian like Turkey’s current president. In 2014, after swapping the office of prime minister for the office of the president without trading in his powers correspondingly, Erdogan moved into new accommodations he ordered built for himself—albeit illegally and at a cost of at least $600 million—and had the walls of his new palace beautified with Aivazovsky’s paintings. Samples of Aivazovsky’s genius can also be glimpsed in less controversial and more elegant state buildings than this palatial eyesore Erdogan now occupies, among them Çankaya Mansion (the Armenian-built palace that served as the presidential residence before becoming the prime minister’s compound with Erdogan’s 2014 switch), Topkapı Palace, Küçüksu Pavilion, and the Istanbul Military and Naval Museums.

One other wall graced by Aivazovsky paintings was that in the room in which Turkey and Russia concluded the peace treaty that brought the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-78 to an end. Of course, the peace entered into that day, with Aivazovsky’s paintings looking down on the treaty’s signatories, did not last—and with disastrous effect to the Armenians. But a shared love of Aivazovsky has endured, cutting across enemy lines and uniting Russians, Turks, and Armenians in a rare consensus. And so, in that spirit, Aivazovsky’s work and its reception remind us on this, the occasion of his two-hundredth birthday, of both the immortality and the universality of great art, starting with his own

A historian of the modern Levant, Scott Abramson is a Ph.D. candidate in the Department of Near Eastern Languages and Cultures at UCLA and a doctoral fellow at the Israel Institute.


Cambridge-Yerevan Sister City Association holds annual meeting

Wicked Local, MA

The 31st annual meeting of the Cambridge-Yerevan Sister City Association was held June 22 at Johnson Hall at Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church in Cambridge.

During a brief business meeting, CYSCA President Alisa Stepanian gave welcoming remarks. Suzanne “Suzy” Pearce was honored for her dedication and decades of service on the CYSCA board of directors. Pearce was one of CYSCA’s founders and she passed away last year. Patricia Nolan, CYSCA member ex officio and longtime member of the Cambridge School Committee, also was recognized. Over the years, Nolan has been active in hosting CYSCA guests visiting from Armenia.

An update and annual report of the Armenia School Aid Project was given by Jack Medzorian. ASAP was founded in 1994 and aids needy schools in Armenia. In 2016, 10 schools in the region of Berd and nearby frontier villages received donations from 10 sponsors totaling $9,000. In April 2017, Eva and Jack Medzorian visited the same region again and distributed $10,500 in aid from 22 sponsors to 11 schools. Funds provided assistance to different schools in various ways, including repairing toilets, replacing crumbling windows with new ones, installing a new fresh drinking water line and providing refrigerators and stoves for a school lunchroom.

Medzorian also shared that Vigen Sargsyan, previously chief of staff to Armenian President Serge Sargsyan, is now Armenia’s minister of defense. Vigen first came to the United States in 1994 as part of the first CYSCA student exchange.

For the eighth consecutive year, CYSCA participated in the Cambridge Science Festival. CYSCA organized a panel discussion on lightning, climate change and other scientific challenges at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and invited Dr. Ashot Chilingarian, director of the Yerevan Physics Institute and head of its Cosmic Ray Division, from Yerevan, the capital of Armenia, to be on the panel. Joining him were speakers from MIT, the University of New Hampshire and the Florida Institute of Technology. The panel discussion was moderated by Mike Wankum, chief meteorologist at WCVB Channel 5 in Boston, attracting more than 100 participants.

During Chilingarian’s stay, CYSCA also organized his visits to various universities including MIT, UNH and Worcester Polytechnic Institute where he gave talks to colleagues and graduate students. He also visited the MIT Haystack Observatory and the Museum of Science in Boston. Discussions were held for potential collaborations and visits to Armenia by climate change experts.

For the 2016 Cambridge Science Festival, CYSCA hosted solar energy expert Dr. Artak Hambarian of American University of Armenia and local counterparts in a panel discussion on renewable energy held at Lesley University in Cambridge.

In May 2016, with funding from Open World, CYSCA hosted a group of young experts in the field of disabilities and inclusion. Over a period of eight days and 25 meetings, they met with local counterparts, such as the Cambridge Commission for Persons with Disabilities; Joint Committee on Children, Families and Persons with Disabilities; Disability Law Center of Massachusetts; Boston Center for Independent Living; Charles River Center; the Arc of Massachusetts; and Perkins School for the Blind. A panel discussion took place on May 26 at National Association for Armenian Studies and Research, during which guests shared their experiences in Boston and the realities in Armenia. The experts have brought back to Armenia the lessons learned in the Boston area.

Open World recently granted CYSCA a fourth grant for a media literacy program for five young professionals from Armenia that will take place in the Boston area from Sept. 28 through Oct. 5. The program aims to develop the leadership capability of young professionals by engaging them with American counterparts, and a program of visits and meeting with various individuals and organizations in the greater Boston area has been planned. Host families are needed.

After the CYSCA annual meeting, guest speaker Brian Corr, executive director of the Cambridge Peace Commission, discussed the importance of sister city relationships, shared values and the future. Corr discussed the peace movement in the 1980s, the importance of people-to-people relationships and formation of sister city relationships.

The minutes, financial report and operating budget were reviewed and accepted. The 2017-18 slate for the CYSCA board of directors was accepted and include Nathan Allukian, Isabelle Hamel, Nancy Kalajian, Philip Ketchian, Eva Medzorian, Jack Medzorian, Ashot Papoyan, Alisa Stepanian and Scott Yerganian.

For information on CYSCA membership or becoming a host family, email [email protected] or visit

Armenian 911 first-responders share the most funny calls & stories

Armenpress News Agency , Armenia
 Monday
Armenian 911 first-responders share the most funny calls & stories
YEREVAN, JULY 24, ARMENPRESS. 911 dispatchers receive the most various
calls on a 24/7 basis, but some of them might get a bit too far.
From a frantic 911 call on a snake encounter to a possible suicide
attempt – these seemingly serious incidents actually didn’t turn out
to be what they appeared to be.
Hovhannes Khangeldyan, head of the National Center of Crisis
Management (Emergency Situations Ministry), held a press conference
today on various matters, and also mentioned a few funny stories.
“We got a call on a snake encounter in an apartment, naturally we
responded as usual and emergency personnel were dispatched. A snake,
however, wasn’t discovered, but a young couple was. Apparently one of
the relatives had found out about them and called us. This, certainly
is an unfortunate case”, he said.
Another citizen had dialed 911 and said that a young girl is trying to
commit suicide on the roof of the nearby building. Emergency
first-responders were immediately dispatched to the scene, only to
find out the girl was simply dancing, having fun, and listening to
music with her earphones.

Culture: The 6th Mime Festival starts in Tsaghkadzor

Public Radio of Armenia

15:19, 21 Jul 2017
Armradio

The 6th Leonid Yengibaryan Mime Festival starts off tomorrow in Tsaghkadzor. The festival is organized by the Ministry of Culture of RA, Yerevan State Pantomime Theatre and Tsaghkadzor Municipality.

Besides Armenia, artists from Artsakh, Germany, Czech Republic, Bangladesh, France, Russia and South Africa are participating this year.

The Armenian participants are Yerevan State Pantomime Theatre, the theatre-studio “Us” for the deaf that works under the same theatre, students of the Pantomime department of State Institute of Theatre and Cinematography.

The financial supporter of the festival is Araratbank which is going to continue supporting Pantomime theatre in the future.

“Starting from this year the festival becomes annual. We used to organize it only once in two years before. Last year we established the Pantomime theatre in Artshakh the first workers of which will participate in the festival this year with an interesting project. It is a German-Artsakh project; one German and one Artsakh mime perform”, said Jirayr Dadasyan, the artistic director of Yerevan Pantomime Theatre.

According to statistics, not only the number of participants but also the number of the audience rose since 2008.

Restarted construction after 20 years of anticipation

Panorama, Armenia

In the course of a regular visit on a family need assessment task two months ago the “Fuller Center for Housing Armenia” gladly surprised the Baghdasaryan family living in Katnaghbyur village of Aragatsotn region by informing that it was included in the center’s housing project. For many years, Haykaram, the family’s father, his wife and their three sons, have had to live with his parents, and rent a half-ruined apartment of a co-villager. Due to social conditions, the construction of the half-built house would not progress and would continue to remain a dream.

The unfinished building will soon become a real home; the construction works of the house are vigorously continuing. The representatives of the partnering organizations, VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian and the “Fuller Center for Housing Armenia” team, who have made volunteerism as a value system, also participated in the construction works.

“I can’t believe that this is reality. This building already looks like a house… It has doors, windows and it has a roof. Your today’s help is so unexpected and to the point, so important and invaluable. I am so grateful for stretching us a helping hand,” said Haykaram.

The purpose of each investment is to help the families living in desperate conditions to overcome them. The results show that the housing project succeeds in performing its mission. Within the six years of cooperation, the partnering organizations have solved the housing problem of 149 families, contributing to the wellbeing of the families and creating basis for the families to raise their children in a healthy environment.

“If we want to have developed rural communities, we have to be ready to support our compatriots to rise. With broken heart, with no perspective for the coming day, a hopeless person is helpless no matter at what age. One of the crucial features of this program is that it lets people in regions settle the years-long problems which seemed unmanageable with dignity. I am happy to see yet another family enthusiastically building its dream home. We have readily joined in the construction works. And this is just another way to strengthen people’s faith in future,” said VivaCell-MTS General Manager Ralph Yirikian.

“One of the specifics of the project is that the family is doing the construction works on its own. It not only greatly reduces the cost of the construction works but also stimulates the family not to leave the home built with their own hands. This is evidenced by years of our experience,” said the “Fuller Center for Housing Armenia” President Ashot Yeghiazaryan.

In 2017 VivaCell-MTS has invested AMD 25 mln for the implementation of the housing project.

Yerevan in talks with Moscow on new loan to buy Russian weapons

TASS, Russia

World

July 20, 2:53 UTC+3 YEREVAN

YEREVAN, July 19. /TASS/. Armenia is in talks with Russia on a new loan to buy Russian-made weapons, Armenian Finance Minister Vardan Aramyan said on Wednesday.

“Discussion of the issue of a new defense-related loan started with Russia this year and will go along for quite a time,” he said, adding that the two countries had earlier reached a top-level agreement on buying Russian-made defense-related products at Russia’s domestic prices. “As a strategic partner, Russia agreed. Negotiations are now underway,” he noted.

According to the Armenian finance minister, his country is having such talks only with Russia from among other countries of the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO). “We are also discussing how to avoid problems linked with the loan repayment,” Aramyan said.

In his words, Armenia has not yet completely used the first export loan of 200 million U.S. dollars meant to buy Russia-made defense-related products. “We have 30 million U.S. dollars left,” he said.

The two countries signed an agreement on that loan on June 25, 2015. It came into effect on February 10, 2016.

The opening of the 4th stage of the “Ari Tun” program took place

Please find the attached press release of the Ministry of Diaspora.
Sincerely,
Media and PR Department
(+374 10) 585601, internal 805


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Sports: Armenian wrestlers win three medals at Junior European Championships

PanArmenian
Armenian wrestlers win three medals at Junior European Championships
– 10:51 AMT
PanARMENIAN.Net – The Armenian team of wrestlers secured one silver and two bronze medals at the Junior European Championships in Dortmund. Hovhannes Maghakyan (120kg weight class) lost to Russia’s Magomedamin Dibirov and took the silver on the last day of the free style event. Earlier, Arsen Harutyunyan (55kg weight class) and Karen Zurabyan (50kg weight class) had snatched a bronze medal each.