Asbarez: Beatrice Euljekjian, Mother of Lebanese-Armenian POW, Passes Away

Beatrice Euljekjian with her granddaughter


BY JASMINE SEYMOUR
Special to Asbarez

Beatrice Euljekjian, the mother Lebanese-Armenian prisoner of war Vicken Euljekjian, who has been held in an Azerbaijani prison in Baku since 2020, passed away on April 21 in Lebanon after suffering a heart attack.

On Thursday, April 21, at around 5:04 a.m. London time, I noticed a missed called from Vicken’s wife, Linda Euljekjian. At 5:18 a.m. there was a message: “Vicken’s mother passed away.”

Only hours before, on Thursday afternoon and evening, we had spoken on the phone, therefore this tragic news was totally unexpected. That morning a Red Cross official had visited their small family apartment outside Beirut, where Linda lives with her daughter Christine and her mother-in-law Beatrice.

The Red Cross staff usually deliver letters from Vicken and take back letters from family members back to him. This is the only permitted communication avenue with the external world for all Armenian captives being unlawfully held in Azerbaijan. No visitors, including foreign diplomats, lawyers, or clergy are allowed to visit them.

Armenian POW Vicken Euljekjian is seen in an Azerbaijani court in June, 2021 (Trend.az photo)

“We are all dead, we have stopped eating or sleeping or living, all we want is for Vicken to return home soon,” Linda, who has been married to Vicken since 2000, said.

The clearing process for each letter from the POWs takes up to several weeks if not months, to be translated from Armenian and scrutinized by the Azerbaijani authorities before being released to the families. While letters are left with families, the pre-recorded videos of the captives are shown only on Red Cross staff mobile devices. No photo or video is entrusted to the families.

On the morning of April 21, a Red Cross staff member showed a routine video recording from Vicken.

Beatrice Euljekjian and her husband, Apraham

“He looks like an 85-year-old man, he is unrecognizable,” a tearful Linda told me. “It breaks our hearts to see him in this state. His mom has been in complete shock to see that her son has changed so much.”

Hours later Vicken’s mother, Digin Beatrice, passed away.

After watching Vicken’s latest video from prison, Linda and Beatrice became extremely concerned about his health. Vicken’s 20-year-old daughter Christine was at work and missed the Red Cross visit. The only two letters brought by Red Cross from Vicken were addressed to his wife and his son.

“Why doesn’t he write to me anymore?” Beatrice kept asking anxiously. Yet what was even more upsetting for her, was to see Vicken look twice his age within two and half years in Azerbaijani captivity.

Beatrice Euljekjian died of heart attack hours after seeing her son’s video. She left this world in grief, in despair, unable to help her son who has been imprisoned unlawfully in an unknown country. All she knew was that Azerbaijan had attacked Artsakh and Armenia.

Her funeral took place in the Holy Savior Armenian Catholic Church in the Bourdj Hammoud neighborhood of Beirut, where she was married and where her children and grandchildren were baptized.

Christine Euljekjian at the Bourdj Hamoud cemetery after the death of her grandmother

In 2018, Vicken, her youngest son had decided to move to Armenia, where he had received his Armenian passport and was promised an apartment in Shushi by the Diaspora High Commission. He was eager to settle down and take his children to Armenia in hopes of providing them a better future in his homeland. But after the Azerbaijani military aggression on September 27, 2020, his dreams and plans were shattered forever.

Beatrice Euljekjian (Jamkochian), was born in Aleppo, Syria in 1950, to a family of Armenian Genocide survivors who miraculously escaped the massacres in their hometown of Aintab, once part of the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia.

At the age of 19, Beatrice had married Abraham Euljekjian from Beirut with whom she had four sons, Vicken being the youngest.

“Vicken had a special place in our mother’s heart,” said Sako, Vicken’s older brother. “Not only because he was the youngest, but he was a miracle baby, the only survivor of the twins that my mother gave birth to.”

The tragedy of the situation of the Armenian POWs is equally tragic for their families, who suffer every day waiting for their loved ones return.

Vicken’s daughter, 20-year-old Christine, had been forced to abandon her education to work 14-hour shifts every day to pay the rent and support her family Lebanese economic collapse and crisis persist. Now, she has also lost her biggest support—her Nene— her rock, who always made her laugh.

“I have always lived with her. She was a mountain of strength, I have always dreaded this moment, but now it has come at the worst time of our lives,” Christine told me.

Christine was only 17 when she started campaigning for her father’s release over two and a half year ago. With the unlawful capture of her father by Azerbaijani soldiers near Shushi on November 10, 2020, Christine suddenly lost her childhood and prematurely became an adult.

It is hard to find any words to ease the pain of this family caught in this lamentable hostage crisis, however, I am reminding them that they are among the “lucky ones.” Thousands of young Armenian servicemen have lost their lives, that hundreds of Armenian captives were brutally murdered in captivity, while 300 more are still missing since the 2020 Artsakh War.

For centuries Armenian mothers, like Beatrice Euljekjian, have been the paragons of fortitude, raising their children with the Armenian language, cultural identity and patriotism in Lebanon and across Armenian diaspora communities. Therefore, the fight of this resilient mother must be continued until her son, a civilian hostage captured after the November 9, 2020 ceasefire agreement, is released from the Azerbaijani hell. Vicken continues to claim his innocence and denies all charges brought against him during a sham trial in a Baku court that has sentenced him to 20 years imprisonment in one of the most notorious prisons in the world.

Who is the brave leader or the valiant knight to bring back innocent Armenian hostages to their grieving families? I am calling on ALL leaders of international organizations, religious leaders and progressive countries: PLEASE SAVE THE LIVES OF INNOCENT ARMENIAN CAPTIVES AND THEIR FAMILIES.

Jasmine Seymour is an activist who established the British Armenian Group, which focuses on campaigning for the release of Armenian prisoners of war currently being held captive in Azerbaijan. The organization has been circulating a petition on change.org and is urging the public to sign the plea to release Armenian POWs.




Possible peace treaty with Azerbaijan must include mechanisms ruling out escalations, says Armenian Prime Minister

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 11:36,

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. A possible peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan must clearly stipulate the terms of the delimitation and also clear mechanisms for ruling out any escalation, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on April 27.

“The possible peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan must obviously have guarantees for implementation and a clear and functioning system for mechanisms of resolving disputes. The terms of border delimitation must be clearly stipulated, and clear mechanisms for ruling out any escalation must be introduced,” PM Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting. 

He added that not allowing a further escalation and achieving comprehensive settlement requires concrete and sincere efforts by the Armenian side and the international community. Pashinyan said that Armenia will continue all possible efforts in this direction.

Ahead of Baku Formula 1 Grand Prix, Armenia calls on int’l sports community to condemn Azeri policy of ethnic cleansing

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 13:35,

YEREVAN, APRIL 27, ARMENPRESS. The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia has called on the organisers of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" European tournament – due to take place in Baku – and the international sports community to raise a voice of protest regarding Azerbaijan’s policy of ethnic cleansing in Nagorno Karabakh.

Below is the full statement released by the Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia.

 

“The Ministry of Education, Science, Culture and Sports of the Republic of Armenia calls on the organisers of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" European tournament and the international sports community to raise a voice of protest regarding the ethnic cleansing policy of the Azerbaijani authorities in Nagorno-Karabakh.The Ministry draws the attention of the sports community to the fact that since December 12, 2022, the Republic of Azerbaijan has illegally blocked the Lachin Corridor, the only road connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to both Armenia and the world, creating an ongoing humanitarian crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh. On February 22, 2023, the United Nations International Court of Justice satisfied Armenia's claim, obliging Azerbaijan to open the Lachin Corridor immediately. To this day, Azerbaijan has not only failed to comply with the court's decision but has also cut off gas and electricity supplies. On April 23, the Azerbaijani authorities set up an illegal checkpoint on the humanitarian corridor connecting Nagorno-Karabakh to Armenia, taking 120,000 Armenian residents of Nagorno-Karabakh hostage. With this policy, the Azerbaijani authorities are trying to ethnically cleanse the Armenian population of Nagorno-Karabakh, forcing them to leave their native land.The organisation of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" European tournament in Baku aims to cover up the policy of extermination of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh.We call on the organisers and participants of the "2023 Formula 1 Grand Prix" not to be part of the cover-up of the policy of ethnic cleansing.”

In Remembrance Of The Armenian Genocide (in NYC)

Photos Nicollette Barsamian

US Senator Charles Schumer spoke at the April 23 Armenian Genocide Remem­brance event on Broadway and 45th Street in Times Square. Senator Schumer said, “Today we remember the victims of the Armenian Genocide and all their de­scendants. 108 years later, we honor the memory of all Armenians and stand in solidarity with the Armenian American community. We must never forget.”

https://www.qgazette.com/articles/in-remembrance-of-the-armenian-genocide/

Bulgarian Political Parties marked 108 Years since the Armenian Genocide

Bulgaria –

With declarations from the parliamentary rostrum, the political formations in the 49th National Assembly marked the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The leader of "Vazrazhdane" (Revival) Kostadin Kostadinov reminded:

"The genocide against the Armenians is not only a tragedy for them, but also a crime with global dimensions against civilization and humanity. This is the beginning of the process of erasing Christianity within the boundaries of the then Ottoman Empire 100 years ago."

Among the dead were 50,000 Bulgarians, Kostadinov reminded.

Ilina Mutafchieva from WCC-DB noted:

"Aghet, the Armenian word for an unimaginable crime, is the way to best describe what was done against humanity against the Armenian people."

Atanas Zafirov from BSP pointed out:

"The marking of this date is also a tribute to all those who fell victim to mass persecutions, systematic, deliberate extermination and ethnic cleansing. May God forgive the souls of the martyrs!"

History knows many painful moments and they should not be used for political purposes, urged the leader of DPS Mustafa Karadayi:

"Such topics should be left to historians. We politicians should look for ways of reconciliation and dialogue, for unification, not as an occasion for division."

GERB-SDS MP Toma Bykov made an analogy with today's situation:

"And when we all come out here and condemn the actions of the Ottoman Empire 100 years ago, but we are not able to clearly and categorically condemn the actions of the Russian Empire in the present, it means that maybe we are a bit hypocritical."

The chairman of TISP's parliamentary group, Toshko Yordanov, expressed regret that the topic is again being used politically and read the poem "Armenians" by Peyo Yavorov, reminding:

"The Armenian Genocide is part of Bulgarian history. Just as our ancestors fled from the horror of the Ottoman Empire in Bessarabia or in Banat, in the same way a part of the Armenian people fled to free Bulgaria and became part of our history and whatever we say here, the Bulgarian people have a clear attitude towards this tragedy".

On April 24, 2015, in connection with the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the event, the Bulgarian National Assembly adopted a declaration acknowledging the mass extermination of Armenians.

https://www.novinite.com/articles/219854/Bulgarian+Political+Parties+marked+108+Years+since+the+Armenian+Genocide

Gus Bilirakis Champions the Armenian Genocide Education Act

With Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day taking place this week, U.S. Rep. Gus Bilirakis, R-Fla., is championing U.S. Rep. Anna Eshoo’s, D-Calif., “Armenian Genocide Education Act.”

The bill “establishes a new program in the Library of Congress tasked with developing resources, including digital resources, to foster understanding about why and how the Armenian Genocide happened,” which “will be incorporated into curricula at schools across the country.” The proposal also “authorizes $2 million annually for the program over five years and allows the Library of Congress to supplement this funding with private donations.”

Bilirakis and other supporters of the proposal weighed in on it this week.

“Our darkest moments as a human race have come during times when those who knew better stood silently, making excuses for passivity and allowing injustice and persecution to reign. We must acknowledge the atrocities of the past so that we might hopefully prevent them in the future,” said Bilirakis. “One of the best ways to achieve this goal is through education and awareness, which is why I am proud to co-lead the Armenian Genocide Education Act again in the 118th Congress.”

“By ensuring students have access to the resources necessary to understand why and how the Armenian Genocide occurred, the Armenian Genocide Education Act preserves the legacies of the victims, combats genocide denial, and ensures that future generations learn the lessons of this dark chapter of history,” said Eshoo. “This legislation honors the memories of my ancestors and all those who perished at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.”

More than 40 House members, including Bilirakis, are co-sponsoring the proposal. The bill was sent to the U.S. House Committee on House Administration. So far, there is no companion measure over in the U.S. Senate.

“Between 1915 and 1923, 1.5 million Armenians, and hundreds of thousands of Assyrians, Greeks, Syriacs, Arameans, Maronites, and other Christians were systematically slaughtered at the hands of the Ottoman Empire,” the congressman’s office noted.

https://www.floridadaily.com/gus-bilirakis-champions-the-armenian-genocide-education-act/

Actor Joe Manganiello discusses his Armenian roots and culture

Actor Joe Manganiello may be known for his hit roles on ‘Magic Mike’ and ‘True Blood’, but he’s now sharing the story of his family’s history, roots, and Armenian culture.  

He spoke about his family’s past in Armenia during an Armenian Genocide commemorative event at the Alex Theater in Glendale Monday night.

He told the story of his great-grandmother who survived the 1915 Armenian Genocide and moved to America.  

In 1915, 1.5 million Armenians were massacred at the hands of the Ottoman Empire (modern day Turkey). Armenians were taken from their homes, tortured, starved, and killed. The land in Western Armenia was also taken by the Ottoman Empire. His great-grandmother survived, but was sent to live in a relocation camp and was impregnated by a German officer.  

She gave birth to a German-Armenian girl, Manganiello’s grandmother, and eventually moved to Worcester, Massachusetts and married an Armenian man.

Manganiello said it’s important to share the stories of our ancestors and spread awareness of the issues.  

"I didn’t realize how underrepresented the Armenian story is out there, I didn’t realize how me telling my great-grandmother's story, just simply she survived therefore I can be here today to tell her story and say her name and have a show like Dr. Gate’s show ‘Finding your Roots’, to have the ability to have me tell her story. I didn’t realize how many of those stories haven’t been heard and how many people don’t know the story of the Armenians," he said at the event.  

April 24, 2023, marked the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. To this day the Turkish government denies that the genocide occurred. In 2021, President Joe Biden became the first US president to formally recognize the Armenian Genocide.  

And even though the genocide occurred over a century ago, an ethnic cleansing of Armenians is occurring now in the region of Nagorno-Karabakh, also known as Artsakh.

"There are still atrocities happening now. It is definitely true for the Armenians; if there could have been some sort of repercussion you wonder if what happened in World War II couldn’t have been avoided," Manganiello stated.  

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"When you have a Diaspora, when you have a displacement of a group of people, it then gets kept alive through food, through culture, through language, through religion. So, the idea that my great-grandmother escaped and took that with her, I understand why it was so important for her."

Manganiello found out about his family’s past and multicultural roots through the genetics test 23 and Me. He also shared his story and learned more about it when he appeared on an episode of the PBS show ‘Finding your Roots with Henry Luis Gates’. He said the entire process took him about 10 years.  

His ancestry includes African, Armenian, German, and Italian.

"So, like I said, it's been this big discovery process. But I think as an artist, what's amazing to me is that now I know. And now I can spend my time exploring all of those things and then finding ways to talk about them in different ways," he said.

Putin, Pashinyan discuss situation in Karabakh over escalation in Lachin Corridor

 TASS 
Russia –
The leaders agreed to continue interaction at various levels

MOSCOW, April 26. /TASS/. Russian President Vladimir Putin held a phone conversation with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the Kremlin press service reported on Wednesday.

"The development of the situation around Nagorno-Karabakh was discussed with an emphasis on solving practical tasks of ensuring stability and security in the region. In the context of the current escalation in the Lachin Corridor, the importance of strict adherence to the entire set of fundamental agreements between the leaders of Russia, Armenia and Azerbaijan was stressed," its statement said.

The leaders agreed to continue interaction at various levels.

Earlier, the Armenian side reported the conversation.

Previously, Azerbaijan set up a checkpoint in the Lachin Corridor. The Armenian Foreign Ministry branded this as a flagrant violation of the 2020 trilateral statement.

Moscow calls on Baku, Yerevan to immediately return to existing agreements — MFA

 TASS 

It is noted that Russia was ready to provide all necessary assistance to Azerbaijan and Armenia both at the political level and on the ground – with the participation of Russian peacekeeping contingent.

MOSCOW, April 24. /TASS/. Russia calls on Azerbaijan and Armenia to immediately return to the existing agreements, Moscow is extremely concerned about the growing number of ceasefire violations in Karabakh, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement released on Monday.

"We register with extreme concern the increase in the number of ceasefire violations. <…> We urge the sides to immediately return to the existing agreements," the Russian Foreign Ministry said.

"We also warn external Western players and local Russophobe elements working on their agenda against attempts to unbalance the situation by smearing Russia," the diplomats stressed.

The ministry noted that Russia was ready to provide all necessary assistance to Azerbaijan and Armenia both at the political level and on the ground – with the participation of Russian peacekeeping contingent. "We proceed from the fact that the local population should not suffer in any case and no obstacles should be created to their lives," the Foreign Ministry said.

The diplomats pointed out that they considered dangerous the increased level of "accusatory and aggressive rhetoric in the public space of Azerbaijan and Armenia. "In the context of the latest developments on April 23, we especially note the unacceptability of any unilateral steps in violation of the basic provisions of the trilateral statement of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia of November 9, 2020, whether it is an uncoordinated change in the operation of the Lachin corridor or attempts to use it for purposes not consistent with a peaceful agenda," the statement said.

"We believe that many of the problems that have arisen are the result of months of stalemate and lack of progress in the negotiation process on the main tracks of the trilateral agreements of the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia, including the unblocking of transport communications in the region, launching the delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border and agreeing the parameters of the peace treaty between Azerbaijan and Armenia. We hope that Baku and Yerevan will show political will and overcome this negative dynamic in the near future," the ministry concluded.

Armenian-Americans in Washington, D.C. call on Biden to stop genocide in Artsakh

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 10:57,

YEREVAN, APRIL 25, ARMENPRESS. Armenian-Americans held a rally in Washington, D.C. to commemorate the Armenian Genocide victims on April 24 and to call on the U.S. President Joe Biden to take action to stop the genocide in Artsakh (Nagorno Karabakh).

The Armenian-Americans gathered outside the Azerbaijani embassy in the U.S. capital and marched to the Turkish embassy, before reaching the White House to hold a demonstration.

The demonstrators were carrying posters saying ‘Aliyev is a War Criminal’, ‘Stop the Artsakh Genocide’, ‘120,000 Peaceful Civilians Held Hostage by Azerbaijan’, ‘Break the Artsakh Blockade’.