Torchlight march marks mass deaths of Armenians [+Links]

By Associated Press – Sunday,

YEREVAN, Armenia — About 10,000 people bearing torches on Sunday night marched through Armenia’s capital to commemorate the estimated 1.5 million Armenians killed in Ottoman Turkey more than a century ago.

The march from a central square to a sprawling memorial complex began with activists burning the flags of Turkey and Azerbaijan. Tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan have spiraled in recent months since the blockage of the road leading to the ethnic Aremenian region of Nagorno-Karabakh within Azerbaijan.

Historians estimate that, in the last days of the Ottoman Empire, up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks in what is widely regarded as the first genocide of the 20th century.

Armenians have long pushed for the deaths to be recognized as genocide.

While Turkey concedes that many died in that era, the country has rejected the term genocide, saying the death toll is inflated and the deaths resulted from civil unrest during the Ottoman Empire’s collapse.

Armenia on Monday formally observes Genocide Remembrance Day, marking the start of the killings in 1915.

https://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2023/apr/23/torchlight-march-marks-mass-deaths-of-armenians/ 

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Facebook blocks Armenian Genocide frames

Panorama
Armenia –

SOCIETY 14:35 22/04/2023 ARMENIA

Facebook has blocked the creation of profile frames to commemorate the 108th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian Genocide Museum and Institute reported on Saturday.

“The Armenian Genocide Museum and Institute has prepared commemorative frames reading “I REMEMBER AND DEMAND” for profile pictures this year as well, however Facebook has blocked the feature to create frames,” it said in a statement.

The museum suggests using Photoshop to add the frames to photos before posting them on Facebook.

PM Pashinyan congratulates Iran’s Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, President Raisi on Eid al-Fitr

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 11:38,

YEREVAN, APRIL 22, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan sent congratulatory messages to the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution Ayatollah Sayyid Ali Khamenei and the President of the Islamic Republic of Iran Sayyid Ebrahim Raisi on the occasion of the Islamic Eid al-Fitr holiday.

The Prime Minister’s message addressed to the Supreme Leader of the Islamic Revolution reads as follows,

“Your Eminence,

I convey my warm words of congratulations to you and the friendly people of the Islamic Republic of Iran on the occasion of the Eid al-Fitr holiday, which symbolizes the end of self-purification and fasting. I wish that the symbolism of this bright holiday be an inseparable companion of the people of neighboring and friendly Iran.

The Government of the Republic of Armenia and the Armenian people greatly value the warm Armenian-Iranian relations with a history of thousands of years, which today, standing as a bright example of the effective dialogue between Christianity and Islam, will conquer new horizons in the near future for the benefit of our peoples and for the sake of regional stability.

Taking this opportunity, I wish you plenty of sunshine and good health, and lasting peace to the people of Iran.

Please accept, Your Eminence, the assurances of my highest consideration”.

Nikol Pashinyan’s message addressed to the President of Iran reads as follows,

“Your Excellency,

I warmly congratulate you on the Islamic holy holiday of Eid al-Fitr. May the fecundity and blessings of this holiday always accompany the neighboring and friendly people of Iran.

Today, there are all prerequisites for the further strengthening of our steadily developing bilateral relations, anchored on the millennia-old rich history. I sincerely hope that due to political will and stable partnership, we will witness the expansion of cooperation between our two countries for the sake of the well-being of the Armenian and Iranian peoples and regional security.

Taking this opportunity, I wish you new achievements and lasting peace to the friendly people of the Islamic Republic of Iran.

Please accept, Your Excellency, the assurances of my highest consideration.”

Conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia | Info

Azerbaijan said today it had established a checkpoint on the only land route to the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh region, a move that was followed by claims of shelling on the border by Azerbaijani and Armenian forces.

Nagorno-Karabakh is internationally recognized as part of Azerbaijan, but its 120,000 residents are predominantly ethnic Armenians and the region broke away from Baku in a war in the early 1990s.

Azerbaijan said it had set up a checkpoint on the road leading to Karabakh, a step it said was essential because it believed Armenia was using the road to transport weapons.

Azerbaijan “took appropriate measures to establish control at the starting point of the route,” the Ministry of Foreign Affairs said.

Armenia said the checkpoint at the Hakari Bridge in the Lachin Corridor was a gross violation of the 2020 ceasefire agreement that ended that year’s war.

(SRNA)

Sports: Davit Hovhannisyan – two-time European Champion, Ara Aghanyan – two-time Vice-Champion

NEWS.am
Armenia –

The European Weightlifting Championship continues at the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert Complex.

David Hovhannisyan (96 kg) became a two-time European Champion, Ara Aghanyan – a two-time Vce-Champion.

Hovhannisyan with the total weight of 377 kg (172+205) won the gold medal.

The second representative of Armenia in the same weight category, Ara Aganyan, showed the total result of 364 kg (165+199).

Sports: Yerevan, Day 7: Armenia starts its move towards top at European Championships

Weightlifters from host nation Armenia were roared on to the podium by a big crowd at the European Championships here in Yerevan.

Davit Hovhannisyan and Ara Aghanyan, first and second last year in Albania, repeated the feat in front of their own fans, helped by a slew of red lights for rivals from France and Italy.

The 96kg result takes the host nation up to second place behind Romania in the medals table and with several more chances over the weekend they look certainties to finish top.

Another certainty is a packed house at the Karen Demirchyan Complex on Saturday and Sunday.

More than 4,000 tickets have been sold for the final men’s super-heavyweight session of the Championships, which features multiple champion and world record holder Lasha Talakhadze of Georgia and the young Armenian challenger Varazdat Lalayan.

Hovhannisyan led his team-mate by 7kg in the snatch and stretched the advantage to 13kg, finishing on 172-205-377, with Aghanyan on 165-199-364.

Between them they declined three attempts, having seen off all challengers.

Cristiano Ficco from Italy made only two good lifts for third place on 165-198-363, ahead of the snatch silver medallist from Turkey, Hakan Kurnaz in fourth on 361kg and Britain’s Cyrille Tchatchet in fifth on 350kg.

Both French athletes, Redon Manushi and Romain Imadouchene – fourth at the International Weightlifting Federation (IWF) World Championships last December – bombed out in the snatch.

In the other medal event of the day, the women’s 81kg, Iryna Dekha from Ukraine won a sweep of gold medals to claim her fourth continental title.

For the third session in a row the winner finished way clear: for Karlos Nasar and Marie Fegue yesterday the margin was 21kg and 27kg, and for 26-year-old Dekha it was 23kg after she made 123-135-258.

Dekha has always thrived in the snatch by comparison with clean and jerk, having bombed out twice with three failures in the latter part of a competition – including at the Tokyo Olympic Games.

Here she made her first clean and jerk but missed the last two, which is exactly what happened in December at the first Paris 2024 qualifier, the IWF World Championships,  where Dekha won snatch gold then dropped to fourth place.

Turkey won four more medals and it has 21, more than any other nation after seven days.

Dilara Narin finished second on 101-134-235 and Sara Yenigun on 131kg.

Elina Erighina of Moldova was third on total with104-130-234.

By Brian Oliver, Inside the Games

https://iwf.sport/2023/04/22/yerevan-day-7-armenia-starts-its-move-towards-top-at-european-championships/

Armenpress: Weightlifter Davit Hovhannisyan won the gold medal, Ara Aghanyan won the silver medal of European Championship

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 21:40,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. 96 kg weightlifters competed at the European Weightlifting Championship in Yerevan. Armenia had two representatives in this weight: Ara Aghanyan and Davit Hovhannisyan.

ARMENPRESS reports, at the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Concert complex, member of the Armenian national team Davit Hovhannisyan lifted 164, 167, 170 kg in the snatch exercise with three successful approaches. Hovhannisyan won a small gold medal in this exercise. In the push exercise, he raised 200, 205 kg and became a gold medalist in this exercise as well. Davit Hovhannisyan is the two-time champion of Europe with a result of 377 kg.

The other member of the Armenian national team, Ara Aghanyan, had one successful approach in the snatch exercise – 165 kg. Aghanyan won a small bronze medal in this exercise. In the push, Aghanyan became the silver medalist of the exercise with one approach – 199 kg, and in the doubles he registered a result of 364 kg and became the vice-champion of Europe.

Ara Aghanyan won the second medal in the European Championship. Aghanyan became the silver medalist of the European Championship last year.

In the championship in Yerevan, until now member of the women’s national team of Armenia, 55 kg Isabella Yailyan became the bronze medalist of the Championship, and Alexandra Grigoryan was the 6th. Anush Arshakyan, weighing 64 kg, took the 9th place in subgroup B. In 76 kg category, Tatev Hakobyan won the silver medal of the European Championship, and 16-year-old Emma Poghosyan was the 5th. Anna Amroyan was 6th in subgroup B of 81 kg, and Liana Gyurjian was 10th in subgroup A.

Gor Sahakyan became the European champion in the men’s competition with a result of 320 kg in the 67 kg weight. Rafik Harutyunyan won a bronze medal in the 81 kg weight class. Andranik Karapetyan became the vice-champion of Europe in the 89 kg weight category.

Genocide survivor testimonies now accessible at the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection, one of the Zoryan Institute’s earliest and most transformative projects, has been added to the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History housed at the AGBU Papazian Library. The collection contains over 750 interviews of Armenians who survived the genocide, and these interviews are now accessible to students, faculty members or researchers at the American University of Armenia (AUA) and in Yerevan.

The Zoryan Institute entered into an agreement with the AUA in 2018 to establish the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History with the purpose of transcribing, translating and subtitling the interviews of the Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection into English.

AGBU Papazian Library director Satenik Avakian played a major role in coordinating activities of the center since its inception. “As a member of the center’s development team from the outset, I am so excited to see the impact that the center and this collection will have on AUA students and researchers,” said Avakian. “I take great pride in being part of the establishment of this center, and I look forward to seeing the incredible work and research that comes out of this impressive collection of interviews.”

The majority of the interviews of the collection were conducted in the Armenian language, and with the support of AUA students working with the center, the Zoryan Institute aims to make these interviews accessible with English subtitles to a wide demographic of people who can learn from these first-hand accounts of survival.

Araz Margossian, the academic support librarian at AUA responsible for the on-site management and coordination of the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History, states, “The Zoryan Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral Histories are the memories and testimonies of unique and individual human souls who witnessed, encountered and survived the atrocities of the Armenian Genocide. It is a great privilege and responsibility for the Zoryan Institute and AUA Center for Oral History to assume the role of housing, overseeing the transcription and translation of the collection, and coordinating access to these testimonies in Armenia.”

The Armenian Genocide Oral History Project, launched in 1983, was initiated by the Zoryan Institute when it became evident that time was running out for the generation of Armenians who had firsthand accounts of the genocide. It is now the largest audio-visual collection of its kind.

Over the years, the collection has proven to be a very valuable resource for researchers, scholars and filmmakers, given scientific approach used for the interview process, and for its visual component. A detailed questionnaire was developed with 90 questions organized under four broad headings: City/Village Life in the Armenian Homeland; Massacre and Deportation from the Armenian Homeland; Experiences as an Immigrant; and Attitudes and Interpretation. This questionnaire was carefully crafted by multi-disciplinary specialists, including anthropologists, sociologists and psychologists. The questionnaire was not only meant to elicit information about the Genocide, but also provide details and valuable insights into the life of the Armenian people preceding the Genocide and the trends that various disciplines can extract from the collection.

Mari Hovhannisyan, executive administrator of the Zoryan Institute Armenia, speaks to the tremendous benefits that this collection has for researchers. “As a researcher myself, I find the Zoryan Institute’s Armenian Genocide Oral History Collection incredibly valuable. Using first-hand testimonies in research contributes to various viewpoints and perspectives that fill in the gaps in documented history. With the support of the collection’s detailed catalogue, I can listen to these testimonies and piece together a common understanding of the people from that region at a specific moment in history, which is truly exceptional. I am elated that through the joint efforts of the Zoryan Institute and AUA, we can make these interviews accessible to researchers around the world.”

In addition to its academic strengths and value, the collection’s visual component has also caught the attention of a number of filmmakers over the years. The Zoryan Institute interviews with Armenian Genocide survivors were the inspiration behind two feature-length films. The 1988 PBS hit “An Armenian Journey” by filmmaker Theodore Bogosian, referenced the interview of Mariam Davis, the very first interview conducted for the collection. The 2022 multiple award-winning animated film by Inna Sahakyan of Bars Media “Aurora’s Sunrise” was based on and features the Institute’s interview of Armenian Genocide survivor Aurora Mardiganian.

The collection offers a visually captivating and emotionally impactful element to historical research. The interviews also provide a more comprehensive and nuanced perspective on past events, illuminating how individuals and communities experienced them. “As part of the work being done at the Zoryan Institute-AUA Center for Oral History, AUA students have embarked on transcribing and translating the interviews of the refugees, soldiers and witnesses of the 44-Day Artsakh War Oral History Project,” said Margossian. “Here again, this work is being done with the objective of making these interviews available in English to scholars and researchers around the world.”

Zoryan Institute and its subsidiary, the International Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies, is a non-profit organization that serves the cause of scholarship and public awareness relating to issues of universal human rights, genocide, and diaspora-homeland relations. This is done through the systematic continued efforts of scholars and specialists using a comparative and multidisciplinary approach and in accordance with the highest academic standards.


Federal and State Parliamentarians to Join Australian National Armenian Genocide Commemoration at Chatswood Concourse

Friday,

SYDNEY: The National Armenian Genocide Commemoration Evening on Monday 24th April 2023 – which will honour the 108th anniversary of the 1.5 million Armenians, as well as the 1 million Assyrians and Greeks, who were massacred by Ottoman Turkey in 1915 – will feature strong representation from Federal and New South Wales parliamentarians, reported the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU). 

Federal Parliamentarians, Jerome Laxale MP – Member for Bennelong and Chair of the Australia-Armenia Inter-Parliamentary Union; Paul Fletcher MP – Member for Bradfield and Vice Chair of the Australia-Armenia Inter-Parliamentary Union and Kylea Tink MP – Member for North Sydney will lead the list of Federal representatives at the commemoration.

Laxale and Tink will be attending their first National Commemoration as Federal Members of Parliament since their election to the House of Representatives in May 2022.

Steve Kamper MP – Member for Rockdale and NSW Minister for Multiculturalism – will attend his first National Armenian Genocide Commemorative event, and will be joined by NSW state parliamentary colleagues, including Hugh McDermott MP – State Member for Prospect; Tim James MP – State Member for Willoughby, Mark Coure MP – State Member for Oatley, Jordan Lane MP – State Member for Ryde, Matt Cross MP – State Member for Davidson and Michael Regan MP – State Member for Wakehurst.

There will be several elected officials from the Willoughby, Ryde, Northern Beaches and Fairfield local governments also in attendance, led by the Mayor of the City of Willoughby, Tanya Taylor and Mayor of the City of Ryde, Armenian-Australian Sarkis Yedelian OAM.

“Many of our political guests will be joining us for the first time for an in-person commemoration to honour our fallen ancestors and pay tribute to their memory. It is an honour to have them join us for such a solemn occasion marked on the calendar of all Armenian-Australians,” said Kolokossian.

Middle East studies historian Dr. Ümit Kurt, who is an ethnically Kurdish citizen of Turkey, will keynote the first in-person National Armenian Genocide Commemoration evening since the Covid pandemic.

Dr. Kurt, is a historian of the modern Middle East. His research is on the social, cultural, and economic history of the late Ottoman Empire and the early Turkish Republic in the 19th and 20th centuries, with a special focus on the Armenian Genocide and dispossession of Ottoman Armenians at large, imperial interests, ethnic politics, forced migrations and infrastructural transformations.

Dr. Kurt completed his dissertation in the Department of History at Clark University in the United States in 2016. He has since held several postdoctoral positions at the Centre for Middle Eastern Studies at Harvard University, and the Polonsky Academy in the Van Leer Jerusalem Institute, and worked as a Visiting Assistant Professor in Armenian Studies Program at California State University (CSU) in Fresno. 

Currently, Dr. Kurt is an Assistant Professor in the School of Humanities, Creative Industries and Social Sciences (History) at the University of Newcastle, Australia. He has also been serving as a Vice Executive Secretary for the International Network of Genocide Scholars (INoGS) since March 2020, and is the author of several books, including “The Armenians of Aintab: The Economics of Genocide in an Ottoman Province” and “Antep 1915: Genocide and Perpetrators” (2018).

He is also the co-author of “The Spirit of the Laws: The Plunder of Wealth in the Armenian Genocide” (Berghahn, 2017), the co-editor of “Armenians and Kurds in the Late Ottoman Empire” (The Press at California State University, Fresno, 2020), “The Committee of Union and Progress: Founders, Ideology, and Structure” (The Press at California State University, Fresno, 2021), and “The State of the Art of the Early Turkish Republic Period: Historiography, Sources and Future Directions” (The Press at California State University, Fresno, 2022).

The event is organised by the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee, under the auspices of His Eminence Archbishop Haigazoun Najarian, the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Armenian Catholic Church, and the Armenian Evangelical Church.

The member organisations of the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee are the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party, the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, the Armenian Democratic Liberal Party, the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Armenian Missionary Association of Australia, Hamazkaine, Nor Serount, Homenetmen, Tekeyan, Armenian Relief Society, Dkhrouni, AGBU Youth and the Armenian Youth Federation.

https://www.anc.org.au/news/Media-Releases/MONDAY-24-APRIL–Federal-and-State-Parliamentarians-to-Join-Australian-National-Armenian-Genocide-Commemoration-at-Chatswood-Concourse

KTLA Celebrates Armenian Heritage Month with a look back at Steve Papazian’s Hollywood career by: Ellina Abovian

Los Angeles –

April is Armenian Heritage Month for Los Angeles County and KTLA is paying tribute by shining a light on those making a positive impact in their community.

KTLA’s Ellina Abovian sits down with Steve Papazian, the former President of Production at Warner Bros. Studios and takes a look back at his storied career in Hollywood.

Watch the video at the link below: