AGBU: Nor Jraberd Repopulation in Artsakh

PRESS RELEASE
Nor Jraberd Repopulation Committee of AGBU in Canada
Address: AGBU Montreal
805 Manoogian Street
St. Laurent QC
CANADA H4N 1Z5
Contact: Viken L. Attarian
Tel: 514-240-0941
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
Deputy Speaker of British House of Lords,
Baroness Caroline Cox In Montreal

Montreal, January 22, 2007 – The NKR Nor Jraberd Project Team has announced
that the Deputy Speaker of the British House of Lords, The Baroness Caroline
Cox will be the main guest of honor during a series of events scheduled for
May 19-20, 2007 in Montreal.

Baroness Cox is an outspoken supporter of the pursuit of self determination
of the population of Nagorno Karabagh (Artsakh in Armenian). She has
participated in many efforts organized by various human rights’ groups in
support of the same goals.

The scheduled events will include a special presentation of her books and
signing by the author at the Armenian Community Center (Hay Getron), several
media interviews, a public debate and interactive session within the Ideas @
the AGBU series, a meeting with the Armenian scouts and girl guides of
Montreal (she is also the Vice President of the World Girl Guide Federation)
and a major fundraising banquet for the Nor Jraberd project at the AGBU
center where she will be the keynote speaker. All of these events and
schedules will be announced in due course.

All Armenian associations, organizations and community groups are kindly
asked to refrain from scheduling any conflicting events during these dates.

For further information, please contact the email address
[email protected] . Information can also be found at the NKR Nor Jraberd
website .

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.norjraberd.org/
http://www.norjraberd.org

NKR Pres Attaches Importance To Any Contact with OSCE MG Cochairs

NKR PRESIDENT ATTACHES IMPORTANCE TO ANY CONTACT WITH OSCE MINSK GROUP
CO-CHAIRMEN

YEREVAN, JANUARY 29, NOYAN TAPAN. "It is naturally meaningless to speak
today about any final results. But, any contact is important: every
meeting gives possibility to understand each other more and more," NKR
President Arkadi Ghukasian stated on January 27, touching upon the OSCE
Minsk Group Co-Chairmen’s visit paid to Stepanakert recently.
A.Ghukasian does not consider that "one can today unequivocally insist"
that the Karabakh conflict settlement is close as "there are still many
unsettled issues." According to his estimations, the NKR approaches are
espected by the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmen "as from our point of
view, our positions are reasoned, argued." The NKR President again
affirmed the viewpoint that the settlement is impossible without the
Karabakh side’s participation in the conflict settlement. In his words,
even those political forces of Azerbaijan, which attempt to make an
imporession that no NKR exists, understand it well.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Primate in Czech Republic Partook in Budapest European Church Forum

PRIMATE OF ARMENIAN APOSTOLIC CHURCH IN CZECH REPUBLIC PARTOOK IN
EUROPEAN CHURCHES FORUM IN BUDAPEST

Yerevan, January 29. ArmInfo. A forum of European churches on the
topic – "Ascend blessed spirit, heal and accept Europe, enlighten the
whole humanity with the light of Christ" was held in Budapest on 23-28
January.

The interconfessional office of the Chancellery of the Mother See of
the Holy Etchmiadzin (MSHE), told ArmInfo that the following questions
were entered in the forum’s agenda: "The Church and its healing
mission in Europe, Europe and nationalities, The light of Christ
spreads over all of us." Barseg Pilavchian, the Primate of Armenian
Apostolic Church in Budapest presented the MSHE at the forum.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

International group calls for compromise on Nagorno Karabakh

Agence France Presse — English
January 29, 2007 Monday

International group calls for compromise on Nagorno Karabakh

The OSCE Minsk group, helping Armenia and Azerbaijan in talks to
resolve the dispute over the separatist region of Nagorno Karabakh,
on Monday asked both countries to prepare for compromise.

"The Co-Chairs urge all parties to sustain this momentum in the
negotiations and to prepare their publics for the necessary
compromises," the group said in a statement released following a
meeting between the concerned parties last week.

The co-chairs of the OSCE’s Minsk group are Russia, the United States
and France.

"The Co-Chairs urge continued pursuit of confidence-building measures
and maintenance of the ceasefire to increase the level of trust and
understanding between the sides," the statement said.

Nagorno Karabakh’s break from Azerbaijan in 1991 precipitated a
full-blown war between fellow former Soviet republics Armenia and
Azerbaijan, claiming some 25,000 lives before ending with a ceasefire
in 1994.

The region’s status remains unsettled, despite years of diplomatic
talks.

The Minsk Group was created in 1992 by the Organisation for Security
and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) to bring about a peaceful resolution
between the two countries.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Pamuk not going to become second victim of Turkish nationalists

PanARMENIAN.Net

Pamuk not going to become second victim of Turkish nationalists
29.01.2007 18:04 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Nobel Prize-winning Turkish author Orhan Pamuk said
"I don’t think of these things any more" in response to reporters’
questions over threats as he arrived at the airport in Istanbul. Pamuk
was coming from Cairo where he joined the 39th Cairo Book Fair as an
honorary guest. Reporters asked him about the threat made by Yusuf
Hayal, one of the names behind the murder of Armenian editor Hrant
Dink, Pamuk dismissed claims by saying he was not giving them a second
thought, reports Today’s Zaman.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

To deny Armenian Genocide is to deny Holocaust

PanARMENIAN.Net

To deny Armenian Genocide is to deny Holocaust
29.01.2007 14:14 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `The United Nations recently adopted a resolution
condemning the denial of the Holocaust. The move was timed to
coincide with the eve of the International Commemoration Day for
Holocaust Victims on January 27, a date which marks the 1945
liberation of prisoners at the Auschwitz death camp of Nazi
Germany. This UN action is significant, of course, but what is most
significant for me was the lack of any mention or even consideration
of the Armenian Genocide,’ Richard Giragosian, expert of the Armenian
International Police Research Group (AIPRG) told a PanARMENIAN.Net
reporter. `And where was the Armenian Ambassador to the United
Nations? Why was not he speaking out, especially with the world’s
attention on the murder of Hrant Dink, and as the Armenian diplomat at
the UN in New York, why did he not raise the issue and remind the UN
of the Armenian Genocide?’ he said.

`And although it is quite true that to deny the historical accuracy of
the Holocaust is simply wrong and should be condemned, the active
denial of the Armenian Genocide is ongoing and continuing, and is
something that has reached far more significant proportions than any
incidents of Holocaust denial. Thus, the real point here is that the
Armenian Genocide must not be continually overshadowed or marginalized
by the Holocaust. The Armenian Genocide was the first of genocide in
the 20th century and can be directly linked to the later
Holocaust. There can be no differences between the two and to deny the
Armenian Genocide is to deny the Holocaust. Moreover, there is a
degree of hypocrisy here, as there is a genocide underway today, in
the Darfur region of Sudan, and like Rwanda, the international
community is doing far to little to stop it,’ Richard Giragosian said.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Diocese launches Hrant Dink Family Support Fund

PRESS OFFICE
Department of Communications
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 160; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

January 29, 2007
___________________

FAITHFUL ENCOURAGED TO SUPPORT FUND FOR FAMILY OF SLAIN JOURNALIST

The Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern) has established the
Hrant Dink Family Support Fund to help the family of the slain
Armenian-Turkish journalist.

Your generous gifts will assure the future security of Hrant’s family,
following Dink’s killing outside the offices of Agos, the weekly newspaper
in Istanbul he led, on January 19, 2007.

"All Armenians should be thankful that such a man as Hrant Dink existed,
that he exercised his voice and fought for the recognition of the truth,"
said Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese. "And so
we owe it to his family to support them now in this dark time. As Hrant
Dink stood up for the Armenian community, so too must the Armenian community
step forward for his family."

The Primate has encouraged each parish in the Eastern Diocese to hold
fundraising events to raise donations for the fund.

Donations can be sent to the Diocese at 630 Second Ave., New York, NY 10016.
Checks should be made out to "Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
(Eastern)", with "Hrant Dink Family Support Fund" in the memo line.

To download a donation form or make your secure on-line donation, visit our
website at:

Charitable tax-deductible gift receipts will be issued by the Diocese.

— 1/29/06

www.armenianchurch.net
www.armenianchurch.net/dink.

A family confronts a time of madness

January 30, 2007

gn.html < .html>

A family confronts a time of madness

An Armenian author re-creates memories of the ordeal of her people.

By Yvonne Zipp

Say the word "genocide," and anybody not currently running Iran will
immediately think of the Jewish Holocaust. Cambodia, Rwanda, and
Bosnia might also come to mind. But say Armenia and in the United
States even highly educated people may draw a blank.

Antonia Arslan has taken steps to rectify that situation. Those who
read her unsparing debut novel, Skylark Farm, will never forget the
events of 1914-1918, when more than 1 million Armenians living in what
is now Turkey were massacred in what is widely regarded by the
international community as a genocide.

Arslan’s family was among that number. Her book is classified as
fiction because she uses the structure of a novel to re-create events
that occurred before she was born, but not because she is inventing
them. In "Skylark," the Italian professor of literature has woven her
family’s "obscure memories" together with research, including
interviews with survivors and her own imagination to tell the story of
how three young nieces and one nephew escaped the genocide and made it
safely to their uncle in Italy.

The Arslans were a prosperous family living in the hills of
Anatolia. In 1914, family patriarch Sempad awaits the return of his
older brother, Yerwant, who had gone to Italy as a teenager to
study. Both men engage in elaborate preparations: Yerwant buys a red
Isotta Fraschinni with a silver monogram, so that he can travel in
style, loading it with gold and silver trinkets for everyone in the
family. Sempad, meanwhile, renovates Skylark Farm, the family’s
country house. He orders a stained-glass window from Great Britain,
lawn furniture from Austria, and has the ground dug for a tennis lawn.

But instead of the long-cherished family reunion, World War I
begins. A few weeks before Yerwant and his family are to leave for
Anatolia, Italy closes its borders. Yerwant desperately tries to get
information about his family, not knowing that a campaign to destroy
the Armenian minority had begun in April, and that by May, Sempad’s
tennis lawn had become a mass grave.

In the first part of the novel, Arslan introduces all the members of
the family, laying out who will survive and who will not. The language
in Part 1 can, understandably enough, veer into the overwrought, and
Arslan indulges in a few too many prophetic dreams. The human warnings
that Sempad and his family ignore are heartbreaking enough, without
throwing in green angels and deathbed prophecies. Also understandably,
Arslan tends to have Turkish characters spout overripe dialogue rather
than engage in a precise examination of the banality of evil. One
exception: in a chilling scene, the Interior Minister Talat Pasha, in
a secret meeting, orders the roundup of Armenian males and then goes
off to play backgammon with Armenian poet Krikor Zohrab. "He’s always
right on time, a real gentleman," Pasha remarks to his aide.

But once the massacre at Skylark Farm occurs – in a powerfully
unflinching scene – the narrative takes hold and Arslan’s writing
surges to meet her material. All the Armenian women, children, and the
elderly are rounded up and forcibly evacuated from the city. They
leave in loaded carriages, but are set on by Kurdish bandits operating
on orders from the Turkish zeptiahs. Those who survive are forced to
march, starving, all the way to Aleppo, where they will be deported to
the desert. No one is allowed to give them food; there is a law that
makes helping any Armenian punishable by death. (Arslan is careful to
mention the brave people, such as the holy leader of Konya, who defied
that order.)

At this point, the race to save the surviving Arslan children takes on
an inexorable momentum. Their unlikely saviors include a Turkish
beggar, a Greek wailer (a professional mourner) and the wife of a
French consul. As they march, Shushanig, the mother, and Azniv, her
second-oldest daughter, do everything to keep the children
alive. (Shushanig only has one son left, her toddler, Nubar. All the
men and boys in their city were murdered. Someone put little Nubar in
a dress as a joke that saved his life.) Azniv’s heroism is all the
more poignant because she could have fled to Paris with a Turkish
soldier who was in love with her.

The strength of the tale is striking: By page 23 readers know what the
outcome will be and yet it’s impossible to stop reading. "Skylark
Farm" operates like "Schindler’s List"; it’s a story of hope that
makes it easier for us to confront the horror of what happens when
evil is allowed to run unchecked.

* Yvonne Zipp regularly reviews fiction for the Monitor.

Copyright © 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0130/p14s03-bo
http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0130/p14s03-bogn

Russia, Armenia to set up joint group to explore uranium fields

ITAR-TASS News Agency
January 29, 2007 Monday

Russia, Armenia to set up joint group to explore uranium fields

Russia and Armenia have decided to cerate a joint commission to
explore uranium fields in Armenia.

Uranium fields were discovered in Armenia in Soviet times. The
commission will have to examine them and find out whether mining will
be economically justified, presidential spokesman Viktor Sogomonyan
said on Monday.

“I can say quite certainly that no uranium enrichment will be
carried out in Armenia,” he said.

Message of HH Karekin II on 15th Anniversary of Armenian Army

PRESS RELEASE
Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Information Services
Address:  Vagharshapat, Republic of Armenia
Contact:  Rev. Fr. Ktrij Devejian
Tel:  +374-10-517163
Fax:  +374-10-517301
E-Mail:  [email protected]
Website: 
January 28, 2007

THE MESSAGE OF BLESSING OF THE CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS
ON THE 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMED FORCES
OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA

We extend our Pontifical Blessings and congratulations from the Mother See
of Holy Etchmiadzin to the officers and soldiers of the Armenian Armed
Forces and all Armenians throughout the world on the occasion of Armed
Forces Day and the 15th Anniversary of the Armenian Army.

Our army was born and shaped from the heroic struggle for the homeland, and
secured victories by means of its courageous and invincible spirit, through
which Artsakh was liberated and peace was established on the borders of
Armenia.

We offer thanks to God, that our armed forces, greater reinforced and
strengthened, continue their vigilant service for the homeland, and bequeath
patriotism, devotion, and examples of faithfulness and valor to future
generations, through which heroic pages were etched in our history fifteen
years ago.  Today, the Armenian Armed Forces, recognized as well prepared
and highly able, bring their commendable participation as well to
peacekeeping missions of international forces.

On this festive and memorable day, we pray for those brave Armenian souls
who sacrificed their lives for their love of homeland – for their love and
freedom and peace.  We appeal to the Almighty in heaven to keep our officers
and soldiers under His grace and blessing, granting them long and happy
lives and successes in their service to our country.  May the Lord grant
reconciliation to the entire world, keep and protect our native land of
Armenia and Artsakh and our beloved people dispersed throughout the world in
peace and security.

May the valiant memories and faithful spirit of the Armenian Army live
forever.

With Blessings,

KAREKIN II
SUPREME PATRIARCH
CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armenianchurch.org