CHURCH REMAINS CENTRAL TO THEIR LIVES
By Susan Chaityn Lebovits
The Boston Globe
Oct 8 2006
When an earthquake killed 25,000 people and left 500,000 homeless in
Armenia in 1988, Thomas Babigian bought a ticket and flew to Spitak
to help rebuild.
“It was pretty gut-wrenching,” said Babigian, who was 28 at the time.
For five weeks, he worked 11-hour days erecting homes while living
in a tent. The trip was arranged through the Armenian Church Youth
Organization of America and the St. James Armenian Apostolic Church.
The Watertown church — now marking its 75th anniversary — has played
a pivotal role in Babigian’s life and that of the large Armenian
community in Boston’s western suburbs.
This year, Babigian, his twin brother, Peter, and younger brother,
Vasken, are spearheading the church’s annual bazaar, which takes
place next weekend.
Growing up in Waltham, the three brothers did not learn to speak
English until they were nearly 6 years old, although their parents,
Garabed and Joan, were Massachusetts natives.
“Our grandparents on both sides spoke only Armenian, so it was
important to all of us that we were able to communicate with them,”
said Peter, 46, who works in the machine manufacturing business and
lives in Waltham with his wife, Gloria, and their three children.
“I remember kids laughing at us and saying, `There are the Babigian
boys — they can’t speak English,’ ” said Vasken , a 38-year-old real
estate attorney in Watertown.
The brothers long ago shed their childhood embarrassment and are
grateful that they grew up steeped in their Armenian culture. Besides
their family, they say, they have St. James to thank.
With a community of 2,500 families, it is one of the largest Armenian
churches in the United States.
The brothers’ mother, who was raised in Watertown, has attended the
church for 70 years.
“At 17 and 18, when `normal kids’ wanted to go to the beach, I was
here trying to learn the service in Armenian,” said Peter. “It gave
me religious and traditional fulfillment.”
Soon after he was ordained a sub deacon and began singing in the choir,
which he still does. He is also the fifth-grade acolyte director.
Thomas, a mortgage broker who lives in Westford with his wife,
Linda, thinks nothing of making the half-hour commute to take their
6-year-old son to Sunday school at St. James. “I want to give him
the same experience, since it was so important to me,” he said.
The brothers share the same olive skin and big dark eyes. They also
share an energy level that might be mistaken for one espresso too
many, but it comes in handy as they oversee preparations for next
weekend’s bazaar.
It will feature traditional foods like bourma, a rolled phyllo dough
with nuts, and manti, Armenian ravioli filled with meat; a live
auction, where people can bid on a Caribbean cruise with Armenians
from around the nation; and, in honor of the anniversary, a raffle
prize of $7,500 .
The church is their second home, they say.
In advance of its 75th anniversary, the brothers and their families
donated a 7-foot gold cross that sits on top of the church. Created
at SRP Sign Corp. in Waltham, it is constructed of cast aluminum with
23 -karat gold leafing. It took six months to make and was consecrated
and erected in 2004.
Vasken and his wife, Christina, are expecting their first child. They
plan to teach the baby to speak Armenian and English.
The St. James Church Bazaar is 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Friday and Saturday.
For more on the church, visit sthagop.com.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Author: Emil Lazarian
Astrakhan Region: General Information
Astrakhan Region
// GENERAL INFORMATION
Today is Oct. 7, 2006 3:23 PM (GMT +0400) Moscow
Endless steppes and the green banks of the Volga; the ice of the
Northern Caspian and flowering lotus fields-Astrakhan Region located
in the Caspian Lowlands of southwestern Russia is all of these
things. Its rich historical past, the unique beauty of its natural
landscapes, and age-old traditions of hospitality have attracted
tourists for a long time. The region was formed as part of the
Russian Federation on December 27, 1943 by decree of the Supreme
Soviet Presidium of the USSR, although Astrakhan Province was
actually formed by Peter the Great in November 1717. It has an
exceptionally favorable geographical location as a link between the
Northern Caucasus and southern Russia and between Kazakhstan and
Central Asia. It also connects Russia with Iran via the Caspian Sea.
Astrakhan Region extends 120 km from west to east between Kalmykia
and Kazakhstan and 375 km from north to south along the Volga and
Akhtuba rivers to the Caspian Sea. It covers an area of 44 100 km2 or
0.3% of the area of the Russian Federation and borders on Kazakhstan
in the east, Volgograd Region in the north and northwest, and the
Republic of Kalmykia in the west.
Despite the region’s nearness to the sea, it has a severe dry
continental climate, with annual precipitation ranging from 180-200
mm in the south to 280-290 mm in the north; most of the precipitation
(70-75%) falls in the warm season. Winter precipitation is in the
form of snow, wet snow, and rain. In summer, torrential rains are
accompanied by thunderstorms and sometimes hail. The average yearly
temperature is from 8.5 to 10 °C with a maximum of +42 °C and a
minimum of -30 °C. About 70% of the region is desert or semidesert.
The topography is flat with salt dome uplifts.
Astrakhan Region has been Russia’s “fish plant” for the past 400
years. It is known for sterlet soup, sturgeon, and black caviar and
is the capital of the Caspian fisheries. Fish are not only caught
here, but are also processed into high-quality products. Astrakhan’s
processing plants dry and smoke Caspian roach (also called vobla) and
prepare balyk [cured steaks of sturgeon and other similar fish],
Caspian herring, and various canned fish.
The region is made up of 11 rural districts, 6 cities (the largest
are Astrakhan, Akhtubinsk, Kamyzyak, Znamensk, and Kharabali), and
442 villages and other small communities. The capital is the old
Russian city of Astrakhan situated on the scenic banks of the Volga
River. The city lies 1534 km southeast of Moscow on islands of the
Volga delta and is known for its large number of bridges over the
branches and channels of the Volga that pass through it.
The first written mentions of Astrakhan date from the 13th century
when the Astrakhan Khanate was formed in the Lower Volga after the
collapse of the Golden Horde. For several centuries, Astrakhan was
the crossroads of trade routes between Europe and Asia.
Today, Astrakhan (pop. about 484 000) is an important industrial and
cultural center and a major cargo transfer point from rail to sea and
river transport and vice versa. The city’s main industrial sectors
are shipbuilding, the light and food industries, and engineering and
metalworking. Znamensk is a city of missile specialists. It is a
relatively young city that grew up from mud huts and tents, and its
history is inseparably linked with the Kapustin Yar test range.
Through the efforts of its residents, the streets of Kapustin Yar
gradually became green. Thousands of trees were planted in parks and
around houses, barracks, and soldiers’ messes. Everyone from generals
to soldiers and pensioners to first-grade pupils had their own
“personal trees” to care for.
Akhtubinsk (pop. 50 800) is a regionally administered district center
292 km north of Astrakhan. Two railway stations (Vladimirovka and
Akhtuba) on the Volgograd-Astrakhan line and a river wharf are
located in the city, and the Moscow-Astrakhan and the
Volgograd-Astrakhan highways pass through it on the right and left
banks of the Volga, respectively.
The city of Akhtubinsk was formed in 1959 from the communities of
Vladmirovka, Petropavlovka, and Akhtuba and a military housing
complex. Its industries include a shipbuilding and repair yard, a
brickyard, a canning plant, a dairy, a meat-packing plant, and a
bakery. Akhtubinsk is also the transfer point from which the Bassol
Company ships salt extracted from Lake Baskunchak. The institutions
of higher education include a branch of the Moscow Aviation Institute
(MAI). The city’s main point of interest in the memorial complex
dedicated to aviation and the test pilots who perished.
Kamyzyak (pop. 15 800) is a district center 35 km south of Astrakhan.
The city was founded in 1973 on the Volga delta in the Caspian
Lowlands. It is close to the Astrakhan I railway station, and the
highway to Astrakhan passes through it. Present-day Kamyzyak is the
center of an agricultural district with food-industry companies. A
research institute for irrigated vegetable and melon cultivation is
also located here.
Narimanov (pop. 11 600) is a district center 48 km northwest of
Astrakhan in the Caspian Lowlands on the right bank of the Volga. It
is 40 km from the Trusovo railway station on the Astrakhan-Gudermes
line and is just off the Astrakhan-Volgograd highway. The city was
formed from the town of Nizhnevolzhsk in 1984 and named in honor of
the Soviet political and party figure N.N. Narimanov. Narimanov is
the site of the Lotus (Lotos) plant, which produces superstructure
modules of floating drilling units.
Kharabali (pop. 19 100) is a district center 142 k from Astrakhan in
the Caspian Lowlands on the left bank of the Akhtuba River (an arm of
the Volga). The Astrakhan-Saratov railway line runs through the city.
It has been a city since 1974, and during this time, a vegetable
canning plant and dairy have been built and are in operation here and
a local history museum has been established.
Archeological monuments include the 13th-century city of Sarai-Batu,
the former capital of the Golden Horde, discovered 40 km southeast of
Kharabali, and a Kalmyk Buddhist monastery (khurul) built after 1812,
discovered 70 km south of the city.
The first inhabitants of what is now Astrakhan Region were Sarmatian
tribes. Their descendents, the Ases, who received a charter (tarkhan)
from Batu Khan, gave their name to the city of Astrakhan. The
Astrakhan Khanate that formed was a typical feudal state with a
population of nomadic cattle herders. Astrakhan was considered a
major commercial center where trade was conducted or through which
merchants from Venice, Khorezem, Bukhara, Kazan, the Crimea, and
Russia transported goods to other countries. The territory’s
remoteness and the demand for labor attracted large numbers of
Russian migrants, who quickly populated Astrakhan and formed the
settlements of Sianova, Bezrodnaya, Terebilovka, Soldatskaya, and
Yamgurcheeva around it. Tatars and Armenians who had settled near the
city likewise formed their own Tatarskaya and Armyanskaya
settlements.
Today, the region’s ethnic mix includes nearly 130 nationalities.
Russians make up most of the population (72%) followed by Kazakhs
(13%), mainly in Volodarsky and Krasnoyarsky districts. Next come
Tatars (7.2%), mainly in Privolzhsky and Narimanovsky districts;
Ukrainians (2%); Chechens (1%); Kalmyks (0.8%); Azerbaijanis (0.5%);
Belarussians and Nogais (0.4% each); Armenians and Dargins (0.3%
each); Gypsies, Turkmen, and Jews (0.2% each); and others (1.5%).
After centuries of coexistence, the boundaries between nations and
their languages, customs, and cultures have disappeared. Astrakhan
Region is considered one of Russia’s most multinational regions,
mainly as a result of migration from former Soviet republics and many
other parts of the country. Most migrants come from Kazakhstan, which
shows in the large number of Kazakhs in the region’s total
population.
At the same time, however, the demographic situation in Astrakhan
Region is deteriorating just as it is in the rest of Russia. Figures
showing a decrease in the resident population for the past 20 years
are disturbing.
The number of births is less than the number of deaths in all of the
region’s population centers except Krasnoyarsky District and the city
of Znamensk; in other districts (Ikryaninsky, Volodarsky,
Kharabalinsky, Narimanovsky, and Akhtubinsky), the social demographic
situation is considered difficult. The number of deaths over the
number of births is increasing, and birthrates are falling even as
the number of women of childbearing age is increasing.
The average age of people living in the region is 35.7 years and the
population distribution by age group is as follows: children from 0
to 15 years, 24.2%; men and women from 16 up to pension age [60 for
men and 55 for women], 57%; and men and women of pension age, 18.8%.
The number of registered marriages among young people between 18 and
25 is decreasing, while the number of divorces is increasing. Over
the last several years, the number of pensioners has remained almost
unchanged at the same time as the proportion of the population of
working age and under has been decreasing, leading to gradual aging
of the region’s population. About 240 000 pensioners are registered
at social welfare agencies and receive monetary and food aid along
with pensions.
Out of the total population of Astrakhan Region, 67% live in urban
areas and only 33% in rural areas.
HISTORY
Astrakhan is an old, hospitable city under the dazzling southern sun,
the pearl of the Lower Volga long known as a major industrial center
not only in Russia, but also in Europe. Astrakhan has been called the
“Fishing Capital”, the “Gateway to the Caspian”; and the “Venice of
the Volga”. All of these names reflect the geographical and economic
position of this outpost and transit center at the mouth of a great
river where vital water and land routes intersect.
The region’s position at the meeting point of East and West has
determined its historical and cultural development. The Lower Volga
and Northern Caspian regions have a unique history as areas where the
tides of different civilizations mingled and new cities were born,
including the capitals of once powerful states like Itil, the center
of the Khazar Kingdom in the 9th century, and Sarai-Batu, the capital
of the Mongolian state known as the Golden Horde.
In 1242, Batu Khan, the grandson of Genghis Khan, made the Lower
Volga the center of his great state. Sarai-Batu was a city of
splendid palaces and mosques and a center of skilled tradesmen that
stood at the historical crossroads of the Great Volga caravan route
and the Great Silk Road leading from China to Europe and Rome. The
history of Astrakhan itself goes back to the heyday of the Golden
Horde.
After the Astrakhan Khanate was annexed to Russia in 1556, the city
was moved from the right bank of the Volga to the left, where a
Russian fortress (Kremlin) was built in 1558. The Artilleriyskaya (or
Pytochnaya), Krymskaya, and Zhitnaya towers are the oldest ones in
the Kremlin. Altogether, seven of the Kremlin’s guard towers have
been preserved, two of which (Krasnaya and Artilleriyskaya) have been
turned into museums. The buildings of Uspensky Cathedral built in
1710 and the Troitsky Monastery with its late-17th century refectory
halls are splendid examples of old Russian architecture that add to
the beauty of the Kremlin complex, which has become an open-air
museum. The Kremlin’s 80-m-high bell tower ornamented on top with old
chiming tower clocks nearly 3 m in diameter will amaze you with its
grandeur and beauty.
With the annexation of Astrakhan Territory, Russia gained an outlet
to the Caspian Sea for trade with eastern countries. Beginning in the
17th century, Astrakhan won an international reputation as a supplier
of prized fish products, such as black caviar and various kinds of
sturgeon.
Astrakhan acquired the status of a provincial city in 1717; and Peter
the Great established a naval fleet, shipyards, and a port to expand
the Great Volga trade route when he visited Astrakhan in 1722. This
had considerable influence on the city’s subsequent development, and
it became one of the main seaports and shipbuilding centers of
southern Russia.
The names of the best Russian architects of the 18th and 19th
centuries are associated with the Venice of the Volga, and it is not
by chance that Astrakhan is numbered among Russia’s most historically
important cities. The Astrakhan Historical Museum founded in 1837 is
housed in a building constructed in 1911 right in the city center.
Its huge collection of 400 000 items includes unique archeological
and numismatic collections, a rare set of Russian porcelain and
glass, and the Gold Storeroom, where gold and silver jewelry and
weapons of the Scythian and Sarmatian periods (1st millennium B.C.)
are exhibited. Another rare exhibit is the skeleton of a mammoth
three m high with tusks more than five m long, which inhabited the
Lower Volga more than 100 000 years ago. The museum’s collection of
the flora and fauna of Astrakhan Territory is also of continuing
interest.
Despite its long and turbulent history, Astrakhan has retained its
distinctiveness. As in the past, the 16th century Kremlin in the city
center defines its appearance. It long ago became the symbol of
Astrakhan, from which the old streets and quarters of the city opened
out like a fan. The Volga River as a symbol of Russia and its
greatest transport corridor and cultural axis uniting different
peoples and cultures is also part of the Astrakhan lands.
RESOURCES
Astrakhan Region is rightly considered the pearl of the Caspian. Due
to its location in the delta of the Volga River, which flows for more
than 400 km through the region, the territory has an abundance of
water resources. The Caspian Sea and the great Volga are its greatest
assets. Water occupies about 10% of the region; there are nearly 900
rivers in the Volga delta, the deepest being the Bakhtemir, Staraya
Volga, Kizan, Bolda, and Kigach rivers. The region also has no equal
in the world in its abundance and variety of valuable fish species.
Fish are the region’s main resource base: more than 70 species of
fish are found in the Volga and Caspian Sea alone, including a unique
shoal of sturgeon varieties (Russian sturgeon, beluga, and stellate
sturgeon). Most of the black caviar and sturgeon supplied to the
world market comes from Astrakhan Region. Eight fish hatcheries in
the region breed sturgeon and salmon and more than 25 million young
bream and sazan [a member of the carp family] are raised annually.
Astrakhan is a territory of numerous islands, steppes, and a large
number of salt lakes. Sagebrush-saltwort deserts and dry
(desertified) steppes divided by a wide belt of meadows and shrubs
along the main channels of the Volga occupy about 70% of the region.
There are also more than 700 salt lakes and 1300 salt marshes, many
with huge salt reserves. The largest lake is Lake Baskunchak, which
has an area of 115 km2. The Baskunchakskoe deposit produces nearly
80% of all the salt in Russia, and production of bromine salts from
the deposit is currently being set up. The huge lake in the hot
desert and the solitary mountain has attracted people since ancient
times, and figured in many legends and tales of the early nomads.
Soils in the region vary from light chestnut soil in northern
districts, brown semidesert soils in more southerly districts, and
floodplain soils in the Volga-Akhtuba floodplain and the Volga delta.
Alkali and saline soils are found among all types.
Astrakhan Region is the only place in Russia where the vegetation
ranges from shoreline to desert plants. It includes fodder,
industrial, food, and medicinal plants. The combination of these
varieties has created unique plant communities in which 750-850
species of higher plants and more than 700 species of lower plants
such as algae have been identified. More than 400 species of vascular
plants are found in the Volga-Akhtuba floodplain and the Volga delta.
These mainly belong to six families, which make up half the flora of
the Volga delta. Certain rare species are also encountered, including
20 that are vanishing from the region like the dwarf iris, water
chestnut, and sacred lotus. Occurrences of rare ferns are of special
interest.
Forests cover only slightly more than 1% of Astrakhan Region. Typical
species include hardwoods (oak, ash, and elm), softwoods (willow,
poplar), and shrubs (rose willow, oleaster). The forests protect
water bodies in the region and are a favorite place for recreation.
The wildlife of this beautiful territory is rich and surprising.
Slow-moving camels and swift saigas [an Asian antelope] graze on the
boundless steppes, and whole rookeries of Caspian seals can be seen
on the icefields of the Northern Caspian. Wild boars, raccoon dogs,
and ermines inhabit the forests of the Lower Volga; and beavers,
muskrats, and otters live along the numerous rivers and canals.
Nearly 2000 species of insects have been counted. The Lower Volga and
its delta are among the world’s richest bird habitats and nesting
sites. More than 200 bird species have been recorded here, of which
60 are permanent residents and 23 are listed in the Red Book.
Waterfowl hunting is popular in the region. The region’s wildlife, as
a valuable asset, is under government protection.
Astrakhan Region is distinguished by its rich natural resources,
which include a large number of important economic minerals such as
oil, gas, sulfur, salt, bromine, and iodine. The region’s oil fields
are the second largest in European Russia in terms of reserves; and
the Astrakhan gas condensate field, with its deep gas reservoirs and
high hydrogen sulfide content, is considered to be the largest in
Europe. The region also has the necessary raw material base for
producing building materials. For example, cement materials such as
argillaceous chalk, marl, and limestone are found on the
Baskunchak-Kharabali Plain. Deposits of building sand and sandstone
have also been found in the region, and deposits of brick earth and
glass sand are being worked. Large deposits of gypsum, clay-gypsum,
mineral pigments, and gaize [a fine-grained sandstone] are being
explored and developed.
Conditions in Astrakhan Region are favorable for the development of
recreation and health centers for the population. Mineral waters and
the therapeutic sulfurous silty muds of Astrakhan Region’s mineral
lakes form the basis of the region’s recreational resources. One of
the best known lakes is Lake Tinaki located 30 km from Astrakhan. Its
brines have sulfide-chloride and sodium-magnesium contents of 127 to
310 g/l. The lake has an area of 90 km2 and has 23 000 tons of usable
mud reserves. Tinakskaya mineral water is also produced here.
The region has many historical monuments and unique nature preserves
with organized tours.
ECONOMY
Astrakhan Region is part of the Volga economic district. The region’s
favorable geographical location has had a strong influence on its
economic development. The Volga River is a major artery for water
routes from countries on the Caspian Sea to the Black, Mediterranean,
Baltic, and North seas. Astrakhan is a natural through trade center
and important transportation hub at the meeting place of Europe and
Asia with their profitable transportation routes. An international
airport has been opened and airplanes now fly to almost everywhere in
the world. An international seaport that will be Russia’s
second-largest port in terms of size and traffic is under
construction. Despite the political and economic crises that followed
the collapse of the Soviet Union, Astrakhan Region made a successful
recovery and is now one of Russia’s most upcoming regions.
A diversified structure and high potential characterize the region’s
industry. The region has abundant natural resources that include
fish, minerals, land, oil, gas, and gas condensate. There are five
oil and gas fields and one high-sulfur gas condensate field. Experts
estimate that the gas condensate field alone has enough reserves for
many centuries; there are currently 80 producing wells and a stock of
130 operating wells. In addition, five gas pretreatment units have
been put into operation. According to existing data, Astrakhan’s oil
fields are approximately the fifth largest in the world.
Production of economic minerals is the basis of the regional economy.
Other sectors such as the fish processing, food, light, chemical, and
engineering industries and water transport are actively developing.
Production of stable gas condensate ensures fuel self-sufficiency.
Furthermore, over the past ten years the share of the fuel and energy
sector in the regional economy has been increasing, and considering
the prospects for development, this trend is expected to continue.
The fishing industry is one of the oldest industries in Astrakhan
Region. Fish canning plants and fish processing factory ships process
the catch.
The engineering industry mainly specializes in ship building and
repair for the fishing industry, metal-cutting machinery,
compressors, and a variety of other devices and equipment.
Economic development is impossible if the region cannot attract
investments; therefore, the government of Astrakhan Region is
implementing measures aimed at creating the conditions for active
capital investment, as well as creating a legislative basis to
protect invested funds.
The efforts of the Astrakhan City Administration and City Council to
stabilize the city’s socioeconomic development are producing results.
For example, an upward trend has been noted in the fuel and energy
complex and operation of the food and construction industries has
stabilized. Moreover, in the last few years, Astrakhan Region has led
the country in housing construction growth rates. Foreign investors
from Bulgaria have participated in solving this problem.
The banking sector and financial institutions are expanding, and
currency and share markets have started operating. Twenty-six banks
and branches of other Russian banks operate in Astrakhan, and
favorable conditions for investors are being created.
The region’s first financial and industrial group, Astrakhan
Shipbuilder (FPG Astrakhansky korabel), has been set up and includes
large shipbuilding companies, the Volga-Caspian Joint Stock Bank
(Volgo-Kaspiysky AB), and investment and finance companies.
The Astrakhan Chamber of Commerce and Industry represents the
interests of the business community and its associations. It takes an
active part in ensuring effective cooperation between businessmen and
government agencies, defends the interests of the region’s
businesses, and participates in business development programs. The
Chamber unites more than 100 companies, organizations, firms, banks,
unions, and associations in the region and acts in accordance with
the Law of the Russian Federation “On Chambers of Commerce and
Industry in the Russian Federation.”
The companies and organizations of Astrakhan and Astrakhan Region
have noticeably expanded the scope of their export-import operations
in recent years. Once they have incorporated, enterprises actively
search for new sales markets for their products and find reliable
customers, including foreign customers.
The Astrakhan Paint Factory (Astrakhansky lakokrasochny zavod) was
one of the finalists in the All-Russian competition “The 100 Best
Goods in Russia.” This once again confirms the stability of a company
that even in 1995 had acquired the name of “Russian Economic Leader”
and become one of the country’s 5000 leading companies. Its products,
which include varnish, paint, household chemical goods, and packaging
paper, long ago found their market niche for goods produced by
domestic industry.
Salt has been produced at Lake Baskunchak for nearly 150 years. The
largest producer of salt for industry and agriculture today is AO
Bassol.
Astrakhan shipbuilders have been working with various European firms
for five years. Astrakhan’s AO 3rd International Shipyard (
Astrakhansky sudostroitelny zavod im. III Internatsionala) has
received a lucrative order from Holland for the construction of three
dry cargo ships. The Astrakhan Shipbuilder financial and industrial
group has concluded another contract for the construction of three
sea-going dry cargo ships for Hungary. The general contractor is AO
Marine Shipbuilding Yard (Morskoi sudostroitelny zavod).
The management of AO Astrakhan Glass Fiber (Astrakhanskoe
steklovolokno) worked successfully with a Czech firm to deliver its
products and has now concluded a profitable contract with the
Romanian firm Stizomat to supply fiberglass thread and glass fiber.
The city is pinning great hopes on partnerships. Two agreements have
been concluded with twin cities in America and the cities of
Ljubljana (Slovenia) and Ruse (Bulgaria). Astrakhan also has close
ties with neighboring Russian cities such as Rostov-on-Don, Saratov,
Stavropol, and Volgograd.
AUTHORITIES
The Administration of Astrakhan Region headed by the Governor is the
highest executive body. The Governor is Astrakhan Region’s highest
official.
The executive branch of the government develops and implements
* financial and investment policy in Astrakhan Region;
* government measures to develop the social sphere, improve the
well-being of the population, and protect the work and health of
the people.
It also adopts measures to
* uphold the law and protect the rights and freedoms of the
citizens of Astrakhan Region;
* develop entrepreneurship and restrict monopolistic activity.
District and city administrations and the regional Administration
exercise executive authority in the region.
The Astrakhan Regional Representative Assembly in the highest
legislative body.
The Astrakhan Regional Court, district (city) courts, and the
Arbitration Court of Astrakhan Region exercise judicial authority in
Astrakhan Region.
CULTURE AND ART
Astrakhan Region is considered the industrial center of the Lower
Volga, but it is also the home of many leading cultural and artistic
figures. Cultural points of interest include theaters, a
conservatory, a philharmonic, a combined historical and architectural
museum preserve, the Kustodiev Art Gallery, a large number of
museums, and of course the Kremlin.
The Kustodiev Gallery founded in 1918 is the pride of Astrakhan. Its
exhibits include paintings by Boris Kustodiev himself and other
masters of Russian painting. History lovers will be interested in
visiting the Kremlin, which houses exhibits of the Astrakhan Museum
of History and Architecture. Its collection includes more than 250
000 items that reflect the rich history of the Lower Volga from
Mesolithic times to the present. Numerous art schools, the Vlasov Art
College, and cultural institutions train professionals in eight
different cultural specialties. The teaching staff includes many
honored cultural workers and artists.
The Valeriya Barsova and Mariya Maksakova festivals that attract both
Russian and foreign performers are held in Astrakhan.
The Mussorgsky Music School (the oldest music school in the Volga
region), the Astrakhan Conservatory, the Astrakhan Regional
Philharmonic, and a new music theater preserve and advance
Astrakhan’s rich musical culture.
Astrakhan is also the home of many famous talented Russians,
including film producer Vladimir Menshov [best known for the film
Moscow Doesn’t Believe in Tears], actor Vladimir Steklov, pop singer
Igor Nadzhiev, and poet Velimir Khlebnikov.
The works of Khlebnikov, who loved the broad expanses of the Volga
River and the beauty of the Caspian Sea, are filled with love for the
people. He said, “One of the secrets of creative work is to visualize
the people you are writing for and find words in the center of life
of these people.”
Official site of the Administration of Astrakhan Region:
© 1991-2006 ZAO “Kommersant. Publishing House”.
–Boundary_(ID_WdC2muKjUbF6TNv+ckWi5 g)–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
ANKARA: Turkey, EU discuss common foreign and security policy
Turkey, EU discuss common foreign and security policy
The New Anatolian
Oct 7 2006
Saturday , 07 October 2006
Turkish and European officials on Friday discussed Ankara’s progress
in aligning its foreign and security policy with that of the European
Union, as part of the country’s accession talks with the 25-member
bloc.
The meeting in Brussels was the 31st of 35 major meetings of the
detailed screening process, which is expected to continue with
the opening of substantive talks on this chapter. Turkey has to
successfully conclude substantive talks on 35 chapters to be eligible
for membership, a process expected to last least 10 years.
Diplomatic sources told The New Anatolian on Friday that Turkey,
as a candidate country, has done a great deal of harmonization for
the EU’s common foreign and security policy.
Recalling Turkey’s contribution to the largest peacekeeping mission
ever undertaken by the EU, in Bosnia-Herzegovina , the same sources
stressed that Turkey had contributed 370 personnel to the EU Force
in Bosnia-Herzegovina (operation EUFOR-ALTHEA).
“Turkey’s combat group with Romania and Italy will have been
established by the end of 2009 and they will be ready for inclusion
in the EU’s forces,” one source said.
Highlighting that Turkey has harmonized its foreign policy with the EU
on the Southern Caucasus, Middle East, Iran, Iraq, and Afghanistan,
diplomatic sources also underlined that Turkey, like EU countries,
decided to send forces to the UN Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL)
But despite parallel policies between Turkey and EU on major foreign
policy issues, there are also differences. Sources have highlighted
that the EU’s approach to a normalization of relations with Armenia,
allowing Greek Cypriot participation in EU-NATO strategic cooperation
and the Aegean problems with Greece are where the most differences are.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
ANKARA: France may lose Turkey if it adopts ‘genocide’ bill, Ankara
Turkish Daily News
Oct 7 2006
France may lose Turkey if it adopts ‘genocide’ bill, Ankara warns
Saturday, October 7, 2006
Tan: The Armenian issue has poisoned bilateral ties in the past, but
the bill will inflict irreparable damage to our relationship
The Turkish capital warned Paris Friday that political and economic
ties between them will suffer if the French Parliament approves a
highly contentious bill that penalizes any denial of an Armenian
“genocide” at the hands of the Ottoman Empire.
“The Armenian issue has poisoned bilateral ties in the past, but
the bill will inflict irreparable damage to our relationship,”
Foreign Ministry spokesman Namik Tan told reporters during a regular
press briefing.
The spokesman, with clear remarks, warned the move could jeopardize
“investments, the fruit of years of work, and France will — so to
speak — lose Turkey.”
The French National Assembly’s decision for the vote, scheduled for
Oct. 12, came at the request of the main opposition Socialist Party,
the bill’s architect.
Appealing to the assembly to block the bill, Tan argued that
adoption of the bill would mean the elimination of freedom of
expression in France. “Our expectation is that France will avoid
taking the wrong step.”
Though the conservative majority in the French assembly opposes the
bill, Turkey fears many opponents will not vote against it for fear
of upsetting France’s 400,000-strong Armenian Diaspora ahead of
elections next year.
Tan said Turkey, too, faces presidential and parliamentary
elections in 2007.
“The people of Turkey will perceive this development as a hostile
attitude on the part of France,” he said. “This draft will deliver a
heavy blow to bilateral relations and to the momentum previously
achieved.”
Letter to Chirac:
President Ahmet Necdet Sezer sent a letter this week to his French
counterpart, Jacques Chirac, on the issue and Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdoðan will discuss the problem Saturday with French
businessmen in Istanbul, Tan said.
A delegation of Turkish lawmakers also warned of harm to French
trade during a visit to Paris earlier this week. They said Ankara
might expel an estimated 70,000 Armenians working illegally in Turkey
if the French law passes.
The Armenian bill was first brought to the French assembly in May,
but the vote was postponed to October after filibustering by the
ruling party. Turkey had at the time threatened trade sanctions
against France and briefly summoned its ambassador in Paris back for
consultations.
France, which has already passed a law recognizing the 1915
massacre as genocide, had $5.9 billion of exports to Turkey last
year, French Trade Ministry data show.
Turkey is stinging from comments by Chirac last weekend in the
Armenian capital Yerevan that Ankara must recognize the Armenian
killings as genocide before joining the European Union.
Ankara says it is ironic that France is preparing to punish those
who express a particular view of history at a time when Turkey is
under heavy EU pressure to change some of its own laws, which are
viewed as restricting freedom of expression.
Last week, Ankara reacted angrily to news that two Dutch political
parties had dropped three election candidates, all of Turkish origin,
for denying the alleged Armenian genocide.
The Netherlands, like the European Parliament and some other
countries, has urged Turkey to recognize the genocide claims.
–Boundary_(ID_JqD0E4u3DRlYgRH34adz9Q)–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
ANKARA: Report: Turkish-Dutch MP admits existence of ‘genocide’
Turkish Daily News
Oct 7 2006
Diplomacy Newsline
Saturday, October 7, 2006
Report: Turkish-Dutch MP admits existence of ‘genocide’:
ANK – Turkish Daily News
As a heated debate on the pressure that is being applied by the two
largest political parties in the Netherlands on candidates of Turkish
origin concerning an alleged Armenian genocide is still on the
agenda, a member of the Dutch parliament of Turkish origin has
reportedly admitted the existence of “genocide.”
While the public, government figures and diplomats in Turkey have
expressed disappointment and anger over the fact that three
Turkish-Dutch candidates for parliament were bumped off the electoral
lists for refusing to acknowledge the alleged Armenian genocide,
Nebahat Albayrak of the Labor Party, said in an interview she
“accepted that a genocide took place,” the CNN-Turk’s Web site
reported yesterday.
“But I’m also of the opinion that the way this took place should
also be researched,” she was quoted as saying by the channel.
The two largest Dutch political parties recently removed the names
of ethnic Turkish parliamentary candidates from a candidate list
after they refused to acknowledge that the killings of Armenians
during World War I amounted to genocide, despite the fact that
whether or not the issue could correctly be termed “genocide” remains
a matter of academic and political debate.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
ANKARA: Week of building bridges with Europe
Turkish Daily News
Oct 7 2006
Week of building bridges with Europe
Saturday, October 7, 2006
Three European capitals — Brussels, Paris and Berlin — talked about
Turkey this week. With the anniversary of the start of talks with the
European Union, Turkey was on the agenda for an entire week with its
politics, arts, and hopes for the future.
Gila Benmayor
Three European capitals — Brussels, Paris and Berlin — talked
about Turkey this week. With the anniversary of the start of talks
with the European Union, Turkey was on the agenda for an entire week
with its politics, arts, and hopes for the future. I could only
participate in the Brussels leg of the “Turkey@Europe” program
organized by the Turkish Industrialists and Businessmen’s Association
(TUSÝAD).
The week of “conquering Europe,” led by TUSÝAD’s honorary president
Bulent Eczacýbaþý, its executive board director Omer Sabancý and
introduction committee president Umit Boyner seems to have reached
its goal, if one looks at the picture in Brussels.
The interest shown in the meeting, which took place in the European
Policy Center Hall, was so high that some of the audience could not
be seated.
And who attended that meeting?
Former British Foreign Minister Jack Straw, European Parliament
member and former French Prime Minister Michel Rocard, the European
Commission’s Enlargement Director Michael Leigh, European Parliament
member Joost Lagendijk and Turkish State Minister and Deputy Prime
Minister Abdullatif Þener, among others.
Foreign speakers were particularly sensitive about two issues:
Article 301 and Cyprus.
Lagendijk, who’s set to marry a Turkish girl in the near future,
underlined double standards concerning this article in two European
countries.
One of these double standards is the proposal the French Parliament
will vote on Oct. 12, which would criminalize denying claims of an
Armenian genocide. The other one is the pressure applied on Dutch
parliamentary candidates of Turkish origin to force them to accept
Armenian genocide allegations.
According to Lagendijk, both France and the Netherlands’ attitude
is a violation of freedom of expression.
Another surprise which came in that meeting was State Minister
Þener’s speech delivered in “French.”
The minister, who read out the text in front of him quite well,
surprised those in the meeting hall.
However, it soon became apparent that the minister — who learned
French in his student years and even wrote a doctoral thesis in
French — can read that language very well but cannot speak it
spontaneously.
Þener, who stumbled when addressed by Enlargement Director Leigh in
French, clearly demonstrated the weakness of our educational system
in teaching foreign languages.
Indeed, foreign languages are the most important tool for building
a bridge to Europe.
The other instrument is undoubtedly music. I am writing so under
the influence of that spectacular night I witnessed in Brussels.
The final activity of the Turkey@Europe program was a concert given
by the Borusan Istanbul Philharmonic Orchestra with director Gurer
Aykal at Bozar Palace, which hosted the Female Sultans exhibition
from Turkey a couple of years ago.
The orchestra of the Borusan Group — the main sponsor of the
International Istanbul Music Festival for 10 years — played pieces
from Schubert, Mozart and Ferit Tuzun.
Some 1,200 guests were present at Bozar Palace that night. Judging
by the applause, the audience had an unforgettable night.
The final piece chosen by director Aykal was extremely significant:
“Habudiyara,” composed by Ferit Tuzun.
Like I say, if language is one way to build bridges, music is the
other.
The state of German and Austrian support:
The European Stability Initiative (ESI) announced the results of a
survey on Turkish membership shortly before German Chancellor Angela
Merkel’s visit to Turkey.
According to the results, 81 percent of Austrians and 69 percent of
Germans oppose Turkish membership.
Germans who earlier opposed Turkish membership on the basis of
cultural differences are now citing Islam and honor killings as the
bases of their objection.
However, according to ESI’s findings, some among the social
democrats of Austria are positive about Turkish membership, such as
Vienna’s mayor and the governor of Salzburg.
However, nobody from Turkey has contacted these people
Romania and Bulgaria, which are to join the club in 2007, are
organizing campaigns emphasizing the cultural wealth of their
countries, but Turkey has done nothing.
We are simply sitting and making no effort.
We can’t win the minds and hearts of Europeans with only TUSÝAD’s
conscientious initiatives.
–Boundary_(ID_4WF/JUqorohxOC3vq0il8 A)–
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Armenia Lucky Not to Have Oil and Gas
Armenia Lucky Not to Have Oil and Gas
PanARMENIAN.Net
05.10.2006 18:26 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia is lucky not to have oil and gas, U.S. expert
Richard Giragossian said in Yerevan. In his words, the states with big
supply of energy resources are totalitarian and poor as a rule. “The
only exception is Norway, which discovered oil after establishing a
well formed political system and sustainable economy. So, from this
viewpoint Azerbaijan has a gloomy outlook,” he said.
At the same time the U.S. expert remarked that in the 21st century
fiber-optic cable will be more important than oil pipelines. “The
future of the world is high technologies and IT development. The
problems of cyber security are being put in the forefront,”
Giragossian said.
He also remarked that the political and commercial benefit from
the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline fully depends on the Kazakh
oil. Presently the oil-bearing zone of the Persian Gulf is the most
important strategic task for the U.S. Caspian region is a secondary
and not a very important task. According to the expert, under such
circumstances Azerbaijan will move towards East and Central Asia
rather then towards Europe.
Georgia moves in the opposite direction, that is towards Europe. Thus,
Armenia may remain alone, in the role of Russia’s only ally, what can
jeopardize the national security. Armenia is most likely to face the
West,’ the expert said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Turkish-Armenian Journalists Awarded Norwegian Prize
TURKISH-ARMENIAN JOURNALISTS AWARDED NORWEGIAN PRIZE
Armenpress
YEREVAN, OCTOBER 5, ARMENPRESS: The editor of a Turkish-Armenian
magazine was Wednesday awarded the Norwegian Bjornson prize, worth
100,000 kroner (15,200 dollars), for highlighting massacres of the
Armenian minority by Ottoman Turks in 1915, DPA reported.
Agos’ editor Hrant Dink has frequently written on the subject that
continues to generate controversy in Turkey today, and has had
frequent run-ins with Turkish authorities. The prize will be handed
out at a November 24 ceremony in the Norwegian west coast city Molde,
the Norwegian news agency NTB reported.
The prize is awarded by the Bjornson Academy, established in 2003 to
protect freedom of expression.
Previous winners were Vivian Fouad and Samir Morcos from Egypt for
their efforts to promote ties between Muslims and Christians, and
Esma Redzepova from Macedonia who has championed the rights of the
Roma people.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
EU "Privileged Partnership" Arranged for Turkey?
EU “Privileged Partnership” Arranged for Turkey?
PanARMENIAN.Net
06.10.2006 13:36 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Angela Merkel is leaving for Turkey amid a crisis
of relations of that country with the EU. Ankara considers the German
Chancellor as a reliable partner and expect positive signals. European
Commission is concerned with insufficient level of freedom of
expression in the country. Article 301 of the Criminal Code of the
country provides for imprisonment up to 3 years of insulting Turkey
and its state institutions. Thus, EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli
Rehn urged Turkey to reforms.
Angela Merkel is expected to touch upon the issue on criticism that
aroused in Turkey owing to Pope Benedict XVI’s statements on Islam,
Reuters reports. Ankara’s response doubted its role as a “bridge”
between Europe and the Islamic world.
Turkey’s stand over the Cyprus also causes EU pretension. Turkey has to
open air and sea routes with Cyprus, as stipulated by the EU Treaty on
Customs Union. Otherwise talks on EU accession may be suspended. Merkel
has an non-compromising position regarding EU demands towards Turkey
to recognize Cyprus. As the Chancellor’s Department stated October 4,
“there will be no indulgence in terms of EU accession for Turkey.”
Angela Merkel is one of those, who do not believe Turkey may become a
full EU member. She has a concept of “privileged partnership”, i.e. a
level of cooperation, which is already achieved. Representatives of
the conservative camp of Germany have even harsher demands, demanding
ceasing EU talks with Turkey, reports Deutsche Welle.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Police Arrest Man Suspected of Killing Aviaservice Head
POLICE ARREST MAN SUSPECTED OF KILLING AVIASERVICE HEAD
Armenpress
YEREVAN, OCTOBER 6, ARMENPRESS: Armenian police have arrested a man,
Robert Sarkisian, who is charged with killing Arthur Khalatian, head
of Aviaservice company, whose body was found in a car in Zar village
of Kotayk province on September 30.
The arrested man had an accomplice, Henrik Hovnikian, who is on the
run. The police said Robert Sarkisian, a resident of Byureghavan town,
and the second man who is his cousin, plotted and killed Khalatian
to seize his apartment in downtown Yerevan.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress