BAKU: Discussion of NK at UN Gen. Assembly a Success for Azerbaijan

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Discussion of Nagorno-Karabakh conflict at UN General
Assembly is success of Azerbaijan – Azeri Senior State
Official

Source: Trend
Author: A.Ismayilova

15.09.2006

Novruz Mammadov, the head of the Foreign Relations Department of the
Azerbaijan President’s Apparat said the injection of an issue on
Nagorno-Karabakh into an agenda of the session of the UN General
Assembly to be held in New York late this September, Trend reports.
`We used the authority and support of our partners in this issue,’ he
noted, recalling the assistance by the United States, UK, and other
countries, particularly GUAM [Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and
Moldova] members-states.
`However, several countries came out against the injection of the
issue into the agenda, and unfortunately some Islamic countries are
among them. Russia together with Armenia hold an opposition stance in
respect to Azerbaijan.
Mammadov reminded that the Azerbaijani President raised an issue on
suspended conflicts in a summit of the heads of GUAM member-states in
May and proposed to resolve the problem namely on this level.
Touching upon Armenian’s statements reportedly Azerbaijan brings the
talks out of the frames of OSCE, the state officer stressed that such
statement actually hurt the negotiation process.
Armenian can not blackmail Azerbaijan with such statements. After all
this country realizes that it must liberate the Azerbaijani territory,
he stressed.
Mammadov underlined the results of talks between the Azerbaijani and
Armenian Foreign Ministers will determine the next round of a meeting
between the Presidents of the conflict countries.
Anyhow, Azerbaijan is eager to see the conflict to move
forward. Azerbaijan desires to rehabilitate its territorial integrity
through talks and peace in order to enable the internally displaced
people to return their areas.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Ras-El- Ain On the Road of Exile

AZG Armenian Daily #177, 16/09/2006
Diaspora
RAS-EL-AIN ON THE ROAD OF EXILE
Ras-el-Ain is a Syrian town located by the Turkish border on the slope
of Armenian Taurus Mountains. The town was founded nearby full-flowing
springs and received a name that means “spring”. This town has direct
relation with the fate of a part of the Armenian people. In late-May
hot days of 1915 a dense caravan of Armenians was displaced from
Tigranakert and Derik regions and was forced into flat Ras-el-Ain and
its surrounding villages. Tortured and tired of the long road, people
quenched their thirst in the Arabian springs and took some
rest. Leaving part of the displaced to the mercy of fate, Turkish
askyars (soldiers) forced others into deserts of Der-el-Zor…
The Armenian that stayed in Ras-el-Ain faced violence from the hands
of Turks, Kurds, Chechens and Turkmens inhabiting this area. Before
Der-el-Zor a big massacre of Armenians happened there. Every inch of
earth here is blood-soaked. People were being killed to snatch their
jewelry and gold or for pleasure as moving targets. Despite great
difficulties 200 Armenian families Ras-el-Ain managed to
survive. Getting rid of Turkish yoke Armenians together Syrian
breathed freely. Armenians earned their living working as craftsmen
and farmers. They peacefully co-existed with the Arab people enjoying
their respect.
French armenologist Dulorie wrote: “Wherever Armenians go, they first
of all found their school, church and newspaper.” It has been 70 years
that an Armenian school functions in Ras-el-Ain, an Apostolic church
was founded earlier. Though there are very few Armenians in Ras-el-Ain
today, they have a school with 16 pupils, a restored church and a
memorial to the victims of Armenian Genocide where remnants of the
perished are kept. Local Armenians have applied to the head of
Armenian diocese in Aleppo asking to grant Ras-el-Ain status of a
pilgrimage site as it is with Der-el-Zor. But the proposal remains
unanswered so far.
Native of Ras-el-Ain, Mr. Vrezh, told me once a sad story. His father
told him that in the caves near Ras-el-Ain’s springs many Armenians
were tortured to death. The caves were long ago filled with stones and
got buried. Mr. Vrezh is fearful that one day the authorities will
take this area to build something thus the graves will be profaned. He
has turned to Syria’s Armenian community and party leaders with a
suggestion to build a memorial on this site. This plea also remains
unanswered but he is still hopeful that his voice will be heard one
day.
The small Armenian community of Ras-el-Ain has many problems. The
church has no priest as this position is poorly paid. A priest arrives
here from Kamishli town 160 km away only for major religious
celebrations. People here perform patriotic songs very beautifully.
Headmistress of the school, Ani Sargsian, who is also a graduate of
the school, spares no effort to educate the children with Armenian
spirit. Parents and benefactors help the school. She dreams of
visiting Armenian and participating in retraining courses for
teachers. Perhaps the Ministry of Education of Armenia can help her
achieve her dream.
There are major problems hamper the survival of this small
community. There is less work for the Armenian craftsmen as the other
nationalities have learned their crafts and now they provide their
services to a vaster clientele. Armenian children leave for Aleppo,
Damask, Lebanon or other countries to continue their education or to
find a job. If it goes like this there will soon be no Armenian in
Ras-el-Ain. Only those will remain who are married with Christian
Arabs or Assyrians.
Currently, there are 50.000 Armenians in Syria. They live in
good-neighborly relations with the Syrian people but still cherish a
dream of returning to their ancestors’ land.
By Derenik Movsisian in Ras-el-Ain

The Anti-Criminalists Will Tell Names Later

A1+
THE ANTI-CRIMINALISTS WILL TELL NAMES LATER
[07:23 pm] 15 September, 2006
About 18 oppositional and pro-governmental parties and organizations
which are included in the `Anti-criminal movement’ were gathered today
to create a document which would decide their future activity.
All the RA parties are involved in the movement except the Republican
party which wasn’t even invited as according Aram Karapetyan, the
leader of the New Times Party, they protect criminalists, `When we
announced that we are going to start an anti-criminal movement, the
Republicans revolted saying that we want to fight against them. After
that the only thing we can do is to let them know about our
activity’. The Armenian Revolutionary Federation was not present
today, but Aram Karapetyan claimed that next time they will be
present.
The next meeting will probably take place on September 25. At the
suggestion of the participants of the meeting next Wednesday the New
Times party will make a draft document. The draft will be distributed
to all the parties and will be voted during the September 25 meeting
after which it will be signed.
At the suggestion of the National Unity the document will mention
names of people in order to know whom they will fight against.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Torosyan Met Bozhko

A1+
TOROSYAN MET BOZHKO
[07:37 pm] 15 September, 2006
Today RA NA Speaker Tigran Torosyan received the Ukrainian Ambassador
extraordinary and plenipotentiary to Armenia Alexander Bozhko.
The Ambassador passed on to the NA Speaker the congratulating message
of Alexander Moroz, the Speaker of the Ukrainian Supreme Rada, in
connection with the 15th anniversary of the RA independence.
Thanking for the message, the NA Speaker found the activization of the
cooperation between the two countries and especially between the
Parliaments, as it can be effective for both former Soviet countries.
The NA President also referred to several statements made by the
Ukrainian President in Baku about the ways of settlement of the
Karabakh conflict. He mentioned that they do not contribute to the
settlement of the conflict and contradict the OSCE principles.
Mr. Bozhko promised to pass on to the authorities of his country the
concerns of the NA Speaker.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Sadoyan Thinks Russia Forces to Raise Telephone Fees

Panorama.am
15:44 15/09/06

SADOYAN THINKS RUSSIA FORCES TO RAISE TELEPHONE FEES
Arshak Sadoyan, Member of Parliament, is going to put every effort to
hinder the Public Services Regulatory Committee from approving the new
tariffs proposed by ArmenTel on possible rise. Consumer Rights
Protection organizations are going to join Sadoyan in his
efforts. `Applications for higher tariffs are normally submitted based
on cost-value and quality of service. We know that ArmenTel is the
second profitable company in Armenia and we are well-aware of the
quality of its services,’ Aram Grigoryan, Public Protector’s Union
head said.
`Even back to those years of cold and dark, our telecommunication
capacities were twice as much as in Georgia, Azerbaijan, Iran and
Turkey. Today the picture is completely different.’ Sadoyan said.
Andranik Manukyan, the minister of transport and communication, also
made a statement recently saying ArmenTel’s proposed tariffs do not
comply with the rendered services and that the Regulatory Committee
must be very serious in considering it.
Reminder: ArmenTel submitted an application September 1 to the Public
Services Regulatory Committee proposing to raise the fee for fixed
telephony from AMD 1000 to AMD 3000. The company also wants to charge
AMD 24,000 for the connection to fixed telephony instead of previous
AMD 12,000. The proposal requires AMD 6 instead of 5 as a fixed
telephony minute charge and AMD 2,4 instead of 1 for internet
connection. All these changes are proposed under the conditions when
the company is in the process of sale.
Citing respectful sources, Sadoyan says Russian companies closely
related to President Putin make pressures on ArmenTel to raise the
prices. He called reporters to launch a fight against the possible
rise of telephone fees promising no one will have Galajian’s
fate. /Panorama.am/
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Genocide: Ankara Urges Paris to "Think"

PanARMENIAN.Net
Armenian Genocide: Ankara Urges Paris to “Think”
15.09.2006 14:53 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, on a visit to Paris,
has reportedly relayed Ankara’s concerns over a bill being introduced
to the French Parliament by the Socialist Party which would make it a
crime to publicly deny the Armenian Genocide. Gul voiced the concerns
of the AKP-led administration at a working dinner with his French
counterpart, Foreign Minister Phillipe Douste-Blazy. Reminding
Douste-Blazy that Ankara had already proposed that a joint commission
of historians work together on the matter, Gul said that French
historians and historians from any country interested would be welcome
to work on the commission, the Hurriyet Turkish newspaper writes.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Pogroms of Caucasians in Saratov Region: 1 Killed, 5 Wounded

PanARMENIAN.Net
Pogroms of Caucasians in Saratov Region: 1 Killed, 5 Wounded
15.09.2006 15:09 GMT+04:00
/PanARMENIAN.Net/ 1 person is killed and several are in reanimation
resulting from a mass fight in Volsk town. Reports on the occurrence
are very contradictory. According to some, two young persons quarreled
with Armenian Diaspora representatives at Galaktika local club. Over
10 took part in a fight. By the time the police arrived, there were
three wounded, one of them later died.
There are no official reports. It is known that many re-settlers from
southern republics live in Volsk. The Prosecutor’s Office confirmed
there was a fight, but nothing similar to the events in Kondopog – the
conflict was an ordinary one. The situation in the town is normal
now. The police works in an intense regime.
Meanwhile, law-enforcement bodies do not confirm media reports on
disorders in Volsk. «The situation in the town is normal,»
stated person on operative duty of the Department of Internal affairs
of Volsk, Russian media report.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Eastern Christians And Dhimittude Under Islam

EASTERN CHRISTIANS AND DHIMITTUDE UNDER ISLAM
AINA, CA
Assyrian International News Agency
Posted GMT 9-14-2006 22:9:42
[Editor’s note] The following article from the Byzantine Catholic
Culture website should give plenty to ponder on the part of all those
who seek to understand the genesis of islamo-fascism, as well as any
contemplated convivium with Islamic countries.
Eastern Christians, Orthodox and Catholic, have plenty of recent
experience with Islamic culture and polity that needs to be heard by
Westerners — Christian and non-Christian. Immigrants from Lebanon
and Armenia, from Greece and Turkey, the Balkans, Syria and Iraq,
Palestine and Egypt, all have stories of ethnic cleansing and centuries
of oppression under Islamic rule. Hispanic culture too was profoundly
marked by the centuries-long struggle with Islam on the Iberian
Peninsula, too. The crusades actually began in Spain when the first
Muslim invaders placed their feet on Spanish soil in 711. From then
on, Spain and the Christian faith struggled under Muslim masters who
at times were more or less congenial towards their infidel wards. The
struggle continued until 1492, just weeks before Christopher Columbus
landed in the Americas.
Those 700 years of struggle saw the intervention of other
Christian nations such as France and England, as well as the
person of Charlemagne himself, to rid the Iberian peninsula of
“dhimmitude”. Catholics of the Byzantine or Mozarabic rite in Spain
in some places lived alongside their Muslim masters and kept the
Faith burning like a frail lamp that could be snuffed out at any
moment. The result was a militant Catholic religion that was to make
ultimately the fateful decision to demand One Faith under One King
during the reign of Ferdinand and Isabella. Even though at times
Muslim occupation brought technological and intellectual advances
(taken from the formerly Christian Byzantine Empire), the bitterness
of the struggle prevented any further melding of the cultures.
Lebanese Christian and Greek refugees from Ottoman and later Turkish
oppression came to the US during the early 1900s to find the freedom
of conscience that had been denied them at home. They fled massacres,
enforced servitude, and the gathering up of their young people to
serve in the Turk’s armies or harems.
Besides Spain, Western Europe had experience with Muslim onslaughts,
also. For example, Muslim pirates raided the coasts of Ireland,
Iceland, England, and northern France during the 1700s with impunity
and took hostages into slavery, forcing them to convert.
But these events are lost to most people, especially Americans who
have little experience with Islam. The Gulf War of the 1990s, and the
subsequent wars in Iraq and Afghanistan are comparative turkey-shoots
when seen in the historical context of Christianity’s struggles with
Islam. The armies of Saddam Hussein and the ragtag Taliban offered
comparatively little resistance. It is well to remember that Muslim
armies were not always so inept: they got as far as three days’ march
from Paris and once besieged the walls of Krakow and Vienna. The
Middle East, and Africa, were Christian until the jihadi armies of
Mohammed swept through and demanded conversion in exchange for the
lives of the vanquished.
The current war, whether it is called a war against terrorism or
to save “civilization” as President George W. Bush puts it, must be
placed in the context of the previous struggles between Muslims and
Christians. The experience of Eastern Christians is much more vital
and deserves a hearing in the West.
Yes, let us discuss with Muslims the difficulty they have in
controlling islamo-fascists. But let us have returned to us the keys
to the Hagia Sophia. — Martin Barillas, Religion news editor.
CHRISTIAN FLIGHT FROM THE MIDDLE EAST
THE REASONS
The purpose of this essay is to advise our readers of the causes of the
Christian exodus from the Middle East. We shall not discuss absolute
numbers and percentages, for they are covered in other Web sites
and books referred to herein. Rather, we want to review the social
and political environment of Muslim societies in which Christians
constitute vanishing minorities in lands where their presence precedes
the invasion of Islam and where the Gospel of Christ was preached
to them two thousand years ago. The ancient communities of Christ’s
followers are now under unrelenting pressure to abandon the lands
where they have been for 20 millennia.
We invite our readers to imagine living in a social and political
environment as members of a religious minority, Christians, where the
dominant majority, Muslims, are told by their “holy book” that they
are the noblest of creatures and the former are the vilest of animals,
where the majority constitutes the only portion of society which counts
whereas those of the minority are outside of and subordinate to that
society, where the official state religion is that of the majority and
the religion of the minority is scorned if not actively persecuted,
where the legal system by its very language prefers the majority and
discriminates against the minority, where the news media promote the
interests of the majority and ignore or defame the people of the
minority, where opportunity in education, employment and business
are tilted toward the majority and away from the minority, where in
times of political and economic misfortune those of the majority feel
free to attack, plunder and kill those of the minority out of hatred
and revenge, where the clergy of the majority preaches hatred for
the minority and issues religious decrees urging its followers to
wage war against the minority, where the men of the majority regard
the women of the minority as shameless and frequently molest them,
where the important decisions in society are based on the religion
of the majority, on ethnicity, tribe, clan and family rather than
on merit, and where ignorance, superstition, corruption, abuse &
denigration of women, oppression, and persecution of religious &
ethnic minorities are the norms, not the exceptions, then you will
understand the predicament of Christians in Muslim societies and
wonder no longer why they seek to escape by emigrating.
Increasingly in recent decades Catholic and Orthodox parishes in North
America and elsewhere have experienced the influx of Christians from
the Middle East. The movement of Christians from the lands of their
ancestors evangelized by the Apostles is perplexing and painful to
American Christians, for it is in that part of the world where our
faith had its genesis. Eastern Christians, Catholic and Orthodox,
cannot separate their religion from the places of its formative
years. The first 600 years of the Christian era saw the growth of the
Christian Churches, the gathering of the books of the New Testament
into the canon of the Bible, and the early ecumenical councils
which clarified the doctrines of the Trinity and the dual nature of
Christ. In those years many of our saintly heroes, whom we venerate
today, appeared like the Three Holy Hierarchs, St. John Chrysostom,
St. Basil the Great, & St. Gregory the Theologian, and St. Nicholas
of Myra, St. Mary of Egypt, St. Anthony the Great, St. Cyril of
Alexandria and many others.
THE THREE HOLY HIERARCHS
In the 7th century a new religion stormed out of Arabia, the religion
of Muhammad called Islam.
Muhammad taught a new monotheistic doctrine in opposition to the
polytheism of Arabia, asserting that his incorporated the best of
Judaism and Christianity and replaced both, that his was the complete
and last revelation of his deity, Allah, and that he was his deity’s
last messenger. [2] Within a century of his death his followers, called
Muslims, carried his religion by fire and sword into the Christian
world of the Middle East, overwhelming the Christian populations
[3] and carrying Islam eastward to the borders of China and westward
across North Africa and into Spain and southern France. Everywhere
the Christian populations capitulated to the armed hordes of Islam. In
dealing with the captive populations the Muslim overlords were guided
by the experience of Muhammad in subduing the pagan, Christian
and Jewish tribes of Arabia. These experiences were incorporated
into Muhammad’s book, the Quran. Pagans were commanded to convert
to Islam. If they refused they were killed and enslaved and their
property seized. If the submitted without resistance, they were spared.
Christians and Jews [4], however, were regarded as “peoples of
the Book” and treated differently. If they surrendered without
resistance, their lives and property were spared conditional on
acknowledgment of their inferiority to Muslims and the superiority
of Muslims and further on payment of the humiliation tax called
“jizya”. See further explanation of jizya in footnote 8 of
This arrangement or
understanding is called “dhimma” and the subjugated peoples of the
Book are called “dhimmi”. See Quran Surah IX, 29. The legal, social
and cultural condition of the subjugated dhimmi in Muslim societies
is called “dhimmitude”. Theoretically the dhimmi were to be allowed
free practice of their religion, but in reality that notion evolved
into mere sufferance under whatever other limitations the local
rulers might impose. For the first centuries after Muslim conquest
the Christian populations were the majorities under their Muslim
masters. Over time these majorities dwindled to minorities through
forced conversions and expulsions.
Dhimmitude
To understand the role of the dhimmi in Muslim controlled societies,
one must first examine the world view of the Muslims envisioned
by Islam’s foundation documents, namely the Quran, the Hadith or
traditions, and the Sharia or law code. Muslims view the entire
world as the possession of Allah and his surrogates on earth, the
Muslims. This world domination by Islam is called “khilafah” and it
remains the goal of Islam.
Jihad or “holy war” is the means by which the infidels are conquered
and the goal of khilafah is achieved.
All humanity must submit to Islam as the natural order of the
universe. The exception, mentioned above, allowed to Christians and
Jews, was and remains, as stated, mere sufferance, not an acceptable
alternative. Muslims divide humanity into two kinds — believers or
Muslims called by the Quran “the best of nations raised up to rule
over all others” Surah III, 110, and “kufr” or infidels defined by the
Quran as “the vilest of animals” Surah VIII, 55. Christians and Jews,
while not pagans, remain infidels, “may Allah destroy them” Surah IX 3.
The world is divided by Muslims into the House of Islam where Muslims
prevail and the House of War where infidels prevail. Between the two
abodes of mankind perpetual war called jihad reigns as the natural
condition or relationship. All Muslims are called to jihad as a moral
mandate to subdue the House of War and establish the universal rule
of Islam, khilafah.
All Muslim society everywhere is contained in the “umma”, the universal
brotherhood of Muslims. In the early centuries following Muhammad
the umma was led by the “khalif”, the Commander of the Faithful,
as the successor of Muhammad, in whom all matters of religion and
state were combined. Islam, then as now, sees no distinction between
the religion and the state.
Islam has no notion of inalienable natural or human rights
such as envisioned by Thomas Jefferson in the Declaration of
Independence. Moreover, Islam does not acknowledge civil rights,
i. e. rights which inure to people by virtue of their membership in a
political state. The only rights possessed by Muslims and dhimmi are
religious rights recognized in the Quran and codified in the Sharia. In
this scheme of things, the despised dhimmi fare badly, for they are
excluded from the umma and remain subordinated to it in law as well as
in practice. Muslims are even forbidden to befriend dhimmi Surah V,
51. By rough analogy the status of dhimmi may be likened to that of
the Negroes in the South during the worst days of Jim Crow. [6]
Seen in the above context and supported by 14 centuries of practice,
the Muslims are trapped in a “closed circle” of their own making
which denies them the opportunity to regard and deal with infidels in
any manner except that which is contemplated by their religion and
culture. Because the mandates of the Quran represent the complete,
final, eternal, literal and unalterable revelation of their deity,
the Muslims are frozen in the Bedouin mentality of the 7th century
and unprepared to deal with dhimmi or other infidels according to
the universal human rights standards of the present. As stated by
the author, Bat Ye’or, in her book, referenced below, entitled THE
DECLINE OF EASTERN
CHRISTIANITY UNDER ISLAM:
“Jihad and dhimma, emanations of the Creator’s will, are invested with
divine attributes: immutability, perfection, justice, infallibility;
considered as perfect systems, they brook no criticism. The subjugation
of Christians and Jews in Islam, in accordance with the
divine will, is achieved by the perfection of the dhimma. Any criticism
of jihad and dhimma — that is to say of the temporal realm —
becomes a sacrilege because of the unity
of the temporal and the spiritual.” p 242
Although the above standards apply generally to the relationships
between the umma and the dhimmi in all times and places, the practical
application in many Muslim states has yielded to outside influences
and political realities. Accordingly the practical applications
have been modified resulting in a variety of situations in which
Muslim states have deviated from the norm, allowing in some cases
more benign treatment of dhimmi. In some states like Baathist Iraq,
Baathist Syria, Jordan, Lebanon, Tunisia and Morocco the governments
eschew the overt persecution of Christians, although the Jews were
run off decades ago. Other states like Saudi Arabia, Iran, Pakistan
and Sudan apply the full vigor of Quranic discrimination.
The exodus of Christians from the Middle East is varied and complex. In
the 19th century the European powers began to intervene increasingly
in the affairs of Muslim countries, pressing the rulers to grant
relief to the dhimmi from the worst of their burdens.
In addition, European Churches moved in to establish schools, printing
presses and mutual aid societies to aid the Christians thereby exposing
them to new ideas.
Those who went abroad to study seldom returned.
Awareness of greater economic opportunities and notions of liberty gave
Christians in Muslim countries a growing appreciation that conditions
elsewhere were better than those which they knew so well. Political
turmoil and periodic rampages by Muslims against Christians motivated
interest in emigration. With the collapse of the Ottoman Empire at
the end of World War I, the emigration of Christians to the Americas
began in earnest.
The second massive emigration began after World War II with the
influx of Jewish refugees into the British Mandate of Palestine. The
concomitant conflict between Palestinians and Jews created instability
and inured to the harm of the Christian communities. The Palestinian
and other Middle Eastern Christians and their Churches sided largely
with the Muslims in opposing Jewish presence in the Middle East. With
the restoration of the people of Israel to the land of Israel in the
State of Israel the conflicts grew.
Rejecting the United Nations’ partition of the Mandate into Jewish and
Muslim parts and as a result of the four wars initiated and lost by
the Palestinians and their Arab allies against Israel, the condition
of the Christians became increasingly bad. The Israelis regard Arab
Christians as untrustworthy and the Muslims continue to treat them
as despised infidels.
Consequently the movement of Christians from the region of the former
Mandate to the West accelerates.
Elsewhere in the Muslim world where there are no Jews or Israelis the
same is happening. The growth and increasing intolerance of militant
Islam, the continuing discrimination against them as despised dhimmi,
economic opportunity elsewhere and the universal longing of people to
be free, prompt Christians to leave the lands of their ancestors and
to seek a better life in freedom elsewhere. As their sons go abroad
for education, their families in an ever widening circle of kin and
friends follow which is emptying out the Christian communities of
the Middle East.
THE FINAL SOLUTION
The final solution to the Christian presence in the Middle East is
rapidly approaching. Within a generation or two, the Christians
will have followed the Jews in fleeing the bitter oppression
of the islamo-fascist social and political order of the Middle
East. Increasingly non-native Christians will take over the custody
of the major shrines and churches. In the lands evangelized by the
Apostles the church bells will go silent and from their towers will
sound the demonic wail of the muezzin summoning Muhammad’s followers
to their prostrations.
Rather than repeat what is already available about absolute numbers
and percentages of Christians emigrating, we direct our readers to two
Web sites with such information. They are “Disappearing Christians in
the Middle East ” at:
and “The Oppression of Middle Eastern Churches” at:
For English translations of
inflammatory anti-infidel agitation & propaganda emanating daily from
mosque & media in the Middle East, see the Web site of the Middle East
Research Institute at: See also our page entitled
Islam & the Church at:
and the books referenced below in footnote [8]
FOOTNOTES
[1] Hagia Sophia is the Mother Church of Eastern Christians, idealized
to appear as it might have been before its desecration by the Muslim
Turks. The life-giving cross has been restored to the dome and the four
minarets have been removed. Today it is neither temple nor mosque,
but a museum. Our Mother Church will be a metaphor of the Churches
of the Middle East, should current trends of emigration continue.
[2] The Quran. When one reads the Quran for the first time, one is
surprised to discover that Muhammad’s deity bears scant resemblance
to the Christians’ God.
Rather, it appears like an ancient Semitic war god elevated by Muhammad
above all others whose worship his followers seek to impose on mankind
by force. One chapter of the Quran, Surah VIII, entitled “The Spoils
of War”, is devoted to the plundering, killing and enslavement of
vanquished infidels and the apportionment of their property among
the followers of Muhammad.
[3] Muslims do not regard themselves as conquerors of the lands of
the infidels, but their liberators. That is based on the premise that
the lands, people and property of all the world belong to Allah and
his followers and that they are merely taking possession of what
is rightfully theirs. The author, Bat Ye’or, states the case well
in her book, ISLAM AND DHIMMITUDE, referenced below, as follows:
“The general basic principles according to the Koran are as follows:
the pre-eminence of Islam over all other religions [Surah 9: 33];
Islam is the true religion of Allah [Surah 3; 17] and it should reign
over all mankind [Surah 34; 27]; the umma forms the party of Allah
and is perfect [Surah 3; 6], having been chosen above all peoples
on earth it alone is qualified to rule, and thus elected by Allah to
guide the world [Surah 35; 37]. The pursuit of jihad, until this goal
will be achieved, is an obligation [Surah 8; 40]. The religions of the
Bible …are deemed inferior as their followers falsified the true
Revelation which their respective prophets conveyed to them — this
Revelation considered to be Islam — before Muhammad’s arrival. Albeit
inferior, these peoples, each a beneficiary of Revelation, have the
choice between war or submission to the umma, whereas idolaters are
forced to convert to Islam or be killed”. pp. 40 — 41
[4] The Jews, although one of the “peoples of the Book”, incurred
the wrath of Muhammad for their rejection of his religion. In the
Quran Surah V, 60 he referred to them as “apes and swine”. The terms
“apes and swine” or “descendants of apes and swine” continue to be
the preferred anti-Jewish pejoratives in the Muslim world.
[5] Dhimmitude is an image by Josef Yinnon and a word fashioned
by the author, Bat Ye’or, to describe the bondage, subservience,
isolation and abuse of Christians and Jews in Muslim societies, the
legal and social restraints under which they live, their culture and
attitudes which evolved under their condition, and the expectations
of the dominant umma. It refers also to Christian acquiescence to and
adoption of the prevailing policy in Muslim states which rejects the
existence of Israel and resists American foreign policy in the region
in a vain effort to curry favor with the Muslims.
[6] One dare not stretch this analogy too far. Whereas the Negroes in
America were able to prevail upon the fundamental religio-political
concept in American society of the equality of all humans in the civil
rights movement and succeed, the dhimmi in Muslim societies are not
so favored. In Islam only Muslims are equal; all others are inferior
and subordinated to Muslims by Quranic definition.
[7] The Lion of Judah. This image shows the Lion of Judah standing
guard over the Holy City of Jerusalem roaring defiance at the enemies
of Israel. The Lion of Judah represents King David and by extension
Jesus Christ as symbol of His victory over Satan. See Rev.
5, 5.
[8] We recommend to our readers the following books:
THE DECLINE OF EASTERN CHRISTIANITY UNDER ISLAM by Bat Ye’or, ISBN:
0838636888
ISLAM AND DHIMMITUDE — WHERE CIVILIZATIONS COLLIDE by Bat Ye’or,
ISBN: 0838639437
WHITNESSES FOR CHRIST — ORTHODOX NEOMARTYRS OF THE OTTOMAN PERIOD
by Nomikos Vaporis, ISBN: 0881411965
THE BODY AND THE BLOOD- THE MIDDLE EAST’S VANISHING CHRISTIANS by
Charles Sennott, ISBN: 1586481657
WHO ARE THE CHRISTIANS IN THE MIDDLE EAST? by B. J. & J. M. Bailey,
ISBN: 0802810209
THE CLOSED CIRCLE — AN INTERPRETATION OF THE ARABS by David
Pryce-Jones, ISBN: 0060981032
THE SWORD OF THE PROPHET — THE POLITICALLY INCORRECT GUIDE TO ISLAM
by Serge Trifkovic, ISBN: 1928653111
By R.L. Schwind
© 2006, Assyrian International News Agency. All Rights Reserved.
–Boundary_(ID_xznVNj2JNBL2+lSQvQnluQ)- –
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.speroforum.com

BAKU: "Nagorno-Garabagh’s Christian Architecture Monuments Have Not

“NAGORNO-GARABAGH’S CHRISTIAN ARCHITECTURE MONUMENTS HAVE NOT ANY RELATION TO ARMENIANS”
demaz.org
15.09.2006
According to Rizvan Bayramov, a scholar-historian, there were nearly
700 historical monuments in Azerbaijani territories occupied by
Armenians Azerbaijani territories occupied by Armenian aggressors
have rich flora and fauna as well as historical and cultural monuments.
According to the Ministry of Culture and Tourism, in occupied
Azerbaijani territories there are 689 monuments, of which 13 (6
architecture and 7 archeological) of worldwide importance, 242 (117
architecture and 7 archeological) – of state importance and 434 (373
architecture and 23 archeological monuments, 21 parks and monuments,
17 works of arts and crafts) – of local importance.
In Armenian-controlled areas there are still such archeological
monuments of worldwide importance as Gulu Musa oghlu’s tomb in
Aghdam (1314), Ganjasar in Kalbajar (1218), the Khudaferin Bridges
in Jabrayil, historical engineering reserve in Shusha city, the Azikh
Cave in Fizuli, and also Niftaly tumulus in Khojaly and Jabrayil.
Rizvan Bayramov, chief of the Cultural Heritage Department of the
Ministry of Culture and Tourism and historian-scholar informed that
lands occupied by Armenia are the territories of the West Azerbaijan.
According to him, almost all cultural and historical monuments there
have been destroyed or “Armenianized”.
Many experts consider that the mentioned statistics do not meet
realities. According to them, in Soviet period there was not a
chance to make up and to examine true list of cultural and historical
monuments of the mentioned territories.
As R. Bayramov informed, it is impossible to say concrete things on
this occasion: “In Soviet time a number of monuments of Azerbaijan
were included to a certain list. Such lists were made up in 1968, 1981
and 1988. Just in Shusha the Government registered 200 architectural
monuments. Anyway, it is very difficult to call a precise number of
monuments in the territory of Nagorno-Garabagh, as any time the list
can be completed owing to new archeological finds. There are cases
when one or another monument is in forest or people know it, but it
is unknown for scholars. Thus, it is impossible to deny availability
of new historical and cultural monuments in occupied territories. Any
way, under the list of 1988 there are 700 monuments.”
The Armenians resort to any methods to prove that Nagorno-Garabagh
and adjacent territories “belong” to Armenia. They have their will
to date. But according to the historian-scholar, the historical
truth is that the Armenians appeared in these territories just when
the Russian Empire that occupied Azerbaijan began resettlement of
Armenians living in Iran and other countries there: “I’d say that
the Christian monuments in occupied Azerbaijani lands have not any
relation to Armenians, as all of them belong to us.”
Armenians’ attitude to the historical and cultural monuments
of Garabagh and adjacent territories is an axiom for each
Azerbaijanian. According to R. Bayramov, equally with everybody the
Ministry receives information from mass media and those who visited
Nagorno-Garabagh: “We have not other information sources. But in
connection with environmental protection and guard the former Ministry
of Culture and present Ministry of Culture and Tourism repeatedly
addressed to international organizations. They’ve addressed to UNESCO,
International Center for the Study of the Preservation and restoration
of Cultural Property, International Council of Museums, International
Council on Monuments and Sites, etc.
Recently Minister of Culture and Tourism addressed once more to
UNESCO concerning fires made by Armenians in occupied Azerbaijani
territories. It is quite probable that recent fires resulted in
complete annihilation of the oldest cemetery in Khojavend.”
R. Bayramov reminded the fact that the point of the 1954 Hague
Convention for the Protection of Cultural Property in the Event of
Armed Conflict says that if the State has not a chance to protect its
cultural monuments, it has the right to address to the United Nations:
“The UN special committee should take all responsibility for cultural
values guard of any State.
It is appropriate mention that in connection with that we have done
a serious work and prepared appropriate statement submitted to the
Ministry of Foreign Affairs. I think that MFA, in turn, will make
all efforts and send a letter to relevant structures.”
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

FEATURE- Peering Through A Lens Into Jerusalem’s Past

FEATURE-PEERING THROUGH A LENS INTO JERUSALEM’S PAST
By Luke Baker
Reuters
15 Sep 2006 01:01:41 GMT
JERUSALEM, Sept 15 (Reuters) – Behind the door of 36 al-Khanka Street,
a steep, stone alleyway squeezed between the Christian and Muslim
quarters of Jerusalem’s Old City, lies a treasure trove of history
in black and white.
Varouj Ishkhanian’s photographic studio is lined with emotive images
from the last 130 years, tracing Jerusalem’s past from Ottoman times,
through British and Jordanian rule, to the founding of the state of
Israel and the wars in between.
>>From wizened Ashkenazi Jews studying the Torah in the early 1900s,
to camel trains leaving Damascus Gate on their way to Bethlehem, and
British General Edmund Allenby standing at the entrance to the Holy
City in 1917, the grainy photographs capture centuries of religion,
politics and conflict.
“Every picture contains more than one thousand words,” the 73-year-old
Ishkhanian says with a chuckle, flicking through a stack of thick,
time-worn albums of original photographs piled on his desk, each
image indexed and dated.
“This one was taken by my grandfather, one of the first that he took,”
he says, pointing to a faded brown-and-white picture of Jewish women
praying at the Western Wall in the late 1800s.
There are portraits too of bare-breasted gypsy women during Ottoman
rule, of the execution of a crook by the Ottoman authorities in 1905,
and of Arab fishermen on the Sea of Galilee at sunset in 1885, one
of Ishkhanian’s favourites.
An Armenian who was born and grew up in the Old City, Ishkhanian is
himself a small part of the history that he and his grandfather — and
now his son — have photographed, having served as the semi-official
photographer of King Hussein of Jordan in the late 1950s and early 60s.
ROYAL MANDATE
He started taking pictures in his teens, in the mid-1940s, when he
would help out his grandfather Kirkor at his photographic shop on
Jaffa Street, in what was then called New Jerusalem — the part that
lay outside the Old City’s walls.
During the 1948 war that followed Israel’s founding, he remained in
the Old City, taking refuge in the Armenian Convent, but still going
out onto the streets each day to hone his craft.
Having developed a knack for both news and more lucrative wedding
photography — his collection contains several portraits of Arab
girls preparing for marriage — he cajoled the Jordanian authorities
who then administered Jerusalem into giving him the only pass to take
photos at the Hashemite palace in Jordan.
“I was working for several newspapers at the time and I just kept
pushing and pushing and eventually they said okay,” he recalls. “Very
soon I was going to Amman almost every day and became quite friendly
with the king.”
He used to have a signed portrait of Hussein, who died in 1999,
in pride of place in the window of his studio, but took it down in
1967 after the Israelis captured the West Bank and East Jerusalem
from Jordan in the Middle East War.
Now a signed portrait of Hussein’s son, King Abdullah, hangs inside
the small shop instead, overlooking Ishkhanian’s desk. A portrait of
Ishkhanian himself, looking dapper in his late 20s, hangs from the
same wall, just above that of Abdullah.
Other images include pictures of his father, Sarkis, who was never
bitten by the photography bug, instead working for the British
authorities during their mandate of Palestine, supplying fuel to
light the oil lamps of the Old City.
EYE ON THE PAST
As well as capturing many moments in Jerusalem’s more recent history,
the photos in Ishkhanian’s studio also reveal how society, traditions
and geography have changed over time in perhaps the most fought-over
patch of land in the world.
A picture from the early 1900s shows Jewish men and women praying
together at the Western Wall, the most sacred site in Judaism,
whereas now they pray in separate sections.
Another from the same period shows houses very close to the Wall that
Ishkhanian said once belonged to Moroccan Arabs, whereas now the area
in front of the Wall is an open square.
However, he refuses to be drawn into any political discussion that
his photos might throw up, leaving them to speak for themselves. “The
pictures show everything,” he says firmly.
With his sight gone in one eye after so many years in a dark room,
Ishkhanian now spends his days in his studio selling prints of the
collection for 50 shekels (about $11) a piece. His son Sarko helps
out and still takes pictures.
He also helps prod Ishkhanian’s sometimes patchy memory, reminding him
of what year he got married and when his three children were born. But
the father remembers clearly when he opened his studio — it was 1964.
“It was after I worked for the king, when I had some money. Then, we
weren’t thinking about the future, it was all dancing and parties,”
he says with a smile.
“It was before I got married, before the problems of 1967. It was a
good time.”
Showing off his favourite photograph — a view he took in 1952 through
the window of the Dominus Flevit church, looking towards the Dome of
the Rock and the Western Wall — he laments how business has declined
over the past six years, since a Palestinian uprising erupted.
But he remains buoyant and enthusiastic. “Every day is good,” he
says. “I still look at everything, and I still take pictures, even
if not as well as before.”
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress