Scheduled Training Of NKR Self-Defense Army Finished In NK

SCHEDULED TRAINING OF NKR SELF-DEFENSE ARMY FINISHED IN NK

DeFacto Agency, Armenia
April 19 2006

Scheduled training of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic Defense Army with
participation of the army formations and units, as well as mobilization
resource, has finished in the Nagorno Karabakh.

The training’s goal was to determine the level of training education
of the armed forces, to improve management of the fighting arm and
coordination of their actions during defensive and counterattack
operations.

Today, in the course of the final, third stage of the training held
on the military polygon of the NKR Defense Army tactic training with
fighting shooting was conducted, during which tanks and artillery
were used.

The preliminary estimation of the training is positive, Spokesman
of the NKR Defense Ministry Senor Asratyan told De facto agency. He
informed that the final results would be summed up one of these days.

NKR DM Lieutenant-General Seyran Ohanyan was in command of the
training. NKR President and Armed Forces Supreme Commander in Chief
Arkady Ghoukasyan and RA DM Serzh Sargsyan were present at the measure.

Today a military units’ parade has been held under field conditions.

The servicemen distinguished in the course of the training were
awarded with certificates of honor and valuable gifts.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Exhibition Dedicated To The Preservation Of Cultural Property In NA

EXHIBITION DEDICATED TO THE PRESERVATION OF CULTURAL PROPERTY IN NA

National Assembly of RA, Armenia
April 19 2006

On April 18 within the framework of EU-Armenia Parliamentary
Cooperation Committee Eighth Meeting an exhibition dedicated to
preservation of cultural property in the National Assembly was
opened. In the exhibition the Armenian monuments left out of the
Armenian territory after the World War I are mainly presented. Armen
Roustamyan, Committee Co-Chairman highlighted the opening of such
exhibition in the aspect of focusing the society’s attention on
the preservation of the historical monument. Representatives of
EU-Armenia Parliamentary Cooperation Committee, NA deputies and others
participated at the opening of the exhibition, which initiated the
NGO Studying the Armenian Architecture.

Armen Hakhnazaryan, Chairman of the NGO studying the Armenian
Architecture, presenting the diamonds of the Armenian architecture,
noted that the goal of the NGO is the preservation and evaluation
of the Armenian architectural values left out of Armenia after World
War I.

Hranush Hakobyan, NA deputy, highlighted the organization of the
exhibition from the viewpoint of presenting our Armenian cultural
property to European deputies. In Mrs. Hakobyan’s opinion the
destruction of the architectural monuments by our neighbours is
unacceptable, reminding that both the UNESCO and the civilized world
have put a task to preserve the cultural property.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Azerbaijani Leader To Meet Bush On Iran N-Crisis

AZERBAIJANI LEADER TO MEET BUSH ON IRAN N-CRISIS

IranMania, Iran
April 19 2006

LONDON, April 19 (IranMania) – Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev will
hold talks next week at the White House with US President George W
Bush on the impasse over Iran’s nuclear program and other strategic
issues in the Caspian region, officials said Tuesday, according to AFP.

The Azerbaijani leader will travel to Washington on Tuesday for an
official visit Wednesday and Thursday, presidential spokesman Tair
Tagizade said.

Aliyev will also meet other US officials to discuss issues including
Iran, construction of oil and gas pipelines through Azerbaijan and
steps toward resolving Azerbaijan’s conflict with Armenia over the
enclave of Nagorno Karabakh, a diplomatic source in the president’s
office told AFP.

The oil-rich former Soviet republic of Azerbaijan sits on the northern
border of Iran and is seen as a potential staging post for a military
attack on the Islamic republic.

In addition to its interest in Azerbaijan’s oil and gas resources,
the United States has quietly provided military assistance to the
country in the form of upgrading naval vessels, training personnel
and building two powerful radar stations there.

US officials have said the assistance is not unusual and comes under
the heading of friendly bilateral US-Azerbaijani ties. Russia however
has kept a wary eye on the evolution of the US presence in Azerbaijan
and officials occasionally cite it as a source of regional tension.

Meanwhile, Azerbaijani authorities announced that Iranian Defense
Minister Mostafa Mohammad-Najar was scheduled to travel to Baku on
Wednesday for a three day visit.

The Iranian minister was due to hold talks with his Azerbaijani
counterpart, Safar Abiyev, and other officials, a defense ministry
spokesman said. No agreements were expected to be signed.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Fareed Zakaria’s Foreign Exchange Prgm: The Armenian Genocide

FAREED ZAKARIA’S FOREIGN EXCHANGE PRGM: THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

Source: EurasiaNet.org

Foreign Exchange
April 14 2006

Show 215 Transcript – April 14, 2006

Americans are talking about immigration; we’ll get the international
perspective.

Hundreds of thousands died–was it genocide? Armenia says yes,
Turkey says no; we’ll take a look at a new film that tries to answer
the question.

And finally, will AIDS derail India’s economic future?

All this and more on Foreign Exchange…

[parts omitted]

In Focus: Genocide?

Fareed Zakaria: The word genocide did not exist until World War II
when it was used to describe Nazi atrocities toward the Jews. But
can something that took place well before the Nazis in a different
historical context still be called a genocide? For Armenia and Turkey
use of the word has been a source of deep debate. Historians have
established that hundreds of thousands of Armenians died due to
Turkey’s actions in the events during World War I; however Turkish
officials strongly reject the assertion that this was a genocide.

They argue that it was a tragedy of war in a war with many such
tragedies. A new film explores this complex history. Tune into PBS
stations this week to see more and now here’s a clip.

Speaker: As war broke out in August 1914 between Germany and Russia the
Turkish Empire had to decide what to do and [inaudible] particularly
wanted to join Germany and use the German alliance to expand the Empire
to the East. The major enemy for Turkey at that point was Russia and
their dream was to conquer the caucuses and Russia and Central Asia and
unite all the Turkey peoples of those lands in a grand Turkic Empire.

Speaker: In December 1914 led by their Minister of War, [Inaudible]
the Ottomans attacked Russia at Sarikamish along the Russian Border.

It was a strategic blunder; the Ottomans were overwhelmingly
defeated. Their hopes for a united empire were smashed. A few months
later as over 120,000 Russian troops advanced into the Empire their
ranks included a contingent of between 5,000 and 6,000 Armenian
soldiers; this Armenian contingent consisted of both Russian
Armenian conscripts and a smaller number of Ottoman Armenians who
had defected. Seeing their own Armenian subjects volunteering and
fighting for the enemy enraged the Turkish leaders; fearing that
still more of their subjects might join the enemy, they now saw the
Armenians of the Empire as a threat to the state.

Speaker: It was now in the wake of the disastrous loss at Sarikamish
that the CUP decided to disarm all the Armenian soldiers in the Ottoman
Army. They had decided that the Armenians were an unreliable group;
and Enver was blaming the Armenians for his loss at Sarikamish. And
then from disarming them they were thrown into labor battalions–that
is grunt work forces by which they were building roads, cleaning
latrines, and so forth, and were easily segregated, rounded up and
just massacred on mass.

Speaker: The massacres of the Armenian soldiers were the first stage
of the Armenian genocide but it was still just a beginning. The
International Association of Genocide Scholars affirms that over
1,000,000 Armenians died during the Armenian genocide. Other scholars
put the numbers as high as 1,500,000. The Turkish government today
denies that a genocide took place and has denied this historical fact
for nearly a century.

Speaker: In 1923 a new Turkish state, a new Turkish Republic was
created which really disconnected itself comprehensively from the
young Turks of 1915.

[Video Clip–News Clip] News Anchor: …impatient with former
methods, Anaturk banished ancient ways. Under Anaturk’s 15 year rule,
Constantinople was renamed Istanbul and became a westernized city
of modern well-planned buildings. Under his one-party government,
factories increased as the he industrialized Turkey. The social
revolution he accomplished was widespread. In everyway he emphasized
the change from the old Turkey to the new.

Speaker: What this new Turkish state then did was, it embarked on
an all-out program of westernization, adopting your western style
constitution, adopting secularism, dropping the old Arabic inspired
alphabet in favor of the Latin script, adopting western style
dress–costume, the civil code, everything; as a result Britain,
France, Germany–everybody else, they were now out to court this new
Turkey to try to become friends with it and the great powers did not
have any interest in pursuing the dirty matter of what had happened
in 1915. And all kinds of reasons like this made it undesirable for
the young republic to maintain an–an honest memory of what had been
done in 1915, and as a result you have an enormously constructed,
fabricated, manipulated national memory.

The “Dark Years” Armenians get 40% of their power from the Metsamor
nuclear power plant. The plant shut down for 8 years after a 1988
earthquake.

During this period “residents stripped the capital Yerevan of virtually
everything made of wood” to heat their homes.

;PHPSESSID=e4544675e99a6b12ad234131fef8346c

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://foreignexchange.tv/?q=node/1204&amp

Easter celebration brings out generations

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

April 18, 2006
___________________

ARMENIAN FAITHFUL FILL CATHEDRAL TO CELEBRATE CHRIST’S RESURRECTION
By Jake Goshert

Some came with sleeping babies in their arms. Others had toddlers
walking alongside. There were families with three generations
attending. All ages of Armenians came Sunday, April 16, 2006, to the
Easter Divine Liturgy at New York City’s St. Vartan Cathedral.

About 1,500 people filled the cathedral, spilling out onto the
sunlit plaza. Among the worshipers were several dignitaries, such
as Ambassador Armen Martirossyan, Armenia’s ambassador to the United
Nations, and his young family.

“There was a tangible sense of spirit and celebration that filled
the entire cathedral,” said Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate
of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), who
celebrated the badarak Easter Sunday. “And there were families and
people from all generations. There were seniors and young parents,
teenagers and newborns. Both the current community leaders and the
future were there to celebrate the victory of Christ’s resurrection.”

The Easter Sunday Divine Liturgy was sung by the St. Vartan Cathedral
Choirs, under the direction of Maestro Khoren Mekanejian with Florence
Avakian accompanying on the organ.

DAY OF CELEBRATION

Following the badarak and the administering of Holy Communion,
the Primate joined the faithful on the plaza for the traditional
“Antasdan” ceremony, or “Blessing of the Fields,” followed by the
release of doves.

The release of 12 doves each Easter represents Jesus sending his 12
disciples to spread the gospel to the world. Joining the Primate in
this ceremony was Diocesan Council Chairman Haig Dadourian, who served
as “godfather.” He was joined by his wife, Astrid, their children and
grandchildren, each helping launch a white dove into the air above
the mass of joyous faithful.

“Not only was Haig Dadourian eager to join this important celebration,
but he wanted the next generation of his family to share in the
experience,” the Primate said. “A true steward of the church, he
is actively working to instill a sense of faith in his children and
grandchildren.”

Following the ceremony on the plaza, 260 Armenians gathered in
the Diocesan Center’s Haik and Alice Kavookjian Auditorium for
a traditional Armenian lamb dinner, organized by Gregory and Ani
Manuelian, and featuring a performance by the Yeraz dance group
directed by Karnik Nercessian.

WEEK OF CELEBRATION

The Easter services were the capstone of a week-long commemoration
of Christ’s sacrifice and resurrection. The events and services were
organized by Fr. Mardiros Chevian, dean of St. Vartan Cathedral.

Easter Eve, Saturday, April 15, 2006, featured a Divine Liturgy
celebrated by Archbishop Yeghishe Gizirian, which was preceded by a
Scripture-reading ceremony.

The Divine Liturgy was sung by the St. Vartan Cathedral Youth Choir,
made up of students from the Diocesan Khrimian Lyceum, and Diocesan
Armenian Saturday schools of New York and New Jersey and under the
direction of Maro Partamian. Students of the Diocesan Khrimian Lyceum
also provided the Scripture readings.

EASTER CONTINUES

April 16 did not mark the end of Easter celebrations for all Armenians.
Because they use the Julian calendar, the Armenian Patriarchate of
Jerusalem will celebrate Easter on April 23, 2006.

On Monday, April 17, 2006, a group of 35 people from the Diocese
headed to the Holy Land on a special pilgrimage. They will be in the
Holy Land until April 25.

This is the first of two trips to the region being organized by
the Diocese this year. The Diocese will take another group on an
educational pilgrimage to the Holy Land this August.

“In the Holy Land you see first-hand the sites mentioned in the
Bible’s accounts of Holy Week. And seeing these places enlivens the
hearts of Christians,” the Primate said. “We must also remember that
the spirit of Easter, the hope and renewal it promises, can be found
in the hearts of all believers throughout the year.”

— 4/18/06

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in
the News and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern
Diocese, delivers his Easter homily to a filled St. Vartan Cathedral
in New York City on Sunday, April 16, 2006.

PHOTO CAPTION (2): The Primate administers communion to a young
Armenian on Easter Sunday, April 16, 2006.

PHOTO CAPTION (3): A young child looks at the doves before they are
set loose during the releasing of the doves ceremony on the plaza of
New York City’s St. Vartan Cathedral following the Easter badarak on
Sunday, April 16, 2006.

PHOTO CAPTION (4): Astrid and Haig Dadourian, who served as “godfather”
of the releasing of doves ceremony, kiss the hand-cross of Archbishop
Barsamian prior to the ceremony.

PHOTO CAPTION (5): Dancers from the Yeraz Dance Group perform during
the traditional Armenian lamb lunch at the St. Vartan Cathedral in
New York City following Easter Sunday services. (Photo courtesy of
Jennifer Morris.)

PHOTO CAPTION (6): Armen Akopian, a student from the Diocese’s
Khrimian Lyceum, reads from the Scriptures during the Easter Eve
service on April 15, 2006, in the St. Vartan Cathedral.(Photo courtesy
of Jennifer Morris.)

PHOTO CAPTION (7): Two of the 12 doves released following the Easter
Sunday badarak perch in a corner of the St. Vartan Cathedral in New
York City.

# # #

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.armenianchurch.net
www.armenianchurch.net.

European Premiere Of Maestro Tigran Mansurian’s Choral Masterpiece”A

European Premiere Of Maestro Tigran Mansurian’s Choral Masterpiece “Ars Poetica”

The Armenian National Chamber Choir conducted by Robert Mlkeyan, will take
part in the conclusive event of the First International Contemporary Music
Festival “Contaminazioni Contemporanee – Musica Sacra” (Contemporary
Contaminations/Sacred Music) to be held on 21-22-23 April in Bergamo
(Italy).
Mansurian’s masterpiece “Ars Poetica”, based on Yeghishe Charents poetry,
and most of the festival World or European première musical events are part
of Munich based ECM recording productions.
An important part of the festival is dedicated to Armenian authors such as
Gurdjieff, Komitas and Mansurian, performed by the Duo Anja Lechner-Vassilis
Tsabropoulos and the Armenian National Chamber Choir.
Just before the musical evening, there will be a presentation of Mansurian’s
work during a public debate and meeting with Maestro Mansurian, by Franco
Masotti (Artistic Director of Ravenna Festival) and Minas Lourian (Director
of Musical section OEMME Edizioni/MUSICAM of Centro Studi e Documentazione
della Cultura Armena, Venice).

[See program below]

CENTRO STUDI E DOCUMENTAZIONE DELLA CULTURA ARMENA
Corte Zappa, Dorsoduro 1602
I-30123 Venezia (Italy)
Phone/fax: +39 (0)41 5224225
E-mail: [email protected]

_________________________________ _____________________

VERBO ESSERE
Associazione Culturale
per le Arti Contemporanee

in collaborazione con:
COMUNE DI BERGAMO Assessorato alla cultura e spettacolo
DIOCESI DI BERGAMO
MUSEO BERNAREGGI

con il contributo di:
FONDAZIONE delle COMUNITA’ BERGAMASCHE
FONDAZIONE CARIPLO
BANCA POPOLARE DI BERGAMO
CREDITO BERGAMASCO
BANCA DI BERGAMO
ECM Records
DUCALE
SINAPSI

CONTAMINAZIONI CONTEMPORANEE
1° Festival Internazionale di Musica Contemporanea

MUSICA SACRA CONTEMPORANEA

LUOGHI DI SVOLGIMENTO

1) Teatro G.Donizetti
2) Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore
3) Centro Congressi Giovanni XXIII
4) Museo Bernareggi

TUTTI GLI EVENTI SARANNO GRATUITI

PRENOTAZIONI

L’INGRESSO agli eventi sarà gratuito sino a esaurimento dei posti.

La PRENOTAZIONE è obbligatoria da effettuarsi presso la segreteria del
festival c/o Centro Congressi Giovanni XXIII tel: 035-236435 oppure
all’indirizzo di posta elettronica [email protected]
PROGRAMMA del FESTIVAL
Il programma preliminare degli incontri pubblicato in questa stampa, potrà
subire delle variazioni

TUTTI GLI EVENTI SONO AD INGRESSO GRATUITO

Venerdì 21 APRILE 2006

ore 18.00
Museo Bernareggi – Città Bassa

INAUGURAZIONE del FESTIVAL

ore 18.30 – 19.30
Museo Bernareggi – Città Bassa

ARVO PART, UN RITRATTO
Inaugurazione della mostra fotografica di Roberto Masotti

ore 21.00
Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore – Città Alta

CONCERTO INAUGURALE
THE HILLIARD ENSEMBLE – Omaggio ad ARVO PÄRT

Sabato 22 APRILE 2006

ore 15.30
Centro Congressi Giovanni XXIII – Città Bassa

TARKOVSKIJ: il cinema fra poesia e profezia
interverranno
Manfred Eicher, produttore ECM
François Couturier compositore e musicista
Altro relatore (da confermare)

ore 18.00
Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore – Città Alta
ANNUM PER ANNUM – CHRISTOPHER BOWERS-BROADBENT – Organo
Musiche di Arvo Pärt, Olivier Messiaen, Erkki-Sven Tüür, Kevin Volans,
Bowers-Broadbent

ore 21.00
Teatro G.Donizetti – Città Bassa
NOSTALGHIA Song for Tarkovskij
François Couturier Quartet
François Couturier (piano), Jean-Louis Matinier (fisarmonica)
Jean Marc Larché (sax soprano), Anja Lechner (violoncello)
prima assoluta

Domenica 23 APRILE 2006

ore 10.30 – 12.00
Museo Bernareggi – Città Bassa

ECM : panorami sonori del nuovo millennio
Ascolto con Manfred Eicher produttore ECM

ore 15.30
Centro Congressi Giovanni XXIII – Città Bassa

TIGRAN MANSURIAN – Il paese delle pietre che urlano

interverranno
Tigran Mansurian compositore armeno
Franco Masotti musicologo
Minas Lourian Direttore sez. Musica Centro Studi e Documentazione della
cultura Armena

ore 18.00
Basilica di Santa Maria Maggiore – Città Alta
CHANTS, HYMNS AND DANCES
GURDJIEFF – TSABROPOULOS
CONCERTO di Anja Lechner (violoncello) e Vassilis Tsabropoulos (piano)

ore 21.00
Teatro G.Donizetti – Città Bassa
TIGRAN MANSURIAN – ARS POETICA
Musiche di Tigran Mansurian e Komitas
Concerto per coro misto a cappella
Armenian Chamber Choir (Coro da Camera Armeno)
Robert Mlkeyan direttore
prima europea

Eventi collaterali:

Museo Bernareggi – Città Bassa

“ARVO PART, UN RITRATTO”
Mostra Fotografica di Roberto Masotti
Dal 21 aprile al 06 maggio 2006
Orario di apertura:
dal martedì alla domenica
dalle 9.30 alle 13.00
dalle 15.30 alle 18.30
chiuso lunedì

–Bou ndary_(ID_FWNC+dw4nUWryRSyp08xyA)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.conteminazionicontemporanee.it

MFA of Armenia: Minister Receives a Delegation of Armenia-EUParliam

MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
375010 Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]

PRESS RELEASE

19-04-2006

Minister Oskanian Receives a Delegation of Armenia-EU Parliamentary
Cooperation Committee

A delegation of members of the European Parliament arrived in
Yerevan to participate in the Armenia-EU Parliamentary Cooperation
Committee. Minister Oskanian received the group, led by its co-chair,
French parliamentarian Marie-Ann Isler-Beguin.

During the meeting, the parliamentarians and the Minister discussed
the ongoing cooperation between the European Union and the South
Caucasus countries. They noted that there is increased EU interest
toward the region. The Minister expressed appreciation at the role
of the European Parliament in the engagement of the three countries
in the European Neighbourhood Policy.

At their request, Foreign Minister Oskanian presented the
parliamentarians with the latest developments in the Nagorno Karabakh
conflict settlement process, and Armenia’s approaches to energy
security and regional cooperation issues.

www.armeniaforeignministry.am

Educators Say Azerbaijan’s Culture Is More Important than Its Oil

U. S. Department of State
18 April 2006
Educators Say Azerbaijan’s Culture Is More Important than Its Oil
Six Muslim women visit U.S. on State Department-sponsored program
By Vince Crawley
Washington File Staff Writer

Washington — Azerbaijani educators told a U.S. audience recently
that their small country on the Caspian Sea can contribute much more
than oil to the rest of the world.

Azerbaijan blends Islamic tradition and religious tolerance at a
geographic and cultural crossroad linking Europe, Asia and the Middle
East. While seeking more contacts with other nations, Azerbaijanis
also want to preserve their country’s unique balance of tradition
and tolerance, the educators said.

“We are all for integration. Not Westernization, but integration,”
said Sevinj Ruintan, a history professor at Baku State University. “We
do not think that we are the only ones who can learn” from cultural
exchanges with other countries, she said. “We think that others can
learn from us as well.”

Ruintan was among six Azerbaijani women scholars and teachers, all
Muslims, who visited the United States March 27-April 14 in a State
Department-sponsored International Visitor Leadership program, where
they looked at religion and education in this country.

During a March 29 roundtable discussion on Islam in Azerbaijan and
Europe, four of the six visitors wore traditional head scarves and
two wore Western-style business clothes. They said the majority
of Azerbaijani women lead a secular lifestyle and do not wear head
scarves in public.

ISLAM IN AZERBAIJAN

Azerbaijanis rediscovered their Islamic heritage after the fall
of the Soviet Union in 1991, yet the resurgence of religion has
not undermined the country’s acceptance of other faiths nor its
fair-minded treatment of women, members of the group said, speaking
through an interpreter. For example, they said, Azerbaijanis have
valued the education of women and girls for well over a century,
and many teachers and scholars are women.

“Azerbaijan has always been a very multiethnic nation,” said Naila
Suleymanova, a rare manuscripts researcher at the Azerbaijan Academy
of Sciences. Until the Soviet Union takeover in 1920, Muslims,
Christians and Jews lived together in Baku. “We have never had any
conflicts with non-Muslims,” Suleymanova said. “Everybody in a way
back in Soviet times fought for his or her faith. Communists were
closing mosques and churches and the synagogues.” Beginning in 1990,
“representatives of all the ethnic groups began to return to religion.”

Azerbaijan is bordered by Armenia, Iran, Russia, Turkey and the
Republic of Georgia. The country has an ethnic Turkic heritage that
also blends elements of ancient Persian culture. Despite shortcomings
during a presidential election in November 2005, U.S. officials
support democratic efforts in the former Soviet republic. (See related
article.) “Azerbaijan has a chance to emerge as a secular democracy
that has a predominantly Shiia population,” Assistant Secretary of
State Daniel Fried testified before the Senate Foreign Relations
Committee on April 5.

Thomas Goltz, a professor at the University of Montana who was a
journalist in Azerbaijan during the early 1990s, said the country’s
rediscovery of Shiite Islam once created the potential for an
Islamist revolution. “The most interesting thing to me is that it
didn’t happen,” Goltz said during a lecture in January at the Johns
Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies in Washington.

During the lecture, Goltz showed a film he made in 1994 documenting
the rise of Shiite Islam as Azerbaijanis cast aside 70 years of
Soviet dominance. “We preserved our religion like a precious flower,”
one Azerbaijani said in the film, which showed fervent gatherings
of worshippers. Goltz, who was an observer during the November 2005
elections, said the country has political flaws but appears to have
struck a balance between modernity and its cultural identity.

Although the government of neighboring Iran is dominated by theocrats,
even religious-minded Azerbaijanis say they are not interested in
Iran’s approach to Islam. “We are not on the level of Islam seen in
Iran,” Sevda Hasanova, editor of Hesabat, a social-political magazine,
said during the State Department roundtable. “Our people would never
want to live the kind of Islam as practiced in Iran.”

“The overall mentality of the Azeri people is clearly intertwined
with Islam,” said Ulduza Fataliyeva, an observant Muslim who teaches
ethics for the nonprofit Center for Religious Studies in Sumgayit,
north of Baku.

“That applies to all people, whether they adhere to the rules of
Islamic law or not,” said Fataliyeva. “As an ethnic Azeri, everyone
knows the rules of Islamic conduct. Whether we worship according to
the Islamic ritual or not, that doesn’t change our Islamic identity.”

Zakiyya Abilova, a rare manuscripts researcher for the Azerbaijani
Academy of Sciences, said she chooses to wear a head scarf as an
outward sign of her faith. “We can’t say people do not have any
religion if they do not pray,” Abilova said. “We all have God in
our heart.”

Abilova learned Arabic as part of her university studies, and she said
her doctoral dissertation was related to sharia, Islamic law. “Islam
is a true light that enriches the human spirit, and I am really proud
to be an Islamic scholar,” said Abilova.

The decision whether to wear a head scarf does not influence the way
women are treated in public, the educators said. “In our country,
whether or not you’re covered or uncovered, the attitude men have
toward women is good,” said Suleymanova, who is also a manuscripts
researcher at the Academy of Sciences.

NATION OFFERS “RICH CULTURAL HERITAGE”

In discussing what Azerbaijan has to offer the world, the women
were concerned that outsiders tend to view their country only in
light of its petroleum reserves. Azerbaijan became an important
oil-producing region more than 100 years ago and was a major oil
and gas supplier to the Soviet Union. In the 1990s, Azerbaijan
signed multibillion-dollar agreements with Western companies. The
1,610-kilometer $4 billion Baku-Tblisi-Ceyhan pipeline — built with
U.S. backing — is scheduled to begin regularly pumping oil from
Azerbaijan to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast later this year.

“Unfortunately, the integration of Azerbaijan has started with
the oil agreements and it has ended with them,” said Hasanova, the
magazine editor.

She said she hopes the government of Azerbaijan will put its oil wealth
to work for the people. And she noted that some experts predict the
oil boom will last no more than 45 years before petroleum reserves
begin to run dry.

Azerbaijan lies on the traditional Silk Road and is a crossroad
between Asia, the Middle East and Europe. The Azerbaijan Academy of
Sciences includes unique volumes of Muslim medical texts, including 363
manuscripts that have been entered in the UNESCO “Memory of the World”
register, which preserves world heritage documents. (See related news
release on the Web site of the United Nations Educational, Scientific
and Cultural Organization.)

“Much of the world could benefit from these global treasures,” said
Abilova, one of the Academy researchers.

Also, many well-known carpet styles from modern-day Iran use
Azerbaijani patterns, Ruintan said. In 1828, Azerbaijan was divided
between the Russian and Persian empires. The portion north of the Aras
River, which was ceded to Russia, eventually became today’s Republic
of Azerbaijan. A larger portion south of the Aras, to include the
city of Tabriz, remains an ethnic Azerbaijani region of Iran. Hence,
ethnic Azerbaijanis weave many Iranian carpets.

“So what we could give to the world,” said Ruintan, “is our rich
cultural heritage. We could try to present our culture on a global
basis.”

President Bush is scheduled to meet with Azerbaijani President
Ilham Aliyev on April 28. (See related article.) For information on
U.S. policy in the region, see Caucasus.

Additional information on the International Visitor Leadership Program
is available on the State Department Web site.

(The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International
Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site:
)

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

http://usinfo.state.gov

April 20–Reception for the Grand opening of the Armenian rug exhibi

For Immediate Release

Armenian Library and Museum of America
65 Main Street
Watertown, MA 02472
Website:

April 19, 2006

April 20–Reception for the Grand opening of the Armenian rug
exhibit.

On Thursday, April 20, Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA)
will host a reception for the grand opening of the Exhibit ~SArmenian
Rugs and Weavings: Textiles of Hearth and Heart~T. The exhibit
features a wide range of the weavings from the mountains of Armenia
and the Transcaucasus. The exhibit is unique in that it features
rare inscribed rugs from ALMA~Rs collection, as well as smaller woven
textiles and rugs from the newly acquired Offen-Alimian Collection.

Furthermore, a dozen exceptional rugs have been loaned to ALMA by the
members of the Armenian Rugs Society: these are publicly exhibited
for the first time.

The reception is scheduled for 6pm through 9 pm on Thursday. In
addition to ALMA trustees, members and friends, members of the
Armenian Rugs Society (ARS), who have loaned rugs for the exhibit,
are arriving from around the world especially for the exhibit. Among
them, Joe Bezdjian (ARS President), Mr. and Mrs. John Sommer, and
Carol Hoerner from San Francisco, Jack and Joan Agajanian Quinn from
Los Angeles, Harold and Janis Bedoukian from Canada, Yeran Megerian,
Valot Atakhanian, and Peter Balakian from New York, Loretta Boxdorfer
from Dallas, Berdj Achdjian from France, and Bob Bruner from Denver.

Daniel Shaffer and Lucy Upward from HALI magazine in London, UK will
be covering the grand opening of the exhibit at ALMA.

As part of the grand opening program, Professor Lucy Der Manuelian of
the Department of Art and Art History at Tufts will present a
lecture titled “Diamonds, Dragons and Crosses: The Story of Armenian
Rugweaving” at 8:00 pm. Professor Der Manuelian is co-author of
WEAVERS, MERCHANTS AND KINGS: THE INSCRIBED RUGS OF ARMENIA, the
catalog for the Kimbell Art Museum’s exhibit which was also shown at
the Virginia Museum of Fine Arts, the Textile Museum of Washington,
D.C., the Worcester Art Museum and the Metropolitan Museum of
Fresno, California.

The reception and the presentation are open to public. ALMA is
located in Watertown Square (intersection of Rte 16 and Rte 20), at
65 Main Street, Watertown MA 02472. For more information please visit
ALMA~Rs website or call the office at 617.926.2562
ext. 3 .

Contact Person: Mariam Stepanyan
Phone: 617.926.2562 ext. 3
Fax: 617.926.0175
Email: [email protected]

Armenian Library and Museum of America, Inc.

65 Main Street
Watertown MA 02472

Tel: 617 926 2562
Fax: 617 926 0175

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

www.almainc.org
www.almainc.org
www.almainc.org

Political Aspect Of Abkhazian Railroad Settled

POLITICAL ASPECT OF ABKHAZIAN RAILROAD SETTLED

Lragir.am
18 April 06

The Consortium including Russia, Armenia, Georgia and Abkhazia
will meet April 27 to discuss the reconstruction of the Abkhazian
railroad, said Member of Parliament Vladimir Badalyan, the co-chair
of the Armenian-Georgian Business Association, to the news reporter of
Regnum. He said during the meeting they will discuss the logistics of
reconstruction of the railroad, as well as investments. An estimated
150-200 million U.S. dollars is required. Vladimir Badalyan said the
work on the railroad will begin as soon as all the necessary documents
are ready. “The political issues of the Abkhazian pipeline have been
settled, and in 2-2.5 years of intensive work railroad communication
will be fully restored,” said Vladimir Badalyan.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress