The Center For Armenian Remembrance Announces The Remembrance Essay

THE CENTER FOR ARMENIAN REMEMBRANCE ANNOUNCES THE REMEMBRANCE ESSAY CONTEST FOR 2008

armradio.am
31.10.2007 11:40

The Center for Armenian Remembrance announces the Remembrance Essay
Contest for 2008.

This contest is open to all students in grades 7-12 in the United
States or foreign equivalent. Prospective participants are invited to
submit an essay conforming to the official rules, on the 2008 topic of
"Why Remembrance is Important".

Essays may be submitted online and may not be submitted via email,
mail or facsimile, starting November 1, 2007. The submission window
will close on March 31, 2008. Essays may be in English, Armenian,
and French. The Center for Armenian Remembrance (CAR) will be granted
permission to publish any and all of the essays which are submitted
for the essay contest.

Turkey has to grasp the past to survive

The Sunday Herald, UK
Oct 28 2007

Turkey has to grasp the past to survive

By Ian Bell
Comment

MY WIFE has no idea where her grandmother was born. Nothing
remarkable about that. In the long century of emigres and immigrants,
when the ships were arriving or escaping, many people grew vague
about half-remembered farmsteads, deserted villages or tenement rooms
in forgotten ports. It happened.

My wife is entitled to be a little more precise, though. "No idea",
means none, nothing. Not a scrap of evidence. Once upon a time,
someone eradicated a large part of her ancestry. This also happened.

Just to ensure that a daughter’s daughter would be forever mystified,
they spent the best part of the long century insisting, sometimes
with extraordinary violence, that no such eradication was ever
contemplated. Just to say so is, to them, an outrage. In their
country there is a law forbidding traitors, fools, journalists and
novelists from mentioning the thing that never happened.

If that isn’t enough, until last week my wife could only guess at
Nana’s given name. Imagine that.

Some heroic research by my sister-in-law says that once there may
have been a girl called Vehanoush Astrick Tchakrian. She had a
beautiful smile.

For years, nevertheless, the glorious myth persisted that this
Vehanoush was actually "Venus" in some perfect, impossible, imagined
past. My wife calculates that Nana spoke nine languages, not because
she was a prodigy of a polyglot – though I bet she was – but because
picking up a tongue around the Med basin was like picking up
insurance. Armenians can never be too careful.

If you believe Turkey’s journalist-slaughtering ultra-nationalists,
1.5 million of that troublesome ethnic group may possibly have
perished in 1915 thanks to an administrative mishap no-one bothers to
explain. You know the script: troubled times, faults on both sides,
regrettable things happen.

Armenians remember swaddled children with their throats cut for a
whim on the long marches through the desert. Memorialised are the
girls raped in ditches and bartered to some local peasant for
"marriage". The lucky ones were tossed into ravines.

American church people and diplomats bore witness to some of it.
Britain, France and Germany got their reports in the embassy bags.
They came for the educated first: for the teachers, doctors, lawyers
and, yes, the journalists. Sometimes, the men were merely butchered
in the street. The point, not overlooked by a junior Austrian
demagogue, was to eliminate the witnesses.

Why does my wife have no knowledge of her grandmother’s birthplace?
Because hundreds of villages, many towns, and one great city were
simply wiped from every map. The next time you take a package holiday
to the country that is gracious heir to Byzantium, ask a single
question. Ask when the tours through the rubble of Van begin.

Still, here’s my most complicated, and least complicated, point. Do I
believe that modern Turkey, and modern Turks, should be held
responsible for any of this? No, not once, not ever. The Ottoman
imperium in its last debauched days slaughtered the Armenians.
Ataturk – who neither denied nor diminished the crime – left a finer
legacy.

How is it, then, that holocaust denial has become an article of faith
for Ataturk’s children? Leave the ancient dead and the forgotten past
behind, for now. The Congress of the United States of America, the
last superpower, has just been bullied with threats and ill-disguised
Turkish menaces merely for suggesting that genocide must always be
admitted, named, and accepted.

Both George Bush and his Democrat rivals have come round to the view
that any slaughter can be overlooked if a strategic airbase is at
stake. How can you resupply the unholy Iraq adventure, or bomb Iran
if Turkey’s national pride is wounded? (And wounded by a fact of
history, a fact for which modern Turkey is in no sense held
responsible. Strategic infrastructure versus whitened Armenian bones:
no contest.) History is not quite done with playful ironies. Turkey
has enacted the role of injured innocent with some panache in recent
weeks. All of a sudden, America is in no mood to argue if a certain
prized ally desires to remove a stone from her shoe. Ankara says it
must solve the Kurdish problem once and for all. A head nods in the
White House. Killing follows.

At this point, Armenians probably lose the capacity for laughter, or
for tears. Long before the Jewish people were caused to suffer and
die, Armenians were forced to learn these lessons. Hilarity has its
limits, however.

First, there is the issue of the Kurdish enclave. Wasn’t that the
single success story of the Iraq experiment, the one viable, peaceful
example of a semi-democracy in the aftermath of Saddam? And the
current plan is to allow Turkey (biggest army within marching
distance of Paris or London) to go on the rampage Genius. So the home
of the US State Department isn’t called Foggy Bottom for nothing,
then?

I mentioned history, and irony. When the women and children of
Armenia were being dragged through the deserts, they had a pair of
tormentors. One was the Turkish state, the other comprised an ethnic
group making themselves useful, in those days, to Ottoman Turkey.

They stole homes, farms, livestock and (much the same thing, it
appears) fertile girls. Screams of grief and agony, it is remembered,
could be heard all over the hills and valleys. The Kurds did that.
Now those same Kurds fight the Turks. They have my support, too. Are
we still pursuing irony? Simultaneously I support the accession of
the great Turkish state to the European Union, and as soon as
possible.

"Possible" hinges, however, on the ability of real democracies to
acknowledge, accept and – who knows? – apologise for the past. If
Ankara continues to insist that the Armenian genocide is a strange
conspiracy, let me into the Ottoman archives.

Then fix the constitution. The European ideal and laughable legalese
invoking a nation’s shallow pride will never cohere. In my country,
journalists are not killed in the street for an opinion; generals are
fired when they grow over-mighty; we understand genocide and (since
we invented most of it) geopolitics. We do not tolerate a barbarism
such as article 301, underpinning the Turkish state, threatening free
expression.

That sounds patronising, no doubt. Clever of you to notice. Proud
Turks, like slow Americans, have very thin skins. Armenians could
meanwhile turn victimhood into a folk dance. But Armenians are the
actual raped victims of someone else’s proud foreign policies.

Someone killed 1.5 million versions of someone’s beloved Vehanoush.
Those multitudes of Armenians died, in essence, because no-one cared.
This week, with another century gone, the Kurds have become the ducks
in the shooting gallery. So why has this liberal (you think)
non-interventionist got nothing to say about Iraq, and echoes?

Before you dare to hurt you must calculate the quantities of hurt. In
the case of Armenia, no-one bothered to count.

When Turkey undergoes purgation, as it must, something vital will
take place. That truth will transform us all. At Europe’s heart,
remember, is a reunited Germany with a history, dark and bloody, we
do not yet understand. The Bush White House is grubby, but tawdry and
dull: it will pass. So here’s an idea. Armenia’s past is Turkey’s
future. Does Turkey want, need, or remember how to grasp a future?
Let’s have two countries come home simultaneously.

My wife has no idea where her grandmother was born. Can someone
please, once, explain that odd, unspeakable fact?

.var.1791551.0.turkey_has_to_grasp_the_past_to_sur vive.php

http://www.sundayherald.com/oped/opinion/display

Armenia Reports on Q3 Banking Sector Development

Global Insight
October 25, 2007

Armenia Reports on Q3 Banking Sector Development

by Venla Sipila

Total assets in the Armenian banking system at the end of September
amounted to some 664 billion dram (US$2 billion), marking growth of
6.3% over the third quarter of 2007, ARKA News reports on a review by
the Central Bank of Armenia (CBA). In addition, the review showed
that total credits issued by the banking system to Armenian
residents’ increased by 20.6% during July-September, reaching over
374 billion dram. Specifically, mortgages rose by 20.8% over the
third quarter, while consumer credits increased by 17.7%. Further, it
was reported that Armenian banks’ total capital increased by 5.8%
during the third quarter, reaching around 148 billion dram at the end
of September. Growth of banks’ and other financial institutions’
liabilities was reported at 0.7% for the third quarter, which brought
the total value to some 29.8 billion dram. The CBA review also
reports that 21 banks were operating in Armenia as of 30 September.

Significance:Credit growth is a necessary part of financial deepening
of a transition economy, but managing the risks associated with it at
times of rapid economic expansion presents a challenging combination
of tasks for the CBA. The domestic banking sector is developing at
the same time as strong workers remittance and FDI inflows keep
foreign currency inflows high, and inflation is under upward pressure
from both demand and cost sides. The CBA has shown determination in
implementing its inflation targeting policy, and its official
near-term inflation targets still seems within reach, even though it
is important that further policy interest rate hikes are presented
should inflation pressure further increase. This, further, will
necessitate additional dram appreciation, which may threaten
attractiveness of dram-nominated deposits. Thus, while the CBA has
shown competence in implementing its monetary and exchange rate
policy, the tasks at hand will form a challenging combination for
some time to come.

Prime Minister’s Official Visit To France

PRIME MINISTER’S OFFICIAL VISIT TO FRANCE

Hayots Ashkharh Daily
Oct 26 2007
Armenia

Serge Sargsyan left Washington for France October 24, thus starting
his official visit to that country. In the evening of the first day
of the visit, a great reception was held in Paris in the honor of
Serge Sargsyan, with the participation of the members of the Senate
and the National Assembly, the Mayors and the Heads of the chief
French-Armenian organizations. "Today I am here to discuss with your
country’s top leadership the key issues of the Armenian-French agenda
and the prospects of our cooperation, and I am sure that our meetings
will, as usual, be held in an atmosphere of mutual understanding. My
confidence is not something accidental; it is based on our past as
well as present-day warm and close ties, which we, without hesitation,
characterize as particular. The mutual understanding established
between our countries, as well as the close and frequent contacts
have already become traditional. There really passes no year without
our Presidents’ meeting each other several times. Thanks to France,
we have our true partner in Europe, which shows unreserved support to
Armenia’s consistent integration to the European structures. France
is sincerely interested in easing the tension in South Caucasus
and establishing stability and makes constructive efforts in that
direction. You all are aware that France has a useful role in the
Karabakh settlement talks, being involved in the OSCE Minsk Group
together with the United States and Russia. We are successfully
cooperating with France in most different spheres.

Today there are 120 enterprises operating in Armenia due to the French
capital. This number is impressive, especially considering that it
includes names enjoying international reputation, e.g. "Alkatel",
"Veolia", "Sor", "Credit Agricole", "Air France", "Perno Richard"
etc. "Sanofi-Aventios" and "Societe Generale" are going to enter
our country. I would like to touch upon an event which is already
an irreversible page in the history of our relations. That is, the
Year of Armenia in France, which seems to have become the sum of our
rich and most ancient ties as well as the eventful every-day life
we have now. I am sure the Year of Armenia will become an important
incentive not only for cultural, but also economic, educational and
scientific exchanges, and why not – deepen the close human contacts
and strengthen the traditional friendship between our countries and
peoples still further."

Armenia To Play In The 2nd Phase

ARMENIA TO PLAY IN THE 2-ND PHASE

A1+
[07:17 pm] 25 October, 2007

The Armenian national youth football team (up to 19 years old)
overcame the ban of the first preliminary phase of European Football
Championship. The Armenian team tied the meeting with Poland 0:0. In
42-nd minute the judge dismissed one of them our footballers from
the match and our team remained with 10 footballers.

We should remind that Armenia had tied the match with Lithuania 2:2,
and defeated San Marino team 1:0.

The team headed by Armen Gyulbudaghyan occupies the 2-nd place by
getting 5 pointes. Lithuania has also got 5 points, but they occupy the
first place for scoring more goals. Thus, the Armenian national team
again appeared in the 2-nd phase of the European Football Championship
after 3 years of break.

The Greenway is No Place for the Anti-Defamation League

The Watertown TAB
Watertown, MA

The Greenway is No Place for the Anti-Defamation League
By David Boyajian

Friday, Oct 26, 2007

WATERTOWN – The magnificent New Center for Arts and Culture, sponsored by
the Combined Jewish Philanthropies and the Jewish Community Centers of
Greater Boston, will probably soon rise on Boston’s new Rose Fitzgerald
Kennedy Greenway.

But suppose – hypothetically – that the chairperson of the Greenway
Conservancy, which is charged with the future maintenance of the Greenway,
had been impeding final approval of the New Center’s construction. Suppose,
too, that he or she was a leading member of a Holocaust-denying organization
that also opposed Holocaust resolutions in Congress. Impossible, you say?

Probably, but the Armenian Heritage Park is actually undergoing just such an
ordeal. The Mass. Pike, which owns the Greenway, approved the Armenian Park
in 2005, but construction has been held up, mostly by Greenway Conservancy
Chairperson Peter Meade.

Meade sits on the board of the New England Anti-Defamation League. As the
national and international media have reported, ADL has worked with Turkey
to deny the Armenian genocide of 1915-23 and to defeat Armenian Genocide
affirmation by Congress.

It is a conflict of interest, therefore, for a person with strong ADL ties
to sit in judgment of anything Armenian.

Peter Meade – he’s Catholic, not Jewish – is a longtime vice president of
Blue Cross Blue Shield and travels in Boston’s elite corporate and political
circles. He is an outspoken supporter of Israel, whose government has long
aligned itself with Turkey in refusing to recognize the Armenian Genocide.

Interestingly, Meade was instrumental in getting Blue Cross to fund ADL’s
`No Place for Hate’ anti-bias programs, which are now mired in scandal
because of ADL’s genocide denials. Blue Cross was the first company that ADL
certified as `No Place for Hate.’

Why does Meade oppose the Armenian Park? He says that Conservancy policy
bans `memorials’ on the Greenway. Part of the Armenian Park will, indeed,
commemorate both the Armenian Genocide and all genocides.

However, the alleged `no-memorials’ policy has never been written down or
formalized, and the Mass. Pike itself has no such policy. Indeed, there are
or will be many memorials on, next to and near the Greenway.

For example, the Greenway’s Chinatown Park contains the Tiananmen Square
Massacre memorial. A memorial for community leader Mary Sou Hou is in the
works.

The Greenway’s North End Park has a lengthy Memorial Railing that will honor
the neighborhood’s past Irish, Italian, Jewish and other immigrants.
Conservancy Executive Director Nancy Brennan is promoting a Mother’s
Memorial Walkway with named bricks in the Wharf District Parks.

The Greenway itself memorializes the venerated Kennedy matriarch, while
underneath runs the Tip O’Neill tunnel.

Christopher Columbus Park, which abuts the Greenway, contains the Beirut
U.S. Marine Corps Memorial, the Frank S. Christian Memorial and the Rose
Kennedy Memorial Garden honoring the Gold Star Mothers of WW II.

It looks like the Conservancy’s `no memorials’ policy may be a `no
Armenians’ policy.

Steps from the Greenway are the Holocaust Memorial’s six towers of glass 54
feet high with steam rising from subterranean chambers named after
concentration camps. The memorial also commemorates Poles and other victims
of Nazi Germany. It is impressive, somber and moving.

Nearby are the 1956 Hungarian Freedom Fighters Memorial, the Irish Famine
Memorial, and other memorials too numerous to mention.

The Armenian Park and a wide-ranging human rights lecture series at Fanueil
Hall are permanently endowed by the Massachusetts Armenian community and
endorsed by the North End/Waterfront Residents Association.

It has been alleged that the Armenian Park would be out of place as too
ethnic. Yet the Greenway’s Chinatown Park will, quite properly, feature
various Asian cultural elements, including waterfalls and streams based on
Feng Shui.

The New Center, `rooted in Jewish culture,’ was designed and funded by Jews.
Its director and board are Jewish. Every event it has held thus far, in
non-Greenway venues, has centered on a Jewish theme, such as the 1933 Nazi
Book Burning. The New Center will surely also be commemorating the Holocaust
in many ways, and rightly so.

Thus the Greenway does have ethnic projects.

We forgot to mention that Peter Meade was instrumental in having the
world-famous bridge near the northern end of the Greenway named after Lenny
Zakim, the late, respected regional ADL director. He also co-chaired its
Dedication Committee and is an adviser to the Lenny Zakim Fund. Not
surprisingly, Meade has won ADL’s prestigious Chairperson’s Award.

We should also add that national ADL’s recent alleged acknowledgment of the
genocide, which implied that Turkey did not intend to kill Armenians,
knowingly contravened the UN’s official 1948 definition of genocide.

Peter Meade is an accomplished and generous man, and I am not accusing him
or anyone of impropriety. However, a top ADL leader must recuse himself from
any matter relating to Armenians. This is unfortunate but necessary.

Meanwhile, the ADL and kindred organizations need to halt their
Turkish-organized proxy war against the Armenian people.

David Boyajian lives in Newton
pinions/x357268519

http://www.wickedlocal.com/watertown/news/o

Armenian Government Proposes Allowing Exporters And Their Foreign Pa

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT PROPOSES ALLOWING EXPORTERS AND THEIR FOREIGN PARTNERS TO GIVE PRICE QUOTATIONS IN FOREIGN CURRENCY IN THEIR AGREEMENTS

Noyan Tapan
Oct 25, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 25, NOYAN TAPAN. At the morning sitting on October
25, the RA National Assembly passed in first reading a package of
bills prepared by the government. The bills envisage amendments and
additions to the Law on Currency Regulation and Currency Control and
a number of other laws.

According to the main speaker, deputy chairman of the Central
Bank of Armenia (CBA) Artur Javadian, previously deals in foreign
currency were allowed between residents and nonresidents but giving
price quotations in foreign currency in agreements was forbidden by
law. Taking into account the proposals of a number of exporters, the
government has decided to liberalize relations between exporters –
legal entities and their foreign partners, allowing to give price
quotations in foreign currency in the agreements signed between them.

Student Org Of The Week: Armenian Student Union

STUDENT ORG OF THE WEEK: ARMENIAN STUDENT UNION
By Natalie Orozco

City on a Hill Press, CA
805
Oct 25 2007

Meet Your Student Org! We will be interviewing Paul Mekhedjian,
president of ASU.

CHP: When was this organization established, and how?

ASU: About four or five years ago. I think it was started by two or
three Armenian students because there were no others on campus. It
started out as some sort of support group to talk about Armenian
issues and speak the Armenian language.

CHP: What does ASU do?

ASU: We create a space of a tight community on campus for anyone
with pride, sayings or cultural background [of Armenia]. We make
people aware of the Armenian community. It is important for us to
spread the message through fundraising or tabling. In the spring, we
raise awareness on Armenian Genocide Recognition Day, which happens
on April 24.

CHP: What upcoming events can we expect from you this quarter?

ASU: That’s actually something we will discuss at [our next]
meeting-but social events probably.

CHP: How often do you meet?

ASU: Normally once a week for just about an hour or so. If anyone has
something to discuss politically or socially, we talk about it. It’s
actually pretty fun.

CHP: How many members do you have this quarter?

ASU: This quarter we are expecting about 10 to 20.

CHP: Who can sign up?

ASU: Anyone! Fully, half, a quarter, one-eighth – as long as you’re
interested in learning more, and willing to be open-minded about a
country that has 3,000 to 4,000 years of history. It is something we
are really proud of. Not many other countries can say that.

CHP: What is a fun tradition ASU does?

ASU: We actually go bowling once every couple of months [laughs].

CHP: What is a memorable moment you have with ASU?

ASU: Our Armenian cultural night we had last spring [quarter], because
it was the first time we did something like that. We were able to pool
all our resources together and bring as much of our culture into one
place at one time with food and Armenian music. I think we did a good
job and we are looking forward to doing it again this year.

http://www.cityonahillpress.com/article.php?id=

Slovakia Interested In Using Knowhow Of Armenian Applied Science

SLOVAKIA INTERESTED IN USING KNOWHOW OF ARMENIAN APPLIED SCIENCE

Noyan Tapan
Oct 24, 2007

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 24, NOYAN TAPAN. During the 5th Armenia – Artsakh
– Slovakia business forum held in Yerevan on October 19-20, the
Slovakian side proposed that the management of Viasphere Technopark
should organize work on creation of a technopark in Slovakia, Ashot
Grigorian, businessman, head of the Armenian community of Slovakia,
announced at the October 24 press conference.

In his words, the Slovakian government is prepared to create
all conditions for establishing a teachnopark with Armenian
investments. Besides, the Slovakian side expressed an intention to use
the knowhow of Armenian applied science, with intensive negotiations
being conducted with this aim.

According to A. Grigorian, during the business forum, Kon-Rad company
(Slovakia) engaged in food export and import was conducting preliminary
negotiations on import of Armenian dried fruit, concentrated apricot
and pomegranate juices, and other foodstuffs into Slovakia, while
Energoconsult company was negotiating the issues of continuing the
programs on construction of small hydropower plants in Armenia and
starting such programs in Artsakh.

It was pointed out that there are no difficulties with Armenia-Slovakia
cargo transportation thanks to the proper operation of Burgas-Poti and
Varna-Poti ferries. In the opinion of A. Grigorian, even if Turkey
lifts the blockade of Armenia, the motor transport transit route
through this country will not be used to communicate with Central
and North Europe because the indicated route through Turkey is longer.

Turkey – Some Progress But Cyprus And Kurdish Questions Remain Unres

TURKEY – SOME PROGRESS BUT CYPRUS AND KURDISH QUESTIONS REMAIN UNRESOLVED

EU-Turkey News Network
ABHaber
si.asp?id=19434
Oct 24 2007
Belgium

"With the perspective of Turkey’s accession to the EU on the horizon,
the European Commission and the Union as a whole are called upon in
the days to come to complete an assessment on the progress that Turkey
has or has not made in the various fields requiring harmonisation
with the acquis communautaire.

"Partial solutions cannot bring a result that either Turkey or
the European Union is expecting" GUE/NGL Cypriot MEP Kyriacos
Triantaphyllides said today during the European Parliament debate on
EU-Turkey relations.

"We should note that some progress has been achieved by Turkey;
however we repeat that in order for Turkey’s accession process to
move without any obstacles, Turkey must implement what all the other
former candidate countries carried out and comply with its conventional
obligations towards the EU as a whole. Turkey must also fulfil its
commitments towards Cyprus, such as the opening of its ports and
airports to the ships and aeroplanes of the Republic of Cyprus and
the lifting the veto to the participation of Cyprus in international
organisations and multilateral treaties" he continued.

Triantaphyllides maintained that encouraging Turkey’s path towards
the EU, which requires the parallel implementation of its obligations
towards the EU, could act as a lever of pressure for the protection of
human rights for the entire population of Turkey, including minorities
and the Kurds, and for the recognition of the Armenian genocide,
as well as the lifting of the closure of borders with Armenia ,
which has several socio-economic implications.

Regretting that today’s vote on the report on EU-Turkey relations
was overshadowed by the recent worrying developments, German GUE/NGL
MEP Feleknas Uca questioned Turkey’s motives in Northern Iraq and
emphasised that Turkey must not be allowed to breach international law.

"Last Wednesday, the Turkish national assembly gave the green light
for Turkish military action in Northern Iraq. Since then, we have
received news of violence on the Turkish-Iraqi border, of fierce
fighting, of Turkish shelling of Northern Iraqi villages, of attacks
on Kurdish facilities and DTP offices and of attempts at lynching
Kurdish citizens by angry nationalists" she explained.

"After the substantial progress towards reform made by Turkey, we
must now take account of new developments. This report is balanced
and fair in its evaluation and judgment" she said before attacking
the idea that a solution to the Kurdish question could be provided
by invading Northern Iraq.

She called for Europe to take its responsibility and play an active
role in the development of a solution strategy for the Kurdish
question.

"It is in this question that the means for the pacification and
democratisation of Turkey lies".

http://www.abhaber.com/haber_sayfa