MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
—————————————— —-
PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
Government House # 2, Republic Square
Yerevan 0010, Republic of Armenia
Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext 202
Fax: +37410. 562543
Email: [email protected]
PRESS RELEASE
08-09-2006
Renate Stille, Newly-Appointed Ambassador of the
Federative Republic of Brazil, Presents Copies of Credentials
On September 8, Minister Oskanian received Renate Stille, Ambassador of the
Federative Republic of Brazil to the Republic of Armenia, who presented her
copies of credentials to the Minister.
Minister Oskanian congratulated Ms. Stille on her appointment, and wished
her good luck in the high mission.
During the meeting, the Minister spoke of the high level of Armenia – Brazil
relations, while underscoring that Brazil was one of the first to recognize
Armenia’s Independence.
He welcomed the opening of a Brazilian Embassy in Armenia – the first in the
region – and expressed confidence that it will contribute greatly to the
development of Armenia – Brazil relations.
Minister Oskanian also informed the Ambassador that Armenia intends to open
an Embassy in the Brazilian capital.
Ambassador Stille expressed satisfaction with the current level of
cooperation between the two countries.
The interlocutors stressed the importance of strengthening and extending
legal interaction, efficient cooperation in international organizations, and
activating trade and economic links between Armenia and Brazil.
Author: Jagharian Tania
Church Service To Open Independence Ceremonies
CHURCH SERVICE TO OPEN INDEPENDENCE CEREMONIES
Armenpress
Sept 11 2006
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 11, ARMENPRESS: A special church service dedicated
to the feast of Holy Cross in Etchmiadzin scheduled for September 17
will start a long array of ceremonies and events designed to mark the
15-th anniversary of Armenia’s independence from the former Soviet
Union that will be marked on September 21.
On September 17 also a photo exhibition called 15 Years of Independence
will open at Yerevan Moskva cinema house. The cinema house will also
hold a retrospective screening of several films dedicated to Armenian
independence.
On September 18 the third Armenia-Diaspora conference will open at
Karen Demirchian complex. The complex will host on September 19 a forum
called New Answers to Old Questions and an exhibition of post stamps.
On September 20 the Demirchian complex will host the official closure
of Armenia-Diaspora conference and a presentation of a silver medal
dedicated to the Independence anniversary.
On September 21 Republic Square will hold a military parade and a
service then will be held in Yerevan Saint Gregory Cathedral. On
September 22 the Demirchian complex will host an economic exhibition.
Turkish Novelist Faces Trial Over Characters’ Words
TURKISH NOVELIST FACES TRIAL OVER CHARACTERS’ WORDS
By Suzan Fraser
Washington Post
Associated Press
Sept 10 2006
ISTANBUL, Sept. 9 — Elif Shafak, one of Turkey’s leading authors,
is about to have a baby — and go on trial.
The reason for this conjunction of joy and foreboding is her new novel,
which has exposed her to a charge of “insulting Turkishness” because
it touches on one of the most disputed episodes of her country’s
history — the massacres of Armenians during the final years of the
Ottoman Empire.
A professor of Near Eastern studies at the University of Arizona,
Shafak, 35, divides her time between Tucson and Istanbul. She sought
a postponement of her trial, set for Sept. 21, until after her first
child is born, but she was refused.
She could receive three years in prison, though similar trials of
other Turkish writers have often folded on technicalities.
“I think my case is very bizarre because for the first time they are
trying fictional characters,” Shafak said, referring to the words
she gave to an Armenian voice in the novel.
The case has broad ramifications, highlighting a rising wave of
Turkish nationalism and the question of whether Turkey, a Western
ally and NATO member, should be admitted to the European Union —
a move the Bush administration supports.
Turks who long for E.U. membership worry that trials of writers are
setting back their cause. But nationalists such as Kemal Kerincsiz,
one of the lawyers suing Shafak, say Turkey should not have to forsake
bedrock convictions — for instance, that there was never any Armenian
genocide — just to please Europe.
“The Easterner has to insult himself and degrade his own culture
to ingratiate himself with the West,” Kerincsiz said in a recent
interview. “Our place is in Eastern culture.”
The novel in question, “The Bastard of Istanbul,” deals with taboos —
domestic violence and incestuous rape — that are rarely discussed
in this conservative, predominantly Muslim country. But it is what
Shafak’s Armenian American characters say that has landed her in court.
For instance, this from a man worried about his niece being brought
up by a Turkish stepfather:
“What will that innocent lamb tell her friends when she grows
up? . . . [That] I am the grandchild of genocide survivors who lost
all their relatives to the hands of Turkish butchers in 1915, but
I myself have been brainwashed to deny the genocide because I was
raised by some Turk named Mustapha!”
Turkey insists the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians during forced
evacuations in World War I was not a planned genocide but the result
of the bloody breakup of the Ottoman Empire.
Shafak said she does not take sides on the genocide debate but accuses
Turkey of having “collective amnesia.”
“Turks and Armenians are not speaking the same language,” she said.
“For the Turks, all the past is gone, erased from our memories.
That’s the way we Westernized: by being future-oriented. . . . The
grandchildren of the 1915 survivors tend to be very, very
past-oriented.”
Prelacy Sponsors 20th Annual St. Gregory of Datev Institute Summer P
PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
September 8, 2006
PRELACY SPONSORS 20TH ANNUAL
ST. GREGORY OF DATEV INSTITUTE SUMMER PROGRAM
NEW YORK, NY-“I have attended Datev for the past four summers and I must
confess that it was probably the highlight of each of those summers,” said
Garineh Panosian, a 2006 graduate of the Datev Institute. That is just one
of many observations and personal testimonials that have come forth from
students who have attended the Datev Institute during the past 20 years.
This summer, seventy-one students (between ages 13 to 18) from thirteen
parishes, and ten clergymen, gathered at the St. Mary of Providence Center
in Elverson, Pennsylvania, July 2 to 9, for the 20th annual St. Gregory of
Datev Institute Armenian Christian Studies Program, under the directorship
of His Grace Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar General of the Eastern
Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America.
In appreciation of the twenty years of Datev a celebration took place on
Saturday evening July 8, at the Holiday Inn, not far from the St. Mary of
Providence Center where the Datev Institute’s summer program takes place
each year. Attending were current and former Datevatzis. (See details of
this event in separate accompanying story.)
Sponsored by the Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC) of the
Prelacy, the Datev Institute offers an opportunity for the youth to enrich
their Armenian Christian faith in a wholesome and nurturing environment.
Worship, Christian education and fellowship are the three main components of
the weeklong program, with daily Arevakal (Sunrise) and Husgoom
(Rest/Compline hour) services, six hours of interactive classes, panel
discussions and Bible studies, as well as recreational and communal
activities. In addition, this year a special workshop was conducted for
altar servers.
The Institute is a four-year program (one week each summer) for youth.
Those who complete the four-year program may return for postgraduate
classes. All five levels of study take place concurrently. The overall
curriculum exposes the participants to Armenian Christian essentials, from
Bible and creeds, sacraments and sacred chants, feasts and saints, communal
worship and personal prayer, and ways to live today in faithful obedience to
the mandate of the Gospel of Christ.
The program began on Sunday evening, July 2, with a prayer by His Grace
Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, followed by orientation led by Deacon Shant
Kazanjian, director of AREC. After presenting the preliminaries, Dn. Shant
stressed that “Datev is not just another youth program; to be sure, it is a
youth program, but with gospel in it. The Gospel of Christ is the essential
ingredient that makes Datev what it is. This gospel, as proclaimed and
celebrated by the Armenian Apostolic Church throughout the centuries, has
shaped and formed our distinctive Armenian Christian character.”
The Faculty
The roster of instructors this year included Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian,
V. Rev. Fr. Shahe Panossian, V. Rev. Fr. Daniel Garabedian, Rev. Fr. Khoren
Habeshian, Rev. Fr. Antranig Baljian, Rev. Fr. Nerses Manoogian, Rev. Fr.
Sarkis Aktavoukian, Dn. Shant Kazanjian, Dn. Nishan Baljian, Dn. Arsen
Mekaelian, and Ms. Jeanette Nazarian.
Guest lecturer, Rev. Fr. Paul Tarazi, Ph.D., Professor of Biblical
Studies and Biblical Languages at St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological
Seminary, taught the upper level students a 4-hour mini course on the Letter
of James. Fr. Tarazi also held a three-hour session on the same letter with
the clergy-instructors of the Institute.
20th Anniversary
On the occasion of the 20th anniversary of the Datev Institute, a seminar
entitled, “Youth, Faith and Life” took place on Saturday, July 8, which
attracted over 25 Datevatzis. The seminar was led by Rev. Fr. Antranig
Baljian, pastor of St. Stephen Armenian Church, Watertown, Massachusetts,
and V. Rev. Fr. Paul Tarazi.
Hagop Kouyoumdjian served as the honorary chairman of the 20th
anniversary and chairman of the fund raising committee. Mr. Kouyoumdjian and
his wife, Ica, have been supporters of the Prelacy and especially Christian
education for more than two decades. His eagerness to help celebrate twenty
years of Datev provided the inspiration for others to follow and support the
future growth of this program for the youth.
The weeklong program came to a close on Sunday, July 9, with the
celebration of the Divine Liturgy at St. Gregory the Illuminator Church in
Philadelphia, officiated by the Prelate, His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan
Choloyan, followed by a farewell picnic, graciously provided by Mrs. Asdghig
Kazanjian, the owner of Armenian Delight in Broomall, Pennsylvania. In his
homily, which focused on prayer, His Eminence said, “Praying together is our
Christian obligation and goal. This for us is not negotiable, because it is
the teaching of the Scriptures. When we pray together, we gather in one
place as one body. That coming together in the name of Christ strengthens
our faith and builds us up as a community of faith. As a Datevatzi you have
learned these things, and it is your Armenian Christian duty to go back to
your parish and take an active role in the communal worship there in order
that you may continue to grow in your faith and contribute to the building
up of your parish community.”
Ari Nalbandian, a 2006 graduate offered this inspiring personal
observation of Datev: “I have been attending the Datev Institute since my
first year in 2003, but it was not until my fourth year that I truly began
to understand its purpose. I now realize that it is more than just a “bible
camp” or a religious retreat. The one lecture that truly spoke to me was Der
Antranig’s July 4th lecture about freedom. He explained the concepts of
servitude and freedom in a way that was revolutionary to me, and probably
all the datevatzis in that room. Servitude and obedience to God is true
freedom, the freedom from sin, which I am now trying to apply to my daily
life. Thank you Datev and Der Antranig for giving me a new Christian outlook
on my life.”
And second year student, Arpi Shetilian, had this to say: “I love Datev
more than I could ever imagine. It’s the greatest place to meet the best
people and to make great lifelong friends. Just in these past two years that
I attended Datev, it gave me a whole new perspective about God and
religion.”
Words of Appreciation
A program of this scope is possible only through the collaborative
efforts of AREC and parishes, parents, volunteer workers, and a number of
organizations and individuals. The Institute thanks the instructors for
their labor of love and the parents for entrusting their children to the
Institute for a week of spiritual formation. The Institute would also like
to express its gratitude to the following for their invaluable services as
supervisors and counselors: Dn. Bedros Kalajian, Dn. Dr. Arsen Mekaelian,
Mrs. Lena Aslanian, Ms. Barbara Baljian, Ms. Mary Gulmezian, Mr. James
Haddad, Mr. Arek Hamalian, Ms. Taleen Kupelian, Mr. Nazareth Markarian, Mrs.
Martha Mekaelian, Ms. Martha Mekaelian, Jr., Mr. Mikhail Mekaelian, and Ms.
Jeanette Nazarian. Many thanks to those parishes that subsidized a portion
of the expenses by providing scholarships.
The Institute extends its appreciation to the Pashalian Family Education
Fund for the donation of $2,000. The Institute also thanks the Prelacy
Ladies Guild (PLG) and the National Association of Ladies’ Guilds (NALG) for
their generous support.
Gregor Gregorian, a 2006 Datev graduate, categorized his experience with
these words, “Datev was an amazing experience for me. It helped me to
understand more about the Armenian Church and learn more about the services
and worships such as the Badarak. Another great aspect about Datev is that
it is strict about its educational program.. I have also learned how to
speak more Armenian which is good because I would eventually like to speak
and understand the language fluently. Overall, Datev is a great experience
for anyone who wants to learn more about the Armenian Church, history,
language, and make new or see old friends.”
For more information about the Datev Institute, visit the Prelacy website
at
# # #
Preserving his story: For Henry Haroian, writing his memoirs was an
Lincoln Journal, MA
Sept 7 2006
Preserving his story
By Cheryl Lecesse/ Staff Writer
Thursday, September 7, 2006 – Updated: 07:59 AM EST
For Henry Haroian, writing his memoirs was an emotional roller coaster.
“I would sit at the computer and stare at a blank screen,” he said, as
anger, sadness and happiness would pass as he tried to get his memories
on paper. “There was this urge within me to get the story out.”
The story Haroian refers to is not his own, however – it’s that of
his parents, Arakel and Dalitah, survivors of the Armenian Genocide
of 1915-1923.
“It’s been called a forgotten genocide,” he said, recalling that some
members of his writing class had never heard of it.
After two and a half years, Haroian, 85, has published “Remembrances,”
a book that tells the story of his parents’ struggles to survive in the
Middle East and in Europe, their eventual move to the United States
for a better live, his upbringing in Watertown – where he changed
his name from Hampartzoom to Henry as an elementary school student
because it was too difficult to write – a foray in World War II,
and life in Lincoln.
Today, Haroian and his wife of 60 years Jessica live in the same
house on Lincoln Road that he worked hard to build 50 years ago.
Residents can hear about Haroian’s experience Thursday, Sept. 21,
when he gives a talk and signs copies of his book at the Council on
Aging in Bemis Hall.
Haroian will donate all proceeds from his book’s sales to the Friends
of the Council on Aging and the Friends of the Lincoln Library. A
similar talk and book signing is planned at the library this fall.
It was a memoir-writing workshop at the Council on Aging that first
got Haroian writing about his family’s experiences.
“I wanted to write my memoirs and I didn’t know quite how to do
it,” he said, crediting Kathleen Lundgren, who ran the workshop,
for helping him work through it.
Haroian said the writing process was similar to his work on his
dissertation in graduate school: difficult to start and difficult
to finish.
“I finally had to listen to my editor [Jack MacLean] who said,
‘You have enough here,'” he said.
Pointing to a photograph in his book of his mother’s family, Haroian
began to tell his family’s story. His mother’s side, coming from
Erzerum, Turkey, would sustain many losses while on what became
a death march to a refugee camp in Mosul; five of the family’s 13
members would survive.
“My mother was a young girl when the gendarmes knocked on the door
and said, ‘You have 10 days to vacate,'” Haroian said.
His father had a harrowing escape after his family was wiped out in
Tadem, the village where he was born. When he was either 12 or 13
years old, Arakel was forced to march through the der zor, or fiery
deserts, by the Turkish gendarmes.
In a book titled, “Our Village, Tadem,” written in Armenian in 1958
by a group of genocide survivors, Haroian’s father writes, “More than
forty years have passed, yet nightmares and flashbacks of horrific
scenes of murders continue to haunt my sleep…we were whipped by
Turkish gendarmes and driven like animals – half naked, in bare feet –
falling, rising, stumbling and yet moving again through an endless,
hot and trackless desert – weary, starving men, women and children,
half crazed from thirst, falling down, some for the last time, dying
where they fell.”
But Arakel was saved; during the march, a band of nomadic Kurds on
horseback charged through the killing field, and one reached down
and grabbed Arakel by the collar.
“For two and a half to three years he was with the Kurds taking care
of horses, gathering firewood, and doing whatever chores needed to
be done,” Haroian said. “One day he escaped and found his way to
a mission.”
The mission, in Mosul, is where Haroian’s parents met. Because he
could speak Armenian, Turkish and Kurdish, he would help translate for
newcomers. The mission was trying to help reunite families; once Arakel
was called in to translate, and was reintroduced to his first cousin.
Haroian’s mother Dalitah, a 15-year-old teen, stumbled to the mission
with her shellshocked mother, who willed herself to survive to protect
her daughter. It was Arakel’s cousin who proposed the marriage,
and Dalitah’s mother agreed.
Although the first part of his book is not his own memories, Haroian
said his parents’ story was an important one to preserve not only for
his own family but for others to know the truth about what happened
in Mesopotamia during World War I.
Haroian said his father and mother were not generally open to him
about what they experienced; much of what he knows he gathered by
listening to his parents and their friends talk around their round
dining room table in Watertown as a young boy.
“I can still smell the coffee and the cigarette smoke swirling around
the light fixture,” he said.
And once his parents went to work, he would sit on the front porch
of his paternal grandmother and hear more.
“She would tell me endless stories about what happened,” he said.
Education was the constant talk at the house, Haroian said, remembering
how he learned to read and write Armenian from the wives of editors
of two Armenian newspapers in town in a rented storefront in Watertown.
And although at the time Haroian would rather have been somewhere else,
he never forgot what he learned – or where he came from.
“Remembrances” is available for purchase at the Council on Aging.
RA Foreign Minister To Meet With Cultural Figures In Connection With
RA FOREIGN MINISTER TO MEET WITH CULTURAL FIGURES IN CONNECTION WITH FORTHCOMING ARMENIA-DIASPORA FORUM
Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Sept 04 2006
YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 4, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. In connection
with the Armenia-Diaspora forum to be held on September 18-20, RA
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian will meet with representatives of
Armenian creative unions and cultural figures on September 5. Noyan
Tapan was informed about it from RA Foreign Ministry Press and
Information Department.
ANKARA: Beyoghlow: Turkey will Miss Opportunities in Lebanon if…
Zaman, Turkey
Sept 2 2006
Beyoghlow: Turkey will Miss Opportunities in Lebanon if it Doesn’t
Take Risks
By Ali H. Aslan, Washington
Saturday, September 02, 2006
zaman.com
Kamal Beyoghlow, an instructor at the prestigious Washington-based
National War College and professor of international relations, said
Turkey would gain strategic benefits if it properly managed the
potential risks of sending Turkish troops to Lebanon.
In an interview with Zaman daily, Beyoghlow indicated the mission to
secure peace in Lebanon was `risky,’ but these risks were manageable
and should not be exaggerated.
He asserted Turkey’s participation in the Lebanon peace force would
play a major role in maintaining the cease-fire and enforce Turkey’s
strategic interest, which he described as `achieving security,
stability and peace in the region.’
Beyoghlow recalled there was no strategy in the world free of
uncertainties, risks and undesired results, adding: `If you don’t
take risks, you will never have opportunities. If you can manage the
risks then you can be very successful. As part of the international
force in Lebanon, if it’s well integrated with the European parties
within the U.N., force then I believe that’s exactly what’s to
happen. This could be a great deal of benefit with minimum cost in my
judgment.’
He further stressed the need for Turkey to closely follow the
developments and obtain assurances as it was doing now.
Beyoghlow noted there were many people in the U.S. and elsewhere who
disfavored Turkey playing a major regional role and referred to
criticisms regarding the Armenian genocide allegations. `I don’t
agree with that. The past is important but the future is more
important. It is natural for Turkey to take that role, because it has
vast economic and political interest in the region. Turkey is very
well situated to play the role of a peace actor and a peace broker.’
Beyoghlow said Turkey’s contribution to the Lebanon peace force
together with European countries sent a strong message to the E.U.
and empowered Ankara in Turkey’s entry process to the union.
`Turkey really dissipated itself from the Arab and the Islamic world;
now its best interest is to build bridges with the Islamic and Arab
world in order to achieve long term peace and stability in the
region.’
Beyoghlow viewed Turkey’s establishing good relations with the
Iranian and the Syrian governments recently as an asset.
It was appropriate and wise of Turkey to have started good relations
with all of its neighbor’s years ago, Beyoghlow said, adding, `In the
long term, unless you talk to Syrians and Iranians about the
problems, you are not going to have peace and stability.’
He stressed it was impossible to resolve the Lebanese crisis only
through the cease-fire and a new strategy was needed. `Israel’s
unilateral approach to peace is not working.’
According to Beyoghlow, a comprehensive peace deal should be achieved
between Israel-Palestine and Israel-Syria.
He said, `If you begin negotiating with Syria right now over the
Golan Heights, for example; if you jump-start the peace process then
there is no problem in terms of an international force suffering from
being caught in the crossfire.’
Beyoghlow asserted the U.S. was the main engine in the region and a
permanent and just peace could not be achieved without it, adding:
`The U.S. is only seeing things through the prism of Israel instead
of seeing through all the regional players’ prisms, including Turkey.
You need to get back to multilane efforts.’
Beyoghlow argued that resolving the Syria-related problems through
negotiations and incentives, as opposed to implementing the Bush
administration’s policies, would make Syria less aligned with Iran.
BAKU: Personal Representative Of Active OSCE Chairman Acts With Pro-
PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE OF ACTIVE OSCE CHAIRMAN ACTS WITH PRO-ARMENIAN POSITION – MEMBER OF AZERI DELEGATION IN OSCE PA
Author: J.Shahverdiyev
TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Aug. 31, 2006
The personal representative of the active OSCE chairman Andzey Kasprzyk
acts with pro-Armenian position, the member of Azerbaijani delegation
in the OSCE Parliamentary Assembly, chairman of the permanent agrarian
policy commission of Azerbaijani Parliament on Eldar Ibrahimov told
Trend , commenting on the statement of Kasprzyk regarding attracting
international experts who will investigate the reasons of fires in
Azerbaijan’s occupied territories and negotiations process held by
the co-chairs of OSCE Minsk Group.
Kasprzyk noted that talks are being held with Azerbaijani and Armenian
foreign ministers. He stressed that the expert group should prepare an
action plan that should reflect the reasons for the fires, inflicted
damages and measures form preventing the firers in the future.
Ibrahimov spelled out that it may be accepted if the group includes
fair people who gave an accurate assessment to the incidents. “If
the expert group, as Andzey Kasprzyk, confirms that the fires
happened due to hot weather conditions, then the activity of the
group isn’t needed,” he emphasized, adding that Kasprzyk takes a
pro-Armenian position. “Fires may happen from hot weather in the
occupied territories, but why don’t the fires happen in the territories
located 100 meters from occupied territories?” he questioned.
Besides, the deputy underlined that the head of Armenian delegation
in OSCE PA told him that the fires took place due to drought and hot.
“I answered him that Yerevan is the most droughty city. If it is
the reason for fires, then Yerevan had to burn long ago,” Ibrahimov
pointed out, adding that he doesn’t accept the position of Kasprzyk
in this issue.
Antelias: HH Aram I receives Reps of Henchagian and ARF parties
PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:
PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon
Armenian version:
HIS HOLINESS ARAM I RECEIVES THE REPRESENTATIVES
OF THE HENCHAGIAN AND ARF PARTIES
The Lebanese chapter of the Social Democratic Henchagian Party in Lebanon
visited His Holiness Aram I on August 28. The delegation included Armenian
Member of Parliament Dr. Yeghig Djeredjian and member of the party’s central
committee, Dr. Matsag Poladian.
The discussions focused on the current situation in Lebanon, the possibility
of reviving the structures of the Armenian community of Lebanon and the
participation of Turkish troops in the peacekeeping forces in the country.
On August 27 His Holiness received the central committee of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation accompanied by Member of Parliament Hagop
Pakradouni. The two sides discussed the efforts for improving the internal
political situation in Lebanon, the issue of Turkish participation in the
international peacekeeping forces in South Lebanon and the necessity to
revitalize the life of the Armenian community of Lebanon and its
pan-Diaspora role.
During both meetings His Holiness praised the work carried out by the
parties. He also stressed the importance of organizing the Armenian national
structures and particularly saving Armenian schools from the financial
difficulties they face while opening their doors widely to Armenian
students. “The Armenian school is the heart of the Armenian community.
Therefore, every effort should be exerted to keep the heart of the community
healthy. We are confident that our communities in the Diaspora will support
and help the Armenians of Lebanon in their efforts to preserve the
activeness of their educational and cultural structures,” said Aram I.
##
The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of the
Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.
"Yerkramas" Newspaper To Celebrate Its 10th Anniversary In September
“YERKRAMAS” NEWSPAPER TO CELEBRATE ITS 10TH ANNIVERSARY IN SEPTEMBER
ArmRadio.am
29.08.2006 16:38
Krasnodar based “Yerkramas” newspapers of the Russian-Armenians will
celebrate its 10th anniversary in September. The editorial office of
the newspaper informs that on the occasion of the jubilee the paper
is receiving congratulations from different international, Russian
and Armenian organizations.
Particularly, the World Human Benevolent Fund has awarded “For the Sake
of Humanity ” medal to the newspaper. The medal is generally awarded
to individuals and organizations having considerable contribution to
civic life.