Hasmik Kirakosyan: Gyumri residents are being told that they are boasts, but this is not senseless

“A new cultural name has come in Armenia- community culture. What is the community?” Gyumri Mayor’s advisor Hasmik Kirakosyan says: “We have a national culture. And the national culture, yes, should not be accumulated in the capital.”

According to her, the decentralization process is being implemented incorrectly, and as a result, the cultural life of the regions does not develop normally.

“Golden Apricot and Erebuni-Yerevan Festival are organizing events in Yerevan, but where are the provinces?”

The mayor’s advisor compares the Armenian world to the Armenian carpet with its diversity. “We should kept the taste and smell of our culture, our diverse traditions and dialects like gems.”

According to Mrs. Kirakosyan, Artsakh, for example, implements the right cultural policy. It has opened museums of Armenian carpets and Armenian dialects. That is to say, the local culture should be kept and developed, which will enrich the national culture.

“And, for example, the cultural town Gyumri, unfortunately, does not have the ‘height’ that it had before the earthquake. It is my opinion, as a fifty-year culture figure,” says Mrs. Kirakosyan.

According to her, culture is the pillar that the people have survived, the culture has served its people without betraying. And the people must remain loyal to its ever-present culture, and pay great attention to it.

“Gyumri has always been a progressive cultural city, it has been a masterful city,” says Mrs. Kirakosyan and tells humor about how Nikolai Tsar had come to Gyumri and admired, and then told his brother about the city of seven churches, and his brotheer came and saw, admired and said to the masters, “You have done something wrong, you had to put wheels under the city so that you could show it to the world, the world will see and admire it.”

“Gyumri residents are being told that they are boasts, but this is not senseless,” continues Mrs. Kirakosyan, “Gyumri has something to praise.”

They have interesting projects and Mrs. Kirakosyan is convinced that Gyumri  has much to say to the world.

Armenia’s way of treating Russia may prove ‘fatal’

Regnum news agency, Russia
July 28 2018
 
 
Fighting reconnaissance in Armenian-Russian relations. The tactic of Fighting reconnaissance is used in cases, when other opportunities of assessing a situation are limited
[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Russian]
 
The story of a charge lodged against the secretary general of the [Russian-led] CSTO [Collective Security Treaty Organisation], Yury Khachaturov, is worth considering within the chain of events initiated by new Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in his search for red lines within the frames of Armenian-Russian relations.
 
From all appearances, the charge under a criminal case and a pre-trial restriction in the shape of a bail for the head of the international military and political block, the CSTO, and the proposal made through the media (!) to "replace the CSTO head" without at least informal preliminary coordination of the issue with partners in the block are beyond the boundaries of official, formal, partnership, allied, block, and other relations between Armenia and Russia.
 
In addition to a couple of phrases from a press release regarding a telephone conversation between the heads of the two countries' foreign ministries, Moscow responded indirectly too, also through the media, dubbing such an approach to things as "non-professional". At the same time, there was a report on an appropriate procedure for the "termination of powers" of Khachaturov, not his "replacement".
 
It is also noteworthy that in this connection, Pashinyan decided to call [Belarusian President] Alyaksandr Lukashenka, the head of a partner country in the block, which Yerevan is assailing with letters concerning the sales of multiple launch rocket systems to Azerbaijan. It is possible that the press services of the heads of the two countries did not become preoccupied with a telephone conversation with [Russian President Vladimir] Putin and they did talk. However, given the tonality of the indirect response from the Russian Foreign Ministry, it is more likely that there was no such conversation.
 
In general, a firm opinion is taking shape that in foreign relations, Nikol Pashinyan is guided by the straightforwardness of the well-known [Russian film] character, Zhiglov: "A thief must be in prison". You can by no means find fault with this position. However, sending a thief to prison in the modern situation in international relations and cooperation, it is necessary to take into account also a whole complex of conditions and objectives resulting from the spirit and interests of these relations.
 
Pashinyan's methods of struggling against corruption and the former regime and for environmental protection, human rights, and other things are identical in their rudeness with his actions in the international arena. And it is not only the CSTO and the EEU [Eurasian Economic Union] that are at issue. He demonstrated his simplified approaches to relations with the EU on the sidelines of the recent Nato summit. However, if there is no one to put him in his place within his country even in his closest entourage in the government, it is possible to find such people in the international arena.
 
In his live appearances in social networks, interviews, and speeches, Pashinyan has stressed on a lot of occasions the need to build equal partnership relations within the frames of the CSTO and in cooperation with Russia, which, as he says, is a centuries-old brother of Armenia. This is quite understandable and acceptable. Enjoying formal and real legitimacy among citizens, Pashinyan can indeed raise the benchmark (as compared to the previous government) to a higher and more efficient level as regards the protection of the interests of a small republic when building relations within the frames of the EEU and in cooperation with the EU, the United States, and Iran.
 
Raising this benchmark within the frames of the EEU and with Moscow in particular, he chose the tactic of fighting reconnaissance. This includes the prime minister's tough reaction to the incident involving the drills of the 102nd Russian base despite all the apologies on the part of Russia as well as his statement on the role of a military arbiter for Moscow in the Karabakh conflict and the concealment of information on Yerevan's possible participation in the Nato drills in Georgia together with Baku and Ankara.
 
The story involving Khachaturov or, to be more exact, the way things were done, should also be considered in this context. However, in all appearances, the Armenian government has already reached the line, where it would be good to slow the pace down and start considering external relations from the position of more elaborate complex methods for international relations. The tactic of fighting reconnaissance is used when there are no other opportunities of assessing the situation or when they are considerably limited. It can often prove to be fatal too.

The Met unveils preview of "Armenia!" opening September 22 (video)

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – The Metropolitan Museum of Art has published a preview of "Armenia!", opening in New York City on September 22 and running through January 13, 2019.

This is the first major exhibition to explore the remarkable artistic and cultural achievements of the Armenian people in a global context over fourteen centuries—from the fourth century, when the Armenians converted to Christianity in their homeland at the base of Mount Ararat, to the seventeenth century, when Armenian control of global trade routes first brought books printed in Armenian into the region.

In a video shared on twitter, Helen C. Evans, Mary and Michael Jaharis Curator of Byzantine Art, says that the exhibition is focusing on Armenian art over time and offers some details about the event.

Through some 140 objects—including opulent gilded reliquaries, richly illuminated manuscripts, rare textiles, cross stones (khachkars), precious liturgical furnishings, church models, and printed books—the exhibition demonstrates how Armenians developed a unique Christian identity that linked their widespread communities over the years.

Representing the cultural heritage of Armenia, most of the works come from major Armenian collections: the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin; the Matenadaran (Ancient Manuscripts); the National History Museum in the Republic of Armenia; the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia in Lebanon; the Brotherhood of St. James in Jerusalem; and the Mekhitarist Congregation of San Lazzaro degli Armeni in Venice.

Almost all of these works are on view in the United States for the first time; some have not travelled abroad for centuries.

Adajian’s Restaurant: After 20 Years In Storage, Murals Still Captivate

The Hartford Courant
Sunday
Adajian's Restaurant: After 20 Years In Storage, Murals Still Captivate

 
Cathy McCarthy of Mystic takes a picture of one of the murals that were painted by Thurston Munson for her grandparents' Hartford restaurant, Adajian's, in the 1940s. The murals have been in storage for more than two decades in Massachusetts. McCarthy family members, left, and Anne Thomas look at a large mural unfurled at National Library Relocations.

by JANE E. DEE
 
 
 
If you lived in Hartford in the 1940s, the place to go to see and be seen was Adajian's restaurant on Asylum Street. Insurance executives, politicians, entertainers and other patrons flocked to the downtown hot spot, pausing to check their wives' mink coats at the door.
 
The cuisine was Armenian, exotic for the era, and the atmosphere was equally tantalizing. Opened in 1947 – this was Joseph S. Adajian's second or third Hartford restaurant; another was called The Roundtable – the interior was dimly lit and smoky, with a basement bar called the Cave or Grotto.
 
But what made the restaurant extraordinary were its murals. Described throughout the years as Middle Eastern fantasy and surrealistic, the 14 murals depicting tales from the Arabian Nights covered nearly every square foot of wall space. Thirteen of the murals have survived. They had not been viewed by the Adajian family for more than 20 years, until recently.
 

Jane Dee | Hartford Magazine
Thurston Munson painted 14 murals for Adajian's Restaurant in Hartford, some quite surrealistic.

"The lounge was dark, the murals were lit," former band leader Paul Landerman told The Courant in 1996. "In the '40s, it was the only place. If you didn't have reservations, don't bother going."
 
Adajian and his wife, Pearl, operated the restaurant for nearly 40 years. Theirs had been an arranged marriage, said granddaughter Shirley Heckert of Clearwater, Florida. "My grandfather fled Armenia to escape being inducted into the Turkish army," Heckert said. "My grandfather sent for her; he honored the family's arrangement. I don't think she had seen him more than a couple of times in her life."
 
And yet Adajian's became a family affair as the couple and their five children helped to run the establishment. Their son Ed became a fixture tending the Grotto's bar.
 
In addition to the Grotto and main dining room, Adajian's hosted large events in a banquet hall. "It was close to the Capitol, they had parties from there," Heckert said. "They had major insurance company parties, Pratt & Whitney parties."
 
She remembers as a young child sitting on Gov. John N. Dempsey's lap during a daytime event. "I would not have been allowed there at night," she said.

Jane Dee | Hartford Magazine
A detail from one of the murals from Adajian's.

 
Neil Howett, 70, of Hartford, frequented the Grotto when he worked for an insurance company in the early 1970s. "The Grotto was lit enough that you could see the murals were on all the walls, including behind the bar," Howett remembered. "They were captivating, interesting and in my mind kind of erotic, but maybe that was because back then to see people bare-chested or partially clothed was exotic."
 
Artist Thurston Munson painted the murals inside the restaurant. Heckert has a shadowy memory of watching him work.
 
Cathy McCarthy of Mystic said her grandfather had "spent a fortune" on the murals. "They were like part of the family."

Jane Dee | Hartford Magazine
While some of the murals are framed, this large one was unrolled when the Adajians' granddaughter Cathy McCarthy came to see them in storage in Three Rivers, Mass.

 
After the restaurant closed in 1986, the murals were restored by Munson and in 1995 they were displayed in a gallery near his studio in Greenfield, Mass. That was the last time McCarthy saw them. In 2004, the murals were placed in storage at National Library Relocations in Three Rivers, Mass. McCarthy traveled there in early June to view them.
 
"Oh my, a naked woman!" she said, as the first mural was revealed. She was not surprised, as she recalled how the liquor commission considered the murals to be a little too racy and asked that the artist tone them down.

Jane Dee | Hartford Magazine
Back in the 1940s, artist Thurston Munson was asked to tone down the murals, which officials thought were a bit too racy.

 
A woman with Rapunzel-length blonde hair and blue eyes is a recurring figure in many of the murals. Several depict men and women against fanciful backgrounds with star-shaped flowers and long-tailed birds.
 
Now that Joseph and Pearl Adajian's five children are deceased, Heckert and McCarthy say it's time to donate the murals to a museum or sell them to collectors.
 
"I would prefer that they not be destroyed – that they find a home," Heckert said.
 
"We have to come to a consensus," McCarthy added. "It's up to the family to decide."

Jane Dee | Hartford Magazine
Detail from one of the murals.

«Ժառանգություն» կուսակցության հայտարարությունը

«Ժառանգություն» կուսակցության հայտարարությունը

 

Մեղադրյալի
աթոռին ՀՀ
երկրորդ նախագահ Ռոբերտ Քոչարյանի հայտնվելը հաստատում է,
որ

ժողովրդի կամքն անբեկանելի արժեք է. նրա նկատմամբ ցանկացած ոտնձգություն,
վաղ թե ուշ,
պատժվում է օրենքով:

«Ժառանգություն» կուսակցությունը Նոր Հայաստանի իրավապահ մարմիններին կոչ է անում վերոնշյալ գործընթացի շարունակականությունն ապահովելու եւ երկրում օրինականության հիմքերն
ամրացնելու
համար բացել մեր պետականության եւս մեկ ամոթալի հանգրվանի` 2013թ. նախագահական ընտրական գործընթացի էջը, որի շրջանակում Սերժ Սարգսյանի վարչակարգը ակնհայտ ձայնագողությամբ փոխեց ընտրությունների արդյունքները՝ սեփական իշխանությունը եւս հինգ տարով երկարաձգելու համար: Դա ոտնձգություն է ՀՀ սահմանադրական կարգի նկատմամբ, քանի որ պետական ինստիտուտները ծառայեցվել են անհատի անօրինական իշխանությունը երկարացնելու համար:

Դեռեւս 2008-ին ապօրինաբար ձեւավորված` Սերժ Սարգսյանի իշխանությունը 2013 թվականին` որպես վատ սովորություն, կրկին հաշվի չնստեց սեփական ժողովրդի կամարտահայտության հետ՝ հենց ընտրական տեղամասում խեղդելով ազատ, իրավական երկրում ապրելու` ժողովրդի կամքն ու ցանկությունը:

2013 թվականի նախագահական ընտրությունները «Ժառանգություն» կուսակցության կամ որեւէ այլ քաղաքական ուժի հարցը չէ: Տեղի ունեցածը հարված էր մեր պետականությանը եւ մինչ օրս չի ստացել իրավական ու քաղաքական պատշաճ գնահատական:

«Ժառանգությունը» պատրաստակամ է օգնել մեր իրավապահ համակարգին` ընտրագողության
հետ կապված խնդիրը
համակողմանի դիտարկելու եւ ողջ ճշմարտությունը ջրի երես հանելու համար:

Այս եւ
ամեն դեպքում բոլոր քաղաքացիների՝ այդ թվում մեղադրյալների, սահմանադրական իրավունքի
ամրագրումը հրամայական է:

 

«Ժառանգություն» կուսակցություն

27 հուլիս 2018թ.

Երեւան

 

Republican Party sees Karabakh motivation in charge against Kocharyan

Arminfo, Armenia
Republican Party sees Karabakh motivation in charge against Kocharyan

Yerevan July 27

Tatevik Shagunyan. The Republican Party of Armenia expresses its deep concern over the charges against the second President Robert Kocharyan and the proposal to use arrest against him.

As stated in the statement of the RPA Executive Body, the accusation leaves the impression of political persecution and in the legal plan is absurd. "We consider the current situation a threat to the democratic development of Armenia and a blow to the process of building a law-based state." A criminal case initiated for political reasons jeopardizes the constitutional order, "the statement said.

The party considers a "trumped-up" process with respect to the former Supreme Commander-in-Chief who has a principled position on the Artsakh issue and made an invaluable contribution to the Artsakh liberation struggle, as a method of pressure on opponents who can oppose possible developments around the Karabakh settlement, different from the traditional approaches of the Armenian side, promoted over the years.

Robert Kocharyan, who is in search of former Defense Minister Mikael Harutyunyan and CSTO Secretary General Yury Khachaturov, who in 2008 occupied the post of the head of the Yerevan garrison, are held as accused on March 1, 2008.


Sports: Karen Khachanov is now Russia’s No. 1 tennis player

PanArmenian. Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – In the updated ATP (Association of Tennis Professionals) Race to London ranking, Russian athlete of Armenian origin Karen Khachanov has climbed three notches to the 22nd spot.

With a total of 1045 points, Khachanov is now Russia’s No.1 tennis player.

Rafael Nadal, Roger Federer and Alexander Zverev top the ranking and are closely followed by Juan Martin del Potro.

Asbarez: EU Leaders Pledge to Support Armenia

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan with President of the European Council Donald Tusk in Brussels.

BRUSSELS—Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan met with Presidents of the European Union’s European Council and European Commission at NATO Headquarters in Brussels, Belgium to discuss EU-Armenia relations and the new government’s mission.

During his meeting with European Council President Donald Tusk, the new Armenian government’s goal is to strengthen democracy, ensure rule of law and support an independent judiciary. Armenia welcomes the EU’s support and is ready for close cooperation to achieve these goals.

Tusk spoke about expanding the Armenia-EU partnership and welcomed the recent national unity in Armenia.

“I have always been the friend of Armenia. What happened in Armenia was unique, I would say, was very European. Your example was very promising and you can expect the EU’s support on the path of implementing the reforms,” Tusk said.

During the meeting, the officials also exchanged views on different issues aimed at developing the Armenia-EU ties. Regarding the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Pashinyan said Armenia is committed to the negotiation process being carried out under the auspices of the Minsk Group Co-Chairs and stated that any attempt to solve the conflict through military means will be an encroachment against the regional security, democracy and human rights.

“Like any democratic country, Armenia strives for peace and does everything for ensuring regional security and stability,” Pashinyan said.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan with President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker in Brussels.

Pashinyan also discussed the perspectives of Armenia-EU relations in the context of the democratic changes in Armenia with President of the European Commission Jean-Claude Juncker.

Juncker said the EU is inspired by the peaceful and democratic nature of changes in Armenia and expressed willingness to continue to support the country’s reforms.

Pashinyan was grateful for the EU’s previous support and assured Juncker that, moving forward, both institutional and financial support and consulting will be used in a more responsible manner.

“The ongoing fight against corruption is one of the main priorities of our government,” Pashinyan said.

We hope the sides will have chance to discuss wide range of issues on NK conflict settlement – Russian MFA spox

Categories
Artsakh
Region
World

Russian foreign ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova commented on the issue of expanding the Office of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairperson-in-Office and its impact on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict settlement.

Maria Zakharova said as a result of the summits directed for the settlement of the NK conflict, in particular, the Vienna and St. Petersburg 2016 summits, the Armenian and Azerbaijani presidents discussed issues aimed at stabilization of the situation in the line of contact and creation of an atmosphere contributing to the peace process.

“For that purpose they agreed, in particular, to increase the number of international observers in the line of contact. This topic has been discussed during the next meetings of the sides, including at the meeting of the Armenian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers in Krakow in early 2018, as a result of which they have reached a principled imagination on the number, deployment of additional observers and other issues relating to it”, she said.

However, Zakharova stated that there is no final decision yet on this matter.

“The first meetings of the ministers will take place soon, thereafter, we hope that meetings will be held during which the sides will be able to discuss a wide range of issues relating to the NK conflict settlement, including the topic of observers”, Maria Zakharova said.

Turkey’s denial policy is concerning and condemnable, says Deputy Speaker Eduard Sharmzanov

ArmenPress, Armenia



Turkey's denial policy is concerning and condemnable, says Deputy
Speaker Eduard Sharmzanov



YEREVAN, JUNE 20, ARMENPRESS. Deputy Speaker of Parliament Eduard
Sharmazanov, who is the head of the Armenia-Greece parliamentary
friendship group, had a meeting on June 19 with Konstantinos Morfidis,
head of the Greek delegation at the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Black Sea Economic Cooperation (PABSEC) during his visit to Albania.

During the meeting, Sharmazanov attached importance to strengthening
the existing relations between Armenia and Greece and expanding
cooperation areas.

Speaking about cooperation of parliamentary delegations of the two
countries in international structures, the sides attached importance
to the need to support each other.

Sharmazanov expressed hope that the Greek parliament will soon ratify
the EU-Armenia CEPA.

Speaking about the international recognition process of the Armenian
Genocide, the Deputy Speaker of Parliament of Armenia thanked Greece
for adopting the law on criminalizing the denial of genocides. He
reminded that the Armenian parliament in turn has adopted the
resolution on condemning the 1915-1923 genocide of Greeks and
Assyrians committed by the Ottoman Turkey.

“Armenians and Greeks are peoples who survived genocides. Turkey’s
destructive and denial policy is concerning and condemnable”,
Sharmazanov said.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan