Karabakh Implements Programme To Boost Birth Rates

KARABAKH IMPLEMENTS PROGRAMME TO BOOST BIRTH RATES

ArmInfo, Armenia
Sept 12 2007

Stepanakert, 12 September: A government-sponsored programme aimed at
stimulating birth rates is under implementation in Nagornyy Karabakh
republic [NKR].

Under an NKR government decision, earmarked accounts are opened in
district (town) branches of Artsakhbank. Following amounts will be
deposited on those accounts: 700 dollars for the third child born
to a family; 1,000 dollars for the fourth child; 1,500 for the sixth
and seventh; 2,000 for the eighth and ninth; 3,000 for the tenth and
every next child.

Emilia Poghosyan has more children than anyone else in Nagornyy
Karabakh. She gave birth to her 15th baby last year. The government
granted her 5,000 dollars.

The deposit accounts will be in use until the child turns 18.

The government allocates money to build accommodation for
large families. For example, a house is being constructed for the
Saghatelyans family – to whom the sixth baby was born – in the village
of Vaghuhas in Martakert region. The village sustained severely damages
during the Azerbaijani-Karabakh war. Family members too are engaged
in the construction that began on 1 August. The family is planning
to move to their new house by the end of this year. This the third
government-sponsored house in the village.

Tufenkian Fnd, ADAA collaborate to benefit young filmmakers in ROA

PRESS RELEASE
September 23, 2007
Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance
20 Concord Lane, Cambridge, MA 02138
Contact: Zoe Kevork
Tel: (818) 415-9848

Tufenkian Foundation, ADAA collaborate to benefit young filmmakers in Armenia
by Antranig Kasbarian

LOS ANGELES – In a new and innovative partnership, the Armenian Dramatic Arts
Alliance (ADAA) and the Tufenkian Foundation have joined to assist young
filmmakers in Armenia. Working with the Manana NGO for talented youth, the
two groups initiated a summer filmmaking workshop featuring noted directors
Gor Kirakosian and Carla Garapedian. More recently, the groups have arranged
the donation of state-of-the-art film and video equipment, which has been
shipped to Manana through the generous assistance of the United Armenian
Fund.

"We felt that the Manana workshops went incredibly well. The children were
delightful and they seemed to absorb like a sponge everything they were
being taught," noted ADAA President Bianca Bagatourian. "Both of our
instructors were very taken by them and I believe that Gor Kirakossian has
promised to go back a few times and continue. He was teaching them very
practical and technical things, and by watching the classes we gained a much
better idea of exactly what is needed."

For the past 10 years, Manana has offered comprehensive education to gifted
youth in the visual arts, media, and creative writing. Nearly 100 children
attend its Yerevan center, where they receive not only technical skills, but
also training in analytical thinking, self-motivation, and social awareness.
Manana’s young talents have already participated at international
competitions, receiving awards and nominations for their films and other
creative works.

To date, the Tufenkian Foundation has served as Manana’s lead sponsor.
During 2007, other groups – most notably, the Paros Foundation – have stepped in
with substantial contributions as well.

Founded in 2005, the Armenian Dramatic Arts Alliance is dedicated to
projecting the Armenian voice on the world stage through theatre and film.
To learn more about ADAA, check out its website at
/

http://www.armeniandrama.org/
http://www.armeniandrama.org
www.armeniandrama.org

Devaney presses peer on ADL

WATERTOWN

Devaney presses peer on ADL

Genocide stance is called too weak

By Christina Pazzanese, Globe Correspondent | September 23, 2007

Watertown Councilor Marilyn Petitto Devaney, who has pressed
neighboring towns to drop out of the Anti-Defamation League’s No Place
for Hate program, is turning up the heat on a fellow councilor she
says has not been tough enough with the ADL for its stance on the
Armenian genocide.

Devaney is calling out fellow town Councilor Jonathan Hecht for his
role in the Mass. Municipal Association’s decision to remain
associated with No Place for Hate, rather than sever ties with the
program, as Belmont, Newton, and Watertown have done.

"Coming from Watertown, it’s a shame he didn’t push to withdraw" from
the No Place for Hate program, she said. "The whole goal of this is to
get the communities to withdraw."

Hecht, who represents District B on the Town Council and sits on
Watertown’s No Place for Hate committee, also serves on the MMA’s
executive committee and 35-member board of directors, and is vice
president of the Mass. Municipal Councillors’ Association, a panel
under the umbrella of the MMA that is a co-sponsor with the ADL of No
Place for Hate.

Hecht is also a researcher and manager of an international law program
on human rights in China at Yale Law School .

The MMA executive committee recently drafted a statement that was
voted by the board on Sept. 11, calling for the ADL’s national
leadership to recognize the killing of 1.5 million Armenians between
1915 and 1923 as genocide, and to support a resolution before Congress
that officially acknowledges the slaughter as genocide.

The board stopped short, however, from ending its involvement with No
Place for Hate. Instead, the board said it would "review and monitor"
and "reevaluate" its sponsorship of the program in light of the
actions the league takes in the coming months.

"It sends a very strong message what the MMA is expecting of the ADL,"
said Hecht, who acknowledged that some communities have taken a more
aggressive stance in recent weeks, a decision he attributes to a
difference in strategy.

"We’re on the same side and we’re all pushing for the same thing," he said.

Hecht said if the ADL has not "unequivocally" recognized the genocide
and supported the congressional resolution after its national board
meeting on Nov. 1, he will ask the board to consider ending its
partnership altogether. " ‘Tantamount to genocide’ is not going to cut
the mustard," Hecht said, quoting a characterization of the genocide
made last month by ADL national head Abraham Foxman. Critics have
called Foxman’s statement inadequate.

"It’s weak, it says nothing, and if you talk to the Armenian
organizations, they are outraged," said Devaney, who tried twice to
get the MMA board to sever ties completely and who believes Hecht
"spearheaded" the MMA’s statement. "This recommendation is not
consistent" with what Hecht’s fellow councilors and what other towns
have done, she said.

Hecht denied taking any lead role in crafting the MMA statement.

He was out of town on Aug. 15 when the Watertown council voted to
sever ties with the No Place for Hate program, but said he fully
supports the town’s actions and would have voted with his colleagues.
"Watertown did the right thing," he said.

Hecht said the controversy has brought more attention to the No Place
for Hate program and its benefits, and he hopes the town will find a
way to continue the activities, even if under a different banner.
"This is an opportunity to do it even better than before," he said.

The program isn’t just some "feel-good, everyone sitting around
singing ‘Kumbaya’ " affair, said Hecht, but an important part of
community policing. "For me, that’s what No Place for Hate is. It’s
real function is to improve public safety, to prevent violence and
property damage," and to build communication between groups, he said.
"It’s very practical and that’s why the MMA has been supportive."

Hecht said he doesn’t deserve any special recognition for his part in
what is a complicated dispute, adding, "This is an issue everyone
should be coming forward and working to settle."

Christina Pazzanese can be reached at [email protected].

(c) Copyright 2007 The New York Times Company

Source: icles/2007/09/23/devaney_presses_peer_on_adl/

http://www.boston.com/news/local/massachusetts/art

The beast within the beauty – Review: Rudolf Nureyev by Julie Kavana

Guardian Unlimited, UK

Books

Biography

The beast within the beauty

Review: Rudolf Nureyev by Julie Kavanagh

Julie Kavanagh’s Rudolf Nureyev reveals a peerless
dancer and entrancing character but also a deeply
unattractive man, says Peter Conrad

Sunday September 23, 2007
The Observer

Buy Rudolf Nureyev at the Guardian bookshop

Rudolf Nureyev: The Life
by Julie Kavanagh
Fig Tree/Penguin £25, pp787

Rudolf, in a word, was rude. After a protracted spat in rehearsal,
choreographer Jerome Robbins summed Nureyev up: ‘Rudi is an artist, an
animal and a cunt.’

If he didn’t like a ballerina he was partnering, he ungallantly let
her thud to the ground. Once, he dragged an uncooperative dancer
across the floor by her necklace, grazing her throat; he fractured the
jaw of a male colleague who annoyed him. He ripped up costumes, hurled
Thermos flasks into mirrors, spat at photographers and kicked police
cars. In a tizz at Zeffirelli’s chintzy villa, he hurled a
wrought-iron chair at his host and pulled down a curtain rod with
which he pounded some majolica pottery to smithereens. Expelled from
the premises, he paused to shit on the steps like an indignant,
incontinent dog.

Even his admiration expressed itself as a kind of erotic
homicide. Before defecting from Russia in 1961, he fixed his fantasy
on the nobly classical Danish dancer Erik Bruhn, who became his mentor
and lover. ‘Go there,’ Nureyev told himself, ‘and suck.’ Fellatio or
vampirism? Either way, he licked his lips and, after absorbing Bruhn’s
technical skills, reported: ‘I receive, I am no longer empty.’
Surveying choreographers, he said: ‘Go and choose brain.’ Like
Hannibal Lecter, he sawed open the skull and feasted on the cerebrum.

Julie Kavanagh’s biography is about a man who danced like a god, but
behaved like a violent, voracious beast. Nureyev was fond of
portraying himself as a barbarian invader, a Tatar who relished the
savagery of the Polovtsian dances in Borodin’s Prince Igor. He
disliked Jews, he explained, because he was an ersatz Arab. Further
back, he claimed to be descended from wolves. John Huston wanted to
cast him as the snake, the ‘homo-reptile’ that introduces sin to Eden,
in his film The Bible; Francois Truffaut called him a ‘man-animal’, a
wild child who resisted socialisation.

But despite his feral tantrums, interspersed with indiscriminate
spending sprees and a sex life that was like a gabbling multiplication
game, Nureyev emerges from this affectionate, acutely perceptive book
as someone whose nonsense and neuroses had to be tolerated because his
conflicts fed his creativity. Long after Nureyev’s leaps, twirls and
feats of athletic transcendence have faded in the memories of those
who witnessed them, Kavanagh’s achievement is to persuade us that he
deserves our compassion as well as our applause.

She is the ideal memorialist, because her infatuation with the artist
is balanced by her sympathy for the wounded, self-destructive
man. Having lost his mother when he defected, Nureyev spent his life
seeking out substitute matriarchs: Margot Fonteyn was one and Maude
Gosling (half of the marital team that, under the pseudonym Alexander
Bland, wrote dance reviews for The Observer) was another. In San
Francisco, he found a third, a boundlessly hospitable Armenian who
owned an ethnic restaurant. Nureyev often arrived with a hundred
friends, who ate without paying or tipping; his hostess tearfully
waved the freeloaders goodbye and begged Nureyev to return
soon. Kavanagh has the same generosity of spirit. She shakes her head
over his excesses, but cannot condemn him. Her writing oozes
solicitude, hence her beautiful description of the ageing Nureyev’s
leg muscles ‘as gnarled and compacted as an ancient olive trunk’.

The touching climax of her book is his reunion with his terminally ill
mother, after an un-nostalgic trek back to the Urals in 1987. He spent
10 minutes with her, disgusted by her squalid room. She did not open
her eyes; he was convinced she had not recognised him, though it was
he who did not recognise her when he saw the foetal wraith on the
bed. After he left, a sister asked if she knew who had been to visit
her. ‘Yes, it was Rudik,’ she said. When Nureyev’s death from an
Aids-related illness arrives, Kavanagh finds a stoical virtue in the
animality that repelled Robbins. Choreographer Rudi van Dantzig,
remembering his last weeks, marvels at his resigned patience: he was
like a sick dog that quietly crawled into the bushes to await the end.

Kavanagh astutely places Nureyev in the pop culture of the Sixties,
which made an instant celebrity of him. His moptop hairdo enrolled
him as a fifth Beatle and the ‘Oriental sinuosity’ of his movements
was mimicked by Mick Jagger. A little more tackily, he adored the
skin-hugging synthetic fabrics of that technological age: while still
in Russia, he dreamed of nylon shirts and on his first trip to the
West begged to be taken to a Lycra factory.

But though he managed to get arrested at a pot party in
Haight-Ashbury, he was no libertarian hippie. Politicians capitalised
on his ‘leap to freedom’ (which actually consisted of six steps across
a room at a Paris airport, when he softly asked the French police to
save him from enforced repatriation) and critic Arlene Croce described
him as ‘Gorbachev’s advance man’. In fact, he was more like a belated
tsar, a despot besotted by luxury.

Ninette de Valois, the Covent Garden ballet mistress, believed that
‘the hysterical effect of freedom’ in the West destroyed him, turning
him into a sexual gourmand and a self-prostituting
vaudevillian. Again, Kavanagh finds catharsis in his consumerism. At
the end of his life, he stockpiled kilims and his grave is draped in a
metallic representation of these soft, bright Turkish carpets. As
Kavanagh points out, they marked him as a homesick nomad, ‘whose most
important piece of furniture was a rug’ that could be folded up and
taken with him when he moved on.

Enthusiasts in the Sixties compared Nureyev to James Dean and the
high-kicking hooligans of West Side Story. His self-image was actually
derived, as Kavanagh ingeniously demonstrates, from the tragic heroes
of Shakespeare and Milton, Byron and Goethe. In Swan Lake, his
vacillation between Odette and Odile, the black and white swans, acted
out the quarrel between artistic sanctity and the profane flesh. After
dancing in Paradise Lost, he became convinced that he was the spawn of
Satan; in adapting Byron’s Manfred, he dramatised the convulsions of
his own damned soul.

Stricken by Aids, he made Romeo and Juliet a ballet about the plague
and, as Prospero in his version of The Tempest, he poignantly admitted
the failure of his art, clutching the magician’s staff to help him
make a few last exhausted assaults on the air. Though dance is
wordless, Nureyev’s body, as Kavanagh puts it, eloquently ‘spoke the
texts’ of the literary works he choreographed, which added up into his
confessional autobiography.

During a decade of research, Kavanagh prised open the doors of
archives in the former USSR and charmed Nureyev’s platoons of lovers
into disclosing details of their copulatory bouts. (He was, I
conclude, a wretched lay: a greedy automaton who treated partners as
dildos.) The evidence of misbehaviour and decadence she unearths is
dismal, but her comprehension of the man’s motives and of the pain and
panic that drove him acts like a healing, forgiving balm.

Her book’s subtitle deserves its definite article: this is the
definitive study of a man who, in his combination of aesthetic grace
and psychological grime, can truly be called a sacred monster.

Interesting Opinion

INTERESTING OPINION

Lragir.am
20-09-2007 16:46:43

The leader of the National Self-Determination Union hosted at the
Hayeli Club on September 20 for a news conference commented on the
failure of the Armenian team of wrestlers on the world championship in
Baku, who won a single bronze. He reported the opinion of an expert
which could be viewed as interesting. Paruir Hairikyan said referring
to an expert that apparently the Armenian wrestlers were not allowed
to display their abilities fully in Baku and their success was
prevented to prevent tensions.

"I have talked to an expert, a serious expert who watched the fights
as an expert, and he said indignantly our wrestler was stronger and
had advantage over the other in the first and second rounds but lost
the third round. He says apparently they had been notified that if
they won and the Armenian flag was waived, the situation would get out
of control. The expert told me this," Paruir Hairikyan says.

Aghabekyan to support Serge Sargsyan

A1+

AGHABEKYAN WILL SUPPORT SERGE SARGSYAN
[08:16 pm] 21 September, 2007

`Independence is our victory which was won not by an Armenian soldier
but by an ordinary peasant, worker, engineer, teacher dressed in
military uniforms,’ said ARF Dashnaktsutyun member Arthur Aghabekyan,
the Chairman of the NA Standing Committee on National Security and
Interior Affairs.

According to him, the Karabakh movement resulted in the USSR collapse
and independence of republics. He emphasized Vazgen Sargsyan’s role in
the RA army establishment. Thanks to Vazgen Sargsyan our detachments
were united under one commandment.

Those days we were alone. We were able to win due to our collective
integrity,’ Aghabekyan noted.

There is one feature characteristic of all nations. No soldier is
remembered after wars, only colonels and commanders are glorified.

This is our drawback, we vociferate about their positive deeds rather
than heroism. It is our fault as since the victory of 1994 we have
been unable to `educate’ our commanders in a decent, modest way, he
said.

Aghabekyan dwelt on the forthcoming elections as well. According to
him, only an ARF Dashnaktsutyun president is capable of confronting
today’s challenges. `I say it for sure,’ he said.

In case Serge Sargsyan and Levon ter-Petrosyan appear at the second
round, the ARF Dashnaktsutyun member will support Serge Sargsyan.

Stream gets short of Dengi unexpectedly

CNews, Russia

Stream gets short of Dengi unexpectedly

Telecom Internet

September 21, 2007, Fri 10:08 AM Moscow

The revolutionary for the Moscow market broadband internet tariff
Dengi with the subscriber fee 30 rubles a month has not survived even
for two weeks. The tariff author Comstar-Direct says the given tariff
was initially planned as testing. However, the market participants are
sure the company has pulled a boner and decided to stop link-ups.

In early September the company Comstar-Direct providing broadband
internet in Moscow through telephone lines under the brand Stream has
updated its tariffs. The most attractive is the tariff Dengi offering
500 Mb of information at 1 Mb/sec for 30 rubles (at the exchange rate
25.12 rubles per dollar, 21.09.07) a month. Such a subscriber fee is
much cheaper than the existing offers in the Moscow market. For
comparison, Stream tariff average fee is 300 rubles a month. The
tariff Dengi is not surprising to arise interest with the users, in
particular, at internet-forums the users of the competing local
networks advised each other to use the given tariff as a reserve.

However, Comstar-Direct has decided upon making the tariff Dengi
temporary this week, which means no link-ups are carried out any
longer. `We were assessing the possible niche for limited tariffs, –
Mina Khachatrya, Comstar-Direct marketing director explains. – It
turned out to be rather large, that is why we have decided upon
resuming link-up to the given tariff when holding special actions at
holidays or organized together with our partners. Then the data volume
included into the subscriber fee is to be increased’.

Link-up to the tariff Dengi so popular with the users has been stopped
– Photo

Temporary tariffs are frequently used in Stream. For example, link-ups
to the tariff Pervoclassny with the unlimited data transfer volume at
128 Kb/sec speed for 100 rubles per month are carried out up to the
end of the year. But the company is constantly repeating link-ups to
such tariffs are possible only when certain actions are held. As for
the tariff Dengi, no warning has been made.

In this connection market participants believe having introduced such
a cheap tariff Comstar-Direct pulled a boner and having understood it
decided to stop link-ups. `At present the internet-traffic prime cost
is very low and theoretically the given tariff might be of benefit to
the company, – Corbina-Telecom representative says. – Besides the
traffic expenses the provider incurs other expenses, i.e. call-center
servicing, power lines, etc. Many forget about it, thus how such
marketing mistakes as the tariff Dengi occur. If the link-ups to the
given tariff continued, then Stream users might be left without the
technical support’.

Comstar-Direct denies the given scenario. `We have initially
implemented the tariff Dengi as temporary, but did not announce it, as
the tariff was testing and we did not want to raise artificial
interest to it., – Mrs. Khachatryan says. -That is a standard
marketing step widely spread in the West but not in Russia. We were to
incur no losses, as the average revenue of one subscriber linked up to
the limited tariff at 1 Mb/sec is higher than of one unlimited tariff
subscriber with 1.5 Mb/sec’.

Russia & Central Asia: Three More Markets Break the 50% Barrier

Cellular-News, UK
20th September 2007

Russia & Central Asia: Three More Markets Break the 50% Barrier

Having seen Kazakhstan become the second market in the region after
Russia to cross the 50% penetration barrier in the first quarter of
this year, in Q2 we witnessed an influx of new members to the over-50%
club, with Georgia, the semi-autonomous Nagorno-Karabakh region and
Azerbaijan reaching 53.3%, 52.8% and 50.0% respectively. All three
markets posted gains in penetration in excess of 4pp in the quarter,
but the largest increase was recorded by Kazakhstan, which added
7.3pp; in fact this is the largest quarterly gain of any market in the
region for over a year.

On an annual basis, Kazakhstan again leads the way with a gain of
21.8pp to reach 59.9% penetration at the end of Q2 2007, with new
entrant Kazakhtelecom (launched 21/2/07) contributing significantly to
the increase. Although its penetration rate is not rising as quickly
as Russia’s was at a similar stage, its quarterly gains in penetration
have been increasing and if current trends continue, it could break
through the 75% barrier by the end of the calendar year.

Armenia recorded the second highest annual gain in penetration, adding
21.2pp to hit 48.9%, and it has almost certainly already become the
sixth market in the region to pass 50% penetration at the time of
writing. It will be some time before any other markets break this
barrier however, with Kyrgyzstan being the next most penetrated
country in the region after Armenia at just 30.0%.

The four least penetrated markets in the region – Tajikistan,
Uzbekistan, Afghanistan and Turkmenistan – also took the bottom four
places in terms of annual gains in penetration, with none of them
managing more than a 10pp increase. However, in proportionate terms,
all four posted a penetration rate at the end of Q2 2007 which was at
least double that of the previous year.

Unsurprisingly, Russia remains by far the most penetrated market in
the region with a rate of 112.1%, similar to that of Western European
countries such as Sweden and the UK. Despite passing 100% penetration
in Q3 2006, the rate has continued to rise steadily in the past year
with an annual gain of 14.4pp in the 12 months to 30th June 2007.

Posted to the site on 20th September 2007

House Of Bishops Meeting Set To Open

HOUSE OF BISHOPS MEETING SET TO OPEN
By Mary Frances Schjonberg

Episcopal News Service, NY
September 19, 2007

Listening can build relationships, lower anxiety, Presiding Bishop’s
canon says

[Episcopal News Service, New Orleans] Presiding Bishop Katharine
Jefferts Schori has assured Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams
that he will be received September 20 and 21 by the House of Bishops
"with great respect and hospitality."

The Rev. Dr. Charles Robertson, canon to the Presiding Bishop and
Primate, said September 19 that Jefferts Schori had spoken with
Williams to discuss meeting arrangements and the bishops’ anticipation
of their conversations.

Robertson termed "extraordinary" the unanimity with which the House
of Bishops voted at its March meeting to invite Williams to meet
with them.

"Both he and we recognize the importance of this time, and that
it is natural to experience some anxiety" in the current context,
Robertson said.

"Our call is to respond to one another, not out of anxiety, but out
of an even deeper respect for ourselves and one another, honoring
our relationships," he said.

Robertson noted that the Presiding Bishop, in question-and-answer
sessions held during her recent travels around the church, has said
that "when communion is based on agreement rather than relationship,
it is easier for tensions to arise."

Given that potential, Robertson said, "to truly be able to listen to
one another is important for finding ways to lower the anxiety."

Jefferts Schori has also reiterated to Williams that the Episcopal
Church’s Executive Council in June "promised our engagement with the
churches of the Anglican Communion and our deep and sincere listening
will continue."

Robertson noted that the General Convention both in 1991 and 1994
"encouraged conversation with our sisters and brothers in the Anglican
Communion, and our ecumenical partners," and that this desire remains.

In 1991, the General Convention proposed a "Pan-Anglican and Ecumenical
Dialogue on Human Sexuality." Resolution B20 said, in part, that the
Presiding Bishop’s office should "propose to all provinces of the
Anglican Communion and all churches with whom we are in ecumenical
dialogue that a broad process of consultation be initiated on an
official pan-Anglican and ecumenical level as a bold step forward in
the consideration of these potentially divisive issues which should
not be resolved by the Episcopal Church on its own."

In 1994, Resolution B12 called, in part, for the church to "commit
itself to dialogue in faith, with no expectation of uniformity,
but every expectation of unity" and "encourage conversation on the
issues of human sexuality with both Anglican and ecumenical partners
open to such communication at national, diocesan and local levels."

Robertson said that all such listening takes place within a context
in which "we also respectfully acknowledge that we have inherited
a system of governance that is not necessarily the same as in other
parts of the communion."

He added "it is very important to us that we continue to honor not
only the concerns of the communion but also our own polity — our
own governance."

Meeting agenda detailed The House of Bishops unofficially started
its regularly scheduled fall meeting with a September 19 dinner,
also attended by spouses who are meeting concurrently under the theme
"Marching with the Saints."

Williams will meet with the bishops and other invited guests for the
entire day on September 20 and for the morning of September 21. They
will discuss a variety of subjects, including the recently proposed
Anglican covenant and the Primates communique. The communique made
certain requests of the bishops and set a September 30 for their
response.

The Joint Standing Committee of the Anglican Consultative Council and
the Primates will attend those conversations, at Jefferts Schori’s
invitation.

House of Deputies President Bonnie Anderson, also invited by the
Presiding Bishop, will be present as well.

The sessions with Williams are closed to the public, media and other
visitors.

The Joint Standing Committee will then meet as a group on September
24 in the same hotel as the House of Bishops. Williams departs New
Orleans the afternoon of September 21 to begin an official visit to
Armenia, Syria and Lebanon.

Williams will participate in a September 20 evening interfaith
gathering at the Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, which will
celebrate the "Resiliency of Spirit in New Orleans," according to a
Diocese of Louisiana news release.

Aspects of poverty and hunger relief targeted by the first of eight
U.N. Millennium Development Goals will be the focus of the house’s
September 21 afternoon session as the bishops join a dialogue with
medical anthropologist and physician Paul Farmer, founder of Partners
in Health medical programs in Haiti and around the world.

A work day for bishops and their spouses is set for September 22. The
house’s planning committee and local officials are monitoring weather
conditions. The work day may have to be re-scheduled depending on
the intensity of developing storms.

Many bishops will participate in worship September 23 with Episcopal
congregations across Louisiana and Mississippi. The Joint Standing
Committee has been invited to witness and take part in re-building
initiatives sponsored by the Diocese of Louisiana over the weekend
and will likely attend worship in local churches, according to a
media advisory from the Anglican Communion News Service.

The bishops will meet in the evening that day to reflect on their
weekend experiences with specific attention to the role racism plays
in hurricane-recovery efforts. Gus Newport, Eugene "Gus" Newport, a
program consultant to the Vanguard Public Foundation and the Louisiana
Disaster Recovery Foundation, will lead the session.

The bishops will hold their first business sessions on September
24. That day will end with a Eucharist.

On September 25, a morning business session is planned. Time is
also set aside in the afternoon if the morning session needs to be
continued. The meeting will close with Jefferts Schori’s reflections,
followed by a Eucharist in memory of deceased members of the house
and then a dinner.

Each day includes time for the bishops to study the Bible and to
worship together.

— The Rev. Mary Frances Schjonberg is national correspondent for
the Episcopal News Service.

Iran Makes Mark On International Stage

IRAN MAKES MARK ON INTERNATIONAL STAGE
By Chris Thau

IRB
Rugby News Service
Tuesday 18 September 2007
Ireland

While the eyes of the world concentrate on the IRB Rugby World Cup
2007 rollercoaster in France, elsewhere in lands far away, the game
keeps moving ahead in its own idiosyncratic way, taking small steps
forward, or sideways, as new clubs and Unions emerge and new matches
and challenges are fought.

After several years of fragmented reports about rugby developments
within Iran, the news that the recently formed national team has made
its international debut on 18 August, came as a bit of a surprise.

Even more remarkable was the news that Iran, who literally has had
no international contact of any kind before this match, managed
to defeat Pakistan by 22 points to 11 in Pakistan, scoring in the
process four tries to the home side’s solitary effort. Flanker Ahmad
Zare-Manesh of Teheran RFC will go down in history as his country’s
first international try-scorer, with lock forward Yousef Jalali as
the kicker of the conversion and the author of another try.

Vartazarian the catalyst

The catalyst of Iran’s unexpected arrival on the world’s stage is Emil
Vartazarian, fly half, former captain of India and senior development
officer in Tamil-Nandu in southern India.

Iranian-born Vartazarian, who learned his trade at the famous Armenian
college in Calcutta, taught by Ashram Sokiaas, one of India’s foremost
players, teachers and game developers, was invited back to the country
of his birth to help coach the newly-formed national team. He takes
up the story:

"This was the first time for many things. It was the first time we were
selecting a national team, it was the first international Test match,
first match outside Iran and especially my first International as a
coach, so I think there was a mixed feeling of anxiety and suspense
not knowing what to expect and what we were getting into.

" In my earlier visit as an IRB trainer for conducting and officiating
a referees course in 2006 I had the opportunity to screen some of the
players at the training sessions and I know that these boys, given
a fair chance, could do well, if given a chance to prove themselves.

Eager to learn

"I taught them a few aspects of the game and they were all crazy
about learning more and more. One could see the hunger for knowledge
in their eyes.

When I was asked to take over as coach I was very excited. I knew
that the fit and hard Iranians could dominate physically Pakistan,
even though the latter had played international games before.

"I also knew that the Iranian players had the pieces of the puzzle
and all they needed was for someone to guide them to put them together
in the right way.

These guys just love the physical aspect of the game and the
challenge," Vartazarian said.

"We had two weeks of vigorous camp and I picked 24 from the 50-strong
squad, who attended the camp. I gave them a friendly game with one of
the clubs in Tehran and they just did exactly what they were told –
so much that after the game they were really shocked by what they
had achieved. Literally, it clicked.

"Some walked up to me after the match and even said that "Now we know
what rugby is all about." It was then that I knew that we shall have
a great game in store for Pakistan and I was very positive that we
could win the match if only everyone did what was expected of them.

First-ever international

"When we went to Pakistan, of course being a very big occasion the
players were a little tight and nervous so the initial 20 minutes
was very scary since anything could have happened. But as the game
progressed the boys started getting the points on board and we kept
on putting the pressure and finally it paid off at the end.

"All credit should go to the boys as they showed that they are
mature players and can handle pressure. And I am glad that my first
international match was a success. I have to say that this is the
beginning of a team that has great potential and it will be a force
to reckon with in the near future if handled properly."