Christian Woman’s Faith Attacked In Istanbul Airport

CHRISTIAN WOMAN’S FAITH ATTACKED IN ISTANBUL AIRPORT

Assyria Times
ews/article.php?storyid=3422
May 19 2010

Returning from a recent trip to Lebanon, Helen Talia, traveling with
her friend Laurice Somo, both from Chicago, approached the security
gates at Istanbul Ataturk International Airport, carrying a host
of religious (Christian) gifts ~ crosses, rosaries in her carry-on
handbag.

"No sooner did I approach the first security attendant, says Talia,
my bag was turned upside down and ridded of all the religious gifts
I had brought back from places of worship I had traveled thousands
of miles in pilgrimage to Lebanon ~ Mar Charbel and Haresa. Needless
to say, the manner in which the procedure was carried out was very
vicious and without any regard to the value that another human places
on his or her spiritual practices.

I gestured to the young woman handling the items to use caution,
but instead, and rather in a sarcastic tone, she stared me in the
eyes and said in the English language, ‘do you have a problem?’ then
proceeded to dump everything in a big garbage dumpster next to her,
without offering me an explanation, then quickly moved me to the next
security station.

In the meantime, the otherwise forbidden [liquid] items, the water,
which I was carrying in my bag, remained untouched and made it through
security. I began to speculate the obvious that the intrusion was
not part of security, but rather a deliberate attack on my faith and
a form of intimidation.

When asked to place a complaint at the second security station,
a female supervisor, proceeded to contact two airport police, both
male, one of whom grabbed me by the left arm while snatching my U.S.

Passport and flight boarding pass out of my right hand. ‘Now, do you
want to place a complaint?’ asked the security supervisor angrily.

This all happened in what seemed to be in the blink of an eye
. . . I noticed the one officer who grabbed my passport quickly made
a photocopy of it, claiming it was necessary in order to document
the complaint, while pretentiously placing a call to a superior who
would handle the claim, one who never made it to the scene.

With only twenty minutes left for my flight to take off to Chicago,
still no visible sign of anyone who was coming to address the issue,
I began to realize that I was being given the run-around. At this
juncture, I concluded my flight, but vowed to follow-up with a story
and a letter to the Turkish Embassy upon returning to the United
States," concludes Talia.

This story is dedicated to the memory of the unborn Assyrian, Armenian
and Pontian and Anatolian Greek children, whose lives were stolen
before birth, and whose mothers were raped while carrying the seed of
life in their holy wombs during the Ottoman Empire, the Young Turks
era and the formation of the Republic of Turkey.

This article calls to the Republic of Turkey to recognize the Genocide
and criminal activities committed against the Assyrians, Armenians,
and Pontian and Anatolian Greeks c. 1870-1930, and to establish
grounds for restitution.

Helen Talia was born in Baghdad and raised in Chicago, where she
currently resides. She is a Certified Public Accountant, a writer
and an activist.

http://www.assyriatimes.com/engine/modules/n

Armenian Sportsman Wins Gold At The European Youth Weightlifting Cha

ARMENIAN SPORTSMAN WINS GOLD AT THE EUROPEAN YOUTH WEIGHTLIFTING CHAMPIONSHIP

ArmInfo
2010-05-19 13:56:00

ArmInfo. Armenia’s Smbat Margaryan, (w.c 56kg), silver medalist of
2010 European Weightlifting Championships, won gold at the European
Youth Weightlifting Championships, which kicked off in Valencia,
Spain, on May 17.

Margaryan lifted 240kg in snatch, clean and jerk combination.

The Armenian team also includes: Isabella Yalyan (w.c. 53kg), Vardan
Militosyan and Vladik Karapetyan (w.c. 62kg), Raffi Melikyan and Aren
Nerseisyan (w.c. 77kg), Azat Sayadyan (w.c. 85kg), Hamlet Poghosyan
(w.c. 94kg), Misha Muradyan and Gor Minasyan (w.c. +105kg).

International Museum Day To Be Marked Under Slogan: Museums For Soci

INTERNATIONAL MUSEUM DAY TO BE MARKED UNDER SLOGAN: MUSEUMS FOR SOCIAL HARMONY

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 17, 2010 – 15:39 AMT 10:39 GMT

May 18 will mark the International Museum Day.

Director of the International Council of Museums Representation in
Armenia Hasmik Aroyan said that this year the International Museum Day
will be marked worldwide under the slogan: Museums for Social Harmony.

Museums will open their doors for the public, as well as special
events will be organized, Aroyan told a press conference in Yerevan.

"The principle of social harmony is in the availability of museums,
exhibits, entire cultural heritage for all groups of population,
including disabled people," she said.

According to Aroyan, the events are aimed at securing availability of
museums for disabled people, as well as attracting the authorities’
attention to this problem.

The events are organized by the Cafesjian Center for the Arts, Bridge
of Hope and Unison NGOs, RA Ministry of Culture and Ministry of Labor
and Social Issues.

Astghik Marabyan, Assistant to the Executive Director for Museum
Operations of the Cafesjian Center for the Arts, said that the events
will have a consecutive nature. She expressed hope that architectural
changes will soon take place in museums, so that disabled people do
not face difficulties while visiting exhibitions.

Chairman of Unison NGO Armen Alaverdyan stated that the organization
hails these events. "I strongly believe that museums’ reconstruction
for disabled people can be considered as a good investment, as it
will contribute to increase in numbers of tourists."

The International Museum Day was established in 1977 by the
International Council of Museums. Since 1978, it has been marked in
over 150 countries every year.

Number Of TV Companies To Decrease In Armenia By 2015

NUMBER OF TV COMPANIES TO DECREASE IN ARMENIA BY 2015

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 18, 2010 – 20:36 AMT 15:36 GMT

On May 18, Armenia’s parliament discussed a bill on making changes
and amendments to the RA Law on Television and Radio.

Armenian Deputy Minister of Economy Mushegh Tumasyan said that
the bill submitted by the RA government aims to digitize the radio
and television broadcasting. According to Tumasyan, the radio and
television broadcasting will be improved in two stages – digitizing
stage (until 2015) and development stage.

The Deputy Minister noted that under the draft law the number of
Armenia’s TV companies will be decreased from 22 to 18, so that 18 TV
companies are able to provide both analogue and digital broadcasting
during the digitizing stage.

Member of Heritage parliamentary group Armen Martirosyan strictly
criticized the bill. According to him, it will restrict pluralism in
Armenia and may serve as a reason for another resolution by the PACE.

"The bill submitted by the government pursues a political goal –
it aims to reduce the number of TV companies during the upcoming
presidential and parliamentary elections in the country, so that it
is easy to control them," Martirosyan said.

Member of the RA parliament Viktor Dallakyan said that one can say
that the pre-electoral campaign of the parliamentary elections of
2012 has started through submission of this bill. According to him,
the bill provides the country’s leadership with the opportunity to
decide on themes to be discussed during TV programs.

Dallakyan added that the bill is unacceptable and the government should
withdraw it, as in case of the bill’s adoption Armenia’s authorities
will be able to implement total control over television broadcasting.

PM Tigran Sargsyan Meets The IMF Delegation

PM TIGRAN SARGSYAN MEETS THE IMF DELEGATION

armradio.am
18.05.2010 14:53

Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan received today the delegation of the
International Monetary Fund led by Head of the IMF Economic mission
in Armenia, Marc Louis.

During the meeting the parties discussed issues related to the
cooperation between the Armenian Government and the International
Monetary Fund. Reference was made to a wide range of issues of
reciprocal interest.

US Chess Championship: Varuzhan Hakobian Takes Lead With Nakamura An

US CHESS CHAMPIONSHIP: VARUZHAN HAKOBIAN TAKES LEAD WITH NAKAMURA AND KAMSKY

Panorama.am
18/05/2010

In Round 4 of the US Chess Championship underway in St. Louis all the
Armenian chess players had draws. Varuzhan Hakobian scored 0,5 in a
set against Kamsky, Melikset Khachiyan and Levon Altounian ended in
draw with Kaidanov and Bhat respectively.

Thus, after Round 4 Varuzhan Hakobian has scored 3 and shares 1-3
horizontals with Nakamura and Kamsky. Levon Altounian and Melikset
Khachiyan have scored 1,5 each and run 14th and 18th respectively.

Varuzhan Hakobian – Gata Kamsky 0,5:0,5

1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 a6 5. cxd5 cxd5 6. Bf4 Nc6 7. Rc1
e6 8. e3 Bd6 9. Bg3 Bxg3 10. hxg3 Qd6 11. Bd3 Bd7 12. a3 h6 13. Na4
O-O 14. Nc5 Rfb8 15. O-O Be8 16. Qe2 a5 17. Bb5 Qe7 18. Rc2 Na7 19.

Bxe8 Qxe8 20. Rfc1 Nb5 21. Ne5 Nd6 22. b3 Rc8 23. a4 Qd8 24. Ng4 Nfe8
25. Ne5 Rc7 26. Qe1 Rac8 27. Qd1 Nf6 28. Ncd3 Nfe4 29. Rxc7 Rxc7 30.

Rxc7 Qxc7 31. Qc1 Qxc1+ 32. Nxc1 h5 33. Kf1 f6 34. Ned3 g5 35. Ke1 Kf7
36. Ne2 Nf5 37. Ndc1 e5 38. Nd3 Ke6 39. f3 Ned6 40. Kf2 b6 41. Ndc1 b5
42. Nd3 bxa4 43. Nc5+ Ke7 44. bxa4 Nc4 45. dxe5 Nfxe3 46. exf6+ Kxf6
47. f4 Kf5 48. Nd4+ Kg4 49. fxg5 Kxg5 50. Kf3 Ng4 51. Nce6+ Kf6 52.

Nf4 Ke5 53. Nb3 Nf6 1/2:1/2.

Gregori Kaidanov – Melikset Khachiyan 0,5:0,5

1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 c6 3. Nc3 d5 4. e3 g6 5. Nf3 Bg7 6. Be2 O-O 7. O-O Bg4
8. cxd5 cxd5 9. Qb3 b6 10. h3 Bxf3 11. Bxf3 e6 12. Bd2 Nc6 13. Qa4 Na5
14. b3 a6 15. Rac1 b5 16. Qa3 Nb7 17. Ne2 Re8 18. Rc6 Bf8 19. Bb4 Bxb4
20. Qxb4 Qd7 21. Rfc1 Rec8 22. Qc3 Nd6 23. Rc5 Kg7 24. Qa5 Nfe4 25.

Bxe4 Nxe4 26. Rc7 Rxc7 27. Qxc7 Ra7 28. Qe5+ f6 29. Qb8 Rb7 30. Qc8 g5
31. Qxd7+ Rxd7 32. Rc6 a5 33. Rxe6 Nd6 34. e4 dxe4 35. d5 b4 36. Nd4
Kf7 37. g4 Nc8 38. Nf5 Rxd5 39. Rc6 Ne7 40. Rc7 Re5 41. Ra7 Kf8 42.

Ra8+ Kf7 43. Ra7 Kf8 44. Ra8+ Kf7 45. Nd6+ Kg6 46. Kf1 f5 47. Nc4 Rc5
48. Ra6+ Kg7 49. gxf5 Rxf5 50. Re6 Nd5 51. Rxe4 Nc3 52. Re7+ Kg6 53.

Re6+ 1/2:1/2.

Levon Altounian – Vinay Bhat 0,5:0,5

1. Nf3 d5 2. g3 Nf6 3. Bg2 c6 4. O-O Bf5 5. d3 e6 6. c4 Nbd7 7. Be3
Bd6 8. Qb3 Qb8 9. cxd5 exd5 10. Nc3 O-O 11. Bd4 Re8 12. Nh4 Be6 13.

Rac1 b6 14. Qc2 Qb7 15. e4 Rad8 16. exd5 Nxd5 17. Nxd5 cxd5 18. Qd2
Qa6 19. Rfd1 h6 20. b3 Bg4 21. Nf3 Nf8 22. h3 Bf5 23. Ba1 Ne6 24. Nd4
Nxd4 25. Bxd4 Qb5 26. Qb2 Bf8 27. a4 Qd7 28. g4 Bg6 29. Qd2 Qd6 30.

Re1 Rxe1+ 31. Rxe1 Qa3 32. Qc2 Qb4 33. Bc3 Qc5 34. b4 Qd6 35. Qb3 Bxd3
36. Bxg7 Qxb4 37. Qxb4 Bxb4 38. Re3 Kxg7 39. Rxd3 d4 40. Bf1 Bc3 41.

Rf3 Re8 42. Kg2 Re1 43. h4 Bb4 44. Rf5 Re7 45. Rd5 Bc3 46. Bb5 Rc7 47.

f4 Be1 48. h5 Rc2+ 49. Kf1 Bf2 50. Rd7 Be3 51. Ke1 Kf6 52. Bd3 Rc3 53.

Ke2 Bxf4 54. Rxd4 Be5 55. Rd7 a5 56. Rb7 Bd4 57. Bb5 Kg5 58. Bd7 Re3+
59. Kd2 Re7 60. Kd3 Bc5 61. Kc4 Re4+ 62. Kd5 Rd4+ 63. Ke5 f6+ 64. Ke6
Re4+ 65. Kd5 Kf4 66. Bf5 Rxa4 67. Rh7 Rd4+ 68. Kc6 a4 69. Rxh6 a3 70.

Rxf6 Kg5 71. Rg6+ Kh4 72. Rg8 Ra4 73. Be6 a2 74. Bxa2 Rxa2 75. h6 Ra7
76. Rg7 Ra8 77. h7 Rh8 78. g5 Bd4 79. Rd7 Kxg5 80. Rxd4 Rxh7 1/2:1/2.

Medvedev’s Charm Offensive In Turkey

MEDVEDEV’S CHARM OFFENSIVE IN TURKEY
By Robert Amsterdam

Eurasia Review
evs-charm-offensive-in-turkey.html
May 13 2010

As President Dmitry Medvedev departed for a state visit to Turkey
this week, there wasn’t much debate over whether or not it would
be success, but rather what kind of deals would be offered up to
get the handshakes – would it be weapons, cheap gas, a pipeline,
a Gazprom investment, or the granddaddy of them all, nuclear energy?

Well Turkey is no old maid (sorry, Ukraine), and has many good reasons
to call for a high dowry: NATO membership, the largest standing army in
Europe, and a booming, modern economy which is closely narrowing the
gap with Europe. Most importantly, the country occupies an incredibly
important geostrategic position between Europe and the energy basin
of Central Asia as well as control over the Bosporus Strait, and will
continue to play a key role in the transit of oil and gas.

So it shouldn’t come as a complete surprise that during Medvedev’s
visit Russia signed a $20 billion deal to built Turkey’s first nuclear
power plant, and another 20 deals and agreements. In this particular
situation, Sergei Kiriyenko and Rosatom played the role usually left
to Igor Sechin, and carried out the now familiar process of layered
bargaining (very few countries in the world can come to one meeting
with arms deals, nuclear energy, and 5 or 6 industrial oligarchs in
tote to jump in on the deal).

But as usual, behind the deals, some problems in the relationship
remain. Turkey and Russia have had a historically rocky relationship
dating back to Ottoman support for the Crimean Khanate (who burned
down Moscow in 1571), while the Tsarist empire repeatedly clashed
with the Turks over the 18th and 19th century and supported Christian
separatists. During the Cold War, fears of Russian intervention in
Turkey drove them into the arms of NATO, while trade politics over
the Black Sea have also come into play. The tensions between historic
rivals continues to today with a very large population of Chechens,
which some Russian hawks believe is a safe haven for terrorists.

Ankara sees itself as an influential regional leader on the Black Sea,
and their conduct following the war in Georgia displayed a distaste
of Russia’s failure to consult before combat operations. There is of
course also Russia’s role in supporting Armenia as a client state, as
well as other regional problems, such as the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute
and Turkey’s interests in Azerbaijan. Energy, however, really seems to
the be trickiest issue of all, and with Russia supplying some 2/3rds of
Turkey’s natural gas, the government is looking to play both sides of
the fence, and above all, maintain strict control over transit points.

Despite some of these tensions, the high stakes involved in Russia’s
effort to monopolize the flow of energy supplies from east to west
(and block the Nabucco pipeline) has led to a hasty and sometimes
expensive rapprochement with Turkey. Medvedev’s visit builds upon the
evident momentum from Vladimir Putin’s 2009 visit, which used energy
trade and investment as the key vehicle to deepen relations.

Before arriving, Medvedev published an op/ed in Today’s Zaman on his
vision for the strategic alliance:

Certainly cooperation in the field of energy comprises the main axis
of our cooperation. We have critical joint projects that are of top
priority in this field. These are the South Stream and Blue Stream-2
natural gas pipelines, the construction of the Samsun-Ceyhan oil
pipeline and a nuclear power plant to be built by Russia on Turkish
soil. I am confident that implementing these projects will be concrete
evidence that relations have moved up to a high-quality new level
and significantly contribute to consolidating international energy
security.

Upon completing the series of deals signed this week, the Russian
President was ebullient: "Our talks today showed that Turkey and Russia
are strategic partners not only in words but in deeds. (…) It really
looks rather impressive." It might not be enough to overcome the deep
problems in the relationship, as well as the collision of national
interests in Turkish and Russian competition in energy transit,
but they are certainly getting close.

Once again, we are witnessing a complete lack of awareness or at least
a policy failure on behalf of Europe and the United States to offer
competing deals to Ankara and keep relations close, and a failure to
recognize the importance of this critical ally. Turkey’s cooperation
with Russia is certainly no doomsday scenario, and, like any other
country, they will structure their relations with Moscow as they see
fit … but if Europe somehow thinks that this won’t impact their
energy security in the long term, they had better get their heads
out of the sand.

Robert Amsterdam is an international lawyer and founding partner
of the law firm Amsterdam & Peroff. This article originally (here)
appeared at the Robert Amsterdam: Perspectives on Global Politics
and Business website.

http://www.eurasiareview.com/2010/05/medved

Armenia Will Continue Contributing To Establishment Of Stability In

ARMENIA WILL CONTINUE CONTRIBUTING TO ESTABLISHMENT OF STABILITY IN AFGHANISTAN

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 12, 2010 – 21:43 AMT 16:43 GMT

An Armenian delegation led by Defense Minister Seyran Ohanyan
participated in a meeting of Defense Ministers from ISAF contributing
nations in Berlin on May 11, the press service of the RA Defense
Ministry reported.

A communique was signed by member countries, through which the parties
confirmed their further support to establishment of stability in
Afghanistan for the sake of international security and stability.

Israeli ‘Settlements’: A New Jersey Story

ISRAELI ‘SETTLEMENTS’: A NEW JERSEY STORY
BY ALAN STEINBERG

newjerseynewsroom.com
seynewsroom.com/commentary/israeli-settlements-a-n ew-jersey-story
May 11 2010

COMMENTARY

During the administration of President Barack Obama, relations between
the United States of America and the State of Israel have regressed
to their worst point since Jimmy Carter left office in 1981. Both
Obama and his Secretary of State Hillary Clinton attribute this to
the continued existence of Israeli "settlements," defined as those
Jewish communities situated in the West Bank beyond the "Green Line,"
the Israeli border with Jordan before its victory in the Six Day War
of June, 1967.

Mainstream media news networks, with the exception of Fox News, support
the Obama/Clinton argument by portraying the Jewish inhabitants of
these settlements as ultranationalist armed fanatics living in Quonset
huts or tents. There is no mention made of the fact that Israel
conquered the West Bank in 1967 in response to Jordan embarking on
a war intended to destroy the Jewish State.

Jordan launched its attack against Israel on June 6, 1967, despite
pleas from the Israeli government to stay out of the war which
had begun between Israel and Egypt the day before. As the Jordanian
offensive began, King Hussein, supposedly an Arab moderate, broadcast
the following message to his Jordanian and Palestinian subjects over
Amman radio: "Kill the Jews wherever you find them. Kill them with
your arms, with your hands, with your nails and teeth."

I have a much different story to tell about the Israeli "settlements."

Indeed, it is a New Jersey story, at it involves one of my dearest
friends in life, Garabed "Chuck" Haytaian.

I had the joy and honor of working on Chuck’s staff while he served as
Speaker of the New Jersey Assembly in 1992 through 1993. Our friendship
was bound together by something more than a common political philosophy
and interests.

A large portion of my extended family residing in Poland was murdered
by the Nazis during the Holocaust. Chuck’s uncle Garabed, for whom he
was named, had been beheaded in front of his family by Turks during
the Armenian genocide of 1915-1917. For Chuck and me, it was a shared
familial heritage that resulted in our working together to craft the
legislation that mandates the teaching of the Holocaust and other
genocides in New Jersey’s public schools.

When Chuck ran for the U.S. Senate in 1994, like virtually every
candidate for statewide office in New Jersey, he travelled to Israel
with his beloved late wife Joan on a fact-finding and informational
mission. Given our relationship, it was natural for him to ask me to
accompany him.

Chuck’s mission to Israel in April, 1994 was coordinated by two
distinguished leaders of the New Jersey Jewish Federations. When these
two gentlemen asked me if I had any special requests for the mission,
I stated that I had only one: Chuck and Joan should visit the West Bank
"settlement" of Efrat.

Efrat is one of a group of settlements comprising the Etzion bloc
(in Hebrew, Gush Etzion), located south of Jerusalem in the region of
the Judean hills. In the modern era of Jewish return to the ancient
homeland, the Etzion bloc was first settled by Jews in the 1920s. The
leading Jewish community of the Etzion bloc was a kibbutz known as
Kfar Etzion.

On November 29, 1947, the United Nations General Assembly voted to
partition the British mandate of Palestine into Jewish and Arab states,
with Jerusalem to exist as an internationalized city. The Jews accepted
the partition plan, while the Palestinian Arabs rejected it and
started a civil war against the Jews, assisted by the Arab Legion of
Transjordan. The civil war began on the day of the partition vote and
lasted until May 14, 1948, the date of the Declaration of Independence
of the Jewish State of Israel. On that day, the new Israeli state was
attacked by all the neighboring Arab states, but the Jews eventually
prevailed, culminating in the armistice agreements of early 1949.

During the 1947-1948 civil war, Kfar Etzion and the other Etzion
bloc communities were destroyed by the Palestinian Arab guerrillas
and the Arab Legion. The Jewish inhabitants of the Etzion bloc were
either massacred or expelled.

The Etzion bloc survivors of the 1947-1948 war never gave up their
dream of returning to their former lands. After the Israelis regained
the area in the June, 1967 war, this dream of return became a reality.

Efrat was founded in the Etzion bloc area in 1980 and today has
a population of approximately 8,000. The entire Etzion bloc has a
population of approximately 50,000.

So on a bright, sunny Friday morning in April, 1994, we members of
the Haytaian mission left our hotel in Jerusalem for Efrat. The trip
took only 20 minutes.

We entered Efrat through the main guard gate and immediate saw
the central community school and plaza and residential areas of
tree-lined streets and attractive stone houses with red tiled roofs
— not exactly Quonset huts and tents. Throughout the municipality,
one always has a magnificent view of the Judean Hills.

This was not what the Haytaians were expecting when I told them we
were visiting an Israeli West Bank settlement. When we exited our van,
Chuck took me aside and said to me, "I thought you told me we were
visiting a settlement. This isn’t a settlement. It’s a suburb!"

Chuck had unwittingly uttered a profound truth regarding the so-called
"national consensus settlements,"which are located very close to the
Green Line. All these communities are located within suburban driving
range of Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, or Haifa.

They are called "national consensus settlements" because virtually
all Israelis favor their retention, even if a territorial compromise
agreement is reached in which Israel relinquishes control of part of
the West Bank for the creation of a Palestinian Arab state. The great
majority of the Israelis do not want to withdraw all the way to the
1967 Israeli borders, as they are an invitation to the destruction
of the Jewish State.

We were most fortunate to have the Chief Rabbi of Efrat Rabbi Shlomo
Riskin, as our guide. He is the ultimate rabbinical Renaissance man,
a person whose qualities and achievements directly rebut the stereotype
of an Israeli rabbi as portrayed by American mainstream liberal media.

Rabbi Riskin is one of the leading Modern Orthodox Jewish rabbis in
the world. The term "Modern Orthodox" is used in contrast to "Haredi"
fundamentalist Orthodoxy. Modern Orthodoxy emphasizes Zionism, secular
learning as well as religious studies, and cooperation on matters of
common community concern with all sectors of the Jewish community,
not just the Orthodox.

Originally from Brooklyn, Rabbi Riskin graduated as valedictorian of
his class at Yeshiva University in Manhattan with a major in Greek,
Latin, and English literatures, and later he received a PhD in Near
East Languages and Literature from New York University. In 1965,
he marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. on the famous Selma to
Montgomery march.

After receiving his rabbinic ordination at Yeshiva University,
Rabbi Riskin became the founding rabbi of Lincoln Square Synagogue
in Manhattan’s Upper West Side in 1963. Under his leadership,
Lincoln Square Synagogue was a magnet for attracting previously
non-observant Jews to Orthodox Judaism. It became one of the most
successful Orthodox synagogues in Manhattan, with remarkable growth
in terms of both membership and activities.

Rabbi Riskin was beloved at Lincoln Square, and he could have remained
as rabbi of the synagogue for life. In 1983, however, he left the
security of Lincoln Square Synagogue to move to Israel and become the
Chief Rabbi of Efrat. He duplicated his Manhattan success in Israel
by founding Ohr Torah Stone Institutions, a network of junior high
schools, high schools, colleges, and graduate programs educating over
3,000 students.

He could not be more proud of his community of Efrat, in which numerous
American Modern Orthodox Jewish families, including New Jerseyans,
have established residence as new Israeli citizens. When he first
arrived in Efrat, there was no running water. Today, Efrat is a
thriving, attractive community.

During his years in Efrat, Rabbi Riskin made extensive efforts to
establish friendly relations with the residents of the nearby Arab
village of Wadi Nis. On the day of our visit, however, West Bank
Jewish-Arab relations constituted a troubling subject for me.

Approximately five weeks earlier, Baruch Goldstein, a Jewish follower
of the late Meir Kahane, whose views I found abhorrent, had committed
a bloodthirsty act of Jewish terrorism. Goldstein was a physician,
formerly from Brooklyn, who resided in the Kiryat Arba settlement
near Hebron. On February 24, 1994, Goldstein entered into the Cave
of Machpelah in Hebron, a site holy to both Jews and Muslims, and
opened fire on unarmed Palestinian Muslim worshippers, killing 29 and
wounding 125, before he was attacked and killed by the Arab survivors.

Goldstein’s act of despicable terrorism had occurred on Purim, a joyous
Jewish holiday, described in the Biblical book of Esther, commemorating
the deliverance of the Jewish people throughout the ancient Persian
Empire from a plot by Haman the Agagite to destroy them. To me,
the Goldstein massacre was a shameful blot in Jewish history, and it
gave unwarranted credibility to those who falsely portrayed West Bank
Jewish settlers as extreme right wing violent zealots.

I told Rabbi Riskin that the Goldstein massacre had damaged
the effectiveness of us Americans who had been advocates for the
settlements in the Etzion Bloc, Efrat in particular. I asked him what
had been his reaction to this tragedy, and I will never forget his
following response:

"When I received the news of the Goldstein massacre, I contacted nine
other Jewish male residents of Efrat. That way, we would have a minyan
— the ten men quorum necessary to say Kaddish — the Jewish memorial
prayer for the dead. Then, we went to Wadi Nis, gave our condolences
to the Arab leaders of the village, and then said the Kaddish for the
Arabs who had been killed by Goldstein. Then, I declared that in view
of this tragedy, there would be no dancing in Efrat this Purim."

This is a story about Efrat that you never heard in the American
mainstream media in 1994. Down through the ensuing years, I have
repeated this story often in speeches I have given before Jewish
religious and secular audiences.

Not every West Bank settlement is like Efrat, or like the other
communities in the Etzion bloc for that matter. I relate this story,
however, to illustrate how false the stereotypes are regarding Jewish
settlers on the West Bank. To be sure, there is a small minority of
right wing West Bank Jewish settler extremists in some isolated areas.

By and large, however, the Jewish settlers in the West Bank national
consensus settlements are idealistic pioneering types who do not seek
either expulsion of their West Bank Arab neighbors or discrimination
against them.

Most Israelis would support a two state solution that would create
a Palestinian Arab state in West Bank and Gaza, as long as Israel
retained the national consensus settlements. In the northern region
of Israel near the Sea of Galilee and within the Green Line, the
Palestinian Arabs now actually constitute a majority. Yet neither
President Obama, nor Secretary of State Clinton, nor even Israeli Prime
Minister Benjamin "Bibi" Netanyahu ever says that these Palestinian
Arabs constitute an "obstacle to peace." Why, then, do Obama and
Clinton contend that the national Jewish consensus settlements impede
the peace process?

In fact, when Obama and Clinton make this argument, they are
conveniently forgetting recent history. In 2005, the Israeli government
of former Prime Minister Ariel Sharon ordered the army to expel 8,000
fellow Israelis from Gush Katif, a block of 17 Israeli settlements
within the southern Gaza Strip. This measure was an integral component
of Sharon’s unilateral disengagement plan, which was motivated by
the hope of reduced tensions with Gaza Palestinian Arabs. Instead of
moves towards peace, however, Hamas, which dominates Gaza, stepped up
its campaign of rockets launched against the Israeli municipalities
of Sderot and Ashkelon.

The real obstacle to peace is not the existence of the Israeli
national consensus settlements. Instead, it is the denial by Hamas
of Israel’s right to exist at all and the refusal of the Palestinian
Authority, which dominates Palestinian Arabs in the West Bank, to
recognize Israel’s right to exist as a Jewish state. The withdrawal
from Gush Katif proved the willingness of Israelis to enter into a
territorial compromise, but this cannot take place if the very right
of existence of Israel as a Jewish State is denied by its Palestinian
Arab neighbors.

As for the Israeli citizens of the Etzion bloc, in 2009 they received
a most unexpected visit from Jimmy Carter, who prior to Obama was
regarded as the President least supportive of Israel. He met with
members of the Gush Etzion Regional Council (which, incidentally,
does not include Efrat, in spite of its status as an Etzion bloc
settlement). Afterwards, to the astonishment of both the Israeli
media and local leaders, Carter made the following statement about
the Etzion bloc:

"This particular settlement is not one that I envision ever being
abandoned, or changed over into a Palestinian territory. This is
part of the close settlements to the 1967 line that I think will be
here forever."

It took a visit to the Etzion bloc for Jimmy Carter to understand the
Israeli case for this group of settlements. My fervent hope is that
Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton will make a similar visit to Efrat
and that they have the same good fortune as Chuck Haytaian and I had
in 1994 to have a great man, Rabbi Shlomo Riskin, as their guide.

Alan J. Steinberg served as Regional Administrator of Region 2 EPA
during the administration of former President George W. Bush. Region 2
EPA consists of the states of New York and New Jersey, the Commonwealth
of Puerto Rico, the U.S. Virgin Islands, and seven federally recognized
Indian nations. He currently serves as Public Servant in Residence
at Monmouth University.

http://www.newjer

Gagik Minasyan : La Suspension Du Processus De Ratification Etait La

GAGIK MINASYAN : LA SUSPENSION DU PROCESSUS DE RATIFICATION ETAIT LA DECISION LA PLUS LOGIQUE
Stephane

armenews
12 mai 2010
ARMENIE

La suspension du processus de ratification des protocoles armeno-turcs
etait la decision la plus logique et correcte que l’Armenie devait
faire a declare le President du Comite Parlementaire Permanent du
Credit financier et des Affaires Budgetaires Gagik Minasyan lors
d’une conference de presse.

Selon lui, l’Armenie avait quatre options : soit suspendre le
processus, soit retirer sa signature, ratifiez les protocoles avant
que la Turquie ne le fasse ou ne rien faire du tout. " L’Armenie a
reussi a manifester a la communaute internationale qui des parties
respecte les mots et les actes " a-t-il dit.

Questionne sur les evenements futurs dans les relations armeno-turques,
Gagik Minasyan a exprime l’espoir que " les forces qui arriveront au
pouvoir suite aux elections parlementaires en Turquie, seront mieux
prepare a l’etablissement de relations avec l’Armenie sans conditions
prealables. " Il ne croit pas qu’une ouvelle etape commencera dans le
processus de normalisation armeno-turc avant les prochaines elections
parlementaires en Turquie.

Gagik Minasyan n’est pas oppose a la participation de l’Iran dans
le processus de règlement du conflit du Karabakh, considerant
particulièrement que ce pays a toujours demontre une position
equilibree sur la question.