UCLA AEF Armenian History Chair Conference October 28/29

PRESS RELEASE
UCLA AEF Chair in Armenian History
Contact: Prof. Richard Hovannisian
Tel: 310-825-3375
Email: [email protected]
1. THE NEXT UCLA AEF CHAIR CONFERENCE, OCTOBER 28-29, 2006
“The Ebb and Flow of Armenians in India and Southeast Asia –Traders,
Merchants, Intellectuals, and Communities.”
Several additional scholars may be included in the program. Interested
scholars should submit a one-page abstract by July 1 to
Prof. RG Hovannisian at “[email protected]
2. A description of the program in the Writers Union of Armenia on the
occasion of the translation into Armenian of volume I of Richard
Hovannisian’s “Republic of Armenia” may be found on the web site
, along with other news of interest.
3. Attached is a report on the the recent UCLA conference on “Armenia:
Challenges of Sustainable Development,” dedicated to renowned UCLA
economic theorist Armen Alchian.

www.ACNIS.am

The Response to Hatred: A Labor of Love

The Response to Hatred: A Labor of Love
Artistic monuments destroyed by Azeris live on in
Ararat Sarkissian’s designs
by Sonia Porter
May 27, 2006
Much of Ararat Sarkissian’s art reflects a lifelong fascination with
signs and icons. It’s a fascination that goes to the heart of
symbol-making — its mechanics, cultural underpinnings, and evolution
across the ages. Not surprisingly, history is a powerful constant in
Sarkissian’s paintings and graphics, making for narratives, however,
that go beyond the linear.
Alphabets, pictographs, architecture, urban grids, religious
iconography. All of these spheres are by turns honored and playfully
tweaked in Sarkissian’s work, whose perhaps most salient statement is
about movement and becoming. In his paintings of vanished cities, for
instance, the purpose is not to inspire nostalgia or romanticize a
glorious past, but to convey the transformation of a certain spirit
that may be traced to the vanished space in question.
It is no doubt the quest for such a transformation that these days
finds Sarkissian busy in his Yerevan studio, painstakingly reproducing
khachkars, or cross stones, that no longer exist.
Cross stones have been a central element in Armenian architecture and
decorative art since the 4th century. Consisting of intricate cross
designs carved on rectangular slabs of stone, cross stones can
function as gravestones, free-standing monuments in cathedral
complexes, or integrated sections of church facades and other
structures. Cross stones were also built for a wide range of social
and political purposes. They commemorated war victories, baptisms and
weddings, and were built as offerings to God for good luck and the
redemption of one’s sins.
Ever since the early 19th century, Armenian cross stones have been
casually and often systematically destroyed throughout the occupied
territories of historic Armenia. The obliteration of cross stones
continues today in Turkey, Nakhichevan, and Azerbaijan, where there
was a sizeable Armenian community until the start of the
Nagorno-Karabagh conflict in the late 1980s. In recent months, the
razing of Armenian monuments reached fever pitch in Nakhichevan, where
local armed forces destroyed some 3,500 cross stones in the Old Jugha
cemetery. The incident prompted Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan
Oskanian to file a letter of protest with the United Nations.
`The men behind the destruction of these monuments either don’t
realize or don’t care that they’re wiping out irreplaceable pieces of
a rich artistic legacy,’ Sarkissian said. `Their crime is being
carried out not only against Armenian culture per se, but civilization
as a whole. As a human being and an artist, I am saddened and
outraged, but I also believe that I must act.’
Sarkissian’s decision to respond has resulted in one of his most
profoundly-felt projects to date. After pouring over hundreds of
sources such as photographs, cross stone fragments, archeologist
drawings, and illuminated manuscripts, he has begun etching likenesses
of extinct cross stones, then embossing the designs on paper that he
himself makes, using a time-honored technique. The goal is to produce
packages containing 36 designs each — 36 being the number of letters
in the Armenian alphabet. Each package will also include a compact
disc documenting the destruction of cross stones and featuring
Sarkissian at work throughout the reproduction process.
`I wish I could help undo the damage at the Old Jugha cemetery… I’d
love to travel there right now and start rebuilding some of those
lovely cross stones,’ Sarkissian said. `But wishful thinking won’t get
us anywhere.’ He then pointed at his designs. `This project, right
here, is my way of dealing with the brutality in Nakhichevan. I’d like
to believe that, in a sense, I’m rebuilding what has been lost,
through these recreations on paper; I’m helping preserve the memory.’
History, Christian lore, folklore, and a great deal of personal
narratives converge in Sarkissian’s embossed designs. As he explained,
the diversity of themes and styles found on cross stones offers an
important insight into the history and artistic evolution of the
Armenian people.
`Armenian sculptors did not simply carve a cross on a piece of stone,’
Sarkissian continued. `Rather, they expanded the definition of the
design with progressively elaborate compositions.’
Born in Gyumri, Sarkissian studied fine art in his birthplace and
Yerevan, and has become one of Armenia’s most prominent painters and
graphic artists, exhibiting his works in Europe, the United States,
Japan, and Russia. Several of his paintings are now part of museum
collections throughout the world. Sarkissian has also published a
number of catalogues, including monographs on signs, icons, and
archetypes.

Ms. Sonia Potter has acted as philanthropic advisor to galleries,
museums and foundations promoting artists, cultural institutions and
humanitarian causes. She may be reached at [email protected]

Exhibition Dedicated to 15th Anniversary of Independence Opens at NA

EXHIBITION DEDICATED TO 15TH ANNIVERSARY OF INDEPENDENCE OPENS AT RA
NATIONAL ASSEMBLY

YEREVAN, MAY 25, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The exhibition of
works of Arev Petrosian, a member of the Painters’ Union of Armenia,
that opened on May 24, at the National Assembly, on the initiative of
Hranush Hakobian, the Chairwoman of the RA Parliament Standing
Committee on Science, Education, Culture and Youth Issues, is
dedicated to the 15th anniversary of the independence of Armenia. “We
got an opportunity to see the future of our country brighter,” Vahan
Hovhannisian, the NA Deputy Speaker, a ARF Bureau member mentioned,
looking at sculptor Benik Petrosian’s daughter’s colourful painting on
organic glass. “We sometimes listen to so pessimistic speeches in the
conference-hall that it seems that everything has perished out of the
hall, but it appears, people live, create, and create wonderfully, out
of the hall,” the NA Speaker said.

Have prejudice, won’t travel

The Times, UK
May 26 2006
Have prejudice, won’t travel
Ben MacIntyre
We used to be happiest at home, away from ‘bloody foreigners’. That
was before cheap air fares

THIS SUMMER, as an antidote to all those books rhapsodising about the
Tuscan sun, you could dip into The Clumsiest People in Europe: Or,
Mrs Mortimer’s Bad-Tempered Guide to the Victorian World, which may
qualify as the most intolerant travel guide ever published. Driving
over lemons? Mrs Mortimer would rather drive over foreigners.
Mrs Favell Lee Mortimer, an Englishwoman who started out as a
children’s author, published three volumes of travel writing between
1849 and 1854, covering the globe from Asia to Africa to the
Americas. She was even-handed, in a back-handed way: she despised
just about everyone and everything.

The Portuguese, as well as being `the clumsiest people in Europe’,
are `indolent, just like the Spaniards’. The Welsh are `not very
clean’; the Zulus: `A miserable race of people’; the Greeks: `Do not
bear their troubles well; when they are unhappy, they scream like
babies’; Armenians `live in holes in the ground . . . because they
hope the Kurds may not find out where they are.’ Buddhists, Hindus,
Mohammedans: all received a thrashing from the aggressively
Protestant Mrs Mortimer.
Lao-Tzu, the father of Taoism, is dismissed as `an awful liar’. Roman
Catholicism comes off little better: `A kind of Christian religion,
but a very bad one.’ Oddly, however, she professes a soft spot for
Nubians: `A fine race . . . of a bright copper colour’.
Mrs Mortimer’s guide (which comes out in paperback next month)
provides a strange glimpse into the blinkered mind of a middle-class,
middle-aged bigot in Middle England in the middle of the 19th
century. Her sweepingly negative generalisations and racial
stereotyping seem even more remarkable for the fact that this doughty
world traveller didn’t go to the places she described and disparaged.
The sum total of her foreign travel was one childhood trip to Paris
and Brussels. Her knowledge of Taoism was exactly zero. She had never
set eyes on a Nubian. She amassed her pungent prejudices sitting in
her English drawing room.
This was once an acceptable British way to travel (or, more exactly,
stay at home and not travel). Mrs Mortimer’s all-embracing xenophobia
was probably extreme, but it was far from unique. Those sorts of
casual prejudices were part of the arrogance of empire, but also
reflected a deep-seated insecurity. Mrs Mortimer was terrified of
anybody un-English because she stayed in England.
Other countries have chauvinists, but the blanket disdain for Johnny
Foreigner was a peculiarly British phenomenon. `Don’t go abroad,’
muttered George VI, speaking for his class and most of his realm.
`Abroad’s bloody!’ Nancy Mitford’s Uncle Matthew ventured abroad
once, but `four years in France and Italy between 1914 and 1918 had
given him no great opinion of foreigners . . . `Frogs are slightly
better than Huns or Wops, but abroad is unutterably bloody and
foreigners are fiends’.’
There is a delightful line in Gosford Park, when one snobbish British
character turns to his weeping wife and hisses: `Would you stop
snivelling? One might think you were Italian!’ It is a remark that
perfectly blends snootiness, stiff-upper-lippery and ignorance.
Evelyn Waugh, so acute on so many subjects, was capable of travelling
with his eyes closed: he sneered that, from the air, Paris without
the Eiffel Tower looked like an extended High Wycombe.
Cheap and plentiful foreign air travel may be killing the planet, but
at least it has finally killed off the sort of prejudice that was
once the hallmark of the British armchair traveller. Britons today
wander in vast droves, and are informed about Abroad in a way that
would have been entirely foreign to our grandparents. Mrs Mortimer
insisted that the English `like best being at home, and this is
right’. Today the English like best being on a cheapo flight bound
for somewhere as far from home as possible. And this, it seems to me,
is right.
The World Cup will bring with it the usual bout of soul-searching
when some sunburnt, beer-drenched oik insists on performing the
`Don’t mention the war’ sketch in downtown Munich. But if this is
xenophobia, it is a pale, ironical imitation of the deeply ingrained
aversion to foreign folk that once prevailed in our culture.
Racism persists, but gone is the fear of foreignness. The British are
as likely as ever to complain that the French smell of garlic and the
Germans have no jokes. The difference is that the vast majority of
Britons know the stereotypes are not true. We no longer laugh with
Mrs Mortimer – as she points to the clumsy Portuguese and the scurvy
Greeks – but at her.
No politician could now declare, as the Earl of Crawford, a former
Tory Cabinet minister, did in 1929: `I am a xenophobe, particularly
as regards the French. I look upon France as a corrupt and corrupting
influence, and the less personal intercourse between Britain and
France the better.’
The Second World War reinforced that sense of superior isolation. The
MI5 officer responsible for interviewing suspected foreign agents
during the war compiled an official report offering observations such
as `Italy is country populated by undersized, posturing folk’. He was
not joking.
For some time after the war, the British island mentality meant
defining our nationality in contradistinction to others. `For the
English,’ David Frost and Anthony Jay once wrote,`the best definition
of hell is of a place where the Germans are the police, the Swedes
are the comedians, the Italians are the defence force . . .’. Today,
according to Crap Towns, the best English definition of hell is Hull.
We owe Mrs Mortimer a debt, for her little book is the shining
example of how not to travel in the British manner, a reminder of a
way of thinking that has gone forever.
Mrs Mortimer wrote her own epitaph: `They always laugh when they hear
of customs unlike their own; for they think that they do everything
in the best way, and that all other ways are foolish.’ Was this some
sudden flash of self-knowledge? No, this is Mrs Mortimer, sticking
the boot into the Bechuanas of South Africa.

Let every tailor mend his own coat, A. Harutyunyan told G. Poghosyan

Let every tailor mend his own coat, Alexan Harutyunyan told Gevorg Poghosyan

ArmRadio.am
26.05.2006 16:24
`Let every tailor mend his own coat,’ said Alexan Harutyunyan,
President of the Council of Public Radio and Television Council of
Armenia in response to the article by Director of the Institute of
Philosophy and Law of the National Academy of Sciences, Sociologist
Gevorg Poghosyan. Evaluating the participation of Armenia in
`Eurovision-2006′ and the results, the latter said that Andre’s song
included Turkish tunes, and the contest was a political action. `If
Armenchik participated in the contest, he would receive an equal
number of points,’ Gevorg Poghosyan added.
`Gevorg Poghosyan had better make the above-mentioned proverb a
principle of his life,’ Alexan Harutyunyan said in an interview to
`Radiolur’ correspondent.
By the way, it was noted in the PostScript of the above-mentioned
article in Aib-Fe: `We consider that after learning about Gevorg
Poghosyan’s views on Armenia’s entry at `Eurovision’ and the results,
Alexan Harutyunyan will not advise him to declare a hunger strike, sew
his mouth or cry.’
Alexan Harutyunyan responded, `I have met him (Gevorg Poghosyan)
several times. Looking into his eyes, one can see that he will not be
able to keep a hunger strike, it is dangerous for his
health. Definitely, I will not give that advice.’

ANCA-WR: Unprecedented Armenian Indy Day Celebr. in Little Armenia

Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918 Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]
PRESS RELEASE
Thursday, May 25, 2006
Contact: Lerna Kayserian
Tel: (818) 500-1918
Armenian Independence Day Festival in Little Armenia Sets Stage for
Dynamic Celebration

– Los Angeles Mayor Villaraigosa, diverse entertainment and vendors
all a part of unprecedented ‘block party’

Hollywood, CA – The Armenian Cultural Foundation has joined forces
with the Armenian Youth Federation – Western Region (AYF-WR), in
coordination with Los Angeles Council President Eric Garcetti, to
present a dynamic festival in the heart of Little Armenia on Sunday,
May 28, 2006.
Though the festival is an annual event for the AYF-WR in celebrating
Armenia’s first independence, this year’s celebration is unprecedented
because portions of Hollywood Boulevard (between Vermont and
Alexandria) will be blocked-off just for the event. The festival is
the result of extensive teamwork between Council President Garcetti’s
office, the ACF, and AYF, and will include special visits by
representatives of the Armenian Consulate in LA, and Los Angeles Mayor
Antonio Villaraigosa.
A variety of vendors, diverse entertainers, performers, writers and
organizations will be on hand from 10 a.m. and 6 p.m. to feature
Armenian culture and raise awareness of Armenian history. Traditional
Armenian food and artifacts will also be a part of the festivities,
all in the tradition of celebrating Armenia’s cultural wealth.

“The Armenian Youth Federation celebrates and recognizes the
importance of our nation’s victories in establishing, after 600 years
of oppression, the first independent republic of Armenia on May 28,
1918, which set the foundation to today’s independent republic,”
explains AYF-WR Chairman Tro Tchekidjian.

Entertainment at the festival will include performances by Element
Band, Vokee, Sako, Ara Sahagian, Karnig Sarkissian, Nersik Ispirian,
Paul Baghdadlian, Gor Mkhitarian, Ara Shahbazian, and many
more. Various dance groups are also scheduled to perform traditional
and contemporary interpretations of Armenian folk dances throughout
the day.

Organizations participating in the festival include the Armenian
Relief Society, Shant Student Association, Homenetmen (Armenian
General Athletic Union and Scouts), and the Armenian National
Committee of America.

For more information on the festival, please contact the AYF Western
Region office at (818) 507-1933 or visit The Event is
open to the public and admission is free.

www.anca.org
www.ayfwest.org.

Oskanian Promotes Armenia Fund’s New Project in Los Angeles

Armenia Fund, Inc.
111 North Jackson St. Ste. 205
Glendale, CA 91206
Tel: 818-243-6222
Fax: 818-243-7222
Web:
Contact: Sarkis Kotanjian
[email protected]
PRESS RELEASE
May 23, 2006
Oskanian Promotes Armenia Fund’s New Project in Los Angeles
Armenia Fund Embarks on Rural Poverty Eradication in 150 Armenian villages
Los Angeles, CA – Foreign Minister of the Republic of Armenia, H.E.
Vartan Oskanian, and Ambassador of Armenia to the United States, H.E.
Tatoul Markarian were in Los Angeles on May 19-20 to promote Armenia
Fund’s new beneficiary project – Rural Poverty Eradication in Armenia.
The Minister and Ambassador held meetings with Armenia Fund’s leadership
over the weekend, discussing plans for the socio-economic recovery
program and its eventual implementation. The discussions were focused on
prioritizing implementation strategies and the steps to carry out the
program in the Diaspora and defining the organizational mechanisms
through which Armenia Fund will implement public outreach, fundraising,
communications and coordination of the Rural Poverty Eradication
Program.
Armenia Fund’s International Board of Trustees, which includes prominent
Diaspora Armenians – Charles Aznavour, Mark Geragos and Vartan
Gregorian, among others, approved the large-scale reconstruction project
aimed at eliminating rural poverty in Armenia and Karabakh. The program
will parallel the works of the $235 million Millennium Challenge
Corporation (MCC) project that is financed by the United States
Government. The MCC will rebuild rural roads and install a modern
irrigation network throughout the republic over the course of five years.

`We envision that the Armenia Fund is best situated to take over as the
umbrella which will appoint a governance board, a fiscal agent, as well
as the management team. This ambitious program is a natural expansion of
the Armenia Fund’s mission – to facilitate infrastructure and
development programs that are beyond the government’s capacity,’ said
Oskanian.
The economic blockades imposed by neighboring Turkey and Azerbaijan have
crippled the fledgling republic’s economy, leaving it without a safe and
secure transit means of goods and services. Furthermore, with the
collapse of the Soviet Union, the centralized Moscow-based economy
shattered and sent negative ripple effects throughout Armenia. Roads,
communication lines, irrigation and drinking water systems, as well as
energy supplies were all hampered and damaged due to neglect.
Building on the international momentum of increased aid to the economic
recovery of the country, Armenia Fund will begin this unprecedented
large-scale infrastructure development program. Armenia, at the
assessment of international experts, has the potential to become the
breadbasket of the region, despite being a landlocked mountainous country.
“The decision to have the Armenia Fund as the organization to carry out
the Rural Poverty Eradication Program speaks to the quality and track
record of Armenia Fund. We are all proud to be a part of this new
initiative,” said Maria Mehranian, Chairperson of Armenia Fund, Inc.
Through this project Armenia Fund will implement a comprehensive
development plan in the rural regions of Armenia. The project will
include development of waterways, irrigation systems, roads, educational
facilities, hospitals as well as agricultural development assistance
programs. Similar to the Martakert Regional Development Program,
currently underway in Nagorno-Karabakh, the Rural Poverty Eradication
Program will be developed by experts from Armenia, France, and the
United States who are currently working with Armenia Fund.

Armenia Fund, Inc., is a non-profit 501(c)(3) tax-exempt corporation
established in 1994 to facilitate large-scale humanitarian and
infrastructure development assistance to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh.
Armenia Fund, Inc. is the U.S. Western Region affiliate of `Hayastan’
All-Armenian Fund. Tax ID# 95-4485698

www.armeniafund.org

Discussion Of The “Law And Theory Of Judicial Precedent” Manual To B

DISCUSSION OF THE “LAW AND THEORY OF JUDICIAL PRECEDENT” MANUAL TO BE HELD AT RA COURT OF APPEAL
ArmRadio.am
24.05.2006 10:13
On may 24 the presentation and discussion of the “Law and Theory of
Judicial Precedence” manual will be held at RA Court of Appeal.
The manual aims at introducing Armenian Judges to the major legal
principles, which lie in the basis of the legal systems in the United
States, United Kingdom and Continental Europe.
International experts from the US, Great Britain and representatives
of court system will participate in the discussion.

“One Box Is Enough To Reveal The Reasons Of The Crash”

“ONE BOX IS ENOUGH TO REVEAL THE REASONS OF THE CRASH”
A1+
[09:04 pm] 22 May, 2006
One of the record boxes of the Armenian plane A-320 which crashed
on May 3 has been found, press secretary of the RA Civic Aviation
Administration Gayane Davtyan confirms. According to her, this box
has recorded the conversation of the pilot and the Russian dispatcher.
Tomorrow authorized representative of the Civic Aviation Gagik
Galstyan will leave for Sochi. He is also deputy head of the Committee
investigating the results of the crash. Most probably the record box
will be deciphered in Moscow.
Is this box enough to get information about the reasons of the
crash? We asked this question to head of the Civic Aviation Union,
pilot Dmitrij Adbashyan.
He informed us that there are two record boxes – work and
emergency. The second is never removed, while the first is taken out
after every flight. “The data of the flight are investigated for the
plane service and other work”.
According to the pilot, regardless of the fact which box has been found
the data of the flight will have been recorded in it. According to him,
if the found box has recorded to conversation of the pilot and the
dispatcher, it cannot have failed to record the other conversations
of the pilot’s cabin.
What is the other box is not found? “Even if it is not, that’s
not important. If one is deciphered, that will be enough”, Dmitrij
Adbashyan told “A1+”.

ULP To Hold Some Vacant Posts In Executive Power

ULP TO HOLD SOME VACANT POSTS IN EXECUTIVE POWER
Noyan Tapan
May 22 2006
YEREVAN, MAY 22, NOYAN TAPAN. The United Labor Party (ULP) will
transfer 5 mln drams (over 11 thousand USD) to the account opened
especially for the purpose of providing assistance to the families
of those who died in the accident of A-320 plane. As Noyan Tapan
correspondent was informed from party head Gurgen Arsenian, such
a decision was made at the May 20 sitting of the party political
board. According to him, the issue of the posts that remained vacant
in the executive power after the Orinats Yerkir (Country of Law)
party’s leaving the coalition was also discussed. In particular,
the most active members of the party will assume the posts of Deputy
Minister of Labor and Social Issues, Deputy Governors of Lori and
Shirak regions. According to our unofficial checked information,
the party was also given the right to be nominated for the post of
the Minister of Culture and Youth Affairs: it will be assumed by
non-partisan Hasmik Poghosian, current Chairwoman of the Armenian
Company of Cultural Ties and Cooperation. As for vacant ruling posts
at the parliament, G.Arsenian refused to provide any information
considering it non-expedient to speak about nominations on the vacant
posts for the present.