ANKARA: Armenian-French Protester Throws Paint On Turkish Ambassador

ARMENIAN-FRENCH PROTESTER THROWS PAINT ON TURKISH AMBASSADOR

BGN News, Turkey
March 2 2015

A French citizen of Armenian descent threw paint on Turkey’s ambassador
to Paris at a conference on Monday.

Turkish Ambassador Hakkı Akil was the target of a one-man protest
on Monday when a French citizen of Armenian descent threw paint on
him at a conference.

Akil was speaking at the “Laicism in Turkey and France” conference
at Paris’ Descartes University Law School when an unidentified person
approached his podium and heaved paint at him.

Detained by the audience and security, it was determined that the
protester was not a student. The ambassador resumed the rest of his
speech after the incident and left the conference.

Answering reporters’ questions afterwards, Akil pointed out similar
attacks had taken place at tourism offices in Paris and Marseilles. He
added that “it wouldn’t be surprising” if such attacks increased as
the centennial of the 1915 events approached.

March 2, 2015 | BGNNews.com | İstanbul

http://national.bgnnews.com/armenian-french-protester-throws-paint-on-turkish-ambassador-haberi/3956

Starbucks Offends Armenian-Americans With New Ad — Shows Armenian W

STARBUCKS OFFENDS ARMENIAN-AMERICANS WITH NEW AD — SHOWS ARMENIAN WOMEN UNDER THE SYMBOL OF TURKEY

The Inquisitr
March 2 2015

If there is any United States company recognized for supporting liberal
views more so than any other, it is easily going to be Starbucks. The
Inquisitr has reported numerous times on Starbucks, and how they’ve
centralized their working ethic of a progressive stance.

The prominent coffee chain is one of the few businesses outside of
tattoo studios that allow their employees to show off their tattoos.

They also refuse to welcome anyone at their coffee shops who have
guns on them, legal or not.

However, when Starbucks tried to honor people ethnically from the
Middle East, they instead offended them, specifically the Armenians
with their latest ad.

According to Daily Mail, Starbucks tried to utilize a new ad to
appeal to Middle Easterners with posters displaying Armenian women in
traditional clothing under the crescent and star of the Turkish flag.

Many Armenian-Americans found the ad to be offensive because of
what Turkey did to them in between 1915 and 1918. About 1.5 million
Armenians were killed by the hands of Turkish Ottoman forces. The
Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) posted a photo of the
ad on their official Facebook page, inquiring why Starbucks would
use such an image.

“Why is Starbucks selling coffee using an image of women, dressed
in traditional Armenian costumes, celebrating a Turkish state that
systematically victimized Armenian women during the Armenian genocide,
and that still denies this crime against all humanity?”

Presently, Starbucks has taken down the poster seen in the Woodland
Hills shop, the one reportedly seen online. Starbucks also made an
official apology through a response to the ANCA on their Facebook page.

“Serving as a place for the community to connect is core to our
business and we strive to be locally relevant in all of our stores. We
missed the mark here and we apologize for upsetting our customers
and the community.”

According to another article by The Guardian, several people on
social media have claimed they saw the posters up at other places
around Los Angeles, a city that is home to 446,000 people of full or
partial Armenian ethnicity. Even the ANCA are preparing for possible
backlash from the community for the ads.”

“It became very clear very quickly that this was a very serious
issue for the entire community, because we started getting a flood
of concern.”

The reason why there is such concern is because this year marks
the 100th year anniversary of the tragedy, which is recognized as
genocide in 43 of the 50 states here in the U.S., and in more than
twenty countries, including Germany and Russia. Therefore, this year’s
commemoration will be far more important than previous years. Yet,
despite the “flood of concern,” ANCA did go on record to state that
Starbucks responded to the situation “very appropriately.”

http://www.inquisitr.com/1888013/starbucks-offends-armenian-americans-ad-armenian-women-under-symbol-turkey/

Taxi Drivers Stage Protests In Yerevan And Gyumri

TAXI DRIVERS STAGE PROTESTS IN YEREVAN AND GYUMRI

18:46 | March 2,2015 | Social

A group of individual taxi drivers (not employed by companies)
gathered in front of the government building today protesting the
recently amended law on Licensing which envisages that individual taxi
drivers in Yerevan must pay AMD 12,000 a month to the state budget. A
parallel protest was being held in Armenia’s second largest city of
Gyumri where taxi drivers are to pay AMD 8000 to the state budget.

The protesting drivers said they could hardly bare their abject needs
with the money they earn and cannot afford to pay so much money to
the state.

A delegation of five taxi drivers today was received by Artur
Arakelyan, Deputy Minister of Transport and Communications.

Details will be given later in the day.

http://en.a1plus.am/1207084.html

Evoking A Century-Old Flight: Some Fear History Is Repeating Itself

EVOKING A CENTURY-OLD FLIGHT: SOME FEAR HISTORY IS REPEATING ITSELF AS ARMENIANS FLEE SYRIA

Los Angeles Times
March 1, 2015 Sunday
Home Edition

ON THE GROUND IN YEREVAN, ARMENIA WITH GLEN JOHNSON

by Glen Johnson

Snare drums rustle and trumpets blare. Chocolates from a famed
confectioner in Syria are handed out among the crowd. The hall falls
silent. A minute of remembrance is observed for the more than 200,000
killed during almost four years of civil war in Syria.

Hundreds of ethnic Armenians from Syria, among the thousands who’ve
fled here to escape the fighting, gathered recently in downtown
Yerevan. They came together to celebrate the 60th anniversary of
the Armenian Central High School in Aleppo, Syria, a cornerstone of
Armenian identity in a city now devastated by war.

“Armenian schools keep Armenian identity alive,” said a woman who
fled Aleppo as rebels rolled into the city in July 2012, and who,
like others interviewed, did not want to be identified for security
reasons. “My parents went there, I went there, the school is like…”

“A treasure for Armenians,” another young woman chimed in.

The attendees had left their homes and businesses, schools and
farmlands, fleeing to Armenia’s capital as Syria descended into chaos.

Many are descendants of people who had gone to Syria to escape the
Armenian genocide of 1915 to 1918 under the Ottoman Empire, which
became the modern republic of Turkey. The Turkish government disputes
that a genocide took place.

The current exodus is one of the most significant movements of ethnic
Armenians since then.

“We are the descendants of those who survived the genocide,” said
Lena Halajian, who heads the Center for the Coordination of Syrian
Armenians’ Issues, a nongovernmental group here helping refugees
adapt. “I fear history is repeating itself.”

Participants at the celebration here read Armenian poetry as a
video of the Aleppo school — showing a modest library and students,
their hands stretched upward, fingers twitching as a teacher asked
a question — flashed on a screen. A quartet including well-known
Aleppo violinist Hovhannes Moubayed plays Dance of the Rose Maidens,
by Aram Khachaturian, the late Soviet Armenian composer.

The violinist, 44, fled Aleppo more than two years ago, and, like
others, he said he had embarked on a new life after leaving most of
his belongings behind.

“Now I try to work as a music teacher,” said Moubayed, who directed a
state music school in Aleppo. “I’ve started [in Armenia] at the very
bottom. But step by step, maybe I can survive.”

Some refugees had been targeted by militants.

“They handcuffed and blindfolded me once they knew I was Armenian,”
said a Syrian Armenian who gave his name as Krikor. “Then they whipped
and burned me.”

Gnarled scars stretch up his forearms now, and he shuffles uneasily.

In summer 2013, Krikor said, fighters with Al Qaeda-linked Al Nusra
Front abducted him from a shuttle bus in northwestern Syria’s Idlib
province. He escaped hours later and made his way to a government
checkpoint, and safety. The experience convinced him it was time
to leave.

Other Syrian Armenians have been kidnapped for their perceived wealth.

Still others have been killed in the crossfire or for sectarian
reasons. Syrian Armenians, part of the country’s 10% Christian
minority, have been targeted by militant Sunni Muslims, who have
become the dominant part of the opposition.

Most Syrian Armenians speak Arabic and Armenian, a fact that has
helped speed their assimilation in Yerevan.

Armenian schools play an integral role in preserving cultural roots
among the massive Armenian diaspora. The Armenian General Benevolent
Union, a nonprofit group promoting Armenian identity globally,
provides funds for the Aleppo school. The high school remains open,
but the population has plummeted.

“The problem is that it can be dangerous for students to travel there,”
said Hagop Mikayelian, 71, a former administrator at the school who
was kidnapped by a rebel group and held for ransom in 2013.

In September, Islamic State militants reportedly bombed an iconic
Armenian church and museum in the eastern Syrian city of Dair Alzour
that memorializes victims of the Turks. Lost were rare documents
detailing the mass killings, say community members, who also note that
bones of some of those who perished were laid in the foundations of
the now-destroyed monument.

“The memorial was living proof of what happened to Armenians,”
Halajian said. “They want to erase our history.”

As Armenians worldwide prepare for centennial memorials in April,
Turkish backing for Syrian insurgents is further fueling Armenian
outrage. The government has supported sundry rebel factions, including
radical Islamists, as it aggressively pursues its goal of ousting
Syrian President Bashar Assad.

And last March, extremist fighters poured into the Syrian Armenian
town of Kassab from across the border in Turkey.

Most of the town’s population fled south to territory still under
control of the Syrian government. Kassab is celebrated among Armenians
as a refuge for those who fled Turkey a century ago.

At the school anniversary gathering, a choir sings Armenian hymns as
ceremonies come to a close.

Generations of graduates flood the stage, embracing while a
photographer clicks away.

Special correspondent Johnson was recently in Yerevan. Times staff
writer Patrick J. McDonnell in Beirut contributed to this report.

GALLUP: Top Three Brightest Oppositionists In Armenia: Zaruhi Postan

GALLUP: TOP THREE BRIGHTEST OPPOSITIONISTS IN ARMENIA: ZARUHI POSTANJYAN, RAFFI HOVANNISIAN AND NIKOL PASHINYAN

by Nana Martirosyan

Monday, March 2, 16:21

According to a survey conducted by the Gallup International Association
Office in Armenia, the brightest oppositionists in Armenia are Zaruhi
Postanjyan, a member of Hertiage Party faction, Raffi Hovannisian,
Leader of Heritage Party, and MP Nikol Pashinyan, Aram Navasardyan,
the Head of the GALLUP International Association Office in Armenia,
told reporters when presenting the survey on March 2.

He said the respondents were asked to assess the politicians on a
5-point scale. The above three politicians were given by 3.8 points.

Then go Gagik Tsarukyan, leader of the Prosperous Armenia Party (3.7),
Naira Zohrabyan (3.7), Levon Ter-Petrosyan (3.6). The following
politicians proved at the bottom of the list: Heghine Bisharyan,
Secretary of Orinats Yerkir Party (2.3), Arthur Baghdasaryan, Leader of
Orinats Yerkir Party (2.2), and Robert Kocharyan, the second president
of Armenia (2.2).

Navasardyan said the survey was conducted between the known dispute of
PAP Leader Gagik Tsarukyan and President Serzh Sargsyan. Consequently,
the assessment could have changed tangibly since then. In addition,
the respondents were asked to assess the opposition activity of the
political forces on a 5-point scale. Top five opposition parties were
as follows: Heritage – 3.7 points, Prosperous Armenia – 3.63 points,
Armenian National Congress – 3.62 points, ARFD – 3.2 points, and
Orinats Yerkir Party -2.4 points. The survey was conducted in the
period from Nov 20 up to Nov 27 among 1067 respondents throughout
the territory of Armenia.

http://www.arminfo.am/index.cfm?objectid=0F26AB70-C0DF-11E4-8BBA0EB7C0D21663

Erdogan: Turkey Won’t Open Border While Azerbaijani Lands Are Occupi

ERDOGAN: TURKEY WON’T OPEN BORDER WHILE AZERBAIJANI LANDS ARE OCCUPIED

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
March 2 2015

2 March 2015 – 10:12am

President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan said that the country will
not open its border with Armenia until Yerevan withdraws from the
occupied lands of Azerbaijan.

The president added that the international community condemns the
occupation of Azerbaijani territories by Armenia.

Turkish President expressed confidence that the issue of the conflict
settlement will be resolved very quickly if Russia and the United
States decide to do so, Trend reports.

Armenian History Events At University Of South Florida In Tampa

ARMENIAN HISTORY EVENTS AT UNIVERSITY OF SOUTH FLORIDA IN TAMPA

By MassisPost
Updated: March 2, 2015

TAMPA, FL — Despite the success, fame, and occasional notoriety of
Armenians worldwide, not a lot is understood about Armenian history.

An upcoming talk at the USF Libraries Holocaust & Genocide Studies
Center aims to change that.

Scholar Dr. Garabet Moumdjian will speak in the USF Tampa Library’s
Grace Allen Room Thursday, April 23rd at 2:00 PM (4th floor). Entitled
“Rising From the Ashes of Tragedy: Armenia’s Triumph Over It’s
Genocide,” his talk will present an overview of Armenian civilization,
their advanced feudal system that predated Europe’s, and the many
waves of foreign invasion that followed.

The story of how the Armenian people and their 5,000 year-old
culture survived a genocide and went on to form communities of highly
successful professionals worldwide will be presented. Both experts
and novices will learn something new in this talk by authoritative
Armenian and Middle East studies scholar Moumdjian. Following the
talk, hear from a panel of Armenian students on their personal and
family experiences with this period in history.

The event at the USF Tampa Library is one of a series in April which
memorialize the Armenian genocide and spread awareness of Armenian
contributions:

A special screening of “Orphans of the Genocide” and director Q&A
takes place on Thursday, April 9th, at 7:00 PM, at St. Petersburg’s
Florida Holocaust Museum (FHM). The Museum presents director Bared
Maronian’s acclaimed film, followed by a question and answer session.

The program is part of the FHM’s Genocide and Human Rights Awareness
Movement, and is presented in partnership with the USF Libraries
Holocaust & Genocide Studies Center and St. Hagop Armenian Church.

Local WEDU (PBS) channel will air “Orphans of the Genocide” and
“The Armenian Genocide” on April 21st at 8PM

A complete list of the ‘Armenian 100’ events take place throughout
April at:bit.ly/armenian100

http://massispost.com/2015/03/armenian-history-events-at-university-of-south-florida-in-tampa/

La Banque Centrale d’Arménie honore le 150ème anniversaire du généra

MONNAIES ARMENIENNES
La Banque Centrale d’Arménie honore le 150ème anniversaire du général Antranik

La Banque Centrale d’Arménie vient d’émettre le 27 février une monnaie
commémorative dédiée au 150ème anniversaire de la naissance du général
Antranik (Antranik Ozinian). D’une valeur faciale de 1000 drams, la
pièce frappée en Lituanie et tirée à seulement 500 exemplaires est en
argent. La gravure sur la pièce -qui porte les insignes de la
République d’Arménie- représente la statue du Père Lachaise (Paris)
avec le général Antranik sur son cheval avec les inscriptions

Birthday stroll in the Old City’s Armenian Quarter…

Birthday stroll in the Old City’s Armenian Quarter…

By RUTH WASSERMAN LANDE
03/01/2015 16:13

Yesterday, I celebrated my birthday. Having chosen a rather unusual
way in which to celebrate it, I had a rare, yet intriguing, glimpse
into the life an Armenian priest, and an even rarer chance to examine,
from within, the underlying tensions between Armenian, Greek Orthodox
and Catholic Christians in an already complex Jewish capital…

We began by entering the usually unyielding Armenian priests’ compound
in the Armenian Quarter in the Old City of Jerusalem. Quite astounded,
I discovered wide parking lots behind secret gateways, in an area
where it is barely possibly to pass by, even with a small car.
Likewise, the living quarters of approximately 100 Armenian monks, as
well as approximately 150 more Armenians, who live with their families
within the premises, were wondrously opened to us, a Jewish Israeli
couple, by our friend, an Armenian

Lebanese monk, who has been living in Israel for the past 30 years.
The Armenians follow their own Archbishop and Pope, whose seat is in
faraway Armenia and provide services and protection to those following
the Ethiopian and the Coptic Churches in Israel. Their undeclared
enemies are neither the State of Israel, nor Islam, at least not in
Israel, yet the Greek Orthodox Church and to a lesser degree, the
Catholic Church in this country.

Following a heart-to-heart chat about the complexities of our region,
I probed deeper into the life experiences of our friend, whose family
members remain in Lebanon, dreading the likes of ISIS and other evils.
Once more, it became abundantly clear to me, that despite all
criticism of- and complexities in the tiny State of Israel, there
remain certain pillars of virtue which are remarkable, once of which
is the freedom of religion which is granted in general and to
Christians in particular.

I was witness to just how difficult and sensitive my aforementioned
observation really was, in the following part of the trip: Following a
group of Armenian monks, my husband and I strolled with them in a
ceremonious manner, from the Armenian Quarter towards the Church of
the Holy Sepulchre- a half-an-hour walk , if one is not in a hurry…
I was a Jewish Israeli woman, strolling with a group of Armenian
monks, cloaked in black with huge gold crosses on their necks and
pointed tall caps, in the midst of a Christian pilgrim crowd, Muslim
local merchants and several, particularly religious, Jewish
passers-by.

As if this was not surreal enough, I was both surprised and proud to
notice several Israeli security personnel securing the monks. When
asked who they were securing them from, I was answered by one of the
policemen that it was from several extreme Jewish individuals, who had
taken the habit to spit at the monks during former such parades…
During this particular parade, I was spared dubious pleasure of
experiencing the above… What ensued within the Church itself was even
more astounding- hordes of visitors, both pilgrims and local clergymen
were organized in a miraculous fashion, according to a strict
timetable, which enabled the Armenian followers to perform their
rituals and ceremonies, then those who follow the Greek Orthodox
Church and finally the Catholics to carry out their own such
practices.

This surprisingly well-ordered, if somewhat tense manifestation of
internal agreements between the three sects vis-à-vis their holy of
holies, was not only respected and acknowledged by the State of
Israel, but kept orderly by Israeli policemen, lest Greek Orthodox
monks physically abuse those of the Armenian order, or vice versa.
Quite surreal.

My birthday gift was clear: yet another astounding reminder and a
greater clarity of just how complex, potentially explosive and
wondrously fascinating this city of Jerusalem really is – for all
people.

http://www.jpost.com/Blogs/Israel-From-the-Inside-Out/Birthday-stroll-in-the-Old-Citys-Armenian-Quarter-392541

"Pomegranate Stone Necklace": Serj Gabyan’s Film On Armenian Genocid

“POMEGRANATE STONE NECKLACE”: SERJ GABYAN’S FILM ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE EXPECTED TO HIT BIG SCREENS IN NOVEMBER

March 2, 2015 10:35

An ancient Armenian necklace, which has passed from hand to hand during
the years of the Armenian Genocide and reached our days. Now, it is
at a private gallery in New York City and is owned by a well-known
Turkish family.

STEPANAKERT, MARCH 2, ARTSAKHPRESS: The aforesaid is at the basis of
filmmaker Serj Gabyan’s full-length feature film, entitled Pomegranate
Stone Necklace, which is about the tragic events of the 20th century.

Gabyan informed that a contract was signed in February with a European
financial organization. In addition, the heads of several Armenian
organizations in France, US, and Russia have promised to assist in
the shooting of this film.

Pomegranate Stone Necklace is expected to hit the big screens in
November.

“The main language of the film is English, since our top priority is
to once again draw the attention of the world community and with the
story of a family and an Armenian ornament on the Armenian Genocide
issue and its consequences,” Gabyan noted.

The film will be shot on location in Armenia, Kazakhstan, Latvia,
and the US. Furthermore, negotiations are underway with the agents
of several Hollywood stars to play parts in this movie.

“Some agents have already approved the script and even expressed
admiration. The matter will become clearer soon,” Serj Gabyan added.

Pomegranate Stone Necklace will be edited in a Hollywood studio.

http://artsakhpress.am/eng/news/13447/pomegranate-stone-necklace-serj-gabyan%E2%80%99s-film-on-armenian-genocide-expected-to-hit-big-screens-in-november.html