USC Student Syuzanna Petrosyan Shares Top Prize in Shoah Foundation

USC Student Syuzanna Petrosyan Shares Top Prize in Shoah Foundation
Film Competition

By MassisPost
Updated: March 14, 2014

LOS ANGELES — A student from the University of Southern California who
describes herself as a descendant of survivor’s of the Armenian
Genocide shared the top prize at this year’s Student Voices Short Film
Contest sponsored by USC Shoah Foundation – The Institute for Visual
Learning and Education.

Syuzanna Petrosyan and fellow student Greg Irwin won the award March 6
for their short film “Play for your Life,” which looks at the
orchestras organized by the Nazis in German concentration camps during
World War II.

Petrosyan said the film was inspired by Alice Herz-Somner, a pianist
who, until her death at 110 in February, was the oldest living
Holocaust survivor. Music factors heavily in Herz-Somner’s testimony
in the Shoah Foundation’s Visual History Archive, which contains
nearly 52,000 recorded testimonies of survivors and other witnesses of
the Holocaust and other genocides.

In April 2010, The Institute signed a historic agreement with the
Armenian Film Foundation and the late filmmaker Dr. J. Michael
Hagopian to incorporate 400 testimonies of survivors of the Armenian
Genocide. The interviews, which are set to come out in April 2015,
will be used for educational purposes through the Visual History
Archive, where they will be stored in perpetuity.

Petrosyan said her interest in entering Student Voices comes from her
own Armenian background and interest in exploring the various
dimensions of genocides. As a public diplomacy master’s candidate, she
said, “it is important to understand not only the big picture and
history of genocides, but also to observe the smaller and personal
stories of survivor’s of the biggest crimes in history.”

The film was the second movie featuring Herz-Somner to win an award in
one week. She is also the subject of the Academy Award-winning
documentary The Lady in Number 6: Music Saved my Life.

Student Voices is a chance for all USC graduate and undergraduate
students, regardless of major, to create short films that incorporate
survivor’s testimony from the Visual History Archive.

Shirin Raban won the Viewer’s Choice Award for her film “There is No
Other Way.” Rebecca Baugh received an honorable mention for “Love,
Noemi.”

Photo: Top prize winners Syuzanna Petrosyan and Greg Irwin with USC
Shoah Foundation Executive Director Stephen D. Smith

http://massispost.com/2014/03/usc-student-syuzanna-petrosyan-shares-top-prize-in-shoah-foundation-film-competition/

Increase of Sevan’s level has positive impact on birds’ nest buildin

Increase of Sevan’s level has positive impact on birds’ nest building

13:20, 15 March, 2014

YEREVAN, MARCH 15, ARMENPRESS. The palpable increase of Lake Sevan’s
level recorded during the recent years created benevolent conditions
for the birds’ nest building fauna. The increase of the water level
resulted in the increase of the canes and moorland, which are
necessary for the nest building of the birds. The Deputy Director of
the Armenian Society for the Protection of Birds Lyuba Balyan stated
this at the course of the press conference held on
March 15.

As reports “Armenpress”, among other things, the Deputy Director of
the Armenian Society for the Protection of Birds Lyuba Balyan
underscored that previously there were few birds building nests in
Sevan, but now one can even meet great cormorants. In addition to
this, the Deputy Director of the Armenian Society for the Protection
of Birds Lyuba Balyan noted that there are also a number of threats,
which have man-made character, and they have negative impact on the
birds’ fauna.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/754019/increase-of-sevan%E2%80%99s-level-has-positive-impact-on-birds%E2%80%99-nest-building.html

Jewels by American-Armenian designer displayed in U.S. museums

Jewels by American-Armenian designer displayed in U.S. museums

11:17, 15 March, 2014

YEREVAN, MARCH 15, ARMENPRESS. First time I have seen the handmade
Jewels by designer Yeva Adalyan was at the Cafesjian Centre. These
jewels were unique; the combination of the metals, stones, and glass
was so harmonically designed that it was impossible not to notice them
and not to admire them. Each of them is a small masterpiece of art
with unique solutions and consonant colors. One cannot call them just
jewels. As Yeva states, they are the creating of her love and warmth.

Then I found Yeva in internet and got in touch with her via facebook.
Thus I discovered the kind of an individual, who is not
afraid of novelties and difficulties and who celebrates solely
triumphs in all situations.

Her life looks like a Hollywood story and the designer, who is very
popular in the United States, confesses that she will not be able to
record any achievement in her life without her dream, dedication, and
diligence.

Designer Yeva Adalyan was born in Yerevan, Armenia and has been living
in Los Angeles since 1992. She works and creates in a few genres,
including jewelry, poetry, graphic, interior, and floral design.
Designed and created by Yeva Adalyan, the unique designs have many
influences fusing industrial and ethnic, bold and dainty, simple and
complex shapes in a brave modern statement.

Designer and owner of YevArts, Yeva Adalyan discovered her passion for
jewelry making in 2002, and hasn’t stopped creating ever since.

YevArts specializes in handmade custom jewelry.

(THE FULL VERSION OF THE ARTICLE IS AVAILABLE IN ARMENIAN)

Article by Hasmik Harutyunyan

http://armenpress.am/arm/news/753961/jewels-by-american-armenian-designer-displayed-in-us-museums.html
http://armenpress.am/eng/news/753961/jewels-by-american-armenian-designer-displayed-in-us-museums.html

Les réfugiés arméniens de Syrie ont l’intention de créer leur propre

ARMENIE
Les réfugiés arméniens de Syrie ont l’intention de créer leur propre
syndicat des fabricants et des entrepreneurs

Les réfugiés arméniens de Syrie, qui se sont installés en Arménie, ont
l’intention de créer leur propre syndicat des fabricants et des
entrepreneurs a déclaré Alexandre Karadanayan, chef d’une organisation
non gouvernementale créée pour aider les réfugiés arméniens de Syrie.

Karadanayan a dit que cela pourrait prendre un mois ou deux pour
mettre en place l’union dont l’objectif principal sera de mettre en
évidence les principaux problèmes rencontrés par les arméniens de
Syrie.

Karadanayan avait été invité à prendre la parole lors d’une réunion de
l’organe anti-trust de l’Arménie – la Commission d’État pour la
protection de la concurrence économique. Il a dit que les
entrepreneurs et les producteurs syriens n’ont pas de conditions
suffisantes pour démarrer une entreprise en Arménie.

>, a-t-il dit.

Karadanayan a dit que les Arméniens de Syrie ont beaucoup d’espérances
face à l’entrée de l’Arménie dans l’Union douanière parce que le
marché local est trop petit.

samedi 15 mars 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

Le Papier d’Arménie, le discret de Montrouge

REVUE DE PRESSE
Le Papier d’Arménie, le discret de Montrouge

Créé à Montrouge (Hauts-de-Seine), le Papier d’Arménie n’a changé ni
de lieu, ni de formule depuis 129 ans. L’arrière-petite-fille du
créateur est aujourd’hui à la tête de l’entreprise.

L’odeur de rose flotte dans une ruelle calme de Montrouge
(Hauts-de-Seine). De large feuilles de papier parfumées sèchent au
soleil derrière les fenêtres grande-ouvertes d’une btisse à deux
étages. C’est ici, en bordure de Paris, qu’est né le Papier d’Arménie
et où il est toujours fabriqué, près d’un siècle après sa création.
“La formule n’a pas changé depuis le début, sourit Mireille Schvartz,
directrice de la petite société familiale de 11 salariés. Les
ingrédients sont les mêmes, seules quelques techniques de fabrication
ont évolué.”

En 1885, son arrière-grand-père, Henry Rivier, un pharmacien, et son
associé Auguste Ponsot, chimiste, découvrent en Arménie que le
benjoin, la résine de l’aliboufier, est brûlé afin de parfumer et
désinfecter les espaces intérieurs. Ils vont par la suite le diluer
avec de l’éthanol et 2 % de formule secrète, et le mélanger à un
papier buvard. Le début du succès pour le Papier d’Arménie, qui se
vend par carnet de 36 lamelles à brûler en accordéon.

Mécanisation

Lorsqu’elle arrive à la tête de l’entreprise, en 1994, à la suite de
sa mère Huguette Laroche, Mireille Schvartz découvre une fabrique
fatiguée, qui ne produit plus que 250 000 carnets par an. “Le papier
était en train de mourir, se rappelle-t-elle. Il n’y avait aucun
marketing, aucune publicité.” Celle qui croit au “potentiel” et à ce
“nom connu des Français” embauche un représentant et met le paquet sur
la communication.

Deuxième étape, mécaniser la production pour augmenter la cadence.
Jusqu’en 1999, aucune machine ne bourdonnait dans la btisse, tout le
travail était réalisé à la main. Laurent, qui travaille dans la
fabrique depuis 18 ans, se souvient : “Tous les après-midis, on était
cinq à six personnes pour découper les feuilles avec des règles et
coller les carnets au pinceau et à la colle.” La société fait
l’acquisition de plusieurs machines de découpe et l’assemblage. Mais
le mélange du papier et du parfum reste le même.

Aujourd’hui près de 2,5 millions de carnets sortent chaque année de la fabrique.

Sortir de la monoproduction

En 2006, lors de l’année de l’Arménie, l’entreprise montrougienne, qui
ne fabrique qu’un seul et unique modèle, décide de sortir une édition
limitée sans benjoin. “Le succès a été tel que nous fabriquons
toujours ce produit”, se réjouit Mireille Schvartz. L’entreprise
propose également un papier à la rose, trois types de bougies qu’elle
sous-traite à la ciergerie bisontine, une société de Besançon (Doubs),
et des bruleurs, fabriqués en Espagne.

“Le mono-produit n’est pas bon pour une entreprise, assure la
dirigeante. Nous avons d’autres recettes des inventeurs, mais les
ingrédients n’existent plus aujourd’hui !” Avec un chiffre d’affaire
de 2,8 millions d’euros, en croissance de 3 à 4% par an, le papier
d’Arménie classique représente près de 80 % des ventes de
l’entreprise.

En 2006, après une étude sur les désodorisants d’intérieurs publiée
par UFC Que Choisir, qui a démontré que le Papier d’Arménie présentait
des quantités de formaldéhydes et de benzène, l’entreprise connait sa
première crise depuis l’arrivée de Mireille Scharvtz à sa tête.
“Pendant six mois ça s’est ressenti sur les ventes, affirme-t-elle.
Nous avons réalisé une étude en laboratoire qui a conclu que le Papier
d’Arménie ne présentait aucun impact sur la santé.”

A la grande satisfaction d’une voisine : “C’est pour cette raison que
ça sent si bon dans le quartier !”

samedi 15 mars 2014,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

http://www.usinenouvelle.com/article/le-papier-d-armenie-le-discret-de-montrouge.N239879

Glendale City Local Leaders gather at Woodbury University to Inspire

PRESS RELEASE
Homenetmen Glendale Ararat Chapter
Email: [email protected]

Event: Elevate 2014 Leadership Development Conference

Where: Woodbury University
Fletcher Jones Foundation Auditorium
7500 N. Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank, CA 91506

Host:Homenetmen Glendale Ararat Chapter
and Woodbury University Center for Leadership

When: March 26, 2014 9:00am

Guests:Scott Ochoa, City Manager, City of Glendale
Katherine Sarafian, Producer Pixar Entertainment
Mikayel Israyelyan, CEO Muse Entertainment
Dr. Arby Nahapetyan, M.D., Chief of Staff, Glendale Adventist
Dr. Luis Ma R. Calingo, President Woodbury University
Mr. Hagop Baghdassarian, Recipient 2014 Elevate Leadership Award

We are pleased to announce that Homenetmen Glendale Ararat Chapter, in
partnership with Woodbury University Center for Leadership, is hosting
the Elevate 2014 Leadership Development Conference on Saturday, March
29, 2014. The event will be held at Woodbury University, at the
Fletcher Jones Foundation Auditorium, and will start at 9:00 am.

The speakers for this year’s conference include: Glendale City Manager
Scott Ochoa; Katherine Sarafian, Producer for Pixar Entertainment;
Muse Entertainment CEO Mikayel Israyelyan; Glendale Adventist Chief of
Staff Arby Nahapetyan, M.D.; and Woodbury University President
Dr. Luis Ma R. Calingo.

The event leaders will also be awarding the Elevate Leadership Award
of 2014 to Mr. Hagop Baghdassarian, local businessman and
philanthropist.

The Elevate 2014 Leadership Conference is the second annual event held
by Woodbury University and Homentmen Glendale. Participants are
offered the opportunity to hear from leaders in public service, higher
education, entertainment, and public health.

Elevate 2013 participant, Elena Mirzaians, recounted =80=9CAs the
audience, we heard inspiring stories of success from the bright panel
of speakers.’

Admission is free with reservations:

Sona Krikorian-Binatli, M.P.D.

www.itsmyseat.com/Elevate2014

BAKU: Akram Aylisli: "I Also Thought That Armenians Might Have Put F

AKRAM AYLISLI: “I ALSO THOUGHT THAT ARMENIANS MIGHT HAVE PUT FORWARD THE INITIATIVE TO NOMINATE ME FOR NOBEL PEACE PRIZE

APA, Azerbaijan
March 14 2014

[ 14 March 2014 14:20 ]

Baku. Javid Zeynalli – APA. “I indeed do not know who has put forward
the initiative to nominate me for Nobel Peace Prize.

I was surprised when I heard this,” writer Akram Aylisli said in his
interview to APA after a number of public figures around the world
requested the Norwegian Nobel Committee to award the Nobel Peace
Prize 2014 to him.

Aylisli said he also thought that one of the organizations might be
interested in it.

“I even thought that Armenians might have done it. Then I looked
at the signatures, read about these persons’ biography and activity
on the Internet. All of those who signed the request probably know
Russian. I believe in the prestige of these persons,” he said.

The writer said he could not forecast whether he would get the prize
or not.

“200-300 people are nominated for this prize every year. I am glad
that the persons, who signed the request, share my opinion. It means
that it was necessary to do it,” he said.

Akram Aylisli said his scandalous “Stone Dreams” made the world
community think much better of Azerbaijan.

“My book has contributed to making a step towards the peace. An
Armenian author wrote: If we had known that there is such an approach
in Azerbaijan, we would not have raised Nagorno Karabakh issue.

Recently, I have read that Zori Balayan cried when speaking about
Khojaly tragedy. I was surprised,” he said.

Commenting on the protests against his book in Azerbaijan, he
attributed it to the complicacy of the society.

“Irrespective of nationality I do not believe pseudo-nationalists. For
example, if Hrant Matevosyan had spoken about my book, I would have
been glad. The relations should be normalized. I remember they shouted
in the square We will take Karabakh back within three days. I asked
Elchibey to declare ceasefire, instead of waging war. I have said in
media, too. But for strong politician, mighty diplomat Heydar Aliyev,
it would have been very difficult to achieve ceasefire,” he said.

Aylisli also commented on the reports that some of those mentioned
in the list are related with the Armenian lobby: “Those saying that
scientists mentioned in the list were instigated by the Armenian
lobby are rascals. The Armenian lobby has nothing to do with them.”

Akram Aylisli dedicated “Stone Dreams” to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict
between Armenia and Azerbaijan. The book writes that the Armenians were
allegedly killed in of the Azerbaijani villages at the beginning of
the century. The book has caused serious protests of the Azerbaijani
people. He was stripped of the titles, protests were held against him.

A number of public figures have recently requested the Norwegian
Nobel Committee to award the Nobel Peace Prize 2014 to Akram Aylisli.

The request was signed by Sergey Abashin, Andrei Bitov, Craig Calhoun,
Georgi Derluguian, Alexander Dobrokhotov, Gasan Guseinov, Kevan Harris,
Rouslan Khestanov, Michail Maiatsky, Vladimir Malakhov, Nikolaj
Plotnikov, Teodor Shanin, Andrew Wachtel and Immanuel Wallerstein.

Initial investigation revealed that Andrei Bitov who signed the request
is the author of “Armenian lessons” books about “Armenian genocide”
published in 1996. Georgi Derluguian is Armenian and is considered
one of the major figures of “Armenian genocide” propaganda.

http://en.apa.az/news/208634

Ukraine: Ominous World War II Parallels?

UKRAINE: OMINOUS WORLD WAR II PARALLELS?

Al-Jazeera, Qatar
March 14 2014

As world leaders call each other ‘Nazis’ and ‘fascists’, clarity is
needed on the application of international law.

Last updated: 14 Mar 2014 06:24 Vartan Oskanian

Vartan Oskanian is a member of Armenia’s National Assembly, a former
foreign minister and the founder of Yerevan’s Civilitas Foundation.

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the start of World War I.

Historians, analysts and pundits have stretched their imagination
to draw parallels between the geopolitical situation then and now,
hinting at a likelihood that history may repeat itself.

Among many real and perceived parallels, British-German rivalry
then is compared to American-Chinese competition now, and today’s
globalised world is seen to be similar to the turn-of-the-century’s
interconnectedness and maritime action.

For World War II, this year is not a significant anniversary, neither
for its start nor its end, but listening to the rhetoric on Ukraine,
one may easily get the impression that the world today is more similar,
simultaneously, to both the beginning and the end of the second war.

US to stand by Ukraine on Crimea annexation

If the comparisons with WWI are done by non-policymakers and remain
purely an intellectual exercise, the WWII parallels are emanating
from those in positions of power and influence, and it’s heard in
real time, as the situation evolves.

Recently, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton likened President
Vladimir Putin to Adolf Hitler. And a few days back, on BBC’s Hardtalk,
Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said of the Russian presence
in Crimea: “We all know where invasion under the pretext of protecting
minorities leads to.” He was referring to Hitler’s occupying the
Czech Sudetenland in order “to protect” the German population there.

The Russian side is calling the new authorities in Kiev “Nazis” and
“fascists”. Other Western leaders liken the rivalry over Ukraine to
the power politics carving territories, creating buffer zones and
spheres of influence around competing powers and opposing poles,
evoking memories of the cold politics of, ironically, Yalta and beyond.

The truth is that the world today is hugely different from what it
was in 1914, 1945 and 1991. First, today’s world has seen, in the
span of one century, two devastating and tragic world wars and one
detrimental and costly Cold War. It is the lingering consequences
of those wars that should guide the world leaders rather than the
underlying seeds and currents of potential conflict today.

Second, nuclear weapons have rendered war between countries possessing
them highly unlikely. Until the advent of the nuclear age, countries
went to war because the consequences of defeat and even of compromise
were deemed worse than those of war. If war ever breaks out, that
would be the result of incompetence, gross negligence, hubris and
short sightedness on the part of those who are in leadership positions.

Tangled alliances, militarism, imperialism

There is always the temptation to explain wars by the more obvious
factors, such as tangled alliances, militarism, imperialism and
natural resources among many others. But one hardly looks at the
hidden underlying disagreements among major players.

There are two kinds of such disagreements today in the international
system that, unless addressed and overcome, will continue to be a
source of tension between states: One is moral and behavioural and
the other is formal and legalistic.

In my extensive dealings with Russia, Europe and the United States,
the contrasting positions were palpable. In discussions with US
and Europe, along with foreign policy issues – Nagorno Karabagh
peace process, relations with Turkey, with Iran and on many other
topics – Armenia’s domestic issues (democracy, elections, rule of
law and reforms) were not only discussed but also conditioned to
foreign aid and assistance. Not once in my meetings with Russia were
non-foreign-policy issues ever raised and discussed, let alone made
subject to trade-offs.

If my experience with the West is any indication of the West’s approach
towards other former Soviet states, including Russia and Ukraine,
it’s possible to see where the Russian displeasure and resentment
toward the West come from.

When foreign policy toward Russia is identified with shaping Russian
domestic politics, the ability to influence the external conduct of
the Russian state is weakened.

So much for behavioural contradictions. The formal and legalistic
discrepancies are two fold and more often intertwined. Those are the
double standards applied by major powers to the justification of use
of force and the de jure recognition granted to self-determination
movements out of political expediency and geopolitical interests. The
problem is further compounded when use of force is the consequence
of political expediency or vice versa.

The Charter of the UN expressly prohibits member states from using
force against each other, allowing only two exceptions: Self-defence
and military measures authorised by the security council. During the
Cold War, states violated these rules countless times, and a paralysed
Security Council watched.

Since the end of the Cold War, despite the yearning for an
international system governed by international law, there is no
evidence that humanity has made serious headways in that regard.

The maintenance of world peace and security depends importantly on
there being a common global understanding of when the application
of force is both legal and legitimate. Only legal or only legitimate
will always weaken the international legal order.

NATO’s intervention in the former Yugoslavia in 1999 was deemed by
some illegal but legitimate. The US invasion of Iraq was considered by
many to be both illegal and illegitimate. The West considers Russia’s
stealth presence today in Crimea illegal.

Counting the Cost – The price of military intervention

Kosovo is recognised by most in the West as an independent state,
while South Ossetia and Abkhazia are recognised as independent by
Russia and just a few others. In both cases, one side accuses the
other of violating the international law.

When Kosovo conducted a referendum for independence, the West
determined that Serbia’s consent was not required.

Yet Crimea’s upcoming referendum is considered illegal by the West,
mainly because of the absence of Kiev’s consent.

Indeed, the line between the legality and legitimacy for use of force
or the absence of it, on one hand and the legality and non legality
of people’s right to determine their own fate and destiny through a
referendum, have been so blurred, that it confuses the honest observer
or the broker about the state of affairs in the world.

I am not here in the defence of one side or the other; I am here for
the defence of clarity, consistency, honesty, and international rule
of law.

Vartan Oskanian is a member of Armenia’s National Assembly, a former
foreign minister and the founder of Yerevan’s Civilitas Foundation.

1417

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not
necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.

http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/opinion/2014/03/ukraine-ominous-world-war-ii-pa-201431372034569427.html

Faith And Perseverance Guide Career Of Pioneering Doctor

FAITH AND PERSEVERANCE GUIDE CAREER OF PIONEERING DOCTOR

COMMUNITY | MARCH 14, 2014 1:17 PM

CLEVELAND — What strikes one most when speaking with Dr. Rafi
Avitsian is not his impressive, “American Dream” success story,
but his remarkable humility and unshakable faith.

“All of the things that have happened to me are not all my doing;
they’re because of God [and] my family’s support…I don’t want to
take any credit for any of it.”

Born in Tabriz, Iran, Avitsian grew up in an Armenian household with
both parents involved in the medical profession: his father was
a physician while his mother was a nurse and midwife. He attended
an Armenian school until the start of the 1979 Iranian Revolution,
when he temporarily relocated to England for a year. Upon his return
to Iran, Avitsian was told that young men could no longer leave the
country as the Iran-Iraq War (1980-1988) had just erupted. Avitsian
returned to his Armenian school, completing middle and high school
during a period of great turmoil and uncertainty.

“I remember when I was a kid, every night, we would wait for the air
raids to be done, to see whether or not we were going to live to eat
dinner,” Avitsian recalled.

Upon graduating high school, Avitsian, like every Iranian male at the
time, was given the option to either attend university or enlist in the
military. (Iran has for decades enforced a mandatory two-year military
service for men over 18 who are not enrolled at a university.)For
him, the choice was easy. However, when it came time to choose his
university path, he debated between engineering and medicine.

“[Growing up,] I was able to see the lifestyle of a physician and how
they help the patients and people…On the other hand, I really liked
engineering: I liked fixing things and making things,” Avitsian said.

Although he initially chose engineering, Avitsian was persuaded by his
father to try medicine. In the end, he stuck with the latter. After
passing the entrance exams, Avitsian was confronted with the second
component of his college admissions: evaluation of his moral character.

“It wasn’t enough at that time — and I think it still isn’t — to
be a good student academically in order to be able to enter university.

Your moral values and character were under very careful scrutiny,”
Avitsian recalled.

A representative from Tehran University came to Tabriz to inquire
about Avitsian, and after a glowing recommendation from his local
grocer, Avitsian was admitted.

“I imagine I entered the university because that grocery store man
put in a good word for me,” Avitsian joked.

He spent the next seven years studying to become a physician. It
was during that time that he met his wife, Suzelle, at an Armenian
cultural club.

“That was the best thing I can remember from Iran,” Avitsian said.

see PIONEER, page 5

PIONEER, from page 4

After graduating from university — and getting married — Avitsian
was required to partake in two years of mandatory military service
like his fellow male graduates. However, his father’s illness made
him the primary breadwinner of his family and thus excused him from
military duty. Instead, Avitsian was sent to serve as a doctor in
rural regions of Iran for the next two years. As chief of healthcare
at a clinic north of Tehran, he would return home to visit his family
every now and then. Soon, his first daughter, Anna, was born.

Meanwhile, his wife was pursuing her degree in translation while
working as a secretary. She learned about immigration to Canada,
and they decided to apply. In 1996, the family immigrated to Canada.

“In Canada, the healthcare system is all government-based and it’s
very difficult if you’re an international graduate. I tried finding
some jobs until I could pass the entrance exams to get into a residency
for a specialty in Canada. It wasn’t easy,” Avitsian said.

Despite the initial difficulty of finding a temporary job to support
his family while studying, Avitsian eventually met fellow Armenians,
one of whom offered him a job at his Subway sandwich store. Avitsian
worked the night shifts while studying for his exams and took care
of his daughter during the day as his wife took college courses and
worked at the same time.

Numerous friends encouraged Avitsian to take the American exams as
well. After passing these, Avitsian applied for an internship and
residency in the United States.

“I was with some other foreign and international graduates, and we
were looking at the residency programs and the hospitals in the US.

When we came down to Cleveland Clinic on the list, someone said,
‘Oh, Cleveland Clinic, that’s a reputable place. They’re not going to
take us. It’s probably a waste of time to apply.’ I agreed, but when
I came back home, I saw that I still had some extra applications,
so I thought, ‘Well, I’ve been sending them so many places, why not
just send one more to Cleveland Clinic?'”

As it turned out, Cleveland Clinic was the first hospital to ask him
for an interview. Avitsian hopped on the next Greyhound bus and made
his first entry into the United States, in 1998.

The following day, Avitsian interviewed with one of the physicians
at Cleveland Clinic. By the end of the day, the program director had
already offered Avitsian a head position at the prestigious hospital.

After several more interviews with other institutions, Avitsian
decided to accept the position at Cleveland Clinic.

A few months later, in November 1999, Avitsian moved to the US, along
with his family. He began as an intern in internal medicine. A year
later, his second daughter, Taleen, was born.

After graduating from the residency program, Avitsian chose to
study neurosurgical anesthesiology for a year. He was soon hired
as an associate, and eventually a member of the full staff, at
Cleveland Clinic. He is now an associate professor of anesthesiology
at the Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine of Case Western
Reserve University. He is also the section head for the Neurosurgical
Anesthesiology Section, where he oversees all procedures related to
neurosurgery and the anesthesiology involved. As program director of
the Neurosurgical Anesthesiology Fellowship Program, he trains two
fellows every year to become neurosurgical anesthesiologists. He
is also a member of the Board of Director of the Society for
Neuroanesthesia and Critical Care and currently a candidate for the
chair of the Department of General Anesthesiology.

Avitsian has traveled extensively to give lectures and edits a
variety of scientific journals. He is also involved in the innovation
of medical devices. One of his first patents was the Central Line
Catheter, which is inserted into the vascular system of a patient to
direct fluid flow.

“When I was a kid, I liked to mend and fix things and make things and
design things, and now I’m doing it in medicine. Cleveland Clinic
has a whole building just for inventors and inventions, so it is a
very helpful resource,” he added.

Avitsian strives to keep the Armenian spirit alive with his family,
speaking Armenian to his children and teaching them to read and
write in the language. In the medical field, he has seized many
opportunities to give back. He got involved in the Armenian Medical
Society in Armenia and quickly established a rapport with Dr. Gohar
Kyalyan, dean of the Yerevan State Medical University, whose strategy
was to build a relationship with Armenian physicians in the diaspora.

Avitsian now regularly attends medical conferences in Armenia and
Karabagh.

“When I lecture, I lecture in Armenian, as it’s easier for the
physicians to understand. And when I return to the US, I sometimes
do lectures online, using Skype,” Avitsian said.

Avitsian also joined the Center for International Medical Education in
Cleveland Clinic, which attracts physicians from other countries for
observation. He has arranged for many physicians from the Yerevan State
Medical University to come and train in Cleveland for a few months.

“It’s not only the practice of anesthesia or any kind of medical
specialty. It’s also about how a hospital is run. In the US, the
day starts very early and we work a lot. In Armenia, the system is
different. They start much later in the day, so there was a lot that
the Armenian physicians could learn from the US,” Avitsian said.

For some physicians, Avitsian noted, the allure of the US — with
its comparatively bountiful opportunities — is overpowering.

“Nothing is perfect, and one of the problems that we have faced is
that those physicians who come here, they’re coming out from a country
which doesn’t promise as great a future as the US does to its medical
graduates — and this does not only apply to Armenia. So some of the
visiting physicians try to go into residency and stay here and not
return, which is natural. For everything that you do, there are some
sacrifices that you have to endure. But again some of them do go back,
and they become very successful physicians, and I’m still in contact
with them,” Avitsian explained.

His latest project is to implement a stroke program in Armenia.

“Stroke is a disease that not only kills, but also disables people,
and those people become a burden on the whole economy of the country.

So we’re trying to see whether we can decrease stroke or treat it fast
enough that they won’t become disabled. I cannot say enough about how
much Dr. Gevorg Yaghjian has been influencing this: he is one of the
most active people I’ve seen in my life. He has the best networking:
every opportunity he gets, he talks to Armenian doctors. Many times
he could have lived in the US — he had the opportunity — but he
is patriotic enough to go back and continue his work there while
collaborating with us here,” Avitsian said.

Along with his extensive work in the medical field, Avitsian remains
an active member of his local Armenian community, specifically St.

Gregory of Narek Church in Cleveland. He sings in the choir and
occasionally acts as sub-deacon. Avitsian says that his faith remains
a central piece of his identity.

“I cannot thank my mother enough, who early in my childhood gave
me the Bible to read…I believe you cannot just close your eyes and
believe the faith. You have to read and compare, and I was in a country
which was religious, even though I wasn’t of the same religion. But
I actually was brought up in a faith-filled environment, and that
helped me to read more and more and then decide for myself,” he said.

Although Avitsian has served on the parish council, his role in
the church now revolves more around keeping the Armenian spirit and
identity alive in the community.

“If you compare the US to other countries, the environment is more
conducive to losing your cultural identity. We’re always thankful to
the US for accepting us, but we still think that keeping your identity
is an important thing,” he said.

Despite his achievements, Avitsian remains incredibly humble. When
asked about his greatest pride, he shies away.

“Honestly, I don’t want to be proud. Everything that I have done,
I don’t see as my own accomplishment: I see it as doing a duty from
God and walking in the path that I was supposed to walk,” he said.

He recalls one night, when he was mopping floors at Subway, his
brother-in-law came in to see him.

“I could see tears in his eyes. He said, ‘Rafi, what were you doing
back home? You were a doctor. And what are you doing now? What are
you doing, washing floors?’ It was humbling, and now I don’t look down
on anyone because of their work, because I’ve been there,” he recalled.

Avitsian credits this experience with keeping everything in
perspective.

“When you are faced with obstacles and you conquer them and you don’t
lose your hope and your faith and then you achieve [your goals], that
is when you become humble. That is when you look at other people,
whatever their job or calling, and you think, ‘Maybe that’s another
doctor, maybe that’s another angel.’ Out of the difficulties that
someone goes through, they can either become aggressive and lose
hope and just let go, or they can keep their hope and be humble and
continue knowing it’s going to get better,” he said.

– See more at:

http://www.mirrorspectator.com/2014/03/14/faith-and-perseverance-guide-career-of-pioneering-doctor/#sthash.7KnIDLxZ.dpuf

Karabakh President Participates In Opening Of Memorial To Freedom Fi

KARABAKH PRESIDENT PARTICIPATES IN OPENING OF MEMORIAL TO FREEDOM FIGHTERS

March 14, 2014 | 19:47

STEPANAKERT. – President of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic on Friday
visited the village of Varanda in the Martuni Region to attend a
solemn ceremony of opening of a memorial to perished freedom fighters.

President Sahakyan awarded a group of freedom fighters of “Arabo”
detachment in connection with the 22nd anniversary of Varanda
settlement’s liberation and for personal bravery shown in battles.

In his speech, President Sahakyan stressed strategic importance of
the settlement’s liberation, noting that without this it would be
impossible to secure the Martuni region.

According to the President, the fact that numerous monuments in Artsakh
and Armenia are being built in memory of our perished brothers and
sisters testifies that the devotees of the nation and their heroism
are not forgotten; the martyrs are always with us and continue to
serve as an example of patriotism and selflessness for generations
to come, NKR president’s press service reported.

Defense minister Movses Hakobyan, other officials, guests from Armenia
participated in the event.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am