Alpena Man’S Hand-Painted Carousel Fulfills Dream

ALPENA MAN’S HAND-PAINTED CAROUSEL FULFILLS DREAM

The Associated Press State & Local Wire
July 10, 2013 Wednesday 10:20 AM GMT

By BETSY LEHNDORFF, The Alpena News
ALPENA Mich.

Mike Arzo’s last name means “may your wishes come true.”

And it could be the reason he plunked down $280,000 at a Las Vegas
trade show for a hand-painted carousel that was made in Argentina.

Later this month, area residents could get their first chance to
catch a ride among the pageantry of bejewelled horses and elegant
white chariots lined with red velvet. All are inspired by the ancient,
over-the-top city of Venice.

“When I am making you happy, I am happier than you are,” said Arzo, who
owns a sports and amusement park five miles north of Alpena on US-23.

Arzo told The Alpena News ( ) that when he was
a child in Armenia, he and his family were poor.

“I would wait in line hoping for a ride on a carousel,” Arzo said.

“One time I stood in line three days in a row. Finally someone offered
me a free seat, and then a family member arrived and I had to go back
in line.”

Despite his situation, Arzo grew up to earn an advanced degree in
electrical engineering and invented a digital readout system for
elevators. The product was snapped up by Otis Elevator Co., and Arzo’s
future was launched.

Drawn to Alpena because of its spectacular fall colors, Arzo purchased
a miniature golf and driving range called Puna’s Playground. In 2009,
he and his wife, Mary, reopened it to the public and he began adding
amusement park rides as a hobby. Other family members, including
Arzo’s brother and Mary’s parents, offered a helping hand or visited
to cheer them on.

The carousel is located in a large pole barn, which also shelters
an Irish bumper car ride. But construction of the floor isn’t yet
complete, so Arzo is hoping the ride will open by the end of this
month.

“It’s hard to find somebody in Alpena, who knows how to put together
a carousel,” park Manager Josh Alberts said.

But work has been proceeding at a steady clip. A Ferris wheel and
colorful outdoor rocket ship ride were added last year.

Both Arzo and Alberts said the horses’ tails are made out of real
horsehair, and the painting is meticulously detailed. No two horses
are alike, some embellished with gilded scales and all glittering
with jewels.

Arzo and his wife do not have children of their own, and look forward
to entertaining young visitors in the future.

“When I see the kids on the horses, that will be the payoff,” Arzo
said. “That’s what I am.”

http://bit.ly/156THeD

Azerbaijan Protests Against ‘Missile Supplies’ To Armenia

AZERBAIJAN PROTESTS AGAINST ‘MISSILE SUPPLIES’ TO ARMENIA

Thursday, July 11th, 2013

MILAN (missile d´infanterie leger antichar) anti-tank guided missile
system.

YEREVAN (RFE/RL)-Azerbaijan has reportedly protested to France and
Germany against the apparent acquisition by Armenia’s armed forces
of anti-tank missiles jointly developed by the two NATO member states.

The complaint reported by the Azerbaijani news agency APA on Thursday
stems from a photograph of the MILAN anti-tank system that was posted
late last month on Razm.info, an Armenian news website specializing
in defense and security. The online publication said the picture was
taken last year during an exhibition at Armenia’s Defense Ministry
that featured weapons manufactured or modernized by Armenian companies.

It said the French-German guided missiles produced since the early
1970s were upgraded with Armenian-made electronic devices. Razm.info
called the Armenian army’s possession of MILANs a “serious
development.” No further details were reported.

Azerbaijani news agencies were quick to pick up the report. Citing
unnamed military sources, APA said that the Azerbaijani authorities
have demanded that the French and German embassies in Baku explain
“how those systems ended up in Armenia.”

France’s ambassador to Azerbaijan, Pascal Meunier, told reporters
in Baku last week that the French government is “investigating the
credibility of that information.” He said French or German arms sales
to Armenia are “very unlikely” because they would violate a Western
embargo on arms deliveries to the parties of the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict.

MILAN’s current principal manufacturer is the Euromissile consortium
based in France. The missile systems originally designed by French
and German companies in the 1960s are also license-built by several
other NATO member states as well as India. They have been in service
in over 40 countries.

The Armenian Defense Ministry declined to confirm or refute the MILAN
acquisition on Thursday. The ministry spokesman, Artsrun Hovannisian,
told RFE/RL’s Armenian service only that Armenia is continuing to
“develop our defense capability.”

Speaking to journalists last December, the commander of Karabakh’s
Armenia-backed army, General Movses Hakobian, listed anti-tank rockets
among new weapons which he said were supplied to his forces in 2011
and 2012. He did not elaborate on their type and origin.

The news of Armenia’s purported possession of MILAN came just
days after it emerged that Russia has begun supplying roughly $1
billion worth of new military hardware to Azerbaijan. According to
the Russian media, the arms consignment purchased by Baku includes
more than 90 battle tanks. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said
at an ensuing military parade that his country will continue buying
weapons to force the Armenians to give up control over Karabakh and
surrounding territories.

http://asbarez.com/111349/azerbaijan-protests-against-%E2%80%98missile-supplies%E2%80%99-to-armenia/

Budaghian’s Gun Was Unusable During Goris Incident

BUDAGHIAN’S GUN WAS UNUSABLE DURING GORIS INCIDENT

Thursday,July11

There were no bullets in the gun of military unit commander, Colonel
Artak Budaghian during the June 1 incident near the house of the
then governor of Syunik province Suren Khachatrian in Goris, Artak
Budaghian’s lawyer Hayk Alumian told Pastinfo news agency.

In the lawyer’s words, the police did not find cartridges on Artak
Budaghian either, therefore he could not fire shots.

The lawyer added that in addition, the colonel’s gun was not assembled
on that day and those facts were included in the materials of the
criminal case.

In an interview with GALA Television Company, Hayk Alumian said that
on the day of the Goris incident, Artak Budaghian’s gun was unusable
so the colonel could not fire from it.

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2013/07/11/artak-budaghyan/

Grigoriu’s Scandalous Speech Does Not Reflect Official Position Of M

GRIGORIU’S SCANDALOUS SPEECH DOES NOT REFLECT OFFICIAL POSITION OF MOLDOVA: CONCLUSION OF PARLIAMENTARY COMMITTEE

18:43, 11 July, 2013

YEREVAN, JULY 11, ARMENPRESS: Scandalous speech of Moldovan
parliamentary advocate Aurelia Grigoriu in Armenian National Assembly
does not reflect official position of Moldova.

“Armenpress” reports calling vesti.md that with such conclusion
performed committee of Human rights protection of Moldovan Parliament.

“During her speech in Armenia Grigoriu expressed her personal
opinion. Moldova had territorial conflict and we understand how wrong
her behavior is who gave legal estimations to Armenian and Azerbaijani
sides,” mentioned president of the committee Vadim Mishin.

In his words Grigoriu in her speech showed political myopia and
non-competence. “Legislation gives authorities to parliamentary
advocate to be involved in human rights protection issues in his
own country. When expressing her opinion she should think about
professionalism of the statement,” stressed Mishin.

He also blamed Grigoriu for deforming the meanings of UN documents
particularly highlighting that she had used separate ideas from the 
documents putting them out from the context.

However the estimation of the committee is still preliminary and the
final conclusion will be accepted in future.

During her report “The protection of human rights and security in
“frozen conflicts” areas” in framework of in framework of Pan-European
Conference “The European Standards of Rule of Law and the Scope of
Discretion of Powers in the Member States of the Council of Europe”,
the Parliamentary Advocate of the Republic of Moldova Aurelia
Grigoriu made a statement, which does not have any connection
to the reality. She announced that “Armenia occupied 20% of the
Azerbaijan’s territory and the Khojalu Genocide was implemented by
the Armenians”. The Parliamentary Advocate of the Republic of Moldova
called Armenia “an aggressor country”.

Later it was found out that Aurelia Grigoriu 2 weeks ago before
visiting Yerevan had been in Baku. In internet were spread her photos
and notes in facebook where she expresses her love towards Azerbaijan.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/725803/grigoriu%E2%80%99s-scandalous-speech-does-not-reflect-official-position-of-moldova-conclusion-of-parliamentary.html

The Atlantic: Aliyev Clan Owns Almost Half Of Russian Mega-Bank VTB’

THE ATLANTIC: ALIYEV CLAN OWNS ALMOST HALF OF RUSSIAN MEGA-BANK VTB’S AZERBAIJANI SUBSIDIARY

15:42 12/07/2013 ” ECONOMY

The American editorial “The Atlantic” published an article which
talks about the latest acquisition of the Aliyev clan in Azerbaijan.

According to the article they control a parent company that owns,
through an offshore subsidiary, almost half of Russian mega-bank
VTB’s Azerbaijani subsidiary.

“There are only two problems. The first is that VTB, which is the
second-largest bank in Russia and is 75 percent-owned by the Russian
government, is also one of the fastest-growing financial institutions
on the planet, with retail, commercial and investment arms in 19
countries, including the United States,” Michael Weiss writes.

According to the article this bank has been, and continues to be,
dogged by civil lawsuits filed in multiple jurisdictions because of
its issuance of loans that have led High Court justices to wonder
“what, if any, due diligence” was carried out beforehand. VTB, as
the author notices, has been accused to being little more than a
vehicle for the enrichment of its executives and for the Kremlin’s
“economic diplomacy.”

“The second problem is that in May of this year, Azerbaijan’s sovereign
wealth fund invested $500 million in VTB’s secondary public offering
(SPO). It was joined by Qatar’s and Norway’s sovereign wealth funds
and, collectively, all three gobbled up 55 percent of the SPO,”
the author writes.

According to the article, on November 9, 2009, Ataholding, an
open joint-stock company that manages AtaBank, one of the biggest
commercial banks in Azerbaijan, purchased 48.99 percent of VTB’s
Azerbaijani subsidiary. The remaining 51 percent is owned by VTB and
thus mostly owned by the Russian government. As of December 31, 2009,
AtaBank’s investment was valued at 10,887,310 Azerbaijani manats,
which at today’s exchange rate is around $13.8 million.

Ataholding is 51 percent-owned by a Panama-registered shell company
called Hughson Management, Inc., of which, Aliyev clan has the
controlling interest. Curiously, and perhaps owing to the diligent
spadework of Andrew Higgins, the Ataholding statement currently
hosted on the company’s website does not include the notes section
of the earlier copy, which says that “the Group’s immediate parent is
Hughson Management Inc. tax resident of Republic of Panama.” Hughson
Management is still currently listed as the majority owner of AtaBank.

The author also touches to Aliyev clan story, noting that Heydar
Aliyev was KGB chief who turned Communist ruler and was the kind of
Stalinoid satrap-cum-mafia kingpin, who could bribe Leonid Brezhnev,
if he found it necessary, in order to remain in power. Gorbachev’s
rise in Moscow coincided with this Heydar’s eclipse in Baku. He
subsequently became first the de facto head of the republic, as the
USSR was falling apart, and then the first president of post-Soviet
Azerbaijan in 1993. Heydar ruled until 2003, which is the year he died.

The elder Heydar was immediately succeeded by his son Ilham, whose own
“election” in 2003 Human Rights Watch characterized as the rotten
fruit of “bureaucratic interference and political intimidation
against the opposition [which made] a free and fair pre-election
campaign environment impossible.” Terms limits for presidents were
abolished in 2009, the same year the regime clamped down on domestic
press freedoms and took the BBC, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty,
and Voice of America off the air.

Here’s how the U.S. embassy in Baku described Ilham Aliyev in 2009:
“Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev utilizes distinctly different
approaches to foreign and domestic policies. He typically devises
the former with pragmatism, restraint and a helpful bias toward
integration with the West, yet at home his policies have become
increasingly authoritarian and hostile to diversity of political
views. This divergence of approaches, combined with his father’s
continuing omnipresence, has led some observers to compare the Aliyevs
with the fictional ‘Corleones’ of Godfather fame, with the current
president described alternately as a mix of ‘Michael’ and ‘Sonny.’
Either way, this Michael/Sonny dichotomy complicates our approach
to Baku and has the unfortunate effect of framing what should be a
strategically valuable relationship as a choice between U.S. interests
and U.S. values.”

Talking about the suspicious relations with the offshore companies
the author notes that the Aliyev clan doesn’t wish to see explored by
muckraking journalists. And Ismayilova, the journalist who was making
her own investigation in this sphere, was targeted by a particularly
nasty campaign of state harassment, which included her being sent an
envelope filled with “pictures of a personal nature” and a message
reading: “whore, behave, or you will be defamed,” the article says.

It also says that these images were later published in Azerbaijani
newspapers associated with the ruling New Azerbaijan Party. Ismayilova
later discovered and documented surveillance wires that had been
installed in the walls and ceilings of her home kitchen, bathroom
and bedroom. The government’s “investigation” of the tapping of
Ismayilova’s residence was a whitewash.

Source: Panorama.am

Mkhitaryan Signs Autographs For Borussia Fans (PHOTO)

MKHITARYAN SIGNS AUTOGRAPHS FOR BORUSSIA FANS (PHOTO)

July 12, 2013

DORTMUND. – Armenian national football team midfielder Henrikh
Mkhitaryan is in great demand among the fans of Borussia Dortmund
of Germany.

The Facebook page of the club has posted a photograph, where the
Armenian international signs autographs for the Borussia fans.

As NEWS.am Sport informed earlier, the 24-year-old midfielder signed
a four-year deal with Borussia Dortmund. Also, Henrikh Mkhitaryan
scored a goal and provided an assist in his first match with the team.

http://sport.news.am/eng/news/26476/mkhitaryan-signs-autographs-for-borussia-fans-photo.html

Six Laureats De L’ufar Presentent Leur Memoire

SIX LAUREATS DE L’UFAR PRESENTENT LEUR MEMOIRE

C’est le vendredi 5 juillet que les six etudiants de l’Universite
Francaise en Armenie (UFAR), dont le memoire a ete retenu pour
l’interet qu’il presente en termes de connaissance sur les enjeux de
developpement de l’Armenie et pour les entreprises francaises dans
une perspective d’opportunite commerciale, ont presente leur travail
devant six auditeurs, principalement issus des entreprises francaises.

Parmi les thèmes presentes, le developpement des assurances
personnelles en Armenie, du credit pour l’agriculture ou les problèmes
des transports aeriens, ont fait l’objet des echanges les plus nourris.

A l’issue de ces presentations, les laureats se sont vus remettre une
attestation par l’Ambassadeur, leur permettant de beneficier d’une
reduction de leur frais de scolarite a l’UFAR.

Ambassade de France en Armenie

jeudi 11 juillet 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

BAKU: U.S. Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus Expands

U.S. CONGRESSIONAL AZERBAIJAN CAUCUS EXPANDS

Azer News, Azerbaijan
July 10, 2013 Wednesday

The number of members of the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus (CAC) in
the U.S. House of US Representatives has reached 46, AzerTac state
news agency reported.

The Azerbaijani Embassy in Washington reported that Mark Medows from
Northern Carolina, Jim Bridenstine from Oklahoma and Filemon Vela
from Texas joined the Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus.

The Congressional Azerbaijan Caucus was formed in the beginning of
2004 by congressmen Curt Weldon (R-PA) and Solomon Ortiz (D-TX),
its founding co-chairmen.

The Caucus has played an important role in increasing the understanding
of the Congress on the Caspian energy and geopolitics of the South
Caucasus region, in further developing the strategic relations
between the United States and Republic of Azerbaijan, increasing
trade, security and military cooperation between the two nations,
better grasp issues surrounding the illegal military occupation of
Azerbaijani lands such as the Nagorno-Karabakh (NK) and other regions
around it by Armenia, the Armenian blockade against Nakhichevan region
of Azerbaijan, and energizing the Azerbaijani-American voters.

Armenia: Getting Serious About Punishing Political Wrongdoers?

ARMENIA: GETTING SERIOUS ABOUT PUNISHING POLITICAL WRONGDOERS?

EurasiaNet.org, NY
July 10 2013

July 10, 2013 – 11:46am, by Marianna Grigoryan

First, it happened in the northwestern city of Gyumri. Then, in the
southern region of Syunik. Within the space of seven months, the
Armenian government has accepted the resignations of two powerful
regional chieftains with long-held track records for alleged violence.

But do these departures signal a real intention to hold public
officials, including political allies, accountable for their actions?

Critics long have charged that political power in Armenia’s regions
often can mean a warrant to behave more like a mafia godfather than a
public servant. Media reports of corruption, bribery and indiscriminate
use of violence run rife.

But now, with recollections of this year’s protests in mind, President
Serzh Sargsyan, who appoints all ten of the country’s governors,
has pledged to hold miscreant officeholders to account. “We will be
the first to condemn the faults and speak about theft and crimes . . .

since this is the price we have to pay to appear on the right path,”
he declared on June 29.

Nonetheless, choosing that path is not straightforward. Regional
officials routinely rally the vote for Sargsyan’s Republican Party
of Armenia (RPA).

That means that Sargsyan, even with no election in sight, “faces a hard
dilemma,” commented independent political analyst Yervand Bozoian. “On
the one hand, he punishes these people and loses their support because
they were providing votes for him. [But] if he does not punish them,
the state is decaying little by little,” Bozoian said.

Some observers believe that former scenario occurred during this
February’s presidential election, when President Sargsyan lost
Gyumri, the site of a Russian military base, to opposition leader
Raffi Hovhannisian by a spread of more than 42 percentage points,
an unprecedented defeat.

The loss was attributed in part to the departure of Gyumri’s former
mayor, Vardan Ghukasian, an ex-regional RPA boss known as “a good
vote provider,” who resigned in October 2012, following a scandal
over a city gunfight involving his son, Spartak.

During Ghukasian’s 13 years in office, the city of Gyumri had acquired
the name “Little Sicily” for its variety of bloodshed and corruption,
often allegedly involving the mayor or certain relatives. Prosecutions
were inconsistent, critics claim.

Following Ghukasian’s resignation, however, his son, an ex-con, was
arrested for a Gyumri gun battle, though subsequently released. This
April, police also scooped up Vardan Ghukasian himself as a potential
suspect in a shooting death, a crime to which Ghukasian’s nephew,
Vahe, confessed.

Many Armenians, though, see these measures and the government’s
acceptance of Ghukasian’s resignation less as a desire for
housecleaning, and more as a payback for the loss of Gyumri in last
year’s parliamentary elections.

Meanwhile, a similar debate about accountability has emerged in
Syunik, a region bordering on Iran that houses much of Armenia’s
mining industry, one of the economy’s few cash cows.

Until his resignation last month, Syunik’s 56-year-old Surik
Khachatrian, known as “Liska” (“Little Fox” in Russian or based
on the Armenian word for “Energized”), ranked as one of the most
influential of Armenia’s presidentially appointed governors, a man
not easily crossed.

Sargsyan’s 12-percentage-point loss this February to Hovhannisian
in Syunik’s seat, Kapan, demonstrated one limit to that influence,
however. A fatal June 1 gunfight near Khachatrian’s house in the town
of Goris that resulted in the death of one man, Avetik Budaghian,
and the serious injury of three others provided a further taint.

RFE/RL reported on July 9 that the father of Budaghian and another
victim alleged that an argument between his sons and Khachatrian had
preceded the shootout. Khachatrian’s 19-year-old son, Tigran, and
a bodyguard have been arrested and charged with murder and illegal
weapons’ possession in connection with the incident. Khachatrian told
police he was asleep at the time of the murder.

Past instances of retaliatory violence, though, contributed to demands
for his resignation, and still raise popular suspicions.

Recently, in a downtown Yerevan hotel, the ex-governor was filmed
slapping businesswoman Silva Hambarzumian, who had alleged that he had
stolen a mine and mining equipment from her. No punishment followed
the incident.

Similarly, in 2008, a US embassy cable released by WikiLeaks cited
a “direct source” about a brutal beating delivered by Khachatrian
in his office to a teenage boy who had scuffled with his son. No
consequences ensued.

“There has been a lack of political responsibility; instead, the
authorities have patronized him,” charged human rights activist Arthur
Sakunts, chairperson of the Helsinki Assembly’s Vanadzor office.

Even with Khachatrian’s resignation, that plotline has not changed,
Sakunts argued. “They did not fire him, but dismissed him according
to his own resignation request . . . There is no political will here
[for dismissals].”

The Republican Party of Armenia, however, underlines that Khachatrian
must be considered innocent until proven otherwise. “If Surik
Khachatrian did not resign, he would not be dismissed because if you
and I and others are not guilty [of a crime until proven guilty] . . .

he is not guilty, either,” commented Deputy Chairperson Galust
Sahakian.

Some observers, though, believe that, even with sufficient proof,
a criminal prosecution of Khachatrian would not occur so long as the
ex-governor supports the president.

RPA Secretary Eduard Sharmazanov objected. “Regardless of whether
you are someone’s relative or have a good position or belong to some
party . . . you must face punishment in the case that you are guilty,”
he said.

Editor’s note: Marianna Grigoryan is a freelance reporter based in
Yerevan and editor of MediaLab.am.

http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67232

Beirut: First-time fasters embrace Ramadan

FIRST-TIME FASTERS EMBRACE RAMADAN

The Daily Star (Lebanon)
July 8, 2013 Monday

by Brooke Anderson

Anyone who has ever fasted knows the discipline required for going
without food or drink from sunup to sun down.

BEIRUT: Anyone who has ever fasted knows the discipline required for
going without food or drink from sunup to sun down. And those with
devoted Muslim friends and family members have seen up close what it
takes to make the daily sacrifice for 30 days during the holy month
of Ramadan. Nevertheless, every year millions of people across the
world take up fasting for the first time – be they children who have
reached puberty, religious converts, Muslims who are newly embracing
their faith or non-Muslims who are doing so as a symbolic gesture to
people of a different faith.

“I’ll be fasting in solidarity with my Muslim friends this year
for the first time so I can feel the meaning of sacrifice,” says
Adriana Bou Diwan, a Christian who is part of an interfaith studies
and solidarity organization called Adyan, Arabic for “religions.”

“When you put yourself in the place of someone else you understand
them better,” she says. “I’m also doing it because we have a lot in
common in our religious traditions.”

Bou Diwan grew up in a predominantly Christian area and was educated
in Catholic schools through university. Until recently she had very
little exposure to Islam. Although she will only fast for one day
because there is no one at home to break the fast with, she will be
taking part in all the traditions, including the predawn suhoor meal.

While Lebanon’s Dar al-Fatwa said it would watch for the Ramadan
crescent Monday evening, the office of the late Shiite preacher Sayyed
Mohammad Hussein Fadlallah announced that the first day of Ramadan
would be Tuesday.

The caretaker government said last week that state institutions and
municipalities would run shifts between 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. during the
holy month of Ramadan.

Mohammad Anis al-Arwadi, a Beirut-based medical doctor with a PhD
in Shariah law, cautions that first-time fasters should make sure
they are in good medical condition before embarking on a month of
no meals during the daytime. For children under the age of puberty
(generally 13), fasting is advised for only a few days as a way of
“training” for later in life.

Arwadi also suggests people who are new to fasting consider why
they are doing it. He says they should be doing it out of religious
conviction and sacrifice – not for social reasons. But he does support
Christians fasting in solidarity with Muslims, especially in Lebanon,
where sectarian tensions remain a lingering relic of the Civil War.

No matter people’s reasons for fasting, he says it’s important for
it to be a genuine conviction.

“You’re obliging your body, in spite of its instincts, to go
without food,” Arwadi says. “It teaches you to feel for poor people
everywhere.”

For Garen Yepremian, a Lebanese account executive who arrived in Dubai
three months ago, fasting will be a mandatory exercise throughout
the 30 days of Ramadan – because in the United Arab Emirates it is
forbidden to eat in public during daylight hours.

“Given I already had a heads up, I didn’t mind it much,” says
Yepremian, an Armenian Christian from Beirut, who knew about the law
before arriving for his latest stint in Dubai. “I just knew that if
I was desperate for food, I’d have to smuggle it in my clothes and
eat it in the bathroom stall without making noise.”

Still, he doesn’t seem to mind the inconvenience for one month given
the wide ranging freedoms he is afforded the rest of the year in Dubai.

“Given the free lifestyle that people have in Dubai and seeing how
open-minded the country [is], I find it fair to respect their beliefs
in their most holy month and support them just as they have given
everyone else the freedom of belief,” he says.

Even with the UAE’s strict laws regarding food consumption during the
months of Ramadan, Yepremian believes people are generally fasting
out of their own convictions: “I feel that they are doing so out of
their own will rather than from peer pressure because it’s the month
of giving for them.”

“Working on multiple marketing campaigns for different clients that
revolve around messaging and wishing blessings to their customers, I’ve
come to understand why it’s such a big deal for them and that makes
me respect them more for being true to their beliefs and convictions.”

Rawad Abed, a Druze who never fasted but grew up with many friends who
did, says he wants to try fasting this year – at least for one day –
so that he can understand why people do it.

“I see my friends doing it every year, and they say they enjoy it,”
he says. “I feel like I need to understand the spirit of their
commitment.”

http://www.lexisnexis.com.ezproxy.aub.edu.lb/lnacui2api/results/docview/docview.do?docLinkInd=true&risb=21_T17768913152&format=GNBFI&sort=BOOLEAN&startDocNo=126&resultsUrlKey=29_T17768913160&cisb=22_T17768913159&treeMax=true&treeWidth=0&csi=335154&docNo=143