Spears: Exhibition `Fly to Baku is PR’ of repressive regime in Azerb

Spears: Exhibition `Fly to Baku is PR’ of repressive regime in Azerbaijan

20:39 08/04/2013 » SOCIETY

A travelling exhibition of Azerbaijani Contemporary art which has made
stops in London, Berlin, Moscow and Rome, before ending up in Baku is
a simply PR for a cash-rich authoritarian government of Azerbaijan,
Josh Spers writes in the British article Spears.

`The whole concept of Fly to Baku makes me uneasy, however: isn’t it
simply PR for a cash-rich authoritarian government, using art to
distract from a regime of repression?’ the author of the article
wonders.

According to him, the position of Azerbaijani artists cannot be so
different from that of Azerbaijani writers, who are restricted –
explicitly or by inference – in what they can write and beaten when
they flout the restrictions, according to a report from Human Rights
Watch called `Beaten, Blacklisted and Behind Bars’.

He brings an extract from the Human Rights Watch: `The government of
Azerbaijan is engaged in concerted efforts to limit the space for
freedom of expression in the country… Dozens of journalists have
been prosecuted and imprisoned or fined. Police and sometimes
unidentified assailants are able to physically attack journalists and
human rights defenders with impunity.’

In tune with this, the art in Fly to Baku is negligible in its
political content, perhaps because of a self-exercised censorship.

As Spero says, perhaps, Fly to Baku’s artists have in their attics
radical art which deals with repression and dictatorship and a ruling
family which spends the country’s money on vanity projects abroad.

The author quotes the journal Private Eye and says that `During the
past year at least 11 MPs, plus several peers, have benefited from the
Azeris’ `caviar diplomacy’. This usually involves no-expense-spared
junkets to Baku.’

The Eye noted how, `British politicians are unusually favourable to
Azerbaijan in the Council of Europe, `despite its consistent flouting
of decisions by the European Court of Human Rights’.’

`So it’s art and caviar diplomacy for some, and jail for others. Fly
to Baku? Easy. Just watch what you say when you’re there,’ the article
says.

In May 1012 the “European Stability Initiative” published a study
entitled “Caviar Diplomacy: How Azerbaijan got the silence of the
Council of Europe” which was showed the detailed chronology and
mechanisms of bribing the members of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
Council of Europe by the ruling regime in Azerbaijan.

Source: Panorama.am

Georgian Reintegration Minister: There is no interest from the side

Georgian Reintegration Minister: There is no interest from the side of
Russia in restoration of railway lines through Abkhazia

ARMINFO
Monday, April 8, 16:11

The restoration of the [Abkhazian] railway is just an idea; there are
no negotiations ongoing so far, Georgia’s Reintegration Minister Paata
Zakareishvili said in an interview to Commonspace.

“Our interest was actually to find out in how far the Russian
Federation would be ready to discuss this idea, and now we see that
there is no interest from the side of Russia. I have personally been
involved in the processes of conflict resolution for a long time, and
very often other parties have blamed Georgia for not taking steps they
were themselves not ready to implement. I doubt that Russia would be
ready to discuss the railway line because then they would have to
revise their policy of recognition [of the independence of Abkhazia].
Our motivation was to propose this idea in order to move the current
situation from deadlock but Russia lacks interest,” Zakareishvili
said.

He said that there have been two meetings so far between Russian
Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin and Special Representative of
the Georgian Prime Minister for bilateral relations with Russia Zurab
Abashidze and this topic has never been brought up.

Un << discours de vérité >> de l’Etat sur les Kurdes

Un > de l’Etat sur les Kurdes

Publié le : 08-04-2013

Info Collectif VAN – – Le Collectif VAN vous
propose cette analyse d’Etienne Copeaux publiée sur son blog
susam-sokak.fr, le lundi 19 janvier 2013.

Légende photo : 26 avril 1998. Un officier supérieur fait visiter
l’exposition au président Demirel.

Photo Türkiye

susam-sokak.fr

Esquisse n° 33 – Un > de l’Etat sur les Kurdes

Samedi 19 janvier 2013

[dernière modification : 27 janvier 2013]

A la fin du mois d’avril 1998, l’état-major de l’armée turque avait
organisé dans les locaux de la banque Ziraat, rue Istiklal à Istanbul,
une exposition sur >, qui visait à dénoncer les violences de l’ >. On remettait aux visiteurs un document sur
papier glacé, intitulé dont parle Foucault dans le cours au Collège de
France du 14 janvier 1976 : >.

L’origine étatique du document transparaît par le lieu même de sa
diffusion, mais aussi par les emplois du > (biz) ou autres
formes possessives (notre, nos – en turc le suffixe -miz et ses
variantes), qui créent, entre l’énonciateur et le lecteur
(destinataire) une communauté faite de tous les éléments ainsi
connotés.

Les quatre textes du document commencent par une invocation que, pour
rester près de la forme turque, je traduis volontairement sous une
forme inusitée en français : > (Sevgili
kardeslerimiz !), > (Sevgili vatadaslarýmýz!)
et surtout > (Yüce Halkýmýz) et > (Yüce milletimiz) ; ce sont des formes fréquemment
employées par les dirigeants s’adressant aux administrés, qui dénotent
le rang hiérarchique élevé de l’énonciateur.

Les autres mots connotés par la forme possessive sont Etat,
constitution, forces de sécurité, patrie, investisseurs ; combat,
protecteurs de village, sang ; jeunes, jeunes filles, honneur,
liberté. Ainsi la communauté est définie : une nation, un territoire
et sa population ; et par-dessus tout son Etat et ses institutions qui
mènent le combat visant à la protéger. Ils forment le > global
du discours : >, >, >. Les >, désignés par un >
(onlar), sont toujours dans le titre ; c’est pourquoi une partie du texte vise à
nier toute altérité à cette population.

Le document comprend trois types de discours : textuel, iconographique
et cartographique. Le discours textuel est partagé en quatre pages ;
la première nie l’existence d’une altérité et réfute la
proposition-titre, >, en recourant à la rhétorique historique du nationalisme turc, mise
en place à la fin du XIXe siècle et reprise par Atatürk en personne
sous le nom de .

Lire la suite de l’article sur le site susam-sokak.fr, le blog
d’Etienne Copeaux

Retour à la rubrique
Source/Lien : susam-sokak.fr

http://www.collectifvan.org/article.php?r=0&id=72678
www.collectifvan.org

Turkey to enhance aviation with Russia

Turkey to enhance aviation with Russia

08:35 ¢ 09.04.13

Turkey and Russia signed a civil aviation agreement on Monday in order
to enhance cooperation with regard to airspace use, code sharing and
increasing the number of fights between the two countries, Hurriyet
Daily News reported.

After bilateral negotiations between the Turkish Ministry of
Transport’s Directorate General of Civil Aviation (SHGM) and Russia’s
Civil Aviation Authority between April 3 and 4, the two sides
concluded an aviation agreement, as SHGM made public yesterday.

As the agreement will increase the frequency of, and remove
restrictions for, flights between several Turkish and
Russianprovinces, the number of destinations served by flights to and
from Russia is set to increase, notably to include locations in
Turkey’s provinces of Samsun, NevÅ?ehir and Gaziantep. Turkey’s airline
companies will be able to fly to the Commonwealth of Independent
States (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova,
Uzbekistan, Tajikistan and Russia) through Russian airspace without
any restrictions on frequency, according to the agreement.

Turkey will be allowed to benefit from trans-Siberian airspace for its
flights to the Far East (Tokyo, Osaka, Bishkek, and Ulaanbaatar),
although limited to a frequency of 21 flights per week.

The agreement also allows the designated companies to engage in code
sharing applications along with third parties.

Turkey and Russia signed 11 agreements in many fields during Russian
President Vladimir Putin’s visit to Turkey in December. As the two
countries bid to increase the $32 billion annual bilateral trade to an
ambitious $100 billion, energy ties dominated the talks.

There are around 3,000 Turkish companies active in Russia, according
to Moscow sources.

After the lifting of visas in 2011, some 3.5 million Russian tourists
have visited Turkey last year.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Inauguration 2013: One country, ‘two leaders’

Inauguration 2013: One country, ‘two leaders’

09:40 ¢ 09.04.13

Today is a presidential inauguration day in Armenia, an important
state event which follows presidential elections to mark the newly
elected state leader’s swearing into office.

While the third republic is preparing for the six inaugural event, the
day is going to be of special importance, with the society expected to
see the two different ceremonies simultaneously.

Former opposition candidate Raffi Hovhannisian, who disputes the
official election outcome, is going to gather a crowd of supporters in
Yerevan’s Liberty Square at midday to celebrate what he calls the
inauguration of his New Armenia.

In the meantime, Serzh Sargsyan will be sworn into his second second
term at the Yerevan Sports and Concert Complex.

According to the official voting results, the re-elected president
polled about 59% in the February 18 presidential election, as opposed
to Hovhannisian’s 37%.

Presidential inaugurations in Armenia were held in the following succession.

First President Levon Ter-Petrosyan was sworn into office on November
11, 1991 at the session hall of Armenia’s parliament (which was then
called the Supreme Council). The newly-independent Armenia not having
adopted a constitution yet, the elected president took oath with his
hand on a 7th Bible, which is now kept in the Matenadaran (Yerevan
Repository of ancient manuscripts) as a state symbol.

Ter-Petrosyan’s second inauguration, held exactly five years later,
saw the re-elected president taking oath with one hand on the ancient
relic and the other hand ` on Armenia’s Constitution (that was adopted
in a universal referendum in 1995).

Following the snap presidential election in 1998, a former president
of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic and an acting president of Armenia
following Ter-Petrosyan’s resignation, Robert Kocharyan, became the
country’s second leader. His swearing-in ceremony was held on April 9
at the Yerevan Opera and Ballet Theatre, which five years later, again
hosted his inauguration event marking his second term in office.

Serzh Sargsyan’s first term inauguration (2008) was also held at the
Opera House.

The text of the president’s oath runs as follows, “Assuming the
office of the President of the Republic of Armenia I swear to fulfill
the requirements of the Constitution in an unreserved manner, to
respect fundamental human and civil rights and freedoms, to ensure the
protection, independence, territorial integrity and security of the
Republic to the glory of the Republic of Armenia and to the welfare of
the people of the Republic of Armenia” (Armenian Constitution,
Article 54).

This year’s event is expected to bring together around 2,000 invitees,
including international delegations and representatives from about 60
countries around the world. The ceremony will be attended by President
of the Nagorno-Karabakh Republic Bako Sahakyan, Secretary General of
the Collective Security Treaty Organization Nikolay Bordyuzha, Iranian
Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, chief of the Russian presidential
staff, Sergey Ivanov, FIDE President Kirsan Ilyumzhinov and the chief
of the Russian Presidential Administration’s Secretariat, Andrey
Chobotov.

Other invitees include the president of the Russian state nuclear
energy corporation, Rosatom, Sergey Kirienko, a deputy foreign
minister of Russia, Sergey Karasin, a speaker of the British House of
Lords, Salterin Wallace, Assistant Secretary General for Public
Diplomacy at NATO, Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic, Secretary General of the
Black Sea Economic Cooperation Permanent International Secretariat,
Victor Tvirku, Deputy president of Argentina Amado Boudou, Lebanon’s
State Minister Marwan Kheireddin, a deputy speaker of the Czech
Republic’s Senate, Alena Gajduskova, President of the Belarusian
National Assembly’s House of Representatives Vladimir Andreichenko,
President of the Chamber of Deputies of Romania Valeriu È`tefan Zgonea
and many others.

Resident and non-resident ambassadors from different countries
(including Russia and European states and international delegations)
are also expected to attend the event.

Despite such a geo-political representation, the domestic guests’ list
is a little bit different.

Of the eight political forces represented at the National Sssembly,
only two ` the Rule of Law and Prosperous Armenia (partially) ` will
be present at the Sports and Concert Complex today. The other
parliamentary factions (the opposition Armenian National Congress,
Heritage and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation-Dashnaksutyun) will
not attend the event.

With the exception 1991, the outcomes of all other presidential
elections in Armenia have been widely disputed, with public uprisings
always preceding, following or coinciding with the inaugural events.

Armenian News – Tert.am

Israël écarte un rôle dans l’immédiat de la Turquie dans le processu

TURQUIE
Israël écarte un rôle dans l’immédiat de la Turquie dans le processus de paix

JERUSALEM – La ministre israélienne de la Justice Tzipi Livni, chargée
du dossier des négociations avec les Palestiniens, a exclu dimanche
que la Turquie joue un rôle actif dans l’immédiat dans la relance du
processus de paix comme l’a suggéré le secrétaire d’Etat américain
John Kerry.

Le processus politique doit se dérouler de façon directe entre nous et
les Palestiniens, a répondu Mme Livni à la radio publique à une
question sur le rôle que pourrait jouer la Turquie dans la relance des
négociations gelées depuis septembre 2010.

Les dirigeants de la région sont importants. Tout dirigeant
palestinien qui souhaite négocier doit bien entendu obtenir le soutien
des pays de la région, mais pour le moment nous sommes totalement
impliqués dans les efforts en vue de la reprise des négociations
directes, tandis que les Américains tentent d’aider à cette relance, a
expliqué Mme Livni au moment où M. Kerry était de retour en Israël
pour tenter de relancer le processus de paix.

Nous pourrons sous peu évaluer la contribution des pays de la région.
L’idée est intéressante, mais cela prendra du temps, a ajouté Mme
Livni, à propos des déclarations de M. Kerry à Istanbul qui a estimé
que la Turquie pouvait jouer un rôle clé et apporter une importante
contribution au processus de paix entre Israël et les Palestiniens.

Un pays aussi dynamique et énergique que la Turquie peut avoir un
impact profond sur le processus de paix, a affirmé M. Kerry lors d’une
conférence de presse avec le ministre turc des Affaires étrangères
Ahmet Davutoglu.

Le secrétaire d’Etat américain doit avoir des discussions dimanche
soir à Ramallah, en Cisjordanie, avec le président de l’Autorité
palestinienne Mahmoud Abbas et mardi à Jérusalem avec le Premier
ministre israélien Benjamin Netanyahu.

Sous la pression des Etats-Unis, M. Netanyahu a présenté le 22 mars
dernier les excuses de son pays pour la mort de neuf ressortissants
turcs par l’armée israélienne lors de l’assaut en 2010 d’un navire
humanitaire en route pour Gaza.

Ce geste a relancé les relations entre les deux pays, suspendues de
facto de fait depuis cet incident. Des discussions sur le versement de
dommages et intérêts aux familles des victimes turques doivent débuter
la semaine prochaine.

AFP

mardi 9 avril 2013,
Stéphane ©armenews.com

Madives: Hoax photo of Nasheed meeting Artur Brothers circulated by

Minivan News, Maldives
April 8 2013

Hoax photo of Nasheed meeting Artur Brothers circulated by State
Defence Minister turns into meme

By Mohamed Naahee | April 8th, 2013

A photograph widely distributed by local media outlets depicting
former President Mohamed Nasheed and his Special Envoy Ibrahim Hussain
Zaki meeting the infamous Armenian `Artur Brothers’ has turned out to
be a hoax.

The Armenian brothers – linked with drug trafficking, money
laundering, raids on media outlets and other serious crimes in Kenya –
were recently photographed with current Minster of Tourism Ahmed
Adheeb and Defence Minister Ahmed Nazim during the Piston Motor Racing
Challenge, organised by the Maldivian National Defence Force (MNDF).

The two ministers initially denied any involvement with the brothers
or their apparent business interests in the Maldives, however a letter
from the Tourism Ministry to immigration authorities requesting a
residency visa for Margaryan and Sargsyan Artur, dated January 27 and
signed by Adheeb, was subsequently leaked on social media.

Zaidul Khaleel, General Manager of the Club Faru resort which is
operated by the state-owned Maldives Tourism Development Corporation
(MTDC), has also reportedly been sacked after he was found to have
paid the brothers’ US$6000 bill.

Meanwhile, on Sunday a photo depicting former President Nasheed and
Special Envoy and former SAARC Secretary General Ibrahim Hussain Zaki
apparently meeting Artur Sargsyan was leaked on social media and
widely republished by local media.

Local media outlet Channel News Maldives (CNM) reported that the
photograph was originally leaked by the former Immigration Controller
and current State Minister for Defence, Ilyas Hussain.

However the photograph turned out to be an edited photo taken during a
formal reception for US Deputy Secretary of State James Steinberg,
held at the former Presidential residence of Muleaage in January 2011,
with Sargsyan Artur’s head carefully photo-shopped onto Steinberg.

According to CNM, Ilyas at the time confirmed to the media outlet that
the photo of Nasheed with Artur Sargsyan was real and authentic.

Speaking to Minivan News, Ilyas Hussain stated that he no longer
wished to comment on the matter.

Following the publication of the leaked photo, a member of President
Waheed’s Gaumee Ithihaad Party (GIP) told Minivan News that Waheed had
prepared a press conference following the release of the edited photo,
but later called it off after the photo was discovered to be a hoax.

Minivan News was unable to confirm the claim as President’s Office
Spokesperson Masood Imad was not responding at time of press.

The photo has since gone viral across Maldivian social media and has
been widely photoshopped to depict Nasheed meeting a wide variety of
celebrities and fictional characters.

The meme has blossomed to include Nasheed encountering deceased
Chairman of Apple Inc, Steve Jobs, Albert Einstein, Justin Beiber,
Professional Wrestler/Rapper/Actor John Cena, the Pope, popular
antagonist of the Star Wars franchise Darth Vader, fictional lead
character in the Sacha Baron Cohen comedy `Dictator’ Admiral General
Haffaz Aladeen, DC Comics superhero Batman, Rowan Atkinson’s UK comedy
icon Mr Bean, and `Big Bird’ from US children’s television show Sesame
Street.

http://minivannews.com/politics/hoax-photo-of-nasheed-meeting-artur-brothers-circulated-by-state-defence-minister-turns-into-meme-55873

Turkey wants end to Canada’s genocide policy, and seeks free trade d

Postmedia Breaking News
April 7, 2013 Sunday

Turkey wants end to Canada’s genocide policy, and seeks free trade deal

OTTAWA – Turkey’s ambassador to Canada says the Harper government’s
decision to brand the killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks as
genocide may be hindering a potentially lucrative trading
relationship.

Ambassador Tuncay Babali made clear in a wide ranging interview with
The Canadian Press that Canada’s position on the First World War-era
slaughter of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians still carries a sting
for his country.

But that doesn’t mean Turkey doesn’t want to press on with forging a
deeper economic relationship with Canada, ideally a free trade
agreement to compliment the current Canada-EU free trade talks once
they are completed, he said.

“I’m a true believer in the potential of our two nations. Canada has a
lot to offer Turkey and Turkey in return has a lot to offer Canada,”
said Babali, noting that Canada’s internal Foreign Policy Plan has
identified Turkey as a key country of focus.

“It cannot be business as usual while accusing a nation of genocide.
It’s a serious allegation. It needs to be substantiated, legally,
historically.”

Related

Canada, key allies storm out of UN nuclear meeting in protest of
Iran’s ‘Israeli genocide ‘ remarks

Turkey reaches out to EU while embracing Islamicization

Jonathan Kay: A great time for a fresh look at the Armenian Genocide

Babali said he suspects Canada is not engaging as quickly as Turkey
would like because the genocide issue is still hanging over relations.

“There is a pacing issue here,” he said. “We want results. We want
action. We want concrete steps forward. Talking about positive things
is ok, but it takes two to tango.”

The $2.5 billion in two-way trade between countries “is far from the
potential” of what Turkey predicts would result from deeper economic
ties: $10-$15 billion within five years, he said.

He said Turkey would like to open free trade talks with Canada.

But on the genocide question, Babali said Turkey would like to see a
gesture from Canada that the government is “trying to leave this
behind us.”

A significant gesture would be a “high level” visit by Foreign Affairs
Minister John Baird to Turkey. Baird cancelled a planned trip in
November, Babali said, because of an important cabinet meeting in
Ottawa.

Babali was also encourged by Baird’s plans to travel to the West Bank
on the week end to discuss future Canadian aid contributions to the
Palestinian Authority.

He suggested Canada can do more in the Middle East peace process, even
though Turkey is well aware of Ottawa’s strong support of Israel.

“I think aid is important. To keep the channels open. You have to hear
both sides. Canada has leverage that can play in those issues as well.
It should be used in a stronger way.”

Handout/AFP/Getty Images)(FILES) An unlocated document showing an
Armenian woman and a child mourning a young boy during the deportation
of Armenians by the Turks in the second part of the 1910’s.

Babali praised the efforts of Baird for m end ing fences with Turkey,
including the personal fri end ship he has forged with his
counterpart, Ahmet Davutolu, who visited Canada this past September.

“We have good room to manoeuvre here after our minister’s visit. But
it takes two to tango,” he said.

“If there is a political will from the Canadian side to move forward
and improve our relations further, to live up to the promise and
potential, we need concrete steps.”

Canada’s Parliament voted in 2004 to recognize the events of 1915 to
1923 as a genocide carried out by Ottoman Turks during the Armenian
uprising.

The Harper government formally adopted that position after winning
power, a decision that angered Ankara and sparked the temporary
withdrawal of its ambassador from Ottawa.

Turkey has lobbied hard internationally to block the genocide
designation, although many other countries have used the term.

In 2010, when the U.S. Congress abandoned a plan to declare the
killings a genocide, Davutolu said ties could have been harmed between
the two countries had “common sense” not prevailed.

Last year, when France passed a law that makes it a crime to deny the
Armenian genocide, Turkey responded by susp end ing military, economic
and political ties.

Last summer, Canada took steps to heal the rift with Turkey. It
unveiled a cone-shaped metal-and-wood monument dedicated to Col.
Atilla Altikat, the country’s military attache gunned down in Ottawa,
allegedly by Armenian terrorists, 30 years earlier.

That appeared to go a long way towards bridging the gap between the
two countries, both NATO allies.

Babali reiterated what Davutolu said during his visit – that Turkey
would like to strike a joint commission with Armenians to discuss the
historical facts surrounding the issue.

During the visit, Baird did not back away from his government’s
earlier position, but said he appreciated the sensitivities at play.

Babali said Turkey wants deeper economic ties with Canada, and it
appears the country is open for business despite any bitterness over
the Armenia policy.

In the next 10 years, Turkey will launch 150 infrastructure projects
worth hundreds of billions of dollars, many in the transportation
sector. Babali cited Bombardier Inc. and SNC-Lavalin as potential
investors.

He also said there are also opportunities for Canadian companies in
his country’s developing nuclear energy program and in shale gas
exploration.

Critics’ Forum Article – 04/07/2013

Critics’ Forum
Literature
Lamenting Jerusalem: The Armenian Quarter in the Old City
By Tamar Boyadjian

For the last two millennia, Jerusalem has been represented as a space
of desire – a place that has been perennially occupied and lost, and
an area whose borders are contested until today. Jerusalem – as both
a spiritual and secular space – has over the years attracted the
attention of many different groups of people, including Armenians.
Armenian presence in Jerusalem dates back over 1,500 years, with
documented evidence from the 5th century. The Armenian Quarter in
Jerusalem, which encompasses one-sixth of the Old City, is unique in
that Armenians are the only people to have a quarter in the Old City
along with the three monotheistic faiths: Christianity, Islam, and
Judaism.

My own interest and fascination with the city of Jerusalem comes from
the desire to examine the ways in which both Armenians and other
cultures represent the city in their medieval literary traditions. On
Friday the 8th of February, I had the pleasure of delivering a paper
about Armenians and the city of Jerusalem in the crusader period, at a
symposium entitled, “Armenian Jerusalem: Past and Present.” The
event, organized by the Armenian Studies Program at California State
University, Fresno, in cooperation with the non-profit organization
Save the ArQ (Save the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem), also featured
presentations by my colleagues – Dr. Bedross Der Matossian (University
of Nebraska, Lincoln); Dr. Sergio La Porta (California State
University, Fresno); and Prof. Barlow Der Mugrdechian (California
State University, Fresno). The lectures on the program covered a rich
array of topics, such as: the history of the Armenian community of
Jerusalem from the early period to the contemporary; issues that
relate to the negotiations between the sacred and the secular;
pilgrimages to the city; and the current political and social events
taking place in the Armenian Quarter, including the election of the
new Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem in January of this year.
Archbishop Nourhan Manoogian succeeded the late Patriarch Torkom
Manoogian, becoming the 97th Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem.

Conversations during this symposium were also interspersed with
personal experiences of both living and traveling to the Armenian
Quarter in Jerusalem. These types of intimate familiarities were
significant in that, alongside providing an outline of the vital role
Armenians have played in the far extended history of Jerusalem, these
experiences also brought to the forefront one of the main goals of the
symposium – raising awareness about the Armenians currently living in
Jerusalem’s Old City .

Currently, the Armenians in Jerusalem face many types of difficulties,
due to socio-economic and political factors impacting the region.
While much of the connection between Armenians and Jerusalem has been
and continues to be religious in nature – and more specifically
related to pilgrimage – a strong and prominent secular dimension also
exists. Armenians in Jerusalem have made significant contributions to
the history and development of the city from the period of early
Christianity to the present. Moreover, in order to better understand
the current condition of the Jerusalem Armenians, one must look at the
historical transformations that Armenians in general experienced under
the 19th-century Ottoman Empire, and later under British Mandate,
Jordanian rule, and the current administration of Israel. In order to
elaborate upon these historical complexities, I find it useful to
briefly draw upon the highly valuable work of my colleague,
Dr. Bedross Der Matossian, Professor of Modern Middle Eastern History
at University of Nebraska, Lincoln.

The collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the Armenian Genocide during
World War I led to the mass migration of Armenians from Cilicia to
Jerusalem, with thousands of Armenians pouring into the Armenian
Quarter. At this point, the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem
detached itself from the authority of the Istanbul Patriarchate and
the Armenian National Assembly, to which it was subordinate during the
period following the Armenian National Constitution in 1863. During
the period under British Mandate, the Patriarchate kept amicable
relations with the British authorities, who largely maintained the
Ottoman millet system and allowed administrative matters concerning
the Armenian refugees and local population to be handled by the
Patriarchate. Following the Arab-Israeli war of 1948 and the
subsequent withdrawal of the British, the Jordanians and the Israelis
had disputes over Jerusalem; and subsequent to the Cold War, Jerusalem
became a contested space for the Holy Sees of Echmiazin and Cilicia.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the Patriarchate pursued a subtle policy with
the Israeli government, but with the breakout of the first Intifada in
1987, the position of the Patriarchate towards the Palestinian
authorities and the Israeli government relatively cooled, and dozens
of Armenian families began to leave Jerusalem. In fact, the
population of Armenians living in Jerusalem has greatly declined since
then. During the British Mandate period, over 10,000 Armenians lived
in greater Jerusalem. Today, that number is under 1,000.

The decline in population is just one of the many challenges that
Jerusalem Armenians face today. These current difficulties are
multifold; and as Armenians, we should be aware of these circumstances
to help maintain this historically significant and long-standing
Armenian diaspora community. The first obstacle Jerusalem Armenians
face pertains to their citizenship status. Most Armenians are
considered Jordanian citizens and fall under the legal category of
“Eastern Jerusalemites.” For this reason, many of them have
difficulty obtaining travel and marriage documents. They also face
obstacles when attempting to bring spouses or other family members
into Jerusalem. The depressed economic environment discourages and
makes it difficult for Armenians to open up and maintain businesses in
Jerusalem. Housing also remains one of the biggest obstacles facing
the Armenians in the Old City. Not only is space limited because of
overpopulation in the Old City, but real estate is very expensive.
Most Armenians, given their current income, simply cannot afford to
maintain their primary residence there. Moreover, Armenians living in
East Jerusalem would find it virtually impossible to obtain a house in
West Jerusalem, due to exorbitant costs and their citizenship status.

Armenian education in the Old City also faces serious challenges and
needs the aid of Armenians in the diaspora. The Armenian
Sts. Tarkmanchatz Secondary School has adopted neither the Israeli nor
Palestinian education systems. Rather, the school follows the system
that was put in place under the British Mandate. As a result,
children graduating from this school are having difficulty both being
accepted and transitioning into Israeli and Palestinian universities.
Amidst these challenges, sweeping reforms and renovations have been
implemented under the supervision of Rev. Father Norayr Kazazian, the
current Dean of Sts. Tarkmanchatz Secondary School. Similarly, Mihran
Der Matossian, the director of the school’s education system, has
undertaken the task of radically restructuring the school’s curriculum
and education program. These reforms have been put in place to
prepare students graduating from the school to enter institutions of
higher education in Israel and abroad.

In face of these challenges, what are some of the things we can do as
Armenians living in the diaspora to help the Armenian community in
Jerusalem? One way to get involved is through the aforementioned
non-profit organization, Save the ArQ, co-founded by Mary M. Hoogasian
and Bedross Der Matossian, which has an Executive Board and supporting
members. The organization’s mission is to create awareness of the
significant religious, cultural, and historical presence of Armenians
in Jerusalem and to encourage the revitalization of the Armenian
Quarter in the Old City. The organization engages in both short-term
and long-term projects to help sustain the Armenian Quarter’s future.
One of its key objectives is to build housing units to re-populate the
Armenian Quarter in the Old City. The organization’s other projects
are devoted to bettering the community’s life by supporting education
at Sts. Tarkmanchatz Armenian School; renovating the compounds within
the Armenian Quarter; building a park and playground in the Quarter;
renovating sections of the Helen Mardigian Museum of Armenian Art and
History; organizing academic workshops, conferences, and seminars at
the Gulbenkian library; and aiding the Armenian clubs in the Quarter.
One of the most recent contributions of the organization is the
donation of lab equipment to the school to enhance students’ study of
the sciences. The organization also intends to set up a program at
the school, whereby teachers living abroad will be invited to teach
there and provide the latest tools and technologies necessary for
educational advancement. The school is also in desperate need of
up-to-date textbooks and school supplies, which could be donated by
both schools and individuals in the diaspora.

Another way Armenians living abroad can help the Armenian community of
Jerusalem is by making a “pilgrimage” to the Armenian Quarter. One
need not be convinced of the historically significant and highly
stimulating experience of visiting a place like Jerusalem. Though
many Armenians abroad may fear traveling to Israel because of the
current political climate, Save the ArQ will begin organizing tour
groups for Armenians interested in visiting the city. There are also
a number of non-Armenian and Christian tour groups which arrange
frequent trips to the Holy Land. These visits will both morally and
financially support the Armenian community in the Old City, along with
being a rewarding experience for the visitors themselves.

One final component that needs special attention pertains to the
preservation of the manuscripts and archival material of the Armenian
Patriarchate of Jerusalem. As a medievalist, and someone who both
collects and works with manuscripts, the preservation and maintenance
of this collection is particularly important to me. We are very
fortunate to have the invaluable magnum opus of Archbishop Norayr
Bogharian – a twelve-volume manuscript catalog, which provides
detailed information about all of the manuscripts belonging to the
Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem. This highly significant catalog
is no longer published in print form, but through my efforts at UCLA,
I have been able to convince the university to digitize it. However,
it is vital that we support efforts to preserve and digitize the
actual manuscripts and archival material – yet another project being
put in place by Save the ArQ. Just like Jerusalem itself, this
material is a palimpsest upon which Armenian culture and history have
been inscribed and preserved; and it is significant that we create
permanency of our own history and culture through modern technologies,
such as digitization.

Through efforts such as these, we can help our brothers and sisters in
Jerusalem maintain this historic and vital community. Let us remember
some of the opening lines of Catholicos Grigor Tgha’s 12th-century
“Poem of Lamentation over the Capture of Jerusalem,” lest we find
ourselves lamenting (as his poem does), a once-present Armenian spirit
in the city:

I cry out this lamentable sound…
You listen concerning the calamity,
Brothers and sisters together,
Children of the great mother Zion
Brides of the upper room.

For more information on Save the ArQ, please visit:

All Rights Reserved: Critics’ Forum, 2013. Exclusive to Asbarez.

Tamar Boyadjian is a Postdoctoral Fellow at UCLA, where she received
her PhD in the Department of Comparative Literature. Her research
interests include medieval manuscripts, crusader Jerusalem, and the
interactions between medieval Europe and the medieval Middle East.

You can reach her or any of the other contributors to Critics’ Forum
at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
in this series are available online at To sign
up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
Critics’ Forum is a group created to
discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.

To visit our group on the web, go to:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/criticsforumarchive/
www.savethearq.org.
www.criticsforum.org.
www.criticsforum.org/join.

Troy to dedicate Armenian monument

Albany Times Union, NY
April 7 2013

Troy to dedicate Armenian monument

By Kenneth C. Crowe II

Troy: After years of work, the Armenian Heritage Monument will be
dedicated Sunday in the north end of the city’s Riverfront Park.

The dedication resolves the issue of whether the memorial would be
placed in the park as promised by former Mayor Harry Tutunjian, who is
of Armenian descent.

“There was some question about whether it would go there. The land was
blessed,” said Mayor Lou Rosamilia about the resolution.

Some residents of Turkish descent took issue with the mention of the
Armenian genocide in which 1.5 million Armenians were killed. The
monument’s language refers to this but also marks the settlement of
Armenians in Troy.

Tutunjian said the monument is a statement about an important ethnic
group that has contributed to the community. The monument, he said,
also speaks to what brought them here.

“This event is the culmination of the Knights and Daughters of Vartan
effort to recognize the Armenians who settled in and around the city
of Troy at the turn of the last century, as survivors from the
Armenian Genocide of 1915,” the fraternal organization said in a
statement.

Armenian clergy will hold a Monument Dedication Service at 1 p.m., Sunday.

http://www.timesunion.com/local/article/Troy-to-dedicate-Armenian-monument-4415260.php