3% inflation recorded in Armenia in December

3% inflation recorded in Armenia in December

3% inflation was recorded in Armenia’s consumer market in December
compared to November 2014. There was a 5.1% increase in food prices,
including alcohol drinks and tobacco products, 0.2% increase in prices
of nonfood products, and 0.7% increase in tariffs of services,
according to the National Statistical Service of Armenia.

The consumer price index was 104.6% in December 2014 on December 2013
– 106.3% for foods, 101.6% for non-foods, and 103.9% for services.

The average monthly growth in consumer prices made 0.4% in
January-December 2014, declining by 0.1% compared to the index of the
previous year (0.5%).

Consumer prices grew by 2.7-4.0% in Armenian cities in December on
November 2014. The highest indices were recorded in the cities of
Gyumri and Ashtarak. Consumer prices rose by 2.7% in the capital city.

07.01.15, 19:31

http://www.aysor.am/en/news/2015/01/07/3-inflation-recorded-in-Armenia-in-December/891748

L’Université américaine d’Arménie accueille une conférence sur l’ide

ARMENIE
L’Université américaine d’Arménie accueille une conférence sur l’identité turque

L’Université américaine d’Arménie (AUA), université privée
indépendante fondée en 1991 à Erevan, a organisé une conférence sur
l’identité turque.

Meltem Naz Kaso, journaliste au quotidien turc > et chercheur
participant à un programme de bourses entre la Turquie et l’Arménie
établi par la Fondation Hrant Dink, était l’un des conférenciers
invités à l’événement. Les participants comprenaient des étudiants
arméniens étudiant la langue arménienne et la littérature à
l’université. L’intervention s’est faite en anglais et a porté sur les
questions de formation de l’identité à travers la littérature.

Chargé de cours à l’AUA, Nareg Seferian, qui a invité Meltem Naz Kaso
à l’événement, a dit que c’était la première fois que beaucoup de ses
étudiants avaient eu une conversation avec un Turc dans leur vie. > a-t-il dit.

L’intervention de Meltem Naz Kaso était axée sur trois aspects de
l’identité turque qu’elle trouvait important au niveau de l’identité
collective de son pays natal. a
expliqué Nareg Seferian. Selon lui, les étudiants arméniens ne sont
pas assez familiers de l’identité turque. > a-t-il
dit.

mercredi 7 janvier 2015,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

La Turquie ne permettra pas de déformer les faits historiques selon

TURQUIE
La Turquie ne permettra pas de déformer les faits historiques selon le
président turc

La Turquie ne permettra pas des distorsions des faits historiques, y
compris les événements de 1915 a déclaré le 6 janvier 2015 le
président tuc recep Tayyp Erdogan selon la chaîne de télévision TRT
Haberier.

Le président a fait ces remarques alors qu’il s’exprimait à la 7 ème
conférence des ambassadeurs à Ankara, en Turquie.

Il a affirmé que l’Arménie essaie par tous les moyens de déformer les
événements de 1915 en les faisant passer pour un génocide ajoutant que
la Turquie fera tous les efforts pour contrer ces tentatives.

Erdogan a ajouté que certains cercles dans le monde marqueront le 100e
anniversaire du génocide arménien.

mercredi 7 janvier 2015,
Stéphane (c)armenews.com

La Turquie combattra << activement >> la qualification de génocide a

NEGATIONNISME
La Turquie combattra > la qualification de génocide arménien

Ankara, (AFP) – Le président turc Recep Tayyip Erdogan a promis mardi
de s’opposer “activement” à toute campagne visant à faire reconnaître
par la Turquie le caractère de génocide aux massacres d’Arméniens de
1915, dont le centenaire est commémoré cette année.

“Le ministère des Affaires étrangères et les institutions concernées
vont activement combattre ces allégations”, a déclaré M. Erdogan lors
d’un discours prononcé devant les ambassadeurs turcs réunis à Ankara.

Une des sessions de la conférence annuelle des ambassadeurs turcs est
précisément consacrée à la définition d’une stratégie de lutte contre
les efforts de l’Arménie et de la diaspora arménienne, qui militent
pour qu’Ankara reconnaisse un génocide.

La Turquie s’est jusque-là toujours refusée à admettre toute
élimination planifiée, évoquant le massacre par l’Empire ottoman de
quelque 500.000 Arméniens, qui s’étaient rangés du côté de son ennemie
la Russie, lors de combats ou à cause de famines.

En avril dernier, M. Erdogan, lorsqu’il était encore Premier ministre,
avait offert des condoléances sans précédent pour ces massacres
d’Arméniens (1,5 million selon les Arméniens et 500.000 selon les
Turcs), évoquant “une douleur commune”.

La Turquie et l’Arménie voisines, qui n’entretiennent pas de rapports
diplomatiques, ont signé en 2009 des protocoles dits de Zurich pour
normaliser leurs relations, mais cinq ans après ces textes n’ont
toujours pas été approuvés par leurs Parlements.

L’Arménie commémorera le 100e anniversaire du génocide le 24 avril,
date à laquelle, en 1915, des centaines d’Arméniens ont été arrêtés et
plus tard massacrés à Constantinople, l’ancienne Istanbul, marquant le
début des massacres.

mercredi 7 janvier 2015,
Ara (c)armenews.com

President ErdoÄan calls EU to revise Turkey policies

Daily Sabah, Turkey
Jan 6 2015

President ErdoÄ?an calls EU to revise Turkey policies

SENA ALKAN
ISTANBUL

In his address to Turkish envoys from across the world, President
ErdoÄ?an said Turkey was proven correct in its appraisal of the Syrian
civil war and called for the EU to adopt a more welcoming stance
toward Turkey

President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an, in his address to envoys yesterday at
the seventh Ambassadors Conference in Ankara, called on Turkish envoys
to be aware of the black propaganda purported against Turkey by some
foreign media outlets. “You should stay strong against the yellow
journalism in those countries. You are the representatives of the
Turkish nation, you are the mission chiefs. You should never, ever
make concessions,” said the president. He further said that the EU,
which Turkey has been trying to join for decades, must revise its
policies toward Turkey. “They have stalled us for a long time, they
have caused us to lose time. It is a pitiful situation that the EU
tries to give Turkey a lesson while it needs to realize the dangers
and threat [against itself],” said the president. Turkey has been
sitting at the negotiation table with the EU longer than any other
candidate. The country handed its application to Brussels in 1987 and
the accession talks began in 2005. However, negotiations hit a
stalemate in 2007 due to Ankara’s position on the Cyprus issue and
opposition from Southern Cyprus, France and Germany.

President Recep Tayyip ErdoÄ?an, in his address to envoys yesterday at
the seventh Ambassadors Conference in Ankara, called on Turkish envoys
to be aware of the black propaganda purported against Turkey by some
foreign media outlets. “You should stay strong against the yellow
journalism in those countries. You are the representatives of the
Turkish nation, you are the mission chiefs. You should never, ever
make concessions,” said the president.

Targeting the policies of the EU, which Turkey has been waiting to
join as a member country for decades, the president said that the EU
must revise its policies toward Turkey.

“They have stalled us for a long time, they have caused us to lose
time. It is a pitiful situation that the EU tries to give Turkey a
lesson while it needs to realize the dangers and threat [against
itself],” said the president.

Turkey has been sitting at the negotiation table with the EU longer
than any other candidate. The country handed its application to
Brussels in 1987 and the accession talks began in 2005. However,
negotiations hit a stalemate in 2007 due to Ankara’s position on the
Cyprus issue, in which Turkey does not recognize Southern Cyprus,
which is an EU member country and has strongly opposed Turkey’s EU
membership with the French and German government. To be able to
classify as an EU member country, Ankara has to successfully finalize
negotiations with the EU in 25 policy chapters that are required to
meet EU standards. So far, only 14 chapters have been opened whereas
17 remain blocked and another four are yet to be discussed. In the
last three years, only one chapter has been opened. Touching on the
increasing Islamophobia, racism and discrimination in some EU
countries, especially in Germany, ErdoÄ?an claimed that activities
targeting Muslims in those countries are at a point that is impossible
to hide.

On the Syrian civil war, which started in 2011 and displaced millions
of Syrians, the Turkish president highlighted that the Islamic State
of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) threat in the region stems from the Bashar
Assad regime and the discriminative policies by the then-Iraqi
government. Referring to the anti-ISIS coalition, led by the U.S. to
eliminate the ISIS threat in the region, ErdoÄ?an said that it is not
possible to end ISIS only through air operations and that boots on the
ground is a must.

The president said that in a conversation with U.S. President Barack
Obama, he had asked him, “Why is Kobani of such strategic importance?”
The question was meant to poke a hole in the notion that the U.S.
prioritized a small village, in which few people remain, when the rest
of the country was at war, with hundreds of thousands dying at the
hands of Assad.

Reminding that 2015 is the 100th year since the 1915 incidents, he
said that Turkey is well aware that some circles will try intensively
to bring this issue to the table. “It is also a good opportunity to
evaluate and discuss the 1915 incidents. We are and will be putting in
the effort to discuss the truths and to read the history,” added
ErdoÄ?an.

Alluding to Armenia, the president said that even though the olive
branch was extended by Turkey, Armenia is still trying to impose its
own perspective.

Turkish-Armenian relations have remained strained for decades due to
the 1915 incidents. Tensions peaked in 1993 when Turkey closed its
borders with Armenia in reaction to the war in Nagarno-Karabakh.

Nevertheless, in April 2014 ErdoÄ?an, who was then prime minister, made
attempts to thaw the tensions between the two countries by issuing a
message ahead of the 99th anniversary of the 1915 incidents. In an
unprecedented move, ErdoÄ?an extended condolences to the grandchildren
of the Armenians who lost their lives in 1915. Both Armenian society
and international circles hailed the message, which read, “It is a
duty of humanity to acknowledge that Armenians remember the suffering
experienced in that period, just like every other citizen of the
Ottoman Empire.”

http://www.dailysabah.com/politics/2015/01/06/president-erdogan-calls-eu-to-revise-turkey-policies

New internal political panorama of Armenia

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Jan 6 2015

New internal political panorama of Armenia

5 January 2015 – 12:56pm
Susanna Petrosyan, Yerevan. Exclusively for Vestnik Kavkaza

Several key events which significantly influence the internal
political panorama of the country took place in 2014.

The participation of the parliamentary opposition in all the important
processes encouraged confirmation of the new reality – the National
Assembly has completely turned into a political body. The parliament
is not an affix of the executive power, which has been adopting the
“right” laws during 15 years, anymore. For the first time since 1995,
the NA has become an independent political body which is more
independent from the President, even though he controls the
parliamentary majority.

Another important event was a new balance of forces in the NA. It is
the first time in modern Armenian history that about 40% of the seats
are controlled by parties which don’t belong to those in power. Today
the parliamentary opposition trio (Prosperous Armenia, the Armenian
National Congress, and Heritage) and Dashnaktsutyun and the Country of
Law have 57-58 of the 131 seats in the parliament.

The third significant event was a decision by the Constitutional Court
on April 2nd on the opposition’s request demanding that the Law on
Funded Pensions be recognized as anti-Constitutional. For the first
time, the Constitutional Court made a decision not in favor of the
authorities. The verdict was based on the legal norm which excludes
the restriction of citizens’ rights, including the right to property.
Moreover, the Court demanded reconsideration of the law. The verdict
led to the resignation of Tigran Sarkisyan’s government, even though
the authorities hid the real reason for the resignation.

The fourth important factor of the internal political life of last
year was the improvement of the opposition’s role. The opposition
began to form a political agenda; and the package of 12 demands
presented on June 10th confirmed this. The demands touched on the
elimination of economic monopolies, the tax and customs spheres, using
measures on minimization of socio-economic problems. However, the
authorities have traditionally ignored offers from their political
opponents. Meanwhile, even the implementation of some of these twelve
demands could become a start on the way out of the deep socio-economic
crisis in which Armenia exists. The hardcore position of the
authorities has strengthened confrontation with society, as the
majority of it supports the demands of the trio. As a result, several
meetings were organized by the opposition in autumn in all key cities
of Armenia. The main demand was the resignation of the authorities.

In the end, those in power have got an opposition which has political
initiative and determines the political agenda. It is a sign of the
authorities’ weakening.

Due to the powerful wave of protest, President Serzh Sargsyan had to
cancel discussions of constitutional changes which were planned for
the autumn and shift the issue to February 2015. Another sign of the
authorities’ weakening was the opposition’s rejection of the
President’s late offer (on November 10th) to discuss the 12 demands.

The President invited his political opponents to discuss the issue
after the government gave a negative answer to the opposition’s
demands. The government stated that it was working on the clauses.

The Vice-President of the ANC, Levon Zurabyan, stated that the trio
had dropped the subject of the 12 clauses. This was unexpected for the
authorities, who accused the trio of marginality, even though it
gathered demonstrations of several thousand people.

Finally, the crisis which hit the financial market of Armenia was an
important event at the end of 2014, which influenced the political
system. The long-lasting policy on artificially strengthening the dram
by the government and encouragement of imports at the expense of
development of exports back-fired on the authorities, including MPs
and officials involved in business affairs. Probably the recent
developments in the financial-economic sphere could encourage
confrontation inside the government forces.

http://vestnikkavkaza.net/analysis/politics/64273.html

Psaki is concerned about shelling in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict-z

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Jan 6 2015

Psaki is concerned about shelling in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict-zone

6 January 2015 – 1:03pm

US State Department spokeswoman Jennifer Psaki recently expressed her
concern about the new round of tension in the Nagorno-Karabakh
conflict, which ignited in the mass shelling of border and frontline
Azerbaijani villages by large-caliber weapons on January 3.

“We are troubled by reports of ceasefire violations, as well as
casualties in recent days,” the official website of the State
Department quoted her as saying.

She also called on Armenia and Azerbaijan to resolve the conflict
through peaceful negotiations mediated by the OSCE Minsk Group. “We do
continue to urge both sides at the highest levels to engage in
negotiations that could lead to a peace agreement,” she said, adding
that the issue is in the spotlight in the USA.

Armenian church head decries Christian persecution in the Middle Eas

The Daily Star, Lebanon
Jan 6 2015

Armenian church head decries Christian persecution in the Middle East

BEIRUT: Armenian Catholicos of Cilicia Aram I Keshishian deplored
Tuesday the targeting of Christians by the region’s extremist groups
and called for Lebanon to elect a new a president to safeguard the
country from rampant violence.

“We welcome unrelenting efforts by officials to preserve Lebanon’s
unity, and we reaffirm our faith in the role of the Lebanese Army in
defending the nation, despite the enormous and painful sacrifices,”
Keshishian told worshippers attending mass on Armenian Christmas.

“We also welcome the wise policy of Lebanese politicians in keeping
Lebanon at a distance from regional upheavals,” Keshishian said,
underscoring, however, the urgent and primary necessity of electing a
president.

“Regardless of the obstacles and difficulties, it is just not
permissible not to have a president in Lebanon,” Keshishian added.

The prelate also deplored the colossal dangers facing Christians,
including Armenians, in the Middle East, especially in Iraq and Syria.

“Despite the huge difficulties and atrocities confronting them,
Christians are determined to stay in this Orient, and to remain
faithful to their duties and attached to their rights,” Keshishian
said in reference to the persecution of Christians at the hands of
jihadi militants from ISIS in Iraq and Syria.

– See more at:

http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Lebanon-News/2015/Jan-06/283225-armenian-church-head-decries-christian-persecution-in-the-middle-east.ashx#sthash.W0mndZJE.dpuf

The Armenian Genocide: A Million and a Half Martyrs to be Canonized

Aleteia.org
5-1-2015

Genocidio armenio: Un millón y medio de mártires pronto canonizados

El centenario del genocidio armenio va a permitir a la Iglesia
ortodoxa rendir homenaje a los mártires e intensificar el deber de la
memoria

Elisabeth de Baudoüin

Para el pueblo armenio, 2015 no va a ser un año normal: marca el
centenario de su tristemente célebre genocidio. También será la
ocasión de una canonización masiva, realizada por la Iglesia ortodoxa:
la de millón y medio de hombres, mujeres y niños muertos a causa de su
pertenencia étnica y religiosa.

La ceremonia se celebrará el próximo 23 de abril. El día siguiente se
convertirá en la “jornada de la memoria” de estas víctimas, ha
anunciado el patriarca armenio ortodoxo Karekin II en una carta
encíclica que ha abierto oficialmente las celebraciones del centenario
de este genocidio.

Estas se extenderán todo el año, ha destacado, especificando que “cada
día de 2015 será un día de recuerdo y de devoción a nuestro pueblo, un
viaje espiritual al memorial de nuestros mártires”.

Otra información, pero que pide todavía ser confirmada: el 12 de
abril, el Papa Francisco celebrará una misa de conmemoración de esta
tragedia.

La aniquilación de un pueblo y de su cultura

Nunca se recordará demasiado: el pueblo armenio fue víctima, el siglo
pasado, de uno de los genocidios étnico-religiosos más monstruosos de
la historia de la humanidad.

“En 1915 y durante los años siguientes -recuerda el patriarca en su
carta con acentos conmovedores-, un millón y medio de nuestros hijos e
hijas sufrieron la muerte, el hambre, la enfermedad; fueron deportados
y obligados a caminar hasta morir”.

“Siglos de creatividad y de objetivos alcanzados fueron destruidos en
un instante. Miles de iglesias y monasterios fueron profanados y
destruidos, las instituciones nacionales y las escuelas, arrasadas y
demolidas. Nuestros tesoros espirituales y culturales fueron
erradicados y borrados”.

A este dramático cuadro, que desgraciadamente huele en la actualidad,
se pueden añadir las fosas comunes llenas de víctimas sin nombre, los
trenes de desplazados incendiados,…

Los únicos supervivientes de esta gigantesca masacre fueron los que
lograron llegar a la Armenia actual, entonces bajo dominio ruso, de
Siria o del Líbano, o incluso de otros países como Francia.

Después, con la valentía, la fe y el genio que lo caracterizan, este
pueblo ha podido “resucitar de la muerte” y brillar de nuevo, como
explica el patriarca con esta emotiva confesión:

“Poniendo nuestra esperanza en Ti, oh Señor, nuestro pueblo ha sido
iluminado y reforzado. Tu luz ha encendido la ingeniosidad de nuestro
espíritu. Tu fuerza nos ha orientado a nuestras victorias. Nosotros
hemos creado cuando otros habían destruido nuestras creaciones.
Nosotros hemos continuado viviendo cuando otros nos querían muertos”.

Este centenario permite también celebrar esta resurrección.

La negación criminal de Turquía

Sin embargo, no se trata de pasar la página hacia atrás sin tener en
cuenta el deber de la verdad y de la justicia, insiste el patriarca,
que no duda en denunciar “la negación criminal de Turquía”.

Hay que recordar que este país -y ello es un obstáculo para su posible
entrada en la Unión Europea- nunca ha querido reconocer el genocidio,
reconocido -y condenado- oficialmente por una veintena de países (a
los que el patriarca saluda en su carta, deseando que a ellos se les
añadan otros).

El año pasado, el primer ministro Erdogan presentó sus condolencias a
los descendientes de las víctimas, un gesto que valoró el mismo Papa
Francisco durante su reciente viaje a Turquía, y del que habló como
una “mano tendida”.

Pero para la mayoría de los armenios de hoy, este gesto es muy
pequeño, respecto al calvario sufrido.

“La sangre de nuestros mártires inocentes y los sufrimientos de
nuestro pueblo clama para tener justicia”, exclama el patriarca, que
cien años después de la tragedia denuncia los “santuarios destruidos,
la violación de nuestros derechos nacionales, la falsificación y la
distorsión de nuestra historia”.

Un mayor reconocimiento por parte de Turquía podría ayudar al perdón.
Pero en cualquier caso, en Turquía, como en otros lugares, el perdón
no es el olvido.

http://www.aleteia.org/es/internacional/noticias/genocidio-armenio-un-millon-y-medio-de-martires-pronto-canonizados-5818662736887808

The Armenians of Singapore: An Historical Perspective

The Armenians of Singapore: An Historical Perspective

By Nadia Wright on January 6, 2015 in Featured, Headline, Special Reports //
Special for the Armenian Weekly

Travellers visiting the bustling city-state of Singapore may not be
aware of the great impact made by the Armenians who form one of its
smallest minorities. Between 1820 and 2000, fewer than 700 Armenians
ever lived in Singapore. Although most were transient, with a mere 12
families residing for three generations, they have left a legacy
incommensurate with their numbers. Along with the Church of St.
Gregory the Illuminator, the oldest existing church in Singapore and
its parsonage, there are other reminders of the Armenian presence.
These include Raffles Hotel, the Straits Timesnewspaper, and
Singapore’s national flower, Vanda Miss Joaquim.

Members of the Armenian community of Singapore in 1917

As in most cities where Armenians settled, there is an Armenian
Street. In Singapore, this short street gained its name because it
bordered the back of the church property. Three other streets attest
to the Armenian presence: Sarkies Road, named after property owner
Regina Sarkies; Galistan Avenue, which recognizes the work of Emile
Galistan of the Singapore Im-provement Trust; and St. Martin’s Drive,
which commemorates the philanthropic Martin family who once owned a
mansion and substantial property along Orchard Road. Stamford House,
built by the firm of Stephens Paul in 1904, still stands offering
insights into Edwardian architecture.

Armenians in Singapore in 1960

So, when and why did Armenians arrive in Singapore and what happened to them?

They were descendants of Armenians from Persia, in particular those
deported from Julfa to Isfahan by Shah Abbas in the early 1600’s. In
later years some of those Armenians migrated to India, the Dutch East
Indies, Burma, Malacca, Penang, and lastly to Singapore, thus forming
an extensive trading diaspora. To better assimilate, most Persian
Armenians Anglicized their names; thus some surnames are not
recognizable as Armenian. For example, Mardirian became Martin,
Stepanian became Stephens, and Yedgarian became Edgar.

The tombstone of Sarkies A. Sarkies who passed away in 1849

In 1820, one year after the British opened a trading post in
Singapore, the first Armenians, the apparently unrelated Aristarkies
Sarkies and Sarkies A. Sarkies, arrived from Malacca. They were soon
joined by Carapiet Phannous, Mackertich Moses, the Seth brothers, and
the Zechariah brothers. All were traders or commercial agents. By
1824, there were 16 Armenians out of a population surpassing 10,000.
More arrivals trickled in hoping to make their fortunes in the new
duty-free port.

Before long, the Armenians wanted their own priest rather than relying
on visits from the priest in Penang. In 1825, Isiah Zechariah, on
behalf of the community, wrote to the archbishop in New Julfa asking
that a priest be sent to Singapore, and in 1827 Reverend Gregory Ter
Johannes duly arrived. The next step was for the Armenians to have
their own church. Having been granted land by the governor, the
community, which was basically comprised of 10 families, raised most
of the construction costs. In 1836, the Armenian Apostolic Church of
St. Gregory the Illuminator was consecrated, and for the ensuing
century met the needs of the growing community.

Between 1820 and 1983, Armenians in Singapore operated more than 85
commercial enterprises. Most set up as traders, specializing in
importing textiles and exporting regional produce. Such firms included
Andreas & Company, Edgar & Company, Demetrius & Company, Arathoon
Brothers, and Chater & Company. The Calcutta-based Armenian shipping
line Apcar Brothers was patronized by the Armenians, and was also the
main carrier of the then-legal opium into Singapore from the 1860’s
until the 1880’s.

Some firms petered out after a short time, whereas Sarkies and Moses,
founded in 1840, lasted until 1913. Others developed into
multinational import and export firms, including Edgar Brothers
(1912-68), Stephens, Paul, and Company (1896-1941), and A. C. Galstaun
(1957-83).

George Michael ran Singapore’s leading photographic studio until 1919

A few individuals owned law firms, restaurants, watch-making, and
jewelry shops, auction houses, small factories, and photographic
studios. The legal firm of Joaquim Brothers was well known throughout
Malaya until its closure in 1902, while George Michael was running
Singapore’s leading photographic studio when he left in 1919.

The hospitality industry attracted many Armenians, their ventures
ranging from small boarding houses to the grandest of hotels: Raffles
Hotel. This future icon was the initiative of Tigran and Martin
Sarkies, who were already running two successful hotels in Penang: the
Eastern Hotel and the Oriental. Propitiously, they named their hotel
after Sir Stamford Raffles, Singapore’s founder, whose statue had
recently been unveiled amidst much pomp and splendor.

An advertisement for Raffles Hotel

Opened in December 1887 and managed by Tigran, Raffles Hotel quickly
established a reputation for its dining innovations. Its fame
escalated after its magnificent new Renaissance-style block was opened
in 1899. The grandest balls and banquets were hosted at Raffles, and
guests included royalty and celebrities such as Somerset Maugham and
Noel Coward.

Managed by Tigran for nearly 20 years, then his younger brother Aviet
for another 10, the hotel reached its halcyon days in the 1920’s under
managing proprietor Martyrose Arathoon.

Advertisement for Hotel de l’Europe

For a short time at the turn of the 20th century, the three major
hotels in Singapore were managed or owned by Armenians. Competing with
Raffles was the Adelphi Hotel run by Johannes and Sarkies, while even
the exclusive Europe Hotel was being managed by Joe Constantine.
Before that, there had been a series of Armenian hoteliers operating
smaller hotels, including Moses’ Pavilion and Bowling Alley, St.
Valentine’s Bath Hotel, and Goodwood Hall and the Sea View Hotel,
which was finally acquired by the Sarkies brothers. The Oranje Hotel,
in today’s Stamford House, which was run in the 1950’s by Klara van
Hien, was the last of the Armenian hotels.

Some of the pioneering merchants built or acquired magnificent houses,
and played a significant role in the educational, economic, civic, and
social life of the colony. They served on various committees including
the first Chamber of Commerce, which met in 1837. In 1895, two out of
the eight elected municipal commissioners were Armenian: a very high
ratio for such a small community.

A notable individual was prominent lawyer Joaquim P. Joaquim
(Hovakimian) who served as president of the Municipal Commission, a
member of the Legislative Council, and was appointed deputy U.S.
consul in 1893. Another prominent figure was George G. Seth, who rose
to become solicitor-general of the Straits Settlements in the 1920’s
and later served as acting attorney-general.

Agnes (Ashkhen) Joaquim

One Armenian who received posthumous fame was Agnes (Ashkhen) Joaquim.
In the 1880’s she hybridized an orchid by crossing the Vanda teres
with the Vanda Hookeriana, thus creating the flower named after her:
the Vanda Miss Joaquim. Propagated by cuttings, this orchid
proliferated not only in Singapore but in the other tropical countries
where it had been introduced. It became especially popular in Hawaii,
where it is better known as the Princess Aloha orchid. In Singapore,
the orchid was selected as the nation’s national flower in 1981.

The Armenians were very loyal to Britain; Hoseb Arathoon, for example,
donated an aeroplane to the British War Office in 1915, and young men
volunteered for both World Wars. The community was also acutely aware
of the suffering of their brethren in Turkey and raised large amounts
of money for the victims of the massacres of the 1890’s and later the
genocide.

Although the community was too small to run its own school, an
Armenian newspaper was printed for a short time. Gregory Galastaun
published “Usumnaser” (“The Scholar”) from 1849 until 1853, with his
friend Peter Seth creating an exquisite etching of Singapore for the
masthead.

Gregory Galastaun published ‘Usumnaser’ (‘The Scholar’) from 1849
until 1853, with his friend Peter Seth creating an exquisite etching
of Singapore for the masthead.

In 1845, Catchick Moses established the ‘Straits Times’ newspaper

In 1845, Catchick Moses had established the “Straits Times” newspaper,
which today is the leading newspaper of Southeast Asia. Moses had
acquired the printing press to help out his beleaguered compatriot,
Martyrose Apcar, but soon sold the newspaper to the paper’s editor,
Robert Woods.

‘Armenian numbers peaked at just over 100 in the 1920’s. A branch of
the AGBU was up and running, Raffles Hotel was in full swing, and the
trading firms were busy and all employed young Armenian men often from
other Armenian communities. However, this was the calm before the
storm. First came the Depression, which adversely affected the trading
companies in particular; then in 1938, the last resident priest
returned to New Julfa; and in 1942 Singapore fell to the Japanese. The
Armenians suffered diverse fates: Some women and children escaped to
Australia, while their menfolk enlisted. Civilians who were British
subjects were interned, while those who were classified as Persians
were not. Death struck both soldiers and civilians.

After the war, a new Singapore emerged: one in which Armenians faced
limited prospects. The few Armenian firms included Edgar Brothers and
Arathoon Sons, and A. C. Galstaun, which was the last of the
Persian-Armenian firms. Gradually the families migrated mainly to
Australia, the U.S., or Britain.

By the 1970’s the community had virtually disappeared; only a handful
of the old families who still spoke Armenian remained. The very
smallness of the community, which had helped it to integrate, also
helped cause its demise: It was demographically unviable.
Intermarriage and the consequent assimilation into a larger culture,
death, and emigration had taken their toll. In 2007, Helen Metes, the
last of Singapore’s Persian Armenians, died.

But not the Armenian community of Singapore. This has been revitalized
by the recent migration of Armenian entrepreneurs from Armenia and
Russia. Along with other expatriates they are creating a new, vibrant,
and growing young community, building on the past to secure a sound
future for Armenians in Singapore.

Armenian Street, Singapore, 1890

Armenian Street today

http://armenianweekly.com/2015/01/06/armenians-of-singapore/