Armenian priest ordained for first time in NC Sunday

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Armenian priest ordained for first time in NC Sunday

The Charlotte Observer

Posted: Sunday, Dec. 07, 2014
Modified: Monday, Dec. 08, 2014

Members of St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church in Charlotte witnessed North
Carolina religious history Sunday with the ordination of their deacon,
Benjamin Rith-Najarian, to the holy priesthood. It was the first time an
Armenian priest has ever been ordained in the state.

Presiding over the sacred service in the church on Park Road was New
York-based Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, who heads the Eastern Diocese of the
Armenian Church of America.

About 150 Charlotte families call St. Sarkis their spiritual home, and
Rith-Najarian is their pastor. The church is one of 62 parishes and missions
in the Eastern Diocese. The Armenian Church of America is an Orthodox
Christian church whose members trace their roots to Armenia, a country at
the crossroads of Western Asia and Eastern Europe. Armenia adopted
Christianity as its official religion in the year 301, and the national
church is one of the world’s oldest.

Tim Funk
Copyright 2014 . All rights reserved.

http://www.charlotteobserver.com/2014/12/07/5369019/armenian-priest-ordained

Antelias: HH Aram I Leaves for the UAE to Anoint the Holy Martyrs Ch

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia

Communication and Information Department

Tel: (+961- 4) 410001, 410003
Fax: (+961- 4) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]

Web:

PO Box 70 317

Antelias-Lebanon

His Holiness Aram I Leaves for the United Arab Emirates to Anoint the
Holy Martyrs Church

Antelias – 4 December 2014. On Thursday, Catholicos Aram I left for
Abu Dhabi upon the invitation of Catholical Vicar V. Rev. Mesrob
Sarkissian and the members of the Diocesan Council.

During his stay, His Holiness Aram I will anoint the newly constructed
Holy Martyr’s Church and inaugurate the new Prelacy and the school
building. On this occasion he will also meet the members of the Diocesan
Council of United Arab Emirates, as well as political figures and
diplomats.

In 2015 We should recommit ourselves with a renewed vision to pursue
justice for our victims

Antelias – 2 December 2014. On Tuesday His Holiness Aram I addressed
the 300 women attending the Christian education course organized
annually by the Christian Education Department of the Catholicosate of
Cilica.

He first referred to the International Day for Older Persons established
by the General Assembly of the United Nations in 1990, and said that
because the elderly are an integral part of our communities, we cannot
marginalize them. Every Armenian, irrespective of his or her age, has
something to learn from the long experience of elderly persons.

After speaking of the importance of 2015, he paid tribute to the memory
of one-and-a-half million martyrs, and said, `We should continue
demanding from the World the restoration of what was stolen from us
through the Genocide planned and executed by Ottoman Turkey, and we
should press for the return of the confiscated Church and private
properties.’

His Holiness Aram I Begins His Pastoral Visit to the United Arab
Emirates

Antelias – 4 December 2014. On Thursday morning, His Holiness Aram I
arrived in Dubai, where he will consecrate the Armenian Church in Abu
Dhabi. The Catholical Vicar V. Rev. Mesrob Sarkissian, and
representatives of the Armenian Church Council in the United Arab
Emirates and members of the community, as well as the Ambassadors of
Lebanon and Armenia to the United Arab Emirates (UAE) greeted him at the
airport. The Armenian Church in Abu Dhabi is the second church that the
Catholicos will have consecrated in the UAE; the first was the St.
Gregory the Illuminator Church in Sharjah sixteen years ago.

On the evening of Friday 5 December, His Holiness presided over the
Divine Liturgy, celebrated by Bishop Papken Charian, the Prelate of
Isfahan (Iran). In his message, Catholicos Aram I thanked the vicar and
the members of the council for their service to the church and the
community. He then reminded everyone that the vocation of the Seminary
of the Catholicsate of Cilicia is to prepare monks and teachers to serve
the church and the community. Referring to the Gospel (Matt. 16:24), His
Holiness said that Jesus had told his disciples: `if any want to
become my followers, let them deny themselves and take up their cross
and follow me.’ He then continued, `Our ancestors accepted
Christianity centuries ago; we should remain faithful to their legacy
and practice our faith individually and live it out together in our
communities.’

Later on, His Holiness joined the members of the community at a banquet
organized in his honor. After he was welcomed by V. Rev. Mesrob
Sarkissian and the president of the Church Council, Mr. Ara Keusseyan,
His Holiness addressed the public. He emphasized the need to set clear
priorities and organize well-defined structures, because, he said, given
the problems in the region, many more families were immigrating to these
countries. Only a united and well-organized community will be able to
serve and accompany them.

His Holiness Aram I

Meets the Students at the Ohanessian Armenian School in Sharjah

Antelias – 6 December 2014. On Saturday, His Holiness Aram I visited
the Ohannessian School, which he inaugurated 18 years ago, and was
warmly welcomed by the 200 students.

The Catholicos and his delegation of clergy attended a special cultural
event prepared by the students, followed by a welcoming speech by the
principal of the School, Ms. Angela Sabayan, who described their
programme and activities. V. Rev. Mesrob Sarkissian also spoke of the
role of the school in serving the communities in Dubai and Sharjah.

In his message, His Holiness thanked the parents for sending their
children to the Armenian School, because, he said, without the Armenian
school the community would weaken. He then thanked the board and the
faculty for their contribution, and finally expressed his appreciation
to Mr. and Mrs. Harout Ohanessian, for constructing the school as well
as covering all the costs. His Holiness also thanked the Catholical
Vicar Rev. Mesrob for his leadership in the community.

# #

http://armenianorthodoxchurch.org/gallery-2
www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org

ANKARA: Former Trabzon Police Chief Summoned To Testify In Dink Murd

FORMER TRABZON POLICE CHIEF SUMMONED TO TESTIFY IN DINK MURDER TRIAL

Cihan News Agency, Turkey
Dec 9 2014

TRABZON – 09.12.2014 13:34:56

Former Trabzon Police Chief ReÃ…~_at Altay has been summoned by
Prosecutor Yusuf Hakkı Dogan to testify in the trial into the murder
of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

Dink was assassinated in broad daylight outside the office of his
Agos newspaper on Jan. 17, 2007.

Media reports say the prosecutor will also request that Yasin Hayal,
a convict in the ongoing trial, and Erhan Tuncel, who was earlier
found not guilty of the Dink murder, testify as part of the ongoing
investigation.

When he testified in January 2012, Tuncel had accused former Trabzon
Police Chief Altay of destroying all the evidence concerning the
Dink murder.

According to a media report, Prosecutor Dogan also listened to the
testimony of a police officer, Bahadır Tekin, on Monday. Tekin was
asked about claims saying that he doctored a report to show he had
checked out an address that was mentioned in an intelligence report
sent from the Trabzon Police Department on Feb. 17, 2006. The doctored
report also said one of Tekin’s colleagues, Ozcan Ozkan, went with him
to scope out the address, which was located in İstanbul’s Umraniye
district, even though neither had gone there.

The intelligence report sent by Trabzon police had warned that Hayal —
now a convict in the Dink murder trial — was planning to assassinate
Dink. There are claims that Tekin had doctored his own report after
the murder took place in order to make it seem as if he had gone
to scope out the address before the murder. Tekin denied all claims
directed at him in his testimony, according to media reports.

As part of the same investigation, two former heads of the intelligence
unit of the National Police Department — Sabri Uzun and Ramazan
Akyurek — and a former police chief, Ali Fuat Yılmazer, testified as
suspects. Other high-profile figures have been called to testify as
suspects, including former İstanbul Police Chief Celalettin Cerrah,
former İstanbul Vice Governor Ergun Gungör and former İstanbul
Police Department Intelligence Unit Chief Ahmet İlhan Guler.

Furthermore, Ogun Samast, who was sentenced to 21 years and six months
in prison in 2011 for assassinating Dink, also testified as a witness
in the ongoing investigation into the murder on Dec. 5. Samast had
sent a letter to Prosecutor Dogan saying he wanted to speak about
the murder. The prosecutor decided to listen to Samast as a witness
in the investigation.

Dink was shot and killed by an ultra-nationalist teenager seven years
ago. Samast and 18 others were brought to trial. During this time,
the lawyers for the Dink family and the co-plaintiffs in the case
presented evidence indicating that Samast did not act alone. Hayal was
given life in prison for inciting Samast to murder. However, Tuncel,
who worked as an informant for the Trabzon Police Department and
was the man accused of initiating the effort to have Dink murdered,
was found not guilty of the murder.

http://en.cihan.com.tr/news/Former-Trabzon-police-chief-summoned-to-testify-in-Dink-murder-trial_7431-CHMTYxNzQzMS8xMDA1

Why Davutoglu’s Armenian Adviser Angered AKP Deputies

WHY DAVUTOGLU’S ARMENIAN ADVISER ANGERED AKP DEPUTIES

Al-Monitor
Dec 9 2014

Author: Mustafa Akyol
Posted December 8, 2014

On Oct. 25, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu appointed an
unexpected name as his “top adviser” in political matters: Etyen
Mahcupyan, a prominent public intellectual of Armenian descent.

This was widely seen as a wise decision, because Mahcupyan, with his
newspaper column and regular TV appearances, has been one of the
most sophisticated defenders of the Justice and Development (AKP)
government in the midst of many crude attempts. The inclusion of an
Armenian voice in the top echelons of the Turkish government was also
seen as a prudent decision on the eve of the centennial of the ethnic
cleansing of Armenians from Anatolia in 1915.

Etyen Mahcupyan is one of the renowned “secular liberals” who supported
the AKP government against the secular Kemalist establishment in the
first decade of this century. (He always refused the term “liberal,”
though, and declared himself a “democrat.”) Many of those liberals
gradually became disappointed with what they saw as the AKP’s
authoritarian turn, and increasingly turned into critics, if not
outright opponents, in the last few years. However, Mahcupyan kept his
support for the AKP solid. During the confrontation between the AKP
and the Gulen movement, which was the definitive matter throughout
2014, Mahcupyan solidly supported the AKP, despite the fact that
he was then a columnist for Zaman, the flagship paper of the Gulen
movement. No wonder he resigned from Zaman in June and moved on to
Aksam, one of the several pro-AKP newspapers.

However, the very sophistication of Mahcupyan soon proved a bit too
much for some AKP folks. Mahcupyan appeared on a TV show on CNNTurk
Nov. 25, and answered some tough questions about the government. When
asked about corruption, he replied: “Corruption is not totally
baloney.”

He added: “But when [pro-AKP] people put this [corruption] on
one side of the scale and what happened on Dec. 17-25 [corruption
investigations] on the other side, the latter proved more dangerous
and corruption became mundane. They [pro-AKP people] did not want
to risk a coup for the sake of going after corruption. Quite the
contrary, they accepted living with corruption for a while to
avert the coup threat. There were two evils and they had to choose
the lesser one. They made a rational choice, and it was clear that
they would make this choice. Turkey is going through a very serious
transformation. It is not willing to risk what it has gained in the
past decade with one stroke.”

To some, this sounded like a realistic defense of the AKP position.

However, to some AKP members, it sounded too realistic. Two deputies
from Ankara, Zelkif Kazdal and Fatih Sahin, wrote angry tweets against
Mahcupyan. “No one has the right to cast any suspicions on the AKP and
AKP governments,” Kazdal said. Another AKP deputy, Mehmet Metiner, who
is also a frequent media face for the party, also warned Mahcupyan,
asking, “What logic does he serve?” Everybody, Metiner, argued, had
to “talk according to the requirements of their office.” In return,
Mahcupyan wrote a note to Metiner in his column in Aksam, implying
that he will not “distort facts to comply with the official position.”

Metiner responded with fury, telling Mahcupyan to be “wise.”

In all this tit for tat, Mahcupyan deserves respect for not “distorting
facts,” and openly acknowledging that Turkey’s ruling party has a
big problem with corruption. If he keeps on being this frank, he will
probably get more reaction from the more propagandist voices of the
AKP, but also perhaps make a contribution to Turkey’s shamelessly
Machiavellian political culture.

However, I believe that Mahcupyan is also contributing to the same
Machiavellian culture on a different level: By arguing that “law”
is not a value that transcends politics, and thus easily disregarding
law for the sake of supporting the “correct” political project.

This led Mahcupyan to two gross mistakes over the years. The first was
his rigorous support for the “coup cases” against the military and its
secularist allies between 2008 and 2012. The so-called Ergenekon, or
“Sledgehammer,” cases put hundreds of officers along with dozens of
academics and journalists in jail. More objective observers warned
that these cases were turning into “witch hunts,” but some Turkish
“democrats,” including Mahcupyan, insisted that they were all
justified, and had to go on “until the end.”

Their fundamental error was to care more about the political results
of these “coup cases” rather than their legal contents. (“These
cases are needed to save Turkey from military rule,” they kept
telling us, disregarding the fact that some of the “evidence”
looked too overblown.) Their belief in a political project (called
“democratization”) made them disregard the universal criteria of law,
such as the presumption of innocence and the benefit of the doubt.

Then, in the second round of the same drama, came the corruption
investigations of Dec. 17-25, 2013. For figures such as Mahcupyan,
again, the key matter was not the legal content of the cases, but
their probable political results. The investigations could have led
to the resignation of some AKP executives and led to a decline in
the party’s votes. This, they said, amounts to a “coup,” and thus
they supported the blocking of the cases by the government.

In fact, Mahcupyan is aware of the meaning of his stances on these
matters, and that is probably why he wrote several articles arguing
that there is no such thing as “universal law.” “Law does not have
the supra-political or nonpolitical role that is ascribed to it,” he
claimed in one his recent pieces, targeting one of the assumptions of
“liberal democracy.” He also reminded that societies “turn their faces
from law to politics in eras of critical transformation.” Elsewhere,
he defined Turkey’s current “critical transformation” as a “people’s
revolution.” The underlying lesson was that we had to put politics
above law, especially in such glorious moments.

No one can say such arguments by Mahcupyan are dishonest or shallow.

But I find them erroneous and dangerous, because they help justify
the hegemony of politics over values that I indeed consider as
“supra-political” such as human rights, rules of justice and freedom.

History teaches us that “revolutions” that disregard these values
“temporarily,” supposedly for the sake of a better future, end
up rather creating a “permanent revolution.” In the meantime, the
“revolutionary” political power, unrestrained by any higher law, ends
up creating a Leviathan that recognizes no rights other than its own.

http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/12/turkey-davutoglu-armenian-adviser-corruption.html

Yezidis Urge Armenian National Assembly To Recognize Yezidi Genocide

YEZIDIS URGE ARMENIAN NATIONAL ASSEMBLY TO RECOGNIZE YEZIDI GENOCIDE IN IRAQ

12.09.2014 16:25 epress.am

Today, representatives of Armenia’s Yezidi minority protested in front
of the National Assembly and sent a letter to all the party factions,
urging them to recognize the situation of Yezidis in Iraq as genocide.

The protest participants gave the option to the MPs to either make a
public statement or pass a legislation. The day is not a coincidence;
on December 9, 1948 the UN passed the Convention on the Prevention
and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide.

The Sinjar Yezidi National Union president Boris Murazi, who informed
us about the protest, applied to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
with two requests. The Sinjar representatives are demanding in one
of their requests to obtain a substantial report on the expenses of
the $100,000 aid given to Yezidis in Iraq from Armenia.

“Not only is it of utmost importance for us that we help our sisters
and brothers, but the aid on a state level must be spent efficiently,”
said Boris Murazi.

The second issue is related to the refugees from Iraq; Murazi is
confident that Armenia would not accept the Yezidi refugees.

“They said many months ago that they would implement work, would
discuss the issue with state institutions and that coordinated steps
would be taken. Let them show us now, for example, has the Ministry
of Foreign Affairs implemented anything in that direction,”said Murazi.

The protesters highlighted that Armenia’s potential state level
recognition of the Yezidi Genocide in Iraq would set an example to
other countries.

“It would result in more intensive help to both the refugees and to
the Yezidi fighters trying to retake their occupied lands.They will
return to their homes.” said Sinjar vice-president Mame Amiryan.

According to him, due to ISIS’s attacks there are approximately 700 –
800 thousand Yezidi refugees, while overall refugee number, including
Christians and Shia Muslims, makes up about 2 million.

Yezidis genocide victims who continue to live in Iraq are keeping
shelter under tents, and the issue of being transferred to another
country is complicated because the large portion of the population do
not have passports. Nearly 30,000 Yezidis have found refuge in Turkey.

http://www.epress.am/en/2014/12/09/yezidis-urge-armenian-national-assembly-to-recognize-yezidi-genocide-in-iraq.html

Le Parlement Rejette Les Changements Proposees Par L’opposition Dans

LE PARLEMENT REJETTE LES CHANGEMENTS PROPOSEES PAR L’OPPOSITION DANS LE CODE ELECTORAL

ARMENIE

Les deputes armeniens ont vote avec 59 voix contre et 54 vois pour
et avec quatre abstentions, le rejet d’un projet de loi appelant a
la suppression des elections legislatives tenues dans le cadre du
soi-disant système majoritaire.

Seuls les membres du Parti Republicain d’Armenie ont vote contre le
projet de reforme, qui est l’une des exigences cles de la campagne
actuelle contre le gouvernement lance par les trois partis minoritaires
(Parti Armenie prospère, le Congrès national armenien et Heritage),
communement connus sous le nom de troïka.

Les trois partis ainsi que deux autres factions minoritaires, la
Federation revolutionnaire armenienne (FRA) et Orinats Yerkir, ont vote
en faveur de la motion, mais leurs voix se sont averes insuffisant
pour que l’initiative passe. Le meme projet de loi presente par la
FRA en mai avait egalement ete defait lors d’un vote similaire.

mardi 9 decembre 2014, Stephane (c)armenews.com

Princeton: Ervine To Speak On Armenians In Jerusalem

ERVINE TO SPEAK ON ARMENIANS IN JERUSALEM

Princeton University
Dec 8 2014

Tuesday, Dec. 9, 2014, 4:30 p.m. · Jones Hall, Room 202

Robert Ervine of St. Nersess Armenian Seminary will give a talk
“Like a Tree Planted by the Waters: The Deep Roots of Armenians in
Jerusalem” at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9, in Jones Hall, Room 202. It
is the second lecture in The Near East and the World Seminar Series
“Christianity and the Near East: Past, Present … Future?”

http://www.princeton.edu/main/news/archive/S41/80/66G03/index.xml?section=announcements

Appraising Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation

APPRAISING TURKISH-ARMENIAN RECONCILIATION

[ Part 2.2: “Attached Text” ]

[Keghart-Logo-Banner.jpg] Editorial, 8 December 2014

On Nov 17, 2014, the e-zine Jadaliyya published an interview with Dr.

Anny Bakalian conducted by Dr. Sinem Adar titled “Armenian
Diaspora Tourism in Turkey.”

[Reconciliation.jpg]

This conversation between a Turkish and Armenian academic seems
designed to introduce Muslim audiences to the history and experience of
Western Armenians before and after 1915. One aspect of the interview
appears to be to defuse enmity between Turks and Armenians by showing
how their ancestors allegedly shared a common heritage prior to
the Genocide.

Interviewee Bakalian recounts her family history in Western Armenia
and Cilicia; her participation in pilgrimages to these lands; and
answers questions about her thoughts and experiences as a descendant
of Armenian exiles. Bakalian’s comments will undoubtedly inform
Muslim readers about Armenian history.

Intellectual exchanges such as this are welcome, but they also
present problems. The successful implementation of Turkish-Armenian
reconciliation seems to require that both sides presuppose common
historical and cultural attributes that are not necessarily accurate
or complete. Indeed, this interview at times risks equalizing the
culpability of Armenians and Turks for antagonisms existing before
and after the Armenian Genocide. A few instances that point to this
include the following comments from Bakalian:

· That many Armenians in 19th century Cilicia and parts of W.

Armenia spoke Turkish as their ‘mother tongue.’ Turkish may
have been the Lingua Franca, given that occupied peoples were using
the dominant, official language of the Turkish Empire, but to call
it the mother tongue of the Armenians is inaccurate and disingenuous.

· That Armenians had a “shared culture” with Turks that included
cuisine, music and Khoja stories. Had Bakalian mentioned that many
indigenous traditions were appropriated or destroyed by centuries of
harsh Turkish occupation, this would render the picture in a different
light…that of Armenian tourists witnessing the co-optation and
weakening of their suppressed culture.

· That Armenians from Lebanon in the 1980s wishing to travel to
Western Armenia would have encountered the refusal of a Turkish
visa because The Armenian Secret Army for the Liberation of Armenia
(ASALA) was murdering Turkish diplomats. Were all Lebanese Armenians
wishing to travel refused a Turkish visa? Was the mention of ASALA
in the interview done to equalize purported “shared pain”
between Turks and Armenians, without mentioning that the assassination
of diplomats is an inevitable tactic of the disenfranchised and
dispossessed? Was it necessary for Bakalian to refer to a Tashnag
ancestor and his descendant as “defiant” — which smack of the
derogative terms used to justify the Turkish narrative that Armenian
revolts were responsible for the Genocide?

· That “some Armenians really want an apology from the
Turkish government [for the commission of genocide]. Some people
would be happy to receive a personal expression of regret.”
While this reflects Bakalian’s personal opinion, it does not
represent a position to which the entire global Armenian community
adheres, nor does an apology suffice or portend a larger political
solution. To her credit, Bakalian ends the interview by saying that
“if the Turkish citizens lobby their government to change
the policy of genocide denial, they may eventually achieve this
[acknowledgment]. Ultimately, the onus is on the Turkish people,
beginning with the intelligentsia.” Unfortunately, Bakalian
stops at governmental acknowledgment as a proposed final solution.

· That “witnessing the villages, towns, and cities of their
parents, grandparents, and great grandparents reconnects [Armenian]
travelers with their roots and heals displacement. The trip [to Western
Armenia] is psychologically therapeutic not only for the travelers,
but also for Diaspora Armenians back home. When the pilgrims return to
their everyday lives, they share their experiences and impressions with
their family, friends, and community. While family stories of Turkish
atrocities are not forgotten, the new narratives offer the promise
of closure.” Many Armenians do not agree with Bakalian’s
opinion that tourism to occupied Western Armenia is the “healing”
solution for exiled Armenians and their descendants. In fact, some
might consider traveling to areas cleansed of Armenians and their
culture a form of re-traumatization, especially when Turkish state
policy is still one of full-blown denial.

There have been, in the last 20 years, a number of misconceptions
inherent in the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process.

Reconciliation begs the question of whether and under which
circumstances a victim group with little support from the international
community should: engage with an unrepentant perpetrating nation;
share responsibility for their victimization in exchange for dialogue;
and if the process puts the appropriately greater onus on the dominant
perpetrator group.

This interview became a springboard for our compiling a list of
misconceptions, presented below.

Ten Key Presuppositions of Turkish-Armenian
“Reconciliation”

1) That reconciliation rectifies an estrangement between peoples
who were once co-equal citizens and good friends residing within a
tolerant Ottoman Empire. False. Armenians were generally second-class
citizens in an oppressive environment.

2) That both peoples are equally responsible for their rift, for what
caused and perpetuates it, for establishing a peaceful resolution, and
have equal power to do so. False. Turkey was the perpetrating state;
Armenians were the victims. The power asymmetry still holds today.

3) That cultural exchanges to ‘bridge misunderstanding’
can overcome historic hostility; such exchanges are enough to help
two sides reach an equitable solution to their problems; and if
exchanges cannot lead to restorative justice, they could minimize
or supplant it. False. There are real political issues that separate
Turkey and Armenia: Turkey’s closure of the border, Turkey’s attempts
to interfere in the Artsakh/Karabagh issue, and Turkey’s pan-Turkist
ambitions to expand to the East.

4) That apologies by Turks in regard to the Armenian Genocide –
individually, collectively or on a government level — may speak
for all concerned and will finally resolve the problem. False, as
financial and territorial reparations are also necessary to completely
make amends for the unprecedented act of genocide committed.

5) That it is up to Armenians to work hand-in-hand with Turks to
educate and transform Turkish society (whether this ultimately helps
the Armenian Cause or not) and that only such transformed Turks from
within Turkey (rather than international pressure upon Turkey) can
establish lasting peace with Armenians. False. Armenians should not
be placed in the position of being the Turks’ psychiatrists.

6) That interminable exchanges, dialogue and dissection of history
should take the place of Armenian political activism for reparations
and restoration or, at the very least, should persuade political
entities to neutralize reparations efforts. False. Dialogue in
perpetuity could indefinitely delay and defuse restorative justice.

7) That the opening of the Turkish-Armenian border is not being
pursued to satisfy the political ambitions of the West, but rather,
is being pursued because it is solely beneficial to the parties
involved. False. The West has much to gain by an opened border,
including the East-West transport of Western-controlled Central Asian
energy resources and political and military penetration by NATO.

Incentives presented to Turks include improving their international
image and boosting the impoverished Turkish economy. For Armenians,
besides some unproven economic gains, purported incentives are that
simply visiting Western Armenia will, in and of itself, satisfy and
give closure to those who carry genocide trauma and the desire to
permanently return to W. Armenia. This may, in fact, complete the
act of genocide.

8) That motives for reconciliation are the same among Turks and
Armenians. False. Some Turks may wish to correct historic wrongs.

Others wish to achieve economic gain; improve a tarnished image;
build democracy in their own nation; and neutralize the reparations
movement. Some Armenians may truly seek restorative justice. Others
wish to obtain career opportunities and advancement, access to power
and personal fame.

9) That the majority of Turks of today are liberal thinkers and
entirely unlike the Turks of the past. And that the reconciliation
movement is widespread and has great public support. False. The
intellectual class that recognizes the Armenian Genocide makes up
a small percentage of the Turkish population. The recent, racially
motivated Turkic assassinations of Armenians such as Hrant Dink,
Sultan Aykar, Marissa Kucuk, Sevan Balikji and Gurgen Makaryan are
still fresh, as are the invasions of Kessab and the bombing of the Der
Zor Memorial. The reconciliation movement is not extensive and does
not have widespread public support. The same group of individuals
are participating in the reconciliation process again and again,
only sometimes with their identities concealed.

10) That so much has changed in the past 100 years and that,
aside from a hostile, paranoid Armenian Diaspora, Turkey is of no
particular threat to Armenia. That those Armenians who question the
asymmetry of the Turkish-Armenian reconciliation process are fanatics
who harbor hatred for Turks, do not wish to see progress, and are
preventing Armenia from making peace with Turkey. False. Those who
point out the power asymmetry between Turkey and Armenians should
not be silenced or marginalized. Diaspora Armenians are looked
upon as hostile interventionists who will spoil Turkish-Armenian
initiatives. In truth, the Diaspora represents the direct outcome
of the genocidal process and the main aggrieved party who remains
stateless and without reparation or restitution.

We urge those who wish to see meaningful dialogue between Turks and
Armenians to consider the points above. On the eve of the Armenian
Genocide Centennial and as reconciliation initiatives proliferate,
every Armenian must ask him or herself the following: “Do I
believe that the Armenians should abandon the dream of returning to
the indigenous lands and properties stolen from Armenians, or should
Armenians cherish their dream the way Martin Luther King, Jr. did,
and for which he paid with his life? His followers have not given up
that dream despite all of the hardships and ridicule.

Let us assume that there are high-minded Armenians who are invested in
the “reconciliation” process as a means of restoring the
lost homeland of the Armenians and seek a way to establish a foothold
in Western Armenia. If this is so, they must take into account that
today’s Assyrians invited to repurchase and resettle into
their ancestral properties in their historic homeland, confiscated
during the (still-ongoing) Genocide, are once again being ousted from
“modern” Turkey.

http://www.keghart.com/Editorial-Appraising-Reconciliation

Economist: Armenian Dram To Remain Under Threat Of Devaluation Until

ECONOMIST: ARMENIAN DRAM TO REMAIN UNDER THREAT OF DEVALUATION UNTIL MARCH

YEREVAN, December 8. /ARKA/. Armenian dram’s downward motion will
be not so dramatic, but the national currency will remain under the
threat of devaluation until March, Vilen Khachatryan, an economist,
told journalists on Monday. The U.S. dollar leapt 4.64 percentage
points today against the Armenian national currency, crossing the
crucial psychological level of 450 drams, and traded at 452.4 drams,
on average, as the press office of the Central Bank of Armenia
reports. The Armenian national currency’s fever began on November 24.

Khachatryan said the devaluation was due to outside shocks, and
jobbing at Armenia’s forex market ahead of New Year holidays added a
great deal to the devaluation. He said it will be possible to analyze
things only in January 2015. In his opinion, the dram’s devaluation
is unlikely to come out of a 20-percent range. The economist said
that sharper fluctuations will be seen after January as a result
of rapprochement between Armenian and Russian economies within the
Eurasian Economic Union. He didn’t rule out that western economic
sanctions against Russia may be eased in March. “After March, the
sanctions may be mitigated or lifted, and this will allow the Russian
ruble to recover, and this, in turn, will strengthen purchasing
ability of money transfers coming to Armenia from Russia,” he said.

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http://arka.am/en/news/economy/economist_armenian_dram_to_remain_under_threat_of_devaluation_until_march/#sthash.cejpD8Pl.dpuf

Vice-President Of Uruguay: "MERCOSUR Has Adopted Declaration Condemn

VICE-PRESIDENT OF URUGUAY: “MERCOSUR HAS ADOPTED DECLARATION CONDEMNING DENIAL OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE”

17:49, 8 December, 2014

YEREVAN, 8 DECEMBER, ARMENPRESS. Uruguay still hasn’t discussed an
issue on adopting a draft law criminalizing denial of the Armenian
Genocide. This is what Vice-President of Uruguay, President of the
Senate of Uruguay Danilo Astori announced during a press conference
held at the National Assembly. “However, the Parliament of MERCOSUR,
the members of which are Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay, Paraguay,
Venezuela and Bolivia, has made a declaration condemning denial of
the Armenian Genocide” he mentioned, according to “ArmenPress”.

Astori emphasized the fact that with that declaration, MERCOSUR has
condemned denial of the Armenian Genocide and condemns those who
still haven’t recognized the Armenian Genocide. “The declaration was
adopted last week,” Astori mentioned.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/786976/vice-president-of-uruguay-%E2%80%9Cmercosur-has-adopted-declaration-condemning-denial-of-the-armenian-genocide%E2%80%9D.html