n Seminaire Sur L’oecumenisme S’est Tenu A Tsaghkadzor

UN SEMINAIRE SUR L’OECUMENISME S’EST TENU A TSAGHKADZOR

ARMENIE

Du 28 au 30 septembre, un seminaire consacre a l’~cumenisme ,
a eu lieu pour la première fois en Armenie. Le seminaire a ete
organise par le ministère des Relations Inter -eglises du Saint
Siège d’Etchmiadzine avec le parrainage de la Fondation charitable
Inter-Eglise armenienne. Ont assiste au seminaire des representants des
diocèses de l’Eglise apostolique armenienne , de l’Eglise armenienne
catholique, diverses organisations sociales et des Unions chretiennes
de jeunes .

Le seminaire a ete ouvert par une prière. L’organisateur de l’
evenement , Mme Gohar Ghalachyan , a brièvement presente les objectifs,
les principes et l’ordre du jour du projet. Au cours du seminaire
qui a dure trois jours les intervenants ont ete : Sa Grâce l’eveque
Bagrat Galstanyan , Directeur du Bureau des questions liturgiques
ecclesiastiques au Saint Siège d’Etchmiadzin , Sa Grâce Mgr Hovakim
Manoukian , directeur du Departement des relations inter-eglises ; le
père Zakaria Baghumyan , Chef du Bureau des procedures de sacraments,
et M. Gharib Harutyunyan.

Les intervenants ont aborde l’histoire des origines du mouvement
~cumenique et de sa mission , la structure du Conseil ~cumenique des
Eglises , la participation de l’Eglise armenienne dans le mouvement
~cumenique , les dialogues theologiques et les defis modernes que
les Eglises chretiennes rencontrent aujourd’hui .

Le 29 Septembre , les participants ont assiste a la Divine Liturgie
qui a eu lieu dans le monastère de Kecharis .

vendredi 25 octobre 2013, Stephane ©armenews.com

BAKU: Hungarian Ambassador To Azerbaijan: ‘The Reports On Hungarian

HUNGARIAN AMBASSADOR TO AZERBAIJAN: ‘THE REPORTS ON HUNGARIAN STUDENTS’ VISIT TO NAGORNO KARABAKH ARE BEING SPECIFIED’

Azeri-Press Agency (APA)
October 23, 2013 Wednesday 2:11 PM EST

Baku: Hungarian Embassy in Azerbaijan is investigating the reports that
a group of Hungarian students guided by teacher on Armenian studies
Balint Kovacs visited Armenia, and then the occupied Nagorno Karabakh.

Hungarian ambassador to Azerbaijan Zsolt Csutora noted that this
information is more like false: ‘Taking into account that diplomatic
relations between Armenia and Hungary have been cut, our embassies
do not operate, I think that it has been fabricated by the Armenian
press. Our embassy has sent a questionnaire to the relevant structures
of Hungary to verify the reports’.

The Ambassador added that the official website of the Hungarian
Foreign Ministry regularly posts information calling not to visit
Nagorno Karabakh: ‘It is said that it is prohibited to visit these
territories without the permission of Baku’.

Armenian media reported that Hungarian students guided by Balint
Kovacs paid a 10-day trip to Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh. According
to the information, during this trip, Hungarian students met with
the Armenian students and said that the two nations had friendly
relations and that these relations must be continued. Kovacs called
Nagorno Karabakh an integral part of Armenian culture.

ANKARA: Dink Trial Suspect Erhan Tuncel Arrested

DINK TRIAL SUSPECT ERHAN TUNCEL ARRESTED

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
Oct 24 2013

24 October 2013 /TODAY’S ZAMAN, İSTANBUL

Erhan Tuncel, who was previously acquitted of all charges related
to the 2007 killing of Hrant Dink, the late editor-in-chief of the
Turkish-Armenian weekly Agos, was arrested on Thursday after being
referred to İstanbul’s 14th High Criminal Court.

The İstanbul 14th High Criminal Court, which has started a retrial
in the Dink case, issued an arrest warrant for Tuncel last month,
and he was detained by police on Wednesday.

The İstanbul court launched the new trial concerning the Dink case
after the Supreme Court of Appeals in May overturned the İstanbul
court’s ruling of Jan. 17, 2012, in which it dismissed the involvement
of an organized criminal network in the murder.

Tuncel, who worked as an informant for the Trabzon Police Department,
was sentenced to 10 years in prison for his role in the 2004 bombing
of a McDonald’s restaurant in the Black Sea town of Trabzon but
was acquitted of all charges regarding the Dink murder, including
prosecutors’ claims in the first trial that he was the one who ordered
Yasin Hayal, the man who was given a life sentence for soliciting
Dink’s shooter, to murder him.

Dink’s lawyers earlier said the Supreme Court of Appeals’ 9th Criminal
Chamber had indicated in its May decision that Tuncel may have played
a crucial role in the murder of Dink.

Hayal and Tuncel, along with all other defendants, were cleared
of charges of membership in a terrorist organization in the local
court’s ruling.

Dink was shot and killed in broad daylight on Jan. 19, 2007, by an
ultranationalist teenager outside the offices of his newspaper in
İstanbul. Evidence discovered since then has led to claims that the
murder was linked to the “deep state,” a term used in reference to
a shady group of military and civilian bureaucrats believed to have
links to criminal elements.

The next hearing of the case will be on Dec. 3.

In an interview with the Star daily on Wednesday, Tuncel said his
arrest warrant was illegal and accused the gendarmerie of having a
“big role” in the murder of the Armenian journalist.

http://www.todayszaman.com/news-329630-dink-trial-suspect-erhan-tuncel-arrested.html

ANKARA: Fugitive Suspect In Hrant Dink Murder Case Arrested In Istan

FUGITIVE SUSPECT IN HRANT DINK MURDER CASE ARRESTED IN ISTANBUL ISTANBUL

Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
Oct 24 2013

Erhan Tuncel, the suspected instigator of the murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, has been arrested by Istanbul’s
14th High Criminal Court, a day after he was captured by the police
in the city’s Kumburgaz district.

The court decided to arrest Tuncel on Oct. 24, a day after he was
captured in a villa where he was hiding out, having spent 38 days on
the run, Dogan news agency reported. He claimed that he was not on
the run but rather had been preparing his defense.

“I had reported these convicts [convicted of the murder] 18 times in
order to prevent their action. I met with the convicts many times to
convince them not to commit this action,” said Tuncel in his defense.

Tuncel also demanded his release, however, the court decided on his
arrest on the grounds that he might leave the country.

Tuncel’s lawyer Erdogan Soruklu told the Hurriyet Daily News Oct. 24
that they had expected the decision of arrest and said they would
object to the decision.

Tuncel was captured in a police operation on the same day as an
interview was published in daily Star, in which he said he would
surrender in 15 days.

“This is the price of having served my country,” Tuncel told reporters
as he was taken into custody by police officers.

“It is an honor to be arrested on the day Adnan Menderes was hanged,”
he also said, in reference to the former Turkish prime minister who
was sentenced to death in the Yassıada trials that took place after
the 1960 military coup.

“I will surrender when I complete my defense,” he said in the interview
at daily Star. “I will reveal the names I am in contact with. The
gendarmerie forces have a big role in the Dink murder … I am not
running away, I am preparing a detailed defense with my application
to the European Court of Human Rights and planning to complete it
within 15 days, I will surrender right after completing this.”

Tuncel also said there was another organization within the state
“higher than Ergenekon [an allegedly shadowy organization accused of
planning to overthrow the Turkish government], that is being prevented
from shedding light on this murder. I am a little piece of all these.”

He particularly pointed to the Black Sea province of Trabzon’s police
department and gendarmerie.

The trial concerning the murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrant
Dink had restarted in Istanbul on Sept. 17 this year following an
overturning from the Supreme Court of Appeals after six years of
legal procedures. The court had issued an arrest warrant for Tuncel.

Tuncel was an informant in the Black Sea province of Trabzon ahead of
the murder of Dink, the editor-in-chief of Armenian-Turkish newspaper
Agos who was shot dead in broad daylight in Istanbul on Jan. 19, 2007.

Earlier in the case on Jan. 17, 2012, the Istanbul 14th High Criminal
Court had ruled to exonerate the 19 suspects from “being members of
a terrorist organization.”

Arrested suspect Yasin Hayal had received aggravated life imprisonment
for instigating the murder and police informant and suspect in
the murder Erhan Tuncel was sentenced to one year and three months
in prison.

Ogun Samast, who pulled the trigger, was a minor at the time and was
sentenced to nearly 23 years in prison. Due to the fact that Tuncel had
already served time in connection to a 10 year and six month sentence
issued for an explosion at a McDonald’s restaurant, he was released.

Tuncel is seen as a key in linking the murder to the state institutions
as members of the police department in Trabzon, the hometown of the
suspects, have been accused of failing to relay intelligence provided
by Tuncel to the Trabzon Gendarmerie Command in a report prepared by
Turkey’s State Supervisory Council (DDK).

The triggerman, Ogun Samast, 17-years-old at the time of the murder,
and Yasin Hayal, who was charged of being the instigator of the
assassination, were convicted of the murder. However, a high criminal
court dismissed charges related to an “armed terrorist organization”
being involved. The Supreme Court of Appeals verdict defined the acts
of all suspects in the case under “an organization formed to commit
crime” according to Turkish Penal Code Article 220.

October/24/2013

Russia Putting A Strong Arm On Neighbors

RUSSIA PUTTING A STRONG ARM ON NEIGHBORS

The New York Times
October 23, 2013 Wednesday
Late Edition – Final

By DAVID M. HERSZENHORN

CHISINAU, Moldova — It was not enough for Dmitri O. Rogozin, a
deputy prime minister of Russia, to warn darkly that it would be
“a grave mistake” for Moldova to seek closer ties with Europe.

Mr. Rogozin, wrapping up a visit here last month, let fly a threat
about the coming winter in this impoverished former Soviet republic,
which is entirely dependent on Russian gas for heat. “We hope that
you will not freeze,” he said.

The squeeze was just beginning. Next, the Russian Orthodox patriarch,
Kirill I, in a rare personal appearance here, denounced Western
Europe, “where religion is simply disappearing.” And three days later,
the sharpest blow: Russian officials, citing vague health concerns,
banned Moldovan wine, one of the country’s most important exports.

The bullying, which the Kremlin denies, is not directed at Moldova
alone. Ahead of a conference next month where the European Union
plans to advance political and trade accords with several ex-Soviet
republics, Russia has been whispering threats and gripping throats,
bluntly telling smaller neighbors that they would be better off
joining Russia’s customs union with Kazakhstan and Belarus.

The frantic push to retain influence, with its echoes of cold war
jousting, reflects the still-palpable fury among Russian officials
over NATO’s expansion into the former Soviet sphere and a desire to
halt a similar, eastward extension of European economic power. The
heavy-handed tactics have wreaked economic chaos throughout the region
in recent months.

In August, Russia suddenly stopped all Ukrainian imports at the border
for stepped-up customs inspections. It lifted the restrictions after
a week, but a senior economic aide to President Vladimir V. Putin
said that they could become permanent if Ukraine, as expected, signs
agreements with the European Union at the conference next month —
a step that the aide, Sergei Glazyev, said would be “suicidal.”

In September, Armenia, which is heavily dependent on Russia for
security reasons, simply capitulated. After a meeting with Mr. Putin
in Moscow, President Serzh Sargsyan abruptly declared that Armenia
would join the Kremlin’s customs union, scrapping years of work toward
agreements under the European Union’s Eastern Partnership program.

Mr. Sargsyan’s unexpected move shocked many Armenians and set off
a protest in Yerevan, the capital, by several thousand people who
noted that their country does not share a common border with any of
the customs union members. It also startled the Europeans, who began
scrambling to prevent further defections.

This month, Russia took aim at Lithuania, which has already joined
the European Union and whose capital, Vilnius, is the site of next
month’s conference. Russia briefly stiffened customs inspections on
Lithuanian goods, and has banned milk and other dairy imports.

Nowhere, however, is the pressure more intense than here in Moldova,
a tiny, landlocked nation of 3.6 million people wedged between Romania
and Ukraine that is by far the poorest country on the Continent,
with annual economic output of about $3,500 per person — less than
half that of Albania.

In addition to the ban on Moldovan wine, there have been rumors that
tens of thousands of Moldovans who work in Russia would be expelled in
an immigration crackdown, cutting off a financial lifeline for many
families. There are also fears of a ban on apples or other produce,
which would be devastating if imposed during harvest season.

Rather than intimidating leaders of the country’s fragile coalition
government, however, Russia’s tactics have only cemented their resolve
to complete the political and free trade agreements with the European
Union.

“The signing of these agreements is the only chance that Moldova has
in order to develop itself as a European country and in the European
spirit,” President Nicolae Timofti said in an interview.

Mr. Timofti said it was clear that the ban on wine imports was about
politics and Russia’s increasingly unrealistic goal of reuniting
the former Soviet republics in an economic alliance through the
customs union.

“We realize Russia has geopolitical interests in this area but there
is also a saying here — ‘You cannot enter the same river twice,’
” the president said. “It is impossible to recreate the union that
used to exist. However, Russia does take action to keep its influence
over this region.”

In interviews, Mr. Timofti and other government officials said the
Russian approach was backfiring, both politically and economically,
leading businesses to reduce their reliance on the Russian market.

When Russia imposed a similar ban on Moldovan wine in 2006, officials
said, exports to Russia accounted for more than 70 percent of the
industry. Today, it is less than 30 percent, and several winery
executives said they had ceased doing business with Russia entirely.

“We stopped working with the Russian market in 2009,” said Andrei
Sirbu, whose family owns the Asconi Winery in Puhoi, a village 20
miles southeast of Chisinau (pronounced KISH-e-now). “It’s a very
attractive market when you look at the sales opportunities, the size
of it. Just in Moscow, you can do so much business, but when you put
the politics into it, that’s the problem — the political risk.”

“To be honest, it’s all politics,” Mr. Sirbu added. “Why should we
suffer because of politicians?”

Moldova’s official response has been to request clarification of
Russia’s concerns about the wine so that they can be addressed quickly,
and to ask that any new technical requirements be specified in writing.

European leaders have condemned Russia’s efforts and undertaken
countermeasures, like lifting limits in the current trade rules on
tariff-free imports of Moldovan wine.

“We will keep telling our friends in Moscow, it is unacceptable that
our partners are being subject to any kind of pressure,” Stefan Fule,
the European commissioner for enlargement and neighborhood policy,
said at a recent news conference here with Prime Minister Iurie Leanca.

Mr. Fule said that the agreement under consideration “has clear
benefits not only to our neighbors, Moldova, but to our neighbors’
neighbors.”

Despite being the only former Soviet republic where Communists regained
power, controlling Parliament and ruling the country from 2001 to 2009,
Moldova has long set its sights westward, so much so that in 2004,
it renamed its foreign office the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and
European Integration.

For parts of the 19th and 20th centuries, Moldova was part of Romania,
and its language is virtually identical to Romanian. Early this month,
Mr. Rogozin, the Russian deputy prime minister, posted a Twitter
message suggesting that Romania had a secret plan to annex Moldova,
after supporting Moldova’s integration into Europe.

Some Moldovan officials have also accused Russia of fomenting unrest in
the country by inflaming the dispute with Trans-Dniester, a breakaway
territory that has declared independence and where about a thousand
Russian troops remain stationed, and also by financing political
groups aiming to topple the ruling coalition.

The Communist Party, which still has the single largest bloc in
Parliament and currently opposes the political and trade pacts with
Europe, this month began demanding early elections in an effort
to dislodge the current government. On Tuesday, Parliament for the
second time in two weeks rejected a vote of “no confidence” in the
government proposed by the Communists.

The government nearly fell apart earlier this year after a bizarre
series of events that began last December when a businessman was
accidentally killed on a hunting trip involving some of the country’s
top officials. Vlad Filat, then the prime minister, was ousted in
the ensuing controversy.

The current prime minister, Mr. Leanca, said that while the government
was pursuing overhauls, including anticorruption measures and an
overhaul of the judicial system, in hopes of eventually joining
the European Union, the outcome was not yet certain. “There are
still threats, and it comes from the fact that we have not reached
yet the irreversibility of our development, of our future path,”
Mr. Leanca said.

In an interview, he described Moldova as at a crossroads. “We could
go one way, which would mean embracing democratic values and on
those values to build a viable society, and a functioning society
with a prosperous economy,” he said. “Or we can stay forever in this
gray area, where there is no rule of law, where people do not have
confidence in their future and therefore they leave the country.”

Iulian Groza, a deputy foreign minister, said that focusing on Europe,
a market of 500 million people, was an obvious choice — and one that
Moldova made long ago — and that Russia should accept Moldova’s
policy decisions. “We want to be treated by our bigger partners,
if not equally, at least with respect,” he said.

President Timofti said he believed that Moldova would join the
European Union, and even predicted good relations with Russia in the
future. “Perhaps at some point in the future, Russia itself will
become a member of the European Union,” he said. “And we will be
together again.”

URL:

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/23/world/europe/russia-putting-a-strong-arm-on-neighbors.html

Hrair And Maggie Soghomonian Donate $15,000 To Asbarez

HRAIR AND MAGGIE SOGHOMONIAN DONATE $15,000 TO ASBAREZ

Thursday, October 24th, 2013

Hrair and Maggie Shogomonian

LITTLE ARMENIA-Mr. & Mrs. Hrair and Maggie Shogomonian of Dubai
have donated $15,000 to Asbarez on the occasion of the publication’s
105th anniversary.

The extent of Soghomonians’ generosity stretches from Dubai to Lebanon,
from Armenia to Boston and now to Los Angeles and Asbarez.

The Soghomonians’ wish is that benefactors and donors in Los Angeles
pay more attention to the needs of national institutions so they are
not forced to look to far away places for donations.

However, we can validate that the reality that thousands of Armenians
who do not live in Los Angeles use Asbarez’s Web-based platforms to
follow the news and get informed.

The Editorial Board and Management of Asbarez extends its heartfelt
gratitude to Hrair and Maggie Soghomonian.

http://asbarez.com/115365/hrair-and-maggie-soghomonian-donate-15000-to-asbarez/

NKR Minister Of Foreign Affairs And Representative Of OSCE Chairman-

NKR MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND REPRESENTATIVE OF OSCE CHAIRMAN-IN-OFFICE DISCUSS INCIDENT OF HADRUT

19:53, 24 October, 2013

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 24, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Foreign Affairs of the
Republic of Nagorno Karabakh Karen Mirzoyan on October 24 received
Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office, Ambassador
Andrzej Kasprzyk. As Armenpress was informed from the Department for
Mass Media and Public Relations of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs
of the Republic of Nagorno Karabakh, the sides discussed a range of
issues on the situation on the Line of Contact between the armed forces
of the NKR and Azerbaijan and the monitoring conducted by the Office
of the Personal Representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office. In
particular, the sides touched upon the incident which took place on
October 17 during the monitoring of the Line of Contact conducted by
the OSCE mission in the Hadrut direction. As a result of shooting to
the NKR Defense Army positions by the Azerbaijani side, the monitoring
was suspended. Both sides emphasized the necessity of preserving the
stability on the Line of Contact and the importance of preventing
the recurrence of such incidents.

http://armenpress.am/eng/news/737721/nkr-minister-of-foreign-affairs-and-representative-of-osce-chairman-in-office-discuss-incident-of-hadrut.html

Russian Natural Gas Supplies To Armenia In Nine Months Drop 3.7 Perc

RUSSIAN NATURAL GAS SUPPLIES TO ARMENIA IN NINE MONTHS DROP 3.7 PERCENT TO 1. 273 BILLION CUBIC

YEREVAN, October 24. / ARKA /. Russian natural gas supplies to Armenia
in the first nine months of this year dropped by 3.7 percent from
the same time span in 2012 to a total of 1.273 billion cubic meters,
Armenia’s Russian-controlled gas operator ArmRosGazprom (ARG) said
in a statement posted on its official website.

During the reporting period the company sold a total of 1.122.2
billion cubic meters of natural gas, 0.5 % less than in the same
period of time last year. Household consumption slashed by 8.7 %
to 361.7 million cubic meters.

The energy sector consumption dropped by 14.9% to 112.8 million cubic
meters, while the industrial sector is said to increase consumption by
10.8 % to 200.7 9 million cubic meters. Other customers’ consumption
rose by 1.7 percent to 115.9 million cubic meters.

Liquefied gas stations sold 331.1 million cubic meters, an 8.8%
year-on-year rise.

Russian gas is delivered to Armenia by joint Russian-Armenian
ArmRosGazprom (ARG). It was established in 1997. Russian Gazprom
holds 80 percent in it, the rest is owned by Armenian government. -0-

– See more at:

http://arka.am/en/news/economy/russian_natural_gas_supplies_to_armenia_in_nine_months_drop_3_7_percent_to_1_273_billion_cubic/#sthash.JpWkWXM2.dpuf

Crossroads E-Newsletter – October 24, 2013

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apost. Church of America and Canada
H.E. Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan
Prelate, Easter Prelacy and Canada
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
Web:

ARCHBISHOP OSHAGAN WILL PRESIDE OVER
90TH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION IN PHILADELPHIA

This Sunday, October 27, Archbishop Oshagan will celebrate the Divine
Liturgy and deliver the sermon at St. Gregory the Illuminator Church
in Philadelphia.

Following the Liturgy, His Eminence will preside over a luncheon in
celebration of the 90th anniversary of the founding of the
Philadelphia parish and the 46th anniversary of the parish at its
current location. The luncheon,
which has been sold-out for several weeks, will take place in the
parish’s beautiful Founders Hall that was dedicated three years ago.

St. Gregory Church at the current location on Ridge Avenue. The new
church
was consecrated in 1967.

An etching of St. Gregory Church at 16th and Oxford Streets where the
parish was founded 90 years ago.

Rev. Fr. Torkom Chorbajian

ORDINATION IN LEBANON

Last Sunday the ordination of Deacon Mourad Chorbajian to the married
priesthood took place at St. Asdvazadzin Church in Bourdj Hamoud,
Lebanon. The ordination took place during the celebration of the
Divine Liturgy by Archbishop Nareg Alemezian. Deacon Mourad was given
the name Torkom.

In his sermon Archbishop Nareg thanked His Holiness Aram I for
entrusting him with the honor of conducting this ordination. He also
offered words of congratulations to Archbishop Oshagan, noting that
the newly-ordained Der Torkom will begin his service with the Eastern
Prelacy.

Der Torkom will celebrate his first Divine Liturgy on Sunday, December
1, following his 40-day retreat in Antelias, Lebanon.

Archbishop Nareg Alemezian officiated the ordination ceremony that
began Saturday evening and concluded Sunday during the Divine Liturgy.

BISHOP ANOUSHAVAN WILL CELEBRATE LITURGY IN WORCESTER;
INTRODUCE PARISH’S NEW PASTOR

This Sunday, October 27, Bishop Anoushavan will celebrate the Divine
Liturgy and deliver the sermon at Holy Trinity Church, Worcester,
Massachusetts. His Grace will take this opportunity to introduce the
Very Rev. Fr. Sahag Yemishyan, who will begin serving as pastor of the
parish.

Since his arrival in August, Father Sahag has been serving the Prelacy
as an outreach priest. Hayr Sourp was born in Yerevan, Armenia, in
1983. He studied at the Armenian Theological Seminary in Antelias,
Lebanon, for nine years and was ordained a celibate priest in 2006. He
served the Catholicosate as the director of the archives, and a
lecturer at the Seminary. Most recently he served as pastor to the
Armenian community of Salonica, Greece.

NOVEMBER 17 EVENT IN HONOR OF MOTHERS

Throughout the year of 2013 parishes under the jurisdiction of the
Holy See of Cilicia have been celebrating the `Year of the Mother of
the Armenian Family.’ With the end of the year approaching, the
Prelacy is sponsoring an appropriate culmination with a banquet on
Sunday, November
17, at the Terrace on the Park in Flushing Meadows Park, New
York. Reception is at 4 pm; dinner will follow at 5 pm. Donation for
the banquet is one hundred dollars.

The program will include music and poetry devoted to motherhood. The
program booklet will include articles, reflections, and poetry devoted
to mothers. In addition the booklet will include a section honoring
the founding members and current and past members of the Prelacy
Ladies Guild that has assumed the role of the `Mother of the Prelacy’
since the Guild
was established in 1974. The booklet will also list all of the
individuals
who have been honored as `Mother of the Year’ by the Prelacy.

For information or reservations contact the Prelacy by telephone
(212-689-7810) or by email ([email protected]).

VICAR WILL ATTEND ROUNDTABLE TOMORROW;
DEPART FOR WCC ASSEMBLY IN KOREA ON MONDAY

Bishop Anoushavan will attend a Religion and Foreign Policy Roundtable
discussion on `Institutions, Education, and Religious Tolerance,’
tomorrow, Friday, October 25, organized by the Council on Foreign
Relations (CFR) in New York City.

On Monday he will travel to the Republic of Korea, where he will
attend the 10th Assembly of the World Council of Churches (WCC) in
Busan, beginning October 30 to November 8. The theme of the Assembly
is `God of life, lead us to justice and peace.’ The Assembly will
bring together Christians from around the world.

There are 354 member churches in the WCC and nearly all are expected
to participate. Representatives of the Catholicosate of the Holy See
of Cilicia are: Archbishop Sebouh Sarkissian, Archbishop Nareg
Alemezian, Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, Ms. Christine Arzoumanian,
Dr. Nora Bayrakdarian-Kabakian,
Ms. Nazeli Kandakarjian, Ms. Vanna Kitsinian, Ms. Teny Simonian, and
Ms. Irma Vartanian Balian.

His Holiness Aram I was moderator of the WCC from 1991 to 2006.

PRELATE MEETS WITH NY-NJ HAMAZKAYIN LEADERS

Executive members of the New York and New Jersey Hamazkayin Armenian
Educational and Cultural Society met with Archbishop Oshagan on Monday
at the Prelacy. They discussed national concerns and areas of
cooperation, especially in cultural and educational endeavors.

The Prelate with New York and New Jersey Hamazkayin members, from
left, Flora Kasbarian, Ani Tchaglassian, Hasmig Abrahamian, Archbishop
Oshagan, Dikran Kazanjian, Asdghig Sevag, Arevig Caprielian.

ST. HAGOP CHURCH IN RACINE CELEBRATES 75TH ANNIVERSARY

Last Sunday, October 20, parishioners of St. Hagop Church, Racine,
Wisconsin, celebrated the parish’s 75th anniversary. The Divine
Liturgy was celebrated by Bishop Anoushavan, who was assisted at the
altar by Rev. Fr. Daron Stepanian, pastor of the parish. The Vicar’s
sermon focused
on the message of Luke 8:21, `My mother and my brothers are those who
hear the word of God and do it,’ that stresses our relationship
with God and our practice to be good Christians.

Following the Divine Liturgy, a celebratory banquet took place that
was attended by many parishioners and friends. Dr. Levon Saryan,
master of ceremonies, and vice chairman of the board of trustees
thanked the attendees and pledged to keep the torch lit for the years
to come. Dr. Mary Olson, a board member and banquet committee member
offered three toasts for the past, present, and future generations of
St. Hagop Church.

Der Daron’s message focused on three truths: victory, vigilance, and
vision. `Let us continue to grow deeper, aim higher, and serve better
until we become the church that God intends us to be,’ he said.

Bishop Anoushavan conveyed the blessings of the Prelate, Archbishop
Oshagan, the congratulations of the Religious and Executive Councils,
and stressed the uniqueness of the family oriented church, where
Armenians by birth and by choice meet in harmony.

The Prelacy’s Certificate of Merit was presented to Mrs. Jessie Toppe,
the eldest mother in the parish who will celebrate her 100th birthday
in December. Mrs. Toppe, hospitalized because of a recent fall, was
presented with the award personally by the vicar and pastor in the
hospital in the
presence of family and friends.

Bishop Anoushavan and Der Daron with altar servers and parishioners
after the Liturgy at St. Hagop Church, Racine.

Vicar and pastor present the Prelacy award to Mrs. Jessie Toppe.

WHITINSVILLE PARISHIONERS WALK FOR NEEDY

Last Saturday St. Asdvadzadzin Church of Whitinsville, Massachusetts,
once
again took part in the National Crop Walk organized by Church World
Services. Thirteen parishioners joined with more than 150 walkers from
eleven churches in Whitinsville on a three-mile walk to raise funds
for food and supplies for the needy.

Archpriest Aram Stepanian, pastor, reports that it was a sunny day and
everyone enjoyed walking together and fulfilling Jesus’
teachings. Along the way from Whitinsville to Uxbridge, the walkers
were offered apples and water. At their destination they were given
sandwiches and dessert. St. Asdvadzadzin Church raised more than $400
for the worthy project.

Parishioners of St. Asdvadzadzin Church joined with 150 participants
from eleven area churches for the charity walk.

The St. Asdvadzadzin contingent raised more than $400.

`LIFE BY THE CAGE’ PRESENTED

Last Friday `Life by the Cage,’ a play by Samuel Kosyan, staged and
directed by Dr. Herand Markarian took place at the Armenian Center in
Woodside, New York. The event was sponsored by the New York Hamazkayin
Cultural Association.

The director with clergy guests and cast members after the
performance.

MUSICAL ARMENIA DEADLINE EXTENDED

Recognizing the importance of discovering and promoting the careers of
exceptionally talented, but not well known, young Armenian musicians
from all over the world, the Eastern Prelacy launched the Musical
Armenia annual concert series in 1982. For more than thirty years the
program has remained true to its objective by encouraging young
Armenian artists and presenting them in recital at Weill Recital Hall
at Carnegie Hall in New York City.

All young soloists and ensembles with at least one member of Armenian
descent are invited to apply. Priority will be given to applicants
currently living or studying in the United States. The deadline for
applications has been extended to October 30, 2013.

For more information and application for the 2014 Musical Armenia
concert click here ().

BIBLE STUDY ON ST. PAUL’S LETTER TO ROMANS

The eight-week Bible study program on St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans,
begins tonight and will continue on subsequent Thursdays up to
December 19, at St. Illuminator’s Cathedral, 221 East 27th Street, New
York City. The Bible studies are being presented by Dn. Shant
Kazanjian, Executive Director of the Prelacy’s Armenian Religious
Education Council
(AREC), and is sponsored by AREC and the Cathedral. For information
contact the Prelacy at 212-689-7810, [email protected], or the
Cathedral at 212-689-5880, [email protected].

NEW PRELACY PUBLICATION TO BE PRESENTED

The Prelacy recently published Archbishop Zareh Aznavorian’s
monumental `Commentary on the Nicene Creed,’ in a bilingual English
and Armenian edition. The English translation was prepared by Deacon
Shant Kazanjian, executive director of the Prelacy’s Armenian
Religious Education Council (AREC). This important work is based on a
series of lectures delivered by Archbishop Zareh, of blessed memory,
and was published in Armenian in Aleppo in 2008. A presentation of
this new bilingual edition
will take place on Wednesday, November 13, at 7 pm, at the Prelacy
offices, 138 E. 39th Street, New York City.

This important work explains the Nicene Creed line by line, word by
word, in accordance to the orthodox faith; it presents the beliefs of
the Christian faith that are essential for every believer. Each
theological and biblical term is carefully examined and compared.

Admission is free. Please RSVP by email ([email protected]) or
telephone at 212-689-7810. For more information click here
().

BIBLE READINGS

Bible readings for Sunday, October 27, Seventh Sunday of the
Exaltation of
the Holy Cross, Discovery of the Holy Cross, are: Wisdom 14:1-8;
Isaiah 33:22-34; 1 Corinthians 1:18-24; Matthew 24:27-36.

For the message about the cross is foolishness to those who are
perishing,
but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. For it is
written,
`I will destroy the wisdom of the wise, and the discernment of the
discerning I will thwart.’ Where is the one who is wise? Where is the
scribe? Where is the debater of his age? Has not God made foolish the
wisdom of the world? For since, in the wisdom of God, the world did
not know
God through wisdom, God decided, through the foolishness of our
proclamation, to save those who believe. For Jews demand signs and
Greeks desire wisdom, but we proclaim Christ crucified, a stumbling
block to Jews and foolishness to Gentiles, but to those who are the
called, both Jews and Greeks, Christ the power of God and the wisdom
of God. (1 Corinthians 18-24).

For a listing of the coming week’s Bible readings click here
().

TWELVE HOLY TEACHERS OF THE CHURCH

This Saturday, October 26, the Armenian Church remembers the Twelve
Holy Teachers (Doctors) of the Church, namely: Hierotheus of Athens,
Dionysius the Areopagite, Sylvester of Rome, Athanasius of Alexandria,
Cyril of Jerusalem, Ephrem the Syrian, Basil of Caesarea, Gregory of
Nyssa, Gregory the Theologian, Epiphanius of Cyprus, John Chrysostom,
and Cyril of Alexandria.

The “Khodageradz Surp Nshan” Reliquary which houses a piece of the
Holy Cross in its center.

FEAST OF THE DISCOVERY OF THE HOLY CROSS

This Sunday, October 27, the Armenian Church commemorates the Feast of
the
Discovery of the Holy Cross (Giut Khatchi). Empress Helena, mother of
Constantine and a devout Christian, wanted to find the True Cross. She
went to Golgotha (Calvary), which had become an obscure and neglected
place. According to some chronicles, it was an informed Jew named Juda
who pointed out the location. After excavation at the site, three
wooden crosses were found.
In order to identify the True Cross, the three crosses were
successively placed on the body of a youth who had just died. When one
of the crosses was placed on him, the young man came back to
life. This was determined to be the True Cross. The commemoration of
this event take place on the Sunday closest to October 26, and can
vary from October 23 to 29.

Christ’s exact burial site was also located, and the Church of the
Holy Sepulcher was built on that spot in 335. The church was destroyed
by fire in 614 when the Persians invaded Jerusalem; it was
subsequently rebuilt. The current dome dates back to 1870. Three
denominations (Armenian Orthodox, Greek Orthodox, and Russian
Orthodox) administer and maintain the church and surrounding grounds,
unfortunately not always harmoniously. Agreements strictly regulate
times and places of worship for each denomination. Ironically, for
centuries a Muslim family has been the custodian of the keys to the
church, which is within the walled Old City of Jerusalem.

NEWS FROM THE CATHOLICOSATE

CATHOLICOS ADDRESSES GENOCIDE COMMITTEE

His Holiness Aram I addressed the Armenian Genocide Committee in
Brussels during the closing dinner of the conference organized by the
committee. Addressing the assembled dignitaries and delegates, His
Holiness said: =80=9CThe values we cherish as a nation and our common
challenges should outweigh our differences and provide the framework
for common action by all Armenians. We must not only seek the
recognition of the Genocide and reparations; we must also work
together to build a sustainable Karabagh and a strong Armenia.’

The Catholicos then urged everyone to help work through the problems
in Armenia and focus on nation building. `The Armenian Church,’ he
said, `has supported the aspirations of our people for freedom and
independence throughout history and continues to do so today.’ He
concluded by saying that the Church is committed to strengthening the
independence of Armenia and Karabagh and working towards the just
resolution of the Armenian Cause.

HIS HOLINESS MEETS WITH EU REPRESENTATIVES

During the time His Holiness Aram I was in Brussels to address the 3rd
Conference of the Armenian Genocide Committees in Europe, he met with
representatives of countries and institutions.

At a luncheon hosted by the Ambassador of Lebanon to Brussels, the
Catholicos met with representatives of the Lebanese community in
Brussels, representatives of the Vatican, and others. His Holiness
thanked the Ambassador for the invitation, and his kind words about
the Lebanese Armenian community during his welcoming address.

The Catholicos met with representatives of various countries at a
dinner hosted by the Ambassador of Armenia to the European Union in
honor of His Holiness and Pako Sahakian, President of Karabagh. During
their address to the gathering, both the Catholicos and President
Sahakian spoke about the Armenian Genocide, its recognition by Turkey,
and obligations for reparations. They both stated that Armenians, in
Armenia, the Diaspora, or Karabagh, would express their demand for
justice with one voice.

THIS WEEK IN ARMENIAN HISTORY

(Prepared by the Armenian National Education Committee[ANEC])

Fall of Kars (October 30, 1920)

The Turkish nationalist movement headed by Mustafa Kemal, with
headquarters in Ankara, did not recognize the Treaty of Sevres signed
by the legal government of the Ottoman Empire on August 10,
1920. Barely a month later, on September 23, Turkish armed forces
under the command of General Kiazim Karabekir started an attack,
without mediating a war declaration, against the Republic of
Armenia. A month later, again, the fortress of Kars-the most important
bulwark of the Southern Caucasus-would fall almost without a fight to
the advancing troops.

Kars, the capital of an Armenian medieval kingdom ruled by a branch of
the Bagratuni family, had changed hands several times over the past
hundred years. After being briefly occupied by Russian troops in 1855
during the Crimea War of 1854-1856, it was occupied again during the
Russian-Turkish war of 1877 and annexed to the Russian Empire as a
result of the Treaty of Berlin in 1878. It fell to the advancing
Turkish troops in March 1918 and was re-conquered by the troops of the
newly born Republic of Armenia after the Turkish retreat following the
end of World War I.

The young commander of the fortress, Col. Mazmanian, gave the order of
attack to his soldiers, who refused to follow his orders and, instead,
deserted. Confronted with the shameful desertion, Mazmanian took his
own life with his revolver in the sight of his soldiers. According to
the memoirs of Karabekir and other sources, the Kemalist soldiers and
the Turkish, Kurdish, Muslim, and Armenian Bolshevik rebels occupied
the entire city in three hours, took hundreds of Armenian officers and
soldiers as prisoners, seized an enormous quantity of war material
(cannons, projectiles, weapons, and bullets) and massacred thousands
of people among the civil population; in 1920-1921, the Turks would
kill a total of 20,000 Armenians in the city and the province of
Kars. Years later, Garegin Nejdeh, who headed the successful defense
of Zangezur against the attacks of Azerbaijanis and Bolsheviks from
1919-1921, would write: `The shame of Kars is not only of the
government of the Republic of Armenia, but of the entire Armenian
people. The armies measure their forces and clash, but the nations are
the winners or the losers. Under the walls of Kars, not only the
Armenian soldier and the general were defeated, but also the entire
Armenian people, lacking spirit of fight and bravery.”

The effects of the fall of Kars would be catastrophic. Despite
Armenian heroic resistance in other places, two weeks later,
Alexandropol (now Gumri) fell to the Turks, which practically reached
the outskirts of Yerevan from the west. The cabinet of Prime Minister
Hamo Ohanjanian fell, and Simon Vratzian became Prime Minister of a
coalition cabinet, which lasted scarcely a week. On November 29, 1920,
Bolshevik forces entered Armenia from the east, and the Armenian
government, confronting the menace of destruction, chose the lesser of
two evils and power was transferred to the Communists on December
2. Armenia would enter the Soviet Union in 1922 as part of the
Federative Republic of Transcaucasia.

The trauma of the fall was masterfully addressed by poet Yeghishe
Charents, a native of Kars, in his only novel, Yerkir Nayiri (Land of
Nayiri), published in 1926. The fall of Kars still remains a polemical
one in the historiography of the Republic of Armenia.

Note: Previous entries in `This Week in Armenian History’ are on the
Prelacy’s web site ().

A general view of modern Kars with the central Armenian church in the
foreground and the fortress in the background.

ARMENIAN LANGUAGE CORNER

(Prepared by the Armenian National Education Committee[ANEC])

Talent Weighs a Lot

People look for talent everywhere, starting with talent shows in
elementary school. Interestingly, we have the same word talent in
Armenian, only pronounced a little differently: daghant
(Õ¿Õ¡Õ²Õ¡Õ¶Õ¤). The use of gh instead of l shows that the word
appeared in Classical Armenian when the Greek λ (l) was written down
as Õ² (gh).

Both English and Armenian, therefore, share the same ultimate origin:
Greek Ï=84άλανÏ=84ον (talanton), a word that meant `scale’ and
`weight,’ and also indicated a certain amount of weight (26 kilograms
or 57 pounds), as well as the monetary sum equivalent to a talent of
gold or silver. When Carthago lost the Second Punic War (218-203 A.C.)
to Rome, it had to pay the exorbitant amount of 10,000 gold talents (=
570,000 pounds)!

The Armenian translation of the Bible already showed the figurative
meaning of daghant as `ability or skill.’ But, while Armenian borrowed
the word directly from Greek, English used an intermediary, the plural
form of Latin talentum, and the figurative meaning was reinforced by
the Old French talent (`will, inclination, desire’).

If you want to delve into the gradations of a talent, the Armenian
language gives you several choices, from the bottom to the top:

Õ¡Õ¶Õ¿Õ¡Õ²Õ¡Õ¶Õ¤ (andaghant) `untalented’
Õ¿Õ¡Õ²Õ¡Õ¶Õ¤Õ¡Ö=82Õ¸Ö=80 (daghantavor)
`talented’
Õ¿Õ¡Õ²Õ¡Õ¶Õ¤Õ¡Õ·Õ¡Õ¿ (daghantashad) `much talented’
Õ´Õ¥Õ®Õ¡Õ¿Õ¡Õ²Õ¡Õ¶Õ¤ (medzadaghant) `of great talent’
Õ¢Õ¡Õ¦Õ´Õ¡Õ¿Õ¡Õ²Õ¡Õ¶Õ¤ (pazmadaghant) `multi-talented’

However, the limit between a multi-talented person and a
Õ°Õ¡Õ¶Õ³Õ¡Ö=80 (hanjar `genius’) is a matter for others, not for this
column.

Note: Previous entries in `The Armenian Language Corner’ are on the
Prelacy’s web site ().

FROM THE BOOKSTORE

PRESIDENT CALVIN COOLIDGE AND THE ARMENIAN ORPHAN RUG

By Hagop Martin Deranian

In 1925, Dr. John H. Finley, Vice Chairman of the executive committee
of the Near East Relief, presented a rug made by Armenian orphans to
US President Calvin Coolidge. In making the presentation, Dr Finley
said that the orphans `have tied into it the gratitude of tens of
thousands of children to you and to America. And what they have tied
into it will never be untied…. It is sent to adorn the dearest of
our temples, the White House of our President.’

In accepting the rug, President Coolidge said, `The rug has a place of
honor in the White House, where it will be a daily symbol of good-will
on earth.’

The rug is large (eleven feet seven inches by eighteen feet five
inches) and is estimated to contain four and one-half million
knots. An inscription on the reverse side of the rug reads: `Made by
Armenian girls in the Ghazir, Syria, [now Lebanon] orphanage of the
Near East Relief and presented as a Golden Rule token of appreciation
to President Coolidge.’

The odyssey of the rug made by orphans in the orphanage in Ghazir is
told in this slim, but informative book. Dr. Deranian tells the rug’s
story from start to the present day. Currently it is in storage in the
White House and rarely sees the light of day.

76 pages, softcover, with photographs

$10.00 plus shipping & handling

To place an order contact the Prelacy Bookstore by phone
(212-689-7810) or by email ([email protected]).

PLEASE DO NOT FORGET OUR ONGOING RELIEF EFFORTS FOR THE ARMENIAN
COMMUNITY IN SYRIA WHERE CONDITIONS ARE BECOMING INCREASINGLY MORE
DIFFICULT.

THE NEED IS REAL. THE NEED IS GREAT.

DONATIONS TO THE FUND FOR SYRIAN ARMENIAN RELIEF CAN BE MADE ON LINE.
TO DONATE NOW CLICK HERE () AND
SELECT SYRIAN ARMENIAN RELIEF IN THE MENU.

The Fund for Syrian Armenian Relief is a joint effort of: Armenian
Apostolic Church of America (Eastern Prelacy); Armenian Catholic
Eparchy; Armenian Evangelical Union of North America; Armenian Relief
Society (Eastern USA, Inc.); Armenian Revolutionary Federation.

Thank you for your help.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

October 24 to December 19-St. Paul’s Letter to the Romans, an 8-week
Bible study program beginning Thursday, October 24, and continuing on
Thursdays up to December 19 (no session on Thanksgiving, November
28). Sessions will be presented by Dn. Shant Kazanjian, Executive
Director of the Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC). Sessions
will take place at St. Illuminator’s Cathedral, 221 East 27th Street,
New York City, 7:15-8:00 pm, Presentation; 8:00-8:45 pm, Q/A &
Discussion. Registration is required. Register at
or contact the Prelacy 212-689-7810, or the
Cathedral at 212-689-5880.

October 26-Annual Fall Fair sponsored by St. Gregory Church of
Merrimack Valley, 158 Main Street, North Andover, Massachusetts, 10 am
to 7 pm. Armenian foods and pastries, along with gift tables, white
elephant, raffles and games. Fun for the whole family.

October 27-90th anniversary celebration of St. Gregory Church,
Philadelphia, under the auspices of His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan,
Prelate. Immediately after the Divine Liturgy at the church’s Founders
Hall, 8701 Ridge Avenue, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19128.

October 27-`Truth or Consequences: Challenges to Armenia’s
Environmental Safety,’ at Pashalian Hall, St. Illuminator’s Cathedral,
221 E. 27th Street, New York City, at 2 pm. Documentary Film and Q&A,
and guest speakers Yeghia Nersessian, Anna Aghlamazyan, and Levon
Galstyan, representing the Pan-Armenian Environmental
Front. Opportunity to meet three activists on the frontlines of
environmental issues in Armenia today.

October 27-A Showcase of Talent, Art Exhibition and Sale, St. Sarkis
Church, Douglaston, New York.

November 2-70th Anniversary of All Saints Church, Glenview, Illinois.

November 1 & 2-St. Stephen’s Church, Watertown, Massachusetts, 57th
Annual Armenian Bazaar, 10 am to 9:30 pm, at Armenian Cultural &
Educational Center (ACEC), 47 Nichols Avenue, Watertown. Delicious
meals (take-out available), Armenian pastries, gourmet, Harvest Store,
Books, Raffles, Attic Treasures, Auctions, and more. For information:
617-924-7562 or on Facebook.

November 2 & 3-Armenian Fest 2013, Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence,
Rhode Island, presents its Armenian Food Festival at Rhodes on the
Pawtuxet, Broad Street, Cranston. Featuring chicken, losh, and shish
kebabs, and kufta dinners, Armenian delicacies, dancing to live music,
arts and crafts, flea market, gift baskets, children’s corner, country
store, jewelry, silent auction, hourly raffles, and grand prize,
$2,000. Children’s dance group will perform on Saturday and Sunday at
5 pm. Armenian food and pastry are available all day. Saturday, noon
to 9 pm; Sunday, noon to 8 pm. Free admission and parking. For
information: 401-831-6399.

November 7-Avak luncheon, noon, Jaffarian Hall, St. Gregory Church,
158 Main Street, North Andover, Massachusetts. Speaker, Dr. Edward
Khantzian, clinical professor of psychiatry at Harvard Medical School,
`Impressions of a Keynote Visit to Armenia.’

November 10-Ladies Guild of St. Stephen’s Church, Watertown,
Massachusetts, presents The Way We Were Ensemble of New York/New
Jersey in their performance of `The Gamavors,’ at 2 pm in the church
hall. Coffee and reception with cast will follow performance. Tickets:
$20 adults; $10 children under 12. For tickets: Mary Derderian,
[email protected] or 781-762-4253.

November 13-Book presentation and reception for `Commentary on the
Nicene Creed’ by Archbishop Zareh Aznavorian, of blessed
memory. Bilingual edition of this important work will be presented
under the auspices of Archbishop Oshagan at the Prelacy offices, 138
East 39th Street, New York City. English translation was prepared by
Deacon Shant Kazanjian.

November 15-16-17-Annual Bazaar, Sts. Vartanantz Church, 461 Bergen
Boulevard, Ridgefield, New Jersey.

November 16-Public Relations seminar for New England parishes,
directed by Tom Vartabedian, at St. Stephen Church, Watertown,
Massachusetts, beginning at 10 am. Speakers include: Stephen Kurkjian,
three-time Pulitzer Prize winning journalist from the Boston Globe,
and Khatchig Mouradian, editor of The Armenian Weekly.

November 16 & 17-Annual ART IN FALL Exhibition featuring national and
international Armenian artists, Hovnanian School, 817 River Road, New
Milford, New Jersey. Fine art including oils, mixed media,
photography, and sculpture in classic, modern, and contemporary styles
by 27 artists. Opening Reception, Saturday, 7 to 10 pm. Cocktails and
Hors D’oeuvres, $30 donation. Sunday, 1 to 4 pm, Refreshments, $15
donation.

November 17-Banquet and Program celebrating the `Year of the Armenian
Mother,’ organized by the Eastern Prelacy, at Terrace in the Park,
Flushing Meadows Park, New York. Watch for details.

November 22 & 23-Fall Food Festival at Holy Trinity Armenian Church,
635 Grove Street, Worcester, Massachusetts. Join us on Friday from 5
pm to 8 pm and Saturday from noon to 4 pm for shish, losh, chicken
kebob, or kheyma dinners. Country Store and Bake Table. Stock up on
katah, choreg, manti, porov kufta, simit, and much more.

November 24-Special program following the Divine Liturgy presented by
Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian commemorating the passing of Catholicos
Zareh I (50th) and Catholicos Khoren I (30th) will take place at
St. Stephen’s Church, 38 Elton Avenue, Watertown, Massachusetts.

November 24-Ladies Guild Annual Bazaar, St. Sarkis Church, Douglaston,
New York.

December 6-Anniversary celebration by Lowell `Aharonian’ Gomideh, 6:30
pm, St. Gregory Church, North Andover, Massachusetts; dinner and
program honoring 50-year members Steve Dulgarian and Joe Dagdigian;
remembering the 25th anniversary of the earthquake in Armenia; soloist
Nina Hovsepian, accompanied by Mary Barooshian. Donation: $20 adults;
$10 students.

December 7-Annual Church Bazaar of St. Asdvadzadzin Church,
Whitinsville, Massachusetts, will take place at Christian Reform
Church, 25 Cross Street, Whitinsville. For information: 508-234-3677.

December 7-Annual Holiday Bake Sale, St. Paul Church, 645 S. Lewis
Avenue, Waukegan, Illinois, 9 am to 3 pm. Enjoy authentic Armenian &
American pastries and plan to stay for lunch at St. Paul Café. For
information or pre-orders, 847-244-4573.

December 7-ARS New York Erebouni chapter presents dinner & dancing
honoring the Mother of the Armenian Family, St. Sarkis Church, Main
Hall, 38-65 234th Street, Douglaston, New York, 8 pm. Featuring Steve
Karageozian and his Band. Full mezze and dinner. Donation $60 adults;
$20 children age 5 to 12; under age 5 free. For tickets and
reservations: Nayda, 516-739-0805 or Vicky 516-365-0971.

December 15-Simply Christmas Concert, St. Sarkis Church, Douglaston,
New York.

February 1, 2014-Valentine’s Day Dinner Dance, St. Sarkis Church,
Douglaston, New York.

February 24-26, 2014-Annual Clergy Ghevontiantz Gathering hosted by
Holy Cross Church, 255 Spring Avenue, Troy, New York.

March 28, 2014-Musical Armenia Concert presented by Eastern Prelacy
and Prelacy Ladies Guild, at Carnegie Hall, Weill Recital Hall, 8 pm.

June 1, 2014-Ladies Guild Annual Brunch, St. Sarkis Church,
Douglaston, New York.

Web pages of the parishes can be accessed through the Prelacy’s web
site.

To ensure the timely arrival of Crossroads in your electronic mailbox,
add [email protected] to your address book.

Items in Crossroads can be reproduced without permission. Please
credit Crossroads as the source.

Parishes of the Eastern Prelacy are invited to send information about
their major events to be included in the calendar. Send to:
[email protected]

http://www.armenianprelacy.org/
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http://e2.ma/click/syatd/4f4cee/glwr4
www.armenianprelacy.org
www.armenianprelacy.org
www.armenianprelacy.org

Hraparak: Former Armenian Judge Offers Classified Information To CIA

HRAPARAK: FORMER ARMENIAN JUDGE OFFERS CLASSIFIED INFORMATION TO CIA

11:11 24/10/2013 ” DAILY PRESS

Armenian justice system may get in a scandal, Hraparak reports. The
paper notes that a former Armenian judge went to the CIA immediately
after arriving in the United States to offer classified information.

“The fact is that the information concerns several cases examined by
the former judge. According to the information, pressure was put on
the judge and Russian interests were involved,” the paper notes.

http://www.panorama.am/en/law/2013/10/24/hraparak/