Earthquake in Turkey Destroys Surp Sarkis Church’s Archways


The recent 6.7 magnitude earthquake that hit Elazığ, a city located in Turkey’s Kharpert region, has caused the archways of Diyarbakir’s Surp Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church to collapse, according to a Facebook post by Dr. Khatchig Mouradian.

Although the church is located approximately 74 miles away from the earthquake’s epicenter, Surp Sarkis’ archways were destroyed as a result of the strong magnitude of the quake.

Following the earthquake, Dr. Mouradian revealed the considerable damage to the church through a Facebook post. “The 6.8 magnitude earthquake in Elazığ (Kharpert region) that caused death and destruction did not spare Armenian cultural heritage,” wrote Dr. Mouradian. “The images below document this most recent damage to the church that has been vandalized and excavated for ‘Armenian gold’ for decades. A friend who prefers to remain anonymous took the photographs the day after the earthquake.”

Armenian ombudsman slams Yerevan councilman’s move against Hrayr Tovmasyan’s daughter

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 27 2020
Law 13:07 27/01/2020 Armenia

Armenia’s Human Rights Defender (Ombudsman) Arman Tatoyan has strongly condemned the move of Yerevan City Council member Henrik Hartenyan against Armenian top court head Hrayr Tovmasyan’s daughter.

ArmDaily reported that Henrik Hartenyan, who represents the ruling My Step faction in the City Council, posted a photo of Sara Tovmasyan user in a Facebook story, adding that the account belongs to the daughter of Constitutional Court Chairman Hrayr Tovmasyan.

“Period, folks!” he added to the story.

“In general, I strongly urge anyone holding public office to clearly understand his/her official status and act exclusively within that status, displaying a proper conduct. You are restricted to your official status,” the ombudsman said in a statement.

“No one has the right to target [an official’s] family life and especially children whether or not the case refers to the official’s family.

“I urge our compatriots using social media to show respect for each other, respect each other’s opinion, dignity, personal and family life,” Tatoyan said.

In a statement on Sunday, the My Step faction said it “strongly condemns any manifestation of hate speech.”

“Please accept our apologies for the incident. Tomorrow, the My Step faction of the Yerevan City Council will convene an emergency meeting, after which it will issue a statement,” the statement read. 

Azerbaijani press: Award-winning documentary on Karabakh conflict screened in Los Angeles (PHOTO/VIDEO)

11:22 (UTC+04:00)

BAKU, Azerbaijan, Jan. 27

Trend:

Documentary film “Black Orchards: Azerbaijan and Armenia’s Wars” produced by “TRT World” was screened at Azerbaijan’s Consulate General in Los Angeles on Jan. 23, Trend reports referring to Azerbaijan’s Consulate General in Los Angeles.

Last week the film received the “Best Short Documentary” award at the Hollywood International Moving Pictures Film Festival in Los Angeles.

Hosted and organized by Azerbaijan’s Consulate General in Los Angeles, the event was attended by the film’s senior producer Oubai Shahbandar and the director and producer Atakan Kerkuklu, as well as consuls general and honorary consuls of various countries, faith and community leaders, media representatives, scholars, members of the local Azerbaijani community and leaders of Turkish, Pakistani, Jewish, Iranian, Korean, Latino and other communities.

Opening the event, Azerbaijan’s Consul General in Los Angeles Nasimi Aghayev gave detailed information on the history of the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict and Armenia’s policy of aggression, military occupation and ethnic cleansing against Azerbaijan.

Aghayev stated that as a result of the illegal occupation of around 20 percent of Azerbaijan’s sovereign territory, over 800,000 Azerbaijani civilians were expelled from their ancestral lands in the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The consul general also noted that Armenia refuses to fulfill four United Nations Security Council resolutions condemning the occupation and demanding the unconditional and complete withdrawal of Armenian troops from Azerbaijan’s occupied areas.

Then the documentary film “Black Orchards: Azerbaijan and Armenia’s Wars” was screened. The film was received by the audience with much interest.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from Nagorno Karabakh and the surrounding districts.

“Yerevan 2800” wins 3rd place at Coin Constellation 2019 International Contest

Aravot, Armenia
Jan 24 2020

                                                       

THE TRIANGLE. The “Yerevan 2800” silver collector coin introduced by the Armenian Central Bank in 2018 has won the third place in the Coin of the Year category at the 13th International Contest “Coin Constellation-2019” in Russia.

220 coins by 33 participants representing 22 countries took part in the contest.

– Unique concept,

– The best artistic solution,

– Original technology,

– The best circulation coin,

– Coin classic,

– Souvenir coin,

– Silver coin of the year,

– Gold coin of the year,

– Coin of the year.

Food: ‘The centre of everything’: Lavash is an exploration of Armenian cooking as it exists right now

National Post, Canada
Jan 15 2020
In Armenia, lavash provides the basis of virtually every meal.John Lee
by Laura Brehaut

Our cookbook of the week is Lavash: The bread that launched 1,000 meals, plus salads, stews, and other recipes from Armenia by food writer Kate Leahy, photojournalist John Lee and chef Ara Zada. To try a recipe from the book, check out: Lavash, lavash-wrapped trout and panrkhash (lavash and cheese bake).

Providing the basis of virtually every meal, sitting on the shoulders of newlyweds in a rite of fertility and prosperity, and acting as a swaddling blanket of sorts, lavash extends far past staple-food status in Armenia.

Commonly crafted by a small group of women, the flatbread cannot merely be defined by its brief assemblage of ingredients — flour, water and salt — or subterranean baking method. Much more than a culinary cornerstone, lavash belongs to a special category of symbolic foods permeating all aspects of life.

Lavash: The bread that launched 1,000 meals, plus salads, stews, and other recipes from Armenia by Kate Leahy, John Lee and Ara Zada. Chronicle Books

“You dance around with it at weddings and wrap babies in lavash,” says Los Angeles-based chef Ara Zada. “It’s the centre of everything.”

The unleavened bread, popular throughout the South Caucasus and Western Asia, is recognized as being so essential to Armenian cuisine it earned a place on the UNESCO intangible cultural heritage list in 2014. Just one year later, the seed of a unique cookbook was sown.

Lavash (Chronicle Books, 2019) — written by Zada, food writer Kate Leahy and photojournalist John Lee — started with an encounter with “earth-shattering lavash” wrapped around locally foraged herbs and homemade cheese in the Armenian village of Zovk. While teaching a food photography workshop to teenagers in the capital city of Yerevan in 2015, Lee had the opportunity to watch his student Inessa Karapetyan’s grandmother making lavash the traditional way, in a tonir (underground clay oven). He was hooked.

“It was this magical process of the way that she spins the dough super thin, puts it on this pillow-like thing (batat) and then plops it into this oven buried in the ground,” recalls Lee. “What came out 30 to 50 seconds later was this chewy but blistery and crisp and salty, really wonderful, thin bread that was slightly reminiscent of Neapolitan-style pizza crust but it wasn’t. It was just really beautiful.”

Inspired by Lee’s tale of life-changing lavash, the authors ultimately united over their shared interest in Armenian cuisine and set out to research the dishes being made in the small South Caucasus country today. Offering an overview of its history, including how the differences between Eastern and Western Armenian cooking came to be, the book is an exploration of not just a wealth of flatbreads but whole-grain stews, hearty soups, salads, pickles, feasting dishes and sweets.

Lavash-wrapped trout. John Lee

Zada emphasizes that they didn’t aim to write a book of traditional Armenian cookery, but a collection of dishes they happened upon during their travels, which took them into homes, bakeries and restaurants countrywide. “We’re not staking claim that these are the ancient, old Armenian dishes,” he says. “It’s dishes that are being cooked within the geographical borders of Armenia itself. So we have dishes in there like salat vinaigrette, which you’ll find anywhere in Armenia but it’s a Russian dish.”

In addition to a culinary snapshot, the authors also present a portrait of a country in transition. Lee underscores the relatively recent influx of Syrian-Armenians, who have transformed the Yerevan restaurant scene with Middle Eastern flavours, and a burgeoning wine industry “that did not exist a decade ago.” On their final research trip for the book, which they planned for April and May in order to mark Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day on April 24, and partake in spring foraging, they unexpectedly witnessed political change as well.

Lee, who is a former Chicago Tribune staff photographer, was shooting a march in Yerevan when he was hit by the first flash grenade police tossed at a crowd of protestors. Navigating his leg injuries and “a lot of stitches” made shooting the cookbook more challenging, not that you would guess it from the resulting photography, which is a highlight of the collection. “John’s the only person that got hurt in a peaceful revolution,” laughs Zada, referring to what became known as the Velvet Revolution of 2018.

“This cookbook was so unusual in so many different ways. Not only was it three authors from different backgrounds — a photojournalist, an Armenian-Egyptian chef, a food writer — we (experienced) a political revolution, and we were going into a country and asking for recipes from people that we didn’t know until these trips,” says Leahy with a laugh. “It could have been a complete disaster but instead I feel like we formed a community behind this book. It’s not our personal story. It’s the story of a broader perspective — of the people who helped us, of a country at a really pivotal moment in history — and that makes it a pretty crazy story when we look back at it.”



Asbarez: Archaeologists Discover Ancient Aqueduct Near Khor Virap


Khor Virap is an Armenian monastery located in the Ararat plain in Armenia

ARMENIA (ArmInfo)—Archaeologists have discovered an ancient water supply system in Armenia with almost two thousand years of history.

According to director of the Institute of Archeology and Ethnography of the National Academy of Sciences of Armenia Pavel Avetisyan, not far from the ancient monastery of Khor Virap, the foundations of an aqueduct – a water conduit for supplying water from sources located above them – were found. In total, within the framework of the Armenian-German program, 20 foundations were found, located over a length of half a mile, Avetisyan specified at a press conference on January 14. According to experts, they relate to 114 to 117 AD, and give insight to the water supply system of ancient Artashat.

Avetisyan did not exclude the possibility that the aqueduct was used to supply water from the Garni River. According to him, the research will continue in the current year.

Apart from the aqueduct, archaeologists have yet to study another major find: geomagnetic studies have revealed the surviving foundations of large palace buildings in the vicinity of modern Artashat, near the 13th hill. All foundations are now located on privatized lands, which means that, in order to excavate, archaeologists must come to an agreement with the current owners. Avetisyan expressed hope that this process will begin this year. The excavations will make it possible to present the ancient Artashat to the scientific community in a completely new way, he explained.

The town of Artashat has a long and rich history, as a settlement in ancient Artashat has existed since the Urartian period. From 190 to 189 BC, Armenia gained independence from the Seleucids. Following independence, its first king was Artashes I, who later founded Artashat (“joy of Artashes”).

Neanderthals knew how to create fire, Armenian archaeologists say after studying Stone Age arene

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YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS. Archaeologists in Armenia have studied aromatic hydrocarbons found at the Lusakert 1 Cave site and claim that this shows Stone Age Neanderthals were in fact able to make fire, Pavel Avetisyan – the Director of the Institute of Archaeology and Ethnography of the National Academy of Sciences said at a news conference. The studies were made in 2019.

“I am talking about the cultural layer which Neanderthals left. This is news in the field of study of the archaic humans. Prior to these arguments, it was believed that only modern humans created and used fire. But this study showed that Neanderthals were in fact able to artificially create fire. This is a very serious study, which has a result of international significance”, Avetisyan said.

The excavations at the Lusakert 1 site – a cave where once Neanderthals lived – are carried out by a joint Armenian-American group of scientists.  

The aromatic hydrocarbons found in the cave showed that there was a source of creating fire.

In the past, researchers believed Neanderthals were unable to create fire and were relying on mother nature: i.e. they waited for the lighting to strike a tree to take the burning wood parts, or took fire from wildfires.

Studies showed that fire was used in the Lusakert 1 cave on a constant pattern, moreover – wildfires in the nearby terrain were extremely rare.

Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan




ACNIS reView

Analytical     

 

OCTOBER 04 2019  
The EAEU Yerevan summit. what is going on in the world

The Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) summit held in Yerevan on October 1 caused a strong reaction in Armenia and the member countries of that event. And if the participation of the Prime Minister of Singapore and the President of Iran at the summit was of interest outside of Armenia, then inside Armenia, as expected, passions were heated around the person of the Russian President Vladimir Putin. The last time the Russian President visited Armenia was almost three years ago. And after the change of power that took place as a result of the “Velvet Revolution”, all of Pashinyan’s bilateral meetings with Putin took place either in Moscow or internationally. in gatherings.

All that time, debates about the nature of Armenian-Russian relations did not stop in Armenia. Many believed that the policies of the new authorities had worsened those relations. Such sentiments were kept hot by some Russian figures and mass media, drumming up the topic of “Armenia’s withdrawal to the West”. And from the moment information about the preparation of the summit of the Eurasian Economic Council in Yerevan appeared, the only topic of conversation became the topic of the visit of the Russian President to Yerevan. For some reason, he had the opinion that Putin will not come to Yerevan because he is “upset” with Pashinyan. The body very few were interested in the summit issue. But what happened happened.

At the first meeting of the heads of state, Putin looked very gloomy indeed. Apparently, it was not easy to feel in the role of one of the many leaders of the states in the territory of the state, which is often perceived as a “vassal” of Russia. Having a meeting at the airport, according to the protocol, being received by the head of the Armenian government on an equal footing with everyone is somewhat unusual. It is more common to visit Armenia at your own discretion, as it was years ago. I still remember how years ago his plane landed not in the capital of Armenia, but in Gyumri, where the Russian military base is located. the military base. And the president of Armenia was forced to leave at that time and meet him right there.

But times are changing. Global trends indiscriminately force everyone to revise their ideas of communicating with partners, and even with those whom they have never considered partners. Driven into a corner by Western countries, Russia can no longer rely on the Eurasian Union. The situation imperatively requires to go out into a wider space and into the sphere of relations between the leading countries. And here he has to change his evaluations in relation to traditional partners. The club called EATM has now turned into just a mechanism for expanding a new network of global relationships.

For the first time, this trend appeared in 2019. June 6-8 during the International Economic Forum in St. Petersburg. We are talking about the unprecedented bid of Russia and China to form a comprehensive partnership in strengthening global strategic stability. The magnificent reception shown to the Chinese President Xi Jinping by the President of that country, Putin, as well as the epoch-making statements leave no room for doubt in the far-reaching intentions of the two countries. Against the backdrop of the PRC’s brutal trade war against the United States, the similar intentions of Russia and China seem fatal for the whole world.

Even then, it became obvious that on the eve of the St. Petersburg International Economic Forum and during its holding, the two superpowers were playing the most important games against Armenia. On the eve of the meeting, the press secretary of the Russian president specially emphasized that in addition to the president of the People’s Republic of China, they are waiting for the prime minister of Armenia. Earlier, Chinese President Xi Jinping announced that Armenia is an important partner of China in the “civilization” policy of his country. After that, the visit of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of the People’s Republic of China to Armenia took place, and an agreement on a visa-free agreement was signed between the two countries.

And, as evidenced by the demonstrative actions of “affection” towards the Prime Minister of Armenia during the days of the forum, the questions put to him in all directions for the purpose of “testing his strength”, Armenia was not waiting for nothing in St. Petersburg. The fact that Armenia was offered a special place in the bid of Russia and China to form a comprehensive partnership was quite transparently demonstrated. It is noteworthy that Prime Minister Pashinyan did not hide in his speeches that Armenia has something to offer to the changing international format. There was a willingness to turn Armenia from Iran to the Eurasian space and of the transport corridor stretching to Europe. Pashinyan stated that EAEU membership cannot be an obstacle in shaping Armenia’s relations with China, the European Union and others. It is also noteworthy that important figures from other post-Soviet states, who are usually present, were absent in the mentioned debates. It seems that there is little to connect them in the new perspective.

If we look at the EAEU summit held in Yerevan today, we can clearly see the continuation of the trends manifested in the St. Petersburg summit. With the efforts of the Armenian government, the Prime Minister of Singapore Lee Hsien Lo and the President of Iran Hassan Rouhani arrived in Yerevan in advance and participated in the work of the Eurasian Higher Economic Council. During this year, the Prime Minister of Armenia was on an official visit to those two countries, where the agreements were reached. And the agreement on the free trade zone between Singapore and EAEU was already signed in Yerevan. The meeting of the presidents of Russia and Iran also took place separate meeting.

In the evening, it became clear that the ice has melted in the relations between Vladimir Putin and Nikol Pashinyan. During their meeting, the Russian president stated in high spirits that the results of the summit were “really good”, including “from the point of view of the development of relations with our partners in third countries… There was no failure, on the contrary, all the agreements between the participating countries of that union were reached within the framework of the organization. Here is the person who made the most efforts for such effective work. I want to congratulate you, as the EAEU president, on the results of the summit held in Yerevan.”

On the eve of the summit, the Russian press did not hesitate to write that “Yerevan summit will go down in history”, referring to the participation of the Prime Minister of Singapore and the President of Iran. Undoubtedly, for Russia, this very aspect is crucial. And the curtseys addressed to India, China and other countries in Yerevan only confirm the opinions that the “Yerevan undertaking” is valued as a basis for the implementation of new global initiatives. Time will show how these initiatives can be drawn into the Western political-economic concept.

 

Manvel Sargsyan


  

Asbarez: Abril Bookstore to Host New York Author Michael Barakiva

Michael Barakiva to present “Hold My Hand” at Abril Bookstore

GLENDALE—Armenian-Israeli author and theater director from New York, Michael Barakiva, will be in town to present his new book, “Hold My Hand,” a sequel to the story of a young gay Armenian. Barakiva will be introduced by performer Lousine Shamamian. The presentation will be held on Tuesday, October 8 at 7:30 p.m. at Abril Bookstore, located at 415 E. Broadway, Glendale, CA 91205. The event is co-sponsored by the Gay and Lesbian Armenian Society of Los Angeles. Admission is free with reception to follow.

“Hold My Hand” is the stand-alone sequel to “One Man Guy.” With their six-month anniversary coming up, Alek and Ethan want to do something special to celebrate. Like, really special. Like, the most special thing two people in love can do with one another. But, Alek’s not sure he’s ready for that. He then learns something about Ethan that may not just change their relationship, but end it. Although Alek can’t bear the thought of finding out who he’d be post-Ethan, he also can’t just forgive and forget what Ethan did. Luckily, his best friend Becky and a madcap Armenian family are there to help him figure out whether it’s time to just let Ethan go, or reach out and hold his hand.

Michael Barakiva is an Armenian/Israeli-American writer and theatre director who splits his time between New York City and Ithaca, NY where he serves as Artistic Director of the Hangar Theatre. His first novel, “One Man Guy,” was named to the Rainbow Project Booklist and spent over one year as the #1 LGBTQ YA book on Goodreads. He is an alum of Vassar College and the Juilliard School, and the recipient of a Drama League Director Fellowship, the David Merrick Prize in Drama, the Phil Killian Directing Fellowship, and the Most Improved Player in 2013 for the New York Ramblers, the world’s first openly queer soccer team. He is also the founding Artistic Director of The Upstart Creatures.

For more information, call 818.243.4112.