Former U.S. Ambassador John Evans To Address Armenian Genocide Comme

FORMER U.S. AMBASSADOR JOHN EVANS TO ADDRESS ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION EVENT IN FRESNO

12:59 22/04/2013 ” SOCIETY

The 98th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will be remembered
this week in Fresno with a series of events, including a visit by a
former U.S. ambassador to Armenia who spoke out about the genocide,
The Fresno Bee reported.

Nearly a century after 1.5 million Armenians were killed by the
Ottoman Empire from 1915 to 1923, the U.S. government still fails to
label the ethnic cleansing as a “genocide.”

The G-word was the “inappropriate” term and the event’s history was
so taboo it couldn’t even be discussed, said former U.S. ambassador
to Armenia John Marshall Evans, who held the post from 2004 to 2006.

Evans challenged that taboo in a 2005 speaking tour in California
where he first described the Ottoman Empire’s assault as a genocide —
an act that thrust him into an uncomfortable position with his bosses.

“After I leveled with California audiences about the Armenian Genocide
in February 2005 … I returned to Armenia as ambassador, but was
required to issue a statement to the effect that what I had said was
‘inappropriate,’ ” Evans said.

“The fact that the subject was treated as taboo meant that it could
not even be discussed,” he said. “That had to change, even if it cost
me my job.”

Evans, a career foreign service officer, was recalled from his
ambassador’s posting in Armenia before the end of his planned
three-year assignment. He retired from the foreign service 18 months
after his genocide remarks.

Evans continues to speak out about the genocide and calls for everyone
to face the hard issues of history and be understanding. “I believe the
failure of the world to deal with the issue has continuing deleterious
consequences,” he said.

Evans will be the keynote speaker for Tuesday’s memorial commemorating
the 98th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide at the Pilgrim Armenian
Congressional Church.

Source: Panorama.am

A Giant Of Our Times

A GIANT OF OUR TIMES

Updated: April 14, 2013

By Dr Vicken Gulvartian

There are giants in this world, and then there are the rest of us.

Prof. Richard Hovannisian is a giant of our times, and I would like to
take this opportunity to write what I have been meaning to say since
Vahe’ Oshagan, my professor from another time and place, introduced
me to the work of this great scholar.

Born in Tulare, California’s Central Valley, Richard Hovannisian was
educated through the UC system in the fifties and sixties. That’s
when a generation of innovative Californians invested to expand
their state’s network of Universities at a pace never duplicated in
America since.

A year spent in Beirut studying under the tutelage of intellectuals
gathered at that time at the Nshan Palanjian Jemaran, married to a
genuine Armenian patriot, and father of four children all with Armenian
names, Richard Hovannisian has been the making of an American-Armenian
who stands out as a role model to generations of youngsters looking
for a path in life and a purpose. Here was, from the day he came
into the academic arena, a distinguished historian, very articulate,
making a case for the plight of the forgotten, recognition of the
Armenian Genocide, and well prepared to debate the denialists and
the revisionists with proof. His work has singularly changed the
image of Armenians in America from that of the discriminated Fresno
Armenian to a voice for a cause, recognition of rights, and a place
in California, US and world history. It has been an honor knowing him,
and a pleasure to have introduced his highly-driven children to mine,
one in particular.

It has been a life dedicated to the mind, and Prof. Richard Hovannisian
has become the measure of the work of the mind: Asking questions to
which answers are to be found in a tireless research of documents,
letters, eyewitness accounts, forgotten manuscripts, oral testimonies
and archives hidden deep in rooms in London, Washington, Paris,
Berlin and Beirut.

The Armenian nation is indebted to him for his relentless search for
our story in the modern era, and for transforming the international
movement for the recognition of the Armenian Genocide into a case
for our human right to claim the past and own it. The Turks shall not
tell our story! The story of life on our ancestral lands in Kharpert,
Cilicia, Mush, Daron, Van, and in all the eastern provinces of Turkey
is documented by an extensive series of academic conferences organized
by Prof. Hovanissian. They serve as yet another proof that the only
reason why we abruptly vanished from the land after 1915 was by force,
by genocide.

Not all scholars work in the realm of Armenian issues and topics,
but those who do must be advised to keep in mind the standards set by
Richard Hovannisian: an insistent discipline to work, write, publish,
and lecture; an endless energy to travel and meet a gathering of
people to talk to them, and to teach.

All said and done, what will be Prof. Richard Hovannisian’s legacy?

Huge!

There will of course always be the more than two dozen books that he
has authored and edited, and the more than 100 scholarly articles
published; Academic seminars organized, research papers delivered,
lectures and speeches given literally everywhere in the world, in
the presence of Turks and Armenians alike, and others as well.

What about the rest of us on a personal level?

I believe that it is what struck me more than thirty years ago as a
college student in Philadelphia: The discovery of the implications of
being Armenian in this world, and the place and purpose of Armenia in
the history of peoples, civilizations and nations. Richard Hovannisian
has been equally effective to draw the identity of the Armenian in
America. The answer to the question, “What are we to do to be relevant
and effective?” has been at the core of his activism.

While the “rest of us” must work hard to keep our institutions of
preservation- schools, churches, newspapers, organizations- it is
important to remember that it is the trail-blazing work of the likes of
Richard Hovannisian that has given us the sense of urgency to organize,
rally and demand, and have a seat at the negotiating table.

The historic dimensions of discussions about our common goals, dreams
and aspirations; and our strive to live with pride and dignity on a
piece of land of our own, are in the history that Professor Hovannisian
has spent a career to document.

He has led generations of students to find their identity,
many organizations to find a cause, and activists to find their
voice. Our current strategy to put Genocide recognition into a
narrative understandable to a general audience and to shake the wall
of Genocide denial is something we owe to Richard Hovannisian.

A message to upstart republics and a warning to those who do not heed
the lessons of history are loud and clear from the giant in our midst.

And that is why the Professor has the podium, and he has not yet
finished his lesson in history.

http://massispost.com/archives/8375

La Communaute Armenienne De Londres Commemore L’anniversaire Du Geno

LA COMMUNAUTE ARMENIENNE DE LONDRES COMMEMORE L’ANNIVERSAIRE DU GENOCIDE

Dimanche 21 avril, les Armeniens du Royaume Uni ont arpente les rues
londoniennes en brandissant les couleurs de la Grande-Bretagne, de
l’Armenie et de l’Artsakh en commemoration du 98ème anniversaire du
genocide perpetre sur ordre du gouvernement ottoman contre le peuple
armenien en 1915.

photos : Russell Pollard

lundi 22 avril 2013, Jean Eckian ©armenews.com

http://www.armenews.com/article.php3?id_article=89001
www.artsakh.org.uk

Armenian-Americans Hold Rally Against Genocide Denial

ARMENIAN-AMERICANS HOLD RALLY AGAINST GENOCIDE DENIAL

Armenian-Americans hold rally against Genocide denial April 22, 2013
– 20:05 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – Armenian-Americans from across the Greater
Washington, DC area called for an end to U.S. complicity in Turkey’s
genocide denial at a White House rally held just days before
President Obama’s annual April 24th statement.

The April 21st “Let Your Voice be Heard for Genocide Recognition!”

protest was organized by the Armenian Youth Federation “Ani” Chapter,
in coordination with a coalition of Armenian American groups
comprising the Greater Washington Armenian Genocide Commemorative
Committee.

“We are all gathered here today to commemorate and bring awareness to
what New York Times Best Selling Author of The Sandcastle Girls,
Chris Bohjalian aptly called, ‘the slaughter you know next to nothing
about,'” began AYF Ani Chapter Chairwoman Narineh Abrahamian. “The
United States – President Obama – can play an important role in
pressing Turkey to deal honestly with its dark past by speaking
truthfully about this crime. Anything less only enables Turkey’s
continued genocide denial. Anything less makes the United States
complicit in that denial. Anything less sends the dangerous message
to other despots that they too can get away with genocide,” continued
Abrahamian.

Armenian National Committee of America Executive Director Aram
Hamparian, relayed the hope of the Armenian American community when
then candidate Obama pledged to recognize the Armenian Genocide and
the disappointment in the face of 5-years of subsequent U.S.

kowtowing to Turkish Government threats. “We are going to be the
conscience of this great nation,” explained Hamparian. “We are going
to put America – if not this April, but eventually – back on the
right side on the Armenian Genocide issue and in so doing move
American policy back to the right side in dealing with all
genocides.”

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/155337/

Traditional Torch-Light Procession In Yerevan Commemorates Armenian

TRADITIONAL TORCH-LIGHT PROCESSION IN YEREVAN COMMEMORATES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

21:13 ~U 23.04.13

Before marching to the Memorial to Armenian Genocide victims
(Tsitsernakaberd), numerous young people that gathered in Yerevan’s
Freedom Square burned Turkey’s national flag.

That action inaugurated a traditional torch-light procession the
Youth Union of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Dashnaktsutyun
(ARF-D) and Nikol Aghbalyan Union organized on the eve of the 98th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey.

Among the participants are Karen Avagyan, Coordinator of Board of
Trustees, Youth Foundation of Armenia, and an Armenian Parliament
member, as well as members of other youth political and public
organizations.

ARF-D Supreme Body member and ARF-D parliamentary group member Vahan
Hovannisyan is participating in the procession as well.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2013/04/23/march-arfd/

Artsakh Leader: Coordinated Policy On Nationwide Issues Imperative

ARTSAKH LEADER: COORDINATED POLICY ON NATIONWIDE ISSUES IMPERATIVE

April 22, 2013 – 17:31 AMT

PanARMENIAN.Net – On April 22, President of Artsakh Republic Bako
Sahakyan sent a congratulatory address to the participants of youth
conference titled “Armenian is in our Hearts”.

“I welcome all the participants and guests of the all-Armenian
conference “Armenian is in my Heart”. The organization of such
an event is important and demanded and I would like to express my
gratitude to Armenian Ministry of Diaspora for the implementation of
this initiative. Strong and independent statehood is the most reliable
guarantee for the existence and natural development of the Armenian
nation. Armenia-Artsakh-Diaspora unshakable trinity and its ongoing
reinforcement is the basis of our independent statehood. Within this
context, the implementation of a unified and coordinated policy on
the crucial nationwide issues becomes an imperative. The international
recognition of the Armenian Genocide, the fair settlement of Artsakh
issue and the maintenance of the Armenian identity in the Diaspora
are these very super tasks.

The inclusion of these issues and a number of related problems in
the conference agenda is very important. It is doubly praiseworthy
that this is a youth event. Such an approach makes it possible to
organize the activities with a long-term perspective.

I am confident that the conference will successfully realize its
tasks and will contribute to strengthening of ties between Armenian
young people in different parts of the world. I wish the participants
of the conference success and productive work,” the address reads,
Central Information Department at Artsakh President’s office reported.

Artsakh Prez Wishes Success To Conference Participants

ARTSAKH PREZ WISHES SUCCESS TO CONFERENCE PARTICIPANTS

04:39 PM | TODAY | OFFICIAL

On April 22, President of the Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) Republic
Bako Sahakyan sent a congratulatory address to the participants of
Yerevan-hosted youth conference “Armenian is in our Hearts”.

“I welcome cordially all the participants and guests of the
all-Armenian conference “Armenian is in my Heart”.

The organization of such an event is important and demanded and
I would like to express my gratitude to the Armenian Ministry of
Diaspora for the implementation of this initiative.

The most reliable guarantee for the existence and natural development
of the Armenian nation is its strong and independent statehood. The
basis of our independent statehood is the Armenia-Artsakh-Diaspora
unshakable trinity and its ongoing reinforcement. Within this context
the implementation of a unified and coordinated policy on the crucial
nationwide issues becomes an imperative. The international recognition
of the Armenian Genocide, the fair settlement of Artsakh issue and
the maintenance of the Armenian identity in the Diaspora are these
very super tasks.

The inclusion of these issues and a number of related problems into
the conference’s agenda is very important. It is doubly praiseworthy
that this is a youth event. Such an approach makes it possible to
organize the activities with a long-term perspective.

I am confident that the conference will successfully realize its
tasks and will contribute to strengthening ties between Armenian
young people in different parts of the world.

I wish the participants of the conference success and productive work,”
Artsakh President said in the address.

http://www.a1plus.am/en/official/2013/04/22/bako-sahakyan

John Kerry’s Statement On Karabakh Shows How Deep Turkey Is Involved

JOHN KERRY’S STATEMENT ON KARABAKH SHOWS HOW DEEP TURKEY IS INVOLVED IN US POLICY – TURKOLOGIST

April 22, 2013 | 16:32

YEREVAN. – US Secretary of State John Kerry’s recent statement,
according to which Turkey would be a constructive player in the
settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh and the Cyprus issues, shows how
deep Turkey is involved in the US policy in the Middle East.

Turkologist Andranik Ispiryan said this during a press conference
on Monday.

In his words, after being appointed as US Secretary of State, Kerry
visited Turkey three times over the course of two months.

“Kerry announced that he believes Turkey would have a constructive role
in the settlement process of the Cyprus issues and the Karabakh issues;
this was an unexpected attempt at winning Turkey over,” Ispiryan noted.

He stressed, however, that although Turkey always tries to create an
impression that it is engaged in the Karabakh negotiation process,
the Armenian party has repeatedly notified that Turkey cannot get
involved in this process in any format, since it is an indirect party
to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

News from Armenia – NEWS.am

Aghvan Vardanyan: Yerevan Needs To Have An Opposition Mayor

AGHVAN VARDANYAN: YEREVAN NEEDS TO HAVE AN OPPOSITION MAYOR

17:01 22/04/2013 ” POLITICS

Yerevan needs to have an opposition Mayor. I am convinced that
Armen Rustamyan will be the best Mayor and in that case there will
be positive changes in the country, member of ARFD Armenian Supreme
Body Aghvan Vardanyan told reporters on Monday when commenting on
the upcoming municipal elections.

Vardanyan thinks that the municipal elections, set for May 5,
are political.

“On May 5, Yerevan residents will vote for party lists and I am
confident that most of them will not vote for RPA. Only ARFD can unite
the opposition forces and form opposition government in Yerevan,”
he said.

Source: Panorama.a

Atom Egoyan mounts new take on `Salome’ while juggling more film and

News1130, Canada
April 18 2013

Atom Egoyan mounts new take on `Salome’ while juggling more film and opera

Cassandra Szklarski, The Canadian Press

TORONTO – Atom Egoyan finds himself busier than usual these days, with
two feature films and three operas all demanding his attention at
once.

`It’s the busiest I’ve ever been,’ says the Toronto-based director,
adding that he’s managed to find pockets of time to work on each
passion project simultaneously.

But it very nearly came crashing down on him when a northern Ontario
shoot for his upcoming drama `Queen of the Night’ nearly derailed
rehearsals for his upcoming opera `Salome.’

`My nightmare kind of came to pass in the new year where I was
shooting right until the day before rehearsals for `Salome’ started,’
Egoyan says in a moment of downtime, recapping his various projects
with the rapid-fire delivery of a man with little time to spare.

`So (I) was literally leaving Sudbury and then coming down and
starting rehearsals the next day (in Toronto). If anything had gone
wrong with the film shoot or if we were delayed, then it would have
been impossible. But you just have to think it’ll work out. And
sometimes it does and other times it doesn’t.’

His immediate priority is `Salome,’ which opens in Toronto for the
Canadian Opera Company on Sunday.

In many ways it’s a remount – Egoyan directed the Richard Strauss
tragedy twice before for the COC in 1996 and 2002. But this version
will feature several new elements, including the work of shadow artist
Clea Minaker meant to highlight the abuse and violence at the heart of
the tale.

Adapted from Oscar Wilde’s play, the 100-minute opera recounts the
ancient story of Salome, who demands the head of Jochanaan (John the
Baptist) in return for performing the Dance of the Seven Veils.

Egoyan says he sees Salome not just as a femme fatale, but as someone
who suffered extreme violence in her childhood. When she demands the
head of John the Baptist, it’s rooted in her own tortured past.

This connection was also made in Egoyan’s previous versions of
`Salome,’ but hindsight now has him considering those efforts `too
extreme.’

`What I’m hoping to do with this production is actually tone it down a
little bit and be more observant of the tone of the libretto and the
way the story is told,’ he says.

`I had such a mission with the first production and I really wanted it
to get across but I think it was overstated and there’s a way of
stepping back a little bit and allowing it to be even more powerful.’

Instead of the earlier film and slide projections, this version will
feature digital images that offer greater flexibility `to do wildly
different things,’ he adds.

`It’s this privilege of being able to finesse something with the
distance and being at a different stage in your life. That was 17
years ago and it was a different time on a number of different
levels,’ he says.

Salome is played by Swedish-American soprano Erika Sunnegardh, making
her COC debut in the title role. Canadian tenor Richard Margison
appears as Herod.

Referring to Wilde’s libretto `an amazing piece of text’ and Strauss’
music as `revolutionary,’ Egoyan says he finds himself continually
drawn to its dark themes.

His first production was mounted between shooting `Exotica’ and `The
Sweet Hereafter,’ two films that also featured young women reeling
from childhood assaults.

`I see it as part of a trilogy of the examination of abuse and the
residual effects of sexual abuse on characters – between Christina in
`Exotica’ and Nicole in `Sweet Hereafter’ and certainly Salome. You
have these three very different experiences of people dealing with
their own sexuality in light of this traumatic early experience,’ he
says.

The through-lines continue into his current work, most notably the
Chinese opera `Feng Yi Ting,’ opening in June for Toronto’s Luminato
Festival.

With music by Guo Wenjing, the work explores the tale of the beautiful
Diao Chan, played by soprano Shen Tiemei, whose charms ignite a
dangerous rivalry between a warlord and a general. It will be sung in
Mandarin with English and Mandarin surtitles.

Like Salome, it focuses on a seductive woman who brings down the
powerful men in her life, notes Egoyan.

`They’re both involved with changing power structures, though they
couldn’t come from more different vocal or operatic traditions,’ he
says of the two operas.

`When you see this production of `Salome’ and you see `Feng Yi Ting’
there’s very strong visual similarities. There are things I learned
from doing `Feng Yi Ting’ which I’m definitely bringing into `Salome,’
with shadow work, especially.’

Egoyan also sees a through-line to his film `Queen of the Night,’
starring Ryan Reynolds and Mireille Enos as parents of an abducted
child. Eight years after she was taken, the child’s father becomes
convinced the now 17-year-old is alive.

`It’s based obviously on the Queen of the Night, the character (from
`The Magic Flute’), and there is an operatic element that is woven
into `Queen of the Night’ the film,’ says Egoyan.

`Ideas of abduction and power and manipulation of reality, all those
themes are in that film as well.’

His other film is `Devil’s Knot,’ an account of the West Memphis Three
saga that Egoyan says he hopes to submit to the Toronto International
Film Festival in September.

Starring Reese Witherspoon and Colin Firth, it tells the story of
three men convicted of torturing and murdering a trio of
eight-year-old boys in 1993.

“Devil’s Knot’ is the study of the most evil thing that can happen to
a community,’ says Egoyan.

`The community needs to have answers and so they rush to judgment and
three 17-year-olds are convicted, who actually had no connection to
that crime it would seem at all. It’s a huge miscarriage of justice
and it’s a very complex rendering of this kind of a piece of American
mythology.’

His third opera is Mozart’s `Cosi fan tutte,’ also for the COC and set
for next year.

Fitting in time for all these projects has been challenging: `It’s
literally an hour here, two hours there,’ says Egoyan.

`We’re seeing the first assembly of `Queen of the Night’ and then I’m
working on `Devil’s Knot,” he says of the rest of his day.

`I have a big meeting with the producers in about half-an-hour to talk
about various things to do on that. And then there’s the opera. And
then I have a huge… design meeting for Cosi (fan tutte).’

Does he thrive on such activity?

`It is a crazy way to work but on the other hand that’s the way it
happened and it’s also a really wonderful way to work.’

Sung in German with English surtitles, `Salome’ runs for eight
performances at the Four Seasons Centre for the Performing Arts
starting Sunday. It continues April 27, and May 1, 4, 7, 10, 16 and
22.

http://www.news1130.com/2013/04/18/atom-egoyan-mounts-new-take-on-salome-while-juggling-more-film-and-opera/