2006-2007- Armenian Days in France

National Assembly of RA, Armenia
Sept 23 2005
2006-2007- Armenian Days in France

On September 23, Hranush Hakobyan, The Chairwoman of the NA Standing
Committee on Science, Education, Culture and Youth met Anni Monry,
councilor on coordination and cultural affairs and Mathieu Leblik,
coordinator for educational and linguistic affairs.
The issues related to the organization of 2006-2007 `Armenian Days’
declared in France and in order to choose 100 schoolchildren leaving
for France. By the proposal of Mrs. Hakobyan it was decided for the
productive organization of the activities to create a working group,
which will leave for marzes to get acquainted with the children,
choose them, taking into consideration the presented demands,
especially the knowledge of the French language and cultural
interests.
It was decided to organize the next meeting in November and do
practical steps, taking into account the concrete proposals for the
program to be carried out.

Turks address painful question: Did ancestors commit genocide?

Turks address painful question: Did ancestors commit genocide?
By BENJAMIN HARVEY
.c The Associated Press
ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) – Scholars held the first-ever public
discussions in Turkey on Saturday about the early 20th-century
massacre of Armenians, choosing words carefully, avoiding emotional
language and picking apart history year by year at a gathering that
nationalists denounced as traitorous.
The European Union called the academic conference a test of freedom of
expression in Turkey, which is hoping to begin talks for membership in
the bloc next month.
The academic conference had been canceled twice, once in May after the
justice minister said organizers were “stabbing the people in the
back,” and again on Thursday when an Istanbul court ordered the
conference closed and demanded to know the academic qualifications of
the speakers.
“This is a fight of ‘can we discuss this thing, or can we not discuss
this thing?”’ Murat Belge, a member of the organizing committee, said
at the conference opening. “This is something that’s directly related
to the question of what kind of country Turkey is going to be.”
The Armenian issue stirs deep passions among Turks, who are being
pushed by many in the international community to say that their
fathers and grandfathers carried out the first genocide of the 20th
century.
“There are so many documents in hand with respect to the destruction
of Armenians,” said Taner Akcay, a Turkish-born professor at the
University of Minnesota, and author of books on the subject including,
“A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish
Responsibility.”
Dozens of officers in riot gear kept hundreds of shouting protesters
at bay. Some protesters pelted arriving panelists with eggs and
rotten tomatoes.
Inside, the audience of more than 300 people was restrained, as only
those invited by the organizing committee and preapproved members of
the media were allowed past security.
The issue has been a taboo for many years in Turkey, with those who
speak out against the killings risking prosecution by a Turkish
court. But an increasing number of Turkish academics have called for a
review of the killings in a country where many see the Ottoman Empire
as a symbol of Turkish greatness.
The panelists, all Turkish speakers, carefully avoided any emotional
language during the first day of the two-day conference.
“Everyone waits for you to pronounce the genocide word – if you do
one side applauds and the other won’t listen,” Halil Berktay, program
coordinator of the history department at Sabanci University, said at
the conference Saturday.
Several governments around the world have recognized the killings of
as many as 1.5 million Armenians in the late Ottoman Empire as
genocide.
Turkey vehemently denies the charge, admitting that many Armenians
were killed, but saying the death toll is inflated and that Armenians
were killed along with Turks in civil unrest and intercommunal
fighting as the Ottoman Empire collapsed between 1915 and 1923.
After the conference was shut down Thursday, Turkey drew condemnation
from the European Commission.
Organizers skirted the court order by changing the venue of the
conference.
The court-ordered cancellation Thursday was an embarrassment for the
country’s leaders, who are set to begin EU negotiations on Oct. 3.
Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul lamented that “there’s no one better at
hurting themselves than us,” and sent a letter wishing the organizers
a successful conference. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also
condemned the court’s decision, saying it did not befit a democratic
country.
The participants were all Turkish speakers and included members of
Turkey’s Armenian minority like Hrant Dink, the editor in chief of
Agos, a weekly Armenian newspaper in Istanbul. There are some 70,000
Armenians living in Istanbul.
09/24/05 16:12 EDT

EU Raps Turkey For Stopping Armenia Conference

RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty, Czech Republic
Sept 23 2005
EU Raps Turkey For Stopping Armenia Conference

23 September 2005 (RFE/RL) — The European Commission has called a
“provocation” a Turkish court’s order to suspend an academic
conference on the 1915 massacre of the Ottoman Empire’s Armenian
population.
A court in Istanbul ordered the suspension on 22 September, a day
before the start of the conference.
The EU executive’s spokeswoman for enlargement, Krisztina Nagy, said
today the timing of the decision and the absence of legal motivations
looked like “another provocation” less than two weeks before Ankara
starts entry talks with Brussels.
Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn had previously described as a
provocation Turkish plans to prosecute novelist Orhan Pamuk. He faces
up to three years in jail for backing assertions that Armenians
suffered genocide at Turkish hands 90 years ago.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Project SAVE To Celebrate 30 Years

PROJECT SAVE TO CELEBRATE 30 YEARS
Belmont Citizen-Herald, MA
Sept 22 2005
The 30th Anniversary Celebration of Project SAVE Armenian Photograph
Archives will be held Saturday, Oct. 1 at the Newton Marriott Hotel.
The event will also mark the 60th birthday of Project SAVE’s founder
and executive director, Ruth Thomasian. The community is invited
to attend.
Steve Kurkjian, investigative reporter for the Boston Globe, will
host this anniversary event, and attorney Tony Barsamian will be the
featured speaker. The evening will kick off with a cocktail reception
and photo exhibit at 6:30 p.m., followed by dinner, silent auction,
and live music provided by the Al Shavarsh Bardezbanian Ensemble.
Project SAVE Armenian Photograph Archives strives to preserve
and promote Armenian heritage and culture through the collection,
preservation and dissemination of photographs. With over 25,000 images,
both vintage and contemporary, Project SAVE’s collection has been
painstakingly documented by Thomasian and her staff.
Located in Watertown, and housed in the building that holds the
Armenian Library & Museum, Project SAVE’s photos and documents ensure
that future generations will know of traditions, places and people
that vanished long ago.
Project Save is a nonprofit, tax-exempt organization that relies on
the generosity of its friends, both nationally and internationally,
and on grants from the Massachusetts Cultural Council; the Thomas
A. Kooyumjian Family Foundation; the Souren Maroukian Trust,
Peter Karabashian, trustee; the Azadoutioun Foundation; and the
Armenian-American Veterans Organization Inc.
Invitations for the 30th Anniversary Celebration have been mailed,
or may be obtained by calling Project Save at 617-923-4542.
Individual tickets for the reception and dinner are $100. To reserve,
mail your check to Project SAVE Archives, P.O. Box 236, Watertown,
MA 02471. Sponsoring donations of $530 or more will be acknowledged
in the Program Book if received by Sept. 25. All donations are
gratefully accepted.
For more about Project SAVE, visit projectsave.org.

Emir of Sharja presents 4 Arab horses to Armenia

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Sept 21 2005
SHARJA EMIR PRESENTS FOUR ARAB HORSES TO ARMENIA
YEREVAN, September 21. /ARKA/. The member of the Supreme Council of
the United Arab emirates (UAE), Emir of Sharja Muhammad Al-Kasimi
presented four Arab horses to Armenia. At the Yerevan hippodrome he
sated that all horses are Arab horses with a touch of Egyptian and
Spanish blood. “Two of the four horses are winners of prestigious
competitions, and I hope that they will continue their way of winners
in Armenia,” Al-Kasimi said. According to him, it is the first step
in the development of horse-breeding in Armenia. Al-Kasimi expressed
a hope that the horses will retain their breed in the future. In his
turn, RA minister of Culture Hovik Hoveyan thanked the Sharja Emir
and expressed a hope that this visit will not be the last his visit
to Armenia.
According to unofficial information, the cost of the horses is
$300,000. A colt in the UAE costs $50,000. P.T. -0–

AbuDhabi: Sharjah Ruler returns

WAM – Emirates News Agency, United Arab Emirates
Sept 21 2005
Sharjah Ruler returns
Sep 21, 2005 – 06:25 –
Sharjah Ruler returns Sharjah, 21 September 2005(WAM)–H.H Dr. Sheikh
Sultan bin Mohammed Al Qasimi, Supreme Council Member and Ruler of
Sharjah returned home Tuesday from an official visit to Armenia.
During his three day visit, Sheikh Sultan met Armenian President
Robert Kocharian , who decorated him with the Order of Saint Mesrob
Mashtots. Saint Mesrob order is the highest order in Armenia and was
conferred on Sheikh Sultan in recognition of his contribution to the
UAE Armenian relations in addition to his role in the fields of
education and culture. Sheikh Sultan met Armenian Prime Minister
Andranik Markarian.

Quince primer

Quince primer
Don’t know much about this fruit? It’s laden with history and has a
unique spot in local ag.
By Joan Obra / The Fresno Bee
(Updated Wednesday, September 21, 2005, 9:45 AM)
Many local folks don’t recognize the quince, a hard and often tart
fruit that looks like a funny-shaped apple.
But a handful of growers know it well. Most of the quince’s commercial
production in the United States rests on a few hundred acres in Fresno
and Tulare counties. Harvest begins around Labor Day and typically
ends in mid-November, says John Kaprielian, a Reedley farmer who tends
three varieties of this fruit: pineapple quince, Smyrna quince and
golden quince.
It’s a fruit that has fascinated local growers for more than a
century. George C. Roeding, the horticulturist and parks commissioner
who lent his name to Roeding Park, is credited with importing the
Smyrna quince from Turkey in the late 1800s.
Despite the strong Valley connection to the fruit, shoppers may have a
hard time finding fresh quince in supermarkets and farmers
markets. Whole Foods in Fig Garden Village already is selling it, and
it could appear on more market shelves as the harvest season
progresses. But much of the quince grown here heads to Los Angeles,
where ethnic groups such as Hispanics and Armenians buy the fruit. Or
it’s sent to the Middle East, where it’s widely eaten.
Quince still is popular among “all the cultures that still place a
high value on food,” says Brian Keavy, who markets quince for
Ballantine Produce in Reedley. “Our culture races toward
convenience. One of our greatest challenges is to get people to slow
down.”
Quince was the original fruit used in marmalades. “The Portuguese word
for quince is marmelo, and the quince jam in Portugal was called
marmalada,” states the 1987-88 catalog of the Southmeadow Fruit
Gardens, a specialty fruit-tree nursery in Baroda, Mich.
In Armenia, cooks turn the quince into preserves, jellies and
juice. In Iran, quince often is paired with meats such as lamb. And in
Spain and Latin America, a quince paste called dulce de membrillo
often is eaten with various cheeses, including the Spanish manchego
and tetilla, or the Mexican cotija.
In the Valley, quince paste is easier than the fresh fruit to find in
stores. The El Mexicano brand is sold at some stores that cater to
Hispanics. At La Paella, a Spanish restaurant at Champlain Drive and
Perrin Avenue, diners can order a dessert of Spanish dulce de
membrillo with tetilla cheese and a glass of port or sherry.
“People had the [quince] trees at home,” says Frank Vidal, the owner
of La Paella and a native of the Spainish province of Galicia. “We
used to make the membrillo at home.”
Making the paste was a lengthy process, he adds.
Quince is widely perceived as a difficult fruit. Its tart, chewy
texture means it’s rarely eaten raw. And cooking it requires
preparation. The skin has a light fuzz that must be removed. Its core
is particularly hard to cut. Cooking turns its pale flesh into a
beautiful red, ruby color ‘ but it typically takes a couple of hours
of cooking for this transformation.

Still, cooking with quince isn’t rocket science.
“Everyone says quince is hard to work with,” says Barbara Ghazarian, a
Monterey author whose cookbook, “Simply Armenian: Naturally Healthy
Ethnic Cooking Made Easy,” contains a chapter about quince. “But if
you’re a home cook who’s willing to cook with apples, then you’re a
home cook who’s willing to work with quince.”
Commercial quince already is defuzzed, she points out. And if you
happen to get the fruit from a backyard tree, rubbing it with a dish
towel should take care of the pesky fuzz.
Most of the time, you can use a knife to cut through the quince. If it
proves too hard, a food processor easily will slice it.
Like apples, the quince browns quickly, so plunge the slices into a
bowl of water with a little lemon juice.
If you’re looking for a quick dish, simply cook the fruit in cobblers
or as you would an apple pie. The quince may not turn that deep red
color, but it’ll still taste good.
If, however, you’re looking for the ruby hue, let the fruit simmer for
a couple of hours to make preserves, Ghazarian says.
The color and cooking time depend on the variety. The Smyrna won’t
start to jell until it turns a deep red, she says. But the golden
quince will start to set up once the flesh has turned a golden color.
You can identify the Smyrna by its irregular shape. The smoother
golden quince, by contrast, “is just a really buff fruit. Huge and
buff,” Ghazarian says. “If the fruit was a guy, it would be Matt
Damon, and I would marry it.”
For recipes such as stuffed quinces, the Smyrna would be a good
choice.
“The Smyrna really holds its shape,” Kaprielian says. “It won’t get
mushy or fall apart.”
Kaprielian also offers a tip for ripening the quince: Simply let it
sit at room temperature until it turns yellow and gives off an
aromatic scent, a process that can take several weeks.
“A lot of times, a quince will get better after harvest,” Kaprielian
says. “It keeps ripening.”
Once it is ripe, store it in a plastic container with a damp paper
towel. Cover the container, but leave the lid slightly ajar. Kept
this way, it will stay fresh for a couple of months in the
refrigerator.
Kaprielian and Ghazarian, who are both Armenian, have ancestral ties
to the quince. This ancient fruit was born in the Caucasus ‘ the
mountainous region between the Black and Caspian seas that now
includes Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan.
The quince has biblical, mythical and historical significance. It is
said to be the apple that tempted Eve in the Garden of Eden. The
Babylonians cultivated it. The Persians took it south, and the Greeks
took it to the east.
It is the fruit that started the Trojan War, the conflict launched by
a rivalry between three goddesses. Each hoped to win a quince destined
for the fairest one. Their judge: Paris, the prince of Troy.
Aphrodite, the goddess of love, made Paris an irresistible offer. If
he awarded her the quince, she would have the most beautiful woman in
the world fall in love with him. Aphrodite won the fruit, and Paris
won the heart of Helen, who already was married to the king of Sparta.
Helen left her husband for Paris, and her husband waged the Trojan War
to bring her back.
Other peoples, such as the Romans, traveled with the quince,
introducing it to areas such as the British Isles.
And when early European settlers came to America, they carried the
quince, Ghazarian says. The first quince tree she tended likely was
planted by settlers in Whitinsville, Mass.
“My family history with the fruit goes back to when my aunt and her
family purchased a home with a fruit-bearing quince tree in the yard,”
Ghazarian writes in “Simply Armenian.” “But it was my grandmother who
cared for the trees. She watched the fruit for signs of ripening
during the final days of September and labored in the kitchen for days
afterwards, making her royal red quince preserves and jelly.”
Ghazarian has noticed rising interest in the fruit, which has prompted
her to collect more recipes and historical information for a cookbook
devoted to quince.
“Quince is the up-and- coming thing,” she says. The reporter can be
reached at [email protected] or (559) 441-6365.

Following the Dream

A1+
| 17:11:23 | 20-09-2005 | Official |
FOLLOWING THE DREAM
«14 years of independence were hard for us. We have experienced the ordeals
of war and peace and proved to ourselves and the world that we deserve
independence», the congratulation message of Armenian National Assembly
Speaker Artur Baghdassaryan says.
«Today Armenia is at an important phase of its development: we prepare to
changes in our Organic Law, which will secure our further progress in
building a jural and democratic state. Dear compatriots, I again
congratulate you and with you peace, happiness and productive work for the
sake of the Fatherland’s prosperity,» the message runs.

Glendale: Dad pleads for son to resurface

The Daily News of Los Angeles
September 13, 2005 Tuesday
DAD PLEADS FOR SON TO RESURFACE;
MAN’S GIRLFRIEND FOUND DEAD IN TRUNK OF HIS CAR IN AZUSA
By Alex Dobuzinskis Staff Writer
GLENDALE – Police continued to search Monday for a missing Glendale
man whose girlfriend was found dead in the trunk of his car, and
detectives said they consider him a “person of interest” in her
death.
Police said Artur Khanzadyan, 24, had no criminal history. But the
family of his girlfriend, Odet Tsaturyan, 24, whose body was found in
the trunk of his 2005 Audi on Friday in Azusa, has said Khanzadyan
was violent with her.
Ashot Khanzadyan, the father of the missing man, issued a tearful
plea to his son after meeting with Glendale police.
“I’m pleading you as your father, as your friend,” Ashot Khanzadyan
said in Armenian through a police translator. “I’m pleading in the
name of your mom, your brother and your entire family, that please
… contact us and the Police Department, just like I am contacting
the Police Department and asking for their help to find you.”
Police are treating Khanzadyan as a “person of interest” in the
homicide case but not a suspect.
Tsaturyan’s car, a 2002 silver Honda Accord with license plate
4VAM520, is still missing. The Coroner’s Office is expected to
perform an autopsy today on Tsaturyan to determine the cause of
death.
Tsaturyan was last seen alive at 5 p.m. Tuesday, leaving the
apartment complex where she lived with her parents in the 800 block
of East Lomita Avenue in Glendale. Her family reported her missing
after she failed to show up at a party that evening.
Khanzadyan also lives with his parents, and he was last seen leaving
home at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday. He was reported missing the following day.
“We don’t know if they were together that night,” Lorenz said.
“Something leads us to believe that they crossed paths because she’s
in the trunk of his car.”
Melkon Isagulyan, an uncle of Tsaturyan, said Khanzadyan had tried to
scare his niece in the past.
“The parents had felt a while ago that he was not normal and they
tried to keep their daughter away from him,” Isagulyan said in
Armenian.
“And the daughter had told the parents that she wouldn’t see him. We
don’t know how he convinced her to get out of the house the other
day.”
Tsaturyan, who worked at Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center
and later as a clerk in Los Angeles, was remembered by family and
friends as a fun person who liked to joke.
Khachik Essakhan, 45, who was a neighbor to the Tsaturyans for a
decade until he moved away some 11 months ago, said he worried about
Odet Tsaturyan being with Khanzadyan.
“He tried to control her all the time so that’s why I told her,
Odet, stay away from this guy. She said, ‘No, I love him.’ I don’t
know what kind of love is that,” he said.
Ashot Khanzadyan, who had worked with his son in the family’s
construction tile business, said his son is not violent.
“My son, for the past 24 years of his life, he’s never even killed a
fly and never hurt anyone,” Khanzadyan said.
From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

BEIRUT: Criminals In Lebanon Beware: You Are On Candid Camera

CRIMINALS IN LEBANON BEWARE: YOU ARE ON CANDID CAMERA
Ya Libnan, Lebanon
Sept 18 2005
Beirut, Lebanon – Police investigators are focusing on a film taken
by a security camera of a bank at the scene of the Jeitawi bombing
in Ashrafiyeh to pin down the identity of two suspects seen planting
two bags of explosives in between parked cars near a coffee shop that
took the brunt of the explosion’s impact, An Nahar reported on Sunday.
Witnesses have told the police that they saw the two bag carriers
climbing out of a private car driven by a third man. The same car
returned to pick them up and raced off after explosives were placed
on target, according to An Nahar.
Investigators hope to establish the identity of the bombers and their
car driver from the film that was taken off the security camera of
a Byblos Bank branch overlooking the scene of the blast that rocked
Jeitawi’s St. Louis alleyway five minutes before midnight.
The owner of the cafe, a Lebanese Armenian in his sixties, was killed
in the blast and a total of 28 people were injured. Police said Sunday
that only three of the wounded people remained hospitalized and the
rest were given quick first aid treatment and discharged.
Residents of the densely populated stricken street in a Christian
neighborhood of the Lebanese capital are still taking stock of the
damage caused by the explosions to their homes and businesses.
Beirut’s municipality launched a fund-raising campaign to help
residents to repair the damage.
An official statement said the first $100,000 donation came from
Sheikh Jassem Mohammed Al Bahr, reportedly a Kuwaiti citizen. The
City Council has decided to extend an initial aid of $500 to every
victim pending a survey of the damage by Lebanon’s Higher Relief Board.
It was the 8th such bombing since March 19. Anti-Syrian politicians
blamed the new attack, like the previous bombings, on Syria’s secret
service and allied Lebanese intelligence operatives. But Hezbollah,
which strongly condemned the Jeitawi blast as a terrorist act of
destabilization, publicly warned against handing down prejudgments.
The filming of the suspects is a message to future criminals that they
can no longer expect to get away so easily. The Lebanese are determined
to find out the truth about who is behind all these criminal acts in
Lebanon and bring to Justice all these criminals.
To those criminals contemplating similar actions in the future,
we may say: “Watch out! You are on Candid Camera”