Armenian Sacred Music Inspires Russian Orchestra

ARMENIAN SACRED MUSIC INSPIRES RUSSIAN ORCHESTRA

RussiaToday
September 20, 2007, 13:06
Russia

The Russian premiere of new music by the Armenian composer, Vache
Sharafyan, has been performed at Moscow’s conservatoire by "The
Soloists of Moscow" Orchestra, led by Russian conductor and violist
Yury Bashmet.

The musicians played a wide range of instruments.

The Armenian composer is famous for writing pieces for rarely used
musical instruments.

Compositions, performed at the Conservatoire this time, featured
music written by an Armenian saint, who lived in the 12th century,
which was later updated for a contemporary European audience.

Somewhere To Call Home

SOMEWHERE TO CALL HOME

Sunshine Coast Daily
12:00a.m. 19 September 2007
Australia

After more than two decades helping refugees start new lives and
find new homes in some of the world’s worst troublespots, Vivianne
Dawalibi has now found somewhere to call home herself.

Born in Sudan to Syrian parents, Ms Dawalibi was part of the United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) team awarded the Nobel
Peace Prize in 1981 for their efforts in the massive humanitarian
effort trying to cope with 2.5 million Ethiopian refugees who fled
that country’s civil war into neighbouring Sudan.

Later, she worked for UNHCR in places like Bangladesh, Belarus,
Armenia and Bosnia.

In Bosnia, she designed social, housing, income-generation and
education programs for the hundreds of thousands of citizens whose
lives were torn apart by the civil war that ended in 1995.

But after migrating to Australia and settling in Sydney with her
husband and son in 1999, she struggled to find a job, constantly
being told she was "overqualified".

Now she has found what she hopes might become her new "home" in
Caloundra, buying the Caloundra Bulk Billing Surgery in Bulcock
Street, which she hopes to turn into a bulk-billing "mini hospital"
using a model that could be duplicated in other centres.

"I came to Australia as a refugee myself … I thought with my
experience I would get a job, but I found it very different,"
Vivianne said.

"Since I’ve come to Caloundra, I really feel like I belong.

"I’ve found my purpose again. For a while I lost my identity, but
now I’m really happy."

Not only did she lose her identity, she also lost her husband in
October 2002.

"After I was unable to get a job in Sydney, we opened an international
trading company," Vivianne said.

"We were exporting cars from various countries into Sudan … but we
had to close the business in 2001.

"I did some projects for the Melkite Catholic Church, then after my
husband died, my son and I moved to the Gold Coast in 2004.

"I was looking for something to invest in and the opportunity came
up to buy the Caloundra Bulk Billing Surgery."

At that time the centre had just two doctors and operated behind the
Caloundra Beach Pharmacy at 68 Bulcock Street.

But after the pharmacy relocated last year, Vivianne decided she
would take over the entire premises and expand the facility to include
an additional doctor, pathology, an exercise physiology room and an
x-ray diagnostic and imaging facility.

The completely-renovated centre will officially "re-open" on September
21, Vivianne saying she was determined to operate the centre as a
bulk billing practice.

"It’s very challenging to remain profitable by bulk billing, but for
me, nothing is impossible," she said.

"I’m committed to developing the business and helping the people."

International Religious Freedom Report Registers No Change In The St

INTERNATIONAL RELIGIOUS FREEDOM REPORT REGISTERS NO CHANGE IN THE STATUS OF RESPECT FOR RELIGIOUS FREEDOM IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
19.09.2007 14:34

In compliance with Section 102(b) of the International Religious
Freedom Act (IRFA) of 1998 the Department of State submits annual
reports on the state of religious freedom in the world to the
Congress. The current report covers the period from July 1, 2006,
to June 30, 2007.

In the chapter on Armenia the International Religious Freedom
Report notes that there was no change in the status of respect for
religious freedom by the Government during the reporting period. Some
denominations reported occasional discrimination by mid- or low-level
government officials but found high-level officials to be tolerant.

The US Government discusses religious freedom issues with the Armenian
Government as part of its overall policy to promote human rights.

During these discussions, the US Government emphasized to authorities
that continued eligibility for the $235 million (approximately 79
billion AMD) Millennium Challenge Compact remained contingent upon
the Government’s performance in meeting good governance indicators,
which include standards of respect for religious freedom.

The report mentions that an estimated 90 percent of citizens nominally
belong to the Armenian Church. There are small communities of other
religious groups: Catholics, Protestants, Muslims and others. The
exact number of atheists is not known. Some minority religious
groups, including the Molokans and some Yezidi groups, have not sought
registration. Although it was not registered as a religious facility,
Yerevan’s sole mosque was open for regular Friday prayers, and the
Government did not restrict Muslims from praying there.

The Law on Education mandates that public schools offer a secular
education but does not prohibit religious education in state schools.

The history of the Armenian Church is the basis of this curriculum;
many schools teach about world religions in elementary school and
the history of the Armenian Church in middle school. Religious groups
may not provide religious instruction in schools, although registered
groups may do so in private homes to children of their members

The military employs Armenian Church chaplains for each division, but
no other religious groups are represented in the military chaplaincy.

It’s noted in the International Religious Freedom Report that during
the reporting period there was no reported officially sponsored
violence against minority religious groups.

The Armenian Apostolic Church is a member of the World Council of
Churches and has friendly relations with the main Christian branches,
including the Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant Churches.

The report underlines that the general population has a negative
attitude about Jehovah’s Witnesses because the latter refused to
serve in the military, engaged in little-understood proselytizing
practices, and because of a widespread but unsubstantiated belief
that they pay the desperately poor to convert. However, unlike in
the previous reporting period, the press did not report complaints
of allegedly illegal proselytizing lodged by citizens against members
of Jehovah’s Witnesses.

This year’s report of the US Department of State included Burma,
China, Eritrea, Iran, North Korea, Saudi Arabia, Sudan and Uzbekistan
in the list of "most troubling" countries.

Bernard Fassier: The Sooner Karabakh Joins The Negotiation Process,

BERNARD FASSIER: THE SOONER KARABAKH JOINS THE NEGOTIATION PROCESS, THE BETTER

armradio.am
18.09.2007 13:05

"Nagorno Karabakh indirectly participates in the process of conflict
settlement," French Co-Chair of the OSCE Minsk Group Bernard Fassier
said in response to ArmInfo question.

In his words, Nagorno Karabakh was a party to the negotiations in
the past. "The sooner Karabakh becomes a party to the negotiations,
the better. We expect that Karabakh will be immediately involved in
the negotiation process in the future," the French mediator noted.

American Co-Chair Matthew Bryza noted, for his part, that the mediators
always respected and reckoned the Karabakhi side. "The respect for
the opinion of our friends from Karabakh is evidenced by the regular
visits to the region and the meetings with its leadership."

Construction Of Centre For Orthodox Studies Will Soon Begin On Top O

CONSTRUCTION OF CENTRE FOR ORTHODOX STUDIES WILL SOON BEGIN ON TOP OF ARMENIAN CEMETERY IN TBILISI

KarabakhOpen
17-09-2007 14:13:45

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Construction of a Centre for Orthodox Studies
(Djemaran) will soon begin on top of the Armenian cemetery in Tbilisi.

Armenian foreign language specialist Raffy Dikranian told a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter that during his recent visit to Tbilisi,
Georgia on 6 and 7 September 2007, he was horrified by the fact that
a large ditch has been dug out between the recently built Georgian
Orthodox Holy Trinity Cathedral and the Armenian "Pantheon Medzats",
where an Armenian cemetery used to be.

"My previous visit to Tbilisi was in September 2005. During that
visit, I was informed by the local Armenian population of Tbilisi,
in the predominantly Armenian Avlabar district, that the Georgian
Government had constructed the largest cathedral of the Caucasus (Holy
Trinity) on the graves of Armenian writers. Only the gravestones had
been moved to another site behind the cemetery, what is currently
the Armenian Pantheon, while the bones had not been relocated. It
was unbelievable then that such an insensible act could be possible,
yet during this trip, I received confirmation that the Armenians of
Tbilisi had not exaggerated the truth in any way," he said.

"Upon my arrival in Tbilisi on 6 September 2007, I was informed of
Georgian President Saakashvili’s plans to completely tear down all
the buildings in the Avlabar District and to build a new, luxurious
neighborhood in that area, around the Holy Trinity Cathedral, for the
President’s elite. It must be mentioned that the buildings occupied by
the Armenians had never been renovated by the Government over the years
and were unsafe. The Government has recently informed the Armenian
residents of Avlabar that it will pay them approx. $906 USD per square
meter and move them to a housing project to be constructed outside the
centre’s boundaries. The Armenians of Avlabar whose families have lived
there for centuries do not want to leave but have no choice," he added.

Raffy Dikranian urges upon all those concerned to write to UNESCO
and President Saakashvili and ask him to show some respect to the
Armenians of Tbilisi by properly burying the bones of the deceased
and allowing them to continue to reside in Avlabar as they have done
so for centuries.

Raffy Dikranian is a foreign language specialist and works with major
institutions like the United Nations’ specialized International Civil
Aviation agency and the Quebec ministry of Health and Social Services
to translate and interpret across a large number of languages.

Kocharyan Discussed Civilian Control Of Defense System

KOCHARYAN DISCUSSED CIVILIAN CONTROL OF DEFENSE SYSTEM

Lragir.am
17-09-2007 15:39:36

Today President Robert Kocharyan held a consultation with the prime
minister, the minister of defense and the chair of the standing
committee of defense and security, the head of the president
administration, other officials, and discussed the reform of the
ministry of defense, the press office of the president reported.

The head of state said the reforms are aimed to enhance civilian
control of the ministry of defense, upgrade the system of government,
and optimal use of resources.

President Kocharyan said the course of the reform is normal, and
underlined the importance of definitive agreement regarding some
conceptual issues, which would allow moving on.

The participants of the consultation touched upon the bill of special
civil service which is expected to be adopted by the end of this year.

ANC-WR Internship-Externship Program Wraps Up 2007 Summer Session

Armenian National Committee – Western Region
Andrew D. Kzirian, Esq., Executive Director
104 North Belmont Street, Suite 200
Glendale, California 91206
Phone: 818.500.1918
Fax: 818.246.7353
[email protected]

ANC-WR Internship-Externship Program Wraps Up 2007 Summer Session

Los Angeles, CA – The 2007 Summer Session of the Armenian National
Committee-Western Region’s Internship-Externship Program (ANC-WR IEP)
concluded on August 23rd. The ten week program closed with presentations by
the participants summarizing their accomplishments while working to address
issues of concern to Armenian Americans. Graduating from the program were
interns Nareg Bostanian, Aida Siyahian, and Ankineh Zadoorian as well as
Taleen Mardirossian, an extern with the Foundation for Economic Development.

The closing reception and presentations were attended by ANC-WR leadership
as well as former IEP participants and the Aghjayan family, sponsors of the
ANC-WR Haroutioun Kasparian Endowment. The ANCA-WR announced the
establishment of an endowment fund in the name of the late Haroutioun
Kasparian of Los Angeles this January. The endowment fund is used to educate
Armenian American youth on issues related to the Armenian Cause. Haroutioun
Kasparian was a lifelong supporter of the ANC-WR who passed away on June 23,
2006. Among his memoirs, Kasparian wrote the following of his passion for
the Armenian Church and the Armenian Cause: "I would like to convey, after
my passing, that you [the Armenian people] must love the Armenian Church
because it is the Armenian Nation. And the nation has an obligation to work
for Hai-Tahd [the Armenian Cause] which is both our national pride and
obligation."

Bostanian, a senior at Ferrahian High School, completed the program in which
he served as a Community and Government Affairs intern. In this capacity he
worked with the ANC-WR staff to schedule and coordinate district office
meetings with federal and state elected officials.

Mardirossian, a second-year student at El Camino College, worked with the
Foundation for Economic Development (FED) which is the contractor for the
California Trade Office (CATO). CATO strives to promote trade and commerce
between the state of California and Armenia and countries of the Newly
Independent States (NIS), Asia and Eastern Europe. In addition to helping
FED develop a press outreach plan, she also oversaw the initiation of a FED
news bulletin.

Siyahian, also a senior at Ferrahian High School, wrote press releases and
explored alternate media formats for ANC-WR news distribution as a Public
and Media Relations intern.

Zadoorian, a second-year student at California State University, Long Beach,
worked with the Los Angeles-Yerevan Sister City Association by helping the
organization with its publicity efforts and exploring program initiatives.

"I really enjoyed this opportunity to work with other student activists and
community leaders while learning about the Armenian Cause in greater depth,"
said Mardirossian. "The best part was that I was able to use what I learned
to make a difference while part of the program."

Established in June 2006, the ANC-WR IEP is a selective and intensive
program that provides student leaders and activists with an opportunity to
participate in an intensive internship designed to provide an in-depth
introduction to Armenian American issues as well as advocacy efforts on the
federal, state and local level. The program hosts spring, summer and autumn
sessions. You can find more information about the IEP by visiting

The Armenian National Committee – Western Region is the largest and most
influential Armenian American grassroots public affairs organization in the
Western United States. Working in coordination with a network of offices,
chapters, and supporters throughout the Western United States and affiliated
organizations around the country, the ANC-WR promotes awareness of issues of
concern to the Armenian American community.

http://www.anca.org/gateway/gateway_overview.php.
www.anca.org

Saving Bukowski’s Bungalow

SAVING BUKOWSKI’S BUNGALOW
By Matt Kettmann/Los Angeles

TIME
Friday, Sep. 14, 2007

Charles Bukowski in his library.

Eckarth Palutke / Huntington Library / AP

The vacant property isn’t much to look at now, and it certainly
wasn’t any prettier back in the late 1960s, when a 1952 Comet was
parked on the front lawn, tins of bacon grease filled up the kitchen,
cigar smoke stunk up the air, and newspapers littered the floors.

But the little bungalow at 5124 De Longpre Avenue in East Hollywood
was the epicenter of a cultural earthquake that continues to rock Los
Angeles’s literary landscape. It is the house where Charles Bukowski
went from blue-collar postman to full-time writer, eventually becoming
world famous for his bawdy tales of lust, liquor, and love.

While Bukowski, who died in 1994, is now a literary immortal, his
bungalow’s days may be numbered. The current owner recently evicted
the tenants, erected a chain-link fence, and put the property on the
market, advertising on Craigslist, "You can easily tear down the old
building and do new construction!"

But like the hard-headed Hank Chinaski, the author’s autobiographical
alter ego, Bukowski fans aren’t letting the home he rented from 1963
to 1972 go down without a rumble. They’re pushing for preservation,
and the city is listening. On September 20, a historical commission
will take the first step in determining whether the property should
be made a landmark and saved from demolition. The preservation charge
is spearheaded by a young woman who might have caught Bukowski’s
wandering eye back in his days at De Longpre, the setting for his
racy novel Women.

Aspiring photographer and temp worker Lauren Everett, 26, has been
a Bukowski fan since her childhood, but she probably understands him
now more than ever, explaining, "I’m an office temp, so I definitely
identify with his idea of ‘stick-with-it-you-don’t-have-to-kill-
yourself-ev en-though-your-job-is-horrible.’" Everett claimed that the
house is the most significant of all Bukowski residences: he lived
there the longest and had his only child there. "Everything else has
been torn down," says Everett. "It would be someplace that people
could go to experience his environment. I think that’s important."

She’s enlisted the help of Richard Schave, who leads literary tours
around Los Angeles, including one Bukowski-themed excursion called
"Haunts of a Dirty Old Man." Schave explained that the De Longpre
neighborhood remains the same blue-collar, immigrant community
of Russians, Armenians, and Slavs that it was in the 1960s and
’70s. And around the corner is still the Pink Elephant, Bukowski’s
favorite liquor store. "It was at De Longpre where his explosion of
work began," said Schave. "This place was the rocket booster that
propelled him through the rest of his life."

Bukowski’s longtime publisher and friend John Martin agrees. "That’s
where I met him," says Martin, who founded Black Sparrow Press in 1969
after discovering the writer’s poetry in underground mimeographs. He
then published Bukowski until the author died from leukemia in
1994. "You just knew this was someplace special," remembers Martin,
now 77 and living in Santa Rosa, California. "He had a whole closet
full of unpublished poems. Literally, they were stacked up on the
floor leaning against the wall two or three feet high. So I went
through and picked out ones I thought were especially good, and I
began, one way or another, to publish Bukowski."

Aside from being the setting for numerous poems and novels, the
bungalow was also where Bukowski decided to quit the post office. "It
was killing him," said Martin, who asked Bukowski how much he needed
to survive every month. Martin handed Bukowski his favorite pen,
and then Bukowski tallied his needs: cigarettes, rent, child support,
booze, food. Adding up to a mere $100 per month, Martin promised that
much in perpetuity. They shook hands on it, but the pen disappeared
into the Bukowski’s mess, never to be found again.

When Bukowski did quit the post office in January 1970, Martin
suggested he write a novel. Twenty-one days later, Bukowski finished
his first novel, telling a shocked Martin, "Fear allows you to do
anything."

Martin went down to De Longpre and picked up what became Post
Office. "To this day, it remains his most popular book," says Martin.

If the commission moves the case forward, the preservationists will
try to enlist the help of celebrity fans such as Johnny Depp, who is
working on an animated film about the author. "So many people for so
long have gone to the mat for Bukowski," says Schave. "If we do get
a yes, then it will make it so much easier to do all the hard work
that will still be in front of us."

That "yes" would come from Los Angeles’s Cultural Heritage Commission,
which dedicates anywhere from 30 to 50 monuments a year, according to
staffer Ken Bernstein. "The vast majority are saved for architectural
significance," says Bernstein, "but the cultural heritage ordinance
does allow for and encourage designation of sites that are important
to the social and cultural history of the city. The question for the
commission will be whether the bungalow retains the physical qualities
that enable it to tell the story of its culture and history." If so,
demolition will be blocked to allow for further review until the
L.A. City Council gives the final nod.

So what happens to the owner then? There are tax breaks for historic
properties, but Schave admits, "It could potentially cramp his
style." The owner, meanwhile, is not talking. When contacted, he got
flustered and said, in an Eastern European accent, "I am sorry. I’m
not at liberty to discuss anything about De Longpre." Former publisher
Martin, who called Bukowski "the most widely recognized and important
author ever born and raised in Los Angeles," hopes the property can
be saved. He explains, "I don’t know if they’re going to be able to
save this property, but I think it’s as interesting and important as
anything of its kind in the city."

What would Bukowski think about this hullabaloo? No one can say for
sure, but it’s definitely a lot of effort for a man whose gravestone
reads simply, "Don’t Try."

MTC And VivaCell: End To Gossips

MTC AND VIVACELL: END TO GOSSIPS

Source: Panorama.am
14:04 13/09/2007

Panorama. am was informed from Russian sources that a press
conference will take place tomorrow at 15:30 in Yerevan during which
representatives of MTC of Russia and VivaCell will come up with an
announcement with comments on recently disseminated gossips.

According to reliable sources, the press conference will take place at
"Armenia Marriott" hotel.

Reminder: Information was spread in the media recently saying MTC is
going to buy VivaCell.

Chief Prosecutor Refuses To Speak On "Royal" Case

CHIEF PROSECUTOR REFUSES TO SPEAK ON "ROYAL" CASE

Panorama.am
14:04 12/09/2007

Armenian Chief Prosecutor Aghvan Hovsepyan finally came up with a
speech at the National Assembly detailing his work in the course of his
career. In his words, the state of crime in the republic is stable,
severe crimes have not reported growth. Deputies had the chance to
address questions to the chief prosecutor after his 20-minute speech.

Heghine Bisharyan, secretary of Orinats Yerkir (OYeK) block was
interested what measures the prosecutor’s office took in relation to
"Royal Armenia" company.

She was particularly interested if the customs required bribe from
the company, or not. Aghvan Hovsepyan said the case is in courts and
they will issue the ruling. "There are prosecutors and judges that
must issue the ruling," Hovsepyan said also saying he is not going
to speak about the case from the stage of the parliament.

The question-answer with Aghvan Hovsepyan, candidate for chief
prosecutor, will continue with the deputies at the parliament early
tomorrow, after which, the National Assembly will elect the chief
prosecutor of the country in a secret ballot. The president of the
republic proposed Aghvan Hovsepyan, present day chief prosecutor,
for the post.