AM: ‘Aunty Lobo’s wine’

Times of India
Dec 2 2004

‘Aunty Lobo’s wine’

IANS[ THURSDAY, DECEMBER 02, 2004 07:13:18 PM ]

PANAJI: India’s shrinking Anglo-Indian community and its members’
changing lifestyles in Kolkata are the subject of a film shot over
the past year that has just made it for its premier at the
International Film Festival of India (IFFI).

“Bow Barracks Forever”, a 118-minute English-language film is the
“story of survival of people in Kolkata and particularly of the
Anglo-Indian community”, says director Anjan Dutt.

Dutt — who combines roles of actor, singer, musician, songwriter and
filmmaker — has set his film in a century-old building that once
served as the barracks for the US army.

When it left after World War II, the building was handed over to
people connected with the Army, primarily Anglo-Indians as the mixed
offspring of British and Indian stock are referred to in this part of
the world.

“This was a community that gave Kolkata its police officers, its
musicians and its hockey players. Over time, the place has
disintegrated and it’s now seen as a dangerous area. It’s half
Chinese, very much Goan and a very strange place,” says Dutt.

Dutt says he was motivated by architect Manish Chakrabarty, who was
trying to convert Kolkata’s old buildings into heritage structures,
so that they could not be demolished for new skyscrapers that spell
big money in a bustling city.

“Calcutta Improvement Trust (CIT) has done nothing, and the (state)
government has been ambivalent. It’s a huge red building that reminds
you of Bow Street. It’s a huge place, where a large shopping complex
could come up. Everyone seems waiting for it to collapse,” said Dutt.

“All characters are based on real people. They live very violently.
Beat each other up violently. Make love violently. The (140 families)
staying in the area believe that something good will come of the
film,” said the director who has directed numerous telefilms for the
ETV Bangali channel.

“Kolkata has never been just a Hindu Bengali city. It is
multicultural, with an Armenian community, the Parsees, Chinese,
Anglo Indians, and the Muslims,” Dutt says.

Dutt said that funds apparently sought to be sent to restore Bow
Barracks, from an MP nominated to represent the Anglo-Indian
community, had got caught in the channels and were not used.

During the shooting, which began on Christmas eve 2003, the director
said he faced a problem with the local residents expecting to be paid
more for their participation.

“I think they had a point. They were misinformed about our film, but
to them making a cinema means making a lot of money,” said the
director, whose film features in the Indian Panorama section of this
year’s IFFI, currently on here.

Initially the film was to be called ‘Aunty Lobo’s Wine’, about the
middle-aged Anglo Indian Emily Lobo, who lives by baking cakes and
brewing red wine.

Dutt, when asked, stressed that attempts had been made to avoid
stereotyping of cultural minorities, as often done by Bollywood.

“Bollywood has done damage. Always, the Nepali comes across as a
joker, the Anglo-Indian is very brutal. It’s only Raj Kapoor whose
‘aunties’ (elderly Christian ladies) are very sweet and nice.
Otherwise it’s only north Indians, specially Punjabis, who seem to be
shown in good light,” he said.

Neel Dutt, who happens to be the director’s son and is music director
for this movie, said doing the film was a “very enjoyable process”.
This film’s cast includes noted actor Victor Banerjee, Lilette Dubey,
Clayton Rodgers and Neha Dubey.

“‘Bow Barracks Forever’ is a story of survival against all odds, a
story that mirrors the spirit of the old and undying city, Kolkata,”
says the director.

Event devoted to Armen Tigranian’s 125th birthday

Yerkir/arm
November 26, 2004

The Vernatun hall of the Armenian national library hosted Armenian
music creators and their appreciators. The event was devoted to 125th
birthday of celebrated Armenian composer, musician and person of art,
Armen Tigranian. The composer’s grandson, Armen Tigranian was also
present. He donated to the exhibition a photo of his grandfather made
in 1939.

The exhibition presented books, photos, musical notes of `Anoush,’
David Bek, ‘ `Anahit’ operas, as well as the CD of `Anoush’ opera
released in the USA. The founder of the Armenian opera was
appreciated in speeches of the National Academy of Sciences director
David Sargsian, note-musical literature department head Marina
Semionova and the composer’s grandson Armen Tigranian.

CSTO SC secrs to discuss situation in CSTO responsibility zone

Kazinform, Kazakhstan
Nov 30 2004

CSTO SC secretaries to discuss situatn in CSTO responsibility zone.

Yerevan, November 30. KAZINFORM. The military and political situation
in the zone of responsibility of the Collective Security Treaty
Organisation (CSTO) and prospects of cooperation among the CSTO
states will be prioritised at the tenth meeting of the committee of
the CSTO Security Council secretaries on Tuesday, Kazinform refers to
Itar-Tass. Partakers of the meeting will consider the fight with
terrorism and other threats to the CSTO states, press secretary of
the Armenian Security Council secretary Seiran Shakhsuvaryan told
Itar-Tass.

The heads of the CIS drug control agencies will take part in the
current forum. Therefore the action Channel-2004 that is aimed
against international drug trafficking will be considered at the
meeting.

“At present all countries have common problems and challenges,” CSTO
Secretary General Nikolai Bordyuzha said. He noted that “at present
no military threat exists, and there are absolutely other threats.”
“Two of them – drugs and terrorism concern most of all countries all
over the world including in the Caucasus,” he emphasised. Accoridng
ot Bordyuzha, “the CSTO should be adapted primarily to those security
problems that exist in our countries.”
The secretaries of the CSTO Security Councils will consider
military-technical cooperation and training of military personnel.

Practical results have been achieved in this field. Russian weapons
are already supplied on internal prices in the CSTO states. Russia
will train military specialists from the CSTO states next year,
Russian Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov reported to President Vladimir
Putin the other day.

The CSTO states believe that the intensification of military activity
is an important direction of the CSTO activity. The military groups
that exist in the CSTO states are being modernised. These are the
Russian-Armenian group in the Caucasus, Russian-Belarussian group and
the rapid deployment collective forces in Central Asia.

Armenia that hosts a meeting of the CSTO Security Council secretaries
for the second time gives close attention to the cooperation among
the CSTO states on the bilateral and multilateral basis. The
republic’s authorities believe that Russian military and border
presence is an important component of Armenian security.

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L’Express
29 novembre 2004

“Même les croyants ont intégré la laïcité”; La culture

Roy Olivier

Pour l’opinion publique européenne, la Turquie pose problème parce
qu’il s’agit d’un pays musulman. Mais cette question n’est jamais
soulevée par Bruxelles, puisque la Turquie est un pays laïque de par
sa Constitution. Les conditions imposées par Bruxelles à la Turquie
pour entrer dans l’Europe ne concernent en rien l’islam ni la
société, mais les institutions et le droit turcs: ceux-ci sont
considérés, à juste titre, comme n’étant pas encore suffisamment
démocratiques, du fait du poids de l’armée, de la liberté d’action de
la police et des restrictions à la liberté d’expression. On voit donc
que l’approche de l’Union européenne ignore totalement ce qui est de
fait la préoccupation de l’opinion publique européenne, l’islam.

Les institutions, gardiennes de la laïcité ou obstacle à la
démocratie?

Le débat repose sur un paradoxe: en Turquie, ce sont les institutions
ayant permis d’enraciner la laïcité dans la société qui sont
aujourd’hui le principal obstacle à l’entrée de la Turquie en Europe.
Atatürk, pour occidentaliser son pays, s’est appuyé sur un Etat fort,
jacobin et nationaliste, où l’armée reste, aujourd’hui encore,
l’arbitre ultime et tire souvent les ficelles au sein du Conseil
supérieur de sécurité. Cette armée est régulièrement intervenue pour
mettre fin à ce qui lui apparaissait comme une mise en cause de la
laïcité par le gouvernement (ouvertement en 1960, 1971 et 1980, et
plus discrètement en 1998), mais elle s’oppose aussi à toute
expression publique de l’identité kurde et à toute critique de
l’histoire officielle, concernant par exemple la question arménienne.
Le voile est interdit non seulement à l’école et dans la fonction
publique, mais aussi à l’université. Cette laïcité autoritaire et ce
nationalisme militant sont défendus non seulement par l’armée, mais
aussi par une partie de la haute administration (y compris la
justice), un ensemble qu’on appelle en Turquie l’ “Etat profond”,
lequel se considère comme dépositaire d’une légitimité et d’une
continuité qui ne sauraient être remises en question par le vote
populaire. Il est incarné par le Conseil national de sécurité, qui
réunit l’état-major et le gouvernement. Or le principe même de
l’intégration dans l’Europe suppose justement la disparition de cet
“Etat profond”, le renoncement à une partie de la souveraineté, le
retrait total de l’armée de la vie politique, une justice
indépendante, le primat des droits de l’homme, la liberté
d’expression et une forme de reconnaissance des identités régionales
ou ethniques, selon des modalités qui peuvent être d’ailleurs très
variables. Les institutions dans leur forme actuelle ne répondent pas
encore aux critères européens (affirmés à Copenhague en 1993).
Néanmoins, le mouvement de réforme de l’Etat est entamé depuis les
années 1980, en fait depuis que l’armée a installé Turgut Özal au
poste de Premier ministre: sous l’influence d’un patronat libéral et
proeuropéen, ce dernier a, jusqu’à sa mort en 1994, ébranlé les
tabous du kémalisme.

Mais, si l’on continue dans ce sens, n’y a-t-il pas un risque de voir
l’islam militant faire retour dans la société et la vie politique,
rendant effectivement impossible toute intégration dans l’Europe? La
Turquie peut-elle échapper à la malédiction de nombre de pays
musulmans, où la laïcité s’impose au détriment de la démocratie?

L’islam turc entre laïcité et revivalisme

La Turquie n’est pas un Etat laïque à la française, puisque le clergé
reste contrôlé par l’Etat: la direction des affaires religieuses
(Diyanet), qui dépend directement du Premier ministre, salarie les
principaux imams, contrôle les lycées religieux qui les forment et
diffuse même des modèles de prêches recommandés. Mais, dans bien
d’autres pays européens (Allemagne, Scandinavie) le clergé est lui
aussi fonctionnarisé. L’islam en Turquie n’est d’ailleurs pas une
religion d’Etat, comme le christianisme peut l’être en
Grande-Bretagne ou au Danemark. En Turquie, l’islam officiel définit
une religion réduite au minimum, c’est-à-dire à la seule pratique du
culte, sans inférence dans la vie politique, culturelle ou sociale.

La société dite “civile” est-elle plus marquée par l’islam? Quelle
que soit la vitalité de la religion, cette société a intégré et
intériorisé la laïcité comme les catholiques ont fini par le faire en
Occident. La question n’est pas tant d’opposer les “libéraux” aux
“conservateurs”: on peut, en islam turc comme chez de nombreux
chrétiens en Europe, être à la fois homme de foi et citoyen. La
politique de laïcité forcée a changé les mentalités. Les Turcs, même
très croyants, ne la remettent pas en question, à l’exception de
petits groupes marginaux, souvent plus proches de sectes que de vrais
mouvements politiques. Le ramadan ne marque pas le paysage urbain,
l’alcool se consomme partout, l’homosexualité se montre (Zeki Müren,
un célèbre acteur travesti, a été enterré très religieusement en
1996), la culture est moderne, l’athéisme se porte bien, ainsi que la
littérature de fiction.

Certes, le revivalisme religieux contemporain se voit tant en
politique (succès du parti AK) que dans la société (augmentation du
nombre de femmes voilées). Mais il n’y a pas de synergie entre les
deux: d’une part, le mouvement islamiste s’est complètement moulé
dans le cadre de l’Etat-nation démocratique et moderne; d’autre part,
les formes de revivalisme religieux, comme le retour du soufisme, se
font en dehors des mouvements politiques.

L’islamisme turc s’était voulu à travers le parti Refah, fondé et
dirigé par Necmettin Erbakan à la fin des années 1960, une
alternative au kémalisme qui permettait à la Turquie de retrouver une
identité musulmane: ce parti représentait donc un clair refus de
l’Europe. Mais le parti n’a jamais pu faire plus de 21% aux
élections, ce qui lui a assuré tout de même le gouvernement en 1996.
Dissous par l’armée, il s’est scindé en deux: la jeune garde, avec
Tayyip Erdogan, ancien maire d’Istanbul, fonde l’AK Parti,
aujourd’hui au pouvoir. La vieille garde obtient à peine 2% aux
élections législatives d’octobre 2002, tandis que l’AK Parti triomphe
avec 34% sur un programme qui ignore superbement toute référence à la
religion. L’électorat de l’AK vient bien au-delà du noyau des
pratiquants. L’AK fonctionne comme une démocratie-chrétienne: il est
très libéral en économie et conservateur sur le plan des valeurs,
comme peut l’être la CDU bavaroise. En ce sens, c’est bien un parti
européen. Mais sa victoire montre surtout que le principe de la
laïcité politique est intégré même par des gens très religieux.

En fait, le parti n’a pas été porté par une vague de retour de la
religion. Le revivalisme religieux est plutôt le fait de confréries,
comme les Nakshbandi ou Suleymanci, qui ne se préoccupent pas
d’établir un parti politique et encore moins un Etat islamique (même
si elles n’hésitent pas à soutenir des candidats de différents
partis). Une d’entre elles, le groupe de Fethullah Gülen, fait preuve
d’un activisme et d’un sectarisme qui la rapprochent d’une secte et
ne laissent pas d’inquiéter. Cependant, la scène religieuse est en
fait très diversifiée: la religion s’est bien privatisée, comme
l’économie.

Conservatisme moral et retour

du religieux

Le droit turc est complètement laïque: il a été importé par Atatürk
tel quel des droits français, italien et suisse. Il n’y a absolument
rien qui rappelle l’islam dans le code. Mais la tentative du
gouvernement de faire passer une loi prohibant l’adultère, l’été
dernier, a fait craindre une inflexion plus religieuse. Pourtant, en
fait, cette loi n’avait rien à voir avec la charia, puisqu’elle
définit le couple marié selon le modèle occidental (un couple
monogame où les conjoints sont égaux): il s’agit plus ici de copier
le retour des valeurs religieuses, comme aux Etats-Unis (où 10 Etats
ont une telle loi) que de se rapprocher de l’Arabie saoudite. Les
croyants en Turquie sont plus proches des conservateurs religieux
chrétiens que des islamistes arabes: on peut s’en inquiéter, mais à
chacun son Europe.

The Official Baku’s Tactics Is To Prolong The Settlement Process

THE OFFICIAL BAKU`S TACTICS IS TO PROLONG THE SETTLEMENT PROCESS

STEPANAKERT, 27.11.04. DE-FACTO. “Azerbaijan’s attempts to transfer
the discussion of the Karabakh problem from the frames of the OSCE
Minsk Group into other international organizations” format will cause
prolonging the settlement process”.

NKR Foreign Minister Ashot Ghoulian stated to the DE-FACTO agency,
while commenting upon the Azerbaijan-initiated discussion of the issue
on the situation on the Nagorno Karabakh controlled territories in the
United Nations Organization. According to him, “neither the OSCE Minsk
Group Co-Chairmen, nor the countries concerned in the soonest peaceful
resolution of the problem greet such efforts of the Azerbaijani party”.

In Ashot Ghoulian’s opinion, the November 23 discussions at the session
of the UNO General Assembly were delayed, mainly, on Azerbaijan’s
initiative due to its uncertainty about the possibility to get the
necessary number of votes. At the same time, the NKR Foreign Minister
noted that “if the resolution project introduced by Azerbaijan is
all the same adopted, it will mean that the Azerbaijani propaganda
machine managed to take off the negotiation process from the true
way”. The head of the Nagorno Karabakh Foreign Ministry stressed that
the official Baku used this tactics every time the parties approached
to concrete agreements.

“Azerbaijan’s such activities aimed at drawing the attention of the
international community from the point of the Karabakh problem –
namely, the status of Nagorno Karabakh, hamper our progress in the
conflict’s settlement”, Ashot Ghoulian stressed.

 PRESS RELEASE  2004-11-27 10:03:00

–Boundary_(ID_ZITLWTzADJf8NG/jYvaokQ)–

BAKU: Deputy FM holds briefing

AzerTag, Azerbaijan
Nov 27 2004

DEPUTY FOREIGN MINISTER HOLDS BRIEFING
[November 27, 2004, 15:24:48]

On November 26, Deputy Foreign Minister of Azerbaijan Araz Azimov held
briefing on the debates over the situation in the occupied territories
of Azerbaijan at the 60th enlarged meeting of the UN General
Assembly’s 59th Session in New York and Azerbaijan Foreign Minister
Elmar Mamadyarov’s meeting with the OSCE Minsk Group co-Chairs.

Mr. Azimov said in particular that Azerbaijani side reaffirmed its
adherence to continue peace talks on the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict in
an intensive, fruitful and constructive manner both at the UN GA 59th
Session and during the prevois meetings with Armenian Foreign Minister
Vardan Oskanyan in Berlin and OSCE Minsk Group co-Chairs in Ney York.

He expressed concern over the fact of illegal settling of ethnic
Armenians in the occupied terrotories of Azerbaijan. The Deputy
Foreign Minister said contradicting the international humanitarian
law and damaging the peace process, these Armenia’s actions shall
cause concern in the international community too. He noted finally
that Azerbaijan wants an international experts group to be formed to
investigate these facts in the occu[pied territories.

In the end, the Deputy Foreign Minister A. Azimov answered questions
from journalists.

European Armenian Federation Calls Upon EU Presidency and AllCountri

EUROPEAN ARMENIAN FEDERATION CALLS UPON EU PRESIDENCY AND ALL COUNTRIES
MEMBERS TO BLOCK AZERBAIJANI-SPONSORED UN RESOLUTION

BRUSSELS, November 25 (Noyan Tapan). The European Armenian
Federation for Justice and Democracy calls upon the European Union
Presidency and all countries members of the European Union to block
the Azerbaijani-sponsored UN resolution in the name of peace and
stability in this sensitive region.

Azerbaijan introduced a resolution asking the United Nations General
Assembly to condemn the so-called Armenian colony created in the
territories under Armenian control.

“The UN resolution submitted by Azerbaijan and Turkey, coupled with
another current initiative being taken up at the Council of Europe,
are both deadly blows to the negociation process initiated by the
Minsk Group” declared Hilda Tchoboian, Chairperson of the European
Armenian Federation.

Over the past several years, Azerbaijan has rejected a number of
proposals put forward by the OSCE Minsk group including the “Common
State” option in 1998. Former President Heider Aliyev walked away
from commitments made in Paris and the Key West summits during talks
with Armenian President Robert Kocharian.

The European Armenian Federation notes that since assuming power,
the current Azerbaijani president, Ilham Aliev, has continuously
discredited the OSCE process, threatening to resolve the Karabagh
issue militarily.

The European Armenian Federation remains concerned that the
disintegration of the Minsk peace process will exclude Europe of any
active role in the South Caucasus, at a time when the European Union
has just included this region in its new neighborhood policy. It
affirms that the end of the process could introduce a new period of
instability in the region.

The European Armenian Federation notes that France joined the
Presidency of the Minsk Group in 1997 to establish peace, but also
with the intention of representing Europe, which did not have great
influence in the region until that time. “It balanced the Russian
and American interests in the region,” explained Tchoboian.

CIS to hold antiterror drill in Tajikistan in early 2005 – Russianmi

CIS to hold antiterror drill in Tajikistan in early 2005 – Russian minister

ITAR-TASS news agency
25 Nov 04

Moscow, 25 November: The CIS Collective Rapid Deployment Force for the
Central Asian region is to hold an antiterrorist exercise in Tajikistan
in early 2005, Russian Defence Minister Sergey Ivanov said today.

According to him, the exercise will be on the whole similar to
that held by the Collective Rapid Deployment Force in Kyrgyzstan
last August.

The minister said that at the session of the Collective Security
Treaty Organization agreement had been reached on a balanced build-up
of forces in all three areas of the Collective Rapid Deployment
Force’s responsibility: Belarus in the west, Armenia in the south,
and Central Asia.

Arkady Ghoukassian:”If Azerbaijan Was In Mood For Peace Seriously, I

ARKADY GHOUKASSIAN: “IF AZERBAIJAN WAS IN MOOD FOR PEACE SERIOUSLY, IT WOULD
CARRY ON DIRECT NEGOTIATIONS WITH NAGORNO KARABAKH”

DETROIT, November 23 (Noyan Tapan). If Goris-Lachin-Stepanakert
highway is the way of life for Nagorno Karabakh, the “North-South”
highway being under construction will become one of the most important
constituent parts of the NKR economic development. NKR President Arkady
Ghoukassian said about it during the public forum held in Detroit,
in which representatives of the Armenian Diaspora of this American
city participated.

On November 17, the NKR President arrived in Detroit from New York
within the framework of the visit to the US in connection with the
regular telethon on fundraising in support to Nagorno Karabakh to
be held here on November 25. It is expected that the collected funds
will be directed at the completion of the “North-South” highway being
of strategic importance to Nagorno Karabakh. The highway will connect
almost all the regions of the republic.

The NKR President called on participants of the forum and in their
person the whole Armenian Community of Detroit to participate in
the forthcoming telethon and, in such a way, support actively the
socio-economic development of Artsakh. Both here and at Arkady
Ghoukassian’s meetings in New York the line of the policies on the
democratization of the social-political life and the building of the
civil society in Nagorno Karabakh, as well as the reformation of its
economy, the revival of its cultural and spiritual spheres carried
out by the President met with approval. Participants of the forum
agreed in the opinion that the current moods of different circles
of the Armenian Community of the US, which expresses willingness
to enlarge aid to Artsakh for the resolution of problems put before
it on the development and strengthening of the republic’s economic
complex, is explained by successes achieved by Nagorno Karabakh in
the democratic reforms.

Such moods, in particular, were also observed during Arkady
Ghoukassian’s meeting with the students and teaching staff of the
Michigan University held in the city of An-Harbor the day before, on
November 18. Those present at the meeting were especially interested
in the settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. Arkady Ghoukassian,
briefly speaking about the history of the rise of the Nagorno Karabakh
problem, emphasized that official Stepanakert stands for only the
peaceful settlement of the conflict with Azerbaijan in contrast to
Azerbaijan that tries to do it by force. And it takes place regardless
of the fact that Azerbaijan failed once, when perpetrated large-scale
military aggression against Nagorno Karabakh, which yielded to
Azerbaijan in the military equipment and force. “If Azerbaijan was
in mood for peace seriously, it would carry on direct negotiations
with Nagarno Karabakh,” Arkady Ghoukassian announced.

It was noticed during Arkady Ghoukassian’s meeting with the students
and teachers of the school after Alek and Mary Manukians that there is
the necessity of closer contacts between the Armenian high schools of
the US and Artsakh. The President thanked the Manukians for constant
support to Artsakh. Then he visited the museum, which is situated at
the school and also bears the names of Alek and Mary Manukians. Arkady
Ghoukassian with great interest got acquainted with the exposition of
the museum, in particular, with the unique collection of the Armenian
ancient manuscripts, antique household goods, as well as with the
paintings of great Armenian masters Ivan Aivazovsky, Martiros Saryan
and other famous artists.

According to the Head Information Department attached to the NKR
President, a reception in honor of Arkady Ghoukassian was held at
the house of Marta and Diana Shushanians the same evening. The most
influential representatives of the Armenian Community of Detroit were
invited there.

The call for taking an active part in the forthcoming telethon
resounded at all the meetings once again.

Wide-open arms, wider need Nonprofit organization plans second facil

The Denver Post
November 14, 2004 Sunday
FINAL EDITION

THE RONALD MCDONALD HOUSE
Wide-open arms, wider need Nonprofit organization plans second
facility, near Fitzsimons campus, to meet growing demand The current
house on Downing Street cares for about 1,200 families a year. When
the new site opens, the Denver operations would be the largest in the
U.S.

by Mike McPhee Denver Post Staff Writer SEASON TO SHARE

The Ronald McDonald House is recognized by many but understood by
few. Inside the house on Downing Street are terrific examples of how
fragile life can be and, for some, how horribly unfair.

Yet the place is filled with hope.

Elmira Poghosyan is an Armenian woman whose 7-year-old son, Arsen,
has endured unimaginable suffering in his short life. In just the
past 12 months, Arsen has suffered through 46 throat surgeries. He
was born with a rare form of cancer that forms polyps in his
windpipe, gradually choking him.

“I think the next few surgeries will cure him,” says Poghosyan, who
has lived in a small room with her son for the past 16 months.

But she has reason to hope. Arsen spent two years in an Armenian
hospital, only to be discharged as incurable. Another year in a
German hospital failed to help him.

Back home in Armenia, a national appeal on Armenian television caught
the attention of an international firm, as well as some Armenians
living in America. A connection was made with Dr. Nigel Pashley at
Presbyterian/St. Luke’s Medical Center in Denver, one of two doctors
in the world able to treat Arsen’s cancer successfully by using mumps
vaccine. Contributions of $7,500 flowed in, British Airways helped
with flights, and the mother and son came to Denver.

Pashley and Presbyterian/St. Luke’s have covered the entire cost of
Arsen’s care while the Ronald McDonald organization has covered all
the costs of housing them.

“This is my family now,” says Poghosyan, quickly breaking into tears
of gratitude. “They have a very big heart.”

The nonprofit Ronald McDonald organization was founded in 1974 by
former Philadelphia Eagles player Phil Hill to care for displaced
families of children undergoing intense medical care. There are 238
houses worldwide and 180 in the United States. Denver’s was the third
to be built.

Four years ago, the house moved from a Victorian on Ogden Street to a
$7.5 million, 30-room facility it built between Children’s Hospital
and Presbyterian/St. Luke’s. But even the large facility, which cares
for families from all over the world, has a waiting list of 18 to 20
families.

Ironically, the same week the new Ronald McDonald house opened,
Children’s Hospital announced it was moving to the Fitzsimons campus
in Aurora. So Pamela Whitaker, executive director and indomitable
force behind the Denver operation, announced she would build a second
facility near Fitzsimons. Land prices near the new medical facilities
have skyrocketed to almost $1.5 million per acre. Undaunted, she is
well underway on a $9 million drive to build a 60-room facility
there. Combined, the two facilities would make Denver the largest
operation in the U.S.

“Denver is a very generous community,” says Whitaker, who came to
Ronald McDonald House when she was laid off from Rose Hospital 15
years ago. Donation canisters at all area McDonald’s restaurants
provide a significant amount of funding, she added.

The organization has applied for a grant this year through the
Post-News Season to Share campaign.

The current facility, which cares for an average of 1,200 families a
year, has an annual budget of $1.25 million, which comes almost
entirely from donations. Whitaker runs a lean operation, with only
four paid staffers, supported by 300 volunteers.

The immaculate building has a large kitchen and dining room. Despite
a well-stocked pantry of donated foods, local families frequently
will bring in or prepare meals for the residents.

Whitaker has a knack for getting everyone involved.

“Even Elmira has cooked a number of Russian meals for us,” Whitaker
said, smiling.

GRAPHIC: Kathryn Scott Osler | The Denver Post Wendy Oleskevich is
staying at the Ronald McDonald House on Downing Street with her son,
Caleb, who is awaiting a heart transplant. The group, founded in
1974, has 238 houses worldwide, including 180 in the United States.
Denver’s was the third to be built.
PHOTO: Kathryn Scott Osler | The Denver Post Wendy Oleskevich is
staying at the Ronald McDonald House on Downing Street with her son,
Caleb, who is awaiting a heart transplant. The group, founded in
1974, has 238 houses worldwide, including 180 in the United States.
Denver’s was the third to be built.