Armenia’s Ruling Coalition In Favor Of Thaw In Turkey Relations

ARMENIA’S RULING COALITION IN FAVOR OF THAW IN TURKEY RELATIONS

RIA Novosti
April 27, 2009
YEREVAN

The Armenian ruling coalition said on Monday it supported the
president’s foreign policy to normalize ties with Turkey.

Armenia and Turkey came to an agreement April 23 on a "roadmap"
aimed at normalizing bilateral relations, which have been virtually
non-existent following a bitter row over the massacre of ethnic
Armenians in Turkey in the early 20th century.

Turkey says Armenia must end attempts to have the killings recognized
as an act of genocide, and claims the deaths of an estimated 1.5
million Armenians at the end of the Ottoman period in 1915 were caused
by civil unrest as the Empire collapsed. However, Armenia and a number
of other countries say the killings were the first genocide of the
20th century.

"We welcome the steps by Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan aimed at
normalizing the Armenian-Turkish relations without preconditions and
within reasonable terms," the coalition parties said in a statement.

Armenia’s coalition, formed in March 2008, unites the Republican
Party of Armenia, Prosperous Armenia, Orinats Erkir (Country of Law)
and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (Dashnaktsutyun).

However, the Dashnaktsutyun party announced on Monday it was
withdrawing from the coalition over the "roadmap" agreement with
Turkey, which it called "unacceptable and condemnable."

The Armenian ruling coalition said in a statement it respected the
position of Dashnaktsutyun and hoped to "cooperate on a broad range
of issues of national and state interests."

The border between Armenia and Turkey was closed in 1993 on Ankara’s
initiative following fighting between Armenia and Turkey’s ally,
Azerbaijan, over Nagorny Karabakh. The disputed region has a majority
Armenian population, but which is within Azerbaijan’s borders. Turkey
has said it wants talks with Armenia to take place in parallel to
Armenian-Azerbaijani discussions on the future status of the region.

Letter: Obama Apologies Damage Nation

LETTER: OBAMA APOLOGIES DAMAGE NATION

The Advocate
657.html
April 27 2009

There has recently been a striking and widespread use of apologies by
President Barack Hussein Obama to atone for the so-called injustices
cause by the United States.

Do apologies by the chief executive deserve a more important role
in our diplomatic toolbox? I think not. As the American president,
he holds an office that only 43 other American citizens have ever
experienced, and it is a sacred honor that was bestowed upon him by
his fellow American citizens.

Because of his apologies, I believe he is marginalizing our nation. I
am especially embarrassed and offended that my president would choose
to apologize to a country such as Turkey. The Turkish Republic has been
repeatedly called upon to acknowledge and express regret for the forced
deportation and massacre of millions of Christian Armenians carried out
by the Ottoman Empire during the closing stages of the First World War.

The Turkish state is not willing to apologize for these acts of
violence perpetrated on its territory (although not, technically,
by the Turkish Republic itself).

Does the president think his apologies set about repairing a fractured
relationship between two parties or restoring the relationship
between a transgressor and the international society whose norms of
right conduct he thinks we are violating? If he does, he is truly
misguided. The United States is a beacon of hope and justice in the
world. We stand ready to defend the world against naked aggression.

If the president wants to apologize about something, he can apologize
about his thoughtless and inconsiderate treatment of British Prime
Minister Gordon Brown.

His boorish behavior during Mr. Brown’s recent visit to the United
States was uncalled for. He should also apologize for the tasteless
gifts given to Mr. Brown by the president and the first lady. Gifts
presented to heads of state in honor of their first visit to the
White House are an important part of good international relations.

Prime Minister Brown was gracious and thoughtful in presenting gifts
that symbolize hallmarks of diplomacy. The carved penholder from an
anti-slave ship, the commissioning paper from a rescued vessel and
the first edition biography of Winston Churchill all represent the
freedom, commitment and the leadership between our nations that paved
the way for the liberty of millions of world citizens.

Barack Hussein Obama gave Mr. Brown compact discs of American movies —
something you can get at Wal-Mart. If the president truly feels the
need to exercise the diplomatic tool of apology, perhaps he should
do it in private, and perhaps he should use it merely to apologize
for his own faux pas.

http://www.2theadvocate.com/opinion/43750

U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer commemorates Armenian Genocide

PanARMENIAN.Net

U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer commemorates Armenian Genocide
26.04.2009 01:20 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ U.S. Senator Barbara Boxer issued the following
statement to commemorate the 94th anniversary of the Armenian
Genocide:

`Mr. President, I rise today to recognize the 94th Anniversary of the
Armenian Genocide.

Ninety-four years ago today, the Ottoman Empire — now modern-day
Turkey — began the systematic destruction of the Armenian
people. Armenians were driven from their homes and villages, marched
to their deaths in the deserts of the Middle East, and slaughtered in
cold blood. Before it was over, approximately 1.5 million Armenians
lost their lives in the first genocide of the 20th century.

Recently, the Armenian and Turkish governments announced important
progress toward achieving the full normalization of relations between
their two countries. I support this effort, and am hopeful that this
process will lead the Turkish government to finally acknowledge the
irrefutable truth of the Armenian Genocide, and also to greater peace
and prosperity for the people of Armenia.

As President Barack Obama has said, `The Armenian Genocide is not an
allegation, a personal opinion, or a point of view, but rather a
widely documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical
evidence. The facts are undeniable.’ There is no need for further
study or debate, because we must never legitimize the views of those
who deny the very worst of crimes against humanity.

On this solemn anniversary, we remember those who were lost in the
Armenian Genocide, while honoring the survivors and their descendants
who have done so much to make America and the world a better place. I
am personally grateful that so many of those individuals have chosen
to call California home.

We also take pause to acknowledge that such crimes are continuing
today. There is perhaps no more fitting example than the genocide that
is raging in the Darfur region of Sudan.

Since 2002, the Sudanese government has attempted to exterminate the
African Muslim population of Darfur with horrific acts of
brutality. Villages have been burned to the ground, innocent women and
children slaughtered by helicopter gunships, and rape has been used as
a tool of genocide. What happened to the Armenians is genocide. What
is happening today in Darfur is genocide, even though the government
of Sudan denies this.

Genocide is only possible when people avert their eyes. Any effort to
deal with genocide — in the past, present or future — must begin
with the truth. By acknowledging the truth of the Armenian Genocide,
we can end the phony debates and strengthen our ability to stand up
against mass killing today.’

Vers une normalisation des relations entre la Turquie et l’Armenie

Les Echos, France
vendredi 24 avril 2009

Vers une normalisation des relations entre la Turquie et l’Arménie

La Turquie et l’Arménie ont jeté les fondements d’une normalisation en
s’entendant sur une « feuille de route », des efforts salués par la
communauté internationale. Des pourparlers avec la médiation de la
Suisse ont abouti à « des progrès concrets et à une compréhension
mutuelle », a annoncé tard mercredi le ministère turc des Affaires
étrangères.

Depuis l’indépendance en 1991 de l’Arménie, lors de l’éclatement de
l’URSS, Ankara et Istanbul n’entretiennent pas de rapports
diplomatiques en raison du contentieux sur le massacre de 800.000 à
1,5 million d’Arméniens en 1915-1917, largement qualifié de génocide
de par le monde, un terme récusé par Ankara. La Turquie avait aussi
fermé sa frontière avec l’Arménie en 1993 en soutien à l’Azerbaïdjan
turcophone, Bakou étant en conflit avec Erevan pour le contrôle de la
région du Haut-Karabakh, enclave peuplée d’Arméniens en territoire
azerbaïdjanais, dont Erevan a pris le contrôle en 1993 lors d’un
conflit ayant fait 30.000 morts. Bakou a appelé son allié turc à lier
ses efforts de réconciliation avec l’Arménie à un, pourtant
improbable, retrait arménien du Haut-Karabakh. L’accord d’hier fait
suite à une visite historique du président turc, Abdullah Gül, à
Erevan en septembre dernier, à l’occasion d’un match de football entre
les deux pays.

ANKARA: Time To Calm Down A Little

TIME TO CALM DOWN A LITTLE
by Ibrahim Karagul

Yeni Safak
April 16 2009
Turkey

There are attempts to create an extremely artificial and exaggerated
crisis – being shaped based on rumours rather than realities – between
Turkey and Azerbaijan; a crisis which is being exploited and which
will eventually cause serious damage to both countries. A disturbing
picture is being marketed through remarks such as "Turkey has turned
its back on Azerbaijan, it is collaborating with Armenia, it has sold
Baku, it has betrayed the Turkic world" and similarly nonsensical
ones, a picture that is instigating the Azeri public opinion against
Turkey and that has even a tendency to turn into an enmity against
the Justice and Development Party, AKP, on a domestic scale.

An amateurish crisis is being concocted. A disquieting goal that will
drag Azerbaijan to commit a historic mistake and that will force Turkey
to retreat from its position in the region can be detected. This is
a situation in which the secret agendas are mixed with realities and
natural reactions, in which narrow power schemes directed against
Turkey and Azerbaijan coexist with multinational scenarios involving
the Caucasus, and in which covert operations shape the infrastructure
for Turkish enmity -as was previously experience in Kyrgyzstan and
Kazakhstan.

Both Baku and Ankara have to be extremely careful. The public both in
Azerbaijan and Turkey should use their common sense. The perpetrators
of this scheme are exploiting the sensitivities, the weaknesses, and
the vulnerabilities of the two countries, the two capitals and the two
communities. Daily stances, policies, and tactics might mortgage the
future of especially Azerbaijan. A great wall can be erected along
Turkey’s Eastern Gate.

The strategy of severing the link between the East and the West, which
had been implemented in Caucasus for centuries, can be transported to
the present time. Why did Armenia occupy Azeri territories outside
Karabakh? Did it occupy those territories only to have a bargaining
chip? No, it occupied through Russian guidance. When Armenian troops
approached the Iranian border, the Iranian army immediately crossed
over to the Azeri side of the border to create a buffer zone. Here
the Russian-Iranian strategy was implemented. The same strategy has
been kept alive since the destruction of the Altinordu state. This
strategy never changed despite the changing administrations in both
Russia and Iran. This strategy is about dividing the East-West Turkic
world, the Sunni world. It succeeded today just as it has succeeded
in the past. The Caspian Basin, today’s Azerbaijan, has been the
venue for this scheme for centuries.

Therefore, especially Azeri territories outside Karabakh should
be liberated. This strategy is more important than Karabakh for
Russia and Iran. Consequently, negotiations on the withdrawal (of
Armenia) from these territories will seriously be sabotaged. It
might even lead to governmental problems in Baku. To what extent
is the Azerbaijani administration aware of this historic role? The
existence and power of states, countries, nations, and empires are
determined by such strategies and not by daily policies, rages, and
susceptibilities. Therefore, Baku should well know that the steps
it is about to take will determine the future of the country and its
people. Turkey should remember the essence of this border which was
more effective in its past as an empire.

The amelioration of Turkish-Armenian relations will not only be
beneficial for Armenia, but it will be beneficial for Turkey and
Azerbaijan as well. Naturally, Baku will and should use the cards
in its possession in a most effective way. Its territories are
under occupation, it has been extremely wronged, and international
public opinion does not seem to attach much importance to this
wrongdoing. Those who scheme over the resources of a country, which is
one of the most effective actors of the energy projects of the 21st
century and which has such a power, have been taking Azerbaijan’s
sensibilities very lightly. They have been unjust towards this
country. This reality should be known.

The issue, however, is not only the opening of the Armenian border. The
Azeri territories should be liberated as well. These two issues have
to be advanced simultaneously. Discussions on the genocide issue or the
activities of the Armenian lobby cannot be assessed alone just because
the United States so wishes. Turkey recognizes and will continue to
recognize this reality. Those who are exploiting the sensitive approach
of Ankara are making a new move in the geopolitical chess game of the
Caucasus by trying to channel Azerbaijan in the wrong direction. We are
fully aware of this move! The issue is far beyond Turkish-Armenian,
Turkish-Azerbaijani, Azerbaijani-Armenian relations; it is about the
consequences of the global power struggle being waged between Russia
and the West. When Russia loses Armenia, it will be totally distanced
from South Caucasus. Energy projects will be reshaped. A new stance
will be determined with regards to the future of the region.

Therefore, the Azeri public and even the administration are being
instigated by Russia and its allies. If this attempt to lead Azerbaijan
in the wrong direction succeeds, President Ilham Aliyev will have
committed a very grave mistake. He will have opened the door not
only to his own irrevocable servitude, but to that of his country and
nation. Those who have a look at the last century will realize this.

The trump card of "Russia against the West" is as valid as the
energy card. Aliyev should definitely use this card. He should
do so if the interests of his country necessitate it. He should,
however, not eliminate his country’s will. He should not let it
be held hostage. Currently, this is not the situation. There is
only a card and Aliyev is forcing it to be perceived. If, however,
he is inclined to use it, there might be trouble in Baku. Yes, even
this can happen. It is true that Armenia is very important for the
West. However, Azerbaijan is much more important and neither the
West nor Turkey can turn a blind eye to the reasons that will push
Azerbaijan to take such a decision.

For the time being, an experiment is being conducted over Azerbaijan
on the assumption that "Armenia will slide towards the Western
axis." Russia is playing its card. Even Iran is playing its card. Those
linked to circles making power calculations in Turkey are implementing
their own agenda. The confidence crisis between Turkey and Azerbaijan
should be surmounted immediately. So long as this is not surmounted,
everyone will continue to play their cards. This can, in the initial
stage, lead to instability in Azerbaijan.

Therefore, everyone should primarily try to calm down…

95 Word Statement Raises Important Concerns

95 WORD STATEMENT RAISES IMPORTANT CONCERNS

Panorama.am
19:47 23/04/2009

"Although this brief 95-word statement may accurately reflect an
opportunity for a genuinely historic breakthrough in relations between
Armenia and Turkey, the message of its text and the timing of its
release raise important concerns," Richard Giragosian, the director
of Armenian Center for National and International Studies (ACNIS)
issued a statement today commenting on the recent joint declaration
issued on 22 April by the Ministries of Foreign Affairs of the Republic
of Armenia, the Republic of Turkey and the Swiss Federal Department
of Foreign Affairs. According to Mr. Giragosian, by issuing such a
joint statement just prior to the annual commemoration of the Armenian
genocide, the Republic of Armenia has only bolstered, and seemingly
endorsed, Turkish attempts to pressure US President Barack Obama from
fulfilling his campaign promises to recognize the Armenian genocide
in his traditional April 24th statement. "Moreover, by agreeing to
not only issue a joint statement that clearly conforms to Turkish
attempts to distort and deny the historical veracity of the Armenian
genocide, but to also release such a statement just two days prior
to the traditional April 24th anniversary, the Armenian government
has demonstrated an appalling degree of short-sightedness and
irresponsibility. Such a strategic error raises further questions over
the sophistication, sincerity and seriousness of Armenian leadership,
particularly at such a vulnerable point in Armenian history when the
security and status of Nagorno-Karabagh remain unresolved and the
future course of democratic and economic reform in Armenia remains
in doubt," says the statement.

Armenian Premier Participates In Quake-Hit Families Count System Pre

ARMENIAN PREMIER PARTICIPATES IN QUAKE-HIT FAMILIES COUNT SYSTEM PRESENTATION

/ARKA/
April 21, 2009
YEREVAN

Armenia’s Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan participated today at a
presentation of a uniform system of counting quake-hit families
in Armenia.

"Last year, we announced about our decision to launch a uniform
information system to settle once and for all the issue of calculating
the families left homeless after the 1988 earthquake. Today we are
here to see how the system works," the premier said.

In his turn, RA Minister of Urban Development Vardan Vardanyan said
on June 12, 2008, the RA Government approved a concept of settling
the housing issue of the quake-hit families in Armenia.

According to the concept, the government is to grant houses to 6,900
families.

"Taking into account how urgent the issue is, the Central Bank of
Armenia and the RA Ministry of Urban Development combined their efforts
to cerate a uniform information system calculating the families left
roofless," Vardanyan added.

According to the minister, a single center will control the system
and the housing department of the RA Ministry of Urban Planning is
to deal with system management issues.

Vardandyan stressed the role of the system in ensuring transparency
of the housing program and management of housing facilities.

The system consists of four databases – individuals’ database,
addresses, the waiting list data and the current situation.

To launch the system, the RA Government allocated 15mln drams from
the budget to buy necessary equipment.

Gallipoli Diggers And The ‘Forgotten’ Holocaust

GALLIPOLI DIGGERS AND THE ‘FORGOTTEN’ HOLOCAUST

Eureka Street
?aeid=12475
April 20 2009
Australia

Anzac Day is a day history has immortalised. We know 25 April 1915
was when the ‘digger’ — one of Australia’s most identifiable and
beloved icons — dug the first trench into the rocky canyon at
Gallipoli that would soon be his grave. Albeit a military disaster,
many recognise the battle as a defining moment, one that forged
a nation.

That same day, the same place and the same battle also mark a nation’s
destruction. The battle at Gallipoli was the first stage in an effort
to systematically exterminate the Armenian race. Denied by Turkey,
and unrecognised by the United States, the Armenian Genocide —
dubbed ‘The Forgotten Holocaust’ — has slipped from the memory
of a world that has grown accustomed to atrocity.

But it happened. Everyone knows it did. It’s the reason 1.5 million
Armenians remain unaccounted for, and why their skulls and bones are
still embedded in the clay of the north-Syrian river banks. It’s the
reason modern Armenia’s borders lie far away from its historic home.

Just as two decades later Hitler deported Jews to concentration camps
in Poland, the Pashas — the Ottoman rulers — expelled the
Armenians from their homeland.

Due to nothing more than a fear of Armenians siding with the Russians,
and a desire to create a uniformly ethnic pan-Turkic state from
Anatolia to central Asia (hindered only by Armenia), the Turkish
nationalists embarked on the most horrific crime against humanity
the world had seen.

At the Gallipoli landing, the Turks conscripted hundreds of Armenians
in the momentous battle for nothing more than cannon fodder. As they
ran unarmed into our troops’ firing line, it was mass-execution.

The Ottoman government executed 600 of the Armenian educated-elite in
Istanbul on 24 April, the very day before the Gallipoli landing, and,
immediately afterwards pursued the rest in the Anatolian highlands.

>From 1915, tens of thousands of Armenian families crossed a desert
the locals called Der-el-Zor, but which the survivors would later
name the Desert of Death. They marched for weeks at a time, snaking
across the desert, not daring to fall behind in the heat. They faced
death by starvation or execution.

Survivors tell of seeing women taken from the rows of prisoners into
the fields, hearing screeches, gunfire and, after a time, seeing the
soldiers returning alone. Thousands were marched into underground
caves in what were the world’s first gas chambers.

Mamikon came from a village near the border of Azerbaijan. His parents
hid him from the government so he would not be conscripted to be killed
at the Dardanelles or forced to join a labour camp at far-away places
like Baghdad. Mamikon was a 16-year-old boy.

At his village, they were starved of water. In desperation his mother
would cut her fingers and feed her blood to her son so he would not
die of thirst.

Children like him from villages all across Armenia were hidden from the
government, often in the homes of sympathetic Turkish neighbours. And
they watched the Armenians of their villages rounded up and marched
off, never to return.

>From behind the dark windows of their refuge, they would hear soldiers
descend on defenceless Armenian women and elders, killing them with
guns or with scythes. After the last cry was stilled, only the lucky
ones were left there in a silent village.

‘Who now remembers the Armenians?’ joked Adolf Hitler as he embarked
on a holocaust of his own. While he was mistaken in thinking that his
genocide of European Jewry would be similarly overlooked, his words
ring sadly true. Turkey denies the claims of an Armenian genocide
and manipulates history to conceal anything that suggests otherwise.

In fact, the Turkish government does not even acknowledge that
Armenians ever lived in those areas from which they were deported and
killed: not even by the banks of the vast and glimmering Lake Van,
the ancient capital where Armenian nationality was forged among the
Nairi tribes over 2000 years ago; or on the white-capped Mount Ararat
that soars into the clouds above it, the very symbol of Armenia,
the centrepiece of its national flag.

In 2007, tens of thousands of Armenians and Turks gathered in Istanbul
to commemorate the life of Hrant Dink, a decorated writer who demanded
recognition of this genocide and spent his life’s work striving to
bridge the rift between the two nations.

‘Hepimiz Hrant’iz! Hepimiz Ermeni’yiz!’ read the banners that
stretched across the wide streets of Istanbul on 19 January: ‘We are
all Armenian. We are all Hrant Dink.’

The last to leave the office building of the local Armenian newspaper,
The Agos, Dink was confronted by two assassins who appeared from
the shadows. They were young boys, ultra-nationalists. Pulling their
pistols, they fired two bullets to his head and two to his chest.

He was not starved, he was not gassed, his wife and daughters were not
raped and his children were not burned alive, but, in the words of the
decorated British journalist, Robert Fisk, Dink was the 1,500,001st
victim of the genocide. ‘At least the world will not forget him
so easily.’

His death stands as an example of the continuing hatred and intolerance
that initially wrought this crime against humanity over 90 years ago.

Nicholas Toscano is a freelance writer and a student of Classics
and Creative Writing at Melbourne University. He has a Diploma in
Modern Languages.

http://www.eurekastreet.com.au/article.aspx

Arkin, Hecht, Buckley, Masur To Star In Ayvazian’S Make Me At Atlant

ARKIN, HECHT, BUCKLEY, MASUR TO STAR IN AYVAZIAN’S MAKE ME AT ATLANTIC STAGE 2
Kenneth Jones

Playbill.com
rticle/128448.html
April 20 2009

Atlantic Theater Company’s world-premiere production of Leslie
Ayvazian’s relationships play, Make Me, will feature Anthony Arkin,
Candy Buckley, Jessica Hecht, J.R. Horne, Richard Masur and Ellen
Parker and will run May 20-June 14.

The production, directed by Atlantic associate artistic director
Christian Parker, will open Off-Broadway May 31 at Atlantic Stage 2
at 330 West 16th Street.

According to ATC, "In Make Me, six pent-up Americans in three different
relationships have reached the end of their ropes. In this naughty
comic fugue, Leslie Ayvazian explores what happens when the rules
are changed just at the moment when people think they are perfectly
comfortable and the lengths to which some will go to be seen, heard
and obeyed."

With this play, Ayvazian makes her Atlantic Theater Company debut. Her
acclaimed Off-Broadway play, Nine Armenians, won the John Gassner
Outer Critics Award, The Susan Smith Blackburn Prize and the Kennedy
Center’s Roger L. Stevens Award. Her film credits include Showtime’s
"Every Three Minutes" starring Olympia Dukakis.

Parker most recently staged the New York premiere of Tina Howe’s play
Birth And After Birth. Other Atlantic credits include Jeff Whitty’s
The Hiding Place and 10X20, a festival of newly commissioned ten-minute
plays by writers previously produced at Atlantic for which he directed
plays by Tina Howe, Keith Reddin and Rolin Jones.

Make Me will feature scenic design by Anna Louizos, costume design
by Theresa Squire, lighting design by Josh Bradford and sound design
by Jill BC DuBoff.

Arkin appeared in Broadway’s I’m Not Rappaport and Off-Broadway’s
The Waverly Gallery; Buckley appeared in Broadway’s After the
Fall, Thoroughly Modern Millie, Cabaret and Ring Round the Moon and
Off-Broadway’s Shockheaded Peter, Valhalla and Communicating Doors;
Hecht most recently appeared in Julius Caesar on Broadway and in
Howard Katz; Horne returns to Atlantic following starring in the
world premiere of Ethan Coen’s Almost an Evening at Atlantic Stage 2
and The Theatres at 45 Bleecker Street; Masur appeared in Broadway’s
Democracy and The Changing Room and Off-Broadway’s Dust, A Feminine
Ending, The Ruby Sunrise and Sarah, Sarah; and Parker’s New York
City work includes House/Garden, Plenty, Entertaining Mr. Sloane,
Fen, The Heidi Chronicles and more.

Ayvazian’s other plays include High Dive, her one-woman show about
turning 50; Rosemary and I, which was named a Susan Smith Blackburn
Prize finalist; Lovely Day, which premiered at City Theatre in
Pittsburgh; Footlights, a one-woman show about shoes; and one-act
plays Practice; Hi There, Mr. Machine; Twenty Four Years; Deaf Day
and Plan Day.

Make Me received workshop productions by the Cape Cod Theatre Festival
and the Adirondack Theatre Festival, both directed by Martha Banta.

Make Me will play Tuesday through Saturday at 7:30 PM and Saturday
and Sunday matinees at 2:30 PM. All tickets are $45 and are
available by calling Ticket Central at (212) 279-4200 or by visiting

The world premiere production of Academy Award winner Ethan Coen’s new
triptych of one-act comedies, Offices, directed by Atlantic artistic
director Neil Pepe, is in previews at Atlantic’s mainstage, the Linda
Gross Theater (336 W. 20th Street), for a May 7 opening.

http://www.playbill.com/news/a
www.ticketcentral.com.

Obituary: Isabelle ‘Zabel’ Shiranian Varadian, 83

OBITUARY: ISABELLE ‘ZABEL’ SHIRANIAN VARADIAN, 83

The Armenian Weekly
-isabelle-%e2%80%98zabel%e2%80%99-shiranian-varadi an-83/
April 20, 2009

Isabelle Shiranian was born on Nov. 14, 1925 in New York City, the
daughter of Abraham and Vartig Shiranian.

She excelled academically at Central High School and was a member of
the National Honor Society. She was a proud member of the Providence
"Vartanian" AYF Chapter and participated in the Sts. Vartanantz Church
Choir and Ladies Guild for many years.

To support her family after her father’s death, Zabel worked for a
jewelry manufacturer during her high school years. After graduation,
she became an executive secretary for the U.S. Life Insurance Company.

During WWII, the female members of the Providence AYF wrote to the
Armenian soldiers who were in the battlefield. They drew names out
of a hat and Zabel pulled the name of Melkon (Mal) Varadian. He
was stationed in North Africa with General Patton’s 7th Army. When
Melkon returned to the states, they met in person at an AYF meeting
and their 61-year journey together began; two years later, Melkon
and Zabel were married and shortly after started a family.

As Zabel often said, they were blessed with three children, Michael,
Sandra, and Malcolm and their spouses Armenie, Megerdich, and Kristen;
seven grandchildren, Nick, Siran, Antranig, Armen, Melkon, Sarah,
and Ani; and three great-grandchildren, Emily, Nicholas, and Carl. All
are past or current members of the Providence AYF. Zabel also enjoyed
the constant company of her grand puppy Mollie.

In 1956, Mal and Zabel purchased the Public Street Market in South
Providence. Together, they operated the market for 40 years until
their retirement.

Many lifelong relationships developed with employees. Notably, Arthur
"Jake" Butler came on board as a young man and devoted many years to
Zabel and Mal in the operation of the store. Jake, his wife Sandy,
and their family are cherished friends to this day.

During their years at the market, the couple hired and mentored
countless family members and neighborhood youth. It was the first
source of employment to dozens of young men who grew to be cherished
friends to the Varadians, and successful members of the Armenian
American community in Rhode Island.

Zabel and Mal held court at Public Street Market and offered guidance
in the business, athletic, and personal lives of many. Their service
and generosity had a positive impact on countless individuals and
families, and made a lasting impression on the community.

Family was a very important part of Zabel’s life. Having lost her
father at an early age, she gave constant attention to her mother and
uncle, Sarkis Keri Marderosian, who both lived near the market. She
was very proud and fond of her many nephews, nieces, cousins, and other
extended family members-she spoke of them often with affection-and was
a loving sister to brothers Dickran and Charlie (deceased) Shiranian.

Zabel kept people happy with her kind demeanor and beautiful smile,
despite her many illnesses and surgeries. She took great joy in
the accomplishments of her children, grandchildren, and great
grandchildren. She relished their celebrations and graduations.

Zabel passed away on Feb. 12, 2009. She will be remembered for her
wonderful sense of humor. She laughed heartily when, at one event,
she and Mal were accidentally left behind in an empty school parking
lot. The family caravan drove off, everyone thinking the others had
Mal and Zabel with them!

www.hairenik.com/weekly/2009/04/20/obituary