Artsakh News Digest #10

ARTSAKH NEWS DIGEST
September 6, 2007 (# 10)

POLITICS

Artsakh celebrated the 16th anniversary of independence. On September 2,
1991, local representative bodies reflecting the will of their electorate
proclaimed the establishment of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic, Artsakh.
Azerbaijan responded with political blackmail, economic blockade and
full-scale military aggression. Through determination and sacrifice, the
people of Artsakh prevailed in defending their right to live in freedom
under the government of their own choosing. "We won on the battlefield,
successfully dealt with the post-conflict syndrome, and established a
functioning state. Today, nobody can ignore the Nagorno Karabakh Republic,"
said NKR President Arkady Ghoukasian.

Steven Pound, Member of the British House of Commons, said there is a
powerful anti-Armenian campaign in the European Parliament by pro-Azeri
delegates to misrepresent Karabakh’s history. "My visits to Gandzasar
Monastery
(<http://www.armeniapedia.o rg/index.php?title=Gandzasar_Monastery>) and
other historical sites in Nagorno-Karabakh are the best evidence that
Armenians have been living there at least for a millennium. I am now armed
with facts and can prove this," he said. While in Artsakh, Pound also met
with NKR leadership and representatives of international NGOs.

BUSINESS & ECONOMY

Armenia and the Armenian Diaspora continue their critical contribution to
the development of Artsakh’s economy, which has grown at a 15% annual rate
for the past five years. A number of major media outlets (including
Washington Post and Boston Globe) reprinted a Reuters article on NKR economy
and the role of Armenia and the Diaspora. (Full story at:
?type=worldnews&storyID=2007-08-26T233820Z_01_ L01783433_RTRUKOC_0_US-KARABAKH-DIASPORA.xml&p ageNumber=0&imageid=&cap=&sz=13&WT ModLoc=NewsArt-C1-ArticlePage3)

A Chinese restaurant run by three cooks from China (!) now operates in
Artsakh’s village of Vank as part of a larger plan to develop the area and
attract foreign tourists. Vank is home to the Gandzasar Monastery, a
spiritual center and a "jewel" of medieval Armenian architecture.
(Read "A Taste of China In Karabakh" at:
<;s=f&o=3 38240&apc_state=henh>)

SOCIETY

Artsakh’s soccer team won the gold at the Forth Pan-Armenian Olympic Games
(< x.html>). Over 100 athletes from
different regions of Artsakh successfully competed in chess, volleyball,
basketball, ping-pong, tennis, badminton, track and field, and soccer,
bringing home 10 medals.

***
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<mailto:[email protected]?subject=Commen ts>. Thanks!

***
ARTSAKH NEWS DIGEST is a publication of the NKR Office.
The Office of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic in the United States is based in
Washington, DC and works with the U.S. government, academia and the public
representing the official policies and interests of the Nagorno Karabakh
Republic, Artsakh. The NKR Office is registered with the U.S. Government
under the Foreign Agent Registration Act. Additional information is
available at the Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.

Office of the Nagorno Karabakh Republic in the United States
1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600, Washington, DC 20036
Tel: (202) 223-4330 Fax: (202) 315-3339
Email: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>
Web: <;

http://today.reuters.com/news/articlenews.aspx
http://www.iwpr.net/?p=crs&amp
http://www.panarmeniangames.am/eng/inde
http://www.nkrusa.org&gt
www.nkrusa.org

Azeri Green Party Leader: Baku Should End The Blockade Of Armenia

AZERI GREEN PARTY LEADER: BAKU SHOULD END THE BLOCKADE OF ARMENIA

armradio.am
03.09.2007 17:21

Azerbaijan must open borders with Armenia and establish economic and
diplomatic ties with it, believes Mais Gyulaliyev, the leader of the
Green Party of Azerbaijan.

According to him, the party conducted a geopolitical survey in
the region and grounding on it prepared a package of proposals to
settle the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The package mostly considers
economic, social and political ways of the conflict settlement. The
document provides analysis of the Azerbaijani economy, the country’s
oil revenues. Besides, the package includes results of analysis of
positions and interests of international institutions regarding the
Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.

The Green Party leader believes that a military way of the conflict
settlement is unreal and rules out this scenario. According to him,
this could gain profit only to the Azerbaijani opposition seeking
change of power. "The opposition comprehends that in the near future
it will not be able to come to power through elections. Forces
wanting ousting of the government are doing their utmost to make
the government resort to the forceful way and using the situation
to achieve replacement of the government. If there is a war,
international institutions will spare no effort to replace the
government, even NATO troops will immediately strike Azerbaijan,"
the Greens leader says. According to him, the Karabakh issue must
be settled only in the political way, which envisages Azerbaijan
fulfilling all its international obligations. "In our package, we
disclosed the obligations to the Azerbaijani public, opposition, NGOs
and international institutions. After fulfilling those obligations and
improving economy, Azerbaijan must take Armenia out of the economic
blockade and make it economically dependent from it," Mais Gyulaliyev
is quoted as saying by Trend.

Hovannisian Defends Karabakh Bill, Downplays Election Defeat

HOVANNISIAN DEFENDS KARABAKH BILL, DOWNPLAYS ELECTION DEFEAT
By Anna Israelian, Ruzanna Khachatrian and Atom Markarian

Radio Liberty, Czech Rep.
Sept 3 2007

Opposition leader Raffi Hovannisian defended over the weekend his calls
for Armenia to formally recognize the self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh
Republic (NKR) as an independent state, denying any ulterior motives
behind them. He also put a brave face on his defeat in a repeat
election to the Armenian parliament.

In an extensive interview with RFE/RL, Hovannisian insisted that
his controversial draft bill on the NKR’s recognition "would in no
way instigate another war" with Azerbaijan. "Nor is it a means of
solving personal or partisan issues," he said. "On the contrary,
it aims to put our problems on the table, before the people."

The bill in question was rejected last week by all parliament factions
except Hovannisian’s Zharangutyun (Heritage) party. Leaders of the
pro-government majority in the National Assembly said that the NKR
has long been effectively recognized by Armenia and that the bill’s
passage would only complicate international efforts to settle the
Karabakh conflict. Some of them accused the U.S.-born politician of
trying to score political points with the initiative.

Hovannisian, who had served as Armenia’s foreign minister in 1992,
rejected the claims, suggesting that they were prompted by "personal
jealousy." He also chided the Armenian press for its overwhelmingly
negative reaction to his bill.

"I simply presented something which has long required a public
discussion," he said. "In my capacity as the first foreign minister
of the Republic of Armenia, I myself placed, together with [then]
President Levon Ter-Petrosian the issue of Karabakh’s international
recognition at the heart of our first year of diplomacy," he added.

In its official reaction to the bill, the Armenian government said
on Friday that the NKR’s unilateral recognition by Yerevan would be
premature. "That must come at a time when it can be maximally effective
and can help achieve a lasting resolution. That time has not yet come,"
Foreign Ministry spokesman Vladimir Karapetian said in a statement.

Speaking to RFE/RL, Hovannisian also addressed his poor performance in
the August 26 repeat parliamentary election that was won a candidate
of the governing Republican Party. Official election results gave
him only 3.4 percent of the vote.

Hovannisian refused to concede defeat, calling the vote "fundamentally
unfree and unfair." Still, he chose to congratulate the election
winner. In addition, Zharangutyun’s representative to the Central
Election Commission endorsed its official results.

The Zharangutyun leader denied on Monday any ambiguity in his party’s
stance and claimed that the outcome of the race was decided by vote
buying and other irregularities. "It is wrong to have an illusion that
a small party could have documented and exposed all that, especially
considering the fact those vote irregularities occurred before voting
day," he said.

"The fact that we got more than votes without bribes is of great value
to me because our goal in those elections was to present a political
alternative," he said.

What Relations Armenia Establishes With Neighbors

WHAT RELATIONS ARMENIA ESTABLISHES WITH NEIGHBORS

Hayots Ashkharh Daily News, Armenia
Aug 30 2007

Though the import of Turkish goods to Armenia continues this year
slackening of pace is noticed. As compared to the 47% increase of
the import of Turkish goods to Armenia during the first six months of
the previous year, in the period of this year it has been increased
only by 15%. In terms of money 45,5 million dollars’ Turkish goods
have been imported to Armenian market. By the way Turkish goods are
imported to Armenia not only from Turkey but other countries as well –
43,5 million dollars’ goods have only been imported from Turkey.

It is a significantly high index in Armenia’s import structure.

AGBU YP in London Hold Inaugural Conference on Armenians in Europe

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Friday, August 31, 2007

AGBU Young Professionals in London Hold Inaugural Conference on
Armenians in Europe

The Armenian community of London has always played a larger role than
their numbers suggest in the European Armenian community and, on March
22, 2007, AGBU Young Professionals of London (YP London) proved their
dedication to that leadership role by holding a special conference for
college academics and politicians on the topic of Armenians and the
European Union.

Under the leadership of Inside Europe Director Nicolas Tavitian and
AGBU YP London Chairwoman Armine Afrikian, the conference on Armenians
in Europe took place under the auspices of the shared project on the
Armenian Diaspora and Europe coordinated by Inside Europe (Brussels),
"Nouvelles d’Armenie" magazine (France), and "Orer" publication (Czech
Republic).

The speakers at the conference reviewed European politics that affect
Armenians, while highlighting the relationship between the EU and
Armenia, and addressed the question of Turkey’s EU membership bid.

Suzan Pattie, Director of the London Armenian Institute and Professor
at the University College London, opened the conference with a
presentation on the European Diaspora. Pattie claimed that the
diasporas play a leading role in the creation of a European identity
and underlined the originality and the importance of the Armenian
network across the European continent, making the Armenian model
"European" in a certain fashion.

Europe in Armenia

Armine Ishkhanian, Director of Conferences at the London School of
Economics (LSE), emphasized the support role that different European
institutions play in Armenia in the reform process, which ultimately
leads towards the establishment of a civil society.

The Member of European Parliament for London, Charles Tannock,
reminded the audience that Armenia, which is deeply impacted by these
political decisions, was at first excluded. It was the European
Parliament which later succeeded in including it. Tannock believes
that Armenia has an important future, being "a country closer to what
Europe represents than most of our other neighbors."

The Ambassador of Armenia to the United Kingdom, Dr. Vahe Gabrielyan,
also emphasized the importance of the contribution of the European
Union towards reforms in Armenia. Eventually, according to Gabrielyan,
it is the identification of Armenian citizens with Europe that serves
as the impetus for reforms and the foundation for relations between
Armenia and the EU.

Turkey in Europe

Journalist Jonathan Fryer, Chairman of the Liberal International
British Group, spoke about his great familiarity with Armenia and its
diaspora, and also mentioned his close friendship with assassinated
editor Hrant Dink. Fryer spoke about his support for Turkey’s
application to join the EU, commenting that the country still needs to
reform before reaching European standards, including the official
acknowledgement of the Armenian Genocide. He called on Armenians to
make a pledge to Europe: "As Armenians, you have a pluralistic
identity. You are Armenians, or British, French, Belgians, but you are
also Europeans. Sometimes the diasporas are so much engrossed in their
problems that they forget to subscribe to the European context in
which they live."

While Fryer opened the debate on Turkey, Ara Sarafian continued the
discussion. A historian and editor, he argued for a direct accord with
Turkey, "Turkey is a country in transition, and it is in our interest
to be in accord with it, in favor of democratization."

Hratch Koundardjian, political consultant and parliamentary advisor,
Aegis Trust, stated that utmost importance should be given to European
institutions, which, independent of their power of decision, are
becoming one of the meeting points of international politics. He
insisted that the EU be given more importance by Armenians and invited
each one of the participants at the conference to start making contact
with their elected European representatives. The AEGIS foundation, he
explained, had made efforts to galvanize the Western governments in
favor of the prevention of contemporary genocides. It was the major
organizer of the Rwandan Genocide Exhibit at the United Nations in New
York, which was cancelled at the request of Turkey due to a sentence
mentioning the Armenian Genocide.

Several students and European experts on regional and international
relations initiated the discussions that followed the presentations.

This conference was the first in a series that is being continued in
several European capitals, to follow up on the debate over various
European political facets of interest to the Armenians. The second was
held on May 26, 2007 in Valence, France during a weekend of activities
organized by AGBU. The third took place in Sofia, Bulgaria on June 23,
2007. More conferences will take place in various European locations
in the coming months.

Established in 2006, AGBU YP London is dedicated to preserving and
promoting the Armenian heritage and identity through educational,
cultural, and humanitarian programs. For more information on YP
London, please email [email protected].

For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please
visit

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org.

August 30 – International Day Of The Disappeared

AUGUST 30 – INTERNATIONAL DAY OF THE DISAPPEARED

arminfo
2007-08-30 10:43:00

The International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is marking the
International Day of the Disappeared on August 30.

ICRC’s statement, received by ArmInfo, contains a call to the
international community to renew its commitment to addressing the
plight of missing persons and their families. In addition, the ICRC is
unveiling a report entitled Missing Persons – A Hidden Tragedy, which
calls attention to the tragic predicament – all too often ignored –
of people unaccounted for in connection with armed conflict and other
situations of violence, and of their families.

"Ever since wars have been fought, people have gone missing,"
said Pierre Krahenbuhl, the ICRC’s director of operations, while
presenting the report at the organization’s Geneva headquarters. All
missing persons have different, often tragic, stories, whether they
are captured, abducted or arrested civilians; prisoners who die in
custody or are held in secret locations; victims of mass executions
hastily buried in unmarked graves; men, women and children fleeing
conflict in mass displacements, separated from their loved ones for
years on end; soldiers killed whose remains are improperly disposed
of, or whose bodies are left unidentified on the battlefield.

"Not enough is being done," according to Krahenbuhl. "It is imperative
to deal with this tragedy and help the tens of thousands of families
of missing persons discover what happened to their loved ones. Not
knowing whether a loved one is dead or alive causes anxiety,
anger and a deep sense of injustice, and makes it impossible for
relatives to mourn and ultimately reach a sense of closure." The
ICRC report includes personal accounts and narratives conveying the
agony and great sense of loss that bereaved families endure over
many years. "Even if there’s nothing but a skeleton, I don’t care –
I just want my son back," said Guliko Ekizashvili, a Georgian woman
whose son is still missing 14 years after he disappeared during the
armed conflict between Georgia and the breakaway region of Abkhazia.

Krahenbuhl emphasized that "there are concrete measures that States
and others can take to prevent such a tragedy from occurring in the
first place.

Often, what is lacking is the political will to tackle the
problem." He also welcomed the adoption in December 2006 of the
International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from
Enforced Disappearance, a legally binding document that prohibits
enforced disappearance. "The ICRC urges States to sign, ratify and
implement this important treaty as soon as possible," he declared.

Prime Minister Goes To See Renovation Pace Of Karen Demirchian Compl

PRIME MINISTER GOES TO SEE RENOVATION PACE OF KAREN DEMIRCHIAN COMPLEX

ARMENPRESS
Aug 30 2007

YEREVAN, AUGUST 30, ARMENPRESS: Prime minister Serzh Sarkisian
and Murad Muradian, the ethnic Armenian owner of the Moscow-based
construction group BAMO, went to see today how the Karen Demirchian
Sport and Cultural Complex, one of Yerevan’s largest and most imposing
buildings, is being remodeled into a modern facility.

The Sport and Cultural Complex, which has two large concert halls,
was built at Karen Demirchian’s initiative (when he was the ruler of
Communist Armenia) in 1983 and became one of the most modern Soviet
facilities of its kind. It has since mainly hosted concerts by Armenian
and foreign singers.

Murad Muradian told reporters today that his company has already spent
some $16-$18 millions on the purchase and ongoing reconstruction of
the complex and will spend $6-$8 million more to accomplish the work.

He said the building has been connected to the natural gas pipeline
and a new boiling house furnished with state-of-the-art equipment
has been built for it.

The company has also replaced 1,200 doors and windows.

The company has hired specialists from Russian Saint Petersburg to
build a modern skating rink. Murad Muradian said though workers
here receive monthly $500-600, there is a big demand for skilled
labor force.

BAMO has won the right to build three sporting facilities in Russian
Sochi that will host 2014 Winter Olympic Games.

The Armenian Weekly; August 25, 2007; Community

The Armenian Weekly On-Line
80 Bigelow Avenue
Watertown MA 02472 USA
(617) 926-3974
[email protected]
menianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 73, No. 34; August 25, 2007

Community:

1. CYSCA Visiting Museum Managers Present at ALMA
By Andy Turpin

2. ALMA Intern Shines with Exhibit on Armenian Wine: ‘Genatsed!’

3. ‘Big Ragu’ Eddie Mekka Highlights North End’s Sicilian Fisherman’s Feast

4. Merrimack Valley ANC Hosts Reception
By Tom Vartabedian

5. The Things We Did This Summer We’ll Remember All Winter Long (Part II)
By Betty Apigian-Kessel

6. Wonder Woman of the ANCA-ER
Executive Director Karine Birazian Talks about Being a Professional Armenian
Activist
By Andy Turpin

***

1. CYSCA Visiting Museum Managers Present at ALMA
By Andy Turpin

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-On August 19, the Armenian Library and Museum of
America (ALMA) hosted a presentation by the Cambridge Yerevan Sister City
Association’s (CYSCA) "Community Connections" visiting professional exchange
group: museum mangers representing 10 diverse museums from Armenia.

The presentation immediately followed the opening reception for ALMA’s new
"Genatsed!" exhibit on the history of Armenian wine.

CSYCA vice president and program director Jack Medzorian gave introductions,
stating, "We are very proud to present our 15th group [in the exchange
program’s history]. This was a joint forum of professionals whose coming
together was made possible by a USAID grant."

He explained, "This group has been very intensely involved in visiting
museums. Their job is education. They’re in charge of educating people on
the rich culture of Armenia. They take that very seriously."

Medzorian pragmatically described the goals the group sought to complete
before they returned home from the Cambridge area on Aug. 24. "The name of
this program is ‘Community Connections’ and that’s what it’s all about," he
said. "We have to develop action plans for these fine people, so they can
implement in Armenia what they’ve learned here."

Program consultant and lecturer for the CYSCA group Tigran Aloyan from
Harvard University’s Kennedy School of Government provided the English
translation to the audience, which heard of the museums’ missions and
histories.

Lilik Hakobyan, director of the Yegishe Charents House Museum, said, "As you
know, Charents died in the purges of the Stalin era. Everything in his rooms
is as it was in the Charents era. The museum has around 18,000 pieces,
including Charents’ personal handwritings and possessions when he was living
there."

She described the museum’s particular sentimental importance to Armenians,
saying, "There are many unpublished works by Charents being found
continuously today that were hidden for years. This is a place where many
Armenians like to come to visit to get acquainted with Charents’ work."

Vera Kalchurina, deputy director and chief curator of Yerevan’s Russian Art
Museum, spoke of the achievements of her museum, stating, "We have 300
pieces, but that does not mean we are not interesting. This is a very unique
museum for our part of the Caucasus because we have some very famous pieces
of Russian art."

She continued, "We are very proud to have a museum of this kind in Armenia.
It is wonderful for young artists to be able to see pieces like Roethko’s
without leaving Armenia. We see our museum as a connecting point between
Russian and Armenian art."

Kamo Sahakyan, director of the Yeghegnadzor Geological Museum in Vayots
Dzor, said that "two million astronomers have come as pilgrims to our
museum," to research the archival notes and journals of Armenia’s past
astronomers.

Vahag Minasyan, director of the State Museum of Nature of Armenia, spoke
proudly of his intuition. "It was created five years ago and belongs to the
Ministry of Natural Resources," he said. "Of course, we have tourists, but
most of our visitors are school children. Our museum presents Armenian
wildlife, minerals and everything related to nature," he added.

Aloyan translated the unanimous feeling of the group that the most valuable
asset of their Cambridge visit was "learning a lot about how funds are
preserved here. We still have this lack of culture [in the Republic] of
giving money to cultural institutions that need development."

Though speaking to the tradition of extreme professional zeal that exists
among Armenian museum workers, he explained, "During the ‘Time of Troubles’
[1991-1997], museum workers preserved funds and materials at their own
expense."

During the audience question and answer period, ALMA Board member Haig Der
Manuelian said he was concerned that few plaques on Armenian monuments had
English translations.

He lambasted, "Armenia has a beautiful rich culture. The information on
these treasures shouldn’t be hidden as if you don’t want the tourists to
know about them. It needs to be recognized that English is the international
language of travel."

Following the question and answer session, Sahakyan pleased the crowd with
his impressive operatic voice talents, a rarity among astronomers.
————————————- ————————————————

ALMA Intern Shines with Exhibit on Armenian Wine: ‘Genatsed!’

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-On Aug.19, the Armenian Library and Museum of
America (ALMA) presented its opening reception for a new panel exhibit
called "Genatsed!: Vine and Wine in the Armenian Culture." The exhibit runs
through Jan. 31, 2008, and examines Armenian viticulture history, wine
production and the grape as an artistic motif from antiquity to the present
in a variety of media, including illuminated manuscripts, architecture,
painting, metal works and textiles.

The over 3,000-year history of grape cultivation in and around Armenia has
greatly influenced the subject matter of Armenian artists and craftsmen.

Sarita Olson, an intern at ALMA, curated the exhibit. An art history and
cultural anthropology student at Boston University (BU), Olson has been
working at ALMA for about two years. She’s also pursuing a minor in French,
which, she explains, helped in her preparation for the exhibit, as many of
the sources used were written in French.

Olson has also been assisting the committee working on ALMA’s upcoming
traveling exhibit, "Forgotten Heroes: The Armenian Legion in World War I."

In the coming months, she will also utilize her French language skills when
she travels to Niger on a BU study abroad program, where she’ll work at the
National Museum (Musee National du Niger) in the capital Niamey.

"The program will have me working with very specific craftsmen, such as
silversmiths or wood workers," she said. "The program is very specific to my
majors and focus in anthropology on West Africa."

Talking about "Genatsed!" Olson said, "It was my first solo exhibition, so
it was kind of a big deal. The hardest part was making the panels."

The ALMA staff, she went on, "has really been so helpful. I couldn’t have
done it without them. This exhibit is an opportunity I probably wouldn’t
have had at another museum."

For more information on ALMA or the "Genatsed" exhibit, visit ALMA’s
website,
——————————— ————————————————– ———-

3. ‘Big Ragu’ Eddie Mekka Highlights North End’s Sicilian Fisherman’s Feast

BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.)-On Aug. 17, Edward Mekjian, otherwise known as Eddie
Mekka from his role as Carmine Ragusa on the hit ABC-TV sitcom "Laverne &
Shirley," performed at the Sorrento Cheese Fisherman’s Feast in Boston’s
North End.

The feast is the oldest continuous Italian festival in Boston. Since 1910,
it has celebrated the devotion of immigrant Sicilian fishermen to the
"Madonna del Soccorso di Sciacca" (Our Lady of Help). The feast took place
Aug. 16-19 and featured Italian-American performers, as well as the
traditional procession of the Madonna and the flight of the Angel.

Mekka spoke to the Weekly about his career and the North End performance
saying, "I’m Armenian, but I got a little Italian in me and it comes
through. In my acting, the Italian community has been very good to me and a
lot of my best roles have been Italians, like Carmine."

He joked, "I’m part Italian, part Armenian. I always say, ‘I’ll make ya a
rug you can’t refuse.’"

Speaking about the show, Mekka said, "I’m the headliner. I have an
eight-piece band and I do all the Tony Bennett, Dean Martin, Louis Prima
stuff. After the show, I’m going up to Maine to do ‘Hairspray.’"

He recounted vividly how he got into acting in the 1970s. "I went to the
Boston Conservatory. While I was out there, there was this dinner theater in
Warwick, R.I.," he said.

"I went to a show of ‘Hello Dolly’ and immediately it clicked and I said to
the guy at the theater, ‘How do I get into this?’ The guy told me, ‘You
gotta be in the union.’ I said, ‘How do you get into the union?’ He says,
"You gotta be in a show.’ I say, ‘How does anybody ever get into this?’"

"But I came back with my picture and a couple weeks later someone got sick
and I got my first acting job," Mekka explained. "I quit school and I went
to New York with all the other actors. I drove a taxi and sold candy outside
Radio City Music Hall. Eventually I went out to L.A., and boom, in three
days I got ‘Laverne and Shirley.’ Pretty good, huh?"

"I have to say," said Mekka, "I’m a really good cook. I make dolma with meat
and red sauce and I incorporate flavors from both Italian and Armenian food.
My father [who is Armenian] hates it. My mother [who is Italian] loves it."
—————————————- ————————————————– ———

4. Merrimack Valley ANC Hosts Reception
By Tom Vartabedian

CHELMSFORD, Mass. (A.W.)-The ANCA continues to blaze new trails under
Kenneth Hachigian, the national chairman, and Karine Birazian, the
newly-appointed executive director of the Eastern Region.

On Aug. 18, both made their second stop to Merrimack Valley following a
visit to Providence the night before. Prior to that, there were visits to
other states along the Eastern seaboard to Florida, throughout the
Mid-Atlantic region and Mid-West.

The mission is two-fold: to incite greater interest in upcoming procedures
through a well-defined grassroots agenda and to augment its capital flow.

At the rallying core stands the much-anticipated passage of a genocide bill
in Congress that continues to beckon a truly "Hye Octane" Armenian lobby.

With 226 co-sponsors aboard for the genocide resolution, progress has become
inevitable, despite strong resistance from the Turkish lobby.

"It’s been 25 years since we’ve had that number," said Hachigian. "That’s a
testament to all involved and the work we’re doing, especially in places
like Merrimack Valley and Providence."

Hachigian pointed to the many advances made since he took office six years
ago, calling it "an ongoing learning experience." He lauded his staff and
those like Birazian for working tirelessly toward the cause.

It all points to a highly respected caucus in Washington, D.C., which has
been made very well aware of Armenian issues both here and abroad.

"We have a Congressional caucus of 160 members," revealed Hachigian. "That’s
remarkable, considering a population of 1.5 million Armenians in this
country, and the fact that there is only one part-Armenian constituent. We’re
regarded as one of the strongest advocacy levels. Almost all of it is
precipitated on local levels with numerous ANC groups."

With Montana aboard, 42 states recognize the Armenian genocide. Although the
work remains insurmountable here, just as much effort is exerted across in
resurrecting the homeland.

In the past 16 years-since Armenia’s independence-$1.7 billion in foreign
aid has been appropriated to the country. Irrigation fields are being built
along with a stable economy that has grown by 12 percent per year since
2000.

"If Armenia cannot be prosperous, people will leave and we won’t have a
country," said Hachigian. "We’re moving in the right direction and the
United States remains an important catalyst."

The reception was hosted by Armen and Sossy Jeknavorian, two active members
of the ARF and ARS community. They were joined by ANC co-chairmen Pearl
Bargamian-Teague and Aram Jeknavorian.

Teague welcomed the 25 guests and spoke of the Congressional battle in the
Fifth Essex District to fill the seat vacated by Martin T. Meehan, who left
to become chancellor of UMass-Lowell.

A number of quality candidates are vying for the seat and are in touch with
the Armenian community.

Birazian put a nursing career in Chicago on hold to assume her current post.
A notable pent athlete in the AYF Olympics, she’ll be competing for her
fifth title over Labor Day weekend.

She attributes a lot of her success to the AYF and "multi-tasking" while
hobnobbing with the political elite of this country. In her capacity, she
oversees a 32-state region and some 293 districts.

"It’s such a joy to wake up each morning and go to work for Hai Tahd,"
Birazian said. "Every contribution we make as individuals is a contribution
to Armenia."

About 65 philanthropists turned out in Providence with the mayor in
attendance.
————————————- ————————————————– ——

5. The Things We Did This Summer We’ll Remember All Winter Long (Part II)

DALLAS, Texas and PHILADELPHIA, Pa.-Eighteen-year-old Lindsey Haroutunian
and her team the Bloomfield Force struck gold as the hard driving Force Team
recently won the National Championship for their age group in Dallas. There
to support and cheer on Lindsey were her parents Dr. Michael and Laurie
Haroutunian and her Aunt Diane (Haroutunian) Brus. Upon arriving back home,
the jubilant Haroutunians played host to a celebratory party for the
Bloomfield Force Championship team, coaches and their very happy families.
Lindsey is a freshman at Villanova University where she was recruited to
play on their soccer team. She arrived at her new school in mid-August in
order to begin vigorous soccer practice sessions. It seems her heart and
soul are dedicated to the sport and her eye is on even more accomplishments
for her new college team. Soccer Buzz Magazine, in giving an overview of
2007’s top 20 teams, mentions Lindsey as one of Villanova’s "Wildcats"
freshman recruits "who could work into roles in the middle of the pitch …
expect Villanova to keep posting wins week after week."

TORONTO, Ontario-Film director Noura Kevorkian and producer husband Paul
Scherber are enjoying the many outdoor activities in their beloved and
vibrant home city of Toronto on Lake Ontario. They, along with year old son
Aran, are attending Shakespeare in the Park, art shows, museums and jazz
festivals not only for family enjoyment but to expose impressionable Aran to
many things-as the young filmmaker Noura says, "So his imagination would
soar." They toured the beautiful nearby city of Niagara-on-the-Lake, known
for its live Robert Shaw theater productions, but are putting plans on hold
to visit Lebanon in the fall till the political situation permits. The main
reason for their trip there is to screen her feature documentary "Anjar:
Flowers, Goats and Heroes" to the community in Anjar and Beirut, in
preparation for the Khatch celebrations coming up in September. Says Noura,
"We will have to wait and see." Later in the fall, they as a family will be
touring North America to screen the film in Armenian communities with plans
to organize a screening for Michigan. Noura’s non-Armenian husband Paul of
only a few years speaks Armenian fluently. They are also busy developing a
group of new film projects. The youthful couple are artistic people on the
go. How did I get to know this talented family? Several of us had the
pleasure of meeting with them on their late spring visit to the Rochester
Hills, home of Mrs. Sally Kabodian, while they were doing research and
interviews for another Armenian documentary film project, which if
accomplished should be very interesting.

CAMP DEARBORN, MILFORD, Mich.-July 29 was a perfect summer day for the ARF
Azadamard Gomideh’s Khanasor kebab dinner picnic commemorating the 100th
anniversary of the historic Khanasor Expedition. It was an occasion to
remember those who defended the national Armenian honor so long ago, and the
crowd of 150 dined and shared camaraderie while revolutionary music played
in the background and the tri-color proudly waved in the afternoon breeze.
The Khanasor Expedition was a turning point in Armenian-Kurdish relations.
Nigol Touman, Vartan and Ishkhan undertook a raid against the Mazrig Kurdish
tribe that had attacked and massacred 800 unarmed Armenian fedayees
retreating from Van towards the Persian border. No Armenian should ever
forget the sacrifice our freedom fighters made. It isn’t just the
revolutionary music of note, it’s the lyrics that tell of brotherhood and
sacrifice, and remind us that "A man only dies once." Who amongst us today
demonstrates that kind of bravery for the Cause? They were Armenians willing
to make the supreme sacrifice in an attempt to end the harsh brutality of
life in Armenian villages. It pays to remember heroes just as assuredly as
it is important to remember who caused our misery and exile from our
homeland. Personally I place the names of the Lisbon Five dghaner (young
men) in the same category of herosner (heroes) just as we pay tribute to the
freedom fighters of long ago. It’s a matter of honor, Armenian honor. While
we are on the subject of honor, let’s include the note we received from
Levon Saryan in Wisconsin responding to the spirited debate over the use of
Armenian words over another language to describe happy times. He writes, "In
the song ‘Ariunod Trosh Veh Tashnagtsutiun,’ we have a line ‘sirenk miutiun,
chanenk vadutiun, mishd partsr bahenk, HHT anoon’-loosely translated, always
exalt the name of the ARF. So what I wrote was also to support the
organization, to keep its name unsullied." So you have, Levon, abrees to you
also.
——————————————- ——————————————–

6. Wonder Woman of the ANCA-ER
Executive Director Karine Birazian Talks about Being a Professional Armenian
Activist

WATERTOWN, Mass (A.W.)-At 24, Karine Birazian has achieved enough to deserve
to have her mid-life crisis some 20 years early. She’s taken up a load of
responsibility in the world of Armenian politics that is equivalent to the
logistics training of a military officer.

As executive director of the ANCA’s Eastern Region, she’s become a female
commando of information and activism for the Armenian community.

Speaking to the Weekly about how she got swept up and away into her current
position, Birazian said, "I didn’t even join the AYF until I was 15. I was
just really involved with Armenian dancing and Hai Tahd. Then I did things
like Camp Haiastan and going to Armenia in 2001, and my act with the AYF
just skyrocketed."

"In Armenia, I volunteered in Nork-Marash, a cardiology medical center. I
was actually pursuing nursing in college-and am a registered RN-then
Hai-Tahd and the AYF became my second life," she recalled.

"In Chicago, where I was born and raised, my true passion was genocide
education," she said, explaining how she first got involved in Armenian
politics. "In high school, when we were doing a research project, my dance
teacher recommended I read Black Dog of Fate. That’s when the flame was
fueled."

Birazian started lecturing students at her high school about the genocide.
"It started with your typical class of about 30 kids and ended with me
lecturing the entire freshmen class and all around the surrounding high
schools."

In 2003, she did the ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship, an experience she
considers a true turning point in her life. "If you ask any of the interns
there, they’ll tell you that there was just something about being in the
office. It was just so welcoming!"

Birazian worked on getting the Armenian genocide into the Illinois state
curriculum and took part in the National Convention for Social Studies
Teachers being held in Chicago that year.

"Compared to the big book companies that had plasma screen TV presentations
set up, we just had a table-and even that was borrowed from our church. We
thought we’d get passed over but our booth generated so much attention.
Eight hundred teachers came and signed up for our information and said
things like, ‘I’ve really always wanted to teach this, but just never had
the resources.’ That launched the Genocide Research Project, and its taken
genocide education to a whole new level," Birazian said.

"I don’t consider what I do a job," she said about her position as executive
director. "I consider it a passion. It hasn’t been easy all the time, but it’s
been a phenomenal experience."

She spoke with gusto about her duties, saying, "I’ll go anywhere to meet
with any activist and give them the tools they need. I think each individual
has a moment in their life when they find a cause to go do something about."

Talking about the Watertown Town Council’s decision to sever its ties with
the "No Place for Hate" program sponsored by the Anti-Defamation League
(ADL), Birazian commented, "To have a town council speak up for what
survivors have gone through is amazing and it turns communities into small
armies that act when they’re called upon."

She noted how in her travels and meetings with AYF chapters, communities
were becoming active in locales that had previously been Armenian no man’s
land, saying, "We didn’t have anything really in Tampa, Fla., until this
year."

Birazian said the next upcoming and major event for the ANCA-ER would be
their fundraising and support gala in New York. "We’re really looking
forward to our banquet on September 22 at New York’s Waldorf Astoria Hotel.
We’re really working hard on it," she said.

As for those communities or community members that are looking to get their
feet wet in the ANCA but feel shy about how informed they are on the issues
of Armenian politics, Birazian consoled, "It’s OK to not know. Nobody’s
going to hang up the phone on you if you call our office. We’re not going to
laugh at you. We’re here to help you to become educated citizens and to take
action."

Keep your eyes to the sky: Karine Birazian could be landing soon to spread
the word in a city near you.

http://www.ar
www.almainc.org.

The Lobby

THE LOBBY
by David Remnick

The New Yorker
09/03/070903taco_talk_remnick
Aug 27 2007

"The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy"; Mearsheimer, John J.;
Walt, Stephen M.; Israel; Lobbyists; Foreign Policy; Iraq War Last
year, two distinguished political scientists, John J. Mearsheimer, of
the University of Chicago, and Stephen M. Walt, of the John F. Kennedy
School of Government, at Harvard, published a thirty-four-thousand-word
article online entitled "The Israel Lobby and U.S. Foreign Policy,"
a shorter version of which appeared in The London Review of
Books. Israel, they wrote, has become a "strategic liability" for the
United States but retains its strong support because of a wealthy,
well-organized, and bewitching lobby that has a "stranglehold" on
Congress and American elites. Moreover, Israel and its lobby bear
outsized responsibility for persuading the Bush Administration to
invade Iraq and, perhaps one day soon, to attack the nuclear facilities
of Iran. Farrar, Straus & Giroux will publish a book-length version
of Mearsheimer and Walt’s arguments on September 4th.

Mearsheimer and Walt are "realists." In their view, diplomatic
decisions should be made on the basis of national interest. They
argue that in the post-Cold War era, in the absence of a superpower
struggle in the Middle East, the United States no longer has any need
for an indulgent patronage of the state of Israel. Three billion
dollars in annual foreign aid, the easy sale of advanced weaponry,
thirty-four vetoes of U.N. Security Council resolutions critical of
Israel since 1982-such support, Mearsheimer and Walt maintain, is not
in the national interest. "There is a strong moral case for supporting
Israel’s existence," they write, but they deny that Israel is of
critical strategic value to the United States. The disappearance of
Israel, in their view, would jeopardize neither America’s geopolitical
interests nor its core values. Such is their "realism."

The authors observe that discussion about Israel in the United
States is often circumscribed, and that the ultimate price for
criticizing Israel is to be branded an anti-Semite. They set out
to write "The Israel Lobby," they have said, to break taboos and
stimulate discussion. They anticipated some ugly attacks, and were
not disappointed. The Washington Post published a piece by the
Johns Hopkins professor Eliot Cohen under the headline "Yes, It’s
Anti-Semitic." The Times reported earlier this month that several
organizations, including a Jewish community center, have decided to
withdraw speaking invitations to Mearsheimer and Walt, in violation
of good sense and the spirit of open discussion.

Mearsheimer and Walt are not anti-Semites or racists. They are serious
scholars, and there is no reason to doubt their sincerity.

They are right to describe the moral violation in Israel’s occupation
of Palestinian lands. (In this, most Israelis and most American Jews
agree with them.) They were also right about Iraq. The strategic
questions they raise now, particularly about Israel’s privileged
relationship with the United States, are worth debating–just as it is
worth debating whether it is a good idea to be selling arms to Saudi
Arabia. But their announced objectives have been badly undermined
by the contours of their argument-a prosecutor’s brief that depicts
Israel as a singularly pernicious force in world affairs. Mearsheimer
and Walt have not entirely forgotten their professional duties, and
they periodically signal their awareness of certain complexities. But
their conclusions are unmistakable: Israel and its lobbyists bear
a great deal of blame for the loss of American direction, treasure,
and even blood.

from the issuecartoon banke-mail thisIn Mearsheimer and Walt’s
cartography, the Israel lobby is not limited to AIPAC, the American
Israel Public Affairs Committee. It is a loose yet well-oiled
coalition of Jewish-American organizations, "watchdog" groups, think
tanks, Christian evangelicals, sympathetic journalists, and neocon
academics. This is not a cabal but a world in which Abraham Foxman
gives the signal, Pat Robertson describes his apocalyptic rapture,
Charles Krauthammer pumps out a column, Bernard Lewis delivers
a lecture-and the President of the United States invades another
country. Dick Cheney, Donald Rumsfeld, and Exxon-Mobil barely exist.

Where many accounts identify Osama bin Laden’s primary grievances with
American support of "infidel" authoritarian regimes in Islamic lands,
Mearsheimer and Walt align his primary concerns with theirs: America’s
unwillingness to push Israel to end the occupation of the West Bank
and Gaza. (It doesn’t matter that Israel and the Palestinians were in
peace negotiations in 1993, the year of the first attack on the World
Trade Center, or that during the Camp David negotiations in 2000 bin
Laden’s pilots were training in Florida.) Mearsheimer and Walt give
you the sense that, if the Israelis and the Palestinians come to terms,
bin Laden will return to the family construction business.

It’s a narrative that recounts every lurid report of Israeli cruelty
as indisputable fact but leaves out the rise of Fatah and Palestinian
terrorism before 1967; the Munich Olympics; Black September; myriad
cases of suicide bombings; and other spectaculars. The narrative
rightly points out the destructiveness of the Israeli settlements
in the occupied territories and America’s reluctance to do much to
curtail them, but there is scant mention of Palestinian violence or
diplomatic bungling, only a recitation of the claim that, in 2000,
Israel offered "a disarmed set of Bantustans under de-facto Israeli
control." (Strange that, at the time, the Saudi Prince Bandar told
Yasir Arafat, "If we lose this opportunity, it is not going to be a
tragedy. This is going to be a crime.") Nor do they dwell for long
on instances when the all-powerful Israel lobby failed to sway the
White House, as when George H. W. Bush dragged Yitzhak Shamir to the
Madrid peace conference.

Lobbying is inscribed in the American system of power and influence.

Big Pharma, the A.A.R.P., the N.R.A., the N.A.A.C.P., farming
interests, the American Petroleum Institute, and hundreds of others
shuttle between K Street and Capitol Hill. Zbigniew Brzezinski,
President Carter’s national-security adviser, recently praised
Mearsheimer and Walt in the pages of Foreign Policy for the service
of "initiating a much-needed public debate," but he went on to
provide a tone and a perspective that are largely missing from their
arguments. "The participation of ethnic or foreign-supported lobbies
in the American policy process is nothing new," he observes. "In
my public life, I have dealt with a number of them. I would
rank the Israeli-American, Cuban-American, and Armenian-American
lobbies as the most effective in their assertiveness. The Greek-
and Taiwanese-American lobbies also rank highly in my book. The
Polish-American lobby was at one time influential (Franklin Roosevelt
complained about it to Joseph Stalin), and I daresay that before
long we will be hearing a lot from the Mexican-, Hindu-, and
Chinese-American lobbies as well."

Taming the influence of lobbies, if that is what Mearsheimer and Walt
desire, is a matter of reforming the lobbying and campaign-finance
laws. But that is clearly not the source of the hysteria surrounding
their arguments. "The Israel Lobby" is a phenomenon of its moment.

The duplicitous and manipulative arguments for invading Iraq put
forward by the Bush Administration, the general inability of the
press to upend those duplicities, the triumphalist illusions, the
miserable performance of the military strategists, the arrogance of
the Pentagon, the stifling of dissent within the military and the
government, the moral disaster of Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo, the
rise of an intractable civil war, and now an incapacity to deal with
the singular winner of the war, Iran-all of this has left Americans
furious and demanding explanations. Mearsheimer and Walt provide one:
the Israel lobby. In this respect, their account is not so much a
diagnosis of our polarized era as a symptom of it.

http://www.newyorker.com/talk/comment/2007/

Mia Farrow exclusive dispatch: I am a witness to Darfur’s suffering

Mia Farrow’s exclusive dispatch: I am a witness to Darfur’s suffering
Published: 27 August 2007

My first visit to Darfur was in 2004. It changed the way I needed to live my
life. I have just returned from my seventh trip to the region. I don’t think
I have the words to adequately represent what I have seen and heard there.

Incomprehensibly, it has now been more than four years since the killing
began. Some experts believe half a million human beings have died thus far.
Others bicker about the exact death toll – as if it makes a shred of
difference to how we must respond.

Only the perpetrators dispute that hundreds of thousands of innocent men
women and children have been killed, in ways that cannot be imagined or
described. It is all the more appalling that we cannot know – that no one is
yet able to count the dead. And the dying continues.

We can, however, know with certainty that more than four million people are
dependent on food aid because their homes, villages, and the fields that
sustained them, are ashes now. We also know that two and a half million
human beings are struggling to exist amid deplorable conditions in squalid
camps across Darfur and eastern Chad. I am a witness to their suffering.

The stories of those who survived the attacks are numbingly similar. Without
warning, Antonov bombers and attack helicopters filled the morning skies and
rained bombs upon homes and families as they slept, as they played, as they
prayed, as they tended their fields. Those who could run tried to gather
their children and fled in all directions.

Then the Janjaweed – government-backed Arab militia – attacked on horseback
and on camels (and more recently in vehicles). They came shouting racial
epithets and shooting. They shot the children as they ran, they shot the
elderly.

I spoke to mothers whose babies were shot from their backs, or torn from
their arms and bayoneted before their eyes, whose children were tossed into
bonfires. I met men whose eyes were gouged out with knives. Strong women in
frail voices described their gang rapes; some were abducted and assaulted
continuously over many weeks.

"No one came to help me," they said, as they showed me the brandings carved
into their bodies, and tendons sliced and how they hobble now.

"Tell people what is happening here" implored one victim, Halima. Three of
her five children had been killed. "Tell them we will all die. Tell them we
need help." I promised her I would do my best to tell the world what is
happening there. In the years since 2004, over and over and over, in camp
after camp, and deep in my heart I have made this promise.

In October, I will return to the region. People will tell me their stories
and again will ask for protection. I will listen, I will take more
photographs, and I will keep trying to tell the world what is happening
there. The people of Darfur continue to plead for protection, and still no
one has come. What does this say about us?

Last week, on the Chad-Darfur border, in a region where genocide is
occurring now, we lit a symbolic Olympic flame. The flame honours all those
who have been lost, and those who suffer; it celebrates the courage of those
who have survived, and is a symbol of hope for an end to genocide
everywhere.

We lit the flame again in Rwanda where the agony of survivors is palpable –
and without end. We gathered strength from their strength.

In Kigali, survivors expressed their wish to join their spirits with ours as
we take the flame to other communities of survivors: Cambodia, Armenia,
Germany, Bosnia.

Today, I look at Rwanda and see the abysmal failure of the United Nations
and of all the nations of the world. Collectively and individually, we
failed in our most essential responsibility to protect the innocent from
slaughter and suffering.

We look to world leaders and our own governments and see that they are mired
in self-serving interests. What are we to do about this? I tell my children
that "with knowledge comes responsibility." Yet our leaders do not reflect
this at all.

Most of us do not want innocent people to be slaughtered. Most of us wish
others well and hope for a world in which all people everywhere can be safe.
Yet, in the face of power and politics, we tend to feel overwhelmed, so we
step aside and attend to our own business. The future of the world, if there
is to be a future, surely lies in humility and in human responsibility. Let
us draw strength and courage from the survivors of genocide and conviction
from the voices of the dead.

After the Nazi Holocaust, the world vowed "never again". How obscenely
disingenuous those fine words sound today. As we look at Darfur and eastern
Chad – a region that has been described as "Rwanda in slow motion" – are we
to conclude that "never again" applies only to white people?

I hope that caring people of the world will band together and with one voice
demand an end to the terrible crime of genocide.

For more information, go to

*From Hollywood to human rights*

Born to Catholic parents in 1945, Mia Farrow followed her film director
father and actress mother into the industry, appearing in a number of
critically acclaimed movies. Over the course of her career she has won
numerous awards including seven Golden Globes. Her very public marriages and
divorces to Frank Sinatra and later Woody Allen, in whose films she
regularly appeared during the 1980s, meant the Farrow family were rarely out
of the media spotlight.

One of Hollywood’s most prolific campaigners, she has been involved in
activism since the 1970s when she became an advocate of adoption rights
after adopting three children from south-east Asia with her second husband
André Previn. She has since gone on to adopt 11 children. A childhood
survivor of the post-war polio epidemics, she has also campaigned for the
eradication of the disease which has paralysed one of her adopted children.
After becoming a goodwill ambassador for Unicef, she has turned her
attention towards Africa and in particular, raising awareness of the
genocide in Darfur.
Source: 2898438.ece

http://news.independent.co.uk/world/africa/article
www.miafarrow.org