Members Of Congress Urge Passage Of H.Res.252

MEMBERS OF CONGRESS URGE PASSAGE OF H.RES.252

PanARMENIAN.Net
04.05.2009 10:30 GMT+04:00

U.S. Senators and Representatives called for increased vigilance and
activism against genocide and genocide denial in floor statements
commemorating the Armenian Genocide, reported the Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA).

Major themes of their remarks were the need for passage of the Armenian
Genocide resolution (H.Res.252), which currently has 116 cosponsors,
and the goal of ensuring that that the proper recognition of past
genocides be used to prevent future genocides.

If ARFD Wins Yerevan Council Of Elders Elections, It Promises To Liq

IF ARFD WINS YEREVAN COUNCIL OF ELDERS ELECTIONS, IT PROMISES TO LIQUIDATE ABSURD PROHIBITIONS OF HOLDING RALLIES

NOYAN TAPAN
MAY 4, 2009
YEREVAN

"If we win Yerevan Council of Elders elections we will exert every
effort to liquidate inappropriate, absurd prohibitions in the issue
of holding rallies," Artsvik Minasian heading ARFD Yerevan Council
of Elders elections electoral roll stated at the May 4 meeting with
ARFD supporters. In his words, ARFD’s preelection program has the
respective provisions about it, where, in particular, it is said
that "a tribune of freedom of expression should be created with the
permanent presence of communal service of maintenance of public order
and Mayor’s Office representative."

As A. Minasian promised, if ARFD wins the elections, it will form a
cadre bank, will bring young skilful forces to the system. He said
that when making appointments to administrative leading staffs ARFD
will be guided by three main criteria: skillfulness, confidence by
society, morality.

As to ARFD’s financial and budget policy, according to A. Minasian,
it should be controlled by the force that will hold positions opposite
to ARFD in Council of Elders’ staff.

According to A. Minasian, the provisions of the Environmental
Protection part of ARFD preelection program envisage keeping Yerevan’s
green zones and water spaces and increasing them three-fold until
2013. Besides, it is envisaged introducing modern systems of dust and
gas cleaning. The figure heading ARFD’s preelection roll also said
that in the urban development sphere it is also envisaged completing
zoning projects and bringing Yerevan development in line with chief
plan’s requirements. A. Minasian also promised to clean Yerevan from
illegal and uanauthorized constructions in case of being elected.

Shah Deniz Phase Two Postponement Officially Confirmed

;tx _ttnews%5Btt_news%5D=34935&tx_ttnews%5BbackPid %5D=7&cHash=e5b127d293

Shah Deniz Phase Two Postponement Officially Confirmed
Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 6 Issue: 84
May 1, 2009 02:19 PM Age: 2 days

By: Vladimir Socor

Shah Deniz Oil Platform in Operational Position

Norway’s StatoilHydro company, commercial operator of the gas export
pipeline from Azerbaijan’s Shah Deniz field, has publicly identified
Turkey as stalling on the transit agreement for Shah Deniz gas to
Europe. StatoilHydro’s latest statements corroborate the concerns of
European and Azerbaijani officials on this issue (EDM, March 4, 5, 16,
April 20, 27). The Turkish AKP government’s stalling hurts
Azerbaijan’s interests, those of the multinational consortium that
develops the giant offshore Shah Deniz field, and European Union
interests in the Nabucco pipeline project, the start of which depends
on the gas from Shah Deniz.

StatoilHydro-Azerbaijan president Kristian Hausken and the company’s
vice president for gas Olav Skalmeras have announced that the
consortium must postpone the start of Phase Two of production at Shah
Deniz until 2016, due to lack of a transit agreement with Turkey.
According to the Norwegian executives, the issue of transit via Turkey
remains a challenge to the Shah Deniz project. They said that Phase
Two can only take place -and its timeframe clarified- after the
transit problems will have been resolved with Turkey (Reuters, April
24; Trend Capital, April 28).

Phase Two of Shah Deniz gas production had been envisaged to start in
2013-14, its timetable correlated with that of the Nabucco pipeline’s
construction. Turkish-imposed delays in field development and
production at Shah Deniz would correspondingly delay investment in the
Nabucco project and its construction.

The consortium, headed by BP and StatoilHydro, owns and operates the
Shah Deniz project and the dedicated South Caucasus Pipeline (SCP) for
gas export. The line, known also as the Baku-Tbilisi-Erzurum (BTE)
pipeline, was conceived as the first section of a major gas export
route via Turkey to Europe. The existing line should feed into the
planned Nabucco pipeline on Turkish territory. The SCP (BTE)
consortium’s ownership and operating rights on the pipeline, however,
stop at the Georgia-Turkey border. Beyond that border, Turkey’s state
company Botas owns and operates the pipeline to Erzurum and onward to
Nabucco’s starting point. Thus, when Nabucco is built, the two
internationally-owned pipelines -SCP and Nabucco- will have to be
linked with each other through the Turkish-owned pipeline situated
between them; and Nabucco itself would run through Turkish territory.

This situation and the perceived lack of alternatives to the Turkish
route are tempting the AKP government to seek concessions at the
expense of Azerbaijan, the Shah Deniz consortium, and the two pipeline
consortiums. Ankara seeks unilateral advantages on the terms of gas
transportation and pricing simply by stalling on the transit
agreements. Stalling on these projects is also the AKP government’s
way to seek political concessions from the EU. As the EU-Turkey
accession negotiations are a long-term process, the stalling may also
turn out to be a long-term process, if the EU tolerates such behavior.

Phase Two of production at Shah Deniz is planned to reach 20 billion
cubic meters of gas annually in the plateau years, double the volume
of Phase One which is currently in progress (Trend Capital, April 29).
Investment in Phase Two is estimated at $16 billion, compared to the
$5 billion invested in Phase One. Facing such investment costs, the
international consortium as well as the Azerbaijani government needs
long-term stable arrangements for transit via Turkey and marketing in
Europe.

Meanwhile, Russia proposes to buy up all available volumes of
Azerbaijani gas at attractive prices. Following repeated offers since
June 2008 from the Kremlin, a memorandum of understanding was signed
on March 27, 2009, by the Azerbaijan’s State Oil Company with Gazprom.
Faced itself with a gas shortfall in the years ahead, Gazprom could
use Azerbaijani gas either for consumption in southern regions of
Russia or for re-export to Europe as "Russian" gas through the
Gazprom-planned South Stream pipeline. Russian officials have alluded
to both possibilities.

Underscoring Moscow’s interest, Valery Yazev -head of Russia’s Gas
Society and vice-chairman of the Duma- proposes that "Russia must
offer the highest possible price for Azerbaijani gas," finance
modernization of the Soviet-era gas pipeline from Baku to the Russian
border, and sell Azerbaijani gas in Europe as Russian gas. As Yazev
makes clear, Moscow seeks to draw Azerbaijan into some bilateral
price-fixing arrangement at Europe’s expense: "What is Europe’s game?
It tries to crush the gas producers. Our countries need to coordinate
their positions. Azerbaijan is geographically closest to Europe among
gas-producing countries of this region. Therefore Moscow wants to
develop close interaction with Baku" (Interfax, Trend Capital, April
22, 24).

In effect, Russia is racing against the EU in Azerbaijan. Meanwhile,
Turkey’s AKP government is making it more difficult for the EU and
Azerbaijan jointly to win this race.

http://www.jamestown.org/single/?no_cache=1&amp

9/11 Commission a model for an accounting on torture

The York Dispatch (Pennsylvania)
April 29, 2009 Wednesday

9/11 Commission a model for an accounting on torture

His interest, President Barack Obama says, is "the achievement of a
full, frank and just acknowledgement of the facts."

His topic was the delicate question of what to call the slaughter of
1.5 million ethnic Armenians at the hands of Turkey during World War I
and the fall of the Ottoman Empire, a festering historical sore no
American president can genuinely hope to heal.

But Obama’s professed desire for a complete and just accounting raises
the question: If it’s good for the Armenians, why isn’t it good for
Americans? Why can’t we also have a "full, frank and just
acknowledgement" of the facts surrounding torture and other moral
horrors that were carried out in our name during the Bush
administration’s global war on terror? History demands it.

Obama doesn’t want to bog his administration’s ambitious agenda down
in partisan recriminations over past practices. Fair enough. But it
does not follow that no official inquiry should be held. There is more
to find out, because much information is still being kept secret —
sometimes by the very perpetrators of the shameful practices, who
press on in the courts, for example, to attain what they hope will be
a permanent shroud.

A copious report by the Democratic staff of the House Judiciary
Committee, released last month, provides a chilling compendium of what
we know, and what we don’t.

We do not officially know whether the "enhanced interrogation tactics"
used by the Bush administration were in fact criminal violations of
federal statutes prohibiting torture and war crimes. We do not know
what laws may have been broken through the use of "extraordinary
rendition." This was the practice of sweeping people up and
transferring them to secret CIA "black sites" or to countries —
Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Jordan and Pakistan, for example — where torture
is believed to be practiced.

We do not know how many people were jailed and interrogated in this
system. Estimates range from 100 to 150 to "several thousand
renditions of terror suspects," the judiciary report says. We don’t
know how a program of "rendition" that was occasionally used in prior
administrations to deliver a suspect to face prosecution in a country
where he was wanted on criminal charges metastasized into a global
sweep of those who were detained for interrogation. We do not know
what happened to "ghost" detainees held by the U.S. in Iraqi prisons
— prisoners who were never registered or identified and, for all we
know, disappeared.

We do not know the full extent of the warrantless wiretapping of
Americans that continues, in some form, to this day.

Sweeping this all aside in the interest of moving on isn’t a mark of
how mature our political system is. It is an indictment of it. It
acknowledges that we cannot withstand the clamor of television talking
heads — that somehow the distraction of their empty chatter is as
weighty in its consequence as the heinous acts that smear the nation’s
reputation. Do we really want to surrender to the purveyors of
partisan hot air? This is the ultimate capitulation. It shows us to be
so weak that we really should worry about how this act of cowardice is
perceived around the world.

We have a contemporary model for how to conduct a politically
sensitive inquiry properly, without undue theatrics and with respect
for classified information. It is the 9/11 commission, a sober and
thorough panel that explored systemic failures that preceded the
terrorist attacks and put to rest false claims — including the Bush
administration’s contention that Saddam Hussein somehow was behind
it. The panel operated outside the partisan hothouse of Congress, yet
drew freely on the expertise of those inside and outside the
government. Its final report became a best-seller, not because it
inflamed political passion but because it was unconventionally — and
thus, believably — dispassionate.

The Bush administration opposed the creation of the 9/11 commission,
then resisted with much force many of the panel’s requests for
information. In the end, determined lobbying by victims’ families and
their acumen at airing their demands in the media forced officialdom
to create the panel, and helped the commission surmount obstacles that
were placed in its way.

Now we have no tearful widows or orphaned children to plead on
television for a just accounting. But how we handle the grievances of
the voiceless and confront our own misdeeds is yet another measure of
our character. And yes, the whole world is watching.

ANCA: Archbishop Choloyan Urges Vigilance Against Genocide

Armenian National Committee of America
1711 N Street, NW
Washington, DC 20036
Tel. (202) 775-1918
Fax. (202) 775-5648
Email [email protected]
Internet

PRESS RELEASE

May 2, 2009
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

HIS EMINENCE ARCHBISHOP OSHAGAN CHOLOYAN URGES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
RECOGNITION IN CAPITOL HILL MEETINGS

— Visits with 16 Legislators during
Marathon Day of Meetings on Capitol Hill

WASHINGTON, DC – His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate
of the Armenian Apostolic Church of the Eastern United States,
called on Members of Congress to speak with unstinting resolve
about the Armenian Genocide and to work to end the ongoing genocide
in Darfur, during a full day of 16 Capitol Hill meetings following
the April 22nd Congressional Commemoration of the Armenian
Genocide, reported the Armenian National Committee of America
(ANCA).

The Archbishop’s meetings included discussions with Senate and
House members from traditional Armenian American communities in New
York, New Jersey, Michigan and Rhode Island, as well as those from
growing communities in Minnesota, Ohio, Maine, Virginia and
Indiana. Among the legislators he met with were: Sen. Amy
Klobuchar (D-MN), House Minority Whip Eric Cantor (R-VA), House
Republican Conference Chair Mike Pence (R-IN), Rep. Leonard Lance
(R-NJ), Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI), Rep. Gary Peters (D-MI), Rep. Tim
Walz (D-MN), Rep. Betty McCollum (D-MN), Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-
MN), Rep. Anna Eshoo (D-CA), Rep. Jackie Speier (D-CA), Rep. John
Sarbanes (D-MD), Rep. Zack Space (D-OH), Rep. Chellie Pingree (D-
ME), Rep. Paul Tonko (D-NY), and Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-RI).

Archbishop Choloyan was joined in his Congressional visits by Rev.
Fr. Sarkis Aktavoukian, Pastor of the Soorp Khatch Armenian
Apostolic Church in Bethesda, MD; ANCA National Board Member Ari
Killian, and ANCA Legislative Affairs Director Raffi Karakashian.

On April 22nd, Archbishop Choloyan joined Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-
CA), Majority Leader Steny Hoyer (D-MD) and over 20 Members of
Congress at the Capitol Hill commemoration of the 94th anniversary
of the Armenian Genocide, organized by the Congressional Caucus on
Armenian issues. During his moving invocation, Archbishop Choloyan
stated "Ninety-four years ago we witnessed the very worst of
humankind’s capacity for evil. Today we stand before you and
reaffirm our pledge to give voice to all victims of genocide and
tyranny and we rededicate ourselves to the struggle for truth and
justice."

Archbishop Choloyan’s complete invocation is provided below.

Photos from the Archbishop’s meetings can be viewed at:
< eleases.php?prid=1709> _releases/press_releases.php?prid=1709

EDITOR: Please email
<mailto:[email protected]>[email protected] rg for print quality photos.

#####

Invocation delivered by
His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan
Prelate, Armenian Apostolic Church of America
94th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide

Capitol Hill
Wednesday, April 22, 2009

In the name of the Father, and of the Son, and of the Holy Spirit.
Amen.

Almighty and ever-living God, Creator of the world, we render
thanks to you for all of the goodness that you have granted us with
your grace and your fatherly care.

We stand before you today in our nation’s beautiful capital city of
Washington, on yet another April, the month of life when the barren
earth blooms, but a month of death for your true children of the
Armenian nation who continue to mourn the genocide of one and one-
half million of their compatriots.

We ask you to bless this great land of liberty that welcomed with
open arms the remnants of the Armenian nation. We ask for your
blessings of its inhabitants, its President, and all branches of
its government and all of its public servants. Protect and
enlighten them that they may serve your glory and be instruments of
goodness for the well being of your sons and daughters in the
United States of America, and in the whole world.

We continue to seek your guidance in our faithful service to you
and in our pursuit of righteousness. Grant us the wisdom and
courage of your divine being to serve humanity in accordance with
the highest ideals and values of our Christian heritage.

Heavenly father, we stand before you today with sadness and
melancholy, but still we are filled with hope. We are filled with
the hope of the resurrection. We are filled with the hope of the
promises of truth and change. We honor the memory of our martyrs
and resolve to carry on their dream, continue their struggle, and
perpetuate their memory.

Ninety-four years ago we witnessed the very worst of humankind’s
capacity for evil. Today we stand before you and reaffirm our
pledge to give voice to all victims of genocide and tyranny and we
rededicate ourselves to the struggle for truth and justice. We give
thanks for our deliverance from the depths of our despair to this
land of liberty. Our journey ahead may be filled with trials and
tribulations, but it is a journey of faith, and we know that we are
helped by the strength that comes from you.

Bless this gathering and all those in attendance. Guide our
national leaders, especially the men and women of Congress who have
joined us in our pursuit of justice. Safeguard the brave men and
women serving in our armed forces here at home and overseas.

Spread your special grace and protection upon the remaining
survivors of the Armenian genocide, who continue to hope and pray
that justice will "roll down like waters, and righteousness like an
ever-flowing stream." *

We will praise your name forever and ever. Amen.

**Amos 5:24

http://www.anca.org/press_releases/press_r
http://www.anca.org/press
www.anca.org

220 Armenian Intellectuals Exiled In 1915 Commemorated

220 ARMENIAN INTELLECTUALS EXILED IN 1915 COMMEMORATED

AZG Armenian Daily
01/05/2009

Armenian Genocide

On 24 April 1915, over 200 Armenian intellectuals were exiled and
then killed. The Human Rights Association commemorated this loss to
Armenian, Ottoman and Turkish society.

The Human Rights Association’s (İHD) Committee against Racism and
Discrimination commemorated 24 April 1915, the day that Armenians
worldwide recognize as the beginning of the forced exile of Armenians
from the Ottoman Empire, with an event in the Tobacco Depot in
Istanbul.

On that day, 139 Armenian intellectuals were arrested in Istanbul and
forcibly taken to Cankırı and AyaÅ~_ in central Anatolia. They were
then killed.

Lawyer Eren Keskin spoke at the event entitled "24 April 1915 and
Armenian Intellectuals: They were arrested, they were evicted, they
did not even get a grave stone."

She said that the death of these intellectuals represented a loss not
only for the Armenian language, culture, thought and science world,
but also for the Ottoman society of the time and for "the world of
all of us today."

An exhibition displayed stories and pictures from a book entitled
"Memory of 11 April", written by Teotig in 1919 and dealing with the
deaths of the intellectuals.

The commemorative event started with a concert of the KardeÅ~_
Turkuler folk group which performed songs in Armenian, Kurdish,
Suryani, Arabic and Turkish.

The group members said that they had fulfilled a wish of murdered
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in December, when they had
organised a tour in Armenia together with the Turkey-based Armenian
choir Sayat Nova.

"We saw that the Ararat mountain embraces Yerevan just as much as it
does Agrı province."

Keskin said, "We, who believed what we were told, and who stayed
quiet even if we did not believe it…we are all guilty."

Publisher Ragıp Zarakol and members of the Bosphorus Performance
Arts Society (BGST) theatre department read life stories and poems of
and by Rupen Sevag, Siamanto (Atom Yerjeyan), Taniel Varujan, Teotig
(Teotoros Lapcinyan) and Krikor Zohrab, all of them killed in 1915.

Around 100 people attended the event, among them Hrant Dink’s widow
Rakel Dink and his brother Orhan Dink, journalist Sarkis Saropyan,
academic AyÅ~_e Gul Altınay and lawyer and IHD branch head Gulseren
Yoleri.

After Zarakol recounted the life of Armenian musician Gomidas, Keskin
ended the commemoration with a quote from the musician:

"It was spring, but here it was snowing." (BC/AG)

Armenian Online Editor Beaten, Hospitalized

ARMENIAN ONLINE EDITOR BEATEN, HOSPITALIZED

CPJ, Committee to Protect Journalists
-editor-beaten-hospitalized.php
April 30 2009

New York, April 30, 2009–The Committee to Protect Journalists calls
on Armenian authorities to apprehend three assailants who attacked
Argishti Kivirian, editor of the independent news Web site Armenia
Today. The unidentified men beat Kivirian early this morning, leaving
him hospitalized in serious condition, Zhanna Alexanian, president of
the Yerevan-based organization Journalists for Human Rights, told CPJ.

"We condemn this brutal attack on Argishti Kivirian and call on Yerevan
police to swiftly apprehend and punish his assailants," CPJ Europe and
Central Asia Program Coordinator Nina Ognianova said. "Independent
journalists in Armenia, including those working online, have been
subjected to increased physical violence in the past year. Armenian
authorities should reverse this trend by investigating and prosecuting
to the fullest all responsible for today’s attempt on Kivirian’s life."

Local press reports and CPJ sources said Kivirian was returning home
from his newsroom at around 5 a.m., when three men attacked him in the
entrance to his Yerevan apartment building. The men appeared to have
been waiting for him, said Alexanian, who spoke to Kivirian’s wife,
the prominent lawyer Lucine Saakian, shortly after the attack. Wielding
rubber clubs, the assailants hit Kivirian in the head and elsewhere
on his body. Kivirian struggled with one attacker who brandished a
gun, causing the firearm to discharge, Saakian told Alexanian. The
shots roused Saakian and neighbors, causing the assailants to flee,
local press reports said.

Kivirian was taken to a Yerevan hospital where he was being treated
for a concussion and multiple bruises, the Armenian press reported.

Armenia Today is an independent Web site that publishes political,
social, and economic news, along with analyses of current events. In a
statement published after the attack, Kivirian’s colleagues said they
were convinced the attack was connected to his work and vowed that
the site would continue operating as usual. Colleagues did not connect
the attack to a specific piece. Kivirian has not yet spoken publicly.

http://cpj.org/2009/04/armenian-online

Crossroads E-Newsletter – April 30, 2009

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apost. Church of America and Canada
H.E. Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan
Prelate, Easter Prelacy and Canada
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
Web:
Email: [email protected]
April 30, 2009

5th ANNIVERSARY OF PASSING OF ARCHBISHOP ZAREH AZNAVORIAN

Today, April 30, is the fifth anniversary of the passing of His
Eminence Archbishop Zareh Aznavorian. One of the most learned and
capable clergyman of the Armenian Church, his death at age 57 was a
great loss.

Archbishop Zareh faithfully served the Armenian Church as an ordained
celibate priest for 38 years, most of which was spent at the
Catholicate of the Holy See of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon. He was an
eminent teacher at the Cilician Sees Theological Seminary and director
of the Christian Education Department. He was a noted composer of both
religious and secular music, a gifted scholar, a Biblical scholar and
translator, and author of textbooks and commentaries.

Many of the faithful of the Eastern Prelacy had the blessed
opportunity to know, love and respect him during the times he was in
the United States for medical treatment.

Throughout his illness he continued to lecture, celebrate the
sacraments, preach, as well as continue his theological research and
Bible translation.

His life and work will keep his memory alive forever. May he rest in
peace.

STS. VARTANANTZ (NJ) WILL CELEBRATE 50TH ANNIVERSARY ON SUNDAY

Sts. Vartanantz Church in Ridgefield, New Jersey, will celebrate its
50th anniversary this Sunday, May 3. The church was consecrated
exactly 50 years ago on May 3, 1959, by Archbishop Khoren Paroyian,
Nuncio of His Holiness Zareh I, Catholicos of Cilicia.

The Prelate, Archbishop Oshagan, will celebrate the Divine Liturgy
Sunday morning and a special commemorative service immediately after
the Liturgy. A celebratory luncheon will follow in the churchs large
hall.

Bishop Anoushavan, Vicar, will also attend the services and
festivities. During his student days in the United States, Bishop
Anoushavan frequently preached at Sts. Vartanantz, as well as other
local parishes where he assisted in organizing Bible studies, youth
seminars, and lecture series.

PRELATE PARTICIPATES IN VARIOUS APRIL 24TH EVENTS; EXPRESSES
DISAPPOINTMENT IN PRESIDENTS MESSAGE

Last week Archbishop Oshagan participated in a number of activities
related to the 94th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

On Friday, April 17, he delivered the invocation at the commemoration
sponsored by the New York City Council and organized by the Armenian
National Committee of New York. In his prayer the Prelate said, We
gather here with the leadership of our great city of New York to
remember the loss of nearly one-half of the Armenian nation. We seek
your guidance in all our endeavors. We especially ask that you spread
your grace over our leaders because strong and wise leadership is
vital to the well being of any nation and society.Remember the souls
of our martyrs and the survivors who were cast out of their ancestral
homeland. Bring them eternal peace through your justice.

On Wednesday and Thursday, April 22 and 23, he was in Washington, DC,
where he attended the commemoration organized by the Congressional
Caucus on Armenian Issues, and visited a number of congressional
leaders encouraging them to support the Armenian Martyrs Day
resolution. In his invocation Wednesday evening, His Eminence said in
part, we stand before you today with sadness and melancholy, but still
we are filled with hope. We are filled with the hope of the
Resurrection. We are filled with the hope of the promises of truth and
change. Ninety-four years ago we witnessed the very worst of
humankinds capacity for evil. Today we stand before you and reaffirm
our pledge to give voice to all victims of genocide and tyranny and we
rededicate ourselves to the struggle for truth and justice.

On Friday evening, April 24, His Eminence presided over the
Divine Liturgy and Requiem Service, celebrated by Bishop Anoushavan at
St. Sarkis Church, Douglaston, New York. Archbishop Oshagan delivered
the sermon based on the theme Lord, Lord Why did you Forsake Me? On
Saturday evening, April 25, His Eminence and Bishop Anoushavan
attended commemorative events organized by the Armenian National
Committee of New York, which took place at the Armenian Center in
Woodside, New York.

On Sunday, April 26, Archbishop Oshagan delivered the invocation at
the Times Square gathering organized by the Knights of Vartan, with
the participation of all the major Armenian institutions and
organizations. His Eminence noted in his prayer, We confess before you
Lord and in the presence of the few remaining survivors, that our
hearts are heavy with sadness. We are disheartened that our president
in his otherwise powerful statement did not honor his promise to
recognize the truth of the Armenian GenocideThe blood of the martyrs,
as predicted by a noted writer of the time, produced a heroic
posterity. New generations of Armenians stand by their obligations not
only by remembering the past and honoring the martyrs, but also by
dedicating themselves to the pursuit of justice for the Armenian
nation and for other suffering people.

NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY NEXT WEEK

The Eastern Prelacys National Representative Assembly (NRA) will take
place next week, hosted by All Saints Church, Glenview, Illinois. The
clergy conference will begin on Tuesday, May 5. The full Assembly,
clergy and lay delegates will begin their deliberations next Thursday,
May 7. The theme of the Assembly will focus on the youth in keeping
with the 2009 Year of the Youth. Keynote speakers on and by the youth
will be delivered by Nayiri Baljian Bell and Levon Barsoumian. Topics
for the panel discussions include religious education, Armenian
education, By-Laws, Youth, Board of Trustees workshop, and financial.

During the banquet Friday evening the 2009 Man of the Year award will
be presented to Antranig Ovasapian and the Spirit of Armenia award
will be awarded to Congressman Mark Kirk from Chicago who is co-chair
of the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues.

SPIRIT OF SURVIVAL EXHIBIT IN NEW JERSEY

A photographic exhibit, Spirit of Survival is on exhibit at Bergen
Community College, 400 Paramus Road, Paramus, New Jersey, through May
22. The exhibit is the work of Project SAVE Armenian Photograph
Archives. Ruth Thomasian, founder and executive director of Project
SAVE gave a brief talk on the history behind the photographs on the
opening day of the exhibit. The exhibit chronicles the Armenian people
in the late 19th and early 20th centuries in the Ottoman and Russian
empires, and then later in Soviet Armenia and the Diaspora. It
features 40 large photographs with text documenting Armenians life
before, during, and after the Genocide when their culture, religion,
language, and very existence were threatened.

For more information
( 62279214/1796096/66723483/goto:http://www.projects ave.org/).

EXECUTIVE COUNCIL MEMBER, KAREN JEHANIAN TO RECEIVE ENGINEERING AWARD

On Wednesday, May 13, the American Society of Civil Engineers will
honor Karen Jehanian, a member of the Prelacys Executive Council, as
the Transportation Engineer of the Year. The award will be presented
during an event that will take place at the Loews Hotel in center city
Philadelphia. Karen is the founder and president of KMJ Consulting,
Inc., specializing in transportation engineering and planning, traffic
engineering, transit planning and transportation systems.

YEAR OF THE YOUTH
His Holiness Aram I,
Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, has designated the year 2009
as the Year of The Youth.

To read His Holiness message in Armenian click here
( 82/goto: doc/Pontifical%20Messages/messages68.htm).

To read His Holiness message in English click here
( 32/goto: cal.pdf).

BIBLE STUDY PROGRAM CONTINUES
The six-part Bible study program on Great Prayers of the Bible
continues with two more sessions, tonight, April 30, and May 14. The
program has been studying a number of biblical prayers that have been
incorporated into the liturgical prayers and services of the Armenian
Church. Dn. Shant Kazanjian, director of the Prelacys Armenian
Religious Education Council (AREC), conducts the Bible studies. The
program is open to all and is free of charge. For information send an
email to [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) or
call 212-689-7810.

EXTENDED BOOKSTORE HOURS

On Bible Study evenings, the Prelacy Bookstore will remain open until
7 pm. The upcoming dates are April 23, 30 and May 14.

DATEV SUMMER PROGRAM: MARK YOUR CALENDAR

The 23rd annual St. Gregory of Datev Institute Summer Program, for
youth ages 13-18, is scheduled to take place at the St. Mary of
Providence Center in Elverson, Pennsylvania, from June 28 to July 5,
2009, preceded by a weekend retreat (optional) from June 26-28,
2009. The Program is sponsored by the Armenian Religious Education
Council (AREC).

For more information click here
( 33/goto:).

PLG MOTHERS DAY LUNCHEON

The Prelacy Ladies Guilds annual Mothers Day luncheon is going to take
place on Thursday, May 21, beginning at 12:30 pm. The luncheon is
being hosted by Rene and Linda Chirinian at their home in New Canaan,
Connecticut. A donation of seventy-five dollars per person will
benefit the charitable work of the PLG.

To make reservations and obtain directions to the Chirinian residence
please contact the Prelacy at 212-689-7810.

ARS SUMMER STUDIES PROGRAM

The Armenian Relief Society, Eastern Region, is sponsoring a Youth
Connect Program which will take place at Bentley University in
Waltham, Massachusetts, from May 31 to June 7. College students are
encouraged to attend this week-long program. Lodging, meals and other
expenses will be provided by the ARS. There is an application fee of
$100 and participants are responsible for transportation to and from
Boston. For information, 617-926-3801.

DAILY BIBLE READINGS
Bible reading for
today, Thursday, April 30 are: Luke 8:1-21; Acts 11:1-26; Acts
11:1-26; 1 Peter 3:10-22; John 4:24-42; Matthew 9:35-10:15; Mark 4:1-9.

Soon afterwards he went on through cities and villages, proclaiming
and bringing the good news of the kingdom of God. The twelve were with
him, as well as some women who had been cured of evil spirits and
infirmities: Mary, called Magdalene, from whom seven demons had gone
out, and Joanna, the wife of Herods steward Chuza, and Susanna, and
many others, who provided for them out of their resources.

When a great crowd gathered and people from town after town came to
him, he said in a parable: A sower went out to sow his seed; and as he
sowed, some fell on the path and was trampled on, and the birds of the
air ate it up. Some fell on the rock; and as it grew up, it withered
for lack of moisture. Some fell among thorns, and the thorns grew with
it and choked it. Some fell into good soil, and whn it grew, it
produced a hundredfold. As he said this, he called out, Let anyone
with ears to hear listen! Then his disciples asked him what this
parable meant. He said, To you it has been given to know the secrets
of the kingdom of God; but to others I speak in parables, so that
looking they may not perceive, and listening they may not u
understand.

Now the parable is this: The seed is the word of God. The ones on the
path are those who have heard; then the devil comes and takes away the
word from their hearts, so that they may not believe and be saved. The
ones on the rock are those who, when they hear the word, receive it
with joy. But these have no root; they believe only for a while and in
a time of testing fall away. As for what fell among the thorns, these
are the ones who hear; but as they go on their way, they are choked by
the cares and riches and pleasures of life, and their fruit does not
mature. But as for that in the good soil, these are the ones who, when
they hear the word, hold it fast in an honest and good heart, and bear
fruit with patient endurance.

No one after lighting a lamp hides it under a jar, or puts it under a
bed, but puts it on a lampstand, so that those who enter may see the
light. For nothing is hidden that will not be disclosed, nor is
anything secret that will not become known and come to light. Then pay
attention to how you listen; for to those who have, more will be
given; and from those who do not have, even what they seem to have
will be taken away.

Then his mother and his brothers came to him, but they could not reach
him because of the crowd. And he was told, Your mother and your
brothers are standing outside, wanting to see you. But he said to
them, My mother and my brothers are those who hear the word of God and
do it. Luke 8:1-21
For listing of the coming weeks Bible readings click here
( ).

RED SUNDAY
This Sunday, May 3, is the fourth Sunday of Eastertide, known as Red
Sunday (Karmir Kiraki). The name does not have an ecclesiastical
origin, but rather is similar to last weeks Green Sunday. The name Red
Sunday is believed to refer to the burst of color that comes forth
from the land after a barren winter.

(Think of red tulips in the green fields). It is a celebration of
nature, especially the rebirth after the Resurrection we celebrated a
few weeks ago. The Gospel reading for this Sunday (John 5:19-30)
emphasizes the life-giving word of Jesus.

AS I SEE IT: THE MORE THINGS CHANGE, THE MORE THEY REMAIN THE SAME
I recently had the opportunity to re-read the first inaugural address
of President Franklin Delano Roosevelt, delivered on March 4, 1933,
and I was amazed at how relevant the message is 76 years later. The
country was in the depths of the Great Depression. Millions of people
were out of work, and confidence in the future was as low as it could
be. Here is a short excerpt:

This great nation will endure as it has endured, will revive and will
prosper. So, first of all, let me assert my firm belief that the only
thing we have to fear is fear itselfnameless, unreasoning, unjustified
terror which paralyzes needed efforts to convert retreat into
advance. In every dark hour of our national life a leadership of
frankness and vigor has met with that understanding and support of the
people themselves which is essential to victory. I am convinced that
you will again give the support to leadership in these critical days.

Happiness lies not in the mere possession of money; it lies in the joy
of achievement, in the thrill of creative effort. The joy and moral
stimulation of work no longer must be forgotten in the mad chase of
evanescent profits. These dark days will be worth all they cost us if
they teach us that our true destiny is not to be ministered unto but
to minister to ourselves and to our fellow men.

In our progress toward a resumption of work we require two safeguards
against a return of the evils of the old order; there must be a strict
supervision of all banking and credits and investments; there must be
an end to speculation with other peoples money, and there must be
provision for an adequate but sound currency We now realize as we have
never realized before our interdependence on each other; that we can
not merely take but we must give as well, that if we are to go
forward, we must move as a trained and loyal army willing to sacrifice
for the good of a common discipline, because without such discipline
nor progress is made, no leadership becomes effective.. For the trust
reposed in me I will return the courage and the devotion that befit
the time. I can do no less.

CALENDAR OF EVENTS

April 9 through May 5The Uprooted:
Genocides, the works of artist Lucy Janjigian will be on display at
the Carole and Norman Barham Rotunda from April 9 through May
5. Hosted by the Queens College Benjamin Rosenthal Library and The
Anthropology Museum of the People of New York and the Armenian
Museum. The library is open from 9 am to 10 pm, Monday through
Thursday; 9 am to 5 pm Friday, and 11 am to 5 pm, Saturday and
Sunday. A Power Point presentation will take place on April 22, 2 pm,
in the Presidents Conference room. For reservations to the Power Point
presentation, reception and parking passes, call 718-428-5650.

April 23Bible Studies program at the Prelacy continues on April 30,
May 14, from 7:15 to 8:45 pm. Dn. Shant Kazanjian, director of the
Armenian Religious Education Council will lead the sessions. Open to
all and free of charge. For registration and information contact
[email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) or
212-689-7810. The Prelacy bookstore will remain open from 5 to 7 pm on
each of these evenings.

May 3Holy Trinity Church, Worcester, Massachusetts, will present the
musical Hello Ellis Island, by Hourig Papazian Sahagian, performed by
the musical ensemble The Way We Were, Sunday, May 3, 2 pm at
Quinsigamond Community Colleges Hebert Auditorium, 670 West Boylston
Street, Worcester. For information: 508-852-2414.

May 350th anniversary celebration of consecration of Sts. Vartanantz
Church, Ridgefield, New Jersey. Divine Liturgy celebrated by
Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, followed by luncheon and program.

May 3Senior Hye Prom, sponsored by St.

Stephen Church Sunday School, Watertown, Massachusetts. Senior members
of the community are invited to attend the Prom following Badarak for
lunch and a musical program featuring golden oldies. For reservations
and information contact the church office at 617-731-6051, or by email
to Audrey Guzelian at [email protected].

May 7-9National Representative Assembly of Eastern Prelacy, hosted by
All Saints Armenian Apostolic Church, Glenview, Illinois. Clergy
Conference begins May 6.

May 9Step into Spring, Silent Auction and Wine Tasting, at Holy
Trinity Armenian Church, Worcester, Massachusetts, 7 pm to 10
pm. General admission: $25; seniors and students: $15. For information
508-852-2414.

May 17The Ladies Guild of St. Stephens Armenian Church of Hartford-New
Britain, Connecticut, is sponsoring an Armenian Tea Party. There will
be a Tea Talk from Bigelow Tea Company, a tea tasting, and a tea
luncheon. Immediately after church services in the church hall.

May 21Mothers Day Luncheon, sponsored by the Prelacy Ladies Guild,
12:30 pm. The luncheon is being hosted by Rene and Linda Chirinian at
their home in New Canaan, Connecticut. A donation of $75 per person
will benefit the charitable work of the PLG. For reservations call the
Prelacy office, 212-689-7810.

June 28Annual Madagh Picnic, St. Hagop Church (Racine), at Johnson
Park Picnic Grounds, 6200 Northwestern Ave., Racine, Wisconsin, 10:30
to 7 pm.

June 29 July 5St. Gregory of Datev Summer Institute, St. Mary of
Providence Center, Elverson, Pennsylvania.

July 18Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence, Rhode Island, Ladies
Guild/ARS Chapter present a Hye Summer Night 4 Dance at The
Annunciation Greek Church, Cranston, Rhode Island. For information
401-434-4467.

July 22Gathering of North American youth in Los Angeles, organized by
the Western Prelacy with the participation of the Eastern and Canadian
Prelacies.

August 2Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence, Rhode Island, Annual
Picnic and Blessing of Madagh and Grapes at Camp Haiastan, Franklin,
Massachusetts, 12 noon to 6 pm, rain or shine. Music by John Berberian
and Ensemble.

September 25-26-27Prelacy Linked-In. Gathering of the youth. Details
will follow.

To ensure the timely arrival of Crossroads in your electronic mailbox,
add [email protected] (mailto:[email protected]) to
your address book.

Items in Crossroads can be reproduced without permission. Please
credit Crossroads as the source.

Parishes of the Eastern Prelacy are invited to send information about
their major events to be included in the calendar. Send to:
[email protected] (mailto:[email protected])

http://www.armprelacy.org/
http://www.projectsave.org/
http://e2ma.net/go/19
http://e2ma.net/go/1962279214/1796096/667234
http://www.armenianorthodoxchurch.org/v04/
http://e2ma.net/go/1962279214/1796096/667255
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/2009Encycli
http://e2ma.net/go/1962279214/1796096/667255
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/datev.htm
http://www.armenianprelacy.org/DBR2009-5.pdf

There Is No Armenian And Turkish Document

THERE IS NO ARMENIAN AND TURKISH DOCUMENT

LRAGIR.AM
19:26:17 – 29/04/2009

On April 29, in answer to Victor Dallakyan’s question whether the
Armenian and Turkish document contains a provision on the agreement
of Kars, the Armenian foreign minister Edward Nalbandyan answered,
saying that there is not such a point, and explained that the roadmap
is time-table of the steps the two sides are to take up for the
agreements and arrangements to be carried into life. Nalbandyan added
that the roadmap does not contain any provision on the principles in
that sense. He noted that the statement signed on April 22 was just
a statement and not a document.

The parliamentary member from ARF Dashnaktsutyun Artyusha Shahbazyan
asked a question on the commission of historians saying that there is
some hint in this connection in the official message on the session
of the Turkish Security Council, according to which the 1915 events
are to be studied. In answer to the question on the commission of
the historians, Edward Nalbandyan said that the statement singed on
April 22 runs that the sides have recorded some progress and both of
them are satisfied with it.

Nalbandyan stated that there cannot be any precondition, as he
personally and the president of the country stated very often that
they launched the establishment of relations without any precondition
and they reached the progress by the same logic.

Catholicos Was Handed Peace Torch

CATHOLICOS WAS HANDED PEACE TORCH

LRAGIR.AM
18:45:25 – 29/04/2009

On April 29, at the Holy See St. Echmiadzin the All-Armenian Catholicos
Garegin II met with the founder of the international fund "White
pigeon" Gianni Rigyevits. His Holiness Garegin II was handed the
torch of peace and love for his efforts in the peace preservation.