Book Review: Survival story

Chicago Sun-Times, IL
Oct 28 2007

Survival story
MEMOIR | Author tells of her mother’s triumph over Armenian genocide

October 28, 2007
BY HEDY WEISS

On the final page of The Knock at the Door — Margaret Ajemian
Ahnert’s deeply personal evocation of the slaughter of the Armenians
by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1917 — there is a photograph of
the author’s mother, Ester Minerajian Ahronian Ajemian.

Ester died in 1999, just a few weeks short of her 99th birthday. But
she might very easily have perished while still a teenager. This book
is a daughter’s tribute to her mother — the story of how Ester not
only escaped death, but triumphed over hatred and violence, and how
she eventually began her life all over again in this country. In
addition, it suggests why, nearly a century after the slaughter,
passions remain so high.

Of course Ahnert’s book has arrives at a fortuitous moment. There is
great controversy swirling around the resolution now making its way
through Congress — a bill that would officially designate the
Armenian slaughter a "genocide" (and surely generate some additional
tension in U.S.-Turkish relations). And within Turkey, highly
respected writers and scholars who recently have attempted to raise
questions about this ethnic catastrophe have felt the heat.

When, in 2005, the highly regarded Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk
(recipient of the 2006 Nobel Prize for Literature) commented to a
foreign newspaper interviewer about the mass killings of Armenians
and Kurds in Anatolia, criminal charges were pressed against him
(though subsequently dropped). As Pamuk noted: "Thirty thousand
Kurds, and a million Armenians were killed in these lands and nobody
dares to talk about it."

What makes The Knock at the Door so compelling is its eye-witness
quality. Though Ahnert makes it clear she based her story on
interviews with her mother over a period of many years, and that she
went on to shape the "words and the voice" heard in the book from her
own imagination, there is an authentic ring about it all.

What also rings true to anyone who has read about the Holocaust, or
about the more recent atrocities in Bosnia and Rwanda, is the way
those who were once neighbors — and seemed to have carved out some
form of multicultural coexistence — quite suddenly became the most
bitter of enemies.

The scenario is familiar: Word of hangings in other towns, the
disappearance of Ester’s father; a mass flight set in motion that
would result in an ethnic cleansing of Christian Armenians. Though
some Armenians converted to Islam in an effort to remain unharmed,
most refused. Fleeing long-established homes and businesses, they
were either rounded up, murdered and tossed into mass graves, or died
of starvation as they marched to what they hoped might be a place of
refuge.

Ester was just 15 when she and members of her family set out to
escape. Ultimately, she was the only one to survive, but along the
way she endured rape, a forced marriage, beatings, isolation and much
more.

Ahnert, who struggles to come to terms with this history herself,
intersperses the chapters that recount her mother’s ordeal with more
contemporary sections that capture Ester’s final years spent at an
Armenian home for the aged in New York. To the very end, Ester showed
no sign of bitterness, believing it was "God’s job to judge."

Hedy Weiss is the Sun-Times theater and dance critic.

THE KNOCK AT THE DOOR
A JOURNEY THROUGH THE DARKNESS OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
By Margaret Ajemian Ahnert
Beaufort Books, 204 pages, $24.95

s/623331,CST-BOOKS-ahnert28.article

http://www.suntimes.com/entertainment/weis

Solo album has lively sounds

Akron Beacon Journal, OH
Oct 28 2007

Solo album has lively sounds
Published on Sunday, Oct 28, 2007

ELECT THE DEAD Serj Tankian Serjical Strike/Reprise

It took a solo album by Serj Tankian, the singer and leader of System
of a Down, to reveal the secret ingredient in that band’s hard rock:
a streak of opera, or perhaps operetta.

Tankian made this album in his home studio, playing many of the
instruments. In some ways, Elect the Dead continues System’s approach
to songwriting, with structures that suddenly shift speed or attack,
from ballad picking to odd-meter pummeling to sing-along choruses.
Tankian’s Armenian ancestry still resounds in the melodies.

His voice is as peculiar as ever. It’s quavery, hectoring,
deliberately overwrought but not self-mocking; even at his most shaky
and nasal, he means it. Some of the lyrics are openly political: ”I
believe that you’re wrong/insisting that they hold the bomb/ clearing
the way for the oil brigade,” he chants at the end of The Unthinking
Majority. But working on his own, he’s less oblique, especially in
broken-hearted songs such as Saving Us or Baby. (One song, Money,
hints that Tankian and System of a Down are at odds.)

In spots where System would blast its power chords louder, Tankian
often switches to quasi-classical piano instead, perhaps adding a
string section as well. That camps up a few songs, bringing Lie Lie
Lie, for instance, uncomfortably close to The Rocky Horror Show. Yet
although System of a Down would have given these songs more sheer
brawn, Tankian’s versions are the next best thing.

Jon ParelesNew York Times

ELECT THE DEAD Serj Tankian Serjical Strike/Reprise

It took a solo album by Serj Tankian, the singer and leader of System
of a Down, to reveal the secret ingredient in that band’s hard rock:
a streak of opera, or perhaps operetta.

Tankian made this album in his home studio, playing many of the
instruments. In some ways, Elect the Dead continues System’s approach
to songwriting, with structures that suddenly shift speed or attack,
from ballad picking to odd-meter pummeling to sing-along choruses.
Tankian’s Armenian ancestry still resounds in the melodies.

His voice is as peculiar as ever. It’s quavery, hectoring,
deliberately overwrought but not self-mocking; even at his most shaky
and nasal, he means it. Some of the lyrics are openly political: ”I
believe that you’re wrong/insisting that they hold the bomb/ clearing
the way for the oil brigade,” he chants at the end of The Unthinking
Majority. But working on his own, he’s less oblique, especially in
broken-hearted songs such as Saving Us or Baby. (One song, Money,
hints that Tankian and System of a Down are at odds.)

In spots where System would blast its power chords louder, Tankian
often switches to quasi-classical piano instead, perhaps adding a
string section as well. That camps up a few songs, bringing Lie Lie
Lie, for instance, uncomfortably close to The Rocky Horror Show. Yet
although System of a Down would have given these songs more sheer
brawn, Tankian’s versions are the next best thing.

Jon Pareles
New York Times

BAKU: Azeri, Armenian talks on Karabakh stalled – ministry official

TURAN News Agency, Azerbaijan
Oct 26 2007

Azeri, Armenian talks on Karabakh stalled – ministry official

Baku, 26 October: The OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs on the Karabakh
settlement have brought nothing to Baku with themselves, Azerbaijani
Foreign Ministry spokesman Xazar Ibrahim said today while commenting
on the talks between the Azerbaijani president, foreign minister and
the co-chairs.

The co-chairs brought nothing to Baku and went back to Yerevan with
"the reiterated and clear-cut position of Azerbaijan", Ibrahim said.

"Regrettably, since the St Petersburg meeting between the Armenian
and Azerbaijani presidents, the talks have actually ground to a
standstill. The co-chairs returned Yerevan in order to move the talks
forward. For the time being, there is no fresh proposal on the
negotiating table and work is being carried out on the basis of the
old principles," Ibrahim said.

Milwaukee: Armenian patriarch seeks interfaith unity

Milwaukee Journal Sentinel , WI
Oct 27 2007

Armenian patriarch seeks interfaith unity
Leader visits on spiritual journey

By TOM HEINEN
[email protected]
Posted: Oct. 26, 2007

Greeted by boys carrying symbolic gifts of bread, salt and flowers,
the spiritual leader of the Armenian Church and its 7 million members
worldwide stepped from a chartered jet in southeastern Wisconsin this
week bearing messages of love, tradition and the need for ecumenical
and interfaith unity in a troubled world.

His Holiness Karekin II is greeted by members of the clergy after his
arrival Tuesday in Milwaukee.

Buy a link hereHis Holiness Karekin II energized people from the
three Armenian parishes under his jurisdiction here – St. Mesrob in
Racine, St. John the Baptist in Greenfield and Holy Resurrection in
South Milwaukee – with calls for the observant and those who’ve
drifted to remember their faith and culture.

This month, he spoke in Washington, D.C., in support of a now-stalled
House resolution that would label as genocide the killings of,
according to some estimates, 1.5 million Armenians by Ottoman Turks
from 1915 to 1923.

Turkey, a key supply route to U.S. troops in Iraq, recalled its
ambassador to Washington and warned of serious repercussions if the
largely symbolic resolution passes.

Karekin said that recognition and condemnation of this genocide are
needed to help prevent future genocides.

While here, he focused on the need for Christians, Muslims and others
to get along.

Armenia, where he is based, has something to offer in that regard, he
said.

It was the first nation to adopt Christianity as the official state
religion, in A.D. 301, before the Roman Empire did. And, despite
being surrounded or occupied by non-Christian nations and cultures –
including the Persian and Ottoman invasions and Soviet rule – the
Armenian people did not give up their Christianity, said Father
Yeprem Kelegian, St. Mesrob’s pastor.

Karekin – who carries the title Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos
(universal leader) of All Armenians – said Armenians had learned how
to work, pray and live in harmony in Islamic countries.

"This experience shows us that if we have the love of God, we can
understand that we are brothers, we are creations of God, although we
have different faiths, different cultures," Karekin said. "We are
sons and daughters of the one God, and also God gave us this world
that we cherish for him."

He is on a nearly 20-city, monthlong tour of the Diocese of the
Armenian Church of America (Eastern), including small communities and
large cities such as Chicago, Minneapolis-St. Paul, New York, Boston
and Dallas. This was the first visit here of a supreme patriarch in
47 years.

At his request, Catholic Auxiliary Bishop Richard J. Sklba organized
a reception at St. Francis Seminary that drew local leaders of
various Christian denominations and the Jewish community. Tuesday, an
estimated 450 people attended an ecumenical service at St. Mesrob.

His one-day visit had an impact on many of the estimated 1,500
Armenian American households in southeastern Wisconsin, Kelegian
said.

"I think it’s the biggest event in our life we will ever encounter,
even when we get older, probably bigger than my wedding," Monica
Heller, 27, of Racine, who is not engaged, said at the airport.

After meeting with Karekin and about 24 leaders from area parishes,
Heller added, "I feel now that, after seeing him, it does increase my
spirituality and also my sense of Armenian heritage, and it makes me
want to do more, especially for the people of Armenia."

Danny Mantis, 21, a St. Mesrob member from Waukegan, Ill., added,
"It’s huge. It’s a big deal. It’s like the pope coming for
Catholics."

y/index.aspx?id=679411

http://www.jsonline.com/stor

France Can Play Considerable Role In Economic Development Of Armenia

FRANCE CAN PLAY CONSIDERABLE ROLE IN ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF ARMENIA

ARKA News Agency
Oct 26 2007
Armenia

YEREVAN, October 26. /ARKA/. France can play considerable role
in economic development of Armenia, the Prime-Minister of France
Francois Fillon said at his meeting with the Armenian counterpart
Serge Sargsian in Paris yesterday. At the meeting the Prime-Minister
of France expressed satisfaction with Armenian-French friendly ties
and considered the bilateral cooperation in politics, culture and
local government as excellent.

The economic cooperation between the countries is progressing, but
still yield to the level of the relations in other areas, Fillon
said. Armenia’s Prime-Minister, in his turn, stressed the dynamics of
bilateral economic ties and the volume of French capital growing from
year to year in Armenia. He pointed out successful activities of a
number of major French companies, particularly "Alcatel", "Veolia",
"Saur", "Pernod Rickard", "Credit Agricole", Air France", on the
Armenian market. Armenia’s Prime-Minister expressed hope that the
Prime-Minister of France will assist in attracting new French companies
to the Armenian market and pointed out the possibility of implementing
joint projects in the fields of information technologies, insurance,
banks and service, healthcare and pharmaceutical industry. The
Prime-Minister of France promised to give instructions to start
the work on mutually advantageous proposals provided by Armenia’s
Premier. The heads of the two countries also discussed the situation
in the Caucasus region, the Karabakh peace process within the OSCE
Minsk Group and issues of the upcoming presidential election in
Armenia. Armenia’s Prime-Minister invited his French counterpart to
visit Armenia. The invitation was accepted with gratitude. Sargsian
also met with the Secretary General of governing Union for a Popular
Movement party of France Patrick Devejian. The sides discussed the
expansion of cooperation and development of relations in various
fields. The Prime-Minister of Armenia is to meet with the President
of France Nicolas Sarkozy.

Meghri-Kapan Highway Exploited

MEGHRI-KAPAN HIGHWAY EXPLOITED

Panorama.am
19:29 27/10/2007

Today the Meghri-Kapan highway having a length of 80 km was opened. It
will allow for year round automobile communication with our neighbor
Iran. The new road will make it possible for vehicles weighing up to
80 tons to pass through.

The Republic’s President, the Iranian Ambassador in Armenia, Minister
of communications and transport Andranik Manukyan took part in the
official ceremony of the new highway’s opening.

Let us note that the highway was constructed with the assistance
from the Iranian side. Until now the only motorway that linked Iran
with Armenia through Meghri mountain chain, often was impassable in
winter months.

Also, trucks with limited, that is up to 36 ton capacity, could drive
on it.

IPA: Perspectives on Iraq, Turkey and Kurds

Institute for Public Accuracy

News Release
Perspectives on Iraq, Turkey and Kurds

October 25, 2007

EDMUND GHAREEB
Professor at American University, Ghareeb is author of several books
including The Kurdish Question in Iraq and The Kurdish Nationalist
Movement. Ghareeb can assess the strategic interests of the various
political operators.
More Information

SUREYA SAYADI, MD
An Iraqi Kurdish doctor and academic now living in the U.S., Sayadi is
an activist and closely monitors Kurdish media. She stresses the human
impacts of the conflict.
More Information

BEN H. BAGDIKIAN
Professor emeritus and former dean of the Graduate School of
Journalism at the University of California at Berkeley, Bagdikian is
most widely known for his book The Media Monopoly. He is also author
of Double Vision: Reflections on My Heritage, Life, and Profession,
which is in part about his Armenian heritage — Bagdikian’s family
survived a massacre in present-day Turkey.

He said today: "The face-off with Turkey over their decades-long fight
against their own independence-seeking Kurds, has become a multi-sided
dilemma for all parties. Kurds have lived for centuries in the
mountains that straddle the Turkish-Iraqi border. In Iraq, the Kurds
are among the U.S. Army’s most stable friends, and also occupy the
other end of Iraq in its oil rich region. Dilemma No. 1. But Turkey
hates the Kurds and hints it might stop cooperating with the
U.S. Dilemma No. 2. Turkey needs U.S. help to enter the European
Union. Dilemma No. 3. But the U.S. needs the big Turkish airfield to
supply Iraq. Dilemma No. 4. Bush has threatened Iran if it does not
stop nuclear development and Cheney has raised the threats of military
action against Iran. But Iran has oil and is Shiite. Dilemma No. 5. In
Iraq various Shiites are our ‘friends.’ But so is Israel a
U.S. friend. Dilemma No. 6. If we move militarily against Iran, it has
missiles it can send into Israel. Israel could fire back. Dilemmas 7
and 8.

"It is a mess with no way to satisfy all the conflicting problems
created when Bush decided he would try to dominate the entire Middle
East."
ge.cfm?authorID=139

VERA BEAUDIN SAEEDPOUR
Available for in-depth interviews, Saeedpour is editor of Kurdish Life
and director of the Kurdish Library. She said today: "The notion that
the PKK [Kurdistan Workers Party] is inaccessible is simply
ludicrous. Scores of Western journalists have visited their mountain
retreats. …

"Ironic. The PKK is on the State Department’s terrorist list; the
U.S. claims it doesn’t ‘talk with terrorists.’ But the U.S. — and
Israel — aids and abets the PKK through local Iraqi Kurds. And why?
The PKK arm, Pejak, attacks Iran. For services rendered, while the PKK
attacks Turkey the administration winks and has kept the Turkish
military from retaliating. …

"For giving safe haven to the PKK/Pejak, for doing Washington’s
bidding in Baghdad, [Massoud] Barzani and [Jalal] Talabani have been
more than amply rewarded. In 2003 the U.S. military facilitated their
takeover of ‘security’ in Kirkuk and even in Mosul. Now, under the
pretext of fighting al Qaeda, units of the U.S. military have been
joining Kurdish fighting units (veiled as members of the ‘Iraqi’
military) in ethnically cleansing ‘contested areas’ of non-Kurds in
advance of a referendum that will determine under whose jurisdiction
these parts of Diyala and Nineveh provinces will fall.

"Perhaps it all depends on who’s doing the cleansing. In 1992
Armenians in Nagorno Karabagh aided by the Republic of Armenia
ethnically cleansed Red Kurdistan, the largest and oldest Kurdish
community in the Caucasus — 160,000 Kurds simply disappeared. With
few exceptions, Kurds elsewhere said nothing. Kurdish Life did a
detailed report on the issue and distributed it to members of
Congress, not least Rep. Tom Lantos, Sen. Ted Kennedy and Sen. Joe
Biden, all still in office. President Bill Clinton did
nothing. Instead, Armenians were rewarded with direct U.S. foreign
aid."

For more information, contact at the Institute for Public Accuracy:
Sam Husseini, (202) 347-0020; or David Zupan, (541) 484-9167.

p?articleId=3D1578

http://www.zmag.org/bios/homepa
http://www.accuracy.org/newsrelease.ph

Armenian Government To Supervise Situation On Food Markets

ARMENIAN GOVERNMENT TO SUPERVISE SITUATION ON FOOD MARKETS

ARKA News Agency
Oct 25 2007
Armenia

YEREVAN, October 25. /ARKA/. The RA Government will supervise the
situation on the country’s food markets to prevent an artificial
price rise, RA Vice-Premier, Minister of Territorial Administration
Hovik Abrahamyan stated at the RA Parliament.

"We will be consistent in settling this issue to prevent an artificial
price rise," he said.

According to Abrahamyan, the problem of sugar has been resolved and
the product is sold at 220-270 AMD for a kilo.

Abrahamyan pointed out that the excitement on the sugar market was
aroused by retail traders. As regards the rise in prices for butter,
vegetable oil and for baked goods, Abrahamyan said that 50 economic
entities have been fined and the issue will remain in the center of
the RA Government’s attention.

Recent rumors about the rise in sugar prices caused the population
to buy sugar in large amounts. As a result, the price for the product
reached 700 AMD ($2.3) for a kilo.

Chairman of the RA State Commission for Protection of Economic
Competition Ashot Shahnazaryan reported that the rise in sugar prices
was artificial in Armenia. He pointed out that Armenia has sugar
reserves for six months, and no changes in the pricing policy are
expected during one year.

OSCE Office Willing To Initiate New Programs In Armenia

OSCE OFFICE WILLING TO INITIATE NEW PROGRAMS IN ARMENIA

armradio.am
24.10.2007 14:01

October 24 RA Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian received the newly
appointed head of the OSCE Office in Yerevan, Ambassador Sergey Kapinos
(Russia).

Welcoming the return of Mr. Kapinos to Armenia in a new status,
Minister Oskanian expressed confidence that the traditionally
productive and useful cooperation with the OSCE Office in Yerevan
will continue.

The parties stressed the importance of continuity of programs
implemented by the Office, particularly the police reforms, the
accomplishment of poverty reduction and a number of socio-economic
programs by the OSCE Office in Syunik.

Ambassador Kapinos presented the results of the regional assembly of
the OSCE Offices, underlining the positive assessment of the activity
of the Yerevan Office by the organization’s Secretary General. It
was noted also that the agenda of cooperation with Armenia is rather
broad and the Office is decisive to accomplish the programs already
in process and initiate new ones.

Iran’s President Becomes YSU Honorary Doctor

IRAN’S PRESIDENT BECOMES YSU HONORARY DOCTOR

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.10.2007 20:12 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Today, Iran’s President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad was
conferred the rank of Honorary Doctor of Yerevan State University
and was awarded with YSU gold medal.

During the ceremony, the President said, "This award is not only for
Ahmadinejad as a personality but also a homage to the wishes a human
being deserves. It proves that Yerevan State University works for
human values – justice, honesty, morals and perfection."

He voiced hope that Armenian scholars and students will have a
possibility to visit Iran in the framework of exchange programs and
invited YSU rector to his country.