Karen Karapetyan Served In The Army: HHSh’s Response

KAREN KARAPETYAN SERVED IN THE ARMY: HHSH’S RESPONSE

Tert.am
11:41 11.05.10

Pan-Armenian National Movement (HHSh) administration has responded
to a move by some youth who on May 10 distributed leaflets in the
Yerevan-based Hayeli club.

The identify of the youth distributing the leaflets has not been
disclosed.

The leaflets were titled "Those giving lessons of Patriotism, and
those speaking and keeping silence about the necessity of serving in
the RA National army."

"These leaflets with an impressive title contain apparently false
information. Particularly, the name of the Chairman of the young
wing of the Pan-Armenian National Movement, Karen Karapetyan, was
mentioned among the politicians who have not served in the army. We
inform [those unaware] that he served in the Frontier troops, in the
9th outpost of Artashat detachment from 1993-1994," reads a statement
released by the HHSh.

Bako Sahakyan Rated High The Efforts Of The Hay Dat Directed To The

BAKO SAHAKYAN RATED HIGH THE EFFORTS OF THE HAY DAT DIRECTED TO THE RECOGNITION OF THE ARMENIAN GENOCID AND PRESERVING ARMENIAN NATIONAL IDENTITY IN THE DIASPORA.

NOYAN TAPAN
MAY 10,2010
STEPANAKERT

On 10 May President of the Artsakh Republic Bako Sahakyan met managers
and representatives of several committees and offices of the Armenian
Revolutionary Federation- Dashnaktsutyun’s Hay Dat at the head of
member of the ARF-Dashnaktsutyun bureau Hakob Ter-Khachatryan.

According to the report by the central information department of
the office of the Artsakh Republic President, Bako Sahakyan rated
high the efforts of the Hay Dat directed to the recognition of
the Armenian Genocide, defending rights of the Armenian people and
preserving Armenian national identity in the Diaspora. The President
also noted important the necessity of elucidating different aspects
of the Artsakh case, further deepening and widening cooperation with
Artsakh in this sphere.

Concessions Will Bring About A War

CONCESSIONS WILL BRING ABOUT A WAR

Lragir.am
10/05/10

The main topic of the discussion during the conference of ARF Hay
Dat Committees was the settlement of the NKR issue.

Member of the ARF Artsakh central committee Armen Sargsyan dwelt on
the necessity for Karabakh to become a full part of the negotiation,
the importance of the clearance of NKR and Armenian functions in them
noting that Armenia is to become a guarantee of Karabakh’s security
and independence. Hence, it is time, according to the ARF member,
for Armenia and NKR to sign an agreement in this connection.

Armen Sargsyan as well as underlined that the opinion to surrender
territories as a concession must be eliminated within the Armenian
political figures because it will bring about a new war.

He says that it is time to start the process of NKR recognition which
seems to be stopped and we started to negotiate with Azerbaijan which
will not bring about pro-Armenian solutions.

In response, the representative of the U.S Eastern wing of Hay Dat
Committee Ani Chakhalshyan expressed her willingness to support
this process but at the same time wondering how other countries will
recognize the NKR independence if Armenia has not recognized it yet.

Armen Sargsyan answered that until NKR is out of the negotiations,
it inexpedient for Armenia to recognize its independence.

In the course of the discussion, the repopulation of the liberated
areas was underlined which is to be done by the Republic of Armenia,
according to ARF Artsakh committee member Levon Hayryan.

By the way, the latter criticized the Armenian government noting
that the Armenian power and the political elite do not respect the
NKR Constitution as they keep dwelling on the surrender of areas.

Azerbaijani FM not to meet with OSCE mediators in Brussels

news.am, Armenia
May 8 2010

Azerbaijani FM not to meet with OSCE mediators in Brussels

14:01 / 05/08/2010Azerbaijani FM Elmar Mammadyarov does not intend to
meet with OSCE MG Co-Chairs in Brussels on May 11-12 due to tight
schedule, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry spokesman Elkhan Polukhov told
Trend News.

`At this stage, co-chairmen of the Minsk Group must work more with the
Armenian side, since, as opposed to official Baku, Yerevan has not
expressed its attitude to the updated Madrid principles,’ Trend quotes
Azerbaijani official.

According to him, achievement of comprehensive agreement on conflict
settlement should be next step in Karabakh peace process. `So, the
Armenian side must express its attitude to updated Madrid principles,’
Polukhov said.

RA Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian will leave for Strasbourg to
attend the CE Foreign Ministers’ sitting to be held on May 11.
Thereafter, he will head to Brussels accompanied by RA Defense
Minister Seyran Ohanyan to participate in North Atlantic Council
meeting in 28+1 format to discuss the implementation of Armenia-NATO
Individual Partnership Action Plan (IPAP). In Brussels, Armenian FM
plans to meet with OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs.

A.G.

UN General Assembly To Host CIS Youth Symphony Orchestra Concert

UN GENERAL ASSEMBLY TO HOST CIS YOUTH SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERT

PanARMENIAN.Net
May 6, 2010 – 15:40 AMT 10:40 GMT

On May 7, the UN General Assembly will host a concert of the CIS
Youth Symphony Orchestra dedicated to the 65th anniversary of the
World War II Victory.

The orchestra’s performance at the UN headquarters is very symbolic,
as the orchestra consists of young musicians of those nations, who
suffered the heaviest losses in this war and contributed significantly
to the victory over fascism.

The concert is organized by Russia’s Permanent Representation in
the UN and CIS Foundation of Humanitarian Cooperation, through the
assistance of Permanent Representations of CIS countries in the UN.

The CIS Youth Symphony Orchestra is one of the most significant
projects launched by the CIS Foundation of Humanitarian Cooperation.

It aims to expand professional and personal contacts for creative
youth, to encourage professional growth of young musicians through
their communication with famous musicians and conductors.

Since its establishment in 2007, the CIS Youth Symphony Orchestra
has demonstrated high professionalism and rich potential in different
performance schools.

Armenia is represented by seven musicians:

Aram Beknazaryan – percussion Lusine Harutyunyan – violin Ashot
Dumanyan – violin Shaghik Martirosyan – violin Tatevik Shahinyan –
violin Veronika Vardpatrikyan – viola Artem Nagdyan – violoncello

The orchestra is unique, due to cooperation with the best CIS
conductors. This year, People’s Artist of the USSR, worldwide known
Vladimir Spivakov will be conducting the orchestra, including the
May 7 concert. Besides, famous pianist, laureate of prestigious
international contests Denis Matsuyev will participate in the concert.

The UNESCO headquarters will host a similar concert in Paris on May 10,
with Ukrainian pianist, laureate of international contests Alexander
Gavrilyuk performing.

Putting It On Record – From Dance Halls Of Infamy To India’s Roll Of

PUTTING IT ON RECORD – FROM DANCE HALLS OF INFAMY TO INDIA’S ROLL OF FAME

Daily Latest News
ault-3590-017662
May 7 2010
India

By IANS – Friday, May 7th, 2010 9:50 am They are the courtesans of a
bygone era who went on to become classical music legends and pioneered
the gramophone music industry. But these women, who played a radical
role in how Hindustani classical music evolved in the 19th and 20th
centuries in the Indian subcontinent, are also the first emancipators
who carved an independent identity in an era when women were trapped
behind the veil.

Gauhar Jaan, Jaddan Bai, Angurbala, and Kamla Jhar are just four of
the 500 women artists who recorded in different regional languages in
the first half of the 20th century. The trendsetters, who literally
gave women a voice to sing on stage, paved the way for modern soiree
artists and playback musicians in Bollywood, the Indian film industry.

They emerged from the alleys of courtesans’ colonies that dotted
historic eastern and heartland cities like Kolkata (Calcutta), Lucknow,
Allahabad and Delhi as well as Lahore, which went to Pakistan with
the partition of the subcontinent in 1947.

Their stories were as remarkable as the women themselves – like the
mother – daughter pair of Malka Jaan and Gauhar Jaan.

It started in 1873 when William Robert Yeoward, an Armenian Jew
employed as an engineer in a dry ice factory in the northern Indian
town of Azamgarh, married an Armenian woman Allen Victoria Hemming.

It was a bleak year for the East India Company in India with a famine
raging in Bihar, Bengal and neighbouring United Provinces.

Victoria’s life seemed woven to the chaos that the drought unleashed,
but destiny bailed her out, like the famine-hit who received timely
aid. Victoria’s marriage to Yeoward ended in a few years, in 1879
after the birth of daughter Angelina Yeoward.

Victoria’s training as a musician and dancer stood the mother and
daughter in good stead. She migrated to Benares in 1881 with a Muslim
nobleman, Khursheed, who appreciated her music.

Victoria converted to Islam and became Malka Jaan while daughter
Angelina was rechristened Gauhar Jaan. Courtesans by status, the
duo changed the course of history of Indian classical music – by
becoming pioneers of the gramophone music of India recorded on 78
rpm vinyl discs.

Gauhar could sing in 20 languages and regional dialects and served
as a court musician in Darbhanga and Rampur.

Most of the musicians of the era were women with social conscience.

They helped mould India’s tryst with freedom by actively taking
part in the struggle for Independence and raising money for the
revolutionaries.

Jaddan Bai was one such musician. Picked from a courtesan’s fair in
Benares in Uttar Pradesh and groomed as a nautch girl, she financially
helped the Left-leaning Progessive Writers’ Association in the first
decades of the freedom struggle.

Born a Hindu, Jaddan was raised as a Muslim. She trained under renowned
musicians and became a singing sensation. She founded the company,
Sangeet Movietone, while her daughter Nargis became a successful
movie star.

Imam Bandi of Lahore sheltered freedom fighters, while Lalita Bai of
Benares was known as Charkhewali Bai for ‘swadesi spirit’.

The women were feisty. Stories of daredevilry and passion were
galore in the opulent quarters – known as ‘kothas’ – of the
nautch-girls-turned-musicians. It was the stuff of romance and
folklore.

Courtesan Janaki Bai, born in Allahabad in 1889, was known for her
haunting voice and graceful dancing style. Bewitched by her dancing,
patron Raghunandan Dubey wanted her ‘exclusively to himself’. Janaki
Bai’s mother refused to part with her daughter. A jealous Dubey
stabbed Janaki 56 times in a fit of rage – earning her the moniker
‘Chappan Chauri (the girl with 56 wounds)’.

The women rendered several kinds of music like ‘dhrupad, dhamar, sadra,
khangal, tarana, sangam, geet, thumris and dadra’ – genres of classical
and semi-classical music – explained a visual documentary chronicling
the musical odyssey of women in the early 20th century recorded music.

‘Women On Record’ was shown recently in the Indian capital New Delhi.

The first lot of women musicians like Bai Sundera Bai, Angurbala,
Kamla Jharia, Indubala and Mumtaz were patronised by the gentry,
who hosted private soirees in their courts.

Angurbala was invited by the Nizam of Hyderabad to perform in his
court. Her photograph appeared with the nizam in the brochure of the
concert tour. Angurbala and Indubala later graduated to the screen.

‘Their voices sometimes surpassed their beauty,’ said actress Neena
Gupta, who anchored a scripted performance, ‘Inhi Logon Ne’, involving
narration, visuals and a concert to walk the audience through and
experience the era, the challenges faced by the women singers and
the diverse repertoires they brought to the Indian classical music.

The women – some of whom were astute traders – were pampered, canny
and influential.

‘At a time, when only viceroys were allowed buggies, Gauhar Jaan
drove her own buggy and paid a penalty for it every time she went out.

Jaddan Bai realised that a technological shift was under way in the
music world from public music to films and switched to movie music,’
Parthiv Shah, director for the Centre for Media and Alternative
Communication that co-hosted the exhibition, said.

The tradition of courtesan-turned-classical musicians or ‘kotha music’
was part of a greater-subcontinental culture bequeathed by the Mughals
to 16th century India. The emperors hired nautch girls to entertain
them in court.

While the heartland towns of India prided themselves on their
professional ‘dance halls’, in neighbouring Lahore, the art flourished
in Hira Mandi, the famous red light district of Lahore, whose history
is irrevocably linked to India.

Archival lore cites that Maharaja Ranjit Singh of Punjab fell in
love with beautiful and intelligent courtesan-turned musican, Mooran,
from Lahore.

The Maharaja, it was said, was so overcome by her beauty that he
jumped into a pool to cool off after meeting her. The courtesan rose
to become the Maharaja’s wife and ‘advised him on key royal issues’.

In a fitting tribute, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s wife
Gurcharan Kaur, sums up: ‘We must always remain grateful to these
legendary performers and musicians who struggled so hard to help
classical music a new course and leave behind such a rich legacy.’

They are the courtesans of a bygone era who went on to become classical
music legends and pioneered the gramophone music industry.

But these women, who played a radical role in how Hindustani
classical music evolved in the 19th and 20th centuries in the Indian
subcontinent, are also the first emancipators who carved an independent
identity in an era when women were trapped behind the veil.

http://www.dailylatestnews.com/2010/05/07/def

Armenian-Turkish Protocols Devaluated, H. Demoyan Says

ARMENIAN-TURKISH PROTOCOLS DEVALUATED, H. DEMOYAN SAYS

Panorama.am
14:26 06/05/2010

Politics

"Armenian-Turkish protocols have been devaluated," the director of
the Armenian Genocide Museum-Institute Hayk Demoyan told reporters.

Turkey is to blame for devaluation, he said. As to the next stage
of the normalization process, H. Demoyan said the latter cannot be
based on the protocols signed in Zurich.

According to him, the establishment of inter-state relations and the
normalization process should come only after the opening of borders.

"By failing the normalization process, Turkey for the third time
disappointed the US: first it did in the context of Iraq war, second,
in that of Georgian-Ossetian war, third time in Armenia-Turkey
reconciliation process," Demoyan said.

SF: Armenian Pair Carries The Day At The Ballet

ARMENIAN PAIR CARRIES THE DAY AT THE BALLET
Janos Gereben

San Francisco Examiner
ian-pair-carries-the-day-at-the-ballet-92788679.ht ml
May 5 2010
CA

SAN FRANCISCO — Whatever Helgi Tomasson’s classical and restrained
1994 "Romeo and Juliet" — onstage at the War Memorial — may lack in
passion is more than made up by San Francisco Ballet’s super-romantic
pair of Davit Karapetyan and Vanessa Zahorian.

Karapetyan, from Yerevan, Armenia’s largest city, and Zahorian,
from an Armenian family in Pennsylvania, portray Romeo and Juliet
with all the heartbreaking poignancy of Shakespeare’s original.

Zahorian’s journey from a shy young girl to an unconstrained lover
is seamless. Karapetyan moves between courtliness and ardor naturally.

The designation "dancer noble" fits him like a glove.

Prokofiev’s grand, familiar music (well performed under the baton of
Dmil De Cou, who returns to the company after too long an absence) and
Jens-Jacob Worsaae’s opulent costumes provide additional attraction.

As usual, the best of Tomasson’s choreography is for the men, and their
dancing is athletic and spectacular. Along with Karapetyan’s Romeo,
James Sofranko’s Mercutio and Jaime Garcia Castilla’s Benvolio truly
fly through the air. Their pas de trois is utterly charming.

Anthony Spaulding’s Tybalt is menacing and scary — his sword fights
are spectacular.

Company stars, past and present, were nice to see in minor roles in
Saturday’s matinee performance: Ricardo Bustamante and Sofiane Sylve
as Lord and Lady Capulet; Yuri Possokhov and Mariellen Olson as Lord
and Lady Montague; and Jorge Esquivel as Friar Laurence.

Even after 16 years since its introduction, Tomasson’s production still
has some puzzling elements. Some scenes are abbreviated to the point
of becoming unnecessary, such as the guests leaving the Capulet ball.

While that brevity may follow tradition of the ballet — which has been
in the hands of many choreographers since its 1935 Russian original —
its execution makes little dramatic or choreographic sense.

The balcony scene and the Capulets’ ball, two large components of the
ballet, are closest to the many classical realizations of the work,
and they are the most successful in this production.

DANCE REVIEW San Francisco Ballet Program 8

Where: War Memorial Opera House, 301 Van Ness Ave., San Francisco When:
7:30 p.m. today; 8 p.m. Thursday-Friday; 1 and 8 p.m. Saturday Contact:
(415) 865-2000,

http://www.sfexaminer.com/lifestyle/Armen
www.sfballet.org

Wilson House Featured On Armenian Television

WILSON HOUSE FEATURED ON ARMENIAN TELEVISION

"Noravank" Foundation
05 May 2010

Wilson House was recently the feature of a report by the Public
Television Company of Armenia. Political analyst and special
correspondent to the U.S. Haykaram Nahapetyan visited the museum where
he interviewed Executive Director Frank J. Aucella and Curator John
Powell about the collection and Wilson’s relations with Armenia. To
see footage from the interview on YouTube (in Armenian) click here.

A particular focus of the segment was the painting entitled
"L’Esperance" by the Armenian-American artist Hovsep Pushman, which
hangs in Wilson House’s Drawing Room. This painting, symbolizing hope
for the future, was presented to President Wilson on November 27,
1917 by an Armenian delegation as "an expression of thanks for the
hope and gratitude his efforts to help suffering Armenia have inspired
in the hearts of all Armenian women" during the Armenian Genocide.

In a similar expression of gratitude this Monday, April 12 Armenian
President Serzh Sargsyan paid a visit to President Wilson’s tomb at
Washington’s National Cathedral where he participated in a wreath
laying ceremony honoring the life and legacy of the 28th president.

Speaking to hundreds of Armenian Americans gathered at the National
Cathedral, Sargsyan praised President Wilson’s 1919 call for a united
effort to ensure that "the Armenian people never suffer again." Ninety
five years later, countries around the world and organizations,
including those in the U.S., continue to carry on Wilson’s legacy,
stated Sargsyan, to prevent genocide and suffering through recognition
of the Armenian Genocide.

"Armenian Journal Of Modern Issues" Published In French Dedicated To

"ARMENIAN JOURNAL OF MODERN ISSUES" PUBLISHED IN FRENCH DEDICATED TO NKR

NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY
MAY 4, 2010
Paris

PARIS, MAY 4, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. On the initiative of the
Armenian General Benevolent Union’s (AGBU) Nubar library, the 11th
issue of the "Armenian Journal of Modern Issues" published in French
is fully dedicated to Nagorno Karabakh, the goals of the Republic,
and the Azerbaijani-Karabakh conflict.

According to the NKR Permanent Mission to France, interviews with
former Co-Chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group Vladimir Kazimirov,
EU Special Representative to the South Caucasus Peter Semnebi,
European Parliament Deputy, member of the committee on parliamentary
cooperation with the South Caucasus states Yevgeni Kirillov, and
others are comprised in the journal.

Articles by the journal’s editor-in-chief, lecturer of the French
Institute of Geopolitics Raymond Kevorkian, lawyer, international law
expert Gerar Gergerian, and NKR Permanent Representative to France
Hovhannes Gevorkian are also comprised in the April issue, reported
NKR MFA press service.