Compensation Money Of Genocide Victims’ Inheritors Given Already For

COMPENSATION MONEY OF GENOCIDE VICTIMS’ INHERITORS GIVEN ALREADY FOR SECOND DAY

Noyan Tapan
Armenians Today
Jan 15 2007

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, NOYAN TAPAN – ARMENIANS TODAY. The HSBC Bank
Armenia started from January 11 payments of the compension to
inheritors of the victims of the Armenian Genocide committed in
Ottaman Turkey in early 20th century.

The New York Life Insurance American company, where once Armenian
bacome the Genocide victims were insured, gave the money.

As Radio Liberty states, 5 people got the compensation already on
January 11, other 1248 people from Yerevan and the marzes are in the
payment lists. The so called Reconciliation Fund Council entrusted this
obligation to the HSBC bank, and the radio station was informed by
the bank, the payment is carried out according to the lists affirmed
by the fund and letters certified by the fund. No payment will be
made without those letters.

"The claimants must personally present themselves. Unfortunately,
there are cases when some of them are dead and the son or daughter
wants to get the money. But in similar cases, there is a right to
give the money to them only in the case when they present a will or
licence about being the inheritor affirmed by the notary office," Suren
Zohrabian, the HSBC bank clients’ service department manager mentioned.

All the 1888 letters a part of which are repulsive are already in
the bank.

But those are gradually sent to senders for no accumulations arise
in the bank.

In words of Artak Khachatrian, the HSBC bank individual financial
services manager, the package was got 3-4 days, more than 100
letters were already sent, other 100 ones were be sent on the next
day. "We shall send 200 letters in a week. All the letters will reach
senders during 6 weeks. The money allocation may continue one-two
months. Though there is no limit of terms of the money allocation. If
the fund affirmed the beneficiary we are obliged to pay him when he
wants," he mentioned.

The New York Life Insurence company, getting 2515 applications of
victims’ insured inheritors, started payments on November 11. 3
million 674 thousand 970 dollars will be allocated in Armenia among
1253 people, 635 claims are refused. Armenians of the U.S. will get
2.7 million.

In total, the compensation process is implemented in 26 countries of
the world. About 8 million dollars are envisaged for that purpose.

Less Than Half Of Applicants Granted U.S. Non-Immigrant Visas

LESS THAN HALF OF APPLICANTS GRANTED U.S. NON-IMMIGRANT VISAS

Armenpress
Jan 15 2007

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS: Less than half of 9,954 Armenian
citizens who sought non-immigration visas for traveling to the United
States of America last year were granted permission. The public affairs
section of the U.S. Embassy in Yerevan told Armenpress that overall
4,324 applicants were granted visas, while 5,630 were denied it.

The public affairs section said also the number of granted visas
reduced to 43.5 percent of all applicants against 45 percent in 2005
and 49 percent in 2004. It said more than half of applicants in the
last seven years were denied visas.

The public affairs section said the number of applicants seeking
tourist visas also declined. Thus, 22, 946 applicants sought tourist
visas in 2000, while last year only 8,535 Armenians wanted to see
the USA as tourists. Also 419 people applied last year for student,
educational and other visas.

‘Voices from the Lake’ Doc Leads Conference at Paris Shoah Memorial

‘Voices from the Lake’ Documentary Leads Conference at Shoah Memorial in
Paris

ASBAREZ, 1/13/2007

LOS ANGELES–Voices from the Lake, the Armenian Film Foundation’s
seminal documentary on the deportation and massacre of Armenians,
leads a conference and full week of film screenings on the Armenian
Genocide at the Memorial de la Shoah in Paris January 14 to 18.

Voices from the Lake is being screened as part of France’s Year of
Armenia, or Année de l’Armenie, which began in September 2006 and ends
in July. Year of Armenia is a monumental undertaking of conferences,
screenings, exhibits and other events throughout France organized by
Armenie Mon Amie, a large committee of influential Frenchmen,
including the presidents of the Senate and National Assembly, the
Minister of Foreign Affairs, and a host of business people,
entertainers, filmmakers, artists, fashion designers and other
cultural leaders. Charles Aznavour serves on the committee. The
official website is _www.armenie-mon-amie.com_
(http://www.armenie-mon -amie.com) .

Edward Nalbandian, the Armenian ambassador to France, and Nelly
Tardivier-Henrot, the Commissaire generale of Armenie Mon Amie, kick
off the conference on Sunday, Jan. 14. Historians Yves Ternon at the
University of Paris at Sorbonne, Raymond Kevorkian of the University
of Paris at Saint-Denis, and Claire Mouradian of the Nubar library
also will participate in the conference.

The Memorial de la Shoah will be showing two documentary films a day
through Thursday. Voices from the Lake will be screened on
Jan. 15. The film, the first feature-length documentary on the
Armenian Genocide, focuses on the tragedy unfolding during the last
days in the city of Kharpert. It won the Bronze Chris Award from the
Columbus Film Festival.

Voices from the Lake and Germany and the Secret Genocide, which
received first prize out of 1,500 entries from 17 countries at the
U.S. International Film and Video Festival, are films one and two in a
trilogy of films Dr. J.

Michael Hagopian has produced on the Armenian Genocide. The third and
final film in the trilogy, Caravans Along the Euphrates, is in
production.

Donations are being sought to complete the final film in the
trilogy. For further information, please contact [email protected]
or 805-495-0717.

No Boycott Of Discussion Of Scientific Reform Concept By ANAS

NO BOYCOTT OF DISCUSSION OF SCIENTIFIC REFORM CONCEPT BY ANAS

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Jan 10 2007

YEREVAN, January 10. /ARKA/. The Board of Armenia’s National Academy
of Sciences (ANAS) has not boycotted the discussion of the scientific
reform concept, President of ANAS Radik Martirossian reported.

In particular, the Academy did not boycott the conference on the
scientific reform concept held in Tsakhkadzor recently, Martirossian
said. He pointed out that four scientists of the Academy take part in
the interagency commission to carry out the presidential instruction
on scientific reforms.

According to Martirossian, all the statements claiming the Academy
has its entire resources expired and is a "soviet" structure sin
against the truth, because the Academy is a successfully developing
institution.

"We agree the Academy needs reforms, and the process has intensely
developed: we finished the staff optimization; we carry out the
modernization of substructures and actively cooperate with the leading
scientific institutions, particularly with the Russian Academy of
Sciences", Martirossian said.

Earlier, the Chairman of the RA Fund for Science and Advanced
Technologies stated that the RA Academy of Sciences does not put
forth any efforts, hinders the course of the scientific reforms
and impedes the implementation of the respective presidential
instruction.

Azeri Official Says Armenia Cannot Join Gas Project Until Karabakh I

AZERI OFFICIAL SAYS ARMENIA CANNOT JOIN GAS PROJECT UNTIL KARABAKH RESOLVED

Turan news agency, Baku,
9 Jan 2007

Baku, 9 January: No bilateral or multilateral relations are possible
with Armenia until the Karabakh conflict is resolved, the head of the
[Azerbaijani] Foreign Ministry press and information policy department,
Tahir Tagizada, has told Turan commenting on Armenian Foreign Minister
Vardan Oskanian’s statement today saying that Yerevan strives to join
the Trans-Caspian gas pipeline.

In order for Yerevan to join regional projects, obstacles to the
resolution of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict must be removed, namely
occupied Azerbaijani territories should be vacated, Tagizada said.

The diplomat also denied Oskanian’s remarks that talks were under
way on Armenia joining the gas pipeline project.

The Armenian foreign minister today made a sensational statement
about Armenia’s wish to become a participant in this gas project in
order to diversify its gas supplies.

Georgia Does Not Intend To Import Armenian Energy In The Near Future

GEORGIA DOES NOT INTEND TO IMPORT ARMENIAN ENERGY IN THE NEAR FUTURE

Regnum, Russia
Jan 10 2006

At present moment Georgia does not need additional energy import,
particularly from Armenia, a REGNUM correspondent is told at
Electricity System Commercial Operator (ESCO) commenting on reports
released by Russian media that the Georgian side did not confirm its
application concerning purchasing electric power from Armenia made
in the end of 2006.

According to ESCO, at present time, Georgia imports electric power
mostly from Turkey to provide energy for Ajaria at the amount of
1.5 mln kwh in exchange. Insignificant amounts of electric energy,
100-200 thousand kwh are imported from Azerbaijan, only to provide
for normal functioning of two energy systems of the two countries in
a parallel regime. The rest of energy needed Georgia received from
domestic reserves.

As for the Georgian application for receiving electric energy from
Armenia, the matter concerned import of Iranian instead of Armenian
energy, as Russian media reported. The Iranian energy was supposed
to be received by Georgia in transit via Armenia, also in exchange;
the matter concerned amounts lower than it was mentioned in the media.

However, as Georgia experiences no deficit, the scheme, at least yet,
has not been applied.

President Of The Bar Of Azerbaijan To Visit Budapest

PRESIDENT OF THE BAR OF AZERBAIJAN TO VISIT BUDAPEST

ArmRadio.am
09.01.2007 11:55

January 20 President of the Bar of Azerbaijan Azer Taghiev will visit
Budapest, where he will meet with Ramil Safarov sentenced to life
imprisonment for murdering Armenian Officer Gurgen Margaryan.

"Azeri Press" reports that Taghiev intends to meet with his Hungarian
counterparts to organize an effective defense of Ramil Safarov.

St Vladimir’s And St Nersess Mark Collaborative Publishing Effort

ST VLADIMIR’S AND ST NERSESS MARK COLLABORATIVE PUBLISHING EFFORT

St. Vladimir’s Orthodox Theological Seminary, NY
Jan 9 2007

Deans Rev. John H. Erickson and V. Rev. Daniel M. Findikyan marked
decades of continued collaboration between their respective seminaries,
St Vladimir’s and St Nersess Armenian Seminary, at a book launch
December 6, 2006. The launch announced a newly released title,
Worship Traditions in Armenia and the Neighboring Christian East, ed.

Roberta R. Ervine, and previewed a stunning upcoming release by Abraham
Terian: a translation of an early fourth-century letter from Macarius
I, Patriarch of Jerusalem, to the son of St Gregory the Illuminator,
founder of the Armenian church.

At the celebration, Worship Traditions was feted as the third book
published within the AVANT series, a cooperative effort begun in
2004 between St Vladimir’s Seminary Press and St Nersess Armenian
Seminary, which provides Armenian patristic, dogmatic, liturgical,
and other early religious literature to the English-speaking world.

Worship Traditions is a collection of articles dedicated exclusively
to the liturgical traditions of the Eastern Christian churches,
gleaned from a scholarly symposium connected with the commemoration
of the fortieth anniversary of St Nersess Seminary’s establishment.

Dr Paul Meyendorff, the Father Alexander Schmemann Professor of
Liturgical Theology at St Vladimir’s, who spoke about the content of
the book and its place in contemporary liturgical studies, noted, "The
importance of Armenian liturgy has heretofore been largely ignored,
because churches using those traditions are relatively small and their
languages were not accessible to Western scholars in the vanguard
of liturgical scholarship. However, within the last 50 years, the
field has taken a turn toward comparative liturgy, and the Armenian
rite-which was tremendously influenced by, and influenced as well,
all major liturgical traditions-has gained importance. With this book,
the Armenian rite enters into the mainstream of liturgical studies."

He further noted that the first article in the book, by leading
liturgical scholar Robert F. Taft, SJ, "Was the Eucharistic Anaphora
Recited Secretly or Aloud? The Ancient Tradition and What Became of
It," addressed a "burning issue in most living churches that live
the liturgy," and quipped, "It alone is worth the price of the book."

Dr Roberta R. Ervine, editor of Worship Traditions, characterized the
book as a "panoramic snapshot of liturgical thinking" that encompassed
both renowned scholars and newcomers and captured the past, present,
and future in the field of liturgical studies. She acknowledged her
colleagues at St Nersess as those always ready to serve the church
and those always on the cutting edge of scholarship and visionary
initiative, saying, "I work with people willing to jump off a cliff
and be caught by the wings of the unseen Spirit." Dr Ervine, Associate
Professor of Armenian Studies at St Nersess, is a graduate of Columbia
University, with extensive teaching experience at all levels, lately
at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem (1995-2001), where she taught
a wide spectrum of courses in Armenian Studies and developed graduate
and undergraduate curricula.

Dr Abraham Terian, series editor and Professor of Armenian Patristics
and Academic Dean at St Nersess Armenian Seminary, announced the
upcoming fourth AVANT title, of which he is the author: a translation
of and commentary on a letter by Macarius I, dated AD 335. He noted
that the "very significant" letter can be situated chronologically
between two other texts of great importance for our understanding
of the liturgy: the Didaskalia and the Apostolic Constitutions-and
is among the handful of primary sources dealing with liturgy in the
early fourth century.

The letter, which describes how the rites of Baptism and Eucharist were
performed in the early church, along with various rites of anointing,
could be considered a companion to St Cyril of Jerusalem’s Catechetical
Lectures, which explains the theological meaning of these two major
sacraments without describing how they were carried out. "This upcoming
book is for all those interested in the Old Jerusalem sacramental
tradition," said Dr Terian.

Fr Findikyan, Master of Ceremonies for the event, also acknowledged
honored members of the audience: the family of Armen Jerejian
(1916-1994), in whose memory the book is dedicated, and other
contributors to the volume, Dr Edward G. Mathews, Jr., Brother Stavros
of New Skete, and Dr Terian.

Rev. Dr. Alexander Rentel, Assistant Professor of Canon Law and
Byzantine Studies at St Vladimir’s, gave the final benediction: an
evening dismissal from the Old Constantinopolitan Euchologion, a prayer
whose history and tone served as a link between the two seminaries.

Photos:

Theodore Bazil, Managing Director of St Vladimir’s Seminary
Press,(left) and V. Rev. Daniel M. Findikyan, Dean of St Nersess
Armenian Seminary, celebrated their collaborative publishing effort
at a book launch held on St Vladimir’s campus December 6.

Roberta R. Ervine, Associate Professor of Armenian Studies at St
Nersess Armenian seminary, holds a copy of the newest release from
SVS Press’s AVANT series, "Worship Traditions in Armenia," which
she edited.

p?option=com_content&task=view&id=371& Itemid=126

http://www.svots.edu/News/Recent/index.ph

Turkey Launches `Genocide’ Investigation Against Taner Akcam

The Armenian Reporter
P.O. Box 129
Paramus, NJ 07652
Tel: (201) 226-1995
Fax: (201) 226-1660
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:
_______________

BR EAKING NEWS

Turkey Launches `Genocide’ Investigation Against Taner Akçam

PARAMUS, NJ – Tanar Akçam, the first Turkish intellectual to
recognize the Armenian Genocide as such, has become the latest to be
investigated for `insulting Turkishness.’
The Istanbul newspaper Radikal has reported that an official
investigation has been opened against University of Minnesota Akçam, who
claims that the Armenian deportations of 1915 and following constituted a
genocide. Radikal broke the story on January 9, 2007.
In an October 6, 2006, newspaper column in the Turkish Armenian
journal Agos, Akçam criticized the prosecution of Agos managing editor
Hrant Dink for using the term `genocide,’ thereby `insulting Turkishness’
under the notorious Article 301 of Turkey’s penal code. Highlighting the
term `genocide,’ Akçam declared himself an accessory to the charges
against Dink, and urged readers to join in Dink’s support.
In response, Recep Akkus, an associate of ultra-nationalist
attorney Kemal Kerinçsiz, filed a criminal complaint against Akçam based
on penal code articles 301 (the `insulting Turkishness’ provision), 214
(`instigation to commit a crime’), 215 (`praise of a crime and a
criminal’), and 216 (`instigating public animosity and hatred’).
Akçam replied in a deposition at the public prosecutor’s office
in Sisli on January 5.
Akçam is the author of A Shameful Act: The Armenian Genocide and
the Question of Turkish Responsibility (New York: Metropolitan
Books/Henry Holt, 2006), which has been widely and positively reviewed in
the United States, and has brought a great deal of public attention
lately to the author and the subject of the Armenian Genocide.
Radikal’s newsbrief on the investigation launched against Akçam
can be read online at
haberno9558&tari h=09/01/2007. (The present article is based on a
translation of the Radikal piece, produced by the Armenian Reporter.)

www.armenianreporteronline.com
www.radikal.com.tr/haber.php?

Venice councilman was a problem-solver

Sarasota Herald-Tribune, FL
Dec 29 2006

Venice councilman was a problem-solver
By PATRICK WHITTLE

VENICE — More than a longtime Venice councilman or tireless public
servant, John Kalajian will be remembered as a man who cared about
solving problems in his community, his wife said Thursday.

"If there was a challenge, John always had a creative way to meet the
challenge," said Sarabeth Kalajian.

Kalajian, a Venice City Council member from 1978 to 1987 and a local
volunteer, fundraiser and community leader for many years, died Dec.
27 of cancer. He was 61.

Family members and former public officials and co-workers remembered
Kalajian as energetic, idealistic and motivated. During his time in
Venice, he served on the boards of a host of community organizations,
including the founding board of the Community Foundation of Sarasota
County. He also worked as a government relations consultant.

Stewart Stearns, president and CEO of the Community Foundation,
recalled a meeting when Kalajian worked for a drug education program
for youths. Kalajian put a chair in the middle of a circle of 60
youths and said: "Here, Stewart; here’s where you sit," Stearns said.

"I said ‘Why did you do that to me, John?’ He said, ‘Stewart, you
needed to learn as much as they did,’" Stearns said. "John expressed
a real deep concern for kids."

Kalajian’s path to Venice was circuitous: The son of ethnic
Armenians, he emigrated to Boston from Germany at age 4. The
Kalajians originally planned to move to California, but ended up
settling in Boston when John’s father became ill. In 1974, John
Kalajian moved to Venice to work as a nurse anesthetist.

Some Venice residents recognize Kalajian for helping to build the
Centennial Park Gazebo and to refurbish the Venice Fishing Pier. Ed
Taylor, a former City Council member who served with Kalajian,
remembers him as "just a real straight shooter."

"All of us were enamored of John’s patriotism and his commitment to
the city," Taylor said.

Kalajian is survived by his wife, Sarabeth, a son, Matthew Kalajian
of Charlotte, N.C.; a daughter, Jill Kalajian of Tampa; parents Paul
and Araxi Kalajian of Boston; and sisters Karen Kalajian of Windham,
Maine, Alice Hunter of Philadelphia and Audrey Kalajian of Arlington,
Mass.

A service for Kalajian is planned for 1 p.m. Jan. 2 at the Selby
Botanical Gardens Great Room by the Bay.

The John L. Kalajian and Sarabeth A. Kalajian Fund for Children’s
Literacy at the Community Foundation of Sarasota County Inc. is
accepting memorial contributions.

The address is P.O. Box 49587, Sarasota, FL 34237. Contributions can
also be made to TideWell Hospice and Palliative Care, 5955 Rand
Blvd., Sarasota, FL 34238.