Christi’s catalogue presents paintings of Armenian Artist

Armenpress

CHRISTI’S CATALOGUE PRESENTS PAINTINGS OF ARMENIAN ARTIST

YEREVAN, JULY 5, ARMENPRESS: A catalogue of paintings and other
artifacts, released by famous British Christie’s auction, called British and
Continental Pictures, includes now the works by an Armenian painter Simon
Galstian who was born in 1914 and died in 2000. This means that the starting
price of his paintings at auctions will start from $1,500-$2,000.
The painter’s son, Vigen Galstian, described the appearance of his
father’s works in the catalogue as ‘a big event,’ saying until now only the
works by famous Armenian painter of sea scenes, Ivan Aivazovski, Sarian,
Bashinjagian and Hovnatanian were included in it.
Galstian said it was not a fortuity, as his father’s works had been
included in the catalogue in 2002 and 2004. The Armenian national picture
gallery has on display one work by Simon Galstian and a dozen of others are
kept in store-rooms. Many other his works are in private museums and
collections in Paris, Istanbul, Moscow and Los Angeles.

DM Finds Premature Talks About Proposing his Candidacy For President

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
July 1 2005

RA MINISTER OF DEFENSE FINDS PREMATURE TALKS ABOUT PROPOSING HIS
CANDIDACY FOR THE POST OF THE PRESIDENT OF ARMENIA

YEREVAN, July 4. /ARKA/. RA Minister of Defense Serge Sargsyan finds
premature talks about proposing his candidacy for the post of the
president of Armenia during the regular elections in 2008. According
to him, he hasn’t taken such a decision yet. In this regard he found
senseless the statements of some public and political circles about
supporting his candidacy. “It’s too early to speak about it, since
there are three years till the elections. Support may be to anyone
who proposed his candidacy in the framework of the law”, he said.
To note, presidential elections in Armenia were held in 2003. RA
Minister of Defense Serge Sargsyan headed the pre-election staff of
the current president of Armenia Robert Kocharyan. A.H. -0–

The vanished cosmopolitanism of ancient Salonica

Herald News (Passaic County, NJ)
June 26, 2005 Sunday
All Editions

The vanished cosmopolitanism of ancient Salonica

By ROBERT RUBY, The Baltimore Sun, Wire Services

“Salonica, City of Ghosts,” by Mark Mazower (Alfred A. Knopf, $35,
474 pp.)

The grand metropolises of northern Europe – Paris, London, Berlin –
helped create the Western ideal of worldly, sophisticated cities.
Western travelers imagined every great city as places with large open
spaces and wide boulevards. Dense traffic became a measure of
vitality. So were bright lights and the preening and babble at cafes.

Salonica, for nearly five centuries one of the greatest trading
centers of Europe, defied every expectation, as Mark Mazower, a
Columbia University professor of history, chronicles in his
exhaustive, affectionate biography of the city, a deeply researched
account that becomes a portrait of the singular, vanished
cosmopolitanism of the Ottoman Empire.

“Rotten houses. Smell of rotten wood,” Herman Melville wrote in his
journal after a typically chaotic landing at Salonica’s port on the
Aegean, seeing the city’s distinctively dressed Muslims, Jews and
Christians, and touring the narrow, odorous lanes. “Imagine an
immense accumulation of the rags of all nations, and all colors
rained down on a dense mob, all struggling for huge bales and bundles
of rags, gesturing with all gestures and wrangling in all tongues.”

This was a different, more frenzied vitality from northern Europe’s.
Jaffa (in contemporary Israel); Sofia, Bulgaria; Sarajevo,
Yugoslavia; even Beirut, Lebanon – all important Ottoman cities –
were backwaters compared with Salonica. After conquering the city in
1430, the Ottomans made themselves at home in the Upper Town, where
access to fresh air and fresh water were best; ice was delivered to
them for making sherbet. The city’s population doubled to 20,000 at
the end of the 1400s, thanks to the arrival of Jews expelled from
Spain, then grew to 30,000. The Jews were entrusted with
manufacturing uniforms for the empire’s infantry. Salonica’s trading
routes soon extended through the eastern Mediterranean, west to
Venice, Italy, and east to Persia and India.

The Sublime Porte, as the government in Constantinople was known,
nurtured an unruly religious tolerance. Salonica was the imperfect,
disorderly showcase for both religious antipathy and compromise. “The
city, delicately poised in its confessional balance of power – ruled
by Muslims, dominated by Jews, in an overwhelmingly Christian
hinterland – lent itself to an atmosphere of overlapping devotion,”
Mazower writes. “With time it became covered in a dense grid of holy
places – fountains, tombs, cemeteries, shrines and monasteries –
frequented by members of all faiths in search of divine
intercession.”

Until the city expanded beyond its walls, citizens of every faith
shared equally in its misfortunes. Fires repeatedly rendered
hundreds, then thousands of people homeless. Cholera killed hundreds,
then hundreds more. No visitors were feared more than the empire’s
plundering Albanians, and soldiers en route to war abducted people
for ransom. The pashas appointed by the Porte to govern the city
rarely stayed longer than a year and typically devoted that brief
tenure to extorting bribes.

For Westerners, the city and empire seemed wholly foreign. And for
that reason, Ottoman lands were deemed exotic and inferior. It was
the convention to highlight the empire’s corruption, to characterize
its weaknesses as a form of sinfulness. But Salonica nurtured great
verve in trade. Nationalism seemed less rational, less appealing, to
the city’s Muslims and Jews than did a loose allegiance to a distant
sultan. It is a worldliness mostly lost to us, a cosmopolitanism less
self-centered and strident than the national movements that succeeded
it.

The largest upheavals came during the first half of the 20th century.
After the Balkan wars of 1912 and 1913, the victorious Greeks
supplanted the vanquished Ottomans. In 1923, Greek refugees arrived
from Anatolia, where tens of thousands of Greeks and Armenians had
been murdered, and the city’s remaining Muslims fled to Turkey. The
final, terrible chapter in the city’s transformation came in 1943,
when the Nazis deported Salonica’s Jews to Auschwitz.

It is almost always a mistake to disparage the present. Salonica –
Thessaloniki, the second-largest city in Greece – is now a more
rationally governed city, its streets wider, its nights busier, its
citizens materially richer. But Mazower’s deep excavation of its
history, and especially of its frail communalism, is a reminder of
qualities that the city, the Balkans and all the eastern
Mediterranean can no longer claim as their own.

Robert Ruby is The Sun’s foreign editor.

CDU/CSU advocate study of Armenian Genocide at German schools

Pan Armenian News

CDU/CSU ADVOCATE STUDY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE AT GERMAN SCHOOLS

02.07.2005 05:02

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Christian Democratic Union and Christian Social Union
(CDU/CSU) of Germany have sent a letter to the Ministry of Education and
Religion of the German federal lands proposing to include the history of the
Armenian Genocide in the school curriculum, reported Tagesspiegel. `The
Armenian Genocide during World War I directly related to the following
banishment and tragedies in Europe and of course the Holocaust.’ According
to the message, schools not always properly respond to Turkey erroneously
teaching history to children. Two weeks ago the Bundestag adopted a
resolution on the Armenian Genocide. The resolution does not specify the
events of 1915-1917 as `genocide’, however the concept is underlies the very
grounding of the resolution. Meanwhile, Armenia and most of the
international community qualify the events of 1915-1917 as a genocide. From
the point of view of Turkey the matter merely concerns the tragic
consequences of the forced deportation imposed by the war. Meanwhile, the
first federal Land of Brandenburg has included the Armenian Genocide in the
curriculum.

AAA: Assembly’s First-Ever Young Leadership Mission Arrives In Armen

Armenian Assembly of America
1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
Washington, DC 20036
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:
 
PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
June 30, 2005
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
Email: [email protected]

ASSEMBLY’S FIRST-EVER YOUNG LEADERSHIP MISSION ARRIVES IN ARMENIA
Assembly Leaders to Join Group

Yerevan, Armenia – After months of anticipation, the Assembly’s
Young Leadership Group has arrived in Yerevan for a 12-day excursion
that will include tours of historical sites, briefings by Armenian
government officials and several social events. Board of Directors
Chairman Anthony Barsamian and Executive Director Bryan Ardouny will
join the delegation which includes more than 50 young professionals,
former Assembly interns and families with children.

“This is the first Assembly Mission of its kind and we are honored
to give our young leaders this unique chance to experience their
ancestral home and heritage,” said Barsamian. “This trip will allow
us to see for ourselves the challenges facing Armenia and how each of
us, no matter our age, can help ensure a brighter future for Armenia.”

While in Armenia, Mission participants will attend several briefings
with Armenian government and U.S. Embassy officials, and also meet with
His Holiness Karekin II. The group will visit several historical sites
including Khor Virab, Holy Etchmiadzin, Garni, Geghard, Sardarabad,
the Genocide Museum and Memorial, attend several musical concerts
and performances in Yerevan and enjoy authentic Armenian cuisine at
several area restaurants.

Children ages five through fifteen will have the opportunity to meet
new friends in Armenia and tour the country in a safe and controlled
environment through the Assembly’s “Camp Yerevan” program. The program
includes a series of age specific activities that will allow youngsters
to truly enjoy Armenia’s rich culture and heritage.

Sheryl Santerian, who is traveling with her parents ages 74 and 81,
and her two teenage daughters, ages 17 and 19, says she’s grateful the
Assembly organized a trip to meet the various interests of her family.

“We appreciate that the Assembly recognized the need for families to
make the trip to Armenia together, and designed this trip with that
in mind,” said Santerian. “I’m already looking forward to making a
return trip with my husband and son in a few years.”

Barsamian also added that later this year, the Assembly will return
to Armenia with Board of Directors Member and Mission Chair Annie
Totah who will be leading the 10th annual Trustees Mission to Armenia
and Karabakh.

“Annie has done a terrific job in making the Mission a truly memorable
experience for so many of our members and supporters throughout the
years,” said Barsamian. “We commend her on this milestone anniversary
and thank our supporters for the continued interest in these trips.”

The Trustees Mission to Armenia and Karabakh is scheduled for October
19 through November 1. For additional trip information or to make your
reservations, please contact the Armenian Assembly at (202) 393-3434.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership
organization.

NR#2005-071

Photograph available on Assembly Web site at the following link:

CAPTION: During their first full day in Armenia, the Assembly’s
Young Leadership Group Mission took a bus tour of Yerevan, stopping
along the way to pose for a group picture on the steps of the Mother
Armenia Statue overlooking the capital city.

–Boundary_(ID_HZkdvaXcZtS733NEAsx/Yw)–

http://www.aaainc.org/images/press/2005-071/2005-071-1.jpg
www.armenianassembly.org

BAKU: Azerbaijan, Turkey support each other on Karabakh,Cyprus – lea

Azerbaijan, Turkey support each other on Karabakh, Cyprus – leaders

ANS TV, Baku
30 Jun 05

[Presenter] Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan began his
first day with a visit to the grave of [ex-President] Heydar Aliyev
and then to the Martyrs’ Avenue. The prime minister, who also wrote his
thoughts in the memorial book, laid a wreath at the monument to Turkish
soldiers who died while liberating Baku in 1918. He also made a note
in the memorial book here. Then he came to the Presidential Palace.

President Ilham Aliyev and Erdogan held a press conference.

[Erdogan speaking in Turkish at the conference] We continue to take
the same position on events around Nagornyy Karabakh. As for Armenia,
Turkey will continue to stand by Azerbaijan just like it has done
until now. On the Nagornyy Karabakh issue, our position is the same
as that of the Azerbaijani authorities.

We have responded in the same way to all the offers and demands we
have received. The Council of Europe has recognized Armenia as an
invader in Nagornyy Karabakh as a result of special efforts made by
Turkey. Therefore, the invader must retreat from the occupied land.
This must be done. Turkey is in favour of resolving this problem
through dialogue, and this resolution is naturally connected with
the behaviour of Armenia which must retreat from the territory it
has invaded.

[Ilham Aliyev] We are ready to do our best to help northern Cyprus to
find a way out of isolation. The esteemed prime minister has already
spoken out on this. I said today that various Azerbaijani companies,
including travel agencies, will open their offices in northern
Cyprus. Flights will be organized from Azerbaijan to northern Cyprus.
All other necessary measures will be taken.

I believe that a delegation of Azerbaijani business executives needs
to visit northern Cyprus soon. We deeply regret that the referendum
held in Cyprus failed to justify our hopes. However, nobody will
allow our Turkish brothers in Cyprus to continue living such a life
because of that. Therefore, the isolation of Turkish Cypriots must end.

Inter-confessional relations with Iran develop

INTER-CONFESSIONAL RELATIONS WITH IRAN DEVELOP

A1plus

| 13:39:01 | 30-06-2005 | Culture |

Yesterday on invitation of Director of Cultural Center of the Iranian
Embassy Reza Atuffi and with the blessing of Catholicos of All
Armenians Garegin II, responsible for inter-church relations, bishop
Yeznik Petrosyan visited the Cultural Center to meet with Reza Atuffi.

The purpose of the meeting was to start inter-confessional dialogue
between the Armenian Apostolic Church and the Islamic Republic
of Iran. The parties agreed on conduction of inter-confessional
symposium in Holy Echmiadzin with the topic “Religion and reason in
modern changeable world”, which will have a lasting nature.

Meetings in Armenia and Iran will be held.

NATO Sec. Gen.: Alliance should not play direct role in solution ofK

NATO SEC. GEN.: ALLIANCE SHOULD NOT PLAY DIRECT ROLE IN SOLUTION OF KARABAKH ISSUE

Pan Armenian News
28.06.2005 04:16

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ “I suppose the NATO should not work for playing
a direct role in the settlement of conflicts in Nagorno Karabakh and
Transdniestria. We should not substitute for the OSCE or the Council of
Europe,” said NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer. “Besides,
the Minsk Group of mediators (US, Russia and France) is engaged in
the Nagorno Karabakh problem,” he noted. In his words, here the NATO
has to make as much effort as possible to strengthen the atmosphere
of confidence based on the respect of the territorial integrity of
states. “This also refers to regions as Abkhazia and South Ossetia. The
settlement of the issue of the status of Russian military bases
in Georgia was a positive more lately. We are not going to assume
the role of a gendarme of the world,” Jaap de Hoop Scheffer added,
reported the Novye Izvestia.

UK Diplomat: Crisis in EU not to affect neighborhood policy

UK DIPLOMAT: CRISIS IN EU NOT TO AFFECT NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY

Pan Armenian News
27.06.2005 03:59

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The UK as representative of the EU President
realizes the significance of the European Neighborhood Policy
(ENP) as a factor stimulating the development of democratic norms
and integration of Azerbaijan into the international community, US
Ambassador to Azerbaijan Laurie Bristow stated. Drawing attention to
the ongoing crisis in the EU caused by the debate on adoption of the
EU Constitution the Ambassador stressed that “independently of the
situation the EU should not limit itself to the settlement of inner
problems.” Gradual integration of the new neighbors into the EU should
be at the heart of the ENP. To adopt the program the EU experts will
arrive in Azerbaijan with a draft, which will serve as a basis for
Azerbaijan’s further integration into the European structures”,
Mr. Bristow noted. To remind, June 14, 2004 the EU Council decided
to include the South Caucasian states in the ENP.

MOSCOW: NATO shares Azerbaijan concern re Russian bases in Armenia

NATO shares Azerbaijan’s concern about Russian bases in Armenia

Regnum, Moscow
25 Jun 05

“NATO is concerned about the relocation of Russian troops from Georgia
to Armenia. We will raise this issue with the Russian leadership in
the near future,” NATO Assistant Secretary-General for Defence
Planning and Operations John Colston has said in Baku.

He welcomed the Moscow-Tbilisi agreement on the relocation of the
Russian military bases from Georgia, noting that the Russian
Federation has implemented some of its commitments undertaken at the
OSCE summit in Istanbul.

“We welcome the withdrawal of the troops, however, this step should
not disrupt stability in the South Caucasus,” he said.

Colston also stressed that all the staff and arms from the bases in
Georgia should be withdrawn only to Russian territory.