Exhibition: New gallery displays Armenian objects of ‘witness and survival’

Boston Globe, MA
Nov 2 2018
New gallery displays Armenian objects of ‘witness and survival’

From 1915 through 1918, more than a million Armenians living under Ottoman rule were massacred. Many who survived the genocide fled their homeland, some secretly harboring sacred objects as they passed through border stations on their journey to the United States.

At first, the objects were honored quietly in bedroom shrines. But eventually many were donated to a group of Armenians in the Boston area who wanted to protect them for future generations.

The founders of the Armenian Museum of America in Watertown rented the basement of a Belmont church, which served as the museum from 1986 to 1990, when it moved to its current quarters at 65 Main St.

As if by reflex, some of the objects were boxed again. That is, until this past January, when Jennifer Liston Munson joined the museum as its new executive director.

“Now,” she said, “we are able to emerge from that initial impulse of protect and preserve, to present and share.”

The museum’s long-stored “objects of witness and survival” will be spotlighted in a new first-floor gallery opening on Nov. 15. At a free opening reception, guests can enjoy food and refreshments, speeches by museum leadership, and live music by Armenian cellist Kate Kayaian.

The museum’s collection is a vast repository, with 5,000 ancient and medieval Armenian coins, more than 3,000 textiles, religious artifacts, ceramics, medieval illuminations, and library. The 1969 brutalist-style building was designed by Ben Thompson, a member of the Architects Collaborative and founder of Design Research.

George Bouret
The Armenian Museum of America’s new gallery will showcase artifacts brought to the United States by Armenian immigrants and refugees.

Now the building is undergoing a “reinvention process,” Munson said, with the aid of Virginia Durruty, an architect who most recently redesigned galleries in the Louis Kahn building at Yale University.

“As we speak, the carpeting covering the concrete floors is being lifted up and will be polished,” Munson said in an interview earlier this fall. A metaphor, she added, “for the difficulty of the Armenian history.”

One of the donated objects that will be highlighted in the new gallery is a medieval reliquary arm — a hollow metal-and-brass arm designed to house the bones of a saint. It was bequeathed to the museum by a woman named Aghavni Demirjian.

In 1916, Demirjian’s mother was escorting a friend to a Russian border crossing when she encountered two women who feared they would be searched and their reliquary arm confiscated. They gave the sacred metal arm to Demirjian’s mother, who brought it with her to the United States and kept it in a shrine in her Rhode Island bedroom.

When she died, her daughter donated the reliquary arm to the museum.

“Of course, this is very relevant right now,” Munson said. “We have so many refugees, we have so many people fleeing their homeland.”

Armenian Museum of America
A medieval reliquary arm that was saved during the Armenian genocide will be on view at the re-pening of the Armenian Museum of America.

Earlier this year, Araxie Krikorian donated her grandmother’s “orphan dress,” a white cotton dress that Krikorian embroidered with blue thread at an orphanage in Greece, where she was taken during the genocide. She eventually moved to Rhode Island and brought the dress with her.

The new gallery, “Armenia: art, culture, eternity,” will showcase objects from the country’s genesis in the Asian continent, its Indo-European alphabet, its adoption of Christianity, and its experience with genocide.

“I think people may have heard that word [genocide] but they don’t know what it means, they don’t know the details,” she said.

The first phase of the project used existing funds made possible by donors, patrons, and visitors. Eventually, the museum hopes to renovate the building’s remaining two floors, including its archive and conservation areas, and the building’s exterior.

The museum will host programing, educational tours, live music events, and more in its newly renovated spaces.

It’s really going to be an absolutely beautiful gallery; it’s really going to rival any gallery in Boston,” Munson said.

On Nov. 15 , the Armenian Museum of America will hold a free opening reception in the new first-floor gallery with speakers and live music from 6 to 7:30 p.m. A special reception in the Adele and Haig Der Manuelian Galleries will take place on the third floor from 7:30 to 9 p.m. To register, e-mail [email protected] or call 617-929-2562, ext. 4.

The museum will resume regular hours and admission prices on Nov. 16. The museum is open Thursday through Sunday, noon to 6 p.m. Regular admission for adults is $15; students and seniors pay $5; children and museum members are admitted free of cost.

Cynthia Fernandez can be reached at [email protected].

Food: Armenian restaurant Mayrik proves good food can come from bad events

The Toronto Star, Ont. Canada
Nov 2 2018
 
 
Armenian restaurant Mayrik proves good food can come from bad events
 
By AMY PATAKI, Restaurant Critic
Fri., Nov. 2, 2018
 
Mayrik
 
Three (out of 4)
 
 
Address: 1580 Bayview Ave. (at Belsize Dr.), 416-483-0922, mayrik.ca
 
Chef: Sebouh Yacoubian
 
Hours: Dinner, Tuesday to Sunday from 5 p.m. Brunch, Sunday 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.
 
Reservations: Yes
 
Wheelchair access: Yes
 
Price: Dinner for two with wine, tax and tip: $150
 
Mayrik proves good food can come from bad events.
 
Mayrik is an Armenian restaurant, opened by two men affected by the Ottoman-led genocide that began in 1915, killing 1.5 million Armenians and forcing another half-million to flee.
 
Aram Gabrielian and Jack Yacoubian are part of the modern Armenian diaspora. (Also: Cher, Charles Aznavour, Atom Egoyan)
 
Yacoubian’s forefathers escaped to Anjar village in Lebanon. Gabrielian’s family also fled, one half to Iraq, the other to Lebanon. The refugees assimilated somewhat before moving to Canada.
 
From that history of trauma comes Mayrik, a testament to Armenian resilience with its proud hospitality and confident Lebanese-influenced cooking.
 
“It’s like a funeral, sombre and happy at the same time,” says Gabrielian, 29.
 
Mayrik (“mother” in Armenian) is Toronto’s second Armenian restaurant. Open since last August, it feeds not only the Armenian community but also the young families of Leaside drawn to its modern looks and accessible menu.
 
With its low lighting and whitewashed walls, Mayrik feels serene. Armenia is subtly transmitted through a few hammered copper dishes, a hanging carpet, the alphabet graphic near the door. Since quality Armenian wines are hard to source, Greek vintages fill the list instead.
 
A server goes through the menu in a manner both helpful and tempting. Suddenly ordering something from every category — mezze, salads, khorovats (grilled), plevres (vegetables) and anoush (desserts) — seems necessary.
 
“We’re not trying to mimic our grandmother’s kitchens and comfort foods. We’re doing a twist,” says Gabrielian.
 
Hence, nicely pink lamb chops ($38) are paired with chermoula, a green North African herb sauce. Syrian muhamarra, a spicy walnut-and-pepper dip, goes with a well-timed 20-ounce rib eye ($60). The spectacular roast cauliflower ($16), showered in pine nuts and pomegranate seeds, should be familiar to Fat Pasha fans.
 
Chef Sebouh Yacoubian, son of owner Jack Yacoubian, uses loads of fresh mint, parsley, za’atar and sumac in his dishes, as influenced by his family’s time in Lebanon. He lays flame-licked chicken ($28) atop garlicky labneh and bakes puffy little pitas for scooping up Mediterranean dips ($8). Leftover pita is baked crisp for fattoush ($18) in a creamy yogurt dressing.
 
Yacoubian’s time cooking at Ossington Ave. Greek restaurant Mamakas Taverna shows in his spanikorizo ($14), the distinct basmati rice grains laced with both fresh and cooked spinach. In the same category as home-fried potatoes licked with spicy red pepper purée ($10), the rice shows consideration for nonmeat eaters.
 
Apples, feta and shortbread make for a winning cheesecake served at the Armenian restaurant, Mayrik, in Leaside.  (COLE BURSTON)
 
When Mayrik steers closer to the Armenian canon, we get dishes such as manti ($14), dumplings made on site weekly by the owners’ mothers. These are stiff and baked, not boiled as at Turkish restaurants, with well-seasoned beef and a blanket of garlicky yogurt and dried mint.
 
Bardez ($14) is a salad of wild leeks with radishes and crunchy fried chickpeas that beautifully strips animal and milk fats from the palate. Su borek ($18) layers stretchy white akawi and halloumi cheeses between slippery sheets of homemade dough for a kind of Anatolian lasagna topped with a poached egg. Urfa beef kebab ($18) comes on bread hard to cut even with a serrated knife. The meat is almost as chewy.
 
Lately, for dessert, Yacoubian has been serving fluffy feta cheesecake ($16) with cinnamon stewed apples. It’s welcome and different, as his version of baklava ($14) touched with Thai chilies that produce a faint catch in the back of the throat.
 
At meal’s end, the bill arrives in a long-handled coffee pot. It looks Turkish, which turns out not to be a bad word at Mayrik.
 
“How can you hate someone for something their great-grandfather did?” Gabrielian asks.
 

Sports: Legendary Armenian weightlifter Yuri Vardanyan passes away in US

MediaMax, Armenia
Nov 2 2018
 
 
Legendary Armenian weightlifter Yuri Vardanyan passes away in US
 
 
 
 
Five-time champion of Europe, seven-time champion of the world, Olympic Games winner, renowned Armenian weightlifter Yuri Vardanyan has passed away aged 62 in the U.S.
 
A source in the Ministry of Sport and Youth Affairs of Armenia has shared the sad news with Mediamax Sport. The involved parties are now considering moving the body of the legendary athlete to Armenia.
 
Yuri Vardanyan beat 5 records at a time at three occasions in his career, including the Olympics when he lifted the record 405kg.
 
In 2013-2013, Vardanyan served as the Minister of Sport and Youth Affairs, later taking the position of Armenian Ambassador to Georgia. He was awarded a number of medals, including Order of the Red Banner of Labor and Order of St. Mesrop Mashtots.

Sports: Legendary Armenian weightlifter Yuri Vardanyan dies at 62

Panorama, Armenia
Nov 2 2018
Society 14:07 02/11/2018 Armenia

World-famous Armenian weightlifter, Olympic champion Yuri Vardanyan has passed away after long illness at the age of 62.

He died in the United States, where he was living, the Ministry of Sports and Youth Affairs told Panorama.am.

Vardanyan won a gold medal at the 1980 Summer Olympics, becoming the world’s first weightlifter to achieve a 400 kilogram total in the 82.5 kg weight category.

He was a seven-time World and 5-time European Champion. He earned the title Honoured Master of Sports of the Soviet Union in 1977 and was awarded the Order of Lenin in 1985. In 1994 he was elected member of the International Weightlifting Federation Hall of Fame.

In 2009 Vardanyan became then President Serzh Sargsyan’s adviser and was appointed sports minister in May 2013. In June, he was appointed Armenia’s ambassador to Georgia.

Azerbaijani Press: Authorities refused the request of the Karabakh committee to hold a rally

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
November 1, 2018 Thursday
Authorities refused the request of the Karabakh committee to hold a rally
Baku / 01.11.18 / Turan: Baku Mayor"s Office refused to authorize the
rally of the Karabakh Public Committee, demanding to take decisive
measures to liberate the occupied territories. The city administration
considered it inappropriate to hold a rally on November 24.
"Negotiations on Karabakh are conducted transparently, all events are
thoroughly covered in the media," said the mayor"s response.
On September 29, the "Karabakh" committee held a rally under the
slogan: "Freedom to Karabakh", demanding that the authorities take
decisive measures in this direction.
* The Karabakh Committee was established this summer with the
participation of 17 public organizations: the Karabakh Liberation
Organization; the party of the "Classic" Popular Front, Nationalist
Action, Civil Solidarity, Islamic, National Democratic, and others.
-03Ñ06--

Azerbaijani Press: Internet freedom in Azerbaijan is deteriorating – Freedom House

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
November 1, 2018 Thursday
Internet freedom in Azerbaijan is deteriorating - Freedom House
Baku/01.11.18/Turan: Freedom House, an international human rights
organization, published a report on the state of the world Internet
freedom in 2018 Freedom on the Net 2018. The report says that
governments around the world are stepping up control over citizen
information, using fake news to harass dissent and thus undermine
trust in the Internet and the foundations of democracy. Internet
propaganda and misinformation are increasingly poisoning the digital
realm. All this contributed in 2018 to the decline of Internet
freedom.
At the same time, it is especially noted that China applies and
transfers equipment for tracking users to the Internet to other
countries. Such technology of persecution from Beijing buy Azerbaijan
and Armenia too. The report explores the situation in 65 countries.
Estimates are given on a 100-point scale. At the same time, 0 is an
indicator of higher freedom, - 100 - the lowest freedom. In the
interval 0, the freedoms of the country are assigned, 31-60 -
partially free 61-100 - not free countries. Azerbaijan appeared on the
60th place - on the border between partially free and not free
countries. Azerbaijan is located between Cambodia (59) and Kazakhstan
(61). Azerbaijan"s neighbors Georgia and Armenia occupy 25th and 27th
places. The authors note a decrease of internet freedom in 2017-18.
The transition of Armenia from among partially free countries to the
category of free, according to the authors of the report, is connected
with the decisive role of the velvet revolution in this country. The
three most free countries were Estonia (6 points), Iceland (6 points)
and Canada (15 points). The top five free countries also include the
USA (22 points) and the United Kingdom (23). - 16D06-

Azerbaijani Press: Russian MFA: Talks on Karabakh conflict unlikely until situation in Armenia stabilizes

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Nov 2 2018

By  Trend

Serious negotiations on the settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict are unlikely until the political situation in Armenia stabilizes, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said, RIA Novosti reported.

“The agreement that was reached [during the talks of the President of Azerbaijan and the Acting Prime Minister of Armenia in Dushanbe] was that contacts should be continued, that foreign ministers will meet, and that, of course, both Armenia and Azerbaijan are ready to work with the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs. We welcome such an agreement,” Lavrov said at a press conference in Moscow.

“We understand that until such turbulent internal political processes, which we are now observing, are completed, it is hardly possible to seriously consider certain ways out of this crisis and ensure a full-fledged settlement of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict,” he added.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts.

Azerbaijani Press: USAID States Serious Decline of Civil Society in Azerbaijan

Turan Information Agency, Azerbaijani Opposition Press
November 1, 2018 Thursday
USAID States Serious Decline of Civil Society in Azerbaijan
Baku / 01.11.18 / Turan: The state of civil society in Azerbaijan
continues to deteriorate in all indicators over the past three years.
The government continues to arbitrarily intervene in the activities of
NGOs, harass human rights activists and political activists, prohibit
activists from going abroad and freeze their bank accounts. This is
stated in the USAID Sustainability Report on Civil Society Structures
in the World.
This government"s approach to civil society continued to create
problems for Azerbaijan"s participation in international structures.
In March 2017, Azerbaijan announced its withdrawal from the Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) after the country was
excluded from the EITI Board in October 2016 for failing to create
normal conditions for civil society.
Among the factors hampering the civilian sector of the country is
indicated the negative legal environment, which over the past year has
become even tougher with the introduction of restrictions on financial
transactions and legal services.
The so-called "NGO case", initiated against several foreign and local
NGOs in 2014, has not yet been closed, although the law prohibits
keeping criminal cases open for more than nineteen months.
The government continued to use this case to harass and interrogate its critics.
Almost all independent NGOs report constant surveillance. Some
representatives of NGOs and the media face a ban on foreign travel,
and many (about 20 people) are subjected to a humiliating search every
time they cross the border.
The actual ban on receiving foreign grants remains in force, because
the Ministry of Justice refuses to register them.
Three years ago, the rules for registration of foreign NGOs in
Azerbaijan were tightened, after which many people left the country
and could not return because of the refusal to register.
More than 50 international organizations have closed their offices
over the past few years, including all major projects funded by USAID
and the European Union. Therefore, two thirds of independent NGOs in
Azerbaijan have suspended their activities, and the rest exist only on
paper.
State funding is, in fact, the only remaining source of grants for
local NGOs, but independent NGOs do not receive state funding.
The country's media are in a similar situation against the background
of a strong restriction of freedom of speech in the country. The media
is largely dependent on government support. Awards, grants, medals and
even apartments to loyal media representatives are issued by the
government, which indicates control over the press.
Critical media and individual journalists are persecuted and accused
by the authorities of working for the West and for Armenians, accused
of treason and labeled as "fifth column".
Some government media, such as Haqqin.az, have even gained a
reputation as a "messenger of trouble" because, as a rule, the
activists they write about are subject to further questioning and
prosecution several days later.
The government also effectively uses social media as a tool for
further pressure on human rights defenders and activists, journalists
and especially those who continue to work with the international
community. Authorities hack their accounts and use an army of trolls
against them.
Summing up the analysis, the authors of the report put Azerbaijan on
the last place among the CIS countries as a civil society. -02D-

Azerbaijani Press: Armenia getting further isolated in region – head of Azerbaijan’s PACE delegation

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Nov 2 2018

By  Trend

Armenia is being further isolated in the region, Chairman of the Azerbaijani Parliamentary Committee for International and Inter-Parliamentary Relations Samad Seyidov told Trend on Nov. 2.

“Armenia’s policy does not inspire confidence in anyone,” Seyidov, who is also head of the Azerbaijani delegation to PACE, said.

“The Pashinyan government is trying to pursue policy that serves the interests of Armenia, however, the more it tries, the more Armenia is being isolated in the region,” he said. “In fact, Armenia’s regional ties are being ruined.”

“This is a paradox, as no matter how Armenia tries to change the situation in the region in its favour, in reality it only becomes worse for itself. And the reason is that Armenia’s political course is fundamentally wrong,” he said.

“Armenia must recognize that all its problems are the result of the occupation of Azerbaijani lands, the expulsion of Azerbaijanis from their lands as a result of the policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide against Azerbaijanis,” Seyidov added.

“The current processes in the region are in favor of Azerbaijan and the recent events in Armenia create a strong basis for such a conclusion,” he added. “In this regard, I would like to cite a few specific facts. A few days ago, Istanbul hosted meetings of foreign ministers of the regional countries in a trilateral format. A meeting of foreign ministers of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Georgia was held on October 29, while a meeting of foreign ministers of Azerbaijan, Turkey and Iran – on October 30.”

Seyidov stressed that respect and support for the principles of international law, in particular, sovereignty, territorial integrity, inviolability of internationally recognized borders, a specific and principled position on resolving the Armenia-Azerbaijan Nagorno-Karabakh conflict based on these principles have been once again outlined in the Istanbul declarations, signed at both meetings of the trilateral format.

“In these declarations, the regional countries, in particular the Iranian side, expressed open support for the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Azerbaijan, made an appeal to resolve the conflict on the basis of these principles,” he said.

Seyidov stressed that Armenia is always trying to harm the Azerbaijan-Iran relations and use it in its own interests.

“However, it is obvious that all the leading countries of the region, namely, Turkey, Iran, Georgia call for resolving the conflict specifically within the territorial integrity of Azerbaijan and confirm that in the above-mentioned declarations,” he said.

The conflict between the two South Caucasus countries began in 1988 when Armenia made territorial claims against Azerbaijan. As a result of the ensuing war, in 1992 Armenian armed forces occupied 20 percent of Azerbaijan, including the Nagorno-Karabakh region and seven surrounding districts.

The 1994 ceasefire agreement was followed by peace negotiations. Armenia has not yet implemented four UN Security Council resolutions on withdrawal of its armed forces from the Nagorno-Karabakh and the surrounding districts.

Sports: Armenian weightlifters set out to World Championship

News.am, Armenia
Nov 2 2018

The Armenian men’s weightlifting team headed to Ashgabat to take part in the 2018 World Championship which will be held from November 3 to November 10.

Andranik Karapetyan (81 kg), Hakob Mkrtchyan (89 kg), Simon Martirosyan (109 kg) and Gor Minasyan (+109 kg) will represent the Armenian team.

The championship will be rated for the Olympic Games 2020 to be held in Tokyo.

The women’s team included Isabella Yaylyan (64 kg), Tatev Hakobyan (90 kg), Liana Gyurjyan (75 kg) and Arpine Dalalyan (+90 kg).