‘We have a new dessert this year’: Armenian Food Festival returns to Richmond for its 61st year

Channel 8 ABC News, USA
Sept 6 2019
‘We have a new dessert this year’: Armenian Food Festival returns to Richmond for its 61st year

by: Katie Dupree

      

RICHMOND, Va. (WRIC) — From grape leaves to chicken kabobs … cheese and spinach beoreg — the Armenian Food Festival is back in Richmond. 8News Anchor Katie Dupree got an inside look at the preparations.

“We have a new dessert this year. It’s called bishi. It’s like the Armenian version of let’s say … donuts,” said church member Lilly Bouroujian Thomas.

The longest-running food festival in Richmond has returned for its 61st year, and the long history of the festival and the Armenian church building itself can be traced back to pastries.

“Their goal was to build a church to thank America, first of all, for having them here, and for being saved because a lot of their family members were massacred during the genocide … so the women would bake,” said church member Linda Sharigian.

The original ladies raised enough money selling their baked goods all around Richmond to build the current church, and family members of those women are still baking today.

Lilly taught Katie how to make just one of the delicious pastries that can be found at the festival.

“We’re making bourma today. It’s almost like baklava — instead of layering it, we just roll it,” Lilly said.

“There you go. Perfect,” Lilly told Katie as she was folding the bourma in half.

“Then we butter this, the top also, so when we put the walnuts on, they stick to it,” Lilly explained. “Walnuts, cinnamon and sugar. Very light sugar.”

“Did you just give away the secret ingredient?” Katie asked.

“I didn’t give the measurements!” Lilly responded while laughing.

“That’s true,” Katie said. “Fair enough! OK, does that look okay?”

“Yes! Perfect,” Lilly said.

“Loosely roll?” Katie asked.

“Yes,” Lilly responded. “Just push it in.”

“Push it in like that?” Katie asked.

“Yes! That’s so pretty, Katie!” Lilly said.

The pastries may look pretty, but they’re not done yet.

“As soon as it comes from the oven, while it’s still hot, we put the syrup on,” Lilly explained.

You can find other sweets at the Armenian Food Festival and savory options, too.

“We have chicken kabob and we have pork tenderloin kabob … of course, our very famous hye burger. People love that,” Lilly said.

If the menu sounds a little familiar to other festivals in the area, the ladies tell me it’s the spices that set them apart.  

“It’s all homemade … it’s just good,” Linda explained.

The Armenian Food Festival runs from Friday, Sept. 6 through Sunday, Sept. 8 at St. James Armenian Church, located at 834 Pepper Ave. in Richmond.

The hours on Friday and Saturday are from 11:30 a.m. to 9 p.m. and noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday.

For more information about the Armenian Food Festival, visit their website.



Film: ‘I Am Not Alone’ Trailer: Armenia’s ‘Velvet Revolution’ Starts With a Step in New Documentary (Exclusive Video)

The Wrap
Sept 6 2019

System of a Down’s Serj Tankian produced film about 2018 non-violent movement premiering at TIFF Saturday

PRODUCTION: Armenian/Bulgarian/German Feature Film and TV Series in Production

Film New Europe
Sept 6 2019
PRODUCTION: Armenian/Bulgarian/German Feature Film and TV Series in Production
               Featured FNE Staff 2019-09-06

   

  • Remission by Hovhannes Galstyan credit: Parallels Filmproduction

    SOFIA: The Bulgarian company Jelfilm is currently in production with a TV series-melodrama Remission, set to premiere in November 2019 on the Armenian Public TV. The main subject of the series will serve for a 120 minute drama Metamorphosis. Both projects are directed by Hovhannes Galstyan and are Armenian/Bulgarian/German coproductions.

    The projects revolve around the artist’s vulnerability, his dependence on the influence of the capital, the bureaucratic intrigues, the envy and hostility of his colleagues. According to Jelfilm representatives, “the story is inspired by true events and shows the cruel battle of an artist who’s fighting to finish his creation”.

    The main characters are played by Khoren Levonyan and Lilit Hakobyan, from the Hanover State Ballet Theatre, who is also the choreographer of the ballet Metamorphosis, around which the projects unfold.

    Both projects are coproductions between Armenia’s Parallels Film Production, Public Television and One Man Studio production, Bulgaria’s Jelfilm and Germany’s Clever Production. The producers are: Hovhannes Galstyan, Margarita Grigoryan, Migran Stepanyan, Laura Clever and Vasili & Vitali Sharkevich.

    The budgets are 250,000 EUR for the TV series and 650,000 EUR for the feature film, representatives of Jelfilm told FNE. The projects are supported by the Public Television of Armenia as well as private sponsors including Ardshinbank, one of the largest banks in Armenia.

    The shooting of the sixteen 40-minute episodes is expected to wrap in October 2019, while the feature film will be shot after the premiere of the TV series and released in the summer of 2020. Shooting takes place in Armenia and part of the postproduction for the feature film will be done in Bulgaria and Germany.

    Production Information:

    Producer:
    Parallels Filmproduction (Armenia)

    Coproducers:
    Public Television of Armenia (Armenia)
    One Man Studio production (Armenia)
    Jelfilm (Bulgaria)
    Clever Production (Germany)

    Credits:
    Director: Hovhannes Galstyan
    Scriptwriters: Hovhannes Galstyan, Marine Zalaryan
    DoP: Mihran Stepanyan
    Cast: Lilit Hakobyan, Khoren Levonyan, Vivien Bastajyan, Frida York, Sos Janibekyan

    https://www.filmneweurope.com/news/bulgaria-news/item/118679-production-armenian-bulgarian-german-feature-film-and-tv-series-in-production

"Karin" – an Armenian-Turkish music project: From deportations to duets

Qantara, Germany
Sept 6 2019
“Karin” – an Armenian-Turkish music project

“Karin” is a musical dialogue between two virtuosos seeking to reconcile the souls of their home countries through their instruments. Marian Brehmer listened to the second album of Armenian duduk virtuoso Vardan Hovanissian and Turkish baglama master Emre Gultekin.

One can hear the closely interwoven tonalities of the baglama and the duduk even on the first track of the album, revealing that the two instruments are by no means strangers to each other and that the full beauty of their sound seems to emerge when they are played in duet.

The Turkish long-necked lute and the Armenian oboe made of apricot wood are more than just two instruments from Asia Minor. With their unique sounds, they are the cultural ambassadors of two countries which share a complicated historical relationship to each other.

“Karin” is the title of the latest album released by the Armenian duduk virtuoso Vardan Hovanissian and the Turkish baglama master Emre Gultekin. This second duo project following their album “Adana” brings the two musicians together again and, although they are both cosmopolitan performers, the music is thoroughly rooted in their respective homelands.

Scoping a historical power struggle

The disc starts off so lively and cheerful that the uninformed listener is unlikely to have any idea of the deep tragedy behind the title “Karin”. What to some might sound like a woman’s name is the former designation for the eastern Anatolian mountain city of Erzurum.

For centuries, Erzurum, a city located about 1900 metres above sea level and at the crossroads of different cultures and empires, found itself caught up in the various power struggles between Armenia, Russia, Iran and the Ottoman Empire.

The metropolis remains anchored in Armenian historical memory, however, on account of the mass murder committed against Armenians during the period of the First World War.

Karin is also the birthplace of Hovanissian’s grandfather, one of just 200 who survived following the deportation of some 40,000 Armenians from the city during the genocide.

Genuine, deeply rooted reconciliation

Considering this family history, the efforts towards reconciliation, which the Armenian virtuoso hopes to achieve together with his musical partner, seems even more significant and genuinely deeply rooted. Hovanissian grew up in the Armenian capital Yerevan, where he was introduced to the duduk by the renowned master musician Khachik Khachatryan. The history of this double-reeded instrument reaches back over 2500 years, which is why the instrument is often described as expressing the soul of Armenia.

For more than thirteen years, Hovanissian has been friends with the Turkish baglama player Emre Gultekin, whom he met in a Brussels recording studio. Gultekin grew up in Belgium as the son of a well-known baglama player.

Through the musical exchange with his Armenian friend, Gultekin quite consciously makes references to the historical period when the culturally fluid heritage of Anatolia set the tone, long before it ossified in the rigid structures imposed by national statehood.

“Karin” is thereby also intended to recall the years before the great trauma, when Erzurum was still a multi-cultural centre of artistic and intellectual activity. Correspondingly, besides Armenian and Turkish elements, the album also includes Kurdish, Persian and Georgian influences, which are all closely and effortlessly interwoven.

For instance, the track entitled “Karin” begins with a common melody line performed by the saz and the duduk. Then, a woman’s voice suddenly resounds, singing in Persian a poem by the contemporary Iranian poet Ali Akbar Sheyda. And the track “Qamla Damtskevla” swiftly transports the listener to a Georgian mountainous landscape.

Borders seem to dissolve

The sentimental vibes of baglama and duduk merged with the beats of the daf, a frame drum, seem to open in the inner eye to the wide mountain panoramas and yellow-brown fields of Anatolia. Borders begin to dissolve, while songs and poetry span time and space, just as they always have done.

In short: while listening to the life-affirming and occasionally melancholic music, one takes up the cause of Hovanissian and Gultekin and can truly believe in the possibility of a peaceful, post-ethnocentric co-existence for Turks, Armenians and Kurds.

Even though at the political level matters may appear to be complex and entrenched, the direct cultural exchange encountered in projects such as this one can prove to be both ground-breaking and a cause for hope.

Marian Brehmer



Armenian children experience Peking Opera in Yerevan

Xinhua, China
Sept 6 2019
Armenian children experience Peking Opera in Yerevan
 
Source: Xinhua
An Armenian child has facial makeup applied during a promotional event of Peking Opera, offered by China National Peking Opera Company, at the Armenian-Chinese Friendship School in Yerevan, capital of Armenia, Sept. 5, 2019. (Photo by Gevorg Ghazaryan/Xinhua)



Sports: Roberto Mancini blames Italy’s draw on red card – for Armenia

Independent, UK
Sept 6 2019
 
 
Euro 2020 qualifying: Roberto Mancini blames Italy’s draw on red card – for Armenia
 
Sports Staff
 
 
Roberto Mancini claimed it would have been easier for Italy to beat Armenia had they not played the entire second half of their Euro 2020 qualifier against 10 men.
 
Italy struggled to break down stubborn opposition in Yerevan and were reliant on two goals in the final 15 minutes for a 3-1 victory which maintains their 100 per cent record at the top of Group J.
 
Striker Alexander Karapetian fired Armenia into a surprise early lead but, after Andrea Belotti’s equaliser, was sent off for a second yellow card in first-half stoppage time to leave his team a man short for 45 minutes.
 
A first international goal for substitute Lorenzo Pellegrini 13 minutes from time, followed by an own goal from Armenia goalkeeper Aram Hayrapetyan, eventually spared Italy’s blushes, to the relief of head coach Mancini.
 
 
“I said that it would be a difficult game. We didn’t start well, then we recovered and we could have gone in ahead at the break,” said Mancini, according to the Italian Football Association’s website.
 
“Their sending off made it tough for us in the end because it meant they defended with 10 men for the entire second half and closed up any space. Things would have been better if they had remained as 11.”
 
Karapetian was shown an initial yellow card for a petulant clash with Marco Verratti before picking up a second booking after being adjudged to have caught Leonardo Bonucci in the face with an arm.
 
Victory for the four-time world champions moves them on to 15 points from five fixtures, while Armenia remain on six and have an uphill task to qualify. Former Manchester City manager Mancini felt the opposition’s superior fitness levels were a factor in his side labouring to success.
 
“We’re back together after four months, the boys have only played two games in the league and it’s normal to have encountered difficulties,” said Mancini. “A lot of the Armenia players are in the middle of their seasons, physically they were slightly ahead of us.”
 
Torino striker Belotti was particularly wasteful in front of goal and also had two efforts ruled out for offside, one incorrectly, while Federico Bernardeschi struck the crossbar.
 
Belotti, who broke a national team drought dating back to May 2018, has been in good form for his club this term, claiming six goals in Europa League qualifying and one in Serie A.
 
The 25-year-old admitted he should have been more potent on Thursday evening and is determined to establish himself as Mancini’s first-choice centre forward.
 
“We have to hold our hands up and say that we missed too many chances, myself included,” said Belotti. “There were two moments where I missed the target or didn’t react quickly enough.
 
“When I’m given the chance to take to the pitch I have to be ready. Scoring goals is simply something that us strikers have inside us, we just have to stay focused and express our quality on the pitch.
 
“I’m happy with my goal but the team deserves the credit and for that I’d like to thank all of my team-mates. Now I don’t want to stop and I have to do everything that the coach asks of me.”
 
PA
 

Sports: Mkhitaryan: ‘Armenia didn’t take chances’

Football Italia
Sept 5 2019
Mkhitaryan: ‘Armenia didn’t take chances’

Henrikh Mkhitaryan felt Armenia “had the chances to score and didn’t” in their 3-1 defeat to Italy, even after going a man down.

The hosts had taken the lead in Yerevan just 11 minutes into this Euro 2020 qualifier, but after Andrea Belotti’s equaliser, Aleksandre Karapetyan was harshly sent off for a second yellow card.

“I think we were 1-1 and a man down, we had two or three chances to score and didn’t,” the new Roma signing told Rai Sport.

“Italy are a strong team, we all know that, and we fought to the end, but eventually lost 3-1.”

Mkhitaryan was asked if the red card had been excessive for jumping with elbow raised on Leonardo Bonucci, but remained diplomatic.

“I didn’t see the incident, maybe it was a red card, maybe not. They were both trying to win the ball, I don’t know if he led with the elbow or not, so I cannot judge.”

Sports: Mkhitaryan: My playing philosophy didn’t coincide with that of Emery

MediaMax, Armenia
Sept 6 2019
Mkhitaryan: My playing philosophy didn’t coincide with that of Emery

He noted that the change of the coach contributed to his decision to move to Roma.

“This isn’t about my failure to adapt to English football. I moved to Arsenal upon Arsène Wenger’s wish, and then Emery came. I think something hindered the process; our playing philosophies didn’t coincide. Anything can happen in football,” Mkhitaryan told journalists.

He said that the most important thing is the fact that he achieved his dream of playing in England. “Now I am focused on Roma’s games”.

The midfielder noted that he had certain offers from other teams as well, but the Italians’ offer was more concrete: “The club was more willing to take me into their team, and I am happy to be part of Roma”.



Sports: Italy take the Mkhi in Armenia

Football Italia
Sept 5 2019
Italy take the Mkhi in Armenia

The Azzurri did just about enough to grind out a win over 10-man Armenia, but it was a reality check for Giancarlo Rinaldi.

It wasn’t pretty nor very much deserved, that’s for sure. If grinding out wins in uninspiring fashion is a symptom of coming down with a winning mentality, then this might be just what the Azzurri team doctor ordered. For the rest of us, enthused by some of the nice football seen in previous outings, a flattering triumph over Armenia felt about as good as chugging down your cough medicine when you are six years old.

We couldn’t say, I suppose, that we had not been warned. The usual mutterings about the game being too early in the Serie A season proved prophetic once more. Nobody ever made much money by betting on Italy being impressive in their first outing of a new season. If bookies paid out on a display’s quality, they’d have been keeping their cash firmly in their pockets once again.

In the end, of course, three points are three points and another vital step towards Euro 2020, and there was the consolation that it looked – at times – like things could have been worse. A lacklustre opening quarter of an hour – when Roberto Mancini’s side went behind to an Alexander Karapetyan strike – threatened to make it an even longer evening.

To watch a man who looked like Daniele De Rossi’s bulky Armenian cousin waltz through to score was a worry. The spectre of a Giorgio Chiellini-shaped hole in the defence was evident in front of Gigio Donnarumma. It was hard to think the injured Juve stalwart would not have made a better fist of blocking the onrushing forward before he found the net.

Credit to the team for shaking off that shock to produce a decent comeback. They started to knock on the door – with Chelsea’s Emerson continuing his good league form – and it was no surprise he had a part to play in the equaliser. When he set up Andrea Belotti, it looked like winning would be a formality. How wrong we were.

A dodgy red card for Armenia’s goalscorer – with a second yellow for an elbow which appeared to make minimal contact on Leonardo Bonucci – ought to have made the task even easier, but it singularly failed to do so. The playing surface may not have been perfect, but there were too many sloppy passes and too many wrong decisions made, as Mancio went doolally on the sidelines. It surprised nobody when he whipped off both his Federicos – Chiesa and Bernardeschi – in the second half. Neither delivered the impact they would have hoped for.

To add to Italian frustration, Marco Verratti picked up a senseless booking which rules him out of the upcoming Finland game. The little midfielder is brilliant, but he does seem to have a love affair with the yellow card which is frustrating. It is hard to build a team around a man who is likely to pick up a suspension with alarming regularity. Mind you, he’s so lovely to watch on the ball, you have to forgive him some failings. Not everybody does, of course.

As Team Italia huffed and puffed it looked more like they might get caught on the break by new Roma man Henrikh Mkhitaryan and his companions despite their one-man disadvantage than power on to win. Goals from sub Lorenzo Pellegrini and a Belotti shot that bounced in off the goalie eventually gave a flattering scoreline.

They might even have had more – with Il Gallo having a strike incorrectly ruled offside – but that would have been truly hurtful to the fans in Yerevan.

There’s no need to panic about the drab nature of the performance as long as the Azzurri get the job done in Finland, but this was a little reality check.

On the back foot, Italy looked out of sorts and underlined why they need to take the game to opponents as much as they can. They also need to sharpen up their finishing and decision making when they are on top if they hope to dispense with these games in more convincing fashion.

Italy fans of long-standing have seen more displays like this than they would care to think about. The important thing, we know, is to learn the lessons it provided in order to be ready for the sterner tests to come.

Sports: Yura Movsisyan proud of Armenia national team footballers

MediaMax, Armenia
Sept 6 2019
Yura Movsisyan proud of Armenia national team footballers

Armenia national team lost the game 1:3 with only 10 players participating in the second half. 

 “We fought hard today in Yerevan against Italy, mostly with 10 men… proud of our boys!

See you all this Sunday,” Movsisyan wrote. 

 The Armenian team will compete against Bosnia and Herzegovina on Sunday again. Bosnia has 7 points in Group J, and Armenia-6 points.