Armenian Christians in East Jerusalem “don’t enjoy equal rights”

PanArmenian, Armenia

PanARMENIAN.Net – Although the Armenian Orthodox Patriarchate has had a presence in Jerusalem since the fourth century, church leaders are disturbed that Armenian Christians in East Jerusalem “don’t enjoy equal rights”, says the chancellor, Father Koryoun Baghdasaryan, according to an article published by The Art Newspaper.

The Patriarchate wishes the police would treat it as a hate crime when its clergy, students and teachers are spat on by the Old City’s Haredi Jewish population, and that clergy who have lived in the Armenian monastery for decades would be granted residency. Without it, they must pay as tourists for public services such as healthcare.

“The most shameful thing”, Baghdasaryan says, is that a memorial to the Armenian Genocide on church property remains closed to visitors because the municipality has delayed approving construction of the entrance. An official in the mayor’s office says a proper plan has not been submitted, but according to the Patriarchate, all the necessary papers have been repeatedly filed over many years.

Israel has never officially recognised the Genocide of Armenians by Ottoman Turks from 1915, likely because of concern for diplomatic relations with Turkey. Baghdasaryan says there is a “moral obligation” for Israel, being home to around 200,000 Holocaust survivors, to recognise the Genocide.

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/270823/Armenian_Christians_in_East_Jerusalem_dont_enjoy_equal_rights

Still, the Armenian Patriarchate continues to honour its own history. A fundraising campaign is under way to renovate its Armenian Museum before 2020 and to open a new gallery space in the Armenian Quarter, raising awareness about the community’s history in Jerusalem.

The article also makes reference to the master tile artist Neshan Balian, who is preparing two exhibitions marking the centenary of Armenian ceramics in the city in September—one in Armenia and one at Jerusalem’s Rockefeller Archaeological Museum. His grandfather and namesake was one of three artisans invited in 1919 by Mark Sykes of the British Mandate government to repair the tiles of the Dome of the Rock Islamic shrine and to introduce a new art to Jerusalem. Balian has also been commissioned by the municipality to renovate the city’s calligraphy-tiled street signs in English, Arabic and Hebrew. Hand-painted tiles with motifs designed by his late mother, Marie Balian, can be seen on murals, doors and wares across Jerusalem.

But despite recognition, Balian, like his East Jerusalem neighbours, is still ethnically profiled and often subjected to full-body searches by Israeli airport security, he tells The Art Newspaper. “I just turned 61; you get tired of pulling down your trousers to a 21-year-old [guard] who knows nothing of the sacrifices you have made to the Israeli art scene,” he says. “More and more I feel like a second- and third-class citizen. There is a lot of emphasis on making Jerusalem as Jewish as possible. I’ll never be fully part of this city or country… I don’t think the elections make any difference.”

Six Kocharyan supporters detained during clashes with police

Panorama, Armenia

Six people have been arrested during clashes between the supporters of Armenia’s second President Robert Kocharyan and police officers in downtown Yerevan.

The press service of the Yerevan Police told Panorama.am that the six people have been detained for failure to comply with legal requirements of police officers under Article 182 of Armenia’s Code on Administrative Violations.

A group of supporters of the ex-president staged a protest in downtown Yerevan on Wednesday, demanding his release.

They moved to the government building which was hosting a joint news conference of the Armenian PM and president of the European Council.

Clashes erupted between police and protesters after the latter tried to block Tumanyan Street where PM Nikol Pashinyan’s motorcade had to pass. 


Armenia 2nd President’s lawyer: Robert Kocharyan not allowed to see his son

News.am, Armenia
Armenia 2nd President’s lawyer: Robert Kocharyan not allowed to see his son Armenia 2nd President’s lawyer: Robert Kocharyan not allowed to see his son

16:23, 10.07.2019
                  

Armenian second president is still not allowed to see his son, Hayk Alumyan, lawyer of Robert Kocharyan told reporters on Wednesday.

According to him, there were no problems with visiting lawyers, but there was a problem regarding meetings with family members.

However, Hayk Alumyan refused to talk more on this topic, explaining that the topic of the meeting with the press is different.

Andrea Wiktorin nominated as new Head of EU Delegation to Armenia

Public Radio of Armenia


Calendar of Events – 07/11/2019

                        Armenian News's Calendar of events
                        (All times local to events)
                =========================================
What:           Women in Economics Workshop
When:           Jul 12 2019 1-5PM
Where:          American University of Armenia,
                Manoogian Simone College of Business and Economics
Misc:           Featuring a cast of all women economists, the Workshop brings
                academics and researchers from Armenia, Australia, Czechia,
                Georgia, and the United States to discuss their latest research
                in demography, labor economics, and macroeconomics
Online Contact: conferences.aea [at] gmail.com
Web:            
                =========================================
What:           "Armenia Tree Project - Celebrating 25 Years" a lecture in 
English
                by Anahit Gharibyan & Sarah Hayes
When:           Jul 14 2019 1pm
                Following Church Divine Liturgy which starts at 10:30am
Where:          Armenian Apostolic Church of Crescenta Valley
                Western Prelacy's Hall, 6252 Honolulu Ave., La Crescenta, CA
Misc:           Armenia Tree Project (ATP), is based in Woburn and Yerevan,
                conducts environmental projects in Armenia's impoverished and
                deforested zones and seeks support in advancing its
                reforestation mission. More than 5,700,000 trees have been
                planted and restored, and hundreds of new jobs have been
                created for Armenians in seasonal tree-related programs. ATP
                works to enhance Armenia's economic and social development by
                mobilizing resources to fund reforestation. These new trees
                provide vitally needed food, wood, environmental benefits, and
                opportunities for economic growth. Our goal is to assist the
                Armenian people through the use of trees that will improve
                their standard of living and protect the global environment.
                Anahit Gharibyan has been with Armenia Tree Project since its
                establishment in 1994. For 16 years she was the manager of
                ATP's Community Tree Planting (CTP) program. Because of her
                efforts, ATP's CTP program has planted and rejuvenated
                1,026,857 trees at 842 sites all over Armenia and Artsakh. In
                2010 Anahit moved to the United States to continue her work for
                ATP as Western Region Community Outreach Manager. She also
                promotes ATP through Building Bridges program connecting
                Diaspora Armenian students with their environmental heritage in
                more than 70 California schools.
                Sarah Hayes found her connection to Armenia when she served as
                an Environmental Education U.S. Peace Corps Volunteer in Sisian
                from 2005-2007. During her service, she secured a grant through
                United States Agency for International Development (USAID) to
                plant trees with students. After her two year Peace Corps
                service, Sarah relocated to Boston where she began working with
                Armenia Tree Project and is now ATP's West Coast Operations
                Manager in Los Angeles.
                The event is free of charge to the public
Tel:            818-244-9639
***************************************************************************
Armenian News's calendar of events is collected and updated mostly from
announcements posted on this list, and submissions to Armenian [email protected].
To submit, send to Armenian [email protected], and please note the following
important points:
a) Armenian News's administrators have final say on what may be included in
        Armenian News's calendar of events.
b) Posting time will is on Thursdays, 06:00 US Pacific time, to squeeze in
        a final reminder before weekend activities kick in.
c) Calendar items are short, functional, and edited to fit a template.
d) There is no guarantee or promise that an item will be published on time.
e) Calendar information is believed to be from reliable sources. However,
        no responsibility by the List's Administation or by USC is assumed
        for inaccuracies and there is no guarantee that the information is
        up-to-date.
f) No commercial events will be accepted.
        (Dinners, dances, forget it. This is not an ad-space.)
g) Armenian News is a non-commercial, non-partisan, pan-Armenian outlet.
*******************************************************************
    The Critical Corner
    The Literary Armenian News
    Review & Outlook
    World News
    The Entertainment Wire
    Probing the Photographic Record
    Armenia House Museums
    ...and much more
© Copyright 2019,  Armenian News Network / Armenian News, all rights reserved.
Regards,
--
Armenian News Network / Armenian News
Los Angeles, CA     / USA

Bath native helping people with disabilities in Armenia

Akron Beacon Journal, Ohio


Bath native helping people with disabilities in Armenia


By Emily Mills
Beacon Journal/Ohio.com             


A Bath native is headed to Armenia this week to help people with disabilities advocate for themselves and integrate into their communities.

Christopher DiRosa, a 2004 Revere graduate, leaves Wednesday for the former Soviet country between Turkey and Iran with six other people as part of the Inclusion Collective, a Denver-based nonprofit organization he founded six years ago.

“In the nation of Armenia right now, they are still very much in the what we call the old Soviet model way of doing things, which is the institution style,” said DiRosa, 34, who’s lived in the Denver area for 12 years. “The government will usually go ahead and take that child and then place them in the institutions that are far off into more rural-type settings, and the families generally have very little interaction.”

DiRosa said the nonprofit, which he said is structured similarly to Doctors Without Borders, works with people with developmental disabilities using specialists and self advocates, or other people with disabilities.

“One of the main emphases of our push is to help the countries that we’re working in deinstitutionalize,” said DiRosa, who also works for the nonprofit Center for People with Disabilities. “So getting out of those big box store institution-type settings for individuals and children with disabilities and getting into smaller community-based settings, similar to what we call host homes and companion model homes here in the U.S.”         

In Armenia, the volunteer-run Inclusion Collective will work with local partners like Warm Hearth, which opened the first long-term group home in Armenia in 2006 and provides long-term rehabilitative care to orphaned people with special needs who have outgrown orphanages.

Warm Hearth is operated by the Armenian nonprofit Jermik Ankyun (“Warm Hearth”) Foundation and supported by U.S. nonprofit Friends of Warm Hearth. It now operates two community group homes in Armenia, with 22 people living there instead of government institutions, which are still referred to as “graveyards,” as euthanasia was a common practice during Soviet times, according to Friends of Warm Hearth.

Soviet ideologies undervalued less productive members of society and believed they didn’t belong in the community, according to the group. Those stereotypes are changing, the group says, with support from the government allowing the group to open its second home last year. The government also started funding another group home unaffiliated with Warm Hearth last year. But more work needs to be done, the group says.

“What we want most for our residents is to be welcomed into the daily life and fabric of their community,” its website reads. “We want them to function with grace in their neighborhood and city according to the gifts they have been given.”

DiRosa met representatives from Warm Hearth in 2015 while giving them tours of smart homes in Boulder, Colorado, in his role managing a program that uses assistive technology in smart home settings so people can live more independently.

On the trip to Armenia, volunteers will work with the 22 people in the group homes, offering one-on-one support and doing smart goal-setting, including encouraging people to be more independent in their settings and become more integrated in their community.

The 26-day trip includes DiRosa, two people with disabilities who are self advocates, a speech language pathologist, a doctor in clinical psychology and a physical therapy-based professional. The trip costs $2,400 per person, with much of the costs covered by private donations.

As part of the trip, the Inclusion Collective also is planning a one-day advocacy conference July 25 in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, where the volunteers will spend most of their time on the trip. As part of the conference, self advocates will share their own experiences and encourage others to stand up for their rights.

The nonprofit partnered with the U.S. Embassy program, the Armenian Association of Social Workers, the Armenian human services ministry, the Rotary Club of Yerevan and Yerevan independent living center Unison for the conference.

In the past, volunteers with the nonprofit have worked in Ukraine, India and Haiti, taking a trip about once every two years, with another Ukraine trip next June.

″[We’re] just taking an inclusive attitude,” DiRosa said, “and making sure that we’re collectively working for the betterment of people overall.”

https://www.ohio.com/news/20190709/bath-native-helping-people-with-disabilities-in-armenia




 


Cultural divisions deepen in Jerusalem amid Israeli election campaign

Art Newspaper



Lauren Gelfond Feldinger

Tusk: EU-Armenia deal an ‘ambitious’ agreement that supports Armenia’s modernization

Panorama, Armenia

“My visit is proof of the importance that the EU attaches to our relations with Armenia and the region. Our discussion today highlighted the effective implementation of our partnership agreement, an ambitious agreement that supports Armenia’s modernization,” President of the European Council Donald Tusk said at a joint news conference with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in Yerevan on Wednesday.

The top European official said the EU will continue providing technical and financial assistance for the implementation of the document.

Tusk attached importance to the rule of law, fight against corruption and respect for human rights.

“The EU welcomes the focus on creating an independent, efficient and accountable judicial system. A solid judiciary is an essential element of a mature democracy and for economic and social development. Also, here the EU will continue to support with expertise and mobilize further resources,” he said.

The European Council chief said he has discussed the establishment of a specialized anti-corruption commission with the Armenia PM.

“In recognition of the government’s reform efforts, the EU has almost doubled our support to Armenia in 2019. These funds will help to implement priority projects, including infrastructure and environment,” he said.

In this context, Tusk said he is looking forward to visiting Lake Sevan later today, where the EU will support water management, as agreed during the recent visit of Pashinyan in Brussels.

“And I will have the opportunity to visit Sevanavank, a monument that testifies to Armenia’s millennia-old imprint on Europe’s culture” he said.

Tusk didn’t touch upon the EU-Armenia visa liberalization issue addressed by the Armenian premier in his statement.

Tusk arrived in Yerevan as part of a regional visit. He was in Azerbaijan on Tuesday and is set to visit Georgia on Thursday to attend an international conference marking the 10th anniversary of Eastern Partnership.

The European official is also expected to meet with the Armenian president in Yerevan. 

Driver killed, passengers wounded in car crash on Armenian highway

Panorama, Armenia
Society 13:04 10/07/2019 Armenia

A car crash on an Armenian highway on Tuesday evening killed a driver and wounded several other passengers, the Ministry of Emergency Situations reported.

A VAZ 2101 collided with a GAZ 24 on Spitak-Gyumri highway, as a result of which the driver of VAZ 2101, whose identity isn’t disclosed, died on the spot.

Before rescuers arrived, a wounded passenger had been taken to Spitak Medical Center through the efforts of local residents.

Rescuers took two other wounded passengers to an ambulance. The health condition of the injured also hospitalized at Spitak Medical Center are assessed as satisfactory.

The cause of the crash wasn’t immediately clear.

More than half of the Armenian population trusts the government – survey results

JAM News

12 per cent less people believe the country is on the right path since October 2018

The results of a new study by the Centre for Public Surveys of the International Republican Institute show that 72 percent of respondents trust the government, while 22 percent consider bad governance to be the biggest failure of the current government.

Armenian National Security Service taking on fake news

After the revolution: the first year in the new Armenia

The survey showed: the majority of the population is optimistic about the future of Armenia, despite certain concerns about the quick pace of development of the economy.

72% of respondents expressed confidence in the Prime Minister.

59% of respondents believe that the government is doing enough  to combat corruption.

60% of respondents believe that the country is on the right path in general. And although this is quite a high figure, in comparison to October 2018, it is down 12 points.

More than 60% of respondents want the government to carry out economic and political reforms not gradually, but as quickly as possible.

The good will and attitude expressed by the Armenian people give the government an unprecedented opportunity to carry out fundamental reforms and improve the economic well-being of the people … Implementing government reforms is crucial for maintaining public support and implementing the government’s reform programme,” said the Director of the Eurasian Region of the International Republican Institute Stephen Nix.

22% of those surveyed said their biggest grievance against the government is poor governance.

Over the past six months, the percentage of people who believe that they can influence decisions taken in the country has decreased from 72% to 53%.

Respondents said that in the next six months, the government, first of all, should solve the following problems:

• job creation (30%),

• solving social and economic problems (18%)

• salary increase (14%),

• increase of pensions (12%).

The International Republican Institute is a non-profit organization. Its goal is “to assist individual countries in building democracy”.

The chairman of the board of directors of this organization is Alaska Senator Dan Sullivan.

Data collection in Armenia was carried out by the Armenian Sociological Association across the country from May 6 to May 31, 2019 through one-on-one surveys in the homes of those interviewed.

1200 permanent residents of Armenia aged 18 and over participated in the study.

The survey was funded by the United States Agency for International Development.