Third consecutive victory for Maria Gevorgyan at the European Women’s Championship

Panorama, Armenia
Sport 17:32 20/04/2019 Armenia

Member pf the Armenian Women’s Chess team Maria Gevorgyan won in the round 8 of the European Women’s Championship. Playing with blacks Gevorgyan defeated Nino Batsiashvili of Georgia which was her fifth and the third straight victory at the tournament.

Other Armenian representatives Elina Danielyan and Lilit Mkrtchyan played draw , while Anna Sargsyan and Siranush Ghukasyan lost.

After 8 rounds played. Elina Danielyan has scored 5.5 points and is half a point behind the leaders Alina Kashlinskaya of Russia and Inna Gaponenko of Ukraine.

To note, 130 players have registered for the tournament, which is played over eleven rounds according to the Swiss system. The14 best players qualify for the next World Cup, a world championship qualifying event.

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Russian, Armenian leaders to meet on sidelines of EAEU session May 29 – upper house speaker

ITAR-TASS, Russia
Friday 12:38 PM GMT
Russian, Armenian leaders to meet on sidelines of EAEU session May 29 – upper house speaker
 
ST. PETERSBURG April 19
 
HIGHLIGHT: The Russian and Armenian leaders will hold a meeting on the sidelines of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) Supreme Council session on May 29, Speaker of the Russian Federation Council (upper house of parliament) Valentina Matviyenko said at a meeting with Armenian parliament Speaker Ararat Mirzoyan on Friday.
 
ST. PETERSBURG, April 19. /TASS/. The Russian and Armenian leaders will hold a meeting on the sidelines of the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU) Supreme Council session on May 29, Speaker of the Russian Federation Council (upper house of parliament) Valentina Matviyenko said at a meeting with Armenian parliament Speaker Ararat Mirzoyan on Friday.
 
“Our countries’ leaders met seven times last year, they maintain permanent contacts,” she said. “On May 29, they will have a meeting on the sidelines of the Supreme Eurasian Economic Council [session], which will be held in Kazakhstan.”
 
Matviyenko recalled that a similar event would be held in Yerevan on October 1, and the two leaders will have an opportunity to meet again.
 
Besides, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev will pay a working visit to Armenia on April 30, she added.
 
According to the speaker, the parties are discussing the date and venue for a meeting of the Russian-Armenian Inter-Parliamentary Commission, and members of the Russian Federation Council Defense and Security Committee will visit Armenia in May. In general, the political cooperation between Moscow and Yerevan is constructive and dynamic, she concluded.

Tjeknavorian: People’s large attendance in FIff great encouragement to artists

Iran Daily
Friday
Tjeknavorian: People’s large attendance in FIff great encouragement to artists
 By Sadeq Dehqan & Farzam Vanaki

People’s large attendance at the 37th Fajr International Film Festival (FIff), currently underway in Tehran, gives encouragement to Iranian artists and, particularly, cineastes, said prominent Iranian-Armenian composer and conductor.

Speaking to Iran Daily on the sidelines of the festival (April 18-26), Loris Tjeknavorian expressed satisfaction with the fact that despite unilateral US sanctions on Iran and the country’s economic problems, people still show great interest in art festivals and events and have not forgotten about cultural issues.

Last May, US President Donald Trump pulled Washington out of the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, signed between Iran and P5+1 in July 2015, and reimposed the White House’s unilateral sanctions on Tehran in two phases.

He expressed hope that Iranians would attend music concerts and performances, particularly classical ones, as enthusiastically as they receive film festivals.

Commenting on his background in composing film music, Tjeknavorian said prior to the victory of Iran’s 1979 Islamic Revolution, he had composed 30 musical pieces for different films.

However, he added, after the victory of the Islamic Revolution, “I was mainly involved in writing musical pieces for operas and ballets as well as symphonies.”

Turning to the relationship between music and cinema, Tjeknavorian said the former is an important part of the latter.

“Nevertheless, I did not continue my work in the field of composing film music despite all its attractions as such pieces are not considered to be separate works of art.”

On his nationality, he said, “I am Armenian-Iranian. I was born in Iran and, thus, this country is my homeland. However, my father is from Armenia.”

Tjeknavorian said he will soon conduct a benefit concert in Tehran in support of flood-stricken people in the western Iranian provinces of Lorestan and Khuzestan.

Unprecedented rainfall in Iran in late March led to devastating floods in parts of the country killing more than seventy people and injuring hundreds more. The flooding has also caused hundreds of millions of dollars of damage to water and agriculture infrastructures.

Tjeknavorian noted that he will perform his own pieces in the concert to be held in two weeks’ time.

Sports: One more school in Armenia enjoying the perks of the CEV School Project

European Volleyball Confederation
One more school in Armenia enjoying the perks of the CEV School Project


Yerevan, Armenia, . The CEV School Project and the accompanying ‘School Volley’ festival was organised earlier this week in the city of Stepanakert in Armenia as the kids of the local primary school No. 7 enjoyed their day with Volleyball. The president of the Armenian Volleyball federation Hrachya Muradyan was also present on this occasion.

A total of 38 children from the sixth grade took part in the festivities and educational sessions led by the coaches from the Stepanakert Sports School – Gayane Melqumyan and Melania Mnacakanyan. Everybody was keen to learn the rules of our game and get their hands on the practical sessions – trying out various technical elements of Volleyball. The day concluded with a Volleyball game and gifting of the sport’s equipment that the CEV is funding for all participants of the project to further develop the skills of the pupils.

Lucy T. Tovmasian, MD is being recognized by Continental Who’s Who

PR Newswire
Friday 5:43 PM EST
Lucy T. Tovmasian, MD is being recognized by Continental Who’s Who
 
ENGLEWOOD, N.J.,
 
PR Newswire
 
Lucy T. Tovmasian, MD is being recognized by Continental Who’s Who as a Lifetime Achiever in the medical industry for her work at Kbve Professional Associates as an OBGYN.      
 
Kbve Professional Associates is an Obstetrics and Gynecology practice currently servicing women and families in the New Jersey Area. This practice employs a team of experienced and compassionate doctors who prioritize accessibility for their patients. Proudly catering to all age groups, Kbve offers Gynecologic care, Maternity care, Family Planning and an array of surgical procedures.
 
Dr. Tovmasian’s experience can be found in the surgical branch of the Kbve practice. While traditionally trained, her distinct skill set is minimally invasive surgery, made up of laparoscopic and robot-assisted surgery. After 11 years in the industry, her sentiment remains that a person must love what they do every day, even when it’s hard to love.
 
In 2001, Dr. Tovmasian Graduated from Columbia University where she earned her Bachelor of the Arts degree in Biological Sciences. Her education continued at St. George’s University School of Medicine, where she spent time as a member of Iota Epsilon Alpha and the International Medical Honor Society. She completed her Doctor of Medicine degree in 2007. Finally, she attended the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey where she completed her Obstetrics and Gynecology residency in 2011.
 
Dr. Tovmasian is a current standing Board Member of the Armenian American Health Professionals Organization. She is also currently a member of the American Medical Association.
 
During her residency at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, Dr. Tovmasian was awarded with the Residency Achievement Award from the Society of Laparoendoscopic Surgeons.
 
Ever appreciative of her roots in Armenia, Dr. Tovmasian is fluent in the Armenian language and each year travels to Armenia to provide healthcare to underprivileged women and families.
 
Dr. Tovmasian dedicates this recognition to her parents, Mania and Thomas Tovmasian. She thanks them for their continuing love and support.
 
For more information, please visithttps://northernjerseyobgyn.com/
 
Contact: Katherine Green, 516-825-5634,
 
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Colgate University: Balakian Wins 2019 Balmuth Award

Colgate University
Colgate University: Balakian Wins 2019 Balmuth Award

HAMILTON, New York

By Mark Walden

Peter Balakian, Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor in humanities and professor of English, has been selected as the 2019 recipient of the Jerome Balmuth Award for Teaching.

Balakian is the author of seven books of poems, including the 2016 Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry, Ozone Journal. His memoir, Black Dog of Fate, received several awards, including the 1998 PEN/Martha Albrand Prize for the Art of the Memoir and was named a best book of the year for the New York Times, LA Times, and Publisher’s Weekly.

“Professor Balakian, as an author and activist, belongs to the world,” said Provost and Dean of the Faculty Tracey Hucks ’87, MA’90. “As a teacher, he has always dedicated himself to the students of this University. I congratulate him on receiving the Balmuth award — he has transformed generations of undergraduates.”

The recipient of many awards — including a Presidential Medal and the Moves Khoranatsi Medal from the Republic of Armenia; Guggenheim and National Endowment for the Arts fellowships; the Emily Clark Balch Prize for poetry; the Spendlove Prize for Social Justice, Tolerance and Diplomacy; and Anahid Literary Prize — Balakian has also been featured broadly in the national and international media.

Since 1980 Professor Balakian has taught courses in American literature, creative writing workshops, as well as courses in genocide studies that have been part of the curriculum for Core Distinction and Peace and Conflict Studies of which he has been an advisory board member since 1986.

“Peter’s endless curiosity, his willingness to turn every encounter into an opportunity for learning and teaching, his ability to engage with the world imaginatively, intellectually, and politically, set a high bar for those who would follow in his footsteps,” wrote one of Balakian’s former students.

“For Colgate students such as me,” wrote another, “Peter is the family member we were able to select, the great ancestral teacher whose care and power has nurtured us through our own scholarly and personal lives.”

The Balmuth award, named in honor of the late Jerome Balmuth, Harry Emerson Fosdick Professor of philosophy and religion, emeritus, was established by Mark Siegel ’73 in 2009 to celebrate and recognize superb teaching by Colgate faculty of undergraduates. The prize is awarded to a faculty member whose teaching is distinctively successful and transformative, recognizing that such distinction can be achieved through a broad spectrum of methodologies ranging from traditional to innovative.

The award will be officially presented to Balakian during a dinner and ceremony on May 2.

Book: Farewell, Aylis: A non-traditional novel in three works

Cleaver Magazine

We don’t often read literature from Azerbaijan, for many reasons. It’s a small post-Soviet country that is hard to find on the map, with a Turkic language that makes finding translators difficult, and a government that still censors its writers Soviet-style. We don’t generally stroll down the aisle at a bookstore and discover the “Azeri” section. The only thing harder to find might be Georgian, and I’ll only say “might.” Probably most of us have no idea what novelists in Azerbaijan write about, what kind of social justice concerns they have, or what kind of risks those writers take to address those concerns.

The publication of Farewell, Aylis: A Non-Traditional Novel in Three Parts, by Academic Studies Press in November 2018, addresses these gaps in our literary exposure in several ways. For the first time we have Aylisli’s powerful and Nobel-worthy novel in English (he was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize in 2014). Because Farewell, Aylis depicts ethnic violence against Armenians in Azerbaijan in the 1990s, Aylisli has been the target of censorship and currently lives under de facto house arrest in Baku. The publication of Farewell, Aylis could open up the Western canon to a powerful literary work, and open up Western writers’ understanding of Azeri writers’ political context. Part of our luck in receiving Farewell, Aylis is that Aylisli transposed much of it into Russian himself, making it accessible to more translators. This translation is by the poet Katherine E. Young, who was a National Endowment for the Arts Translation Fellow for Farewell, Aylis, and has received several awards for her work translating contemporary Russian women poets.

We don’t often read literature from Azerbaijan, for many reasons. It’s a small post-Soviet country that is hard to find on the map, with a Turkic language that makes finding translators difficult, and a government that still censors its writers Soviet-style.

Farewell, Aylis is actually three novellas that cover several decades of social transition in Azerbaijan under authoritarianism. The historical circumstances depicted in the novellas are important context for the characters, but none of these novellas are “about” history or Azerbaijan per se. Each one is about an individual who is trying to understand morality and humaneness in a society where humane distinctions have ceased to exist.

The first novella is Yemen, and it is the only one that was published widely in Azerbaijan, in 1994. Yemen takes place during the Gorbachev years and follows Safaly, a teacher who goes on a trip to avoid the visit of some pesky relatives from Moscow. On the trip, he encounters Ali Ziya, an old friend whom he once accompanied on a pseudo-religious pilgrimage to Yemen.

Akram Aylisli

Past and present begin to bleed together as both men relive memories of the Yemen trip. On that trip, Safaly had gone on a walk one afternoon, and, finding Safaly missing from his room, Ali Ziya had reported to the Soviet embassy that Safaly was on his way to defect to America. This event seems comical to a Western reader, but in Soviet society denunciations and being reported to the Soviet authorities were not a small thing. For Safaly it is a revelation of the ways that the Soviet system has created a new type of individual, and that new individual has created a new society: “He suddenly understood: that which was called Soviet authority was also Ali Ziya—and so what if he drank tea, pouring it into the saucer and blowing on it.”

Yemen asks timeless questions about the ideological collusion between the individual and autocracy, and how it is that a society comprised of individuals can lose its moral bearing. When Safaly visits his home village, his uncle points out to him that the individual has to decide whether he will stand with or against his own society: “And are infidels really found only among Russians or Armenians? A kafir, nephew, isn’t distinguished by nationality, it comes from the essence of a person.” Society loses its moral bearing one person at a time, one Ali Ziya at a time.

The story can seem dream-like at moments, with Safaly’s most dramatic insights arriving during a fantastical whiskey-fueled conversation with astronaut Neil Armstrong, who passionately debates Safaly on whether national leaders are “far-sighted” or not. The writing reminded me of Moscow to the End of the Line by Yerofeyev, but Safaly’s philosophical trajectory is more cohesive and unfolds naturally and compellingly.

The second and most well-known novella in the trilogy is Stone Dreams. It was the publication of this story in a Moscow magazine in 2012 that Russian journalist Shura Burtin described as having “the effect of a bomb exploding,” and resulted in Aylisli’s being censored, the public burning of his books, and the revoking of his travel privileges.

Katherine E. Young

The protagonist of Stone Dreams is Sadai Sadygly, a well-known Azerbaijani actor who goes for a walk one morning and comes across a group of boys kicking an elderly Armenian to death. When he intervenes to save the Armenian, the boys beat him so badly that he winds up in the hospital. Unconscious in the hospital, Sadai relives several scenes from his childhood in the village of Aylis, as well as several scenes from his professional life in the city of Baku. Both strands of memory reveal the disintegration of relationships between the Azerbaijanis and the Armenians that he has known, and the moral frustration that Sadai has experienced as friendships and relationships have responded to ethnic and religious tension.

In the hospital, Sadai is attended by two men whose stories become interlaced with his. One is Dr. Farzani, haunted by his attempts to live a moral Muslim life, which resulted sadly in the break up of his family. The other is Dr. Abasaliev, a retired psychiatrist who has been slowly translating an ancient text related to the founding of the town of Aylis, and has discovered that, contrary to the popularly disseminated narrative, Aylis has Armenian roots. “If a single candle were lit for every Armenian killed violently, the radiance of those candles would be brighter than the light of the moon,” Dr. Abasaliev claims, while reading the history of Aylis to the unconscious Sadai and the attendant Dr. Farzani.

Stone Dreams is about the role of the “average” individual in a time of moral and spiritual confusion. None of the characters are perfect, but they struggle to understand how to honor their conscience in a time where the conflicts run so deep that it is almost impossible to live a truly moral life, before one’s family, one’s nation, one’s God. All of them ask fundamental questions about what their actions mean, and what they can do versus what they are powerless to do. Like most good writing that poses pressing questions about human nature, the story does not offer any neat answers or conclusions, but shows us what it means to grapple with these questions.

It is no surprise that after the reaction to the publication of Stone Dreams, the third novella never made it into print in Azerbaijan. A Fantastical Traffic Jam is magical realism in the style of Gabriel García Márquez, and takes place in a fictional country called Allahabad, ruled by a corrupt dictator. The protagonist is Elbey, a government worker who has known the dictator for most of his life—the two of them come from the same rural area, and their families are intertwined in surprising ways. In the tradition of Orwell or Bradbury, Elbey works for the Operations Headquarters for the Restoration of Fountains and Waterfalls in the Name of Progress and Pluralism, an “enigmatic organization” whose name “gave off the aroma of a splendid bouquet of lies.” Elbey is facing several professional and personal crises which cause him to scheme, manipulate, and try to out-think his dictator employer (something which isn’t easy to do) in an effort to avoid being killed…or avoid being induced to kill himself. The story moves back and forth between Elbey’s current day relationship with “the Master” (as the dictator is often referred to), Elbey’s childhood, and the Master’s childhood and rise to power. Unlike the other novellas, this one has a few epigraph-style lines from Aylisli at the beginning of each section, that point out certain important aspects of the text: It’s not meant to be a tale where each fictitious person has a real-life counterpart, but the story is meant to illustrate the way that “glutinous regimes devour themselves.” Like the other novellas, A Fantastical Traffic Jam explores relationships as a way of showing how greed and manipulation on a national level reproduce themselves in the lives of the people who serve the regime.

Farewell, Aylis holds many gifts for its reader. The novellas are each stylistically unique but have a historical and philosophical sequence that both unfold and dialogue with each other powerfully.

A Fantastical Traffic Jam was probably my favorite of the three for its stylistic inventiveness and use of irony. One day I’ll teach a class on tiny magical novels that blow up when read, and I can add Aylisli to my syllabus alongside Bulgakov and Zoschenko.

Farewell, Aylis holds many gifts for its reader. The novellas are each stylistically unique but have a historical and philosophical sequence that both unfold and dialogue with each other powerfully. The characters are realistic: not ideologues, not angels or rogues. The translation is smooth and rhythmic, and the stories maintain their internal thematic consistency in complex ways that speak to the chemistry between the novel and the translator. A reader doesn’t need to know anything about Azerbaijan in order to contact the world of the novels, because the characters are relatable and they capture what we need to know in their stories.

So often, academic presentations of literature create a false partition between the artistic and the academic: the reader can only encounter the art after wading through 800 essays, which tell the reader what to think and how to be appropriately impressed by the writing, and each of the essays cites 400 sources. This volume doesn’t do that.

While this non-traditional work is wonderful reading, the volume that Academic Studies Press has put together is unique in a few other ways. Because I’m an academic, I should be able to say this without offending too many people: It’s so nice to see an academic press present a powerful piece of art in a way that honors both its artistic value and its academic value. So often, academic presentations of literature create a false partition between the artistic and the academic: the reader can only encounter the art after wading through 800 essays, which tell the reader what to think and how to be appropriately impressed by the writing, and each of the essays cites 400 sources. This volume doesn’t do that. There is an introduction written by journalist Joshua Kucera that is helpful and readable, intelligent without being abstruse, and it doesn’t give away everything that happens. The novellas come next. A reflective essay by Aylisli ,which I’ll pair with a Solzhenitsyn essay when I teach writing next year, follows. It is a powerful—and somewhat magical (Márquez again)—piece. Aylisli reflects on his experiences as a writer, dealing with censorship, what it’s like to watch people burn his books, and his poignant relationship with his hometown of Aylis, from which he draws his pen name (his real last name is Naibov). There is a copy of a speech that Aylisli was supposed to give in Italy in 2016 but could not because his travel privileges had been revoked. And there is an afterward by Andrew Wachtel that considers how Aylisli fits in the larger tradition of Soviet literature and explains his relevance to our world today far better than I ever could.

The volume is unique because the novel is given adequate context, including the writer’s reflections, but the reader is also allowed adequate intellectual room to encounter the writing as a novel, as a story, without being overwhelmed with historical context or theoretical significance. I personally hope this starts a trend for publishing non-Western text in translation in volumes like this. Why shouldn’t we see more significant non-Western writing, and why shouldn’t we enjoy both responding to the stories that come from other parts of the world and learning some of the relevant context, without being overwhelmed by the context?

In a 2014 article, Dr. Mikhail Mamedov of George Mason University pointed out that when it comes to historical moments of conflict and oppression, “literary works are often more important” than historical monographs “because they reach a broader audience.” Stone Dreams, he argues, is the “most important novel to emerge so far” in the literary response to the conflict between the Azerbaijanis and the Armenians. He describes it as “a novel of repentance—and perhaps a gesture towards reconciliation,” a lovely description that is also challenging for all writers. Farewell, Aylis is not a reactive novel intended to prove any ideology right or wrong. Ultimately, it is a work of the heart and a work of love and acceptance for other people, no matter their history. Aylisli is setting a timely example for how to be a writer and what kind of literary offering to make, in a time of cultural strain.


Ryan K. Strader earned a B.A. in Russian Literature from George Mason University, an M.A.T. from Clayton State University, and a Ph.D. in Rhetoric and Composition from Georgia State University. She writes about post-Soviet writers, qualitative research methods, and writing pedagogy. She lives south of Atlanta with her husband and two kids, where she gets to read, write, and teach every day.


Azerbaijan urges Armenia to be pragmatic at Karabakh talks

Interfax
Azerbaijan urges Armenia to be pragmatic at Karabakh talks

BAKU. April 19

Azerbaijan is urging Armenia to show pragmatism in the Karabakh settlement process and to support the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group co-chaired by Russia, France, and the United States, Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry press secretary Leila Abdullayeva said in a statement on Friday.

“We are inviting the Armenian Foreign Ministry to join the statements made in the 3+2 format (the Minsk Group co-chairs, as well as Azerbaijan and Armenia), to be pragmatic, and to have faith in and support the activity of the OSCE Minsk Group,” the statement said.

Armenia and Azerbaijan should be working to build trust, it said.

“They [Armenia] should also participate in the effort toward peace, stability, and prosperity in the region,” the statement said.

As regards the recent statement by the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Abdullayeva said that the commentary made by Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov on the coming discussion of the Karabakh settlement with Armenia “fully complies with the joint statements released in the 3+2 format.”

“These statements clearly speak in favor of preparing people in both countries for peace. The Armenian administration has to realize that the status quo is unacceptable, unstable, and cannot last forever,” she said.

It was reported on Thursday with reference to Mammadyarov that the United States had invited the foreign ministers of Azerbaijan and Armenia to hold another meeting on the Karabakh settlement process in Washington DC.

Meanwhile, Armenian Foreign Ministry press secretary Anna Nagdalyan told Interfax that the ministers might hold their next meeting in a country co-chairing the OSCE Minsk Group. “The possibility of a meeting in a co-chair country is actually being discussed. However, unilateral announcements and public discussions should be avoided as long as the process continues,” Nagdalyan said.

Regarding the Azerbaijani foreign minister’s report on the discussion of Russia’s proposal of 2016 at the Moscow meeting on April 15, she said that the sides had posted a relevant statement at the end of their meeting.

“The document specified the subjects discussed. The purpose of joint statements is to summarize the wording coordinated between parties. Any statements exceeding or contradicting the coordinated wording do not help build mutual trust, especially if such statements are imaginary and unrealistic,” Nagdalyan said.

There are no negotiations based on any program at the moment, she said.

Russia, Armenia to increase intensity of joint military drills – Southern Military District HQ

Interfax
Russia, Armenia to increase intensity of joint military drills – Southern Military District HQ

MOSCOW. April 19

The intensity of exercises involving the members of the armed forces of Russia and Armenia will be increased, the press service for the Southern Military District said in a statement.

Relevant agreements were made during a meeting between the commander of the Southern Military District troops and the chief of the Armenian Armed Forces General Staff, the statement said.

During the meeting, the Southern Military District Troops Commander, Col. Gen. Alexander Dvornikov, and the Armenian Armed Forces General Staff Chief, Lt. Gen. Artak Davtyan, “discussed the plans of interaction during joint events in military training,” it said.

According to the statement, Dvornikov noted the high level of interaction shown during a recent joint exercise involving the units of the 102nd Russian military base and the Armenian Armed Forces.

“The exercise was conducted at various ranges; Alagyaz, Baghramyan, and Kamkhud. The established force of the two countries’ troops has successfully perfected modern methods of conducting combat actions and controlling, including carrying out objectives in shared reconnaissance-fire and strike channels,” the press service cited the commander as saying.

“The representatives of the Armenian delegation, in turn, reiterated their readiness for the further strengthening of ties in joint combat and operative training,” the statement said.

Asbarez: Ararat Home Banquet to Celebrate 70 Years of Service to the Community

Ararat Home, assisted living facility

MISSION HILLS – This year marks Ararat Home’s 70th anniversary, which will be celebrated with a banquet on Saturday, May 11, featuring a tribute program and wonderful entertainment.

Established in 1949 by a group of visionaries, Ararat Home was created to serve our community by caring for our elderly. For 70 years, it has been home to thousands of Armenians – men and women, parents and grandparents, generations of our compatriots, who have received comfort, compassion, and loving care there. With tremendous community support since its founding, Ararat Home has grown from its humble beginnings and has succeeded in carrying on its mission of care for seven decades.

As the tribute video prepared for the occasion shows (available online), Ararat Home’s journey began in Los Angeles’ Historic West Adams District with seven residents moving into film star Mary Pickford’s mansion, which was purchased for $12,000. From its early days, when securing funding for mortgage payments and daily needs was a struggle, through its periods of growth, the Home has today become a million dollar operation, employing over 400 staff and caring for 400 residents in three facilities on two campuses.

Ararat Home Board of Trustees Chair Michael Surmeian credits community support for this growth and success. “Thanks to the generosity and dedication of countless supporters – members of the community, philanthropists, and organizations – who have sustained the Home’s mission for decades, Ararat Home has become the pride of the Southern California Armenian community. And, in return for this investment of support, the Home has continually endeavored to serve the community well.”

“We consider it our duty and privilege to serve our community in this capacity,” says Chief Operating Officer Derik Ghookasian. “At Ararat Home, we strive to provide each of our residents with individualized, comprehensive, quality care. In the uniquely Armenian, family environment of the Home, residents find companionship, life enrichment and dignity, and their families find support, understanding and peace of mind. These are qualities that set Ararat Home apart in the industry of long-term, elder care. And, our community deserves nothing less than our very best effort.”

In order to meet the ever-increasing needs of the community and the demand for its services, Ararat Home has achieved several milestones during its 70 year history. In 1980, it purchased Ararat Convalescent Hospital in Eagle Rock. And, in 1981, it purchased 10.5 acres of agricultural land in Mission Hills, which it developed and opened as its new campus in 1992. After several phases of expansion through 2018, the campus is now home to Ararat Assisted Living Facility, Ararat Nursing Facility, Ararat-Eskijian Museum, Deukmejian Community Center, and Sheen Memorial Chapel.

With its most recent acquisition of 13 acres of virtually undeveloped land adjacent to its Mission Hills campus, Ararat Home is planning to create a true Continuing Care Retirement Community with independent living units, recreational areas, additional assisted living and skilled nursing capacity, and memory care units.

Mr. Surmeian remarks that the new project builds upon the successes of the past. “70 years of unparalleled service to the community is certainly worth celebrating. Ararat Home is a pillar of our community; we are all in some way connected to it, and it belongs to all of us. With the endless possibilities of a new campus awaiting us, the Home needs your support now. Come dream with us and help bring this dream to fruition!”

A 70th Anniversary Banquet is planned for Saturday, May 11, at 6:30 p.m. in Deukmejian Grand Ballroom on the Ararat Home campus, in Mission Hills. Entertainment will be provided by ALLEN G. ORCHESTRA, and television personality and author Jill Simonian Panossian (website) will serve as the Mistress of Ceremonies. Tickets are $175, and sponsorship opportunities are available. For inquiries, you may call (818) 365-3000, email, or visit the website.

Ararat Home is a non-political, non-denominational, non-profit organization with the mission of providing assisted living and skilled nursing care facilities, primarily for the Armenian community, and of promoting Armenian culture and heritage in the United States.