Exposing the First 20th-Century Genocide: The Armenian Genocide

The Epoch Times
Literature

Interview with author and translator Siobhan Nash-Marshall
By Joseph Pearce
Updated:

Siobhan Nash-Marshall is uniquely placed to offer penetrating and illuminating insights into one of the darkest and most horrific chapters in human history.

The chair of philosophy at Manhattanville College in New York is the author of “The Sins of the Fathers,” a book about the Armenian Genocide, and translator of the newly published novella “Silent Angel” by Antonia Arslan, which is set against the backdrop of the genocide.

Dr. Nash-Marshall’s book exposes Turkish denialism about the genocide and shows how the dehumanizing effects of modern philosophy are responsible for the butchering of a whole people. Her translation of “Silent Angel” has provided readers in the English-speaking world with another book by Armenian-Italian novelist Antonia Arslan, whose earlier novel about the genocide, “Skylark Farm,” was an international bestseller.

<img class=”wp-image-3395918 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_Siobhan-Nash-Marshall-600×400.jpg”” alt=”Epoch Times Photo” width=”600″ height=”400″ /> Author Siobhan Nash-Marshall attributes the Armenian Genocide to modernist philosophy.

In this exclusive interview for The Epoch Times, Nash-Marshall speaks by email of the genocide and about her translation of Arslan’s latest book.

Joseph Pearce: “Silent Angel” is a novella set against the backdrop of the Armenian Genocide. Could you give a brief explanation and description of this genocide and when it happened?
Siobhan Nash-Marshall: The Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th century. The triumvirate at the helm of the Ottoman Empire at the time (Enver Pasha, Talaat Pasha, and Djemal Pasha) took advantage of the World War I and launched a full-scale slaughter of the Armenians. A million and a half of them (that is, three-quarters of the Armenian people who lived in their historic homeland at the time, in what is today called Eastern Turkey) were slaughtered in the most horrendous ways imaginable.

The men were separated from their families. They were usually killed on the spot. The women and children were then forced to “relocate” by foot into the Syrian desert. Every sort of horror was visited upon them along the way. Most of them died of thirst, starvation, fatigue.

The genocide is a very well documented event. Newspapers from every continent chronicled it in gruesome detail. The Allies coined the term “crime against humanity” when they called upon the Turks to stop killing the Armenians. Pope Benedict XV, in his letter to the sultan, called it the “leading of the Armenian people almost to its extinction.” It was part of an operation that the U.S. ambassador at the time, Henry Morgenthau, called the “whitewashing of Anatolia.”

Mr. Pearce: Apart from being the translator of “Silent Angel,” you are also the author of “The Sins of the Fathers,” a book about the Armenian Genocide. Could you tell us a little about the book?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: My primary concern in “Sins of the Fathers” is modern philosophy. This is not strange for a Catholic. Pope Leo XIII railed against modernism. He also tried to protect the Armenians during the pre-genocidal massacres (1894–1896) perpetrated by Sultan Abdul Hamid. This is not a coincidence.

In my book, I tried to shed light on five crucial characteristics of the Armenian Genocide.

First, it was predicated on modern Western thought: All of its perpetrators read and carefully studied 19th-century European philosophers.

Second, it shows the price of modern political hypocrisy. The genocide did not happen overnight. It was preceded by nearly 30 years of negotiations in which the European Powers called for reforms in the Armenian provinces, signed treaties of all kinds with the sultan, but let the Armenians be slaughtered. Pope Leo XIII intervened and tried to mediate between the European Powers and negotiate with the sultan because he was well aware of the plight of the Armenians and the hypocrisy of the Powers.

Third, the Armenian Genocide highlights the historical engineering inherent in modern philosophy. Although the actual killing of the Armenians was mostly completed by 1923, the government of Turkey today is still trying desperately to rewrite Armenians out of the history of the lands of modern Turkey.

Fourth, the Armenian Genocide highlights the social engineering inherent in modern philosophy. The Armenians were killed in order to construct a “new Turkey” built along the lines dictated by French and German philosophy. [In “Sins of the Fathers,” Dr. Nash-Marshall shows how the intelligentsia of the “new Turkey” were inspired by Karl Marx and Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel and also by the French philosopher Auguste Comte.]

Fifth, the Armenian Genocide was violently anti-Christian.

The Armenian Genocide thus gives us a very good image in which to understand the problems that we are facing today. We too see historical engineering, social engineering, violent anti-Christianity. The Armenian Genocide shows what happens if we don’t pay attention to the signs.

<img class=”wp-image-3395928 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_cover-of-Sins-of-the-Father-600×902.jpg”” alt=”Epoch Times Photo” width=”600″ height=”902″ /> Siobhan Nash-Marshall’s book explores the underlying reasons for the Armenian Genocide, and how it is still not acknowledged by the Turkish government.

Mr. Pearce: The original title of “Silent Angel” was “Book of Moush.” Could you tell us something about the “Book of Moush” and how it relates to the plot of “Silent Angel”?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: Moush was one of the Armenian provinces in the Ottoman Empire. It was very important culturally and religiously. It had important monasteries, at one of which, for instance, Casper, one of the Three Kings of the New Testament, was buried, or so Armenian oral traditions tell us.

As the location was important, so too is the “Book of Moush.” It is called the “Msho Charantir”—the “Homiliary of Moush.” It actually exists. It is the largest extant Armenian manuscript. It is on display in the Matenadaran, the great library in Yerevan, the capital of Armenia. One can plainly see its two pieces.

All Armenians know the story of the book. It was divided into two parts during the genocide and carried by two women who managed to save it. The names of the women who saved it are lost. “Silent Angel” gives the women names and tells their story.

<img class=”wp-image-3395898 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_antonia-Arslan-600×902.jpg”” alt=”Epoch Times Photo” width=”600″ height=”902″ /> Armenian-Italian novelist Antonia Arslan. (Courtesy of the Augustine Institute)

Mr. Pearce: The author of “Silent Angel,” Antonia Arslan, wrote a previous bestselling novel, “Skylark Farm,” also about the Armenian Genocide. Could you tell us a little about that novel and how it differs from “Silent Angel”?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: “Skylark Farm” (“La Masseria delle Allodole”) is Antonia Arslan’s first novel, and the first part of what is likely going to be a pentalogy. The second part is “Road to Smyrna,” the third “The Sound of the Wooden Pearls.” She dealt with part of it also in “Letter to a Girl in Turkey.” Alas, only the first has been published in English.

<img class=”wp-image-3395937 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_Skylark-Farm-cover-600×929.jpg”” alt=”Skylark Farm cover” width=”600″ height=”929″ /> The novel “Skylark Farm” is a personal account of the horrors of the Armenian Genocide.

“Skylark Farm” is a personal novel for Arslan, as can be seen from her dedicating it to her aunt, a survivor of the genocide, with whom she grew up. It is a difficult story. Like all descendants of families and cultures ravaged by genocide, Antonia Arslan has had personally to deal with what can be called the problem of Job since her birth. Her family has seen evil face-to-face and has had to understand how to hold on and deepen their faith through it. And so has she. In “Skylark Farm,” she shows that diabolical evil, sparing no details. It was horrendous.

Like a true classicist, Arslan weaves her family’s story in “Skylark Farm” as an epic. This is the perfect genre for a Joblike story. It allows Arslan to weave a timeless perspective in her story.

Both of these things make “Skylark Farm” very different from “Silent Angel.” In “Skylark Farm,” Arslan is trying to grapple with the horror of what happened to her family and her people. In “Silent Angel,” she focuses on the saving of her people.

Mr. Pearce: Who or what is the “silent angel” that gives the novella its name?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: Antonia Arslan loves the title “Silent Angel.” In Italian, as we’ve mentioned, her novella was published with the title “Book of Moush.” There are many silent angels in Arslan’s novella. One of them is the Book of Moush itself. It cannot speak, so it is silent. But it can show, and by showing it becomes a messenger of God, bringing the message of salvation.

Another angel is the angelic guide who guards over the people who are called upon to save the book. The angel plays an important role in the story. Yet another angel in “Silent Angel” is Zacharias, the sole survivor of his village, who leads the party carrying the book to safety. Two more of the novella’s angels are the Greeks, Makarios and Eleni, who protect the Armenians who are saving the book from those who would kill them.

“Silent Angel” is filled with angels, with messengers of God. Arslan has laced the story with them.

<img class=”wp-image-3395920 size-medium” src=””https://img.theepochtimes.com/assets/uploads/2020/06/20/6_30_cover-of-silent-Angel-600×914.jpg”” alt=”&quot;Silent Angel&quot;” width=”600″ height=”914″ /> “Silent Angel” tells the story of how an Armenian treasure, the “Book of Moush,” was saved during the Armenian Genocide.

Mr. Pearce: Without wishing to give the plot away, could you give us a summary, not of the plot but of the principal characters?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: “Silent Angel” is the story of Anoush, which means “sweet” in Armenian, and Kohar, which in Armenian means “jewel.” They are simple women. Anoush is a wife and mother, and is shy and soft-spoken. Kohar is boisterous, has a fiancé, and is a decision maker. They are farmers. They come from a beautiful place. In their adventure they are joined by Hovsep, which is Armenian for Joseph, who is an orphan; by Eleni, the Greek midwife; and her sweetheart, the Greek Makarios.

Mr. Pearce: The literary landscape of “Silent Angel” illustrates the horrors of human cruelty and depravity but also the triumph of human endurance and virtue, as well as suggestions of God’s providential presence in the midst of darkness. In what ways does the novella achieve this, and what does it offer 21st-century Americans in the sense of its being somehow inspirational or applicable to our own times and culture?
Ms. Nash-Marshall: We are living in difficult times, and risk forgetting what is truly important in our lives. We are distracted by events, by violent emotions, by unrest. We also are always tempted to think that we are alone. This is especially true for us now, not just because of COVID-19, but because those links that once seemed to bind our society have loosened: families, parishes, communities.

“Silent Angel” reminds us what is important: the glorious Truth that saves us. It reminds us that that truth is not an abstract belief, but a real person. It reminds us that that person does not save us collectively. He saves us individually, and sends us beauty, messengers, hope, and strength.

Joseph Pearce is the author of “Solzhenitsyn: A Soul in Exile” (Ignatius Press).

Amman: Jordanian Intelligence foils a terrorist act targeting the Armenian Church and a commercial store


Al-Rai  (الرآي) , Hashemite
Kingdom of Jordan



 


Jordanian Intelligence foils
a terrorist act targeting the Armenian Church and a commercial store


المخابرات تحبط عملاً إرهابياً
لاستهداف كنيسة ومحل تجاري


 


[Translated from Arabic exclusively for the Armenian News
Network Armenian News by Katia M. Peltekian]


 


AMMAN – Ghazi Al-Mirayat.



 


The General Intelligence forces foiled a terrorist attack by
four suspects who had planned to target a church and a commercial store in
Amman and arrested them earlier this year. The attack was planned to show
support to the ISIS terrorist group.


 


The four defendants attempted to join the terrorist
organization by crossing the Jordanian border, but the tight security measures
along the Jordanian borders prevented them from sneaking out of the country. Thus,
they planned to carry out armed operations on the Jordanian territories.


 


For their plans, the four chose to carry out the terrorist
act with explosives and decided to blow up a church and a liquor store (a store
that sells alcoholic drinks). But because they found difficulty in manufacturing
explosive devices, they changed their plans to using automatic assault weapons.


 


The State Security Court held a public session headed by Military
Judge Brigadier Dr. Ali al-Mobaideen to look into the case. When the defendants
were asked how they would plead to the charges brought against them by the
State Prosecution, they responded that they were not guilty. Three of the defendants
are also facing charges of promoting the ideology of a terrorist group.


 


The details of the case, as stated in the indictment, reveal
that all the defendants are residents of the Al-Wehdat area in Amman, and they are
friends. Following the events in Syrian and Iraq, and the emergence of the ISIS
terrorist organization in 2014, the defendants began following the news and
reports on ISIS via the Internet and shared these contents with each other
until they became convinced that ISIS is the “true” organization that seeks to
implement Islamic Law. They soon pledged their allegiance to ISIS to obey its
teachings.


 


And because the defendants saw it necessary to support the
organization, they agreed in 2017 to join the ranks of the fighters and fight
for the organization. However, they were unable to do so due to the tight
security measures along Jordan’s borders.


 


By the beginning of 2018, as a result of the defendants’
inability to join the organization and fight with its elements in Syria, two of
the 4 suspects decided to carry out an armed operation inside Jordan to show
their support to ISIS. After they identified a few targets, they settled on two
specific ones: the Armenian [Apostolic] Church in the Achrafieh neighborhood of
Amman, and a liquor store in Al-Wahdat only by virtue of their proximity to
their place of residence.


 


The two main suspects then decided to form two separate
cells to carry out the terrorist. It was planned that the first cell would
include themselves and one of the other suspects to attack the liquor store in
Al-Wahdat. The second cell would include the original two and the fourth
suspect to carry out a terrorist attack on the Armenian Church.


 


In March of 2018, one of the suspects was arrested and referred
to the State Security Court for the crime of promoting the ideologies of a
terrorist group. He was sentences to 5 years in prison. However, this did not deter
the remaining three as they continued to formulate the right time and place to carry
out their terrorist attack. However, by the end of the year, another one of the
group was also arrested, thus exposing the two remaining suspects who were
also arrested last January.


 


 


The
original in Arabic:
http://alrai.com/article/10542479/%D9%85%D8%AD%D9%84%D9%8A%D8%A7%D8%AA/%D8%A7%D9%84%D9%85%D8%AE%D8%A7%D8%A8%D8%B1%D8%A7%D8%AA-%D8%AA%D8%AD%D8%A8%D8%B7-%D8%B9%D9%85%D9%84%D8%A7-%D8%A7%D8%B1%D9%87%D8%A7%D8%A8%D9%8A%D8%A7-%D9%84%D8%A7%D8%B3%D8%AA%D9%87%D8%AF%D8%A7%D9%81-%D9%83%D9%86%D9%8A%D8%B3%D8%A9-%D9%88%D9%85%D8%AD%D9%84-%D8%AA%D8%AC%D8%A7%D8%B1%D9%8A?fbclid=IwAR0AM2K_OdXoC7RK2N0ayBEWXybr2iuwUaiHI6Hjt4N_tm3kpX03JZOjaXY


No other way out: Armenia’s Health Minister calls for “conscious” lockdown

Public Radio of Armenia

Armenian MP: Turks decided to commit a new historical and cultural attack

News.am, Armenia

19:06, 28.06.2020
                  

French Armenian Jeanne Barseghian elected Mayor of Strasbourg

Public Radio of Armenia

The new generation of Teach For Armenia getting ready for September

MediaMax, Armenia

When remembering her numerous visits to Artsakh, Rita never forgets about the children she has met there.

 

“They had so much potential for studying and discovering something new. But there were communities that had no schools, there were even children who didn’t attend school; it pained them to say that they didn’t know English or Russian because they didn’t have teachers to teach those subjects,” remembers Rita Babayan.

 

The idea of going back to Artsakh as a teacher has been on her mind for a long time. During the pandemic Rita had a lot of spare time on her hands and began looking for new programs. She discovered Teach for Armenia, which offered an opportunity to work in Artsakh.

 

Rita is a philologist, a Russian language specialist. She has worked in preschool for a long time, and is currently employed. The decision to give up a well-paid job came as a shock to her relatives. But Rita has no doubt that her heart guides her in the right direction.

 

Rita has passed all the stages of Teach For Armenia and reached the final one- the Summer Academy. During a 7-week intensive training course, selected participants receive theoretical and practical knowledge and skills, so that they are ready to work as a teacher and a leader in school come September.

 

The Summer Academy was usually held in one of the regions of Armenia. This year it is held online like all the stages. The program kicked off on June 22 and will end on August 7.

Photo: Teach For Armenia

“I have applied for Teach For Armenia without having any expectations for myself, but now I understand that I will achieve a lot both professionally and humanely and will grow myself. We learn a lot of new things in terms of methodology and teaching techniques, develop new skills in ourselves,” says Rita.

 

Rita hopes that the pandemic situation will improve by September and she will leave for Artsakh and communicate with children in person not online.

 

Without losing hope that things will go back to normal, but also being ready for the new situation, Teach Armenia Foundation has changed its entire program.

 

“This year we are using the teaching method based on changes. TFA has adapted Apple’s Challenge-based learning theory, replacing “challenge” with “change”. Our communities have endless possibilities: you just have to find ways to use them properly. We want to achieve these changes through education.

Photo: Teach For Armenia

We are teaching the participants how to organize distance learning. During this time, they will be working with children remotely for 3 weeks, learning all the nuances. The last week of the Academy is the adaptation stage. All the knowledge and skills gained to conduct classes online should be analyzed and projected to offline work. We are getting ready for both variants of teaching.

 

The whole program will be build around this. It’s an innovative approach that we are using for the first time. Our long-term goal is to share this approach with our partner schools if it turns out to be a success,” says Nara Magtaghyan, Regional Director at Teach For Armenia.

Photo: Teach For Armenia

This year, 1200 people applied for the program. After passing several stages, only 70 participants from almost all the regions of Armenia, Artsakh, Lebanon, France, Russia, Georgia and Syria, qualified for the Summer Academy.

 

Many of them didn’t have pedagogical education. They choose the subject they can teach by profession, and through training they get acquainted with teaching methods and gain necessary skills. Throughout the 2 years of the program, Teacher-leaders are working with the teachers.

 

This is the second year in a row that current teachers have joined the program: 7 teachers have been selected. They will continue working in their communities using new methods.

“Since every year we say goodbye to one generation of teachers and welcome the next one, it is very important for us to always have the right shift. We assess the situation and see what teachers are needed in which community. There is a great demand for science and foreign language teachers. We have tried to involve all the specialists who are needed: foreign language, history, mathematics, informatics, physical education, elementary school teachers. Unfortunately, we do not have physics teachers,” says Nara Magtaghyan.

 

Academy participants are working in small subject groups. Although the mentors are helping them throughout the training, project coordinators value the participants’ ability to study and analyze the material independently.

 

The first week was lees busy. The participants had more time to get to know each other.

Photo: Teach For Armenia

“The participants are very excited to have an opportunity to educate children and have an impact on the community. Many of them say they are motivated, learn new tools online and more deeply understand our approaches, their mission, and they have become more confident in teamwork.

 

Our goal is for them to be able to learn independently and be initiative, because online education will require them to develop those skills. They watch our videos on their own, do the homework and analyze. If you want to be a good leader, you must have high self-awareness, be able to analyze the work you have done, see the positive and the directions for improvement. This is important, so that during their future activity they could do much more in-depth analysis,” says Irina Manukyan, TFA Leadership Development Manager.

 

Two weeks later, when future teachers have the necessary theoretical knowledge, the practical stage will begin – working with children.

Photo: Teach For Armenia

In previous years, the summer school was organized for the students of the community where the Academy was held. As the “Student Leadership Camp” will also be online this year, 300 students from 24 communities will take part in it. The program provides them with necessary technical means for the lessons.

In April, Teach For Armenia launched “End the digital divide” fundraising campaign, aimed at providing students in rural areas of Armenia and Artsakh with technology and internet connectivity, so that they are not left out of the educational process during distance learning. The fundraising continues.

 

Lusine Gharibyan


Armenian geopolitics: Threats and claims

Modern Diplomacy
 
 
 
 
on
By Rusif Huseynov
                
 
A couple of days ago I encountered a publication from Modern Diplomacy`s Geopolitical Handbooks series. I was thrilled to learn something interesting when its catchy title drew my attention: Armenia`s existential threats and strategic issues.
 
Authored by David Davidian, this handbook is designed to introduce an (uninformed) audience to Armenia by touching upon and not thoroughly discussing the basic geopolitical and strategic issues for the country. A nuclear engineer by profession, Davidian teaches technology and programming at a Yerevan-based university, occasionally penning anti-Turkish and anti-Azerbaijani articles
 
While I became quite disappointed about the overall quality of the publication, several moments, nevertheless, caught my attention and are worth being discussed: demographics as an advantage, nuclear annihilation as a policy of deterrence and territorial claims.
 
Several times throughout the text, Davidian analyzes a possibility of ethnic or religious insurgencies through domestic demographics. Demographically, the author rightfully points out, Armenia is largely mono-ethnic with an insignificant number of ethnic minorities. That ethnic Armenians came to comprise 98% of the country`s population is explained with the exodus of non-Armenians in the wake of the disintegration of the Soviet Union, but this exodus is tied to economic reasons. We may understand why the author deliberately skips the forceful deportation of the Azerbaijanis, which obviously happened not because of economic reasons.
 
The Azerbaijanis pushed out of the country between 1988-1991 used to be the largest ethnic minority in the present-day Armenia and the absolute majority in some provinces for several centuries. Up until the early 20th century, ethnic Azerbaijanis constituted at least 50% (or more than 50%, according to some sources), of the city of Erivan (modern-day Yerevan).
 
Figure 1. Distribution of Azerbaijanis in the present-day Armenia in the 19-20th centuries
 
Although several waves of deportation (well-planned and effectively implemented by Armenian authorities) during the Soviet time significantly shrank the Azerbaijani community in Armenia, at least 250,000 Azerbaijanis were still inhabiting the country by the mid-1980s. The last episode of the ethnic cleansing took place in the late 1980s, wiping Azerbaijanis off the Armenian map and turning Armenia into a mono-ethnic country.
 
While many countries led by developed states work for decades to celebrate ethnic and racial diversity, teach tolerance and co-existence and prevent any xenophobia, this Armenian professor, who lectures at American-Armenian University, affords to write the following lines: “This [mono-ethnic nature] puts Armenia in the same condition as states such as Japan. Many developing states work for decades or more to achieve the homogeneous demographic status of Armenia.”
 
The means Armenia has achieved its homogenous society with would be called “ethnic cleansing” elsewhere in the world, but obviously not in Armenia itself. And while the Armenians, who themselves spread across the globe to flourish in many (usually multi-ethnic) societies, the homogenous demographics at home, in Armenia, is considered by Davidian “a strategic asset.”
 
Nuclear deterrence, Armenian style, is also explained by Davidian. According to him, a possible attack by Turkey will be responded with “a controlled core breach of the Armenian Nuclear Power station (ANP) at Metsamor. In parallel with a full power core breach, the planned burning of ANP spent fuel storage facility would add to the radioactive contamination. Geographically, this act would be much worse than the radiation poisoning effect of conventional nuclear weapons. This last act of desperation would not only make much of eastern Turkey and Armenia uninhabitable for many decades but parts of Azerbaijan, Iran, Georgia as well.”
 
In other words, detonating Armenia’s operating nuclear power plant and spent fuel storage is called a “strong Armenian deterrent.” This “scorched earth” tactics offered by Davidian would be able to contaminate for decades and even centuries the lands of not only Armenia, but also other regional countries.
 
Noteworthy is the author`s (and/or Armenia`s) territorial claims against its neighbors, Azerbaijan and Turkey. While Azerbaijan`s provinces, Nagorno-Karabakh and Nakhchivan, are repeatedly called Armenian, this territorial appetite extends to vast Turkish lands as well. It is important for the author to “secure a sovereign landmass from Armenia’s current western border to the Black Sea… to release Armenia from its landlocked condition, removing the dependence on Georgia, Russia or Iran.” Davidian justifies this territory as an award Armenia should get as “genocide” reparations and presents his map of the claimed landmass.
 
While fearing Turkey`s possible attack at Armenia, Davidian nevertheless reflects Armenia’s expansionist ambitions. The Armenian irredentism, Davidian seems adherent to, should in fact be no surprise. The Armenian government has avoided “an explicit and formal recognition of the existing Turkish-Armenian border” since 1991, when Armenia proclaimed its independence; interestingly, the 1991 Declaration of Independence contains reference to Eastern Turkey usually considered as Armenia`s territorial claims.
 
Most recently, in 2011, Serzh Sargsyan, then Armenian President, made a statement that sparked an outrage in Turkey. When answering  if Turkey “will return Western Armenia” in the future, Sargsyan put this responsibility on the shoulder of the next generation(s) of Armenians.
 
While the discussed publication provides shallow information on the basic geopolitical and strategic issues Armenia faces, some of the author`s ideas are either close to nonsense or distort the truth or put forth aggressive claims, by celebrating his country`s mono-ethnicity and keeping silent about the reason of this mono-ethnicity, voicing territoral ambitions against Azerbaijan (Nagorno-Karabakh, Nakhchivan) and Eastern Turkey (to get access to the Black Sea) and threatening the neighboring countries with a nuclear doomsday.
 
Although not an official doctrine, this paper, nevertheless, echoes the main domestic discourse and presents Armenia herself as the main threat to the neighboring countries and the whole region.
 

Kanye West’s “Ararat” Yeezy Foam Runners sold out within hours

Public Radio of Armenia

Former MP Ruben Hakobyan invited to NSS

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 14:37,

YEREVAN, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS. Former member of Parliament of Armenia Ruben Hakobyan has been invited to the National Security Service.

Hakobyan told reporters that he has been invited to the NSS for his yesterday’s calls made outside the Constitutional Court.

“They almost said that I have made calls over the Constitutional order, the main emphasis is put on this”, Hakobyan said.

On June 26 Ruben Hakobyan was outside the Constitutional Court expressing his protest over the recent law according to which the powers of three judges of the Constitutional Court have been suspended, and President of the Court Hrayr Tovmasyan continues serving as CC member.

Reporting by Norayr Shoghikyan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan

Icelandair to operate Los Angeles-Yerevan charter flight on July 11

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 13:13,

YEREVAN, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS. Icelandair airline will operate a Los Angeles-Yerevan charter flight on July 11, the Consulate General of Armenia to Los Angeles said on Facebook, adding that the plane will make a technical stop in Reykjavik for refueling, which will last an hour.

“Given the current situation in the aviation market due to COVID-19 and crowds of our compatriots in California, a Los Angeles-Yerevan direct charter flight will be carried out on July 11 at the request of the Armenian Consulate General in Los Angeles”, the statement says.

The flight duration will be 15 hours. The aircraft has 260 seats.

Citizens of the Republic of Armenia and foreigners with the right of permanent residence, as well as foreign citizens who have family members living in Armenia (spouse/parent/child) can take a flight to Armenia.

Reporting by Lilit Demuryan; Editing and Translating by Aneta Harutyunyan