Armenian CB, Warsaw Stock Exchange sign contract of the sale of the Armenia Securities Exchange

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 18:58,

YEREVAN, JUNE 28, ARMENPRESS. Today, on June 28th , in Yerevan, the Governor of the Central Bank of Armenia Martin Galstyan and President of the Management Board of the Warsaw Stock Exchange (GPW) Marek Dietl signed an agreement on the sale of a majority interest in the Armenia Securities Exchange (AMX), ARMENPRESS was infomred from the Central Bank of Armenia. 

“We consider this investment as a long-term partnership. Our aim is to recreate with joint efforts the capital markets of Armenia and thrive to extend our business further into the region. We also expect to develop the capital markets infrastructure, creating opportunity for businesses to raise sustainable and affordable capital while enabling the investors and savers to manage their savings and investments more professionally within a wider range of investment products and opportunities,” said Marek Dietl, President of the Management Board of GPW.

“We believe this to be an important milestone in the development of Armenian capital markets. Having found such a partner in the Warsaw Stock Exchange, realizing we have the same vision and similar aspirations, we believe this deal to be a turning point in the chronicles of capital markets in Armenia. Under the leadership of the Warsaw Stock Exchange, with their experience and knowledge, AMX has the full potential to expand and become the robust stock market ready to take up the challenges of the 21st century and lead the region.” said Martin Galstyan, Governor of the Central Bank of Armenia.

The intention of the GPW to acquire the AMX was announced on September 18, 2020, after which the necessary analysis were carried out, a development plan for the next 5 years was purposed, and the necessary corporate approvals were implemented. Finally, this year at the May 24 Meeting, the Board of the Central Bank of the Republic of Armenia approved the transaction.

Accordingly, the Warsaw Stock Exchange (GPW) will acquire 65.03% of shares of the Armenia Securities Exchange (AMX) (967 shares in total). The Central Bank of Armenia will maintain 25.02% of shares, and the remaining 9.95% are the AMX’s own shares. The value of the transaction is about AMD 873 million, a part of which (about AMD 499 million) will be paid after signing the Share Purchase Agreement, and the rest, after completion of processes established by the Share Purchase Agreement.

The Warsaw Stock Exchange Group (GPW Group) operates trading platforms for shares, Treasury and corporate bonds, derivatives, electricity and gas, and provides indices and benchmarks including WIBOR and WIBID. The index agent FTSE Russell classifies the Polish capital market as a Developed Market since 2018. The markets operated by the GPW Group are the biggest in Central and Eastern Europe. For more information, visit www.gpw.pl

At the end of May 2022, the market capitalisation of 376 domestic companies listed on the Main Market was PLN 585.8 billion (EUR 128.0 billion), while the total market capitalisation of 421 domestic and foreign companies listed on the Main Market was PLN 1,165.2 billion (EUR 254.6 billion).

Armenia Securities Exchange (AMX) is the only securities regulated market operator in Armenia. As an integrated exchange offering, AMX provides a full suite of services including listing, trading, clearing, information services and alternative market solutions. Currently 28 companies are listed in the AMX.

Armenpress: Ruling Civil Contract faction starts procedure of suspending powers of Ishkhan Saghatelyan and Vahe Hakobyan

Ruling Civil Contract faction starts procedure of suspending powers of Ishkhan Saghatelyan and Vahe Hakobyan

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 19:24,

YEREVAN, JUNE 28, ARMENPRESS. The Civil Contract faction, which forms the majority in the National Assembly, made a decision to start the procedure of suspending the powers of Vice President of the National Assembly Ishkhan Saghatelyan and Chairman of the Standing Committee on Economic Affairs Vahe Hakobyan, ARMENPRESS reports MP Emma Palyan from the ruling party wrote on her Facebook page.

AW: Major contemporary art exhibition of 125 works now open at Armenian Museum of America

Art enthusiasts enjoy the Discovering Takouhi exhibit of 30 portraits of Joan Agajanian Quinn by Armenian artists (Photo: Kenneth Martin)

WATERTOWN, Mass.—“On the Edge:  Los Angeles Art 1970s -1990s from the Joan and Jack Quinn Family Collection” and “Discovering Takouhi: Portraits of Joan Agajanian Quinn” opened at the Armenian Museum of America on June 16 to a large and enthusiastic crowd of art lovers from near and far.  

The celebration of this impressive contemporary exhibition kicked off with a lively members reception before the gallery doors opened to the public. 

Museum executive director Jason Sohigian welcomes everyone to the opening of the exhibit (Photo: Kenneth Martin)

Executive director Jason Sohigian welcomed guests and thanked many individuals who played a role in the curation and installation of the exhibition, including Rachel McCullah Wainwright, curator of the Bakersfield Museum of Art, and Gina Grigorian and Natalie Varbedian, curators of the “Discovering Takhoui” exhibition of 28 Armenian artists.  

Museum president Michele Kolligian offered warm remarks about her long friendship with Agajanian Quinn, as well as her fond memories of the late Jack Quinn. She extended her appreciation to Joan’s two daughters, Amanda Quinn Olivar and Jennifer Quinn Gowey, who play an integral role in the Quinn Family Collection. Special thanks were also expressed to the JHM Foundation for their generous support of the exhibition.  

Pictured at the opening reception are members of the Museum’s executive committee Sandra Missakian, Joan Agajanian Quinn, and president of the Board of Trustees Michele Kolligian (Photo: Kenneth Martin)

 The exhibition of 125 contemporary works by artists including John Altoon, Jean-Michel Basquiat, Charles Garabedian, Frank Gehry and David Hockney runs through November 30 at the Armenian Museum of America. Additional events are planned for later this summer and fall.

Berj Chekijian, director of finance and building operations, and Joan Agajanian Quinn (Photo: Kenneth Martin)

The Armenian Museum of America is the largest Armenian museum in the Diaspora. It has grown into a major repository for all forms of Armenian material culture that illustrate the creative endeavors of the Armenian people over the centuries. Today, the Museum’s collections hold more than 25,000 artifacts including 5,000 ancient and medieval Armenian coins, 1,000 stamps and maps, 30,000 books, 3,000 textiles and 180 Armenian inscribed rugs, and an extensive collection of Urartian and religious artifacts, ceramics, medieval illuminations and various other objects. The collection includes historically significant objects, including five of the Armenian Bibles printed in Amsterdam in 1666.


AW: Presenting Armadi Tsayn

Armenian music is rich in history, tradition and genre. It can be liturgical music. It can be classical music in both the Western sense or in a traditional Armenian style. And it most certainly can be folk musicEastern or Western with traditional instrumentation or modern keyboards, guitars and drums. For those of us children, grandchildren or great-grandchildren of survivors who migrated to America after the Genocide, Armenian music is rooted in the music those amazing people brought with them. It was the village music that sometimes overlapped with Kurdish, Greek, and, yes, even Turkish music. It has always been our music. Generations of musicians have preserved, perpetuated and evolved this music. Sometimes it is called kef music, others might call it “deghatsi” music and picnic music. To generations of AYFers, it is the soundtrack of dances, parties, the Olympics, and, without too much exaggeration, of our lives.

Musicians often worry about this “deghatsi,” Western Armenian, kef music. Will it last? Will it fade away? Who will take it over? Will they make it better while preserving the core of what makes it so special, that je ne sais quoi that gets into our hearts and souls and ties us to our culture in the most visceral way. I believe it is in my very genetic code, and I know I am not alone in thinking this way.

Well, it does my heart good to report there is nothing to worry about. There is a cadre of young musicians that are equally enticed by and devoted to this music. They are quite talented, versatile and entrepreneurial. They love our music and want to play. They want to entertain and share their gifts and talent. Two of these musicians—Alek Surenian and Sam Sjostedt—just formed a band called Armadi Tsayn, and they are touring Armenia the next two weeks. They recently recorded and released a single, “Artsakh Aghves.” Surenian and Sjostedt are also part of the Norkef Ensemble, which is performing at the upcoming AYF Olympics in Worcester.  

Armadi Tsayn founders Alek Surenian and Sam Sjostedt (Photo: Knar Bedian)

I had the virtual pleasure of interviewing the founders of Armadi Tsayn before the start of their tour in Armenia on June 28. As a bonus, I have also included comments from their teachers and mentors.

A.W.: How did you two decide to form this group and why the name Armadi Tsayn?

Alek Surenian and Sam Sjostedt: It started as a pretty vague idea. Once we started having a couple performance opportunities offered to us, we wanted to have a name that would fit what we were doing the best we could. The chemistry between us felt unique, and more like friends playing music than anything else.

We wanted to think of a unique name, and something that connected us to our Armenian identity. Armadi Tsayn, translated to “Sounds/Voice of the Roots” seemed to fit quite well when thinking about what to name the project. We’re always talking about our roots and where we come from, so this name seemed to be a manifestation of that idea.

A.W.: Is it just the two of you?

A.S.: No, most of the time we perform with other musicians and friends. We are always open to bringing in new people and change our sound depending on who enters. For instance, we’ve done most of our performances with Rebecca MacInnes, a Berklee graduate and violinist. She will be accompanying us during our tour in Armenia, as well as Datev Gevorkian on oud and Beck Sjostedt on guitar.

A.W.: How did you meet and decide to collaborate?

S.S.: We met via a connection through the AYF internship. It was friends of friends that brought us together. Once Alek moved to Massachusetts for work, we decided to start working together and bounce ideas and compositions off each other until we found things that really started to work.

A.W.: How did you create, book and otherwise arrange this awesome tour of Armenia?

S.S.: Once things picked up and we established this project more concretely, the idea to perform in Armenia was shared as a possible opportunity for the future. It became reality when Alek’s friend Garin Bedian reached out to us to propose a tour in Syunik province where we would bring the sounds of the Armenian Diaspora to our homeland and breathe new energy into a region which has been combating border incursions and acts of aggression by Azerbaijan. Bedian, originally from Chicago, now lives in Meghri and has been working with us to book venues, contact locals and arrange for shows throughout the country.

AW: What is the tour schedule?

A.S. and S.S.: We will start our tour in Kapan, Lijk and Meghri in Syunik and make our way north to perform in Gyumri and Yerevan.

A.W.: How are you planning to document this tour?

A.S. and S.S.: We definitely aim to share our travels through the country on social media and encourage locals and diasporan alike to attend our shows.

A.W.: Tell me about the recent single “Artsakh Aghves”…

A.S.: It was a composition that Sam wrote only a few months ago, while reflecting on a lot of the events and tragedy of the war and its effects on the Armenian population as whole. It has a bit of a jumpy and bouncy nature to the song structure, which kind of made me think of the way a fox would hop.

It was composed by Sam, and Mal [Barsamian] and I gave our own flare to it once it was pretty much laid out in full. It was a pretty quick process, going from the brain and then into the studio with it. Usually compositions tend to lay around for months before anything actually happens, but this one just felt right to get it out while the piece was still new and entertaining for us.

A.W.: Are you planning more recordings?

A.S. and S.S.: We’re definitely planning to continue releasing music. Hopefully one or two more singles, and then a full EP release. Whatever feels right to do. After we get back from Armenia, we will spend the rest of our time this summer writing and recording, aiming for some late summer/early fall releases for new music.

A.W.: You guys recently did a concert in Cambridge. Tell us about that…

A.S. and S.S.: It was extremely successful! We hosted it at the Lilypad and had two other local groups from our area, Souq El-Jum3a and The Cypress, also play with us. It was so cool for all of us to see such an insane turn out for this style of music, and people enjoying all aspects of the concert.

A.W.: Alek, how did you get into playing the dumbek?

A.S.: I grew up in the suburbs of Chicago in a household where music was common, as both my parents played music in their youth. My dad was a drummer, and my mom played the piano. Some of my earliest memories hearing the dumbek was listening to kef music at local events like AYF Midwest Junior Olympics and the madagh picnics in Racine, WI. However, kef music isn’t as popular in the midwest compared to the east coast. When I eventually started going to AYF events east like Camp Haiastan and Junior Seminar during my early teenage years, I was exposed to the music more which got me curious in giving the dumbek a try. I first got one when I was very little to mess around with and decided to revisit it. I began taking lessons in Chicago from Mid East Beat multi-instrumentalist Jimmy Hardy. He set the foundation for me— teaching the basic time signatures and importance of keeping tempo. From there, I took the knowledge he gave me and refined my skills further while also seeking out any events I could play at, particularly with my close family-friend Datev Gevorkiana fantastic young oud player from Bedford, MA. Over the past few years, we’ve established ourselves as a kef duo playing at many AYF events and recently brought on good friends like Sam and clarinetist Michael Kamalian to create the Norkef Ensemble.

A.W.: What role did your time at Camp Haiastan play in your musical development?

A.S.: Camp Haiastan played a tremendous role because it provided opportunities for me to sit in with amazing musicians like Mal Barsamian, John Berberian, Ron Tuntunjian and Bruce Gigarjian, who would regularly come to perform kef music at the Saturday night dances while I was working as a counselor. It was very much a “learning by doing” atmosphere because they taught me how to play different songs, develop my musicianship and explore the nuances of playing in a full bandall while performing live. I owe a lot to them because they were always supportive and welcoming when I would ask to join. It’s an honor to have them as mentors and continue to play with them today.

A.W.: What is your day job?

A.S.: I’m a footwear designer and majored in product design at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. I became interested in footwear design because I wanted to combine my passions for sport and art into a career path and have worked at various brands such as Wolverine Worldwide, Timberland, Puma and Clarks.

A.W.: Might music ever become your primary work?

A.S.: No, I don’t see it as something that I would pursue full-time. My career in footwear design is something I worked very hard towards, and I plan to go down this career path for the rest of my life. However, I aim to continue my hobby of playing music outside of my day job as it is a form of escape and therapy for me. It’s a great pleasure to invest in this passion by improving my musical skills, sharing it with good friends, and getting the opportunity to perform at events and explore this new project with Armadi Tsayn.

A.W.: As a designer, can we assume you do the graphics for Armadi Tsayn?

A.S.: So far, yes. I’ve designed a handful of things like the cover art for our new single. The beautiful thing about music is that it’s a multi-faceted art-form where the visual and sonic collide. Having passions for both art and music, it’s really fun to combine and explore both mediums. I regularly work on graphic and apparel design projects outside of my professional work through my own brand as.am or with the AYF.

The cover art for Armadi Tsayn’s first single “Artsakh Aghves”

A.W.: Sam, where are you currently studying?

S.S.: I’m an undergraduate at Berklee College of Music. I study film score and plan on taking a second major in performance as well.

A.W.: What is your primary or first instrument?

S.S.: My primary instrument is the oud now. When I was around 10 to 13 years old, I mainly played drums, and then moved to guitar. I ended up playing mostly in punk, hardcore and rock bands for most of my high school years and even a bit after high school. Once I took up oud though, everything musically seemed to change, and the change was definitely for the better.

A.W.: You have a relatively well-known, if not, famous dad? Can you provide some background information and how he influenced you?

S.S.: When I was born, my dad was signed to A&M Records with his band at the timeApe Hangers (he was a big motorcycle guy growing up). He had a huge song in the movie “Empire Records,” and that’s what most people know him from. It’s weird to this day that people I meet will fan out over that song and him as a musician. Now, he plays in the Boston-based band Muck and the Mires. His influence on me is honestly bigger than probably any. He introduced me to a lot of cool stuff when I was growing up, from KISS’ “Alive!” to Echo & The Bunnymen’s “Ocean Rain.” These albums had a major influence on me musically, especially hearing them at such a young age. I always had cool music around me growing up.

A.W.: When did you become interested in Armenian music?

S.S.: I spent a lot of time with my maternal grandparents growing up, especially during summers when my parents would work. They introduced the whole concept of Armenian culture to me. My great aunt shared Armenian music with me, which I found mesmerizing…artists like Artie Barsamian and Udi Hrant. I would see videos as I got older of Richard Hagopian playing the oud and just be absolutely enthralled. As I got older and researched liturgical and folk music, I was really able to get a grasp on the beauty of the music as a whole, rather than something that I just sort of did because it was in my culture. I’m truly fascinated by it and always crave more.

A.W.: The great John Berberian is your oud teacher. Please talk about his influence on your music.

S.S.: Yes, I started playing the oud with John. It started with weekly lessons at his house, but it was one of those things where I went home and played for maybe four to five hours a day, if not more. I have a small studio at my parents’ house, and I would be locked in there for hours on end, listening to different players and just trying to build my ear for the music as I played. John really encouraged me to take it seriously and gave me so much knowledge and a plethora of really cool music that inspired me to attend music school. At Berklee, my oud teacher is Simon Shaheen, who I’ve grown quite close to and share a similar bond with as a teacher and friend. These are two of the most incredible players there are, and I’m forever grateful to be able to spend my time learning from them.

A.W.: I understand you also play the duduk and Mher Mnatsakanyan is your teacher.

S.S.: I started playing duduk during the pandemic. It was one of those things that I bought out of boredom. A friend of mine, Ann Lucas, connected me with Mher, who taught me how to play from the ground up. It was so cool, as I’ve never played a wind instrument before, to fully immerse myself in that side of music. Mher is also the king of duduk. He is just the real deal. I’ve also been lucky enough to study with his father Manvel, who is also an absolutely unbelievable player.

Mal Barsamian played clarinet on “Artsakh Aghves.” As usual, he did an excellent job and added a lot to the recording. I talked to Mal about Sam and Alek’s tour in Armenia. Mal related, “I remember when we used to play at the Camp, and Alek used to join us. I thought he had potential back then. I have not known Sam for as long, but I am very impressed by his playing both on oud, duduk, bass and guitar. It is a great thing they are touring Armenia. I cannot wait to hear all about their experience when they return. I really liked the song ‘Artsakh Aghves’ that Sam wrote and was honored they asked me to play clarinet on the album.”

Armadi Tsayn founders Alek Surenian and Sam Sjostedt (Photo: Knar Bedian)

I also talked to John Berberian to get his perspective on Alek and Sam. He said, “Sam has been my student for two and a half years. His passion for learning was great, and he couldn’t get enough of it. I am so excited for Alek, Sam, Datev, and Rebecca to tour Armenia and get the flavor of our people in the homeland and in turn sharing our music with them.”

Mher Mnatsakanyan is from Armenia. The master duduk player was equally complimentary of the duo and their tour. “These two young individuals are very talented and incredibly enthusiastic. They will do whatever needs to be done to improve and master their knowledge of our music. I once had the chance to play with Alek and Sam. I was very impressed with their eagerness and desire to play our folk music in both Eastern and Western styles.”

Alek’s dad Ara is a good friend. He told me he is very excited about his son’s new project and tour in Armenia. “First, I have known Garin Bedian since he was born and so proud of his move to Meghri. This tour is his idea to bring Armenian American culture and AYF members to parts of Armenia that are not regularly exposed to the diaspora considering the very real possibility that some or all of this region could be lost in the very near future. Second, Datev is my godson and has grown to be an incredibly gifted musician. To see him and Alek start playing together at a young age in the AYF Olympics hotel lobby year after year to now touring Armenia is an incredibly proud moment for me. Finally, I can’t say enough about Alek’s perseverance. He showed an affinity for percussion at a young age. I recall purchasing his first dumbek and sharing with him all my Armenian kef music CDs. He would practice for hours. As he grew older, it became his personal mission to carry on this incredible musical tradition. He is now taking what he learned at home in Chicago to the homeland and sharing it with communities that may have never heard anything like this.”

It’s clear after connecting with Alek and Sam that “our music” is in good hands. Wishing them the best on their exciting tour in the homeland!

Mark Gavoor is Associate Professor of Operations Management in the School of Business and Nonprofit Management at North Park University in Chicago. He is an avid blogger and oud player.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 06/28/2022

                                        Tuesday, 
Pashinian Warns Of New War With Azerbaijan
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia - Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian speaks on state television, 
Yerevan, .
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has claimed that Azerbaijan is torpedoing peace 
talks and preparing the ground for another war with Armenia.
“They are trying to create legitimacy for a new war,” he said in televised 
remarks aired late on Monday. “Whether they plan the new war in three months, 
three years or thirty years is a different issue.”
In that regard, Pashinian pointed to continuing Azerbaijani claims that Yerevan 
is reluctant to negotiate a peace treaty with Baku, demarcate the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border and open it to commerce. He said that the 
Azerbaijani side itself cancelled a fresh meeting of senior Armenian and 
Azerbaijani officials which was due to take place in Brussels on Monday. It has 
also not responded to an Armenian proposal to organize a face-to-face meeting of 
the foreign ministers of the two states, he said.
On Sunday Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev again implicitly threatened to 
resort to military action. He said that Armenia will “regret it” if it delays 
the border demarcation.
Aliyev voiced similar threats earlier this month when he warned Yerevan against 
continuing to oppose the opening of a land corridor connecting Azerbaijan to its 
Nakhichevan exclave.
Armenian officials again ruled out such an extraterritorial corridor afterwards, 
arguing that Armenian-Azerbaijani agreements brokered by Russia call for only 
conventional transport links between the two South Caucasus states.
Pashinian said on Monday that Baku itself is violating those agreements by 
breaching the ceasefire regime in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone and 
continuing to hold dozens of Armenian prisoners.
Pashinian adopted a conciliatory policy towards Azerbaijan following Armenia’s 
defeat in the 2020 war over Karabakh. He has since repeatedly promised that it 
will usher in an “era of peaceful development” for Armenia and the entire region.
Pashinian sparked weeks of antigovernment protests in Yerevan after signaling in 
April his readiness to “lower the bar” on the status of Karabakh acceptable to 
Armenia. Armenian opposition leaders accused him of helping Azerbaijan regain 
full control over the Armenian-populated territory.
One of those leaders, Ishkhan Saghatelian, claimed on Tuesday that Pashinian’s 
warning about a new war with Azerbaijan is aimed at discouraging Armenians from 
fighting for regime change. In a Facebook post, Saghatelian insisted that 
Pashinian’s removal from power is on the contrary the only way to “save Armenia 
and Artsakh from this destructive course.”
Opposition Leaders Set To Lose Parliament Posts
Armenia - Parliament vice-speaker Ishkhan Saghatelian leads an opposition 
demonstration in Yerevan, May 18, 2022.
The ruling Civil Contract party moved on Tuesday to dismiss a deputy speaker of 
the Armenian parliament and the chairman of one of its standing committees 
affiliated with the main opposition Hayastan alliance.
Hayastan’s Ishkhan Saghatelian holds one of the three posts of vice-speaker 
reserved for the opposition. The other opposition lawmaker, Vahe Hakobian, 
chairs the parliament committee on economic affairs.
A representative of Civil Contract’s parliamentary group, which controls the 
majority of seats in the National Assembly, said it has decided to strip them of 
their posts because of their continuing boycott of parliament sessions.
Saghatelian, Hakobian and the 33 other deputies representing Hayastan and the 
other parliamentary opposition force, Pativ Unem, began the boycott in April in 
advance of their daily demonstrations demanding Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s 
resignation.
Under Armenian law, a lawmaker can lose their seat if they skip, for 
“non-legitimate” reasons, at least half of parliament votes during a single 
semi-annual session of the National Assembly. The final decision to that effect 
is to be made by the Constitutional Court at the initiative of the parliament’s 
leadership or at least one-fifth of the deputies.
Parliament speaker Alen Simonian said on May 17 that he is considering 
initiating such an appeal to the court. According to the parliament’s press 
office, over a dozen opposition lawmakers could be formally accused of 
absenteeism at that point.
Simonian told reporters on Tuesday morning that he and other pro-government 
lawmakers will discuss the issue at a meeting later in the day.
After the meeting, the ruling party announced no decision to strip any 
opposition parliamentarians of their seats. It said instead that Saghatelian and 
Hakobian will only lose their posts.
Speaking shortly before that announcement, Saghatelian again dismissed the 
government threats to terminate his and his colleagues’ membership of the 
National Assembly.
“We are out to fight against that gang,” he told News.am. “For us, the 
[parliamentary] mandate is only a tool for struggle. If the authorities want to 
strip us of our mandates let them do that. That will not affect our struggle in 
any way.”
Saghatelian announced earlier in the day that the opposition forces will hold 
their next antigovernment rally on Friday.
Pashinian Admits Failure Of ‘Judicial Reforms’
        • Naira Nalbandian
Armenia - Parents of soldiers killed in the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh protest 
outside the Supreme Judicial Council building in Yerevan, May 26, 2022.
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian acknowledged late on Monday that a scandal 
sparked by leaked audio featuring Armenia’s top judicial officer has undermined 
the credibility of judicial reforms declared by his administration.
But Pashinian did not say whether he believes Gagik Jahangirian, the 
controversial acting head of the country’s Supreme Judicial Council (SJC), 
should resign.
Ruben Vartazarian, the SJC’s previous chairman, publicized on June 20 a 
14-minute audio clip which he secretly recorded during a dinner meeting with 
Jahangirian in February 2021. The meeting took place two months before 
Vartazarian was controversially suspended by other SJC members amid rising 
tensions with Pashinian.
In the recording full of profanities uttered by him, Jahangirian can be heard 
seemingly warning Vartazarian to resign or face criminal charges.
Jahangirian claimed late last week that he simply tried to trick Vartazarian 
into resigning as head of the state body that nominates judges and can also 
dismiss them. He dismissed calls for his resignation voiced by opposition and 
civil society groups.
Armenia -- Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian chairs a meeting with senior 
law-enforcement and judicial officials, Yerevan, November 30, 2020.
Pashinian did not comment on those calls when he was asked about the scandal 
during a live televised appearance. Instead, he attacked Vartazarian, saying 
that the recording also raised questions about the former SJC chairman.
“I always say that our biggest problem is the judicial system, that we don’t 
have real successes here,” Pashinian told Armenian Public Television.
Asked whether the leaked audio scandal has cast a shadow over his declared 
judicial reforms, Pashinian said: “I think so.” He expressed hope that an 
Armenian law-enforcement agency will properly investigate the content of the 
recording and its implications.
The Investigative Committee reportedly interrogated Vartazarian on June 23. But 
it has still not opened a formal criminal case in connection with Jahangirian’s 
secretly recorded comments.
Critics say Jahangirian must be not only sacked but also prosecuted for what 
they see as blackmail and illegal interference in the work of law-enforcement 
bodies.
The SJC indicated last week that it will not even launch disciplinary 
proceedings against its embattled head. But one of its members, Davit 
Khachaturian, announced on Monday that the judicial watchdog has set up a 
working group that will look into the leaked audio and determine whether it 
warrants such proceedings.
Armenia - Ruben Vartazarian, head of the Supreme Judicial Council, at a news 
conference in Yerevan, June 20, 2022.
The SJC formally deposed Vartazarian as its chairman and member on June 23. The 
official reason for the move was a recent newspaper interview in which he 
claimed that Jahangirian joined the watchdog in January 2021 in breach of 
Armenian law.
Vartazarian fell out with Pashinian in late 2020 as the prime minister’s 
political allies accused him of encouraging Armenian courts to free arrested 
government critics. Vartazarian denied the accusations. He says that he was 
indicted and suspended in April 2021 as part of government efforts to replace 
him with Jahangirian, a former prosecutor widely seen as a figure loyal to 
Pashinian.
Pashinian’s political opponents dismiss his stated efforts to reform the 
Armenian judiciary as a smokescreen for increasing government influence on 
courts. Pashinian and his political allies say the reforms are on the contrary 
aimed at strengthening judicial independence.
U.S. Reports Russian Boycott Of Talks On Karabakh
        • Tatevik Lazarian
US - The Department of State building in Washington, DC, April 20, 2020.
Russia has boycotted a multilateral discussion on the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict 
initiated by the United States within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group, the 
U.S. State Department said on Tuesday.
“The U.S. OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair spoke with her counterparts today to discuss 
the future of Nagorno-Karabakh,” tweeted the department’s Bureau of European and 
Eurasian Affairs.
“It's unfortunate the Russian Co-Chair [of the Minsk Group] did not accept the 
invitation. We look forward to the Minsk Group’s continuing work,” it said.
The State Department division did not specify who else took part in that 
discussion or give any other details.
The U.S., Russia and France have for decades jointly tried to broker an 
Armenian-Azerbaijani peace accord in their capacity as the co-chairs of the 
Minsk Group. According to Russian officials, Washington and Paris stopped 
working with Moscow in that format following the Russian invasion of Ukraine.
Armenia -- The U.S. and French co-chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group and other 
diplomats meet with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian, Yerevan, December 
14, 2020.
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Karen Donfried denied the Russian claims when 
she visited Yerevan on June 18. She told RFE/RL’s Armenian Service that the 
Minsk Group remains a “very important format” for Washington.
The Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed Donfried’s assurances on June 22. A 
ministry spokeswoman said the U.S. and France caused “irreparable damage” to the 
mediating format as a result of their broader attempts to isolate Russia on the 
international stage.
Visiting Baku two days later, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov insisted 
that “the Minsk Group stopped its activities at the initiative of the American 
and French co-chairs.”
Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian suggested on Monday that Lavrov’s comments 
contradict one of the provisions of his joint declaration with Russian President 
Vladimir Putin adopted in April. It stresses “the importance of using the 
potential and experience of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmanship institute in 
accordance with its international mandate.”
ARMENIA - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (right) is about to meet with 
Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Yerevan, June 9, 2022.
“I think that this contradiction needs to be clarified,” Pashinian said, adding 
that the Minsk Group is not dead.
Incidentally, the secretary of Armenia’s Security Council, Armen Grigorian, met 
with the group’s the French co-chair, Brice Roquefeuil, in Paris on Tuesday. A 
statement by the council said the two men agreed on the need for achieving a 
comprehensive Karabakh settlement “under the aegis of the OSCE Minsk Group 
co-chairmanship.”
In recent weeks, Armenia’s leaders have called on the U.S., Russian and French 
mediators to resume their joint peace efforts.
By contrast, Azerbaijani officials and President Ilham Aliyev in particular have 
repeatedly questioned the need for the group’s continued existence. Aliyev has 
said that Azerbaijan’s victory in the 2020 war with Armenia put an end to the 
Karabakh conflict.
In a statement issued on Tuesday, the Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry urged Yerevan 
to “stop wasting time on restoring a format the effectiveness of which was 
always low.”
Reprinted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2022 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
 

ANN/Armenian News – A Series of Photo Albums Prepared by Maria Jacobsen Missionary Nurse and Relief Worker

 

Armenian News Network / Armenian News

 

by Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor

Probing the Photographic Record

 

LONG ISLAND, NY

_______________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________________

 

Maria Jacobsen is a name well-known to Armenians.  She was one of two Danish-born women who richly deserved the title “Danish Mothers of the Armenian Orphans.”  Five Armenian stamps were issued in July 2014, in advance of the upcoming 2015 commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. (See Fig. 1 for two juxtapositioned 200 dram stamps; one with an image of Karen Jeppe; the other of Maria Jacobsen.).  A very special feature of the work of each of these two women is that their individual efforts for the Armenians covered many years.  It was not a matter of dedicating themselves to short-term service for either of them.

 

Fig. 1.

 

This posting draws attention to our YouTube video of the photo albums of Maria Jacobsen, whose broad and remarkable service spanned more than a half-century.  Maria Jacobsen is buried according to her wishes in the courtyard of her beloved Bird’s Nest Orphanage in Byblos [Jubeil], Lebanon, one of the most ancient cities on earth.  See endnote.[1]

We were fortunate enough through the generosity of the late Karekin Dickran, a Lebanese Armenian emigrated to Denmark, who knew Eileen Hadidian as a neighbor in Beirut days, to be able to make contact years ago with Eileen in Albany, California.  Although Eileen pretty much nearly always used her maiden name, she was married to Peter Trichenor and they had one child, a daughter named Melia.  Eileen was an extraordinarily lovely person and an accomplished musician.  She had earned a Master’s degree and her Doctor of Music degree from Stanford University.  Sadly, she died December 14, 2012, after a long battle with cancer.  Part of her musical legacy, especially in the East Bay area, may be found in CDs produced through The Healing Muses. See: http://magnatune.com/artists/hadidian/

One of the many distinctive aspects of the photos in the various Jacobsen Photo Albums in Eileen’s possession, which she inherited from her mother, (who was an adopted daughter of Maria Jacobsen) were photos ranging from the pre-Genocide and Genocide periods at the twin cities of Mezireh-Harpoot all the way up to, and including the rehabilitation activities in the orphanages set up and maintained for Armenians in The Lebanon.  Viewing and examining the Albums today enables one to appreciate not only the sheer volume but the development and temporal context of the events before and during the disastrous Armenian Genocide and its ultimate consequences. 

Eileen’s husband, Peter Trichenor, now of course a widower, is retired and lives in Portland, Oregon where their daughter Melia resides as well, and teaches.  Both are pleased that our video of the Albums has been posted for general viewing and possible use.

Another feature of the Jacobsen Albums is that they permit us not only to view content and range of photographic coverage, but also provide a means of dovetailing, and linking with photographs taken by others on site, even if the photos were the product of workers who were engaged in the region for a relatively short period of time.  It will be appreciated that “bits and pieces” of information from scattered, even unlikely or unexpected sources, can all help fill in a picture that might otherwise be lacking one or a few details thought to be important. 

All this allows for what has been referred to as a “panorama of contextualization” to emerge.

For example, an early photograph shows Maria Jacobsen on the upper story porch of the Annie Tracy Riggs Hospital in Mezireh taken on the occasion of the dedication of the Hospital in 1910.  This is from an enlargement of a photograph showing the front of the Annie Tracy Riggs Hospital and the notables and attendees of the dedication of the ‘American’ Hospital’ at Mezireh  (See Figs. 2a. and 2b.) 

This view of the gathering at the Hospital shows a number of notables assembled, such as the Vali [Governor General] of the Vilayet and the penultimate American Consul to Harput, Turkey, William Wesley Masterson.  It might be interesting for some to learn that we ourselves obtained some additional photographs that pertain to that period in Harput (which overlapped with some of the early time of Maria Jacobsen’s service) through the kindness of the daughter of Consul and Mrs. Masterson, Mary Carroll Masterson.  She was born in Mezireh and was delivered at the Hospital by American physician Dr. Ruth A. Parmelee, who born in Trebizond, Turkey and was descended from missionaries who long served in Turkey.  Remarkably, the Masterson family had deep connections with a small town on the Ohio River, Carrollton, Kentucky, the hometown of one of us, Eugene L. Taylor.  We were able to track her down quite easily and got to know her quite well by.  H happy coincidence and chance![2]

 

Fig. 2a.

 

Fig. 2b.

Maria Jacobsen is third from the right.

 

Another rewarding connection we have been personally able to make through ‘linking’, involves an attractive color painting produced in 1917, looking down from the ‘Garden’, used by some of the missionaries to escape the summer heat of the upper City.  It shows the Harpoot plain below with a few of its buildings and a proximal village as viewed from above – that is to say, from a higher elevation looking down southwards.  These places are all labeled clearly.  See Fig. 3a. and 3b.

Karen Marie Petersen (1881- date of death has not been yet exactly determined, either 1961 or 1964) certainly painted an attractive picture, and today it has become a very rare one at that, especially in terms of what it shows in color.  It is reproduced from a quality photograph of the framed painting measuring 46 inches wide X 32 inches high, made and sent to us on CD by the late Karekin Dickran. It was also interesting to us especially since the painting offered a view in color of the town of Yegheke where Armenian American Master photographer Kazar Sarkis Melikian was born, as well as being the hometown of the mother of a late sister-in-law.[3]

 

 

Fig. 3a.

View of some of the Harpoot Plain as seen from the Garden.

Cf. ANN/Armenian News Armenian News October 11, 2015, by Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor.

 

 

Fig. 3b.

Karen Marie Petersen.  From a photograph in a Maria Jacobsen Album.

See photographs of her when considerably younger in Figs. 5. and 6.

 

To continue briefly about Kazar Sarkis Melikian of Yegheke we will mention that K.S. Melikian’s daughter Mary Christine Melikian of Worcester, Massachusetts died at the age of 89 on 22 September 2015. We posted a brief notice on ANN/Armenian News.  A Sad Note of Passage, And A Happy Notice of a Major Legacy of Photographs for Armenians at The Library of Congress: Commentary, and a Notice of a Video Posting on YouTube by Eugene L. Taylor and Abraham D. Krikorian entitled  Kazar Sarkis Melikian Studio, Worcester, Mass.  As stated, Mary’s father, Kazar Sarkis Melikian, was an important preserver and photographer of Armenian heritage and the Armenian experience – from Kharpert to America, up to his death in 1969.  We made the video of the photo albums in 2006.  See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyenw3n7xJA.

Those Interested in Armenian and Armenian-related photos can also show their commitment to preservation of their Heritage through videoing them as well.  What follows in our video includes an overview of the Melikian Project.  It includes a letter of thanks from Mary completed and finalized late in the afternoon the day before she died peacefully and unexpectedly” See: https://www.Armenian News.org/orig/ak-20151011.html [4]

Another especially interesting example of a video that ‘dovetails’ with what is covered in the Maria Jacobsen Albums and which is particularly significant and useful especially for the Kharpert area, bears the descriptor Laurence H. and Frances C. MacDaniels American Committee for Relief in the Near East (A.C.R.N.E.) 1919-1920, Photo Album Oberlin College Archives SG1276. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1zEDfMSx8mk.

This is not the time or place to go into detail here on how the two of us ended up at Oberlin College Archives studying the MacDaniels Near East Photo Album, suffice it to say that we were hoping to expand our knowledge of the period, and gain access to relevant photos pertaining to the Armenian genocide witnessed by the last American Consul at Harput, Leslie A. Davis.  Again, it is by pure chance that Leslie Davis was born and is buried in Port Jefferson, Long Island where we live. [5]

Fig. 4. below shows some of the future staff of the American Committee for Relief in the Near East (ACRNE) assigned to Harpoot area, on the way out to Harput from the German-constructed eastern deep-water port of Derinjeh.

 

Fig. 4.

“On the way”.  Going out into the Interior of Turkey from Oula Kishla [Ulukışla]; this was the group’s “dining car.”  Front row, from left: Dr. Ruth A. Parmelee, Mrs. Frances C. MacDaniels, Miss Florence Miss Stively, nurse;  2nd row, Esther F. Greene’, Peggy Niles; Amy A. Bliss, nurse;  3rd row, Cornelius M. Janney; Alice Moore; back row, an Armenian cook with the first name of Kourken [meaning Brave as a Wolf or Lion] and an Armenian translator and much respected and very able Armenian helper (formerly in the employ of the American Consulate as a Cavass) Garabed Bedrosian.  Returning missionary Miss Mary W. Riggs is missing from the photograph.  Dr. Laurence H. MacDaniels took this picture.

Once in Harpoot the group set to work immediately, and there is a considerable amount of archival paper material and letters once owned by the MacDaniels family and now at Oberlin Archives that provide substantial detail.   We know of two photos of the group of relief workers that served much of their tour of duty in Harpoot.  Each of the photos seems to have been taken by 2 different cameras on the same occasion.  Although they are virtually the same, there are some differences in the view provided, that allows the viewer to get a slightly different or arguably better perspective.  (See Figs. 5. and 6. below).

Fig. 5.

This group photograph of those who served at Harpoot is neither labeled nor dated but the negative of the photo is at Oberlin Archives.  Moreover, a nearly identical copy (also without identifications) exists in the hands of a MacDaniels’ daughter. It bears the annotation in the hand of Maria Jacobsen “Harpoot Missionaries and Relief Workers, August 1919.” (See Fig. 6. below.)

 

 

Fig. 6.

Caption is the same as was given for Fig. 5. above but note the “Turkey Carpet” spread out on the ground in Fig.5.  The dog Harrass is not in this photo. The presence of ‘native’ workers/inmates is more obvious here and one can even detect people peeking out the upper windows on the left.

 

Almost all are identifiable with great certainty: little girl front left seated on the ground, is Beatrice Arshalouys [‘Dawn’ in Armenian] Dingilian, affectionately called “Bessie” by Miss Maria P. Jacobsen, who is seated next to her—Bessie was adopted by Miss Jacobsen; Ruth A. Parmelee, M.D.; Anna R. Ward, wife of Dr. Mark H. Ward; second row seated, Miss Karen Marie Petersen, a Dane; the next man with the necktie remains unidentified; (3rd from left remains unidentified; she is not Emma Barnum Riggs, i.e. Mrs. Henry H. Riggs, because she died on 26 April 1917 fide Jacobsen Diaries).  A guess is that neither is she Mr. H.H. Riggs’ fiancé [Frances C. MacDaniels in a letter home dated 11 February 1920 relates “…Mr. Riggs startled us by engaging himself to one of the missionaries who just came out.  I don’t know the technicalities of marriage of Americans in foreign countries, but I think they will have to wait till they can reach some American consul.”  (Parenthetically, Henry H. Riggs was born in 1875 and the woman here looks as if she would be a bit old for him.  Be that as it may, Riggs did marry one Annie M. Denison in Harpoot on 7 May 1920 fide Ara Sarafian, ed. of Henry H. Riggs’ Days of Tragedy in Armenia, Personal Experiences in Harpoot 1915-1917Gomidas Institute, Ann Arbor 1997); Henry Harrison Riggs [“Harry]”; his sister Mary W. Riggs; Dr. Mark H. Ward, M.D.; standing in the back row is Frances C. MacDaniels, Miss Florence Stively, Cornelius Janney, Peggy Niles, Lee Vrooman (later Rev. Vrooman D.D.); Gardiner C. Means (later a famous economist) and last in row Laurence MacDaniels, Professor at Cornell University.  Identification of “Bessie” verified by her daughter the late Eileen Hadidian.  This photograph may well have been taken on the occasion of the farewell party for Miss Jacobsen prior to her return to Denmark with Bessie.  Mrs. Anna Ward is identified fide her daughter and son and a nephew in telephone conversation.

 

Many images from the MacDaniels Near East album are included in the video we uploaded some years ago on our You Tube Conscience Films site about the so-called ‘Orphan Rug’ that was made for the American White House. See https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MkQQEFsXDRg  “History of the Armenian Orphan Rug Made for the White House 1925.”  The video itself was entitled Story of an Oriental Rug made by Armenian Orphans for the White House: preserving authentic memory of survivors of the Turkish genocide against the Armenians by Eugene L. Taylor and Abraham D. Krikorian, You Tube, December 14, 2014.

The MacDaniels material is, in a word, very valuable not only in itself but because it allows linking and broadening of understanding of the period at large.  It is a great pity that equivalent albums with supporting letters so far as details are concerned, do not exist for other areas.  Fig. 7. below shows a photograph of the MacDaniels outside of their ‘residence’ in Harpoot at the Euphrates (Yeprad) College facilities.  The photo labeled in the hand of Maria Jacobsen derives from a scan made from one of Maria Jacobsen albums at Albany, California.  Having worked with the MacDaniels materials at Oberlin Archives, we believe we can express our confident opinion that this is the nicest photo of the couple together during the time of their service in Harpoot.  It may be of some interest to readers that they occupied the space occupied by Maria Jacobsen after she left to go back to Denmark after an exhausting period during and especially just after the genocide.

Fig. 7.

 

The American Committee for Relief in the Near East undertook a massive effort at the end of the war to help ‘salvage’ survivors and remnants of the genocide.  Most of the efforts concentrated on the very young and young who had somehow or other escaped concerted efforts by the Turks at elimination.  Opening, or taking over houses to provide facilities to accommodate full orphans, or half-orphans, children born of rape and violation of Armenian women and mothers, became a high priority.  Miss Mary W. Riggs was essentially in charge of who was admitted or not admitted.  The Near East Relief map shown below gives an excellent summary of just how extensive the efforts were.  The remnants were not that numerous though, because the map does not make it clear that the orphanages were quite small and one should not get that idea that massive numbers of children survivors were necessarily involved in the Harpoot area.  (There were all told some 5,000 orphans.)

The map shown in Fig. 8. shows the general distribution of these orphanages.  In the video of the Jacobsen album (and the Orphan Rug video) an attempt is made to show these efforts, how they were prioritized and executed.

Even under very difficult circumstances those running the orphanages and helping maintain some semblance of normalcy had a gargantuan amount of work to do.

 

Fig. 8.

 

The efforts to provide the orphans some semblance of ‘normalcy’ in life are phenomenal and emphasize just how imaginative and resourceful the care providers were.

For example, the staged events at Mezireh for the orphans at Armenian Christmas in 1920 are quite extraordinary and heart-warming.  See https://www.Armenian News.org/orig/ak-20140106.html  “Christmas Celebrations for Armenian Orphans in Mezreh (Kharpert) January 8, 1920: from letters and photographs.” ANN/Armenian News January 6, 2014, Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor.  The organizational skills of the relief workers for massive projects is clearly in evidence.

Despite all this dedication and work of those determined to carrying out ‘salvage’ efforts’, it ended up being virtually impossible to sustain the efforts for the orphans in Asia Minor.  There was massive and consistent harassment by Turk ‘leadership’ who were running the show after the War, despite technically being the losers, and deliberate curtailment of the orphanage work for Christian kids and ‘returning refugees’ had to be faced and dealt with realistically.  It became very clear that these kids would have to be moved into safer areas.[6]

The story of the relocation of the orphanages is too long to describe here.  The Orphan Rug video featuring some of the photographs from the MacDaniels’ album, and the present video under notice here of Maria Jacobsen’s work covers it well, and in a very personal way.

Figure 9. below tells it ‘all’. 

 

Fig. 9.

“Mama” Jacobsen and some of her charges.

 

Maria’s diary, handwritten in Danish was translated into Armenian, and from Danish into English, considerably later.  It has a number of images that are shown in the video.  See Figs. 10. and 11.[7]

 

 

Fig. 10.

 

 

Fig. 11.

This photograph on the back cover of the Diary also appears in Walter P. Davenport’s

“General Health Conditions and Medical Relief Work in Armenia” (192l) Medical Surgeon vol. 48. no. 2, Feb. pgs. 139 – 158.  See especially at pg. 150.  There the caption reads “The sidewalk his deathbed.”

 

 

Her work was formally recognized by many.  Fig. 12 shows a gathering at which many orphans now grown up are gathered to honor her.

 

Fig. 12.

 

We hope that this ‘notice’ of the Maria Jacobsen video posting will help make people aware of this rich resource.  For us, the Maria Jacobsen albums enabled us to visually fill out a series of events at the Harput area starting with the United States William Wesley Masterson especially in 1909 all the way to Maria Jacobsen’s work at Harput, into The Lebanon area of Syria, and finally in Lebanon which was formally recognized as an independent country in 1943.

 

Endnotes


[1] Karen Jeppe is fully deserving of her own major coverage, suffice that we only merely mention her here. Others are sure to take up the challenge of celebrating through video her life and work among the Armenians.  See e.g. Watenpaugh, Keith David (2010) “The League of Nations’ Rescue of Armenian Genocide Survivors and the Making of Modern Humanitarianism, 1920-1927”, The American Historical Review vol. 115, 1315-1339.

[2] See https://www.Armenian News.org/orig/ak-20070611.htmlMary C. Masterson, Daughter of Harput Consul William W. Masterson, Dead at Age 92” by Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor.  ANN/Armenian News June 11, 2007.

[3] ANN/Armenian News October 11, 2015 by Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor.  “Mary Christine Melikian of Worcester, Massachusetts died at the age of 89 on 22 September 2015. A Sad Note of Passage, And A Happy Notice of A Major Legacy of Photographs for Armenians at The Library of Congress: Commentary, and a Notice of a Video Posting on You Tube by Taylor and Krikorian entitled ‘Kazar Sarkis Melikian Studio, Worcester, Mass.’  Mary’s father, Kazar Sarkis Melikian, was an important preserver and photographer of Armenian heritage and the Armenian experience – from Kharpert to America.  We made the video of the photo albums in 2006. See: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zyenw3n7xJA.  Those Interested in Armenian and Armenian-related Photos Can also Show their Commitment to Preservation of their Heritage through videoing them as well .  What follows in that video includes an overview of the Melikian Project.  It includes a letter of thanks from Mary completed and finalized the late in the afternoon the day before she died peacefully and unexpectedly (https://www.Armenian News.org/orig/ak-20151011.html.)

[4] See https://www.Armenian News.com/orig/ak-20171003.html “Harpoot and Mezereh: A Glimpse into The Way it Was in 1956 When Ruth Azniv Parmelee, M.D. Visited.  She Had Worked in Both Places First from 1914 To 1917, And then from 1919 to 1922” by Eugene L. Taylor and Abraham D. Krikorian, ANN/Armenian News, October 3, 2017.  Compare Karen Marie Petersen’s painting with the views taken by the outstanding Netherlands travel photographer Dick Osseman, Figs. 7 to 10 (kindly made available to us years ago with permission to use).  Some very interesting film footage and commentary are offered in a video with Ara Sarafian visiting the Harput area in The Blue Book, Political truth or historical fiction? (2007) by Gagik Karagheusian, David Holloway and Ara Sarafian, Ani Sounds ca. 80 min.).  See also Voices from the Lake, the secret genocide by J. Michael Hagopian (2007) which focusses on the Kharpert area.  That video is about 86 min. long and was released by the Armenian Film Foundation.

[5] See “United States Consul Leslie A. Davis’s Photographs of Armenians Slaughtered at Lake Goeljuk, Summer of 1915”, ANN/Armenian News April 7, 2017, Abraham D. Krikorian and Eugene L. Taylor.  It is curious that we never did find what we were hoping to find at Oberlin College Archives, but that visit did open yet another path. This is of course a very good example that [chance favors the prepared mind.]

[6] Detailed coverage of some of the activities associated with the movement out of the Harpoot area of orphans may be found on pgs. 400 to 409 of our chapter in the volume entitled “The Genocide of the Ottoman Greeks: studies on the state-sponsored campaign of extermination of the Christians of Asia Minor, 1912-1922 and its aftermath: history, law, memory” ed. by Tessa Hofmann, Matthias Bjørnlund, Vasileiois Meichenetsidis, published by Aristide D. Caratza, New York and Athens, 2011. The efforts were nothing short of heroic.

[7] Since the diary is not the easiest book to track down in a Library and is difficult to locate on the used book market, we are presenting a copy of the catalog entry from the British Library.

Diary (1907-1919) Kharberd / Maria Cheikpson (Yagopson); Translated from the Danish manuscript. Inside Eps. Bakhtikian, Mihran Simonian

      Title: 

Ōragrut’iwn (1907-1919) kharberd / Maria Chēyk’ěpsěn (Eagopsěn); Danierēn tseṛagir bnagrēn t’argm. Nersēs Eps. Bakhtikean, Mihran Simonean.

      Author: Cheikpson, Maria, author;
Maria Jacobsen, 1882-1960 author.

      Contributor: Bakhtikian, Nerses;
Simonian, Mihran;
Nersēs Bakhtikean translator.;
Mihran Simonean translator.

      Subjects: Armenians

      Publication Details: Ant’ilias : Tparan Kat’oghikosut’ean Hayots’ Metsi Tann Kilikioy, 1979.
Antilias. Printing house of the Catholicosate of the Armenian Great House of Cilicia, 1979

      Language: Armenian

      Identifier: System number: 020092256

      Physical   xxxi, 963 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm

 

 

 

 

© Copyright 2022 Armenian News Network/Armenian News and the authors. All Rights Reserved.

CivilNet: Pashinyan’s comments on Lachin corridor refocus attention on residents’ future

CIVILNET.AM

28 Jun, 2022 05:06

By Mark Dovich

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan confirmed at a press conference Monday that “in case of a change” in the route of the Lachin corridor, some Armenian communities there “will pass to Azerbaijan’s control,” refocusing attention on the still-unclear future for the region’s residents.

However, he refused to go into any detail about what the handover will mean in practice, only saying that the “problems…will be solved with the help of the Artsakh (Karabakh) government.”

The Lachin corridor is a strategically important strip of land surrounding a road patrolled by Russian peacekeepers that, at present, connects Armenia with the part of Karabakh remaining under Armenian control.

The corridor begins at the Armenian border village of Tegh and then, after crossing into Karabakh, winds through the village of Aghavno and the town of Lachin, also known as Berdzor. After that, the road heads north through the village of Lisagor on to Shushi, the largest city captured by Azerbaijani forces in the 2020 Karabakh war, before finally reaching Stepanakert, the region’s capital.

As a result of territorial gains made by Azerbaijan in the war, the Lachin corridor has become the only overland connection between Armenia and Karabakh. The villages and towns along the other roads between Armenia and Karabakh were handed over to Azerbaijan after the war.

The ceasefire declaration that ended the war stipulates that a new road should be built that also connects Armenia and Karabakh, but that bypasses the Armenian communities that remain within the Lachin corridor. Those include the villages of Aghavno, Nerkin Sus, and Sus, as well as the town of Lachin.

Once that alternative route is completed, Azerbaijan is meant to take control of those communities, and Russian peacekeepers are supposed to relocate to the new route.

The new road is set to start in the Armenian border village of Kornidzor and then will head through the Karabakh villages of Hin Shen and Mets Shen. After that, the new route will link up with the portion of the old road running through Lisagor to Shushi and, beyond that, to Stepanakert.

The ceasefire calls for “a plan for the construction” of the new road to “be determined within the next three years,” without specifying which side should take on the responsibility and cost of building it.

But as officials in Yerevan and Stepanakert have largely kept up their silence on the issue, Baku has taken the lead on the project, with Azerbaijani construction crews making significant progress building the section of the route that lies in Karabakh.

In fact, the head of Azerbaijan’s roads agency said earlier this year he expects the new route to be ready by the end of next month, well ahead of the three-year timeline set in the ceasefire.

In contrast, work on the part of the new road that will lie in Armenia has yet to begin.

All that has put the remaining Armenian residents of the Lachin corridor on a collision course with the geopolitical reality that Azerbaijan may soon take control of their communities.

In the immediate aftermath of the 2020 war, CivilNet reporters visited Aghavno, one of the villages that may soon be handed over to Azerbaijan. Residents there largely struck a defiant note, pledging to stay.

“We are not betraying (our lands). We are not abandoning our homes. We have nowhere else to go,” said resident Narine Rasoyan, giving what was then a more or less typical point of view.

A journalist with Eurasianet who traveled to the village earlier this month found more mixed emotions about the prospect of a handover, but many residents still said they would refuse to leave.

CivilNet’s team, meanwhile, paid a visit a few weeks ago to Hin Shen, where Azerbaijani construction crews have already begun building a section of the new road. Residents there spoke of their anxiety living in such close proximity to Azerbaijani workers.

“No matter how much we try to dispel people’s fears, all this (construction) has a negative impact on them,” said Karen Barseghyan, the head of the village school.

Tigran Grigoryan, a well-known Karabakh analyst, called for a more sober view on the Lachin corridor issue in an interview with CivilNet shortly after Pashinyan’s press conference, saying that “at this stage, we should understand we cannot prevent that (handover) agreement.”

“Since the war, Yerevan and Stepanakert have not had the opportunity to prevent the handover of those communities to Azerbaijan,” he noted. “The reasons are evident: the army was crushed after the war, (and) the Russians had the perception that those settlements should be handed over.”

CivilNet: “Azerbaijan is trying to build up legitimacy for new war,” says Pashinyan

CIVILNET.AM

28 Jun, 2022 10:06

  • The next meeting of the special envoys for Armenia-Turkey normalization talks will take place on July 1 in Vienna.
  • Azerbaijan is trying to build up legitimacy for a new war by blaming Armenia for the lack of progress in peace talks, says Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan.
  • Armenia’s service sector, which includes retail, tourism, entertainment, and banking, grew by 24.9% between January to May 2022.

Gegharkunik Governor receives Dutch Ambassador

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 10:07,

GAVAR, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS. Governor of Gegharkunik province Karen Sargsyan received Ambassador of the Netherlands to Armenia Nico Schermers.

During the meeting the sides discussed the INFORMA project to be implemented in the province, which aims at training specialists working based on artificial intelligence for the municipalities of the province.

The Governor of Gegharkunik thanked the Kingdom of the Netherlands for this initiative and the support provided, expressing hope that the project will positively affect raising the awareness and information level of the local population.

At the invitation of the Governor, the Dutch Ambassador will soon pay a visit to the province to get acquainted with the opportunities existing in the field of hiking tourism.

 

Reporting by Khosrov Khlghatyan

European Commission’s head opposed to boycotting G20 summit if Putin attends

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 10:57,

YEREVAN, JUNE 27, ARMENPRESS. The European Commission’s Ursula von der Leyen said in an interview with the German TV channel ZDF on Sunday that she was against a boycott of the G20 summit scheduled for this fall if Russian President Vladimir Putin attends it, reports TASS.

“We have to think very carefully about whether we paralyze the entire G20, so I don’t support it”, the president of the European Commission said on the sidelines of a G7 summit in Elmau, Bavaria. “In my opinion, the G20 is too important, including for developing countries”, she added.

The G20 heads of state and government summit will take place on November 15-16 in Bali.