Belgian MPs visit Armenian Genocide monument in Brussels vandalized earlier this week

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – April 28 2022

The staff of the Armenian Embassy in Belgium once again honoured the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide at the khachkar-memorial in Henri Michaux Square in Brussels.

The monument had recently become a target of cultural vandalism, but was restored within hours thanks to Ixelles authorities.

Members of the Belgian Parliament from the New Flemish Alliance – Allessia Claes, Karl Vanlouwe, Andries Gryffroy and Mark Demesmaeker also honoured the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide, while protesting against the act of vandalism towards the memorial.

Construction of Ajapnyank metro station about to start

Public Radio of Armenia
Armenia – April 28 2022

Construction of the Ajapnyak metro station is about to start, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the government sitting today.

A tender for the design of the station was announced, and the winner has been selected, he said.   

“Today we are discussing the issue of financing to have the project of Ajapnyak metro station worked out, which will mean that we are already entering the construction stage,” Pashinyan said.

Yerevan Mayor Hrachya Sargsyan noted that in 2021 a contract had already been signed with the design company. According to the mayor, the project will be implemented in 510 days, or maybe sooner.

Opposition movement stages more two campaigns against Pashinyan

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 28 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net – The opposition Resistance Movement has begun marching from two more destinations towards Yerevan, as part of a bigger initiative to oust Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan from power.

Two separate groups of people on Thursday, April 28 launched campaigns from the town of Aparan, Aragatsotn province and the village of Sardarapat, Armavir province.

Protesters are currently marching towards the capital from a total of four destinations across the country, including Ijevan, which Pashinyan’s hometown, and the village of Tigranashen, Ararat province.

Pashinyan himself staged a massive disobedience campaign back in the spring of 2018 and removed then Prime Minister Serzh Sargsyan who had been in power for 10 years. The PM, however, came under fire after signing a statement with the Russian and Azerbaijani Presidents to end the war in Nagorno-Karabakh almost 45 days after the start of the military hostilities. Under the deal, the Armenian side was forced to cede all the regions surrounding Karabakh to Azerbaijan, having lost a part of Karabakh itself in hostilities.

The history of Armenian Americans in California

FOX 11 Los Angeles
April 28 2022

According to historians, before Glendale and Hollywood, the original communities Armenians settled in were Fresno, Boyle Heights and Montebello. 

In 2020, the city of Montebello marked its 100-year history. Originally, it was an agricultural community with humble beginnings, before its successes in commerce and in the oil industry. Not long after Montebello was established in 1920, it became the first suburb most Armenians settled in back in the 1930s, which is just part of a piece of Southern California history.

“It was Fresno and Montebello. And the reason that those two communities were as heavily populated, densely populated as early as they were, is both complicated and really easy.  The Fresno Armenians were those who came from the Ottoman Empire escaping genocide, looking for foreign lands, and established themselves in the agricultural economy of the Central Valley,” Salpi Ghazarian, Director of Armenian Studies at the University of Southern California’s Dornsife Institute. “Those who came to Montebello were those who during World War ll escaped the Soviet Union, escaped many of them from Ukraine, from the various cities that are being bombed today.”

The USC program is committed to documenting, preserving, and most importantly, giving a voice to the people who lived during those historic years. Not only do their stories make up the history of Southern California, but these are the stories that are an essential part of the Armenian experience.

Data from the USC archives says 20 million Soviet citizens died in WWII. Of those, 200,000 of those were Armenians. Some were captured by the Germans, historic Armenian communities in Eastern Europe and Crimea were relocated as slave labor, others retreated with the German army seeking an escape from Stalin’s regime. This is how some 4,000 Armenians found themselves in Stuttgart, Germany when the war ended.

Montebello resident Jack Hadjinian’s grandparents were part of that group.


“My grandfather Senekerim “Sam” Arakelian was a genocide survivor who eventually was taken to Germany by Nazis as forced labor. Along with another 2,000 to 3,000 Armenians that lived in labor camps, my family ended up in Stuttgart in the labor camp. My mom is one of 185 Armenians that were born in those camps,” Hadjinian said. 

“They bonded during a really difficult time. Those bonds have continued through today, through the various generations,” said Ghazarian.

By 1952 most of the 4,000 Armenians were allowed to land in the U.S. as a result of a special act of Congress called the Displaced Person’s Act of 1948 that enabled their immigration.

USC studies reveal some settled in Detriot, Michigan or Niagara Falls, New York as they remembered the families they had left behind and began new lives as factory workers, while many came to Montebello and sustained bonds of friendship that were based on the relationship and interdependence from their years in Stuttgart.

Jack Hadjinian’s family went through Ellis Island, to Worcester, Massachusetts, to Detroit. “There were a lot of jobs there. My uncles worked on the Ford F-150 assembly line and some of my uncles worked for Cadillac. My grandfather was a janitor at Ford,” he said. 

Eventually, many like Hadjinian’s family headed west.

“They came to Boyle Heights, which is such an important core for Los Angeles. [There are] so many communities- the Jewish community, the Latino communities and the Armenian community started out there,” said Ghazarian.

“As they moved, they looked for businesses to make a living that did not require language skills or education. Many of them started in the trash business and actually hauling trash. And then it was Armenians who transformed the trash business from just residential trash pickup to commercial trash pickup, which is such a huge industry in Southern California. Other Armenians went into the food business, and started with lunch trucks, which then later became hot lunch trucks,” said Ghazarian.  

They had that entrepreneurial spirit. As they thrived they gave back to the community, they established churches, schools, dance groups and community centers. Montebello is home to the first Armenian Genocide Memorials in the country.

“It is the first Armenian Genocide monument on public property in the world. It is world-famous and everybody knows about it. It stands 75 feet tall,” Hadjinian explained.

The Holy Cross Cathedral is another place that brings thousands of people through its doors. This church has great significance in Hadjinian’s life.

“I was baptized here in this church and I was married in this church. My family contributed to the building of this church. This is a one of the larger church properties Armenian church properties,” said Hadjinian.

Right next door is Bagramian Hall, an enormous banquet hall, where large-scale events take place. Next to Bagramian Hall is the smaller Tumanjan Hall, which was the youth center.

Hadjinian said Montebello is a wonderful place where everyone seems to really understand and respect each other’s cultures.

One Armenian-owned business that perfectly illustrates the diversity of the community is a local favorite – Z’s Diner. “It is an interesting place that’s very colorful. Not just physically, but when you look at the menu you will find that they serve Mexican food, Armenian food, and American cuisine,” he added. 

“I think the common denominator in Montebello is that everyone feels very connected to this community. There are people or families like mine that have been here three, or four generations. Not many Armenian communities go that far back,” said Hadjinian.

“This is a place where four generations get together willingly…it’s really quite phenomenal. It continues this whole concept of community and neighborhood that in many places in the U.S. we’ve lost, but this community sustains it,” said Ghazarian.

Carrollton church sanctified the day before international Armenian Diaspora

Texas – April 27 2022

Carrollton now has a new, “one-of-a-kind” Armenian Orthodox church, according to community members.

Locals gathered 10 a.m., April 22 to consecrate the new Saint Sarkis Armenian Church located at 4421 Charles Street, in Carrollton.

“We are consecrating the church,” Hamlet Sarokhanian, a member of the church’s community said. “This is called Saint Sarkis Armenian Orthodox Church. In Dallas-Fort Worth, there are around 10,000 Armenians, and we’ve had a church since the ’80s, and we’ve always dreamed of having a sort of monumental complex that would serve not only as a place to pray, but as a place where many generations of Armenians can come together.”

The church was designed by New York architect David Hotson and his team. It marries traditional design of Armenian churches, historically built out of stone, and modern design and materials using concrete reinforced with fiberglass rebars and other more state-of-the-art interior design. 

The church celebrated its first Sunday service on the following day, which coincided with the international Armenian Diaspora, memorializing the 1.5 million victims of the 1915 Armenian Genocide.

The church’s façade also immortalized the lives lost by depicting 1.5 million unique icons that, together, create an image of a cross in Armenian medieval style.

“We have canonized the victims,” Lusine Meeks, who is in charge of the godfathers and godmothers said. “They’re sanctified. We no longer mourn them, but we want to remember and celebrate them.”

In addition to the church, the complex has an event hall, athletic building and open space for special events like Armenia Fest slated for October.

The consecration was visited by international religious leaders who anointed the building as a holy place of worship. Bishops also anointed crosses around the nave representing the godfathers and godmothers who helped found the church.

See all photos at the link below:

Sos Hakobyan: 72,000 people left Armenia permanently last year alone

Panorama
Armenia – April 28 2022

POLITICS 11:30 28/04/2022 ARMENIA

Sos Hakobyan, the spokesman of the opposition Homeland Party, urged people to join the street protests aimed at toppling Nikol Pashinyan and his cabinet during an opposition awareness march on Wednesday.

“The current authorities announced that the man in Armenian should live well and feel safe, being able to make plans for the future. However, 72,000 of our compatriots left Armenia permanently last year alone,” he said.

“Armenia’s debt, that is, the debt of the Armenian people has doubled. Neither salaries nor pensions have risen. The Armenian people live in worse and much more dangerous conditions. The residents of border regions suffer casualties every day and live under the direct target of the enemy,” Hakobyan noted.

He stresses that the only way out is to stand up and fight. Then the marchers began chanting “Stand up, Armenia!”, “Stand up, Artsakh!” and “Stand up, Armenian people!”

“This time we will fight to the end. The change of power will take place in a short period of time and our struggle will be crowned with victory. We will have an independent and developing Armenia, a secure, strong and sovereign Artsakh. We will live in Armenia without the Turks,” the spokesman said.

Ryde City Council votes to raise Artsakh flag in reaffirmation of solidarity with Stepanakert

Panorama
Armenia – April 28 2022

The City of Ryde Council in Sydney Australia has unanimously adopted a Mayoral motion solidifying support for the indigenous Armenian people of the Republic of Artsakh, who are again under fire by aggressive occupier Azerbaijan, reported the Armenian National Committee of Australia (ANC-AU).

The motion, moved by Mayor Jordan Lane with the support of Armenian-Australian Councillor Sarkis Yedelian, resolved to raise the Republic of Artsakh flag in a Council ceremony at Putney’s Kissing Point Park in solidarity with the City of Ryde’s friendship city, Stepanakert.

The motion referred to the 20-day disruption of natural gas and heating pipelines between the Republics of Armenia and Artsakh by Azerbaijan, leaving over 100,000 indigenous inhabitants of the territory without access to gas amid a sharp cold spell in February 2022.

Councillors Lane and Yedelian also raised concern regarding Azerbaijan’s recent violation of the November 9 Russia-brokered ceasefire agreement on 8 March 2022, which resulted in a new wave of displacements, forcing over 400 Armenian women and children to evacuate their homes.

ANC-AU Political Affairs Director, Michael Kolokossian thanked the City of Ryde Councillors and applauded the success of the motion.

”The actions of Azerbaijan seek to intimidate and cause terror amongst the local Armenian population of Artsakh. This new wave of aggression is the continuation of the war that Azerbaijan is determined to end with the complete cleansing of ethnic Armenians from their ancestral homeland,” said Kolokossian.

“This motion by a unanimous and steadfast City of Ryde Council shows this will not be achieved and Artsakh will remain Armenian,” added Kolokossian.

ANC-AU Administrative Assistant, Danielle Der-Bedrossian addressed the Council Meeting during the debate and said “standing up for the indigenous Armenians of Artsakh is the least we can do for their future so that they may fulfil their aspirations to determine their own future, freely and peacefully”.

Der Bedrossian added in her remarks: “I would like to thank the Council of Ryde, a sister city of Stepanakert, for standing up and showing its ongoing support for the people of Artsakh and its ongoing condemnations of pan-Turkic dictators who wish to continue the neo-Ottoman genocidal policy of their forefathers.”

“It is my sincere hope that one day soon, the Australian Federal government will recognise the independence of Artsakh just like it did in Kosovo and East Timor before it is too late.”

In 2019, the City of Ryde Council voted unanimously on a resolution to form a Friendship City relationship with the capital of the Republic of Artsakh, Stepanakert.

The adoption of the motion comes only days after Republic of Artsakh President, Arayik Harutyunyan addressed the Armenian Genocide and the ascendance of the Pan-Turkic ideology, stating: “More than a hundred years after the Armenian Genocide, we are once again facing serious challenges, once again having to fight for national and universal values, for the protection of fundamental human rights and freedoms, for the full realisation of our natural right to live freely and independently on our own soil.”

The Permanent Representative of the Republic of Artsakh in Australia, Kaylar Michaelian similarly thanked the City of Ryde for adding their voice of support to a people in need.

“The brave Armenians of the Republic of Artsakh are appreciative that the local representatives of the most-Armenian populated municipality in Australia have extended their support for their right to democratically self-govern on the lands of their ancestors,” Michaelian said.

Opposition activists hold awareness campaign outside YSMU

Panorama
Armenia – April 28 2022

Young opposition activists held an awareness campaign in front of the Yerevan State Medical University (YSMU) on Thursday, urging all students to join the protests in defense of Artsakh and Armenia.

“We urge all YSMU students to join the fight. Artsakh is of great value and will always remain so. Students, stand up!” one of the protesters said.

Afterwards, the young activists installed the Artsakh flag in the yard of the university.

“The land for the liberation of which our brothers fought and sacrificed their lives is ours,” they said, chanting “Artsakh, Artsakh!”.


Armenia lifts Сovid-induced restrictions


April 28 2022


  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

Restrictions on entry to Armenia have been lifted. Working citizens will no longer need to take a PCR test every 7 days or present a certificate of vaccination. The Ministry of Health made this decision taking into account the epidemiological situation in the country and the slowdown in the spread of coronavirus in the world.

On April 28, the government approved a project submitted by the ministry to lift the current restrictions.


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From May 1, visitors entering Armenia will no longer need to submit a PCR test or vaccination certificate.

Local residents will no longer need to present their PCR test results or vaccination certificate to their employer every 7 days.

These documents will not be required for visits to penitentiary institutions and military units. Military personnel serving in the Armenian Armed Forces will be able to receive their due leave without restrictions imposed in connection with the spread of coronavirus.

The requirement to keep a distance of 1.5 meters during any events, including in schools and kindergartens, has also been canceled.

The lifting of restrictions is explained in the draft submitted by the Ministry of Health by the stable epidemiological situation in Armenia and the decrease in the incidence of coronavirus.

Amid Covid-19, people in Armenia were forced to look for new opportunities to preserve their business and develop it

In the past 14 days, only 144 cases of the disease have been registered in the country, which is 33% less than in the previous two weeks.

“Over the past month, there has also been a sharp decrease in the number of deaths, in 14 days only one death has been registered”, Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan said at a government meeting.

According to her, the vaccination process played an important role in stabilizing the epidemic situation.

To date, 44.1% of Armenian citizens have been fully vaccinated. About 50,000 people received a booster dose.

Anahit Avanesyan assures that vaccination will still be actively continued in polyclinics and mobile vaccination points. On top of that, Armenian citizens can also get vaccinated at home.

The prime minister summed up the minister’s report with a call to the people of Armenia not to relax and continue to get vaccinated, as “no one can predict what will happen next”. According to Nikol Pashinyan, the country has a wide range of vaccines in sufficient quantities.

To overcome the crisis, experts propose to radically change the country’s image and launch aggressive marketing advertising

During the period when the restrictions were in effect, the control over their observance was carried out by special inspection bodies. According to the head of the department coordinating their work, the results of the inspections showed that “at least among working citizens, the level of vaccination is quite high”.

From January 1 to April 26, inspection bodies conducted 23,792 checks just to make sure working residents were vaccinated or had a PCR test every seven days.

“During all these inspections, only 208 violations were registered, that is, only 0.8%. This is a good indicator for our colleagues in the Ministry of Health to know in which direction to move. Perhaps we need to pay more attention, more actively involve the unemployed and pensioners in the vaccination process”, said Artur Asoyan.

CalPoly Armenian Student Association Celebrates Armenian Heritage Month

Mustang News, California Polytechnic
April 28 2022
TINI NGUYEN

Cal Poly’s Armenian Student Association (ASA) has been celebrating Armenian Heritage Month in April with the goal of bringing the Armenian community together and commemorating the Armenian genocide committed by the Ottoman Empire, modern-day Turkey, that took place from 1915-1923.

“April marks the anniversary of the official beginning of the Armenian genocide, which happened on April 24th, 1915,” ASA Vice President and computer science sophomore Sophie Martyrossian said. “This is a really significant day for a lot of Armenians because we remember the tragedy that happened and the justice we haven’t had for the past 107 years.”

Turkey has not made reparations regarding the genocide; the Turkish government continues to deny the genocide ever occurred. When U.S. President Joe Biden acknowledged the Armenian genocide, it created a lot of backlash in the Turkish community.

“One of the things that students can do [to support Armenians] is by boycotting [products made in Turkey],” Martyrossian said.

Martyrossian gave a presentation about Armenian diasporas and the effects the genocide had on them during ASA’s general meeting on April 22.

More than seven million Armenians are living outside Armenia, Martyrossian said in her presentation. Most of them are now living in Syria, Lebanon, Iraq and Palestine. The genocide has caused many to immigrate to the United States as well. Notable Armenian-Americans include Kim Kardashian and Cher, who are both half Armenian.

At the end of Martyrossian’s presentation, members of ASA shared their family’s history and how the genocide has impacted them.

“My great grandfather was actually in Wisconsin at the time looking for work and when he decided it was time to go back home, he found his wife and his kids dead,” philosophy freshman Bella Papazian said. “So, he ended up remarrying and moving to Syria, and that’s where my mom’s side of the family [ended up].”

Papazian also shared the story of their dad’s side of the family.

“[On] my dad’s side of the family, my great grandfather actually survived the genocide,” Papazian said. “He was hiding under his mother’s dress as the raids were going on . . . His mother was killed while he was under her [dress] and they didn’t find him, so he was able to flee and he actually went to Syria as well.”

Activities ASA hosted during this month include Easter egg painting on April 15 and painting the P the colors of the Armenian flag on April 17.

This week is Armenian Heritage Week, which included an ASA-facilitated discussion and reflection on Sunday, an Armenian genocide information booth and Armenian genocide memorial on Monday and an ASA general meeting on Friday, according to an Instagram post.

The information booth on Monday informed Cal Poly students about the Armenian genocide since not many are aware of it, Martyrossian said.

“We’re going to talk more in depth [about the genocide] and the side effects and what it means to us today,” Martyrossian said. “And then, in conjunction with the Armenian Genocide, there’s still the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict that still hasn’t been resolved and we still haven’t gotten any justice work. We’re planning on speaking about that and what students at Cal Poly can do to help the Armenian community.”

During ASA’s general meeting, ASA Treasurer and political science senior Jenny Galoyan will present her senior thesis on the Armenian genocide in 1915 and its connection to the Nagorno-Karabakh war in 2020, which was a conflict between Armenia and Azerbajian.

According to Galoyan, fewer people understand the Nagorno-Karabakh war than they do the Ottoman-era Armenian genocide.

“I’m postulating that there was a relationship — that the legacy of the genocide affected how the war played out in 2020, which includes the war crimes, the resolution, how the relationship between [Armenia and Azerbajian] is like now and with Turkey and the rest of the pan-Turkic world,” Galoyan said.