Armenpress: Eurowings to launch Yerevan-Berlin roundtrip flights

 11:21,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. Eurowings will launch Yerevan-Berlin roundtrip flights in May 2024, the Armenian Embassy in Germany has announced.

The embassy’s discussions with Eurowings were conducted together with Berlin legislator Martin Petzold and   European and Armenian Professionals Association official Mikayel Minasyan, the Armenian Embassy said in a statement.

”Over the past few months, the Armenian Embassy in Germany, together with Member of the Berlin House of Representatives, Prof. Dr. Martin Petzold and European and Armenian Professionals Association official Mikayel Minasyan has had many discussions with Eurowings , aimed at including this route in the summer flight schedule.”

Flights can already be booked for May 31, 2024  at the following link: https://www.eurowings.com/de.html ։




Pashinyan congratulates Czech Prime Minister on National Day

 11:40,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has congratulated Prime Minister of the Czech Republic Petr Fiala on the Czech National Day.

"I warmly congratulate you on the national holiday of the Czech Republic,” PM Pashinyan said in a letter addressed to PM Fiala published by his office. “I am pleased to note the activation of interstate relations between Armenia and the Czech Republic in the current year. I fondly remember our meeting and constructive discussion within the framework of my official visit to the Czech Republic in May of this year. I highly appreciate the Czech Republic's support for democratic reforms in Armenia, as well as for the process of establishing and strengthening peace and stability in our region. Taking this opportunity, I wish new successes to you, and peace and prosperity to the friendly people of the Czech Republic,” the Armenian PM said.

Armenian Foreign Ministry felicitates Czechia on the occasion of the national holiday

 12:06,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian Foreign Ministry has congratulated Czechia on Independence Day.

''Our heartfelt congratulations to Czechia on Czechoslovak Independence Day. Wishing peace and prosperity to the people of Czechia. Looking forward to further enhancing our relations anchored in shared values of democracy and human rights,'' the Armenian foreign ministry said in a post on X.

Biden meets with top Chinese diplomat at White House

 12:22,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. President Biden met Friday with China’s top diplomat at the White House ahead of a potential meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping, the Hill reports.

''Biden met with Wang Yi, the foreign minister and director of the Office of the Foreign Affairs Commission, and the president “emphasized that both the United States and China need to manage competition in the relationship responsibly and maintain open lines of communication,” the White House said in a readout of the meeting. 

He underscored that the United States and China must work together to address global challenges,” the White House said.

Wang also met with Secretary of State Antony Blinken and with national security adviser Jake Sullivan.

Armenia joins over 65 nations in Malta to chart course for ending war in Ukraine

Oct 28 2023
ins-over-65-nations-184700021.html

Does religion still play a role in politics? The case of Armenia.

North Texas eNews
Oct 28 2023
By Henry Bucher
Oct 28, 2023

The United States Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire, Henry Morgenthau, was in conversation with a Turkish diplomat about the deadly effects of World War One on their Armenian community. With some confusion, the Muslim Ottoman diplomat asked Ambassador Morgenthau why, as a Jew, he was so concerned about the Armenian Christian minority.

 

In the 1960s, a US citizen registered as a student at the American University of Beirut in Lebanon, was called to the office of the Dean of Students within days after classes began. The Dean discussed the issues raised because the student had noted on his registration form under religion that he was an atheist. The Dean noted that AUB had nothing against atheists and welcomed them; but needed to know for their data base whether he was a Jewish atheist, a Christian atheist, a Muslim atheist, or some other kind of atheist!

 

The history of Southwest Asia—a major part of what we call the “Middle East” where many faiths originated—is still dealing with the way to handle the ethno-religious-cultural nationalisms as they relate to the present political realities. In the USA, the separation of religion and state is a key part of our Constitution; but this did not avoid these issues that are still with us today.

 

Armenian oral tradition notes that their ancestry can be traced to Haik, grandson of Noah via his father Japeth. Two disciples of Christ brought their faith to the Armenians in the first century: Bartholomew, and Thaddeus (Jude). Since then, the Armenians have had many serious persecutions resulting in survivors spreading into many parts of the world.* During the several Russo-Turkish wars, the Turks assumed that their Armenian minority Christians were pro-Russian—some were.

 

Many claim that the killing of up to two million Armenians during and after World War One can be called the “Armenian Holocaust.” To use the term “Holocaust,” where Hitler bragged that six million Jews were killed, is not the only misnomer. As soon as Hitler invaded a European country, his first step was to round up Jews and put them on trains headed for extermination camps in Germany. Hitler’s aim was extermination: Turkey’s aim was expelling Armenians from Turkey. The forced exodus has resulted in seven to nine million ethnic Armenians in the world today, three million of which remain in Armenia.

 

Russia and the USA have the greatest number of citizens with Armenian origin. Many have distinguished careers. In Russia, aeronautic engineers Mikoyan and Gurevich created the MiG. In the USA, Kim Kardashian needs no introduction. A well-known playwright and author is William Saroyan.** The famous actor and singer Cher is Cherilyn Sarkissian. These are just four examples of distinguished Armenians ‘in diaspora’.

 

Religion plays an historical role today in politics, often a subtle one. Texas Republican Senator Ted Cruz has praised a coalition of mostly conservative Christians (not all are MAGAcolytes) with: “I am so grateful for the commitment and the passion of the Faith and Freedom Coalition because freedom, religious liberty and the Constitution are under attack right now, and yet I am encouraged that you are standing up to defend liberty.”

 

Meanwhile, back in Gaza during the Israeli bombing, a grieving Palestinian girl(about eight years old) cried: “We don’t have water to wash our hands before we pray, and we need it to drink also!” (The Qur’an’ requires the washing of hands and feet before the five daily prayers).

 

 

*The most recent has been in the news in late September 2023—the fate of Armenians in the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave in Azerbaijan.

 

**Most Armenian names end in “-ian.” When another vowel precedes the ‘i,” a “y” replaces both.

Turkish Press: Russian, Azerbaijani foreign ministers discuss preparation of Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty

Anadolu Agency, Turkey
Oct 29 2023
Elena Teslova

MOSCOW

Russian and Azerbaijani foreign ministers discussed preparation for an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty in a telephone call Saturday.

Sergey Lavrov and Jeyhun Bayramov confirmed the need to step up efforts to normalize relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia, the Russian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

They also spoke about unblocking transport communications and delimitation of the Armenian-Azerbaijani border.

The Azerbaijani army initiated an anti-terrorism operation last month in Karabakh to establish constitutional order in the region, after which illegal separatist forces in the region surrendered.

Azerbaijan, having now established full sovereignty in the region, has reiterated its request to the Armenian population in Karabakh to become part of Azerbaijani society.

A Turkish secret hiding in plain sight

BBC Travel, UK
Oct 28 2023
In the border city of Gaziantep, a secret jazz cafe is helping residents reconcile with the city's turbulent past and offering hope for the future.
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On Wednesday and Saturday nights, if you follow the narrow, stone streets in Gaziantep, Turkey's old Armenian district to an unmarked silver door and knock three times, you're in for a treat. 

Moments later, a man with a long white ponytail and round glasses will appear, welcoming you to his cafe, Jazz ve Kahve, and whisking you away for a night of food and traditional Middle Eastern music. Inside a room filled with Persian carpets, locals will be listening to the melody of a ney (a Turkish wind instrument) intertwining with that of a Syrian lute-like oud in a 19th-Century Armenian mansion overlooking a scenic courtyardstrewn with dangling lights. 

"Gaziantep is a city at a crossroads in the heart of old Mesopotamia. When they were under the same empire, Armenians, Turks and Arabs all coexisted peacefully," said Murad Uçaner, the ponytailed cafe's owner. "In these few square metres, we are trying to revive that ancient vibe."

In the past few years, Uçaner's intimate cafe has become an institution in Gaziantep – one of the cities impacted by the 7.8-magnitude earthquake that struck the Turkish-Syrian border in February 2023. Several buildings around this old Armenian neighbourhood of Kayacık were damaged or collapsed, but Jazz ve Kahve is still standing, and Uçaner is motivated to preserve its legacy. 

"This is not just a place where people eat and drink," he said. "It is also a place where people from different cultures and countries meet, exchange information and get to know each other's cultures."

The story of Jazz Kahve goes back to 2017 when Uçaner, a historian, translator and novelist, became fascinated with the history of Armenians in Gaziantep. While noticing the construction of more and more high-rise buildings across the city, Kayacık's cobbled streets and Ottoman konak residences made him feel nostalgic for a past he wanted to revive. 

Uçaner researched archival footage of the area and stumbled on a photograph taken in 1907 whose caption mentioned it was an Armenian house. As Uçaner explained, not only is the mass killing of Armenians by Ottoman Turks that took place during World War One something that is generally denied in Turkey, but he never learned that Gaziantep was once home to a thriving Armenian, Kurdish and Arab population. "It made me question the accuracy of the history they teach us," Uçaner said. "I discovered that even though Armenians survived for thousands of years in these lands, there have been attempts to erase the memory of their presence here."

Ümit Kurt, a Middle East historian and the author of the book The Armenians of Aintab: The Economics of Genocide in an Ottoman Province, explained that approximately 32,000 Armenians lived in Gaziantep before WW1, but as the war intensified, most were deported to Syria and other nations to remove this non-Muslim ethnic group from Anatolia.

For nearly a century since the war's end, most of these families' homes were left abandoned and in ruins. But after Gaziantep was named Turkey's capital of gastronomy in 2015, many of these crumbling buildings were transformed into cafes and hotels in an effort to draw tourists while preserving the architectural heritage of the city. 

Inspired to take part in the city's collective urban renewal, Uçaner hatched a plan to combine his love of history and music. 

"For 10 years, he dreamt about opening a cafe, but he was worried he would have had to leave his job in translation," said Murad's sister, Mujgan Şahin, who helps him run the cafe. "One day I stumbled upon an abandoned Armenian building dating back to the 1890s. I encouraged Murad to rent it."

After a year-long restoration, Jazz ve Kahve's (which means "jazz and coffee") opened in 2018. Uçaner never had to leave his full-time job, and the cafe has become a hub for the city's intellectuals, who come to share knowledge about Gaziantep's shared Turkish, Armenian and Syrian history.

After knocking at the silver door, visitors walk by the building's 19th-Century frescoes and engravings in the Armenian alphabetas Uçaner explains the area's unique history. Sometimes, he even guides guests around the neighbourhood to see similar examples of Gaziantep's multi-ethnic past, such as the Papirus Cafe, which was once the house of a prominent Armenian politician. Guests are then treated to Turkish and Arabic music and can order Turkish teas or wines alongside traditional Syrian food that was once commonly eaten in Gaziantep under Ottoman rule, such as muhammara (walnuts and roasted red peppers) and mutabbal (aubergine dip). 

Ironically, the recent earthquakes that struck the region have made the cafe's role as a cultural meeting point even more symbolic. 

When Uçaner was jolted awake by the earthquake (whose epicentre was near Gaziantep) that February morning, he was scared to see if his cafe was still standing. Hours later, he saw that the minaret and dome of the city's famous Liberation Mosque (which was formerly an Armenian church) located just in front of his cafe were in ruins. 

"It was almost like a heartbreak," Uçaner said. The region's seismic capacity had destroyed much of its rich history, and he feared Gaziantep's culture and past may one day be forgotten. As such, Uçaner says he now feels his role as one of the custodians of Gaziantep's fading multicultural past is more important than ever.


Gaziantep's famous Liberation Mosque was formerly an Armenian church and was destroyed in the recent earthquake (Credit: Carola Cappellari)

"It is important to preserve the memory and transform it into a lesson for future generations to not hate your neighbour, because we were all one population once," Uçaner said. "These buildings speak for us, and they need to be protected and repurposed to be part of our present." 

Since the 1970s, Gaziantep has grown from a 120,000-person town of primarily ethnic Turks to a bustling two-million-person metropolis – and much of this growth is due to the Syrian civil war. Thanks in large part to its location along the southern border with Syria, Gaziantep has absorbed an estimated 500,000 Syrian refugees fleeing the nearby conflict. Despite the fact that Syrians once peacefully co-existed here with Turks and Armenians, the recent influx of Arabic-speaking residents has led to tensions. 

Yet, Uçaner hopes his secret jazz cafe can not only preserve the memory of a more cosmopolitan Gaziantep but serve as a bridge connecting its past with its present. In recent years, it has displayed photo exhibits documenting the ongoing Syrian refugee crisis and hosted panels and lectures about the city's multicultural past.

In 2021, Uçaner and several customers – including a sociologist, an urbanist and a musician – also launched the project Memory of Anteb to highlight the architectural and cultural legacy of Armenians and Muslims who once lived in Gaziantep.

"The history of Gaziantep was written by official historians in line with the denial policy of the country. We wanted to rewrite that history in a more peaceful present," Uçaner said. 

Today, during lazy summer afternoons or cold winter nights, artists and musicians of all backgrounds come to drink a hot cup of tavsan kani çay (red "rabbit blood tea"), chat and get inspired by music from around the region. 

"It's here, playing with other musicians, that I learnt we play the same songs but with different lyrics, depending on our language," said Ezzat Dahman, a Syrian-Palestinian oud player who regularly performs Turkish and Syrian music at the cafe. "That shows just how similar our cultures are and how many things in common we have."

Dahman had the idea to launch his own music project at the cafe, called Music Against Racism, to bring Turks, Syrians and Kurds closer together. "The idea will be to play Syrian and Turkish traditional songs that have the same melody together, to foster mutual understanding."

Regular customers are also treated to Turkish folk music, which bears traces of Arab and Armenian melodies. "We like to discover new forms of music we had never been accustomed to, like jazz or classic," said customer Irem Deniz Adali, holding a glass of Suryani red wine, typical of south-eastern Turkey, as she tapped the wooden table to the rhythm of an old folk song. "But what's even more beautiful is how this place gives us a chance to revive the old, diverse, festive past of this region."

The earthquake may have temporarily stopped these gatherings, but they quickly returned in full force as the building didn't suffer any major structural damage. "If you're aware of a place's past, its community can move forward to build a more peaceful present," Uçaner smiled, before welcoming a few other guests at the door.

https://www.bbc.com/travel/article/20231027-a-turkish-secret-hiding-in-plain-sight

Armenian Economy Minister, British counterparts discuss enhancing Armenia’s chamber of commerce system

 14:32,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Minister of Economy Vahan Kerobyan had a meeting with the representatives of the British Chamber of Commerce in London.

"We have discussed further reforms aimed at making the chamber of commerce system in Armenia more efficient, which will enhance the effectiveness of their activities. In order to strengthen trade and business relations between Armenia and Great Britain, we have emphasized the need for more active participation of businessmen in the exchange of information and the organized sector exhibitions," Kerobyan said on his Facebook page.

The Armenian Minister of Economy also held a meeting with representatives of the largest banking and investment corporation, JP Morgan. During the meeting issues related to ensuring access to international markets for corporate businesses were discussed.

"At the meeting, the opportunities for attracting investments from international markets to support programs related to organizations in agriculture, industry, telecommunications and other sectors were touched upon,"  said Kerobyan.



It is impossible to destroy Hamas without destroying Gaza and its civilian population, says Lavrov

 15:20,

YEREVAN, OCTOBER 28, ARMENPRESS. It is necessary to "stop" in the Gaza Strip and announce humanitarian programs, said in an interview with BelTA.

"It is necessary to stop, it is necessary to announce humanitarian programs to save the population, which has found itself in a blockade: no water, no electricity, no food – there is none of this," Lavrov said.

He stressed that if the Gaza Strip is destroyed and two million people are expelled, it will be a catastrophe for many decades or even centuries.