The California Courier Online, June 29, 2023

The California
Courier Online, June 29, 2023

 

1-         Russian-Israeli
Blogger’s Bold Efforts

            To Support Armenia and
Artsakh

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

           
www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         Though Coup
is Over, Putin’s Hand Weakened, Armenia Could be at Risk

3-         After 38
Years in Education, GUSD Superintendent Vivian Ekchian to Retire

4-         Violence
erupts again outside Glendale
school board meeting

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1-         Russian-Israeli
Blogger’s Bold Efforts

            To Support Armenia and
Artsakh

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher, The California Courier

           
www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

I just read a very important article in the Armenian
Mirror-Spectator in which Aram Arkun interviewed Russian-Israeli blogger
Aleksander Lapshin who is currently on a tour of Canada
and the United States.
He already met with Armenians in Toronto, Canada, on June 3, and New York City on June 11. He also met with
the Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International and the Committee to Protect
Journalists to brief them about the dire situation in Artsakh.

Lapshin was born in Russia
and moved to Israel
when he was 13. His wife is from Moldova
and moved to Israel
14 years ago. However, she is still waiting for approval to become a citizen of
Israel
since 2017.

During his many visits to Armenia, he travelled three times
to Artsakh from 2011 to 2016. Azerbaijan’s
government issued a warrant for his arrest and asked Belarus
to send him to Baku for “illegally crossing Azerbaijan’s border” from Armenia. Belarus extradited him to Azerbaijan in 2017 where “he was sentenced to
three years in prison, but was given a pardon in September and flown to Israel after
what he describes as an attempt by four masked men in prison on his life. The
Azerbaijani government, however, claimed that he had tried to commit suicide,”
Arkun reported.

Lapshin said that Israel’s
Security Agency repeatedly urged him to stop supporting Armenia because “Azerbaijan is our ally.” He was
also advised to withdraw his complaints against Azerbaijan from the European Court
of Human Rights and United Nations. Lapshin replied: “No, no way. I will go to
the end and I will win.”

On May 21, 2021, the European Court of Human Rights ruled in
Lapshin’s favor in his lawsuit against Azerbaijan for attempted murder,
torture and illegal imprisonment. However, Azerbaijan has refused to pay him
the compensation of 30,000 euros. “Meanwhile, the United Nations Human Rights
Committee adopted a resolution on July 19, 2022 condemning the Belarusian
authorities for illegally arresting Lapshin and extraditing him to Azerbaijan,”
The Mirror wrote.

Lapshin told the Mirror that because of his criticisms, he
cannot visit Russia and the
former Soviet countries, ‘except Armenia,’
but added, “I just said except Armenia,
but who knows? Armenia
is under huge Russian influence.”

“Lapshin continues to pursue his own case against Azerbaijan’s violations of human rights but is
committed also to helping Armenia.
He understood, he said, that ‘it would be better for me, my family and for our
safety, to just leave it aside and continue our old life.’ However, he
continued, ‘I just cannot abandon what I do in favor of Armenia and Artsakh because I have many friends
in Armenia.
Some of them were killed during the second Karabakh war. I actually love this
country, so I feel in Armenia
like my second home,’” Arkun reported. “Lapshin added, ‘Look, six million Jews
were killed during the Holocaust. A lot of Armenians actually supported Jews
and saved their lives. So, I feel the same.’”

Lapshin told the Mirror: “‘Of course I do not receive any support
from the government of Armenia.’
Furthermore, the fact that Armenia,
facing an existential threat, is trying to sign a peace agreement with both Azerbaijan and Turkey, seems to create complicated
motivations. ‘Even some of the politicians in Armenia tried to convince me to
leave it aside, for some political reasons. What I do against Azerbaijan,
somehow, in some ways, is against the national interests of the current
Armenian government…So I feel a bit alone in this fighting, but this time,
fortunately, I have a lot of friends, both Armenian friends, and American and
European friends, who actually support me.’”

“While in Armenia, Lapshin met several former prisoners of
war who had been raped in [the Baku] jail and tried to convince them to go with
him to the US and Europe to testify about this, but, Lapshin said, they felt
uncomfortable about talking about such experiences openly due to Armenian
social norms or culture,” Arkun reported. The former Armenian prisoners of war
told Lapshin: “there were strict warnings from Armenian intelligence services
for them not to communicate with journalists or human rights activists. One can
speculate that if true, this is due to the precarious current situation of Armenia, which is doing anything in its power to
avoid a new war of aggression by Azerbaijan.”

Lapshin told the Mirror that members of the U.S. Jewish community do not support his human
rights activities for Armenia.
They told him: “Why do you need to deal with Azerbaijan,
because Azerbaijan is
actually the ally of Israel.
Okay, you had a bad experience with Azerbaijan, but still, you have to
think globally. This is realpolitik. What you do against Azerbaijan is against the national interest of Israel.”

Lapshin regretted that the American “Armenian community is
so divided and weak.” “There is mistrust of the Armenian government and each
other, he said, and this situation made him feel emotionally depressed,” Arkun
reported.

“If someone wants to invite me for meetings with human
rights activists or politicians even on the state level I will be more than
happy [to oblige],” Lapshin told Arkun. After Toronto
and New York, he is going to Los
Angeles, San Francisco, Sacramento, Las Vegas, Seattle, Portland, Dallas, Miami, and probably
Chicago, as well as Vancouver, Canada.
Later this year, he plans to visit Armenia again. However, he added,
due to the unstable political situation, “I can never know if I am going to be
allowed to enter Armenia.”   

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2-         Though Coup is Over, Putin’s
Hand Weakened, Armenia Could be at Risk

 

(Combined Sources)—With a so-called 24-hour coup by Russia’s
mercenary boss, Yevgeny Prigozhin, ending in an anticlimactic pullback, Russian
President Vladimir Putin was able to avoid a dramatic and bloody standoff with
his one-time ally.

Tensions came to a head several weeks ago when the Defense
Ministry announced that all private military companies, including Wagner, would
have to sign contracts. Putin endorsed the move but Prigozhin refused to sign —
only to then lead his fighters on the ill-fated revolt last Friday.

Prigozhin called off his uprising en route to Moscow following talks
with Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko, saying he wanted to avoid
bloodshed.

Nonetheless, the fact that the outspoken Prigozhin could
even mount an armed mutiny with his private military company, the Wagner Group,
with little resistance and an apparently muted response is widely seen as a
deep political blow for Putin and his regime.

“Prigozhin’s armed rebellion indicates a political crisis
within Russia and shatters
the myth of Russia’s
invincibility and overwhelming power,” Hanna Liubakova, a nonresident fellow
with the Atlantic Council’s Eurasia Center, and a journalist and researcher from Belarus, said
on Sunday, June 25.

Prigozhin and his mercenary forces on Saturday, June 24
seized one of the Russian military’s key bases in the south of the country, and
the city of Rostov-on-Don, before proceeding
north to Moscow.
However, the rebellion was dramatically called off before the rebels reached
the capital city.

On Saturday, June 24, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan had a
telephone conversation with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Pashinyan
emphasized that although the events unfolding in Russia
were Russia’s
internal affairs, he sought information about the situation established in the
friendly country.

The President of the Russian Federation informed the
Prime Minister about the latest developments. The developments in Russia could have serious repercussions on Armenia and
Artsakh. It could lead to the withdrawal of the Russian Peacekeepers from
Artsakh, leaving Armenians there vulnerable to Azeri attacks. Any Russian
withdrawal from the region, including Armenia,
could threaten Armenia’s
protection from attacks by Azerbaijan
and Turkey.

Also on June 24, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan had
a telephone conversation with Putin during which Erdogan “expressed full
support for the steps taken by the Russian leadership.”

“All those who consciously took the path of treason,
blackmail and prepared an armed rebellion will suffer inevitable punishment.
All those guilty of attempted riots will suffer the inevitable punishment, they
will answer before the law and the people,” said the Russian President.

 

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3-         After 38 Years in Education,
GUSD Superintendent Vivian Ekchian to Retire

GLENDALE—At
the close of the Glendale Unified School District (GUSD) Board of Education
meeting on Tuesday, June 20, Dr. Vivian Ekchian announced she will be retiring
from her role as superintendent of GUSD, effective June 30, bringing to a close
her 38-year career in public education.

 Ekchian’s career
began in Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD)—the second-largest school
district in the nation serving nearly 600,000 pre-K to adult student
learners—and spanned the full range of classroom to leadership roles from
instructional aide to teacher. Ekchian has a doctoral degree in educational
leadership from the University of Southern California; a master’s degree in
educational administration from the University of California, Los Angeles; and
a bachelor’s degree and teaching credential from California State University
Northridge.

Ekchian was Deputy Superintendent of LAUSD before starting
her tenure in 2019 at GUSD, where she became the first female and first
Armenian-American Superintendent for the district—the third-largest in Los Angeles County, serving 26,000 students in
grades K-12.

“It has been an honor and a privilege to serve the students,
families, and employees of Glendale
Unified School
District for the past four years. Together, we
successfully navigated the COVID-19 pandemic, improved health and wellness for
students and employees, and expanded dynamic learning opportunities for every
child,” said Ekchian. “I know that our Board of Education, school and district
leadership, educators, and staff will continue the transformative work being
done throughout the district and maintain a steadfast focus on preparing all
students for success in college, career, and life.”

In 2022, Ekchian was named Los Angeles County Superintendent
of the year.

“Dr. Ekchian will be greatly missed in Glendale Unified. Her
focus on equity and student success has significantly impacted how we meet
student needs. She has served as a powerful role model for our students and
adults alike. On behalf of the board, we wish her the best in retirement and
look forward to her continued presence in the community,” said Board of
Education President Nayiri Nahabedian.

The members of the GUSD Board— Jennifer Freemon, Shant
Sahakian, Ingrid Gunnell, and Kathleen Cross—each thanked and commended Ekchian
for her service.

Dr. Darneika Watson, Chief Human Resources and Operations
Officer, will serve as Interim Superintendent as the Board of Education
determines next steps.

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4-         Violence
erupts again outside Glendale
school board meeting

By Jenny Yettem

 

GLENDALE—Over 500 protesters
and activists rallied once again for the Glendale Unified
School District’s final
meeting of the current school year on Tuesday, June 20.

The meeting came just two weeks after the June 6 session
where the board adopted a resolution to mark June as Pride Month—where
demonstrations in the parking lot and street turned violent and three arrests
were made.

There were no LGBTQ+IA issues on the June 20 agenda, but
GUSD and the Glendale Police Department were nonetheless prepared for the
situation as posts on social media suggested more protests could materialize.
GUSD Parent Voices had issued a call to its supporters to attend the meeting.
GALAS Armenian LGBTQ+ Association had issued a statement that it would not participate
in the meeting due to safety concerns.

By 10 a.m., barricades were set up in front of the building
and access inside was limited to parents with administrative appointments. By 2
p.m., the lobby was closed and district officials were on hand to distribute
numbered tickets and comment cards to people in line waiting to participate in
the meeting.

By 3 p.m., police officers in riot gear arrived on scene.
Some approached people in line asking them to place their umbrellas and chairs
in their vehicles, while others set up wooden striped barriers and rolls of
fluorescent crowd-control wire in the center of the parking lot. Other officers
stood guard in the lobby of the building to maintain order as district
officials escorted individuals from outside into the meeting to address the
board.

Protesters opposed to teaching children about sexual
identities in school—including a large number of Armenian Americans—held signs
that said, “Leave our kids alone” and “Parents want education not
indoctrination” and continued chanting slogans during the start of the meeting
that was also being simulcast outside.

Before the meeting, a man who wanted to be identified as Art
told The Courier that parents who are against the LGBTQ+IA curriculum should
have the right to opt out and that as parents, they have the right to know what
their children are exposed to at school. “They’re erasing family, and family
values,” said Art.

Inside the meeting, President Nayiri Nahabedian started off
the meeting by welcoming those in the audience, calling out attempts to spread
disinformation, and by encouraging efforts to foster dialogue.

“Angry rhetoric has been ratcheted up and some things have
been said and done that are simply not OK and they really must stop. Accusatory
language, personal attacks, mining people’s social media to publicize deeply
personal situations, vandalizing cars, racial and ethnic slurs, homophobic,
transphobic slurs and intentional misrepresentation of what’s happening in our
schools. These things will create long lasting divisions in our Glendale community that
may never be repaired. Deep divisions that we should wonder how to come back
from,” said Nahabedian. She said that the school board has “met with dozens of
parents,” and that “this constructive engagement will have to continue.”

“Your students’ experience is at the heart of it. There are
vague ideas of what’s happening. We encourage dialogue so we can address
concerns that come up and have workable solutions,” she said before commencing
with public comment.

Similar to what transpired inside the June 6 meeting, some
speakers railed against school board members and equated inclusion of LGBTQ+IA
teaching materials to pedophilia; others thanked the board for its support of
LGBTQ+IA students. For just under two hours, more than 55 people spoke during
the meeting’s public comment portion on the issue of the LGBTQ+IA curriculum.

Glendale School Board candidate Jordan Henry hurled insults
at the GUSD board for attending the Glendale Pride Picnic on Saturday, June 17 along
with other city and state officials. Henry called GUSD board member Ingrid
Gunnell “a radical Marxist” and said the board was trying to “poach emotionally
unstable children in school.”

Glendale’s
Poet Laureate Raffi Joe Wartanian delivered an incisive poem, titled “Love is a
Jewel” in which he reminded that “power is love and love is a jewel inside of
us all.”

Alan Dish, who said he is a GUSD alumnus, said he has been
receiving threatening messages from Jordan Henry. “This is somebody who wants
public authority, who is willing to use threats to stifle my speech. We should
all be concerned when someone resorts to threats. How would he talk to a child?
This guy is not your leader,” said Dish.

“It remains very important for loving parents and advocates
to keep showing up to speak on the issue of empowerment and inclusion in our
GUSD schools and schools nationwide. Inclusive education directly teaches our
children to stand up for themselves and each other. For those who feel too
scared to be here, we will continue to show up GUSD to thank you for being on
the right side of history on this issue,” said Chantal Cousineau.

Around 7:15 p.m., just before the board went into closed
session, police immediately intervened when a physical confrontation took place
among dozens of the protesters in the parking lot of a church near the GUSD
office. A man ended up on the ground, covering his head with his hands as other
men kicked him. Police made one arrest outside the meeting, but did not
immediately say whether it was related to the confrontation. Inside the
building, employees and members of the media were taken to upstairs offices
while police cleared the chambers and lobby. [Ed: When as a journalist I
approached to speak with members of the anti-GUSD protest, I was the target of
verbal aggression and hostility by a number of people including Tony Moon—a
confirmed participant in the January 6, 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol.]

The meeting resumed at 9:15 p.m., to discuss and vote on a
number of agenda items before adjourning into a second closed session.

At 11:15 p.m., the meeting resumed with the final item on
the agenda: the announcement of Superintendent Vivian Ekchian’s retirement.

 

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California Courier Online provides readers of the Armenian News News Service with a
few of the articles in this week's issue of The California Courier. Letters to
the editor are encouraged through our e-mail address, .
Letters are published with the author’s name and location; authors are required
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Armenian Social Council affirms position of Armenians in defending the region

Kurdish Press, Syria –
The Armenian Social Council affirmed that the Armenians in NE Syria will continue to defend the region and stand by the other components in the face of the Turkish attacks.

Today, the Armenian Social Council issued a written statement to the public, in which it affirmed that the attacks of the Turkish occupation will not dissuade the people of all components in NE Syria from the resistance of the Turkish military escalation in the region.

The text of the statement read:

We declare with our own identity that we will resist attacks on our lands. We will not take a single step back, we know the murderous Turkish state and its genocide through its history. While the Turkish state continues its attacks in line with its murderous history, we will defend the lands in which we live, and we will not leave the fields of our struggle.”

The council rejected the continuous Turkish attacks, "We do not accept the recent intensified attacks by drones against NE Syria. Three people who were in a civilian car, including the co-chair of Qamishlo canton Yusra Darwish, lost their lives as a result of an attack on June 20. It is clear that The will of all residents of Rojava was targeted by this attack to break people's resistance."

We are the victims of the genocide, who follow in the footsteps of the Armenian martyrs who chose resistance, and not those who accept surrender and betrayal. We will continue to defend the Rojava revolution and the Rojava women's revolution with all the components that live in the region.

a.k


Armenian female soldier Anush Apetyan real video and photo go viral on Twitter and Reddit

Do you recognise Anush Apetyan? As the video gains popularity online and causes a stir on social media, many people are eager to learn more about who she is. If you’re interested in learning more about the viral video of Anush Apetyan that has gone viral, keep reading the article.

When Armenia and Azerbaijan clashed in the city of Jermuk in September 2022, Anush Apetyan was a female soldier from Armenia who was slain after being tortured, disfigured, and raped by Azerbaijani forces. Three kids—ages 16, 15, and 4—belonged to Apetyan.

The Armenian Army member was reportedly stationed close to Vayots Dzor’s borders. She was defending her nation and fighting Azerbaijani forces at the border. She dedicated herself to serving her country and gave up her life for it, making her the embodiment of perseverance and bravery. To find out more about her, please read this page further.

In the viral Anush Apetyan film, horrible crimes perpetrated by Azerbaijani military are shown. Users of the internet are debating the terrible footage. Anush Apetyan’s dismembered body is revealed in a viral video with the limbs of the Armenian soldier sliced off. There was obvious signs of mutilation, which led others to believe that she had undergone terrible torture.

Additionally, the Azerbaijani soldiers spat words into Anush Apetyan’s breast and threw stones into her eyes. The awful incident was made even worse when the Azerbaijani troops put a severed finger in her mouth. For further information, please read the material below.

People from all around the world are expressing their shock, outrage, sadness, and distress in response to the Anush Apetyan film, which has sparked outrage on a global scale. Numerous individuals are now speaking out and demanding Anush Apetyan’s justice. On Twitter, the hashtags #StopWarCrimes and #JusticeForAnushApetyan have both gained popularity.

The government and authorities also condemned the brutality and violence and demanded that other organisations, like the United Europeans and the European Union, take responsibility. Updates and other material will be posted here, so check back often.

https://thesportsgrail.com/armenian-female-soldier-anush-apetyan-real-video-and-photo-go-viral-on-twitter-and-reddit/

Former President of Armenia salutes Gladstone’s legacy during Flintshire library visit

In Your Area, UK


Dr Armen Sarkissian visited Gladstone's Library to mark its Founder's Day celebrations

PAYING HIS RESPECTS: Dr Sarkissian gave a one-hour talk, held in the library's world-famous Reading Rooms(Image: Geoff Scotland/@himynameisgeoff)

The former President of Armenia visited a Flintshire library to pay respects to its founder, William Gladstone. Dr Armen Sarkissian, who was President of Armenia from 2018 to 2022, visited Gladstone’s Library in Hawarden on May 22, to mark the Library’s Founder’s Day celebrations.

Dr Sarkissian and his delegation were hosted by the library team, led by Warden Andrea Russell, and trustees of the library, including Patrick Derham, former headmaster of Westminster School, and Charles Gladstone, a direct descendant of the Victorian statesman William Gladstone. During a one-hour talk, held in the library’s world-famous Reading Rooms, Dr Sarkissian thanked the library, which is a registered charity, for welcoming him, and emphasized the need for strong leaders like William Gladstone, four times British Prime Minister, and for learning spaces like Gladstone’s Library.

He said: “It is a great privilege to be here for me, Gladstone is a special figure in Armenian history and for the millions of Armenians living worldwide. My grandmother was born in what was Western Armenia and she was one of the survivors of the Armenian genocide.

FOUNDER'S DAY: Dr Sarkissian and his delegation were hosted by the library team, led by Warden Andrea Russell, and trustees of the library (Image: Geoff Scotland/@himynameisgeoff)

“There were stories about her life during the massacres, and there were two distinguished names that came up in her stories, President Wilson of the United States and William Gladstone. William Gladstone was respected by Armenians as he returned to the public eye in his twilight years to advocate against widespread attacks on the Armenian people, which took place in the Ottoman Empire in the late 1800s.”

Gladstone died on May 19, 1898, less than 20 years before the Armenian Genocide was carried out in 1915. The recent Founder’s Day event marked the 125th anniversary of his death.

Patrick Derham, chair of trustees of Gladstone’s Library, said: “All of us who are privileged to have a connection with the library are walking in the footsteps of history. We’re just trying to preserve something that is unique, that is very, very special for future generations.”

LEARNING FOR ALL: The recent Founder's Day event marked the 125th anniversary of Gladstone’s death (Geoff Scotland/@himynameisgeoff)

Warden Andrea Russell said: "It was so good to share this day with so many people who are passionate about the Library – giving thanks for all that has been, and looking forward to developing and widening the Library’s reach."

Among those invited to the event were Friends of the Library. As a charity, it has recently refreshed its Friends programme and is actively recruiting more supporters who share its vision to encourage and enable learning for all. Find out more about Gladstone’s Library at gladstoneslibrary.org.

Existential Crisis: Christian Communities at Risk in Azerbaijan-Armenia War

TDPel Media

‘We haven’t said our last word yet’: Traces of genocide, silence on the streets

 DuvaR.english 
Turkey –


Friday June 23 2023 12:08 am

*Dr Özgür Sevgi Göral

On 18 June 2023, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that the bodies of Missak Manouchian and his comrade, partner and resistance fighter Mélinée Manouchian would be buried in the Panthéon, where the mausoleums of France's "national heroes" are located.1 Historian Annette Wieviorka underlines that, ironically, we owe the recognition of Misak Manouchian first in French politics and then in the field of memory to the Nazis and the collaborating French state. According to Wieviorka, we learn about Manouchian and the partisans who organised armed resistance in the Manouchian group mainly through the "Red Banner" printed by the Nazis in occupied France.2

The Red Banner was intended to propagandise the decision to execute 23 partisans of the Resistance and Partisans – Migrant Workers' Group (Francs-Tireurs et Partisans – Main-d'Œuvre Immigrée, FTP-MOI) who organised the anti-fascist armed resistance in the Paris region. On the poster, the names and origins of the 10 partisans, including Manouchian, all of them immigrants, some Polish, some Hungarian, some Italian, and some Hungarian, and the total number of attacks on the Nazis were given. Misak Manouchian is introduced as the leader of the partisans, with photographs, as follows: "Manouchian, Armenian, chief of the gang, 56 attacks, 150 killed, 600 wounded".

In her lecture on Manouchian, historian Wieviorka makes one more point. The crucial role of the Resistance and Partisans – Migrant Workers' Group, the resistance army of the French Communist Party (FCP), of which Manouchian was a member, in the anti-fascist armed resistance was not emphasised by the FCP itself during the Cold War years. During the 1920s, when Spanish, Polish and Italian workers first migrated to France for economic reasons, these units, organised internally by the FCP through publications in the mother tongue of migrant workers, became an irregular army of special resistance during the Nazi occupation and formed the backbone of anti-fascist resistance.

Wieviorka argues that the limited mention of this partisan group during the Cold War years was a requirement of the political line of the FCP; the post-1945 FCP is above all patriotic, French. Its political goal is to become a powerful institution of the post-war reconstruction process. Thorez, the leader of the party, made this clear in a speech on his return from Moscow: "Production is today the highest form of the class task, the task of the French people. Yesterday our weapon against the enemy was sabotage, armed action, today our weapon to foil the plans of the reactionary forces will be production."3

Manouchian's traces gradually fade in the FKP's imagination of the productive, hard-working, factory-working French proletarian. Those who wanted to emphasise this international heritage remained in the minority within the party. Nevertheless, in the 1950s, Manouchian's anti-fascist memory began to partially surface. In 1950, a street in 20th Paris was named "Manouchian Group". Then, in 1955, Louis Aragon wrote the poem Strophes pour se souvenir for the Manouchian group, which Léo Ferré performed in 1961 as a song called The Red Banner.4

Born in 1906 in Besni, Adıyaman, Missak Manouchian, a revolutionary and poet, carpenter and partisan, whose entire family, except for his older brother, was massacred during the Armenian Genocide5, and the name of the partisan group of migrant communist workers became more frequently heard in the French memory field with the release of Mosco Boucault's documentary Des terroristes à la retraite (Retired Terrorists) in 1985. Misak Manoushian, who was first sent to an orphanage in Syria with his older brother after the Genocide and then moved to Marseille and then to Paris and settled in France, became a frequently mentioned figure in the French memory field from the 90s onwards.

This year, it was announced that the bodies of Missak Manouchian and Mélinée Manouchian will be buried at the Panthéon. In the announcement, Macron refers to Missak Manouchian as follows: "His unrivalled courage, his patriotic spirit that transcended all borders, his tranquil heroism expressed in his last letter to his wife Mélinée, in which he stated that he did not hate the German people, are a special source of inspiration for our Republic."6  

Macron's way of commemorating Manouchian [and his group], while it may sound nice at first, actually represents a particular political approach and situates Manouchian within the national narrative. In the letters written by Manouchian and his comrades, in the notes they left before they were killed, there is hardly any mention of France or the French Republic; most of them describe themselves with adjectives such as internationalist, communist, none of them are French citizens, and they express themselves with concepts such as peace, freedom, liberation.7

Macron's use of the term "tranquil heroism" for Manouchian is particularly striking because it is difficult to describe the partisans, who should be remembered for their sabotage and armed struggle against fascism, as tranquil. The philosopher Pierre Tevanian argues that to portray Manouchean posthumously as a part of the French national narrative and as someone who died for "love of France" is to distort his political legacy and historical experience. Moreover, this way of portrayal not only falsifies Manouchean's experience, but also, in a double move, defines France as the place Manouchean fell in love with. He describes France as if a very large part of it did not silently collaborate with German fascism, as if there was no systematic racism and xenophobia, and as if the anti-fascist resistance was not actually a handful.

Diluting, taming, absorbing the radical content of a revolutionary, partisan, militant or struggler after their death and making them a part of the official and national story is not unique to Macron's commemoration of Manouchian, but we can say that this approach is valid in almost all state commemorations. In particular, the political legacy of many figures who have become part of the "national pantheon" and whose memory has been nationalised by the state is coopted by diluting their radical content in a similar way.

For example, if we look at how the political legacy and memory of Martin Luther King has been interpreted after his official recognition and inclusion by the US, we see that elements of King's political position that emphasise the importance of class relations and poverty, the systemic nature and impact of racial capitalism, and the vital nature of self-organisation for the black community have been carefully erased. Thus King is remembered not as one of the leaders of the black radical movement, but as a moderate and rule-abiding democrat, although there are many other concepts that could be emphasised while commemorating Martin Luther King.8 

In Turkey, where Missak Manouchian was born and where the 1915 Armenian Assyrian Genocide took place, the official ideology still insists on the denial of the genocide. Considering that this rigid denial cannot be cracked to a great extent, that commemorations of the Armenian Genocide, which could be held on the streets 10 years ago, can now only be held inside institutions, and that even the most basic forms of democratic action are banned in Turkey, is it not a "luxury" to criticise France's commemoration of Manouchian? After all, isn't it positive that the political legacy and memory of a revolutionary is recognised by the state? These and similar questions can be increased; in my opinion, with a similar logic, all of these questions can also be asked about the urgency of Turkey's memory field. In a country where even the most basic rights are sometimes not exercised, is it meaningful to remember the commemorations of the Armenian Genocide based on Manouchian's transfer to the Panthéon?

Is it possible to make the recognition of the genocide an agenda at a time when there is a massive attack on the working class and it is becoming increasingly difficult to raise an organised voice against it? What is the benefit of insisting on commemorating the genocide in a geography where denial is so structural and strong, when street mobilisations are so dampened? I think that the deepening debate on how to remember Manouchian's anti-fascist, immigrant and internationalist political legacy and a political debate on the space opened up by genocide commemorations in Turkey and the political meanings of their absence today point to a similar place: What is the meaning of "democratic action", "street action" and "gestures of memory" in a moment where there is an increasingly right-wing centre, where "mainstreaming of the fascism and fascisation of the mainstrem "9, where Kurdish hostility, racism and xenophobia/immigrant hostility are constantly fuelled, where misogyny and hatred against LGBTI+ people are pumped, and where there is an all-out attack on all the gains of the working class? What is the use of a call for rights, law, equality and remembrance that is increasingly uninspiring next to the exciting and emotionally stirring voices of neo-fascisms?

In the research I conducted this year, I tried to find some clues to answer these questions. By reflecting on the accumulated experience of the Armenian Genocide commemorations in Turkey, I tried to analyse the different forms of the struggle for the recognition of the genocide took, the relationship of this struggle with other political movements in Turkey, and the political meanings of not being able to hold these commemorations today. While thinking about why I started this research, I realised that the research I was conducting was also an effort to remind myself. In Istanbul, in the not too distant past, genocide commemorations could be held on the streets.

Of course, the flow of political time is not the same as the flow of chronological time, and many studies looking at the commemorations rightly point out that that time was a period of different expectations in the axis of what we can roughly call "democratisation" in Turkey, the government's political programme emphasised other things, and the macro-level impact of the European Union harmonisation process. In my opinion, another factor that is at least as important as these is the fact that genocide commemorations can be organised at a time when many different political movements in Turkey are on the streets with a very wide repertoire, and street protests can be carried out with different political objectives.

The commemorations of the Armenian Genocide in Turkey, after the first years when the Armenian community organised the commemorations in Istanbul immediately after the genocide, started with different actions in Istanbul on 24 April since 2010, first with the pioneering struggle of the Human Rights Association, especially the IHD – Commission Against Racism and Discrimination, and then with the efforts of the Stop Racism and Nationalism Initiative.

The profile of the organisers of these commemorations can be defined in 3 different groups: Activists who commemorate the genocide by its name and by emphasising the concrete demands of recognition, reparation and coming to terms with the past, and who attach importance to the _expression_ of the political definition and demands, which I call "memory militants"; intellectuals from the left and liberal thought who argue that commemorations can be held without necessarily calling it genocide, by alluding to the concept and partially expressing what happened during the genocide process, and that this would be more inclusive; and moderate conservatives who frame genocide as a "common pain", who believe that this issue can only be discussed if the pain of all parties is emphasised, and who claim that the important thing is to make the issue talkable. Of course, there are many different aspects of these different commemoration approaches that can be discussed, but what draws my attention is the political danger posed by the approach of "the issue is not the commemoration of the genocide by name" in a geography where denial is so strong.

Commemorating the Armenian Assyrian Genocide by its name does not only indicate an intellectual and political attitude towards the genocide itself, but also reminds us that denial ensures the continuation of genocide, that the effects of genocide continue today and in the present, and that only through the widespread discussion and acceptance of certain demands for recognition, compensation and reparation can denial be broken.10   

On the other hand, I believe that the coexistence of these different forms of commemoration, despite all the debates, conflicting confrontations and sometimes frictions it harbours, opens up a very important intellectual and political space. I think that being eclectic in this field, which we call the field of memory, but in which different ways of processing the past are actually related to the political climate of today and the present, can open up some spaces.

A discourse analysis that looks at the language of the statements of the commemorations and the words they use is of course very meaningful, but it is also necessary to look at the total conflicted political accumulation created by all these commemorations, rethink the methods used and draw conclusions from this. For example, everyone I interviewed agreed that there was a significant intellectual and political accumulation on the genocide, but they were almost unanimous that the panels organised with the approach of "we sit a leftist, a Muslim, a liberal and a democrat at the table and discuss it" failed to create a radical change in the participants' own political circles. The younger generation of activists were more critical of their struggle and emphasised the importance of building alliances and ties with different political movements more enthusiastically.

Therefore, without giving up on forcing street commemorations, this period can also be used to abandon the forms of activity that are not working in the struggle for the recognition of the genocide and to establish new forms that work instead. We can think about which political movements, local initiatives and grassroots organisations we can establish relations with in order to crack the "post-genocidal habitus of denial"11, as Talin Suciyan puts it. One can work on the political possibilities opened up by the struggle for the recognition of the genocide through the recognition of the international nature of the Ottoman-Turkish working class in the past and present.

Throughout the 20th century it can be recalled that it was internationalists, immigrants, and stateless people who fought against fascism, pushed it back and ultimately defeated it. Instead of narratives that always centre on the survivors or those who were murdered12, studies can be conducted on how the mechanisms of denial work and how the structural pillars of denial function. Without instrumentalising the genocide, the struggle for the recognition of the genocide can be thought of not only as an act of "solidarity" with the minorities in Turkey, but also as being at the heart of a political programme on how to realise the perspective of "living together " in Turkey, and with which movements this programme can be formed in alliance.13

We are going through times when it is vital to build alliances given the fact that the representatives of organisations that make written statements about the genocide or commemorate the genocide in any way are being sued for insulting Turkishness. Norayr Olgar from the Nor Zartonk Initiative, which carries out very important work on how the genocide continues today and in the present, explains the importance of political remembrance very well in his article about Misak Manouchian: "Today, what remains of Manouchian and his comrades is more than just streets named after them, busts erected, books and songs written about them. What the 23 migrant partisans who came together left us is the hope of living together and the internationalist struggle. The courage and determination of Manouchian and his comrades will grow and live on in solidarity with the Kurdish people struggling against massacres from Gezi to Kamp Armen, in Lice, Nusayibin and Sur."14

I believe that we should not give up trying to think together about the "surplus" left to us by Manouchian and to deepen on it. As one of the activists I interviewed said, "We haven't said our last word yet" and I am almost certain that we will only find this word through a collective effort, by building alliances and expanding our existing alliances.

*Dr Özgür Sevgi Göral

Visiting Scholar at the University of Cambridge and researcher of the research project on Turkey-Armenia Relations organised by the Cambridge Interfaith Programme and funded by the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation   

Disclaimer: The views expressed in this piece are those of the author and do not reflect the views of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation.

[1] On 18 June 1940, General Charles de Gaulle made his famous speech on BBC Radio in London, calling on the French people to resist. This is why today has become a day to commemorate the anti-Nazi resistance in France.
[2] France Inter, podcast recording, Missak Manouchian, au nom des autres, 25 February 2023, https://www.radiofrance.fr/franceinter/podcasts/autant-en-emporte-l-histoire/autant-en-emporte-l-histoire-du-samedi-25-fevrier-2023-7362639
[3] Christian Stoffaes, Le rôle du Corps des Mines dans la politique industrielle française : deux siècles d'action et d'influence, Réalités Industrielles, November 2011, p. 57.
[4] Listen to the song at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1nqyPVPDtcY
[5] It is actually accurate to describe the great massacre of 1915 as the Armenian Assyrian Genocide, I will use this term from time to time in this article to emphasise this politically, but I will mostly use the term Armenian Genocide as I am specifically analysing the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide on 24 April.
[6] For the  full statement published on 18 June 2023, see https://www.elysee.fr/emmanuel-macron/2023/06/18/ceremonie-du-18-juin-2023
[7] Pierre Tevanian, Manouchian n'est pas un héros de " roman national ", les mots sont importants, 18 June 2023 https://lmsi.net/Manouchian-n-est-pas-un-heros-de-roman-national 
[8] Andrew J. Douglas, Jared A. Loggins, Prophet of Discontent. Martin Luther King Jr. and the Critique of Racial Capitalism, University of Georgia Press, 2021
[9] Ugo Palheta, La Nouvelle Internationale Fasciste, Textuel, 2022.
[10] There are many studies evaluating genocide commemorations, it is not possible to mention them all in this article in an exhaustive manner, I will only point out three studies that I have used: Talin Suciyan, Toplumsal Anma Pratikleri Şekillenirken, Bölüm II: İstanbul 24 Nisan 2015 [While Social Remembrance Practices Take Shape, Part II: Istanbul 24 April 2015], Azad Alik, 21 June 2015, https://azadalik.com/2015/06/21/toplumsal-anma-pratikleri-sekillenirken-bolum-ii-istanbul-24-nisan-2015/; Egemen Özbek, Yeni bir Hatırlama Kültürü ve Ermeni Soykırımı Anmaları [A New Culture of Remembrance and Armenian Genocide Commemorations], Birikim, no. 392, December 202: 60 – 69; Adnan Çelik, Geçmeyen Bir Geçmişle Yüzleşmenin Zorlukları: Ermeni Soykırımı ve Kürt Müdahil Öznelliğinin Dönüşümü [The Difficulties of Confronting an Impermanent Past: The Armenian Genocide and the Transformation of Kurdish Interventionist Subjectivity], Birikim, no. 392, December 2022: 34 -52. Although this article I wrote in 2013 on the use of the term genocide is outdated in many respects, politically I think it is roughly close to this: Özgür Sevgi Göral, Ermeni Soykırımını Tanımak [Recognising the Armenian Genocide], Özgür Gündem, 25 April 2013, https://www.academia.edu/6604017/Ermeni_Soykırımını_Tanımak
[11] Talin Suciyan, Armenians in Modern Turkey: Post-Genocide Society, Politics and History, 2016.
[12] For nuanced critiques of these narratives, see Umut Tümay Arslan, Kesik’in Açtığı Yerden: Kat Kat Notlar [From the Place that Kesik'in Opens: Kat Kat Notlar], Altyazı, 27 March 2015 https://altyazi.net/yazilar/elestiriler/kesikin-actigi-yerden-kat-kat-notlar/, Nora Tataryan Aslan, Facing the Past. Aesthetic Possibility and the Image of "Super-Survivor", Journal of Middle East Women's Studies, 17:3, November 2021, 348 – 365.
[13] For an important article explaining the importance of the concept of "alliance" and why it should be used instead of "solidarity" in some cases, see Nazan Üstündağ, Dayanışmanın bazı sorunlarına dair [On some problems of solidarity], Yeni Özgür Politika, 12 April 2023, https://www.ozgurpolitika.com/haberi-dayanismanin-bazi-sorunlarina-dair-175436
[14] Norayr Olgar, Manuşyan, 23’ler ve Nazizme karşı mücadele [Manouchian, the 23s and the struggle against Nazism], Avlaremoz, 24 January 2016.

https://www.duvarenglish.com/president-erdogan-once-again-accuses-opposition-politicians-of-being-pro-lgbt-news-62609

Military reforms to ensure constant readiness – Speaker

 13:12,

YEREVAN, JUNE 26, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan has said that the authorities are working with the presumption that an attack could take place at any moment and called for constant readiness.

“Making predictions is an ungrateful task,” he told reporters when asked whether there was a chance that the Azerbaijani border provocations could escalate into large-scale hostilities.

“Of course we must always be ready that an attack could take place at any moment against us, and we are working with this very logic. The actions and reforms in the military are carried out with this logic, regardless whether or not there would be provocations,” Simonyan said.




Speaker of Parliament expects progress from forthcoming round of talks with Azerbaijan

 12:56,

YEREVAN, JUNE 26, ARMENPRESS. Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan has expressed optimism over the upcoming foreign ministerial talks with Azerbaijan in the U.S., telling reporters on Monday that “progress” can be expected from the meeting.

“We can expect progress from the negotiations because I have to say that the talks are proceeding rather intensively and the proposals and discussions are giving results from both sides. In these changes, somewhere the Armenian side agrees to certain wording, while someplace the Azerbaijani side. At this moment I see that there is progress,” Simonyan told reporters.

Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan has departed to Washington D.C. to hold another round of talks with the Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov.

Prigozhin mutiny charges not dropped – TASS

 13:16,

YEREVAN, JUNE 26, ARMENPRESS. The investigation of the criminal case against Evgeny Prigozhin, founder of the Wagner Private Military Company (PMC), accused of organizing an armed mutiny, has not been closed, TASS reported citing a source in the Russian Prosecutor General's Office.

"The criminal case against Prigozhin has not been closed. The investigation continues," the source said.

On June 23, Russian Federal Security Service investigators opened a criminal case against Prigozhin under Article 279 of the Russian Criminal Code for organizing an armed mutiny. The case was initiated after Prigozhin's Telegram channel published statements that his units were allegedly attacked and appealed to supporters to come out against the country’s top military leaders. The crime is punishable by 12 to 20 years in prison.

The Russian Wagner private military company led by Evgeny Prigozhin launched an insurrection in Russia that began on Friday evening. Prigozhin said his actions were a “march for justice” while the Kremlin said the mercenary group is committing mutiny.

The armed contractors managed to seize an army headquarters in the southern Russian city of Rostov-on-Don, with some forces marching on Moscow.

However, on Saturday the Wagner chief agreed to stop the advance towards the Russian capital and return his troops to their bases in exchange for “security guarantees” as part of a deal with Moscow, brokered by Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko. Some media reports said the charges would be dropped.

Aliyev privately acknowledged Armenia’s territorial integrity with area size, says Speaker of Parliament

 13:33,

YEREVAN, JUNE 26, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has acknowledged Armenia’s territorial integrity with a numerical wording, Speaker of Parliament Alen Simonyan said on Monday.

“The wording of Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev is a bit different. He says he doesn’t have any territorial claims against the Republic of Armenia. I have to say that during a closed meeting he has accepted and is accepting the territorial integrity of the Republic of Armenia with a numerical wording, this is an important nuance,” Simonyan said.

Armenia has numerously said that it expects the Azerbaijani leadership to publicly confirm that it recognizes Armenia’s territorial integrity with a 29,800 square kilometer area.