AW: Aurora’s Voice

Within the wide array of podcasts, books, Hollywood movies, Academy Award film nominees and humanitarian initiatives, there are very few accounts of Armenians publicly recognized across the board. Aurora Mardiganian’s harrowing story is one of the few.  

Storytelling of her traumatic life has existed for over a century, beginning in 1918 with the publication of the book Ravished Armenia: The Story of Aurora Mardiganian, The Christian Girl Who Survived the Great MassacresJust over 100 years later, Aurora’s Sunrise, an animated film about her life, premiered in 2022 and was Armenia’s entry to the Academy Awards for 2023. Also in 2023, Uncovering Roots launched a three-part podcast series titled, The Lost Voice – Aurora Mardiganian

Aurora Mardiganian

Born Arshaluys (Aurora) Mardiganian in 1901 to a prosperous Armenian family in Chmshgatsak in the Ottoman Empire, she miraculously survived the 1915 Armenian Genocide but witnessed the tragic deaths of her family members. Like many Armenians of the time, she endured a harrowing march of thousands of miles, subjected to unspeakable cruelties by Turkish gendarmes.

Sold into slavery for a mere 85 cents to a tribal leader’s harem, Mardiganian escaped multiple abductions. Finding refuge in an American mission home in Diyarbakir, her courage was kept alive with caring visits from Armenian General Andranik. He referred to her as his “little girl” and restored her spirit by allowing her to care for other girls liberated from harems. Strengthened, she was aided by General Andranik in reaching New York City with the support of the Near East Foundation, holding onto hope of finding her brother who reportedly escaped to America.

As a parting gesture, General Andranik gave her a ring that had belonged to his father and grandfather. He implored her, “When you reach that beloved land, tell its people that Armenia is prostrate, torn and bleeding, but it will rise again – if America will only help us – send food for the starving and money to take them back home when the war concludes.”

Mardiganian answered the call. Boarding the ship without a place to call home, she carried her strong Christian faith that God would guide her in fulfilling the mission she had pledged to her hero, General Antranik. Broken, traumatized and fearful, Mardiganian was hopeful that she was sailing toward a safer life. 

But that hope didn’t last long.  She could never have imagined the horror that awaited her. 

Cover of 1918 book “Ravished Armenia” showing Aurora Mardiganian (Wikimedia Commons)

Once in America, Mardiganian shared her story with newspapers with the hope of finding her brother and fulfilling General Antranik’s mission. Her story caught the attention of screenwriter Harvey Gates and his wife, who did not have her best interests in mind. Gates convinced her to write Ravished Armenia, with promises that he and his wife would care for her. Unfortunately, without comprehending the contracts she signed naming them as legal guardians, Mardiganian unknowingly became the star of the 1919 silent film Auction of Souls, a cinematic portrayal of her traumatic experiences. Soon, she found herself reliving the most agonizing events of her life on a Hollywood film set. By all accounts, the movie was a blockbuster and broke box office records. Through high-society charity screenings nationally and internationally, the movie raised $30 million to rescue 60,000 Armenian orphans through Near East Relief. 

Forced to address audiences after each film premiere, Mardiganian’s traumatic past caught up with her, and she collapsed during a 1920 screening in Buffalo. This incident marked her final public appearance. With Mardiganian absent from the stage, both Hollywood and the world gradually lost interest, and her story faded into obscurity. Unfortunately, the book and film also vanished, with no known complete print of the movie.

In her later life, Mardiganian married and had a son, but the relationship was estranged after her husband’s death. She never located her brother and lived out the rest of her life haunted by memories, paranoia and in fear of danger lurking at her door and windows.

In light of the recent resurgence of remembering Mardiganian, I implore you to witness the astonishing story in mediums that are accessible and appealing to a broad range of listeners, viewers and readers.  

Listen, watch, read:

  • The Lost Voice – Aurora Mardiginian; “Uncovering Roots” Podcast
    “Uncovering Roots” is characterized as an exploration into lesser-known narratives that deserve to be heard. For podcaster Max Saakyan, the story holds personal significance, living in the United Kingdom as an Armenian, a region where awareness of the Armenian Genocide is limited. Saakyan engages listeners with his compelling voice, incorporating oral testimonies and interviews with people who knew Mardiganian. The podcast is accessible on all major podcasting platforms.
  • Aurora’s Sunrise  
    Armenian director Inna Sahakyan blends storybook adult animation, video testimony and rediscovered footage from Mardiganian’s lost silent epic and revives her forgotten story. The footage is brilliantly edited together with animation made using paper cutouts and characters who act out Mardiganian’s story. 
  • “Ravished Armenia – The story of Aurora Mardiganian, the Christian girl who lived through the great massacres” by Aurora Mardiganian
    A grueling first-hand account from Mardiganian of her life before the United States. It is painful to read, but critically important to understand the depth of the horrors she experienced.  

Advertisement for the American drama film “Auction of Souls” (1919) with Aurora Mardiganian at the Royal Theater in Tulsa, Oklahoma, on page 51 of the August 2, 1919 Exhibitors Herald (Wikimedia Commons)

In honor of the 100th anniversary of the 1915 Armenian Genocide, the Republic of Armenia chose to make Mardiganian the face of the “Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity,” an esteemed humanitarian initiative founded by visionary philanthropists Vartan Gregorian, Noubar Afeyan and Ruben Vardanyan, who have been joined by thousands of supporters and partners. Thousands of Armenian families like mine owe gratitude to Mardiganian for her efforts in raising funds for Near East Relief, which played a crucial role in rescuing orphans and reuniting them with their families, including my grandfather. 

While Mardiganian was once a Hollywood star, the screenplay of her full life does not have a storybook ending. I can only hope that when Mardiganian passed away in solitude in 1994, she wore General Antranik’s ring, a symbol of the promises kept from a bygone era.

Let’s continue to honor her legacy of resilience and deep commitment to God and to her Armenian people.

Victoria Atamian Waterman is a writer born in Rhode Island. Growing up in an immigrant, bilingual, multi-generational home with survivors of the Armenian Genocide has shaped the storyteller she has become. She is a trustee of Soorp Asdvadzadzin Armenian Apostolic Church and chair of the Armenian Heritage Monument in Whitinsville, MA. She is the author of "Who She Left Behind."


Meetas.am, the apparel brand bringing the past into the future

Enter a Diasporan Armenian home and you’ll likely come across these decor staples: a Mt. Ararat painting, a framed թռչնագիր (bird letter) alphabet, a blue glass evil eye, an Armenian carpet, a glass jar of dried apricots or pistachios. But some homes now have replaced their traditional flowery bird letters for graphic designer Alek Surenian’s more modern take. The refreshed look uses a “flat” graphic style and a muted, curated color palette. When explaining his process, Surenian noted, “I think it’s good to evolve what’s been done in the past and turn it into something new and fresh.”

Alek Surenian

Much of his work draws inspiration from the past – whether it’s old Armenian posters, illuminated manuscripts, carpets, architecture or family heirlooms. The Armenian rug tote bag he created, for example, was inspired by a doily his great grandmother made. “It’s pretty sacred to my family, since it’s one of the few items in our possession that was owned by her,” he said. “The doily has a circular composition, so I pulled patterns from that and a Persian rug in our home and combined them together.” 

Armenian rug tote inspired by Surenian’s great grandmother’s doily (Photo: Alek Surenian)

Surenian’s latest drop and fifth release, The Yeraz Collection, is inspired by William Saroyan’s The Armenian and the Armenian. Featuring a cap and T-shirt with custom typography – squiggly, cloud-like letters that spell out the word երազ (dream) – the collection is “an ode to the dreamers” and those “longing for a world where a ‘New Armenia’ can become a reality.” For all of the products Surenian sells, he also sets aside a portion of proceeds for an Armenian organization. “I’ve had the great pleasure to donate to organizations such as the ARS, With Our Soldiers, Tufenkian Foundation, and now, All For Armenia, with this recent collection,” Surenian explained. 

as.am “Yeraz” collection (Photo: Sepahn Chiloyan)

While as.am launched in 2021, many AYF members in the United States already owned some of Surenian’s designs, as he created designs for the organization’s branded merch for many years. “As a Junior growing up in Chicago, my first experiences doing product design began with designing t-shirts for local midwest AYF events,” Surenian said. Later, he served as a member of the AYF Central PR Council, during which he designed the swag for regional events. “Without these experiences, I wouldn’t be the designer I am today, and most importantly, I’ve learned new skills which I added to my ‘design tool box,’” Surenian noted.

Outside of his work for the AYF and his as.am brand, Surenian’s graphic design skills have shaped the aesthetic of the promotional materials and artwork for his two music projects: the Norkef Ensemble and Armadi Tsayn band. Since the Norkef Ensemble performs traditional kef music at dances, picnics and regional events like AYF Senior Olympics, the art draws inspiration from old album covers. Armadi Tsayn, on the other hand, is “more contemporary and artistic” so the visuals have a modern flavor; the logo is an outline of a sun peeking out over a minimalist Mt. Ararat, with an array of roots stretching into the ground. Though it’s a symbol representing a specific musical project, the logo is reflective of Surenian’s approach to art as a whole: shining light on a new future while still staying true to his origins. “I think that being Armenian is all about bringing the past into our future,” he said. “Our ability to preserve and find ways to evolve our culture from generation to generation is essential to the survival of our identity.”

Catch Surenian and folk band Armadi Tsayn at upcoming live performances in Boston on February 10, New York City on February 24, and Los Angeles on March 16. 

Knar Bedian is a freelance writer and photographer whose work has been published in NPR, Gizmodo, Wired Magazine and Boston Art Review, among others. She is also the founder of a local music publication called Sound of Boston.


Aivazovsky’s marine art on display at the National Gallery of Armenia

After the completion of long-awaited renovations, the permanent exhibition of renowned Armenian artist Ivan Aivazovsky (born Hovhannes Aivazian) has reopened at the National Gallery of Armenia in Yerevan. The exhibition is the marine artist’s most significant collection in terms of quantity and artistic worth, containing over 50 paintings and graphic works.

Born in Theodosia on the Crimean coast, Aivazovsky grew up by the sea, which sparked his inclination for arts from a young age. Aivazovsky studied at the Simferopol Gymnasium (1831-1833) and then at the Imperial Academy of Fine Arts in St. Petersburg (1833-1839). 

Statue of Aivazovsky at the National Gallery of Armenia

In 1837, the Saint Petersburg Academy of Arts awarded Aivazovsky a gold medal and sent him to study abroad. In 1840, Aivazovksy set off to Italy and later traveled to England, the Netherlands and France. In 1868, Aivazovsky went to the Caucasus, and in 1869 he participated in the opening ceremony of the Suez Canal. When he was 75, he took the longest journey of his life and traveled to America by steamboat with his wife Anna Burnazian.

Aivazovsky’s works were admired everywhere, and he was elected a member of the academies of Paris, Rome, Amsterdam, Florence and Stuttgart. He was also awarded the French Legion of Honour and received the highest rewards.

Haykuhi Sahakyan, art historian and curator of the exhibition, told the Weekly, “The collection of Hovhannes Aivazovsky of the National Gallery of Armenia is one of the richest collections of the world-famous sea painter and is extremely diverse both in terms of genre and exhibits.” Sahakyan added that a large number of the pieces from the collection were laid in the very first years of the museum’s foundation between 1924 and 1985. The first exhibits were transferred to the museum from the Armenian House of Culture in Moscow (former Lazarian Seminary). Throughout the years, the collection has grown rapidly through donations and acquisitions.

Aivazovsky’s artwork at the National Gallery of Armenia

The current Aivazovsky exhibition aims to introduce visitors to the museum’s collection and many of Aivazovsky’s masterpieces that demonstrate virtuosity. Consisting of four sections, the main element of the exhibition is light, which in its various manifestations is the main idea in many of Aivazovsky’s paintings. Aivazovsky used the technique of glazing, which is masterfully demonstrated in his paintings of sunrise and sunset scenes. 

“It is possible to single out the painting ‘Descent of Noah from Ararat’, painted by Aivazovsky in 1889. It symbolizes the beginning of a new life and seems to be imbued with biblical light,” Sahakyan said. Originally, the painting was exhibited in Paris, but later it was brought to Armenia through the efforts of Martiros Saryan. 

Aivazovsky’s artwork at the National Gallery of Armenia

Although consistent, Aivazovsky’s sea paintings are distinguished by a variety of genres and themes, and the stormy scenes especially reflect Aivazovsky’s temperament, according to Sahakyan. Contrary to many beliefs, Aivazovsky did not like working in the open air, as he believed that the elements of nature were constantly changing, and it was impossible to capture the wind, cloud movements and the sea. “He watched the sea for a long time, which, according to him, changed every second, and once he went back to his studio, he began to depict it in such a way that it seemed that the waves were moving in his canvases,” Sahakyan said.

The sea and the storm were Aivazovsky’s creative passions, especially depicting when the natural forces reach their maximum tension. The intense confrontation between humanity and the forces of nature is also a prominent theme in his artwork. In 1844, a ship sailing from England to Spain and struggling against a storm, with young Aivazovsky among its passengers, miraculously came ashore in the Bay of Biscay. “Fear was not able to suppress the ability to perceive that living picture and to imprint it in my memory,” Aivazovsky wrote. As a witness of the untamed elements of nature, Aivazovsky later created many works that conveyed his admiration for all things natural. “In his paintings, the ever-present ray of light, the symbol of hope and salvation, foreshadows an optimistic ending even for the most terrible storms,” as stated in the exhibit.

Aivazovsky’s artwork at the National Gallery of Armenia

The relationship between man and nature, optimism and humanism are the basis of Aivazovsky’s art, as evident in the exhibition. Aivazovsky loved to travel to different countries, paint new seashores and introduce his works to art lovers everywhere. The fourth and final section of the exhibition features nighttime seascapes, which convey the mystery and charm of moonlit seascapes typical of Romantic art. “Both Armenian and foreign visitors are always curious to discover new aspects of his art and leave the museum filled with the greatest admiration for Aivazovsky’s art,” Sahakyan said.

Hena Aposhian is a freelance journalist who primarily focuses on Armenian arts & culture. She is a graduate of the American University of Armenia and holds a bachelor's degree in English & Communications.


Sheriff Peter Koutoujian appointed Vice Chair of the Council of State Governments Justice Center Advisory Board

NEW YORK, N.Y.—The Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center is pleased to welcome Cam Ward, director of the Alabama Bureau of Pardons and Paroles, as the organization’s new Advisory Board Chair and Middlesex County, MA, Sheriff Peter Koutoujian as Advisory Board Vice Chair. Director Ward, nationally recognized for his leadership on criminal justice reform, is set to lead the organization’s next phase.

“I am honored to work with this outstanding, bipartisan organization,” said Director Ward. “I believe our work is vital to the national effort to enhance public safety, promote best practices in the criminal justice system, and save taxpayer dollars through meaningful rehabilitation programs. I look forward to serving as chair of the CSG Justice Center Advisory Board.”

Middlesex County Sheriff Peter Koutoujian (Photo: Sona Gevorkian)

Additionally, Sheriff Koutoujian, with his distinguished track record in law enforcement and criminal justice policy, brings a wealth of experience to his new role as vice chair. “The CSG Justice Center has a vital mission and stands as the premier association of its kind in the country. Its efforts to improve public safety and justice across the United States are essential now more than ever,” said Sheriff Koutoujian. “I have seen firsthand the high level of professionalism and expertise that the CSG Justice Center can bring to states and communities, and I am excited to work with Director Ward and the Advisory Board members to build upon these tremendous successes and further evidence-based programs across the nation.”

These leadership changes come at a vital time in the national conversation about what works to keep communities safe and ensure that the justice system is effective and fair. Megan Quattlebaum, director of the CSG Justice Center, praised the new appointments, stating, “Director Ward and Sheriff Koutoujian are incredible leaders who have shown what is possible when policymakers bring urgency and optimism to the table. The innovations they have made in their own states have become national models. We are very fortunate to have Director Ward and Sheriff Koutoujian as part of our team as we continue to support effective, evidence-based policies and practices. Both of these positions reflect the organization’s commitment to leadership that is bipartisan and well-versed in policy development, system oversight and the advancement of justice reforms.”

The CSG Justice Center also welcomes Marsha Curry-Nixon to the executive committee. Founder and director of AMiracle4Sure, Inc., her work with individuals who are reentering their communities after incarceration, her roles on various boards and her academic achievements in public service leadership make her an invaluable addition to the team.

In addition to these leadership changes, the CSG Justice Center is proud to introduce four new esteemed members to the Advisory Board:

• Nicholas Deml, commissioner of the Vermont Department of Corrections, whose leadership and track record of innovation will inform our corrections and reentry initiatives.
• Christelle Perez, division chief for Violence Prevention and Crime Victims Services at the Office of the Illinois Attorney General, brings an invaluable perspective on victim services and violence prevention.
• Sheryl Victorian, chief of the Waco Police Department in Texas, whose experience in law enforcement will enhance our public safety strategies.
• Nan Waller, judge at the Multnomah County Circuit Court in Oregon, offers her judicial expertise, as well as her experience with courts as leaders of justice reform initiatives.

The diverse perspectives that these new members bring to the table will enrich the Advisory Board’s deliberations and ensure the CSG Justice Center continues to be positioned to advance consensus around successful approaches to safety and justice. The Advisory Board will be convening in the Spring of 2024, in Washington D.C. for its first committee meeting.

The full list of the CSG Justice Center Advisory Board members is available here.

The Council of State Governments (CSG) Justice Center is a national, nonprofit, nonpartisan organization that combines the power of a membership association, serving state officials in all three branches of government, with policy and research expertise to develop strategies that increase public safety and strengthen communities.




AW: Armenian National Committee of the Middle East calls for halt to military operations in Gaza

The Armenian National Committee of the Middle East has called for a halt to Israel’s military operations in Gaza. 

“The ongoing bloodshed [in Gaza] poses a serious threat to the geographical expansion of military operations, jeopardizing regional stability and exacerbating the resulting humanitarian tragedy,” said the Armenian National Committee of the Middle East in a statement released on January 11, 2024. 

“Urgent steps must be taken to halt military operations and address the humanitarian disaster, initiating a process of peaceful settlement,” the statement continues.

More than 26,000 Palestinians have been killed and 65,000 have been injured since Israel launched an unprecedented military assault on Gaza that has caused widespread devastation and destruction. The offensive follows an October 7 attack on Israeli military and civilian targets by Hamas. Over 1,200 Israelis have been killed in the war, the vast majority on October 7. 

The Armenian National Committee of the Middle East released its statement on the first day of a hearing on South Africa’s “Application of the Convention on the Prevention of the Crime of Genocide in the Gaza Strip” at the International Court of Justice, which was filed against Israel on December 26, 2023.  

The ICJ ordered the State of Israel to immediately “take all measures within its power” to protect the Palestinians of the Gaza Strip from violations of the Genocide Convention, including “prevent[ing] and punish[ing] incitement to commit genocide.”

In a 15-2 ruling issued on Jan. 26, the court also ordered Israel to provide “urgently needed basic services and humanitarian assistance” to Gaza’s Palestinian civilians and “prevent the destruction and ensure the preservation of evidence” related to genocide allegations presented to the court by the government of South Africa.

The court also said that it was “gravely concerned” about the Israeli hostages abducted by Hamas on Oct. 7, 2023 and called for “their immediate and unconditional release.”

Israel must file a status report with the court detailing its progress on the court’s directives by Feb. 26, one month from the ICJ order’s issue date.




Narine Grigoryan, emerging from loss to create through the theater

In the scope of my initiative of spotlighting the great Armenians of today for the Weekly, I recently had a heartfelt conversation with the young Armenian actress Narine Grigoryan. Grigoryan is known for her role in Yeva (2017), the Armenian entry for the Best Foreign Language Film at the 90th Academy Awards. She has also impressed audiences across Armenia and the world through her powerful performances in Amerikatsi (2022), Half Moon Bay (2014), Bravo Virtuoso (2016), The Line 2: 25 Years Later (2017) and Long Return (2017). In 2018, Grigoryan was appointed the Art Director of the Hamazkayin Theater named after Sos Sargsyan. Since then, the young director and actress has won major awards in international theater festivals and presented Armenian culture to foreign audiences with special delicacy, beauty and depth. In our conversation, we covered a wide range of subjects, including Grigoryan’s personal journey, the current state of Armenian theater and the broader significance of art.

Milena Baghdasaryan (M.B.): What brought you to the world of theater?

Narine Grigoryan (N.G.): The interesting thing is that I spent my childhood in places where I didn’t even see a theater, but since childhood I have been telling myself and everyone else that I would become an actress. Later, I changed my path, went to the PhysMath school, took part in math olympiads, but eventually I returned to where I knew I belonged. At 17 years old, I arrived where seven-year-old Narine knew she should be. But the things I learned and picked up while being away from the world of theater then helped me in my career as an actress. Learning math impacted my way of thinking, and my family’s move to Artsakh enabled me to better understand my roots as well as to learn a dialect, which is a great way to enrich one’s vocabulary and perception of language. Back then, it seemed I was moving away from theater, but everything that happened throughout that journey has shaped me into the artist I am today, and I am grateful for that. 

M.B.: Perhaps every person encounters some sort of a turning point throughout their life. What has been the decisive event, role or person, after which things took a completely different turn?

N.G.: I would say the different meetings with the people who have shaped me in my profession are what I consider turning points. One example of such meetings is that with Ruben Babayan (renowned director and Honored Art Worker of Armenia) during my studies at the Yerevan State Institute of Theatre and Cinematography. He taught me a lot about my profession and even helped me learn things like how to give interviews or how to accurately formulate my thoughts. Despite all my success as an actress, he never allowed me to forget that I was first of all a director. In general, he made a very significant impact on my career, and I will always remember and appreciate his role in my life. Another key person is Sos Sargsyan – someone whose ‘breath’ is always present in our theater. I would also like to mention the name of Serj Melik-Hovsepyan, who came to Armenia from France and introduced me to a completely different theater style. Before him, our theater still often followed the Russian approach, whereas his appearance brought something revolutionary for us. Even though I am not a risk-taker in my personal life, I like taking very big risks in theater. I am not afraid of unlearning everything I know and starting everything from scratch. In theater, I like taking the scary road and exploring things I have never seen or experienced before. 

M.B.: How do you get inspired? Does the transformation from Narine Grigoryan to any other character or persona need a special time, location or circumstance to take place, or can it happen at any moment?

N.G.: When acting, I put aside my profession as a director and immerse myself into the world of acting. For me, the first impulse of inspiration is the director on whom I choose to rely fully and who I let inspire me. I like understanding and imagining what kind of a fairy tale they have in mind, what they expect from me in creating that tale, and I embody that. The other impulses are the author, my partner on stage and the audience. There are many impulses, but the first one for me is always the director. The ‘grain of wheat’ is in the director’s hands. But it is important to continue creating in that fairy tale, not merely comply with the requirements of it, and to be able to create in someone else’s creation, you first need to understand it. 

When directing, it is interesting for me to notice, now, as an adult, that all my impulses come from my childhood. This year was very difficult for me; many losses, and the loss of Artsakh in particular, disarmed me to the point that I could no longer create new performances. I had no inspiration or willingness to do anything. Then, recently, Paruyr Sevak’s grandchild came to me and introduced me to the project dedicated to the 100th birth anniversary of the great Armenian poet on which he wanted us to collaborate. I remembered that, when I was a child, my father, who knew Sevak’s poems very well, used to come up with games revolving around that poetry. For example, he would say out loud a line from a poem by Sevak, and expect me to quickly remember the next line and continue the game. It was our favorite pastime, my favorite memory from childhood, and now that my father is no longer, I had a strong urge to revive those moments. So when Sevak’s grandchild came to me with the project idea, it was that childhood memory that inspired and encouraged me to get involved, despite all the losses and traumas of 2023. 

Narine Grigoryan

M.B.: When creating something new, do you have the audience’s potential reaction in mind, or do you give to the paper or the stage whatever your heart dictates? 

N.G.: Milena, I am my own audience. Jerzy Grotowski once said that director is the professional audience․ When you are creating something as a director, the professional audience inside you watches. At different points this audience might say, “It’s no longer interesting,” “It’s becoming boring,” “Change the tone,” and, as Sevak used to say, the more you mix your “I” with the great “We,” you start feeling what the “We” feels, and you start seeing things from the perspective of the “We.” Of course, you need to create from your own sincerity, from what has hurt you, from what has given you joy. I create from what has emotionally moved me and that I know would move others too. You just need to be clean, pure, genuine and authentic to feel what your audience feels. You need to be like a clean white page. In general, it’s difficult to be a director; while the actor is responsible for exploring and revealing his or her color palette only, the director is responsible for a whole big creation process. 

M.B.: Narine, your characters always differ from other characters, and, in addition to being different, they are also loved by the audiences. What is your secret formula? 

N.G.: Perhaps my secret formula is my sincerity and genuineness itself. I never recite a poem if I do not find it relevant, if I do not feel connected to it. Even though, based on my contract, I am responsible for playing any given role, I do not play it if it is not ‘mine.’ When I was younger, people would say they would complain to Sos Sargsyan when I would not take this or that role. Then, Sos Sargsyan would say: “Who is that? Narincho? Oh yeah, leave her alone. She will not play if she does not want to.” 

M.B.: To what extent is it important for the artist to be accepted and loved by the audience? Or is the artist’s personal satisfaction enough?

N.G.: You know, my field is such that there is a very strong connection between the artist and the audience, and that connection is here and now. It is not like music or painting, which can be understood years after the artist’s death; acting is live art, it takes place here and now, and it needs to be understood here and now. They will not see me acting on stage after I die. Moreover, styles change. Today, I would not act or speak like Vahram Papazyan would in the times of the Romanticism movement. As an actress, you need to be interesting in your own time, and, more than that, you need to prove that you were interesting yesterday and are still interesting today and will be tomorrow. It is difficult, as sometimes even after one unsuccessful performance you or the audience might think that you are no longer a good artist today; you were one yesterday, but no longer. When you are an actress, being interesting is a continuous process. In fact, I take everyone’s comments very close to my heart. When I am asked, who is the theater expert on whom I rely and whose word I take seriously, I respond “Everyone.” I listen to everyone’s opinion as I would listen to the most professional expert’s opinion. 

M.B.: In your opinion, is talent born with the person or as a result of hard work? Or maybe both?

N.G.: I would say both. I teach at the Yerevan State Institute of Theatre and Cinematography, and all my students are talented, but not all of them go to the end of the road. Each and every one of them is a flower bud, but not everyone blooms. There are students who are so incredibly talented, I look at them and think they would ‘move mountains’ in theater, but time passes and they take another road; I find out they are now police officers, IT specialists…they have left theater and not come back. At such moments, I realize that being an actor is not just about talent; it’s about character, patience, willpower, love and authenticity. In theater, it’s easy to give up, to be discouraged by a word…“Your voice isn’t that strong for an actor,” “You don’t look nice on the stage,” and so many other negative comments can make someone quit. But those who stay choose to stay not because they want to be liked but because they have something to say, and theater is for them the way and the place to express themselves. They stay and they act because they cannot not act. I come across many actors who want to be liked to the extent that they are no longer authentic. They act in a way to fit in, to please, to be liked. They act not for something greater, not for the divine, but for simply stroking their own egos by being liked by the audience. They don’t succeed, they are not liked, because they are not themselves. They are not authentic. 

M.B.: What does the theater field in Armenia currently lack? If you were given a magic wand that could make any necessary changes in the field, what would your first steps be?

N.G.: In my role as an art director, I realized that theater does not like sudden, abrupt changes. That is because in theater you deal with people, and you cannot simply say, “You are not a good actor. From now on you should not act in theater.” If you work in theater, one of the most important things for you is the other person’s inner world, the other person’s feelings, and therefore you cannot make an abrupt and careless change. To be honest, recently there have been very positive changes in our theater. The creators of soap operas did not understand that they needed to provide the audience with a quality product, and people started going to theaters in search of something of higher quality. Over time, soap operas have undergone a regression in Armenia, while theater has made huge progress, and a proof of that progress is the many awards that we have received in international festivals and competitions. Another positive dynamic is that the individual theaters in Armenia no longer perceive each other as competitors that need to pull each other down but rather as collaborators that can help each other succeed, and the outcome is clearly visible. 

Theater helps us love each other a little bit more. You come and watch another person’s story, and you start to empathize with the other. You start to see beyond yourself, you start to become a part of a “we.”

M.B.: What is the role of art and of theater in particular? How can theater as an artform be used today to change the socio-political situation of the country and the emotional state of the individuals?

N.G.: In general, theater helps us love each other a little bit more. You come and watch another person’s story, and you start to empathize with the other. You start to see beyond yourself, you start to become a part of a “we,” and after that, you start to ache for the people under blockade in Artsakh despite being in Yerevan; you start to ache for the villager whose crops were damaged from the frost, even though you are not from that village and are sitting comfortably in your cozy apartment in the city. Theater helps you understand the other, look at things from someone else’s perspective. Theater helps humans stay human. By being able to do so, theater can have a very important role in people’s lives. 

One of the main issues of our society today is the divide that exists between us. The interesting thing is that we are all fighting for the same goal, for our homeland, but we refuse to see that we can do so in different ways. When one looks and sees “nine,” he or she gets disturbed when someone else points out that it’s not a “nine” but “six.” Both of the sides are right, but they are wrong in refusing to look at the issue from a different angle. Our problem is that we fail to see the other’s perspective, and the role of art is to show that perspective. 

M.B.: There exists an interesting paradox. In wartime, people die, but very powerful works of art are born. It seems that there needs to be some sort of pain that can push people to create, as if there needs to be a gap for art to step in and fill in. Do we need pain to create, or happiness too can inspire us?

N.G.: It was the opposite for me. The losses dulled my willingness to create. I started to think that all I am doing is just drawing butterflies against the backdrop of large-scale happenings. But then you also realize that you might drown in reality without art, and you start looking for an escape, for a source of light, for a place where you can still fly freely. To be honest, after the pandemic and the war, I thought that people would no longer come to the theater, but then I saw more and more people come to our plays. As they were coming, we also felt the responsibility to get ourselves together and continue creating, but it was difficult. For a whole year I couldn’t get myself together, since my entire life was about victories. It was about knowing that Artsakh was mine. It’s my homeland. I knew that to the level of my cells…and suddenly it all collapsed. But on the other hand, when you start looking at it from the lighthearted point of view of an artist, you realize that the loss was just a page. You can turn it and start from a clean, blank page. You just need to not repeat the same mistakes; our history is like a wheel, turning and coming to the same point, as if we are doing something the wrong way, as if we are not learning from our mistakes. 

M.B.: What are some pieces of art that you would recommend to watch today to rediscover the light?

N.G.: I would not give specific names, but in my own artistic work I try to conclude everything with a sense of hope. In one of the plays, at the end the buffalo gives birth to a calf; in another, a suitcase saves the family. In another instance, the loss of the war is followed by the birth of Harutyun (an Armenian name that also means resurrection). There will always be Harutyun. No matter what, our Sasuntsi Davit will be born, and he will help his people stand up again. It’s the epic poem of our nation. It’s in us. It’s us, the Mets Mher in the epic who goes and builds the other’s town. It’s us who have gone and built Baku and Tbilisi while not giving proper attention to our own Yerevan. The continuous mourning is also in our epic poem; when Davit is born and his parents are dead, the grandmother enters her rooms and starts mourning instead of taking care of the newborn child. It’s all us, a bit ‘crooked,’ a bit naive, but also very kind, loving, humorous…These are important characteristics that we need to hold onto and, like in that cartoon, pull from our own hair to get ourselves out of the bog.

M.B.: What has been the best advice that you have received, and what would be your own best advice to young Armenian artists?

N.G.: Do not lose your humor, because humor is that lighthearted gaze that helps you look at the problem from a different perspective, find a solution and get on your feet. Another piece of advice is to never lose your love and keep loving the other. Keep trying to understand and empathize with the people around you. With love, you also manage to keep your patience, your strength, your power. With love, you win. 

Milena Baghdasaryan is a graduate from UWC Changshu China. Since the age of 11, she has been writing articles for a local newspaper named Kanch ('Call'). At the age of 18, she published her first novel on Granish.org and created her own blog, Taghandi Hetqerov ('In the Pursuit of Talent')—a portal devoted to interviewing young and talented Armenians all around the world. Baghdasaryan considers storytelling, traveling and learning new languages to be critical in helping one explore the world, connect with others, and discover oneself. Milena currently studies Film and New Media at New York University in Abu Dhabi.


RFE/RL Armenian Service – 02/06/2024

                                        Tuesday, February 6, 2024


Iran Ready To Help ‘Strengthen’ Armenia, Says Envoy


Armenia - Iranian Ambassador Mehdi Sobhani speaks to journalists, January 11, 
2024.


Iran is interested in seeing Armenia strengthen its position in the region and 
ready to provide “any assistance” for that purpose, the Iranian ambassador in 
Yerevan said on Tuesday.

Mehdi Sobhani also reaffirmed Tehran’s support for the Armenian government’s 
position on transport links with Azerbaijan.

Yerevan proposed late last year a “Crossroads of Peace” project as a blueprint 
for opening the Armenian-Azerbaijani border to travel and commerce. The project 
says that Armenia and Azerbaijan should have full control of transport 
infrastructure inside each other’s territory. Iran’s Foreign Minister Hossein 
Amir-Abdollahian praised it during a December visit to the Armenian capital.

Azerbaijan effectively rejected this formula and renewed its demands for an 
extraterritorial corridor that would connect it to its Nakhichevan exclave 
through Syunik, the only Armenian region bordering Iran. Azerbaijani President 
Ilham Aliyev said in early January that people and cargo should be allowed to 
move through that corridor “without any checks.”

“We welcome and support the Crossroads of Peace project presented by Mr. 
Pashinian,” Sobhani told Armenian journalists and analysts. “That project is 
about maintaining peace and stability in the region and respecting the 
territorial integrity and sovereignty of regional countries. We consider 
Armenia’s position logical and consistent with international norms.”

“We welcome the unblocking of roads but only if that happens on the basis of the 
interests and sovereignty of the regional countries,” the envoy said in comments 
cited by the Armenpress news agency. “We support the strengthening of Armenia 
and the establishment of peace and stability. Only a balance of forces in our 
region will contribute to all that. We are ready to provide any assistance that 
Armenia will need for further development.”

Sobhani indicated Iran’s opposition to the Azerbaijani demands for the so-called 
“Zangezur corridor” backed by Turkey. The Islamic Republic will not tolerate any 
“geopolitical changes” in the South Caucasus, he said, echoing statements 
regularly made by Iranian leaders.

Kamal Kharrazi, a senior adviser to Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali 
Khamenei, also made this clear when he visited Yerevan last week. Pashinian and 
Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan praised Tehran’s stance during their talks with 
Kharrazi.

Armenia’s position on the issue has been criticized by not only Azerbaijan and 
Turkey but also Russia, its longtime ally. Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei 
Lavrov complained on January 18 that Yerevan opposes Russian control of a 
prospective Syunik road and railway leading to Nakhichevan. Lavrov claimed that 
a Russian-brokered agreement that stopped the 2020 war in Nagorno-Karabakh calls 
for “neutral border and customs control” there. Armenian leaders deny this.




‘No Decision Yet’ On Armenian Independence Declaration

        • Ruzanna Stepanian
        • Karlen Aslanian

Armenia - A copy of the 1990 Declaration of Independence.


Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s political team has not yet made a final 
decision on whether to try to remove from Armenia’s constitution any reference 
to a 1990 declaration of independence resented by Azerbaijan, a senior lawmaker 
said on Tuesday.

“I want to make clear that we do not have a final conclusion,” Hayk Konjorian, 
the parliamentary leader of Pashinian’s Civil Contract party, told reporters. 
“It’s still too early to make a final conclusion and raise questions from that 
standpoint.”

Konjorian at the same time stressed: “We must not regard any text as sacrosanct.”

The declaration in turn refers to a 1989 unification act adopted by the 
legislative bodies of Soviet Armenia and the then Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous 
Oblast and calls for international recognition of the 1915 Armenian genocide. It 
is cited in a preamble to the current Armenian constitution adopted in 1995.

Pashinian again criticized the declaration last week, claiming that Armenia 
“will never have peace” with Azerbaijan as long as it is mentioned by the 
constitution. Accordingly, he defended his plans to try to enact a new 
constitution that would presumably make no such reference.

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev said on February 1 that Armenia should remove 
that reference and amend other documents “infringing on Azerbaijan’s territorial 
integrity” if it wants to make peace with his country. Armenian opposition 
leaders portrayed Aliyev’s statement as further proof that Pashinian wants to 
effectively declare the 1990 declaration null and void under pressure from 
Azerbaijan as well as Turkey.

Armenia - Opposition deputy Artur Khachatrian speaks in the Armenian parliament, 
Yerevan, February 6, 2024.

“Aliyev and Pashinian almost simultaneously … presented the same demands to the 
people of Armenia,” one of them, Artur Khachatrian, told RFE/RL’s Armenian 
Service. “It is obvious that Aliyev is thus forcing Pashinian to make 
concessions.”

Konjorian denied that Pashinian wants to change the constitution at the behest 
of Aliyev. Pashinian sounded less categorical on this score in a reportedly 
pre-recorded radio interview broadcast on February 1.

Khachatrian is one of several lawmakers from the main opposition Hayastan 
alliance who have been allowed by the Armenian Foreign Ministry to see in recent 
weeks written proposals regarding an Armenian-Azerbaijani peace treaty exchanged 
by Yerevan and Baku. In a joint statement issued on February 2, the lawmakers 
insisted that the Azerbaijani terms of the treaty are extremely unfavorable for 
the Armenian side.

“I stand by our assertion that the country which presented such proposals to us 
has no desire or intention to sign a peace treaty with us,” Khachatrian insisted 
on Tuesday.

Edmon Marukian, an Armenian ambassador-at-large and political ally of Pashinian, 
likewise charged on February 2 that Baku is not serious about signing the peace 
deal. He said Aliyev’s demands for the constitutional change in Armenia amount 
to a “new precondition.”




Armenia’s Ruling Party To Plead For Release Of Tech CEO

        • Shoghik Galstian

Armenia - Speaker Alen Simonian (left) chairs a session of the Armenian 
parliament, Yerevan, February 6, 2024.


Lawmakers representing Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian’s Civil Contract party 
have decided to ask authorities to release the founder and two current and 
former employees of a major Armenian software company arrested last week on 
corruption charges.

Ashot Hovanesian of the U.S.-registered company Synergy International Systems, 
senior company executive Lili Mkrian and her former colleague Ani Gevorgian were 
indicted in a criminal investigation into what law-enforcement authorities call 
a fraudulent procurement tender organized by the Armenian Ministry of Economy 
last summer.

The tender was invalidated by an Armenian court shortly after being won by 
Synergy. Investigators say the ministry illegally disqualified another 
information technology firm that submitted a much smaller bid. Four ministry 
officials were also detained last week. But unlike Hovanesian, Mkrian and 
Gevorgian, they were set free or moved to house arrest in the following days.

Synergy on Monday rejected the still unpublicized accusations leveled against 
the remaining detainees and demanded their immediate release. The Armenian Union 
of Advanced Technology Enterprises (UATE) also condemned Hovanesian’s arrest 
over the weekend. It said that recent “unfounded” detentions of “business 
representatives and other prominent persons” are turning Armenia into a “risky 
country” for local and foreign tech entrepreneurs.

Hayk Konjorian, the leader of Civil Contract’s party parliamentary group, 
announced on Tuesday that it met late on Monday and decided to petition a court 
to free the Synergy executives pending investigation. He said the pro-government 
parliamentarians will guarantee the suspects’ proper behavior in writing.

Armenia - Deputies from the ruling Civil Contract party attend a session of the 
National Assembly, Yerevan, March 21, 2023.

Konjorian insisted that the decision was not ordered by or coordinated with 
Pashinian. It reflects public reactions to the arrests, rather than the fact 
that one of the suspects, Gevorgian, is the wife of parliament speaker Alen 
Simonian’s brother, he told journalists. He said the pro-government 
parliamentarians also took into account the fact that Gevorgian and Mkrian have 
young children.

One of those deputies, Emma Palian, expressed confidence that Simonian’s 
sister-in-law will be cleared of any wrongdoing.

“Knowing personally Mr. Simonian but not Ms. Gevorgian, I am sure it will emerge 
that the case is baseless and the result of a misunderstanding,” said Palian.

The speaker, who is a senior member of the ruling party, himself has not 
commented on the case so far. But he did make a point of posting on Facebook a 
photo of himself, his brother and Gevorgian right after her arrest.

The fact that one of the detainees is related to Simonian has fueled speculation 
about political motives behind the high-profile case. Some commentators claim 
that Pashinian personally sanctioned the young woman’s arrest in a bid to boost 
his falling approval ratings by showing Armenians that he is serious about 
combatting corruption. Pashinian allies have dismissed such claims.



Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2024 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Novak calls for closer ties with Armenia

Budapest Times, Hungary
Feb 6 2024
Novak calls for closer ties with
Armenia 
Written by BT/MTI 
President Katalin Novak, receiving Armenian counterpart Vahagn Khachaturyan in
Budapest on Tuesday, said ties between the country should be strengthened and "filled
with content".
  During his first official visit to Hungary, the Armenian president and Novak discussed “issues
around peace in the world, Hungary’s efforts to provide humanitarian aid to Armenia,
demographic challenges, bilateral ties, minorities, as well as a European outlook for
Armenia,” Novak said.

Diplomatic ties with Armenia were re-established in 2022, and Khachaturyan is the second
Armenian president to visit Hungary, Novak noted. At their talks, the two presidents also
agreed to launch a cultural cooperation schedule for Hungary and Armenia. 

The agreement signed on behalf of Hungary by Balazs Hanko, the deputy state secretary for
higher education, caters to strengthening bilateral relations in higher education, science,
technology and culture. 
Regarding the Hungary Helps programme, in which Hungary has donated 40 million forints
to Armenian families for medical care, another aspect of the scheme will enable around
1,000 children forced to leave their homes to camp in Hungary. 
The president said the Armenian minority in Hungary, which was awarded government
support of 2 billion forints between 2011 and 2023, was strengthening and developing, and
the community has expanded by 18 percent since 2011.

  

  Trade turnover grew eleven-fold to 29 million dollars over the span of 20 years. Hungary also
offers 30 Stipendium Hungaricum scholarships to Armenian youth, she noted, adding that
Hungary Helps also aids members of persecuted Christian communities. 
Novak pledged its support for Armenia in forging close ties with Europe and advancing visa
liberalisation when it takes over the presidency of the Council of the European Union. 
Meanwhile, asked about Sweden’s NATO accession, Novak said she favoured early
ratification and she had asked the Hungarian MPs to vote for it. She said she had spoken
yesterday with Swedish Prime Minister Ulf Kristersson by phone and encouraged him to visit
Hungary as soon as possible for talks with herself and the prime minister.
  Regarding the political opposition furore over a presidential pardon given to an official
connected with a paedophile, the president said that pedophilia was “disgusting and the
most serious crime”. There would be no pardon for paedophiles during her presidency, she
said, adding that she had led action against child abusers with the introduction of a register
of sex offenders. The justification for the presidential pardon could not be made public for
legal reasons, she said.

Khachaturyan welcomed “a new era in Armenian-Hungarian relations” when the two
countries “have an opportunity to restart ties, which may offer huge opportunities.” 

Meanwhile, he said both Russia and Ukraine have large Armenian communities and “they
are now fighting each other, which is unacceptable.” The Armenian president thanked
Novak for Hungary’s support for ethnic Armenians.
  https://www.budapesttimes.hu/diplomacy/novak-calls-for-closer-ties-with-armenia/
  

Don’t Forget the Armenia Refugees of Artsakh

Feb 6 2024

In September, the Islamic nation of Azerbaijan invaded its neighbor Armenia.


Living in the constant motion of a 24/7 news cycle inevitably pushes certain headlines off the front page. In recent months, that has been the plight of tens of thousands of Armenia refugees flung out of the Nagorno-Karabakh region. In September, neighboring Azerbaijan, an Islamic nation, invaded Armenia and blockaded what Armenians call Artsakh. The region has been a locus of ongoing conflict since the fall of the Soviet Union, but events took a significant turn with the 2023 Azerbaijan offensive.

The result was a massive upheaval for those who call Artsakh home. Since then, fleeing Armenians — the vast majority of whom are Christian — have endured the constant threat of danger and the deprivation that followed.

American diplomat Sam Brownback, a Catholic, called the invasion and offensive a “religious cleansing” against Armenian Christians.

About 90% of the Armenian population as a whole is Christian, according to the U.S. State Department, most of whom are Orthodox, and fewer than 10% Catholic. Armenians proudly call their homeland “the first Christian nation,” referring to King Tiridates III proclaiming Christianity the official religion of the Kingdom of Armenia at the beginning of the fourth century. The Armenian Apostolic Church’s Etchmiadzin Cathedral is frequently cited as the oldest Christian church in the world. Pope Francis visited the historic site in 2016.

When Pope St. John Paul II traveled to Armenia in September 2001 to commemorate the 1,700th anniversary of Christianity in Armenia, he said, “A striking feature of this land are the many crosses in the form of the khachkar, testifying to your steadfast fidelity to the Christian faith.” A khachkar is a specifically Armenian artistic representation of the cross, typically as a free-standing stone monument.

Azerbaijan has routinely led pogroms of destruction against the khachkar over the decades.

There is a tradition in the Armenian Apostolic Church that St. Jude Thaddeus — with St. Bartholomew — evangelized the region, and was eventually martyred in Armenia. This patron saint of impossible causes is thus revered in both Western and Eastern Christianity. In fact, Louis Boettiger’s Armenian Legends and Festivals (1920) chronicles the tale of King Abgar of Edessa, whose kingdom reached modern-day Armenia, and his encounter with the image of Christ “not made by human hands,” delivered to him, the story says, by Jude Thaddeus.

The human catastrophes that have befallen Armenia in recent history, namely the Armenian Genocide and into our own time with the Nagorno-Karabakh Wars — which not a few Armenians view as related events in a longstanding struggle against Turkey — thus take on a sense of urgency for all Christians around the world as their fellow brethren suffer. These days, the urgency is quite palpable: the government of Artsakh agreed to dissolve at the beginning of 2024, forcing ethnic Armenians to seek a new homeland elsewhere with little time to spare.

Little Armenia is a community in East Hollywood named after the Armenians who fled their home in diaspora. The city of Glendale is the nexus for the Armenian population; the Greater Los Angeles area is home to the largest population of Armenians outside Armenia. John Semerdjian, an Armenian-American from the San Pedro area of Los Angeles, is concerned not only with the plight of Armenian refugees slipping from the attention of the general populace, but also that the news media itself has not accurately reported what has transpired in Artsakh.

“I don’t think the news showed what was happening in Armenia,” he told me. “A lot of the news coming from there was blocked from being shown here.” When Hamas attacked Israel on Oct. 7, Semerdjian noticed a distinct shift in the world’s attention. “It’s really sad what’s happening now in Gaza and Israel,” he said. “But imagine all that happening and no one knowing about it. That’s what it felt like regarding Armenia the last few years.”

Semerdjian felt compelled to take action as refugees sought help. “Some people reached out to me to help families with kids living in their cars to get situated for a few months with a place to stay and food to eat.” So through the OKNi Foundation, a charity platform, Semerdjian launched a fundraiser “to extend a helping hand to displaced families as they embark on the courageous journey of rebuilding their lives.”

In 2015, Pope Francis declared St. Gregory of Narek a Doctor of the Church. Venerated as a saint in both the Catholic Church and Armenian Apostolic Church, Francis quoted Gregory, whom he called “the word and voice of Armenia,” during his visit in 2016: “The light of God’s mercy is never clouded by the shadow of indignation.”

Today, there are fellow Christians spurned from their home, forced to wander a dangerous world, hinging their hope on the mercy of God, asking, like God in the Garden:

Adam, who are you? I no longer recognize you.
Who are you, O man?
What have you become?
Of what horror have you been capable?
What made you fall to such depths?
—Pope Francis in Jerusalem, Yad Vashem Memorial, 2014