Pope Francis sends letter to Catholicos Aram I on Armenian Christmas

Papal Nuncio Gabriel Katchea visited His Holiness Aram I, the Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, this morning and handed him a letter from Pope Francis on the occasion of the Armenian Christmas.

His Holiness Aram I expressed gratitude to the Vatican and especially Pope Francis for his full support to the just cause of Armenians on the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.

The interlocutors discussed the developments in the Middle East, the rising tensions between Iran and Saudi Arabia. They stressed the need to prevent the further aggravation of the situation, the results of which could be disastrous to the whole of Middle East.

The parties also discussed the domestic situation in Lebanon with a special focus on the presidential elections.

Juventus plan summer move for Henrikh Mkhitaryan

Juventus could make another effort to sign Borussia Dortmund playmaker Henrikh Mkhitaryan next summer, according to .  

The Armenia international has been one of the stars of the Dortmund team this season and was heavily linked with a move to Juventus last summer, but a deal never happened.

Juventus have continued to monitor his performances this season and according to Sky Italia, while they believe a January move is not possible, the club are ready to take a stab at him again next summer.

The Bianconeri are keen to sign a creative midfielder in the summer and Mkhitaryan is one of the options they could again seriously consider for next season.

Juventus have continued to monitor his performances this season and according to Sky Italia, while they believe a January move is not possible, the club are ready to take a stab at him again next summer.

The Bianconeri are keen to sign a creative midfielder in the summer and Mkhitaryan is one of the options they could again seriously consider for next season.

Mkhitaryan has been in scintillating form for Thomas Tuchel’s Dortmund side this season, but with his contract expiring in 2017, the club could be forced to sell him next summer to earn a respectable fee.

His contract situation gives confidence to Juventus and the club believe they could take the midfielder to Turin for a fee of around €11m next summer.

With 15 goals and 19 assists from 28 appearances this season, the Armenian has been one of the star performers for Dortmund and Juventus want him to wear their colours next term.

He is also the captain of the Armenian national team and has 56 caps to his name.

Syriac Church leaders angered by Islamic State attack in Syria

Syriac [Assyrian] church leaders denounced the year-end terrorist attack that targeted Christian-owned restaurants in Qamishli, Syria, reports.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the Dec. 30 attack, which killed 20 people, 13 of them Christian, and injured more than 40.

“Most victims were young people willing to welcome the New Year with hope and joy,” Syriac Catholic Patriarch Ignatius Joseph III Younan told Catholic News Service from the patriarchate in Beirut. Instead, he said, “In tears and gloomy hope, Christians of Qamishli welcomed 2016.”

“It was a sinister message the terrorists wanted to send to the Christians of this city, sowing death and tears,” the patriarch said of the “unprecedented terrorist massacre … a message of horror so far to the entire Christian community in this war-torn country for the past five years.”

Prior to the conflict that is tearing apart Syria, Christians in Qamishli, located in northeast Syria near the Turkish border, numbered about 40,000.

“Now they surely are less than half,” Patriarch Younan said of the continuing exodus and fatalities. “Now, after this massacre, our fear is that the emigration of Christians will go further and in larger numbers.”

Christians in the patriarch’s hometown of Hassakeh, 52 miles away, previously numbered about 35,000. He said probably only about half remain. The patriarch added that hundreds of families from the countryside had been headed to cities like Qamishli and Hassakeh.

“It is really frightening development of the situation. The young generation seem to have no more hope in the future,” he said.

In a statement from the patriarchate in Damascus, Syria, Syrian Orthodox Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem II, who was born in Qamishli, denounced the attack, saying: “The old people weep, the young are losing hope and the children’s joy is wiped away.”

“The enemy of humanity is spreading its power everywhere in our beloved Middle East, seeking to destroy the homes of the children of God and to lead them astray,” Patriarch Ignatius Aphrem said.

“What god do these suicide bombers worship? What religion do they follow?” the patriarch asked, emphasizing that “they use blood, slaughter, and killing as a way to please their god.”

“Where are the people of good conscience to act against these attacks? Is it not time to wake up from their deep sleep and to do all that is possible to protect the remaining people in this region, whose sole concern is to live in peace in their homeland? Is it not the fit time to unite and collectively fight all forms of terrorism and extremism?” he asked.

The funerals of the 13 Christian Qamishli victims Dec. 31 were an ecumenical ceremony concelebrated by Syriac Catholic Archbishops Gregorios Elias Tabe of Damascus and Jacque Behnan Hindo of Hassakeh, a Syriac Orthodox bishop and several members of Armenian Catholic and Orthodox clergy, which Patriarch Younan referred to as “a witness of communion that Christians of the Middle East continue to give, living ‘the ecumenism of blood,’ as Pope Francis has repeatedly said.”

In Beirut Dec. 31, the Syriac and Armenian Catholic patriarchs, bishops and priests of different denominations, including Orthodox, gathered to offer prayers for the victims.

“We pray to the Lord to end this tragedy: Enough of this terrorism, enough is enough,” Patriarch Younan said at the ceremony. “We invite and urge decision-makers in the world to work on security and restoring peace and tranquility in the world, especially in our East, especially in Syria and Iraq.”

AMAA helps create an oasis of peace in a desert of armed struggle

Photo:  Studio Venus

 

Asbarez – On Friday, December 25 2015, in a festive atmosphere, families from Emmanuel, Bethel, Martyrs’ and Syriac churches gathered in Bethel Church to celebrate Christmas in the Church’s “Poladian” Hall.  The program started with welcoming words from Maria Boshgezenian as well as a greeting with a short message from Rev. Haroutune Selimian, President of the Armenian Evangelical Community in Syria.  “The New Year brings new hope to our lives, the hope that something will change for the better.  As the old year comes to an end and the New Year unfolds we will thus feel renewed with new hope and promises of something good and beautiful things to come” said Rev. Selimian.

The celebration reached its climax when Santa Claus arrived, and with the financial support of the Armenian Missionary Association of America (AMAA) distributed gifts of pajamas to family members.  At the conclusion of the event Sona Keosgherian, on behalf of the Armenian Evangelical Social Action Committee, thanked Rev. Selimian for his steadfast support to the Armenian Community in Syria.

The following day, Rev. Selimian, along with Pastor Simon Der Sahagian and some members of the Church visited the Armenian Old People’s Home at “Gulbenkian Hospital” in Nor Kyugh, Aleppo. Rev.  Selimian warmly greeted the residents of the home and with his encouraging words wished them a Blessed Christmas and a healthy and peaceful year.  With the financial support of the AMAA, gifts were distributed to the elderly.

The same day, Rev. Selimian along with a few members of the Church also visited the Armenian Orphanage in Nor Kyugh.  In attendance were the Board of Trustees of the Armenian Orphanage and the children of people martyred during the Syrian Civil war.  During the meeting, Rev. Selimian thanked the board members for their devoted service and care towards these orphans and distributed gifts which were made possible through the support of the AMAA.

Kuwait recalls ambassador from Tehran

Kuwait has announced it is recalling its ambassador to Iran as a regional row over the execution of a Shia cleric in Saudi Arabia deepens, the BBC reports.

Saudi Arabia’s embassy in Tehran was ransacked and set alight on Saturday, after it executed Shia Muslim cleric Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr and 46 others.

Saudi Arabia broke off diplomatic ties with Iran in response, followed on Monday by its allies Bahrain and Sudan.

The US, UN and Turkey are among those calling for calm in the region.

Sunni Muslim Saudi Arabia and Shia Iran are major rivals for power in the Middle East and back opposing sides in the conflicts in Syria and Yemen.

Kuwait’s announcement, which was carried on the state-run Kuwait News Agency, did not explain exactly how Kuwait-Iran diplomatic relations would be affected, reports said.

Five Armenians awarded France’s highest honor

Two French-Armenians historians, Anahide Ter Minassian and Raymond Kevorkian, are among five Armenian recipients of the French Legion of Honor (Ordre national de la Légion d’honneur), the highest decoration in France, in 2015, the reports.

By decree of French President Francois Hollande dated Dec. 31, 2015, the Grand Chancellor of the National Order of the Legion of Honour published the names of the honorees, which also include Professor Serge Nazarian, and pharmacist and former president of the Armenian Association for Social Assistance André Yédikardachian.

Armenian-American professor Mark Moogalian, the first passenger to tackle a gunman aboard an Amsterdam-Paris train on Aug. 21, 2015, was awarded the Legion of Honor in September 2015.

Ter Minassian, whose work focuses on modern Armenian history, teaches at l’École des hautes études en sciences sociales (School for Advanced Studies in the Social Sciences) and the Pantheon-Sorbonne University. Ter Minassian has published several books about Armenia and the Armenian Genocide, including La question arménienne (The Armenian Question) in 1983; 1918-1920-La République d’Arménie (1918-1920-The Republic of Armenia) in 1989; Histoires croisées: diaspora, Arménie, Transcaucasie (Intersecting histories: Diaspora, Armenia, Transcaucasia) in 1997; and Smyrne, la ville oublié: Mémoires d’un grand port ottoman, 1830-1930(Smyrna, The Forgotten City: Memories of a Great Ottoman Port, 1830-1930) in 2006.

Kévorkian is a lecturer at the University of Paris VIII: Vincennes–Saint-Denis, and serves as research director at the French Institute of Geopolitics (Institut Français de Géopolitique). Kevorkian is also the director of Paris’s Nubarian Library and the editor ofRevue d’Histoire arménienne contemporaine (The Journal of Contemporary Armenian History). In 2006, Kevorkian published The Armenian Genocide: A Complete History, the first book on the Armenian Genocide to make extensive use of the archives of the Nubarian Library. In 2010, he received the Presidential Award from Armenian President Serge Sarkisian in recognition of his scholarly work in Armenian history.

On Sept. 13, 2015, Armenian-American Mark Moogalian, the 51-year-old Sorbonne professor who was identified by the UK’s the Daily Telegraph as the first passenger to tackle gunman Ayoub El-Khazzani on Aug. 21 aboard an Amsterdam-Paris train, was awarded the French Legion of Honor by French President Francois Hollande.

During the high-speed train ride, Moogalian tackled El-Khazzani, who was armed with an AK-47 assault rifle. It is reported that he instinctively acted to protect his wife, Isabella Risacher, and managed to take the assault rifle away from El-Khazzani. The assailant drew another gun and shot Moogalian in the neck, revealed the professor’s sister, who was also on the train. Moogalian’s heroism, along with the actions of Americans Alek Skarlatos, Spencer Stone, and Anthony Sadler, and Briton Chris Norman, helped save many lives. Skarlatos, Stone, Sadler, and Norman were awarded the Legion of Honor soon after the attack. Hollande had announced he would award Moogalian the Legion of Honor once he had recuperated.

The French Legion of Honor, established by Napoleon Bonaparte in 1802, is awarded for excellent civil or military conduct.

ANCA WR announces establishment of ‘Walter and Laurel Karabian Foundation for Public Policy’

The Armenian National Committee of America – Western Region proudly announced the official establishment of the Walter and Laurel Karabian Foundation for Public Policy. Housed under the ANCA-WR, the Foundation will be the first Sacramento based fellowship program of its kind with the goal of preparing the next generation of Armenian-American policy leaders.

“The ANCA-WR has been looking to establish such a program in Sacramento for many years, and Mr. Karabian’s generosity has finally enabled us to do so. Throughout his life, Mr. Karabian has mentored countless young individuals, paving the way and guiding them in their pursuit of higher education, community service and public office, and it is only fitting that his legacy and work continue through this fellowship program,” noted ANCA WR Chair Nora Hovsepian. “We are grateful to Mr. Karabian for entrusting us with this unique program that will serve our community for generations to come and will empower our youth to seek careers in public policy,” added Hovsepian.

Initially announced in late October in front of over 1,400 supporters, donors, and activists during the ANCA-WR Annual Gala Banquet where the Honorable Walter Karabian was honored with the ANCA WR Legacy Award, the fellowship program is geared toward recent college graduates and is made possible by the Karabian family’s generous funding.

“Having been a legislator and leading a productive life in politics, I know firsthand the value of programs that will develop the next generation of leaders,” stated Karabian. “The ANCA-WR is the leading Armenian advocacy organization and has a strong track record of deliverables, which include internship and externship programs for the youth in the community. For this reason, it is my honor to help plant the seeds for a much needed public policy program for our youth in the Golden State’s Capital. I am confident that under the supervision of the ANCA-WR, this program will expand and flourish in coming years to produce a generation of new policy leaders,” added Karabian.

“It has been a wonderful, productive, and glorious life for me, and I gratefully accept this honor. Do I have any regrets? Yes, several, but only two loom large in my memory. I wish my wonderful wife Laurel could be with us tonight. Having left us a year ago, she would have loved this evening and the continuation of the Armenian Nationalism of her father, Arshag Dickranian. I also regret the fact that I was not persuasive enough to convince George Deukmejian to pardon Hampig Sassounian.”
—Walter Karabian speaking at the ANCA-WR 2015 Anuual Banquet

The year-long fellowship will be divided into two six month long phases. During the first six months, fellows will work on public policy related matters in Sacramento ranging from state office holders and administrative offices, to non-profit organizations, advocacy groups, labor unions and consulting firms. During the second six months, fellows will work exclusively for one legislator in the Assembly or Senate.

In addition to the projects assigned to them by supervisors at the various offices or agencies, fellows will be required to attend networking events and weekly seminars throughout the year, providing professional training, networking skills, and opportunities to meet other professionals within the public policy sector.

Participants will need to make a commitment of at least one year and will be provided a stipend to assist with housing and living costs.

Applications and additional details will soon be forthcoming.

Born in Fresno, California, Walter Karabian is the oldest son of John Karabian and Zevart Shishmanian. Karabian’s paternal family arrived in Fresno in 1896 from Bitlis, and his maternal family was from Dikranagert in Turkish-occupied Armenia.

Karabian graduated from Roosevelt High School in Fresno and later continued his education at the University of Southern California, where he earned a Bachelor of Arts in History, a Masters Degree in Public Administration and a Juris Doctorate from USC Law School. He was also elected Junior Class President and Student Body President, becoming one of the most successful graduates in that era.

“Little Zevart Shishmanian was walking to school on her first day in rural Sanger, California, 1916. When she arrived at Bethel School, she could not understand her teacher and her teacher could not understand her. Frustrated with a lack of options, the teacher put her in a class for the mentally retarded. She fought her way out ofthat class with a determination to be an excellent English speaker. When Zevart married Hovhannes Karabian in Fresno, they became John and Gladys Karabian. She gave her children the names Walter, Lawrence and Patricia, and she refused to speak Armenian in the house in front of her children. The scarring from the episode in rural Bethel School was deep and permanent. When I arrived in the legislature in 1967, having heard these stories from my youth, one of the first pieces of legislation I introduced was if you were going to test somebody for IQ purposes, you had to test them in their home language. Governor Reagan signed it into law and the burden of being forced to provide IQ testing in the home language was so great that the IQ test was quickly phased out of existence.”

After completing his education, Karabian served as Deputy District Attorney for Los Angeles County for two years. Soon after, Karabian became an active political figure in the Democratic Party and focused on a career in politics. In 1966, he was one of the youngest men to ever be elected to the California State Assembly and only the third American-Armenian to be elected to public office in the history of the United States.

While a member of the Legislature, Karabian published various articles and gained a reputation as a significant legal author as well as Legislator. He made substantial contributions to the development of California law concerning crime, prison reform, education, civil rights, free speech, and the preservation of endangered species in California. Notably, Karabian used his influence to bring awareness to the Armenian Genocide in California. In 1967, at a time when most people were not aware of the Genocide, Karabian authored the first resolution commemorating the Armenian Genocide in the State Assembly, paving the way for future successes through the community’s activism, including for Armenian Genocide recognition and education.

In 1972, Karabian introduced California’s ratification of the Equal Rights Amendment which was designed to guarantee equal rights to women. Karabian also authored the first Freedom Act protecting sources of news information, the Endangered Species Act, which preceded the National Endangered Species Act.

Based on the trauma endured by his mother when she was wrongly labeled as being mentally retarded as a child simply because she was unable to successfully take IQ tests in school because English was her second language, Karabian utilized his position in Sacramento to introduce legislation requiring that child IQ testing be completed in the child’s native language.

In 1972, he was selected to serve in the powerful position of Majority Leader. At the time, he was only 33 years old and became the youngest Majority Leader in California’s history. Later, he would become a member of the important Rules Committee.

Following the devastating 1988 earthquake in Armenia, all Armenian organizations in California joined together in a historic coalition to rush aid to our crippled Nation. Karabian was chosen as Chairman of the coalition which came to be known as the United Coordinating Committee for Armenian Earthquake Relief.

Continuing his life-long dedication to service, he is a Trustee of the George Ignatius Foundation. Since 1985, Karabian and his Co-Trustees of the George Ignatius Foundation have been responsible for donating discretionary fun
ds to Armenian organizations totaling over $5 million dollars.

Karabian’s dedication to the Armenian Cause is well-known throughout the world and has had a lasting impact over the Armenian community. In addition to countless other initiatives, Karabian is a founding member of the Armenian Bar Association and the Armenian Film Foundation.

Along with his partner John Karns, Karabian’s law firm earned a reputation for its political networks and legal aptitude, expending its time and resources to assist various institutions throughout the Armenian community by providing legal representation to ANCHA (American National Committee to Aid Homeless Armenians), the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, AGBU, Holy Martyrs Armenian Ferrahian High School, Armenian Mesrobian School, and the Arshag Dickranian Armenian School where Karabian’s children attended.

Karabian has served on the USC Law Center’s Board of Councilors, is a life member of Legion Lex at the USC Law School, a life member of Scapa Praetors at the School of Public Administration, a life member of USC’s Presidential Associates, a member of the Widney Society for the million dollar donors at USC, and is a Pepperdine University Life Endowed Associate.

In 1988, Karabian married Laurel Dickranian at St. Sarkis Armenian Church in London. They were blessed with a daughter Madeline Araxie who is a senior at USC, double- majoring in Italian and Television Writing. His other children are Benjamin Karabian who is the Supervising Deputy City Attorney for Central Criminal Trials in the City of Los Angeles and Katharine Sarine Giovanardi. After 28 memorable years of marriage, Karabian lost his life partner when Laurel sadly passed away in late 2014. Laurel was the youngest daughter of benefactors Mr. and Mrs. Arshag and Eleanor Dickranian of Beverly Hills whose resourcefulness and dedication have positively impacted nearly every major Armenian organization both locally and abroad.

 

Obama: U.S. needs ‘sense of urgency’ to fight gun violence

President Barack Obama said Tuesday that despite his executive actions bypassing Congress on guns, lawmakers still need to address the issue, CNN reports.

“Congress still needs to act,” Obama said from the White House, surrounded by victims of gun violence and their families. “The folks in this room will not rest until Congress does. Because once Congress gets on board with common-sense gun safety measures, we can reduce gun violence a whole lot.”

“But we also can’t wait,” Obama added. “Until we have the Congress that’s in line with the majority of Americans, there are actions within my legal authority that we can take to help reduce gun violence and save more lives.”

12:04 p.m. – Obama defended his actions to strengthen background checks for purchasing guns, answering critics who say the measure would not make it harder for criminals to obtain firearms.

“Each time this comes up, we are fed the excuse that common-sense reforms like background checks might not have stopped the last massacre, or the one before that, or the one before that, so why bother trying,” Obama said. “I reject that thinking.”

“We know we can’t stop every act of violence, every act of evil in the world. But maybe we could try to stop one act of evil, one act of violence,” he added.

France’s Hollande honors Charlie Hebdo victims

President Francois Hollande has unveiled plaques to the victims of last January’s jihadist attacks in Paris as anniversary commemorations begin, the BBC reports.

Seventeen people died in three days of attacks targeting Charlie Hebdo magazine, police and a kosher store.

The first plaque was unveiled on Tuesday outside the former offices of Charlie Hebdo, where 12 people were shot dead.

However it was immediately covered up as onlookers expressed shock that the name of one of the victims, Georges Wolinski, had been spelt incorrectly with a Y.

Mr Hollande then took part in further ceremonies for a policeman killed as he chased the Charlie Hebdo attackers, and at the Jewish supermarket in eastern Paris where four shoppers died.

OSCE MG plans new meeting of Armenian, Azerbaijan Presidents: Warlick

After more than a year without a meeting, it was important for the presidents of Azerbaijan and Armenia to talk face-to-face and clarify their positions in Bern, the US co-chair of the OSCE Minsk Group James Warlick told Trend.

The President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan and the President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev held a summit Dec.19 in Bern under the auspices of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group (Ambassadors Igor Popov of the Russian Federation, James Warlick of the United States of America, and Pierre Andrieu of France).

Although the sides didn’t achieve any breakthrough in Bern, the co-chairs will aim to bring the presidents together again in 2016, Warlick said.

The sides discussed a range of issues, including violence along the line of contact and Armenia-Azerbaijan border and proposals regarding a settlement of the conflict, he said.

“In the meantime, the co-chairs will continue their work with the foreign ministers on proposals regarding a settlement, measures to reduce the risk of violence, and programs to promote dialogue between the communities of Nagorno-Karabakh,” Warlick said.

The diplomat went on to add that the position of the OSCE MG regarding the conflict hasn’t changed.

The United States fully supports the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs’ efforts to mediate a lasting settlement to the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, Warlick said.

“We urge the sides to approach the upcoming summit constructively and use the opportunity to make progress towards a settlement,” he said.