ANCA advocates bring community message of peace, prosperity and justice to Capitol Hill

The first day of the Armenian National Committee of America’s (ANCA) grassroots advocacy Fly-In campaign concluded this evening with a standing-room-only Capitol Hill program featuring Congressional speeches, inspiring remarks by Armenia’s Ambassador and Nagorno Karabakh’s Permanent Representative, and a moving keynote address by the director of Stepanakert’s Lady Cox Rehabilitation Center – a regional clinic in urgent need of U.S. support.
House Intelligence Committee Ranking Democrat Adam Schiff (D-CA), Armenian American Congresswoman Jackie Speier (D-CA), and Representatives Judy Chu (D-CA) and Jim Langevin (D-RI) were among House Members offering powerful remarks regarding ongoing grassroots efforts to support peace, prosperity and justice.
Armenian Ambassador to the U.S. Grigor Hovhannissian and Artsakh’s Permanent Representative to the U.S. Robert Avetisyan shared the Armenian nation’s efforts to foster regional peace and stressed the vital role of expanded ties with the United States.  Offering impromptu remarks was Montebello, CA Mayor Jack Hadjinian, who shared his cities’ efforts to assist Artsakh through a special sister-city relationship with its capital, Stepanakert.  In his keynote remarks, Lady Cox Rehabilitation Center Director Vardan Tadevosyan discussed the life-changing work of the internationally renowned program which helps over 1,000 adults and children with disabilities annually.
Tadevosyan traveled to Washington DC to join with ANCA advocates from throughout the U.S. who are participating in two full days of meetings with Congressional leaders on a host of community concerns, with special focus on expanded U.S. aid to Artsakh and Armenia; the implementation of Royce-Engel proposals for Artsakh peace; passage of the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution (H.Res.154);  and support for a State Department determination of genocide in describing the ISIL / Da’esh attacks against Christians, Yezidis and other minorities in the Middle East.  A resolution, H.Con.Res. 7
5, led by Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE) and Anna Eshoo (D-CA) condemning the genocide was adopted unanimously on Monday evening.  Secretary of State Kerry’s statement on the issue is expected later this week.
On Wednesday, March 16th, advocates will continue with a full day of meetings culminating in a reception at the Embassy of the Republic of Armenia.
The ANCA kicked off the week of grassroots activism with a national Congressional Call-In Day, with thousands of community calls advocating the peace, prosperity and justice message reaching Capitol Hill.
Complete coverage of the Capitol Hill Program and Congressional meetings to follow.
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Armenian-Cypriot high-level talks

Armenia fully supports efforts to solve the Cyprus problem on the basis of United Nations’ resolutions, President Serzh Sargsyan said on Tuesday.

The Armenian president headed a delegation on an official visit to Cyprus.

Following a tete-a-tete meeting with his Cypriot counterpart Nicos Anastasiades, three agreements between the two countries were signed.

The first was an intergovernmental agreement for the mutual recognition of diplomas of study, while the other two were cooperation programmes for Education and Sciences, as well as Culture, for the period 2016-2020.

The agreements were signed by Cypriot Education minister Costas Kadis, and Armenian Education minister Levon Mkrtchyan and Culture minister Hasmik Poghosyan.

Speaking after the signing, both Anastasiades and Sargsyan praised the level of bilateral relations between the two countries.

The Armenian president welcomed the support Cyprus has shown his country, evident in the visits by both Anastasiades and House Speaker Yiannakis Omirou, as well as the voting of a resolution by Cypriot parliament for the criminalisation of denying the Armenian genocide.

Sargsyan also thanked the people of Cyprus for reaffirming their support and solidarity to the Armenian people on the centennial anniversary of the Armenian genocide last year.

He added that he appreciates Cyprus’ position on the issue of Nagorno-Karabakh, and noted that his country supports a solution of the Cyprus problem on the basis of UN resolutions.

“I hope there won’t be any obtrusive interfering, and that President Anastasiades’ systematic efforts will yield results soon,” Sargsyan said.

Anastasiades said the two men informed each other on the Cyprus problem and the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute.

“What we are after is a solution that is imbued by the principles of the European Union, fully protecting the human rights of all its residents, Greek Cypriot or Turkish Cypriot,” Anastasiades said.

“What is being sought is not a solution that leaves winners and losers, but one that creates prospects for the future of everyone living in Cyprus.”

Anastasiades pointed out that the brotherly bonds between Cyprus and Armenia are primarily affirmed by the active presence of the Armenian community in Cyprus, which, although harmoniously assimilated into Cypriot culture, continues to honour its own culture, heritage, language and religious identity.

He added that Cyprus is a steadfast supporter of the strengthening of Armenia’s ties with the European Union in every aspect of cooperation.

Anastasiades assured his Armenian counterpart that Cyprus looks forward to further strengthening relations between Cyprus and Armenia, which are “not merely close and sincere, but primarily fraternal”.

Following the speeches, Anastasiades hosted a dinner in honour of the Armenian president.

Armenia ranked 121st in World Happiness Report 2016

Armenia is ranked 121st among 156 countries in the released today. Denmark is still the happiest country in the world followed by Switzerland and Iceland. The top ten also includes Norway, Finland, Canada, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Australia and Sweden.

Armenia’s neighbors are ranked as follows: Georgia – 126th, Azerbaijan – 81st, Turkey – 78th, Iran – 105th.

Our partners in the Eurasian Economic Union Kazakhstan and Russia are placed  54th and 56th respectively, Belarus is 61st, Kyrgyzstan – 85th.

The World Happiness Report 2016 Update prepared by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network (SDSN) and the Earth Institute at Columbia University looked at data recording how highly people evaluate their lives on a scale running from 0 to 10. The rankings are based on surveys in 156 countries covering the three years 2013-2015.

The World Happiness Report 2016 Update, which ranks 156 countries by their happiness levels, was released today in Rome in advance of UN World Happiness Day, March 20th.

41 civilians dead in coalition raids on Yemen market

Photo: Al-Masirah

 

At least 41 Yemeni civilians were killed when Saudi-led coalition warplanes hit a market Tuesday in the rebel-held northern Hajja province, medics and tribal sources said, AFP reports.

An official at a hospital run by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) said the facility had received the bodies of 41 people killed in the raids, along with 35 people who were wounded.

A health official in Hajja said the casualties were civilians and included children, adding that “the toll could rise”.

Local officials and tribal sources told AFP that coalition warplanes carried out several raids on the market in the town of Mustabaa.

Sargsyan, Tsipras meet in Athens

The President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan met with the Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras on Tuesday morning, as part of his official visit in Greece, according to Greece.com.

Our people know what it is to be refugees, to be uprooted… we are on the first line of humanism to address the crisis. I want to believe that the truce in Syria will stop the flow of people. Our countries face these challenges with the head high” the Greek PM said during the meeeting with the Armenian President.

“We’ve had long-standing ties with Armenia. Today, I welcomed President S. Sargsyan, to further deepen our relations,” the GReek PM tweeted. 

President Serzh Sargsyan, who is in Greece on official visit, today laid a wreath at the monument dedicated to the victims of the Armenian Genocide located at the Nea Smyrni Square in Athens and accompanied by the representatives of the Armenian community, clergy and Armenian cadets, who receive military education in Greece, paid tribute to the memory of the victims.

Later, at the government building the President of Armenia had a meeting with the Prime Minister of Greece Alexis Tsipras. Serzh Sargsyan and Alexis Tsipras stressed the importance of deepening the mutually beneficial cooperation in a number of areas – trade and economy, agriculture, culture, education, health care, tourism and others, as well as the necessity to encourage investments and contacts between the representatives of business circles and with this regard highlighted the role of the intergovernmental commission. Prime Minister Tsipras assessed as promising the development of the trilateral Iran-Greece-Armenia cooperation, considering warm and friendly relations between the Republic of Armenia and the Islamic Republic of Iran. He noted that his country has a good experience of such trilateral cooperation in the Greece-Cyprus-Israel and Greece-Cyprus-Egypt formats, which in his assessment, are functioning efficiently. The Prime Minister noted that Greece also sees opportunities in cooperation between the EU and EEU and would like to bring his participation to the process. On behalf of his country, the Prime Minister of Greece expressed readiness to support the development of the Armenia-EU relations, bringing to a successful conclusion negotiations on a new Armenia-EU legal document on cooperation. Along with the discussions on the bilateral agenda items, the President of Armenia and Prime Minister of Greece exchanged views on current international problems, challenges, as well as regional developments. Presenting the position of his country regarding current international problems, Alexis Tsipras underscored that they must be solved through peaceful means, based on the norms of international law. He also underlined that Greece supports a peaceful resolution of the NK problem through negotiations in the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group and would like to see a peaceful, secure and stable development of the region.

After the private meeting of the President of Armenia and Prime Minister of Greece, there took place extended negotiations with the participation of the official delegations. At the conclusion of the discussions, the parties signed a number of documents aimed at the development and deepening of the Armenian-Greek cooperation in a number of areas. In particular, signed were the Program of Cooperation between the Ministry of Health of the Republic of Armenia and Ministry of Health of the Hellenic Republic in the area of Health Care and Medical Aid for 2016-2018, Action Plan of Cooperation between the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Armenia and Government of the Hellenic Republic for 2016-2020, Program of Cooperation between the Government of the Republic of Armenia and Government of the Hellenic Republic on Cooperation in the area of Education and Research for 2016-2020.

President Serzh Sargsyan and Prime Minister of Greece Alexis Tsipras recapped the results of the negotiations with the joint statements for the representatives of mass media.

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Statement by President Serzh Sargsyan at the meeting with the representatives of mass media after his meeting with Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras

Your Excellency,
Ladies and Gentlemen,

First, allow me to express gratitude to you personally, Mr. Prime Minister, President Pavlopoulos and of course to the brotherly Greek people for this special reception. Each time I visit Greece, I feel exceptional warmth. There is no doubt that that warmth is emanating from the friendship of our two peoples which withstood the test of centuries and today has become the cornerstone of our interstate relations. I should mention with satisfaction that in the course of my visit, I have had very open and constructive discussions with my Greek partners – President Pavlopoulos and Prime Minister Tsipras. We have discussed the entire agenda of the Armenian-Greek relations and prospects of cooperation. We have registered with pleasure that our approaches in bilateral as well as with on regional and international issues mainly coincide. At the same time, we agreed that we should do more in bilateral as well as multilateral formats to give a new impetus and new quality to our relations. We stressed the importance of the documents signed in the framework of the visit, which are aimed at deepening of our cooperation in the areas of health care, medicine, culture, education and research. These are areas in which our countries have competitive advantage which means that we should work hard to use it. We also agreed that unfortunately in our bilateral agenda the weakest link is the trade and economic area which undoubtedly is conditioned by objective reasons. I told Mr. Tsipras that we are watching closely efforts by the Greek governments aimed at addressing the existing problems. We are confident that your country will overcome all obstacles. Armenia is greatly interested in the economic and political stability and advancement of the friendly Greece. We noted with satisfaction that military area has become a traditional area of our cooperation, and today we continue to expand our cooperation. Taking this opportunity, I would like to thank the Government of Greece for the years-long consistent assistance in the area of civil and military education. In last twenty years, over 200 Armenian servicemen and officers have been trained in Greece. This is the basis which allows to register new success in this area. We should never depart from the idea that security of our two nations is interlinked.
Of course cooperation with Greece is important in the context of Armenia-EU all-inclusive cooperation since the European Union continues to be one of the most important partners for Armenia with regard to the implementation of the reforms; EU is also a major trade partner for Armenia. We are also grateful for the assistance provided in this axis.

We attach special importance to the balanced position of Greece in the resolution of the NK issue and support to the continuous efforts of the Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group. There is no doubt that the Armenian community of Greece has a great role in the preservation of the incessant Armenian-Greek friendship. We will never forget assistance of the brotherly Greek people which lent a helping hand to the Armenians who survived in the Genocide and provided them with the opportunity to live and create in their new Fatherland. I also highly value Greece’s principled position on the recognition and condemnation of that horrendous crime. On the eve of the 100th anniversary of our national tragedy, Greece reiterated its pledge adopting the resolution on Fight Against Racism and Xenophobia (September 9, 2014), which also criminalized the denial of the Armenian Genocide sending an exemplary message to the world. In its turn, the National Assembly of Armenia in 2015 unanimously adopted a Declaration on the Condemnation of the Genocides of Greeks and Assyrians in the Ottoman Empire. This is a vivid manifestation of the fact that the spirit of solidarity continues to unite our two nations. Centuries long spiritual and cultural commonalities of our two nations are testified to by the Armenia: The Spirit of Ararat Exhibition opened in the framework of my visit at the Byzantine and Christian Museum in Athens. Events like these are important for the preservation of the spirit of friendship and from the viewpoint of passing it on to future generations. From this viewpoint it is also essential to conduct high-level reciprocal visits. In this context, I have invited Mr. Tsipras to visit Armenia. I am very glad that he accepted the invitation, and we once again referred to the significance of a constant work towards solidifying our friendship. Friendship ought to be nourished and enhanced, and frequent meetings are a means to achieve that.

I once again express my thanks for the warm welcome.

Borussia Dortmund charged by Uefa after Tottenham fans injured in crush

Photo: Getty Images

 

Borussia Dortmund have been charged by Uefa after 17 Tottenham fans were injured in a crush before last week’s Europa League first leg, The Guardian reports.

Fans were hurt as they struggled to enter the Westfalenstadion before the last-16 game and Uefa has opened disciplinary proceedings against the German club.

Uefa’s control, ethics and disciplinary body has charged Dortmund with blocking stairways at the ground, which would breach Article 38 of the safety and security regulations. The case will be heard on 19 May.

Spurs fans were treated for injuries caused by police pepper spray while another reportedly had to be carried away on a stretcher.

The congestion developed as supporters were redirected towards a different entrance into the stadium shortly before kick-off.

Dortmund police said the late arrival of Spurs fans had created unexpected pressure on the entrances, which had to be temporarily closed.

A statement read: “In order to prevent an uncontrolled entrance of the followers of Tottenham, pepper spray and baton was used by the police, in which 17 English supporters were slightly injured due to eye irritation. Furthermore, a police officer and five employees of the security service were wounded in the course of these measures.”

Tottenham lost the last 16 match 3-0, with the second leg to be played at White Hart Lane on Thursday.

Armenia: The Spirit of Ararat exhibition opens in Greece – Photos

“Armenia: The Spirit of Ararat” exhibition opened at the Byzantine and Christian Museum of Athens on the eve. The opening ceremony was attended by the Presidents of Armenia and Greece, Serzh Sargsyan and Prokopis Pavlopoulos.

More than 100 items on display present Armenia – from Bronze Age to the 20th century. The artifacts are unique findings excavated exceptionally from the current territory of the Republic of Armenia, high-value samples of architecture and sculpture, unique items used for worship and ritual, as well as manuscripts and examples of applied art from different historical- ethnographical periods.

The exhibition consists of three parts – “The Fascination and Power of Armenian Civilization,” “Armenia in a changing world,” and “Appeal to posterity” (dedicated to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide.”

NKR President meets with Flemish MPs

On 15 March Artsakh Republic President Bako Sahakyan received a group of Flemish parliamentarians of the Kingdom of Belgium at the head of deputy chairman of the Belgian Senate Karl Vanlouwe to discuss a range of issues related to the development of bilateral relations.

President Sahakyan highlighted the deepening of the Artsakh-Flanders ties from economic, political and humanitarian perspectives, pointing to the presence of favorable conditions for expanding cooperation.

During the meeting President Sahakyan awarded Heghine Evinyan, EU officer of the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy with the ”Gratitude” medal, rating high her patriotic activity.

Deputy chairman of the NKR National Assembly Vahram Balayan, foreign minister Karen Mirzoyan, head of the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy Gaspar Karapetyan and other officials partook at the meeting.

Ani: The empire the world forgot

Ani – the City of 1,001 Churches –  is now an eerie, abandoned city of ghosts

By Joseph Flaherty

An abandoned city of ghosts
Ruled by a dizzying array of kingdoms and empires over the centuries – from the Byzantines to the Ottomans – the city of Ani once housed many thousands of people, becoming a cultural hub and regional power under the medieval Bagratid Armenian dynasty. Today, it’s an eerie, abandoned city of ghosts that stands alone on a plateau in the remote highlands of northeast Turkey, 45km away from the Turkish border city of Kars. As you walk among the many ruins, left to deteriorate for over 90 years, the only sound is the wind howling through a ravine that marks the border between Turkey and Armenia.

Photo: Linda Caldwell/Alamy

The toll of many rulers
Visitors who pass through Ani’s city walls are greeted with a panoramic view of ruins that span three centuries and five empires – including the Bagratid Armenians, Byzantines, Seljuk Turks, Georgians and Ottomans. The Ani plateau was ceded to Russia once the Ottoman Empire was defeated in the 1877-78 Russo-Turkish War. After the outbreak of World War I, the Ottomans fought to take back northeast Anatolia, and although they recaptured Ani and the surrounding area, the region was given to the newly formed Republic of Armenia. The site changed hands for the last time after the nascent Turkish Republic captured it during the 1920 eastern offensive in the Turkish War of Independence.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

A hotly contested territory
The ruins of an ancient bridge over the Akhurian River, which winds its way at the bottom of the ravine to create a natural border, are fitting given the vexed state of Turkish-Armenian relations. The two countries have long disagreed over the mass killings of Armenians that took place under the Ottoman Empire during World War I, and Turkey officially closed its land border with Armenia in 1993 in response to a territorial conflict between Armenia and Turkey’s ally Azerbaijan.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

A bid to save the ruins
Although the focus on Turkish-Armenian tension preoccupies most discussion of Ani, there’s an ongoing effort by archaeologists and activists to save the ruins, which have been abandoned in favour of more accessible and less historically contested sites from classical antiquity. Historians have long argued for Ani’s importance as a forgotten medieval nexus, and as a result, Ani is now on a tentative list for recognition as a Unesco World Heritage Site. With some luck and careful restoration work, which has begun in 2011, they may be able to forestall the hands of time.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

‘The City of 1,001 Churches’
At its height during the 11th Century, scholars estimate that Ani’s population reached as high as 100,000 people. Artistic renderings based on the site’s archaeological findings show a bustling medieval centre crowded with myriad homes, artisanal workshops and impressive churches scattered throughout.

Known as “The City of 1,001 Churches”, Ani’s Armenian rulers and city merchants funded an extraordinary number of places of worship, all designed by the greatest architectural and artistic minds in their milieu. Although the nickname was hyperbole, archaeologists have discovered evidence of at least 40 churches, chapels and mausoleums to date.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

An imposing cathedral
A rust-coloured brick redoubt, the Cathedral of Ani looms over the now-abandoned city. Although its dome collapsed in an earthquake in 1319 – and, centuries later, another earthquake destroyed its northwest corner – it is still imposing in scale. It was completed in 1001 under the reign of Armenian King Gagik I, when the wealth and population of Ani was at its peak. Trdat, the renowned Armenian architect who designed it, also served the Byzantines by helping them repair the dome of the Hagia Sophia.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

Half of a church
Only one half of the Church of the Redeemer remains – a monument to both the artistic prowess of the Armenian Bagratid Dynasty and the inevitability of time. Propped up by extensive scaffolding now, the church was an impressive architectural feat when it was built. It featured 19 archways and a dome, all made from local reddish-brown volcanic basalt.

The church also housed a fragment of the True Cross, upon which Jesus was crucified. The church’s patron, Prince Ablgharib Pahlavid, reportedly obtained the relic during a visit to the Byzantine court at Constantinople.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

A church fit for a prince
Built sometime in the late 10th Century, the Church of St Gregory of the Abughamrentsis a stoic-looking, 12-sided chapel that has a dome carved with blind arcades: arches that are purely for embellishment instead of leading to a portal. In the early 1900s, a mausoleum was discovered buried under the church’s north side, likely containing the remains of the church’s patron, Prince Grigor Pahlavuni of the Bagratid Armenians, and his kin. Unfortunately, like many of the sites at Ani, the prince’s sepulchre was looted in the 1990s.

Photo: Linda Caldwell/Alamy

The remnants of an underground city
Opposite the Church of St Gregory of the Abughamrentsare a series of caves dug out of the rock, which some historians speculate may predate Ani. The caves are sometimes described as Ani’s “underground city” and signs point to their use as tombs and churches. In the early 20th Century, some of these caves were still used as dwellings.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

A church that keeps watch
The Church of St Gregory of Tigran Honents stands vigilant over the ravine that separates Turkey and Armenia. Commissioned by a wealthy merchant and built in 1215, it was constructed when the then-controlling Kingdom of Georgia granted Ani as a fiefdom to a bloodline of Armenian rulers, the Zakarians. During the winter, the lonely church makes for a striking sight against the endless, snow-covered Armenian steppe in the distance.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

Frescoes cover the walls
The Church of St Gregory of Tigran Honents is one of Ani’s best preserved buildings, adorned with remnants of paintings depicting scenes from the life of Christ and St Gregory the Illuminator. Detailed fresco cycles did not ordinarily appear in Armenian art of the era, leading scholars to believe the artists were most likely Georgian.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

An Islamic minaret still stands
The Seljuk Empire – a Turkish state in Anatolia that drove out the Byzantines and eventually gave way to the Ottoman Empire – controlled the greater area of what is today northeast Turkey and Armenia beginning in the mid-1000s. However, in 1072, the Seljuks granted control of Ani to an Islamic dynasty of Kurdish origin, the Shaddadids. The Shaddadids, in turn, left their mark on Ani with buildings like the mosque of Manuchihr, which is perched precariously on the edge of the cliff. Its minaret is still standing from when the mosque was constructed in the late 1000s; the rest of the mosque is most likely an addition from the 12th or 13th Centuries.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

Origins up for debate
The original purpose of the mosque of Manuchihr is debated on both the Turkish and Armenian sides. Some contend that the building once served as a palace for the Armenian Bagratid dynasty and was only later converted into a mosque. Others argue that the structure was built as a mosque from the ground up, and thus was the first Turkish mosque in Anatolia. From 1906 to 1918, the mosque served as a museum of findings from Ani’s excavation by the Russian archaeologist Nicholas Marr. Regardless of the building’s origins, the mosque’s four elegant windows display spectacular views of the river and the other side of the gorge.

Photo: Joseph Flaherty

Once formidable city walls
Ani’s city walls may seem ready to crumble, but when they were constructed in the 10th Century, they made for a formidable defence. The Bagratid family of kings built them in order to fortify their new capital and, over the centuries, they protected the city’s occupants against siege after siege by various armies. These ramparts, along with Ani’s inhabitants, witnessed bloody conflicts between the Bagratids and the Byzantines, and the Byzantines and the Seljuks.

Despite Ani’s history as a field of warfare, the ruins also represent many periods throughout history where the city saw a remarkable interchange of cultures, religions and artistic motifs.

Aurora Prize finalists announced

Today, the Aurora Prize Selection Committee announced the four Aurora Prize finalists as Marguerite Barankitse, from Maison Shalom and REMA Hospital in Burundi; Dr. Tom Catena, from Mother of Mercy Hospital in the Nuba Mountains of Sudan; Syeda Ghulam Fatima, the General Secretary of the Bonded Labor Liberation Front in Pakistan; and Father Bernard Kinvi, a Catholic priest in Bossemptele in the Central African Republic.
The Aurora Prize for Awakening Humanity is a new global award that will be given annually to individuals who put themselves at risk to enable others to survive. Recipients will be recognized for the exceptional impact their actions have made on preserving human life and advancing humanitarian causes, having overcome significant challenges along the way. One of the four finalists, the ultimate Aurora Prize Laureate, will receive a grant of US$100,000 and the chance to continue the cycle of giving by nominating organizations that inspired his or her work for a US$1 million award.
The Aurora Prize was created by the co-founders of 100 LIVES, a pioneering global initiative seeking to express gratitude to those who put themselves at risk to save Armenians from the Genocide one hundred years ago. On behalf of the survivors of the Armenian Genocide, the annual Aurora Prize aims to raise public consciousness about atrocities occurring around the world and reward those working to address those issues in a real and substantial manner.
“All four finalists are being recognized because they have found the courage to fight against injustice and violence inflicted upon those most vulnerable in their societies,” said 100 LIVES Co-Founder and Aurora Prize Selection Committee Member Vartan Gregorian. “We created the Aurora Prize not just to honor, but to support the unsung heroes who reclaim humanity and stand up to such oppression and injustice. One hundred years ago, strangers stood up against persecution on behalf of our ancestors, and today we thank them by recognizing those who act in the same spirit in the face of modern atrocities.”

The finalists

Marguerite Barankitse, from Maison Shalom and REMA Hospital in Burundi, saved thousands of lives and cared for orphans and refugees during the years of civil war in Burundi. When war broke out, Barankitse, a Tutsi, tried to hide 72 of her closest Hutu neighbors to keep them safe from persecution. They were discovered and executed, whilst Barankitse was forced to watch. Following this gruesome incident, she started her work saving and caring for children and refugees. She has saved roughly 30,000 children and in 2008, she opened a hospital which has treated more than 80,000 patients to date.
Dr. Tom Catena is the sole doctor at Mother of Mercy Hospital in the Nuba Mountains in Sudan. An American physician, Dr. Catena is the only doctor permanently based near the country’s border with South Sudan, and is therefore responsible for serving over 500,000 people in the region. Despite several bombings by the Sudanese government, Dr. Catena resides on the hospital grounds so that he may be on call at all times. His selfless acts have been brought to light by a number of media and aid organizations, and he was named one of TIME’s 100 Most Influential People in 2015.
Syeda Ghulam Fatima has worked tirelessly to eradicate bonded labor, one of the last remaining forms of modern slavery. Fatima is the general secretary of the Bonded Labour Liberation Front Pakistan (BLLF), which has liberated thousands of Pakistani workers, including approximately 21,000 children, who were forced to work for brick kiln owners in order to repay debts. The interest rates are too high for workers to pay off, trapping the workers in forced labor and poor—often brutal—conditions. Fatima has survived attempts on her life and repeated beatings during the course of her activism.
Father Bernard Kinvi became a priest at age 19, after losing his father and four sisters to prolonged violence and illness. Father Kinvi left his home country of Lome, Togo to Bossemptele, a small town just inside the border of the Central African Republic, to head a Catholic mission which consisted of a school, church and the Pope John Paul II Hospital. In 2012, civil war broke out in the Central African Republic between Muslim Seleka rebels and the anti-balaka (anti-machete) Christian militia. Amidst the violence, Father Kinvi’s mission provided refuge and health services to those on both sides of the conflict, saving hundreds of people from persecution and death.
From July to October 2015, nominations were received from around the world through a public portal on www.auroraprize.com. Candidates were nominated for their selfless work, from battling bonded labor to harboring refugees, to delivering frontline care in conflict zones.
One of the four finalists will be announced as the inaugural Aurora Prize Laureate during a ceremony in Yerevan, Armenia on April 24, 2016. Selection Committee Co-Chair George Clooney will present the award. The Aurora Prize finalists will be celebrated as part of a weekend of events bringing together leading voices in the humanitarian field, including the International Center for Journalists, International Rescue Committee and Not On Our Watch to discuss some of the most pressing humanitarian issues the world is facing today, and acknowledge those confronting them.