RA CB Undertakes History Exhibitions Dedicated to National Currency

RA CB UNDERTAKES HISTORY EXHIBITIONS DEDICATED TO NATIONAL CURRENCY IN
MARZES

VANADZOR, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. An exhibition dedicated to the
history of the Armenian national currency which also represents
activities of the RA Central Bank was opened in Vanadzor on April
9. As Tigran Sargsian, the Chairman of the RA Central Bank mentioned
at the opening ceremony of the exhibition, it was the first time such
an exhibition was organized outside Yerevan. According to him,
investigations showed that the society does not yet value important
components of independence including the national currency. In the CB
President’s opinion, it is particularly caused by the circumstance
that the stage of stabilization of the state system, which is combined
with economic and social problems, is still going on. Population is
concentrated on their solution and does not pay attention to those
important historic events which he participates in. According to
T.Sargsian, few people saw importance of the national currency at the
initial stage of its circulation, the currency was losing its value
with every passing day which was caused with the distrust towards
it. But time showed that the dram became stable and valued against
foreign currency.

FAO Allocates $300K For Armenia’s Forest Sector Development

FAO ALLOCATES 300 THOUSAND DOLLARS FOR ARMENIA’S FOREST SECTOR
DEVELOPMENT

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The UN Food and Agriculture
Organization (FAO) has allocated 300 thousand USD for the development
of Armenia’s forest sector. A mutual understanding memorandum has
already been signed with the state noncommercial organization
Armforest, which will coordinate the development of a new National
Forest Program. The program aims to determine the priorities and
specicic actions of the country’s forest sector management for the
next 15 years. Within the program framework, it is envisaged to
conduct research in the forest sector, analyse the current state of
the forests and make predictions on the basis of various social and
economic factors. FAO representatives propose using the expertise of
other countries, while taking into account Armenia’s national
peculiarities. In the opinion of the local experts, the main
components of the future program should include legislative
amendments, the development of by-laws and the training of
specialists. The program implementation will start after the
establishment of a coordinating body composed of representatives of
state bodies, scientific organizations, NGOs, mass media and local
communities.

US Embassy in Armenia Continues “Days of Jazz in Armenia”

US EMBASSY IN ARMENIA CONTINUES SERIES OF EVENTS “DAYS OF JAZZ IN
ARMENIA”

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. A concert of Jazz Orchestra of
Armenia, veterants of jazz and jazz band of the Central TV-radio of
Armenia took place in Aram Khachaturian concert hall on April 10. As
Noyan Tapan was informed from the US Embassy in Armenia, the cocnert
was organized within the framework of events “Days of Jazz in Armenia”
on the Embassy’s initiative.

Book Coincides with 90th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide

Fresno State News, CA
April 11 2005

Professor’s Book Coincides with 90th Anniversary of Armenian Genocide

A Fresno State professor’s book looking at Armenians in Canada was
published this month and coincides with the 90th anniversary of the
beginning of the Armenian genocide that killed 1.5 million people.

Dr. Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill, a professor of history at California
State University, Fresno wrote `Like Our Mountains: A History of
Armenians in Canada,’ which was published by McGill-Queen’s
University Press. The book recounts the sweeping social history of
the Armenian-Canadian experience that links the Old World with the
New against a far-flung diaspora.

The genocide of Armenians in Turkey began in 1915. More than
seventy-five thousand Armenians have found refuge in Canada and
Kaprielian-Churchill’s narrative is the first comprehensive account
of their experience from the late 19th century to the devastating
earthquake in 1988.

`Like Our Mountains’ relates the history of the Canadian Armenian
community from its founding, settlements and economic adjustments, to
its social, religious, political and cultural life, transformations
over generations, and relationship with other communities in Canadian
society. The book examines the cities settled by Armenian immigrants:
Brantford before 1914, St. Catharines after World War I, Hamilton
after World War II, and Toronto and Montreal from the 1960s to 1988.

Kaprielian-Churchill carried out exhaustive research in English,
Armenian, and French sources including interviews with survivors of
the genocide, archives, oral histories, diaries and memoirs and
letters.
A professor of Armenian and Immigration History, Kaprielian-Churchill
specializes in the field of Armenian diasporan history.

The blackest page of history

Ha’aretz, Israel
April 11 2005

The blackest page of history

By Yair Auron

“United States Diplomacy on the Bosphorus: The Diaries of Ambassador
Henry Morgenthau, 1913-1916,” Gomidas Institute, Princeton & London,
500 pages

“United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide, 1915-1917”
edited by Ara Sarafian, Gomidas Institute, Princeton & London, 706
pages

“Lawyer, Ambassador, Statesman: The Memoirs of Abram I. Elkus,”
Gomidas Institute, Princeton & London, 122 pages

On June 19, 1915, as the genocide of the Armenians reached a peak,
Henry Morgenthau, the U.S. ambassador to Turkey, penned a letter to
his son: “The ruin and devastation that is being wrought here is
heart-rending. The government is using its present opportunity while
all other countries are at war, to obliterate the Armenian race, and
the worst of it is that it is impossible to stop it. … The United
States as a neutral power has no right to interfere in their internal
affairs, and as I receive report after report of the inhuman
treatment that the Armenians are receiving, it makes me feel most
sad. Their lot seems to be very much the same as that of the Jews in
Russia, and belonging to a persecuted race myself, I have all the
more sympathy with them.”

Almost 30 years later, on January 16, 1944, Henry Morgenthau, the
son, U.S. secretary of the treasury during World War II, met with
President Roosevelt to discuss “the problem of the remaining Jews in
Europe.” Not only was the State Department ineffectual in its
treatment of the problem, said Morgenthau, but it was “actually
taking action to prevent the rescue of the Jews.” He was convinced
that “affective action” could be taken, citing the success of his
father, Henry Morgenthau, Sr., in saving the lives of Armenians when
he was ambassador to Turkey.

These brief quotes from the protocol of the meeting between
Morgenthau, Jr. and Roosevelt illustrate how important it is that
these diaries are finally being published today, 90 years after the
genocide. How the world acted before and after the massacre of the
Armenians in Turkey is critical for our understanding of the
circumstances that enable genocide to happen. We need reminding that
genocide is possible only when the balance of power between the
victims and the murderers is such that the murderers enjoy absolute
superiority. And this depends to a large extent on the actions of the
“third party,” by which we mean the rest of the world.

This third party can be schematically divided into three groups:
those who help the murderers, those who help the victims and those
who stand on the sidelines and do nothing. Morgenthau, Sr. was the
man who urged the U.S. not to stand there and gape, but to do all it
could to contribute to the rescue effort. Morgenthau tried to talk to
the Turkish rulers, but never got very far because a neutral power
like the U.S. had no right to intervene in another country’s internal
affairs, as he explained to his son.

It is worth pointing out that formally, at least, this state of
affairs has changed since the Holocaust, thanks to the Convention on
the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide adopted by the
United Nations in 1948. According to this convention, intervention in
cases of genocide is not only a right, but a duty. But this has not
kept genocide from happening, because the world is still reluctant to
intervene.

While the genocide was going on, Morgenthau wrote in his diary, and
in numerous memos submitted to the U.S. Secretary of State, Robert
Lansing – some of which have now been made public for the first time
– that the “persecution of Armenians is assuming unprecedented
proportions. Reports from widely scattered districts indicate a
systematic attempt to uproot peaceful Armenian populations and
through arbitrary efforts, terrible tortures, wholesale expulsions
and deportations from one end of the Empire to the other, accompanied
by frequent instances of rape, pillage and murder, turning into
massacre, to bring destruction and destitution on them.”

Personal shock

Morgenthau writes of many talks with the grand vizier, Said Halim
Pasha, his interior minister, Talat Pasha, and his war minister,
Anwar Pasha, but these came to nothing. Morgenthau was convinced that
the only country that might assist in lessening these atrocities was
Turkey’s ally, Germany. He approached the German ambassador in
Turkey, but was under no illusions. “I believe [the embassy] will
simply content itself with giving advice and formal protest probably
intended for the record, to cover itself from future responsibility,”
he wrote.

Morgenthau was clearly the driving spirit behind the rescue effort,
but his writings also provide vital source material for documenting
and studying the Armenian genocide, which the Turks, until today,
deny ever happened. To our great shame, Israel has helped them in
this act of denial, as have academics around the world, including
several Israelis. Morgenthau knew what was happening from thousands
of reports filed by American consuls and missionaries working in
various parts of the Ottoman Empire, and he documented and passed on
this information in real time, out of a deep sense of personal shock
and horror.

Arriving in Constantinople in November 1913, Morgenthau kept a diary
that he filled with accounts of his official duties, his social life
as an ambassador, his personal affairs, his humanitarian endeavors on
behalf of Turkish soldiers and citizens wounded in the war, and his
efforts to stop the brutal attacks on the Armenians.

Some of this material is incorporated in a book published in 1918,
“Ambassador Morgenthau’s Story,” where he portrays the Armenian
genocide as “the greatest crime in modern history” and observes that
“among the blackest pages of modern history, this is the blackest of
them all.” “I am confident that the whole history of the human race
contains no such horrible episodes as this,” he writes in hindsight.

Morgenthau’s diaries, however, are a valuable source of firsthand
information composed in real time. Together with the recently
published “United States Official Records on the Armenian Genocide,
1915-1917,” they offer a clear picture of what the U.S. government
knew. Hence their importance for understanding genocide in general,
and the circumstances that would enable such a thing to happen. The
“Official Records on the Armenian Genocide” consists of memos filed
on a daily basis, informing the U.S. Secretary of State and President
Woodrow Wilson of the efforts to rescue as many Armenians as possible
and the obstacles that faced the rescuers along the way.

These books should be required reading for anyone researching World
War I, American diplomacy, the Ottoman Empire and the Armenian
genocide. The university libraries in Israel contain very few volumes
on the history of the Armenian genocide, and those available are
chiefly books by Turks who deny that it happened. These new
publications help somewhat to set the record straight.

Worthy of mention here is the Gomidas Institute, cofounded by the
young British-Armenian historian Ara Sarafian, which specializes in
publishing collections of documents, meticulously edited, with an
introduction and annotations that make the work accessible to
contemporary readers. To date, the institute has managed to scrape
together funding to publish 10 volumes – a very important
contribution to the desperate and sometimes frustrating battle of the
Armenians and their friends to win recognition of their national
tragedy.

`Never again’

One sad example: During the same week that the world marked the 60th
anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz, constantly repeating the
refrain “never again,” and “we have learned our lesson,” the state of
Brandenburg in Germany caved in to Turkish pressure and deleted half
a sentence about the Armenian genocide from a 10th-grade textbook on
the history of World War I. It was the only textbook in Germany that
even mentioned the genocide.

Morgenthau’s diaries have now been joined by another memoir. This one
is by Abram I. Elkus, who succeeded Morgenthau as U.S. ambassador to
Turkey in 1916-1917. Elkus was also Jewish, and he made no effort to
hide it. He, too, worked tirelessly on behalf of the Armenians,
possibly identifying with their suffering because he knew, as a Jew,
what it was like to be an underdog.

Morganthau and Elkus, as we see from their books, were of great
assistance to the Yishuv – the pre-state Jewish community in
Palestine – which found itself in dire straits during World War I.
What saved the Jews in Palestine from a fate similar to that of the
Armenians is very much a matter of debate. Was it the intervention of
the U.S., largely through the auspices of Morgenthau and Elkus? The
actions taken by Germany? The public outcry that the Jews managed to
arouse? Was it the docile behavior of the Jews, as opposed to what
the Turks perceived as Armenian rebelliousness? Maybe the Turks had
no intention of wiping out the Jewish Yishuv in Palestine, or maybe
they wanted to, toward the end of the war, but by that time, they
couldn’t.

The work of the two American ambassadors on behalf of the Yishuv has
not been sufficiently studied, perhaps because Morgenthau was not a
Zionist and did not regard Zionism as a solution to the Jewish
problem. Nevertheless, he was instrumental in arranging passage for
refugees on American ships that sailed between Beirut, Jaffa,
Alexandria and Constantinople. Morgenthau maintained close ties with
the Jewish community in Turkey and representatives of the World
Zionist Organization such as Victor Jacobson and Richard Lichtheim.
He helped Hashomer leaders Manya and Israel Shochat, who were
arrested and exiled to Turkey by the Ottomans. Morgenthau intervened
to keep them from being sent to east Turkey. He ordered the U.S.
consul to visit them every Sunday and send him a report on how they
were faring.

“The local authorities and top echelons in Constantinople knew about
the consul’s visits to us,” wrote Israel Shochat in his memoirs, “and
I am convinced that this is what saved us from torture, harassment
and possibly even death.” Ambassador Elkus continued in this vein.

Yishuv connection

The comments made about them by members of the Yishuv during World
War I are enlightening. Avshalom Feinberg of the intelligence ring,
Nili, wrote about the Armenian genocide in a letter to Henrietta
Szold, secretary of the Experimental Station in Atlit, headed by Nili
chief Aaron Aaronsohn, in October 1915. In this letter, he also
mentions Morgenthau:

“Allow me at this point to pay honor to your country. I must say that
without American Jewry we would not have been able now to survive in
Palestine. Both the U.S. and our people were represented in these
dark days – decisive days, I would say – in the most glorious and
valuable manner by Ambassador Morgenthau. Does it not seem that
Divine Providence has helped us, this time, by placing this man in
this position at this moment? He knew brilliantly how to bring honor
to his country and to his origins, and it goes without saying that he
will forever deserve the thanks of his people. It is fair to say that
this man has entered human history through the front door, by virtue
of his approach to the defense of the Armenians. In his defense of
the Armenians he acted not only as a brave American and the valuable
ambassador of a great nation. He also gave of himself.”

Feinberg goes on to say that the Egyptian newspapers announced
Morgenthau’s commitment of $2 million to aid the Armenians. “This
constitutes a rousing rebuttal of the petty aphorism that `charity
begins at home,'” he writes. “We can only support and applaud these
millions, which will ease the suffering of the Armenian victims whose
plight may become ours tomorrow. … It is a touching and uplifting
sight, that a son of such an impoverished people should be the first
to offer aid to another wretched people, with whom we have no ties of
blood, faith or tradition. Is not the nobility here even greater?”

Prof. Yair Auron is the author of “The Banality of Indifference:
Zionism and the Armenian Genocide” and “The Banality of Denial:
Israel and the Armenian Genocide,” both published by Transaction. His
new book, “The Pain of Knowledge: Holocaust and Genocide Issues in
Education,” will be coming out this month.

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http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/pages/ShArt.jhtml?itemNo=562515&amp

Exhibition Armenia Expo To Be Held in Krasnodar in May

EXHIBITION ARMENIA EXPO TO BE HELD IN KRASNODAR IN MAY

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. The exhibition Armenia Expo scheduled
for April 27-30 in the Russian city of Krasnodar will be held on May
5-7. According to the deputy director of the Armenian Development
Agency Mushegh Sargsian, the exhibition postponement was due to the
fact of holding another exhibition of Armenian goods and services,
Armenia Today. Expo 2005, in Tbilisi on April 21-23. M. Sargsian told
NT correspondent that the production of all the branches of the
Armenian economy will be displayed at the exhibition. The main aim of
the exhibition is assisting Armenian businessmen with establishing new
business links and signing agreements. 140 companies have been invited
to participate in the exhibition organized at the initiative of the
Chamber of Commerce and Industry of Armenia, the Armenian Development
Agency and the Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen of Armenia.

National Library of Armenia Opening Ceremony on April 11

OPENING CEREMONY OF WEEK OF NATIONAL LIBRARY OF ARMENIA TAKES PLACE ON
APRIL 11

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 11, the National Library Week
(NLW) was opened in the National Library of Armenia (NLA) with
exhibitions dedicated to the 1600th anniversary of the Armenian
letters’ invention and the 70th anniversary of composer Areg
Lusinian. The week, being held already for the fourth time on the
initiative of “Armenian Libraries’ Assosiation” NGO, will have “Our
Future is a Reading Child” wachtward this time. According to David
Sargsian, the Director of the NLA, the goal of the Week is to attract
public’s attention to book, to attach importance to role of libraries
for society as the most important source of information about
education, culture and other spheres. “Libraries have invaluable role
in process of bringing up literate and civilized generation,”
D.Sargsian mentioned. According to the NLA Director, the NKR Republic
and Central Libraries of Stepanakert and Lachin joined NLW this time.
Within the framework of the Week, events are also envasiged in Javakhk
and Bolnis-Khachen. Vardashen and Nubarashen special schools will be
given bookshelves and books with financing of the US Embassy in
Armenia. It was also mentioned that competition of compositions on “My
Library”, “My Favourite Book” and other themes will be announced in
all schools of the capital with decision of Yerevan Mayor’s Office.

Exhibition Dedicated to Armenian Genocide’s 90th Anniversary to Open

EXHIBITION DEDICATED TO ARMENIAN GENOCIDE’S 90TH ANNIVERSARY TO OPEN
IN RF FEDERAL ASSEMBLY WITH PARTICIPATION OF RA NA SPEAKER

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 12, the delegation headed by
Artur Baghdasarian, RA NA Speaker, will leave for Moscow at the
invitation of Boris Grizlov, Speaker of RF State Duma. Within the
framework of the official visit meetings with Boris Grizlov, Speaker
of RF State Duma, Sergei Mironov, Chairman of the Council of
Federation of RF Federal Assembly, Mikhail Fradkov, Chairman of RF
government, Igor Levitin, Co-chairman of Armenia-Russia
inter-governmental commission, are planned. According to RA NA Press
Service, an exhibition dedicated to the 90th anniversary of Armenian
Genocide will open in the building of RF Council of Federation with
participation of parliamentary speakers of the 2 countries.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Kocharian: “No Armenian State Instance Laid any Territorial Claims”

ROBERT KOCHARIAN: “NO ARMENIAN STATE INSTANCE LAID ANY TERRITORIAL
CLAIMS”

YEREVAN, APRIL 11, NOYAN TAPAN. No state instance of Armenia has ever
raised the issue of territorial claims, today the Armenian Genocide
issue is the prior one on the political agenda. RA President Robert
Kocharian declared this during this April 11 meeting with Yerevan
State University students while answering the question if Armenia
intends to lay territorial claims to Turkey if the latter recognizes
the Armenian Genocide. “We should be realists in order that our wishes
and expectations shouldn’t differ from each other very much. The more
realistic we are the less we will be disappointed,” the President
emphasized.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Armenian Genocide Square Memorial Stone in Montevideo to Be Unveiled

ARMENIAN GENOCIDE SQUARE’S MEMORIAL STONE IN MONTEVIDEO TO BE UNVEILED
ON APRIL 22

MONTEVIDEO, APRIl 11, NOYAN TAPAN. At the instructions of mayor of
Uruguay’s capital Montevideo Adolfo Peres Piera, one of the city
squares will be named Armenian People Genocide Square. Uruguay’s
Armenian Cause Commission and the Armenian Diocese Central Department,
the Vramian Club and “Komitas” radio-hour issued a joint report,
according to which a decision has been made to erect at the square a
memorial stone which will be unvailed on April 22. The organizations
expressed gratitude on behalf of Uruguay’s Armenian community and the
whole Armenian people to the authors of the initiative to honor in
such a way the memory of the numerous victims of the Armenian
genocide. They informed that about a year ago Raffi Hunanian, a member
of Montevideo’s city council proposed naming one of the city streets
“1915, April 24”, however, after dicussing this proposal, the city
council made on March 30 a unianimous decision to allocate an area
abutting on one of the city’s busiest streets and name this area
“Armenian People Genocide Square”. The Armenian organizations of
Uruguay remind that in 1965 – the year of the 50th anniversary of the
Armenian genocide, Uruguay was the first country to officialy
recognize the Great Genocide, and has always supported the Armenian
people over the last 40 years. To recap, there is already Armenia
Square in Montevideo.