BAKU: More ceasefire violations

More ceasefire violations

Baku Today

AssA-Irada 10/03/2005 12:08

Armenian military units fired at Gapanly village of Terter District
with submachine guns and machine guns from 24:00 to 00:30 on Wednesday,
ANS TV has reported. Casualties are reported on the Armenian side.

At the same time, Armenia fired at Orta Gishlag and Garadaghly villages
of the Aghdam District. The Ministry of Defense has confirmed the
reports.

According to the Ministry, Armenian military units fired at the
positions of the Azerbaijani troops located 2,5 km southeast of
Tapgaragoyunlu village in Goranboy District from 20:10 till 20:45 on
Tuesday. On the same day, the positions of the Azerbaijani military
troops located close to Shykhlar village of Aghdam District were also
subjected to firing. No casualties are reported.

The Ministry of Defense did not confirm TV reports saying that
Azerbaijani soldier Mammad Mammadov received a head injury after
Armenians breached ceasefire in Terter District at about 13:00 on
Wednesday.

Armenian military units fired from their positions in the occupied
Seysulan village of Terter District at the positions of the Azerbaijani
military troops located in Gapanly village of the same district with
submachine guns and machine guns from 20:30 to 23:00 on Monday.

Several soldiers are reported wounded on the Azerbaijani side, while
several others wounded and killed on the Armenian side, according to
the Ministry.

ANKARA: Bad News From The E.U.

TurkishPress.com

Bad News From The E.U.

Published: 3/9/2005

BY TAMER KORKMAZ

ZAMAN- France has already planted a ~Qreferendum mine~R along Turkey~Rs path to
the European Union. Ankara didn~Rt even raise a word of protest.

A package of constitutional changes accepted by the French Parliament and
approved by President Jacques Chirac last week aims to block Turkey~Rs
European Union membership. The decision announces that new members will not
be admitted into the Union without the French public~Rs consent after 2007.
It~Rs obvious that the resolution aims to block Turkey~Rs path. [Turkey is
currently the only EU candidate projected to join after 2007]

Even if Turkey successfully completes full membership talks in the next
decade, the fate of Turkey~Rs membership will be decided by the French
people.

The ~Qreferendum barricade~R idea belongs to Nicolas Sarkozy, head of the
French government and the person most likely to succeed Chirac after
France~Rs next elections scheduled for 2007. Backed by his party, Sarkozy has
used the issue of Turkey~Rs EU membership as a weapon against Chirac. And at
last, he was able to make the French Parliament accept these constitutional
changes.

Sarkozy is offering ~Qprivileged partnership~R to Turkey, and 90 percent of
his party members support this scheme.

Sarkozy stands united with the German rightists who are expected to come to
power in the next German elections. In other words, the bloc against Turkey
within the EU will be fortified by the year 2007. Meanwhile, the French
public is being ~Qstuffed~R with Armenian ~Qgenocide~R claims.

At the same time, the Cyprus issue is also at hand. However, there is no
trace of a solution on the horizon. A few days ago, Greek Cypriot Justice
Minister Doros Theodoru made a significant confession. ~QOur efforts to date
have been aimed at preventing a solution,~R he said. ~QWe~Rll try to avoid
negotiations till Oct. 3. Then we~Rll pursue a solution within the framework
of EU law.~R

The Greek Cypriots~R strategy aims at forcing Turkey to recognize the Greek
Cypriot Republic. They~Rll block a solution until Oct. 3, and then Ankara
will have to recognize them in order to continue its EU membership
negotiations.

Greek Cypriots are the ones trying to prevent a solution, but Turkey has to
pay the price!

How will the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) sign the protocol
which grants recognition to the Greek Cypriots, when the Greek Cypriots have
officially announced that they have no intention of compromising?

On top of all this, just when the EU Troika was arriving in Istanbul this
weekend, female demonstrators were being beaten up by the Turkish police.
Europeans who oppose Turkey~Rs membership will certainly use this to their
advantage.

Turkish Press

UR students join campaign to support U.N. population fund

REDLANDSDAILYFACTS.COM

UR students join campaign to support U.N. population fund

By CATHERINE GARCIA
Staff Writer

Around the globe today people are celebrating International Women’s
Day, but for Jane Roberts, a former University of Redlands French
professor and tennis coach, and former lawyer Lois Abraham, every
day is women’s day. Roberts and Abraham are the founders of 34
Million Friends of UNFPA, an organization dedicated to raising the
$34 million a year allocated by Congress that the Bush administration
is withholding from the United Nations Population Fund. “Our goal is
idealistic, but within the realm of possibility,” said Abraham. “UNFPA
has a vision, and so do we.”

The fund is the world’s largest international source of funding
for population and reproductive health programs. Since its founding
in 1969, the fund has provided nearly $6 billion in assistance to
developing countries.

The goal of 34 Million Friends of UNFPA isto urge 34 million
individuals to support the cause by donating one dollar each.At
the University of Redlands, students are being urged to bring their
dollars to a table set up in the commons this afternoon, or to the
Office of Community Service Learning until Friday.

“This is a positive protest against an unfair practice,” said Junior
Eileen Hards, a creative writing major from Redlands.

According to the 34 Million Friends of UNFPAWeb site, the United
States has withheld funding for United Nations Population Fund
since 2002 and remains the only country in the world to do so for
political reasons.The Bush administration’s decision came in response
to allegations that fund is compliant with coercive family planning
efforts in China.

The administration sent its own three-member investigative team to
China, where the expert panel determined that United Nations Population
Fund does not supportsuch activities. The team recommended the release
of the money.

Ming Beck, a University of Redlands studentwho left China 20 years ago,
settling in Hong Kong before comingto the United States, believes
thatmany Chinesepeople are suffering without the money from the
United States.

“They do need education, because they don’t alwaysknow what’s
outside of where they live,” she said of those who live in remote
villages. “The country people are the ones who would and should
benefit from this money.”

The United Nations Population Fund works in more than 140 nations
worldwide to improve reproductive health, support and protect the
health of young people, prevent HIV/AIDS, promote gender equality,
secure reproductive health care supplies and to assist in humanitarian
emergencies.

In 2004, contributions totaling $326 million were received from a
record 166 countries, including most of the European Union, Japan
and Canada. Contributions also were given by a number of non-wealthy
countries, including Afghanistan, Armenia, Somalia, and Timor-Leste.

After learning of the United States’ decision to cut funding to the
Timor-Leste, Roberts lay in bed thinking, “A letter to the editor or a
letter to my congressman won’t be enough. So I’ll get 34 million people
to donate a dollar.” The same idea was being hatched by Abraham in
New Mexico. After learning about each other, the women joined forces.

According to their Web site, the $34 million that has been withheld
for each of the past two years would have been able to prevent 4
million unplanned pregnancies, 1.6 million induced abortions, 9,400
maternal deaths and more than 154,000 infant and child deaths.

As of Feb. 25, more than $25 million had been given in U.S. gifts
and pledges. California leads the country in donations, with 15,120
residents having contributed.

“I’mproudto be from the most generous state,” Hards said. “Ihope we
continue to give lots of money. It’s such a worthwhile cause.”

For more information on 34 Million Friends of UNFPA or to make a
donation, visit

www.34millionfriends.org

ANC-SF: SF Poet Laureate and Famed Armenian Poet Diana Der Hovanessi

PRESS RELEASE

Armenian National Committee
San Francisco – Bay Area
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
Tel: (415) 387-3433
Fax: (415) 751-0617
[email protected]

Contact: Ani Baghdassarian (415 ) 387-3433

Reflections on Genocide: The Armenian Genocide in Poetry

SF Poet Laureate and Famed Armenian Poet Diana Der Hovanessian at Poetry
Event

San Francisco, CA ~V At a unique event in commemoration of the 90th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, renowned Armenian poet and
translator Diana Der Hovanessian and San Francisco~Rs poet laureate
Devorah Major will read selections from their work. The evening of
poetry and arts, hosted by the Bay Area Armenian National Committee will
take place on April 19, 2005 at 7:30 pm at the San Francisco State
University Poetry Center. In addition to other readings, the event will
also include music performed by Armenian composer and singer Gor
Mkhitarian, and an exhibit of paintings by local Armenian-American
artist Nanor Ekmekjian.

Diana Der Hovanessian, well known as a poet and one of the world~Rs
finest translators of Armenian poetry, was a Fulbright professor of
American poetry at Yerevan State University in 1994 and 1999. She is the
author of 21 books of poetry and translations, and has won awards from
the National Endowment for the Arts, PSA, Pen-Columbia Translation
Center, National Writers Union, American Scholar, Prairie Schooner, and
Paterson Poetry Center, among others. Her poems are often aired on
National Public Radio and have appeared in the New York Times, Christian
Science Monitor, and journals worldwide. She is currently president of
the New England Poetry Club.

~SReflections on Genocide,~T also features Devorah Major, San
Francisco~Rs Poet Laureate. In addition to being a poet, Major is a
novelist, spoken word artist, activist, and arts educator. Her most
recent books are two volumes of poetry: Where Rivers Meet Ocean~T (City
Lights Publishing, 2003) and ~SWith More Than Tongue~T (Creative Arts
Books, 2003). An anthology of her work will be released in May 2005 by
City Lights Publishing.

The evening will also include readings by native San Franciscan poet
Sevana Panosian, who holds a Masters of Fine Arts in Creative Writing
from San Francisco State University~Rs prestigious writing program. Her
work has been anthologized and translated in ~SBirthmark: An Anthology of
Armenian American Poetry~T, and she is the first place recipient of the
New England Poetry Club~Rs ~SDaniel Varoujan~T award.

Los Angeles poets William Archila and Lory Bedikian will also read
selections of their work. Each holds a Masters of Fine Arts degree in
Creative Writing from the University of Oregon. Bedikian was awarded the
Dan Kimble First Year Teaching award for poetry and her work has
appeared in journals nationwide. Archila, exiled during El Salvador~Rs
civil war, has been anthologized in Another City: Writing from Los
Angeles published by City Lights Books.

Musician Gor Mkhitarian who will perform songs from his award-winning
CDs ~SEpisode,~T ~SYeraz,~T and ~SGodfather Tom,~T A recitation in Armenian by
UC Berkeley student Hasmig Tatiossian will also take place. Tatiossian
is in her senior year at UC Berkeley, International Relations with an
Emphasis on Genocide and Human Rights Violations. Mixed media paintings
by local artist Nanor Ekmekjian will also be featured at this
extraordinary event. Born and raised in Lebanon, Ekmekjian~Rs work
revolves around themes of displacement and exile. Her work is
predominantly mixed media in both figurative and abstract paintings.

The SFSU Poetry Center is located on the fifth floor of the Humanities
Building, room 512. For further information, contact the Bay Area
Armenian National Committee at (415) 387-3433.

http://www.ancsf.org/pressreleases/2005/03102005a.htm
www.ancsf.org

ANC-SF: Award Winners to Stage Performance Pieces by Aram Kouyoumdji

PRESS RELEASE

Armenian National Committee
San Francisco – Bay Area
51 Commonwealth Avenue
San Francisco, CA 94118
Tel: (415) 387-3433
Fax: (415) 751-0617
[email protected]

Contact: Ani Baghdassarian (415 ) 387-3433

Thought-Provoking Solo Plays about the Armenian Genocide

Award Winners to Stage Performance Pieces by Aram Kouyoumdjian

San Francisco, CA – Award-winning actress Jan Ahders will headline an
evening of solo plays about the Armenian Genocide, written and directed
by Aram Kouyoumdjian. “Protest” and “The Delicate Lines,” presented by
the Bay Area Armenian National Committee will be performed at the
C.A.F.E./Off Market Theater on Thursday, April 21 at 7:00 pm and Friday,
April 22 at 8:00 pm.

In “The Delicate Lines,” Ahders, the winner of four Elly Awards for
acting, will star in a role specifically written for her by
Kouyoumdjian, Elly Award winner for writing (“The Farewells”) and
directing (“Three Hotels”). The Sacramento Bee has hailed Ahders’ work
as “exceptional” and “remarkable,” while describing the “classy
Kouyoumdjian” as having “an adventurous artistic sensibility for
intelligent productions.”

“The Delicate Lines” follows the story of an Armenian woman in the days
after the Armenian Genocide as she struggles with her poet brother’s
descent into madness and with her conflicted love for his best friend.
The piece, which will have its world premiere this April, will be paired
with “Protest,” a work constructed around a demonstration against
Turkish denials of the Genocide. “Protest” will be performed by Elly
Award-nominated stage and screen actor J.D. Rudometkin.

All three artists are members of Vista Players, a theater group
Kouyoumdjian co-founded and leads as Artistic Director. The troupe has
been called “boundlessly talented” by the Sacramento News & Review, and
Kouyoumdjian has previously directed both Ahders and Rudometkin in plays
including ~SArcadia~T by Tom
Stoppard, and ~SThe Play About the Baby~T by Edward Albee.

The C.A.F.E. / Off Market Theater is located at 965 Mission Street, in
San Francisco. Tickets to the show are $20 and may be obtained by
calling the ANC office at 415-387-3433. Performances will begin
promptly and there will be no late seating.

http://www.ancsf.org/pressreleases/2005/03102005b.htm
www.ancsf.org

Aliyev Seeks to Boost Saudi Ties

MENAFN.COM

Aliyev Seeks to Boost Saudi Ties

Arab News – 10/03/2005

RIYADH, 10 March 2005 – Azerbaijan’s President Ilham Aliyev, who
witnessed the signing of two bilateral economic agreements here
yesterday, called for intensifying efforts to boost political,
commercial and cultural relations with Saudi Arabia.

The call was made during his meeting with Saudi businessmen at the
Riyadh Chamber of Commerce and Industry (RCCI) following his talks
with Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Fahd, Crown Prince Abdullah
and a host of Saudi officials.

Aliyev said that “Baku is looking to Saudi Arabia to support its
regional interests politically and commercially”. He reiterated that
“the Kingdom is, in fact, supporting the Azeri position, at a time
when we have been wrestling with a geopolitical dilemma created
because of the conflict with Armenia”.

The Azeri leader witnessed the signing of an investment protection
agreement prior to his meeting at RCCI. Another agreement for SR67.5
million credit line facility granted by Saudi Fund for Development
(SFD) to Azerbaijan was also signed in the presence of the president.

On behalf of Saudi Arabia, the accords were inked by Finance Minister
Dr. Ibrahim Al-Assaf. Later, Aliyev participated in the RCCI meeting,
which was also attended by Minister of Commerce and Industry Dr. Hashim
Abdullah Yamani.

Azeri diplomat Naghi Jaabbarov said that “two credit agreements will
also be signed by the Islamic Development Bank (IDB) and Azerbaijan
on Thursday in Jeddah”.

IDB has agreed to grant $10.4 million credit facility for a road
construction project and another $10.1 million credit for a tunnel
project in that former Soviet republic. Referring to the progressively
growing Riyadh-Baku relations following the meeting of businessmen
at RCCI, Saad ibn Ibrahim Al-Mojel, RCCI’s vice chairman, said that
“the two sides are discussing as how to set up direct transportation
links between the two countries. There is neither a direct flight to
Baku nor a port in the Azeri capital, which are hampering our business
plans and relations”.

“President Aliyev has promised to look into the possibility of setting
set up direct air link to boost tourism and pilgrimage traffic”,
he said. Al-Mojel said that “there is a lot of potential to forge
closer relations in all sectors”.

He said that “the Armenian problem and the geopolitical dilemma with
which Azerbaijan is faced with will not discourage the Saudi leaders
and businessmen”.

Jaabbarov said that the funds will be used for building and expanding
infrastructure in that country.

Victory Relay To Moscow Reaches Maritime Territory

VICTORY RELAY TO MOSCOW REACHES MARITIME TERRITORY

Novosti
2005-03-10 08:59

VLADIVOSTOK, March 10 (RIA Novosti) – The Victory relay, which has
flown from Yuzhno-Sakhalinsk, the administrative center of Sakhalin
region, to the western coast of the Sea of Japan the day before,
continued its westward movement in the Maritime territory.

According to the press service of the regional border department
of the FSB, the Sakhalin residents handed over the relay symbol –
a case from a 76mm shell to be filled with the soil from the regions
it passes – to the border guards of the Maritime territory.

On Thursday, the relay moved to the Pyotr Tereshkin station of the
Khasan border group. On March 11, the relay bearers will visit the
border station named after Hero of the Soviet Union Nikita Karatsupa
of the Grodekovo border group. The relay will also pass across the
Khankai and Dalnerechensk border groups.

In Luchegorsk the relay will be handed over to the Border Department of
the Khabarovsk territory and the Jewish autonomous region on March 15.

RIA was told in the press service that the relay will pass along
Russia’s borders and across Belarus, Ukraine, Moldova, Georgia,
Armenia, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and Tajikistan.

The relay began on February 23 simultaneously in Belarus (Brest)
and Kamchatka (on the Ratmanov island in the Bering strait, roughly
in the middle between Russia’s Chukotka and US Alaska). It is to end
on May 9 at Moscow’s Poklonnaya Hill, during the 60th anniversary
celebrations of victory in the Great Patriotic War of 1941-1945,
which was part of the Second World War of 1939-1945.

Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia warns against attempts t

Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All Russia warns against attempts to revise results of WWII

ITAR-TASS
09.03.2005, 18.18

MOSCOW, March 9 (Itar-Tass) — Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and All
Russia warned against attempts to revise the results of World War II.

Speaking at the opening of the 9th World Russian People~Rs Assembly
on Wednesday, Alexy II said, ~SToday some are trying to slander and
bury in oblivion the feat of our people and to equalise aggressors
and those who fought them.~T

He believes it necessary to ~Sdo everything possible to ensure that
these attempts do not succeed and that the thankful memory of those
who fought against the strongest army of the world safeguarded mankind
from a new mutual extermination.~T

The patriarch stressed, ~SThe idea of the global dictatorship of
terrorism still dominates many minds. We must think about how to
counter terrorism, how to preserve the greatest achievement of the
victory ~V lasting peace between nations, how to revive the ideal of
unity and spiritual strength that were shown in those years so that
the lessons of the great victory were not forgotten but would serve
for the future of mankind.~T

The World Russian People~Rs Assembly, which opened at Moscow~Rs Christ
the Saviour Cathedral on Wednesday, is devoted to the unity of peoples
as a guarantee of the victory over fascism and terrorism.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, officials from the Defence Ministry,
politicians, statesmen, public and religious figures addressed the
congress.

The religious delegates include the chairman of the Central Moslem
Board, Talgat Tadzhutdin, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church of
Old Believers, Metropolitan Andrian, the head of the Russian eparchy of
the Armenian Apostolic Church, Archbishop Ezras, the chairman of the
Congress of the Jewish Religious Communities of Russia, Rabbi Zinovy
Kogan, and a representative of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad,
Archbishop Mark of Germany.

Getting Real About EthniCity

Creative Loafing Charlotte

CUISINE | CUISINE 03.02.05

Getting Real About EthniCity

Charlotte cuisine covers the globe, but do the locals care?

TRICIA CHILDRESS

Next Generation Consulting, that now-notorious outfit that hired focus
groups of “young professionals” to determine Charlotte’s hipness factor,
noted that one element that would make the Queen City “cool” is to have
“authentic” ethnic restaurants, especially “authentic” ethnic restaurants in
the city core. I’m going to assume for the moment that these “young
professionals” did not mean putting in an Epnic (Disney’s Epcot + ethnic)
restaurant along the lines of a P.F. Chang’s on the Square. I’ll go with the
hopeful premise that what they want are locally grown ethnic restaurants
operating in the downtown environment. The study folk call this a “cultural
amenity,” since eating ethnic is a popular fad for grads.

But just how many ethnic restaurants does Charlotte actually have now? I
asked Bill Hardister of the Mecklenburg County Health Department this
question, since his department inspects all the food operations in the
county. Unfortunately, his office does not stratify restaurants by type or
size. On the MCHD list are 1,758 active food operators. This number takes in
all the fast food franchises, including the 31 McDonald’s and the 46 area
Subways, the deli counters at the Harris Teeters, even the jail.

So although there is no official document with the precise number of ethnic
restaurants, I culled through the list and arrived at approximately 300-plus
locally owned and operated ethnic restaurants. I did not include the
hundreds of Italian restaurants and pizzerias, local burrito-type chains
such as Salsaritas, regional burrito chains such as Southwest Moe’s, or
locally grown gyro shops such as Showmars. Nor does this list include the
growing number of ethnic bakeries or food markets. I tried to keep the list
to actual ethnic eateries. In many cases, I made the distinction of ethnic
from non-ethnic by calling the establishment and asking the owner if he, or
she, considered the restaurant to be ethnic. Some non-ethnic eateries are
owned by folks who have very ethnic sounding names.

I went further to break these 300-plus eateries into ethnic groups. The
largest turned out to be the 110 area Chinese food vendors. Not all of these
spots are restaurants. Some are take-out-only places while others are large,
full-scale restaurants such as Wan Fu, Dragon Court, Shun Lee Palace and
Baoding.

The next largest ethnic eatery group was Latino. In this category were about
90 Latino spots: 70 from Mexico, three from South America, four from El
Salvador, and about 10 from the Caribbean islands of Jamaica, the Dominican
Republic, Granada and Cuba.

Next are the “other” (non-Chinese) Asian spots. This list includes over 30
Japanese eateries, a few sushi-only places; 12 Vietnamese restaurants (one
is a soup shop); 12 Thai restaurants; 11 Indian (two of these are south
Indian vegetarian); two Korean (one of these is a small Japanese/Korean take
out, while the other, Koryo, has been operating in Charlotte for 15 years);
one Malaysian; and one Laotian.

Charlotte has four Middle Eastern eateries and one Persian restaurant (in
addition to the Kabob House, Ali Baba take-out says it serves Persian, too).
Two spots serve New Zealand cuisine and two serve African (non-Middle
Eastern) cuisine. Of these, one serves Ethiopian exclusively, while the
other serves Ethiopian and Eritrean. Regrettably, the West Africa
restaurant, Katchikally, closed last year.

In addition to the plethora of Italian places ~W and Italian-American places
~W Charlotte is host to a handful of eateries from Europe, including France,
Spain, England, Ireland and Germany. (If I’ve left out your restaurant,
please call me: 704-522-8334, ext 136.)

Surprising, though, is the lack of a Russian or Eastern European style
restaurant, given the burgeoning number of ex-pats from the former USSR and
Yugoslavia who now call Charlotte home. There are a few ethnic markets: two
Russian, one Russian/Armenian/Eastern European, and one Bosnian market.

But are these ethnic restaurants genuinely authentic? In a brief Spanish
survey given to a random sampling of Latino eateries, I asked if the owner
considered his restaurant’s dishes authentic. The answer was unanimously
yes. All but one owner came from the same country as the food served, and
all agreed that the specialties of the house could be ordered at a
restaurant in their native country.

More interesting was the answer to the percentage of clients who were US
citizens. Not one of these restaurateurs indicated that the “Charlottean”
customers amounted to more than 40 percent. In fact, at a majority of
places, the number was closer to five to 10 percent.

When asked why Charlotteans have the perception that there’s a dearth of
authentic restaurants in town, the owners looked perplexed. Here I was
speaking Spanish on a street with dozens of similar establishments. Most
owners just burst out laughing. Some tried to help by indicating that
Charlotteans might not know these restaurants exist (after all, the focus
group didn’t). Others said that Charlotteans may be uninformed about the
various Latino cuisines. One Caribbean restaurateur, visibly annoyed, noted
non-Latinos thought all Latino food was the same: Tex-Mex. “I do not serve
burritos here,” she said, shaking her head.

But then these Latino restaurateurs were quick to tell me that their
restaurants had specialties not found elsewhere in the city: the cut of
meat, or imported ingredients.

Toi (Sukanya) B. Rogers, a native of Bangkok, owns Thai Marlai in Cornelius.
She moved to Charlotte with her American husband in 1972. In the 1980s, she
opened the phenomenally popular Thai Cuisine. Then in the 1990s, she opened
Thai Orchid. Does Rogers consider her Thai Marlai an authentic Thai
restaurant? She responded wryly, “I am 100 percent Thai. My sister who is
cooking in the kitchen is 100 percent Thai. We get our seasonings, our
chilies and many other ingredients from Thailand, and the recipes are my
family’s. And they are 100 percent Thai, too. If someone does not think this
place is an authentic Thai restaurant, they should come talk to me.”

Many restaurateurs agree with Rogers. Nader Behrouzjou opened North
Carolina’s only Iranian (Persian) restaurant seven years ago. He said, “My
dishes at the Kabob House are all Iranian dishes. People tell me I should
convert some of the recipes, to Americanize them. But my culture is 2,500
years old. I serve the authentic kebob marinated with different spices.”

Alex Ayalew, a native of Addis Ababa, Ethiopia, opened Meskerem Ethiopian
Cuisine last year. He reports, “Our food is authentic. It is exactly the
same as the food in Ethiopia. We get all the spices from back home. The
taste is the same.” He said it is just as important for him to educate his
customers about his culture as to serve them delicious food, and he hopes
that more Charlotteans will visit his restaurant, which is less than one
mile from Trade and Tryon. “We try to market to everyone. Once they try it,
they come back.”

In Pineville, Gitta and Tom Maier opened the Waldhorn Restaurant six years
ago. The restaurant is named for her parents’ restaurant in Stuttgart and
her husband is a Culinary Institute of America graduate whose father is a
German baker. Gitta Maier said, “We are definitely authentic. Our customers
rave about the food and say it reminds them of Germany. Two-thirds of our
customers are American, the rest are Germans who live here.”

But the truth is that although some restaurants such as those mentioned
above remain true to their heritage, others do not. As the clientele grows
to include more Americans, a funny thing happens to the menu. It is a common
practice, for example, for Chinese restaurants to have two menus. One is for
Asians and the other for non-Asians. On the latter are such Americanized
Chinese dishes as Chicken Chow Mein, Chop Suey and, more recently, Crab
Rangoon. And no, there isn’t cream cheese in traditional Chinese cuisine.

Why two menus? Tony Koos, owner of Dragon Court Chinese Restaurant in the
Asian Corners Marketplace, puts both of his menus in the same folder ~W that
way Asians and Americans alike can choose. He stated, “We have the two
menus, the regular Chinese and authentic Chinese. Both types use the real
Chinese vegetables. What is different is the cooking style. The authentic
style is totally different.”

But serving authentic can be challenging for the restaurateur who wants to
hear that cash register ring. Would an American choose black chicken feet
stir fry at a Chinese restaurant?

The change in dishes may be subtle. Kevin Cheng, who serves extraordinary
Taiwanese cuisine at Tomi, related, “We have one dish that we had to change.
The dish called for a chicken leg cut up with the bone and the skin. First,
Americans don’t like dark meat. Next, they don’t like the bones, and third,
they don’t eat skin, so we use boneless chicken breast as the meat for this
dish. But all the other ingredients and the sauce are the same.”

Some restaurateurs opt out of the whole authentic arena altogether. At
Salsas, Sergio Gomes said their restaurant’s concept is “American Mexican.”
“We considered both directions and went with this concept. While we have
authentic Mexican choices on the menu, we primarily have Tex-Mex. But
everything is made fresh in house. We try to reach as many people as we can,
so the dishes are not too spicy. About 70 percent of our clients are
Americans; the rest is Latino, but that segment is increasing.”

But what happens to the other ethnic restaurants if one within a category
acquiesces to American taste buds? Bhupen Engineer, owner of Bombay Cuisine,
noted that having high quality Indian restaurants is important to him. He
opined, “Many people will judge all Indian restaurants from one Indian
restaurant. If they do not have a good experience at my competitor’s place,
then I will lose a future customer.”

So if ethnic restaurants have only one menu for all patrons and the food is
“authentic,” do the non-ethnic customers take advantage of the experience?
Most restaurateurs told me that Americans typically order the same dish
repeatedly. Cheng said some customers come into Tomi, realize he doesn’t
serve Americanized Chinese food like chow mein, and leave.

Cuong Duong, owner of Bên Thành Vietnamese Restaurant, reported, “Americans
eat the same thing again and again. I have one customer for the past 10
years and only sometimes does he order something new. It’s always the same.”
Duong also noted that what the Vietnamese come for at lunch is not the same
that non-Vietnamese come for at dinner. “The Vietnamese come in for our Bun
Bo Hue, a spicy lemongrass and rice noodle soup; banh canh, a shrimp and
rice noodle soup; pho soup with meatballs; and a seafood soup. Americans
order the curry, spring rolls, charbroiled meats with sweet sour sauce, and
stir fried tofu and pan fried rice noodle.”

How many is the right number of ethnic restaurants? Out of Charlotte’s
300-plus ethnic restaurants, there are 17 ~W from upscale fine dining to take
out ~W in the center city (within 277): Bistro 100 (French), ARPA (Spanish),
Latorre’s (Latino), Blue (Mediterranean), Luce, Coco Osteria (Italian), SoHo
Bistro, China Inn, China King, China Queen, The Wok, Curry House, Open
Kitchen (Southern Italian), Sushi, Tin Tin, Fuse Box and Fujos. Notably,
this group does not include a number of ethnic restaurants within one mile
from Trade and Tryon, including the exceptional Cuisine Malaya.

While ethnic restaurants may be the culture that the “young professional”
study group yearns for, the fact is I am unaware of any of our current
ethnic restaurants having a lengthy wait at dinner. Not downtown, not on
South Boulevard, North Tryon nor Central. So why come downtown?

Mao Lin, who owns SoHo Bistro in the Hearst building, came downtown because
his family desired to offer more “cosmopolitan” food. Lin had had
restaurants in Fayetteville and a small takeout Chinese restaurant in
Harrisburg.

Other area entrepreneurs have looked into going downtown. Engineer said when
the Indian population grows to about 10,000, a “fine dining” Indian
restaurant could make it downtown. However, a vegetarian South Indian
restaurant could never survive the high rent, reported Narayan Mogera, the
owner of the Woodlands South Indian Vegetarian Restaurant. “I do not serve
meat, nor do I serve alcohol. With the cost of the lease, we could not make
money downtown without selling meat or alcohol. Typically Southern Indian
restaurants, such as Woodlands, are vegetarian. Entrée dishes do not cost
that much.”

Mark Shen, owner of the Emperor Chinese Restaurant that’s within a mile of
Trade and Tryon but outside the 277 loop ~W and, thus, the study group’s
knowledge ~W noted that he has looked into going downtown, but the
ventilation requirements have dissuaded him. “Typically, the hood costs
about $15,000 to $25,000. That’s the common type you would put in here (in a
strip shopping center). Downtown, there are many environmental concerns,
especially if you are operating on the street level of a condominium
complex.” He continues, “Those hoods are very expensive. They muffle the
sound and change the grease output. They cost $75,000 to $100,000.” That
additional $75,000 for just the hood system means the entrepreneur needs to
have ever deeper pockets.

Another factor which is discouraging to entrepreneurs is the high cost of
downtown space. Rogers, who has looked into opening there, said, “Most
places cost about $10,000 a month for rent, plus a percentage.” That’s
$120,000 up a year ~W or, in a restaurateur’s language, the typical
restaurant would have to have sales of over $1.2 million just to break even.
That’s a lot of Pad Thai.

Would Charlotteans fork out $25 for a Pad Thai or Chicken Tikki Masala
entree? The owners I spoke with thought Charlotteans are not ready to spend
that kind of money at an ethnic restaurant. Besides, Charlotte needs to
welcome a larger ethnic community in order to support these additional
restaurants, and Charlotte is not known for that kind of inclusive
hospitality.

How far are the other 300 ethnic restaurants from center city? Ironically, a
large percentage of these restaurants are within 10 minutes from Trade and
Tryon. The 4900 Block of Central Avenue, which is 5.1 miles (or nine
minutes) from the Square, has the following to offer: one Thai restaurant,
two Vietnamese, one Mexican/Honduran, one Caribbean, one Salvadorean, one
Middle Eastern, one Salvadorean bakery, two Middle Eastern markets, and a
Vietnamese billiards/bar.

For now, most of Charlotte’s authentic ethnic restaurants are located in
ethnic neighborhoods, since their main customer base is ethnic. But what
about the brave souls who have staked out an ethnic position in the
netherworld of restaurants, places like Ballantyne? A few years back, Be
Pham and Axel Dikkers opened the remarkable Saigon Café. She had been the
owner of many successful Vietnamese restaurants in town; he had once owned
the French Pastis in SouthEnd. Not only was the rent high in Ballantyne, but
the folks who went to Saigon Café didn’t like the interactiveness of the
food. Dikkers told me, “I think the people didn’t want to do things with
their hands. They wanted me ~W the chef ~W to do it all for them.”

And ethnic owners are no different from Charlotte’s other independent
operators who are besieged by the increasing invasion of chain restaurants.
But the ethnic owners’ true competitor is the Epnic restaurant, since many
Americans find it so much easier to eat in a “kinda authentic” ethnic place.

While today’s customer is much savvier about food and is interested in
ethnic cuisines, will this same customer support the ethnic restaurants if
they move into non-ethnic neighborhoods, or if they move downtown? Remember
Tango Argentino? Siboney Cuban? Inka Grille? Pastis? Closed. Closed. Closed.
Closed.

The very cool aspect to getting our groove back, or getting it for the first
time, is that Charlotte can actually buy its way to being cool. Charlotteans
are very good at spending money. Instead of buying the McMansion, perhaps a
few dollars could be spared to try all the ethnic eateries in the city. In
fact, if you visited one of the 300-plus ethnic restaurants currently open
each week, it would take six years to visit all of them. Plus, during that
time, more independent restaurants would open ~W maybe even a Dutch
Indonesian place. In any case, the ultimate benefit is not “coolness.” The
ultimate benefit is that Charlotte might develop a culinary soul.

–Boundary_(ID_W/d6BdATJCb/VM46zx5xfw)–

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

2 tragic anniversaries mark Week of Prayer for Kurds

BPNews.Net
Baptist Press

Today is Thursday, Mar 10, 2005

2 tragic anniversaries mark Week of Prayer for Kurds
Mar 9, 2005
By Staff

Memorial garden
The memorial cemetery at Halabja, Iraq, is for victims of the gas attack by
Iraqi troops. The attack of March 16, 1988, on the village has become the
symbol of Saddam Hussein~Rs attempt to exterminate the Kurds from Iraq.
Multiple names on tombstones record family members who died in the attack.

RICHMOND, Va. (BP)–Two tragic anniversaries will fall on the week of March
15-21, marking events that men intended for evil — but that God is using
for good.

One year ago on March 15, anonymous gunmen attacked five Southern Baptist
humanitarian workers near Mosul in northern Iraq. Larry and Jean Elliott,
David McDonnall and Karen Watson died. Carrie McDonnall continues to recover
from multiple wounds.

Seventeen years ago, on March 16, 1988, more than 5,000 men, women and
children were killed in a chemical attack by Saddam Hussein’s regime on
Halabja, also in northern Iraq. It became known as “Black Friday” — the
most infamous of many attacks that destroyed or damaged thousands of
villages in the region and killed more than 100,000 people.

The connection: Both incidents involved the Kurds, the world’s largest
people group without their own homeland. Overwhelmingly Muslim, about 30
million Kurds live in Iraq, Turkey, Iran, Syria, Armenia and other nations
in the region.

The Southern Baptist workers who died last year were trying to help Kurds in
Iraq rebuild their lives, gain access to clean water — and discover that
God deeply loves them.

This March 15-21, Southern Baptists can honor the service of their slain
workers — and help carry it forward — by participating in a Week of Prayer
for the Kurds. Free resources that will help churches or small groups
effectively pray for the Kurds can be downloaded at ,
including: a seven-day prayer guide; a video featuring International Mission
Board President Jerry Rankin; a video tribute to the fallen Southern Baptist
workers featuring a message from Carrie McDonnall; and a PowerPoint “virtual
prayerwalk.”

“This is an important season of the year as we focus on North American
missions and our responsibility to reach our own nation for the Lord,”
Rankin said. “I encourage you to give generously to the Annie Armstrong
Offering that supports the work of our North American Mission Board. But
would you pause and through this week join us in also praying for the Kurds?
As they observe a day of infamy and tragedy in their own history, and as we
remember those of our own mission family who gave their lives, let us pray
that the Kurds might join us in God’s eternal Kingdom and through faith in
Jesus Christ become a part of His family.”

The Kurdish people are the fourth-largest ethnic group in Central Asia and
the Middle East. Only the Arabs, the Persians and the Turks outnumber them.
Yet they have lived a life of conflict and turmoil across the ages. Not
having a country of their own, they have struggled for a sense of identity
and belonging. They have been dominated by the giants of Turkey, Iran, Iraq
and Syria — and subjected to many abuses. “The Kurds have no friends but
the mountains,” a famous Kurdish proverb asserts.

But the Kurds do have a friend: The Lord of the mountains, the God who sent
His Son, Jesus Christ, to free all peoples from their spiritual chains: “…
not wishing for any to perish but for all to come to repentance” (2 Peter
3:9b).

The majority of the Kurds have little access to the Gospel. High illiteracy
rates and different Kurdish dialects create additional obstacles. But
Christian workers are creating audio and visual materials to communicate the
Good News to them. As a new wind of spiritual openness sweeps through the
region, small but growing numbers of Kurds are discovering the giver of true
freedom — Jesus Christ – and sharing Him with others.

One young survivor of Saddam’s 1988 chemical attack on the Kurds of Halabja
has become a follower of Jesus. The Southern Baptist workers who were killed
last year befriended him. In an interview soon after their deaths, he
expressed the special relationship he had with them. Tearfully, he told how
the day before their deaths, Larry Elliott hugged him and said, “You are my
son,” while David McDonnall had been “like a brother” to him.

“As you pray, thank God for those who gave their lives in the hope that
these people would one day know our Lord Jesus Christ,” Rankin said. “Pray
especially for the Kurdish people — neglected, oppressed and lost. Christ
died for them as He did for all the peoples of the world, and He desires
that they too have an opportunity to know Him.”

http://imb.org/kurds