BAKU; Major investors in Upper Garabagh disclosed

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Jan 6 2005

Major investors in Upper Garabagh disclosed

Base Metals and Garabagh Telecom companies are major investors in the
self-proclaimed Upper Garabagh Republic, Armenian press reported last
week.

According to the reports, Base Metals with 700 employees has been
developing copper and gold deposits in the region for many years. The
company, which exported the first consignment of copper and gold to
European markets in October, has invested $7 million in Upper
Garabagh over a year and a half and plans to invest a total of $20
million in the region. According to the company director Artur
Mkrtumian, processed bars of copper and gold are produced in Armenia
and then exported to Europe. Copper and gold fields in Upper Garabagh
are to be developed within 20 years, he said.

Another major investor Garabagh Telecom has been providing
telecommunications, cellular and Internet services in the region
since February 2002. The company has invested $15 million and
succeeded in establishing a mobile communications system which
currently covers 75% of the Upper Garabagh territory.

US-funded project
US Agency for International Development (USAID) signed an agreement
with the Armenian Assistance Foundation in October to implement a
humanitarian project in Upper Garabagh before September 2007.
3,000 houses and social establishments located in five districts of
Upper Garabagh, Azerbaijan’s region occupied by Armenia, will be
restored under the project.
A tender for the rehabilitation of 23 houses, 20 medical stations and
water pipelines in Asgaran region has been announced. Restoration
operations will commence in April 2005.
The project manager Andranik Sarkisian told the Armenian press that
rehabilitation work started in Khojavand region in November.
Renovation of 290 houses, 11 medical stations and water pipelines in
Aghdara region will begin shortly, Sarkisian said.

TBILISI: Min. defends decision to stop Armenians entering Georgia

The Messenger, Georgia
Jan 6 2005

Minister defends decision to stop Armenians entering Georgia at Larsi

Speaking at a press conference on January 5, Minister of Economic
Development Aleksi Aleksishvili defended the decision to prevent
Armenian citizens from crossing the Larsi checkpoint, denying that
the decision was politically motivated.
Regarding this issue Aleksishvili explained that during winter big
trucks are not allowed to cross the Larsi checkpoint from Russia into
Georgia for safety reasons, adding that the Armenian side had been
informed about this.

BAKU: Armenia’s Foreign Debt Highest in the Caucasus

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Jan 6 2005

Armenia’s Foreign Debt Highest in the Caucasus

During the discussions of the 2005 state budget in the Armenian
parliament last week, MPs expressed their concerns over the country’s
foreign debt.

Armenia’s foreign debt currently amounts to $1.129 billion ($362 per
capita). The figure will make up $1.429 billion ($458 per capita) in
the near future, as the government plans to borrow $93.6 million in
2005, $79.8 million in 2006 and $83.7 million in 2007.

Despite the hard situation, the country is expected to repay foreign
debt worth $48.6 million in 2006 and $39.8 million in 2007.

Some Armenian experts predict an increase in the country’s foreign
debt over the next five years, saying that the figure will exceed $2
billion ($622 per capita) in 2010.
Armenian sociologists, in turn, claim that the country’s per capita
foreign debt will increase and that the amount of per capita debt
will reach $1,053 in 2010.

According to the 2004 statistics, there are 3,213,000 people in
Armenia, 1,221,000 of whom, or 38% of the total population, have left
the country due to social hardship.
Armenia’s opposition explains the tough situation in the country by
its failure to participate in regional projects due to tensions in
relations with Azerba ijan and Turkey with regard to the Upper
Garabagh conflict and a high corruption level.

Georgia, with a population of 5,100,000, is second in South Caucasus
for the amount of foreign debt. The country’s liabilities make up
$1.7 billion or $333 per capita, according to the 2004 data.

The foreign debt of Azerbaijan, with a population of 8,100,000,
currently amounts to $1.5 billion, or $183 per capita. The country
repaid $102 million out of $143 million owed over the nine months of
this year.

For some, Christmas is today

Press-Enterprise , CA
Jan 6 2005

For some, Christmas is today

Armenian Orthodox Christians celebrate Christmas today, 12 days after
the churches that follow the Gregorian calendar celebrated the birth
of Jesus Christ.

Members of the Armenian Apostolic Church of Riverside will observe
the Holy Feast of Nativity during the monthly service on Sunday at
All Saints Episcopal Church, 3847 Terracina Drive, Riverside.

Bible study and hymn-singing will begin at 2 p.m., with the Holy
Badarak, Divine Liturgy at 3 p.m. The traditional Blessing of the
Water will follow the service.

The Blessing of the Water celebrates the baptism of Christ and the
revelation of his divinity.

Early Christian churches celebrated Christ’s birth and baptism
together on Jan. 6 until the 4th century, when the church in Rome
separated the two events to establish a Christian replacement for a
pagan holiday, said the Rev. Dr. Stepanos Dingilian, visiting pastor.

ANKARA: Russia is doomed

Kavkaz Center, Turkey
Jan 6 2005

Russia is doomed

The words that are in the heading are not a fruit of the author’s
imagination, but it is a quite substantiated prediction based on
specific figures and facts, which are a subject of discussion right
in Russia today. It is a matter of catastrophic demographic
situation.

Ethnic Russian population of the Russian Federation is rapidly
decreasing. Entire cities and villages are ceasing to exist due to
the lack of population in them. According to official figures of
National Forum, «Present and Future of Russia’s Population», which
took place in Moscow last month, 11,000 villages and 290 cities have
disappeared from the map of the Russian Federation. 13,000 villages
are still on the map, but they remained with no inhabitants in them.
Two villages are disappearing in Russia each day, which in one year
is equal to a small province.

Deputy Minister of Health and Social Development of Russia, Vladimir
Starodubtsev, said that Russia’s population has decreased by 9
million over the last 10 years. Moreover, depopulation affected
virtually entire Russia. Even according to understated figures, the
number of the Russian population is decreasing 700 to 800 thousand
each year (other reports show that the figure is 1.2 million a year).
Since 1992 death rate among Russians exceeded birth rate and the
difference has only been increasing ever since then.

Male death rate in Russia is one of the highest in the world. At the
same time 30% of the dead are men of working years. Average life of
men is 13 years less than that among women (women – 72 years, men –
58.8 years). Main reasons are alcoholism, oncology (cancer), traumas
and poisonings. Deaths from abuse of alcohol in Russia skyrocketed
3.5 times over the past 5 years. Suicide rate exceeds Central
European figures 2.5 times among males and 1.5 times among females.
In Russia there are twice as many deaths in traffic accidents as
there are in European states.

Russian youth ages 15 to 19 started dying 40 % more often. Out of
today’s generation of 16-year-olds, only 54 % will live until they
reach their retirement age.

In 1998 for the first time the number of retirees in Russia exceeded
the number of children and juveniles under 16 by 110,000. For January
1, 2004, this number has grown to 4.2 million. Right now the number
of children under 14 is 2.5 times lower than the number of retirees
(10.6 and 27.2 million accordingly). According to the predictions
that have been made, starting the year 2006 the number of retirees
will be growing even more actively and by 2016 it will comprise 25%
of the entire Russian population.

According to the census of the Russian Federation, the number of
ethnic Russians was 104 million out of 144.2 million of the overall
population in Russia. Considering the fact that demographic figures
in Russia have always been considered to be a national security
issue, then proceeding from Soviet/Russian practice of demographic
overstatements, you can say for sure that the number of 104 ethnic
Russians is set too high and it’s already been quite a while since
the real number of ethnic Russians sank under the psychological mark
of 100 million.

The signs of apparent worsening of demographic situation for Russians
have been seen right in Moscow as well. This week Komsomolskaya
Pravda newspaper («Young Communist Truth») published the figures of
ethnic structure of the population of the Russian capital. Senior
research officer of Center for Geopolitical Research of Institute of
Geography under Russian Academy of Sciences, Olga Vendina, whose
research is based on the records from civil status registries in all
districts of Moscow over the years of 1993 – 2003, ‘ethnically
tinged’ neighborhoods have already been formed in Moscow. In these
parts of the city Russian population is constantly decreasing, while
the percentage of residents of other ethnic backgrounds is
systematically increasing. Furthermore, it is in Moscow’s historical
center, where birthrate among non-Russian population is considerably
higher than birthrate among Russians, who are being naturally ousted
to the capital’s outskirts.

The largest ethnic diasporas in Moscow, whose numbers are constantly
growing due to sharp increase of newborns throughout the last 10
years are Azeris, Tatars, Armenians and Ukrainians. At the same time
each 5th Russian woman marries a man from the Caucasus.

But that’s not all. About a year ago Novye Izvestiya (‘New Tidings’)
newspaper published some figures about ethnical structure of Russia,
compiled by Jewish University of Jerusalem based on the 2002 census.

According to that sensational document, in 2002 the number of Chinese
population in Russia reached almost 3.5 million, and thus the Chinese
have now taken the fourth place in Russia’s population, following
Russians (104 million), Tatars (7.2 million), and Ukrainians (5.1
million). 15 years ago there were only 5 thousand Chinese living in
Russia.

According to the predictions made by the experts, by the year 2013
every fourth person in Russia will be a Chinese.

In this short material we quoted only a few facts that are recognized
in Russia and that are not propagandistic exercises of Kavkaz
Center’s journalists, as Moscow likes to be claiming. Anyone can draw
his/her own conclusions from these facts. And in conclusion, we would
like to quite the Holy Koran:

«But if you turn back, then indeed I have delivered to you the
message with which I have been sent to you, and my Lord will bring
another people in your place, and you cannot do Him any harm; surely
my Lord is the Preserver of all things».
(The Koran 11/57).

Said Ibrahayev,

for Kavkaz Center

http://kavkazcenter.com/eng/article.php?id=3420

Cafesjian, Kerkorian awarded Fridtjoff Nansen medal

Gerard Cafesjian and Kirk Kirkoryan have been awarded with great
humanitarian, Nobel Peace Prize recipient Fridtjoff Nansen medal.

Armenia TV
January 6, 2005

Prominent American-Armenian benefactor Gerard Cafesjian has been awarded
with the Fridtjoff Nansen medal for his active socio-political
participation, establishment of humanitarian principles, investments in
the motherland, namely for reconstruction of the ”Cascade” museum,
and for his active participation in all nation-wide projects. Fridtjoff
Nansen Fund’s chairman also delivered that . another prominent
Armenian-American benefactor and businessman Kirk Kirkoryan has also
been awarded with the same medal for reconstruction of the Armenian
economy and desaster zone, for reconstruction of cultural objects, for
unprecedented number of highway-construction projects and for financing
a great deal of other humanitarian initiatives. ”This once again
testifies that nothing is left unnoticable by people who live in
Armenia.” Said Felix Bakhchinyan, chairman of the ” Fridtjoff Nansen
Fund”. The fund functions for about ten years. During this period it
has awarded with medals several prominent people: among them, grandson
of the great humanitarian, architect Aidil Nansen, Russian
ex-prime-minister Nikolay Rijkov, president of the Norwegian National
Academy Bjarne Vaaler, presidendts of Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh, the
prime-minister of Armenia, defense ministers of Armenia and Nagorno
Karabakh, writers Eduartas Majelaitis, Silva Kaputikyan, Zori Balayan,
president of the Natioanal Academy of RA Fadey Sarkissyan and so
forth. Chairman of the Fridtjoff Nansen Fund congratulates the great
patriots on the occasion of beeing awarded with the medal of the Nobel
Price recipient Fridtjoff Nansen. Felix Bakhchinyan also congratulates
them both on the occasion of the New Year and Christmas. Please, find
underneath the texts of the certificates, which were awared to Gerard
Cafesjian and Kirk Kirkoryan.

Honorable Mr Gerard Cafesjian, for your fruitfull activities conducted
towards establishing of social-political and humanitarian principles, as
well as for your unforgettable merit put within development of the
republic’s economy and for your most active participation in all
nation-wide projects, you are being granted with the comemorative medal
of the great humanitarian and Nobel Peace Prize recepient Fridtjoff
Nansen.

Honorable Mr Kirk Kirkoryan, for your fruitfull activities conducted
towards establishing of social-political and humanitarian principles, as
well as for your unforgettable merit in the motherland’s development,
reconstruction of the desaster zone, road-construction and renovation of
cultural centers, you are being granted with the comemorative medal of
the great humanitarian and Nobel Peace Prize recepient Fridtjoff Nansen.

High Comissioner of the League of Natioans, recipient the Nobel Peace
Prize, National Hero of Norway, physician, polar explorer and great
friend of the Armenian people Fridtjoff Nansen encountered numbers of
Armenian refugees, who escaped the Great Genocide committed by the
Turks. He also has implemented a prolific work in introducing the
Armenian problem to the world. It is well-known that Nansen has given
passports with his own signature to those Armenians who had no
documents. And those passports were accepted in many countries. n those
times the great humanitarian helped the people of Povoljie to escape
starvation. He sent to Russia 4000 trains packed with food, as a result
of which, 7 million people escaped death. Today one in every 5 Russians
is the generation of those who once were saved by Fridtjoff Nansen. In
1925 Nansen visited Armenia in order to learn personally the refugees’
situation. He understood that the super-powers and the League of Nations
once again have deceived Armenians and himself. After this, he left for
the United States, hoping to collect donations. Nansen delivered
lectures in all Universities, receiving money in return. And in the
end, in the streets of big cities, the citizen of the world, Fridtjoff
Nansen, began to ask for money for Armenian refugees.

BAKU: OSCE Minsk Group co-chairman calls for Azeri concessions

OSCE Minsk Group co-chairman calls for Azeri concessions

Ekspress, Baku
6 Jan 05

The Russian co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, a team of
international mediators to resolve the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict, has
called on Azerbaijan to make concessions at the forthcoming talks in
order to reach a settlement of the conflict. In an interview with the
Azerbaijani daily Ekspress, Yuriy Merzlyakov described the Prague
talks as “decisive” and said: “Armenia has agreed to some
concessions. Now, it is Azerbaijan’s turn”. The following is the text
of Alakbar Raufoglu report by Azerbaijani newspaper Ekspress on 6
January headlined “‘Prague recipe in the Karabakh settlement'” and
subheaded “Or why the Armenians have agreed to a ‘stage-by-stage
solution plan'”; subheadings are as published:

“The Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers discuss at talks
issues pertaining to a staged solution to the Karabakh conflict,” the
Russian co-chairman of the OSCE Minsk Group, Yuriy Merzlyakov, said
yesterday, commenting on the latest statements by the Azerbaijani
leadership on the Prague process in an exclusive interview with
Ekspress. He noted that Armenia has already agreed to a stage-by-stage
solution [principle]. “Now we have to work out certain details.”

Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev has told a recent meeting of the
country’s Security Council that a new stage has started in the
Karabakh settlement. The head of state said that the Prague process
envisages a stage-by-stage solution to the conflict and the
discussions are proceeding in a way that is favourable to Azerbaijan.

“We do not rule out agreement on some options proposed by Baku. But
for this purpose mutual steps should be taken, desire should be
demonstrated and coordinated,” Merzlyakov said. He described the
forthcoming Prague talks as “a decisive moment”.

Big talks due next week

“The Azerbaijani and Armenian foreign ministers are due to have
important talks next week. The dialogue can be continued towards a
final end should there be any specific results in Prague,” the Russian
co-chairman stressed.

He said the meeting of the ministers “will cast some light on many
questions about the evaluation of the situation, specific solution
proposals and prospects of holding more talks: Armenia has agreed to
some concessions. Now, it is Azerbaijan’s turn”.

Besides, the activity of a fact-finding group that will be sent to the
region of the conflict on the initiative of the OSCE on 25 January
will also be in focus in Prague. “We attach great importance to this
mission. The fact-finders may clarify many points that affect the
course of the talks and eliminate complications.”

New stage?

“The Prague meeting on the issues discussed in 2004 will be continued.
It is still too early to talk about specific results. Certain elements
will be discussed within the framework of this process,” Azerbaijani
Deputy Foreign Minister Araz Azimov told Ekspress.

He said that “Azerbaijan had more success” in the negotiations in
2004, as Baku managed to familiarize the international community with
its position on Nagornyy Karabakh. “Our primary goal is to have the
territories liberated. Now, the Azerbaijani government should carry on
its efforts in the peace process in this direction.”

Besides Armenia’s attitude to the latest talks and specific solution
options, the Prague meeting will discuss the illegitimate settlement
policy being pursued in the occupied territories, Azimov said. The
parties will also review the “details” of the fact-finding group’s
visit to the region late in January. The mission will prepare a
special report after inspecting the occupied territories. “I hope that
the new stage of the Prague process will be more active,” he said.

Touching on the details of the talks, the deputy foreign minister said
that “the interests and positions of the parties should be
distinguished”. “It is possible to make very sensitive, complicated
and principled decisions only in normal and objective conditions which
will be created after attempts to settle the conflict are stepped up
and the consequences [of the conflict] and results are removed.”

He said that Baku abides its position on territorial
integrity. Commenting on the reports that Armenia has agreed to the
idea of a stage-by-stage solution, Azimov said that Yerevan’s position
has not changed in principle but “there is desire for rapprochement”.

Karabakh’s ethnic Armenians

[Armenian] Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan held a one-to-one meeting
with the “so-called head of the foreign ministry” of the “Nagornyy
Karabakh Republic”, Arman Malikyan, in Yerevan yesterday. Official
reports say the two discussed the details of the Prague talks and the
possible participation of the separatists in the peace process.
Oskanyan told Malikyan that the position of Karabakh’s ethnic
Armenians would be taken into account in the discussions between the
foreign ministers.

“We now have a favourable situation in the conflict. Armenia must make
use of this opportunity to familiarize the international community
with the essence of the conflict and have the problem solved in line
with the principle of self-determination of the people of Nagornyy
Karabakh.”

The meeting also discussed priorities of Armenia’s Karabakh policies
next year.

“Prague recipe”

One may come to a conclusion from the above mentioned official
statements that a specific solution “recipe” will be discussed in the
forthcoming round of the Prague talks. Naturally, it is difficult to
predict the effect of this situation on the settlement process. In any
case, it is not yet clear what the ministers “bargain” on.

“The statements made in the run-up to and before the Prague meetings
allow us to conclude that the co-chairmen have produced a new
settlement recipe. Although it envisages a stage-by-stage solution,
there are some dangerous tendencies,” the former [Azerbaijani] foreign
minister, Tofiq Zulfuqarov, told Ekspress yesterday.

The Armenians aim to include certain items in the proposals which will
allow for a stage-by-stage solution, he said. At the talks Yerevan
calls for the prior resolution of issues such as the status of
Nagornyy Karabakh, a referendum among the Armenian community and other
legal issues.

“The main discussions and problems are related to it at this stage.
Therefore, the co-chairmen are now more inclined to a stage-by-stage
solution,” Zulfuqarov said. Baku should hold the “UN card” in order to
take advantage of the settlement process, he noted. One can only
expect the “result to continue the discussions” from the Prague
talks. Specific progress in the resolution of the problem depends on
international pressure on Armenia. US President George Bush is
expected to announce his country’s foreign policy priorities soon,
Zulfuqarov stressed. “If the Karabakh issue is mentioned there, the
Minsk Group co-chairmen will deal with the issue more seriously.”

Former state advisor Vafa Quluzada also believes that the fate of the
Prague talks depends not on the parties to the conflict, but on the
co-chairmen.

“The main dialogue is now between the USA and Russia. If the USA
manages to explain the existing realities to Moscow and Paris, there
will be no problems. We should know that the USA holds the key to the
problem and it will be used soon. The Prague talks and any talk of
recipes just aim at diverting the attention”.

ANKARA: EU/National Security

TURKEY

EU/national security

The National Security Council issued a statement welcoming the fact that the
EU had given Turkey an accession talks start date but warning that Turkey must
be ready to deal with any problems arising during negotiations. The statement
said: “It was emphasized how important it was for certain negative points in
the [EU] summit decision to be eliminated so that the accession talks process,
which aims for full membership, can be conducted on sustainable grounds not
containing any conditions or discriminating against Turkey.” Among the issues
which the council envisaged might be problematic were security problems
connected with Cyprus and the Aegean, the alleged Armenian genocide problem and the
issue of minorities.

(Hurriyet web site, Istanbul, in Turkish 31 Dec 04)

Mapping Sitting: On Portraiture and Photography

NYU’s GREY ART GALLERY PRESENTS RARE GLIMPSE OF PORTRAIT PHOTOGRAPHY
FROM THE ARAB WORLD

Mapping Sitting: On Portraiture and Photography
A Project by Walid Raad and Akram Zaatari – Arab Image Foundation

January 11-April 2, 2005

New York City, October 25, 2004. In Mapping Sitting, two contemporary
artists present installations that dynamically disclose how
photographic portraits operated in the Middle East over the last
century. On view at the Grey Art Gallery from January 11 through April
2, this timely and topical exhibition was conceived by Walid Raad-a
media artist based in New York and Beirut and best known for his
innovative project titled The Atlas Group-and Akram Zaatari, a
prominent video artist, filmmaker, and curator who lives and works in
Beirut. Raad and Zaatari have devised four sections based on the
Middle Eastern tradition of `surprise’ street photography, on
itinerant photography, on institutional group portraits, and on
passport images. The latter features over 4,500 postage stamp-sized
passport portraits, while a video projection presents group photos of
military soldiers taken in Iraq, Lebanon, Palestine, Syria, and Egypt
in the first half of the 20th century.

Raad and Zaatari reveal how Arab portrait photography not only
pictured individuals and groups, but also functioned as commodity,
luxury item, and adornment. Their installations feature diverse
photographs from the Arab Image Foundation-an archive in Beirut
housing more than 70,000 images taken by professional and amateur
photographers from the late 19th century to the present.

Collectively, the photographs convey pluralistic and dynamic Middle
Eastern communities through the lenses of indigenous
photographers-images far different from photos of the region
circulating widely today in the popular press.

Mapping Sitting presents four distinct practices: studio passport
photography; institutional group portrait photography; the street
tradition of ` photo-surprise’; and portraits by itinerant
photographers. These four forms are examined through the works of
Tripoli-based Armenian photographer Antranik Anouchian (1908-1991);
Lebanese photographer Hashem el Madani (born 1930); various group
portrait photographers who were active in Lebanon, Palestine, Syria,
Egypt, and Iraq between 1880 and 1960; and early 1950s street
`photo-surprise’ images by Setrak Albarian and Sarkis Restikian of the
Photo Jack Studio in Tripoli, Lebanon. Addressing the proliferation of
photographic portrait industries in the Arab world, the exhibition not
only raises questions about portrait photography in the Middle East,
but also about portraiture, photography, and visual culture in
general.

The history of photography in the Arab world is not well documented.

Introduced in the Middle East by colonial occupiers in the mid-19th
century, photography was, at first, dominated by Western practitioners
who focused primarily on antiquities, regional landscape, and exotic
traditions. Local photographic production flourished after Yessai
Garabedian, the Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, held the first
photography workshop in the region in the 1860s.In the years that
followed, photographic production continued to expand, especially as
Armenian exiles, many of whom had been trained as photographers, fled
Turkey for Islamic countries. With the arrival of Kodak box cameras in
the 1880s and 1890s, the appetite for photographic images increased.

As photography spread throughout Middle Eastern culture, modernization
was transforming the region. The social, political, and economic lives
of the emerging nation-states gave rise to nationalist liberation
movements alongwith evolving awareness of geography and
identity. Modern building methods and urban planning were implemented,
labor and women’s movements developed, and new literary and artistic
forms focused on identity as the central issue in developing
socio-political realities. Contrary to Western images of the Arab
world, which often depicted marginalized or dehumanized subjects,
photographs by indigenous Middle Eastern residents captured the
quotidian lives of these changing communities. Concentrating on
commercial photography, Mapping Sitting’s creators Walid Raad and
Akram Zaatari-artists who also function inthis instance as
curators-pose a number of questions: What historical, aesthetic,
philosophical, and cultural conceptions of photography are repeated
and/or questioned in these images? What can we learn about notions of
identity from these portraits? Keeping in mind the peculiar conditions
of production, distribution, and consumption of the images, Mapping
Sitting also investigates how these photographic practices reveal
characteristics of nascent national identities.

Walid Raad is Assistant Professor of Art at Cooper Union in New York
City.

His works include textual analysis, video, and photography
projects. He has recently performed at the Centre Georges Pompidou,
Paris; the House of World Cultures, Berlin; and the Institute of
Contemporary Arts, London. In 2002,his Atlas Group was included in the
Whitney Biennial, New York, and Documenta 11 in Kassel, Germany. Akram
Zaatari is the author of more than 30 videos, including This Day
(2003), How I Love You (2001), Her + Him Van Leo (2001). His writings
appear in critical and scholarly journals such as Parachute,
Framework, Bomb, Al-Adaab, and Al-Nahar. Zaatari is a co-founder of
the Arab Image Foundation in Beirut; Raad sits on the organization’s
board.

Mapping Sitting is complemented by a 250-page publication that
includes 840 photographs, designed by Mind The Gap Productions in
Lebanon, and co-edited by Karl Bassil, Zeina Maasri, and Akram Zaatari
in collaboration with Walid Raad.

In conjunction with the Lower Manhattan Cultural Council and Cooper
Union,a series of public programs will explore the multiple issues
this timely exhibition brings to light. The Grey Art Gallery and the
Arab Image Foundation are organizing a national tour of Mapping
Sitting.

The exhibition is made possible in part by the Islamic World Arts
Initiative, a program of Arts International generously supported by
the Doris Duke Foundation for Islamic Art, and the New York State
Council on the Arts. The Grey Art Gallery presentation is made
possible in part by the Abby Weed Grey Trust. Educational programs are
supported in part by the Grey Art Gallery’s Inter/National Council.

Armenian priest assaulted by Yeshiva students

Armenian priest assaulted by Yeshiva students

Jerusalem Post
Jan. 6, 2005 19:04

By ETGAR LEFKOVITS

An Armenian Priest was assaulted by four yeshiva students in the Old City of
Jerusalem Thursday afternoon, in the second such attack in the last three
months, police said.

The altercation began when the priest, Father Avedis, was spat on by one of
the yeshiva students in front of the Armenian Monastery where he lives in the
Armenian Quarter of the Old City, the priest said.

The Jewish assailant refused to go to police with the priest, and the two got
into a scuffle.

Meanwhile, a couple more yeshiva students came by, and got into a heated
argument with the priest over who attacked whom, the priest recounted.

A foreign ministry official, accompanied by an Israeli security guard, who
was passing by came to the aid of the priest, and summoned police.

The four haredi suspects subsequently scuffled with the Israeli security
guard who tried to detain them before police arrived, police said.

The four were subsequently placed under arrest, and will be remanded in a
Jerusalem court on Friday morning.

The priest was not hurt, and did not require medical treatment in the
incident.

The assault on the priest was immediately condemned by the New York-based
Anti Defamation League, and, later, by the Mayor of Jerusalem.

“This kind of behavior is outrageous, inappropriate and goes against all
Jewish teachings, said the Co- Director of the ADL’s Israel Office Laura Kam
Issacharoff.

She added that such attacks are not as incidental as they seem, and that
Jerusalem yeshiva students must be taught respect and tolerance of others.

Later Thursday evening, Jerusalem Mayor Uri
Lupolianski also condemned the attack which he called a “despicable act”
which is “likely to harm the delicate relations that exist in Jerusalem.”

In a statement, he added that the “Jewish people,
which was subject to centuries of persecution abroad, should be the first to
show tolerance and moderation to others.”

The attack on the Armenian priest was the second such incident in the Old
City of Jerusalem in the last three months.

In October, another yeshiva student spat at a Sunday morning procession of
Armenian clergymen in
Jerusalem’s Old City and then scuffled with a priest.

He later apologized.