Armenia, Russia have allies relations – Kocharyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
TASS
June 26, 2004 Saturday

Armenia, Russia have allies relations – Kocharyan

By Tigran Liloyan

YEREVAN

Relations between Armenia and Russia are rightfully viewed as
relations of allies and are based on traditional cooperation between
the two nations, Armenian President Robert Kocharyan noted in a
greeting addressed to participants of the constituent assembly of the
Russian-Armenian Business Cooperation Association to be held in
Moscow on Tuesday.

The organisation is being set up under the leadership of Federation
Council member and former Soviet prime minister Nikolai Ryzhkov.

Kocharyan will be honorary chairman of the organisation.

Bilateral relations between Armenia and Russia were always enriched
and supported by close cooperation in various organisations,
associations and creative unions, Kocharyan noted.

The president expressed the hope the new association would promote
developing strategic partnership between the two states and give new
dynamism and quality to trade and economic cooperation.

The association uniting well-known representatives of science,
business, medicine, education, culture, tourism and other areas is
believed to be able to solve difficult problems and implement
specific business projects and programmes, the Armenian president
said.

The city of disciples; tourists flocking to Italian city…

The Independent (London)
June 26, 2004, Saturday

THE CITY OF DISCIPLES;
TOURISTS ARE FLOCKING TO THE ITALIAN CITY WHERE MEL GIBSON FILMED
HIS

by JAMES FERGUSON House of God (main): the streets of Matera; (left)
Jim Caviezel as Jesus in The Passion of the Christ’

As caves go it was certainly comfortable, with firm beds, a
television, air conditioning and even a minibar. It was also stylish
in a stripped- down sort of way. Discreet lighting and subtle tiles
in the bathroom were complemented by quirky details like a squatting
gargoyle carved out of the rock opposite the loo. The small terrace
was decorated with a mosaic- topped table and fashionable seating. It
exuded taste. But I didn’t realise how trendy it was until Signore
Cristallo, its owner, produced a copy of Hip Hotels, confirming its
chic credentials.

The Sassi Hotel (sassi means “stones”) is, quite literally, a
collection of caves gouged out of the sandstone cliffs in the
southern Italian city of Matera. The 20-odd rooms are arranged on
various levels, joined by steps, and while from a distance the hotel
may look like a normal building, its facade is precisely that – a
front made out of stone blocks dug from the caves. The technology
might be Stone Age, but it works. The caves are cool in the fierce
Basilicata summer and retain warmth in the winter.

Like some troglodyte metropolis, Matera is largely comprised of holes
carved out of the hillsides that drop steeply down from the city’s
central plateau. Up on this spur, known as the Civita, is a more
familiar sort of Italian city, a cluster of narrow streets, palazzos
and elegant squares that eventually merge into modern, nondescript
suburbs. But tumbling down two ravines are the sassi, the tiers of
cave dwellings. Looking across the ravine, you see a vertical
panorama of doors and windows, with flights of steps winding up
between the buildings. As you climb these steps you walk across the
roofs of the caves below.

The hillsides present a bizarre geometry of arches, columns and
chimneys as well as the occasional satellite dish. Some dwellings are
more ornate than others, with balconies and towers, while the most
humble are little more than a door in the cliff face. Rather like a
Swiss cheese, the soft tufa stone is pitted with holes of different
sizes. Sometimes the effect is eerie, like a legion of staring eyes.
At other times, especially at dusk, the stone takes on a glorious
mellow tone.

The city is also exceptionally rich in churches: some conventional,
others – the so-called chiesi rupestri – dug into the rock. Some date
back to between the 8th and 12th centuries when monks from Armenia,
the Middle East and Asia Minor settled here, escaping persecution and
building monastic communities in the harsh terrain.

This extraordinary urban landscape is beginning to attract visitors
to Matera, and the tourist authorities are waking up to the fact that
the city is not only architecturally unique but stunningly beautiful.
And Matera has another claim to fame, for it was here that Mel Gibson
chose to film The Passion of the Christ, his notoriously intense
reconstruction of the crucifixion. Standing on the steep stone path
where Gibson shot Christ’s agonising climb carrying the cross, you
can make out a rocky and desolate outcrop across the valley where the
crucifixion itself was recreated.

Not that this was the first blockbuster to be made in Matera. Around
25 films have been filmed here since the 1950s, many seeking to
replicate what a biblical scene two millennia ago might have looked
like. But Gibson’s painful epic was probably the best, at least in
terms of local employment. “At least 500 locals got jobs as extras,
although 5,000 applied,” says our enthusiastic guide, Mariarosaria
Lamacchia, an art history graduate who returned home to work in
Matera’s fledgling tourist industry. “You could tell who was working
on the film as they started walking round town showing off their long
beards.”

You can’t begrudge Matera’s people their long-overdue change in
fortune. From medieval times, the gulf between the wealthy feudal few
who lived at the top of the town and the majority in the sassi was
huge and insurmountable. Looking down on their poor neighbours in
every sense, the elite of landowners and professionals built
beautiful civic buildings and ornate churches, many later re-styled
to suit Baroque tastes. The cave-dwellers, meanwhile, lived in abject
poverty. Most of them were farm labourers, working for a pittance for
the landowners. Tuberculosis and malaria were rife.

Little changed until well into the 20th century. New caves were still
being excavated until the 1950s, as a growing population looked for
affordable housing. Raffaele Cristallo, who was born into a family
that lived on the plateau, recalls that women used to dump their
families’ sewage into the bottom of the ravines. “But they managed to
do it with great dignity,” he says, “hiding the buckets under their
shawls.” If there was a strong sense of communal solidarity, there
was also terrible poverty and squalor. Horses and donkeys shared the
unventilated caves with entire families. Mariarosaria showed us one
cave, now housing a potter’s workshop, in which 40 people slept.

The tragic predicament of Matera’s cave dwellers was illuminated in
Carlo Levi’s account of his political exile in Basilicata in the
1930s. In his memoir Christ Stopped at Eboli, Levi’s sister passes
through Matera and likens the sassi to Dante’s Inferno, in which
people inhabit a netherworld of disease and deprivation. “Never
before have I witnessed such a spectacle of misery,” she says,
remarking that the children begged for quinine rather than money.

“Something had to give after the war,” says Signore Cristallo,
recalling that the region had elected an energetic member of
parliament who invited the former Prime Minister De Gasperi to view
the sassi in 1950. “When De Gasperi came, he saw all those tiny beds
piled up side by side in a cave and the most tragic expression came
over his face.” Soon people began to speak of la vergogna, the
national shame of Matera. True to his word, De Gasperi enacted
legislation in 1952, ordering the forcible evacuation of the sassi
and the relocation of some 15,000 people into new, purpose- built
accommodation on the plateau. The most desperate were moved first,
and within eight years almost all had swapped their caves for an
apartment in the new city. The state took over the site. There was no
choice, but, says Signore Cristallo, everybody wanted to leave. I
asked whether some might have missed their old homes. “Perhaps they
missed the solidarity of their old neighbourhood, but they had gained
a proper home, a bathroom, a new beginning.” The caves were abandoned
and bricked up. For years the sassi were a wilderness, inhabited only
by wild dogs. The identity of the city changed as people abandoned
agriculture for the construction industry. A generation was born
knowing nothing of cave life.

That might have been the end of the story. But gradually attitudes
changed, as academics re-evaluated the importance of the site. What
had hitherto been seen as a slum began to be viewed as a culturally
distinctive human habitat. A gradual, and informal, repopulation of
the sassi took place in the 1970s, as enterprising characters like
Signore Cristallo bought some of the few caves that had remained in
private hands. Then, in 1986, new legislation paved the way for a
proper renaissance, when the Italian government announced it would
support businesses and individuals wanting to resettle in the
neighbourhood. The shame of Matera finally became its pride when
UNESCO designated the sassi a World Heritage Site in 1993.

Now, groups of visitors trudge up and down the pathways of the cave
district, and a cluster of restaurants and B&Bs have opened up. The
hammering and drilling of restoration work echoes sporadically around
the ravines. There are strict UNESCO-inspired guidelines as to what
can be done. Signore Cristallo, who has witnessed the death and
rebirth of this spectacular place, welcomes all this activity and is
proud of his regular guests, who include diplomats and artists.

He is also proud that his son has married a Brazilian girl whose
father was attending a conference in Matera. It is a small symbol of
the city’s revival. Has he seen The Passion of the Christ? “I may go
one day,” he says, “just out of curiosity.” Meanwhile, in the nearby
Trattoria Lucana, they’re advertising fettuccine alla Mel Gibson,
delighted that the director would drop in after work.

TRAVELLER’S GUIDE

GETTING THERE

The nearest international gateway to Matera is Bari, 40 miles away.
Ryanair (0871 246 0000; ) flies there daily from
Stansted from pounds 46 return. British Airways (0870 850 9 850;
) flies to Bari from Gatwick from pounds 78.70. Those not
inclined to drive from Bari to Matera can take a train there: the
Ferrovie Appulo-Lucane line ( – in Italian only) runs
from Stazione FAL to Matera Centrale. There are several departures
daily except Sunday.

STAYING THERE

I Sassi (00 39 0835 331 009; ) is surprisingly
reasonable given that this is probably Matera’s finest hotel: doubles
start at EUR84 (pounds 60), room only. Casa D’Imperio (00 39 0835 330
503; ), a refurbished 16th-century farmhouse
nearby, makes a cheerful alternative. Doubles start at EUR64 (pounds
45.70), breakfast included.

FURTHER INFORMATION

Contact the Matera Turismo, a local cooperative promoting the region
(00 39 0835 336 572; ), or the Italian State
Tourist Board (020-7408 1254; ).

www.ryanair.com
www.ba.com
www.fal-srl.it
www.hotelsassi.it
www.casadimperio.it
www.materaturismo.it
www.enit.it

Bush’s Ankara talks focus on Iraq

Deutsche Presse-Agentur
June 27, 2004, Sunday

Bush’s Ankara talks focus on Iraq

Ankara

Iraq topped the agenda for U.S. President George Bush’s brief visit
to Ankara Sunday, with Turkish leaders pressing for U.S. action
against Kurdish rebels in northern Iraq. In a brief statement before
meeting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, Bush said
ongoing developments in Iraq, NATO and a variety of other issues
would be the main agenda points. “I would remind the people of this
good country that I believe you ought to be given a date by the
European Union (EU) for your eventual acceptance into the EU,” Bush
said. “I appreciate so very much the example your country has set on
how to be a Moslem country and at the same time, a country which
embraces democracy and rule of law and freedom.” Bush declined
reporters’ questions and did not make any other public statement
during his stay in Ankara. After meeting Erdogan in the morning, Bush
layed a wreath at the mausoleum of the founder of the modern Turkish
Republic, Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, and later met Turkish president
Ahmet Necdet Sezer. The U.S. president then flew to Istanbul where he
met various religious leaders including Greek Orthodox Patriarch
Bartholomeus, Armenian Orthodox Patriarch Mesrob Mutafyan and head of
the Turkish Religious Affairs Department Ali Bardakoglu. On Monday
Bush will participate in a two-day NATO summit in Istanbul. According
to Turkish media reports, leaders in Ankara sought assurances from
Bush, as well as from Secretary of State Colin Powell and National
Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice, that the U.S. supported the full
territorial sovereignty of Iraq and that the oil-rich region of
Kirkuk would not be handed over to Iraqi Kurdish groups. Turkey is
concerned that Kurds in northern Iraq are laying claims on the region
with the view to use oil revenues that may one day allow them to
declare independence. Ankara fears that such a development may lead
to Turkey’s own restive Kurds to push for independence. On that
point, Turkish leaders called on Bush to make real efforts to rout
out rebels from the Kurdish Workers’ Party (PKK) now holed up in
mountainous northern Iraq. Security was tight for Bush’s first-ever
visit to Turkey with some 13,000 police on duty in Ankara, police
helicopters patrolling the skies and some of the capital’s busiest
roads closed to traffic. Ties between Turkey, the only Moslem member
of NATO, and the United States were severely strained in the run-up
to the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq when the Turkish parliament refused
to allow U.S. troops to use Turkey as a launching pad to attack its
neighbour. While government to government relations are now on a much
better level, the invasion and occupation of Iraq have been extremely
unpopular amongst Turks and anti-U.S. feeling may rise even higher if
a threat by members of the al-Tawhid wa al-Jihad group in Iraq to
execute three Turkish nationals being held hostage is carried out.
The group has said the three would be executed if Turkey does not
agree to pull its citizens and companies out of Iraq within 72 hours.
Supporters of various leftist political parties and trade unions
gathered in the Istanbul suburb of Kadikoy on Sunday to protest both
Bush’s visit and the NATO summit, but unlike protests in Ankara on
Saturday the demonstration proceeded peacefully. dpa cw sc mga

The bare bones of Turkey

Sunday Age (Melbourne)
June 27, 2004 Sunday
First Edition

The bare bones of Turkey

by Claire Scobie

Louis de Bernieres sticks to the Aegean in his new novel. By Claire
Scobie.

Louis de Bernieres famously once likened “the pressure of trying to
write a second bestseller to standing in Trafalgar Square and being
told to get an erection in the rush hour”.

Captain Corelli’s Mandolin not only cast de Bernieres as a publishing
phenomenon, but at the height of Corellimania, tourism to the Greek
island of Cephallonia where the novel is set, rose by 20 per cent.
Since then more than 3 million copies of Captain Corelli have been
sold in English and it has been translated into 24 languages. So has
he succeeded with his latest novel, Birds without Wings?

“What, get an erection?” He chuckles. “Yes, to begin with I had a
ghastly sense of fatalism that everybody was going to say it wasn’t
as good as Corelli. . . Now I think it’s probably better, although it
may not be as cuddly or lovable.”

Louis de Bernieres, who was in Australia last month, is at 49 a
retiring, jovial man given to frequent bursts of belly-shaking
laughter and piquant English wit. Birds without Wings, 10 years in
the writing, is a sumptuous epic feast of love and war, about the
inhabitants of Eskibahce (literally the Garden of Eden), a town in
south-west Turkey at the turn of the 20th century.

Christians, Muslims, Armenians and Greeks co-exist, bound by history,
inter-marriage and friendship, until World War One heralds the
collapse of the Ottoman Empire and shatters their relative communal
harmony. It bears de Bernieres’ literary hallmarks – vast emotional
breadth, dazzling characterisation, rich historical detail (and
gruesome battle scenes), swerving between languid sensuality and
horror, humour and choking despair.

Its genesis was in de Bernieres’ fascination with the Turkish
accounts of Gallipoli – where, “as in Australia, Gallipoli has a role
of myth-making . . . Turks often think of Gallipoli as the point when
the Ottoman Empire was transformed into Turkey . . . because Mustafa
Kemal (later known as Ataturk) was the most important Turkish
commander at Gallipoli and then became the head of the republic”.

For his research de Bernieres trawled through the Ottoman archives,
reading primary sources in French (the diplomatic language), visited
Turkey three times and spent two weeks walking the Gallipoli battle
fields, where his maternal grandfather had fought and was shot three
times in one day. Some 40 years later, still suffering from war
wounds, “he shot himself, a late casualty of the war,” says his
grandson.

“Gallipoli was moving and made me feel very sad. Bones are coming to
the surface everywhere . . . and you have no idea whether they are
French bones or Anzac bones, or British or Sikhs. That makes you
understand the fatuousness of nationalism because you can’t tell the
nationality of a bone. You can’t tell if it is a Muslim or Christian,
just a human bone.”

While Birds was not written as a modern fable, “it necessarily is a
parable”, he says, reflecting his hatred of “certainties,
absolutism”, nationalism and religious dogma.

De Bernieres says he was an “obstinate and wilful child”, traits he
still holds dear today. He read voraciously and recalls once “trying
to dig to Australia in the orchard” but only getting “about four-feet
down”. Aged 18 he briefly served in the British army but quit
because, he “didn’t want to be told what to do”, and was much happier
strumming Bob Dylan ballads on his guitar and writing poetry.

He then travelled to Colombia, working as a teacher and part-time
cowboy. The experience had a lasting impression and aged 35, while
still teaching in London, he wrote his debut, The War of Don
Emmanuel’s Nether Parts, inspired by South American magical realism.

Two more Latin American novels followed until “by happy accident” he
stumbled across the history of Cephallonia, inspiring Captain
Corelli, for which he was awarded the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize in
1995.

When the film of Captain Corelli was released in 2001, much was made
of de Bernieres’ disdain. In fact he has seen it five times, thinks
the cinematography is “marvellous”, but only wishes it could have
been “a European art-house film rather than a Hollywood blockbuster”.

He is prepared for the criticism that Birds may invite. “I am trying
to offend everybody with perfect fairness, so it should be offensive
to Turks, Greeks and Armenians.” In it he has included animals,
children and old people, who he believes are under-represented in
literary fiction.

His last endearing semi-fictionalised work, Red Dog, chronicled the
exploits of a “splendid dog” Red, from Karratha in Western Australia
who he immortalised as the canine hero who hitches rides and drops
vile “stinkers”.

De Bernieres describes writing as “a pleasure . . . a compulsion that
comes upon me, a useful form of obsessive madness I suppose. I get
obsessed about music, about golf, but they come and go, and writing
is like that”.

He has many books on the go – one about eccentric characters from the
village in which he grew up, another about the life of his paternal
grandfather. The fortune earned from Captain Corelli has given him
the freedom to choose what to write and when – he had no contract for
the latest until it was finished. A few years ago, he moved to a
Georgian rectory in Norfolk but still drives his veteran Morris Minor
Traveller.

“It’s very strange to have enough money for the first time in your
life,” he says. “Instead of buying one good pair of quite expensive
trousers you go and buy 10 cheap ones.”

In the past few years he has alternated between furious bursts of
writing, inventing words (“Shakespeare did so I don’t see why the
rest of us can’t”), gardening, pottering and serenading his cat with
his mandolin or the robins with his flute.

De Bernieres always shows the final manuscript to his partner,
actress and director Cathy Gill, 32, who is not impressed by how
famous he may be.

Finally, he says he wants to be remembered for taking the British
novel out of north London and onto a world stage.

Birds without Wings will be published this week by Secker & Warburg
at $49.95
From: Baghdasarian

Yesterday’s seeds, today’s harvest

Los Angeles Times
June 27, 2004 Sunday
Home Edition

Yesterday’s seeds, today’s harvest;

Beasts of the Field A Narrative History of California Farmworkers,
1769-1913 Richard Steven Street Stanford University Press: 904 pp.,
$75; $29.95 paper * Photographing Farmworkers in California Richard
Steven Street Stanford University Press: 330 pp., $39.95

by Mark Arax, Mark Arax, a Times staff writer, is the author of “In
My Father’s Name” and co-author of “The King of California: J.G.
Boswell and the Making of a Secret American Empire,” written with
Times business editor Rick Wartzman.

My grandfather, Aram, took the long road to California in the spring
of 1920. His migration covered 7,000 miles by ship and train. There
was no turning back.

Everything along the way seemed so farfetched to him — the Statue of
Liberty, the nation’s capital, the budding factories of Detroit. It
wasn’t until the tracks reached Fresno that America came true.
Outside his window, at the foot of the Sierra, the San Joaquin Valley
shimmered. Vineyards and orchards and vegetable fields, row after
perfect row. As his train chugged into town, my grandfather kept
muttering the same words in Armenian. “Just like the old land.”

The old land was a lazy village beneath the Mountain of Mist in
Bursa, Turkey. Every month the Anatolian sun ripened another fruit,
but it was the silk from the mulberry that gave the village its
wealth. “We had a very easy life,” he told me. “Our village was too
prosperous to do its own work. The poor Turkish workers did it all.
We used to have a name for them — ‘almost like slaves.’ ”

My grandfather survived the 1915 genocide at the hands of the Turks
by hiding in an attic with Maupassant and Baudelaire. He came down
after a year with plans to attend the Sorbonne University and write
for a living. Then the letters from his Uncle Yervant in Fresno —
“watermelons as big as small boats” — arrived. My grandfather was 19
when he took the bait.

He might have been forgiven for assuming the best when his uncle
drove up to the depot that day in a shiny Model T Ford. It wasn’t a
week later that they headed three hours south on a country road and
landed in Weedpatch. There, long before the Okies and Steinbeck
arrived, my grandfather dropped to his hands and knees and began
picking potatoes. Up and down the valley he trailed the harvest.
Watermelons, peaches, grapes, oranges and olives. This new land
wasn’t like the old land. My grandfather had become one of the beasts
of the field.

He was far luckier, it turned out, than the legions of migrant
farmhands who came before him, men whose American rebirths and brutal
journeys are vividly captured by Richard Steven Street in “Beasts of
the Field,” a stunning narrative history of California farmworkers
from 1769 to 1913. It took my grandfather four seasons working
alongside his widowed mother, sister and brother to go from fruit
tramp to farmer. He would watch his brother, Harry, become a cop
killer in 1934 and his son, Ara, become a murder victim in 1972 after
both strayed from the farm.

My grandfather taught me, the oldest child of that murdered son, that
our drama was part of a larger drama that played out in California
agriculture long before his arrival. Because I spent years gathering
his story, I thought I understood why the dreams of so many
immigrants are swallowed up by the fields. Because I live in the San
Joaquin Valley, the most productive farm belt in the world, a place
built on the backs of fieldworkers, I thought I understood their
lives. For the last six years, I’ve collected and written the
narratives of the black sharecroppers, Mexicans and Okies who came
here to pick the cotton for such giants as J.G. Boswell.

But “Beasts of the Field” is a history book that reaches into the
present and changes the way we see things. I now understand why the
lives of farmworkers so often end in the same broken place. Because
it has always been this way — as far back as the native Chumash and
Gabrielinos who plowed the first fields in the shadow of the missions
and the Chinese who erected the levees to drain the waters of the
great Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and the white Europeans who
threshed the wheat as the giant metal harvester, the farm’s first
breathing machine, snorted and clawed at the earth.

For the first time, thanks to Street’s 25-year labor of love, the
whole extraordinary tapestry of that early era is before us. A
photographer, journalist and scholar, Street hails from no academy
and works for no publication. Logging thousands of miles from field
to library to newspaper morgue, he has produced a work of monumental
scholarship. One might ask if the subject hadn’t been thoroughly
mined. Countless academics and journalists, after all, have
documented in articles and books the peculiar institution that is
California agriculture. But although readers may believe that Carey
McWilliams’ seminal 1939 work, “Factories in the Field,” offered the
definitive word on the feudal empires of the soil, Street provides a
far more exhaustive, layered and satisfying portrait. Simply put,
Street’s remarkable book belongs on the short shelf of such
indispensable works of American history as Oscar Handlin’s “The
Uprooted” and Bernard Bailyn’s “Voyagers to the West.”

He steers clear of the polemics and dry scholarly treatments that
have undermined less ambitious books on the subject. Instead of
shouting his moral indignation at the lot of farmworkers, Street
builds his case pound for pound with an assiduous weighing of the
facts. He does so with language that may not be lyrical but serves
his chronological narrative well, giving a voice to those who have
always appeared to us hidden under hats, muffled in bandanas, backs
to the sun, hands in the earth.

Notably, Street, who is the Ansel Adams fellow at the Center for
Creative Photography and a onetime Guggenheim fellow, has
accomplished this while putting together a companion volume,
“Photographing Farmworkers in California,” that stands out as a
comprehensive visual record of farm labor from 1850 to the early
1990s. In the more than 270 images, we see workers picking, striking,
fighting, dancing, resting, praying and dying in photographs shot
through the lens of the famous (Dorothea Lange) and the obscure
(Ernest Lowe). His third volume, set for publication in fall 2005,
will complete the massive history, focusing on the period 1913 to
2000 and the farmworkers’ struggle to unionize.

“Beasts of the Field” follows the migrant field hands dawn to dark
through the early evolutions of a California agriculture destined for
industrial greatness. First, the missions sought a blend of salvation
and self-sufficiency. Then the bonanza wheat farms chased the numbing
notion that bigger is better. Finally, the vineyard and orchard
growers recognized that the Golden State offered a one-of-a-kind
union of soil and climate. Why waste it on mere wheat?

Street gives the reader the look, smell and taste not only of those
fields but also of the Chinatown opium dens and the skid rows
crackling with liquor, prostitution and murder where the workers’
long day ended. Nowhere in the 625 pages of text (and more than 200
pages of notes) does he shy away from his singular focus, and why
should he? The story of agriculture is the story of California from
Junipero Serra, the Franciscan friar who brought the first field
hands north, to Japanese immigrant Kinji Ushijima, the Potato King
who harvested 28,000 acres of spuds in the early 1900s on reclaimed
delta land. Every epic migration that transformed the state was a
migration rooted in the fields.

“Adrift in a landscape of ordered beauty,” he writes, “the
[farmworkers] illustrate the human costs required to produce a
geography of abundance, telling us not only about irony, suffering,
misery, acrimony, disorientation, resentment, cynicism and violence
but also about hope, tenacity, sacrifice and generosity.”

Who, precisely, were the first campesinos in California? That they
were brown-skinned peoples native to the land down south should come
as no surprise. By early 1769, Spain had kicked the Jesuits out of
Baja California and installed the Franciscans as missionaries who
would claim the Pacific Coast. The Franciscans dragged a group of
Cochimi Indians north for the “Sacred Expedition.” By summer’s end,
more than half the Cochimi — 180 in all — had died of disease and
starvation.

Street deals head-on with a question that has long divided scholars
of the mission period. Were the padres taskmasters or slave drivers?
Were the Indians ennobled or exploited? What was so bad about
Catholicism, hard work and an adobe roof over the head, even if they
came with the dreaded disciplina, the rawhide whip?

The padres weren’t monsters, Street agrees. They fed the newly
baptized California natives well, sweated alongside them and rarely
demanded more than a 40-hour workweek. And for their part, the
natives could be exasperating. By the droves, they feigned illness
and ran away from the missions and hid in the tules of California’s
interior, where they became addicted to booze and games of chance.
But Street ultimately comes down on the side of mission critics,
concluding that the system reduced natives to “childish dependence,
prepared them for nothing, exposed them to diseases.”

Measuring the agricultural legacy of the missions is easier. The
California natives who joined the Cochimi planted the first vineyards
and wheat fields, erected the first brush dams and dug the first
irrigation canals. A peek into the state’s future grape and wine
industry could be glimpsed at the San Gabriel mission where the
170-acre La Vina Madre, “the mother vineyard” had taken root.
Likewise, the practice of labor contractors acting as go-betweens in
the California fields began with the mayordomo, boss men selected
from the ranks of mission guards.

For the better part of a century, the male natives bent, stooped,
squatted and crawled with their poles, clippers, sacks and buckets.
The women, who weren’t allowed in the fields, had their own quotas to
meet grinding wheat and corn. Their positions hardly changed after
Mexican rule replaced Spanish rule and the natives were supposedly
free to pursue a life of small-scale farming. Instead, cast adrift,
they huddled in dusty camps like the one on the outskirts of El
Pueblo de Los Angeles, where they led “vicious and irrational lives.”

Growers in the 1850s were still so reliant on native field hands that
they pushed the newly minted U.S. state of California to enact a law
that controlled the natives and forced them to work. The Indian
Indenture Act, in the words of McWilliams, “competed favorably with
slavery.” Only when the native population dwindled to a band of old
and crippled field hands did the farmer begin his eternal search for
a new group of desperate and poor.

The late 1860s and 1870s brought fresh laborers to the fields:
hard-luck Americans of European stock who had come West with gold
fever but who now found themselves threshing and bagging California’s
booming wheat crop. Street brings to life the grinding toil of the
men who wandered farm to farm, their worldly possessions packed tight
in a bindle. He does his best writing describing how they mounted the
first leviathan wheat harvesters and bounced all day over rough
ground, jolting themselves silly. They could not escape the Central
Valley sun.

“The heat had an almost metallic characteristic,” he writes. “It was
a weight that men carried on their backs, a fiery warmth that cracked
their leather boots, heated equipment to the point where it could not
be touched without gloves and baked straw so crisp that it snapped
like glass filaments underfoot.”

He lingers on the wholesome meals served to the wheat threshers and
on the songs they sang, always swearing off another harvest season:
“Don’t go, I say, if you’ve got any brains. You’ll stay far away from
the San Joaquin plains.”

As the crops grew more diverse, the call for more dependable
farmworkers grew louder. It was answered by peasant Chinese farmers
from the Guangdong province who poured off ships in the 1850s and
fanned out to Stockton, Sacramento, Fresno, Sonoma County and Los
Angeles. Among the myths Street debunks is the notion that the
Chinese constituted a significant minority of farm laborers at any
one time. Of the 50,000 Chinese in California in 1861, only about
1,500 had moved onto farms.

Nowhere was their imprint more lasting than in the delta, where they
drained hundreds of thousands of acres of wetlands with an incredible
latticework of levees. The Chinese boasted their own system of
mayordomo: “China bosses” who made good on the promise that each
field hand would pick 1,500 to 2,000 pounds of grapes a day. The
bosses won many jobs by agreeing to a pay scale of $1 a day —
cheaper than the wage for Mexicans, $1.25, and for whites, $1.50.

“Beasts of the Field” makes clear that the issue of wages has long
pitted field hand against field hand, striker against grower and
reformer against politician. The debate always seems to start and end
in the same place. The farmer believes he isn’t exploiting the field
hand because what he offers is so much better than what the worker
had back home. The reformer shouts back that the farmer is engaging
in the cheapest form of moral inoculation. It is the ideals of this
country — not the Third World exigencies of their old land — that
judge morality. A dime a day in Guangdong doesn’t excuse a dollar a
day in Weedpatch.

The picker does hold certain leverage. Crops left too long in the
field perish. A two-week delay in picking might bring a grower to his
knees. This math drove the Chinese to strike again and again in the
1880s, shutting down the fruit harvest in Santa Clara and the raisin
pick in Fresno until they got their way, the same wages as the white
man.

That the “coolies” had the cheek to strike only played into the
anti-Chinese sentiment sweeping across the land. Farmers didn’t know
what side of the fence to stand on, with their white neighbors or
with their ethnic field hands. Some tried appealing to logic:
“Americans can not go out in the hot sun and stoop over the vines all
day when the thermometer is probably 115 degrees in the shade,” one
grower asserted. “Our American sons won’t do that.”

For all its breadth, “Beasts of the Field” never quite makes the case
that agriculture’s exploitation differed from the brutality imposed
by industrial America. Was farm work worse because it took place
under the searing sun? Were the white farmers greedier as a class
than white factory owners? Were the bottom-line impulses of
agriculture different from the quotas that industry imposed on their
beasts of the steel mill?

Occasionally Street tips the scale of judgment in error. He quotes a
1913 editorial by Chester H. Rowell, a longtime editor of the Fresno
Republican, likening the perfect field hand to a manifold beast.
Rowell, it turns out, wasn’t expressing his view but what he regarded
as the unfortunate view of the farm lobby. The sarcasm is not noted
by Street.

Back on firm ground, Street details how the racist views of the
Yellow Peril culminated in the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act that, over
time, dried up Chinese labor. The Japanese then staged their own
rising. At the height of their influence in 1909, about 30,000
Japanese worked on California farms, accounting for nearly 42% of the
labor force.

More than any other ethnic group, the Japanese saw fieldwork not as
an end but as a means to buy their own farms. Toward that goal, they
became tough negotiators. They confronted and boycotted growers,
withheld labor at key times and walked out during harvests. By 1910,
many Japanese had realized the dream of becoming farmers; they had
bought 17,000 acres and leased 89,000 more, dominating the
strawberry, melon and sugar beet crops.

The Yellow Peril soon raised its ugly head again. The so-called
Gentlemen’s Agreement in 1907 halted Japanese immigration. As always,
Big Ag didn’t know where to turn. Into this vacuum, miraculously,
came the Greeks, the Sikhs, the Portuguese and the Armenians.

My grandfather didn’t have the benefit of those hobo songs to steer
him clear of the San Joaquin plains. The only song he heard was his
Uncle Yervant’s naively sweet one. For that second harvest, he
returned to Weedpatch with his mother, sister and brother, this time
to work for Villa Kerkorian, a grape grower with a ferocious mustache
resembling Pancho Villa’s.

My grandfather and his family slept in the Kerkorian barn on a bed of
raisin crates and hay until one night when they began feuding.
Grandpa’s 17-year-old brother, Harry, had the gall to question the
arrangement by which Uncle Yervant picked very little and played
pinochle a lot. Challenged for the first time, Yervant stormed out of
the barn.

“That boat that brought you over,” he shouted. “I would have been
better off had it brought a sack of potatoes instead.”

They didn’t speak again for years. By that time, Harry was well on
his way to killing a cop in Long Beach and serving a life sentence in
San Quentin. My grandfather was married and farming raisins outside
Fresno. In his 80s, as he grew blind, he gave me a stack of poems he
had written to the memory of the grape and cotton pickers: “To my
white, brown, yellow and black brothers and sisters who toiled under
the hellish sun.”

A few weeks ago, as another harvest neared, I drove to Weedpatch and
tried to find the old Kerkorian ranch. Villa Kerkorian had lost all
his land during the raisin bust of 1920-28. Not long after, they
found an ocean of oil beneath his old grapes. Kerkorian didn’t live
to see his get-even: His youngest son, Kirk, came to rule MGM and
rank as one of the world’s wealthiest men.

At the edge of town, a few miles down the road from where John
Steinbeck encountered the Okies, I met a young Mixteca who had
arrived the week before from deep in Mexico, her land turning to
dust. She had been smuggled across the border in the back of a
Suburban and was using her wages from the bell pepper fields to pay
off a $1,900 debt to the coyote. I asked her why she had come and she
began to tear up. She had left behind two young children with her
mother. “For their future,” she explained. In another few days, she
will stop harvesting peppers and begin picking grapes. In the powdery
loam, she will trace the footsteps of my grandfather and the other
“beasts” whose imprint Street has so faithfully recorded.

They still walk through these fields. *

GRAPHIC: PHOTO: FIELD HANDS: Laborers pick lettuce in the Salinas
Valley in 1935, from “Photographing Farmworkers in California.”
PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by Dorothea Lange Courtesy of Stanford
University Press PHOTO: SUBSISTENCE: A farmworker from Mexico, idled
by freezing weather, cradles a baby outside his home next to an
Imperial Valley pea field in 1937. PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by
Dorothea Lange Courtesy of Stanford University Press PHOTO: LOCAL
CREW: Chinese laborers sewed wheat sacks in the San Fernando Valley
in 1898, 16 years after the Chinese Exclusion Act cut the workforce.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Courtesy of Stanford University Press PHOTO: ON THE
COVER: “Cheng’s Hands and Hat,” Roger Minick’s 1966 photograph, is
included in Richard Steven Street’s “Photographing Farmworkers in
California.” PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by Roger Minick Courtesy of
Stanford University Press

Chess: Top two in world chess tournament in Libya advance to round 4

Associated Press Worldstream
June 25, 2004 Friday

Top two in world chess tournament in Libya advance to round four

by MAHMOUD KASSEM; Associated Press Writer

TRIPOLI, Libya

The top two seeds at the World Chess Championship advanced to round
four Friday after drawing their games, but the tournament’s
third-strongest player was knocked out.

No. 1 seed Veselin Topalov of Bulgaria and No. 2 seed Michael Adams
of England went through, but Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine was defeated
by the lower-ranked Rustam Kasimdzhanov of Uzbekistan.

Topalov ended his streak of five consecutive wins on Thursday night
when he drew with Sergei Movsesian of Slovakia.

Adams drew with Hichem Hamdouchi of Morocco. Playing white, Hamdouchi
began solidly with a Ruy Lopez opening, but black quickly took
control of the ‘a’ file as Adams doubled his rooks and threatened
white’s king with his queen. Hamdouchi ultimately fell foul of the
time limits.

Topalov and Adams, numbers 5 and 8 in the world respectively, beat
their opponents by 1.5 points to half a point.

Topalov and Adams are the only two players from FIDE’s top 10 to play
in the US$1.5 million tournament, which Libya is staging as part of a
campaign to shake off its image as a rogue state accused of
sponsoring terrorism.

In the Ivanchuk-Kasimdzhanov encounter, the players agreed to draw
their first two games Thursday, but Kasimdzhanov defeated his
Ukranian opponent in the first rapid game.

In the most beautiful game Thursday, Croatia’s Zdenko Kozul earned a
place in round four when he showed that advancing pawns and
sacrifices can be as deadly as a full-frontal attack with major
pieces.

Kozul cooly turned the tables on an over-confident queen attack by
Russia’s Sergei Rublevsky, playing a Slav defence game. Sacrificing a
rook and pushing his pawns on the ‘b’ and ‘c’ files relentlessly
forward, Kozul won an extra queen and forced Rublevsky to resign
after 47 moves.

“Kozul sacrificed a rook to create an extremely complicated and
exciting position which had everyone following this game with great
attention,” said FIDE master Geoffrey D. Borg.

The youngest player left in the tournament, 16-year-old Hikaru
Nakamura of the United States, drew his Slav defence game with
Alexander Lastin of Russia, but the result was enough to advance him
to round four following his win Wednesday.

Cuba’s Lenier Dominguez also goes through after a dazzling display.
In a Caro-Kann exchange variation with a Panov-Botvinnic attack,
Dominguez forced France’s Vladislav Tkachiev to resign after only 33
moves.

In arguably the most exciting chess of round three, Armenia’s Levon
Aronian fought against Russia’s Pavol Smirnov into the early hours of
Friday. Both players are roughly of equal strength.

His face showing the stress, Smirnov beat Aronian in the first blitz
game, lost the second, and came back in the third in play so fast
that some of the pieces were accidentally knocked over.

Going by nation, Russia has made the best show in the tournament so
far, having four of the 16 players remaining in the contest.

Round four resumes on Saturday after a rest on Friday.

The FIDE championship began June 19 amid controversy. Libya refused
to allow players from Israel to attend. Many top players decided not
to compete, apparently because they were angry that the world’s
strongest-rated player, Garry Kasparov of Russia, is to be allowed to
play the winner without taking part in the qualifying rounds.

Armenia will take part in NATO-sponsored exercises in Azerbaijan

Associated Press Worldstream
June 26, 2004 Saturday

Armenia will take part in NATO-sponsored exercises in Azerbaijan

YEREVAN, Armenia

Armenia will take part in NATO-sponsored exercises in Azerbaijan this
fall in spite of tensions between the two countries, a top Armenian
military official said Saturday.

Col. Murad Isakhanian, the chief Armenian representative at the Baku
planning conference for NATO’s Partnership for Peace maneuvers, said
Azerbaijan had given security guarantees for the Armenian contingent
at the Cooperative Best Effort-2004 exercises in the Azerbaijani
capital Baku in September.

Earlier this week, several protesters broke into the planning meeting
in Baku and called on Azerbaijan to stop negotiations with Armenia.
The incident highlighted tensions over Nagorno-Karabakh – a territory
disputed by both countries. Isakhanian and another Armenian officer
were among those attending the conference.

Protesters and hotel security guards suffered minor injuries in the
incident in the hotel. Eight people were detained by police.

Armenia and Azerbaijan are at odds over the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave,
which Armenian forces seized from Azerbaijan in the early 1990s. A
1994 cease-fire has largely held, but no final settlement has been
reached. Neither Armenia nor Azerbaijan are NATO members, but both
former Soviet republics participate in NATO’s Partnership for Peace
program.

Isakhanian said Saturday that Azerbaijani authorities had apologized
for the Baku incident.

Un nuevo rey para Las Vegas

El Pais
June 27, 2004

Un nuevo rey para Las Vegas

SANDRO POZZI

Kirk Kerkorian logra hacerse con los casinos de Madalay por 7.900
millones de dolares. El leon que nunca duerme. Eso es lo que dicen en
Las Vegas del multimillonario Kirk Kerkorian, al que sus 87 anos de
edad no le pesan nada. Tampoco la inmensa fortuna que ha ido amasando
con sus manos, con la que parece no conformarse. El accionista
mayoritario de los estudios MetroGoldwynMayer (MGM) y del operador de
casinos MGM Mirage esta a un paso de convertirse en el mas grande
entre los grandes en el mundo de los juegos de azar y del negocio de
las convenciones, al anunciar la compra de su rival Mandalay Resort.

BODY:
A Kerkorian -numero 65 en la lista de los hombres mas ricos del
planeta, segun Forbes- le bastan tres minutos para oler una buena
operacion. Los negocios, dice, son “el elixir de la vida”. Y mientras
mas grande sea la operacion, mejor. Es raro ver al magnate en eventos
publicos Ni siquiera se pasea por sus casinos. Lleva mas bien una
vida al margen de la sociedad mientras teje tras las cortinas la
expansion de su imperio. Nada que ver con el ganster Bugsy Siegel,
quien en 1946 abrio en Las Vegas el primer casino con neones, el
Flamingo. Sin embargo, su historia esta intimamente ligada al
boulevard del juego desde hace 35 anos.

Kirk Kerkorian esta considerado, de hecho, como uno de los pocos
hombres de negocios que apostaron por transformar la imagen del vicio
de la Sin City -la ciudad del pecado-, para convertirla en todo un
icono del capitalismo y del negocio. La adquisicion de Mandalay
Resort por 7.900 millones de dolares, anunciada hace dos semanas, es
un paso mas en esa direccion. Sin tener que salir de Las Vegas, este
magnate californiano, hijo de inmigrantes armenios, controlara 11
hoteles de casinos, entre ellos los famosos Bellagio, Mandalay Bay,
Excalibur, Lu-xor, New York New York o el Circus Circus.

Kerkorian tendra mas plazas hoteleras de las que nunca pudieron tener
juntos el multimillonario tejano Howard Hughes y Stephen Wynn,
antiguo dueno de la cadena Mirage. Lo unico que le falta es el Caesar
Palace. Hasta el punto que dicen que Las Vegas, una de las metropolis
de mayor crecimiento en EE UU, es propiedad de una sola compania. Su
reino en el mundo del juego ira mas alla aun. Con la adquisicion de
Mandalay, su imperio se extendera a otros Estados del pais -Nevada,
Misisipi y Nueva Jersey- y Australia.

MGM Mirage, donde Kerkorian posee el 57% del accionariado, contara
con un total de 30 propiedades y sumara 75.000 plazas hoteleras, el
40% de las maquinas tragaperras y el 44% de las mesas de apuestas del
pais. A esto hay que sumarle 186 kilometros cuadrados de espacio en
centros para convenciones en las principales ciudades de EE UU. MGM
contara con 70.000 empleados y unos ingresos superiores a los 7.000
millones de dolares anuales.

La adquisicion de Mandalay es la segunda mas importante que en los
ultimos cuatro anos va a realizar MGM, tras hacerse en 2000 con el
control de Mirage en una operacion valorada en 6.400 millones de
dolares. El propio Stephen Wynn explica que Kerkorian siempre se bate
a si mismo: “Cuando habia hoteles con 400 habitaciones, el construyo
uno con 1.512 plazas en 1969. Despues se supero con uno de 2.000 y
luego otra vez con un gigante de 5.000”. Si el mafioso Bugsy Siegel
esta considerado como el creador de Las Vegas, a Kirk Kerkorian se le
atribuye la era de los megaresort.

La adquisicion de Mandalay, como todas las apuestas fuertes, esta
sujeta a varios riesgos. Por un lado, esta el control de las
autoridades reguladoras, que podrian imponer la venta de determinados
activos y la cesion de licencias para evitar una concentracion
excesiva en el sector. La otra es la amenaza de un nuevo ataque
terrorista en suelo estadounidense, que podria dejar la operacion en
zona peligrosa, ya que Las Vegas esta considerada como un objetivo
posible.

Labor Minister Calls For Bolstering Iran-Armenia Ties

Tehran Times, Iran
June 28 2004

Labor Minister Calls For Bolstering Iran-Armenia Ties

TEHRAN (IRNA) — Minister of Labor and Social Affairs Safdar Hosseini
here on Sunday met with the head of the Presidential Staff of
Armenia, Artashes Toumanian, and called for bolstering of
Iran-Armenia ties.

Alluding to an upcoming visit of President Seyyed Mohammad Khatami to
Armenia, he expressed hope the fifth Iran-Armenia Joint Commission
session will be held without delay.

Hosseini referred to the several signed agreements on electricity,
energy, gas and oil between the two countries and praised the
countries’ “outstanding” bilateral cooperation. The minister of
labor, while praising the increasing volume of trade exchanges
between Tehran and Yerevan, said: “Both sides can bolster their
relations due to the existence of many potential.”

Toumanian lauded the efforts of the Iranians to bolster relations and
expressed hope these relations would serve the interests of both
countries even more.

Toumanian also said the project to construct the “Kajaran” tunnel is
one of the most viable joint projects under way and would have no
problems going into operation.

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Bush Has Productive Meetings in Turkey

27 June 2004

Bush Has Productive Meetings in Turkey, Senior Official Says
President meets with Turkish government, religious leaders

By David Anthony Denny
Washington File Staff Writer

Istanbul, Turkey — President George Bush had “very good meetings” with
Turkey’s president and prime minister in Ankara June 27, according to a
senior administration official.

Briefing the press on background at the Conrad Hotel, the official said that
Bush’s meetings with Turkish President Ahmet Necdet Sezer and Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdowan “show that from this moment forward, Turkey sees its
aims in Iraq as parallel and consistent with” the United States. The
official said the leaders discussed territorial integrity of Iraq, and Bush
said the subject was of critical importance to the United States.

The leaders also talked about PKK (Kurdistan Worker’s Party) terrorists,
which operates out of Kurdish-occupied northern Iraq. Bush agreed that the
PKK is a terrorist organization, and said the United States wants to work
with Turkey to combat the group.

Bush expressed sympathy over the three Turkish workers kidnapped in Iraq
recently, the senior official said. Bush told the Turkish leaders that the
kidnapping “demonstrates the kind of enemies we’re dealing with” — those
who “seek to export chaos” to Iraq and elsewhere. International community
needs to unite to combat this threat, according to the senior official.

On the subject of Cyprus, which is now in its 30th year of division into
Greek and Turkish enclaves, Bush thanked Turkey for its “extraordinary”
efforts, the senior administration official said. United Nations Secretary
General Kofi Annan had come up with a good plan to end the division, and the
Turkish government and Turkish Cypriots “did a lot to promote this plan,”
though it was rejected by Greek Cypriots, the official said.

The U.S. and Turkish officials also discussed the Broader Middle East
Initiative, the senior official said. He noted that Erdogan had gone to the
Group of Eight summit in Sea Island, Georgia, to support the initiative.
Turkey’s a secular democracy with a Muslim majority, the official said, and
while perhaps not a model for the entire Middle East, the country
demonstrates that secular democracy can flourish in a Muslim society.

After leaving the Turkish capital and flying to Istanbul, Bush met with
several of the ancient city’s religious leaders, said the senior official.
Included in the group were the government’s general director of religious
affairs, an Islamic mufti, the chief rabbi, and Assyrian, Armenian, and
Greek Orthodox metropolitans. He said the meeting with religious leaders
also went very well. Its purpose was to recognize the contributions to the
city’s life by religious minority groups, some of which have been part of
Istanbul for centuries.

Afterward, Bush met with NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer. This
was, in the senior official’s words, “a terrific meeting.” He added that the
Summit was “closing in on a number of really strong” positive
accomplishments. He predicted that they may include:

— A NATO statement announcing agreement on training mission in Iraq,
containing a positive answer to last week’s request from Iraqi Prime
Minister Ayad Alawi for NATO to train Iraqi troops;

— Expansion of the International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) for
Afghanistan, moving outside of Kabul with Provincial Reconstruction Teams
(PRT’s).

— An Istanbul Declaration on how NATO’s expanding to meet challenges of
21st century;

— A NATO contribution to President Bush’s Broader Middle East Initiative;
and

— NATO will mark the coming termination of its mission in Bosnia after nine
years.

(The Washington File is a product of the Bureau of International Information
Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: )

http://usinfo.state.gov