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Syria Armenian town Kessab again under sniper fire – Agos

February 26, 2015 By administrator

The Syrian border town of Kessab, which is mainly populated by ethnic Armenians

The Syrian border town of Kessab, which is mainly populated by ethnic Armenians

The Syrian border town of Kessab, which is mainly populated by ethnic Armenians, is amid increasing anxiety and fear under the Islamic State’s fresh threats.

Speaking to the Turkish-Armenian publication Agos, a resident of the city said that the town’s Armenian population has is now feeling like a captive as the confrontations between the conflicting sides continue.

“For us, even the smallest eruption between them costs a life. We cannot even work in our yards, as we are under snipers’ target,” the source complained.

Reports recently emerged that last year’s raid against the town was partly due also to Turkey’s assistance, which shelled the area.

Sounds of bomb explosion are now often heard in the town, which is not very far from the the Turkish border. The population of Kessab now leads a battle for survival under the Islamic State’s fresh threats.

“We have no other choice than to trust our country’s army. No one knows at all what bargaining is going on over Kessab. Developments evolve irrespective of our desire. No one can give guarantees that nothing of the kind will happen ever again. Turkey earlier did not deny the reports that they have links with what happened to us; neither has it guaranteed that it won’t be repeated. How can we sleep in peace in such conditions,” a resident of Kessab is quoted as saying.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, islamic state, Kessab, Syria

70 representatives from 38 churches to attend Armenian Genocide commemorations

February 26, 2015 By administrator

churches-leadersETCHMIADZIN. – Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II chaired the assembly of the Supreme Spiritual Council. The event was held from Tuesday to Thursday in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin. Karekin II noted that this is the first assembly that has been convened in the year of the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, and the assembly agenda includes organizational issues with respect to the centenary commemorations, informed the Mother See Information Services.
The Supreme Spiritual Council members reflected on the genocide martyrs’ canonization ceremony and the remembrance events to be held between April 22 and 24 in Armenia, including the Mother See. It was noted that, at the invitation of the Mother See, around 70 representatives from 38 churches, and inter-ecclesiastical, ecumenical and interreligious organizations as well as representatives from all Armenian church dioceses in the world also will participate in these commemorations. In addition, the Supreme Spiritual Council approved the 2014 financial report of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, attending, Church, Genocide-commemorations

Turkey: Dersim-Armenians learning native tongue

February 25, 2015 By administrator

f54ed963e84929_54ed963e84940.thumbThe Armenian residents of Turkey’s Dersim region have started learning Armenian as part of a recently announced cooperation initiative with the Alevis.

The Istanbul-based Armenian publication Hye Tert reports that the two communities have already launched an association to realize joint projects.

“An important concern for the Dersim-Armenians is that they have forgotten their language. To bridge that gap, our first task was to organize courses. Tigran Lokmagyozyan, an Istanbul-Armenian currently residing in Armenia, has now come to Dersim for that reason. We have 15 students for the starting period,” Serkan Meriatash, the association’s founder, told the publication.

He unveiled plans for conducting different events in April, ahead of the Armenian Genocide centenary. Meriatash said that a delegation of Dersim village mayors is now considering a possible visit to Armenia from April 16 to 20 for organizing a public screening of movies.

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Dersim-region, learning, Turkey

Carpinteria, CA. New Children’s Picture Book Celebrates Armenian Easter Traditions

February 24, 2015 By administrator

pressrelease_337721_1424469208As the world reflects on the Armenian tragedy of 1915, Pomegranate Publishing has released a new children’s picture book, Mariam’s Easter Parade, which celebrates the traditions of the Armenian culture. Written by Marianne Markarian and illustrated by Margaret Markarian Wasielewski, Mariam’s Easter Parade is a light-hearted story of young girl who might be too small to help with the Easter preparations, but she is clever enough to celebrate with her own special parade!
Carpinteria, CA, February 23, 2015 –(PR.com)– As the world reflects on the Armenian tragedy of 1915, Pomegranate Publishing has released a new children’s picture book, Mariam’s Easter Parade, which celebrates the traditions of the Armenian culture. This April marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide in which four million Armenian residents are estimated to have died in Ottoman Turkey.

Written by Marianne Markarian and illustrated by Margaret Markarian Wasielewski, Mariam’s Easter Parade is a light-hearted story of young girl who might be too small to help with the Easter preparations, but she is clever enough to celebrate with her own special parade!

“While it’s important to acknowledge and remember the lives lost to the genocide, it’s also important to celebrate the traditions of the Armenian culture, which continues to thrive in a diaspora that extends from the former Soviet Republic to the United States and Canada,” said publisher Marianne McCarthy.

Armenians celebrate the Easter holiday with faith, food, festivities—and egg-cracking contests! The book includes a recipe for dying Easter eggs with onion skins and instructions for the Armenian egg-cracking game.
Markarian is a second-generation Armenian-American who used her grandmother’s life in the “old country” of the Ottoman Empire as inspiration. Her first book, The Pesky Bird, was a ForeWord Book of the Year finalist.

The illustrator is an award-winning artist and member of the Cincinnati Art Club and the Woman’s Art Club of Cincinnati. Her work has been exhibited in New York, Detroit, Cincinnati, Florida, and Chicago. Her vivid pastel illustrations portray the beautiful countryside and colorful dress of the Armenian people in the early 1900s.

The book is available at Amazon.com as well as independent bookstores throughout the country. For more information, visit the company’s website at https://pomegranatepublishing.wordpress.com/.

Based in Southern California, Pomegranate Publishing is an independent publishing company that explores cultural integrity through books.

Contact Information
Pomegranate Publishing
Marianne McCarthy
805-684-9570

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Armenian, book, Carpinteria, Children's

The Prince in Switzerland love story book” Centuries of Armenian history and culture”

February 23, 2015 By administrator

By Wally Sarkeesian

The-Prince-in-Switzerland, By Dalita I. Alex

The-Prince-in-Switzerland,
By Dalita I. Alex

Author Dalita Alex

“A wonderful love story book, the author glides us through centuries of
Armenian history and culture. highly recommend it.”

Hrant, a young Swiss man working in finance, meets on a train a very
prominent Swiss historian, who is very much interested in his Armenian
heritage and his family’s past experiences of migration, survival and
integration. Hrant decides to further enlighten the professor about the
Armenian people’s struggle, past and present, for recognition and respect.
He belongs, on his father’s side, to a very important Armenian aristocracy,
the Bagraduni and Hetoumian dynasties that belonged to the kingdoms of
Cilicia, Armenia and Georgia during the Middle Ages. These dynasties were
the foundation, the source of his bloodline, lineage and history. Hrant is
very proud of his legacy. He eventually falls in love with a French-Armenian
girl, Sara, but their relationship is difficult, since she resides in Paris, while
he lives in Zurich. Eventually love triumphs, and Sara leaves her homeland
to marry Hrant, the Armenian Prince in Switzerland. Full of true historical
recollections, it is the love story between two people, and the love of proud
people towards their legacy. The story of faith, hope and love with all its
facets, engulfs compassion, friendship and beauty.

To Order contact the following:
Best Pearl

Dalita I. Alex
Worlwide distributors of Fancy pearls & cultured Pearls from all sources
Am Pfisterhölzli 48
CH-8606 Greifensee/ZH
bestpearl@ggaweb.ch
On Line Shop www.best-pearl.ch
+41 79 279 75 35

Filed Under: Articles, Books Tagged With: Armenian, book, culture, love, story, Switzerland

Turkey: “Khojaly an excuse to incite ethnic hatred”

February 23, 2015 By administrator

incite ethnic hatred

incite ethnic hatred

On February 20, the Turkish Association for Human Rights issued a statement in response to anti-Armenian demonstration planned for February 22 in Istanbul, operating under the banner “demonstrations condemning the Khojaly genocide and the Armenian Terror.” The Association of Human Rights sent a petition to the governor of Istanbul before the event, which has already caused a rise in anti-Armenian sentiments with graffiti saying: “You are all Armenians, all bastards, “spray painted on the walls of a church in Istanbul.

Here are some excerpts from the statement:

Khojaly: An excuse to incite ethnic hatred against Armenians in Turkey

February 19, 2015, the Association of Human Rights presented the governor of Istanbul a petition warning officials that “demonstrations condemning the Khojaly genocide and the Armenian Terror”, to be held in Kadıköy, Istanbul, February 22, were intended to incite ethnic hatred from the time they have been pre-announced.

The events are organized by the reformist Youth Association of Azerbaijan, with the support of the Turkish youth branches Homes and platform Turanian Movement.

As our petition to the governorate reported by activists of the Movement Platform Turanian publish public screens, including graffiti, banners and posters in central locations in Istanbul. In the statement they distribute in stores and that we attach to this petition, they incite violence marking the militants fighting against racism as “terrorists”. People who somehow remain “unidentified” write racist graffiti, such as “you’re either Turkish or Bastards” or “You are all Armenians, All bastards” on the walls of the church of Kadıköy in more put flags representing the ultra-nationalist symbol (mythical wolf).

The protesters chanted “You are all Armenians, You are all bastards” during the protests for Khojali on Taksim Square February 26, 2012.

The demonstrators chanted: “You are all Armenians, you are all bastards”, during the Khojali events in Taksim Square on February 26, 2012.

Khojaly is a pretext for the real purpose of inciting ethnic hatred and hostility against Armenians in Turkey, as observed globally over the Khojaly events to Taksim Square February 26, 2012. Before the eyes of the Minister of Interior, the same place where he was giving a speech, protesters held banners where you could read: “You are all Armenians, you are all bastards,” while shouting slogans hate against Armenians.

The corrupt and shady cooperation between Azerbaijan and Turkey therefore comes forward: The organizers are able to threaten their regimes for February 22 because they have no doubt that the officials of the Republic of Turkey go their providing an endless tolerance.

In the petition, we presented the case, we reminded the governor that racism displayed both during demonstrations in 2012 and during the preparation phase of the demonstrations of February 22 for “Condemn Armenian terrorism” constitutes a crime Under Article 216 of the Turkish Penal Code for “public humiliation or incitement to hatred and enmity.” We also stressed that incitement to racist violence violates Article 14 of the European Convention of Human Rights Rights, which prohibits discrimination.

We asked the Governor’s Office take preventive measures against slogans, writings, banners, and incentive threats to ethnic hatred or enmity; that in cases where they occur, all the mechanisms of judicial procedures are activated immediately after the protests, and that the state fulfills its responsibilities with greater efficiency.

(…)

The so-called NGOs of the state of Azerbaijan, where opposition journalists are left rotting in prison and honest public intellectuals are left with threats to life via a lynching, we ask: What are you in Turkey? What business brings you to Istanbul? No one believes you weep for those killed in Khojaly; It is not in their memory as you fight. You come to Turkey to support the anti-Armenian and threaten Armenians in Turkey, which has no connection with Khojaly.

A word to the hate mongers in Turkey, which joined forces with anti-Armenian Azerbaijani: Stop your lies. Khojaly is not about you. this was never Khojaly interest. Your true intention is to intimidate the Armenians of Turkey and all non-Turkish, non-Muslim peoples and exacerbate their precarious existence.

The words, “Long live Turkey racist,” spray painted on a church wall in Kadikoy. (Photo: Murad Mihci / Nor Zartonk)

The very existence of human rights is justified by the cause of resistance and struggle against the atrocities and persecutions in Turkey and in the world. However, it will remain once the defenders of human rights to fight against those who exploit the horrors and pain of the victims for their own purposes exercise of racist violence across borders.

We, human rights defenders, invite all to unite as one body against racism, racial violence, discrimination and hatred, to show that you are alone in your projects, to isolate yourself in society, and put you in front of the public conscience.

We remind officials, once again, they will be held accountable for the public display of ethnic hatred, bloody cases are still too fresh in our memory.

Human Rights Association, Istanbul Branch

Committee against Racism and Discrimination

Monday, February 23, 2015,

Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, ethnic, hatred, İstanbul, khojaly

Pope Awards High Church Honor to Armenian Mystic St. Gregory

February 23, 2015 By administrator

By NICOLE WINFIELD Associated Press

St. Gregory of Narek

St. Gregory of Narek

Pope Francis has given a gift of sorts to Armenian Catholics commemorating the 100th anniversary of the massacre of Armenians by Ottoman Turks, declaring a revered 10th-century mystic and poet, St. Gregory of Narek, a doctor of the church.

The Vatican said Monday that Francis had agreed to bestow one of the highest church honors on Gregory after the decision was taken by the Vatican’s saint-making office. The designation, however, clearly reflects a desire of Francis, who as Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio was particularly close to the Armenian community in Buenos Aires.

The title of doctor of the church is reserved for people whose writings have greatly served the universal church. Only 35 people have been given the title, including St. Augustine, St. Francis de Sales and St. Teresa of Avila.

Gregory, who lived around 950 to 1005, is considered one of the most important figures of medieval Armenian religious thought and literature. His Book of Prayers, also called the Book of Lamentations, is his best-known work, a mystical poem in 95 sections about “speaking with God from the depths of the heart.”

The designation comes a few weeks before Francis celebrates a Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica to commemorate the centenary of the start of the Armenian massacre.

Several European countries recognize the massacres as a genocide; Turkey, however, denies that the deaths constituted genocide, saying the toll has been inflated and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.

Francis provoked Turkish anxiety when in June 2013 he told a visiting delegation of Armenian Christians that the massacre was “the first genocide of the 20th century.”

The Vatican spokesman subsequently said the remarks were in no way a formal or public declaration and therefore didn’t constitute a public assertion by the pope that genocide took place.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Church, Mystic, Pope, St-Gregory

Armenian The Case for Self-Reconciliation

February 20, 2015 By administrator

By keghart.com editorial
L-Finger-Hand-FWe live in a time when money, opportunity and position are bestowed upon those who enter academia or careers under the rubric of “conflict resolution,” also known as “reconciliation.” A more fitting name is the “Reconciliation–Industrial Complex,” or RIC.

Like the better-known term, “Military–Industrial Complex,” RIC refers to the overlapping aims and financial relationships that exist among government officials, powerful legislators, lobbyists, NGOs, think tanks, academia, media and creative fields, and the industries and corporations that support them. These parties provide funding and other support for government programs, public and private policy initiatives, salaried positions, grants, and political access that will serve their selfish interests rather than the needs of the general citizenry.

Quite often, Armenians whose livelihoods depend on RIC ridicule or dismiss as “unrealistic,” “immature,” or “living in a fantasy world” those critics who advise against indiscriminately embracing so-called reconciliation initiatives without making absolutely clear that genuine Armenian goals include genocide acknowledgment, reparations and restitution from Turkey.

Among the Armenian organizations that receive funding from Western interests and governments who themselves have agendas that may not agree with the Armenian national interest are the Caucasus Institute of Yerevan; the Civil Society Institute of Yerevan; the Civilitas Foundation; the Eurasia Partnership Foundation; the Golden Apricot Film Festival; the Hrant Dink Foundation; the Imagine Center for Conflict Transformation; the Regional Studies Centre; and the Yerevan Press Club.

The pro-RIC interests who fund these Armenian organizations include: European Union; Council of Europe; British Embassy in Yerevan; U.S. Embassy in Armenia; U.S. Embassy of Azerbaijan; Honorary Consulate of Israel to Armenia; Embassy of Germany to Armenia; Kingdom of the Netherlands; U.S. Department of State; U.S Agency for International Development (USAID); Open Society Institute; Open Society Foundation-Turkey; Eurasia Foundation; Global Dialogue Foundation; Heinrich Boll Foundation; Goethe Institute; Friedrich Ebert Foundation; Friedrich Naumann Foundation for Freedom; Enka Construction Company of Turkey; Turkey-Armenian Fellowship Scheme; and Turkish Economic and Social Studies Foundation (TESEV).

How do we know that these pro-RIC Western interests are sincere if they and/or their governments will not even acknowledge the Armenian genocide, let alone approve of restitution of any kind? For example, a top member of the American Jewish Committee — which works against Armenian genocide recognition and backs Israeli military and political support of Azerbaijan — sits on the honorary board of the Civilitas Foundation. Given the strategy of the West (i.e. the U.S., Europe, and NATO) to use Turkey to penetrate the Caucasus and Central Asia, and use Armenia as a doormat, their grants to Armenian organizations should be viewed with considerable skepticism.

Ironically, there are Armenians who sermonize about forging friendships with, and exercising forbearance towards, Turks but who will not, in practice, extend that very same courtesy to their fellow Armenians.

Given the severity of Turkish barbarism that was unleashed upon the Armenian people before, during, and after the Genocide, it is paradoxical that Armenian reconciliationists seem willing to cooperate with Turks in a way that they are not willing to do with their own compatriots.

There are Armenians in the RIC camp who lack a brotherly attitude towards those Armenians who view so-called reconciliation efforts with skepticism. There is also no shortage of Armenians who hold grudges because of disagreements with fellow Armenians. And it is unfortunately common to encounter Armenians who envy, demean and hinder the efforts of, other Armenians.

Such opponents could discuss their differences, empathize, agree to coexist, cooperate, or make amends.

But then, should not understanding go both ways? Should not Armenian critics of so-called reconciliation try to find common ground with Armenian reconciliationists? This is difficult to accomplish if conflicts – whether intra- or inter-ethnic – are not dealt with and resolved but are instead swept under the carpet. Thus, we are left with pleas to “be nice to each other,” but not to discuss anything considered contentious.

Everyone is entitled to his opinion. But, is it informed opinion? As evidenced by who funds “reconciliation” initiatives, misinformation can skew our opinions. For example, how many well-meaning reconciliationists are aware that many of the funders do not recognize the Armenian genocide and are, in fact, pro-Turkey and pro-Azerbaijan?

Because the passage of years can soften people’s judgments of a heinous crime, time is on the side of the perpetrator. Thus, the perpetrating side’s stonewalling may be rewarded with forgetfulness. Meaningful Armenian action, therefore, must be taken in the present and not in some vague future.

It is supremely important that Armenian reconciliationists refrain from signing away Armenian rights to reparations and the restitution of Western Armenia. They should drop their minimalist “all we want is an acknowledgment or apology” plea.

There really is no such thing as Turkish-Armenian “reconciliation.” The word means a resumption of intimate relations after a breach. This does not describe the relations Turks had with Armenians in the Ottoman Empire. The word better describes how we Armenians could and should unite to reach our greatest national potential.

Today, the internal strangulation of our people in Armenia at the hands of corrupt government officials continues. How long will the global Armenian nation – including Diasporan organizations who silently condone the actions of the current regime — tolerate the annihilation of what is left of Armenia?

If we wish to survive as a nation and see the continued moral, spiritual, and material progress of Armenia and Armenians, true reconciliation with one another on the eve of our genocide centenary must begin now. In the words of poet-activist Yeghishe Charents, “O, Armenian people, your only salvation is in the power of your unity.”

Filed Under: Articles, Opinion Tagged With: Armenia, Armenian, Diaspora, reconciliation

Armenian community plans to install memorial plaque honoring Gurgen Margaryan

February 19, 2015 By administrator

Gurgen-Margaryan

Gurgen-Margaryan

YEREVAN. – The Armenian community of Hungary plans to install a memorial plaque on the building where Gurgen Margaryan was killed 11 years ago, deputy chairman of the Armenian organization of Hungary Nikoghos Hakobyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

There is a khachkar in Budapest, and the Armenians and representatives of Hungarian NGOs honor memory of Gurgen Margaryan by bringing flowers to the khachkar, he said.

The organization has already addressed Hungary’s Defense Ministry with a request to install a memorial plaque on the building where Armenian soldier had been killed, and they are expecting the formal reply from the Ministry.

Ramil Safarov, a then-lieutenant in the Azerbaijani military, was extradited on August 31, 2012 from Hungary, where he was serving a life sentence for the premeditated axe murder of Armenian lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan, in his sleep, during a NATO Partnership for Peace program in Budapest back in 2004.

Ramil Safarov’s return to Baku was welcomed, as was his act of murder, by the officials of president Ilham Aliyev’s government and much of Azerbaijani society

And Armenia’s President Serzh Sargsyan announced on August 31, 2012 that Armenia is suspending its diplomatic ties with Hungary.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, hungary, memorial-plaque

How an Islamized Armenian from Turkey found his relatives in Armenia

February 18, 2015 By administrator

lusankar-71I have taken this photo on September 19, 2010, on the opening day of the Holy Cross Church on Akdamar Island, Turkey. We were Invited by “Hrant Dink” Foundation, we attended the event with a group of journalists. Islamized Armenians also visited Akdamar to take part in the opening ceremony of the Church. They were talking in Turkish or Kurdish and our Istanbul- Armenians compatriots were translating. An old man by the name Farzanda from the village Shenik (Sasun), came close to me and said that he was looking for his relative in Yerevan, who, according to him, was born in Talin, his name is Vardan Vardanyan and is a lecturer at one of the universities in Yerevan. At that time, Farzanda was 70 years old. He was a one of the Hidden Armenians in Turkey who had converted to islam.

Farzanda told me that his father’s name was Ulikhan and last name – Gyulbadagh(yan). Farzanda’s Kurdish son in law Bashir gave me his phone number so that his relatives in Yerevan would contact him. Later, we learned from a Turkish Armenian residing in Armenia that on reading Bashir’s phone number in “Aravot” newspaper and seeing Farzanda Gyulbudagh’s photo, his relatives in Yerevan had called him, found him and met with him.

Gohar HAKOBYAN 

ARAVOT

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, found, Islamized, relative

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