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NSW Ethnic leaders demand sacking of Multicultural NSW boss Hakan Harman over ‘airbrushing’ of war atrocities

February 16, 2015 By administrator

By Rick Feneley

Turks Vandalised: The Assyrian Genocide Memorial at Bonnyrigg.

Turks Vandalised: The Assyrian Genocide Memorial at Bonnyrigg.

Ethnic community leaders are demanding the resignation or sacking of their most senior representative in the NSW government, claiming he pushed the agenda of his Turkish homeland to resist public memorials for genocides by the former Ottoman Empire as well as Japan’s war crimes and other atrocities. Report SMH

Hakan Harman is under intense pressure to quit as chief executive of Multicultural NSW, just seven months after his predecessor, Vic Alhadeff, resigned over a perceived conflict of interest when he defended Israel’s right to strike Gaza as a defence against Palestinian militants.

Armenian, Greek, Cypriot, Korean and Assyrian leaders have united to sign a statement saying Mr Harman’s position is untenable after he issued guidelines to local governments – without first telling his minister, Victor Dominello – that they should be careful not “assign blame” when considering memorials or public monuments to “contentious” historical events.

Mr Dominello forced Mr Harman to withdraw the guidelines when he was alerted by the aggrieved community leaders. And Mr Harman told Fairfax Media on Sunday: “In hindsight, I made an error of judgement by not consulting more widely,” but he said his door was open to his critics so they could work together on “what unites people as Australians”.

The signatories say Mr Harman’s unilateral action makes him unsuitable to lead an agency with a charter “to promote and advance community harmony”.

In 1997, the NSW Legislative Assembly unanimously acknowledged the genocide of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1922 and it erected its own garden memorial the next year. The monument includes the parliament’s resolution that it “condemns and rejects all attempts to deny or distort the historical truth” about this and other genocides of the 20th century.

assured her Turkish counterpart last year that the federal government does not recognise the “tragic events” as genocide.

Armenian Australians plan to erect another memorial in Willoughby when they mark the centenary of the genocide on April 24 this year – the day before Anzac Day, when Australia will also commemorate 100 years since the bloody landing at Gallipoli in Turkey.

Korean and Chinese Australians also have plans for a statue called Three Sisters in Strathfield to pay respect to 200,00

Minister for Citizenship Victor Dominello (left), pictured with NSW Premier Mike Baird, forced the head of Multicultural NSW to withdraw divisive guidelines regarding public memorials. Photo: Dominic Lorrimer

Ethnic community leaders are demanding the resignation or sacking of their most senior representative in the NSW government, claiming he pushed the agenda of his Turkish homeland to resist public memorials for genocides by the former Ottoman Empire as well as Japan’s war crimes and other atrocities.

Hakan-Harman

Turkish Hakan-Harman

Hakan Harman is under intense pressure to quit as chief executive of Multicultural NSW, just seven months after his predecessor, Vic Alhadeff, resigned over a perceived conflict of interest when he defended Israel’s right to strike Gaza as a defence against Palestinian militants.

Armenian, Greek, Cypriot, Korean and Assyrian leaders have united to sign a statement saying Mr Harman’s position is untenable after he issued guidelines to local governments – without first telling his minister, Victor Dominello – that they should be careful not “assign blame” when considering memorials or public monuments to “contentious” historical events.

Under pressure: Hakan Harman, chief executive of Multicultural NSW.

Mr Dominello forced Mr Harman to withdraw the guidelines when he was alerted by the aggrieved community leaders. And Mr Harman told Fairfax Media on Sunday: “In hindsight, I made an error of judgement by not consulting more widely,” but he said his door was open to his critics so they could work together on “what unites people as Australians”.

Vandalised: The Assyrian Genocide Memorial at Bonnyrigg. Photo: Supplied

But the Foreign Affairs Minister, Julie Bishop, assured her Turkish counterpart last year that the federal government does not recognise the “tragic events” as genocide.

Armenian Australians plan to erect another memorial in Willoughby when they mark the centenary of the genocide on April 24 this year – the day before Anzac Day, when Australia will also commemorate 100 years since the bloody landing at Gallipoli in Turkey.

Korean and Chinese Australians also have plans for a statue called Three Sisters in Strathfield to pay respect to 200,000 so-called “comfort women” – sex slaves abused by Japanese soldiers during World War II.

“We do not believe that it is appropriate for government, at any level in Australia, to ‘weigh in’ on those historical matters,” the letter said, arguing it could jeopardise community harmony.

On February 3 this year, the Turkish alliance issued a press release applauding Multicultural NSW for its guidelines and pointedly criticising Mr Dominello and Prime Minister Tony Abbott for having attended the unveiling of memorials such as the “so-called” Assyrian Genocide Memorial at Bonnyrigg. (That memorial was vandalised with graffiti – “f— Assyrian dogs”  – soon after its opening in 2010.)

In a newsletter last year, the Turkish alliance admitted that donors’ pledges had not been forthcoming, so: “We are currently running on $0 and are entirely reliant on campaign specific assistance from the consulate.”

The signatories against Mr Harman said Multicultural NSW could not be “led by an individual who engages in unilateral action – in this case, by adopting divisive guidelines that were drafted by a body backed by a foreign government”.

Some of the leaders told Fairfax Media they regarded Mr Harman’s “conflict of interest” to be worse than that of Mr Alhadeff, who had continued to act as chief executive of the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies while he headed the Community Relations Commission, recently renamed Multicultural NSW. His dual roles, they said, had at least been transparent.

They feared stopping the construction of monuments was an attempt to “airbrush”  war atrocities.

While the board of deputies was not a signatory to their protest, its president, Jeremy Spinak, thanked Mr Dominello “for his swift action in quashing these guidelines which, if implemented, would have caused significant division and disharmony. It is concerning that policy in such an important and sensitive area could have been shaped in this manner”.

Stepan Kerkyasharian, a long-serving head of the CRC, and an Armenian Australian, did not sign the document either but said he was saddened that “the processes followed by the commission have created disharmony, reflecting on its reputation”.

“The apparent selective consultation by the commission raises serious ethical questions which need to be addressed by the government,” he said. “The commission is duty-bound not only to be impartial, inclusive and transparent but also be seen to be so.”

A spokesman for Mr Dominello said he had “asked Mr Harman to work with the relevant organisations to address their concerns”. Mr Harman said he welcomed that opportunity and “we exist to build peace and harmony in the community”.

The signatories to the protest letter were the Korean Society of Sydney, the Assyrian Universal Alliance, the Australian Hellenic Council of NSW, the Greek Orthodox Community of NSW, the Cyprus Community of NSW and the Armenian National Committee of Australia.

Time to Unite time to #deturkification of Washington

how the Turks infiltrated Islamic empire and hijack the Islam

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Assyrian, demond, Ethnic-community, Greek, NSW

German-Armenian community representative is killed

February 14, 2015 By administrator

German Police

German Police

A  cultural board member of the Armenian community in Bielefeld, Germany, has died Wednesday due to a gunshot wound.

The incident occurred on Tuesday at around 7։15pm local time (10։15pm Armenia time), reported Die Welt daily of Germany.

According to police, three men had started to argue nearby a furniture store in the city, and one of them had shot Grigoryan. Hours after hospitalization, however, the Armenian man had died from the bodily injuries he had sustained.

Those involved in this incident are from former Yugoslavia, the Neue Westfälische daily reported citing its police sources. The perpetrators, a 39-year-old Serb and a 36-year-old Kosovar, had fled the scene.

The motives for the murder are yet unknown, but an investigation is underway.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Germany, Killed, man

The master of false-Flag operation Davutoglu Accuse Armenian Diaspora work with Gulen movements

February 12, 2015 By administrator

Davutoglu, are you NATO member or ISIS?

Davutoglu, are you NATO member or ISIS?

 Armenian diaspora in US denies Davutoglu fabricated claims on cooperation with Gülen Movement.  Fact it was him davutoglu when he was FM said we opened embassies all over the world to serve Gulen movement.

Read Claire Berlinskiour Article our two thugs Erdogan and Fethullah Gülen

Edvin Minassian, who is among the executives of the US-based Armenian Bar Association, told the weekly that the fact that the many members of the Armenian diaspora in the US work for the closure of charter schools run by Turkish people affiliated with the movement is a clear sign that the two groups are at odds with each other.

The director of the US-based Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), Aram Hamparian, was also quoted by Agos as saying that members of the movement in the US openly and actively works against the policies of Armenian community in the US. He argued that members of the movement supports efforts by the Turkish government to “prevent a just and truth-based solution to the Armenian genocide issue” and siding with Baku in the Nagorno-Karabakh dispute. 

Harut Sassounian, the publisher of The California Courier, an English-Language Armenian weekly based in Glendale, California, also termed Davutoğlu’s statements that members of the Gülen movement support the Armenian community in the US as “one of lies of Davutoğlu and President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.”

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Davutoglu, false flag, Gulen, master, operation, the

You are natives of this land – Davutoglu to Armenians and other minorities

February 12, 2015 By administrator

Davutoglu, You are natives

Davutoglu, You are natives

Turkey’s prime minister has announced a government plan for ruling out the term ethnic minority from the country’s social life.

“We are resolute on that. You are the natives of this land; you aren’t strangers here. Your traditions have been on these lands. And so they will continue living,” Cihan news agency quotes Ahmet Davutoglu as saying at a dinner event with ethnic minority groups.

Representatives of Turkey’s non-Muslim communities were invited to the event held in capital Ankara.

In his speech, Davutolgu also reportedly spoke of “beautiful recollections of history” and shared culture.

He asked the guests to never forget that the first Armenian novel was written in the Turkish language.

“Likewise, we should never ignore the Armenian factor’s big value in the Turkish music. We must never forget what harmony the Jewish and Greek cultures maintained with our culture. It is our history,” he said.

The dinner event was attended by Mr Davutoglu’s spouse, as well as Deputy Prime Minister Bulent Arinc, Minister of Justice Bekir Bogdagh and Minister of Family and Social Policy Aysenur Islam.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Davutoglu, Minorities, natives

Eurovision Song Contest: Armenia to be represented by Genealogy! #Eurovision2015

February 12, 2015 By administrator

Yerevan, Armenia #genealogy

#armeniangenocide

The logo of the Genealogy project. Photo: Armenian Public Television Company

Armenia has come up with a new and innovative idea for the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest: The country will be represented by artists from all five continents! The project will be called Genealogy, and they will sing Don’t Deny in Vienna.

Peace, unity and tolerance – that will be the key message of the Armenian entry in the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest. Inspired by the symbol of a forget-me-not flower and of Building Bridges, the slogan of the contest, a wholly new concept was born. eurovision.tv

Taking into account numerous requests of the Armenian diaspora, five musicians from Europe, Asia, America, Africa, and Australia, all of Armenian origin, will be part of the band Genealogy. The idea is to unite a new generation of Armenians on stage whose families once spread all over the world in the year 1915.

A Global Forget-Me-Not Flower

The five artists at the same time symbolize the five petals of the forget-me-not flower. In their centre, the group will be unified by a sixth artist, who will be from Armenia.

The stage name of the project in the 2015 Eurovision Song Contest will be Genealogy, and they will sing Don’t Deny.

The first member of the band will be announced on February 16. Stay with Eurovision.tv to be among the first to know!

Did you know?

It’s not the first time Armenia is being represented by an act that refers to its globally spread diaspora:

In 2010, Eva Rivas sang Apricot Stone in Oslo – a song refering to Armenians living far from home, feeling their strong links and longing to the far-away motherland.

Like the forget-me-not flower in this year’s entry, the apricot is also a heavy symbol for Armenians – the fruit even gave its color to one part of the Armenian flag!

 

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, armenian genocide, Contest, Eurovision, genealogy, song

AFAD camp where the alleged killings of Armenians 46

February 9, 2015 By administrator

 kampAccording to the news Fıratnews (IS) established by AFAD’ın for Kobaneli Suruç fled from the camp was, in 1895, the last stop of thousands of Armenians were killed “Wargeh Meza’s” It’s on in.

Armenian origin living in Suruc Impairments Iron (54) and Ibrahim Halil Kaya (58) and 60-year-old Kurdish Rights Euphrates, AFAD’ın the location of the camp established by way of Urfa for Kobanêli, Erzurum in 1895 during the Ottoman Sultan 2 Abdulhamid, Erzincan, Malazgirt Sivas, Cizre, Mus like Serhat and exiled from Botan province argued that the camp where about 20 thousand Armenians introduced. Iron and rock, describing what they learned from their parents that brought their ancestors and currently AFAD tent area of ​​the establishment of the city that the term “Wargeh Meza’s” the name of the given and thousands of compatriots here were killed, while the rest is now Kobanê’y Specified in

Abraham began to explain that expressed the great injustice done to the Armenians in the Ottoman period Halil Kaya, “according to the information communicated to us by our parents yurtt whether the Armenians in 1895, was reduced to exile. Starving in the way, those who survived the massacre by Armenians died of thirst in place and they brought, were scattered all over the world. Just like the current Kobani’yi with women, Armenian women were miserable. Cizre, Malazgirt, Mus and Sivas diagnosis deported thousands of Armenians were massacred in Suruc and Urfa. This route is filled with their bones, “he said.

Deminer disrupts the “essence” Wargeh Meza’s’ first kampıdır.getiril as they are all separate convoys of Armenians, were geitiriliy of places without water. Osian village called Xelê şirîf brought thousands of Armenians, the villagers used to water the animals in a pond drinking water by pressing the head of hundreds of drowning were killed there, “he says.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: afad, Armenian, killing, Turkey

Just published Pinar Selek: Because they are Armenians

February 5, 2015 By administrator

selek-2-197x303Just published by Editions Liana Levi’s new book Pinar Selek, because they are Armenians, she said: “My book is a small token. But a cry too. »

April 2015 will mark the centenary of the Armenian Genocide. A black page in Turkish history, still controversial, still taboo. Pinar Selek, born in the 70s, offers a personal narrative, woven memories and encounters … With it, we earn from 

within the meaning build reciting in school slogans proclaiming national superiority, studying lying on textbooks, cutting through a city where Armenian names were erased signs …

Committed sociologist, writer and Turkish activist Pinar Selek was accused of terrorism in 1998 because of his work on minorities (prostitutes, transvestites …), Kurdish militants, the army … who disturb power. She lives for over 16 years a true judicial harassment. Her feminist work, militarism continues in France, where she lived in exile since 2012. She is currently conducting research on space militant Turkish and Armenian diaspora movements at ENS Lyon.

arton107799-475x394Big Table Pinar Selek receives, sociologist, writer and Turkish activist in exile in France since 2011, author of several essays, a novel The House of the Bosphorus (Liana Levi, 2013), with a thesis on the emancipation movements Turkey. She is now a researcher attached to the ENS de Lyon and publishes Because they are Armenians (Editions Liana Levi, February 2015). With philosopher Michel Marian, working for many years on the issue of Armenia, member of the editorial board of the journal Esprit, contributor to magazine News from Armenia and co-author with Ahmet Insel Dialogue on Armenian taboo (Liana Levi, 2009).

Thursday, February 5, 2015,
Jean Eckian © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, book, pinar-selek, published

USA, University of Rhode Island offers course on Armenian history, culture

February 5, 2015 By administrator

187878The University of Rhode Island (URI) is offering the course, “The Armenian Experience: History and Culture,” at its Kingston campus for the spring 2015 semester, on Mondays, the Armenian Weekly reports.

As part of the “GenEd-HigherEd” initiative, the co-chairs of the Genocide Education Project Rhode Island branch, Pauline Getzoyan and Esther Kalajian, developed and proposed the honors seminar course, which went through a rigorous approval process by the university during the fall semester. Getzoyan and Kalajian will teach the course, which will focus on Diasporan studies as they relate to the Armenian experience. Topics will include an understanding of genocide and the implications of genocide on culture, identity, and religion.

The course will include a robust offering of guest speakers, including author Chris Bohjalian and filmmaker Talin Avakian, who will speak about “Literature and Film: An Author’s and Filmmaker’s Responsibility to Truth – Exploring History, Fiction, and Non-fiction” Tom Zorabedian, assistant dean of the URI College of Arts and Sciences and the Harrington School of Communication and Media; Dr. Catherine Sama, professor of Italian at URI, who will speak about Armenians in the diaspora with a focus on Italy and about the subject of genocide in Italian literature and film; George Aghjayan and author/professor Marian MacCurdy, who will be part of a panel discussing “The Aftermath of Genocide: The Issue of Denial and Justice Specific to the Armenian Genocide;” Berge Zobian, owner of Gallery/Studio Z in Providence, who will introduce students to Armenian art and architecture, both pre- and post-genocide; and Charles Kalajian, who will introduce students to Armenian musical instruments and the aural tradition of learning music, with assistance from Ken Kalajian and Leon Janikian.

“This course, which coincides with the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, is the realization of a 10-year-long dream for us, as genocide education advocates in the state of Rhode Island,” said Getzoyan.

“Through this course, we intend to convey to students the many layers of history and social experience surrounding the Armenian Genocide and its aftermath. In doing so, we not only honor the memory of the victims, but we seek to help students make more informed choices as they become global citizens confronted with related issues.”

Funding for the course’s guest speakers is being provided by the National Association for Armenian Studies and Research (NAASR), Varnum Paul Fund. Additional financial support is provided by the Ararat Association of Rhode Island. URI Music Department chair Joseph Parillo is credited with promoting the development of the course within the university.

The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit organization that assists educators in teaching about human rights and genocide, particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and distributing instructional materials, providing access to teaching resources, and organizing educational workshops.

Related links:

The Armenian Weekly. Genocide Education Project Establishes Course at URI

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, History-Culture, university-rhode-islan

Catholic Herald Online‎ “We must not forget Armenia’s suffering” #armeniangenocide

February 4, 2015 By administrator

PA-13377877-800x500Armenia has arguably produced more martyrs than anywhere else, given that the victims of the genocide were killed in hatred of the Faith

Early February is a good time, liturgically speaking. On Monday we celebrated the lovely feast of the Presentation of the Lord in the Temple, when candles were blessed, marking the fortieth day since Christmas, and on Tuesday we celebrated St Blaise, when throats were blessed. Report catholicherald.co.uk

St Blaise is one of those saints of which we know very little, even though his is a famous cult. As is the case with so many early martyrs, legends sprang up and accounts were written down many centuries later, which have no historical value. But we can be sure that Blaise was a bishop and a martyr and lived in what is now called Sivas in Turkey, but in which those days was called Sebastea in Armenia.

Once Armenia covered much more territory than that presently covered by the former Soviet Republic in the Caucasus. A look at a map places Sivas in the middle of modern Turkey, but up to a hundred years ago the town still had a flourishing Armenian and Greek Christian population. Then came the fateful day: April 24 1915. It was on this day that the Ottoman government began to arrest and deport Armenians who had been living in Anatolia from time immemorial. This organised campaign of arrest, deportation, massacre and extermination led to the deaths of between one million and one and a half million Armenians. It is for this reason that visitors to Turkey today will find plenty of Armenian history but no actual Armenian people, or at least very few.

The Armenian genocide is commemorated all over the world, but not in Turkey and not much in Britain, which studiously avoids mentioning the genocide in order not to jeopardise relations with Turkey. This is a pity, to put it mildly, as it is hard to see how any nations – ours or the Turks – can flourish when we deny truth.

St Blaise, ever popular throughout the Catholic Church, is the only Armenian saint in the Universal Calendar. He is the solitary representative of his culture, but what a culture! The nation of St Blaise is the oldest Christian nation, having been converted to Christ by St Gregory the Illuminator in 301, before the time of Constantine. Moreover, Armenia has arguably produced more martyrs than anywhere else, given that the victims of the genocide were killed in odium of the Christian faith. Right now we are rightly concerned by ISIS’s cruelty; let us not forget the Armenians of 100 years ago.

Adolf Hitler’s view of the Armenian genocide is worth recalling, and his reference to it, made in August 1939, worth quoting:

Our strength is our quickness and our brutality. Genghis Khan had millions of women and children hunted down and killed, deliberately and with a gay heart. History sees in him only the great founder of States. What the weak Western European civilization alleges about me does not matter. I have given the order – and will have everyone shot who utters but one word of criticism – that the aim of this war does not consist in reaching certain designated [geographical] lines, but in the enemies’ physical elimination. Thus, for the time being only in the east, I put ready my Death’s Head units, with the order to kill without pity or mercy all men, women, and children of the Polish race or language. Only thus will we gain the living space that we need. Who still talks nowadays of the extermination of the Armenians?

Who indeed? That is why we need to talk about Armenia and remember them this April. Put the date of that hundredth anniversary in your diary now.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: #armenianGenocide, Armenian, catholic-herald, suffering

Armenian church of Mosul torched by Islamic State

January 27, 2015 By administrator

MOSUL

mosul-church-650x320The Islamic State (IS) militants have burnt down one of the oldest Armenian churches in Mosul, northern Iraq. Basnews

Saed Mamuzini, a KDP official from the city, told BasNews, “IS insurgents continue to torch and destroy public places, people’s homes and shrines.”

“They systematically destroy homes and shrines on a daily basis,” said Mamuzini.

The torched church is in the Wahda neighborhood of the city.

“The church belongs to the Armenian Christians and was regularly used for worship,” added Mamuzini.

When insurgents took control of Mosul in June 2014, Armenians and Christians fled to the provinces of the Kurdistan Region.

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: Armenian, Church, islamic state, Mosul, torched

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