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Armenia, New photorealistic 3D puzzle Shadowmatic available on App Store (Video)

January 16, 2015 By administrator

187204After 3 years of development, Triada Studio Games from Armenia has launched Shadowmatic, a photorealistic 3D puzzle for iPhone, iPad and iPod touch. report PanARMENIAN.Net

Shadowmatic is an imagination-firing puzzle where users rotate abstract objects in three dimensions and use their shadows to create recognizable silhouettes on the wall. The game progresses through different rooms, which are all designed to look relevant to the hidden silhouette.

The game includes 9 rooms and over 70 levels. Each room has a unique atmosphere with a related musical composition that can be downloaded from iTunes. Shadowmatic features gorgeous graphics, secondary objectives, nonlinear level progression and 3D parallax view.

The game employs a special system of hints that could be used in case of necessity. First hint is a word or a phrase that implicitly hints at the hidden silhouette’s practical, visual, or any other properties and functions. Second hint is another word or a phrase, which, in conjunction with the first hint, will provide more context for the silhouette, making your guess easier. Third hint is the title of the hidden object. Final hint reveals an image of the shadow that you’re expected to project. However, the developers suggest that refraining from using any hints at all is deemed to make the game more enjoyable and fun.

Shadowmatic is compatible with iOS devices: iPhone 3GS and later, iPad 2 and later, iPod Touch 4 and later. In the future, it will be available for other desktop platforms as well.

The puzzle is available in English, Spanish, Russian, French, German, Italian, Brazilian, Portuguese, Chinese, Japanese, Korean and Turkish. In the near future it will be localized in Armenian and several other languages.

After release of teasers in 2014, the game got lots of feedback.

Grabit Magazine describes Shadowmatic as “a cathartic puzzler that looks to take you to a happy place and then tickle your brain rewardingly while you’re there.”

Gamezebo says the game “looks seriously cool. Not only are the 3D graphics incredibly photorealistic, but the movements feel smooth, and the lighting effects themselves are especially masterful.”

The game is produced by Triada Studio Games, a new division of Triada Studio, a computer animation studio with over 20 years of history. Shadowmatic is the company’s first attempt to combine its vast computer graphics experience with an experimental in-house 3D engine. Founded in 1993, Triada Studio is a motion design and visual effects studio with a strong team of talented directors, CG supervisors, concept artists, animators and 3D generalists.

 

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, Shadowmatic

Azerbaijan Crime: A Baku Pogrom Eyewitness Recounts the Ordeal 25 Years Later

January 14, 2015 By administrator

17VilyaGardenEDITOR’S NOTE: Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte has spent the better part of her adult life speaking about the horrors of Azerbaijani state-sponsored pogroms against the Armenian population in Baku, which commenced on January 13, 1990—25 years ago today—and saw the forced deportation and gruesome murder of Armenians who had called Baku home for generations. What makes her qualified is that she and her family escaped the atrocities and she lived to tell the world. She has spoken about this tragic incident in recent Armenian history at State Houses, as well as Congress. In September, 2014, Astvatsaturian Turcotte accompanied her father, Norik, to his first-ever visit to Armenia and Artsakh since the Baku pogroms. On the 25th anniversary of the tragic events in Baku, Astvatsaturian Turcotte has allowed Asbarez the exclusive right to publish below an excerpt of her book, “Nowhere, a Story of Exile – a childhood diary of Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte.”

BY ANNA ASTVATSATURIAN TURCOTTE

“One evening, she said, during the [Baku] riots and demonstrations, a group of five to seven young men came into the patio and directly went up to Vilya’s apartment on the second floor. They had batons in their hands. These batons were infamous for instantly breaking a bone. Some of the men carried other dangerous objects, like knives and clubs.

The men broke into Vilya’s apartment and beat Vilya’s grandmother in their hallway. This happened during evening hours and Vilya was there to witness the violence. Grandma couldn’t tell us if he himself was hurt. They didn’t touch his mother, Zhanna, who was the daughter of an Azeri father, making her an Azeri. But they did beat her sixty five year-old mother in front of her. No one had ever heard such horrifying screams like the ones that came from Zhanna’s throat when she pleaded for them to stop beating her already unconscious, old mother. Zhanna screamed and tore off her long hair, and the men were holding her back as their friends beat an old woman. But they didn’t stop.

The thugs left very suddenly – when Zhanna died. Her death was surprising and instant. A heart attack killed her. Her heart literally broke. Her mother, Lilya, was injured but alive. Zhanna, an eccentric, yet beautiful woman in her mid 30s, with long black hair and big passionate dark eyes, was dead.

 

The apartment was left the way it was when Zhanna died; the shock of her death was astonishing to even the thugs. They ran off without touching a thing. There were valuable objects in her apartment, more expensive than anyone’s in our building. Rahiba and a Russian neighbor, Katya, said that they’ll look after it. Instead, over several nights, they robbed the place clean of everything Zhanna possessed.

21HRWe didn’t doubt for a second that Rahiba had informed on Zhanna and her family just for the expensive things in their comfortable apartment. It wasn’t only about religion, or nationality or a piece of good real estate called Karabakh. It wasn’t about the pride and honor of the country, or a sense of national supremacy. This tornado of events brought up the dirt and the slime of humanity to the surface, and at the end we didn’t suffer just for being Armenian. We suffered equally for having the best apartments, the most beautiful Czechoslovakian crystal, gold jewelry, precious gems, china, hand-blown German New Year Tree decorations, valuable furniture and silver forks and knives.”

Excerpt from “Nowhere, a Story of Exile – a childhood diary of Anna Astvatsaturian Turcotte.”

Rereading these words I wrote as a child brings a nauseating, dark feeling of imminent danger. This familiar feeling, triggered by memories, comes and goes in forms of health problems, flashbacks, bouts of sobbing or nightmares over the last 25 years. This sick feeling is a lifelong companion to many survivors of the Armenian pogroms in Azerbaijan, close to 400,000 of us. Every autumn, with every first snow I am instantly taken back in time to my first few months in Yerevan as an Armenian refugee from Baku. The smell of the autumn air or of new notebooks bring back the feeling of safety, away from my turbulent home city. But it also brings back the anticipation of a human catastrophe and helplessness over the memories that keep flooding back.

My family made a sudden move out of Baku on September 18, 1989. After months of resisting my father’s persuasions to leave our home, my mother had a sharp, intuitive need to leave immediately. We had no plans apart from our trust in a handful of relatives in Yerevan to house us until the violence in Baku subsided. This street aggression was erupting in surges over the last year and half since Nagorno-Karabakh voted for its right to self-determination. The movement to rid Azerbaijan of its Armenian population was gaining momentum after the Sumgait and Kirovabad massacres, taking on a more organized and precise form. Something suddenly scared my mother and we were gone.

The day before we left my home forever, my mother begged her friend and our next door neighbor Zhanna to leave as well. Her son Vilya was one of my best friends. Zhanna believed that because she was Azerbaijani through her father’s side, despite her mother being Armenian, that she, her son and mother would be spared. But she wasn’t. She died of a heart attack at the age of 37. Her Armenian mother died of debilitating injuries after being smuggled into Russia. Her son was hidden in Baku like a precious gem for over a month and then also smuggled into Russia to live in coldness and poverty for the remainder of his childhood.

My parents still beat themselves up for not pushing Zhanna harder to leave, but they also understand how difficult it was during Soviet times to make the sudden move into nowhere without permission to work or live outside of Baku, away from the comforts of our apartment and our life. It was even harder for a single parent like her. Such was the fate of many Baku Armenians who believed for months that they would never be slaughtered the way they were. “The Soviet government would never allow such Azerbaijani disobedience,” all of us thought. And many Armenians simply had nowhere to go.

It was incomprehensible for my family to imagine what would have happened if we had stayed. Would they break through our door? Would Papa be stabbed or beaten to death? Would Mama be raped or burnt alive as many Armenian victims were in Baku, Sumgait and Kirovabad? Would I survive like Vilya did? Those were the thoughts of an 11 year old child imagining the fate of her family at the hands of Azerbaijani government’s tools of Armenian destruction.

Between February 1988 and September 1989 we came across many instances where death was around the corner, while we hid in the dark, waiting out the storms of violence outside our dining room windows. My father was always armed with knives. At the time, my Grandmother was the only person who knew that I escaped near rape by our Azerbaijani neighbor. We didn’t tell my father in fear of what he might do or what might be done to him. But Baku of January 13—19, 1990 was a different animal. It was executed with surgical precision; with mass numbers. Only the addresses of Armenian families were targeted. People were slaughtered; then the survivors were shipped out of Baku by the military, across the Caspian Sea just like my ancestors were in 1918.

Azerbaijanis rid themselves of Armenians again, and with them, they rid the country of intellectual capital. We built Baku. Our history, along with our people, was erased. It remains only in the minds of the many who still remember the old Baku; those same silent ones that long for the past when Armenians and Greeks and Russians brought diversity, culture, beauty and prosperity to the Capital city. These same people tell me how everything Armenian is being destroyed and demolished, to be replaced with gaudy shiny skyscrapers; that the Azerbaijanis suffer from fear of being targeted by the despotic dictator; that they suffer from unemployment and poverty in the shadows of those ostentatious towers.

It is inconceivable for me to go through life without this cross we bear as Baku refugees. Once in a while I try to imagine what it would feel like if none of this happened; who I would be like had I grown up in peace and security. But I snap out of my introspection when I remember just how lucky we are as a family, with few cuts and bruises. I recently found Vilya. My best friend grew up as an orphan without a mother, a father, or grandmother. My other close Baku friend left her house without one single picture of herself as a child. Many families lost children, sisters, brothers, parents and grandparents. I cannot comprehend how they move on and grow and thrive and succeed. And they do.

We remember the beauty that made Baku our home and we are aware it no longer exists there. We bring this beauty with us to the thousands of communities across the world where Baku Armenians make their homes, from the United States to Germany, Norway to Australia. Armenian Nation will never let this happen to us or our descendants again. I am sure of it. And no matter how long it has been, 25 years or 100 years, we are here and we resist, each in our own meaningful way, the Aliyev government’s efforts to change history. This is the least we can do to honor the innocent victims of the heinous crimes by Azerbaijan.

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, Azerbaijan, Ordeal

France: A 16-year-old Armenian community of Marseille beaten to death

January 13, 2015 By administrator

arton106946-480x480Camille Julian High School of Barasse (13011) was the scene today Monday, January 12 as incomprehensible as a violent drama. A young French member of the Apostolic scouts, Armenian, Michael ASSATURYAN, has lost his life at 16 and a half, savagely attacked by a horde of young people determined to kill him.

The CCAF South, Coordination Council of Armenians in France in the southern region, condemn this tragedy and calls the court to act quickly. This premeditated murder, follows many anti-Armenian actions, and casts doubt on the nature of the attack. Violence strikes again blindly with savagery.

While a show of solidarity invaded France, condemning the hatred of the other, fanaticism and extremism, Marseille, following the great citizen rally, is a sad example of a situation that has deleterious for too long.

This tragedy highlights a climate of tension that prevails more in our neighborhoods, and our young are the sad victims.

This young man by his exemplary voluntary commitment only wanted to live a peaceful and serve his district and city.

The CFC, its sincere condolences, parents and friends of Michael.

He invites all who wish to pay tribute to this young activist, to come together this Tuesday, January 13 at 19:30 Armenian Apostolic Cathedral Marseille 339 Avenue du Prado 13008 Marseille

Azad BALALAS
Co President

Jacques Donabedian
Co President

Simon Azilazian
Co President

Tuesday, January 13, 2015,
Ara © armenews.com

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, beaten to death, France, youth

Yerevan condemns the bombing of the Armenian church in Syria

January 12, 2015 By administrator

arton106911-480x270An Armenian Catholic church in the largest city of Syria, Aleppo, was partially destroyed by bombing Islamist rebels. An attack has widely condemned the Armenian government.

The Church of St. Rita was hit by mortar shells Friday. Syrian pro-government media as well as local Armenians said the church was targeted by one of the Islamist militia for the defense of the Syrian army units loyal to President Bashar Al-Assad. No one was injured in the bombing. According to them, no one was injured.

Photographs posted by AlMasdarnews.com show gaping holes in the roof and walls, as well as the church’s rubble strewn around his altar. The Arab press service said the rebels also bombed the surrounding neighborhoods.

The damaged church is at the top of the water wells used by the Syrian Armenians and other Christians in the city ravaged by war. The civil war continues in Syria has left many regions of Aleppo no running water.

Zarmig Boghigian, the editor of the Armenian magazine Aleppo Gandzasar, accused “terrorist groups” of deliberately targeting civilians and churches. “This area is not a front line,” stated Boghigian in a telephone interview with the Armenian service of RFE / RL (Azatutyun.am).

Armenia responded Saturday. “The international community must redouble its efforts to prevent such crimes against the civilian population, minorities and shrines,” said Tigran Balayan, spokesperson for the Armenian Ministry of Foreign Affairs in a statement.

Monday, January 12, 2015,
Claire © armenews.com

Filed Under: News Tagged With: Armenian, bombing, Church, Syria

Diaspora representatives want to erect world’s largest cross in Armenia

January 10, 2015 By administrator

crossYEREVAN. – Armenian authorities will help to choose location if Armenian communities agree to install the world’s largest cross in Armenia, Diaspora Minister Hranush Hakobyan told Armenian News-NEWS.am.

The Armenian communities of France and Lebanon have an intention to install the world’s largest cross.

“The authors of the project will decide on the amount of investments by themselves, but the Diaspora representatives should first coordinate the projects with Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II,” she said.

Asked about her attitude towards the initiative, the Minister said she cannot have negative opinion on something “that is related to Christianity, will promote tourism in Armenia and will make Armenia popular in the world”.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, cross, Diaspora

Today January 9th 1919 The New York Times “Fear of Armenian Doom” Morgenthau

January 9, 2015 By administrator

The-fear-of-Armenian-Dome

Filed Under: Articles, Genocide Tagged With: Armenian, doom, morgenthau, New York Times

Armenian Ambassador Confronts Azeri Counterpart in Argentine Media

January 6, 2015 By administrator

vahagn-melikianArmenia’s Ambassador to Argentina Vahagn Melikian

BUENOS AIRES (Agencia Prensa Armenia)—The current Armenian Ambassador to Argentina, Vahagn Melikian, sent a letter to Clarin, the largest newspaper in Argentina, about the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, in response to a letter published by the Ambassador of Azerbaijan, Mammad Ahmadzada.

“The Ambassador of Azerbaijan confuses his mission and believes his goal in Argentina is to deny and correct the opinions of journalists and political analysts about the situation and the prospects for peace in the South Caucasus,” says Melikian in his response.

“It is very difficult to define Azerbaijan as a democratic state. From the first years of independence to the present the presidency has been passed from father to son. The free press is persecuted systematically. The opposition leaders are political regime prisoners. The petrodollars of the Caspian Sea got to the head of a leadership without ideological support and despised by his own people, to whom they prohibit to freely express themselves.”

“The vice of lying, distorting and misrepresenting the historical truth has become an inseparable part of the machinery of official propaganda of Azerbaijan,” concludes the Armenian ambassador.

In early December, Ahmadzada sent a letter to the newspaper criticizing an article written by the head of the International section in Clarín, Marcelo Cantelmi, a journalist that had already been victim of the persecution of the Azerbaijani government in August 2013, when he was added to the country’s blacklist and banned from entering Azerbaijan. In the article, Ahmadzada said that Armenia has a “repressive regime of military-oligarchic dictatorship” and that Nagorno Karabakh “is an internationally recognized territory of Azerbaijan.”

This was followed by two responses of Vahagn Melikian and Mario Nalpatian, Vice President of the Socialist International and member of the Bureau of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation, which were subsequently answered by Ahmadzada, all published by Clarin.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Ambassador, argentiana, Armenian, Azerbaijan

The genocide of the Armenians will be commemorated in 28 cities in Turkey in 2015

January 3, 2015 By administrator

arton106606-480x480There are a few months the Association of Human Rights in Turkey (IHD) launched the “Campaign to End the denial on the eve of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.”

Details of the events taking place as part of the campaign have also begun to emerge.

The IHD carry out the activities with the support of the following associations Nor Zartonk the Zan Institute, the working group on reconciliation with history, the Gomidas Institute, the Collectif Van, the Council of European Armenians and Syrian activists.

The IHD organize commemoration events in 28 cities 24 April 2015. “gatherings Genocide” will be organized in some cities on the sites where the genocide was perpetrated.

In Istanbul, an event will be organized in front of the Museum of Turkish and Islamic Arts Haydarpaşa. The second center of the commemorations of April 24 will Diyarbakir.

The Gomidas Institute will organize a special event in Diyarbakır of April 22 to 24 with the support of IHD.

Saturday, January 3, 2015,
Stéphane © armenews.com

Filed Under: Genocide, News Tagged With: 100 anniversary, Armenian, Genocide, IHD, Turkey

Santa’s bag has Armenia soldier’s most-awaited gift: vacation

January 3, 2015 By administrator

santaSanta Claus and Snow Maiden are touring a military unit in Armenia. Its barracks are decorated with firs and balloons, and festive tables are set in the canteen.

The military unit’s deputy commander, Lernik Asryan, told Armenian News- NEWS.am that they welcome the New Year in a special way.

“All the staff assembles in the canteen, each year on December 31 between 8pm and 11pm, where there is a celebratory dinner. Subsequently, we gather in front of the TV, listen to the [New Year] messages by the President and the Catholicos. Then begins the festive evening filled with cultural and sporting events,” Asryan said.

He added that the military unit also has singers, female dancers, and presenters, who also become the Santa Claus and the Snow Maiden.

“What is a Santa Claus without gifts? A lottery is organized. It’s the favorite moment of the soldiers, since the [grand] prize is a vacation. [But] the best barrack staff, [and] the best cultural and sporting performances also receive gifts,” the military unit’s deputy commander noted.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, military, santa claus

China, Armenian Historical ritual in Guangzhou

January 2, 2015 By administrator

ganghzouChina Armenian community, after long years for the first time on December 14 in Guangzhou, came together for a ceremony at the Armenian Church.

Guangzhou, Shanghai, Nanjing, Hong Kong and dozens of Armenians coming from other cities, was held in observance of the Bishops Haygaz Najaryan directed.

Australia and New Zealand Armenian Church Bishop, India and the entire Far East Armenian Pope Envoy Archbishop Najary that, after the last decades over the last rites performed by the Armenian community in China, China and the happiness of making ritual met the Armenians serves as the home of Hong Kong heard expressed.

At the beginning of the 19th century until the middle of the 20th century, Harbin, in cities such as Shanghai and Hong Kong, had a small but lively Armenian community. During this period, there was an Armenian church in Harbin and Shanghai, China was the center of the Armenian community. The majority of Armenians in China, in 1950, leaving the country moved to America or the Soviet Armenia.

According to Jack & Julia Maxima Hong Kong figures of the Armenian Center, today there are about 500 Armenians in China and Hong Kong.

ganghzou1Armenian victims of the Communist revolution in China

Armenian community in China, though very small, Armenians have a long history in this country. The first Armenians who live in China, Tsarist East China Railway began construction in 1898 by a few people in Russia was selected to run the building. The first settlements while others were Harbin.

Armenian Relief Association in 1910, established the Armenian Shanghai Club, a center was created for the Armenian immigrants in the region. Central, the invention of the Armenian community in time, wedding, turned into a social hut where activities such as baptism. In 1923, 400 Armenians living in the city of Harbin in northern China, and founded the first Armenian church in the region. Many Armenians living in the country, after the Chinese People’s Revolution in 1949, he left here and Shanghai Armenian Club was transformed into private ownership. The Armenian church in Harbin, was destroyed during the Cultural Revolution that Mao Zedong launched in the 1960s.

Filed Under: Articles Tagged With: Armenian, China, Guangzhou, Historical, ritual

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