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Armenian Reporter - 4/21/2007 - front section

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  • Armenian Reporter - 4/21/2007 - front section

    ARMENIAN REPORTER
    PO Box 129
    Paramus, New Jersey 07652
    Tel: 1-201-226-1995
    Fax: 1-201-226-1660
    Web: http://www.reporter.am
    Email: [email protected]

    April 21, 2007 -- From the front section

    All of the articles that appear below are special to the Armenian Reporter
    For photographs, visit www.reporter.am

    1. Hope for the City donates $10 mln in medical aid to Armenia
    * Founders deliver aid and meet stakeholders

    2. Friends and family mourn the passing of James Aljian (by Paul Chaderjian)
    * Former MGM Studios executive served as Executive Director of Lincy Foundation

    3. From Washington, in brief (by Emil Sanamyan)
    * Bush, Fried stress importance of elections in Armenia
    * U.S. renews warning to Azerbaijan over Karabakh...
    * ...and argues for Kosovo independence
    * Turkish-Kurdish tensions heat up
    * Lobbying against the Genocide resolution continues
    * Prominent Democratic senators endorse Genocide resolution

    4. European observers say May 12 will be "a touchstone for Armenian
    democracy" (by Armen Hakobyan)
    * Should Armenian voters keep their fingers clean?

    5. Foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan meet again
    * Minsk Group co-chairs to return to the region

    6. Inscriptions at Tzitzernakaberd (by Armen Hakobyan)

    7. AGBU centenary celebrations concluded in Yerevan (by Betty
    Panossian-Ter Sargssian)
    * Sarkis Demirjian, Karnig Yacoubian, and Nazar Nazarian awarded the
    Mkhitar Heratsi medal

    8. Armenians are weightlifting champions in Europe

    9. U.S. European Command's Combined Endeavor 07 to be held in Yerevan next week

    10. The lost motherland, part 2: The ruins of Ani (by Tatul Hakobyan)

    11. Living in Armenia: A grandfather, a granddaughter, and destiny (by
    Maria Titizian)

    12. Commentary: Wanted: A new Armenian strategy/perspective on Middle
    East (by Talar Kazanjian)

    13. Letters
    * Neither better nor worse, just different (Maida Garabedian Domenie)
    * Is the UN continuing the trauma of genocide? (Dr. Ani Kalayjian)
    * Why cancel a memorial concert to Hrant Dink? (Shahkeh Yaylaian Setian)

    14. Editorial: Let the people prevail

    15. Editorial: Refusing complicity

    ************************************** *************************************

    1. Hope for the City donates $10 mln in medical aid to Armenia

    * Founders deliver aid and meet stakeholders

    YEREVAN - On April 12, the Minnesota-based charity Hope for the City
    donated medicine to Armenia worth $9,595,000 wholesale. On hand to
    deliver the donation were the charity's founders, Dennis and Megan
    Doyle.

    Hope for the City acquires surplus goods and gets it to those in
    great need in the United States and abroad. Its international
    operations are focused on delivering medical supplies, medicine, and
    medical equipment to developing countries.

    The medicines donated and the institutions that will receive them
    were chosen in consultation with Armenia's Ministry of Health and the
    United Armenian Fund. "We worked specifically so that we would not
    undermine the existing pharmaceutical companies in Armenia," Megan
    Doyle said. "These are drugs that are not necessarily manufactured
    here, so they are difficult to get and typically very expensive."

    * A second visit

    This was the Doyles' second visit to Armenia. During their first visit
    in 2005, they established relationships with several entities. Hope
    for the City has provided medical equipment and supplies to the
    Arabkir Children's Hospital in Yerevan; the Armenian Relief and
    Development Association (ARDA), which is active in the Gyumri area;
    and the Armenian-Austrian Medical Association. The combined value of
    these donations was over to $1 million.

    On this visit, the Doyles, who were accompanied by Hope for the City
    executive director Clare Brumback, were able to see the donated
    equipment in use and have further in-person discussions with their
    partners in Armenia. Also with them was Patrick Donahue, a biomedical
    technician sent by Universal Hospital Services, the largest medical
    equipment outsourcing supply company in the United States. Mr. Donahue
    worked on repairing equipment donated by Hope for the City and
    assessed the need for additional equipment repair.

    His Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians, received the
    Doyles in Etchmiatzin. They also met with Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian and Deputy Minister of Health Tatul Hakobyan.

    Dennis Doyle is the CEO of Welsh Companies, a leader in full service
    commercial real estate, based in Minneapolis, Minn. He and his wife
    Megan started Hope for the City in 2000. Since its inception, Hope for
    the City has donated approximately $230 million worth of goods.

    * Making the rounds

    Visiting the Arabkir Children's Hospital, Dennis and Megan Doyle
    delivered medical equipment and met with Dr. Ara Babloyan, the
    director of the hospital, who provided them with a new needs
    assessment list.

    In Gyumri, they met with Toros Philabosian, director of ARDA, and
    visited the city's birthing hospital and its orphanage. At the
    hospital, they handed out layettes for all 70 children born in April.
    At the orphanage, they gave clothing, bottles, and diapers to the
    children.

    Back in Yerevan, the Doyles met Dr. Taron Tonoyan, director of the
    Austrian-Armenian Medical Association, who provided them with a new
    needs assessment. They visited the Austrian-Armenian Hospital, where
    they met patients and saw equipment donated by Hope for the City.

    The Doyles also visited the Armenian-American Wellness Center and
    became familiar with its programs and facilities. They met one of its
    principals, Hranush Hakobyan, who is also a member of Armenia's
    National Assembly and chair of its Standing Committee on Science,
    Education, Culture and Youth Affairs.

    * CFF connection

    Dennis and Megan Doyle are members of the board of the Cafesjian
    Family Foundation (which owns this newspaper). In that capacity, they
    also visited programs supported or operated by the foundation,
    including the fuel-cell design and manufacturing firm H2ECOnomy,
    Armenia TV and other media organizations, Cascade Capital Holdings,
    and the Cafesjian Museum Foundation.

    Hope for the City and the Cafesjian Family Foundation also sponsor a
    microlending program. The Doyles visited a bakery and a small
    parquet-flooring business that had received loans through the program.

    Before leaving Armenia on April 15, Dennis and Megan Doyle said they
    were happy with how the aid provided by Hope for the City had been
    distributed to date. They said they were eager to do more for Armenia.

    **************************************** ***********************************

    2. Friends and family mourn the passing of James Aljian

    * Former MGM Studios executive served as Executive Director of Lincy Foundation

    by Paul Chaderjian

    BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. - Friendly, loyal, personable, tough, a man who
    valued honesty and truth, a hero. These are a few of the words being
    used to describe the late James Aljian. The 75-year-old Oakland native
    will be buried in Beverly Hills today. He passed away ten days ago
    from cancer, but the impact he made on the homeland through the Lincy
    Foundation will be felt for many generations in Armenia and beyond.

    Up until a few months ago, when cancer began to slow him down, Mr.
    Aljian, known as Jim, focused much of his time on his responsibilities
    as the executive director of Kirk Kerkorian's Lincy Foundation. Mr.
    Aljian was also an executive and one of the original board members of
    Kerkorian's Tracinda Corporation and MGM Mirage Incorporated.

    "I first met Jim in 1961 when he was an auditor with Ernst & Ernst,"
    said Mr. Kerkorian. "He was tough, and I knew right away that I needed
    him on my team."

    In addition to his most recent responsibilities in Mr. Kerkorian
    business ventures, Mr. Aljian also a former senior vice president of
    finance at MGM Studios in the 1970s and MGM/UA Entertainment in the
    1980s. He served on the boards of Western Airlines, South West
    Leasing, MGM Grand Hotel, Chrysler Corporation, and Daimler Chrysler.

    "Jim's loyal confidence and business acumen proved invaluable to me
    over the years," said Mr. Kerkorian, "but no more valuable than his
    friendship, which meant so much. I will miss him more than I care to
    think about."

    The organization that Mr. Aljian, a certified public accountant,
    helped manage is credited with building the first of many megaresorts.
    Mr. Kerkorian, Mr. Aljian, and company developed several major Las
    Vegas resorts in the 1960s and 1970s, including Caesars Palace, the
    Flamingo, the International (now the Las Vegas Hilton), and the
    original MGM Grand (now Bally's Las Vegas).

    "Jim played an invaluable role on our board and he will be very
    sadly missed," said MGM Mirage chair Terry Lanni.

    * Lincy Foundation

    "He was a very down to earth, very friendly and devoted to the
    charitable work of the Lincy Foundation," said Harut Sassounian,
    vice-chair of the Lincy Foundation, president of the United Armenian
    Fund and publisher of the California Courier newspaper. Mr. Sassounian
    worked with Mr. Aljian since the creation of the United Armenian Fund
    (UAF) more than 15 years ago.

    "He provided good counsel and direction to accomplish the intended
    objectives of his projects," said Mr. Sassounian, "and to make sure
    that the funds provided fully served the purpose for which they were
    committed."

    Mr. Sassounian says Jim will be sorely missed. "I've learned a lot
    from him over the years," he said. "I hope that all of us together on
    the Lincy staff will be able to continue the work that he spearheaded,
    both in the US and Armenia."

    Since its establishment in 1989, the Lincy Foundation has provided
    tens of millions of dollars to a various Armenian and non-Armenian
    charities in the US and Armenia. In recent years, the Foundation
    allocated $170 million for infrastructure redevelopment in Armenia and
    is currently allocating another $60 million.

    "Mr. Aljian oversaw all of Lincy's operations, including the
    requests that came in," said Mr. Sassounian. "He reviewed and
    investigated all aspects of the requests, the propriety of the
    requested funds, what they would be allocated for, who the requesting
    organizations were, what their background was, how much they have
    raised and what their project were all about."

    The consummate accountant, Mr. Aljian valued each penny, according
    to Mr. Sassounian. "He counted every penny," he said, "because those
    pennies were destined for a specific purpose of charitable use. It
    didn't matter if it was a dollar or a million dollars, every penny had
    to serve a good purpose, and he made sure of that."

    Sassounian says the late CPA was friendly but very tough about
    finances. "He knew a lot about accounting, and he knew a lot about
    finances," he said. ""For good reasons, he put a high premium on
    honesty, on the truth. He would not put up with any kind of corruption
    or waste of time or money."

    * Private, family man

    After living in Las Vegas for many years, Mr. Aljian relocated his
    family to Southern California when Tracinda Corporation and Lincy
    Foundation headquarters moved to Beverly Hills.

    "Mr. Aljian was a very private man," said Mr. Sassounian, so private
    that it was only when Mr. Aljian's illness prevented him from working
    did his Lincy Foundation colleagues know of his illness. "He never
    complained. He always said he was fine. Even when he didn't feel good,
    he put on a brave face and kept it to himself."

    Mr. Sassounian began working with Mr. Aljian right after the 1988
    earthquake in Armenia. The Lincy Foundation had been formed months
    earlier, and Mr. Sassounian approached the charity and proposed the
    idea of forming the United Armenian Fund in order to deliver
    assistance to Armenia through a coordinated effort.

    "He was fun to be with," said Mr. Sassounian. "We discussed a lot of
    issues unrelated to business including recollections of his college
    days, when he played football in San Francisco. He liked the outdoors.
    He was a handyman. He fixed things, and he would tell a lot of
    Hollywood stories."

    For more than 30 years, Mr. Aljian was a voting member of the
    Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, the organization that
    hands out the annual Oscar awards.

    * Early years and Armenian heritage

    Mr. Aljian was the son of Genocide survivors from Dikranagerd. He was
    born in Oakland and graduated from Oakland High School before heading
    to the University of California at Berkeley for his undergraduate
    degree. Mr. Aljian also had a graduate degree in business
    administration from Golden Gate University in San Francisco.

    After serving as an Eagle Scout, Mr. Aljian also served in the U.S.
    military and was a decorated sharpshooter in the Army's Third Infantry
    Division and stationed in Germany for a short period. A great source
    of pride, however, came from the work the Lincy Foundation had done in
    the homeland.

    "Even though he didn't know the language," said Mr. Sassounian, "he
    had a great interest in Armenian issues, especially in recent years as
    the genocide issue became very prominent. When it became an issue in
    Washington and with Congress, he asked a lot of questions."

    Mr. Sassounian says Mr. Aljian was always approachable and returned
    every phone message, even if he did not know the caller. Mr.
    Sassounian says Mr. Aljian never turned his back to anyone, even
    strangers who approached him during his rare appearance at Armenian
    social event.

    "Anybody who called and said 'I want to come and see you' was told
    to come on down," said Mr. Sassounian. "He would not say I'm busy, or
    who are you. A lot of people went and talked to him. They may not have
    always gotten what they wanted out of him, and because he was very
    tough. Even though he was very sociable and friendly, but he was at
    the same time a very good businessman, and he knew when to say yes and
    when to say no."

    Mr. Aljian's first and only visit to Armenia was in 1998. He
    accompanied Senator Bob Dole on a fact-finding mission for the Lincy
    Foundation. "It was a good trip at the beginning of the Lincy
    projects," said Mr. Sassounian. "He enjoyed it immensely, and he
    always talked about going back. But unfortunately, he got busy, and
    later on, his health did not allow him to travel."

    * Final respects

    "I miss him, and I will miss him a lot," said Mr. Sassounian. "It's
    been 18 years that I've known him and worked with him, sometimes
    closely, and traveled with him. There was no question that he wanted a
    homeland that's prosperous, especially economically, that it would
    have high employment, that there would be very little emigration. He
    cared strongly about that. He definitely wanted the projects that
    Lincy did to be enjoyed by the public at large and have the money
    definitely go strictly to the purposes intended."

    Friends and family will pay their final respects this morning at
    9:30 a.m. at Good Shepherd Catholic Church, 505 N. Bedford Drive, in
    Beverly Hills. The family requests that in lieu of flowers, donations
    be made to The UCLA Foundation for the James Aljian Memorial Fund at
    the David Geffen School of Medicine, 10945 Le Conte Ave., Suite 3132,
    Los Angeles, Calif. 90095.

    Glendale businessperson and philanthropist Kosti Shirvanian was
    friends with Mr. Aljian and his wife for nearly three decades. Mr.
    Shirvanian says that he is proud of Mr. Aljian for all the
    contributions the Lincy Foundation made to the homeland. "Even though
    he was an American-Armenian," said Mr. Shirvanian on the phone from
    Shanghai China, "he was able to accomplish a lot in Armenia through
    his influence at Lincy. He should be given credit for all his
    contributions to the homeland. He was one of the kindest men. He was
    hard to get close to, but he was my hero."

    ************************************* **************************************

    3. From Washington, in brief

    by Emil Sanamyan

    * Bush, Fried stress importance of elections in Armenia

    President Bush sent a message of congratulations to Armenia's newly
    appointed prime minister, Serge Sargsian. The message also noted that
    the U.S. "expects" Mr. Sargsian to "make a great contribution to
    holding a free and fair election in accordance to international
    standards, which will serve as a serious stimulus for developing
    relations between the two countries," PanArmenian.net reported on
    April 17.

    At a roundtable discussion with journalists from former Soviet
    republics held on April 11, Assistant Secretary of State Dan Fried
    said in reference to the May 12 parliamentary election that the U.S.
    does not "expect perfection. We don't expect to go from deeply flawed
    to perfect, but we do expect to see substantial forward progress."

    In a comment sure to spark Armenia's competitive streak, Mr. Fried
    told an Armenian journalist, "Given the strength of the Armenian
    diaspora and given Armenia's links to the West, frankly, you ought to
    be way ahead of Georgia. But I ask you, are you in terms of democratic
    reforms?" Answering a later question, Mr. Fried did acknowledge
    "shortcomings" in Georgia as well.

    Mr. Fried added, "Armenia should be doing better. It should be a
    leader. It should be a prospering country. It has all the ingredients.
    And lack of oil and gas is not necessarily a curse."

    * U.S. renews warning to Azerbaijan over Karabakh...

    Addressing the on-again, off-again Azerbaijani threats to go to war
    against Armenians, Mr. Fried noted, "it is important to try to find a
    peaceful settlement. War will destroy everything Azerbaijan is trying
    to do." He said, "Azerbaijan has every opportunity, like Armenia,
    although the economies are very different, to have a very good 21st
    century."

    Almost a year ago, during a similar roundtable discussion on April
    4, 2006, Mr. Fried told an Azerbaijani journalist in attendance: "Your
    country's going to have a lot of money coming in from oil and gas, but
    only if there is peace. If there is war, there is no more money. All
    right? Just look at the map. You know what I'm talking about. You're
    well set up for peace. Of course, the oil and gas money won't do you
    any good unless it's well spent, but that's a different issue."



    * ...and argues for Kosovo independence

    While U.S. officials continue to stress what they call the "unique"
    nature of each conflict, likely independence of the former Serbian
    province of Kosovo would still set an important precedent. The United
    States and its allies are determined to recognize the independence of
    a breakaway region (Kosovo) despite opposition from its former ruler
    (Serbia) and an important international player (Russia).

    In prepared testimony for an April 17 hearing in the House Foreign
    Affairs Committee, Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs Nick
    Burns stressed, "supervised independence for Kosovo is now the only
    way forward." He added: "We need to act now. We cannot afford to wait
    any longer. Until there is clarity, Kosovo's undefined status will be
    a source of increasing tension and instability."

    After a "period of international tutelage for a limited number of
    years," Kosovo will formally declare independence. The United States
    and other Western allies will then move to recognize this independence
    even if Serbia and Russia continue to oppose it.

    The House committee, including its chair Tom Lantos (D.-Calif.),
    spoke overwhelmingly in support of Kosovo's independence. Just two
    committee members, Reps. Dan Burton (R.-Ind.) and Diane Watson
    (D-Calif.) expressed opposition.

    "Kosovo has been a part of Serbia for a long, long time," said Rep.
    Burton, who has also been a big booster for Turkey, Azerbaijan, and
    the former Zaire dictator Mobutu Sese Seko. "Externally imposed
    solution won't work." He warned that independence would lead to
    "bloodshed."

    Rep. Watson also worried that recognition of Kosovo's independence
    would set a precedent for more conflicts, and asked why the United
    States would not support independence for Somaliland, Taiwan, or
    Kurdistan "from either Iraq or Turkey."

    * Turkish-Kurdish tensions heat up

    The chair of the Turkish General Staff, Gen. Yasar Buyukanit, told
    reporters in no uncertain terms that he wants his army to go into Iraq
    "for a military operation" against Turkish Kurdish (PKK) rebels there,
    and the reason it has not yet done so is because "a governmental
    decision is required for that," Turkey's "semi-official" Anadolu news
    agency reported on April 12.

    The reason this decision has not been made is because of U.S.
    opposition, which says that the rebel threat should be dealt with "in
    a cooperative way, in a joint way, rather than [through] unilateral
    actions," argued State Department spokesperson Sean McCormack the same
    day.

    Turkey claims that the recently increased tempo of operations
    against its forces in Turkish Kurdistan and occasional terrorist
    attacks against civilian targets inside Turkey are coordinated from
    northern Iraq. This view has been questioned, however, by British
    journalist James Brandon, among others. Mr. Brandon is one of the few
    Westerners to visit the PKK camps in northern Iraq.

    Speaking at the Jamestown Foundation on March 29, Mr. Brandon
    described the primitive condition and remote location of the camps,
    which make any real coordination difficult if not impossible. He also
    argued that it would be in Turkey's interest to make peace with the
    secular PKK, whose leaders have stepped back from demands for
    independence.

    Turkey's real concern appears to be not with any activity generating
    imminent terrorist threats, but the rise of a de facto Kurdish state
    on its border with Iraq. In fact, the most recent Turkish
    saber-rattling came following the statement by the Iraqi Kurdish
    leader Mas'ud Barzani, who told Al Arabiya TV that if Turkey continues
    its cross-border interference, Iraqi Kurds would respond by
    interfering inside Turkey. Mr. Fried of the State Department called
    Mr. Barzani's words "extremely unhelpful and unwise."

    * Lobbying against the Genocide resolution continues

    Turkey's Kurdish concerns dominated an April 17 event with senior
    Turkish Parliament members hosted by the Hudson Institute and
    moderated by its Zeyno Baran. At the same time, the members of
    parliament from both the governing and opposition parties stressed
    their displeasure with the House resolution on the Armenian Genocide
    (H. Res. 106), currently backed by 188 members of Congress.

    In a quick interview with the Reporter, Erol Aslan Cebeci, a member
    of the Turkish parliament from the ruling Justice and Development
    Party (AKP), likened the impact of the potential passage of the
    non-binding measure to Pearl Harbor, the JFK assassination, and the
    9/11 attacks. "Even people herding sheep in the mountains in Turkey,
    they will remember when this resolution will pass," he claimed.

    During the presentation, Mr. Cebeci warned, "Turks are an emotional
    group of people when it comes to these issues" and with resolutions
    continuing to pass through Congress and other parliaments, "believe me
    in my lifetime we will not see [Armenian-Turkish] normalization."

    Mr. Cebeci also argued that "Turks and the Turkish republic have
    come a long way on [the Genocide] issue in the last 10 to 15 years."
    Back then, Mr. Cebeci said, the Turkish government would just say that
    "nobody died." He went on: "Now you can hear that, yes, there were
    atrocities committed, yes there were massacres, but it was not one-way
    ... that we regret this.... But I don't think there will ever be a point
    when the Turkish public will say that, yes, there was a genocide."

    Members of parliament from the opposition Republican People's Party,
    former ambassadors to NATO and the United States respectively, Onur
    Oymen and Sukru Elekdag, suggested that Congress had no "jurisdiction"
    over the Genocide issue. Moreover, Mr. Oymen waved a copy of a book by
    denier Justin McCarthy and claimed that "580,000 Turks were killed by
    Armenians." (This is down from past claims of "two million" Turks
    killed).

    The delegation also included the parliament's Foreign Affairs
    Committee chair Mehmet Dulger, the former foreign minister Yasar
    Yakis, and member of Parliament Zekeriya Akcam, all from AKP.

    * Prominent Democratic senators endorse Genocide resolution

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D.-Nev.) and a top contender for
    the Democratic presidential nomination Sen. Hillary Clinton (D.-N.Y.)
    have agreed to co-sponsor the Senate Genocide resolution (S. Res.
    106), the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) reported on
    April 18.

    During a Washington "breakfast briefing" held by Senators Dick
    Durbin (D.-Ill.) and Barack Obama (D.-Ill.) with Illinois residents on
    April 12, Sen. Obama - also a leading contender for the Democratic
    presidential nomination - was asked whether he planned to co-sponsor
    S. Res. 106 introduced last month by none other than Sen. Durbin.

    In response to a question from the ANCA's Karine Birazian, Sen.
    Obama said: "For those who aren't aware, there was a genocide that did
    take place against the Armenian people. It is one of these situations
    where we have seen a constant denial on the part of the Turkish
    government and others that this occurred. It has become a sore spot
    diplomatically. I have to check with my staff to find out what has
    gone on in our office that has resulted in us not signing on to [S.
    Res. 106]."

    The Senate measure currently has 29 supporters.

    In a statement last September, Sen. Obama said: "the Bush
    Administration's policy concerning the Armenian Genocide is wrong and
    is untenable." He nevertheless voted to approve the nomination of
    Ambassador Richard Hoagland, arguing that "it is in the best interest
    of the U.S.-Armenia relationship to have an effective U.S. ambassador
    in place."

    ************************************ ***************************************

    4. European observers say May 12 will be "a touchstone for Armenian democracy"

    * Should Armenian voters keep their fingers clean?

    by Armen Hakobyan

    YEREVAN - "The upcoming Parliamentary elections in Armenia on 12 May
    will be a crucial touchstone for the degree of maturity of democracy
    in Armenia." A four-member "pre-election delegation" of the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) reached this
    conclusion during a visit to Armenia that lasted from April 10 to 13.
    The delegation had been invited by the speaker of Armenia's National
    Assembly.

    The delegation's conclusions were based on back-to-back meetings
    over the course of four days. They were announced by Leo Platvoet (The
    Netherlands, Group of the Unified European Left), head of the
    delegation, who spoke at the National Assembly on April 13.

    The other members of the cross-party team were Georges Colombier
    (France, European People's Party Group), Ewald Lindinger (Austria,
    Socialist Group), and Bernard Marquet (Monaco, Alliance of Liberals
    and Democrats for Europe).

    The delegation met with the president, the speaker, the ministers of
    justice and foreign affairs, the chair of the Central Electoral
    Commission, representatives of various political parties participating
    in the elections, members of the Constitutional Court and of the
    Office of the Human Rights Defender of Armenia, and representatives of
    the mass media and nongovernmental organizations.

    "The delegation was heartened by the assurances of the Armenian
    authorities, and all political stakeholders it met, that it is their
    intention to hold elections that fully meet Council of Europe
    standards for democratic elections. In this respect the delegation
    stresses that it is the responsibility of all parties and stakeholders
    to adhere to the rules that a genuinely democratic process demands.

    "The delegation took note of the improved election code, which has
    generally passed the expert analysis of the Council of Europe's Venice
    Commission. The election code forms a sound basis for the conduct of
    democratic elections if it is fully implemented in good faith.

    "The delegation welcomes the efforts by the authorities to create a
    centralized voters' list, in line with longstanding recommendations by
    the Parliamentary Assembly. However, the delegation also notes the
    concerns of several interlocutors that the accuracy of the voters'
    lists still leaves a lot to be desired. It therefore calls upon the
    authorities to continue, and if necessary step up, all efforts to
    ensure the highest possible accuracy of the voters' list on Election
    Day."

    The day before the delegation's arrival, however, the head of the
    Passport and Visa Department of Armenia's police had announced that
    voter lists are posted at every precinct and also online (at
    www.elections.am). She had urged voters to check the lists and report
    errors through a hotline established for the purpose or via letter or
    email. Her request was broadcast by all media throughout the country.
    (See also last week's edition of the Armenian Reporter.) In addition,
    the U.S. government and the International Foundation for Election
    Systems are modernizing the Passport and Visa Department's computer
    systems for this same purpose.

    [On April 19, the Passport and Visa Department announced that in the
    ten days since the announcement, 10,254 names had been removed from
    the rolls. Of these, 3,680 were the names of deceased voters.]

    * Inky fingers?

    The PACE delegation said it "regrets the reluctance by the majority of
    the political players in Armenia to introduce the inking of voters
    fingers, as advised by the Venice Commission, as a proven mechanism to
    prevent multiple voting."

    Since the countries represented by the four members of the
    delegation do not require voters to have their fingers inked upon
    voting, this correspondent asked how many member countries of the
    Council of Europe follow the practice. "I don't know how many
    countries," Mr. Platvoet said, "But I have been an observer in
    Azerbaijan, Albania, and Serbia, and Mr. Marquet in Montenegro, and
    those countries do. Also, Mexico, which has observer status in the
    Council of Europe, has this practice."

    During the press conference, Mr. Platvoet said the delegation tried
    to avoid double standards. "The fact remains, however - and by the
    way, the government and all political parties agree - that a lot has
    to improve in order for Armenia to have good elections. The principle
    is this: if you want to have free and fair elections, the condition is
    public trust in the system. And we hope that this trust will grow
    during this election cycle."

    The delegation said it "was concerned over its overall impression of
    a lack of popular interest in the election process by the electorate.
    Such attitudes of apathy, or even cynicism, are not conducive to the
    development of democracy in Armenia. The delegation was not able, with
    few notable exceptions, to discern marked differences between the
    political platforms of the contenders. It was left with the impression
    that the upcoming elections are regarded by many as a struggle between
    political elites and not between concepts and ideas. In relation to
    this, the delegation is concerned that in a number of constituencies
    only one candidate is running for the majoritarian mandate, thereby
    not allowing the electorate in those constituencies a fully democratic
    choice."

    Would voter apathy or similarities among the platforms of various
    parties lead the delegation to assess the election as not free and
    fair, this correspondent wanted to know. "We have to be honest and in
    our statement we simply repeated those general thoughts that were
    shared with us during our visit. Of course we hope this will
    contribute to fair and free elections."

    * Campaign ads

    The statement continued: "The delegation would like to stress that a
    level playing field in the campaign, and full respect for the
    principles of freedom of expression and assembly, are key conditions
    for democratic elections. It is therefore concerned by the uneven
    conditions for the political players, as highlighted by the media
    monitoring sponsored by the Council of Europe. In this respect the
    exorbitant costs for paid political advertising demanded by
    broadcasters are deeply regretted."

    The statement failed to note, however, that as required by law,
    state-run public television is providing one hour of free television
    time to each political party that is running in the elections. The
    free time is from 5:15 to 6:15 every afternoon. Paid advertising rates
    are set by each commercial station and are the same for all parties.
    Mr. Platvoet did note, however, that he had been elected twice with
    "zero minutes of television time."

    Citizens abroad cannot vote

    The statement also noted: "The fact that out-of-country voting has
    been abolished in the amended election code is of concern to the
    delegation, as, in practice, it will disenfranchise a sizable part of
    the Armenian population that is living abroad."

    On the night of April 12, during the delegation's visit, two
    Prosperous Armenia party campaign offices in different parts of
    Yerevan were rocked by explosions two hours apart. (No one was hurt.)
    The delegation took note of the incident: "The delegation strongly
    condemns the recent attacks on the headquarters of a political party
    in Armenia. It would like to reiterate its position that violence and
    intimidation have no place in a democratic society. Electoral
    violations during past elections have never been satisfactorily
    investigated and prosecuted. A climate of impunity for electoral
    violations and election related violence cannot be allowed to exist in
    Armenia. The delegation therefore calls upon the competent authorities
    to fully investigate any election related complaints that are brought
    to its attention and, where violations are found, to provide redress
    and prosecute the violators to the fullest extent of the law."

    What would be the repercussions for Armenia, as a member of the
    Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, if the elections are
    not free and fair? "As you know, the previous elections did not meet
    Council of Europe standards and principles," Mr. Platvoet said. "There
    have been positive changes since then, as for example in the election
    law. The state authorities and political parties are becoming
    increasingly aware that if they want to be part of European
    institutions, then they have to move toward free and fair elections.
    We do not know what will happen on Election Day, of course. But if
    that step forward is not taken, that will be an obstacle to
    integration with Europe. But this is a hypothetical, a what-if. We
    must wait for Election Day and see what will happen."

    *********************************** ****************************************

    5. Foreign ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan meet again

    * Minsk Group co-chairs to return to the region

    YEREVAN - On April 18 in Belgrade the foreign ministers of Armenia and
    Azerbaijan met on the sidelines of a ministerial meeting of the Black
    Sea Economic Cooperation organization. Armenia's Foreign Ministry
    reports that Vartan Oskanian and Elmar Mammadyarov were joined by the
    cochairs of the OSCE Minsk Group and the personal representative of
    the OSCE chairman-in-office.

    The co-chairs made suggestions regarding the remaining areas of
    disagreement on the negotiating document for a final resolution of the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict, both foreign ministries said. But neither
    would disclose the substance of the suggestions. It was agreed that
    the cochairs would visit the region again and discuss with the
    presidents of Armenia and Azerbaijan the possibility of another
    meeting of the two presidents.

    Speaking in Vienna the previous day, Mr. Oskanian had said, "I have
    seen all the proposals that have ever been produced by the mediators,
    and if I were to base my judgment purely on the content of the
    document on basic principles at hand, I can assure you that we've
    never been this close. What we have today is the most sensible, the
    most balanced. This is a trade-off among principles, this gives
    something to everyone, and denies every maximalist demand the sides
    might have. It is a balanced approach and we hope we will be able to
    continue to make progress on the basis of this document."

    But two factors affect the negotiations and need to be addressed,
    the Armenian foreign minister added: "One is the militaristic ambition
    of Azerbaijan. Let me repeat: this conflict has no military solution.
    This must be ruled out so we can focus on compromise. Second, the
    public statements made by the sides should match the spirit and letter
    of the document. When the document is eventually opened up, the public
    will ask why the statements don't match the content. In the case of
    Baku's statements, there is a discrepancy between their statements and
    the content of the document. My guideline is to go by what we've been
    hearing, what the co-Chairs have been hearing during the talks."

    For the full text of the Armenian foreign minister's statement see
    www.armeniaforeignministry.com

    A.H.

    ******************************************** *******************************

    6. Inscriptions at Tzitzernakaberd

    by Armen Hakobyan

    YEREVAN - "The genocide of the Armenian people in 1915-22 is a global
    disgrace," inscribed Boris Yeltsin in the memorial book for notable
    visitors to the Armenian Genocide Museum at Tzitzernakaberd.

    The apricot tree attached to the poplar is in bloom. All around it
    are wormwood trees with plaques next to each of them showing which
    head of state, religious leader, or other dignitary planted the tree
    and when. Behind the unmatched flowers of the apricot tree is the
    arresting monument in memory of the 1.5 million victims of the
    Armenian Genocide. It stands there as a memorial and a protest, a
    demand for restitution, as a symbol of survival, and a warning never
    again to allow such a tragedy.

    On the road to the monument workers are preparing for the arrival on
    April 24 of much of the population of Armenia. Nearby is the Armenian
    Genocide museum-institute, which has been in operation for a mere 11
    years but has already become a repository of documentation and
    artifacts of the tragic era. Construction began in 1995, on the 80th
    anniversary of the Genocide. It operates as part of Armenia's National
    Academy of Sciences.

    Countless Armenians have visited the museum, as have thousands of
    tourists, and delegations visiting the country. They have seen the
    Ottoman state's planned and deliberate destruction of Armenian
    civilization in Western Armenia in 1915 and the years that followed.

    The director of the museum-institute, Hayk Demoyan, accedes to my
    request, and in deputy director Suren Manukyan's office I start
    perusing the volumes of the memorial book for notable visitors. This
    too is history, the pages of which are still being written, as the
    blank pages of human memory are filled. There are scores of
    inscriptions, enough for a book-length study, but there's nothing
    stopping us from pausing on just a few of them.

    The first inscription in the book for foreign dignitaries was made
    on May 2, 1996, by Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow and all Russia. "The
    delegation of the Russian Orthodox Church visited the Armenian
    Genocide museum, paid its debt of deep respect, and prayed for the
    repose of the souls of the 1915-22 genocide of the Armenian people. In
    eternal memory of the victims of genocide."

    I turn the pages and the still-timely September 11, 1998,
    inscription of Dr. Ioannis Kasoulides, the foreign minister of Cyprus,
    catches my eye: "The Nazis were condemned in Nuremburg. The Hague is
    sentencing the crimes against humanity in Bosnia and Rwanda. None of
    those atrocities would have taken place if the genocide against the
    Armenian people were prevented and condemned. In my country, Cyprus,
    in 1974 Turkey once again engaged in ethnic cleansing. The
    international community must stop such horrors."

    Neighboring Georgia's past and present leaders too have written
    their impressions. Let's quote Eduard Shevardnadze's note from
    September 29, 1999: "In their heroic history of many centuries, the
    Armenian people have faced many adversities. The subject of this
    museum too is evidence for all generations in all countries for how
    carefully peace must be maintained, how we must not fail to maintain
    and develop good-neighborly relations among peoples. I believe in the
    wisdom of the Armenian people, their worthy past, and their great
    future."

    The president of Bulgaria, Petar Stoyanov, mentions the assistance
    provided to Armenians by the Bulgarian people. On December 1, 1999, he
    wrote: "I deeply bow before the suffering and heroism that lies at the
    foundation of the history of the Armenian people. I am proud that my
    people gave refuge and assistance to Armenians persecuted in their
    country and that the great Bulgarian poet wrote of Armenians and
    Armenia, 'a people always brave and martyred.'"

    Then I come across the September 15, 2001, inscription of the
    current president of Russia, Vladimir Putin: "Russia has felt the
    tragedy and pain of the Armenian people as its own. We bow our heads
    before the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide."

    Among these broad sentiments, I suddenly come across the October 12,
    2002, inscription of the first president of Russia, Boris Yeltsin:

    "The genocide of the Armenian people in 1915-22 is a global
    disgrace. There cannot be and is no forgiveness for it. Russia has
    recognized it, as have many countries in the world. It is time for
    Turkey too to repent.

    "I have been looking for many years and see that Armenia is being
    reborn! Thank you for preserving memory and truth."

    On July 12, 1999, the president of the Senate of France, Christian
    Poncelet, wrote: "This century, which has been witness to so much
    suffering, the genocide of 1915, but also as Anatole France had hoped,
    the recognition of a free and independent Armenian state, is coming to
    an end. My fellow senators and I sincerely hope that the new
    millennium bring peace, stability, reconciliation, and brotherhood in
    a stable Europe."

    And whereas France has recognized and condemned the 1915-17 genocide
    of the Armenian people by Turkey, the Jewish state has not -
    notwithstanding the genocide that befell the Jewish people in the
    hands of Nazi Germany in 1939-45. So it is interesting to see what
    Israel's deputy foreign minister, Nawaf Massalha, wrote on December 6,
    2000: "What we have just seen here is horrible and shaking. No one can
    stay indifferent in the face of this atrocity. I identify myself with
    the suffer[ing] of the Armenian people as well as with the desire to
    continue to live as a proud, independent, and free people, who
    perseveres and continues its glorious culture. Our sincere
    condolences, and we call upon the world, even today, to take the
    appropriate lesson from the past, and make sure that such things will
    never happen again."

    In the same context, it is interesting to see what dignitaries from
    the United States have written in the memorial book. Let's look at two
    inscriptions.

    "Our visit was extremely moving," wrote Rep. Adam Schiff of
    California. "To witness in such graphic form the undeniable facts of
    the genocide, through the faces of the men, women, & children . . .
    and especially through the children is a searing experience. We must
    rededicate ourselves to the justice & peace of final unequivocal
    recognition."

    And Rep. Frank Pallone of New Jersey wrote: "The museum continues
    its great effort to document & explain the Armenian genocide in the
    most effective way. One day I will come back, and the U.S. Congress
    will have recognized the Armenian genocide." Alas, that day has not
    yet come.

    Let us close with the memorable inscription of Jacques Chirac, the
    president of France, whose signature enacted the French law
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide. "Souviens-toi!" or "Remember!"

    *************************** ************************************************

    7. AGBU centenary celebrations concluded in Yerevan

    * Sarkis Demirjian, Karnig Yacoubian, and Nazar Nazarian awarded the
    Mkhitar Heratsi medal

    by Betty Panossian-Ter Sargssian

    YEREVAN - A year's worth of celebratory events honoring the Armenian
    General Benevolent Union first 100 years concluded this week with a
    final string of events in Armenia and Nagorno-Karabakh.

    A delegation of 130 AGBU members representing 24 chapters from 15
    countries, headed by the AGBU's president, Berge Setrakian, and eight
    members of the Central Board came to Armenia for the occasion. The
    celebrations spanned the week of April 2-8.

    On April 3 the AGBU delegation visited Nagorno-Karabakh to take a
    close look at reconstruction projects in the villages of Norashen,
    Bareshen, and Jrakn in Hadrout, which are being implemented thanks to
    the financial support of the AGBU.

    The week included a conference dedicated to the 100th anniversary of
    the organization and another conference discussing educational issues.
    During the second conference a project to create an Armenian virtual
    university and an online teaching program was presented.

    The delegates also held working meetings to discuss the
    organization's current and future projects. They were joined by a few
    dozen AGBU young professionals from Armenia and the diaspora. The
    meetings afforded participants the opportunity to forge new ties.

    The members of the Central Board were received by President Robert
    Kocharian of Armenia on April 6. The president decorated three members
    of the AGBU Board of Trustees - Sarkis Demirjian, Karnig Yacoubian,
    and Nazar Nazarian - with the Mkhitar Heratsi medal.

    Armenia's National Academy of Sciences awarded Mr. Setrakian with an
    honorary doctorate.

    On the last day of the jubilee week, the AGBU turned a symbolic page
    by burying a time capsule.

    "All the chapters of the AGBU contributed to the contents of the
    time capsule," Ashot Ghazarian of the AGBU office in Yerevan told the
    Armenian Reporter. "Each put in a token representing the work of the
    AGBU in various sectors. There were DVDs, pictures, and video films in
    the iron-and-steel double box; they will be preserved for coming
    generations. The box will be opened a century later. The time capsule
    was buried symbolically in Etchmiatzin because it represents the
    eternal existence of our nation, our religion, and it is a place where
    people have walked during the past centuries and will walk in the
    future. Besides, over the past millennia the Armenian Apostolic Church
    has been the protector of all our national supreme values and we are
    sure that for the coming hundred years it will also preserve that
    symbolic legacy of the AGBU", Mr. Ghazaryan said.

    The AGBU says it plans to meet new challenges using modern means.
    "The preservation and development of the Armenian language in Armenia
    and the diaspora should be carried out with modern means and
    technologies. Apart from continuing our projects in requalification
    programs of Armenian language teachers and the modernization of
    Armenian-language textbooks, we aim to establish a virtual university
    so that our national language, literature, history, and cultural
    values will easily be within the reach of the young and upcoming
    generations," Mr. Ghazarian added.

    ****************************************** *********************************

    8. Armenians are weightlifting champions in Europe

    Meline Daluzian of Gyumri, Armenia, won the gold medal in the 63
    kilogram women's category in the European weightlifting championship,
    which is underway in Strasbourg, France. She established three new
    records, Noyan Tapan reports.

    Sergey Petrosian, 19, who represented Russia and is of Armenian
    origin, won the gold medal in the men's 62 kilogram category.

    *************************************** ************************************

    9. U.S. European Command's Combined Endeavor 07 to be held in Yerevan next week

    YEREVAN - Military communicators from 42 countries and two
    multinational organizations are preparing for Combined Endeavor 2007,
    a set of military communication exercises to be held April 27 through
    May 10 in Baumholder, Germany, and Yerevan.

    This U.S. European Command-sponsored exercise brings NATO members,
    countries that are part of NATO's Partnership for Peace, and other
    countries together to plan and execute interoperability testing of
    command, control, communications, and computer systems. The stated
    purpose is to be prepared for future combined humanitarian,
    peacekeeping, and disaster-relief operations.

    ************************************* **************************************

    10. The lost motherland

    by Tatul Hakobyan

    Part 2: The ruins of Ani

    Let us move from Kars to another capital of the Kingdom of Bagratunis,
    the ruins of Ani. Ani was first mentioned in the manuscripts by
    historiographers Eghishe and Ghazar Parpetsi, as an unassailable
    fortress. It is assumed that Ani got its name from the fortress city
    Ani, which was a religious center for pagan Armenians.

    In foreign lands, even if it is Western Armenia, a good and
    well-informed taxi driver can turn out to be more useful than an
    Armenian-Turkish phrasebook, a map of the region, or your knowledge of
    the architectural monuments. For example in the province of Kars, my
    best companion is a Turkish citizen by the name Jelal, who not only
    has a good knowledge of English, but is also versed in history (the
    Turkish version, of course). On his mother's side he is Armenian, but
    what is the most important he is a kind and a trustworthy taxi driver.

    On March 23, I was the only visitor to the ruins of Ani. The weather
    was rainy, so after I had visited several churches, Jelal told me that
    he'll wait for me in the taxi by the gates, while I once again took
    pictures of the dilapidated masterpieces of Armenian medieval
    architecture.

    During 989-1001, by order of Smbat II of the House of Bagratuni,
    architect Trdat built the main cathedral of Ani in the territory
    between the enclosures Ashotashen and Smbatashen. King Smbat was not
    lucky enough to see the wonder, and only under the patronage of
    Catranide, the wife of Gagik the First, who inherited the throne from
    King Smbat, was the construction of the main cathedral of Ani
    finished.

    The inscription on the southern front of the cathedral states,
    "During the reign of Gagik, the King of kings of Armenians and
    Georgians, I, the daughter of Vasak, the king of Syunik, the queen of
    Armenians, by inspiration of our gracious Lord and by the order of
    King Gagik, have built this holy cathedral, founded by Smbat the
    Great."

    Ani, the capital-fortress city of the Bagratunis, which is now
    introduced to tourists as part of the Turkish heritage, is located at
    the right bank of river Akhurian, 45 kilometers from Kars, capital of
    Vanand's Armenian kingdom, by the village of Ojakhli.

    In the beginning of the eighth century, the Armenian ruler Ashot
    Bagratuni the Meateater bought the provinces of Arsharunik and Shirak
    and joined them together with Ani to his lands. By the great wall of
    Ani, next to the entrance, there are English and Turkish signs telling
    about the history of the city. Obviously, these signs, as well as the
    ones within the walls never mention that Ani was an Armenian capital.
    You will never find the words "Armenian" or "Armenia" anywhere, except
    in the thousand-year inscriptions on the Armenian churches. These tell
    the truth about Ani. Everything else that they'll tell you in Ani are
    lies, in the word and spirit of Turkish historiography.

    Last time I visited the ruins of Ani, which was possibly in the
    August of 2003, Turkish frontier guards Mammed and Murad were showing
    tourists a quarry across the border. They were offering binoculars and
    telling in their poor English, that the digging had been going on for
    three years.

    "What country is on the other side of the river?" I asked.

    "Ermanistan, Ermanistan" the Turkish guards agreed. In "Ermenistan"
    the binoculars were showing trucks by the quarry carrying stones, and
    3 people sitting on a hill, possibly artists, who were painting the
    cathedrals of the Armenian kingdom of Bagratuni.

    The Turkish frontier guards said that the Armenians were making
    underground explosions in the quarry, and that was the reason that the
    ruins of Ani were collapsing.

    This time there were no frontier guards, and one did not need to get
    permission to visit Ani from Kars anymore. I'm all alone in the ruins
    of Ani. From the other side of the river the noise of the tractors
    working in the quarry on the Armenian side was still disturbing the
    silence of the ruins. However, that didn't prevent me from imagining
    and shouting at the top of my voice that I am the king of the ruins of
    Ani.

    In the year 961, Ashot Bagratuni II moved the capital from Kars to
    Ani. In 992, the catholicosate also moved to Ani. Historians state
    that at that times Ani had a population of about 100 thousand, 12
    bishops, 40 monastery superiors, and 500 priests.

    With the decline of the Bagratuni kingdom, in 1045, Ani was besieged
    by the Byzantine army. The last king, Gagik II got the city of Cesaria
    and a palace in Constantinople as compensation.

    A few years later, in 1064, the Seljuk Turks captured Ani and sold
    it to a Kurdish dynasty Shadadan. In 1200, Tamar, the Georgian queen,
    captured Ani; in 1237, it was passed into the hands of the Mongols. In
    the middle of the 14th century, the Turkmen tribe Karakoyunlu made Ani
    their capital. In 1579, Ani became a part of the rising Ottoman
    Empire.

    From the beginning of the 19th century until now, Ani has been
    desolated. In the city, within and outside its walls, the monuments of
    Armenian medieval architectural are dilapidated.

    Tigran Honents' Saint Gregory Church was built in a comparatively
    late period, in 1215, when Ani was under the control of the Georgian
    queen Tamar. Maybe this is the reason this church is in reasonably
    good shape; the inner walls of the church are all in colored
    miniatures.

    Saint Amenaprkich church was built during the first half of the 11th
    century. Today half of it is ruined. The bridge of Ani, which was
    built in the tenth century and is almost ruined, connects the right
    and the left banks of Akhuryan and is open for tourists, because it is
    situated in a neutral zone of the Turkish-Armenian border. You have to
    look at the Saint Hripsime monastery using binoculars. It is on the
    bank of the river, almost ruined.

    In Ani, beside Armenian culture, you can also see architectural
    monuments from the Seljuk period, such as a bathhouse or the Menuchehr
    mosque.

    Jelal, the taxi driver, was patiently waiting by the gates.

    "Jelal, can we say today, that these ruins of Ani are ours?" I asked.

    Jelal didn't answer, but there was kindness on his face. He drove
    faster and half an hour later, under the downpour turning into snow,
    we reached Kars, ready to leave for Avetis Aharonyan's birthplace the
    next morning.

    To be continued.

    ************************************** *************************************

    11. Living in Armenia: A grandfather, a granddaughter, and destiny

    by Maria Titizian

    Can genetic material serve as the medium through which thoughts and
    memories are transmitted? Some would argue that it is scientifically
    difficult, if not impossible to prove. I on the other hand, have
    nothing to prove. All I know is that I ended up where he began. Not
    quite, but close enough. We came from different countries but we were
    both born by the sea. He fought for physical survival while I fight to
    keep memories alive. His journey took him to the Sorbonne, mine guided
    me back to the lost-again found-again homeland. Ours is a strange
    story. A grandfather and granddaughter that never met yet who had a
    relationship that defied comprehension. He lived through atrocity,
    I've only read about it. His gentle spirit allowed me to feel outrage
    and horror the first time I read about the Genocide. He never got the
    chance to tell me about it.

    When my family moved to Canada in the sixties, my grandparents
    stayed behind in Lebanon. I was only a child and have no memories of
    either of them. Living on different continents, worlds apart, my
    grandfather and I were bound together by the words we wrote in our
    letters to one another. By the time they decided to join us in Canada,
    civil war had erupted in Lebanon and they were trapped. My family's
    story is the story of our nation. Torn asunder, trying to piece
    together fragments of an existence with no place to call home.

    Many memoirs have been written by Armenians about their
    grandparents' experience during the Genocide. There is a common thread
    in all these stories - the survivor invariably picks a grandchild to
    whom to tell their story. My grandfather never got the chance to tell
    me his story; he died in 1980 before we were able to be reunited. I
    understand now that he never had to pick me because I was destined to
    be the vessel through which his story would one day be told. I was the
    one who returned to the place we call the homeland, a place he yearned
    for his whole life. Although it's not Cilicia, where he began, it is
    the lost-again found-again homeland, that elusive piece of geography
    that binds us to her will and where I find myself now.

    My grandfather was born in Haji Hababli, Musa Dagh, in 1900. His
    family was large and its offspring predominantly males, a condition
    that continues three generations on. When his village received news
    that they too would be forced to abandon their homes and join the
    caravans like the rest of the Armenians living in Anatolia, the
    village coordinated a resistance. They were mountain people, tough and
    stubborn, unaccustomed to change and unwilling to succumb to the
    enemy. They preferred to perish on their lands rather than be forced
    to flee. Although some of the residents of Musa Dagh obeyed the
    deportation orders, the majority ascended the mountain and fortified
    their positions. Musa Dagh was one of the few sites that organized its
    self defense and thus became the stuff of legends. For forty days and
    forty nights, the population of Musa Dagh valiantly held back the
    Turkish army until the last bullet was placed in the barrel of their
    guns. Finally, lack of food, supplies, and ammunition forced them to
    make a critical decision which did not include surrender. Off the
    coast, they could see warships anchored in the bay. The villagers made
    a banner which read, "Christians in Distress: Rescue." Several young
    boys were ordered to swim out and warn the officers of the ships of
    their desperate situation.

    After the French and British saved the Armenian population of Musa
    Dagh, they were transported temporarily to Port Said in Egypt until
    the French authorities could figure out what to do with them. When
    they arrived their ship docked at the port and they remained on board
    for two days. When they were finally allowed to disembark they
    surveyed their new surroundings. A barren terrain, where there were no
    plants or vegetation, only eternal stretches of sand. Quickly a tent
    city was erected with each family assigned to one tent. This temporary
    accommodation would be where they would live for the next four years.
    After a time the tents were organized and divided into sections, each
    one carrying the name from their lost villages in Musa Dagh: Haji
    Hababli, Vakif, Kabusia, Khdr Bek, Bitias and Yoghun Oluk. Some of the
    women set up a canteen to provide food and not long after they were
    supplied with drinking water. To protect the tent city a unit of ten
    men, comprised of British and Armenian soldiers was organized. The
    American Red Cross and the Armenian Church helped to establish small
    workshops to provide employment. Sewing, carpet weaving, and
    comb-making began to flourish. A hospital was set up with the aid of
    Egypt's Armenian Red Cross. However within the first two years over
    300 souls perished to illness. Just when they were settling into their
    new lives, they were informed that they were to be sent back to Musa
    Dagh, which was now under French mandate. After four years in Egypt,
    whoever hadn't perished from illness or a broken heart began the
    journey back home.

    After the population of Musa Dagh slowly began to return to their
    ancestral homelands, the tent city was dismantled and the refugees
    gone. When they returned to Musa Dagh, they found their homes and
    villages destroyed, their crops ruined. They rebuilt their homes, but
    twenty years later were deported once again as a result of the
    annexation of Musa Dagh to Turkey. Thus in 1939, the French
    authorities brought 1,068 families to Ainjar, Lebanon, where they
    continue to live today. All that remains of Musa Dagh is the village
    of Vakif, which continues to exist and according to most accounts is
    the last remaining Armenian village in Turkey.

    Once back in Musa Dagh, my grandfather was sent to Paris by the
    Gulbenkian Foundation to continue his education, with the promise that
    upon returning he would dedicate his life to his people. It was a
    promise he kept till his death. His children never understood the
    fervor with which he served his community. His grandchildren, most of
    them born and raised in faraway lands didn't bother much with family
    history. So why was it that I, among his many grandchildren, felt a
    tug at my heart the first time I read the word atrocity? Why was it
    that I left behind my parents, siblings, aunts, uncles, and cousins to
    tread the uncharted waters of a newly independent homeland with two
    young children? I have no logical answers. All I know is that
    something beckoned me here, to be on this land, to breathe its air, to
    bear witness to its development and empowerment, and to share the
    blame for its mistakes. Was it in the encrypted words in the letters
    of an old man to a granddaughter thousands of miles away attempting to
    tell his story or was it mapped out in my genetic code?

    This year marks the 92nd anniversary of the Genocide. It is an
    intrinsic component of Armenian national identity and it will be sixth
    year that I will be marching with my fellow Armenians toward the
    Genocide Memorial. Tzitzernakaberd, perched upon a hill in Yerevan
    will open its arms to its dispersed children and wait. Whether it is
    sunny or raining, whether Mt Ararat will emerge from the clouds,
    whether Turkey acknowledges the atrocities of the past, we will
    continue to pay homage to our forefathers who perished over 90 years
    ago because as a friend once assured me, we have no choice for it is
    mapped out in our genetic code.

    ******************************************* ********************************

    12. Commentary: Wanted: A new Armenian strategy/perspective on Middle East

    by Talar Kazanjian

    Mention the Middle East and you're likely to think of chaos, conflict,
    and insecurity. In recent decades, the waves of turmoil caused by
    regional wars - whether these are periodic or ongoing - have brought
    upheaval and social unrest to many Middle Eastern countries.

    For the Armenians of the Middle East, such crises have generally
    been cause for deep concern. But the developments of the last several
    years suggest that even more troubling times may lie ahead. If in the
    past conflicts were largely contained within national boundaries,
    today the danger of spillover into a regional conflagration is
    greater. Adding to the complexity is that fact that the Republic of
    Armenia lies right on the border of what has become known as the
    Greater Middle East.

    These are new realities, and Armenians - both in the republic and in
    the diaspora - need to revisit their strategic thinking on the Middle
    East. Such a strategy would take into consideration the security of
    both Armenia and the Armenians living in the Middle East.

    The new U.S.-centric international perception of the Middle East
    began taking shape after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. The
    re-evaluation of American policy after that date led to the perception
    of the Middle East as a unified entity: a large land mass stretching
    from Pakistan and Afghanistan through Iran to the Arab world -
    integrated to a significant degree within a single framework.

    Given the divided nature of the region in the 20th century, it would
    have been logical to find that each country's Armenian community dealt
    with the problems of insecurity largely on its own. However, with the
    change in the way the whole region is being perceived and with the
    advent of globalization, it has become necessary for Armenians to
    change their understanding, and to devise a new, more comprehensive
    strategy that would include the totality of Armenians living in the
    region.

    The first step in such a strategy would entail dropping the
    perceptions that are becoming outdated. Armenians elsewhere still tend
    to think of the Middle East as a region where the preservation of the
    Armenian language and culture are relatively easy to achieve. This
    region is viewed as a source of Armenian-speaking immigrants to North
    America, Europe, Australia, and elsewhere. However, since the creation
    of an independent Armenia, this view is less certain.

    On several occasions during the last several years, the need for a
    comprehensive Armenian vision has made itself felt. One example is the
    decision taken by the Armenian government to send a small military
    contingent to Iraq, which resulted in objections from the region's
    local Armenian communities. Wherever one stands on the question of the
    deployment, the fact to emphasize here is that the entire debate
    occurred largely due to the lack of a common vision, where the role of
    the regional Armenian presence would be clear.

    Both Armenia and the Armenians of the Middle East could derive
    benefits from a unified position. In the Middle East, Armenians could
    promote the position of Armenia in the countries in which they live.
    The connections and networks of each Armenian there could be used to
    advance Armenia's interests and position in those countries.

    On the other hand, Armenia could provide a safe haven for Middle
    Eastern Armenians when their livelihoods are disrupted or seriously
    threatened. This very situation presented itself after the Iraq war in
    2003. Since that time, at least by some accounts, the Iraqi Armenian
    community has been victimized by the daily insecurity in the country.

    Unfortunately, the variety of help or protection on offer by
    Armenians (whether it's the Republic of Armenia or diaspora
    organizations) continues to be limited in scope. Even if Armenians all
    over the world had expressed a desire to help the Iraqi Armenians,
    there was no unified plan to deal with the issue.

    With further crises looming over the region, Armenians might use
    their failure to act in Iraq as an impetus to devise plans where the
    respective abilities of both Armenia and the Armenian organizations in
    the Middle East could be incorporated in a complementary, unified plan
    to protect the Armenians of the region.

    Armenia and the Armenians of the Middle East have congruent
    interests in many spheres of security. Focusing on the multitude of
    "Armenian interests" in the diverse countries of the region no longer
    serves the interests of the Armenian presence as a whole. A new
    strategic perspective on the Middle East would help Armenians as a
    group face the challenges and probable changes that the region's
    future holds in store. And it would help them endure.

    * * *

    Talar Kazanjian is a graduate student at Johns Hopkins University
    School of Advanced International Studies in Washington. She is
    originally from Syria. This is her first contribution to the Reporter.

    *************************************** ************************************

    13. Letters

    * Neither better nor worse, just different

    Sir:

    Garbis Moushigian's letter to the editor ("An Armenia to be proud of,"
    Mar. 24) was so well written, and I believe it expressed the feelings
    of many of us in the diaspora. I too have had moments of frustration
    over developments in Armenia - followed by enthusiasm when I keep in
    perspective that this is a newborn country, which has come a long way
    in a short 16 years.

    Compare Armenia to the other ex-Soviet countries: Even Russia has
    not gotten its act together, and it is a far more resource-rich
    country, and does not have its borders closed. It is very true that
    once we saw the real Armenia, it was very different from the Armenia
    we had imagined. Not worse or better, just different. Mr. Moushigian
    is right: the majority of us in the diaspora are descendants of
    Western Armenia, and the present Armenia is not only different in
    language and mentality (due to long years of Russian influence), but
    is also not the Armenia we would know from our literature, dreams, and
    upbringing. Even the cuisine is different. But again, that does not
    mean that it is better or worse; it's just different, and sometimes in
    a more positive way.

    The language difference I believe has made it difficult for both
    sides to assimilate well. After all, Western Armenians - in spite of
    the lack of a country, schools, and any feedback from the motherland
    for many years - must be credited with keeping the spirit of
    Armenianism alive into the second, third, and fourth generations.
    Today we find many diaspora Armenians who, while not speaking a word
    of Armenian, still know that they are Armenian. Western Armenians have
    inherited a wonderful literary heritage. And just as we have always
    admired the works of Eastern Armenian poets, musicians, and
    dramatists, the current Republic of Armenia should also respect those
    works dating back centuries emanating Western Armenian authors.

    Thank you for Mr. Moushigian's wonderful letter.

    Very truly yours,

    Maida Garabedian Domenie

    Florida

    * Is the UN continuing the trauma of genocide?

    Sir:

    I was invited to attend a UN exhibit on the 13th anniversary of the
    Rwandan genocide titled "Lessons Learned"; it was scheduled to take
    place on April 9, and organized in part by the British-based Aegis
    Trust. Shortly before the event, I received an urgent call from a
    colleague who was outraged, and urged me to read my e-mail
    immediately.

    What I found was a letter indicating that the event had been
    "postponed" for political reasons. The postponement followed on the
    objection by the Turkish UN Mission to a single sentence in the
    exhibit: "Following World War I, during which one million Armenians
    were murdered in Turkey, Polish lawyer Raphael Lemkin urged the League
    of Nations to recognize crimes of barbarity as international crimes."

    Certainly, in an exhibit about "lessons learned" about the Rwandan
    genocide, it is helpful to know how Raphael Lemkin coined the term
    "genocide" in response to the mass atrocities committed against
    Armenians by the Ottoman Turks. The Aegis Trust, too, felt that the
    reference to the Armenians was extremely relevant, and took its stand
    against the UN.

    More generally, as a psychologist and a traumatologist working with
    survivors of mass trauma for over 20 years, I like to caution that
    denialist and revisionist policies impact us all negatively.
    Psychologically, these cause a regression in healing, and
    re-traumatize every one of us: survivors, witnesses, bystanders - as
    well as the perpetrators. In the healing process it is not just the
    trauma that counts; what's more important is what happens after the
    trauma. Ninety-two years of revisionism and denial is leading to
    another form of continued genocide, called "psychological genocide."

    Very truly yours,

    Dr. Ani Kalayjian

    Cliffside Park, New Jersey

    * Why cancel a memorial concert to Hrant Dink?

    Sir:

    On Friday, April 6, I drove from my home in Cape Cod to Providence,
    R.I., with joy in my heart to attend a concert "dedicated to dialogue
    in memory of Hrant Dink," featuring "Armenian composers of the Ottoman
    period." The reason for my joy was that Armenian and Turkish students
    at Brown University had put their differences aside and organized this
    event. But when I arrived, I was told that the concert had been
    canceled because of protests and threats from Armenian and Turkish
    citizens.

    I drove back home with sorrow because the efforts of the students
    had been struck down by those who could not come to terms with
    separating their feelings against the Turkish government from the
    students' expression of goodwill. The students had tried to do
    something that should have been undertaken by Armenian and Turkish
    citizens of goodwill. What a lesson could have been learned: That
    Armenians and Turks would benefit from civil discourse, could debate
    differences of opinion, and even enjoy shared similarities.

    In trying to understand the reasons for the protest and threats, I
    learned some things. First, some people were offended because the
    event was to take place on Good Friday and entertainment events are
    generally not held on Good Friday. But because the concert was a
    memorial to Hrant Dink - who believed in, and lived and died because
    of his beliefs in justice and peace - the concert would have been
    appropriate. In discussing this issue with a much-respected Armenian
    priest, he said he would not have objected to the concert.

    Second, some people felt that the concert would have harmed the
    passage of the resolution to recognize the Genocide, when and if it
    comes up for a vote. I don't understand the rationale for that
    thinking. Perhaps someone who protested the concert on the basis of
    that reasoning would offer an explanation.

    Third, some people felt greater distrust of the Turks because of the
    concurrent issue involving the re-opening of the Aghtamar church. Now,
    the manipulation of the Aghtamar opening and the erasing of any
    mention of Armenian history certainly confirmed my long-held distrust
    of the Turkish government. But that does not mean that I have any
    animosity towards Turkish persons. Rather than reacting to fears that
    the concert would be used as propaganda by the Turkish government, I
    suggest that a more proactive position would have been to tell the
    truth. And the truth is that the concert is an example of freedom of
    speech, which Americans hold dear, as opposed to Article 301 in Turkey
    that makes it a crime to mention the Genocide. The concert, I thought
    at first, would be an opportunity to draw a contrast with Turkey's
    denial of freedom of speech; but on second thought, was its
    cancellation an example of the denial of free expression by Armenians
    and Turks in America?

    I have been in correspondence with Turkish and Armenian students and
    I am very proud of their intentions. But I am still trying to
    understand why prominent Armenians in Rhode Island and the East Coast
    felt compelled to use pressure and threats to have the concert
    canceled. They could have simply not attended the concert. I would
    appreciate the protesters explaining why they thought they had a right
    to deprive me and others from attending an event that honored Hrant
    Dink. I cannot answer for the Turkish protesters; I can only question
    their motives. But as an Armenian of Turkish citizenry, I have to ask,
    what would Hrant Dink say?

    Very truly yours,

    Shahkeh Yaylaian Setian

    Cape Cod, Massachusetts

    *********************************** ****************************************

    14. Editorial: Let the people prevail

    On May 12, the citizens of the Republic of Armenia will go to the
    polls and elect a new National Assembly.

    The election campaign is in full swing. The parties and individual
    candidates are reaching out to voters with their platforms, their
    assessments of the current situation, and their plans for the future.
    There are well-attended rallies throughout the country. People can see
    all their choices.

    The parties and candidates running represent a range of options:
    from advocates of unfettered free-market capitalism to socialists to
    communists. That said, most advocate a balanced foreign policy of
    continuing good relations with Russia, the United States, and Europe,
    maintaining peace, and reaching a settlement in Nagorno-Karabakh that
    provides for continued Armenian control of the region and the security
    of its people. Likewise, most acknowledge the economic policies that
    have allowed Armenia to make significant economic progress over the
    last few years, though they have divergent views on the nature and
    pace of further reforms.

    The U.S. chargé d'affaires in Armenia has rightly pointed out, "it
    doesn't appear that there were any . . . political decisions taken to
    disallow parties or candidates. We were worried about it, but it
    appears that it went well." (See interview in the print edition of
    this newspaper.)

    This is an exciting moment for Armenia, whose people, 15 years ago,
    declared their intention to build a democratic state. It is also a
    critical moment: for people to maintain their faith in their
    burgeoning state, the elections must be free and fair.

    The Central Electoral Commission is legally responsible to ensure
    that the elections meet this standard. The president, the government,
    the Central Electoral Commission, and various political parties have
    declared their commitment to free and fair elections. Officials,
    activists, and citizens must understand that their leaders mean what
    they say. Ultimately, it is the responsibility of every citizen to be
    active and vigilant.

    Several entities, including domestic groups, are monitoring the
    election process. This process includes or has included legal reforms,
    the establishment of electoral commissions, the verification of voter
    rolls, nominations, the training of poll workers, and much else.

    It also includes the campaign. Careful monitoring is underway to
    confirm that incumbents do not get disproportionate coverage in the
    mass media. Indications so far are that opposition candidates have
    more access to television than has been the case in the past. A good
    gauge is state-run public television, which has been providing
    significant news coverage to opposition candidates in addition to
    legally mandated free time. As for print media, a wide range of views
    are published and readily distributed. The government newspaper,
    Hayastani Hanrapetutiun, has been allocating room to all parties.

    It is gratifying to see that, so far, Armenia is living up to its
    promise. On Election Day, we look forward to seeing citizens
    throughout the country exercise their right to vote - and carefully
    guard that right.

    Armenians living in the United States have a role too. Through our
    connections to Armenia, we can and should encourage citizens to
    participate in the democratic process, be vigilant, and help Armenia
    fulfill the promise it made to itself - and to the world - to be a
    free nation led by its people.

    ***************************************** **********************************

    15. Editorial: Refusing complicity

    The New York Times has written a powerful editorial excoriating "the
    U.N.'s craven new leadership" for "bowing to Turkey's demands" to
    "censor discussion of the Armenian genocide." The editorial, which
    appeared on April 13, argues that in making such demands, Turkey makes
    itself an accessory to the crime of 1915: "It's odd that Turkey's
    leaders have not figured out by now that every time they try to censor
    discussion of the Armenian genocide, they only bring wider attention
    to the subject and link today's democratic Turkey with the now distant
    crime."

    See www.nytimes.com for the full text of the editorial, which also
    appeared in the International Herald Tribune.

    The New York Times has shown moral leadership at a time when several
    major newspapers have opted for an unprincipled stance. With the Bush
    administration, the well-paid Turkish lobby, and Turkey's allies on an
    all-out campaign to defeat the Armenian Genocide resolutions in
    Congress, these newspapers have given space to specious and poorly
    argued commentaries on the matter. These essays portray Turkey as a
    reliable U.S. ally and raise false alarms about disastrous
    consequences that would follow the adoption of the resolutions.

    Even the New York Times published such a commentary in the guise of
    news last week. To their credit, the editors promptly published a
    correction that addressed the article's worst offense.

    The New York Times is right to point out that every time Turkey
    tries to censor discussion of the Armenian Genocide, it makes itself
    an accessory to the crime. In demanding that others join it in denial,
    Turkey asks them to become complicit as well. It is unfortunate that
    the U.S. administration and so many newspapers have chosen complicity.
    Kudos to the New York Times for refusing to play along.

    Let us once again urge President Bush to choose the right path.
    Instead of complicity in the crime, let the United States regain its
    proud place as one of the nations that tried to do something about the
    Armenian Genocide as it was happening, and helped the survivors
    afterward. In his annual message on April 24, President Bush should
    use the expression he has been at pains to avoid: the Armenian
    Genocide.

    connect:
    President George W. Bush
    The White House
    1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
    Washington, DC 20500

    Comments: 202-456-1111
    FAX: 202-456-2461
    [email protected]

    ************ ************************************************** *************

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