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FM Received the Civilitas 2007 award from the Dama Castellana org.

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  • FM Received the Civilitas 2007 award from the Dama Castellana org.

    MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS OF THE REPUBLIC OF ARMENIA
    ------------------------------------------ ----
    PRESS AND INFORMATION DEPARTMENT
    Telephone: +37410. 544041 ext. 202
    Fax: +37410. 565601
    Email: [email protected]
    www.armeniaforeignministry.am


    PRESS RELEASE

    10-12-2007

    Armenia's Foreign Minister Received the Civilitas 2007 award from the Dama
    Castellana organization


    In Conegliano Italy on December 9, 2007, Armenia's Foreign Minister Vartan
    Oskanian received the Civilitas 2007 award from the Dama Castellana
    organization.

    The award, established in 1992 by the Dama Castellana organization, the town
    of Conegliano, the Province of Treviso, the Region of Veneto, and the
    European Community, is intended for those individuals who personify human
    values, tolerance, solidarity and whose work adds quality to the life of the
    community and humanity.

    Previous winners include Pope John Paul II (2004) and Rita Levi Montalcini
    (2003), a Nobel Prize laureate and daughter of Primo Levi.

    The official ceremony bestowing the award on Minister Oskanian took place on
    Sunday, December 9. In the town hall, in the presence of local and regional
    leaders, businessmen and dignitaries, as well as members of Italy's Armenian
    community, the announcement of the award was made. This was followed by a
    procession towards the Academy Theater, with participants dressed in
    traditional garb carrying the medieval traditional banners of the region. At
    the Theater, Minister Oskanian was awarded the prize for his work in
    promoting dialogue to achieve peace and stability in the region and in the
    world. The Minister's acceptance speech appears below.

    H. E. Mr. Vartan Oskanian
    Minister of Foreign Affairs
    Conegliano, Italy
    December 9, 2007

    I am honored to receive this award and feel privileged to be in the
    distinguished company of today's winners and the recipients of former years.

    I thought long about the significance of the Dama Castellana conceiving of
    such an award, and thus creating the opportunity for an annual message about
    the importance of dialogue and peace. This respected organization takes very
    seriously its local heritage, and understands the need to recall and evoke
    the past in order to assure a well-grounded and meaningful life in the
    present.

    So, it is because of the wisdom of the ages, that in a region synonymous
    with viniculture, you are focusing on peace-making. Wine is life, wine
    makes life, and depends necessarily on a life of peace and stability. Making
    wine, sharing wine, enjoying wine all assume time, all require a confidence
    in the future, all oblige patience and faith in tomorrow. The world of wine
    takes peace for granted.

    The original European dream, the glue that held together post-war Europe,
    was for peace and prosperity. Today, you in Italy and throughout Europe can
    take that peace for granted.

    We in Armenia cannot.

    We have lived under subjugation, have seen ethnic cleansing and genocide
    even before the terms existed, and have lived as a minority without rights.
    We saw military aggression in response to peaceful calls for dialogue and
    tolerance.

    As a small people, serving as the perennial buffer between empires, on the
    most trampled path on earth, Armenians have become living witnesses of the
    benefit of dialogue between and within cultures. We have been engaged in
    that international exchange for ages. Our Diaspora, living as it does
    across borders, is both the means and the beneficiary of international
    exchange. Today, we in Armenia are among its greatest promoters, especially
    in our neighborhood.

    21st century Armenia belongs to a world where warring neighbors have found
    that they can accept new borders based on realities on the ground and move
    on. Europe's nation-states have found that they can transcend borders,
    without diminishing or ignoring cultural spaces, without expecting
    historical identities to vanish. Armenia has the example of some of the West's
    oldest democracies, oldest developed economies, some of the most stable
    states, coming together several decades ago, voluntarily suspending some
    aspects of their sovereign political and economic rights in order to build
    structures which would enhance and consolidate their political and economic
    advantages, and diminishing the threat of war.

    Armenia has always said that we have already benefited from the process that
    you have undergone. We share history, values and civilization, we also share
    the goals of an integrated, interdependent, interrelated European political
    and economic community.
    For me personally, seeing the community that exists here, in Conegliano, the
    political, social community that embraces visitors with a passion, that is
    proud of its accomplishments in 50 years, that is ready to serve as example
    and partner, this community offers hope and inspires passion. From
    winemaking to tourism, there is much that we can learn from you.

    Armenia is known as the motherland of grapes and winemaking. Armenia's
    viticultural history goes back at least to Biblical times, when Noah
    established the first vineyard in the Ararat Valley after the Flood.
    Excavations in this area have lent strong support to the theory that some of
    the very earliest systematic wine-growing did indeed arise here.

    This is one of many connections between Veneto and Armenia. Last year we
    concluded a two-month long Days of Italy in Armenia. This year, our
    ambassador in Rome is promoting several events that highlight the centuries
    old connections between us. And there are many.

    Let me use this opportunity to say thank you for the especially large and
    meaningful assistance Italians provided to Armenians in the devastating
    earthquake that destroyed much exactly 19 years ago yesterday. This was not
    the cause but the manifestation of a special relationship that goes back
    much farther. It was in Italy in 1512, that Hakob Meghapart produced the
    first book ever published in Armenian. Venetians signed their first
    interstate trade agreement with Armenians, half a millennium ago. The
    renowned Briton, Lord Byron, referred to the Venetian island of San Lazaro
    as a fortress of Armenian independence, since the Armenian monks of the
    Order of Mekhitar had found refuge there in the early 1700s. There you have
    it all - cultural, economic, political - our ties are deep and broad.

    Today, you point to the Mekhitarist congregation as an example of the wealth
    of Venetian culture and heritage. Armenians point to the Mekhitarist
    Congregation as Armenia's representatives from the ages when there was no
    Armenian state.

    >From them, and from you, we have much to learn. I will take away with me
    today the warmth of your friendship, the generosity of your hospitality, the
    wisdom of your age. And all of this offered with ease.

    It is sprezzatura. I wish for a long and deep dialogue so that Armenians
    can discover this Italian art of effortless creation that results in the
    'studied carelessness' of Italian food and Italian wine. I wish to replicate
    the accessibility, the immediacy, the intimacy with the old even as the
    elegant new is continuously created. I wish to appreciate the individual's
    resolve to enjoy the pleasures of life and the society's understanding that
    such enjoyment can only be had in a world of dialogue and peace.

    I appreciate your trust in my own commitment to these values. The Dama
    Castellana has put additional responsibility on me and on all of us in
    Armenia to work harder for tolerance, solidarity and peace in our region and
    in the world.
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