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California Courier Online, February 8, 2007

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  • California Courier Online, February 8, 2007

    California Courier Online, February 8, 2007

    1 - Commentary
    Truth Prevails over Millions Spent
    By Turks to Lie about the Genocide

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    2 - UCLA AEF Chair Hosts Three
    Events in Coming Weeks
    3 - Prisoner of Conscience to Speak
    On Holocaust Remembrance Day
    4 - Armenian Fertility Specialist Helps
    67-Year-Old Gives Birth to Twins
    5 - Prelacy Relocates
    To New Building
    6 - 'The Armenian Genocide' Film
    To Air March 29 on KOCE-TV
    7 - TIME Magazine Distributes Documentary;
    Adopts Policy on the Armenian Genocide
    8- The 'Armenian Schindler's List' Now
    Accessible for Readers in English
    ****************************************** ************************
    1 - Commentary
    Truth Prevails over Millions Spent
    By Turks to Lie about the Genocide

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    It took a little more than a year and a half, but it was well worth
    the wait. After lengthy, sometimes complex, but mostly amicable
    discussions, the European edition of TIME magazine, in its Feb. 12,
    2007 issue, published a full-page text on the Armenian Genocide and
    distributed a complimentary DVD, in English and French, which
    contains a compelling 52-minute documentary on the Armenian Genocide
    by French director Laurence Jourdan. The DVD also includes a
    46-minute interview with Dr. Yves Ternon, a leading expert on the
    Armenian Genocide.
    This issue of the magazine, which has been on newsstands since Feb. 2
    in 67 countries throughout Europe, parts of Africa, Asia and the
    Middle East, was sold out within the first 48 hours of its
    availability. Extra copies can be ordered by contacting:
    [email protected].
    Both the DVD and the full-page ad were provided free of charge by
    TIME Europe (circulation 550,000) after realizing that its staff,
    without proper review, had inserted a Turkish DVD as a paid
    advertisement, under the guise of promoting tourism in Turkey in the
    June 6, 2005 issue of TIME Europe.
    The Turkish DVD, paid for by the Ankara Chamber of Commerce, was a
    deceitful attempt to spread malicious lies and denialist propaganda
    on the Armenian Genocide. Sinan Aygun, the Chairman of the Chamber of
    Commerce, subsequently disclosed that Turkey's General Chief of Staff
    had approved the DVD for distribution through TME. He also revealed
    that the Turkish Ministry of Culture and Tourism had prepared the
    sinister DVD.
    When scores of TIME subscribers, the Switzerland-Armenia Association
    (SAA) and this columnist complained to TIME executives, Managing
    Editor James Kelly in a letter to SAA dated Sept. 2, 2005, apologized
    for having disseminated the Turkish DVD which he said "was not
    adequately reviewed by anyone at TIME." Furthermore, he acknowledged
    that the Turkish DVD did not "meet TIME's standards for fairness and
    accuracy."
    Moreover, TIME (Europe) published in its October 17, 2005 issue, a
    critical page-long letter to the editor -- possibly the longest
    letter ever published in the history of the magazine -- jointly
    signed by the following five French organizations: Memoire 2000, the
    Coordinating Council of Armenian Organizations of France, Comité de
    Defense de la Cause Armenienne - ANC France, J'Accuse, and the
    Movement Against Racism and for Friendship Among Peoples. In an
    Editorial note, TIME restated its earlier apology for disseminating
    the Turkish DVD.
    In December 2005, these five organizations along with the
    Switzerland-Armenia Association, the French Association of Armenian
    Lawyers and Jurists, the EUROPEAN - ARMENIAN FEDERATION for Justice
    and Democracy, and The California Courier newspaper reached an
    amicable agreement with TIME executives ensuring that the facts of
    the Armenian Genocide will not be distorted again in the pages of the
    magazine.
    TIME agreed to distribute free of charge in its European edition an
    Armenian Genocide documentary selected by the Armenian side. The
    magazine paid the licensing fee for use of the DVD as well as the
    cost of duplicating over half million copies. TIME also agreed to
    publish free of charge a full-page ad on the Armenian Genocide.
    In addition, Michael Elliott, the Editor of TIME International,
    issued the following significant written statement: "Please be
    advised that, in common with other leading news organizations, it is
    TIME's policy and practice to refer to the Armenian genocide as a
    historical fact. Accordingly, I will be informing our correspondents
    and editors that the term 'Armenian genocide' should be used without
    qualification."
    The above mentioned organizations are pleased that the very costly
    Turkish attempt to distort the facts of the Armenian Genocide
    backfired and was properly countered by TIME magazine which placed
    journalistic ethics above all other considerations.
    Turkish officials, on the other hand, were very displeased with this
    turn of events. Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, when asked for his
    reaction to the DVD in TIME magazine, told CNN TURK last Friday: "Now
    millions of people [in Europe] will be brainwashed against Turkey."
    Turkish TV networks and newspapers provided extensive coverage of
    this unexpected development. Turkish denialist circles have already
    launched an e-mail campaign against TIME magazine. Those wishing to
    counter the Turkish complaints should send their e-mails to:
    [email protected], thanking TIME executives for
    reaffirming the true facts of the Armenian Genocide.
    The above achievement is the result of lengthy discussions with TIME
    executives. For the first time, several Armenian and non-Armenian
    organizations throughout Europe and the United States worked together
    on a common project. Now that such a network is in place, it becomes
    easier to organize such a multinational coordinated effort in the
    future on other significant issues.
    The Turks paid over a million dollars to advertise their denial of
    the Armenian Genocide in seven languages. With the kind assistance of
    TIME, the Armenians and their friends succeeded in organizing a
    successful response using nothing more than the language of truth!
    ******************************************* *********************************
    *****
    2 - UCLA AEF Chair Hosts Three
    Events in Coming Weeks
    LOS ANGELES - Over the next few weeks, the Armenian Educational
    Foundation Chair at UCLA will be holding three events in Burbank, and
    Los Angeles.
    The first event will be held February 16, at 8 p.m., at the Western
    Diocese of the Armenian Church, 3325 N Glenoaks Blvd., Burbank. Under
    the auspices of Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, "An Evening to
    Celebrate" will mark the publication of the first six volumes edited
    by Professor Richard Hovannisian in the UCLA international conference
    series, "Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces."
    The event is open to the public at no charge.
    On February 25, at 3:30 p.m., a program "Hrant Dink: His Legacy and
    His Challenge," will be held at UCLA Dodd Hall 147, co-sponsored by
    the UCLA AEF Chair and Near Eastern Center, and Turkish Students to
    Commemorate 'Our Hrant', and the Organization of Istanbul Armenians.
    Parking is available at Structure No. 2, Hilgard Avenue, UCLA
    Entrance at Westholme Avenue.
    The event is open to the public at no charge.
    March 17-18, Saturday, 9:30 a.m. - 5:30 p.m., and Sunday, 2- 5:30
    p.m., the AEF will host "The Ebb and Flow of the Armenian Communities
    of the Indian Ocean."
    The lectures will be held at UCLA Young Hall 50 (Court of Sciences).
    Parking, Structure No. 2, Hilgard Avenue UCLA Entrance at Westholme
    Avenue. Open to the public at no charge.
    UCLA parking fee is $8.00.
    ******************************************* ******************************
    3 - Prisoner of Conscience to Speak
    On Holocaust Remembrance Day
    DENVER - Bestselling author and Amnesty International "prisoner of
    conscience" Taner Akcam will speak on his recent book, A Shameful
    Act: The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish
    Responsibility, in Denver's Mizel Museum at 2:30 PM on April 15,
    (Holocaust Remembrance Day).
    The lecture, hosted by Armenians of Colorado, Inc., will be part of
    the Armenian Genocide awareness and remembrance events in Colorado
    that will include a commemoration at the State Capitol's Armenian
    Genocide memorial plaque located on the Northeastern grounds in
    Denver on, April 22, at 1:30PM.
    Sociologist and historian Taner Akcam teaches at the Center for
    Holocaust and Genocide Studies at the University of Minnesota. Akcam
    grew up in Turkey, where he was imprisoned for editing a political
    publication and was adopted by Amnesty International as a prisoner of
    conscience in 1976. Akcam later received political asylum in Germany,
    where he earned a PhD from the University of Hannover and worked with
    the Hamburg Institute for Social Research on issues concerning the
    history of violence and torture in Turkey.
    Akcam is widely recognized as one of the first Turkish scholars to
    write extensively and authoritatively on the Turkish genocide of the
    Armenians in the early 20th century where 1.5 million Armenians were
    brutally exterminated at the hands of the Ottoman Turks. He is
    currently facing criminal charges for "insulting Turkishness" in his
    homeland, a crime under Article 301 of the Turkish penal code. The
    charge stems from publishing a column defending Turkish-Armenian
    journalist Hrant Dink's use of the term "Armenian Genocide" on
    October 6, 2006. Dink was the editor of the weekly Turkish-Armenian
    newspaper Agos until, January 19, when he was assassinated by a
    Turkish nationalist.
    Attendees to Akcam's lecture will also have free access to "The Dead
    Weight of Complacency," a dual exhibition of local artists'
    interpretation of genocide presented by the Mizel Museum and Colorado
    Coalition for Genocide Awareness and Action running from Jan. 11 to
    April 27. The Museum is located at 400 S Kearney St, Denver.
    Taner Akcam's lecture is free of charge and will be followed by a
    discussion and reception. For additional information contact Simon
    Maghakyan at 720-252-7265.
    The sponsor of the lecture, Armenians of Colorado, Inc. (AOC) was
    established in June 1982. It is a 501(c) (3) non-profit, cultural
    organization charged with a purpose to create a cohesive Armenian
    community and to further the understanding of Armenian history,
    culture, and heritage. AOC actively supports issues and concerns of
    the Armenian-American community here in Colorado as well as those
    identified within the Armenian Diaspora throughout the world.
    For more information about Armenians of Colorado go to
    www.armeniansofcolorado.org.
    ****************** ************************************************** ******
    4 - Armenian Fertility Specialist Helps
    67-Year-Old Gives Birth to Twins
    LOS ANGELES - Carmela Bousada, a 67-year-old Spanish woman, became
    the oldest woman to give birth having delivered twin sons in
    Barcelona, Spain on December 29. The in vitro fertilization (IVF)
    process was conducted by Dr. Vicken Sahakian, medical director of the
    Pacific Fertility Center, which has offices in Glendale and Westwood
    in the Los Angeles area. Previously, the oldest woman to have given
    birth was a Romanian woman who gave birth to a daughter at age 66 in
    January 2005.
    "I am glad the in vitro fertilization process was successful and both
    the patient and the newborns are doing well, however, I would never
    recommend that a female of this age go through this procedure due to
    the potential health risks and social implications of a pregnancy at
    that age," said Dr. Vicken Sahakian. "I do not accept single female
    patients over the age of 55
    and unfortunately, in this case, the patient deceived us about her
    age in order to receive treatment."
    The Pacific Fertility Center is one of the leading medical practices
    specializing in fertility issues in California.
    Carmela Bousada is a retired department store employee who lives in
    Cadiz, in southern Spain. The twins, Pau and Christian, were born
    seven weeks premature but are now healthy and at home with Ms.
    Bousada.
    ********'**************************** *************************************
    5 - Prelacy Relocates
    To New Building
    LA CRESCENTA, Calif. - The Western Prelacy announced last week that
    the renovation project of the Western Prelacy has concluded, and it
    is in the process of moving to its new offices at 6252 Honolulu Ave.,
    in La Crescenta, Calif.
    Regular office hours will officially resume at the new building on
    Feb.5, 2007. Office hours are from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Details
    on the upcoming official opening ceremony will be forthcoming, the
    Prelacy release said last week.
    Contact information for the Prelacy offices is: Tel: 818-248-7737/8;
    Fax: 818-248-7745; Email: [email protected].
    The Prelacy Website is: www.westernprelacy.org .
    ************************************************ **************************
    6 - 'The Armenian Genocide' Film
    To Air March 29 on KOCE-TV
    HUNTINGTON BEACH, Calif. - - Emmy Award-winning producer Andrew
    Goldberg will appear live in the studios of KOCE-TV, Orange County's
    PBS station, for a special broadcast of his award-winning
    documentary, The Armenian Genocide, on Thursday March 29 at 8:00 p.m.
    Since the film first aired, this will be Goldberg's first television
    appearance in the Los Angeles and Southern California area - home to
    the largest Armenian community in the U.S. The Armenian Genocide is
    the unprecedented, powerful and complete story of the first genocide
    of the 20th century when over a million Armenians were killed at the
    hands of the Ottoman Turks.
    The film received extraordinary reviews and coverage in almost every
    major newspaper in the U.S., including the Wall Street Journal, The
    Los Angeles Times, The Washington Post, The Boston Globe and
    countless other publications. Alessandra Stanley, the chief
    television critic of The New York Times, described the film as
    "powerful" adding that it ".honors the victims of the Genocide." The
    NJ Star Ledger called the film "serious, literate and ultimately
    heartbreaking." The film has sold internationally to major networks
    in Canada, Australia, France, Italy, Spain, Portugal, Greece and
    Finland, as well as many other countries. Narrated by Julianna
    Margulies, The Armenian Genocide features additional narrations from
    Ed Harris, Natalie Portman, Orlando Bloom, Laura Linney, Paul Rudd
    and Jared Leto to name a few.
    "KOCE is proud to be the only station in the Southland, including Los
    Angeles, to air The Armenian Genocide," said Mel Rogers, president
    and general manager of KOCE-TV. "This film and its topic represent
    part of the mission of public television to stimulate responsible
    discussion and illuminate complex issues. Since most Americans do not
    fully understand the issue in all its complexity, we are committed to
    offering the program which we sincerely hope will help viewers better
    understand this chapter in world history."
    Featuring interviews with leading experts in the field, such as
    Pulitzer Prize-winning author Samantha Power, and New York Times
    best-selling author, Peter Balakian, this film features
    never-before-seen historical footage of the events and key players of
    one of the greatest untold stories of the 20th century.
    Filmed in the U.S., France, Germany, Belgium, Turkey and
    Syria, the program features discussions with Kurdish and Turkish
    citizens in modern-day Turkey who speak openly about the stories told
    to them by their parents and grandparents. "As Turkey seeks to join
    the European Union 90 years later, this film can give people a much
    better understanding of why this issue is such an important and
    current part of the international conversation about Turkey's role in
    the world today," said Goldberg.
    Emmy-award winning producer Andrew Goldberg's television credits
    include PBS, ABC News, E!, CNN, and countless others. In addition to
    writing, directing and producing The Armenian Genocide, Goldberg's
    recent documentaries include Anti-Semitism in the 21st Century: The
    Resurgence, A Yiddish World Remembered, and The Armenians, A Story of
    Survival. He has also written and produced commercials for such
    companies as Bell South, Sephora/Louis Vuitton, AT&T and PetSmart.
    He is currently working on a two-hour film for PBS called Jerusalem:
    Center of the World.
    Major underwriters include John and Judy Bedrosian, The Lincy
    Foundation, The Avanessians Family Foundation and The
    Manoogian-Simone Foundation.
    ************************************** *************************************
    7 - TIME Magazine Distributes Documentary;
    Adopts Policy on the Armenian Genocide
    GLENDALE - The Feb. 12, 2007 issue of the European edition of TIME
    magazine --available in newsstands throughout Europe as of Feb. 2nd
    -- carries a full-page factual announcement on the Armenian Genocide,
    along with a complimentary DVD, in English and French, which contains
    a compelling 52-minute documentary on the Armenian Genocide by French
    director Laurence Jourdan. The DVD also includes a 46-minute
    interview with Dr. Yves Ternon, a leading expert on the Armenian
    Genocide.
    Both the DVD and the full-page ad were provided free of charge by
    TIME Europe (circulation 550,000) after realizing that its staff,
    without proper review, had inserted in the June 6, 2005 issue of TIME
    Europe a Turkish DVD as a paid advertisement under the guise of
    promoting tourism to Turkey. The Turkish DVD, paid for by the Ankara
    Chamber of Commerce, was a deceitful attempt to spread malicious lies
    and denialist propaganda on the Armenian Genocide. To correct this
    error, TIME (Europe) published, in its October 17, 2005 issue, a
    critical page-long letter to the editor jointly signed by the
    following five French organizations: Memoire 2000, the Coordinating
    Council of Armenian Organizations of France (CCAF), Comité de Défense
    de la Cause Arménienne (CDCA) -- ANC France, J'Accuse, and the
    Movement Against Racism and for Friendship Among Peoples (MRAP). In
    an Editor's note appended to the letter, TIME apologized for
    disseminating the Turkish DVD.
    In December 2005, these five organizations along with the
    Switzerland-Armenia Association (SAA), the French Association of
    Armenian Lawyers and Jurists (AFAJA), the European-Armenian
    Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD), and The California
    Courier newspaper reached an amicable agreement with TIME executives
    ensuring that the facts of the Armenian Genocide are not distorted
    again in the pages of the magazine.
    Subsequently, Michael Elliott, the Editor of TIME International,
    issued the following public statement: "Please be advised that, in
    common with other leading news organizations, it is TIME's policy and
    practice to refer to the Armenian genocide as a historical fact.
    Accordingly, I will be informing our correspondents and editors that
    the term 'Armenian genocide' should be used without qualification."
    The above mentioned organizations are fully satisfied with the
    corrective steps taken by TIME magazine.
    They are also pleased that the Turkish attempt to distort the facts
    of the Armenian Genocide, supported by considerable financial
    resources, was properly countered as a result of these organizations'
    close cooperation with TIME which placed journalistic ethics above
    all other considerations.
    ********************************** ****************************************
    8 - The 'Armenian Schindler's List' Now
    Accessible for Readers in English.
    University of Arkansas
    FAYETTEVILLE, Ark. - Geoffrey Brock's translation from Italian of the
    debut novel by Antonia Arslan, brings the story of her family's
    struggle for survival in the Armenian genocide to the
    English-speaking world.
    The Kirkus Review calls Skylark Farm an "Armenian Schindler's List."
    The Bloomberg reviewer praised the "impressive subtlety" of Brock's
    translation of Arslan's "powerful account."
    Brock is assistant professor of creative writing and translation in
    the J. William Fulbright College of Arts and Sciences at the
    University of Arkansas.
    In the prologue to her novel, Arslan remembers herself as a small
    child savoring the names of relatives who lived all over the world.
    She thinks of Arussiag in Beirut, Zareh in Aleppo, Nevart in Fresno
    and Michel in Copacabana as travelers.
    In fact, they are among the few survivors from her family of the
    Armenian genocide of 1915, and she uses bits of memories to write a
    novel that tells their story and the story of those killed. Arslan
    grew up in Italy, the granddaughter of an Armenian who was living in
    Venice at the time of the genocide. The men and boys of his family
    back home in Anatolia were killed one night in May and buried beneath
    the tennis court of the family's country house, Skylark Farm.
    Brock, an award-winning translator of other Italian authors, seeks to
    recreate the literary experience of a work in translation. In the
    case of Arslan's novel, even the translation of the title was a
    question. In Italian, the novel's title is La Masseria delle
    Allodole.
    "It was a difficult title to translate," Brock said. "The word
    'masseria' refers to a kind of farm, though it isn't the standard
    word for farm. And in the novel, it's used specifically to refer to a
    house that presumably used to be a farmhouse but is now really a
    country house. I strongly considered The House of Skylarks as a
    title, but the phrase in Italian has a strong rustic overtone that I
    wanted to maintain."
    Acknowledging the many who helped reconstruct that tragic time,
    Arslan thanks "all the gentle, daydreaming Armenians who, in Milan
    and Rome and the world over, welcomed me and nourished me with
    ancient images and unforeseen kinship and gave me the gift of
    treasured memories."
    Brock noted that the novel has been very popular in Italy and is
    being made into a film by Italian directors, the Taviani brothers.
    The American edition of Skylark Farm is published by Alfred A. Knopf,
    New York.
    ******************************************** ******************************
    The California Courier On-Line is a service provided by the
    California Courier. Subscriptions or changes of address should not be
    transmitted through this service. Information in that regard should
    be telephoned to (818) 409-0949; faxed to: (818) 409-9207, or
    e-mailed to: [email protected]. Letters to the editor concerning
    issues addressed in the Courier may be e-mailed, provided it is
    signed by the author. Phone and/or E-mail address is also required to
    verify authorship.

    --Boundary_(ID_rPNnpm7RrLhLgBZiX4mXGQ )--
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