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Massis Weekly Online - VOLUME 27, NO. 2 (1302)

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  • Massis Weekly Online - VOLUME 27, NO. 2 (1302)

    Massis Weekly Online
    http://MassisWeekly.com
    VOLUME 27, NO. 2 (1302)
    SATURDAY,  FEBRUARY 3, 2007

    - SD Hunchakian Party Youth Union Stages A Protest Against Anti-Armenian
    Violence In Russia
    - Congressmen Introduce Resolution Calling On The United States To
    Fully Recognize The Armenian Genocide
    - Harout Sassounian Honored By AEBU Sahag-Levon Mgrditchian College
    Alumni
    - Armenian Community Mounts Global Effort To Create The ?Hrant Dink
    Foundation?
    - Unemployment Rate Improved In Armenia???
    - Opinion
    Bolsohay Perspective On Dink Assassination

    -------------

    - SD Hunchakian Party Youth Union Stages A Protest Against
    Anti-Armenian Violence In Russia

    YEREVAN -- Student activists of SD Hunchakian Party Sarkis Dkhrouni Youth
    Union have staged on Wednesday a rare demonstration outside the Russian
    embassy in Yerevan to protest continuing racially motivated attacks on
    Armenians in Russia.
    Chanting ?No to Russian fascism,? the protesters, most of them members of
    the student wing of a small Armenian party, demanded that Russian
    authorities crack down on neo-Nazi skinheads widely blamed for endemic
    violence against darker-skinned people living in Russia.
    The protest followed the January 19 killing in Russia of yet another ethnic
    Armenian teenager. The 14-year-old Artur Martirosian was stabbed to death
    near his family?s Moscow apartment. Russian law-enforcement authorities have
    reportedly denied racist motives behind the killing, adding to Armenian
    concerns about their willingness to tackle hate crimes.
    ?If similar incidents happen again and if Russian officials blame them on
    social disputes we will hold a sit-in here and will do everything to hinder
    the work of the Russian embassy,? said Narek Galstian, a member of the SDHP
    Sarkis Dkhrouni Student union. ?People keep getting killed just because they
    are Armenians.?
    According to Russian anti-racism organizations, at least seven Armenians and
    ethnic Armenian citizens of Russia were killed last year by ultranationalist
    groups openly operating in Moscow and other big cities. Faced with growing
    domestic pressure, the Armenian government began to raise the issue with
    Russian authorities.

    Congressmen Introduce Resolution Calling On The United States To Fully
    Recognize The Armenian Genocide

    During a press conference on Capitol Hill a resolution was introduce
    recognizing the Armenian Genocide. The legislation (H. Res. 106) was
    introduced in the House of Representatives by longtime Armenian issues
    supporters Reps. Adam Schiff (D-CA), George Radanovich (R-CA) and
    congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues Co-Chairmen Frank Pallone, Jr. (DNJ)
    and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), together with Congressmen Brad Sherman (D-CA)
    and Thaddeus McCotter (R-MI).
    The resolution has already garnered strong bipartisan support, with over 150
    Members of Congress expected to be added as cosponsors tomorrow. It is
    modeled after H. Res. 316 which overwhelmingly passed the House
    International Relations Committee last Congress. H. Res. 106 calls upon the
    President to ?ensure that the foreign policy of the United States reflects
    appropriate understanding? of
    the ?Armenian Genocide? and to ?accurately characterize the systematic and
    deliberate annihilation of 1,500,000 Armenians as genocide? in the
    President?s annual message. (The House International Relations Committee is
    now known as the House Foreign Affairs Committee.)
    Shortly after the bill was introduced, Congressmen Pallone, Schiff,
    Knollenberg, and Radanovich held a press conference on Capitol Hill which
    was attended by Genocide survivors Rose Baboyian and Yer. Sirarpi Khoyan,
    members of the media. ?The United States has a compelling historical and
    moral reason to recognize the Armenian Genocide, which cost a million and a
    half people their lives,? said Schiff, the bill?s lead sponsor. ?But we also
    have a powerful contemporary reason as well ? how
    can we take effective action against the genocide in Darfur if we lack the
    will to condemn genocide whenever and wherever it occurs? With the new
    leadership in Congress, I am hopeful we can finally get this resolution
    passed.?
    Congressman Radanovich said he was pleased that the bill was introduced with
    the strong support of his House colleagues, adding that ?the United States
    has a special responsibility to ensure that the lessons of the past are
    never forgotten - no matter the political discomfort or cost.?
    Congressmen Pallone and Knollenberg said they would work with members of the
    Armenian Caucus and the leadership of both parties to secure a floor vote.
    ?By properly recognizing the systematic torture and murder of 1.5 million
    Armenians as genocide, we will honor America?s historic leadership and
    remind the world of the democratic and humanitarian values on which our
    country is founded,? the lawmakers said.


    Harout Sassounian Honored By AEBU Sahag-Levon Mgrditchian College Alumni

    On Saturday, January 21 the Sahag-Levon Mgrditchian College Alumni honored
    Mr. Harout Sassounian, President of United Armenia Fund. The event was held
    at the Rococo Room of Pasadena, CA. His Eminence Abp. Hovnan Derderian was
    in attendance accompanied by Abp. Vatche Hovsepian and Fr. Arshag
    Khatchadourian. The Master of Ceremonies for the event was Mr. Hampig
    Sarafian who requested a moment of silence for the recently slain Hrant
    Dink, following which both the American and Armenian National Anthems were
    sung. The MC expressed his sincere appreciation to Mr. Sassounian for all of
    the service which he renders for the community, and emphasized his trip to
    Lebanon where he supported 28 schools, one of which was the Sahag-Levon
    Mgrditchian College. The main speaker for the evening was Dr. Arshag
    Kazanjian who said that Mr. Sassounian deserved special recognition for his
    decades of service to the community as a historian and a leader, as well as
    performed the duties trusted to him by the Lincy Foundation. As a token of
    appreciation, the Alumni presented Mr. Sassounian with a plaque of
    commendation.

    Armenian Community Mounts Global Effort To Create The ?Hrant Dink
    Foundation?

    As Armenians throughout the world mourn the senseless murder of journalist
    Hrant Dink, community leaders have vowed to keep his name and ideals alive
    with the establishment of the ?Hrant Dink Foundation.? The primary purpose
    of the foundation will be to disseminate the message and vision of Mr. Dink
    and support the continued efforts of Agos newspaper, of which Dink was the
    founder and editor-in chief.
    A coalition of Armenian community organizations spearheaded by the
    Organization of Istanbul Armenians met at the Western Diocese of the
    Armenian Church to launch the Foundation. They are in the process of
    collecting donations to fund it. Those interested in contributing to the
    Hrant Dink Foundation can call 818-641-1059 or visit the Foundation?s web
    site at:www.HrantDinkFoundation.com. ?We feel it is our duty to continue the
    struggle of Hrant Dink, who died fighting for the right of free speech,?
    said Hovsep Tokat, Chair of the Committee establishing the Foundation. ?His
    only crime was that he was an Armenian living in Turkey. The response of
    hundreds of thousands of people throughout the world is a testament to the
    support of his ideals,? he said.
    Dink was a champion of the right of free speech. He was a fearless leader
    and proponent of free expression and democracy. This stand was particularly
    difficult for the native of Turkey, due to Turkey?s policy of suppressing
    and punishing those who engage in free speech with ideas contrary to
    government opinion.
    Dink?s dream was to achieve better understanding between Armenians and
    Turks. He believed he could succeed if he could reach the average Turkish
    citizen. This is why he chose to stay in Turkey even when he knew that his
    life was in danger.
    In 2005, Dink was prosecuted in Turkey for violating article 301 of Turkey?s
    penal code, which states that open reference to the Armenian Genocide equals
    ?insulting Turkishness? and is punishable as a crime. While Dink was
    convicted under this article, he was given a 6-month suspended sentence. In
    September, 2006, a prosecutor in Istanbul opened a new case against Dink for
    the same crime, due to his statement to a foreign news agency that the mass
    killings of Armenians in Turkey was Genocide. His trial was still pending
    when he was assassinated in front of his newspaper office on January 19,
    2007. Despite numerous death threats, Turkish authorities did not provide
    any protection or investigate the threats.
    ?Of course I say it was Genocide.With these events, you see the
    disappearance of people who lived on these lands for 4,000 years,? Dink
    said. Despite the new charges, Dink remained determined, and vowed to
    continue to speak the truth regardless of the consequences. Other Turkish
    journalists have
    come under fire by the Turkish government and have been prosecuted under
    Article 301, including Orhan Pamuk. Despite heavy criticism none were
    convicted. Pamuk went on to receive the Nobel prize in literature, becoming
    the first Turk in history to be so honored. Turkey denies that the Ottoman
    regime committed Genocide during World War I despite voluminous evidence to
    the contrary.
    ?In addition to his principled stand on free speech, Dink was an advocate of
    educating the Turkish population of its own history,? said Tokat. ?He did
    not blame the general population for denial of the Genocide, rather he
    criticized the government for not educating its citizens about the truth of
    its past. His progressive thoughts and opinions are what the foundation
    hopes to keep alive,? he said.


    Unemployment Rate Improved In Armenia???

    By Sarkis Karayan, M.D.
    Let me discuss the latest official figure for unemployment rate in Armenia:
    According to an article in AZG daily, and on its web page, titled
    ?Unemployment Level Decreases to 7.2 % in Armenia?, we read the following:
    ?By the end of 2006, in December, the unemployment level in Armenia
    decreased to 7.2 % from 7.7 % [ from December 2005]. This is official
    Armenian Government data, as given by Sona Harutunian, Head of the National
    Employment Service, an affiliation of the Labor and Social Affairs
    Ministry?.
    The Armenian government contradicts itself terribly. The government?s Annual
    Statistical Report, for 2005, published by the ?National Statistical Service
    of the Republic of Armenia? gives the unemployment rate to be around 30%
    for all ages that could work during 2004 . (See pages 76 and 77, in the
    Statistical Booklet of Armenia, published in 2005 by ?National Statistical
    Service
    of the Republic of Armenia?.
    The possibility that the unemployment rate of 30% during 2004, has decreased
    to 7.2% is nil.
    The Central Intelligence Agency?s (CIA) Fact Book for Armenia estimates that
    30% of Armenians were unemployed during 2003.
    For comparison, I give the unemployment rate for a few countries; USA around
    5%: Turkey, 9.3% with 4% underemployed;Georgia- 12.6%; Poland -17%; Russia-
    8.5%; Uruguay- 10.5%; Ukraine- 10%; Egypt- 10.3% Spain- 8.7%.
    Professional Statisticians have a dictum ?A country can not be considered to
    be civilized, if it does not have reliable statistics?. Authorities in
    Armenia may benefit from this dictum.



    Opinion
    Bolsohay Perspective On Dink Assassination


    By Steve Sevgulian
    We knew it was coming. We wondered how long it would take, even in todays
    Turkiye, where Ataturk is still worshipped. His policy of ethnic cleansing
    continues today, not just for minorities but also as it did for Turks when
    his dictatorship began. No longer can they wear traditional turbans, write
    with Arabic script, and other post genocide Turkish norms/traditions.
    They have created a new Turk, one created by this man whose ethnicity is
    most likely not purely Turkish in his own blood. We also know that, unlike
    diasporan Armenians, the genocide never stopped. Even in Turkish history
    books there are moments of anti-Armenian campaigns and laws and
    persecutions. How much worse could it have been in this society where all
    information, for so long, was completely controlled by the government? How
    do you think Ataturk was able to assassinate his political rivals? How do
    you think he was able to manipulate certain (gusagtsagan) Armenians into
    assassinating the Enver Pashas in the post-war world where they had the
    rightful place as leaders of the Turkish nation? How do you think he was
    able to have his pedophilic ways, and still be the man who lead his nation,
    and renegotiate existing treaties with his European counterparts? Outrageous
    tax against those who maintain their ethnic identities? Forced Turkification
    of names, closures of the most prominent schools and hospitals because of
    their ethnic / religious alleliations? State terrorism and state sponsored
    terrorism to this day? Its nothing new, except in one aspect. Hrant Dink was
    a man above all others. He spoke freely, not on behalf of himself or any
    political party or movement, but for a society and people?especially the
    Bolsohay community.
    Please do not ask what he significance is, because if you?re unaware of him
    being the first Armenian to represent the Armenian community of Istanbul and
    Turkey, then you have no idea of the pain we (Bolsohays) feel. He said,
    boldly, ?I AM ARMENIAN? in a country where that is considered treason. It
    has been Ataturks policy for nearly a century.
    Insignificant token gestures such as what little Armenian schools, press,
    and people still exist are overshadowed by the generations of ethnic
    cleansing (shame and persecution for usage of the Armenian language, for
    example), suspicion (arrest and persecution during the cold war for merely
    walking by the Russian Embassy and being Armenian), second class citizenship
    (in courts, lawsuits, property ownerships and basic entitlements to
    citizens, and of course torture (and refusal to be given the dignity of
    death) for ?being out of line?. Hrant chose to be ?out of line? because it?s
    the 21st century. To other Armenians, it might have just been his death that
    was shocking but the grief the Turkish people publicly expressed at his
    death, THAT is what shocked us. The masses chanting ?we are all Armenian?,
    the funeral, the public acknowledgement that he was not a traitor (though in
    death), the fact that he was a moral, honest, and good man?again, PUBLICLY.
    The people of Turkey are ready for the 21 century. We look forward to the
    day when the government will join them, and we are allowed to die in
    dignity, or, as Monte Melkonian envisioned, a return of Armenians near
    Ararat, even under a (more realistically) Turkish flag.


    --
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