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  • Massis Weekly Online - VOLUME 27, NO. 3 (1303)

    Massis Weekly Online
    http://MassisWeekly.com
    VOLUME 27, NO. 3 (1303)
    SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 2007

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

    - State Department Will Work To Block A Vote In Congress
    - Leaders Of SDHP, ARF And ADL Meet in Paris
    - Bush Administration Seeks Drastic Cut In U.S. Aid To Armenia
    - Armenian Council of America Sponsors H.R. 106
    - Nine Out Of Ten Respondents Consider Corruption A Problem Or A Big
    Problem In Armenia
    - Clark University Alumnus Establishes Fund For Study Of The Armenian Genocide
    - A Journey To Armenia: Land of Contrasts

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

    - State Department Will Work To Block A Vote In Congress
    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul Warns Against U.S. Genocide Resolution

    WASHINGTON, DC -- Turkey?s foreign minister has warned the U.S.
    Congress that passing a resolution condemning as genocide the mass
    killing of Armenians early in the last century would harm relations.
    Abdullah Gul, speaking after meeting top U.S. officials in Washington
    on February 6, said the proposed resolution would be an irritant to
    otherwise close cooperation with the United States on issues such as
    Iraq. ?Adoption of even a nonbinding resolution in either chamber
    would seriously harm our bilateral relations,? Abdullah Gul said
    Tuesday as he wrapped up a trip to Washington.
    ?I see this as a real threat to our relationship,? he said. ?While we
    are having cooperation in these difficult fields, while we are
    fighting shoulder to shoulder in these fields, while we are supporting
    each other and facing these challenges, this resolution, if it is
    accepted, I believe that if that happens, it will be a real shock.?
    U.S. officials have said they will try to block the resolution.
    ?In terms of the discussions within the U.S. Congress, look, we
    understand very clearly that this is a sensitive issue not only for
    the Turkish people but for the Armenian people,? U.S. State Department
    spokesman Sean McCormick said. ?We have made our views known on the
    potential for a resolution or for a bill.?
    Gul's visit comes at a tense moment for relations between the United
    States and Turkey. President George W. Bush?s administration is
    alarmed that the suggested congressional resolution could disrupt
    efforts to repair strains stemming from perceptions in Ankara that
    regional instability caused by the U.S.-led war in Iraq have harmed
    Turkish interests. The administration has opposed previous attempts
    by members of Congress to pass resolutions recognizing the 1915-1919
    killings in Anatolia of up to 1.5 million Armenians as an organized
    genocide. A resolution introduced in the House of Representatives in
    January is thought to stand a much better chance of passing a floor
    vote.
    State Department officials say the administration will work with
    members of Congress to head off the resolution.
    ?A congressional resolution would be a tremendous blow to our
    bilateral relationship,? said U.S. Deputy Assistant Secretary of State
    Matthew J. Bryza. ?We are working harder than usual.?
    In meetings with U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and National
    Security Adviser Stephen Hadley, Gul pressured the administration to
    block the resolution. But Bush will have to persuade the new
    Democratic-controlled congress, which does not need presidential
    approval for such a resolution.
    Members behind the proposed bill have said they expect a push by the
    administration and lobbyists working for the Turkish government to
    keep the resolution from a full vote by the House. House Speaker Nancy
    Pelosi, who will decide whether to offer the bill for a full vote if,
    as expected, it is approved by the House Foreign Affairs Committee,
    has expressed support.
    In meetings with Rice and other officials, Gul raised U.S. cooperation
    on preventing Kurdish rebels from using Northern Iraq as a sanctuary
    and a base of operations against Turkey by terrorists. Gul warned
    against suggestions in some U.S. political circles that Iraq be split
    into three autonomous regions, which Turkey fears would create an
    independent Kurdistan in Northern Iraq and embolden PKK separatists in
    southeastern Turkey. ?A soft partition of Iraq is a fantasy,? he said.
    ?Iraq does not have internal boundaries.?

    - Leaders Of SDHP, ARF And ADL Meet in Paris

    On Monday February 5th the leaders of the world governing bodies of
    the Social Democratic Hunchakian Party, the Armenian Revolutionary
    Federation and the Armenian Democratic League (Ramkavar party) met in
    the Fr ench capitol Paris to discuss national issues of interest to
    Armenians.
    SDHP was represented by Mr. Setrak Ajemian, Chairman of Central
    Executive Committee, the ARF by Mr. Hrant Markarian chairman of Bureau
    and ADL by Mr. Michael Kharabian, chairman of the Central Executive
    Body.
    This meeting was the first of its kind in recent years. During the
    several hour-long meeting issues concerning Diaspora communities,
    Armenian- Turkish relations and the current situation in Armenia were
    discussed.
    In conclusion it was decided to establish a permanent working body
    also similar meeting will be held in the future to address issues of
    concern to all Armenians.

    Social Democrat Hunchakian Party
    Central Committee Media Center

    - Bush Administration Seeks Drastic Cut In U.S. Aid To Armenia

    WASHINGTON, DC -- The administration of President George W. Bush has
    proposed a drastic reduction in regular U.S. assistance to Armenia,
    provoking strong criticism and resistance from Armenian-American
    organizations.
    The Bush administration?s budget request for the fiscal year 2008,
    unveiled on Monday, calls for $35 million in economic aid to the
    country, sharply down from the 2006 level of $69 million. It would
    also cut U.S. aid to the Armenian military by more than 30 percent to
    $3.3 million.
    The proposed cuts came just days after the U.S. House of
    Representatives set the 2007 aid package for Armenia at about $75
    million. The Senate is expected to approve a similar aid allocation
    soon.
    Armenian-American leaders are particularly dismayed by the fact that
    the Bush administration is again trying to change that parity by
    asking for $5.3 million in military financing for Azerbaijan.
    Administration officials have previously argued that Azerbaijan needs
    more such help than Armenia in order to secure its much longer border
    with America?s arch-rival Iran and Caspian Sea coast.
    The proposed funding cuts seem to stem from a broader reduction in
    U.S. assistance to former Soviet republics that began in the late 1990s.
    U.S. officials will also point out that Armenia is on course to
    receive $235.6 million in additional U.S. aid under Bush?s Millennium
    Challenge Account program. Washington says the release of the
    five-year aid package is conditional on the democratization of
    Armenia?s political system.
    Today?s announcement is the first step in a lengthy process. The next
    step is for the House and Senate to review the Administration?s
    request through committee hearings, the first of which will take place
    later this week when U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice
    testifies before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee.

    - Armenian Council of America Sponsors H.R. 106

    In the wake of the assassination of prominent Armenian journalist
    Hrant Dink in Turkey, House Resolution 106 has been introduced by Rep.
    Adam Schiff (D-Burbank) recently urging President Bush to recognize
    the Armenian Genocide. The Armenian Council of America has pledged its
    full support as a key sponsor encouraging Armenian Americans and
    various organizations to contact their representative to advocate this
    crucial legislation.
    ?It is important now more than ever for the Resolution to be passed,?
    said Peter Darakjian, Director of the Armenian Council of America. ?We
    are living in an era where journalists are being murdered for
    defending human rights and it is vital that we collaborate all our
    efforts in showing that justice will prevail and the Armenian Genocide
    will be recognized. Recognition has been long overdue and denial has
    been around for too long,? added Darakjian.
    In a letter to the Congressional Caucus on Armenian Issues, the ACA
    expressed their gratitude for the years of hard work and perseverance.
    The Caucus has contributed to issues of concern for the Armenian
    American community.
    Additionally, various Armenian organizations, including the Armenian
    Council of America have been instrumental in prompting the community
    to contact local representatives to advance this key legislation which
    has received much praise from the media, including the Los Angeles
    Times.
    ?New Hope for Genocide Resolution,? an Op-Ed article in the Feb. 4
    edition of the Times reported that since the Democratic Party, which
    has been most sympathetic to the Armenian Genocide resolutions, is now
    controlling Congress, the chances of the legislation passing is very
    likely.
    The article also added that House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-San
    Francisco) who has been highly supportive of Armenian Genocide
    resolutions has earnestly brought the legislation matter to a vote.
    ?The Armenian Council of America will do everything in its power to
    have this legislation passed,? added Darakjian. ?The window of
    opportunity has never been wider and the unity in our community is
    stronger now more than ever. The assassination of Hrant Dink was a
    travesty and an enormous loss to all Armenians and defender?s of human
    rights issues worldwide. However, it has made us resilient to blind
    ignorance fueled by the Turkish government and increasingly passionate
    towards the advocacy of Armenian Genocide recognition and education.?
    The support for H.R. 160 has included over 160 members of the House.
    Key Congressional supporters include Congressmen Adam Schiff (DCA),
    George Radanovich (R-CA) and Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs
    Frank Pallone (D-NJ) and Joe Knollenberg (R-MI).

    - Nine Out Of Ten Respondents Consider Corruption A Problem Or A Big
    Problem In Armenia

    January 31, 2007, Yerevan ?The corruption perception survey was
    implemented by Center for Regional Development/ Transparency
    International Armenia (CRD/TI Armenia) with the support of UNDP
    Armenia Office from July-December 2006. The results of the survey
    revealed that nine out of ten citizens consider corruption as a
    problem or a major problem in Armenia. In addition, nine out of ten
    respondents stressed that free and fair elections is one of the
    solutions to improve the anti-corruption situation in Armenia.
    The results of the 2006 survey indicated that the citizens of Armenia
    are still very much concerned about corruption. 89.0% of the surveyed
    citizens see corruption as a problem or a major problem in Armenia.
    40.1% of the respondents considered corruption as crime and 11.81% as
    an immoral behavior. In 2006, nearly five times more interviewees
    (67.7%) than in 2002 (14%) stated that corruption has always existed
    in Armenia. The majority of interviewees (64.0%) believe that the
    level of corruption has increased during the last three years.
    Most people both in 2002 and 2006 still think that bribery and abuse
    of public office for personal gain are the main manifestations of
    corruption. They still believe that the state authorities are those
    who mainly initiate corruption and that more corruption occurs in the
    high level of the Armenian government system.
    However, the responses concerning the most corrupt institutions
    (structures) have changed since 2002. While the prosecution system was
    mentioned again in 2006, the Prime Minister?s Office and the courts
    that were mentioned in 2002 were replaced by the Prime Minister and
    the Ministers in 2006.
    As to the most corrupt sectors and services, the traffic police are
    still perceived by the public as very corrupt (68.2%). In addition,
    the majority of respondents selected the electoral system (73.9%) and
    the tax service (63.3%) as most corrupt, while in 2002 the military
    and health sector were given similar marks.
    The 2006 survey revealed new sectors to which unofficial payments were
    made, as reported by interviewees. These are the State Registrar, the
    Office of Enforcement of Court Decisions, foreign embassies,
    environment-related services, condominiums, as well as the Register of
    Civil Acts, in addition to healthcare, education, traffic police, tax,
    customs, cadastre, military, local self-government bodies, notary
    offices, which were also mentioned in 2002.
    Whereas the majority of the 2002 respondents thought that the main
    causes of corruption are poor law enforcement, imperfect legislation
    and inefficient control and punishment mechanisms, in 2006 an
    increased number of interviewees were inclined to see public tolerance
    as one of the major causes of corruption in Armenia.
    According to the findings of the 2006 survey, 69.4% of the public is
    not aware about the Anti-Corruption Strategy, 84.4% about the
    Anti-Corruption Council and 91.4% about its Monitoring Commission, as
    well as about Armenia?s international obligations in the fight against
    corruption (84.3%).
    While prioritizing the solutions to improve the current situation,
    89.0% of the respondents pointed to a necessity of ensuring free and
    fair elections. They also referred to strengthening law enforcement
    (93.9%) and punishment of those involved in corruption (91.9%) as a
    key to the success of reducing corruption in the country. Both in 2002
    and 2006, the majority of interviewees continue to believe that the
    President of the country could play a determining role in reducing
    corruption in Armenia. More than half of the respondents felt that
    people themselves cannot do anything.
    In 2006, 39.0% of the respondents said they could not justify
    corruption at all. In 2006, 50.7% of respondents answered that they
    would not take bribes since it is unacceptable for them, whereas in
    2002 only 17% of the respondents were of the same opinion.
    The above data was presented today at the presentation of ?2006
    Corruption Perception Survey in Armenia? publication, which took place
    in the Congress Hotel. The survey results were presented by the
    Chairwoman of the CRD/TI Armenia Ms. Amalya Kostanyan. The event
    brought together public figures, representatives of NGOs and
    international organizations, as well as mass media. Ms. Consuelo
    Vidal, UN Resident Coordinator and UNDP Resident Representative,
    Ambassador Vladimir Pryakhin, Head of OSCE Office in Armenia, Ms.
    Bojana Urumova, Special Representative of Secretary General of CoE to
    Armenia, and Ms. Anna Aghadjanian, Head of the Human Rights Division
    of the International Organizations? Department, Ministry of Foreign
    Affairs of Armenia were key speakers of the event.
    The survey was implemented by CRD/TI Armenia with the support of UNDP
    Armenia Office. The organization carried on a similar survey in 2002,
    and analogous survey questionnaire was developed in 2006 to ensure a
    comparison with the previous data.

    - Clark University Alumnus Establishes Fund For Study Of The Armenian Genocide

    WORCESTER, MA -- On February 9, the Board of Trustees of Clark
    University established the Agnes Manoogian Hausrath fund to support a
    doctoral student working in an area of Genocide Studies that will shed
    light on the Armenian Genocide. The fund was made possible by a
    $500,000 gift from Clark alumnus Bill Hausrath ?53 in memory of his
    wife . Mr. Hausrath?s mother-in-law was a survivor of the Genocide. As
    a child she witnessed her mother?s death as the Armenians were forced
    from their homes and made to march into the desert.
    Mr. Hausrath has long supported student scholarships at Clark. Growing
    up during the Depression his mother saved $.25 every week in a jar.
    She worked hard to save what may now seem like a small sum. It was
    enough for Mr. Hausrath to enroll as a freshman.
    The savings were depleted after his first year but he was able to
    remain a student at Clark thanks to a scholarship. He majored in
    business administration. Mr. Hausrath is retired and lives in
    Wakefield, MA. The Strassler Family Center for Holocaust and Genocide
    Studies was established at Clark University in 1997 as the first and
    only institute of its kind. It is committed to offering excellent
    undergraduate education and superior graduate training in the hope of
    giving shape to a better future: learning to recognize genocidal
    ideologies before they take control and identifying strategies for
    deterrence. Once devoted solely to Holocaust scholarship, the mandate
    grew to include the Armenian
    Genocide. With the establishment of the Stephen and Marian Mugar and
    Robert Aram ?52 and Marianne Kaloosdian Chair, the Strassler Center
    became home to the first endowed professorship in all of North America
    specifically dedicated to the study of the Armenian Genocide and the
    modern history of the Armenian people.
    Professor Simon Payaslian, the first incumbent of the Kaloosdian/Mugar
    Chair, is an energetic teacher and scholar. Working under his
    instruction, students study the Armenian Genocide as a distinct
    subject and as a comparative case. Professor Payaslian recently
    published US Policy toward the Armenian Question and the Genocide .
    Committed to fresh scholarship about the Armenian Genocide and renewed
    efforts to teach about it, Clark is eager to recruit more doctoral
    candidates with this focus. The Agnes Manoogian Hausrath fellowship
    will help to accomplish this goal. The mandate of the Strassler Center
    is clear: to fund graduate student fellowships, acquire research
    materials, and hire library staff able to catalogue Armenian language
    books in order to attract first-rate students and sustain their
    scholarship. Ninety years after the Armenian Genocide, denial of the
    historical record continues to be an issue around the globe. The
    Center?s Ph.D. candidates are the future professionals who will
    advance the frontiers of knowledge and scholarship, and they will
    provide the well-researched and intelligent answers to deniers.
    Clark University is a private, coeducational liberal-arts research
    university with 2,000 undergraduate and 800 graduate students. Since
    its founding in 1887 as the first all-graduate school in the United
    States, Clark has challenged convention with innovative programs such
    as the International Studies Stream and the accelerated BA/MA programs
    with the fifth year tuition-free for eligible students. The University
    is featured in Loren Pope?s book, ?Colleges That Change Lives.?

    - A Journey To Armenia: Land of Contrasts

    By Michèle Simourian
    I went to Armenia with many thoughts and emotions. I had long wanted
    to see this little country or, at least, what remained of my ancestral
    homeland. Those feelings set me up for expectations which, I did not
    think, could possibly be met. Reality exceeded those expectations!
    A feeling of overwhelming pride and joy came over me as I gazed upon
    Svartznots Airport?s Arrival terminal when I landed: a feeling which
    never left me throughout my trip even as it was often accompanied by
    utter sadness.
    How, I asked myself, could Armenia manage this level of modernity,
    organization and beauty and the latest in 21st Century technology to
    welcome its visitors? I have known through my work with AMAA for many
    years that Armenia?s resources are limited, that unemployment is very
    high as the economy had suffered enormously after Perestroika and the
    1988 earthquake. From those first moments on Armenian soil and
    throughout my trip I was faced with constant contrasts and the manner
    in which our Armenian brothers and sisters manage to make the
    impossible happen!
    Yerevan?s Republic Square is gorgeous in its layout. The buildings
    surrounding it are magnificent in architecture and warm in color,
    built as they are in various hues of cream and ochre tuf stones.
    These colors glow even in the rain and lend the square a sunny
    appearance.
    Here one sees BMWs and Mercedes, bustling well dressed business men
    and women, one could be in an affluent European city. Oh, but what I
    found when probing beyond those buildings is another greyer world
    which seems to have been left behind. It is firmly anchored in the mid
    20th century soviet days except that now, it is heartbreaking to see
    youths standing in the streets without purpose as factories and work
    have come to a standstill for far too many. Laundry is hanging from
    lines outside apartments stacked one on top of the other in poor state
    of repair and bleak looking. There are no luxury cars here, only old
    rusty Russian cars, some as old as twenty years: how do they still
    run? The sad feelings I mentioned earlier came as I witnessed the
    misery of people struggling to survive. They represent 90% of the
    population, I was told, and the contrast could not be more dramatic
    between them and the 10% of those seen on Republic Square two or three
    blocks away. Just as telling about the class differences as the BMWs
    and rusty old cars driving along the same roads, are the mansions
    being built next door to houses which look ready to fall down. There
    does not appear to be a middle class: just the very wealthy and the
    very poor.
    What of the countryside? Once again I saw great contrasts between the
    stark beauty of the stony, rather arid surroundings leading to Gumri
    and the verdant, lush region around Dilijan and Lake Sevan, so like
    Switzerland. Just as France?s countryside is dotted with beautiful
    castles so is Armenia?s with ancient churches.
    There survive some 160 churches which date from the IV to the VI
    centuries alone and many more from later periods: these speak volumes
    for Armenia?s Christian heritage and its importance to the Armenians.
    I was awed by the splendid Gherghard and Khor Virap churches. I was
    inspired and never felt closer to God than in their exquisitely simple
    and refined interiors, their graceful domes directing the eye
    heavenward. The ?Khatchkars? or crosses, such symbols of Christianity
    and Armenia, are everywhere and constant reminders of not only our
    faith triumphant throughout the ages, but also of the extraordinary
    skills of those who crafted them.
    The pride of our people is evident everywhere I went. Gloriously
    designed monuments have been erected to honor the Armenian heroes
    throughout history such as the tombs of Christian martyrs, some
    lovingly encased in churches such as St. Gayane or St. Hripsime,
    clergy, poets, freedom fighters found in and around ancient
    monasteries and the more recent (1970?s) Genocide Monument and Museum.
    These resting places reflect the love and respect of Armenians for
    those who have left them a heritage so rich in every way. The question
    never far from my mind as I marveled at all the magnificent miniatures
    at the Matenadaran and so many other treasures of Armenia was: what
    does the future hold for this little country so poor now?
    On good clear days, as I journeyed to certain parts of Armenia, I had
    a constant and most awesome companion in Mount Ararat! It seemed so
    close yet was off limits as it is in Turkey. Visible for hours, it
    stood there majestic, solid and utterly beautiful!
    Its twin snow capped peaks reaching toward Heaven, soaring from its
    very flat surroundings, undaunted it seems by its separation from
    Armenia as it looks down calmly on the meandering Arax River: one bank
    in Armenia and the other in Turkey.
    I could not help but see a similarity between the calm majesty of this
    magnificent mountain, its survival since the beginnings of mankind,
    and the dignity, pride, courage and survival of our compatriots and
    ancestors who have never been intimidated by the onslaught of
    countless enemies
    throughout the ages! They are not today dispirited by the poverty and
    the lack of economic opportunities in Armenia: they manage somehow.
    Their dignity in their difficult circumstances was evident everywhere
    I visited. Some of the homes, schools and AMAA offices I visited
    throughout Armenia were poor but without exception immaculate: so were
    the children and the parents who picked them up. How do they manage
    with electricity still intermittent and salaries so low? It is a
    wonder how the people can survive.
    Our AMAA offices are mostly in old buildings, one is in a trailer, but
    they are equipped with modern tools to communicate, diagnose illnesses
    and distribute goods. Modern technology and science are at work to
    bring aid to our people. How marvelous it is to see how so much good
    can come from limited resources. How this is achieved became very
    clear and inspiring as I traveled to the far flung centers which the
    AMAA operates: what it lacks in resources is made up by the courage,
    compassion and selflessness of those carrying our mission work in
    Armenia!
    To witness the working of pastors who often handle 3 or 4 churches and
    communities under sometimes enormously difficult conditions and hard
    to travel roads is to witness Christianity at its sacrificial best.
    The Youth Leaders I met, trained at the AMAA Seminary are infectious
    in their enthusiasm. They are avid learners under the care of
    marvelous visiting professors who come from abroad at great personal
    sacrifice. How patient, loving and talented are our teachers in our
    after school programs as they teach our youth computer literacy,
    foreign languages and skills which will give them a better start in
    life. How loving is the care given to hundreds of little ones in our
    kindergartens where pint sized tables and beds await them along with a
    nutritional meal daily! All these programs helping thousands are
    beautifully orchestrated by the devoted staff of AMAA Armenia; it?s
    directors and leaders. Love, as they spread the Good News through
    their actions, is evident everywhere. The great respect they show for
    our less fortunate brothers and sisters in Armenia is a testament to
    their Christian Spirit. As I visited the house of a child, one of the
    2,800 sponsored children in the AMAA Child Sponsorship Program; I was
    moved and inspired by the dignity in which the family receives help
    and by its efforts to reciprocate in a warm and welcoming hospitality.
    I have always felt proud of my Armenian ancestry, but never more than
    on this trip. The present is troubled for the majority in Armenia, but
    our people, both those being helped and those bringing help, are
    determined and undaunted by it. I have no doubt that with God?s help,
    as in the past, the present and the hurdles it presents will also be
    overcome!
    I have been active in the AMAA for 24 years and, while always
    impressed by the work of this admirable organization, I have never
    been more so than on this trip! May God continue to bless the AMAA,
    our benefactors and volunteers who make its work possible, and
    beautiful Armenia.

    Michèle Simourian is AMAA Orphan/Childcare Fund Co-Founder.
    Past AMAA Board Member


    --
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