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Massis Weekly Online - Volume 27, No. 6 (1306)

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  • Massis Weekly Online - Volume 27, No. 6 (1306)

    Massis Weekly Online
    http://MassisWeekly.com
    VOLUME 27, NO. 6 (1306)
    SATURDAY, MARCH 03, 2007
    ---------------
    - Armenian Opposition Parties Fail To Form An Election Alliance
    - Turkish MPs To Lobby Against Armenian Genocide Bill
    - SDHP "Sarkis Dkhrouni" Youth Association Organizes A Seminar
    Dedicated To Sumgait Pogroms
    - Education Minister Asks University Boards To Investigate Corruption
    - British House Of Commons Hosts Meeting On Armenia
    - Armenian Community Leaders In Canada Meet With Minister Jason Kenney
    - Vivacious, Talented & Young Cellist Ani Kalayjian
    - UCLA International Conference On Indian Ocean Armenians
    - Armenian Studies Program at Fresno State To Hold 19th Annual Banquet
    ---------------


    - Armenian Opposition Parties Fail To Form An Election Alliance

    YEREVAN -- Last-ditch attempts by several Armenian opposition parties
    to form an election alliance have ended in failure, it was confirmed
    on Wednesday. The parties led by former Prime Ministers Aram Sarkisian
    and Vazgen Manukian and former Foreign Minister Raffi Hovannisian
    failed to iron out their differences in late-night negotiations on
    Tuesday. All there men were tight-lipped about reasons for the fiasco,
    which is another good news for the Armenian government.
    Sarkisian seemed particularly disappointed with the collapse of the
    talks, saying that his radical Hanrapetutyun (Republic) party will
    have to run for parliament on its own. He confirmed that Hanrapetutyun
    will not team up even with the former ruling Armenian Pan-National
    Movement, another opposition party involved in the talks.
    "I wouldn't like to use details of those negotiation for attacking
    anyone," Sarkisian told RFE/RL. "I think those details won't be of any
    use." But the outspoken oppositionist did say that he suspects some of
    his potential allies of playing into the government's hands.
    "Unfortunately, in Armenia and dictatorial countries in general there
    are too many such parties," he said. When asked to name them,
    Sarkisian said, "The public will see that during the election
    campaign. I think the public already has suspicions about one or
    another party. I don't have to specify them."
    Manukian also refused to elaborate on the opposition discussions. "I
    don't want to play the blame game," he told RFE/RL. "That's just the
    way it is. We failed for some reason, and I don't want to make any
    comments."
    Manukian also said later in the day that his National Democratic Union
    (AZhM), one of Armenia's oldest opposition parties, has decided to
    boycott the May 12 elections. The veteran politician has advocated
    such a boycott in the past, arguing that the country's culture of
    electoral fraud leaves little room for the opposition.
    The nominal chairman of Hovannisian's Zharangutyun party, Vartan
    Khachatrian, may have had Manukian in mind when he complained that
    some unspecified participants of the talks were skeptical about the
    chances of an opposition bloc making a strong showing in the May 12
    elections.
    "We did everything in our power to reach agreement and always remained
    open to mutual concessions," Khachatrian told RFE/RL. He said
    Hovannisian was even ready not to occupy any of the five top spots in
    the would-be bloc's list of candidates. Khachatrian added that
    Zharangutyun will decide later on Wednesday whether or not it will
    contest the elections.

    - Turkish MPs To Lobby Against Armenian Genocide Bill

    Turkish legislators are traveling to Washington to lobby members of
    the U.S. Congress against a draft resolution recognizing the mass
    killings of Armenians under the Ottoman Empire as genocide,
    parliamentary sources said last Thursday.
    Three separate delegations, including members of the ruling Justice
    and Development Party and the main opposition Republican People's
    Party, are visiting Washington starting late February and in March to
    seek support against the resolution, expected to be debated at the
    House of Representatives in April.
    The Democratic-controlled Congress is widely expected to back the
    draft, even though the White House is opposed to it, wary over the
    impact on relations with a key Muslim ally and a NATO member. Turkish
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said after a visit to Washington this
    month that passing the draft would "poison" ties and "spoil
    everything" between the two countries.


    - SDHP "Sarkis Dkhrouni" Youth Association Organizes A Seminar
    Dedicated To Sumgait Pogroms

    YEREVAN -- The Social Democrat Hnchakian Party "Sarkis Dkhrouni" Youth
    Association conducted a discussion with a panel of speakers
    emphasizing the importance of educating the international community
    about the Sumgait pogroms on the 19th anniversary of the massacres.
    The panelists delved in the issues concerning the proper way of
    presenting the historical and political motives behind the atrocities
    towards the Armenians of Sumgait.
    The 1988 Sumgait atrocities in Azerbaijan were viewed by the panelists
    as a continuation of the genocidal persecution of the Armenian people.
    The Azerbaijani government carried out very similar actions as their
    ancestral kins, the Turks, with the same motives to eliminate the
    Armenian population
    from their historic lands to achieve pan-Turkism.
    Hrair Ulubabyan, who organized an Armenian resistance in Sumgait and
    currently is the head of the initiative protecting the rights of the
    Sumgait Armenians, was a panelist at the lecture. He stated that the
    century old intention of the Turkish people was to achieve an Armenia
    without an Armenian population; that was the driving force behind the
    Azerbaijani government. That vision was attempted to become a reality
    when the pogroms had been initiated.
    The panelists stated that the atrocities against Armenians, which
    continued until 1991, were so vile that they could be comparable to
    the Genocide of 1915. Thus it is important to state that justice for
    the victims of both Genocides remains unresolved.
    The most striking is the fact that neither the international community
    nor Armenia has recognized the events of Sumgait as massacre. Former
    Ombudswoman for the Republic of Armenia and prominent Human Rights
    Activist, Larisa Alaverdyan who was also a member of the panel stated
    that the international legal issues concerning the Sumgait pogroms had
    not come to culmination since the last time it was discussed in 1989
    during the Soviet era. The Sumgait pogroms are a prime example of
    human rights abuse, Alaverdian stated that we simply have not been
    able to raise the issue as a state matter within the international
    community. She believes that it is crucial the Sumgait pogroms and
    their aftermath be addressed by the U.N. Commission on Human Rights.

    - Education Minister Asks University Boards To Investigate Corruption

    Following a survey that was conducted and publicized by the Social
    Democrat Hunchakian Party "Sarkis Dkhrouni" Student and Youth
    association exposing a system of payment for good test and exam
    results at government run universities, Republic of Armenia's
    Education Minister Levon Mkrtchian has prompted University management
    boards to investigate the persistent corruption.
    Out of 2000 students - five percent of all the students in Armenia -
    1821 said that there was corruption in their colleges. A striking 93
    percent of respondents to the survey recommended that instructors
    salaries be improved to discourage them from accepting bribes.
    The results of the survey were submitted to the education minister
    asking him to remedy the problem. Up until the now, the Education
    Minister had been non-committal. Yet mounting international exposure
    and pressure concerning the revelation of persistent corruption within
    higher educationhas finally resulted in his compliance to a formal
    investigation.
    Within a statement the "Sarkis Dkhrouni" student association conveyed
    its desire that exposure of this corruption will lead to the overhaul
    of the current Soviet-era system of marking. Adjustments need to be
    implemented and mandated from above. As 87 percent of the surveyed
    students stated there should be a functioning system of discipline in
    the management of higher education establishments.
    If this systemic problem of corruption within our system of higher
    education is not resolved, bribery will persist in the country and the
    deep rooted culture of corruption will remain. Those who pass their
    exams with a bribe are assumed to be knowledgeable, will gain
    respectable positions in the future, and ask for bribes. The cycle
    must be stopped.


    - British House Of Commons Hosts Meeting On Armenia

    LONDON -- Armenian Ambassador to Great Britain His Eminence Vahe
    Gabrielian met on February 20 at the UK House of Commons with
    representatives of both Houses and prominent members of the Armenian
    community in the UK. The event was organized by Armenia Solidarity
    group, the British-Armenian All-Party Parliamentary Group, and the
    Social Democrat Hunchakian party UK organ "Nor Serounti Tsayn" (Voice
    of Nor Serount). The meeting was also jointly sponsored by Ms. Nia
    Griffith MP and Dr. Bob Spink MP.
    The meeting was devoted to two motions submitted to the parliament
    urging the end of the Turkish blockade of Armenia and the
    re-affirmation of the Armenian Genocide. The parliamentary motion to
    recognize the Armenian genocide; EDM 357, was submitted by Bob Spink
    of the Conservative Party. Currently it has been endorsed by 68
    parliament members. The parliamentary motion on the Turkish blockade
    of Armenia; EDM 344, was submitted by Nia Griffith from the Labor
    party and currently has the support of 66 MPs.
    Presentations were made by: Dr Spink, Baroness Cox, Nia Griffith,
    Quentin Davies, Paddy Tipping, Andrew Dismore, Lord Avebury and Eilian
    Williams. Members of the Panel presented each their own points of view
    about Turkey's ascension to Europe, the opening of the borders between
    the two countries and the recognition of the Armenian Genocide. In
    their closing remarks the parliamentarians advised the British
    Armenian community: to advocate their own MPs and ask them to sign EDM
    357 and EDM 344. Another factor that the community must address is
    the UK governments keen interest to admit Turkey into the Europe
    Union. The panelist stated that it is imperative that the British
    Armenian community contact their MEPs and voice their concern over the
    matter.
    The parliamentarians announced their intention to organize their
    fellow members of parliament and wear a white poppy on April 24 in
    remembrance of those who perished during the Armenian Genocide.
    The speaker of the day His Excellency Dr Vahe Gabrielyan, the Armenian
    Ambassador who spoke about "The Turkish Blockade of Armenia" and "the
    Recognition of the Armenian Genocide by the UK Government" and
    reiterated the statement that "Turkey must apologize to Armenia." His
    Excellency spoke extensively on Armenia's approaches to these and
    other issues and called on the MPs to use Britain's close ties with
    Turkey to force it to open border with Armenia and establish relations
    with it. The ambassador thanked the organizers and well as British MPs
    for their efforts
    urging debates on these two very important problems

    - Armenian Community Leaders In Canada Meet With Minister Jason Kenney

    MONTREAL -- Several leaders of the Canadian Armenian community met
    earlier today with Minister Jason Kenney, Secretary of State for
    Multiculturalism and Canadian Identity. The meeting, which was held in
    the Montreal offices of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of Canada,
    was organized by the Congress of Canadian Armenians at the request of
    the Minister. The discussions centered on Armenian issues and the
    concerns of the community.
    The recent assassination of Hrant Dink in Istanbul was discussed with
    the Minister. The Rural Poverty Eradication Program in Armenia, which
    the Canadian Diocese and the Congress of Canadian Armenians have
    committed to actively support, was explained.
    Suggestions were made on how to streamline the Canadian visa
    application process in Armenia. The community leaders also recommended
    that Canada play a more active role in supporting a lasting solution
    to the Nagorno-Karabagh issue based on its right to self determination.
    During the meeting, Payam Akhavan, Professor of Law at McGill
    University, thanked the Minister for his recent timely intervention in
    facilitating Taner Akçam's entry into Canada. Akçam, a Turkish
    historian, visited Montreal last week to give two lectures. "Akçam is
    a voice for Armenian-Turkish reconciliation," said Professor Akhavan.
    "Thankfully, those who tried to silence him by making slanderous
    accusations failed."
    At the end of the meeting, Jason Kenney concluded his remarks by
    saying: "I treasure my relationship with the Armenian community. I am
    sensitive to its concerns, and am committed to help it achieve its
    future aspirations." "I am very encouraged by the Minister's response
    to the several suggestions
    we made to him," said Taro Alepian, Chairman of the Congress of
    Canadian Armenians. "The Government of Canada has shown by its actions
    that it is supportive of our community, and of our stated positions on
    Armenian issues."
    The member organizations of the Congress of Canadian Armenians include
    (in alphabetical order): AGBU Alex Manoogian School, AGBU Montreal
    Chapter, Armenian Democratic Liberal Party, Holy Cross Church of
    Laval, St. Gregory the Illuminator Church of Montreal, S.D. Hunchakian
    Party, Society of Armenians from Istanbul, Tekeyan Cultural Association.

    - Vivacious, Talented & Young Cellist Ani Kalayjian
    By Arpine Kocharian

    "I find the process of being a cellist, and performing with other
    musicians to be an exhilarating experience." Ani Kalayjian

    Cellist Ani Kalayjian has garnered respect in the classical music
    world at an age when most artists have yet to prove themselves. At
    just 25 years old, the Armenian-American talent has had groundbreaking
    performances in the United States, Canada and Europe, appearing in
    concert both as a soloist and chamber musician. She has set the stage
    for a prolific career having collaborated with many of the world's
    most famous artists, while expressing her own artistic vision through
    an impressive repertoire that reflects a wide range of genres and
    styles.
    What started as a hobby soon became a true passion for music. Ani
    began taking cello lessons at the age of four after she moved to the
    United States. Her grandfather, who taught cello in the Middle East,
    and was involved in the formation of a local orchestra in the 1960s,
    was an early source of inspiration.
    Ani's musical studies continued at the Manhattan School of Music
    preparatory division. She received her Bachelor's degree in cello
    performance from the Mannes College of Music in New York City, where
    she studied with Timothy Eddy, cellist of the Orion Quartet. Ani went
    on to obtain her Master's degree with distinction from the Royal
    Northern College of Music in Manchester, England, where she was a
    student of Ralph Kirshbaum, international soloist. Ani's teachers,
    whom she considers integral to her success, refined her artistry and
    skills as a professional musician. She concluded her postgraduate
    studies in 2006 embarking on an exciting career in music.
    International exposure to classical music festivals and her myriad
    experiences have helped shape and impact her direction as a performer.
    Ani was one of the two cellists selected for the national program of
    the inaugural season of David Finckel and Wu Han's Music@Menlo. She
    has appeared in Michael Tilson Thomas' Aaron Copland workshop at
    Carnegie Hall where she performed at Zankel and Weill Hall. At Prussia
    Cove in Cornwall, England, she was featured in a BBC documentary
    playing in a master class with Steven Isserlis. In 2003, Ani made her
    concerto debut atColumbia University's Miller Theatre performing
    Saint-Saens concerto with orchestra. Her recent competition success
    includes winning the Anglo-Czechoslovak Trust competition where she
    was also granted the Bohuslav Martinu Foundation Prize. Her 2006
    concerts included appearances with the Bayside Trio in Portland,
    Maine, as well as solo performances in Holland, the Czech Republic,
    and at Oxford University in England. Among her upcoming engagements
    are solo recitals in Montreal, as well as her New York solo recital
    debut at Carnegie Hall on March 31, 2007.
    As well as her ambitions as a soloist, Ani's passion for chamber music
    is manifested in Trio Nareg where the brilliant young cellist will
    perform with Ani Kavafian, one of America's most versatile violinists,
    and pianist, Armen Guzelimian, a virtuoso soloist. The three
    celebrated solo artists will perform at the inaugural season of the
    opening of Segerstrom Hall for the very first time on May 24, 2007.
    This groundbreaking musical event will promote Armenian contemporary
    and classical works.
    David Finckel, Artistic Director of the Chamber Music Society of
    Lincoln Center has been quoted with saying, "Ani Kalayjian's music
    making is infused with her personal warmth. She brings joy into the
    concert hall and shares it generously with the audience and with her
    colleagues. She is an important musician who will undoubtedly touch
    many lives during her career."
    As a messenger of classical music, Ani wishes to discover seldom
    played works that have not yet been explored to their full potential.
    She is also dedicated in promoting classical music amongst the
    younger generations. "I want to educate people of the living power of
    classical music. I can say that this is the central goal of my career."

    - UCLA International Conference On Indian Ocean Armenians

    UCLA -- "Ebb and Flow of the Armenian Communities of the Indian Ocean"
    is the theme for the next UCLA international conference, Saturday and
    Sunday, March 17-18, 2007. Sixteen scholars from Armenia, Europe, and
    North America will discuss the important commercial, cultural, and
    intellectual roles of the Armenian communities of Southeast Asia from
    the seventeenth through twentieth century. The conference, open to the
    public at no fee, will be held in Young Hall, Court of Sciences 50, on
    Saturday from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30p.m and on Sunday from 2:00 to 5:30p.m.
    The Saturday sessions will focus on cultural and intellectual themes,
    including the current state of the Indo-Armenian community, while the
    Sunday afternoon session will feature three presentations on the
    long-distance trade of the New Julfa merchants and their interaction
    with the mercantile forces in the Indian Ocean and beyond.
    The conference is sponsored by the UCLA Armenian Educational
    Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History and co-sponsored by the
    Center for India and South Asia, Department of History, International
    Institute, Center for Near Eastern Studies, and the AGBU Southern
    California District Committee. It is the sixteenth consecutive
    conference in the UCLA series on Historic Armenian Cities, Provinces,
    and Communities.
    After introductory comments on the "ebb and flow" by Professor Richard
    Hovannisian, the Saturday morning sessions will be chaired and
    discussed by Professor Engseng Ho of Harvard University, with five
    papers: Professor Margaret Sarkissian of Smith College will give an
    illustrated talk on the Armenian mercantile communities of Southeast
    Asia; Professor Khachig Tololyan of Wesleyan University will speak on
    eighteenth-century thought on transforming the Armenians from
    dispersion to nation; Professor Peter Cowe of UCLA will examine the
    development of Armenian drama in India; Professor Osheen Keshishian of
    Glendale Community College will assess the roles of "Azdarar" and
    other Indo-Armenian periodicals; and Ph.D. candidate Mana Kia of
    Harvard University will present Joseph Emin in the context of British
    colonial policies.
    The Saturday afternoon sessions on March 16 will be chaired and
    commented on by Professor Houri Berberian of CSU, Long Beach.
    Presenters include Professor Michael Fisher of Oberlin College on an
    Armenian lady from Agra in London in the early seventeenth century;
    Professor Bhaswati Bhattacharya of Leiden on the noted Armenian
    general, Khwaja Gorgin Khan; Dr. Richard Hovannisian on Indo-Armenian
    notables, with a film on Sir Catchik Paul Chater; Mr. Gregory
    Aftandilian, a fellow at Harvard University, on American GIs in India
    in World War II, and Honorable Armen Baibourtian, Armenia's first
    ambassador to India, on the present situation of the community.
    Extended time has been given for each of the three presentations on
    Sunday afternoon, March 17, dealing with long-distant merchants and
    trade. Edward A. Alpers of UCLA will serve as chair and discussant.
    Professor Sanjay Subrahmanyan, director of the India and South Asia
    Center at UCLA, will speak on French commercial ambitions and Armenian
    interlocutors in the seventeenth century; Dr. Sebouh Aslanian of UC
    Irvine and a co-organizer of the conference, will focus on the role of
    the New Julfan "Network of Trust," and Tatiana Seijas of Mexico City
    and a Ph.D. candidate at Yale University will present Don Pedro di
    Zaratte, a Julfan Armenian in Mexico City. Discussions will follow
    each of the conference sessions.
    As in past conferences in this series, Richard and Anne Elizabeth
    Elbrecht of Davis will mount a pictorial exhibit, this one on the
    Armenian churches, buildings, and institutions of South Asia.
    The conference proceedings in this series are edited and prepared for
    publication by Richard Hovannisian. To date, six volumes have been
    released: Van/Vaspurakan, Bitlis-Mush/Taron, Kharpert/Tsopk,
    Erzerum/Karin, Sivas/Sebastia, and Diarbekir-Urfa/Tigranakert-Edessa.
    The seventh, Armenia Cilicia, is being co-edited with Professor Simon
    Payaslian of Clark University and will be published in 2007, to be
    followed by volumes on the Armenian communities of Constantinople,
    Smyrna, the Black Sea-Pontus region, Kars and Ani, Caesarea,
    Jerusalem, and New Julfa.
    Parking for the international conference on the Indian Ocean
    communities may be found along Hilgard Avenue (limited space) or in
    the UCLA Parking

    - Armenian Studies Program at Fresno State To Hold 19th Annual Banquet

    FRESNO -- The Armenian Studies Program of California State University,
    Fresno, will hold its 19th Annual Banquet on Saturday, March 24, 2007
    at the Fort Washington Golf & Country Club, 10272 N. Millbrook, in
    Fresno.
    The keynote speaker and special guest for the Banquet is The Honorable
    Armen Liloyan, Consul General of the Republic of Armenia, who will be
    paying his first official visit to Fresno. The Consul General was born
    in Yerevan, Armenia and received a Bachelor's degree from the
    Department of Oriental Studies at Yerevan State University. In
    2001-2002 he received his M.A. in Diplomacy and International
    Relations, from the University of Westminster, in London. He has
    diplomatic experience as a desk officer for Central Europe and later
    the Balkans in the Foreign Ministry of the Republic of Armenia. In
    November 2006 he was appointed as Consul General of the Republic of
    Armenia in Los Angeles. During the Banquet, student recipients of
    Armenian Studies scholarships and grants will be recognized.
    The Armenian Alumni and Friends Chapter at Fresno State is organizing
    a silent auction at the Banquet. During the past several decades the
    Program has gained national and international recognition, with an
    undergraduate program offering as many as ten courses in Armenian
    Studies.
    The Program houses two endowed positions, the Haig & Isabel Berberian
    Chair of Armenian Studies, held by Prof. Kouymjian, and the Henry
    Khanzadian Kazan Visiting Professor of Armenian Studies. Barlow Der
    Mugrdechian and Dickran Kouymjian constitute the core faculty of the
    Program along with the annual Kazan Visiting Professor. The reception
    and silent auction begin at 6:00PM followed by the Banquet at 7:00PM.
    Tickets are available at $50 per person, with a special price of $20
    for Fresno State students. For more information about the Banquet,
    please contact the Armenian Studies Program at 559-278-2669.


    --
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