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Massis Weekly Online - Volume 27, Issue 40 (1340)

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  • Massis Weekly Online - Volume 27, Issue 40 (1340)

    Massis Weekly Online
    http://MassisWeekly.com
    VOLUME 27, ISSUE 40 (1340)
    SATURDAY, November 10, 2007

    -----------
    - 120th Anniversary Of The Social Democrat Hunchakian Party Celebrated
    - Gaidz Youth Organization Message
    - Armenian Genocide Monument Consecrated In Wales
    - Speech By The Presiding Officer Of The National Assembly Of Wales
    - Prominent Businessman Links 'Recent Tax Raids' With His Opposition Stance
    - Revisiting Political Ideology and Strategy
    -----------

    - 120th Anniversary Of The Social Democrat Hunchakian Party Celebrated

    GLENDALE, CA - More than thousand people gathered at the Glendale High
    School Auditorium on November 4 to celebrate the 120th anniversary of
    the Social Democrat Hunchakian Party and its crucial contribution to
    the Armenian Cause in the Armenian communities worldwide.
    The program featured artistic performances and several speakers
    including keynote speaker Mrs. Lyudmila Sarksyan, Chairwoman of the
    SDHP Armenia, specially invited to the U.S. for this occasion and Mr.
    Setrag Ajemian, Chairman of the Central Committee of SDHP. Mrs.
    Sarksyan conveyed the importance of the Hunchakian ideology of
    democracy with social and civil rights for the welfare of the Armenian
    nation. Stressing the importance of a democratic system with social
    and economic responsibility of the Armenian government, Sarksyan
    expressed her dismay with the current unjust system of oligarchy which
    has abused Armenia?s social, civil and economic systems.
    Mr. Ajemian conveyed the powerful message of the significance of the
    organization historically in relation to the Armenian people and the
    Hunchakian party?s role in the future of Armenia relating it to the
    current state of affairs of the Armenian nation. Both articulated the
    SDHP?s stance for the upcoming presidential election for the Republic
    of Armenia is a crucial step in regaining the civil and economic
    rights of the Armenian people, underlying the decision of the SDHP to
    support the presidential candidacy of former Armenian president Levon
    Der Bedrosian.
    Master of Ceremonies Dr. Rupen Yaghszian reminded the audience of the
    many struggles the Hunchakian party has had to overcome throughout the
    centuries and the triumphs they have achieved through sacrifice and
    hard work. He emphasized the longstanding belief system of the
    Hunchakian party stating the principle of a single, united Armenian
    people, motherland and church. Dr. Yaghszian emphasized the SDHP?s
    belief in the importance of having a united Armenian Apostolic church,
    free of political association headed by the See of Etchmiatzin.
    ?Rest assured that the future is in good hands,? said Chris
    Garsevanian of the Gaidz Youth Organization. He delivered a strong
    message stating that the new generation of Armenian-Americans will
    lead the Armenian people to victory by preserving the Armenian culture
    and ensuring that the Armenian Genocide gains the recognition it
    rightfully deserves. He added that the progress of the Gaidz and
    Dkhrouni youth organizations are monumental to the future of the
    Armenian Cause.
    Dr. Hamparsum Sarafian, Vice-Chairman of the SDHP Western Region
    Executive Committee, praised the Hunchakian party and its
    accomplishments throughout the years around the world quoting the
    first editorial in the ?Hunchak? newspaper written in 1887. Assuring
    the audience the importance of the editorial did not erode over time
    and still holds true today; that in order for the Armenian people to
    prosper the struggle must come from within. As that struggle continues
    the SDHP has been a leading advocate that came about from the people,
    with the people, for the people.
    Adis Harmandian, Gagik Badalian and Samvel Vartanyan elated the
    audience with patriotic and nationalistic folk songs accompanied by
    film montages of the history of the SDHP narrated by Harout Der
    Tavitian.Ani Yepremian recited various poems to astounding applause as
    the Vartan and Siranush Gevorkian International Dance Academy dazzled
    the audience with vibrant dance performances reflecting the history
    of the Armenian people. The celebration ended with a standing ovation
    and jubilation for the 120th anniversary of the SDHP.

    - Gaidz Youth Organization Message
    By Chris Garsevanian

    We are gathered here today to celebrate the Social Democrat Hunchakian
    Party?s 120th year anniversary. But what you may not know, is that the
    Hunchakian party?s youth organization will be celebrating their first
    centennial in a mere 3 years.
    This youth organization first started off as a student union created
    by Arsen Gidour in 1910. This union was established to elevate
    awareness within the Armenian people of their rights, their rights as
    citizens and their rights as human beings. They prepared them to rid
    their people of the tyranny of the Ottoman Empire that for the past
    500 years had enslaved the minorities, especially the Armenians. The
    Armenians who were unfairly taxed, suppressed, oppressed, abused, and
    humiliated.
    This association of Armenian University students across Europe
    collaborated in starting a newspaper with scientific, literary, and
    social content. This newspaper was called Gaidz, which the
    organization later adopted as their name. The Gaidz youth, visited
    villages and towns in Armenia organizing lectures energizing the
    youth, playing a significant role in instilling ideals of democracy,
    freedom, and equality, and that gaidz, that spark, to stand up and
    defend themselves.
    The Gaidz youth organization has come a long way since those strenuous
    times, but we still face challenges today in the 21st century. Living
    in almost every country around the world, the youth of our diaspora
    faces the threat of assimilation. Which is why our mission has evolved
    to maintaining and promoting our Armenian identity, history, culture
    and heritage; fostering a harmonious and productive relationship among
    Armenian youth; and to spread awareness and tolerance of Armenian and
    non-Armenian communities by way of encouraging active involvement in
    community affairs, but the most important task and challenge that was
    bestowed our generation is being passed the torch as the bearers of
    the Armenian Cause.
    It has become our duty to ensure that we, the Armenian people finally
    prevail in our seemingly endless struggle for unequivocal recognition
    of the Armenian Genocide. But we will not accept a mere ?unbinding
    resolution? because that will not even come close to reciprocating
    what they ripped away from generations of Armenians. We will demand
    restitution and compensation to pay for physical and emotional pain,
    grief, and suffering.
    Aside from the Armenian cause, you may all rest assured that this new
    generation of Armenians, my generation, will lead the Armenian people
    into prosperity for many generations which that follow. We will stand
    as the new advocates for our motherland and our people. So, don?t
    worry about the future, it is in good hands.

    - Armenian Genocide Monument Consecrated In Wales

    CARDIFF, WALES -- The unveiling and consecration of the Welsh National
    Monument to the Armenian Genocide went ahead successfully last week
    despite attempts by screaming Turks to disrupt the Requiem, which was
    led by Bishop Nathan Hovhannissian and the St Sarkis Church Choir,
    London. The monument, the first on public land in the UK, was unveiled
    by Lord Dafydd Elis- Thomas, Presiding Officer of the National
    Assembly of Wales and His Excellency Dr Vahe Gabrielyan, Ambassador of
    the Republic of Armenia to the UK. Wreaths were laid in memory of the
    Armenian and Assyrian victims of the 1915 Genocide.
    The event was followed by an afternoon of speeches and Welsh and
    Armenian music, poetry and dancing. Permission to erect the beautiful
    Stone Cross monument, a veritable Armenian Khatchkar, was granted by
    the United Nations Association Wales on land owned by the National
    Assembly of Wales. The small Welsh-Armenian community, under the
    leadership of John Torosyan (Wales-Armenia Solidarity chairman), were
    responsible for all the arrangements to achieve the realisation of
    this project. The event organising team comprised of members of the
    ever-growing lobbying coalition initiated by Armenia Solidarity,
    British-Armenian All-Party Parliamentary Group and Nor Serount
    Cultural Association.
    The Assyrian Bishop, Khoshaba Guorges from the Ancient Churches of the
    East, also prayed and addressed the meeting. His participation was in
    recognition by Armenians of the hundreds of thousands of Assyrians
    also killed in the 1915 Genocide.
    Speeches were delivered by His Excellency Ambassador Gabrielyan, as
    well as Canon Patrick Thomas and Mike Joseph. Music was provided by
    the Welsh choirs Côr Aelwyd Hamdden and Côr Cochion. The Akhtamar
    Dance group provided Armenian folk dancing, directed by Arsen
    Zakaryan, and a solo dance performance by Dalila Heath. This was
    followed by a Duduk performance of ?Dleyaman?, performed by Karapet
    Baljian and Ara Petrossian. Finally, Armenian poetry was recited by
    Teni Nersessian. At the end of the afternoon the plight of the
    Armenians of Iraq was highlighted by Isobel Manook. An appeal was made
    for Iraqi and other interested Armenians to contact Armenia Solidarity
    ([email protected]) to coordinate lobbying efforts on their
    behalf.
    The Presiding Officer?s speech was read by the MC, The director of the
    Welsh Centre for International Affairs, Stephen Thomas (please see
    the transcript of the speech below).

    - Speech By The Presiding Officer Of The National Assembly Of Wales
    Lord Dafydd Elis-Thomas

    It is a great honour to be here today at the invitation of
    ?Wales-Armenia Solidarity? to receive this stone cross, the khatchkar,
    on behalf of the people of Wales, and to see the cross being
    consecrated in memory of the Armenians who were killed during one of
    the worst Genocides ever seen in the world; the genocide of a million
    and a half of the people of Armenia by the Turkish State in 1915.
    It is a great pleasure also to welcome to Wales the Ambassador of
    Armenia to the UK, Dr Vahe Gabrielyan, as well as Bishop Nathan
    Hovhannissian, the Primate of the Armenian Apostolic Church in the UK.
    It is a reflection of the consuming interest in Wales in the history
    of Armenia that the finance for this beautiful monument was raised
    wholly by Welsh Armenians. It is a symbol of the special sympathy of
    the people of Wales for the people of Armenia that here, in the
    building raised in order to promote peace throughout the world after
    the horrors of the First World War, that the cross is placed.
    This building is a symbol of the wish and the ambition of Wales to
    have a voice in international affairs and I am pleased to say that
    Wales has recognized the right of Armenia to her freedom and has
    called on the rest of the world to recognise the suffering of her
    people. It is not just a matter of sentiment that Wales identifies
    with a small country with a unique language, a religious character
    which derives from the world?s oldest Christian Church; and experience
    of living next to a rabid and imperialistic neighbour.
    The relationship of Wales with one of the world?s oldest countries and
    the world?s oldest Christian Church back to the end of the nineteenth
    century and the massacre of the people of Armenia in 1894 in Sasoon.
    Llewelyn Williams, the Liberal MP from Wales, wrote a book ?Armenia
    Past and Present? on the shame of the massacre.
    Protest meetings were held, poems were written, and money was
    collected to ease the suffering, and a ?Wales- Armenia Society? was
    formed. When the terrible Genocide happened, of course, we were in the
    middle of the Great War, and to our shame, not the same attention was
    paid to the sufferings of Armenia in 1915 as was the case in 1894-96.
    In the wake of Turkey?s victory over the allies in Galipoli in 1915,
    the Turkish state began the work of trying to exterminate the whole
    Armenian population of the country. On the 24th April 1915, the
    intellectuals were arrested and murdered and the wider Armenian
    population then suffered the same fate.
    As Robert Fisk noted in his powerful book, ?The Great War for
    Civilization?, this was the first ever genocide and it is significant
    that it was the silence of the rest of the world in the face of such a
    tragedy that led the Nazis to consider the Genocide of the Jews.
    Hitler was quoted in August 1939, when ordering his generals to attack
    Poland, ?who today remembers the destruction of the Armenians??
    I am glad that people are not turning their back on Armenia today as
    they did a century ago.
    The National Assembly has given true support to the campaign to
    recognize the reality of the Genocide. In October 2002, the majority
    of National Assembly Members supported a motion by Rhodri Glyn Thomas
    A.M. (the present Transport minister) to this effect: - - Recognising
    the truth of the Genocide that occurred under the government of Turkey
    in 1915 - Calling on Turkey to end her economic blockade on Armenia -
    Call on The UK Parliament not to support Turkey?s application for EU
    membership until she recognises the Genocide of 1915 as well as ending
    her economic blockade of Armenia. The majority of Welsh MPs have also
    signed similar motions in the House of Commons in 2006 and 2007. In
    2001, the First Minister of Wales laid a wreath of flowers to remember
    the victims of the Genocide and in the National Holocaust Day ceremony
    this year in Cardiff.

    - Prominent Businessman Links 'Recent Tax Raids' With His Opposition Stance

    YEREVAN -- Armenia?s prominent millionaire businessman and parliament
    deputy on Monday defied what he called retribution from the state for
    his pro-opposition political views and said he would remain ?next to
    [expresident] Levon Ter-Petrosian? with whom he shares ?a common
    ideological ground.?
    Khachatur Sukiasian, who is also known for his criticism of corrupt
    practices in Armenia?s customs, linked the recent inspections by tax
    officials of his businesses with his being ?the bearer of the ideas
    conceived by Ter-Petrosian? and a person who is among ?the supporters
    and participants? of the rising opposition movement in support of the
    ex-president?s election bid.
    More than 40 representatives of Armenia?s State Taxation Body launched
    inspection of the Bjni Company belonging to the Sukiasian family.
    Sukiasian says these tax inspections are an excuse to disguise the
    political persecution that was launched by the state after he was seen
    next to the ex-president.
    Sukiasian accompanied Ter-Petrosian to a police station late last
    month to negotiate the release of a dozen loyalists who were arrested
    while urging citizens to take part in an upcoming opposition rally.
    ?I have chosen this direction realizing that well. I realize well that
    all hints, all conversations, the whole information that reaches me
    >From different bodies is connected with this process.
    But that will not change anything. I will always be next to him
    [Ter-Petrosian], because I share the concerns that he raises,?
    Sukiasian told RFE/RL.
    ?I think this is something that the government doesn?t like. But I
    have my own approaches, because I want what is [good] for the future
    of my country, for the future of our children,? he added.
    Sukiasian, who is one of the largest taxpayers in Armenia, says
    entrepreneurs work in unequal conditions today. He says the government
    lacks political will to bring them all into ?an equal field? of
    taxation.
    According to Sukiasian, through affiliation with the government ?a
    person defends himself and his business and not an idea or a political
    decision that this system has advanced.? Sukiasian hinted that some
    overtures once were made to try to ?recruit? him, but he declined to
    disclose any details.
    In an interview with RFE/RL, Sukiasian accused authorities of exerting
    pressure on companies where they don?t have a share.
    ?We are not against inspections, but it should not be done for the
    purpose of destroying,? he said. ?But it is impossible to destroy
    business in our case. Our companies will struggle to the end, up to
    the European Court, and we will defend our rights.? Representatives of
    the State Taxation Body refuse to give interviews or provide
    explanations.


    - ?In Memory of Heros Marie Tchilingirian?
    Revisiting Political Ideology and Strategy
    By Hratch Tchilingirian

    The immediate reaction of a casual observer of Armenian life in the
    Diaspora to the 120th anniversary of the first Armenian political
    party is, arguably, of irrelevance. While the majority of diasporans
    are familiar with the ?three traditional political parties?, they are
    hardly familiar with the program and history of these national
    institutions that have preserved Armenian political and cultural life
    in dispersion for over one hundred years. True, like all other
    institutions that have been around for a long time, Armenian political
    parties in general and the Social Democratic Hnchakian Party (SDHP)
    in particular have a host of challenges confronting them at this
    juncture of their history. Asking the right questions in
    organizational life sometimes is more important than listing new ideas
    that lead to nowhere. But before contemplating some key questions that
    need to be asked, it is worth highlighting the foundational ideas that
    shaped the thoughts of the founders of SDHP back in 1887 and defined
    the activities of subsequent generations of members.
    Social democracy and the liberation of the Armenian people ? from
    ?injustice, brute power and slavery, economic, political, social and
    material inequalities?? were the founding ideological and strategic
    pillars of SDHP (See Hnchak, Nos. 11-12, October- November 1888).
    While over the last 120 years the world in general and the Armenian
    people in particular have seen enormous changes, the fundamental
    principles of social democracy and freedom in the legacy of SDHP have
    relevancy to the present. The challenge to the party leadership today
    is to articulate that link and relevancy to Armenians living in the
    21st century.
    It should also be noted that long before the term was invented,
    globalization was at the heart of the foundation of the Social
    Democratic Hnchakian Party. The party was founded in Geneva by seven
    Armenian intellectuals from the Transcaucasus with the immediate aim
    of liberating Ottoman Armenians. Ideologies developed in Europe were
    articulated for audiences in the ?Orient?. Soon after the formation of
    the party, all the founding members started to learn the technology of
    the time ? typesetting ? as an essential tool of their work. (The
    metal types for the party paper came from Venice, prepared by the
    Mekhitarist Monks.) SDHP had branches not only in the Armenian
    heartland, but also in Europe, the US and the Middle East.
    SDHP was founded to struggle against, as its founders stated in their
    program, injustice and inequalities. They believed that ?the complex
    and unjust state of things can be reformed only by the socialist
    organization, by the direct means of people?s constitution, by giving
    each person in society real capacity of participation in the
    administration of all public affairs?. They argued that it is only
    through such approach that ?the natural and undeniable human rights
    are preserved? (See Patmutiun S. T. Hnchakyan Gusaktsutyan. Vol. 1,
    Beirut: Shirak Press, 1962: 32-37).
    The wider historical and sociopolitical context of the founding of
    SDHP was the modern socialist movement of the late 19th century, which
    was rooted in the working class movement in Europe, where the founders
    studied and lived. The two influential ideas were the democratic
    liberal ideology and socialism, which were dominant in the political
    discourse of the time. Naturally, liberal democratic ideas were not
    confined to Western Europe. For instance, the democratic structure of
    the Armenian National Constitution established in the Ottoman Empire
    in 1863 is attributed to the prevalence of the idea among Armenian
    intellectual circles in Constantinople and the provinces. On the other
    hand, the socialist ideology as subscribed by the SDHP founding
    members was essentially Marxist, but shaped through the prism of the
    Russian revolution.
    In general, the socialist movement adopted by SDHP founders envisaged
    a socio-economic system ? including socialized ownership of the means
    of production ? in which the community has control over property and
    distribution of wealth in order to achieve social and economic
    equality in society. The control of the ?community? was to be directly
    exercised by the workers? councils or indirectly by the state. Karl
    Marx (1818-1883), the ?father? of modern socialist philosophy,
    suggested that socialism would become a reality after the proletarian
    (workers) revolution, whereby the means of production would be owned
    collectively. Society would then progress into communism ? that is, a
    classless, stateless social organization based on ?common ownership of
    the means of productions, wherein the state would be nothing else but
    the revolutionary dictatorship of the proletariat.?
    Even as socialism provided the founding ideology of SDHP, this wider
    human liberation agenda gradually changed into a narrower ?national
    liberation? movement of the Armenian people. For instance, while the
    concepts of ?historic materialism? and class struggle were not
    applicable to the conditions in Western Armenia ? where religion and
    racial variables were more dominant ? a significant segment of
    Armenian intellectuals in the Caucasus subscribed to ?classical
    socialism?, infused with nationalism, a new national consciousness. In
    the short term, the main concern of SDHP was ?the economic and
    political conditions of the Armenian people in Turkish Armenia?. As
    described in their short term objectives, politically the Armenians in
    the Ottoman Empire were ?completely without rights, condemned to
    slavish silence, and [expected to be] extremely loyal.
    They are ?unmerited as witnesses in court; guilty when killing for
    self defense; [considered] offensive when complain and cry about their
    miserable condition; [are] persecuted for religion; do not have
    security of life and abode; [and are] subject to destructive and
    indignant attacks by brutal tribes?.
    For all of these, the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire have ?reached a
    state of political and physical destruction and material poverty?
    (ibid).
    The Party believed that this untenable situation would be resolved
    only by ?overthrowing the supreme
    authority of Turkey over the Armenian people? and through
    ?workers-ruled [ramkapetakan] political liberty and national
    independence.? Indeed, the idea of revolution as a means of radical
    change was a prevalent political goal and strategy in the late 19th
    century, not just for Armenian political parties,
    but to a host of other peoples living under the yoke of empires. Once
    Turkish Armenians were liberated, the longer term objective of SDHP
    was to liberate the Armenians living in the Russian and Persian
    empires as well. The three liberated entities of the Armenian nation
    would then form a ?Federal Workers-ruled Republic? [dashnaktsayin
    ramkapetakan hanrapetutiun]. What was unclear in
    the party program was where this new independent, free Armenian
    Republic would be created ? which parts of Western Armenia,
    Transcaucasus and northern Persian were to be included in it? This was
    an essential question that was not articulated by the founders and
    eventually caused divisions in the party.
    What is extremely relevant today on this 120th anniversary is the fact
    that insecurity, indignation, discrimination, and injustice continue
    to define the situation of the Armenian community in Turkey today.
    Although not on the scale of the 19th century, the lives of some
    70-80,000 Armenians living in
    Turkey are as perilous and concerning. Similarly, the conflicts in the
    Caucasus have not been resolved and national security concerns are high.
    On the ideological level, SDHP?s ?socialist values? are hardly
    mentioned or discussed in the current discourse of the Party and its
    activities. ?Injustice, brute power, economic, political, social and
    material inequalities? ? as articulated 120 years ago by the founding
    members of the party ? are burning issues today as well. While
    socialism as practiced in the USSR failed miserably, it is still alive
    in various forms of intensity in Europe (e.g., Britain under Labour
    Party, Spain under the Socialist Workers? Party, France under Lionel
    Jospin?s Socialist Party, etc.) and is more visible in South America.
    Indeed, in recent years, especially after the end of the Soviet Union,
    globalization ? the integration of economic, political, and cultural
    systems the globe over? and the political economy of ?transition? have
    become hot topics in regional and international relations. While
    strong economic growth as a result of globalization has improved the
    lives of people around the world in absolute terms, the process of
    globalization ? especially technological changes ? has often been
    blamed for the widening gap between rich and poor. As a result of the
    current world economic system ? shaped by a global capitalist market
    (the ?New World Order?) ? there is growing social polarization around
    the
    world. For instance, the wealth of the 475 billionaires in the world
    is equivalent to the combined incomes of more than 50 percent of the
    world?s population, that?s about three billion people.
    Another staggering example of inequalities in wealth distribution is
    the fact that the assets of the three richest people in the world
    exceed the combined GDP of 47 least developed countries.
    Today SDHP needs to address not only contemporary Armenian national
    issues, but also global concerns. Without engagement with the wider
    society and the world, the party ? and any political party in the
    Diaspora for that matter ? would become marginal, static and
    parochial. It is not a secret that the membership in Armenian
    political parties is dwindling. Serious questions need to be asked by
    the party leaders. What does SDHP ? and Armenian political parties in
    general ? need to do in the coming years to remain relevant to
    Armenians in the Diaspora and Armenia? What is the main ideology or
    philosophy that defines SDHP today? Which elements of the founding
    principles of SDHP are still relevant today? What kind of human and
    material resources are needed to articulate and disseminate those
    principles and values? How should political, cultural and social goals
    be implemented in various parts of the world where Armenian
    communities are spread?
    In our Diaspora reality today we could either look at our historic
    national institutions as precious museum like antiquities to be
    celebrated and cherished (such as the church and parties) or make them
    vibrant organizations that shape and enrich our communal life. Today
    it is not enough for choices to be attractive, they need to be
    convincing and add value. There is much to be learned from the past
    and there is much to think and do in the present.
    Hratch Tchilingirian is a scholar at the University of Cambridge.


    --
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