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ANCA Challenges Genocide Denial at ‘Institute of Turkish Studies’ Event

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ITS Treasurer Edward Erickson: ‘It’s probably genocide.’ 

WASHINGTON—Institute of Turkish Studies (ITS) Treasurer Edward Erickson responded angrily on Feb. 5 to Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) questions about his position on the Armenian Genocide and his organization’s ties to the Turkish government, threatening to have ANCA Government Affairs Director Kate Nahapetian removed from his lecture at Georgetown University.

kate erickson 300x169 ANCA Challenges Genocide Denial at ‘Institute of Turkish Studies’ Event

ANCA Government Affairs Director Kate Nahapetian challenges ITS Treasurer Dr. Edward Erickson on ITS ties to the Turkish government at his Feb. 5 lecture at Georgetown University.

“Can we get her out of here?” was Dr. Erickson’s response to Nahapetian’s inquiry about whether he believed the murder of 1.5 million Armenians constituted genocide. “This is not Turkey,” retorted Nahapetian, noting that those holding positions not shared by the lecturer cannot simply be silenced in the U.S.

The ITS had arranged for Erickson to lecture at the Georgetown University Center for Contemporary Arab Studies Boardroom on his latest book. Referencing Erickson’s opening assertion that history has an agenda, that “resources drive policy” and “resources determine policy,” ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian asked Erickson to clarify the Institute of Turkish Studies’ ties to the Turkish government and its policy of genocide denial. Dr. Erickson acknowledged that the ITS was founded by a grant by the Turkish government, but claimed that “the ITS has no strings attached, is not a puppet or an organ of the Turkish government. It operates as a separate entity. It makes its own decisions and its agenda has nothing to do with anything Armenian or the denial of the genocide.”

Nahapetian challenged that assertion, reminding Erickson and attendees that former ITS Chairman Donald Quataert felt compelled to relinquish his position with the organization following a meeting with then-Turkish Ambassador to the U.S. Nabi Sensoy, precipitated by an article Quataert had written acknowledging the genocide.

In a 2008 “Inside Higher Ed” article, Quataert told reporter Scott Jaschik that the ambassador “made it clear that if I did not separate myself as chairman of the board, that funding for the institute would be withdrawn by the Turkish government and the institute would be destroyed.” Jaschik’s complete article on the topic, titled “Is Turkey Muzzling U.S. Scholars?”, is available here.

ITS’s ties with the Turkish government were explored extensively in the spring 1995 “Holocaust and Genocide Studies” Journal article titled, “Professional Ethics and the Denial of Armenian Genocide,” by Dr. Roger W. Smith, Dr. Eric Markusen, and Dr. Robert Jay Lifton, the full text of which is available here.

Voice of America reporter Arsen Kharatyan and other attendees, including Lee Jundanian and Dikran Dourian, asked other questions and expressed their concerns about Erickson’s flawed scholarship and his ties to Turkey’s international campaign of genocide denial. In what was perhaps the most puzzling moment of the talk, when questioned a second time on his position regarding the Armenian Genocide, this time by Kharatyan, Erickson replied, “There are days I wake up and I think, ‘It’s probably genocide.’ There are days I wake up and I think ‘probably not.’”

Click here to view the embedded video.

Following the lecture, Hamparian commented, “We saw today yet another angry attempt by an Ankara-funded organization, this time the Institute of Turkish Studies, to enforce—right here in America—Turkey’s shameful gag-rule on the Armenian Genocide.”


Adventurist Ric Gazarian Reaches Out to Armenian Orphans

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CHICAGO, Ill.—With two Bengali tigers at his beckoning side, you might take Ric Gazarian for some Las Vegas act like Siegfried & Roy.

ric gazarian 300x258 Adventurist Ric Gazarian Reaches Out to Armenian Orphans

Ric Gazarian finds the tigers in India quite friendly during his travels abroad.

Quite the contrary. He befriended the cats during a stop in India to produce a film that’s suddenly hit the popularity charts big time. The full-length documentary, “Hit the Road India,” was premiered last summer at the Golden Apricot Festival in Yerevan and is currently the No. 3 sports film and No. 5 documentary on iTunes in the United Kingdom.

“The tigers are cared for by a group of monks at a monastery,” he explains. “The attraction wouldn’t be allowed in the western world. You enter a small canyon and are met by 10 giant grown tigers lounging around unchained and unrestricted, almost oblivious to tourists.”

The movie comes from a book he’s written, joined by another titled “7000 KM to Go.”

If anything, the tigers provide that extra kick in his octane when he hits the road. Gazarian is a worldly traveler. He’s been to over 75 countries and 7 continents—and he’s hardly through.

The film defines the experiences he had in India while competing against other teams in an auto rickshaw through unimaginable challenges.

It’s been nothing short of a whirlwind tour for the young adventurist, whether it was the time he was shaken down by Russian cops for a suspected bride in the streets of Moscow; quarantined by the Chinese government in Tibet for five days; felled by a case of unbearable food sickness in Yemen; or surviving a mafia encounter in Taiwan.

All said and done, it’s Gazarian’s work in Armenia that has set him apart. He spends months volunteering at the Zatik Orphanage and with an after-school group in Yerevan.

He also spent eight months volunteering at an orphanage and homeless shelter in Thailand. But it’s the Armenian experience that has left him with an indelible impression.

His first visit in 2003 came with his dad. It was a pleasure trip. He met an Armenian woman working at the hotel who encouraged him to work for USAID, thus planting a seed.

Gazarian already had a traditional career in the financial industry, but no vacation time per se. He hooked up with Jason Demerjian, founder of the Armenian Volunteer Corps, and moved to Yerevan the following year, renting a studio apartment in the center of Yerevan on Sayat Nova Street.

Gazarian soon found himself at Zatik Orphanage caring for 120 children (ages 6-18) and teaching them English. His efforts were also being spent at the Manana Center, an after-school group where children learned about photography, journalism, and film.

As a gesture of gratitude, he organized Zatik Fest, a carnival for the kids with horse rides, cotton candy, ice cream, clowns, music, and a moon bounce.

Since 2003, Gazarian has made annual trips to Armenia to spend time at Zatik and Manana. And each time, Zatik Fest is part of his itinerary. Every dram comes out of his pocket.

“When they turn 18, it becomes more difficult to stay in touch with the children,” he notes. “They leave the orphanage and proceed on their own across the land. Facebook and e-mail make it easier to stay connected. Last year, I hooked up with 10 former students and we spent the day bowling.”

A moment he’ll never forget was visiting an 18-year-old graduate in her new home after being placed out of Zatik. As she gave Gazarian a tour of her room, there was an enlarged photo of the two of them covering the wall. It was taken the day of a Zatik Fest in 2005.

“The lesson is important: Small gestures can mean a lot,” he points out. “Take the time to make the extra effort, the extra phone call, the extra e-mail, and extra visit. It pays off in the end.”

Like others making return trips to Armenia, Gazarian is impressed with the building that’s taken place—the trendy European-city look in Yerevan.

“What really matters is seeing how people live and prosper with so much less than the average person in America,” he says.

His work “7000 KM to Go” traces a 17-day journey he took in 2010 driving from Budapest to Yerevan. The rally, called “Caucasian Challenge,” went through 11 countries covering the 7,000 kilometers.

“We were competing against 10 other teams,” he recalled. “When I learned about the rally and saw that it ended in Yerevan, I knew I had to participate.”

His team raised $9,000 for the Armenian Volunteer Corps. The real winners were the children of Zatik and Manana.

One of his protégés is former student Gor Baghdasaryan whom he met as a lad of 13. They stayed in touch through the years, sharing adventures of the Caucasian Challenge. Gor is now a full-fledged film director and founder of Manana Films.

During a conversation, they decided to create a travel-adventure documentary and wound up participating in the Rickshaw Challenge. Gazarian drove 2,000 kilometers over 12 days across India in a rickshaw, a small 7 hp vehicle, while Gor and his brother Moosh filmed the amazing journey for two weeks, trailing Gazarian in a car.

“A most challenging event,” describes Gazarian. “Awful roads. Brutal traffic. Monsoons. Heat and cold. Police intervention. Terrorism. Food Poisoning. We got hit with all kinds of obstacles but made it.”

After a year of hard work, the film premiered at the Golden Apricot Festival before a packed house. It’s now being marketed and tops the iTunes charts.

Gazarian grew up in Wellesley, Mass., born to Armenian parents. He was educated at Boston College and worked in financial services in Boston before moving to Chicago in 1999. He left the industry in 2008 to start www.drivemesafely.com in Boston, where he remained five years. A recent speaking engagement at St. James Church in Watertown drew a packed house.

Armenian Tablet Unveiled in Yerevan

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YEREVAN (Armenpress)—On Feb. 4, the first ever Armenian tablet computer, dubbed Armtab, was introduced to the public in Yerevan.

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The displayed tablets

“Today we have come together to celebrate Armtab’s birth for all of us, for our motherland, and society,” said Vahan Zakaryan, the founder of Technology and Science Dynamics, Inc. “We have received incredible support to get to work as soon as possible,” he said, adding he is hopeful the factory will start mass producing the tablets in the coming months.

The chair of the Minno Tablet Company, Eric C. Ryan, said the investment program is among the best, both with respect to the support provided by the government of Armenia, and the staff and partners engaged in the program. “I hold in high esteem Armenia’s technological ingenuity and potential, and I am confident that very soon Armenia will be widely recognized as a hub for high technology all over the world with our support as well,” he said.

Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan, the Armenian Minister of Education and Sciences Armen Ashotyan, and the Minister of Economy Vahram Avanesyan attended the unveiling.

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A scene from the unveiling

Speaking at the event, Sargsyan noted that Microsoft Corp. has recorded high rates of growth in Armenia’s tech industry. The IT sector in Armenia, he added, needs financial injections and institutional support to develop. In this regard, the legislative branch of the Armenian government seeks to aid nascent companies in Armenia’s tech sector, he said.

“I am also pleased to note that Microsoft’s Innovation Center in Yerevan was recognized as one of the four best such centers in the world, which means that our young people have this tool as well to acquire new knowledge and new skills,” Sargsyan said, according to Armenpress. “We must think about incentives to give an opportunity to emerging companies to find their place in this rather highly competitive field.”

Sargsyan also noted that a legislative package will soon be introduced in the National Assembly to provide tax relief for beginner companies in the tech sector.

All Roads Lead to Refugees

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I have always been drawn to the themes of uprooting, displacement, border-crossing, and the ongoing connections between old and new homes.

Perhaps because I carry some degree of transmitted trauma associated with forced displacement, I’ve been propelled into wanting to understand how humans experience persecution, how they flee from it, and how their lives unfold following traumatic uprooting. After all, it is what we knew growing up, having genocide survivors as grandparents. And today, on the eve of the Centennial, as the survivors quietly fade away, we need to be talking about this more than ever.

My maternal grandparents landed in Canada after fleeing the civil war in Lebanon—displaced for a second time since the Armenian Genocide. As a high school student at the time, I distinctly recall my 80-year-old grandfather, Khatcher dede, at the kitchen table, duly studying Canadian history, government structure, and his rights and responsibilities as a future citizen. Canada would be his final stop in the tumultuous life journey that started in the region of Tomarza where he was born. I took advantage of the studious mood and did my math homework by his side.

The day finally came for my grandparents to present themselves at the immigration offices for their citizenship test. At his advanced age, my grandfather was starting to show signs of weakened legs. I remember wondering if there was a direct correlation between the pain in his legs and the inhuman distances he had been forced to walk as an orphaned 5-year-old child, displaced from his home in Tomarza, in the region of Kayseri.

As my grandfather passed through the main doors of the exam room, he fell to the ground; his legs had momentarily given up on him. He, of course, got back up, but fell again as soon as he entered the room. He must have been eager to pass that exam; perhaps his nerves and excitement had gotten the best of him. The government official, having witnessed my grandfather’s fall, told my mother that they could reschedule the test. Khatcher dede immediately interjected this, saying, “No, no, I am ready to take the exam.”

Following the test, my grandfather, who was not the most talkative person, especially about anything related to his harrowing childhood, turned to the examiner and said he was happy to be in Canada. He said he knew that Canada was a good country, because when he had lived in an orphanage in Adana, Turkey, Canadian missionaries had given him one of his first real meals since leaving home.

Indeed, the humanitarian aid provided to Armenian orphans at the beginning of the 20th century was highly valuable. Yet, the idea here is not to glorify Canadian humanitarian traditions. Mostly, this simple story leaves me amazed by the matter-of-factness behind such statements. My grandfather had said these words without a hint of victimization, bitterness, or repressed anger in his tone or body language. Is this how his potential and never-diagnosed post-traumatic stress disorder was expressed and vocalized?

Subconsciously, my grandparents’ trajectories as refugees have left an indelible mark on my being, even though they rarely discussed their experiences unless probed from time to time. In retrospect, I suppose that writing my Ph.D. dissertation on the refugees in Montreal today was never an arbitrary choice. (In fact, completing my degree also explains my absence from the “Scattered Beads” column and the Weekly’s pages!)

As we approach the Armenian Genocide Centennial with rampant denial discourse aggressively circulating in every shape and form, we must be prompted by the enormous urgency to preserve our survivors’ voices and narratives. One of the many commendable initiatives is taking place at the University of Southern California, where the Shoah Foundation–Institute for Visual History and Education is preserving every first-hand testimony for educational and action-driven purposes.

So many untold refugee stories are floating in all regions of the world, as the number of the displaced rises at a staggering rate. In the meantime, the least we can do is to start building, documenting, and preserving our own family archives before the sons and daughters of genocide survivors start fading away, too.

A Tribute to Sos Sargsyan

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By Arevig Caprielian

Sos Sargsyan was one of the most beloved and appreciated stars of stage and screen both within and outside of Armenia. It was, therefore, most appropriate for the New York Chapter of Hamazkayin to organize a program in his memory, and to pay tribute to the extraordinary Armenian that he was. On Fri., Jan. 31, fellow Armenians gathered at the Armenian Center in Woodside to attend the program, dedicated to this prominent artist, great patriot, and civic leader.

Sos 41 1024x768 A Tribute to Sos Sargsyan

On Fri., Jan. 31, fellow Armenians gathered at the Armenian Center in Woodside to attend the program, dedicated Sos Sargsyan.

Asdghig Sevag, the vice-chairperson of the chapter, gave opening remarks and invited Dr. Ara Caprielian to introduce the keynote speaker, Karine Kocharian, an actress and the executive producer of Voice of Armenians TV (www.voiceofarmenians.com).

The presentation began with the screening of an informative video prepared by Kocharian. The excellent montage of various interviews with Sos Sargsyan revealed his views, beliefs, raison d’être, and philosophical perceptions of life. It also highlighted his notable artistic career and, most importantly, gave the audience an opportunity to see and hear the beloved actor impart his stand on significant national issues.

The video was followed by Kocharian’s oral presentation, consisting of four parts: Sargsyan as an actor; as a person; as a patriot; and as a political activist. Having shared the stage with Sargsyan at the Sundukian Theater, Kocharian had a panoply of personal memories and first-hand experiences to share with the audience. Sargsyan’s multifaceted persona as an artist, concerned Armenian, loyal and honest friend, and dedicated member of the ARF emerged through the oral and video presentations.

It was interesting to hear Sargsyan’s commentary on the shortcomings in contemporary Armenia, his dismay at the less than stellar quality of television programs currently offered to the public, as well as his sharp criticism of the sub-standard colloquial language. Most of all, it was instructional and gratifying to see how Sargsyan endeavored to instill in the young generation patriotism and loving respect for our language. The presentation elicited a strong round of applause.

After the closing remarks, Sevag thanked Rev. Fr. Mesrob Lakissian, pastor of the St. Illuminator’s Armenian Apostolic Cathedral, for his unwavering support of Hamazkayin’s activities. She also acknowledged the presence of Dr. Dikran Kazanjian, chairman of the Regional Executive of Hamazkayin, who made the visit from Washington, D.C.

All those present lingered long after the program ended, enjoying one another’s company, and the scrumptious desserts.

Well Versed: Armenian Hip-Hop Artists Make Their Mark on Industry

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Special for The Armenian Weekly

Armenian culture has a historical wealth of musical contributions, but it’s only recently that Armenian influence has spread to the hip-hop genre. Since the early 2000’s, rap artists such as HT Hayko (Hayk Margaryan) have been active in Armenia. In addition to the typical hip-hop subject matter, his songs are often political in nature, documenting the daily struggles and injustice in the Republic.

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Nazo Bravo (Naz Aslanian)

Following Margaryan’s success, the number of Armenian hip-hop artists has increased both within Armenia and throughout the diaspora, especially on the West Coast of the United States. The 2013 “Armenian Emcee Cypher,” a showcase performance of West Coast Armenian rappers that took place in Los Angeles last summer, featured nine artists: One-2, Pknuckle, Apollo Poetry, Patrick Antonian, BlackJack, Nazo Bravo, A. Chilla, capital Z, and R-Mean. The event was organized by Pentagon Records, a label co-founded by Armenian rapper R-Mean (Armin Hariri) and his producer, and hosted by Los Angeles radio station Power 106’s DJ Vick One. R-Mean is also well known in the Armenian community for his Open Wounds movement seeking recognition of the Armenian Genocide.

Nazo Bravo (Naz Aslanian) is another artist for whom the genocide is a frequent theme. His songs “HyePower” and “Killing Fields,” produced by his label MightyHye Records, focus entirely on the Armenian Genocide and the political issues surrounding its recognition.

Born in Los Angeles to Armenian parents, Bravo appears perfectly at home in front of a camera. Maintaining an acting career on the side, he has appeared in a short film, “4 Minutes,” and in several episodes of the Armenian television series, “Dilemma.” His music videos have a uniquely cinematic quality to them, notably his song “James Bond,” an homage to the film series that features numerous clips from various Bond films. The video that accompanies “HyePower” is a dark and hard-hitting reflection, alternating between nightmarish dream sequences to uplifting, powerful scenes celebrating Armenian tenacity in the face of struggle.

The video screened at the Arpa Film Festival, and is dedicated in its final frame to “Victims of the Armenian Genocide and All Other Genocides.” The video is conscious of other genocides throughout, opening with a recording of Adolf Hitler’s 1939 Obersalzberg speech in which he infamously referenced history’s erasure of the Armenian Genocide.

Shortly after, the camera shifts to Bravo sitting in an armchair beside a set of railroad tracks, an open magazine in his lap with a cover photo of Tupac Shakur. A personal friend of the Shakur family, Nazo Bravo is highly aware of the origins of the genre in which he works. “I’ve come across some people who are legends in the game, you know, and I’ve soaked up some advice. I got a chance to meet, several times—and I would say have a relationship with—Tupac’s brother, and spend time with him and his family, and my family… It’s kinda crazy, you know, with Tupac being my biggest inspiration and favorite artist, that was amazing for me to be able to go from listening to someone and them being in this imaginary world at this point cause they passed away, to actually meeting someone who grew up with him and made music with him and kinda was with him along the whole journey.” “HyePower” is a remix of the song “HiiiPoWeR” by Kendrick Lamar, who Bravo also acknowledges as a source of inspiration in the song.

Having worked in the hip-hop industry for the last four years, Bravo describes it as an unregulated, cutthroat milieu. “A lot of people are drawn to music because they think that they will have an easier life if they’re successful as entertainers…but it’s actually one of the most difficult things you can do because everyone’s trying to do it… There’s a lot of traps, there’s a lot of people who wanna just take your money.” Bravo has nonetheless found considerable success. His recent single “Focus” has played on more than 80 radio stations and was featured on the prominent site AllHipHop.com; he also performed it recently on the main stage of the House of Blues on the Sunset Strip in Los Angeles.

Bravo attributes some of his success to the “opening up” of the genre over the past several years, in which rap music has seen many non-traditional newcomers. “The game opened up and there’s all types of rappers now… Since that it’s still difficult but it’s definitely opened up. And the world of hip-hop, all the blogs and the media outlets, they’ve opened up to non-traditional rappers… That’s one of the exciting things about it. It’s a very exciting time right now. I think hip-hop matured a little bit, and you know, especially after certain rappers got killed, they wanted a change… They started bringing different content, different subject matter into the music, and I think that kind of opened up people’s eyes. It kind of pushed the culture forward…”

Initially, Bravo says the reaction of his family and friends to his musical pursuits was mixed, but that has since changed. “There’s definitely been almost a trajectory of acceptance, in different phases. At first it was like, ‘Oh it’s a hobby, that’s cool.’ Then it was, ‘Ok, when are you gonna get over this hobby?’… But after a while they saw that I was doing more and more… Especially with ‘HyePower’… Once I did the video to ‘HyePower,’ that changed everything… Visuals are very important, and I really realize that after ‘HyePower.’ Especially visuals for somebody like me, who’s different.”

Not yet satisfied, Bravo says his ultimate ambition is to be the first Armenian rapper to make it on the Billboard charts and to be the rap equivalent of Serj Tankian’s group System of a Down. In the meantime, the constant refrain of “Ayoooooooo!” in his songs serves as a call to all Armenians, and an introduction to the rest of the world.

Meanwhile in Germany, brothers Vahe and Ashot Akopian have been recording rap tracks since 2003 under the name “Armenios.” Based out of Koblenz, their songs appear in both German and Armenian, sometimes as a mixture of both. Like Nazo Bravo, the brothers began as fans of the genre and eventually felt compelled to make their own contributions to it. It was after Vahe survived accidental electrocution in 2003 that the brothers decided to make their hip-hop ambitions a reality. Vahe has gone by the moniker “15Volt” ever since.

Their songs are characterized by their distinctively deep voices and strong bass beats. Ashot’s professional background is in audio, while Vahe works in video production, expertise that has been very useful in their musical career. Their videos typically feature shots of the urban landscape interspersed with scenes of the brothers rapping. Their songs address themes of “politics, Armenian identity, and hope.”

The Akopian brothers were among the first artists to rap in Armenian, beginning as they did in 2003, around the same time as HT Hayko. The idea of Armenian hip-hop was a very new one at the time, and the brothers recall that it was “…unaccustomed for many to hear rap in Armenian.” Their early entrance into the genre is even more notable given their location in Germany. But in spite of their unlikely setting, “People very quickly identified with our music. The family, to be honest, did react a bit skeptically, they had never responded to this genre. But with time, they came to really enjoy our music. Among our friends, everyone was listening to us.” Later on, Vahe was featured in the song “Rap Drive By” by Illem, an Armenian rapper in California.

The goal of their music is to “Share our thoughts with the listener. We call on our people to stick together, to respect and to love each other… For us it’s always important to remember our roots, because in a strange land there is a big chance that you may forget your own identity. But it’s also not wrong to learn positive things from living abroad.”

Indeed, the immigrant experience is a recurring theme in their songs. The 2009 song “La Cosa Koblenziana,” in particular, paints a dark picture of immigrant life; the lyrics in German translate to, “Immigrant where are you going?/[Anti-immigrant slur] What are you looking at?/Here you better watch where you spit/The people are kind here, but not to everyone/We aren’t popular, and we’ll never be loved.” Ashot reflected, “As an immigrant, it’s generally always difficult. We definitely had some very hard times.”

Ultimately, however, the Armenios songs leave a powerful impression of hope and pride in the face of adversity. Their 2008 song, “Alles Für Die Brüder” (“Everything For The Brothers”), ends its final verse with the lines, “I grew up here/But wasn’t born here/Later came to Germany and have lost something here/…We all come from different families/But have the same heart/My country, my pride: Armenia.”

A Medical Mission Trip That Taught Us So Much

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By Vahe S. Tateosian, MD

My first international medical mission trip to Armenia helped confirm a simple truth: the more one learns, the more one realizes how little we all know.

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‘Working with my fellow anesthesiologists from Armenia, I was impressed by their skills and knowledge, and overjoyed by their willingness and ideas on continued collaboration.’

Throughout years of training to become a pediatric anesthesiologist, I had wanted to be part of a medical mission, but always assumed that my role (once my training had been completed) would be more as a teacher rather than as a student.

Yet, my patients proved to be the greatest teachers, along with the physicians, surgeons, nurses, and students who shared their skills during my 10-day mission. The relationships with the patients and the Armenian healthcare professionals are most memorable and will stay with me the longest.

To set the stage, allow me to rewind eight months or so, when I was contacted by the Plasticos Foundation through my former employer, the Cleveland Clinic. The Plasticos Foundation was looking for a pediatric anesthesiologist who spoke Armenian, and had the ability to endure a mission to a developing country to perform complex pediatric surgery.

Plasticos was assembling a team to provide reconstructive plastic surgery to Armenian orphans and children from remote Armenian villages. The medical team coming from the U.S. would perform surgeries, and receive support from Armenian medical personnel. The U.S. team was to provide training that would ensure the Armenian medical team could provide follow-up care to the surgery patients equivalent to care in any Western country.

A total of 16 professionals were on the U.S. team, including 3 surgeons, 2 pediatric anesthesiologists, OR nurses, an IT team, and trip coordinator. The idea was to bring a self-
sufficient team that could serve patients from pre-op through post-op recovery.

Our mission was conducted entirely at the Arabkir Medical Center in Yerevan. On the first day, the team screened approximately 130 children. Sixty patients were accepted for surgery, beginning the next day.

Most days we operated 12 hours a day. As with any international medical mission, the days in the hospital were full of constant adjustments and considerations—from the equipment used, to the relationship between the nurses and physicians, and their “normal” routine. Thankfully,

I spoke the language, but was given a brief introduction to “informed consent” on our first day in the hospital by one of the anesthesia residents, an astute and well-spoken young man. Parents simply wanted to be assured that their children would be well taken care of, and they put their faith and trust in us, which was both humbling and inspiring.

Interacting with our young patients, their parents and (for the orphans) caretakers was, of course, the most rewarding part of the job. It was apparent, just as it is in the U.S., how much these pediatric patients were loved and cared for. A difference was the measure of success. Too often in the U.S., our successes are measured by efficiency, and speed. Too often, we don’t realize the impact of even a simple procedure on the lives of our patients and their families. These

Armenian families allowed me to rediscover, sometimes well after our encounter with them, the true purpose of our actions.

The relationships with our fellow healthcare professionals were meant not only to teach them, but also to teach us. Together we were creating a foundation for collaboration and learning by any means we had at our disposal. In such a technologically advanced age, our methods of communication, teaching, interaction and interpersonal relationships seemed endless.

Yet, it was obvious how much the Western world takes for granted. Many of our First World problems constitute interest rates, traffic jams, and status updates. Third World problems are urgent needs, such as social services, transportation, basic healthcare and infrastructure. A few of the nurses I worked with had been on call, stayed in the hospital 24 hours, and continued to stay and help the following day, well past their shifts, in order to contribute. All with smiles on their faces! Needless to say, many of them commute home on buses for over an hour.

We often take for granted the resources and information that are so easily at our disposal, simply a few swipes away on our smartphones. Yet, working with my fellow anesthesiologists from Armenia, I was impressed by their skills and knowledge, and overjoyed by their willingness and ideas on continued collaboration.

Back home, I stare at the thousands of lights of the cars ahead of me in traffic on the way to work. In Armenia, our jaws dropped every morning with the views of Ararat on the bus ride to the hospital. I’m often asked what I will remember most, what inspired me the most? The commitment of the Armenian doctors, students, and nurses. The frustration in their eyes and in their tone, mixed with hope. The ideas exchanged by fellow anesthesiologists and surgeons in the plans for future endeavors. The children and their parents who had only words and hugs to express their gratitude. Ayo (Yes), all of that and more.

Dr. Tateosian is a member of Armenian American Health Professionals Organization (AAHPO), whose mission includes providing outreach and health care through Medical Missions to Armenia.

APP Gathering Features David Barsamian

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WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)—On Feb. 6, David Barsamian, founder and director of Alternative Radio, was the speaker at a small gathering organized by Armenians and Progressive Politics (APP).

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Barsamian speaking during the gathering (Photo by Aaron Spagnolo)

The event was structured as a Q&A during which Nanore Barsoumian, the assistant editor of the Armenian Weekly, asked Barsamian questions that covered a wide political and social terrain, and included Armenian issues, the Arab revolts, the notion of “worthy” versus “unworthy” victims, media monopoly, the role of alternative media, social media, the Occupy movement, censorship, surveillance, Eduard Snowden’s NSA leaks, and WikiLeaks.

Barsamian, who was once deported from New Delhi because of his views on Kashmir, spoke about some of the challenges he has faced during his career. He also spoke about the way his Armenian identity has informed his activism, and the kinship he felt with Edward Said, as their histories both contained threads of dispossession and exile.

For over two decades, Barsamian has been a critical voice of U.S. foreign intervention and an advocate for social justice. A journalist and author, he has authored books with Noam Chomsky, Howard Zinn, Eqbal Ahmad, Tariq Ali, and Arundhati Roy. His latest books are How the World Works and What We Say Goes—both co-authored with Chomsky—and Targeting Iran.

APP is an initiative of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Eastern Region Central Committee. It aims to examine various topics—particularly Armenian issues—from a leftist perspective, and has been organizing talks and conferences since 2006.

While in Boston, Barsamian also conducted interviews with Noam Chomsky, gave a talk on “Reform or Revolution: Capitalism and the Environment” at the Community Church of Boston, and spoke about “The Global Economic Crisis” at Worcester State University.


Retelling David of Sassoun: An Interview with David Kherdian

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In Fresno, where I grew up just a couple of blocks down from William Saroyan’s childhood home, there was a sculptor named Varaz. His studio was near my house, and once in a while I’d pass by and see him pounding and chiseling away at one of his many wild and wonderful large-scale pieces. During the summer he’d work in his shorts and shoes, his bare chest and legs glistening with sweat. Then one day, my parents said that Varaz had sculpted something important, that they had given it a prominent place near Fresno City Hall, and that we should go see it.

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The cover of ‘David of Sassoun’

The bronze sculpture was huge and powerful: David of Sassoun rears back on a horse readying for a charge. His sword is drawn and his huge eyes are full of fire and resolve. I asked my parents, “Who is David of Sassoun?” And they said, “Our greatest folk hero.” Tell me more! They looked at each other and laughed uneasily. Something like, “He lived a long time ago and defeated our enemies,” was about all that my father could give me.

As I grew older, I was surprised to discover that although nearly every Armenian knew of David of Sassoun, hardly any could say much more than what my father had told me. Sometime during my 20s, I stumbled upon The Daredevils of Sassoun by Leon Surmelian. As I turned the pages, my delight at having finally discovered the story quickly petered out. The words were there, but the thrill of the story seemed to have leached away in translation. I had a very similar reaction to Mischa Kudian’s Saga of Sassoun, and though I enjoyed Tolegian’s version of the tale, especially his attempt to capture the rhyming patterns of the original, the story stumbled until it ultimately fell apart. I might have turned to Shalian’s definitive translation, except the length and the scholarly nature of the production daunted me. I wanted to enjoy the tale, not use it in a dissertation.

Although I’d admired David Kherdian for many years [Kherdian is perhaps most known by Armenians for his The Road from Home: A True Story of Courage, Survival, and Hope], I was frankly doubtful that his version could do much more than any of the others. The reason the writer/translators hadn’t been able to make David into a compelling story—I had concluded—was because it was actually a kind of mosaic of stories with many missing pieces, and to artfully arrange those stories together into a unified picture, even for a writer as accomplished as Kherdian, would be nearly impossible. But as I began reading his book, I felt the sense of adventure and playfulness and wonder that I’d always hoped to find in this tale. For the first time, David came to life for me, and, as it turned out, in a way that did not really match Varaz’s sculpture.

Kherdian’s David was powerful and courageous, yes, but he also possessed the all too human flaws that the gods and demigods usually possess. Varaz’s statue embodied the fantasy hero inside of every Armenian, the Savior that might have repelled the savagery that befell them during the genocide, but this David had a sense of humor, was a victim of temptation, and suffered from poor judgment; this David actually embodied the realities of Armenians through their long and tumultuous history at the crossroads of civilizations, a reality that they continue to face to this day. What makes epics great is that they seem to be borne outside of time altogether, personifying the essence of a people if not the essence of humanity—and Kherdian’s David of Sassoun does just that.

I conducted the following interview with Kherdian via e-mail exchanges over a period of a week.

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Aris Janigian: What inspired you to do this book?

David Kherdian: I don’t know that there was a moment of inspiration as such, as there was the knowing that a retelling was possible. This happened while I was reading Shalian’s word-for-word translation. I had already tried the Surmelian and Kudian translations, which I found not only worthless as writing, but after reading Shalian, I saw that they were totally false as translations of the original. But it was only after I got into the Shalian that it occurred to me—like a shot—that I could bring this tale to life, and do it brilliantly, even better than my retelling of the Asian classic, Monkey: A Journey to the West, because it was Armenian and I had it all in me: the sensibility, the psychology, the humor, the pathos and bathos, the sentiment and sorrow, and the need, even if tragic, of delivering it to a higher truth.

Kherdian 205x300 Retelling David of Sassoun: An Interview with David Kherdian

Kherdian

 

AJ: How long did it take? What was the process like?

DK: I began the writing in early 2012, and I’m guessing it took from six to eight months to complete the first draft. I spent the next two years re-writing, revising, reshaping, and polishing the manuscript. My original intention was to drop the concluding tale, “Mher’s Door,” for the same reason, I realize now, as the writers in Armenia, because the harshness of the last tale, which denotes the end of a civilization, was something almost no one was willing to face. And so idealized versions were presented, at the expense of facing its actual truth—that ends and beginnings cannot be separated. This misunderstanding then accounts for my own struggles with David, as well as the reasons for its obscurity. I seem to be the first, or possibly only the second writer, who wanted to decipher what it was the originator of this tale was saying to the world. As I explained in my previous answer, its meaning can only be found in the epic’s purpose, which might not necessarily be in its direct service of the people, but as an explanation as to the evolution of the planet, of which we are a part, which in turn places us correctly in scale and value: that the planet is not here for us, but that we are here for the planet, in ways that as yet we do not understand. If I am right, then David of Sassoun is an objective work of art, as I believe the other existing epics are. It is through our deciphering of these works that our own consciousness can grow.

 

AJ: The cover of the book reads, “David of Sassoun: Retold by David Kherdian.” Can you tell us what you mean by “re-telling?”

DK: When you change languages, you are automatically doing a retelling because everything has to move at once: syntax, metaphors, similes, expressions, figures of speech. And so the dialogue is altogether new, as are the descriptions of sights, scenes, people, etc., and not only new but different, because all of it must become natural in the language you are working in. There are times when you can make an almost literal translation of a figure of speech, for example, and make it as poignant as the original, where it feels literally translated, yet is just as strong as the original (as in, “horruh eengav,” or “fell into the hole,” meaning “completely failed,” to “don’t fall in the hole,” as the maireg says to the two travelers; the reader knows it is a translation, because of the quirkiness of the English, and so the figure of speech is retained along with the humor of the original).

There are many times in the straight narrative of the original where the psychological underpinnings, as well as the philosophy, were simply absent, so these had to be applied. The moral of the story can’t be provided alone by the actions; the tale-teller must inject these in order to keep himself connected to the reader. This has to be done with great delicacy, and this is the art of story telling. When and how to do what. In the end it must not read like a translation, which means that the teller must become its author, not its translator. For example, I had to rewrite the first genealogical tale of Sanasar and Baghdasar three or four times before it became my story. Nonny, my wife, would read the early versions and pronounce loudly, “It’s not you! It’s not you!” Until one day (because I couldn’t always tell myself) she announced, “You’ve got it, now it’s yours.”

 

AJ: The story occurs in four parts, each building on the last. In some ways, it could be the story of the birth and decline of any civilization, but there is definitely something “Armenian” about it, a particular cultural sensibility that you capture in your re-telling.

DK: With Armenians there is always this feeling, axiomatic in their makeup, that they have been wronged, that they are too good for this world, and should be exempt from its worst nightmares, simply because they are who they are and therefore stand above the fray—and yet again and again they find themselves caught up in it and, being small, are overrun time after time.

The superhuman giants of Sassoun have their own laws and codes and badge of honor, and never get mixed into the politics that nevertheless engage them, and although they win battle after battle, they do not collect the grapes of wrath because they stand above the world that they find themselves living in. They remain psychologically detached in their ideal world, but must enter and even invade the world of their enemies, which they disdain and repeatedly destroy, each time they are challenged by them.

In short, they are beautiful dreamers, whose ideals can only be preserved by extraordinary means, by being sterling, undefeatable giants. But in the end they succumb to the earthly, human seductions from which they are finally not exempt. Thus they pay for their sins in isolation, because they have no place in the ordinary world. Armenians have always sustained themselves with humor and disdain for the absurdities of life, which only humor can leaven, finding comfort in ideals, while preserving their sorrows in music that strains to find peace in beauty, however agonizing—that yearns for understanding from a world within reach but out of touch.

 

AJ: There is also a sense in this masterpiece that civilization itself is a burden. The giants would always rather be hunting and scouting through the forests. Outside of their total devotion to their mothers, even women don’t seem to interest them much, and when they finally get around to them, they treat them badly or get treated by them badly.

DK: Would a giant not carry an extra burden of discomfort, along with the expectation that, being bigger, they should know or do more than a normal human being? Most men would prefer hunting and scouting as boys to shooting and killing other human beings. The transference is put on them; hunting and scouting they chose for themselves. I suppose women were included in that transference they were dragged into; most men remain boys into young manhood, so in that sense I do not find them unusual, and Armenians have always kicked at civilization.

 

AJ: This is a fascinating observation. In the book, time and again, all the Armenians want is to build a society where they can live peacefully and honorably. And just because of that, it sometimes seems, foreign kings are keen to cause them trouble. Does this dynamic describe the inner life of the Armenian people even today?

DK: In the sense of being dispossessed I would say it is true. Any people without a country, or one that has been lost to them for so long, as well as lost to itself, I think does something to the psyche. I remember as a little boy arguing with other little boys in the neighborhood about God’s nationality, with their concluding that God did not have a nationality, but I decided in silence that if God was my father he must then be Armenian. In time I gave up this idea, but the estrangement I felt that night has never left me, and I have never had a sense that I could call any nation mine. I believe most Armenians outside of the Homeland feel this way. The scorn that was directed at me as a child by the established order only deepened this feeling. Hence, I have worked to become invincible.

 

AJ: There are so many attributes possessed by David and his forefathers that characterize Armenians even to this day. I’m particularly struck by his oversized generosity, which seems to me to be an Armenian trait. On more than one occasion, he announces his presence to his adversaries, so that they will not later claim that he “came like a thief in the night.” One wonders whether these traits are part of our so-called “genetic code.” Is there a lesson we can learn from this reality if it is in fact so?

DK: To be an underdog aligns one with others who have suffered, which accounts for the compassion many Armenians feel in the face of injustice, the sufferings of others. By offering a hand up, we assuage some of our own pain, while also placing ourselves on the right side of the equation. This natural sympathy comes not only from our own experience but from racial memory. Most Armenians have this to one degree or another. We can also become obsessed with the idea of fairness, addressing past hurts with a countering action that says, “This is how it should be,” which can lift us out of a posture of inferiority into one of superiority, but this can also lead to acts of hubris, as we have seen time and again in this epic. However, when this action is right and comes from a clean heart, we move from selfishness and self-serving, to one of simple honor—then the very order of life moves onto a different scale. The giants codify this change by announcing to the adversary that they are going to attack, to make themselves ready. By leveling the playing field, they are effectively rewriting their own history, not only with righteous victories, but by offering instant pardons to the vanquished, freeing them of guilt and humiliation. There are variations on these actions throughout the epic.

 

AJ: This makes me think how different David is from the heroes in the ancient epics, including the Greek epics, whose heroes were “raised” so to speak in the pre-Christian era. David possessed a kind of chivalry consistent with early middle-age norms of conduct for heroes and warriors. He is innocent at heart and yet a consummate killer. He does not pick fights, but is courageous to a fault when demanded. He conducts himself with honor at home, and yet struggles with temptation abroad.

DK: How can it be that as old as we are we have remained naive? Because we are innocent at heart, uncomplicated, like children who refuse to grow beyond their games into harsh reality, with its humorless edicts, presumptive conduct, and learned behavior—but remain, partially hidden in a corner, making faces at the adults with their fancy dress and ideas, their rules and regulations.

Gurdjieff, the spiritual teacher, said the entire cause of our misery, of our fall from grace, was our “educations”—the way we were taught to lie, to pose, to pretend, to envy, to betray, and hide behind authority figures, ad infinitum—which is the “civilization,” so called, that controls us. Is there no way out of this, excepting perhaps on the back of a magical horse, transcendent of the beliefs of man with a power that is outside of theirs, a power that does not fear the extraterrestrial, and is able to enter the domain of the supernatural, that children trust, the way they cannot trust the laws of man—that Way, which tests bravery over fears, challenges us in our faith, our hope, our love—that which is truly sacred in us, that we can only enter as a child…the myth now enters the Christian era.

 

AJ: I asked you what I hoped would take us into the historical aspects of the tale, particularly the chivalric medieval world view that I suspect shaped the sensibility of the narrator(s) and construction of the characters, but you chose to answer it with a poetic philosophy. This poetic worldview, I think, is your unique contribution to this tale and allows you to re-tell David of Sassoun with such artistry. In the past, when this story was told in English, the “translator” either treated it as an historical text, which made it uninteresting to all but a handful of academics, or hadn’t the poetic power or prowess to unlock its magic, which made the tale unwieldy and uninspired.

DK: I have to confess that history never interested me, but it wasn’t until I wrote The Road From Home that I realized why: History was telling the story of everything everywhere, or all of it outside of time, with the larger lens turned on themselves, that is, the historian at his dais—instead of on the storyteller, going down onto the ravished field, hoisting one casualty onto a stretcher, taking that person to the sidelines and asking to hear their story: What happened and how and, if you know, what was the reason, and what are you thinking right now, and where can you/we go from here?

That’s the person I want to meet, not what the general did that the politicians arranged under instructions from the power-possessors, that evil cadre that will always be with us—with the academics following after to professionalize. They are still producing books from talks and lectures and conferences on David of Sassoun; I got a new one in the mail just yesterday, and they are still at that old occupation of five against one. Leafing through this tome, I was shocked to learn that all these people seem to know or are interested in is how things got assembled, dissembled, re-assembled, and forgotten, to be re-remembered, ad infinitum. I was shocked to learn that the genealogical tales that make up this epic were published in different combinations, some singly, and then in various combinations, but only in one instance were the four tales collected into a single volume, which is the unadulterated epic itself. This worked out beautifully for these academics, who would never have to answer the question: What does this epic mean?

Fortunately, Artin Shalian, also an academician, performed a word-for-word translation of the complete epic. Just think what might have happened if they came to an actual realization—that this epic was about the rise and fall of a civilization. When I asked the editor of this latest volume if there was a consensus by them of the epic’s actual meaning and value to humanity, to the Earth, and finally the planet, he had nothing to say.

 

Aris Janigian is author of three novels, Bloodvine, Riverbig, and This Angelic Land, and co-author, along with April Greiman, of Something for Nothing.

David of Sassoun: An Armenian Epic Retold by David Kherdian (Tavnon Books, Jan. 1, 2014; illustrator: Nonny Hogrogian) can be purchased on http://www.amazon.com/David-Sassoun-Armenian-Retold-Kherdian/dp/0985134607.

Armenian Genocide Recognition: Necessary but Not Sufficient

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With the approaching Centennial of the Armenian Genocide in 2015, Turkish leaders are coming under increasing pressure from the international community to face their country’s sordid past and acknowledge the genocide. Significantly, public statements regarding the Armenian Genocide were made in the last few days by the heads of three European states: France, Germany, and the Czech Republic.

During his visit last month to Turkey, French President Francois Hollande, without using the word “genocide,” called on Turkish leaders to confront their history: “Memory work is always painful…but must be done. What we need is to carry out reconciliation through research and recognition of what has happened… By recognizing the historical events you will be elevated not only in your own eyes, but also in the eyes of the world.”

Hollande also held a private meeting with Rakel Dink, the widow of martyred Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink.

Similar wise counsel was offered last week by German Chancellor Angela Merkel to visiting Turkish Prime Minister Recep Erdogan: “Turkey must come to terms with its history.” Ironically, Erdogan was the one who brought up this issue by complaining that Germany was planning to allocate funds for the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide Centennial.

The president of the Czech Republic, Milos Zeman, went even further than the French and German leaders by actually using the term “Armenian Genocide” during President Serge Sarkisian’s visit to Prague two weeks ago: “Next year marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. In 1915, 1.5 million Armenians were killed.”

While international pressure on the Turkish government is expected to become progressively more intense with the approach of the Centennial, Armenians should be wary not to be misled by such well-meaning, but at times, self-serving statements. If such pressures prompt a Turkish leader to admit to the Ottoman government’s intent in committing massacres or even genocide, it would be insufficient to satisfy the just demands of the Armenian people. In fact, the raising of expectations for Turkish recognition could be counter-productive, because if and when Turkey does acknowledge it, everyone including Armenians may wrongly assume that our long-anticipated objective has been realized!

Several decades ago, when the world was still unaware of the basic facts of the Armenian Genocide, its recognition by the international community and the Turkish government was imperative. However, at this stage, when over two dozen countries, many international organizations, and the International Association of Genocide Scholars have acknowledged the Armenian Genocide, mere recognition is no longer the ultimate goal.

Rather than recognition, Armenians and all people of goodwill now seek justice for the genocide committed by Ottoman-Turkish leaders. Just as Germany paid compensation to Holocaust survivors, the government of Turkey, as successor to the Ottoman Empire, has to pay billions of dollars in restitution, and return the stolen Armenian properties and occupied lands.

To strive for restitutive justice, Armenians should use all possible means—political pressure, economic boycotts, public protests, and lawsuits—to convince Turkey’s leaders that they would be better off negotiating with representatives of the Armenian government and Armenian Diaspora, seeking a just resolution for this long-lasting injustice. As there are considerable disparities between the political, economic, and military capabilities of the two sides, Armenians may not be able to obtain all their demands overnight, but should insist that Turkish officials offer them as much restitution as possible in a phased manner towards eventual full justice.

The just settlement of the Armenian Genocide issue would have many benefits for Turkey, which would be hailed by the international community as a progressive and civilized country. Its leaders may even be considered for the Nobel Peace Prize. Recognition followed by restitution would also facilitate Turkey’s entry into the European Union. Otherwise, the continued refusal to come to terms with the Armenian Genocide would prolong the Turkish people’s embarrassing predicament of being constantly reminded of the crimes committed by their forefathers and continuously humiliated before the entire world as genocide denialists.

Should Turkish leaders have the courage to resolve their Armenian conundrum, the Armenian people would finally begin obtaining long-awaited compensation for their losses, enjoy an economically and geopolitically more viable and secure homeland, with the expectation that a repentant neighbor will be more inclined toward peaceful coexistence.

Rendahl: That’s No Bull

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Special for The Armenian Weekly

I met a cowboy recently. A rodeo cowboy. He’s a small-town North Dakotan boy who lived in Los Angeles for years and then repatriated to our home state some years ago. Anyone reading this column space knows how hard repatriation is—whether you’re from L.A. or Lebanon—so you can imagine my appreciation for his journey.

He’s articulate in a way that’s different from most people I meet. He doesn’t fall into the typical speech patterns of, well, anyone I’ve ever met. He uses metaphors only a rodeo cowboy would use. That every experience in life is as different as every bronco you ride, and you learn as you go. That people are like wine: They take on the environment they come from. That when you’re beyond a problem, you can describe it from the top of the mountain looking into the valley—or from a butte, a more fitting landscape for a cowboy—but you no longer need to drag it back up with you.

Sometimes I listen to him and wonder if I’ve dropped some kind of country acid or suffered a rodeo concussion, as he has some 10 times in his life. I mean, I don’t ride broncos, but I once had a pony named Little Joe who wouldn’t have bucked off a fly. I drink foreign wine to a fault, but I know that the Dakota soil where my ancestors are buried is somehow part of my being. And walking up mountains for no reason has never appealed to me, so I rarely view the world from that height unless I’m in an airplane.

How is it that the rodeo cowboy ended up in Los Angeles? I have no more answer for that than I have for how I ended up in Armenia for years. Both places are densely populated with Armenians, yet somehow my acculturation to Armenian village and city life in dresses and heels seems to me much easier than his acculturation to L.A. in a cowboy hat and boots.

When I meet people, I look for ways to connect our experiences. So when I met a rodeo cowboy who used to wrestle steers—yes, that’s a thing—I couldn’t help but think of a steer story. A girl doesn’t have many steer stories, but I’ve got one and no one can take it away from me.

I was about 13 years old, I think. Something had gone awry during the castration of about 15 bulls that week. That may be awkward for males to read, but it’s a fact of life for those who raise beef cattle. That phrase—beef cattle—may seem strange, too, since Armenians don’t generally differentiate between milk cattle and beef cattle as we do in the Midwest, but that’s how it is. On the whole, we raise cows for either milk or meat, not both.

The bulls, now steers thanks to a visit from an area veterinarian, were not faring well. They were bloating for no apparent reason and struggling to stay on all fours. Some laid down in the dirt of the corral, exhausted from the discomfort, I imagine, and exactly what I would have done in their stead.

My parents went to attend a funeral in another part of the state. Dad asked me to go out to the corral three times that day to walk the steers around. I accepted the responsibility, which in my mind was to keep them all alive until my parents’ return.

I didn’t know then that there were things I would have zero control over, that sometimes the world is just shitty (bullshit pun intended). So when I went out to walk the steers and found several of them lying on the ground, I was committed to getting them up. That was my responsibility, after all—to keep the steers walking and alive.

It was mayhem almost immediately. I had walked the short distance from the house to the corral, only to find that they were bloated to the point of hopelessness. I used my firmest voice to walk those still upright around the corral, somehow under the impression that walking would alleviate their tender situation.

The others, though, were another matter. I remember only one who lay in a corner of the corral, eyes rolled back in its head, tongue hanging into the dry, brown dirt. I tried prying him up with a 2×4 plank to no avail. I tried pouring water into his mouth, but he couldn’t drink. Tears streamed down my face because I could not save this living being from dying on my watch.

Some eight steers died that day.

Dad didn’t file a lawsuit against the veterinarian responsible for the losses. Neither my family nor North Dakota has a litigious culture.

My friend Melanie, author of the book Prairie Silence: A Memoir, would agree: Our dads have different narratives on the experience of a farmer’s daughter. One is that of a girl protected from the harshness of the land and life. The other is that of a girl altogether aware of the fragility of it all, from one day to the next.

I had no idea what eight steers meant in terms of protein converted into energy, but I had some idea of what it meant in terms of meat converted into tuition dollars.

My dismay was not, of course, the result of a lesser balance in the Certificate of Deposit account my parents had opened in my name, but of loss in general.

It was a traumatic day in my youth, but the rodeo cowboy might tell me that I am who I am in part because of the day in the corral, that my view is clearer from the top. He might tell me that we can work as hard as possible—in fact, that we must—but that loss is inevitable, and that to accept it graciously is the most dignified response.

And I would have to agree. For as many figurative broncos have bucked me off in life, at least as many have carried me to a new place of understanding and being.

And that’s not bullshit.

All Armenian Fund to Renovate Music College in NKR

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STEPANAKERT, NKR—Through the sponsorship of Moscow industrialist Armen Shakhazizyan, a Hayastan All-Armenian Fund benefactor member, the Fund is implementing extensive renovations at Stepanakert’s Sayat-Nova Music College. The project is co-sponsored by the government of the Nagorno Karabagh Republic (NKR).

Stepanakert Sayat Nova College 02 300x169 All Armenian Fund to Renovate Music College in NKR

The Fund is implementing extensive renovations at Stepanakert’s Sayat-Nova Music College.

The refurbishment of the Sayat-Nova Music College, which has a total area of 1,925 square meters, comprises major structural and cosmetic improvements. To date, the building has been reinforced and thoroughly redesigned, and its exterior has been overlaid with marble tiles. When renovations are completed within a few months, the beautiful landmark, which was built in the Soviet era, will be transformed into an ultra-modern educational facility, complete with well-lit staircases, a state-of-the-art auditorium, and soundproofed classrooms.

Over the past three years, Shakhazizyan has also sponsored an extensive renovation of the Stepanakert Retirement Home and the construction of a potable-water network in Artsakh (Karabagh).

Scholars Call for Reexamination of ECHR Judgment on Genocide Denial Case

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Highlight ‘Historical and Conceptual Inaccuracies’ in Court Decision

BOSTON, Mass. (A.W.)–Concerned genocide scholars issued an open letter highlighting  ”historical and conceptual inaccuracies” in the European Court’s decision on Dogu Perinçek v. Switzerland, and called on the government of Switzerland to request a reexamination of the Court’s judgment.

Below is the full text of the letter, released on Feb. 14.

***

An Open Letter to:
Madame la Conseillère fédérale
Simonetta Sommaruga
Cheffe du Département fédéral de justice et police (DFJP)
Palais fédéral ouest
CH-3003 Berne

After having read the European Court’s decision on Dogu Perinçek v. Switzerland (ECHR. 370, 230, 17 December, 2013) we, as concerned genocide scholars, believe it imperative to respond to historical and conceptual inaccuracies that are articulated in the decision, and we believe those inaccuracies have serious ethical and social significance.

We do not take issue with the notion of freedom of expression, something that scholars agree is most often an essential part of open, democratic society. We are, however, concerned about elements of the Court’s reasoning that are at odds with the facts about the historical record on the Armenian genocide of 1915 and at odds with an ethical understanding of denialism.

The decision asserts that: 1) “genocide as a precisely defined legal concept was not easy to prove”; 2) “the Court doubted that there could be a general consensus as to the events such as those at issue, given that the historical research was by definition open to discussion and a matter of debate, without necessarily giving rise to a final conclusion or to the assertion of objective and absolute truths”; the court uses the phrase “heated debate” in referring to the current political context surrounding the Armenian genocide.

First, it is the overwhelming conclusion of scholars who study genocide (hundreds of independent scholars, who have no affiliations with governments, and whose work spans many countries and nationalities and the course of decades) that the Ottoman mass killings of Armenians conforms to all the aspects of Article 2 of the U.N. CPPC definition of genocide.

In 1997, the International Association of Genocide Scholars (IAGS), the major body of scholars who study genocide, passed a resolution unanimously recognizing the Ottoman massacres of Armenians as genocide. The International Center for Transitional Justice (ICTJ) prepared an analysis for the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation Commission (TARC) in 2003, stating that “the Events [of 1915] include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the Convention (UNCPPCG).

In 2000, 100 leading Holocaust scholars signed a petition in The New York Times affirming the events of 1915 were genocide and urging worldwide recognition. An Open Letter from the IAGS to Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan, in June, 2005, enjoined the Turkish government to own up to “the unambiguous historical record on the Armenian genocide.” The only three histories of genocide in the 20th century that genocide-studies theorists (such as William Schabas) agree on are the cases of the Armenians in Turkey, in 1915; the Jews in Europe, in 1940–45; and the Tutsis in Rwanda, in 1994. The destruction of the Armenians was central to Raphael Lemkin’s creation of the concept of genocide as a crime in international law, and it was Lemkin who coined and first used the term Armenian Genocide in 1944.

The idea put forth by the Court that crimes of genocide may only apply to the events in Rwanda and at Srebrenica because they were tried at the ICC is incomplete. Crimes of genocide have been assessed as historical events by scholars for decades now, and both the crimes committed against the Armenians by the Ottoman Turks in 1915 and those committed against the Jews of Europe by the Nazis in the 1940s were deemed genocide by Lemkin. As legal scholars have noted, crimes of genocide can be tried retroactively, and William Schabas has pointed out that in the Eichmann trial in Jerusalem, in 1961, the word genocide was used retroactively to designate crimes committed against the Jews.

Further, under Article 10, “the Court clearly distinguished the present case from those concerning the negation of the crimes of the Holocaust. . . . because the acts that they had called into question had been found by an international court to be clearly established.” We would note that the perpetrators of the Holocaust were prosecuted at the Nuremberg Trials (1945–46), not for the crime of genocide, but for “crimes against humanity,” even though Raphael Lemkin had previously created the term “genocide.” The Armenian case, contrary to the Court’s assertion, does have a clear legal basis for its authenticity. First, “crimes against humanity” was the very phrase coined by France, the United Kingdom, and Russia in their 1915 joint declaration in response to the massacres of the Armenians by the Ottoman Turkish government. After WWI, the Ottoman government convened military tribunals (1919–20) to try 200 high-level members of the military and government for premeditated mass murder of the Armenian population. The ICTJ decision of 2006 also affirms such a legal basis.

The Court also decided, on the basis of Article 17 (prohibition of abuse of rights), that “The rejection of the legal characterization as ‘genocide’ of the 1915 events was not such as to incite hatred against the Armenian people.” Yet the ECtHR states (para 19) that “the negation of the Holocaust is today the principal motor of anti-Semitism.” We would note similarly that the denialism of the Armenian genocide in Turkey resulted in the assassination of Armenian Turkish journalist Hrant Dink, and has resulted in violence to others in Turkey.

In referring to the Armenian genocide as “an international lie,” Mr. Perençik reveals a level of extremism that belies all sense of judgment. We believe that the Court makes a misstep when it privileges Turkey’s denialism (a country with one of the worst records on intellectual freedom and human rights over the past decades) as a “heated debate.” As the IAGS has written in an Open Letter on denialism and the Armenian genocide (October, 2006), “scholars who deny the facts of genocide in the face of the overwhelming scholarly evidence are not engaging in historical debate, but have another agenda. In the case of the Armenian Genocide, the agenda is to absolve Turkey of responsibility for the planned extermination of the Armenians—an agenda consistent with every Turkish ruling party since the time of the Genocide in 1915. Scholars who dispute that what happened to the Armenians in the Ottoman Empire in 1915 constitutes genocide blatantly ignore the overwhelming historical and scholarly evidence.”

As noted genocide scholar Deborah Lipstadt has written: “Denial of genocide whether that of the Turks against the Armenians, or the Nazis against the Jews is not an act of historical reinterpretation . . . . The deniers aim at convincing innocent third parties that there is another side of the story . . . when there is no other side.” We believe that the Court’s decision and reasoning contributes to denialism and this has a corrosive impact on efforts for truth and reconciliation, and ethics.

We believe it important that the government of Switzerland request a reexamination of the Court’s judgment in this case.

Sincerely,

Taner Akçam, Kaloosdian/Mugar Professor, Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Clark University

Margaret Lavinia Anderson; Professor of the Graduate School (Current); Professor of History emerita; University of California – Berkley

Joyce Apsel, Master Teacher of Humanities, New York University; Past President, International Association of Genocide Scholars

Yair Auron, head, Department of Sociology, Political Science and Communication, The Open University of Israel

Peter Balakian, Donald M. and Constance H. Rebar Professor of the Humanities, Colgate University

Annette Becker, Professor of History, University of Paris, Ouest Nanterre La Defense; senior member, Institut Universitaire de France

Matthias Bjornlund, archival historian; Danish Institute for Study Abroad (DIS), Copenhagen

Donald Bloxham, Professor of Modern History, University of Edinburgh

Hamit Bozarslan, Director, EHESS, Paris

Cathy Caruth, Frank H. T. Rhodes Professor of Humane Letters, Cornell University

Frank Chalk, Professor of History; Director, Montreal Institute for Genocide and Human Rights Studies

Israel Charny, Past President International Association of Genocide Scholars; Director, Institute on the Holocaust and Genocide, Jerusalem

Deborah Dwork, Rose Professor of History; Director of the Strassler Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies, Clark University

Helen Fein, Independent Scholar; former executive director of Institute for the Study of Genocide (New York)

Marcelo Flores, Professor of Comparative History; director, The European Master in Human Rights and Genocide Studies, University of Siena

Donna-Lee Frieze, Prins Senior Fellow, Center For Jewish History, New York City; Visiting Fellow, Alfred Deakin Research Institute, Deakin University, Melbourne.

Wolfgang Gust, Independent Scholar, Director armenocide.com.de Hamburg

Herbert Hirsch, Professor of Political Science, Virginia Commonwealth University; co-editor, Genocide Studies International

Marianne Hirsch, William Peterfield Trent Professor of English and Comparative Literature at Professor in the Institute for Research on Women, Gender, and Sexuality; Columbia University

Tessa Hofmann, Prof. h.c. Dr. phil, Frie Universitat Berlin, Institute for East European Studies

Richard Hovanissian, Professor Emeritus, Armenian and Near Eastern History at the University of California, Los Angeles; Distinguished Visiting Scholar at Chapman University and the University of California, Irvine

Raymond Kevorkian, Historian, University of Paris-VIII-Saint Denis

Hans-Lukas Kieser, Professor of Modern History, University of Zurich

Mark Levene, Reader in Comparative History, University of Southampton, UK

Robert Jay Lifton, MD; Distinguished Professor Emeritus, The City University of New York

Deborah Lipstadt, Dorot Professor of Modern Jewish History and Holocaust Studies, Emory University

Wendy Lower, John K. Roth Professor of History, Claremont McKenna College

Robert Melson, Professor Emeritus, Purdue University; Past President, International Association of Genocide Scholars

Donald E. Miller, Professor of Religion; Director, Center for Religion and Civic Culture, University of Southern California

A. Dirk Moses, Professor of Global and Colonial History, European University Institute, Florence and Senior Editor, Journal of Genocide Research.

James R. Russell, Mashtots Professor of Armenian Studies, Harvard University

Roger W. Smith, Professor Emeritus of Government, College of William and Mary; Past President, International Association of Genocide Scholars

Leo Spitzer, K.T. Vernon Professor of History Emeritus, Dartmouth College

Gregory Stanton, Research Professor in Genocide Studies and Prevention, George Mason University; Past President, International Association of Genocide Scholars

Yves Ternon, Historian of modern genocide, independent scholar, France

Henry C. Theriault, Professor of Philosophy, Worcester State University; Co-Editor-in-Chief, Genocide Studies and Prevention

Eric D. Weitz, Dean of Humanities and Arts and Professor of History, The City College of New York/Graduate Center

Armenia, Turkey Clash over Genocide at UN Security Council (Video)

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Foreshadowing next year’s Centennial commemorative events, the Armenian Genocide issue was discussed for the first time at the UN Security Council on January 29.

Armenia’s Ambassador Garen Nazarian, addressing the main topic of the Security Council session, ‘War, its Lessons, and the Search for a Permanent Peace,’ began his remarks with a subtle hint to Turkey on UN’s peacemaking role: “to forge a deeper reconciliation among peoples, based on a shared narrative and memory of a troubled past. Often this process entails more than simply adopting declarations and resolutions, visiting and laying down flowers at victims’ memorials or signing agreements or protocols and shaking hands. To be lasting, reconciliation may require the settling of the past, recognition and acceptance of responsibility for committed crimes.”

Regarding lessons learned from the Armenian Genocide, Amb. Nazarian specifically mentioned that the “reconciliation process could be delayed for decades or even generations. This was the first modern genocide perpetrated under the cover of the First World War.” Armenia’s representative went on to insist that “ending impunity for heinous mass atrocity crimes is vital for restoring justice and normalcy.”

Click here to view the embedded video.

Amb. Nazarian also outlined the steps necessary for proper reconciliation between nations: “successfully reconciled societies and nations usually undergo an extensive process of restoring justice, including reparations to victims and their heirs in order to re-establish their national dignity and identity. It is also imperative to speak with one voice against the distortion of history, the denial of historical crimes, and negationism.”

In his response, Turkey’s UN representative Halit Cevik, not surprisingly, focused on the future rather than his country’s bloody past. Without realizing that he was condemning his own country, the Turkish delegate insisted that “those responsible for the most serious crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide, and war crimes, must be held accountable.” Amb. Cevik then went on to repeat his government’s worn-out denials, claiming that “allegations of genocide regarding the 1915 events have never been legally or historically substantiated. In this same vein, there is neither political nor legal consensus as to the nature of those events…. We believe that deriving animosity from history by trying to imprint on others an incriminating and one-sided view of the past, and calling for selective compassion, is not the proper way of respecting the memory of many Turks, Armenians, and others who lost their lives during the First World War. It is therefore important to face history in its entirety, and through impartial scientific examination of historical records and archives, so that the right lessons may be drawn from history and the common fair memory can be reached.”

Amb. Nazarian, in his right of reply, expressed deep regret to hear the Turkish representative’s “distorted explanations about the undeniable fact of the Armenian Genocide which took the lives of 1.5 million Armenian children, women and men living in the Ottoman Empire during the regime of Young Turks…. It began on April 24, 1915, and went on until 1923 — the systematic and planned slaughter of the entire nation.”

Describing in detail the deportations and massacres culminating in genocide, Amb. Nazarian asserted that “this crime has been recognized by a number of [UN] member states and international organizations, including the United Nations and its subsidiary body — the Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities.

In a second reply to Amb. Nazarian, Turkey’s representative became more subtle in his denialism: “We did not say that nothing happened in 1915. These events do not fit in the description of genocide which was defined in the [UN] Convention of 1948. Now, an Armenian delegation is raising that the 1915 events are genocide in the absence of any resolution or any decision of the International Court. So how do you expect us…,” before he could finish his statement, his cell phone rang, interrupting him in mid-sentence.

It is very likely that more such confrontations will take place with Turkey leading up to the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide. Turkish officials do not seem to realize that the more they deny and counter the Armenian activities, the more they help publicize the Genocide and the just demands of the Armenian people. Meanwhile, thanks to the Turkish delegation’s two responses to Amb. Nazarian statements, the Armenian Genocide was extensively discussed at the UN Security Council for the first time ever!

ANC of Eastern Massachusetts Consults with New Rep Katherine Clark

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Newly Sworn-In Legislator Co-Sponsors Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution

MELROSE, Mass.—On Fri., Feb. 7, activists with the Armenian National Committee (ANC) Eastern Massachusetts met with newly elected representative Katherine Clark (D-MA-5) in her district. This marked the first meeting between ANC activists and Congresswoman Clark, who won in a special election to replace former Representative, now-Senator, Edward Markey (D) last fall.

clark ancma 300x197 ANC of Eastern Massachusetts Consults with New Rep Katherine Clark

Congresswoman Katherine Clark with ANC of Eastern Massachusetts activists Michael Kouchakdjian, Dikran Kaligian, and Tamar Kanarian

Activists Dikran Kaligian, ANC of Eastern Massachusetts chair, Michael Kouchakdjian, and ANC Eastern Region Board Member Tamar Kanarian, all constituents of the Fifth Congressional district, spoke with Clark about a number of important issues of concern to Armenian Americans, including U.S. aid to Armenia, Artsakh, and Javakhk, and the recognition of Nagorno-Karabagh as an independent state.

Just days prior to the introductory meeting, Rep. Clark co-sponsored H.Res.227, the Armenian Genocide Truth and Justice Resolution.

“The strength of Massachusetts is our people and our proud diversity,” Clark said. “The Armenian community is a vital part of this district; it is unique and strong. I’m proud to be a friend of the community, and I am eager to continue our work together in building a brighter future for all Massachusetts families.”

“We look forward to building on our first meeting with Congresswoman Clark since she took office and to cooperating on a broad range of community concerns,” said Kanarian. “We warmly welcome her to our Commonwealth’s strongly supportive Congressional delegation and are eager to support her leadership, as a U.S. Representative, in advancing the policy priorities of her Armenian-American voters.”

“We are excited to work with Rep. Clark and introduce her to our extended Boston community,” added Kaligian. “We believe there is a real opportunity for Congresswoman Clark to win the support of the Armenian Americans in her district and will work diligently with her office to build that relationship.”

Clark won the special election primary on Oct. 15 and the special election on Dec. 10 to finish then-Representative Ed Markey’s term upon his election as Senator in June 2013. She represents the Fifth Congressional District of the Commonwealth of Massachusetts. Heavily Armenian-populated cities and towns in her district include Watertown, Waltham, Belmont, Lexington, Arlington, Cambridge, Framingham, Lincoln, Winchester, and Woburn.


Olympic Flame Still Burns with Almasian

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WESTFORD, Mass.—Twenty years after becoming the first athlete to compete for Armenia, the Olympic flame continues to burn brightly for Joe Almasian.

Tom Feature Olympics 240x300 Olympic Flame Still Burns with Almasian

Joe Almasian watches the Winter Olympics’ opening ceremony with the two jackets he wore as Armenia’s first athlete 20 years ago.

It’s never been extinguished, ever since he and Kenny Topalian represented the Independent Republic of Armenia in a rented bobsled while funding their own expenses.

The fact they finished well out of the running made no difference. Millions of Armenians throughout the world watched them parade into Lillehammer led by the Armenian tricolor. The patriotism alone was worth a gold medal.

“An experience like that never leaves you,” said Almasian. “You live that dream all your life.”

The year was 1994. Armenia was struggling as an independent republic for three years and needed a lift.

The country was still in recovery from a devastating earthquake in 1988 that took 25,000 lives and left another 300,000 homeless. Poverty and depression were rampant.

The two became instant household names. Arman Serebrakian, an alpine skier for Armenia at the Sochi games, lists Almasian and Topalian as his two role models for “breaking the ice” as Armenia’s first Olympians.

“They’re my heroes,” he said during an interview.

These days, Almasian is making his share of speaking engagements, rekindling the past. He’s been the subject of a full-page spread in the Lowell Sun and has accepted invitations to speak at schools. It’s been somewhat of a celebrity status for the ageless athlete, who continues playing competitive soccer and serving his Armenian church and community with unbridled devotion.

During a speaking engagement at St. Gregory Church, Rev. Stephan Baljian recalled the time his dad, Rev. Archpriest Antranig Baljian, took him to Connecticut for a surprise encounter with Almasian.

“I was only 14 at the time,” he said. “Here’s my father dragging me to Hartford to hear some speaker. I balked but went anyway. It turned out to be Joe Almasian talking about his Olympic experiences and I was never more entranced in all my life. Now I’m his pastor. It’s a sense of pride and admiration that has transpired to this very day.”

Since joining the church with his wife Kim and three children, Almasian has played an active role. He’s a trustee; co-chairman of the Building Committee, which has raised $1.5 million for the renovation project; and is part of the maintenance crew.

He helps keep the church mobile and functioning while Kim sings in the choir, and offspring Armen, Meline, and Tamar regularly attend Sunday School.

There’s a tinge of humor in his delivery.

“People always ask me how we finished and I tell them there were no gold medals, but we were national champs,” he smiles.

“I was able to fulfill the obligation of promoting my homeland,” added the one-time Camp Haiastan attendee and Framingham/Providence AYFer.

Like his mom Lucy (Oulohojian), Almasian is among the top Olympic scorers in AYF history, did soccer and track at the University of New Hampshire, and is an Eagle Scout.

“Being of Armenian heritage, it’s always nice to see your country represented,” he said. “I’d like to think we paved some of that road and gave inspiration to others.”

American Jewish University to Host ‘Armenia, Auschwitz and Beyond’

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Recognizing the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, and in conjunction with the 44th Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches, a special program, titled “Armenia, Auschwitz and Beyond,” will be presented Monday evening, March 9, on the Familian Campus of the American Jewish University, 15600 Mulholland Drive, in Bel Air, Calif.

Founded by Franklin H. Littell and Hubert G. Locke in 1970, the Annual Scholars’ Conference on the Holocaust and the Churches is an interdisciplinary, international, interfaith, intergenerational conference. It provides a forum for scholars to report the latest findings in Holocaust research, ensuring the valuable lessons of the Holocaust remain relevant for today’s world. This year’s program features Prof. Richard Hovannisian, Stephen Smith, and Prof. Michael Berenbaum.

Hovannisian is Professor of Modern Armenian History, a past holder of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair at UCLA, and currently Chancellor’s Fellow at Chapman University in Orange County. The recent recipient of the UCLA Alumni Association’s “Most Inspiring Teacher” award, he is internationally acclaimed for his advancement of Armenian studies. His extensive scholarly publications have placed the Armenian Genocide into broader Near Eastern, Europeans and Russian contexts.

Smith is the executive director of the USC Shoah Foundation–The Institute for Visual History and Education, as well as the UNESCO Chair on Genocide Education. A theologian by training, he continues to be involved in memorial projects around the world and lectures widely on issues relating to the history and collective response to the Holocaust, genocide, and crimes against humanity. He recently presented the keynote speech at the United Nations on Holocaust Remembrance Day.

Berenbaum, a world authority on the History of the Holocaust, is Professor of Jewish Studies at the American Jewish University and executive director of the Sigi Zering Institute, a think tank exploring the ethical and religious implications of the Holocaust. He was involved with the creation of the United States Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C., and as project director played a major role in its permanent exhibit; he has subsequently consulted on and designed museums on three continents. He is also an award-winning producer and historical consultant for numerous acclaimed films on the Holocaust.

The conference is hosted by different educational institutions around the country. This year, the American Jewish University is the host institution, with President Robert Wexler serving as the honorary chairman. Berenbaum is the 2014 Conference chairman.

The Annual Scholars’ Conference is supported in part by individual donors, along with grants from the Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany and Verbe et Lumière.

The program will be held at the Gindi Auditorium in the Main Building (Ziegler Administration Building), and begins at 7:30 p.m. It is free and open to the public, but reservations are required by calling (310) 440-1279. For more information, contact Marcia Sachs Littell, Vice President of the Annual Scholars Conference, by e-mailing scholarsconf@aol.com or calling (610) 667-5437; or visit http://ascconf.org.

Members of Congress Join Global Protest on 10th Anniversary of Safarov Murder of Gurgen Margaryan

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Reps. Schiff, Cicilline and Pallone Participate in Social Media Campaign Condemning Azerbaijan’s Pardon, Praise and Promotion of Unrepentant Axe Murderer Ramil Safarov

WASHINGTON, DC – Ten years after the brutal murder of Armenian Lt. Gurgen Margaryan, Representatives Adam Schiff (D-CA), David Cicilline (D-RI) and Congressional Armenian Caucus Co-Chair Frank Pallone (D-NJ) joined with Armenians worldwide in condemning the Azerbaijani government’s pardon, praise and promotion of his confessed but still unrepentant murderer, Lt. Ramil Safarov, reported the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA).

schiff cicilline pallone tweets Members of Congress Join Global Protest on 10th Anniversary of Safarov Murder of Gurgen Margaryan

Image of the tweets by Representatives Schiff, Cicilline and Pallone marking the 10th anniversary of Azerbaijani Lt. Ramil Safarov’s axe-killing of Gurgen Margaryan.

“Thanks to the AYF for launching this global initiative, to a worldwide legion of online activists for sending our message of peace and justice across the internet, and, of course, to our friends, Representatives Adam Schiff, Frank Pallone, and David Cicilline, for adding their vital voices to this far-reaching awareness-raising campaign,” stated ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian.

The U.S. Representatives joined a targeted Twitter, Facebook, and Instagram campaign, spearheaded by the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) in the United States and Canada, to raise awareness about Safarov’s brutal axe murder of Margaryan, in his sleep, during a NATO sponsored English language peace training program.  In August, 2012, Safarov, who had been tried, convicted and imprisoned for his actions in Hungary, was inexplicably extradited back to Azerbaijan, where he was given a hero’s welcome by President Ilham Aliyev, in addition to financial compensation and a promotion in military rank.  A chilling video featuring Azerbaijani Government officials openly and proudly praising the axe-murderer can be viewed at: http://youtu.be/ualn6CqJltU

In a tweet timed with the AYF international effort, Rep. Schiff stated “Azerbaijani soldier Ramil Safarov should never have been pardoned for butchering an Armenian Army officer. Appalling. #Justice4Margaryan.”  In an expanded statement shared with the ANCA, Rep. Schiff explained, “Ten years later, we remember Armenian Lt. Gurgen Margaryan, who was hacked to death by Azerbaijani soldier Ramil Safarov while participating in a NATO training exercise in Hungary.  Safarov should be in prison, but inexplicably, he was extradited back to Azerbaijan from Hungary in 2012.  Instead of serving out his sentence in an Azeri jail, he was pardoned, promoted to Major, given back pay and paraded through the streets of Baku in a disgusting and bloodthirsty welcome home.”

Rep. Cicilline echoed these thoughts in his tweet, noting “On the 10th Anniversary of the brutal death of Lt. Gurgen Margaryan, we honor his memory & rededicate ourselves to #Justice4Margaryan.”  Upon Aliyev’s release of Safarov in 2012, Rep. Cicilline commented that, “Over the years, serious questions have been raised about whether the Azerbaijani government is truly committed to developing a peaceful, nonviolent relationship with the people of Armenia. Its reckless actions this week do nothing to address these concerns.”

Rep. Pallone was equally adamant about the need for justice for Margaryan’s murder, in this tweet:  ”10yrs after he was killed by Azerbaijani Lt. Ramil Safarov, we still seek #Justice4Margaryan. Must hold Safarov accountable for his crime.”  Following Safarov’s release, Rep. Pallone had stated that Azerbaijan’s actions “only further confirm their desire to facilitate and condone violence against Armenia and its people.”

All tweets honoring Margaryan’s memory can be viewed by searching #Justice4Margaryan in the Twitter feed.

Azerbaijan’s glorification of Safarov in 2012 sparked international outrage, but did not result in his return to prison.  A statement issued by the White House on August 31, 2012, stated, “President Obama is deeply concerned by today’s announcement that the President of Azerbaijan has pardoned Ramil Safarov following his return from Hungary. Safarov confessed to the murder of Armenian Army officer Gurgen Margaryan in Budapest in 2004, and was serving a life sentence in Hungary for this brutal crime. We are communicating to Azerbaijani authorities our disappointment about the decision to pardon Safarov. This action is contrary to ongoing efforts to reduce regional tensions and promote reconciliation.”  The OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs expressed “their deep concern and regret for the damage the pardon and any attempts to glorify the crime have done to the peace process and trust between the sides.” Over dozen U.S. Senate and House members condemned the Azerbaijani action.

A listing of statements of outrage from U.S. officials in response to Safarov’s release can be viewed at http://www.anca.org/safarov.

Last Genocide Survivor in Italy Dies

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By Jean Eckian / Paris

On Sat., Feb. 16, Sergio (Sarkis) Musceghian, the last survivor of the Armenian Genocide in Cerchiara (Calabria), Italy, died. He was 98 years old.

Sarkis was born on Nov. 4, 1916, and was taken in by Italian missionaries in Rhodes while walking on the streets of Constantinople when he was four years old.

In his eulogy, Cerchiara Mayor Antonio Carlomagno paid tribute to this man “of great dignity and moral rectitude.”

“The community of Cerchiara di Calabria had the pleasure and honor of meeting Sarkis during memorial moments of this great tragedy of the Armenian people, still waiting for justice in history and men. We were honored to meet with him and the history of his people. Sarkis, thank you,” said Carlomagno.

In the last years of his life, Sarkis devoted much of his time to discussing the fate of the Armenian people, especially during genocide commemorations on April 24. “I cannot miss an opportunity when we speak of the fate of my people,” he once said.

He lived in the village of Nor Arax (a “Villaggio Armeno”) in Bari with his wife Maryam and her daughter Vartuhi. In January 2013, Bari unveiled a khatchkar (cross-stone) in tribute to the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

Nor Arax Last Genocide Survivor in Italy Dies

Economic Blockades and International Law: The Case of Armenia

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An adequate Armenian policy towards Turkey has spurred much debate, especially since the signing of the 2009 Armenia-Turkey protocols in Zurich. The opening of the border was considered one of the cornerstones of the protocols; thus, it is important to understand why the de-facto border was closed in the first place, and what alternatives to the protocols the Republic of Armenia has in mind.

armenia border 2 Economic Blockades and International Law: The Case of Armenia

The Armenia-Turkey border

This article presents the legal and historical background of the unilateral economic blockades imposed on Armenia by Turkey and Azerbaijan, and proposes certain measures that Yerevan may take to protect its national interests. This article will not, however, cover the topic of the de-jure borders of Armenia with its neighbors.

Interestingly, Turkey was one of the first states to recognize the independence of the Republic of Armenia (the legal heir of the Armenian Democratic Republic of 1918) on Dec. 24, 1991, following the collapse of the Soviet Union. In 1993, due to the ongoing war between the Artsakh Republic and the Republic of Azerbaijan, Turkey unilaterally closed its land and air borders with Armenia, although the airspace was later re-opened in 1995. Despite the closed border, some indirect trade still takes place between the two states, mostly through Georgia. However, transit entails additional costs and, obviously, an under-realization of the trade potential. The closed borders additionally block Armenia’s guaranteed access to the sea, which would enable more efficient trade opportunities. This has certainly translated negatively on Armenia’s ability to take part in international economic cooperation and to better integrate with multilateral trading blocs. The primary imported goods from Turkey to Armenia are food products, textile, chemical industries, and household goods. Armenia, on its part, exports raw and processed leather, jewelry, and various metal products to Turkey. To this day, Turkey and Azerbaijan have refused to establish diplomatic relations with Armenia. Additionally, Azerbaijan closed its border with Armenia and Artsakh during the Soviet era.

An economic blockade is a type of unilateral coercive measure. It is widely acknowledged that the term “unilateral coercive measure” is difficult to define. Nevertheless, these measures often refer to economic steps taken by one state to compel a change in the policy of another. The most widely used forms of economic pressure are trade sanctions in the form of embargoes and/or boycotts, and the interruption of financial and investment flows between sender and target countries. While embargoes are often understood as being trade sanctions aimed at preventing exports to a target country, boycotts are measures seeking to refuse imports from a target country. Frequently, however, the combination of import and export restrictions is referred to as a trade embargo.

Turkey and Azerbaijan have effectively been exercising an illegal unilateral economic blockade against Armenia, which has hurt the latter economically. The UN Security Council, the sole body to legally authorize sanctions against states, has not done so against Armenia.

On Dec. 1, 2011 the Second Committee of the UN General Assembly approved the text of “Unilateral economic measures as a means of political and economic coercion against developing countries” by a recorded vote of 118 in favor, 2 against (Israel, United States), and 49 abstentions. The General Assembly called on the international community to condemn and reject the imposition of such measures, while requesting that the Secretary General continue to monitor their imposition and to study their impact on countries and on development.

Earlier in October 2002, the General Assembly had adopted a resolution on unilateral coercive economic measures that called on states to not recognize or apply such measures imposed by any state across territorial boundaries, as they are contrary to recognized principles of international law. Armenia said that by voting in favor of the resolution, it condemned the continuing practice of imposing such measures, particularly in the South Caucasus region. Such measures contravene international law and the principles of the UN Charter, and their practice is detrimental to developing countries, as well as those with economies in transition.

Armenia is not yet recognized by the UN as a victim state of unilateral coercive measures. Its first objective should be to make sure that the economic blockades by Turkey and Azerbaijan are categorized as a unilateral coercive measure. Armenia has previously stated at the UN that the negative consequences of sanctions have been felt beyond the countries directly affected, as they have also had adverse implications for the free flow of international trade and the effectiveness of international economic cooperation. Additionally, Armenia said that it does not agree with the imposition of unilateral economic measures as instruments of political and economic coercion against developing countries.

The Declaration on Principles of International Law concerning Friendly Relations and Co-operation among States in accordance with the Charter of the United Nations was adopted by the General Assembly on Oct. 24, 1970. The maintenance of international peace and security and the development of friendly relations and co-operation between nations are among the fundamental purposes of the UN. According to the Charter, the people represented by the UN are determined to practice tolerance and live together in peace as good neighbors.

Turkey and Azerbaijan are in clear violation of the Principle of Good Neighborliness, as well as all of the General Assembly resolutions condemning unilateral coercive measures. Armenia, as a subject of international law, has to take actions to protect its rights and ensure that Turkey and Azerbaijan adhere to the accepted international norms and principles. Even though the General Assembly resolutions are not obligatory, they do create the guidelines and parameters for moving forward. Armenia must use this card to deal with the dual blockade as well as Azerbaijan’s accusations that Armenia is in violation of Security Council resolutions.

Treaty law provides countries and individuals the right to life, the right to an adequate standard of living (including food, clothing, housing and medical care), the right to freedom from hunger, and the right to health. By blockading Armenia, Turkey and Azerbaijan have violated these rights. The Committee on Economic, Social, and Cultural Rights concluded that human rights must be taken fully into account when designing an appropriate sanctions regime; that effective monitoring should be undertaken throughout the period that sanctions are in force; and that the external entity imposing the sanctions has an obligation to take steps, individually and through international assistance and cooperation, in order to respond to any disproportionate suffering experienced by vulnerable groups within the targeted country. None of the requirements of this Committee have been followed by either Azerbaijan or Turkey.

Turkey and Azerbaijan are also in violation of customary international law and general principles. Within the United Nations more broadly, Member States have expressed their view that unilateral coercive measures of an economic character may constitute unlawful interferences. The 1965 Declaration on the Inadmissibility of Intervention in the Domestic Affairs of States and the Protection of Their Independence and Sovereignty, the 1970 Declaration on Friendly Relations, and the 1981 Declaration on the Inadmissibility of Intervention and Interference in the Internal Affairs of States—with a particular emphasis on economic measures, among others—establish the basis for the customary law.

In order to be regarded as intervention, the measures must be aimed at influencing the sovereign will of another state in undue fashion. Thus, where unilateral coercive measures intend to induce compliance with international legal obligations, such as non-use of force or human rights, they are less likely to infringe on the principle than when they are directed against the legitimate sovereign political decision-making of a state. The Turkish-Azerbaijani blockade in this case is clearly an intervention.

According to Chapter VII of the Charter of the United Nations, the Security Council may impose forcible or non-forcible measures in situations that constitute at least a threat to international peace and security. This has not been done with regards to Armenia.

Some states view unilateral coercive measures as infringing on the right to self-determination, basing their claim on Articles 1, Paragraph 2, and 55 of the Charter of the United Nations. Finally, these states note that unilateral coercive measures can also have the impact of the deprivation of one’s means of subsistence, and can constitute an obstacle to the realization of the right to development. Armenia can and should also use these factors in its argumentation.

Armenia needs to be more aggressive in the international arena in presenting its predicament. The border is not simply closed, but has been closed in violation of the accepted international norms and international documents. Once the brief but aggressive phase of awareness-building bears some positive results, and once the government of Armenia finds the right time, it needs to take the next step of introducing various resolutions within all possible international organizations (especially the OSCE) and pressure Turkey to abide by international rules and norms. It would be helpful to study the economic blockade resolutions regarding Cuba that pass in the General Assembly every year. Some other strategies may prove to be useful for Armenia as well.

At the same time, it is important to keep the Artsakh issue on the margins. At the beginning, the pursuit should only be geared towards the Turkish blockade, and not the Azerbaijani one. There is a high risk of also discussing the Artsakh conflict in the UN, should Armenia involve Azerbaijan in its demands. It would be less risky to first pressure Turkey and then, based on the experience, decide on the course of action regarding Azerbaijan’s blockade.

It is clear that Armenia, as a member of the international community, has certain rights and privileges provided by international law, and should thus use all possible instruments in its toolbox to ensure that its national interests are served well. International law by itself is unlikely to produce any tangible results for Armenia, but it should be incorporated into the Republic of Armenia’s wider strategy and foreign policy.

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