Hillary Clinton To Meet With Armenian-American Organizations As Turk

HILLARY CLINTON TO MEET WITH ARMENIAN-AMERICAN ORGANIZATIONS AS TURKEY CONTINUES TO LINK NAGORNO KARABAKH

Panorama.am
13:54 11/01/2010

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will meet with
Armenian-American organizations next month to consult on the protocols
between Armenia and Turkey, announced the Armenian Assembly of America
(Assembly). The Assembly requested a meeting with Secretary Clinton
to discuss issues of concern to the community.

"The Republic of Armenia through its President, has taken bold steps,
yet the Republic of Turkey continues its counterproductive actions
with respect to normalizing relations with Armenia," stated Assembly
Executive Director Bryan Ardouny. "As such, this meeting offers an
important opportunity to discuss the Administration’s efforts to hold
Turkey accountable," added Ardouny.

The Armenian General Benevolent Union, the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of America (Eastern), the Diocese of the Armenian Church of
America (Western), the Knights of Vartan, along with the Assembly
issued a joint statement in support of President Serzh Sargsyan’s
initiative "in taking a positive approach to the process of normalizing
relations…." The joint statement also made it clear that we will
continue "to stand firmly with the Nagorno Karabakh Republic to ensure
its freedom and security" and will also continue to lead the charge
with respect to "all those working for universal affirmation of the
Armenian Genocide."

While Armenia has taken a constructive approach, in direct
contradiction to the protocols signed in October of 2009, Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan continues to link progress on
the protocols to a resolution of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. In
addition, while in Washington, DC last month, Erdogan, when asked
about the Armenian Genocide on the Charlie Rose television program,
stated that "I can say very clearly that we do not accept genocide.

This is completely a lie."

"In the face of Turkey’s ongoing campaign of denial, we must redouble
our efforts to secure U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide and
urge swift passage of the Armenian Genocide resolution in Congress,"
stated Ardouny.

Invited to attend the meeting with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
are: the Armenian Assembly of America, the Armenian General Benevolent
Union, the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern),
the Diocese of the Armenian Church (Western), the Knights of Vartan,
and the Armenian National Committee of America.

Secrets Revealed in Turkey Revive Armenian Identity

The New York Times
January 10, 2010 Sunday
Late Edition – Final

Secrets Revealed in Turkey Revive Armenian Identity

By DAN BILEFSKY; Sebnem Arsu contributed reporting.

SECTION: Section A; Column 0; Foreign Desk; Pg. 12
ISTANBUL

Fethiye Cetin recalled the day her identity shattered.

She was a young law student when her beloved maternal grandmother,
Seher, took her aside and told her a secret she had hidden for 60
years: that Seher was born a Christian Armenian with the name Heranus
and had been saved from a death march by a Turkish officer, who
snatched her from her mother’s arms in 1915 and raised her as Turkish
and Muslim.

Ms. Cetin’s grandmother, whose parents later turned out to have
escaped to New York, was just one of many Armenian children who were
kidnapped and adopted by Turkish families during the Armenian
genocide, the mass killing of more than a million Armenians by the
Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1918. These survivors were sometimes
called ”the leftovers of the sword.”

”I was in a state of shock for a long time — I suddenly saw the
world through different eyes,” said Ms. Cetin, now 60. ”I had grown
up thinking of myself as a Turkish Muslim, not an Armenian. There had
been nothing in the history books about the massacre of a people that
had been erased from Turkey’s collective memory. Like my grandmother,
many had buried their identity — and the horrors they had seen —
deep inside of them.”

Now, however, Ms. Cetin, a prominent advocate for the estimated
50,000-member Armenian-Turkish community here and one of the country’s
leading human rights lawyers, believes a seminal moment has arrived in
which Turkey and Armenia can finally confront the ghosts of history
and possibly even overcome one of the world’s most enduring and bitter
rivalries.

She already has confronted her divided self, which led her from
Istanbul to a 10th Street grocery store in New York, where her
Armenian relatives had rebuilt their broken lives after fleeing
Turkey. (Many of the Armenians who survive in Turkey today do so
because their ancestors lived in western provinces during the
killings, which took place mostly in the east.)

The latest tentative step toward healing generations of acrimony
between the countries took place in October on a soccer field in the
northwestern Turkish city of Bursa, when President Serzh Sargsyan
became the first Armenian head of state to travel to Turkey to attend
a soccer game between the national teams. In this latest round of
soccer diplomacy, Mr. Sargsyan was joined at the match by President
Abdullah Gul of Turkey, who had traveled to a soccer match in Armenia
the year before.

”We do not write history here,” Mr. Gul told his Armenian
counterpart in Bursa. ”We are making history.”

The Bursa encounter came just days after Turkey and Armenia signed a
historic series of protocols to establish diplomatic relations and to
reopen the Turkish-Armenian border, which has been closed since 1993.
The agreement, strongly backed by the United States, the European
Union and Russia, has come under vociferous opposition from
nationalists in both Turkey and Armenia.

Armenia’s sizable diaspora — estimated at more than seven million —
in the United States, France and elsewhere is alarmed that the new
warmth may be misused as an excuse to forgive and forget in Turkey,
where even uttering the words Armenian genocide can be grounds for
prosecution.

Also threatening the deal is Armenia’s lingering fight with
Azerbaijan, its neighbor and a close ally of Turkey, over a breakaway
Armenian enclave in Azerbaijan.

The agreement, which has yet to be ratified in the Turkish or Armenian
Parliaments, could have broad consequences, helping to end landlocked
Armenia’s economic isolation, while lifting Turkey’s chances for
admission into the European Union, where the genocide issue remains a
crucial obstacle.

But Ms. Cetin argued that the most enduring consequence could be
helping to overcome mutual recriminations. She said Armenians had been
battling a powerful and collective denial in Turkish society about the
killings.

”Most people in Turkish society have no idea what happened in 1915,
and the Armenians they meet are introduced as monsters or villains or
enemies in their history books,” she said. ”Turkey has to confront
the past, but before this confrontation can happen, people must know
who they are confronting. So we need the borders to come down in order
to have dialogue.”

Ms. Cetin, who was raised by her maternal grandmother, said the
borders in her own Muslim Turkish heart came down irrevocably when her
grandmother revealed her Armenian past.

Heranus, she said, was only a child in 1915 when Turkish soldiers
arrived in her ethnically Armenian Turkish village of Maden, rounding
up the men and sequestering women and girls in a church courtyard with
high walls. When they climbed on each others’ shoulders, Heranus told
her, they saw men’s throats being cut and bodies being thrown in the
Tigris River, which ran red for days.

During the forced march toward exile that followed, Heranus said, she
saw her own grandmother drown two of her grandchildren before she
herself jumped into the water and disappeared.

Heranus’s mother, Isguhi, survived the march, which ended in Aleppo,
Syria, and went to join her husband, Hovannes, who had left the
village for New York in 1913, opening a grocery store. They started a
new family.

”My grandmother was trembling as she told me her story,” Ms. Cetin
said. ”She would always say, ‘May those days vanish, never to
return.’ ”

Ms. Cetin, a rebellious left-wing student activist at the time of her
grandmother’s revelation, recalled how confronting Armenian identity,
then as now, had been taboo. ”The same people who spoke the loudest
about injustices and screamed that the world could be a better place
would only whisper when it came to the Armenian issue,” she said.
”It really hurt me.”

Ms. Cetin, who was imprisoned for three years in the 1980s for
opposing the military regime in Turkey at the time, said her newfound
Armenian identity inspired her to become a human rights lawyer. When
Hrant Dink, editor of the Turkish-Armenian newspaper Agos, was
prosecuted in 2006 for insulting Turkishness by referring to the
genocide, she became his lawyer. On Jan. 19, 2007, Mr. Dink was killed
outside his office by a young ultranationalist.

Ms. Cetin published a memoir about her grandmother in 2004. She said
she purposely omitted the word ”genocide” from her book because
using the word erected a roadblock to reconciliation.

”I wanted to concentrate on the human dimension,” she said. ”I
wanted to question the silence of people like my grandmother who kept
their stories hidden for years, while going through the pain.”

When her grandmother died in 2000 at age 95, Ms. Cetin honored her
last wish, publishing a death notice in Agos, in the hope of tracking
down her long-lost Armenian family, including her grandmother’s sister
Margaret, whom she had never seen.

At her emotional reunion with her Armenian family in New York, several
months later, Margaret, or ”Auntie Marge,” told Ms. Cetin that when
her father had died in 1965, she had found a piece of paper carefully
folded in his wallet that he had been keeping for years. It was a
letter Heranus had written to him shortly after he had left for the
United States.

”We all keep hoping and praying that you are well,” the note said.

LTP: Two years after election we’re strong & united as never before

Levon Ter-Petrosyan: Two years after the presidential election we are
strong and united as never before

2010-01-08 17:30:00

ArmInfo. "All our victories were real, not just moral. Our key
victory is that 2 years after the presidential election we are strong
and united as never before despite the tragic events of March 1,
persecutions and arrests," said Levon Ter-Petrosyan, Leader of the
Armenian National Congress, during the rally of his supporters. He
welcomed Suren Surenyants and Hmayak Hovhannissyan who withdrew their
candidatures in favor of Nikol Pashinyan. "Can you imagine something
like this in the camp of the
authorities?" he said.

He said the election at the district No10 were falsified from the very
beginning. He is sure that in no other country a candidate for
parliament could be arrested. "The letter of the law is prior for the
country. However, the Armenian authorities are so short-sighted that
they did not understand that they could gain dividends from the
international community if they did not arrest Pashinyan," Levon
Ter-Petrosyan said. For conclusion, he said that Nikol Pashinyan has
already gained victory in the election given the number of the
participants in the rally. He also said that the next ANC rally will
be held on March 1. After the rally, 1500-2000 participants in the
rally went in a procession along the streets.

The ANC rally is timed to the additional parliamentary elections in
the election district No10 scheduled for January 10. Nikol Pashinyan,
the oppositionist, the editor of Haykakan Zhamanak Daily, who is
currently in custody, advanced his candidature at the elections.
Pashinyan is charged with Articles 316.1 and 225.1 of the Armenian
Criminal Code (organizing mass public disturbances, using force
against a representative of the state and violating the law regarding
the staging of public events). Pashinyan had been wanted for over a
year and emerged from the underground after the president announced
amnesty. The deputy mandate of the above election district proved
vacant after the former parliamentarian Khachatur Sukiasyan was
deprived of his mandate for complicity in the incidents of March 2008
in Yerevan.

Many neglects in Armenia’s culture

news.am, Armenia
Jan 9 2010

Many neglects in Armenia’s culture

11:03 / 01/09/2010The most significant achievement of 2009 in the
culture was Armenia’s inclusion in the countries running international
festivals, to a large extent thanks to cultural workers headed by
director Yervand Ghazanchyan, the director of Stanislavskiy Russian
Drama theatre Alexander Grigoryan told NEWS.am.

He also underlined that Russian Drama theatre bestowed an award after
Kirill Lavrov at the international theatre festival in St. Petersburg.
`No one in Armenia got higher award ever,’ the director said.

As to the neglects, Grigoryan ruefully outlined that theatre after
Sundukyan still has no art director. `On the whole it is difficult to
mention one or two neglects as there are a lot in cultural field
though with fault of ours,’ director concluded.

A.G.

Azerbaijani UN delegates sent letter to Ban Ki-moon

news.am, Armenia
Jan 8 2010

Azerbaijani UN delegates sent letter to Ban Ki-moon

16:49 / 01/08/2010 Permanent Representation of Azerbaijan to the UN
sent a letter to Secretary General Ban Ki-moon expressing concern over
the fact that `Armenia keeps on neglecting its international
commitments related to Nagorno-Karabakh conflict.’

Armenia’s stance on the real essence of the conflict threatens to lead
astray the international community. Unconstructive position of
Armenian authorities endangers solution to the dispute by political
means, the letter reads.

Azerbaijani delegates claim that Armenia is presently the only
mono-ethnic country in the world where racial discrimination prevails
in politics, calling on UN and international organizations to
undertake more serious measures against Armenia, Azertag reports.

A.G.

Armenian Inventors Develop Bar Clamping, Tightening Tool

US Fed News
January 7, 2010 Thursday 5:16 PM EST

Publication No. WO/1910/000001 Published on Jan. 7, Armenian Inventors
Develop Bar Clamping, Tightening Tool

GENEVA, Jan. 8 — Karen Gasparyan and Patvakan Hakhinyan, both of
Armenia, have developed a bar clamping and tightening tool.

According to an abstract posted by the World Intellectual Property
Organization: "The present invention is related to hand-operated
clamping and tightening tools. A bar clamping and tightening tool is
disclosed, comprising a bar, a stationary jaw assembly which can be
fixed on and released from either end of the bar and comprises a
stationary jaw mounted in and spring- loaded relative to the housing
of the stationary jaw assembly, a moveable jaw assembly which can
slide along the bar and comprises a housing to which a moveable jaw
and a rear handle are fixed, a drive handle mounted in the housing of
the moveable jaw assembly so that it can pivot about said housing,
drive levers which are mounted in and spring- loaded relative to the
housing of the moveable jaw assembly and can slide along and be fixed
on the bar, a locking lever mounted in the front of the housing of the
moveable jaw assembly, wherein the stationary jaw can pivot about the
housing of the stationary jaw assembly and comprises a means for being
fixed on the bar. The efficiency of use is increased." The invention
carries International Patent Publication No. WO/1910/000001 on Jan.
07. The original patent was filed in Armenia under application No.
PCT/AM2009/000004 on July 1, 2009. It is available at:
000004

http://www.wipo.int/pctdb/en/ia.jsp?ia=AM2009/

AGBU Brazil Celebrates Its 45th Anniversary

AGBU Press Office
55 East 59th Street
New York, NY 10022-1112
Phone: 212.319.6383, x118
Fax: 212.319.6507
Email: [email protected]
Website:

PRESS RELEASE

Friday, January 8, 2010

AGBU Brazil Celebrates Its 45th Anniversary

On Sunday, October 25, 2009, AGBU Brazil celebrated its 45th
anniversary at Buffet Maison du France in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Close to
500 guests of all ages came out to celebrate the milestone event,
which was notable for the large presence from the emerging generation
of Brazilian Armenians.

The event was attended by numerous guests, including His Excellency
Valery Mkrtumian, General Consul of the Republic of Armenia, His
Excellency Anatoly Kapko, General Consul of Russia, Reverend Yesnig
Guzelian, representing Archbishop Datev Karibian, Reverend Boghos
Baronian, and Reverend Roy Abrahamian of the Armenian Protestant
Church. Also in attendance were Ruben Kechichian, chairman of AGBU
Buenos Aires and member of AGBU Central Board of Directors, and his
wife, Elsa.

The event honored three distinguished AGBU Brazil members for their
invaluable work and commitment to the organization and its work:
former AGBU Brazil chairman Carlos Matheus Der Haroutiounian, former
AGBU Brazil board member Hampartsum Moumdjian, and Manuel Kherlakian
Neto, an AGBU member and generous supporter of AGBU Brazil’s many
programs. Der Haroutiounian and Moumdjian received AGBU Honor Member
diplomas, granted by AGBU Central Board of Directors, while Neto was
given the chapter’s annual Personality of the Year award.

AGBU Brazil chairman Krikor Manukian congratulated the honorees during
his speech and thanked everyone for the success of the event. He also
enthusiastically mentioned the youth who participated in the South
American Olympic Games, organized by Córdoba. Ruben Kechichian passed
along a message of congratulations from AGBU President Berge
Setrakian, and expressed his happiness and pride in participating in
the 45th-anniversary celebration. The evening’s guests were treated to
a special live music performance by the band Yerevan 50 of Montevideo,
Uruguay.

Established in 1906, AGBU () is the world’s largest
non-profit Armenian organization. Headquartered in New York City, AGBU
preserves and promotes the Armenian identity and heritage through
educational, cultural and humanitarian program, annually touching the
lives of some 400,000 Armenians around the world.

For more information about AGBU and its worldwide programs, please
visit

www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org
www.agbu.org.

Schwarzenegger appoints Ronald Barsamian to Big Fresno Fair Board

Schwarzenegger appoints Ronald Barsamian to Big Fresno Fair Board
08.01.2010 18:27 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger has
appointed Ronald Barsamian, 56, of Fresno, to the Big Fresno Fair
Board.
He has served as managing partner for Barsamian and Moody Professional
Corporation since 1992. Previously, Barsamian was partner for Finkle
and Barsamian Law Firm from 1985 to 1992 and assistant general counsel
for Western Growers Association from 1978 to 1985. He is president of
the Agricultural Personnel Management Association Board of Directors
and vice-chairman and chairman-elect of the Clovis Chamber of
Commerce.

This position does not require Senate confirmation and there is no
salary. Barsamian is a Republican, Asbarez.com reported.

Copt killings heighten Christian alarm

United Press International
Jan 7 2010

Copt killings heighten Christian alarm

Published: Jan. 7, 2010 at 2:08 PM

CAIRO, Jan. 7 (UPI) — Drive-by Muslim gunmen killed seven Christians
near Luxor as they left a midnight mass for the Coptic Christmas
Wednesday night.

Days earlier, Christians across northern Iraq were attacked by Muslim
zealots over the Yuletide season, as they have been since Iraq
collapsed into sectarian chaos in 2003.

The Middle East is the birthplace of Christianity and home to some of
the most ancient sects. But across the Muslim-dominated region,
Christians are on the run.

There is no definitive figure for the number of Christians in the
region, but it is estimated to be at most 10 million out of a total
population of more than 400 million.

A region that was 20 percent Christian a century ago is now about 2
percent — and that’s dropping fast.

Islam, founded by the Prophet Mohammed in the 7th century, became the
dominant religion in the region as the Muslim empire expanded.

Much of the Middle East was Christian in those days. But Christians —
and others — converted to Islam, forcibly or voluntarily, as Muslim
armies surged out of the Arabian peninsula into the Levant, North
Africa and southern Spain, as well as westward into Asia.

Since that time only Lebanon managed to keep a Christian majority
(until the mid-20th century anyway), although Egypt’s 7 million Copts,
descended from the ancient Egyptians, constitute the single largest
Christian community in the Arab world.

Other communities, distinct minorities, still exist in Iraq, Syria,
the Palestinian territories, Israel and Jordan. There are even
Christians in Iran, where the largest church is the Armenian Apostolic
Church, which dates back to 300 AD.

There has been a Christian presence in Iraq since the 2nd century,
mainly adherents of the Chaldean and Assyrian churches.

There are some Christians in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf states, mainly
expatriates. In most places they are allowed freedom of worship,
although in Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, non-Muslim
religious gatherings are banned.

But all the indigenous communities are declining because of
emigration, a falling birth rate, and in some places, persecution by
the Muslim majorities.

The rise of political Islam in the 20th century is widely considered
to have resulted in a surge of Christian emigration to the West.

During his visit to the Holy Land in May 2009, Pope Benedict XVI
lamented: "While understandable reasons lead many, especially the
young, to emigrate ¦ the departure of so many members of the Christian
community is recent years" is a "tragic reality."

The violence against Christians that occurred in Iraq and Egypt over
Christmas are extreme examples of Muslim intolerance, but they are by
no means isolated and are often driven by political rivalries and
religious extremism.

In Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war, much of the fighting was between the
Maronite Catholics, the dominant Christian sect, and a Muslim
coalition.

Yet Lebanon remains the only Arab state with a Christian president, a
Maronite, under a 1943 political covenant dividing political power
between the multitude of sects in the former French colony.

But that may not be so for much longer. The Muslims, the dominant
Shiites and the smaller Sunni and Druze sects, now far outnumber the
Maronites, whose community is steadily dwindling through emigration as
the Iranian-backed Hezbollah grows in power and strength.

Indeed, some Maronites, seeking to secure some sort of future in a
turbulent region inundated by Islamic fervor, have made a
once-unthinkable political alliance with the Shiite fundamentalists of
Hezbollah.

It is clearly a marriage of convenience for both parties and it is not
expected to last once Hezbollah achieves its objective of putting the
long- downtrodden Shiites in power.

But it shows how desperate some Christians have become to retain their
identity and religion as radical Islam takes hold.

Indeed, Lebanon’s Christians now find themselves caught in the middle
of a worsening confrontation between Shiite and Sunni Islam, which is
the big battle that is coming in the region.

Israel, too, has caused dismay among the region’s Christians. The
creation of the Jewish state in 1948 was a disaster not only for the
Palestinians, who were driven out of their ancestral lands, but for
the Christians of the Holy Land where their faith was born.

Many Palestinians who fled were Christians. Like their Muslim
counterparts, they have never been allowed to return, and probably
never will be.

Israel’s victory in 1967 added to their woes. The occupation of Arab
East Jerusalem and the West Bank choked the life out of their
communities.

ecial/2010/01/07/Copt-killings-heighten-Christian- alarm/UPI-81551262891300/

http://www.upi.com/Top_News/Sp

Lincy Foundation Donates $150,000 to TCA Arshag Dickranian School

TCA Arshag Dickranian Armenian School
1200 N. Cahuenga Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90038

Tel: 323-461-4377
Fax: 323-323-461-4247
Contact: [email protected]

LINCY FOUNDATION DONATES $150,000 TO
T.C.A. ARSHAG DICKRANIAN ARMENIAN SCHOOL

Los Angeles, January 6, 2009 – In a letter dated December 22, 2009, The
Lincy Foundation approved a contribution in the amount of $150,000 to the
Tekeyan Cultural Association Arshag Dickranian Armenian School, enclosing
a check in full payment

`We are overjoyed and very grateful to the Board Members of The Lincy
Foundation for responding to our grant applications in such a timely and
generous manner`, said George K. Mandossian, chairman of the School Board
of Trustees.

Arshag Dickranian School has long been listed as a beneficiary of The
Lincy Foundation, its latest gift constituting the eleventh of such
contributions. In June 2008, the foundation’s president Mr. Jay Rakow and
senior vice president Mr. Harut Sassounian visited the school. The two
guests spent more than an hour meeting with the school trustees, gathering
first hand information about the school’s daily activities and touring the
campus.

The Lincy Foundation has long earned world wide acclaim for its diverse
and exemplary benevolence throughout the United States and Armenia.

Located at 1200 North Cahuenga Blvd., Los Angeles, the TCA Arshag
Dickranian Armenian School is a federally tax exempt, Pre-K to 12th grade
private educational institution. Visit for more
information.

www.dickranianschool.org