Paralyzed Ex-Soldier Needs Funding For Treatment Abroad

Paralyzed Ex-Soldier Needs Funding For Treatment Abroad

04.11.2015 10:57 epress.am

Ex-soldier of the Nagorno-Karabakh Defense Army Grigor Yesayan, who
got a disease of the central nervous system a month and a half after
being drafted into military service in the fall of 2001, is undergoing
medical examinations in Yerevan. Yesayan intends to send the results
to Germany, where he wants to continue his treatment.

Yesayan said in an interview with Epress.am that medical exams in
Armenia are being financed by the RA Ministry of Defense. However, the
Ministry does not take upon itself to fund the ex-soldier’s treatment
abroad.

“The Defense Ministry is ready to cover the travel costs, while we’ve
opened a bank account to raise funds for the medical treatment. If the
required amount is raised, I will be able to undergo treatment,” he
said.

Yesayan has recently undergone magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the
spine; a computed tomography (CT) scan of the head is scheduled for
May. The MRI procedures showed a positive development; now he is
awaiting the CT for further details, the ex-soldier said.

According to Yesayan, he was healthy when he was drafted into the Army
in 2001. About two months into his military service, however, he
received food poisoning and was taken to a hospital in Djebrail, then
– to Stepanakert, from where he was transferred by a helicopter to
Erebouni Medical Centre in Yerevan on January 12, 2002. The young man
was unable to return to service and was demobilized. He has been
unable to walk since.

“A few soldiers from our military unit died in the hospital. They said
that a commander was tried and sentenced to two years in prison. So
what? I’ve become disabled,” Yesayan said.

An account in the name of Grigor Yesayan’s mother, Karine Yesayan, has
been opened in VTB Bank (Armenia):

AMD 16036022384802

USD 16036022384803

EUR 16036022384804

RUR 16036022384805

From: A. Papazian

http://www.epress.am/en/2015/04/11/paralyzed-ex-soldier-needs-money-to-undergo-treatment-abroad.html

Assemblée de Corse – Genocide Armenénien Motion

Corsica Infurmazione
7 avril 2015

Assemblée de Corse – Genocide Armenénien Motion

Biancucci Jean, Femu a Corsica, L’Assemblée de Corse

A l’occasion de la prochaine session de l’Assemblée de Corse, voici la
motion “génocide Arménien” depose par Jean Biancucci au nom de Femu A
Corsica:

Le 24 avril 1915 débutait l’extermination des arméniens de l’Empire
Ottoman, par le régime Jeune-Turc, ce qui eut pour conséquence la
disparition quasi-Totale de people arménien de sa terre d’origine et
la dispersion des survivants dans le monde entire.

Considérant que:

100 ans, après cette tragédie de l’histoire nous interpelle. Le Peuple
Corse, ses élus doivent prendre leur part dans la prise de conscience
et la reconnaissance de ce crime contre le Peuple Arménien.

Considérant que:

L’Assemblée de Corse, à travers ses sensibilités doit marquer la
manière significative sa volonté de contribuer à la réparation
historique de ce drame international.

Considérant,

En conformité avec la loi française no2001-70 du janvier 2001 et la
résolution de Parlement Européen en date du 18 juin 1987 – que:

“le événements qui se sont déroulés à partir du 24 avril 19115
constituent un génocide”, tel que défini par la Convention des Nations
Unies pour la prévention et la répression du crime de génocide du 9
décembre 1948.

Considérant que:

La Turqui gui souhaite adhérer à l’Union Européenne diot faire face à son passé.

L’Assemblée de Corse

Demande:

Que la Turqui reconnaisse le crime de génocide perpétré par la régime
Jeune-Turc à l’encontre du Peuple Arménien

Souhaite:

-Que la Turquie établisse des relations harmonieuses avec la
République d’Arménie

Invite:

-Le gouvernement de la République française à transmettre cette
délibération aux autorités compétentes d’Arménie et de Turquie.

Femu A Corsica

From: A. Papazian

http://www.corsicainfurmazione.org/75150/assemblee-de-corse-genocide-armenien-motion-femuacorsica/2015/#

Well sharpened dialogue

Well sharpened dialogue

APRIL 11TH, 2015

As the Armenian church celebrates Easter today and the community marks
100 years since the genocide THEO PANAYIDES meets Archbishop Nareg
Alemezian

It’s a good time to interview His Eminence Nareg Alemezian, Archbishop
of the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox Church in Cyprus – because today is
Easter Sunday for the local Armenian community (numbering about 3,500
souls), one of the many things their Church does slightly differently
to its Greek Orthodox counterpart. The Archbishop’s sermon (spoiler
coming up for Armenian readers!) will be taking a very specific tack,
not just celebrating Christ’s resurrection but linking it to the
resurrection of the Armenian people after the 1915 genocide – because
this year marks the 100th anniversary of that hellish time when around
1.5 million perished at the hands of Ottoman troops, just before the
creation of modern-day Turkey. That’s another reason why our interview
is topical.

Just last week, Parliament amended the law to make denial of the
genocide a criminal offence in Cyprus (Armenia wasn’t mentioned by
name, but the change in the law – making it sufficient if the genocide
in question has been recognised by our parliament, as opposed to an
international court – was clearly designed to encompass the events of
1915), a change the Archbishop welcomes; that kind of law is crucial
“if we want to prevent future genocides,” he says in his office at the
Armenian Prelature, flanked by an icon of the Virgin Mary and a photo
of the current ‘Catholicos’, Aram I. ‘Catholicos’ (meaning ‘Supreme
Patriarch’) is a title unique to the Armenian Church – yet another of
the things this small, traditional faith does slightly differently to
its larger counterparts.

His own name, ‘Nareg’, means ‘well-sharpened sword’ according to the
internet – but this particular Nareg has a mild, earnest manner, eyes
gazing patiently from above his bushy beard. His eyebrows have a
slight upward slant when he talks, giving him a pleading, almost
beseeching air. He tends to sit back in his chair, wrapped in priestly
robes, his hand gesturing rhythmically as he talks. He’s an easy
talker, fluent in four languages – and in fact his previous post, when
he was based in Lebanon (he only came to Cyprus in September 2014),
was as Ecumenical Officer, “which is like foreign affairs minister. I
was in charge of foreign relations for the Armenian church”. One can
see his patient, earnest manner having thrived in that job, fostering
dialogue with other churches (including Islam) in Armenian dioceses
from Iran to Venezuela.

Lebanon is one of two headquarters for the Armenian Apostolic Orthodox
Church (the other being Armenia itself). Lebanon – Beirut, to be
precise – is also where he was born 53 years ago, the only child of “a
very pious Christian family”. His dad was a deacon in the church; his
grandparents were survivors of the genocide, carrying memories of life
in old Armenia; Nareg himself was never in any doubt about his future.
“There is a story about my entering the kindergarten when I was three
years old,” he tells me, “[and] the principal asked ‘What would you
like to become?’, and my immediate answer was: ‘I want to become a
clergyman’. So I consider this as a pure calling of God. It’s a
vocation.”

The only real decision – which he took at the age of 19, just before
being ordained – was whether to become a married priest or a celibate
priest; the former serve in the parishes, he explains, the latter
“belong to a brotherhood” and are able to rise up the ranks, to Bishop
or indeed Archbishop. The young man was advised to consult with his
parents before making his decision (if nothing else, the celibacy of
their only son would deprive them of grandchildren), but in fact the
decision was easy. “You have two families now,” cried his jubilant
parents: “Your first family is the Church, and then you have your
paternal family”. Mum and Dad are now in their 80s, live in Montreal
and see him when he visits every few months. “They are very happy.
They always say this is the will of God.”

Isn’t celibacy a huge sacrifice, though? “It’s a decision of a
lifetime,” he admits, “it’s a lifetime commitment. But, as I say, I
don’t regret it … I consider celibacy also as a vocation”. It’s
unclear how much of life he’d experienced at 19, having been ensconced
in a seminary for eight years – but he’d certainly seen something of
the dark side, since those were also the first years of Lebanon’s
civil war (it dragged on for years, long after he’d left for Vancouver
in 1981). The war “was more or less fluid, it wasn’t targeted in one
place,” he recalls. “There was a time – for weeks, months, sometimes a
year – that we were enjoying relative peace. But other times, yes,
there were some bombardments, and we received our share of
destruction.”

His teenage memories of war are mostly innocuous – queuing up for
bread with other seminarians, for instance (“to sustain our physical
life,” as he puts it). But he also recalls one time, after a
bombardment, when he heard a commotion outside and went out to see a
truck belonging to a local militia roaring down the street, dragging a
person (presumably a prisoner) behind it. The soldiers were whooping
and cheering, lost in “an atmosphere of happiness or satisfaction that
they were driving that person around, and that person was going to be
killed in that way,” he says solemnly.

Why doesn’t God intervene in such situations? There’s no easy answer
to that question (the Archbishop mutters something about the soldiers
having free will – but that still doesn’t explain why He didn’t
intervene to help the victim, who must’ve been praying for all he was
worth at that moment), in fact it’s no mystery that God moves in
mysterious ways. “I strongly believe that all my decisions, all my
plans, all my steps are guided by God,” says Nareg firmly – yet he
also knows that God is elusive, and may just be a phantom for some
people. What about atheism? Can he imagine a world without God?
“Personally I cannot imagine that, and I cannot accept that,” he
replies. “But, on the other hand, if there are people who say ‘I don’t
need God’, I’m ready to respect their opinion. But they have to
respect my opinion, saying that I need God [in order] to survive. I
need God to live.”

It’s a typical response from this genial, ecumenical man, a man for
whom compromise seems to come naturally even as he stays very firm in
his own beliefs; “I’m sure we can find common ground, through dialogue
and through mutual trust,” he affirms at one point. Dialogue is his
forte, reaching out to other creeds. “I consider myself to be a person
of all cultures, all faiths – a person in dialogue, a person in
contact, a person in relationship,” he says earnestly. “I feel like
I’m part of the whole world, although I keep my Armenian identity”.
Despite his move to Cyprus (which may even feel like a step down,
though of course he doesn’t say so), he’s still on the Central
Committee and Executive Committee of the World Council of Churches,
talking to everyone from Anglicans to Mennonites – and he still goes
on “special assignments”, as for instance next Sunday when Pope
Francis will be holding a special Holy Mass on the 100th anniversary
of the genocide. Catholicos Aram will be there, so will the President
of Armenia – and so will Nareg Alemezian, indeed “I will be there
prior to the visit, in order to organise the visit in a proper way”.

Ah yes, the anniversary. Events are being planned all over the world,
wherever the Armenian diaspora has a presence. In Cyprus, a
commemorative stamp is coming out, a photo exhibition is being
organised, a book is being published on how the Greek press covered
the atrocities in 1915, the Cyprus Symphony Orchestra is giving a
performance with an Armenian guest conductor – and that’s not even
mentioning the religious service being held on April 24, viewed as the
starting-date of the genocide.

‘But why dwell on it so much?’ I ask, somewhat impertinently. After
all, it was a long time ago. Why not just move on?

He sighs patiently. “Well, we are ready to move on. Because our appeal
has been, from the beginning, reconciliation – but based on
forgiveness,” he adds with emphasis. “You cannot forgive someone if
that person does not say ‘I’m sorry'”. Turkey continues to deny the
genocide; some have even claimed that Turks were killed by Armenians,
instead of vice versa. Above all, the wounds haven’t healed, despite
the existence of an independent Armenia (which is only about one-tenth
the size of “historical Armenia”); on the contrary, the violence
persists as a kind of cultural genocide. “On a daily basis, we have
many historical monuments in occupied Armenia – which is nowadays
Turkey – being destroyed,” he reports. Even in Cyprus there’s the
matter of Sourp Magar, the Armenian monastery in the occupied
Pentadaktylos, not quite destroyed (at least not yet), but ruined by
years of neglect.

The Archbishop visited Sourp Magar eight years ago, while in Cyprus
for an ecumenical conference, and visited again a couple of months
ago; he was shocked by how much it’s deteriorated. The place must be
saved, he insists, but not as a historical monument – it needs to be
restored as a monastery: “Monks have to live here. This place has to
serve its purpose”. The biggest obstacle isn’t money, but politics; a
full restoration, like he envisions, would have to be part of an
overall solution to the Cyprus problem. Couldn’t he just make a deal
with the Turkish Cypriot authorities, maybe through a private
investor? “I don’t know,” he replies, looking uncomfortable. “I have
also to respect the position of the authorities of the Republic of
Cyprus.”

It’s a telling remark – because of course Armenians are a minority in
Cyprus, totally integrated yet not quite assimilated, dependent to
some small extent on the “hospitality” of their hosts. They used to
live in a glorified ghetto in Nicosia (Victoria Street, now in the
occupied north), but that’s now changed – yet the Armenian Prelature
is on Armenia Street, next to the Nareg Armenian School, and the
neighbourhood is dotted with Armenian businesses. Armenian culture is
fiercely preserved, “and the Church is the bastion of that
preservation and enrichment”. The Archbishop is a man on a mission.

What kind of person is Nareg Alemezian? A man of God, in the literal
sense of having devoted his whole life to religion – but also in the
more general sense of being austere, ascetic, un-tempted by the world.
“I’m a simple person,” he shrugs. “I believe in simplicity in life.”
He lives simply, in a flat above the Prelature. He likes reading,
mostly memoirs and biographies – recent subjects have included Pope
John XXIII and Lee Kuan Yew, the late Prime Minister of Singapore –
and classical music. “I’ve never said, for instance, that I like to
drive this kind of car, or wear this kind of shirt,” he tells me.
“Whatever is given to us is a gift. As a matter of fact, our very life
is a gift. And, in order to fulfil ourselves in the world, we have to
think of spiritual and moral richness, not material. Unfortunately our
world has become a very materialistic place, and our society a very
consumerist place.”

He tells me a story. He lived for six years in New Jersey, working in
the Armenian diocese there, and one of his great pleasures was reading
the book reviews in the New York Times every Sunday. “The next day, I
used to go to a bookstore,” looking to buy what he’d read about – “and
entering a bookstore was for me a great occasion of joy. But, on the
other hand, I found that instead of buying one or two books, that I
would have time to read, I became addicted to buying 10, 15, 20, even
there was a time when I bought 75 books in one visit!”. One day, he
looked at the piles of unread books on his bookshelves and realised he
was being self-indulgent – so “I stopped that habit. And now, I have a
discipline. When I go to a bookstore I know what book I have to buy,
and when I finish reading that book then I buy another book.” He nods,
in his mild gentle way: “This is the way of life that has to be
adopted by all of us.”

Is that true? Some will agree, others may violently disagree. Life is
short, they’ll say; why deny yourself pleasure? The Archbishop will
surely hear them out, and tell them he respects their opinion – but,
for him, denial of pleasures (at least worldly pleasures) has been
part of his life, part of his vocation. Meanwhile there’s the question
of Armenia, still surviving in its scattered global fragments, still
intact but heavy with the memories of 1.5 million dead in a
long-vanished homeland. “Still, we are uprooted,” he tells me, and
shakes his head sadly.

From: A. Papazian

http://cyprus-mail.com/?p=48877

AUA students, faculty become latest ABMDR donors

PRESS RELEASE
Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry
3111 Los Feliz Avenue, #206, Los Angeles, CA 90039
Contact person: Dr. Frieda Jordan
Phone: (323) 663-3609
Email: [email protected]

AUA students, faculty become latest ABMDR donors

Los Angeles, April 11, 2015 – One hundred and twenty seven students
and faculty members at the American University of Armenia (AUA) became
the latest potential bone marrow stem cell donors to join the ranks of
the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry (ABMDR). They joined the
pan-Armenian organization on March 31 and April 9, during recruitment
drives held on campus, in Yerevan.

The recruitments were led by ABMDR executive director Dr. Sevak Avagyan,
ABMDR medical director Dr. Mihran Nazaretyan, and the university’s
Graduate Student Council. The ABMDR team was enthusiastically welcomed
on campus by AUA president Dr. Armen Der Kiureghian, department heads,
lecturers, professors, and graduate and undergraduate students. The new
recruits included AUA vice president of Finance and CFO Gevorg Goyunyan
and Admissions director Arina Zohrabian.

`We consider every single recruitment as a victory for our mission to
save lives in Armenia and across the world,’ Dr. Avagyan said. `And
when we witness a wonderful spirit of volunteerism at an institution
such as AUA, our work becomes all the more worthwhile.’

`As our students and faculty responded to the call of ABMDR by giving
just a small amount of blood to help save a life, they were truly
following the Latin maxim facta non verba, which means `actions speak
louder than words,” said Dr. Der Kiureghian.

The AUA recruitments have come on the heels of two ABMDR donor
recruitments last month at the Police Academy of the Republic of
Armenia, in Yerevan.

About the Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry: Established in 1999,
ABMDR, a nonprofit organization, helps Armenians and non-Armenians
worldwide survive life-threatening blood-related illnesses by recruiting
and matching donors to those requiring bone marrow stem cell
transplants. To date, the registry has recruited over 26,000 donors in
24 countries across four continents, identified 2,482 patients, and
facilitated 20 bone marrow transplants.

From: A. Papazian

Armenia’s government announces April 23 a day off

Armenia’s government announces April 23 a day off

YEREVAN, April 11. /ARKA/. Armenia’s government decided, at its
meeting on April 11, to make April 23 a day off and Saturday April 18
a working day instead, the government press office reported.

The change is made as the Armenian genocide victims will be sanctified
on April 23, the head of the government staff David Harutiunyan said.

On April 23, one day before April 24, the day of commemoration of the
victims of Armenian Genocide, the victims will be sanctified in the
Saint Echmiadzin Church, and this will be one of the most important
historic events, since the last sanctification in Armenia was
conducted 400 years ago.

Armenian genocide was the first genocide committed in XX century.
Turkey rejects the accusation of massacres and the killing of one and
a half million Armenians during World War I.

The fact of the Armenian genocide is recognized by many countries,
particularly by Uruguay, Russia, France, Lithuania, most of the U.S.
states, as well as by the parliaments of Greece, Cyprus, Argentina,
Belgium, Wales, National Council of Switzerland, Common House of
Canada, the Seym of Poland and lower house of Italian parliament. -0–

From: A. Papazian

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/armenia_s_government_announces_april_23_a_day_off/#sthash.XUDgVWWs.dpuf

Fresno’s April 24th commemoration

PRESS RELEASE
AGC-Fresno
P.O. Box 28493
Fresno, CA 93729
Email: [email protected]
Web:
FB: facebook.com/agcfresno

BRUCE JANIGIAN TO HEADLINE CENTRAL VALLEY COMMEMORATION

Fresno-Bruce Janigian of the American University of Armenia will be
the keynote speaker for the Central Valley’s commemoration of the
100th anniversary of the Armenia Genocide on April 24th. The event
begins at 7:00pm and will take place in the sanctuary of the St. Paul
Armenian Apostolic Church (3767 N. First Street, Fresno). To
accommodate the large number of people attending the commemoration,
viewing screens will be installed in the church’s social hall and
courtyard; overflow parking will be available at the nearby Pilgrim
Armenian Congregational Church (3673 N. First Street, Fresno).

Janigian is an international attorney whose expertise includes
international trade and investment as well as government and public
policy matters. He has served on the Board of Trustees of the American
University of Armenia Corporation and as the university’s Vice
President for Development and Government Relations.

Along with marking the centennial of the Armenian Genocide, this
year’s commemoration will be the first to recognize the sainthood of
the 1.5 million Armenians murdered at the hands of the Ottoman Young
Turk regime during the period 1915-1923. On April 23, the Armenian
Apostolic Church will canonize the victims, who have already been
acknowledged as martyrs for their faith. The ceremony will observe a
moment of silence at exactly 7:15pm, or 19:15 military time, to
correspond to the year that the Turkish government began their
campaign of ethnic cleansing.

Dr. Matthew Jendian, Professor of Sociology at Fresno State, will
serve as the evening’s emcee. Included in the program are the
Mazmanian family, who will be performing traditional Armenian music,
the Homenetmen Scouts, and the students of the Charlie Keyan Armenian
Community School.

The commemoration is organized by the St. Paul Armenian Apostolic
Church, the Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church, First Armenian
Presbyterian Church, Pilgrim Armenian Congregational Church,
St. Gregory’s Armenian Apostolic Church (Fowler), St. Mary’s Armenian
Apostolic Church (Yettem), and Sts. Sahag-Mesrob Armenian Apostolic
Church (Reedley). As is the tradition, the site of the Genocide’s
remembrance rotates each year among the valley’s Armenian churches.

The commemoration is part of a year-long series of events promoted by
the Armenian Genocide Centennial-Fresno Committee, which includes
representatives from the various Armenian religious, educational,
social, and political organizations of the Central Valley. For more
information, please visit the AGC-Fresno website at
and on Facebook at

From: A. Papazian

http://www.agcfresno.org/
www.agcfresno.org
www.facebook.com/agcfresno.

Armenia’s President To Be In Moscow On Day Of Victory

ARMENIA’S PRESIDENT TO BE IN MOSCOW ON DAY OF VICTORY

YEREVAN, April 10. /ARKA/. Armenia’s president said in his interview
to Mir TV he will be in Moscow on the Day of Victory.

“I believe Armenia’s president should be and will be present at the
major celebrations, the ones held in Moscow, so I will be in Moscow,
we have already received an invitation, and I will participate in the
key events. In fact, it is a bright holiday, and we should celebrate
it wholeheartedly,” the president said.

The president stressed Armenians had their active contribution to
the defense of the Soviet Union, and said Armenians’ approach to war
“is probably a bit different from that of other nations”.

In the beginning of this war, there were 2.8 million ethnic Armenians
living in the Soviet Union, of them 1 million 800,000 in Soviet
Armenia. Some 600,000 Armenians joined the Soviet army as conscripts
or volunteers during the way, of them 314,000 have never returned,
Sargsyan said.

“It is every ninth Armenian; almost 12% of the overall number of
Armenians in the Soviet Union was killed during the Great Patriotic
War. It is a large number, bearing in mind that no military operations
took place on the territory of Armenia, which means no civilians were
affected,” Sargsyan said.

During the war, over 600,000 Armenians were drafted to the Soviet Army,
over 300,000 of them were killed in the battles. A hundred and six
Armenians were awarded Hero of the Soviet Union, including legendary
pilot Nelson Stepanyan and Marshall of the Soviet Union Hovhannes
Baghramyan who received the award twice. Twenty-seven Armenian became
full cavaliers of the Order of Glory.

Armenians’ contribution to the victory included major army commanders,
such as twice Hero of the Soviet Union Marshall Hovhannes Baghramyan,
Hero of the Soviet Union and marshall of armored troops Hamazasp
Babajanyan, aviation marshall Sergey Khudiakov (Armenak Khanferyants),
Hero of the Soviet Union fleet admiral Ivan Isakov (Hovhannes
Isahakyan).

Armenia sent six motor-rifle divisions to the frontline, including
the 39th Tamanyan division that reached Berlin. About 100,000 ethnic
Armenians were involved in the resistance movement in WWII and fought
as part of the allies’ armies.

From: A. Papazian

http://arka.am/en/news/politics/armenia_s_president_to_be_in_moscow_on_day_of_victory/#sthash.xamiCtzj.dpuf

Visite fraternelle de sa Saintete Karekine II au Pape Francois.

VISITE FRATERNELLE DE SA SAINTETE KAREKINE II AU PAPE FRANCOIS.

ARMENIE

Communique du centre d’informations du Catholicossat supreme.

Saint Etchmiadzine le 9 Avril 2015.

Le 10 avril, a l’invitation du Pape Francois, Souverain Pontife de
l’Eglise catholique romaine, sa Saintete Karekine II, Patriarche
supreme et Catholicos de tous les Armeniens, se rend au Vatican pour
une visite fraternelle.

Le 11 Avril le Catholicos de tous les Armeniens se rendra a Naples
où il presidera les ceremonies de reouverture de la chapelle saint
Gregoire l’Illuminateur et de benediction du khatchkar (stèle votive)
dedie au 100ème anniversaire du Genocide des Armeniens.

Le 12 Avril, sa Saintete le Patriarche des Armeniens participera a la
Divine liturgie celebree par le Pape Francois en la basilique saint
Pierre a l’occasion du 100ème anniversaire du Genocide des Armeniens.

A l’occasion de cette visite, le Catholicos de tous les Armeniens
est accompagne par les archeveques Khajag Barsamian, Primat du
diocèse de la Côte Est des Etats-Unis, Arakel Karamian (diocèse de
Godayk-Armenie), des eveques Movses Movsisian (diocèse du Sud de la
Russie), Achod Mnatsaganian (diocèse d’Egypte), Armache Nalbandian
(diocèse de Damas), Hovaguim Manoukian (responsable du departement des
relations inter Eglises du saint Siège), Vahan Hovhannessian (Diocèse
de France), Kevork Saroyan (Recteur de l’Academie de Theologie de
saint Etchmiadzine), le hieromoine Anania Dzadourian (secretaire),
le père Vahram Mayilian (responsable du centre d’informations du
saint Siège d’Etchmiadzine).

vendredi 10 avril 2015, Stephane (c)armenews.com

From: A. Papazian

Baroness Caroline Cox: Reports About Massacre Of Armenians In Maragh

BARONESS CAROLINE COX: REPORTS ABOUT MASSACRE OF ARMENIANS IN MARAGHA NEVER REACHED THE WORLD’S HEADLINES

16:27 10/04/2015 >> COMMENTS

Maragha: The name of this village is associated with a massacre
which never reached the world’s headlines, although at least 45
Armenians died cruel deaths, Caroline Cox and John Eibner write in
the book “Ethnic Cleansing in Progress: War in Nagorno Karabakh,”
Karabakhrecords.info reports.

According to the material, it is written in this book that during
the Christian Solidarity International mission to Nagorno Karabakh
in April, 1992 news came through that a village in the north, in
Mardakert region, had been overrun by Azeri-Turks on April 10 and
there had been a number of civilians killed. A group went to obtain
evidence and found a village with survivors in a state of shock,
their burnt-out homes still smouldering, charred remains of corpses
and vertebrae still on the ground, where people had their heads sawn
off, and their bodies burnt in front of their families.

According to the book, at least 45 Armenians had been massacred and 100
were missing, possibly suffering a fate worse than death. In order to
verify the stories, the delegation asked the villagers if they would
exhume the bodies which they had already buried. In great anguish,
they did so, allowing photographs to be taken of the decapitated,
charred bodies. Later, when asked about publicizing about this tragedy,
they replied they were reluctant to do so as “We Armenians are not
very good at showing our grief to the world.”

According to the article, the authors of the book believe it is
important to put on record these events and the way in which they
have been interpreted and portrayed by the Armenians themselves,
and by the international media as the international public opinion
is inevitably shaped by media coverage.

The international media did not cover the massacre of the Armenians
in Maragha at all. Consequently, in the eyes of the world, the
armed forces of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh have been made
to appear more brutal than those of the Azerbaijanis; in reality,
evidence suggests that the opposite is more likely to be true, the
authors write.

With the efforts of the Information and Public Relations Center
of the Administration of the President of Armenia the truth
about the genocide in Maragha became more widely-known and
replicated. The documentary “Maragha, 10 April 1992. An Ordinary
Genocide was shot,
the eyewitness testimonies, photos and videos taken on that
fearsome day were compiled and published on various websites
,
the website maragha.org is operating.

Related:

Maraga: oil interests, aggressive Armenophobia and the silence of
the international community

Bakur Karapetyan’s book on Margushavan and Maragha massacres released

22 years passed since massacre day organized by Azerbaijani military
units against Armenian civilians in Maragha

Maraga – a contempotary Golgotha

From: A. Papazian

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NwNL7t4iGW0
http://karabakhrecords.info/gallery/category/events/maragha-case/
http://maragha.org/index_ru.html
http://www.panorama.am/en/politics/2015/04/10/cox-maraga/

10 Fascinating Facts To Know About Armenia, As The Kardashians Are E

10 FASCINATING FACTS TO KNOW ABOUT ARMENIA, AS THE KARDASHIANS ARE EXPLORING THE LAND OF ANCESTORS

14:44, 10 Apr 2015
Siranush Ghazanchyan

Kim Kardashian, Khloe Kardashian, Kanye West and North West
are currently on vacation in Armenia to learn about the land of
the family’s ancestors. While the famous family continues their
sightseeing overseas, E! Online presents 10 fascinating facts about
Armenian culture and history.

1. The Kardashians aren’t the only famous Armenians. Cher is also of
Armenian decent through her father’s lineage. Michael Vartan also
has Armenian blood as does Dita Von Teese and Joe Manganiello. And
although Steve Jobs was of Syrian decent, his adoptive parents Paul
and Clara Jobs were Armenian.

2. Pomegranates are a favorite food among Armenians. Aside from being
tart and delicious, they symbolize fertility.

3. The Armenian people were the first culture in the world to adopt
Christianity as the official state religion after two of Jesus’
apostles, St. Thaddeus and St. Bartholomew, travel through the region
soon after Jesus’ death.

4. They discovered wine (sorry, France!). Back in 2011, scientists
concluded that the real birthplace of wine may have been in a cave
in Armenia. Archaeologist called the cave the “oldest” winery ever
dating back over 6,000 years.

5. Wine isn’t Armenia’s only contribution to the world. They were
also among the first to invent yogurt and coffee.

6. In 1915, 1.5 million Armenians were murdered in the Ottoman Empire
in what is now known as the Armenian Genocide. Turkey, the successor
state of the Ottoman Empire, denies the historical event. The 100th
anniversary of the Armenian Genocide will be honored on April 24.

7. Armenians celebrate Christmas on Jan. 6, the original date of the
Christian holiday.

8. Armenians love to dance (especially a type of line dance) and call
dancing “keff time,” which means party time.

9. Cheese boregs are a traditional Armenian dish made of feta cheese
wrapped in filo dough and baked until golden brown.

10. The word for beautiful in Armenian is “siroon.”

From: A. Papazian

http://www.armradio.am/en/2015/04/10/10-fascinating-facts-to-know-about-armenia-as-the-kardashians-are-exploring-the-land-of-ancestors/