BAKU: OSCE Chairman Holds Talks In Baku

OSCE CHAIRMAN HOLDS TALKS IN BAKU

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 6 2005

Baku, September 5, AssA-Irada
The Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict over Upper Garabagh, the upcoming
parliament elections in the country and Azeri-Slovenian relations
were in focus during OSCE chairman-in-office, Slovenian Foreign
Minister Dimitrij Rupel’s meetings in Baku on Monday. Rupel met
with President Ilham Aliyev, foreign minister Elmar Mammadyarov,
as well as representatives of political parties and non-governmental
organizations. The OSCE chairman told a news briefing held jointly
with minister Mammadyarov that the results of the recent meeting
of Azeri and Armenian presidents in the Russian Volga river city
of Kazan are being analyzed by the mediating OSCE Minsk Group. “The
positions of the sides should be brought closer stage by stage.” Rupel
noted that talks should continue to achieve this. Touching upon the
parliament elections, the OSCE chairman said international observers
bear a great deal of responsibility in this respect. Over 1,000 OSCE
observers will monitor the poll in November, he said. Rupel also
touched upon future expansion of Azeri-Slovenian ties and steps to
be taken for the Azerbaijani President’s visit to Slovenia.*

Boxing: Armenia First, Then World Domination For Darchinyan

ARMENIA FIRST, THEN WORLD DOMINATION FOR DARCHINYAN

SecondsOut
Sept 5 2005

By Paul Upham: IBF/IBO flyweight world champion Vic “Raging Bull”
Darchinyan left Sydney for Armenia on Monday, making the first
return visit to his country of birth since he became world champion
last year. “I have been waiting a long time for this trip,” he
said. “I will be there for two weeks and then come back to training
in Australia.” The 29 year-old who competed at the 2000 Olympic
Games is now an Australian citizen but is revered as one of Armenia’s
best sportsmen. The hard punching southpaw now has plans to become
undisputed champion at flyweight. But before he can target the WBA,
WBC or WBO title-holders, he must make a mandatory defence of his
IBF title against Ireland’s Damaen Kelly 21-2 (10).

“I saw Kelly’s fight with Pacheco,” said Darchinyan 24-0 (19).
“Pacheco hurt him with body punches and I will hurt him with head
punches. I will hurt his chin. He is a good boxer and I will be
expecting a tough fight. He is the leading contender for me from the
IBF and I will show everyone again what I did in the last fight.
Kelly will be ready for my left hand and I will then show you my
right hand. On the hand pads, Jeff (Fenech) and Billy (Hussein) are
telling me that my right hand is much stronger than my left when I
am throwing body punches. I use my left hand during the fight because
I know I will finish him sooner.”

Darchinyan made the second successful defence of his IBF title with a
5th round stoppage of Colombian Jair Jimenez on August 24 in Sydney.
“It was a good fight,” he said. “I did a smart job. I just didn’t
jump on him and start punching I took my time. I saw some of his
fights and he was a good puncher. He was tough and he didn’t want to
go down.” Darchinyan won the IBF title from long reigning champion
Irene Pacheco last December in the USA and added the IBO title to
his collection on March 27 this year with an 8th round stoppage of
Mzukisi Sikali. He has his sights set on a unification bout with WBA
champion Lorenzo Parra 25-0 (17).

“I’d love to fight Parra,” said Darchinyan. “He is taking other fights
because he knows I am wanting to challenge him. He doesn’t have to
fight me, but he thinks he is tough, so why not fight me? I can’t see
anyone at flyweight who will trouble me. There are some good fighters,
but no one who is strong like me. I will challenge the fighters at
bantamweight or super bantamweight, then you will see what I can
do. Any division I fight in, I know I will destroy them.”

Antelias: His Holiness Aram I expresses support to the American peop

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr. Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS EXPRESSES HIS SUPPORT TO THE AMERICAN PEOPLE

In a letter to the president of the United States, George W. Bush, His
Holiness Aram I expressed his support and condolences to the American people
in light of the losses suffered after a hurricane hit the city of New
Orleans in Louisiana.

In his letter His Holiness says: “The tragic images that I see on television
are, indeed, disturbing and heartbreaking. This is, in fact, one of the
biggest natural disasters in the recent memory of the U.S.A. I share the
pain and anxiety of those who have been affected by this disaster.”

The Catholicos also informed the president that he has advised the two
prelates of the Catholicosate of Cilicia in the United States to encourage
the Armenian-American communities to bring their active participation in the
post-hurricane humanitarian efforts.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Armenian Parliamentary Speaker Congratulated Armenian President On H

ARMENIAN PARLIAMENTARY SPEAKER CONGRATULATED ARMENIAN PRESIDENT ON HIS 51ST ANNIVERSARY

YEREVAN, AUGUST 31. ARMINFO. Armenian Parliamentary Speaker Arthur
Baghdasaryan congratulated President Robert Kocharyan on his 51st
Anniversary.

The parliamentary press-service reports to ARMINFO that the speaker’s
address in particular says that birthdays often become a reason for
summary of the past year when everything done and future plans are
assessed. “I am sure that in future the passing years will become
successful for You. I wish Your health, happiness and success,”
says Speaker Baghdasaryan.

Pryakhin: Armenia has significant authority among OSCE member-countr

VLADIMIR PRYAKHIN: ARMENIA HAS SIGNIFICANT AUTHORITY AMONG OSCE MEMBER-COUNTRIES

ARKA News Agency, Armenia
Sept 2 2005

YEREVAN, September 2. /ARKA/. Armenia has significant authority among
the OSCE member-countries, Head of OSCE Yerevan Office Vladimir
Pryakhin said at the presentation of the publication of the Helsinki
Final Act of the OSCE. He pointed out that just after declaring its
independence, Armenia joined the OSCE in 1992 and actively worked
within the organization. The evidence is the opening of the OSCE
Yerevan Office on the initiative of the Armenian authorities, which
became a new stimulus for Armenia – OSCE cooperation. “Yerevan openly
accepted the programs the OSCE realize in Armenia. Armenia’s
cooperation with the OSCE can be characterized as very productive”,
Pryakhin said. A.A.–0–

The Ordeal of Arab Christians

The Ordeal of Arab Christians
September 03, 2005 12:53 AM EST

The Conservative Voice
Sept 3 2005

By Magdi Khalil – The recent, simultaneous bombing of six Iraqi
churches reflects the seriousness of the predicament of Arab
Christians, who are trapped between the hammer of terrorists groups
and extremists, and the anvil of fanatic governments that skillfully
manipulate the issue of religious radicalism for their own benefit,
while reinforcing religious, ethnic and sectarian discrimination among
their citizens. Arab Christians live in the bosom of a racist culture
that claims superiority over non-Muslims, fueled by a legacy mostly
filled with violence and hatred and a history centered on strife,
murder and viciousness.

Obviously, the Christians of the Middle East have lost the demographic
race to the benefit of their Muslim compatriots. Their numbers
continue to dwindle not just due to natural factors, but because
many of them chose, or were compelled, to emigrate. Some fell
victims to the constant pressures that escalated to fatal attacks.
And others succumbed to the temptation to renounce their faith. The
Christians of Southern Sudan were the only ones to maintain their
place in that difficult contest, and though they paid a dear price,
they discovered the means to achieve a realistic balance of power
and face off eradication designs.

A survey of the present situation of Christians living in the Middle
East demonstrates a problematic and distressing cycle: Arab Christian
populations are declining, resulting in an erosion of their political
power, which in turn causes their conditions to worsen and ultimately
drives them out of their own homeland. This pattern is repeated
throughout the region.

In Lebanon, Christians represented 50-60% of the population prior to
1975; today this percentage has declined to 25-30%. Most importantly,
their political influence has severely weakened. The Lebanese
emigration ministry estimates the number of emigrants at five
million, more than three and a half million of which are Lebanese
Christians. In the past Lebanon was known to be a safe haven for
persecuted individuals who were hunted because of their religious
or intellectual beliefs. Today, however, it is driving out its own
children because of the Arab infringement, the Palestinian foolishness
and the Syrian occupation.

The Lebanese Patriarch Nasr Allah Safir talked with LBC TV station
about the Christian situation saying: “The Christians feel left out,
their presence being clearly unwanted”. He commented on the injustice
committed against Lebanese Christians: “Lebanon was in a state of
war, and it was the agreement of El Taef that put an end to this war,
but only a partial and selective implementation of the agreement was
carried out.” The writer Mushee Maouz confirmed this statement in his
book , with the following words: “Since 1943, and for many decades,
the Maronite Christians of Lebanon, the Shi’a, and the elite Sunni
have worked together in a diverse, legal and democratic system that
was controlled by minorities. However, the shift in favor of Muslim
communities, Radical Arab nationalism and military Palestinian
existence, as well as the Syrian and Israeli intervention ended up
alienating the Maronites and forcing them to take a defensive stance.”

Iraq witnessed an increase in Christian emigration following the
defeat of Sadam Hussein in the second Gulf War, as the political
speech took religious tones and the economic situation continued to
deteriorate. Once Baghdad fell at the hands of the Coalition troops,
the fanatics came out of their dark caves and began attacking the
liquor shops owned by Christians. As a result more than two hundred
shops had to be closed. The attacks became more serious as they then
targeted Christian women who were not veiled, Christian residences, and
finally took the lives of a number of innocent Christians citizens. The
final attacks targeted Christian churches during Sunday services and
resulted in a large number of casualties and injuries. News reports
mentioned that thousands of Iraqi Christians were forced to migrate
to Syria in the aftermath of such attacks, proof enough that the
so called “resistance” is nothing but another facet of the vicious
terrorism that assaults innocents and ultimately seeks to ruin the
new Iraqi experience.

During a few decades, the percentage of Palestinian Christians
has dropped from 17% to less than 2% of the total population. The
Israeli newspaper reported that entire neighborhoods in Beit Gala,
Beit Lahm and Beit Sahur have been emptied of Christians because of
the overwhelming Islamic tide that has turned the Palestinian cause
into an Islamic issue, and the growing power of the fundamentalists
who are imposing their rules and views on the Palestinian community.
According to the BBC, the Christian inhabitants of Jerusalem, who,
in 1920, represented 50% of the population, currently represent a
mere 10%.

The Palestinian , under the leadership of Islamic organizations,
had a detrimental effect on the Christians who were required to pay a
type of tax to those organizations to support suicide missions. News
coming out of the Holy Land is disturbing. In Gaza, Christian women,
in fear of being attacked by Islamic fanatics, have donned the veil.
During the crisis in the Church of the Nativity, a reporter from
Los Angeles managed to sneak into the church and indicated that
the terrorists have raided the church, leaving nothing intact. They
used the wood of the temple as fire fuel, and the pages of Bibles
as toilet paper. Another incident that took place in Nazareth City,
when the fanatics tried to build a mosque right in front of the
Church of the Annunciation, clearly reveals the intentions of the
fundamentalist organizations to establish an Islamic state on this
most sacred Christian ground.

The situation of Egypt’s Copts is definitely not promising, as
they are now more marginalized then ever. The reports issued abroad
refer to them as “an isolated minority”, “a minority under siege”,
“a persecuted Church” and “an oppressed minority”. To quote Mushee
Maouz: “The Copts’ participation in political life is minimal. The
peaceful integration of the Copts into their society started in the
middle of the 19th Century, but was regularly interrupted by the
militant Islamic movement that disconcerted the Copts and created
tensions between Muslims and Christians. The Copts continued to
swing back and forth between integration and rejection throughout
the 20th Century, and isolation became the common pattern under
the rule of autocratic regimes.” This dismal situation propelled a
million and half Christians to emigrate to the United States, Europe
and Australia. The exact number of the Christian minority living in
Egypt remains a well guarded government secret.

Of all the Arab regimes, the Syrian and Jordanian regimes are deemed
the best in their dealings with Christian citizens. Nevertheless,
the Islamist movement and the deteriorating economic situation have
badly affected the Christians in these two countries. Since the events
of September 11, tensions are running high in the region, and hatred
towards all that is related to the West is growing almost to the point
of triggering a collision between the East and West. To quote the
British reporter Martin Buckley: “The Christians in Jordan feel that
they are being pushed into a difficult corner, either to belong to
the Western World or to the Arab World.” Growing suspicions surround
the Christians, falsely accusing them of being “a fifth column” or an
“inside enemy” – another example of a prevalent mindset that constantly
casts doubts about the Christians’ loyalty and patriotism. It seems
that Christians are sadly destined to pay the price whenever tensions
or conflicts arise between the Arab World and the West.

Throughout the ages of Arab invasion and Ottoman occupation,
Christians of the Middle East: the Copts, Armenians, Syrians,
Maronites, Assyrians, Chaldeans, and Aramaeans have suffered from
persecution along with other minorities like the Shi’a, Kurds and
Druz. Their situation improved, however, when the modern state was
founded after the collapse of the Ottoman rule and at the onset of
Western colonization, becoming more engaged in their societies in
response to the emergent concept of citizenship. Unfortunately, at
the escalation of militant regimes and fascist religious movements,
a relapse occurred costing the minorities most of their justly earned
citizenship rights.

The bleak situation of the Christian Arabs has caught the attention
of honorable men who chose to confront the sinister tide that has
overtaken the region, and some of them paid dearly for their courage
such as Dr. Farag Fouda and Prof. Saad Eddin Ibrahim; the former
who was assassinated in 1991, and the latter who was jailed during
2000-2003.

A number of Arabic writers have recently produced candid articles and
other publications calling attention to the ordeal of Arab Christians.

Saudi Prince Talal Ben Abdelaziz wrote an article entitled “The
Survival of Christian Arabs”, in , a Lebanese newspaper, stating
the following: “The Christian Arabs’ situation is the product of
an environment overwhelmed by fanaticism and a violence level which
can trigger disasters of historical proportions, and, most of all,
the product of an environment strongly disposed to eliminate the
different other. The continued existence of the Christian Arabs in
their homelands will reinforce the foundations of the modern state, the
cultural diversity and democracy, and put an end to the continuous loss
of scientific, intellectual and cultural abilities in our region. Their
emigration is a mighty blow that will prove detrimental to our future.”

Mr. Muhammad Hasanayn Haykal wrote the following words in the
magazine entitled : “I personally feel, as others certainly do,
that if we do not address the issue of Christian emigration, if we
continue to overlook it or neglect it on purpose, then we will face
an Arab scene that will not just be different from the current one,
but one that would have definitely lost part of its assets on a human
and cultural level. It would be such a loss if the Eastern Christians
leave believing that there is no future for them or their children
here, Islam would then be left alone in the East, with only the
company of Zionist Judaism – and most specifically that of Israel.”

As for Mr. Galal Amin, he wrote the following enlightening words:
“Evidently, the issue of Muslims and Copts is not a religious issue,
it stirs up all our issues: education, freedom, rational thinking,
justice, ethics and development. If this argument is valid, then it
is obvious that if we want to see Muslims freed, we need to free the
Copts first”.

Mr. Tarek Heggy wrote the following comment: “Progress and
modernization are infectious! And it is up to the minorities of the
Middle East to pass on these notions into our region”.

There were many other inspiring words, in addition to a significant
visit from Pope John Paul II, who wished to support and encourage the
Middle East Christians. However, no matter how important the words
and visits are, neither of them is capable of achieving significant
results. Only when the foundations of the modern state are firmly
set in place, can we dare hope that this situation will change.
Democracy, liberty and citizenship – the basics of a modern state –
were the factors that initiated the integration of Christians within
their societies in the first half of the last century; and it was the
absence of these factors during the second half of the last century
that sent them back into the dark ages of isolation and persecution,
where they still abide.

Magdy Khalil is an Egyptian writer and analyst residing in the USA.
You can contact him at: [email protected]

http://www.theconservativevoice.com/articles/article.html?id=8004

Feature: Mad about Turkey

Feature: Mad about Turkey
by GARETH HARDING

UPI – United Press International (USA)
September 1, 2005 Thursday 11:45 AM EST

BRUSSELS, Sept. 1 — Brussels, the self-styled capital of the European
Union, is a consensual sort of place, where believers in the EU project
far outnumber doubters, and polite debate is preferred to heated
argument. But when it comes to the pros and cons of Turkey’s membership
of the Union, the gloves come off and etiquette flies out the window —
as a demonstration against Ankara’s EU bid proved earlier this week.

On a leafy square wedged between the European Parliament and the
Council of Ministers in the EU quarter of the city, several dozen young
activists from the “Voice for Europe” campaign handed out leaflets
against Turkish membership of the 25-member bloc to bemused motorists,
tourists and passers-by. They held up banners proclaiming “55 percent
vs. 35 percent: can’t you count” — a reference to a recent European
Commission opinion poll showing a majority of Europeans against Turkish
membership, let off balloons with the slogan “Turkey is not in Europe,”
and set up a huge clock with the hand standing motionless at 5 minutes
to noon. The message? Even at this late stage — accession talks with
the predominantly Muslim state are due to begin in Brussels in one
month — the decision by EU leaders to open membership negotiations
with Ankara can be reversed.

It is difficult to get worked up about draft directives and
parliamentary amendments — the usual Brussels fodder — but the
question of whether Turkey should be admitted into the EU in the
latter half of the next decade unleashes powerful emotions.

When Boris Blauth, the German coordinator of the Voice for Europe
campaign, tells United Press International that Turkish immigrants
commit “far more crimes” than locals, a Belgian journalist of Turkish
origin retorts: “Turks don’t have a chance to integrate. They are
put in a ghetto and left to their own devices.” To illustrate his
point, the photo-journalist tells the story of a date he once had in
Brussels. “After two hours talking in a bar, I told the girl my name
and she spat in my face and left.”

A hot-headed Armenian demonstrator has little sympathy for the
reporter’s romantic woes or arguments in favor of Turkish entry. “You
shouldn’t be a journalist. You should be a clown,” he says, to which
the reporter replies: “Go forth and multiply” — but not quite in
those words.

It is easy to see why Turkish membership of the EU, which is the
main topic on the table of a meeting of European foreign ministers
in Wales Friday, sparks such violent reactions.

If Turkey joined the EU in 2015, it would become its most populous
state within a decade due to strong population growth in the
predominantly Muslim republic and low fertility rates in the Union.
As population size largely determines voting power in the EU, it would
leapfrog Germany to become the state with the greatest political clout.

Turkey is considerably poorer than EU states, with a per capita gross
domestic product equal to a quarter the EU average.

“Unemployed manpower will stream into European territories, which
will result in tensions both on the labor force market and on the
level of society,” says a pamphlet distributed by Voice for Europe.

Blauth’s main concern is that Turkish values, which he describes as
in the “Asian, Islamic tradition,” are different from European secular
values such as equality between men and women and freedom to practice
one’s religion. “Let them have their culture and let us have ours,”
says the German.

Opponents of Turkey’s membership of the EU vigorously deny they are
racist or xenophobic, but there is more than a hint of Islamophobia
in some of the arguments they put forward.

“A Muslim state cannot join the European Union,” says Mogens Camre,
a Danish Euro-skeptic member of the European Parliament who took
time out to meet the campaigners Monday. “You can believe in any
God you like, but the Islamic religion is not about democracy. The
Arab world rejects modern society and we don’t want their fingers
on our buttons in Europe. We’ve only been able to develop the way we
have because we are a homogenized society. If the Muslims took over,
Denmark would be a desert.”

These arguments may be crude and pander to the public’s basest fears
about a clash of civilizations between Christian Europe and Muslim
Turkey, but they are widely held in the EU. In a recent commission
poll, three-quarters of Germans and 70 percent of French respondents
came out against Turkish accession, with over half of those interviewed
opposing Ankara’s entry into the 25-member club.

Since it was founded in May, Voice for Europe has collected over
26,000 signatures for its petition against Turkish membership and
has brought its message to Budapest, Copenhagen, Athens, Warsaw,
Prague and other European capitals.

“We have had a very good response on the streets,” says Blauth. “Even
Turkish women in hijabs (headscarves) have signed our petition.”

Despite the muscular campaigning against Turkey’s membership bid by
groups like Voice for Europe and the last-minute doubts expressed by
senior members of the French, Austrian, Greek and Cypriot governments,
membership talks with Ankara are still likely to kick off as planned
on Oct. 3 — over 40 years after Turkey first filed its application
to join. But the public debate about whether to admit the large,
powerful and populous nation on Europe’s eastern fringes is likely
to run and run.

Conquering Ararat

CONQUERING ARARAT

AZG Armenian Daily #156, 02/09/2005

Three mountain-climbers from Armenia, Hakob Gnuni, Vazgen Gnuni and
Karo Kendanian, conquered Mount Ararat these days and erected Armenian
tricolor on its top. They climbed the mountain together with climbers
from Greece.

Dishing out while dining in

DISHING OUT WHILE DINING IN

Burbank Leader, CA
Aug 31 2005

Zankou, known for chicken but not decor, hopes to draw in more
customers with a stylish new restaurant in Burbank.
By Darleene Barrientos, The Leader

BURBANK — Zankou Chicken restaurants are famous for the tender,
roasted chicken and tasty garlic spread they serve, but not so much
for the nondescript, cafeteria-like decor.

The Southern California chain, owned by the Iskenderian family of
Glendale, is planning to break with its reputation for good food
but bad ambience by opening a Mediterranean-inspired restaurant with
27,000 square feet in Burbank. The building will include the chain’s
first patio seating, and a dome will grace its southeast corner.

The new restaurant is scheduled to be open by November or December
and will be the beginning of the chain’s move toward more attractive
and welcoming eateries.

“This is going to be the staple,” said Dikran Iskenderian, a manager
and co-owner of Zankou’s six restaurants. “This is going to be,
God willing, what all of Zankou’s future stores will be based [upon].”

Burbank’s Zankou is being built from the ground up as part of a strip
mall under construction along San Fernando Boulevard just west of
Burbank Boulevard. The mall, which is being developed by Dell West
Properties, will include a drive-through Starbucks, a Robeks Juice
store, a Quizno’s sandwich shop, a nail salon and spa, an IndyMac
Bank branch and an Italian gelato shop, which will also be owned by
the Iskenderian family.

Seven tenants will occupy 13,000 square feet of the 50,000-square-foot
lot, said Rafik Khatchaturian, the developer and owner of the
property. The Khatchaturian and Iskenderian families have known each
other for at least 20 years, but have not worked together until now.

“I went to Italy and was inspired by the Italian architecture,”
Khatchaturian said of his plans to build the project. “I wanted
to create a high-end food court. I think we’ve been lucky in the
implementation of the idea.”

Zankou’s Burbank restaurant anchors the strip mall’s north end. The
eatery’s owners will employ a variety of consultants to plan the
restaurant’s paint, lighting, tile and kitchen layout.

“This location — no one can say anything anymore about the decor,”
Iskenderian said. “They can’t say anymore, ‘it’s great food, but take
it to go.'”

About 60% to 70% of Zankou’s customers take their food to go,
he said. With its new Burbank restaurant, Iskenderian said he
expected that number to drop to 50%. Iskenderian’s grandfather,
Vartkes Iskenderian, opened Zankou’s first store in Beirut, Lebanon,
in 1962. Iskenderian’s father, Mardiros Iskenderian, immigrated to the
United States and opened the first U.S. location in Hollywood in 1984.
Subsequent stores opened in Glendale in 1984, in Van Nuys in 1992, in
Anaheim in 1996, in Pasadena in 2000 and in West Los Angeles this year.

If Zankou’s Burbank restaurant opens as scheduled, it will be the
first time the chain has opened two stores in one year, Iskenderian
said. Future locations are being considered on Ventura Boulevard near
Tarzana, in Beverly Hills and in eastern Santa Monica.

The family might consider going public one day, but franchising the
Zankou brand is an unlikely idea, Iskenderian said.

“The food is handmade, and the recipes are from my family,” Iskenderian
said of Zankou, which is named after a river in Armenia. “We don’t
want the quality of the food to go down.”

Youth group leader takes full-time position at Diocese

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:

August 29, 2005
___________________

NEW YOUTH OUTREACH COORDINATOR JUMPS RIGHT INTO WORK

She was only in the office for a week before heading off to St. Vartan
Camp for seven days; then it was on to Midwest Hye Camp for a week; and
then another week at the St. Nersess Seminary summer sessions.

And soon she’ll be coming to a parish near you. Jennifer Morris, past
chair of the Armenian Church Youth Organization of America (ACYOA),
began as the full-time youth outreach coordinator at the Diocese of the
Armenian Church of America (Eastern) this July.

A native of Michigan, she received her bachelor’s degree in psychology
and elementary education and a master’s degree in curriculum and
teaching from Michigan State University. For the past seven years she
has taught second grade in the Rochester, MI, Community Schools.

She is a life-long member of the St. John Church of Southfield, MI, a
graduate of its Sunday School, and a former Hye Camp and St. Nersess
counselor.

“Coming to work at the Diocese was an opportunity that came upon me that
I couldn’t say no to,” said Morris. “Initially I was so hesitant,
because I am so comfortable in Michigan. But I realized this was an
opportunity that, if I didn’t take it, later I would regret it.”

She sees working at the Diocesan Center in New York as a way to be an
active, witnessing Armenian Christian.

“Being a Christian is who I am, it’s at the very center of everything I
do,” she said. “To be able to make that a part of my everyday work is
very powerful. Being able to bring children to Christ is very powerful.”

Morris will begin her position by spending time at both St. Vartan and
Hye Camps to look at how the newly devised curriculum is working. She
will provide feedback to improve it even further next year.

As youth outreach coordinator, one of her main focuses will be on
providing leadership training to parish youth directors and identifying
parishioners who should be tapped to serve as local youth directors. She
will also be working with parish ACYOA Jrs., which target 13- to
18-year-olds, to provide national cohesiveness to the purely local
program.

“I’m most excited to get into the life of the parishes, to understand
what is going on and how we can improve it,” she said. “We need to work
with parishes and youth leaders locally and regionally. We need to work
together because everyone has ideas but we’re not sharing those ideas,
so I want to be a springboard for youth directors, to help them with
planning things beneficial for our kids.”

Though she’ll have a wide variety of responsibilities, Morris sees her
job very simply. “Through my work I hope to bring children closer to the
Armenian Church. I hope to bring them Christ-centered programming that
is effective and meets their needs, that makes them want to be a part of
the church and make them feel special and important and loved by the
church,” she said.

Morris will be taking over the youth outreach coordinator
responsibilities from Yn. Arpi Kouzouian, who had been splitting her
energies between that position and director of St. Vartan Camp. Yn.
Kouzouian will now focus entirely on the camp program.

“We are excited that such a dedicated young person as Jennifer Morris
has chosen to serve the Armenian Church and share her love of Christ and
of the Armenian people. She is definitely an asset to our community,”
said Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese. “It is
also exciting to learn that this year our St. Vartan Camp is reaching
more children then ever. I am certain that with the full focus of Yn.
Arpi our summer camp efforts will be one of the best ways we bring the
next generation into the life of the church.”

— 8/29/05

E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
and Events section of the Eastern Diocese’s website,

PHOTO CAPTION (1): Jennifer Morris, a life-time member of the St. John
Church of Southfield, MI, spent her first few weeks as the Diocese’s new
coordinator of youth outreach at the Diocesan summer camps and at St.
Nersess Seminary’s summer sessions.

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www.armenianchurch.org
www.armenianchurch.org.