Antelias: Participation in the conference of ATIME

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:

THE CATHOLICOSATE OF CILICIA PARTICIPATES IN THE CONFERENCE ORGANIZED
BY THE ASSOCIATION OF THEOLOGICAL INSTITUTES IN THE MIDDLE EAST

On April 8 and 9, the Association of Theological Institutes in the
Middle East organized a conference on April 8 and 9 in the “Garden
Tower” hotel in Antelias. The conference was the continuation of
another conference, held on March 3-5 and entitled “Bioethics in the
Life of the Church and Societies Today.”

Deacon Berdj Asadourian, Deacon Ourardou Sarkissian, Setrag Aredjian
and Johnny Der Artinian participated in the conference on behalf of
the Catholicosate of Cilicia.

Professors and directors of theological schools discussed a wide range
of issues related to bioethics and morality during the conference.

The conference was a challenge students preparing themselves for
spiritual service in the future. They got acquainted with the current
issues and achievements in the field of bioethics.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
Ecumenical activities 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 genocide program features local pianist

Newburyport News, MA
April 14 2005

Armenian genocide program features local pianist

Salisbury concert pianist Claudia A. Keyian will be the featured
performer at Sunday’s observance of the 90th anniversary of the
Armenian genocide in North Andover. The program starts at 3 p.m. at
North Andover High School, 430 Osgood St.

Keyian is the director of the children’s choirs at First Religious
Society, Unitarian Universalist, in Newburyport. She also directs a
music program for infants and toddlers and their families, and
performs throughout the region.

The recipient of several music and academic scholarships, Keyian has
done graduate work in the areas of piano pedagogy, performance and
early childhood music education.

Sponsored by the Armenian Genocide Commemorative Committee of
Merrimack Valley, Sunday’s program will pay tribute to 18 survivors
of the genocide from the area. Rev. Vartan Kassabian, pastor of St.
Gregory Armenian Church of North Andover, will be the main speaker,
and the Armenian Choral Group of Merrimack Valley will perform.

A joint requiem service led by area clergy will open the program.
Admission is free.

Large-Scale Programs in Motion in Regards to 90th Commemoration

LARGE-SCALE PROGRAM OF EVENTS ENVISAGED IN ARMENIA AND ABROAD IN
CONNECTION WITH ARMENIAN GENOCIDE’S 90TH ANNIVERSARY

YEREVAN, APRIL 14, NOYAN TAPAN. On April 24 of the current year 1.5
mln people are to make a procession to Tsitsernakaberd, to the
Memorial to Armenian Genocide. According to the information provided
by the Press Service of the state commission on preparation of the
events, this year this number will double in consideration of the fact
that the Genocide’s 90th anniversary is marked and a large inflow of
people from Armenian marzes and abroad is expected. A large-scale
program of events is envisaged in Armenia and abroad. Scientific and
cultural events, public discussions have aleady started from early
April in many foreign countries. In Armenia the events will start in
the second half of April. On April 20-21, an international conference
on the subject “The Gravest Crime, Serious Challenge: Human Rights and
Genocide” will be held in Yerevan with participation of the greatest
scientists from 20 countries of the world, state and political
figures, including well-known Jewish and Turkish historians. The
international conference will be broadcasted in the direct air by the
Pubic Television of Armenia on the “Nor Alik” (“New Channel”) TV
channel. The conference will be broadcasted in Europe, America,
Russia, Near ans Middle East countries by satellite television. The
key event will be the procession of 1.5 mln people. This year the
Memorial to Genocide will be visited by official delegations from 15
countries of the world. In the evening of April 23 some youth
organizations are going to organize a torch-light procession from
Republic Square to the Memorial. On April 24, liturgies will be served
in all Armenian churches both in Armenia and other countries of the
world. Cultural events are also planned. On April 18-30, films on the
subject of Genocide will be shown in the “Moscow” Yerevan cinema. In
April and May “Armenian Genocide” photoexhibition of Armin Vegner,
German doctor and missionary, eye-witness of the deportation and
massacre of Armenians, and “Genocides of the 20th century”
photoexhibition of Simon! Norfolk (Great Britain) will open in
Yerevan. The photoexhibitions will be exhibited in a number of other
countries, too. Several tens of Armenian and foreign authors’ works on
Genocide have been published this year. A laser disk dedicated to the
Genocide’s 90th anniversary is being prepared for release. On April
22, a literary exposition on Genocide and human rights will be
presented in RA FM library.

The dream of Aland

Ha’aretz, Israel
April 14 2005

The dream of Aland

By Adar Primor

Finance Minister Benjamin Netanyahu revealed to us this week that he
has a dream – the Irelandization (and Singaporization) of Israel.
Last week, during the visit of Finland’s foreign minister, Erkki
Tuomioja, someone in the Foreign Ministry recalled another dream of
Netanyahu’s, from 1997: the dream of the “Alandization” of Palestine,
or in other words, copying the autonomy model of the Aland Islands –
which are under Finnish sovereignty – in the Palestinian territories.
It would be interesting to know, snickered that same source, whether
Netanyahu would today repeat that original idea.

In Mariehamn, the snow-covered capital of the Aland Islands, there
were recently some people who recalled that Israeli friends from the
Levant had shown an interest in them. The governor of Aland, Peter
Lindback, told of an Israeli ambassador who wanted to learn about the
local police force on the islands. The head of the local
administration, Elisabeth Naucler, told of a visit by Prof. Ruth
Lapidot, former legal adviser of the Israeli foreign minister, who
also came to investigate the local autonomy. Nati Tamir, former
ambassador in Helsinki and at present the ambassador in Canberra,
confirmed Israeli interest in the “Aland model,” and mentioned that
it lasted for several years.

It turns out that Israel is in good company. In a world of multiple
regional and ethnic conflicts, the list of those interested in the
“islands of peace” is a long one. About two weeks ago, the president
of Zanzibar visited Aland in order to learn how to behave vis-a-vis
his mother country, Tanzania. Before him, a long list of delegations,
officials and professors, liberation organizations and government
representatives, representatives of separatist regions and
mother-countries, visited the islands, from Corsica and France,
Nagorno Karabakh and Azerbaijan, South Ossetia and Georgia, the
Crimea and Ukraine, and East Timor and Indonesia – and this is just a
partial list.

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About 25,000 people live in Aland, which is composed of a chain of
about 6,500 islands and lies in the Gulf of Bothnia, between Finland
and Sweden. In 1809, Czarist Russia annexed Finland and Aland, which
until then had been a part of the Kingdom of Sweden. With the fall of
the last czar and Finland’s declaration of independence, in 1917, the
residents of the islands – 95 percent of whom are Swedish speakers,
wanted to reunite with Sweden.

Their request was transmitted to the League of Nations, which ruled
that the islands would come under Finnish sovereignty, but would be
demilitarized and neutralized, and entitled to self rule and full
cultural autonomy. This compromise agreement, which didn’t satisfy
any of the parties in its time, eventually turned the islands into a
dynamic and flourishing autonomy, a unique formula that is considered
the greatest achievement of the League of Nations.

Finns or Swedes? We are Alanders, boast the inhabitants of the
islands today. They watch Swedish television and go to study at
Swedish universities, their mentality is closer to Stockholm than to
Helsinki, but they still root for Finland at hockey games against
Sweden.

For all those seeking the perfect model of government, the Alanders
explain that their system is inimitable. If there is anything to
learn from it, it is the fact that it is sui generis, and apparently,
the same will have to be true of the Palestinian model.

The peace framework which Israel and Egypt agreed upon at Camp David
in 1978 spoke of “full autonomy” for the Palestinians. The Israeli
peace initiative of 1989 spoke of “self rule,” whereas the term on
which Israel and the Palestinians agreed after 1993 was “self
government.” But what was fine before Oslo today arouses profound
disdain.

There is nobody in the Foreign Ministry who will admit that the
Israeli interest in Aland was anything more than a “preoccupation
with a curiosity,” because even Prime Minister Ariel Sharon – who,
according to many, expressed admiration for the creation of the
Bantustans in South Africa, and who writhed (like his predecessors)
among the terms “entity,” “autonomy,” “minimum powers,” and “limited
sovereignty” – understands that there is no serious body today in the
international community that will support anything less than a
Palestinian state with full sovereignty.

And Netanyahu? The finance minister, who is also opposed to the
disengagement, ignored the overtures of Haaretz this week, as though
refusing to awake from his new dreams about the flourishing Israel;
as though refusing, at the same time, to give up the old dream of
Palestinian autonomy, and to accept the reality and the fact that
whether you will it or not, “Aland” is just a dream.

Toronto: Truth vs. Violence for film fest opening slot

The Toronto Star
April 13, 2005 Wednesday

Truth vs. Violence for film fest opening slot

Martin Knelman, Toronto Star

Opening night of the Toronto International Film Festival’s 30th
incarnation is almost five months away, but we can already offer some
guesses about what might be on the screen at Roy Thomson Hall on
Thursday, Sept. 8.

It shapes up as a rematch between those longtime friends and
sometimes rivals, Atom Egoyan and David Cronenberg. And for festival
CEO Piers Handling, 2005 could seem like a replay of 2002 – the year
Handling had to make a tricky choice between movies by these two
directors most closely associated with the festival.

That year the festival opened with Egoyan’s Ararat, an ambitious but
rather academic look at the 1915 genocide in which Egoyan’s Armenian
ancestors were the victims and the Turks were the oppressors.

Spider, Cronenberg’s best movie in years, was given a gala slot
midway through the festival. It was a riveting portrait of a mentally
disturbed misfit wandering the drab streets of London. But the
thinking was that it was too dark and edgy to be palatable for the
glitzy, corporate crowd on opening night.

In 2005, Egoyan and Cronenberg both have movies scheduled to be
released in the fall. And good reports are coming back from early
screenings of both.

In this corner: Where the Truth Lies, a black comedy that its
producer, Robert Lantos, hopes will carry Egoyan into the mainstream.
It has to, given its $26-million budget. According to word from last
week’s sneak screening for select industry insiders of an unfinished
version, it shapes up as a smart, entertaining audience-pleaser.

Formerly known as Somebody Loves You, Egoyan’s movie tells the story
of a showbiz duo (played by Kevin Bacon and Colin Firth) who break up
for mysterious reasons. The plot – which veers between 1959 and 1975
– is set in motion by a celebrity interviewer (Alison Lohman) who
raises certain sensational questions. Sex, drugs and the Mafia figure
in the plot, and so does the discovery of a dead woman’s body in a
hotel room.

In the other corner: Cronenberg’s latest movie A History of Violence,
which its U.S. distributor, New Line Films, recently test-screened in
Pasadena. Viggo Moretensen plays an apparently charming, happy family
man living with his wife (Maria Bello) in a lovely small town in the
U.S. Midwest. But their life is shattered when another Mafia figure
(Ed Harris) turns up, mistaking Mortensen for someone else – and
plunging him into a violent struggle.

Cronenberg is already preparing for his next movie Painkillers, which
will be produced jointly by Lantos and his sometimes partner Andras
Hamori – the provocative Hungarian emigre who worked in Toronto
throughout the 1980s before moving to Los Angeles. There he has built
a new career as an independent producer of such edgy pictures as Max
(2003), in which one of the characters was the young Adolf Hitler.

Hamori, a Canadian citizen, is almost sure to be returning to the
2005 Toronto film festival with Fateless, a daring Holocaust drama
that created a stir in February at the Berlin Festival. Nigel
Andrews, film critic for London’s Financial Times, wrote that the
jury should have given its top award, the Golden Bear, to this
Hungarian movie based on an autobiographical novel by Nobel
Prize-winner Imre Kertesz. Andrews also chose Fateless’s Lajos
Koltai, a former cameraman, as the festival’s top director.

The film tells the story of Gyuri, a young Jewish man who comes of
age amid the horrors of a concentration camp after being deported
from Budapest. When the camp is liberated, he returns home – only to
discover that he is not exactly welcome. Former friends and
neighbours react to him with shock, embarrassment and
incomprehension.

Trudy Desmond, the marvellous jazz singer who died five years ago at
the peak of her career, makes a posthumous return in a terrific new
CD, A Dream Come True: the Best of Trudy Desmond. It includes
material from earlier albums such as Make Me Rainbows, Tailor Made
R.S.V.P. and My One and Only. And it offers an opportunity for
connoisseurs of the great American songbook to discover Desmond.

Desmond was a funny girl from Brooklyn who landed in Toronto circa
1970 when offered a part in the revue Spring Thaw. Despite occasional
periods in New York or Los Angeles, she spent most of the next three
decades here. You may have seen her opening for George Burns at the
O’Keefe Centre. George should have been opening for Trudy, but she
never became the kind of star whose name sells a lot of tickets.

At one point, she quit show business and set up an interior design
business. It was successful, but she wasn’t happy. Then in the late
1980s, she began appearing in spots like George’s Spaghetti House and
the Montreal Bistro. But the perfect room for her was the Top o’ the
Senator. She was at home there, the perfect cabaret singer. She
seemed to have lived the lyrics of every song she sang, and startling
sounds came out of her mouth.

It’s a bit late for a comeback, but hearing Trudy’s singing songs
like “The Best Thing for You” always raises my spirits.

US Ambassador to Baku Refuted Info on Deployment of US Mil to Azerb.

Pan Armenian News

US AMBASSADOR TO BAKU REFUTED INFORMATION ON DEPLOYMENT OF US MILITARY BASES
IN AZERBAIJAN

13.04.2005 06:42

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The US is not going to deploy military bases in Azerbaijan
for securing the Caspian region, US Ambassador to Baku Rino Harnish stated.
In his words, during yesterday’s meeting US Secretary of Defense Donald
Rumsfeld and Azeri Defense Minister Safar Abiyev discussed the bilateral
cooperation within the frames of the anti-terrorist coalition and
Azerbaijan’s integration into NATO.

“Pyunik”, “Mika” to Meet in First Tour of 14th Football Championship

YEREVAN “PYUNIK” AND ASHTARAK “MIKA” WILL MEET IN THE FIRST TOUR OF
THE 14TH FOOTBALL CHAMPIONSHIP IN ARMENIA

YEREVAN, APRIL 13. ARMINFO. In the first tour of the 14th Football
Championship started in Armenia today, champion and Silver prize
winner of last year’s championship, Yerevan “Pyunik” and Ashtarak
“Mika” will meet.

Yesterday, Yerevan “Banants” won Abovyan “Esteglal-Kotayk” with a
score 1:0, “LerArtsakh” in Guymri won the local “Shirak” with the
score 4:1. As the teams in the Championship number 9, “Dinamo-Zenit”
rests in the first tour.

Acting Kyrgyz DM, Russian envoy discuss military cooperation

Acting Kyrgyz defence minister, Russian envoy discuss military cooperation

Interfax news agency, Moscow
13 Apr 05

BISHKEK

The Russian ambassador to Kyrgyzstan, Yevgeniy Shmagin, and Acting
Kyrgyz Defence Minister Ismail Isakov discussed Kyrgyz-Russian
cooperation on Wednesday [13 April].

“We intend to develop cooperation with Russia in future, too, within
the framework of obligations undertaken by the republic, expanding
them with new aspects of cooperation,” the acting Kyrgyz defence
minister has told journalists:

Speaking about priority areas in developing Kyrgyz-Russian military
cooperation, Isakov said that in many respects they were connected
with cooperation under the Collective Security Treaty Organization
[CSTO; members are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan and Russia].

“Russia provides the republic with large military and technical aid
under this organization and on bilateral basis,” Isakov said. “We are
expecting the delivery of Russian military aircraft equipment and
component parts to repair firearms and spare parts.”

Another area of cooperation is making Kyrgyz territory available for
deploying Russian military facilities, the acting defence minister
said.

He said that he had held phone talks with Russian Defence Minister
Sergey Ivanov. “The Russian minister assured us that through the
Defence Ministry, Russia will provide the Kyrgyz armed forces with
necessary aid. We are grateful to the Russian side for such care,”
Isakov said.

Anastasyan Among The Leaders

A1plus

| 18:51:46 | 11-04-2005 | Sports |

ANASTASYAN AMONG THE LEADERS

In the international chess competition in Dubai Grossmeister Ashot
Anastasyan is playing quite successfully. In the 6th round playing with
black draughts he beat Alexey Alexandrov and shares the 1st place with 5
other players with 5.5 points. Anastasyan has won 5 games and played one
draw.

Gabriel Sargsyan too is playing well. He won the game of the 6th round and
has now 5 points. Artashes Minasyan and Elina Danielyan are in the middle of
the list with 4 points each.

NATO seminar starts in Armenian capital

NATO seminar starts in Armenian capital

Mediamax news agency
12 Apr 05

YEREVAN

A two-day seminar organized by the George Marshall European Centre for
Security Studies and dedicated to the issue of drafting an Individual
Partnership Action Plan [IPAP] Armenia with NATO started in Yerevan
today.

Representatives of the Armenian foreign and defence ministries and of
other ministries and departments involved in the drafting of Armenia’s
IPAP with NATO are taking part in the seminar, Mediamax reports.

The retired German general [Deputy Director of the George Marshall
European Centre for Security Studies], Dr Horst Schamfeld, is heading
the delegation of the Marshall centre.