ANKARA: One Sided Or Mutual?

One Sided Or Mutual?
BY TAHA AKYOL

Turkish Press
26 Oct. 2004

MILLIYET – In 1919, writer Ziya Gokalp told the following to a military
court about the Armenian issue: ‘It wasn’t one-sided, the massacre
was mutual!’ In two books, ‘Death and Exile: The Ethnic Cleansing
of Muslims 1821-1922’ and ‘Muslims and Minorities,’ Professor Justin
McCarthy wrote about Muslim-Christian clashes and massacres between
which resulted in 5 million Muslim deaths. He researched not only the
Ottoman archives, but also made extensive use of reports of the British
Consulate. McCarthy characterizes the incidents which began with the
1915 Armenian revolt as a ‘war between communities.’ The real issue is
the ‘Ottoman response’ to the massacres which the Armenians started.
There were more Muslim deaths (Death and Exile, p. 217).

The Bosnians lived through the last massacre in the Balkans. Europe
just sat and watched this until NATO intervened! In his book ‘The
World’s Banker,’ Sebastian Mallaby wrote about the World Bank’s
failure to respond and the efforts of Kemal Dervis, later an economy
minister but then a WB official, to save the Bosnians. Through Dervis’
efforts, the WB eventually decided to help Bosnia’s reconstruction,
which encouraged NATO to intervene.

French daily Le Monde asked Dervis his opinion about the so-called
Armenian genocide. Dervis expressed his concerns about the incidents
and reminded them of Muslim massacres. The truth about the Armenian
question is that it wasn’t a one-sided reaction, but a mutual
massacre. If you act as if nothing happened, then people label the
incidents ‘genocide.’ Moreover, we have to remind the West of the
‘Muslim Massacre.’ The massacre, which began in 1821 on the Danube
and continued until 1995 in Bosnia… I wish there were more Turkish
people like Dervis working in the WB, the International Monetary Fund,
the UN and OECD.

–Boundary_(ID_c3+H/H923uvm23GBeX0nYQ)–

A spat in the Old City

Jordan Times
Sunday, October 24, 2004

A spat in the Old City

By Omar Karmi

OCCUPIED JERUSALEM – On Oct. 10, Armenian Archbishop Nourhan Manougian,
second in the Armenian Church hierarchy here, led a procession from the
Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem’s Old City to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre
to mark the Exaltation of the Holy Cross.
>From somewhere among the onlookers, a young Yeshiva student suddenly stepped
forward and spat at the bishop. The robed clergyman slapped the man back.
The Jewish student grabbed a chain, with an ancient religious pendant, from
around the bishop’s neck, tore it off and broke it. By this time, the entire
Armenian procession had piled in, and the Yeshiva student escaped relatively
unscathed only after the intervention of the Israeli police.

If it hadn’t happened, you couldn’t have made it up. But this was just
another day in Jerusalem, and not too far out of the ordinary either,
judging by the Oct. 12 headline in the Israeli daily Haaretz, `Christians in
Jerusalem want Jews to stop spitting on them.’

`This is not an unusual incident,’ an Armenian Church official told The
Jordan Times. `We all get it. Last week, a Greek Orthodox priest heard a tap
at his window. When he opened it, someone spat in his face.’

But the Armenians are particularly exposed to such incidents, said the
official, who preferred to remain nameless. Not because of their creed, but
for logistical reasons. `If the Greeks go to the Holy Sepulchre, it’s just
around the corner. It’s the same for the Latins. But the Armenian Quarter is
right next to the Jewish Quarter, and we have much further to go. Hence,
there is more opportunity for spitting.’

What’s with the spitting? The Yeshiva student in question in this incident,
Natan Zvi Rosenthal, said afterwards by way of explanation that he had
always been taught that Christianity was `idol worship.’ Rosenthal’s
explanation comes in various guises. George, a resident of the Armenian
Quarter, said he had once been told that wearing a cross was `a
provocation.’ `One [Jewish] neighbour told me that Christians had persecuted
Jews for 2,000 years, and that’s why some feel it is appropriate to act like
this.’

An Israeli police spokesman on Oct. 19 said this was the first such incident
that the police had dealt with in two-and-a-half years. He conceded,
however, that the incidents are not always brought to the police’s
attention.

Certainly, they are happening with enough frequency for some to question
whether it constitutes an anti-Christian phenomenon. Daniel Rossing, former
adviser to the Israeli religious affairs ministry on Christian affairs and
director of a Jerusalem centre for Christian-Jewish dialogue, told Haaretz
on Oct. 12 that there has been an increase in the number of such incidents
recently, `as part of a general atmosphere of lack of tolerance in the
country.’

The incidents have made many Christian clergy wary and, according to sources
in the Franciscan Church, it has been unofficial policy for Franciscan
clergy to only wear civilian clothes in West Jerusalem for the past 10 years
to avoid any incidents. The Franciscans have also suffered from garbage
being thrown into the garden of their monastery on Mount Zion. There have
been other recent acts of vandalism. A week after the Armenian incident,
Stars of David were spray-painted on the entrance to the Monastery of the
Cross, not far from the Israeli parliament in West Jerusalem.

The Holy Trinity Russian Orthodox Cathedral, located near the Israeli police
headquarters in the Russian Compound also in West Jerusalem, has suffered
similar vandalism.

The Armenian Church official also told of several incidents, two in which
the Armenian superior at the Holy Sepulchre Church, Archimandrite Samuel
Aghoyan, had been spat in the face by religious Jews in the Old City.

On Oct. 17, Rosenthal offered an apology to Archbishop Manougian, who in
turn said his religion compelled him to accept it. For the time being,
Rosenthal has been banned from Jerusalem’s Old City for 75 days, and,
according to the Israeli police spokesman, he could still face charges of
assault. The spokesman said he was not aware if there were any other charges
the student could be convicted of, but that a `smart lawyer’ could probably
find some.

Israeli politicians of the left and the right, meanwhile, have come out
strongly against the incident, and the Armenian Church official says he
wouldn’t be surprised if Rosenthal would receive a prison sentence.

`I don’t think the Israeli government, for a number of reasons, can appear
not to be able to protect the holy sites in Jerusalem. It doesn’t look good
for them in any future negotiations over Jerusalem, and it doesn’t look good
to their Christian supporters in the West.’

Sunday, October 24, 2004

Putin pledges to step up fight against xenophobia

Associated Press Worldstream
October 19, 2004 Tuesday 9:37 AM Eastern Time

Putin pledges to step up fight against xenophobia

MOSCOW

President Vladimir Putin pledged Tuesday to make a stronger effort to
stem the spread of xenophobia in Russia, where ethnic-based killings
and attacks on minority groups have become increasingly common.

Addressing a congress of Azerbaijanis living in Russia, Putin said
authorities in Russia have made “mistakes and flaws” in dealing with
the problem. “We need to analyze the situation and respond harshly,”
said Putin, who attended the congress together with Azerbaijani
President Ilham Aliev.

“This is particularly important for Russia – a multiethnic and
multi-faith country,” Putin said. “Accord between different ethnic
groups is a corner stone of Russia’s existence.”

Azerbaijanis, the most numerous group of migrants in Russia at about
2 million, have been target often of ethnically motivated attacks.

“Not only the government structures, but the entire society must
respond immediately to any violence or religious intolerance,” he
said, pledging that the government would “consistently and harshly”
combat xenophobia.

Recent polls have shown a rise in xenophobic sentiments in Russia. In
one survey, about 60 percent of respondents support restrictions
against migrants from the former Soviet republics in the Caucasus
Mountains south of Russia – Azerbaijan, Armenia and Georgia.

Rights activists estimate that there are about 50,000 neo-Nazis in
Russia, with Moscow and St. Petersburg home to their largest groups.
About 20 people have been killed in race-based attacks in Russia
annually in the past few years, and human rights groups say the
government does not do enough to prosecute such crimes.

Armenian PM expresses wariness about sending military contingent toI

Armenian PM expresses wariness about sending military contingent to Iraq

AP Worldstream
Oct 15, 2004

Armenian Prime Minister Andranik Markarian suggested the former
Soviet republic is reconsidering a promise to send troops to Iraq,
expressing fear that it could put his country in terrorists’ sights.

Armenia is considering sending about 50 military personnel to Iraq,
primarily bomb disposal experts, doctors and transport teams. They
would work under Polish command, and Armenian President Robert
Kocharian pledged the troops during a visit to Poland early last month.

But Markarian stressed that it was up to the Constitutional Court
and the parliament to make the decision on sending the troops.

“Let’s not forget that … there have been certain changes from the
conditions under which we gave preliminary approval” of the plan,
he said.

The government has sought to portray the decision to send troops to
Iraq as a way to boost ties with Europe, but critics worry that it
will endanger the 25,000-person Armenian community living in Iraq.

“We also have concerns on this count. It’s possible that as a result
Armenia could become of the targets of terrorists,” Markarian said.

Of the 12 former Soviet republics in the Commonwealth of Independent
States, four _ Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan and Georgia _ have
sent troops to Iraq.

The Vanishing Act of the Church in Turkey

The Vanishing Act of the Church in Turkey

A church worn down by Christian rivalry and Islamic Jihad hangs on in the
land of Nicea and Ephesus.

Collin Hansen

10/15/2004 9:00 a.m.
Christianity Today

Only those who are mindful of history can fully appreciate
the significance of Turkey’s expected admission to the European
Union. The bitterness spawned by centuries of warfare and political
rivalry has now given way to a new era of diplomatic and economic
engagement. Yet, Turkey’s troublesome record of human-rights abuses
remains a considerable stumbling block for a few wary EU nations. In
particular, the Ankara government is still prone to crack down
on ethnic and religious minorities when perceived as a threat to
nationalist identity. A sign of the government’s suspicion: non-Muslim
clergy are still forbidden from training there.

Many Greek and Armenian Christians in Turkey suffer the double ignominy
of religious and ethnic marginalization. Though the government
is officially secular and many Turks are only nominally Muslim,
conversion to Christianity is considered a betrayal of heritage and
homeland. Persecution stemming from this perspective has stunted
church growth and crippled the small Christian community.

But for these Christians, EU admission offers hope. A handful of
Greek Christians remain in Turkey, holdovers from a bygone era of
Hellenistic influence in Asia Minor. Their hope is that increased
trade activity with Europe will invite Greeks to return to Istanbul,
where they can broker business and diplomacy between Western Europe
and the Muslim world.

The hope is different for Turkey’s approximately 45,000 Armenians,
a traditionally Christian people. They believe Ankara’s engagement
with the West will stimulate further reforms in the democratic system,
possibly even allowing the government to admit the murder of nearly
1.5 million Armenians by Turkish authorities during World War I.

In both cases, EU access functions as a sort of reverse “Macedonian
call” for these beleaguered Christians. Acts 16 records a vision seen
by Paul while traveling through Phrygia and Galatiaâ^À^Ômodern-day
Turkey. The vision showed a man from Macedonia (ancient Greece),
begging for Paul to come and preach the gospel in that land..

Of course, far from being historically unreached like ancient
Macedonia, Turkey is home to many of Christianity’s pivotal
events. Present-day Turkey hosted the Christian church’s foundational
church councils, including Nicea, which laid the groundwork for
orthodox theology. The seven churches of Revelation were there. And
one of Paul’s most important epistles, Ephesians, was addressed to
believers in a city on Turkey’s Mediterranean Sea coast.

So how did Turkey’s Christians end up like the Macedonian in Paul’s
dream, begging for help from abroad?

Byzantine collapse While modern territorial spats between Greece
and Turkey occasionally garner headlines, the peoples in these two
regions have been in conflict for millennia. About 1,500 years ago,
the rivalry assumed a doctrinal dimension. In 431, the Council of
Ephesus condemned Nestorianism, followed by the Council of Chalcedon’s
dismissal of Monophysitism in 451. At these councils, the chief
defenders of these theological offshoots represented churches in the
East, ranging from Assyria and Persia (Nestorians) to North Africa
and Armenia (Monophysites). The situation only worsened when the
Greeks attempted to subjugate the Eastern churches by seizing their
monasteries and churches.

The theological denunciation of the Eastern churches coincided with
ongoing ethnic and geopolitical infighting. The Persians warred
with the Aramaeans, Egyptians, Armenians, and Greeks, greatly
destabilizing the Christian territories’ frontier with the newly
Muslim land on the Arabian peninsula. A struggle in the Byzantine
capital of Constantinople between Emperor Phocas (602-10) and his
general Heraclius instigated a military mutiny. Then in 632, Emperor
Heraclius ordered the conversion of the Jews, which resulted in mass
murder and tremendous resentment of his rule.

All in all, there was a great deal of resentment toward the Byzantines,
even among other Christians. Thus, when Islamic Bedouins began raiding
Christian territories, they allied with displaced Arabs and disaffected
local Christians. The Persians and Greeks dismissed these sorties
as common, unsophisticated nomadic activity. But they were wrong. The
first wave of jihad was underway.

The second wave of jihad overthrew the Byzantine Empire
altogether. The key for the Islamic conquerors was enlisting the
support of the recently converted Turks. The Turks were a warlike
group, quick to battle, skilled in the slave trade. Once converted,
the warrior doctrine of jihad motivated them to subdue Armenia and
the Greek territory in Anatolia, where the Turkish capital of Ankara
is today. Osman Ghazi (1299-1326), founder of the Ottoman Empire,
led these Turks in military campaigns against Christians, and his
successors carried on his war against the Byzantine Empire and Europe.

Boasting extraordinary leaders and a ruthless military, the Ottoman
Turks capitalized on Christian weaknesses and rivalries to subdue all
of Asia Minor, conquering Constantinople in 1453. They also captured
the Balkans during the mid-15th century, and even reached the gates of
Vienna in 1683. It was this crisis of encroaching Islam that provided
the backdrop for the Protestant and Catholic Reformations.

Armenian genocide Even while the Byzantine Empire collapsed, however,
the Armenians managed to withstand the Islamic onslaught. Though
part of the Ottoman Empire, they maintained their culture, language,
Orthodox religion, and a large measure of political autonomy. But
some fatal miscalculations and the weight of world events, not to
mention the Ottoman Empire, conspired to nearly annihilate them.

The Armenians desired true freedom from the Ottomans. They hoped to
gain this freedom by earning European sympathy for their plight,
combined with some help from the Russians, who sought to weaken
their Ottoman enemy. World War I upset their strategy. In the middle
of a bloody war, the Ottomans could not afford an insurrection. The
Europeans had no sympathy to offer, given their staggering losses in
the trenches. And the Russians were already fighting two frontsâ^À^Ô
one with Germany and the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the other with
Marxists.

These factors also provided cover for the Turks to solve their
“Armenian problem” once and for all. The Turks simply shot many of
the Armenians. Others they rounded up and marched toward the Middle
East without food, water, or shelter. For the Muslim crowds along
the Armenian “parade route,” deportation was an opportunity for rape,
pillage, and slave internment. Some women survived by converting to
Islam and immediately marrying a Muslim. But the rest were slaughtered
when they reached their destination in modern-day Syria. Up to 1.5
million Armenians died. This 20th-century genocide motivated Hitler,
who when discussing mass murder of the Jews said, “Who remembers
the Armenians?”

Lessons of a disturbing past The state of the contemporary church
in Turkey, home to so many seminal moments in Christian history,
looks bleak for now. Perhaps integration into the European Union
will galvanize the small Greek Orthodox community in Istanbul and
allow the Turkish government to honestly examine the grizzly fate of
the Armenians.

Hopefully the spread of religious freedom there will ease
hostility toward missionaries and converts from Islam to
Christianity. Regardless, we should heed the warnings of
historyâ^À^Ôbeware the dangers of political infighting between
Christians with earthly interests at heart, and never underestimate
the seriousness of Islamic jihad.

Collin Hansen is assistant editor for Christian History &
Biography. More Christian history, including a list of events
that occurred this week in the church’s past, is available at
ChristianHistory.net. Subscriptions to the quarterly print magazine
are also available.

Armenia not to take part in military operations in Iraq – minister

Armenia not to take part in military operations in Iraq – minister
By Tigran Liloyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
October 12, 2004 Tuesday

YEREVAN, October 12 — Armenia will not send servicemen to Iraq. “It
did not and will not take part in military operations” in that country,
Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan told the public television.

“It is a matter of a humanitarian action, not a military one,” he
said, referring to the Armenian intention to send medics, sappers
and drivers to Iraq.

In contrast to other regional countries, Armenia did not welcome
the operation in Iraq from the very beginning, the minister said.
“Humanitarian participation is quite a different thing, and it can
be discussed in light of the interests of the Armenian community and
the people of Iraq,” he said.

Armenia is fighting against international terrorism through affiliation
to international conventions, strengthening of borders and prevention
of terrorists’ transit via its territory, Oskanyan said.

League of Women Voters talk to residents who made a difference Oct.

League of Women Voters talk to residents who made a difference Oct. 21

Lexington Winchester Star, MA
Oct 13 2004

If you were riveted by Tracy Kidder’s story of the young Paul Farmer
and his work with sick and impoverished Haitians, you will not want
to miss hearing people in the Winchester community describe their
experiences in lands devastated by natural disaster, disease, poverty,
and political conflict.

The League of Women Voters invites everyone to hear these residents’
compelling stories on Thursday, Oct. 21, at the Winchester Public
Library. This event, at 7 p.m., is free and open to the public.

In the wake of a severe earthquake and the fall of communism in the
late 1980s, Gail O’Reilly discovered an Armenia whose people were
demoralized. With their way of life taken away from them involuntarily,
Armenians didn’t yet understand the rules of democracy and felt
fortunate to have electricity and running water even two hours a
day. After observing Armenians trying to sell their crafts in a park
without tourists there to buy them, O’Reilly decided to help the
artisans sell their products more globally and, at the same time,
find ways to preserve Armenian art and culture.

Michael Bedford, a Peace Corps volunteer in the 1970s and the Asia
Regional Manager for Oxfam in the 1990s, became the second-ever Peace
Corps Director in Bangladesh in 2000. His work teaching Bangladeshis
about the United States and its democratic principles became even
more important in this Moslem country following the Sept. 11 tragedy
and the U.S. war on Afghanistan and Iraq.

Ten years ago, Tom Hirschfeld was invited to join a volunteer project
in Nicaragua to build a village school and on subsequent trips to
use his medical expertise to develop programs for sustained community
development. Hirschfeld also has traveled to Nepal, Bosnian refugee
camps, and Tibet, primarily with Bridges to Community, an NGO that
brings volunteers to parts of the world that are in need of their help.

In 1985, Marion Austin began her work in Haiti, where she directed a
massive feeding program as a missionary to the Haitian people. As she
became involved in new missions in different villages, she was named
President of the organization Bless the Children of Haiti. Austin
has continued her work through the NGO Hope for the Children of Haiti.

The Winchester League welcomes the entire community to “The Journeys
of Winchester Residents Making a Difference,” Oct. 21 at 7 p.m. at
the Library. There are mountains beyond mountains.

-Written by Dotty Burstein

BAKU: Azeri MP to Europe body dismisses criticism,promises fair muni

Azeri MP to Europe body dismisses criticism, promises fair municipal
elections

ANS TV, Baku
11 Oct 04

The head of the Azerbaijani parliamentary delegation at the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE), MP Samad
Seyidov, in a 30-minute interview with the “Point of View” programme on
the Azerbaijani independent TV station ANS, welcomed a PACE resolution
complementing Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev on releasing political
prisoners and the reforms he was implementing.

After a while the presenter pulled him up short, saying that the report
“contained a fair amount of criticism of commitments” that could have
been easily honoured by Azerbaijan and which were important not only
for the Council of Europe (CE) but for Azerbaijan, too.

Seyidov took on board some of the existing problems that were mentioned
but added that the Azerbaijani parliament had already endorsed setting
up public television, for example. He then changed tack saying that
“analysing Ilham Aliyev’s one-year period in office, his latest steps,
we see why the resolution is positive because within the shortest
period of time, he has taken such important steps that they should
indeed be assessed positively. As for criticism, this will never end”.

Seyidov praised the role of the Azerbaijani parliamentary delegation
at the PACE session, adding that the CE and Azerbaijan should work
closely on the implementation of laws. Seyidov said that some Armenian
proposals to amend the PACE rapporteurs’ report on finding a Karabakh
settlement should not be taken seriously but stressed the importance
of the report by Council of Europe Secretary-General Terry Davis on
the Karabakh conflict.

The MP said he thought that Azerbaijan has been honouring its
commitments to the Council of Europe and would soon complete them
successfully as they and the Karabakh settlement were interwoven.

Asked about Azerbaijan’s readiness to hold the upcoming municipal
elections in December so that they were in line with Council of Europe
standards, ahead of the January session of PACE where the issue will
be debated, Samadov said that “we should be very serious in how we
organize the municipal elections” to avoid providing those working
against us with “extra pretexts”. Highlighting the significance of the
elections, the MP said that this will give us an opportunity for the
“normal, fair resolution of the Karabakh and the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict”.

In reply to a question about whether the president would meet relevant
bodies coordinating their activities with those of international
organizations, the deputy said that the foreign policy issues were
being centralized and that the relevant state bodies had to come up
with specific proposals to coordinate their efforts.

The MP was upbeat about the Azerbaijani parliament’s interaction with
other parliaments, stressing that its activities should be transparent
and active without becoming a “hostage” to policies of others. He
rejected proposals by international organizations for holding joint
meetings between the three South Caucasus republics and separatist
bodies operating in these republics.

Russia transport minister to hold talks in Yerevan

Russia transport minister to hold talks in Yerevan
By Tigran Liloyan

ITAR-TASS News Agency
October 11, 2004 Monday

YEREVAN, October 12 — Russian Transport and Communication Minister
Igor Levitin will discuss with the state leadership of Armenia the
entire complex of bilateral relations in the political and especially
in the economic sphere.

Levitin is arriving in the Armenian capital on Tuesday for the
first time in the capacity of the head of the Russian part of the
intergovernmental commission for economic cooperation.

Levitin will meet with Armenian President Robert Kocharyan and Prime
Minister Andranik Margaryan. The Russian minister will hold talks
with the head of the Armenian part of the commission, Defence Minister
Serzh Sarkisyan who is also Secretary of the National Security Council
under the Armenian president.

Sources in the Armenian government told Itar-Tass Levitin will address
the opening of the international Armenian economic forum held here
by the Union of Armenians of Russia and the World Armenian Congress
with well-known Russian entrepreneur and public leader Ara Abramyan
in the head.

The visit’s programme includes a visit to the Yerevan instrument
making plant Mars, which was handed over to Russia as settlement of
Armenia’s interstate debt.

TBILISI: Yerevan comes out from the shadows

The Messenger, Georgia
Oct 8 2004

Yerevan comes out from the shadows

According to the Russian newspaper Red Star, the Minister of Defense
and Secretary of the National Security Council of Armenia Serzh
Sarkisian gave an interview to the republic’s public TV in which he
shed light on some aspects of military politics.
Much attention was paid to Armenian-Russian relations. According to
the Minister of Defense, Russia was and is the main strategic ally of
Armenia. Serzh Sarkisian denied all allegations that Armenia does not
want to deal with Russia and wants to enter NATO. He called all the
rumors about this “political commotion.”
“I never wished nor wish now for Armenian to enter NATO. Owing to the
fact that we participate in the Organization of Agreement on Joint
Security, many issues, which should not be announced, are being
positively discussed and decided,” he noted. Nevertheless Armenia is
actively participating in different projects and programs of the
North-Atlantic block.
According to Sarkisian, start of Armenia’s cooperation with NATO is
simply taking advantage of opportunities. As he thinks, the aim of
cooperation with NATO is that Armenia wants to become a full member
of the European family.
“We will continue to intensify our cooperation with the alliance and
think that this cooperation is a component part of national
security,” Sarkisian said. As for cooperation with Western partners,
he noted that Armenia is obliged to send its military specialists to
Iraq. “By its participation, Armenia must contribute in the
establishment of stability in Iraq,” he noted. Concerning the
Karabakh conflict, Sarkisian stated that Armenia has no wish to renew
military actions with Azerbaijan. He said that Yerevan is not
interested in reducing Azerbaijan’s participation in the NATO program
“Partnership for Peace.”