Aronyan The 2nd After The Draw With Adams

ARONYAN THE 2ND AFTER THE DRAW WITH ADAMS

armradio.am
24.01.2008 16:22

Armenian Grand Master Levon Aronyan played a draw with Michael Adams of
England in the 10th round of the Corus International Chess Tournament
underway in Wijk aan Zee (Holland). Gaining 6 points from 10 possible
Aronyan currently occupies the second position. Magnus Carlsen (Norway)
is leading with 6.5 points. In Round 11 Aronyan will compete with
Loek van Wely (Holland).

In Group B Grand Master Sergey Movsisyan of Slovenia is leading with
8.5 points from 10 possible. Gabriel Sargsyan has 3.5 points and
ranks 13th.

Joe Biden Becomes 34th Cosponsor Of Armenian Genocide Resolution

JOE BIDEN BECOMES 34TH COSPONSOR OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.01.2008 14:44 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The highly regarded and influential chairman of
the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Senator Joseph Biden (D-DE),
a longtime supporter of U.S. recognition of the Armenian Genocide,
officially announced his support yesterday for the Armenian Genocide
Resolution (S.Res.106), reported the Armenian National Committee of
America (ANCA).

"Armenian Americans – and all those committed to forever ending
the cycle of genocide – welcome Chairman Biden’s principled support
for Congressional reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide, and thank
him for his years of leadership in helping to put America back on
the right side of this compelling moral and foreign policy issue,"
said ANCA Executive Director Aram Hamparian. Senator Biden’s decision
yesterday brings the official Senate cosponsor list to 34.

October 10, with a vote 27 to 21 the U.S. House Committee on Foreign
Affairs passed the Armenian Genocide Resolution, H.Res.106, which
was introduced by Representative Adam Schiff January 30, 2007.

However, the resolution did not reach the House floor.

British Press Responsible For False Claims About PKK Bases In Karaba

BRITISH PRESS RESPONSIBLE FOR FALSE CLAIMS ABOUT PKK BASES IN KARABAKH

PanARMENIAN.Net
22.01.2008 16:06 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Allegations that Nagorno Karabakh had hosted outlawed
Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) camps are sheer nonsense, Armenia’s
Deputy Foreign Minister Arman Kirakossian said in an interview with
the Cumhuriyet daily. "These false claims appeared in the British
press four years ago. Places referred to as camps are in fact Kurdish
and Yezidi villages in the region," he said.

In December 2007 Azerbaijan announced that Kurdish rebels are trained
in camps deployed in Nagorno Karabakh.

The Tragic Events Of The Holocaust And The Greek Christians; Help To

THE TRAGIC EVENTS OF THE HOLOCAUST AND THE GREEK CHRISTIANS; HELP TO THE JEWS
Orestes Varvitsiotes

Greek News
me=News&file=article&sid=7971
Jan 21 2008
New York

On the occasion of the designation of January 27 as a Day of
Remembrance of the victims of the Holocaust in Greece, it is timely
to recount these horrific events, and also to examine how their
Christian brothers acted and reacted to those events. To begin with,
it must be acknowledged that the subject of the Holocaust in Greece,
though not deliberately, had been left to benign neglect so to speak
for a long time. It resurfaced again in the mid-1990ʼs with the
advent of the 50th anniversary of the end of the World War II and the
erections of the various Holocaust memorials to mark the event. There
are many reasons for the silence, of course. I would like to point
out, however, that the tragic developments that took place in Greece
after the Liberation, i.e., the civil war, the imperatives of the
Cold War and the desire of the Greek people to bury the events of
the unpleasant past, also contributed to this neglect.

Yet, it is a story that must be told, both for its tragic aspect,
i.e., almost the total annihilation of an entire people and also for
the empathy and assistance they received from the Greek Christian
population during their ordeal. Although Greek Christian-Jewish
relations (especially in Thessaloniki) were not always at their best,
there was no official or institutional anti-Semitism in Greece. In
fact, as soon as Thessaloniki was liberated by the Greek forces in
1912, King George I and other Greek officials went out of their way
to re-assure the Jews that they had nothing to fear and they were
welcome as one of the cityʼs thriving communities. Indeed the Jews
continued to live their lives as before with their own institutions:
synagogues, schools, a hospital, newspapers, orphanages and an old
age home.

In order to understand what happened to the Jews in Greece, one must
have an idea of their history and the demographics at the time of the
Holocaust. The Jews arrived in Greece prior to the Current Era, as
early as 140 BC, and maybe even earlier, since there are archaeological
remains of a synagogue in Delos dating back to the 3rd century BC. At
the time of Paul the Apostle (circa AD53), we know that thriving Jewish
communities existed in continental Greece, the Greek islands and in
Asia Minor, then inhabited by Greeks. As a matter of fact, it was
St. Paulʼs visits to these communities that started Christianity
going by visiting the Jewish Diaspora of the Greek World. But he did
not get anywhere with the Jews; as a matter of fact he had to flee in
the darkness of the night several times to save his life, for he was
considered a heretic and his teachings, blasphemous. Along the way,
however, he made converts among the Greeks, at which time he changed
his tactics and concentrated on them. The descendants of these Jews
are called Romaniotes (Greek speaking). At the time of the Holocaust,
their main centers were the city of Ioannina, in Epirus-a region of
northwestern Greece-and the nearby towns: Arta, Preveza, Kastoria,
Trikkala, and Larissa. (Although the latter two towns had "mixed"
communities, meaning there were also Sephardic Jews; i.e., Jews
who came from Spain. Other smaller communities also existed in the
islands and other parts of Greece. (After Greeceʼs independence,
there was a small community in Athens as well.)

The first Ashkenazi (Central and East European Jews who speak Yiddish
or Jewish German written in Hebrew letters) came to Thessaloniki
from Hungary and Germany in 1376 in order to escape persecution, and
their arrival continued throughout the fifteenth century. In 1394 as
well as during the Venetian rule (1423-1430), other smaller groups
came from the Provence, mainland Italy and Sicily. On March 26 1430,
after a three-day siege, Thessaloniki fell to the Turks. Slaughter,
looting and taking of slaves followed to such a point that the Sultan,
Murat II, intervened in order to put an end to the slaughter. The
devastation was so brutal that he personally freed at his own expense
many prisoners and, subsequently, tried to revive and repopulate
the devastated city by bringing Turks as well as Christians from the
surrounding area. Thus, when the Jews were forced to leave Spain in
1492, the Sultan, Beyazid II, saw a great opportunity to repopulate
the city, and with talented people at that. Of the Spanish Jews
who thus arrived in the Ottoman Empire, a number of them settled in
Constantinople, Smyrna and to a lesser extent some other places.

Thessaloniki, however, attracted the largest number of the Sephardim,
and thus they became the largest ethnic element in Salonika, as they
came to call Thessaloniki. Soon afterwards, others also began to
come from Italy as well as Ashkenazi from Germany and other parts
of Europe. But the Sephardim dominated the scene. In due course,
Thessaloniki would become a thriving community and a vibrant Jewish
cultural center, gaining for itself a reputation as the "Second
Jerusalem" and "Mother of Israel". In the 1913 census conducted
by the Greek authorities, out of the total population of 157, 889,
61,439 were Jews, 45,889 Turks, 39,956 Greeks, and a small number
of Armenians, Bulgarians, and Europeans. (According to a 1919 Jewish
census, their number was 90,000.) By contrast, the Jewish population
in Constantinople and Smyrna was just between 5-10% of the total.

The demographics of Thessaloniki, however, began to change drastically
after the Balkan Wars (1912-14), the Russian Revolution (1917) and
the Asia Minor Catastrophe (1922), when a continuous flow of Greeks
from Bulgaria, Russia and Turkey poured into Thessaloniki.

During the exchange of population in 1923-24, a large number of
the 1.2 million Greek refugees from Turkey settled in Thessalonike
and other parts of northern Greece. It is estimated that the total
population of Thessalonike in 1941 was about 225,000. At the time,
of the 72,900 Jews living in Greece, 56,000 lived in Thessalonike. The
total population of Greece was just over 7 million.

By this time, the Jews in all parts of Greece were assimilated or
mainstreamed, except in Thessaloniki. There they lived in their own
quarters, spoke Ladino (a mixture of Spanish and Hebrew) as their
mother tongue, and had their own schools, newspapers, a hospital, two
orphanages, an old age home, and cultural centers. It was not until
1932, when it became mandatory that the Greek language be taught in all
schools-be it public or private-that the Jews began to learn Greek. The
lack of knowledge of Greek will cost them dearly, as it is considered
one of the reasons that the Thessaloniki Jews did not take to the
mountains to escape, and they so easily became captives of the Germans.

When Mussolini ordered the attack against Greece in October 1940,
many Jews served in the Greek Army and fought in the Albanian Front.

(A total of 12,898 enlisted men and 343 officers, of which 513 died
and 3,743 wounded.) As a matter of fact, the first victim of the war
was Colonel Mardohai Fritzis, who became legendary for his courage.

The inability of the Italians to conquer Greece brought in the Germans,
who wanted to protect the oilfields of Romania from possible British
air strikes and also to cover Wermachtʼs southern flank when
they would invade Russia, as they planned. Thus, Germany attacked
Greece on April 6, 1941, occupied Thessaloniki on April 9 and Athens
on April 21. The Battle of Crete took place between May 20 and 30. On
May 31 the entire of Greece was under German occupation.

On June, the Axis divided Greece into three sectors: the Germans took
Athens, Thessaloniki and western Macedonia, Crete and a few other
islands; the Bulgarians eastern Macedonia and Thrace, and the Italians,
the rest.

The problems for the Jews in Thessalonike began immediately, and in
earnest: The day after the Germans occupied Thessaloniki they ordered
the closing of the Jewish newspapers: one was published in Ladino
and two in French. At the same time they began the publication of Nea
Evrope, a virulent pro-Nazi newspaper that will play a major role in
spreading poisonous propaganda against the Jews and the Allies. On
April 15 they arrested all members of the Community Council, and a
few days later more of their leaders. They also arrested the Chief
Rabbi, Dr. Zvi Koretz, whom they sent to prison in Vienna, and they
appointed Sabby Saltiel as president of the Community. Saltiel is
described as a "mild-mannered man and a non-entity". Now, having
their own man in charge of the community, they released the members
of the Council they had previously arrested. They forbid the Jews
from habituating in the cafes and pastry shops, took over their
hospital-literally throwing out in the streets the patients-looted the
community offices and confiscated stores and houses. Then on July 11,
1942, they ordered all males between the ages of 18 and 45 to gather
in Plateia Eleftherias (Liberty Square), where they were subjected
to all sorts of indignities, including beating, and were made to
register. Not even animals are treated in such an inhuman manner. This
event brought to surface the height and depth of the Nazi ability to
brutality and barbarism that will be amply demonstrated throughout
Greece (and Europe) in the future.

Ultimately, 3,000 Jews were sent to forced labor camps, where they
suffered untold hardships and many died from hunger, the cold and
exhaustion.

In December 1942, after firing Saltiel as president and arresting
his interpreter and stool pigeon, Albala, the Germans reestablished
the Community Council and appointed new members with Rabbi Koretz as
president. The members they selected were respectable citizens and that
gave the Jews a sigh of relief hoping that maybe, at last, things will
get better after all. Indeed, the main task and preoccupation of the
community and its leadership became the fate of the people in forced
labor, the alleviation of their plight and their release. Finally, they
were able to negotiate their release by paying 2.5 billion drachmas
to Dr. Martens, the Thessaloniki German commandant. Other events:

The destruction of the Jewish cemetery

The confiscation of businesses and factories

The squeeze for money that reduced the communityʼs ability to
continue other social programs, such as the feeding of the poor and
the young.

Then on February 2, 1943 an SD (Sichrheitsdienst) committee arrived
in Thessaloniki, headed by Dieter Wesliceny and SS Lt. Alois Brunner.

On February 6, they put in motion the mechanism for the final
destruction of the Jews. Now the Jews were forced to wear the yellow
Star of David and to live only in certain neighborhoods, actual
ghettos. They also created a Jewish Militia to keep order. These
measures, claimed the Germans through the mouth of Dr. Koretz, were
aimed at restructuring the Jewish community into a self-administering
body, located in an autonomous area of the city, with their own
mayor and chamber of commerce. In fact, deceit and absolute secrecy
of their plans made it possible for the Germans to mislead and
lure the Jews onto their own destruction. It also neutralized the
Christian populace of the city, thus making it easier for them
to carry out their plans. Unfortunately, the Jewish leadership,
and especially Rabbi Koretz, did not heed the urging of EAM (the
Communist led Resistance organization) to join the Resistance and
flee to the mountains. Instead, he dutifully obeyed German orders
and tried to ameliorate them with "good behavior". Dr. Koretz tried
to solicit the help of the quisling prime minister, Logothetopoulos,
who was sympathetic to them. However, the ardent anti-Semite governor
of Macedonia, Simonides, was facilitating the German plans, because
he claimed that the Jewish houses were needed to shelter the Greek
refugees from the Bulgarian occupied sector. An appeal made by
the bishop of Thessalonike, Ghennadios, was of no avail. Neither
did the appeal of Archbishop, Damaskinos, and the presidents of all
major cultural, professional and business associations of Athens and
Piraeus. Damaskinos Appeal, as it came to be known, is an important
historical document and an act of unique courage.

On March 6, 1943 the Jews were prohibited from exiting their ghetto
confines, while at the Baron Hirsch section-now converted into a
transit camp-the stage was set for the final act: From there, the
Jews would be loaded on trains that will carry them, under the most
inhuman conditions, to the German concentration camps, and their
death. The first convoy left on March 15, 1943. Consecutive convoys
followed, spaced a few days apart. By August 18, in just six months,
no Jew was left in what was an ancient and vibrant community. Of its
46,091 members sent to the death camps, only 1950 survived. Today,
there are only 1,200 Jews living in Thessaloniki, as some of the
survivors subsequently emigrated to America and Israel.

The fate of the Jews in other parts of Greece had its own
peculiarities. In the Bulgarian sector the Jews met the same fate as
in Thessaloniki: almost total extermination. Of the approximately 5,500
Jews living in the area, 4,215 were sent to Treblinka and to immediate
death. Things were different for a while in the Italian sector:
not only were the German orders completely ignored; but the Italians
actively helped many Jews to escape. However, the situation changed in
September 1943 when Italy surrendered to the Allies and switched sides
in the war. Then the German war machine began to implement their "final
solution" in what was previously the Italian sector. They thoroughly
succeeded in Ioannina with the sheepish collaboration of Cabili, a very
prominent member of the Jewish community, as well as in Arta, Preveza,
Chalkis, Corfu, Crete and Rhodes. In Corfu, the most despicable thing
happened, where the mayor and his cohorts, all Nazi collaborators,
clapped as the Jews were taken away, destined to their death camps. The
Cretan Jews were drowned while they were transported to Piraeus, and
a British submarine torpedoed their boat. In Athens, when the Chief
Rabbi, Elias Barzelai, was ordered by the Germans to submit the names
of the Jews, his abduction was engineered by EAM and Jewish members
of the Resistance, and was taken to the mountains. At the same time,
the Athens synagogue was set on fire, in order to destroy the records.

This sent a message to the Jews of Athens to hide and seek shelter
amongst the Christian populace or flee the country. EAM/ELAS actively
helped many Jews to find shelter and set up a mechanism for those
who wished and could afford it to flee to Turkey and from there to
Palestine. Only those who couldnʼt or trusted German intentions
and assurances, registered. At the same time, EAM circulated leaflets
warning those who would turn in any Jews that they will be executed
as traitors. They also published an appeal by Rabbi Barzelai for the
Jews to join the Resistance and flee to the mountains. At this time,
Archbishop Damaskinos did all he could to assist the Jews escape and
survive. Besides appealing to both Logothetopoulos and Altenburg,
Hitlerʼs representative in Athens, he formed a three-member
committee for the specific purpose to render assistance to the Jews,
to find ways to save them. It is a well-known fact that the Chief of
Police of Athens, Angelos Evert, saved many Jews by issuing false
ID cards. The Archbishop ordered the clergy to extend all possible
assistance to the Jews, including the issue of false baptismal papers
and hiding them in monasteries. Indeed, the efforts of the Greek
Orthodox Church were sincere, extensive, persistent, and courageous (in
contrast to the Catholic Church and the Pope). As a result, the Jews
who were sent to the death camps from Athens were less than a 1,000,
and this number includes many who had come to Athens for safety,
but were caught or betrayed. For it is a sad commentary that Jews
working for the Gestapo betrayed many Jews. In Patras, Larissa and
Trikkala, Jews fared "better", with the help of the local populace and
the Resistance. In Volos and Zakynthos, most Jews were saved thanks
to the brave efforts of their bishops. In Katerini, the Greek chief
of police, with the passive acquiescence of the German commander,
delayed the execution of the order to round up the Jews and, instead,
warned them to flee. Most were led to safety.

Nevertheless, the total number of Jews who survived the Holocaust
in Greece was merely 10,000. Those who perished, 62,573!! Indeed,
a very heavy toll and a tragic event in the annals of human history!

Orestes Varvitsiotes

(*) The material used in this article was obtained, among others, from
the following sources: The Jews of Greece, by Nicholas Stavroulakis:
Athens, Talos Press, 1990. The Jews of Ioannina, by Rae Dalven:
Philadelphia, Cadmus Press, 1990. War-time Jews: The Case of
Athens, by Alexander Kitroeff: Athens, ELIAMEP, 1995. In Memoriam
(Greek translation from the French), by Michael Molho: Thessaloniki,
1976. Jewish Community of Thessaloniki, (booklet in both English and
Greek) by Albertos Nar: Jewish Community of Thessalonike. Archbishop
Damaskinos, Years of Enslavement (in Greek), by Elias Venezis: Athens,
Estia Press, 1981. Thessalonike 1897-1997 (in Greek) by Demetrios
A. Drogides: Thessalonike, University Studio, 1996.

http://www.greeknewsonline.com/modules.php?na

Anniversary Year To Be Full Of Festivities

ANNIVERSARY YEAR TO BE FULL OF FESTIVITIES

Panorama.am
16:29 21/01/2008

Today is the 130th anniversary of writer publicist Vahan Tekeyan. On
the occasion, the Tekeyan Cultural Union of Yerevan will organize a
number of events in the course of 2008, Ruben Mirzakhanyan, director
of Tekeyan Cultural Union, told reporters today.

"Tekeyan Union will continue annuals events this year. They
will simply have the logic of dedication to the famous writer,"
Mirzakhanyan said. In his words, in March Tekeyan Theater will stage
Perch Zeituntsyan’s "In the mirror."

In summer Tekeyan Union will accept young people and pupils from
all countries where Tekeyan centers function. They will take part in
the construction works in the cultural establishments under the name
of Tekeyan.

RA Police Denies Statement Of Orinats Yerkir Party’s Representative

RA POLICE DENIES STATEMENT OF ORINATS YERKIR PARTY’S REPRESENTATIVE THAT FALSIFICATIONS DURING ELECTION ARE BEING PREPARED

arminfo
2008-01-21 09:37:00

ArmInfo. RA Police denies the statement of Orinats Yerkir Party’s
representative that falsifications during election are being prepared.

To recall, at a press conference on January 16, the head of campaign
headquarters of Orinats Yerkir Party’s candidate Heghine Bisharyan
expressed surprise at the fact that a greater sum is allotted
for printing passports in 2008 than in 2007. She also declared
about possibility of falsifications during the coming presidential
election by way of printing "extra" passports. In this connection,
the press service of RA Police made a statement denying these
declarations. According to the statement, the same sum is allotted
for printing passports in 2008 as in the previous years. As to
forged passports, the Police recalls that earlier, it had already
denied this. The Police also say after election lists were placed at
and posted to the polling stations, no statements
about inaccuracies in the lists were received from Orinats Yerkir
Party.

www.elections.am

"Heritage" Still Undecided

"HERITAGE" STILL UNDECIDED

armradio.am
21.01.2008 15:52

The "Heritage" Party Has not made a definite decision on supporting
any of the candidates during the presidential elections of February
19, reads the Party’s statement issued on January 19.

It is noted in the statement that "according to a sober political
analysis, neither of the candidates, considering themselves
oppositional, is able to gain victory during the elections through
a separate campaign."

Board of "Heritage" has applied to presidential contenders Vazgen
Manukyan, Vahan Hovhannissyan, Arthur Baghdasaryan and Levon
Ter-Petrosian with an urge to unite their efforts and reconsider the
pre-election tactics.

The statement notes that "if at least two of the mentioned four
candidates do not get united, the party will make the final decision
later."

Monitoring Will Be Resumed

MONITORING WILL BE RESUMED

KarabakhOpen
18-01-2008 13:12:33

On January 16 the OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs took part in the
monitoring of the line of contact for the first time. According to
official information, no incidents were reported during the monitoring.

Answering the question of Karabakh-Open.com what determined the
decision of the co-chairs to participate in the monitoring the NKR
minister of defense Movses Hakobyan said the OSCE monitoring of the
line of contact was suspended over the past 6 months. The decision
of the co-chairs was a wish to help resume the monitoring.

Movses Hakobyan emphasized that no extraordinary preparations were
done for the participation of the co-chairs.

By the way, during the last monitoring efforts of the OSCE the
Azerbaijani side did not lead the missions to the front line.

Issues Concerning The Presidential Elections Discussed

ISSUES CONCERNING THE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS DISCUSSED

National Assembly, Armenia
Jan 17 2008

On January 16 Mr. Tigran Torosyan, President of the National Assembly
of the Republic of Armenia received Mr. Mikhail Krotov, IPA CIS
Secretary General. Mr. Felix Ghushchyan, Ambassador of Armenia in
IPA CIS participated at the meeting.

The sides mainly discussed the upcoming elections. Mr. Tigran
Torosyan, NA President, expressed confidence that they will be held
with no less success as the parliamentary elections were, and they
will comply with the international standards, enabling the observers
to record good outcomes. The NA President stressed the work of the
IPA CIS observation mission, which will had its contribution in the
successful conduct of the May elections too.

Mr. Mikhail Krotov, IPA CIS Secretary General congratulated the New
Year of the NA President on behalf of Mr. Sergey Mironov, IPA CIS
Chairman and him and wished a democratic year to Armenia. He said
that after getting invitation for carrying out an observation mission
a group of 10 experts headed by Mr. Anatoly Torshin had been formed,
and already from the beginning of February it would hold a mediation
monitoring. Mr Krotov confirmed that still during the parliamentary
elections the Electoral Code of the Republic of Armenia was studied,
and they are aware of the amendments made also in November. They
believe that the Electoral Code was well updated and it complies
with the international standards, creating legislative good bases
for the organization of the elections in a best way. As he assessed,
the Electoral Code creates opportunities to activate the voters’
participation and improve the election lists and prevent the
election riggings. Mr. Krotov also said that in February the head
of the observation mission Mr. Anatoly Torshin is going to meet the
authorities of Armenia, chairman of the Central Electoral Commission
and the candidates of the presidential elections, who will express
wish.

At the meeting issues concerning the improvement of the CIS
Inter-Parliamentary Assembly works, which will be under discussion
at the IPA CIS April session, were also discussed.

Moods inside Heritage are not distinct

Lragir, Armenia
Jan 14 2008

MOODS INSIDE HERITAGE ARE NOT DISTINCT

The leader of the Heritage Party Raffi Hovannisian is delivering
lectures at a series of U.S. and European universities and will
return to Armenia around January 20, stated Member of Parliament
Stepan Safaryan, the secretary of the Heritage faction, on January 14
at the Hayeli Club. The reporters asked when the Heritage Party will
decide on supporting a candidate running in the presidential
election.

Stepan Safaryan says the administration of the party will hold a
meeting as soon as the leader of the party returns. `I think there
are a number of new realities, the election programs of the
candidates. Not all the programs have been released but I
nevertheless think that we will have them by that time, and there is
a small period for a certain behavior and expression, and finally, if
the moods inside the party change, it will be reflected in our
decision,’ Stepan Safaryan says.

He notes that the moods inside the party are not distinct. He means
that there is no considerable support for any one of the candidates.
`There are moods inside the party. A considerable part thinks it is
necessary to support an opposition candidate, the candidate which has
a good chance, they think this candidate is Levon Ter-Petrosyan.
However, there are also other opinions, Vazgen Manukyan, Vahan
Hovanisyan, Arthur Baghdasaryan,’ Stepan Safaryan says, noting that
they will not support the candidate of the government because they
are opposition to this system.