Catholicos Of All Armenians Receives OSCE PA Chairman Joao Soares

CATHOLICOS OF ALL ARMENIANS RECEIVES OSCE PA CHAIRMAN JOAO SOARES

Noyan Tapan
March 12, 2010

ECHMIADZIN, MARCH 12, NOYAN TAPAN. Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin
II on March 12 receiving a delegation led by OSCE PA Chairman Joao
Soares expressed gratitude to the OSCE PA Chairman for strengthening
peace in the world and, in particular, for efforts made by OSCE in the
issue of peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. "We
are hopeful that the 21st century will also bring justice to issues
our people has been concerned with for centuries," Karekin II said.

J. Soares in his speech touched upon OSCE’s current activity. He
expressed respect for the Armenian Church mentioning the role of the
church in the region.

According to the Information Services of the Mother See of Holy
Echmiadzin, the Armenian-Turkish and Armenian-Azeri relations were
also touched upon during the conversation.

Armenia Adheres To Settlement Of Regional Issues Through Dialogue

ARMENIA ADHERES TO SETTLEMENT OF REGIONAL ISSUES THROUGH DIALOGUE

PanARMENIAN.Net
11.03.2010 14:09 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenia adheres to settlement of regional issues
through dialogue, according to RA National Security Council secretary
Artur Baghdasaryan.

As he said at 73rd NATO PA Rose-Roth Seminar: "Based on this principle,
Armenia initiated rapprochement process with Turkey.

Armenia, who’ve suffered the tragedy of 1915 Genocide, found strength
and political will to normalize ties."

Dwelling on Karabakh issue, Artur Baghdasaryan stated that Yerevan
supports peaceful settlement of the issue and constructive approach
in negotiation process.

Ariel Cohen: "If President Obama Mentions The Term "Genocide" In His

ARIEL COHEN: "IF PRESIDENT OBAMA MENTIONS THE TERM "GENOCIDE" IN HIS STATEMENT ON APRIL 24, IT WILL CAUSE MORE PROBLEMS"

APA
March 10 2010
Azerbaijan

Washington. Isabel Levine – APA. Ariel Cohen, a leading American expert
on Russia, Eurasia and international energy policy and a Senior Fellow
at the Heritage Foundation in Washington believes that Turkey will
react harshly, as the decision of the House International Relations
Committee on Armenian genocide passed by a 24:23 majority.

In an interview with APA’s Washington correspondent, Dr. Cohen said
that the distance between U.S. and Turkey will increase, even if the
full House of Representatives votes against the resolution passed by
the House International Relations Committee.

He reminded that the Committee calls president Obama to reflect
in the US foreign policy the events of 1915 as "Armenian genocide"
and to use the term in his April 24th declaration.

"Before the March 4th voting the Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
called the chairman of the House International Relations Committee
Howard Berman and stressed that the resolution would harm the
Turkey-Armenia normalization process. "Hillary’s phone call didn’t
help" – Cohen observed.

According to the expert, in protest Ankara called Namik Tan, its
Ambassador to the US, back for consultations.

"Currently the resolution is lobbied by 117 Members of Congress
members. The same is being done by 13 senators in the US Senate"
– he pointed out. However, it is difficult to predict the actual
outcome as the Administration’s pressure not to pass the resolution
will increase", Cohen said.

On the other hand, the analyst believes that Turkey is becoming a
more difficult partner, but the country is still a US ally within NATO.

"Some believe that the US is trying to increase its influence on
Turkey so that the country ratifies the new normalization protocols"
– Mr. Cohen added, "but at stake are much more fundamental issues of
US-Turkish relations".

He noted that if President Obama mentions the term "genocide" in his
statement on April 24, it will cause more problems. "Hopefully, Turkey
will not leave NATO or stop cooperating with the US, but it will be
an even more prickly partner", Cohen said: "Turkey’s trajectory is
away from the U.S., away from the West, and back to its neo-Ottoman
and Islamic roots. The train has left the station."

BAKU: Turkey Awaits ‘Clear Signal’ From US

TURKEY AWAITS ‘CLEAR SIGNAL’ FROM US

news.az
March 9 2010
Azerbaijan

Recep Tayyip Erdogan Ankara will not send its ambassador back to
the USA until it has received reassurances over a resolution backing
Armenian claims of genocide.

Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the government would
not send its ambassador back to Washington until it got a ‘clear
signal’ on the fate of the resolution, broadcaster NTV reported
on Tuesday.

Turkey withdrew its ambassador after the US House of Representatives
Foreign Affairs Committee passed a resolution recognizing the killing
of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as ‘genocide’.

Accepting New Challenges

ACCEPTING NEW CHALLENGES
By Lalai Manjikian

7/manjikian-accepting-new-challenges/
March 7, 2010

Much has been written about the connection between women and the
nation over the course of world history. Symbols, words, and suggestive
imagery have been used to equate women to territory, a nation’s future,
and to other noble national ideals.

Not surprisingly, the woman figure has been adopted by Armenians as
well, to express certain core ideals that remain tightly intertwined
with Armenian cultural identity and nationalistic values. Terms such
as mother tongue (mayrenee lezou), mother Armenia (mayr Hayasdan),
and mother church (mayr yegeghetsi) are omnipresent in the Armenian
lexicon. Coincidentally, such elements are deemed to be the pillars
of Armenian existence and survival, namely throughout the diaspora.

As much as this personification of language, land, and church as
woman is flattering, it is also intriguing, given that patriarchal
structures and hierarchies are known to dominate the Armenian political
and religious landscape.

As Armenian women continue to increase their visibility within various
Armenian and non-Armenian spheres, a community organization where women
have always occupied a strong presence is the century-old organization
known as the Armenian Relief Society (ARS). It allows for women to
evolve as humans, as women, as citizens, and as Armenians amid the seas
of dispersal that we navigate. The ARS continues to be an efficient,
inspiring, and even fun organization, acting as the socially conscious
nerve in many of our diasporic communities. Run and maintained by
highly motivated and determined women, the ARS serves as a model for
Armenian women. Furthermore, it constantly strives to propel Armenian
women forward, to new heights both in Armenia and throughout the
diaspora, while reaching out to non-Armenian communities in need.

When I watch the ARS at work, it reinforces the notion in me that women
are proactive by nature. I feel that we come from a lineage of strong
women-from Sose Mayrig’s infallible model, Zabel Yessayan’s avant-garde
ideas, and Carla Garabedian’s audacious realizations, to our own
mothers, sisters, grandmothers, great aunts, and female friends.

Undoubtedly, the Armenian woman is a central figure in the nation’s
perpetuity, particularly throughout the diapsora.

With the threat of annihilation long behind us, but the fear of
assimilation forever lingering throughout the diapora, how is the
current role of Armenian women who are members of the diaspora
defined today?

Needless to say, this separation from the homeland has created large
amounts of anxiety throughout the diaspora. For years, the main
concern and challenge for women living in the diaspora has been how
to conserve the "Armenianness" of the family, given the reality of
living miles away from Mother Armenia’s protective shield and sword.

Given the above-mentioned links between women, national and cultural
values, as well as the numerous challenges that being a woman entails,
how do Armenian women embody the noble burden of their nation’s
survival? And if they do, how do they articulate it? Surely the
associations between woman and nation are still at the foundation of
our diasporic existence, but are they as rigid as they once were? Is a
woman’s central role within the diaspora being challenged by various
personal choices, or simply by virtue of finding ourselves in the
midst of endless cultural influences? Either way, perhaps we should
refresh our viewpoints and consider flexible notions of identity,
nationalism, and cultural values that reflect our diasporic realities
more adequately.

Regardless of the old or newer guard surrounding ideas of woman and
nation, I view women to be an important part of the driving force that
has sustained the diaspora’s existence. Following the catastrophic
rupture created by the genocide, Armenian women played an instrumental
role in the public, domestic, and educational spheres, in efforts to
re-build, re-organize, and re-populate.

Besides the obvious biological reasons that contribute to this
continuity, the vital traditions and values prominent both in the
public and private spheres and embedded in our collective identity
are transmitted from generation to generation through women. Armenian
mothers have been and will continue to be the carriers and transmitters
of Armenian ideals, however one chooses to define those ideals.

I often wonder if Armenian women embody such responsibilities
consciously or instinctively. Perhaps both. Whether instinctive or
conscious, I find this process of birth and transmission on behalf
of women so vital, given the sense of internalized loss many of us
in the diaspora still carry.

Needless to say, each woman has a unique life trajectory and therefore
experiences cannot be generalized. Surely not all women feel this
way or have simply made other decisions, leaving them outside of the
normative heterosexuality and nation-building molds I describe above.

Even if they fall into the mold in some ways, a number of Armenian
women also choose to take other positions pertaining to cultural,
religious, and lifestyle decisions-adding color, texture, and dimension
to our already eclectic collection of beads.

Regardless of whether one does or does not fit in such molds, the
bottom line is that many Armenian young women in the diaspora are left
feeling conflicted. With access to the entire world wide open, often a
clash of cultures, values, religions, and races occur. The challenge
is to remain open and flexible enough to engage as cosmopolitan
world-citizens while remaining true to the values that have been
transmitted, have been salvaged and blossomed against all odds,
despite the attempt to yank out the root permanently.

As members of the diaspora, perhaps compensating for the loss is
making amends with the new, and at times, the unknown. This just may
be the real challenge we all face.

http://www.armenianweekly.com/2010/03/0

Deportations led to 1m deaths: History Legacy of first world war

Deportations led to 1m deaths: History Legacy of first world war

The Guardian, UK
March 6, 2010 Saturday

Mark Tran

What happened to the Armenians in 1915?

During the first world war, Armenians from the Caucasus formed
volunteer battalions to help the Russian army against the Turks. Early
in 1915, these battalions organised the recruiting of Turkish
Armenians from behind Turkish lines. The Young Turk government reacted
by ordering the deportation of the Armenian population to Syria and
Palestine. About 1 million died from starvation or were killed by Arab
or Kurdish tribes along the route. Many survivors fled to Russian
Armenia where, in 1918, an independent Armenian republic was
established.

What is the definition of genocide?

The legal definition is found in the 1948 UN convention on the
prevention and punishment of the crime of genocide. Article two of the
convention defines genocide as "any of the following acts committed
with intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnical,
racial or religious group, as such: killing members of the group;
causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to
bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part; imposing
measures intended to prevent births within the group; (and) forcibly
transferring children of the group to another group".

Did genocide take place in 1915?

Armenians think so. Turkey accepts that atrocities took place but
argues that there was no systematic attempt to destroy the Christian
Armenians. It puts the number of deaths during 1915 at around 300,000
and says many innocent Muslim Turks also died in the turmoil of war.
Argentina, Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia and Uruguay are
among more than 20 countries that have formally recognised genocide
against the Armenians. The European parliament and the UN
sub-commission on prevention of discrimination and protection of
minorities have also done so.

What is the US position?

During the US presidential election campaign, Barack Obama had no
doubt that genocide occurred. "The Armenian genocide is not an
allegation, a personal opinion or a point of view, but rather a widely
documented fact supported by an overwhelming body of historical
evidence," he said. But in a visit to Istanbul last year, he avoided
the word genocide, and described the events of 1915 as "one of the
great atrocities of the 20th century". The Obama administration does
not want to antagonise Turkey, viewing it as a valuable interlocutor
on a host of regional problems, including Iran’s nuclear programme.

How has Turkey responded?

Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, said his country had
been accused of a crime it had not committed, adding that the
resolution would hamper efforts by Turkey and Armenia to end a century
of hostility. Under US prodding, Turkey and Armenia last October
signed a landmark accord to improve ties.

What happens next?

Both the White House and Turkey will be hoping that the current row
will become a rerun of 2007, when the house foreign affairs committee
passed an identical resolution, prompting Turkey to recall its
ambassador in protest. The 2007 resolution never came to a vote on the
house floor after intense lobbying by the Bush administration.

300,000

20 Captions:

The face of an Armenian orphan. Many survivors fled to Russian Armenia

The number of Armenians who died in 1915, according to Turkey’s figures

The number of countries to have recognised ‘genocide’ against Armenians

Barack Obama used the word ‘genocide’ during his election campaign,
but avoided it on a visit to Istanbul

Azerbaijan not ready to provide Armenian sportsmen with Sec Guarante

Azerbaijan is not ready to provide Armenian sportsmen with additional
security guarantees

2010-03-06 13:18:00

ArmInfo. Minister of Youth and Sports of Azerbaijan Azad Rahimov has
expressed his opinion concerning the participation of Armenian
sportsmen in the European wrestling championships and the world boxing
and fencing championships to be held in Baku.

Azerisport.com quotes Rahimov as saying that, when last year he
attended the European judo championships in Yerevan, the parties
agreed to prepare a kind of letter of guarantee ensuring the security
of Azeri sportsmen in competitions held in Armenia and vice versa. So,
if Armenians wish to take part in the Baku tournaments, they will be
given no additional guarantees. The local mass media will have no
problems with communicating with the Armenian sportsmen and delegates.

Genocide resolution – Ankara’s chance to shake off Baku’s pressure

Genocide resolution – Ankara’s chance to shake off Baku’s pressure on
the way to Protocols ratification

06.03.2010 16:58 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ US House Foreign Affairs Committee passage of
Genocide resolution is Ankara’s chance to shake off Baku’s pressure on
the way to Protocols ratification, according European Integration NGO
chairman Karen Bekaryan.

`Probability for Protocols ratification is dwindling, but the final
result of Armenia-Turkey rapprochement could be forecasted only in
case Ankara fails to ratify protocols before April 24,’ he told a news
conference in Yerevan.

The expert linked the slump in rapprochement process with Turkey’s
internal political situation, rather than the passage of H.Res. 252.

Commenting on recent statement by Turkish Foreign Minister on the
possibility to open borders with Armenia within 3 days, and closing
them, should Karabakh war break out, Karen Bekaryan stressed that
Ankara’s statements contain a threat of force and a message to
Azerbaijan.

Commenting on the reaction of US Administration on resolution passage,
the expert emphasized there was nothing new in Obama Administration’s
statements. `Compared with previous administration’s reaction, this
time, official Washington’s response was less harsh. The statements of
US Department of State leave US some space for further maneuvers,’
Bekaryan said.

On March 4, US House Foreign Affairs Committee’s passed a resolution
recognizing and commemorating the Armenian Genocide. The resolution
was passed by a vote of 23-22.

The Protocols aimed at normalization of bilateral ties and opening of
the border between Armenia and Turkey were signed in Zurich by
Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian and his Turkish
counterpart Ahmet Davutoglu on October 10, 2009, after a series of
diplomatic talks held through Swiss mediation. On January 12, 2010,
the Constitutional Court of the Republic of Armenia found the
protocols conformable to the country’s Organic Law.

Turkish Police Accost Sabbath Worshipers in Synagogue

Arutz Sheva , Israel
March 7 2010

Turkish Police Accost Sabbath Worshipers in Synagogue

by Hillel Fendel

(IsraelNN.com) A Turkish newspaper reports that police burst into an
Istanbul synagogue during recent Sabbath services and demanded
worshipers’ ID’s.

The Turkish Milliyet newspaper reported that the Muslim government in
Turkey appears to be cracking down on non-Muslim minorities. The
individual communities are not being permitted to have their own
leaders; one person will be recognized by the government to represent
all the minorities as one. As the Christian community outnumbers the
Jewish one, it is expected that a Christian will serve as `Chief
Rabbi.’ This issue may have been resolved, however; see below.

In addition, Christian and Jewish children are being placed in
separate non-Muslim public school classes. In Jewish schools, only
Turkish citizens are allowed to be registered ` preventing the son of
a Jewish United States consul worker from studying in a Jewish school.

Finally, Turkish authorities raided the Hemdat Yisrael synagogue in
Istanbul one Sabbath morning, the most crowded day of the week, and
demanded that worshipers produce identification and proof of
residence. Most worshipers did not have the required papers because of
Sabbath restrictions, but were allowed to produce them at the
conclusion of the Sabbath.

Leaders of several minority religious communities convened for an
emergency meeting last month to discuss the worsening situation.

Rabbi Yitzchak Haleva, Chief Rabbi of Turkey, says it’s `much ado
about nothing.’ Speaking with Israeli media sources last week, Rabbi
Haleva said that all misunderstandings had been resolved and that he
himself will be running for re-election for the position of Chief
Rabbi about two months from now. Regarding the mid-services Sabbath
check of ID’s, Rabbi Haleva told Makor Rishon’s Yitzchak Hildesheimer
that it was only a matter having to do with internal security.

A Turkish Jew quoted on Ynet did not sound confident, however:
`Everyone here is apathetic, they are involved in their own business
and their work – but we do feel that the situation has changed, even
though it is being ignored. It is reminiscent of other periods in
history¦’

Turkey Recalls US Ambassador
Turkey recalled its ambassador to the U.S. last week after the House
Foreign Relations Committee narrowly approved a resolution recognizing
the Turkish slaughter of Armenians during World War I as genocide. The
London-based Al-Quds Al-Arabiye editorialized that the "Jewish lobby"
in Washington is to blame for the resolution.

s/News.aspx/136373

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/New

Resolutions, Evolution and Armenian Genocide Recognition

ianyan magazine
March 7 2010

Resolutions, Evolution and Armenian Genocide Recognition
By Liana Aghajanian on March 7th, 2010

By now, Armenians, Turks and those who care about foreign affairs in
general have come to find out that on Thursday, the House Foreign
Affairs Committee voted to recognize the mass killings of Armenians in
the early 20th century as genocide.

The vote, a very narrow and nerve racking 23 to 22 was broadcast on
Armenian cable channel Horizon, and also shown subsequently online.

Right after the vote, Turkey recalled its Ambassador, Namik Tan, back
for consultations, Armenian publications swiftly posted the news,
status updates and tweets exploded with joy and disappointment on both
sides and the Obama administration, who had urged the committee to
vote against the resolution, said it will seek to block the bill from
coming into fruition.

Those who followed along with my live tweeting of the event were
overjoyed and happy to say the least, especially after the slim margin
of just one vote.

As for me, for a moment, I was shocked and surprised, although I
probably shouldn’t have been. A similar resolution passed through the
same committee in 2007 and was later successfully blocked from ever
amounting to anything.

For a while after the vote was counted, I was in a sort of euphoric
haze, not because of the actual vote, but because of what those who
belonged to the committee had said along the way.

One phrase that stuck in my mind came from Representative Lynn
Woosley, who represents the California’s sixth congressional district.

To deny this resolution, she said, would be to deny the lives of those
who perished. `For those who say it’s not the right time,’ she
continued, `If not now, when? When will it be convenient. I urge my
colleagues to stand up for human rights.’

Others, reaffirmed that they believe a genocide took place, but felt
it wasn’t the right time, that the lives of troops would be in danger,
that the possibility of losing a key ally like Turkey wasn’t in the
best interest of the U.S.

Like all other Armenians, I have grown up with stories about the
genocide. Relatives from my father’s side, while crossing the Araks
river to escape the killings, drowned. I’ve seen documentaries,
rallies, television specials, photos, there is no doubt in my mind
that a genocide occurred.

Do I think that this resolution is a good idea? I still don’t know.
This post from Lena Osipova describes almost to a tee how I feel. The
agenda, the goals of Diaspora Armenians, who still live in a 1915
meters deep well, as Hrant Dink said are different than Armenians in
Armenia.

While we sit in free countries, in our warm houses and flashy cars in
our garages, many in Armenia are still suffering from economic turmoil
and poverty . There is corruption and discrimination and much more
that we, thousands of miles away, have the good fortune to not see.
Most diaspora Armenians have never even met a Turk, nor do they want
to. For so long, the glue that has held us all together has been the
Armenian Genocide. Don’t marry odars, they tell us, we need to
preserve the Armenian ethnicity. We crowd the streets in every major
metropolitan city on April 24, chanting away phrases like `Dirty
Turkey can’t deny/The 1915 genocide.’ We don’t adapt and we don’t
adopt, and in turn, Armenia suffers.

Do I need the U.S. government to recognize the genocide? Maybe, but I
don’t feel any less Armenian, I don’t feel like something is missing
if they don’t. My feelings could very well be the result of it not
being recognized for so long, who knows.

Do I hate President Obama and think of him as a `liar’ or `coward?’
No, and I don’t understand the knee jerk reactions of those who do.
Obama is the president of the United States and as such, he will
always err on the best interests for his country, whether or not it’s
`wrong’ or `right.’ We need to understand this. Contrary to popular
belief, the interests of Armenian-Americans aren’t on his agenda at
the moment, nor should they be. To think that they should, wouldn’t be
realistic.

The answer still is, for me, `I don’t know.’ My thoughts pull me in
two directions – they tell me once that recognition might never
happen, a reality that I seem to be making peace with every day, and
then, they whisper to me again, telling me that this has the
possibility to finally put to rest what the diaspora has been rallying
around for so long.

I’m not a politician, or a historian or an analyst. I’m a journalist.
And before I became a journalist, I was and still am Armenian. And I
am still struggling with what the aftermath of this resolution might
be, and cautiously hoping that things will turn out for the better.
But what is `better?’ I still don’t know.

http://www.ianyanmag.com/?p79