Future of the Past

Future of the Past
By Harold Meyerson

Washington Post
Wednesday, April 6, 2005; Page A19

At first glance, it looked to be a triumph of the human spirit. There,
at a joint news conference last week in Jerusalem, stood the patriarchs
of the rival faiths of the Middle East — Israel’s chief rabbis,
the deputy mufti of Jerusalem, leaders of the Catholic and Armenian
churches — Jews, Muslims and Christians, together at last.

And the cause that had united them? A gay pride festival scheduled
for August in Jerusalem. The leaders of religious orthodoxy had come
together to help ban the festival. Interreligious harmony reigned as
historic enmities gave way to a common loathing of homosexuals.

We have seen the future of the past. The photograph of the clerics
that ran in the newspapers may some day be viewed as an artifact
of the founding of the Orthodox International. Globalization is
bringing modernization and the demand for equality to the doorsteps
of the most traditionalist societies and enclaves. Orthodox faiths
are not accustomed to interreligious cooperation — there is no God
but their own, after all — but in the threat of secularism, they
find themselves with a common enemy and a range of common hatreds.

If Orthodox International had a founding father, it was John Paul II,
who spent much of his papacy endeavoring to reconcile the various
orthodox Christian faiths. When such churches threatened to forsake
orthodoxy for the siren call of human equality, he did not hesitate
to intervene in their deliberations — warning the Anglicans, for
instance, not to ordain gay priests.

John Paul’s orthodoxy, I fear, will quite overwhelm the humanistic
aspects of his legacy. In Africa, John Paul’s church is a tribune
for economic justice — for debt forgiveness, for a global economic
order that seeks to enhance, not destroy, workers’ rights. It is
also a vehement opponent of birth control and condom distribution,
even as an AIDS epidemic ravages the continent. That such a church
could call itself “pro-life” is sophistry of the highest order.

The church that John Paul took over in the late ’70s was home to
many priests, theologians, bishops and even cardinals who were
seeking the common ground between church traditions and modern
egalitarianism. The church that John Paul made and leaves is home to no
such discussion. The vibrant intellectualism of the Vatican II era has
been driven outside the church walls. Where once the Catholic Church
had such engaged and vigorous leaders as Chicago’s Cardinal Joseph
Bernardin, today it is suffused with John Paul’s party-line hacks.

The effects of such hackery are already apparent. A veteran union
organizer I know, who has worked over the years with any number
of bishops and priests on behalf of low-wage workers all the way
back to the farm workers’ grape boycott, tells me that he’s now
encountering Catholic clerics who are withholding their support from
such struggles. The problem, it seems, is that the organizer’s union
backed the pro-union but pro-choice John Kerry for president. Though
John Paul is identified with the cause of workers’ justice, the church
he built is increasingly willing to discard such concerns when they
run counter to the strictures of orthodoxy.

Political scientist Samuel P. Huntington has argued that we are now
engaged in a clash of civilizations that pits the liberalism of the
West against the orthodoxy of Islam. Huntington’s on to something,
but I think he has located his fault line in the wrong place. The
opposition to liberalism — Jeffersonian liberalism, with its belief
in science and, correspondingly, human equality — extends well beyond
the backwaters of Islam. It includes the church that the pope bequeaths
us, the Protestant Christian Right, the Orthodox rabbis of Israel.

The blue state-red state division in the United States is increasingly
a global reality as well, and just as it sunders nations, it can also
at least partially erase some preexisting borders. In the Middle
East, it’s not just onetime orthodox rivals who look increasingly
alike. My friend Jo-Ann Mort, one of the keenest observers of Israeli
society, has noted the similarities between the young, nightclubbing,
pro-democracy demonstrators in Beirut and the young, nightclubbing,
pro-peace demonstrators in Tel Aviv. The real Green Line in Israel
and Palestine may one day separate the red and the blue.

A specter is haunting modernity. Powered by tradition, by a misogyny
and homophobia for which a future pope will one day apologize as
surely as John Paul did for the church’s anti-Semitism, the Orthodox
International marches forth to do battle against liberalism, invoking
ancient beliefs against the claims of a common humanity.

[email protected]

Michael Weinstein Appointed Head Of ERDB Yerevan Office

MICHAEL WEINSTEIN APPOINTED HEAD OF ERDB YEREVAN OFFICE

04.04.2005 04:27

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Michael Weinstein has been appointed the new
head of the Yerevan Office of the European Reconstruction and
Development Bank. As PanARMENIAN.Net reporter came to know from the
representative office, this appointment was caused by the Bank’s
aspiration to render the Armenian businessmen access to the world
markets. “I hope to be helpful to Armenia, the ancient country with
great potential”, Mr. Weinstein noted. Presently Armenia is the key
constituent of the Early Transition Country (ETC) initiative directed
towards seven countries – Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan,
Moldova, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan. To note, the ERDB has concluded
bargains with SHEN Armenian concern and Maralik textile manufacturing
company. When Michael Weinstein starts his work in Yerevan, the Bank
will sign an agreement with Inecobank.

Belarus parliament ratifies CIS accord on military infrastructure us

Belarus parliament ratifies CIS accord on military infrastructure use

Belapan news agency, Minsk
4 Apr 05

Minsk, 4 April: The Belarusian National Assembly’s House of
Representatives [parliament’s lower house] has ratified the agreement
on operational equipment of territories and joint use of military
infrastructure facilities within the Collective Security Treaty
Organization (CSTO) [member states are Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan,
Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Russia].

The chief of the Belarusian armed forces’ General Staff and the
first deputy defence minister, Syarhey Hurulyow, said during the
presentation of the bill that the agreement was signed on 18 June
2004 in Astana [Kazakhstan] “in the interests of ensuring military
security of the parties”.

Hurulyow said the agreement was “a deterrent factor” for potential
military adversaries. “Unfortunately, nobody, including NATO, can
guarantee our security,” the speaker said. Therefore, he noted,
“it is reasonable” for Belarus to ratify the agreement.

Hurulyow noted that Belarus was the first CSTO member state to ratify
the agreement. “We are interested in it more than the other states
due to our geopolitical location,” the chief of the General Staff
explained.

[Passage omitted: details of the agreement.]

Georgian President Refuted Information That Robert Kocharian Met Wit

GEORGIAN PRESIDENT REFUTED INFORMATION THAT ROBERT KOCHARIAN MET WITH
HIM BY VLADIMIR PUTIN’S ORDER

04.04.2005 06:15

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili refuted
the information that Armenian leader Robert Kocharian met with
him by order of Vladimir Putin, IA Regnum reports. “Armenia is an
independent state with its own interests”, he stressed in his interview
with Rustavi-2 TV company. “Armenia is our neighbor, her President
and the political elite show friendly attitude towards Georgia. Our
attitude is the same. It will be extremely difficult for us to achieve
progress within the country of beyond its borders without each other’s
assistance. It is natural”, he added. When commenting on Armenian
President’s unexpected visit to Georgia Mikhail Saakashvili said,
“If a neighbor wants to drop in for a cup of tea he does not have to
call and warn of his visit 2 weeks earlier. We can visit each other
without warning when there is something to talk about.” At that the
Georgian President underscored, “We will always have a subject for
conversation with Armenia and Azerbaijan. We are mutually dependent
and tied, we have a lot of common problems and one should be silly
to refuse contacts of the kind.”

TBILISI: Saakashvili claims increased role for Georgia as geopolitic

Saakashvili claims increased role for Georgia as geopolitical player

Rustavi-2 TV, Tbilisi
3 Apr 05

President Mikheil Saakashvili has said that Georgia is playing an
active part in a “geopolitical revolution” sweeping across the former
Soviet Union. The Georgian and Ukrainian foreign ministers’ joint
visit to Kyrgyzstan last week succeeded in easing the political crisis
there, he told Rustavi-2 TV, adding that this proved that Georgia had
“learnt to influence developments”. Saakashvili also announced that
he had rejected Vladimir Putin’s offer to host a meeting involving
the Russian and Georgian presidents and the Abkhaz and South Ossetian
separatist leaders. Saakashvili said that the proposed format was
unacceptable to Georgia and that he favoured bilateral talks with
the separatists. The following is the text of a report by Rustavi-2
on 3 April; subheadings inserted editorially:

[Presenter] The Georgian president gave “Kviris Kurieri” [this
programme] an interview today. Saakashvili is gaining weight in
international politics. In Moscow, he is being referred to with
irritation as an importer [as heard] of revolutions. Although things
are not so bright in domestic politics, he believes that there are
important changes taking place outside the country that will determine
Georgia’s political and economic security. What offer by Vladimir
Putin has Mikheil Saakashvili turned down? Irma Nadirashvili reports.

Putin’s offer of talks with separatists

[Correspondent, to Saakashvili] First of all, is it true that you have
rejected Vladimir Putin’s invitation to come to Sochi where you may
have met [Abkhaz separatist leader Sergey] Bagapsh and [South Ossetian
separatist leader Eduard] Kokoiti? [Saakashvili’s answer not broadcast]

[Correspondent, continues] Mikheil Saakashvili has rejected Putin’s
invitation to come to Sochi. The proposed format of the meeting reminds
him of relations between [USSR] Communist Party Central Committee
secretaries. It is essential that talks are held with Sergey Bagapsh
and Eduard Kokoiti, but Tbilisi is the only possible venue.

[Saakashvili] There has indeed been an offer of talks in Sochi. The
idea of a meeting with these groups is unacceptable to Georgia from
the very start. The Russians are also well aware of that. As regards
bilateral meetings, we do favour such meetings. However, our view,
which the Russian side accepted, was that it would only be worth
holding a meeting if the two sides made up their minds and agreed on
some specific issues.

We do not operate under the old system. We operate in a system where
all decisions affecting the state are thoroughly prepared, with
the interests of both sides taken into account, so that there are no
surprises and no excesses. The two countries should talk to each other
like proper states. Georgia has already become a state and it talks
to everyone as such. Therefore, with full adherence to official state
procedures, we will of course continue our relationship with Russia,
including at the top level. There is no doubt about it.

As regards a hastily arranged meeting, I think we have convinced
the other side that every meeting should produce a result. We both
understand that there is no point having a meeting for a meeting’s
sake.

[Correspondent] He has not yet decided whether or not he will go to
Moscow to attend the event the Russians are holding to celebrate
victory over Nazism. The Georgian president is still waiting for
Vladimir Putin’s final decision on the removal of the Russian bases
from Georgia.

Armenian president’s visit

In Akhalkalaki, where opposition to the withdrawal of the Russians is
the strongest, the majority of the population are ethnic Armenians.
If anyone from outside could sway them, it would be Robert Kocharyan
[Armenian president], who paid a surprise visit to Tbilisi two
days ago.

[Saakashvili] If you decide to pop in in the evening to have a cup
of tea with your neighbour, you do not have to call them two weeks in
advance. Whenever we as neighbours want to discuss something specific
or just to see each other, we can always visit each other without any
warning – it is not that far – lock ourselves in a room and talk when
there are things to discuss. We will always have things to discuss
with Armenia and Azerbaijan because we are so dependent on each other,
our lives are so interwoven, and there are so many common problems
that it would be really foolish not to take advantage of such links.

[Correspondent, to Saakashvili] Some people say that it was Putin
who sent Kocharyan here.

[Saakashvili] No, certainly not. Armenia is an independent country
with its own interests. Armenia is our neighbour. Its president and
political elite are well disposed towards Georgia. Likewise, we,
of course, are extremely well disposed towards our neighbours. If we
do not help each other, it would be very difficult for us to achieve
anything either at home or abroad. That is natural.

Georgia gaining weight in regional politics

[Correspondent] In the past two weeks, the situation in the country
has been tense. There have been power shortages and street protests.
However, the past two weeks have also seen a marked increase in
foreign policy activity. No sooner had President Saakashvili returned
from a trip to Ukraine than he went to Kazakhstan. Simultaneously,
he sent Foreign Minister Salome Zourabichvili to post-revolutionary
Kyrgyzstan, who went there together with her Ukrainian counterpart.

[Saakashvili] The fact that they had a crisis of legitimacy, the
fact that the Georgian and Ukrainian ministers went there together
– that is a precedent we have created – and the fact that this was
followed almost immediately by action from other neighbours and former
[Kyrgyz] President [Askar] Akayev’s statement that he would resign –
all of that means that we have learnt to influence developments to
a certain extent.

[Correspondent] Following the Rose Revolution [which brought
Saakashvili to power], Russia has lost its influence in Ukraine,
Moldova and Kyrgyzstan in quick succession. The Georgian and Ukrainian
presidents are now preparing a new project, this time an economic
one. It concerns an Odessa-Brody oil terminal, which is to be linked
to Supsa [port in Georgia], so that there is an export route for
Kazakh oil that will bypass Russia.

[Saakashvili] The most important thing, both at home and abroad,
is to seize the initiative. We should never wait for things to calm
down around us because this may not happen. Ukraine [the change of
government in Ukraine] may not have happened because Europe was rather
passive until the very end, until the revolution entered its decisive
phase. There was a fair amount of scepticism from other countries. That
is why we should never wait for others to say or do something. We
should know what is important to us and how we feel it should be done.

We are currently living in a unique situation where Georgia has become
not only a fact of life but also a factor.

[Correspondent] By his own admission, all his foreign policy moves
serve a single purpose, which is to restore Georgian territorial
integrity.

[Saakashvili] We are most certainly on the right track today. We are
really getting a historic chance to break the curse, geographical and
political, that has been on us for so many centuries. We can break
it once and for all and reach the place where we belong, which is
European civilization.

[Correspondent] The American president’s forthcoming visit to
Georgia is an event almost as important as the Rose Revolution,
Mikheil Saakashvili believes.

[Saakashvili] This is undoubtedly a historic visit. It perfectly fits
the context of the geopolitical revolution that is taking place in
Georgia and abroad, with the active participation of Georgia.

Polish Prez Did Not State NK Essential to Azerbaijan

POLISH PRESIDENT DID NOT STATE THAT `NAGORNO KARABAKH IS ESSENTIAL OF
AZERBAIJAN’

01.04.2005 05:19

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Spreading propaganda the Azeri party and forges
facts to achieve its goals on the Nagorno Karabakh conflict, Polish
Ambassador to Armenia Tomasz Knothe said when commenting on the
reports spread by the Azeri media. According to these reports, Polish
President Alexander Kwasniewski during the meeting with Ilham Aliyev
allegedly said that `Karabakh is the essential of Azerbaijan’, Arminfo
agency reports. In Knothe’s words, the Presidents just discussed the
Karabakh problem. `Comprehending the complexity of the issue President
Kwasniewski would never make a statement of the kind. The information
spread by the Azeri media contains no single true word’, the Polish
Ambassador stressed.

Chairman of Soc. Security Considers Social Cards System Unnecessary

CHAIRMAN OF SOCIAL SECURITY FUND CONSIDERS INTRODUCTION OF SOCIAL
CARDS SYSTEM IN ARMENIA AS UNNECESSARY

YEREVAN, APRIL 1, NOYAN TAPAN. The social insurance cards should serve
the citizen, not vice versa. Vazgen Khachikian, the Chairman of the
Social Insurance State Fund, said about it during the March 28 press
conference. He also said that he doesn’t know, for what purpose the
social insurance card in Armenia serves. As the RA citizen, he
considers that there is neither necessity nor need of this card. It
was noticed that such a system has been introduced in Ukraine by the
means of the same PADCO international organization. According to
V. Khachikian, the notion of the social insurance (not security) card,
which mainly plays the role of an electronic pocket-book, is customary
in the world. V. Khachikoian considers that the serious discussions
should be held on this issue. “It isn’t shameful to recognize own
mistake and follow the right path.” The wrong application of the
system may be compared with carbon monoxide, which has neither color
nor smell but can become a reason of death with time. It was also
noticed that as of March 23, 10,990 pensioners received social
insurance cards in Yerevan. 2,778 out of them received the cards by
the reason of the old Soviet passports, 3, 813 didn’t apply for
receiving the cards, and 1,494 pensioners refused to receive them at
all.

Karabakh leader blames Azerbaijan for destabilizing situation

Karabakh leader blames Azerbaijan for destabilizing situation

Regnum, Moscow
30 Mar 05

“Azerbaijan is destabilizing the situation on the contact line between
the armed forces of Nagornyy Karabakh and Azerbaijan and trying to
advance on our positions, pursuing two goals. First, the authorities
of that country are trying to resolve domestic political tasks by
proving to the opposition that they are ready for war. Second and most
importantly, Azerbaijan is blackmailing the international community
and trying to convince it that the country will start a war if the
problem is not resolved according to Azerbaijan’s scenario,” the
president of the Nagornyy Karabakh Republic [NKR], Arkadiy Gukasyan,
said after a meeting with OSCE Chairman-in-Office Dimitrij Rupel.

“We are interested in preventing the war. I am sure that the people of
Azerbaijan wish the same. However, the lack of official or any other
contacts with the Azerbaijani side makes the situation
unpredictable. Speaking of the need to create an atmosphere of mutual
confidence, we mean the establishment of contacts – we have to be able
to listen to each other, something that unfortunately has not happened
yet,” Gukasyan said.

Commenting on the situation on the contact line, the NKR president
said that there were casualties and injuries on the Karabakh side
after the recent incidents, but “their number is small”. In different
parts of the contact line the parties are separated by 70 metres to
1-2 km. The Azerbaijanis have now moved 150 metres closer to the
positions, from which they were 300 metres away before.

Gukasyan asked the OSCE chairman-in-office to take control of the
processes on the contact line and confirm the state of affairs again.

Pre-Premiere Screening of Armenian Genocide Film Held in Paris

PRE-PREMIERE SCREENING OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE FILM HELD IN PARIS

31.03.2005 06:54

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The pre-premiere screening of the Armenian
Genocidedocumentary was held in Star Parisian cinema March 30,
Armenian Ambassador to France Eduard Nalbandian was present at it, the
Press Service of the Armenian Foreign Ministry reported. The film will
be aired on ARTE European channel that is viewed by millions,
specifically in France and Germany, April 13 – two weeks before the
90-th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. The hour-long documentary,
shot by French Lorence Jourdan tell about the Armenian Genocide in
Ottoman Turkey, presenting these events as an unquestionable fact of
crime against humanity. The picture widely uses memories of peoples,
who had experienced the Genocide, evidences of diplomats of the
Ottoman Turkey period.

Antelias: Delegation Representing Lebanese Opp visits HH Aram I

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:

A DELEGATION REPRESENTING THE LEBANESE OPPOSITION
VISTS HIS HOLINESS

A delegation representing the Lebanese opposition met with his Holiness Aram
I on March 25. The delegates informed His Holiness about the recent
developments in the internal political life of Lebanon.

Catholicos Aram I emphasized the importance of preserving national unity
through dialogue and bringing the country of out its current stalemate. He
stressed that it is important to form a new government, draft a new
electoral law and then hold elections. He assured that the Armenian
Community will actively participate in this process.

##

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

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