Armenian Church Online Bulletin – 07/08/2004

PRESS OFFICE
Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
Contact: Jake Goshert, Communications Officer
Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
E-mail: [email protected]
Website:
July 8, 2004
___________________

Week of July 2 to July 8, 2004
* * *

SATURDAY IS FEAST OF 12 APOSTLES

Saturday (7/10), the Armenian Church commemorates the dedication of the
apostles of Christ. Two of those apostles, Thaddeus and Bartholomew,
were instrumental in bringing Christianity to Armenia. To learn more
about all of the apostles, and for resources to help teach your
children, click to our website:

(Source: Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), 7/7/04)
* * *

DIOCESE DISCUSSES IRAQI ARMENIANS WITH OTHER ORGANIZATIONS

The Eastern Diocese and other Armenian community organizations have
asked the leadership of the Armenian Diocese in Iraq to create a
prioritized list of needs. Once that is created, the Diocese and other
groups will work to aid the Iraqi Armenians. For more on this effort,
and to learn about the historic Armenian community in Iraq, click to our
website:
;selmonth=7&sely
ear04

(Source: Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), 7/7/04)
* * *

CAMPERS SETTLE INTO NEW HOME

The campers at this year’s St. Vartan Camp are settling into their new
home, the beautiful Ararat Center in the heart of the Catskill
Mountains. To read updates from the campers and see photos, click to
our website:

(Source: Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), 7/7/04)
* * *

COME TO THE ARARAT CENTER CONSECRATION

Come to the free Saturday, July 24, consecration and open house for the
Diocese’s new Ararat Center, in Greenville, NY, 30 miles south of
Albany, NY. The fun runs from noon to 5 p.m. Archbishop Khajag
Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese, will perform the consecration
at 2 p.m. Free food and live music will round out the fun.

Many parishes are organizing buses or car caravans to the festivities.
Check with your local parish.

RSVP by Saturday (7/10) by e-mailing [email protected] or
calling (212) 686-0710 ext. 43.

To learn more about the Ararat Center, click to our website:
;selmonth=6&sely
ear04

(Source: Ararat Center, 7/7/04)
* * *

ARMENIAN TEACHERS HEAD TO DIOCESE

Armenian School educators from around the Diocese will be in New York
City next week for the Diocese’s Teacher’s College. Participants in the
week-long session, which begins Sunday (7/11), will explore ways to
teach the Armenian language, history, religion, and literature, and will
be able to ear college credit from St. Peter’s College. For more on
this and other events happening throughout the Diocese, click to our
website’s Calendar of Events:

(Source: Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern), 7/8/04)
* * *

FIND PERFECT ARMENIAN GIFTS ONLINE

Looking for help learning to speak or write Armenian? Want a gift with
Armenian flavor for a wonderful cook? Trying to find a way to say “I
love you” to that special Armenian in your life? Find the perfect gift
for anyone online at the St. Vartan Bookstore website,

Shopping online is easy, quick, and safe. New items are added regularly
to the website,

Browse hundreds of gift items, without leaving your bedroom. Just click
today to:

(Source: , 7/8/04)
* * *

LEARN ABOUT THE BADARAK

Want to learn more about the Badarak’s history and meaning to better
understand the service? Click to our website:

# # #

http://www.armenianchurch.org/worship/apostles/index.html
http://www.armenianchurch.org/news/index3.php?newsid=445&amp
http://www.armenianchurch.org/blogs/campnews/index.html
http://www.armenianchurch.org/news/index3.php?newsid=438&amp
http://www.armeniandiocese.org/calendar/index.php
http://www.stvartanbookstore.com
http://www.armeniandiocese.org/worship/index.html
www.armenianchurch.org
www.stvartanbookstore.com.
www.stvartanbookstore.com.
www.stvartanbookstore.com

BAKU: Azerbaijan should step up democratic reforms, EU envoy says

Azerbaijan should step up democratic reforms, EU envoy says

Turan news agency
7 Jul 04

BAKU

Janez Potocnik, commissioner in charge of the EU’s European
Neighbourhood Policy, held a news conference today to sum up the
results of his two-day visit to Azerbaijan. The aim of his trip to the
South Caucasus was to discuss with the country’s leaders the European
Neighbourhood Policy and further steps which have to be
taken. Potocnik’s mission aims at encouraging conflict resolution and
strengthening regional cooperation. Reports on every country will be
submitted to the EU following the visit.

The situation will be analysed in autumn and the European Neighborhood
Policy plan will be worked out in spring 2005.

In Baku Potocnik held meetings with the president, parliament speaker,
prime minister, foreign minister and opposition party leaders.

He said that democratic development, human rights, freedom of press,
struggle against corruption and a settlement of the Karabakh conflict
were discussed at the meetings. In his opinion, the development of
democratic principles, the implementation of energy projects and the
anti-poverty programme, and the settlement of the Karabakh conflict
will draw Azerbaijan closer to the EU.

Azerbaijan has a great development potential, he said. “A civil
society is developing but the process should be more rapid. Reforms in
the political and economic spheres will draw Azerbaijan closer to
Europe,” he said.

He added that the EU intends to allocate Azerbaijan 30m euros every
year under TACIS programme.

As for Karabakh, Potocnik said that the peaceful solution to the
problem is the “only acceptable one”.

Armenia denies reports on return of occupied districts to Azerbaijan

Armenia denies reports on return of occupied districts to Azerbaijan

Noyan Tapan news agency
7 Jul 04

YEREVAN

Reports that Armenian Foreign Minister Vardan Oskanyan talked during
the Istanbul meetings [on 29 June] about the possibility of returning
seven districts controlled by the Armenian armed forces – not
including Nagornyy Karabakh – are wide of the mark.

Commenting at the request of Noyan Tapan news agency on reports by the
Azerbaijani and Turkish media about Oskanyan making such a statement
during his meeting with Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, the
press secretary of the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Gamlet Gasparyan,
said: “Nothing of the sort has happened, this is wide of the mark.”

Such a report was published, for example, in the Turkish newspaper
Zaman which quoted Gul as saying this.

Russian Nationalist “confesses” ordering killing Russian antifascist

Nationalist “confesses” to ordering the killing of Russian anti-fascist

RTR Russia TV, St Petersburg
27 Jun 04

[Presenter] There was a ceremony to bid farewell to Nikolay Girenko at
the scientific centre of the Russian Academy of Sciences on Thursday
[22 June]. The murder of the ethnologist became one of the main
subjects of the past week. An investigation team has established the
basic facts. Tatyana Aleksandrova reports all the details.

[Unidentified men marching with torches, chanting] Clear off from
here. Russia is for Russians. We do not need Khachiks [an ordinary
Armenian name].

[An unidentified boy of around 13 with shaven head] We beat up
non-Russians.

[A man’s voice] How often?

[The unidentified boy] Nearly every day.

[Correspondent] Girenko was a Russian with a Ukrainian last name. He
was killed by a shot from a sawn-off rifle through the door after
asking politely: What do you want? The senior researcher at the
Institute of Anthropology and Ethnography, African-philologist
candidate of historical sciences was 64. His public activities
prevented him from defending his doctoral thesis. He worked as
anti-fascist campaigner for the last 20 years.

[Yuriy Chistov, director of the Petr the Great Institute of
Anthropology and Ethnography (Kunstkamera, collection of curiosities)]
In general, it seemed to us all that Nikolay Mikhaylovich was doing
extremely important work, but it [turned out to be] so
dangerous. Touch wood, there have [until now] been no cases of the
sort that people were killed so insolently and openly for their
expressed opinion.

[Correspondent] The extremist groups knew Girenko by sight. He was an
expert in nazi ideology who gave evidence in court hearings. Nazis
have openly confessed to having murdered him.

[Vladimir Popov, captioned as the leader of the Russkaya Respublika
(Russian Republic) organization] The verdict has been carried out at
my command. I do not know who carried out it, and nobody is likely to
know it. We shall erect a memorial to an unknown hero.

[Correspondent] There is the signature of this frail young man at the
end of verdict No 1 of the tribunal of the self-proclaimed Russkaya
Respublika. Popov is not trying to escape even following his
confession on the Internet.

[Nikolay Vinnichenko, St Petersburg prosecutor] We have in practice
not had this sort of situation before. On the one hand, this all
resembles farce. On the other hand, I shall reiterate, since the
information is rather serious, that our attitude to it is appropriate.

[Correspondent] The verdict against the murdered professor contains a
list of all the cases he was involved in, including this one accusing
the [chief] editor [Pavel Ivanov] of the Russkoye Veche nationalist
newspaper of inciting ethnic discord. It was brought to court thanks
to scientific evidence given by Girenko and the firm position of the
city prosecutor].

[Valeriy Zheltkov, Velikiy Novgorod prosecutor] Through this sort of
incitement – I quoted examples in my speech, the events started in
Sumgait [now Azerbaijan] and the Fergana valley [now Kyrgyzstan and
Uzbekistan] here [in the Soviet Union] at the end of the 1980s –
large-scale massacres happened on the basis of peoples’ ethnic origin
or religion. Everything starts precisely from all this. This is basic
incitement.

[Correspondent] But the [court] victory turned out to be illusory: a
R10,000 [345 dollars] fine instead of four years in prison. A court
appeal cancelled the ban on journalistic activity. Pavel Ivanov has
replaced a typewriter with a computer, and he is continuing to expose
the world-wide Zionist plot.

[Pavel Lepshin, lawyer] It is best of all that the leader of a nazi
group gave an order in written form. So-and-so is to beat up
watermelon seller [Mamed] Mamedov by such-and-such a date. Pupkin,
Khryapkin [imagined names] and others are to be commissioned to kill
Mamedov. Their titles in the hierarchy of their nazi community should
be mentioned – I forgot, their membership cards as well.

[Correspondent] All this is not an invention of legal theorists but
ordinary legal practice. A few years ago local TV gave extensive
coverage to an event which occurred in one district of the city. A
candidate for a seat in parliament [Denis Usov] handed out leaflets in
the whole constituency, which had the programme’s statement: I want to
evict blacks.

The prosecutor’s investigation found the canvassing to be absolutely
legal.

[Olga Anisimova, acting prosecutor in Frunzenskiy district, St
Petersburg] He said that according to the encyclopedia, there are red
and black cockroaches and he called [on people] to engage in cleaning
the city of black cockroaches. He did not mean anything else but
zoological points.

[Correspondent] Girenko’s colleagues admit that he may have been the
only expert in the country who could create a scientific method to
expose fascist propaganda. He decided to use the method since he
understood the source of the danger unlike those people who pass by
swastikas on the walls with indifference.

[Girenko, archive footage from Russia’s TV St Petersburg in 2002] If
society follows their way of doing things, society will collapse. It
will be the deepest delusion of those who will have contacts with them
to think that they are fools, uneducated people who simply have
nothing to do.

[Unidentified marching men] [We say] Yes to Russians and no to
(?foreigners).

[Video shows the words being typed: The world Judaic plot. The black
Egyptian priesthood; a leaflet saying, The deputies of the (?15th)
municipality have initiated a programme of the eviction of people of
Caucasian ethnicity from the district. We are honest, kind and open
people. They were brought up differently. Signed: Denis Usov; The
rhymed graffiti reads, The Jews are at the Kremlin, but were are in
shit; another graffiti goes, The crematorium is waiting for the Yids]

=?UNKNOWN?Q?Mus=E9e?= maritime : Anita Conti =?UNKNOWN?Q?=AB_La?= da

Le Télégramme
3 juillet 2004

Musée maritime : Anita Conti « La dame de la mer »

Le Musée maritime propose désormais chaque été une exposition « phare
» consacrée à un personnage marquant du monde maritime.

On se souvient que, dans la période de grce de ses débuts, le
Port-musée de Douarnenez avait déjà organisé une exposition et
diverses animations en hommage à cette femme extraordinaire,
scientifique, écrivain, photographe.

La ville avait été l’une de ses dernières escales.

Ce que nous propose aujourd’hui le Musée maritime d’Audierne, c’est
la présentation d’une quarantaine de ses photographies et de quelques
objets personnels particulièrement évocateurs.

Un marin parmi les autres

Dans des vitrines, sont disposés son appareil photo, un Rollei cord 6
x 6, qui renvoie aux images prises dans des conditions parfois très
difficiles; des gants de ville, qui rappellent que pour Anita Conti,
l’élégance morale allait de pair avec l’élégance physique et aussi
des gants de pêcheur de morue, ceux qu’elle portait pendant ses
campagnes à Terre-Neuve, quand la femme du monde se fondait dans
l’équipage et participait aux tches quotidiennes.

Plusieurs photos en portent témoignage : l’une nous la montre en
suroît parmi les marins pêcheurs du chalutier Bois Rosé, en 1952,
l’autre en train de nettoyer une cheminée du Vikings.

Sa simplicité, ses qualités humaines et sa connaissance de la mer lui
permettaient d’être vite adoptée à bord.

Un destin hors normes

Née en 1899 dans une famille d’origine arménienne, elle voyage
beaucoup pendant son enfance. On la retrouve ensuite à Paris où elle
travaille avec succès dans la reliure d’art; elle épouse un
diplomate. Mais le goût de l’aventure lui fait changer de vie : elle
devient chargée de mission pour l’ancêtre de l’Ifremer, l’Office
scientifique et technique des pêches maritimes. On la retrouve en
1939 dans une campagne morutière; en 1939-1940, elle prend une part
active à des opérations de déminage dans l’Atlantique nord. De 1943 à
1946, elle navigue en Afrique de l’Ouest. Retour au Grand Nord en
1952 sur le morutier Bois-Rosé. En 1958-59, elle travaille au musée
océanographique de Concarneau. En 1975, elle court toujours la mer.

Pendant sa longue carrière, elle aura rencontré Pierre et Marie
Curie, Pierre Mac Orlan, Théodore Monod, le commandant Cousteau,
Blaise Cendrars et bien d’autres. Elle aura ramené de ses voyages
40.000 photos, des films, des notes, des livres (Racleurs d’océan).
L’exposition du Musée maritime rend justice à son talent de
photographe. Des images fortes, dont certaines n’avaient encore
jamais été exposées, précieux témoignages sur la pêche et la vie des
pêcheurs et oeuvres révélatrices d’une sensibilité esthétique
originale.

Ouvert tous les jours, de 10 h à 12 h et de 15 h à 19 h, sauf le
samedi matin.

Tehran: Bitaraf Lauds Iran-Armenia Cooperation

Tehran Times, Iran
June 30 2004

Bitaraf Lauds Iran-Armenia Cooperation

TEHRAN (PIN) – Economic cooperation between Iran and Armenia has been
fruitful for both countries in all fields.

Speaking at a meeting with the visiting Armenian Chief of Staff
Artashes Tumanian, Iranian Minister of Energy Habibollah Bitaraf
stated that relations between Tehran and Yerevan were important to
the whole region and called for expansion of economic, political and
cultural collaboration in all fields.

Referring to joint projects underway with Armenia including an
Iranian gas pipeline, the minister stated that Iran pursued a power
exchanged with Armenia in return for gas sales to that country.

Tumanian stated that completion of the Iran- Armenia gas pipeline was
a result of the participation of the Iranian Energy Ministry.

Referring to other joint projects between the two countries including
a dam and a power plant on the Aras River, he called for more
cooperation in energy between the two countries. The two sides also
reviewed joint water and electricity projects including the third
power transmission line, a windmill, as well as the Aras dam and
power plant. MSK/DWN

Book Signing and Presentation of Three New Works by Author Nahabed

Book Signing and Presentation of Three New Works by
Author Nahabed Melkonian

Jerusalem St. Tarkmanchatz
Alumni Association of North America
1335 N. Detroit, #114
Los Angeles, CA 90046
Tel: (323) 851-9119
Tel/Fax: (818) 247-6809
Email Contact: Mihran Toumajan
([email protected])

June 30, 2004

The Tekeyan Cultural Association, the Armenian Society of Los Angeles,
and the Jerusalem St. Tarkmanchatz Alumni Association of North America
cordially invite the public to attend a book signing and presentation
of three new works by the eminent author and intellectual, Nahabed
Melkonian. The featured books include “The Lament of the Church”
(“Voghp Yegeghetsvo”, in Armenian), “In the Shadow of Meditation”
(“Khogumneru Shukin Dag”, in Armenian), and “In Contemplation”
(recently translated into English).

The books will be presented by the Rev. Fr. Vazken Movsesian, Pastor
of St. Peter Armenian Apostolic Church in Glendale; Dr. Sarkis
Mesrobian; and, Aris Sevag, Managing Editor of The Armenian Reporter
International weekly newspaper and translator of “In
Contemplation”. Parsegh Kartalian will serve as Master of
Ceremonies. The evening will also feature a modest artistic
program. The presentation will culminate with the traditional dousing
of wine on the books (kinetson).

This literary event will take place on Wednesday evening, July 21,
2004 at 8:00 pm at the Armenian Society of Los Angeles’ Center in
Glendale (221 South Brand Boulevard).

Refreshments will be available after the book signing and
presentation. Admission is free.

Turkey’s unrequited EU love

BBC News
Last Updated: Monday, 28 June, 2004, 16:01 GMT 17:01 UK

Turkey’s unrequited EU love

By Oana Lungescu
BBC correspondent in Istanbul

Two years ago, Turkey won the Eurovision song contest with a tale of
unrequited love.
In many ways, it echoed the country’s own unsuccessful bid to woo the
European Union since 1963, when it signed an association agreement that
promised eventual membership of the bloc.

Things began moving in 1999 when Turkey was officially recognised as an EU
candidate, and especially after the election of the Justice and Development
Party (AKP) government in 2002, which quickened political reforms to an
unprecedented pace.

Earlier this month, Turkish state television began broadcasting in Kurdish,
the language of a sizeable minority in this country of 67 million.

On the same day, the government released four Kurdish activists, including
human rights award winner Leyla Zana, who had spent 10 years in jail after
trials deemed unfair by the EU.

Turkey’s new government is working hard on reforming its image
Over the past 18 months, the government has passed nine reform packages,
including a ban on the death penalty, a zero-tolerance policy towards
torture in prisons, and curtailing the interference of the military in
politics, education and culture.

“I am impressed – because starting with the constitution, they’ve changed a
lot of laws,” says Murat Celikan, a human rights activist who writes a
regular column in the daily Radikal.

“To give one example, two years ago, a radio was banned for one year for
airing a song in Kurdish and in Armenian. Now the state television has
Kurdish programmes – so that’s a great change.”

The EU has also welcomed the reforms, but it wants them implemented across
this vast country by local police, judges and bureaucrats. So far,
implementation is uneven, especially in the provinces and the Kurdish areas
in the south-east.

“It will take time because I am sure that the security forces especially are
not yet well informed about those changes. If you want to make a
demonstration in Istanbul or in an eastern province like Diyarbakir, the
procedures are still different – not by law, but because of implementation,”
says Murat Celikan.

Investor wariness

The prospect of EU membership, coupled with IMF-inspired reforms, have also
brought greater stability to the crisis-prone Turkish economy.

Huge shopping centres are full of young people in search of the latest
trends. The economy is growing, while inflation has fallen to single-digit
figures for the first time in decades.

It will be a big, almost the biggest country, it will be pretty much the
poorest country in the EU and it’s located in quite a difficult strategic
security position

Kirsty Hughes
Analyst
But foreign investors remain wary of Turkey. In 2002, they invested only
$300m (£164m), 10 times less than in Hungary, a country whose entire economy
equals that of Istanbul.

Cem Duna, a leading member of the influential Turkish businessmen and
industrialists association Tusiad, has this explanation.

“Hungary is a member of the European Union and has been a candidate for the
past 10 years or so, this was the main reason why this happened. Now Turkey
can easily amass up to $10-15bn (£5.5-8bn) foreign direct investment per
annum once it is on the same track, with the same finality in sight.”

Meanwhile, Turkey remains poorer than the 10 countries of central and
southern Europe that have just joined the EU, with living standards at about
a quarter of EU levels.

Muslim giant

But in terms of population, it is as big as all of the 10 put together.

If it were to join around 2015, it would become the second biggest country
in the EU after Germany.

Is the EU ready to admit such a large poor country, which also happens to
border on Iraq and Syria?

Kurdish rights have improved as Turkey tries to gain EU entry
Kirsty Hughes is the author of a recent study on the implications of Turkish
EU membership.

“It will be a big, almost the biggest country, it will be pretty much the
poorest country in the EU and it’s located in quite a difficult
strategically security position,” she says.

“But when you actually look at what does that mean for joining the union,
what it means for its economic policies, for its budget, for how it votes to
make decisions, then all those things start to look manageable.

“For instance, it would have about 15% of the votes in the EU Council,
that’s slightly less than Germany has today in the say of how to run the EU.
In budget terms it would cost about as much as the ‘big bang’ enlargement
that we’ve just had.

“Now again, that’s not cheap, but it’s about 10% to 15% of the EU’s budget
so it’s not as shocking as if you said it’s going to be half the budget. It
does have a lot of implications for EU foreign policy, but I think those
will have to be taken as they come.”

Strategic

For Guenter Verheugen, the European enlargement commissioner, Turkey’s
strategic position straddling Europe and the greater Middle East is an asset
rather than a drawback.

EU politicians face one of the toughest decisions they have ever had to
take. If they say no to Turkey, they risk alienating a key ally in the
Muslim world with unpredictable consequences. If they say yes, they may
upset many voters at home who are already unhappy about where the EU is
going

At a recent conference in Brussels, he warned that the EU would make a
tragic mistake if it stopped or reversed the process of democratisation in
Turkey by denying it eventual membership.

“The eleventh of September 2001 marks a far-reaching change in our strategic
thinking. Since 11 September, the question of the relationship between
Western democracies and the Islamic world is one of the most important
issues in the first decade of the 21st Century.

“The question – which role will Turkey play in the organisation of that
relationship – can be very crucial. Personally, I am convinced it will be
crucial.

“And the process of reforms in Turkey has a meaning far beyond the borders
of that country. It has a meaning for the whole Islamic world, because it
demonstrates that there’s no contradiction between the universal values of
human rights, democracy, the state of law and a country with a Muslim
population and Muslim background.”

EU decision

In October, Mr Verheugen will issue a progress report on Turkey which will
form the basis for the decision of EU leaders.

While the report is widely expected to be positive, public opinion in
France, Germany, Austria and elsewhere is becoming increasingly reluctant to
accept a further enlargement of the EU, especially to include a large Muslim
nation like Turkey.

Since the Netherlands will be holding the EU’s rotating presidency in the
second half of the year, I asked Ben Bot, the Dutch foreign minister (and a
former Dutch ambassador to Turkey) how worried he is about the lack of
public support among Western voters?

“Perhaps there has been a lack of proper communication and now there is, I
think, an unjustified fear of Islam, which is perhaps understandable in the
context of terrorism and so on, but which is not justified – because I think
that the situation in Turkey is completely different.

“They also forget that Turkey has been a member of Nato, of the Council of
Europe, that it has helped the West during all these years, also during the
Cold War, has been a staunch ally.

“And so, it’s in itself astonishing that people all of a sudden are against
Turkish participation, whereas we think that Turkey would be a very valuable
member of the EU. It will take a long time, that I agree, it will certainly
take many, many years of negotiations before they fully comply with all the
criteria.”

Indeed, in 10 years or so from now, the EU will be a very different union,
and Turkey will be a very different country.

But come December, EU politicians face one of the toughest decisions they
have ever had to take.

If they say no to Turkey, they risk alienating a key ally in the Muslim
world. But if they say yes, they may upset many voters at home who are
already unhappy about where the EU is going.

Broadcaster Jennings, cellist Yo-Yo Ma honored at AUB

Broadcaster Jennings, cellist Yo-Yo Ma honored at American University of
Beirut

.c The Associated Press

BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) – ABC News anchor Peter Jennings and cellist
Yo-Yo Ma picked up honorary doctoral degrees Saturday at the American
University of Beirut and paid tribute to the school as a place to turn
for cultural understanding.

Jennings, anchor of ABC’s World News Tonight with Peter Jennings,
spent time as a newsman in Beirut in the late 1960s and early
1970s. He noted the United States has found it challenging to win the
hearts and mind of people in the region.

“I’ll go back to the United States and remind my colleagues that if
we want better understanding we can go back and spend just a little
time on this campus talking to all the people,” he said. The
university has been a meeting point of ideas and people from the
Middle East and West for more than a century.

Jennings, the Toronto-born son of a Canadian radio announcer, dropped
out of high school before launching his career in journalism. He
served as ABC News bureau chief in Beirut for seven years.

AUB President John Waterbury jokingly forgave Jennings for his limited
formal education. Receiving the Doctorate in Humane Letters, Jennings
opened the folder containing the document and quipped: “It’s true. I
have one.”

Receiving his Humane Letters doctorate, Ma spoke about how music
transcends borders. He picked up his cello and played a few minutes of
Bach that he offered “to the amazing history and accomplishments of
AUB.”

Also honored at the ceremony were Sir Michael Atiyah, a British
mathematician of Lebanese father and Scottish mother, and Vartan
Gregorian, an Iranian-born educator and philanthropist who moved to
Beirut at age 15 and studied at the Armenian College before studying
and later teaching at several U.S. universities.

AUB was founded in 1866 by Christian missionary Dr. Daniel Bliss as
the Syrian Protestant College and later became nonsectarian and
independent. The prestigious institution educated many Arab
politicians. It survived Lebanon’s 1975-90 civil war despite being
targeted by a car bomb and the assassination of its president.

sfg-sjs

06/26/04 09:35 EDT

Stalin and his Hangmen

The Age, Australia
June 26 2004

Stalin and his Hangmen
Reviewer Gideon Haigh

By Donald Rayfield
Viking, $49.95

In her 1922 poem I Am Not One Of Those Who Has Left the Land, the
Russian Anna Akhmatova described her countrymen as “the people
without tears/straighter than you, more proud”.

Given Joseph Stalin had just ascended to the post of Communist Party
general secretary, it would prove a handy national attribute.

In Stalin’s three decades of homicidal misrule of the Soviet Union,
as Donald Rayfield presents it, there seems scarcely to have been
time for grief or sadness, so utterly was the environment one of
fear, pain and blood. The reader of Stalin and his Hangmen, however,
will almost certainly feel differently. This is a harrowing account,
occasionally painful to read, of a time when “terror” was a daily
reality rather than a political buzzword worn hollow.

Rayfield’s approach is to analyse the relationships between Stalin
and Feliks Dzierzynski, Viacheslav Mezkhnisky, Genrikh Iagoda,
Nikolai Ezhov and Lavrenti Beria – the chiefs, consecutively, of
Russia’s security services.

Yet referring to the Cheka and its successors, the OGPU, NKVD and
KGB, as “security services” at all is almost to collude, because by
all accounts they secured only Stalin, never his country.

Almost without exception, the threats they neutralised were phantoms
of imagination or contrivances of propaganda.

Simon Sebag Montefiore’s recent biography dared to try to humanise
the man of steel; Rayfield’s Stalin is mostly inscrutable, an
originator of the most nihilistic aphorisms (“Gratitude is a dog’s
virtue”; “There will be unity only in the cemetery”) and the bleakest
jests (when his son tried to shoot himself, Stalin laughed; “Ha, so
you missed!”).

In this, the author is shrewd: Stalin’s gift as a dictator was the
distance he preserved from his subordinates, so that none ever felt
other than on probation and all competed for his favour.

Stalin’s recurring bouts of paranoid psychosis afforded ample
opportunities to be the most loyal, the most doctrinaire, the most
punitive.

And, as Rayfield says: “Party workers knew that going too far was far
less dangerous than not going far enough.” The numbers in Stalin and
his Hangmen bear this out.

Stalin’s own estimate was that collectivisation of agriculture, by
bullet and noose, cost 10 million lives. The NKVD’s photo archive was
at one time the world’s largest, containing 10 million images.

NKVD records of 1937’s Great Terror show the implausibly precise
aggregate of 681,692 shot of the 1.44 million convicted of
“counter-revolutionary crimes”, although Rayfield notes dryly that
the service eventually simply “ran out of paper” to record sentences
and executions.

Yet, heeding Stalin’s advice about a single death being a tragedy and
a million a statistic, Rayfield’s narrative brings individuals
sharply into focus.

Dzierzynski, for example, is a chilling figure, so extreme in his
puritanism that he once spurned pancakes made by his sister because
she had bought the flour from a private trader, and prone to musings
of deepest morbidity: “My thought orders me to be terrible and I have
the will to follow my thought to the end . . .”

For all the bloodiness of their rises, Iagoda and Beria cut tragic
figures in their falls. Dismissed from his post, Iagoda awaited
arrest in his new office, making paper aeroplanes.

He responded to questions at his show trial by repeating: “It wasn’t
like that, but it doesn’t matter.” With two guns at the back of his
head in a central committee meeting, Beria wrote 19 times the word
“alarm”.

The stories from Stalin’s charnel houses are so vivid as to make Abu
Ghraib look like Butlins, whether of a theatre director being
tortured until mute and paralysed then shot, or of an Armenian who
appealed for clemency by slitting his wrists and writing in his own
blood.

But nothing is quite so haunting as the letters to Stalin of his
former colleagues Zinoviev and Bukharin while awaiting their fates.

“Can’t you see,” pleaded Zinoviev, “that I am no longer your enemy,
that I am yours body and soul, that I have understood everything,
that I am ready to do everything to earn forgiveness, mercy?”

“I still want to do something good,” Bukharin entreated. “And now I
must tell you straight: my only hope is you.”

Rayfield writes expertly and stylishly. Sometimes even he sounds
incredulous. “An observer of the show trials,” he muses, “would have
had to conclude that all Lenin’s party except for a tiny circle
around Stalin had for some reason carried out a simulated Bolshevik
revolution at the behest of world capitalism.”

This outstanding book might have been better still had Rayfield
addressed more closely the questions of public pathology that he
poses at intervals; in essence, as he puts it: “How could a literate
urban population submit to a reign of terror and actively, even
enthusiastically, collaborate in offering victims up to it?”

What does the thrall exerted by Stalin’s hangmen tell us about the
hanged, and survivors too?

Akhmatova’s reflection on her people may be as true today as ever –
Russia being ruled, with increasingly brutality, by a former secret
policeman.