Armenian, Azerbaijani FMs To Hold Talks In Athens

ARMENIAN, AZERBAIJANI FMS TO HOLD TALKS IN ATHENS

news.am
Nov 27 2009
Armenia

In the course of December 1-2 meetings in Athens, Armenian and
Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers, Edward Nalbandyan and Elmar Mammadyarov,
are expected to discuss the issues that the sides have not yet agreed
on, informed Elhan Poluhov, Azerbaijani FM Spokesman. In addition,
a 3+2 format meeting of FMs with OSCE MG Co-Chairs is also scheduled.

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chair Yuri Merzlyakov earlier reported of the
possibility of Nalbandyan-Mammadyarov meeting within the framework
of the OSCE Foreign Ministers’ conference.

Earlier, speaking in RA NA, the Armenian FM did not rule out the
possibility that the document adopted in the course of OSCE Foreign
Minister’s meeting will contain the provision on conflicts, namely
Nagorno-Karabakh issue.

BAKU: Turkey May Appoint Ethnic Armenian Negotiator On EU Admission

TURKEY MAY APPOINT ETHNIC ARMENIAN NEGOTIATOR ON EU ADMISSION

AzerNews Weekly
Nov 27 2009
Azerbaijan

An ethnic Armenian Turkish citizen may reportedly be appointed to
the post of the expert dealing with talks on Turkey’s admission to
the European Union.

Leo Suren Alepli has been selected to the relevant secretariat from
among 115 candidates, Hurriyet newspaper said.

The country’s intelligence body will have the final say about his
appointment.

Foreign Policy: How The West Lost Turkey

FOREIGN POLICY: HOW THE WEST LOST TURKEY

PanARMENIAN.Net
27.11.2009 18:55 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Lately, some on the right in Washington have fretted
that Turkey’s religiously oriented Justice and Development Party,
the AKP, will distance the country from its Western allies, eroding
secularism as it seeks tighter bonds within the Middle East. After all,
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pushed some very sensitive
Western buttons, Foreign Policy reports.

"These moves leave plenty to worry about – including the possibility
that the United States will make things worse by worrying about all
the wrong things. But Erdogan’s decisions do not augur the rise of
an Islamist foreign policy in Turkey. The more troubling reality
is that they are the inevitable outcome of long-brewing domestic
trends. In limiting cooperation with Israel and improving relations
with neighbors like Iran and Syria, Erdogan is playing to Turkish
leftists and rightists, secularists and Islamists. He’s pandering to
voters who already dislike the United States and Israel while cleverly,
if cynically, pursuing Turkey’s national interests," says the magazine.

According to the author, Turkey will be more useful to its allies if
it is on good terms with its allies’ enemies. "Being a bridge between
East and West, they say, requires having a footing in the East as
well. Yet in trying to turn its dual identity into a strategic asset,
Turkey runs the perpetual risk of finding itself rejected by both
sides," the article further says.

The author of the publication believes that "Erdogan’s challenge is
even harder. He has to get what he can from Turkey’s new friends in
the East while also keeping – and, if necessary, publicly defending –
Turkey’s friends in the West."

Azerbaijan’s Victory In New War Not Obvious

AZERBAIJAN’S VICTORY IN NEW WAR NOT OBVIOUS

PanARMENIAN.Net
26.11.2009 13:07 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev’s warlike
statements on the threshold of the meeting with his Armenian
counterpart Serzh Sargsyan in Munich considerably damaged Karabakh
talks, according to Andrey Areshev, deputy director general of
Strategic Culture Foundation.

"I always tell Armenians to please us with the agreement that can be
achieved," Aliyev said on the threshold of talks.

"Even international mediators permitted themselves to comment on
the Azeri leader’s eccentric ideas about the compromise," Areshev
emphasized in the article he titled "Karabakh settlement reaches a
deadlock again."

French Co-Chair Bernard Fassier called on both sides "to refrain from
harsh statements at the current stage of talks."

"Azerbaijan’s foreign policy, which is based on maximalistic demands,
is cracking and this makes Baku nervous. Although some may interpret
Aliyev’s statement as a "well turned" diplomatic move, such policy
seems rather doubtful and hampers the negotiation process," Areshev
concluded.

At 88, She Still Teaches The Piano

AT 88, SHE STILL TEACHES THE PIANO
By Carol South

Grand Traverse Herald
Nov 25 2009
MI

TRAVERSE CITY — Retirement, who needs it?

Rose Megregian of Elk Rapids is 88 and still going strong, teaching
piano to 30 young children weekly at a Traverse City studio. Her
gentle manner is coupled with exacting standards and a thorough
knowledge of both music and young minds, all combining to spark a
lifelong love of music in her students.

Offering lessons four afternoons a week at the Tinkertunes Music
Studios in Logan’s Landing, Megregian also tutors private students at
her home. Starting with kids from scratch, teaching them the basics
from notes to keys to how to sit at the piano, over and over again,
year after year, is just part of the process.

Megregian loves kids and sharing with them her love of the piano,
guiding them through the years as they learn and master new skills.

"They’re really rewarding to be with, children are just precious,"
said Megregian, who also works with students through high school age.

"It makes my life. You go there and you’re into the teaching and
all perked up and when the children are done I say, ‘Gee I wish I
had more.’"

"I love them and it keeps me going," she added.

After teaching for 30 years downstate in Dearborn, Megregian gave it up
when she and her husband retired up north. After he died 12 years ago,
she needed to do something with her life and thought about teaching
again. With trepidation but determined to try, she approached Tom
Kaufmann, owner of Tinkertunes, by chance knocking on his door

"I was just brave enough to do it, I don’t know how," Megregian
recalled. "I said, ‘I’m a piano teacher, I want to get back into it.’
He set me up, he really did, I have to give Tom all the credit for
getting me going again."

Adding nearly a dozen years to her resume in this latest teaching
iteration, Megregian is a "grandma" working with piano students two
and three generations younger. The connection between student and
teacher thrives, whether because of or despite the age difference.

Kaufmann has no doubt his "phenomenal" and "sweetheart" of a teacher
is the bottom line.

"One mom told me that even if her kid wasn’t taking piano lessons,
she’d bring her kid down to hang with Rose," he said.

Tanya Svoboda of Traverse City concurs. Her daughter, Amelia, 6,
has studied with "Miss Rose" weekly for about a year.

"She just has the perfect disposition, friendly and kind," Svoboda
said. "She’s really special, like a grandma."

Megregian graduated as a piano major from the Detroit Institute
of Musical Arts, part of the University of Detroit, and joined the
school’s faculty. She also completed and is certified to teach the
Kelly Kirby Method, an approach she has used for beginning students
throughout her teaching career.

"It’s basically ear training and then they read music, get the notation
and all the other basics," said Megregian of the four-book course
that takes a year or two to complete. "The kids like it because it’s
like a workbook almost, every time there’s something new they work on,
something that they can color or cut out."

As for learning the piano herself, Megregian is not really sure how
she got started. Her Armenian family fled to the United States from
Turkey after World War I, when she was 18 months old. She learned
English when she started kindergarten in Detroit, where her family
settled and her father found work at Ford Motor Company.

"How (my mother) managed to get a piano when we had no car, no
telephone," wondered Megregian of the old upright she learned to play
on, often while her mother sang along.

BAKU: OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Make A Statement On Azerbaijani, Ar

OSCE MINSK GROUP CO-CHAIRS MAKE A STATEMENT ON AZERBAIJANI, ARMENIAN PRESIDENTS’ MEETING

AzerTag
Nov 23 2009
Azerbaijan

The Co-Chairs of the OSCE Minsk Group, Ambassadors Yury Merzlyakov of
Russia, Bernard Fassier of France, and Robert Bradtke of the United
States, released the following statement today.

"President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev and President of Armenia Serzh
Sargsian met November 22, 2009 at the residence of the French Consul
General in Munich at the initiative of OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs
Ambassador Yuri Merzlyakov (Russian Federation), Ambassador Bernard
Fassier (France), Ambassador Robert Bradtke (United States).

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov and Armenian Foreign
Minister Edward Nalbandian also participated in the talks, as well as
the personal representative of the OSCE Chairman-in-Office Ambassador
Andrzej Kasprzyk.

During this meeting, the sixth such meeting this year, the two
presidents engaged in a detailed and in-depth discussion of the most
important unresolved points in the Co-Chairs’ proposals. The talks,
which lasted almost four hours, were constructive. In some areas,
progress was made. At the same time, some issues still remain open.

The Presidents instructed their foreign ministers to continue working
with the Co-Chairs on these matters. As a next step, the Co-Chairs are
organizing a working session with the two ministers in advance of the
OSCE Ministerial Council, which will take place December 1-2 in Athens.

Collapse Of Armenian Church In Tbilisi – Barbarous Act

COLLAPSE OF ARMENIAN CHURCH IN TBILISI – BARBAROUS ACT

news.am
Nov 24 2009
Armenia

Collapse of Armenian St. Gevorg of Mughni church in Tbilisi is a
barbarous act, disreputable for civilized, let alone Christian state,
said the Head of ARF Dashnaktsutyun faction Vahan Hovhannisyan at
the Nov. 24 press conference.

"We realized that international pressure only can influence Georgia
and we already initiated that process," stated Hovhannisyan, not
specifying what concrete steps ARFD undertook.

The domed St. Gevorg of Mughni Church in Tbilisi (built 1356) collapsed
yesterday Nov. 19 in the Old Tbilisi part of the city. The incident
evoked response from Armenia and Armenian community of Georgia. The
protest action is planned towards Georgian Embassy in Armenia. However,
Georgian authorities did not comment on the issue yet.

OSCE Minsk Group Warns Azerbaijan Against Bellicose Rhetoric – Sourc

OSCE MINSK GROUP WARNS AZERBAIJAN AGAINST BELLICOSE RHETORIC – SOURCE

Interfax
Nov 23 2009
Russia

The cochairmen of the OSCE Minsk group for the settlement of the
Nagorno Karabakh conflict have urged Azerbaijani President Ilham
Aliyev to refrain from bellicose declarations after his talks with
Armenian Presidents Serzh Sargsyan in Munich.

"Talking to journalists after the meeting of the presidents of Armenia
and Azerbaijan the cochairmen urged President Ilham Aliyev to refrain
from bellicose declarations," a source close to the negotiating
process in Munich told Interfax on Sunday.

Interfax has not obtained confirmation of this information from
official sources yet.

Earlier reports said that Aliyev and Sargsyan met at the residence of
the French consul general in Munich on Sunday. The sides exchanged
opinions about the current state and prospects of talks on the
settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict over Nagorno Karabakh.

Last Friday Aliyev said that if the meeting in Munich proves fruitless,
the war may resume in the area. Yerevan regarded the declaration as a
challenge to the entire international community, not just to Armenia
and Nagorno Karabakh.

Georgian Authorities To Restore St. Gevorg Church

GEORGIAN AUTHORITIES TO RESTORE ST. GEVORG CHURCH

news.am
Nov 24 2009
Armenia

The restoration works of Armenian St. Gevorg of Mughni church in
Tbilisi launched. According to Georgian National Agency for Cultural
Heritage Preservation, the board of experts already examined the
church’s dome state. It was decided to start restoration works
immediately.

The domed St. Gevorg of Mughni Church in Tbilisi (built 1356) collapsed
Nov. 19 in the Old Tbilisi part of the city. Armenian side accused
Georgian authorities and Orthodox Church of neglect of historical
monuments. However, these accusations were not unsubstantiated taking
into account Georgia’s repeated scornful attitude towards Armenian
monuments and cultural heritage.

GenEd: San Francisco Teachers Attend Workshop on Armenian Genocide

PRESS RELEASE

The Genocide Education Project
51 Commonwealth Ave.
San Francisco, CA 94116
(415) 264-4203
[email protected]
www.GenocideEd ucation.org

Contact: Raffi Momjian

SAN FRANCISCO TEACHERS ATTEND WORKSHOP ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE
11_24_2009.htm

SAN FRANCISCO, CA, — The Genocide Education Project conducted a
workshop for teachers from San Francisco’s public high schools and
Northern California’s only Armenian-American day school, KZV School. The
course, entitled The Fundamentals of Genocide and the Armenian Case,
held on the KZV campus, is part of an effort to support California’s
state law requiring public schools teach about the Armenian Genocide.

The presence of both public school teachers and Armenian-American school
teachers provided a platform for valuable discussions regarding
approaches and methods for teaching the Armenian Genocide. "It was a
unique dialogue that was very productive" stated Raffi Momjian,
Executive Director of The Genocide Education Project. "Discussions
between these professional groups allow a better understanding of the
value of teaching this important topic."

Sara Cohan, Education Director for The Genocide Education Project,
introduced workshop participants to a variety of teaching materials
including lesson plans, historical documents, video and web-based
approaches to engaging students in the study of genocide and the
Armenian Case. They also studied the Armenian Genocide as an archetype
for other incidents of genocide carried out in the 20th Century.
Educators had an opportunity to share ideas on why and how to teach
about the Armenian Genocide.

All who attended received free lesson plans and other classroom
resources including: Human Rights and Genocide: Case Study of the First
Genocide of the 20th Century: Lesson Plans published by The Genocide
Education Project and a DVD containing a 5-min ABC News story on the
Armenian Genocide.

####

The Genocide Education Project is a nonprofit, tax-exempt 501(c)(3)
organization that assists educators in teaching about human rights and
genocide, particularly the Armenian Genocide, by developing and
distributing instructional materials, providing access to teaching
resources and organizing educational workshops.

http://www.genocideeducation.org/pr/2009/