Ararat Bank Issues New NVER CARD Dated To Maternity Day

ARARAT BANK ISSUES NEW NVER CARD DATED TO MATERNITY DAY

PanARMENIAN.Net
25.03.2009 21:18 GMT+04:00

Araratbank offers a new Gift Card on the eve of Apr. 7, Motherhood,
beauty and love day celebration. Receiver’s name and any wishes to
beloved person can be printed on Gift Card. Ararat bank offers free
card opening and account maintenance. Annual card maintenance free
is AMD 1500, Araratbank news service reported.

The card will give a possibility to effect non-cash transactions and
receive cash from any terminal in Armenia and NKR.

The new Gift Card can be obtained in Araratbank central office as
well as any of 25 subsidiaries in Armenia.

Eurovision Song Contest: Introducing The 2009 Entries: Armenia

INTRODUCING THE 2009 ENTRIES: ARMENIA

esctoday.com
/read/13584
March 25 2009

All entries in the 2009 Eurovision Song Contest are known, but the
actual contest is still two months away. As a warm-up, we introduce
one of the entries every day in random order. Part ten is dedicated
to the entry from Armenia.

Basic information

Performers: Inga & Anush

Song: Jan jan (My dear)

Language: English and Armenian

Music: Mane Akopyan

Lyrics: Avet Barseghyan, Vardan Zadoyan

Draw: 6th in the first semi final

The song

Jan jan is a folkloristic up-tempo dance song. The lyrics are an
invitation to dance the Nor par, a dance that is supposed to spread
hopes for a new and better life:

Can’t you see?

We aren’t free Fixed like a tree To the holy ground With my sound I’ll
be always around I wanna dance, don’t you stand Sister, give me hand

Everybody move your body We are dancing nor par

The singers

The sisters Inga and Anush Arshakyan are both graduates of the
S. Aslamazyan music school. Inga studied violin and jazz singing and
she has laso worked as a violinist for a well-known orchestra. Her
sister Anush majored in piano, but she also studied jazz singing. In
1994, she had already been the winner of a music contest in Omsk and
she would also perform with the philharmonic orchestra of Armenia.

As a duo, the sisters started their career in 2000 by entering the
National Song Theater of Armenia. Ever since they have enjoyed
a successful career with many concerts around Europe and the
USA. Nowadays they are said to be the most popular folk singers
in Armenia.

In 2009, they entered the Armenian national final for the Eurovision
Song Contest and won it making them the first duo to represent
Armenia. Later, it was announced that the famous Russian trio Fresh
Art is working with the sisters to develop the stage image and the
performance for Moscow.

You can find new pictures from the photo session with Fresh Art here.

The national selection

Armenia hold a classic national final this year. On a Saturday evening,
21 acts performed one song each and the winner was chosen by a mix
of jury voting and televoting. Inga & Anush were the favourites of
both and could win the national final ahead of Mher and Dorians.

Armenia in the Eurovision Song Contest

Armenia took part in the Eurovision Song Contest for the first time
in 2006 and has become one of the most successful countries since
finishing eighth twice and fourth once last year. Remarkably, 2009
will mark the third year in a row the Armenian entry will be performed
in English and the national language.

http://www.esctoday.com/news

Yerevan To Host "Health Service & Pharmacy" Exhibition

YEREVAN TO HOST "HEALTH SERVICE & PHARMACY" EXHIBITION

PanARMENIAN.Net
24.03.2009 15:34 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ LOGOS EXPO Center, with assistance of Ministry
of Health of Armenia, will organize "Health Service & Pharmacy"
international specialized exhibition from April 10 to 13, 2009.

The exhibition offers an opportunity to for leading specialists in
various fields to present their viewpoints and recommendations and
expand contacts.

25% of participating companies are foreign manufacturers, representing
Russia, Georgia, Japan and other countries.

Workshop With The Water Users’ Associations

WORKSHOP WITH THE WATER USERS’ ASSOCIATIONS

armradio.am
23.03.2009 11:36

"Euroconsult Mott Mac Donald" company, which is implementing
the Institutional Strengthening component of Irrigation Entities
Sub-Activity of the Millennium Challenge Account-Armenia program,
held a workshop to present the component to its key stakeholders. The
purpose of the workshop was to provide background information on the
activities and works implemented by the consultant, as well as its
future actions. Information was provided on the work done with 51
Water Users’ Associations (WUA) and 3 Water Supply Agencies (WSA),
including a recent assessment of their capacity, as well as progress
to date on the development of their Management Improvement Plans.

Representatives of WUAs and WSAs were among the participants.

Ara Hovsepyan, MCA-Armenia CEO and Andranik Andriasyan, Head of the
State Committee for Water Management addressed the invitees with
opening remarks.

Institutional Strengthening component of Irrigation Entities
Sub-Activity was presented by "Euroconsult Mott Mac Donald" expert
Onno Schaap.

The main objective of the Institutional Strengthening component is to
develop institutional and technical capabilities in water management
entities to ensure reliable and timely water delivery, promote greater
ownership of the water delivery system by water users, and create a
basis for technical and financial sustainability of the irrigation
system through training and technical assistance interventions.

Icon Communications launches its internet-network in Armenia

Icon Communications launches its internet-network in Armenia

2009-03-20 22:39:00

ArmInfo. Icon Communications has launched its internet-network in
Armenia. The inaugration ceremony was attended by Prime Minister of
Armenia Tigran Sargsyan, Chairman of the Commission on Regulation of
Public Services of Armenia Robert Nazaryan and other officials.
Sargsyan pointed out the importance of development of internet
communication in Armenia’s regions, particularly, in borderline areas.
This will boost economic activity outside the capital. One more
positive effect of this step will be enhanced quality of telecoms
services due to growing competition. Chief Executive Office of Icon
Communications Adam Kablanian said that he was happy to start
activities in Armenia and thanked all people who cooperated with his
company and was interested in its success. He said that the key goal of
his company was to provide Armenians with high quality and cheap
internet service.

Icon Communications was registered in Armenia in 2007. Its key
shareholder of VTEL Holdings. In June 2008 the company was granted a
license fo WiMAX service in Armenia. The license allows the company to
provide internet and VoIP within 3,400-3,450 MHz for 10 years. The
company is planning to spent almost $15mln on its development.

ANTELIAS: HH Aram I assists Mid-Lent sunrise service at St Nshan

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: nian.htm

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I ASSISTS THE MID-LENT SUNRISE SERVICE
AT SAINT NESHAN CHURCH OF THE DIOCESE OF LEBANON

According to the tradition the Prelate of the Diocese of Lebanon Archbishop
Kegham Khatcherian and the Members of the Church Council invited His
Holiness Aram I to preside over the Mid-Lent Sunrise Service at the Saint
Neshan Church of the Diocese in Beirut. The students of the seminary who
accompanied His Holiness did the singing.

At the end of the Service Archbishop Kegham Khatcherian welcomed the
Catholicos on behalf of the Diocese and its leadership for this Pastoral
visit, which indicated that the whole Church was being resourced spiritually
in anticipation of the Holy Feast of Easter.

In his message to the congregation, His Holiness Aram I said that the period
of fasting and praying prior to Easter is the human response to Jesus’ words
"I am the door: by me if any man enter in, he shall be saved, and shall go
in and out, and find pasture." (John 9:10). Despite the sufferings of the
Armenian community in Lebanon for many decades, the leadership and people
remained steadfast. New challenges are now touching the lives of the youth.
The decision to declare 2009 "The Year of Youth" was taken in order to
discern and lead the youth to the "doors" where Jesus’ teachings, the
Traditions of the Church and Armenian identity are affirmed and shaped
through love, peace and hope. He then invited the Diocese and the faithful
to open "doors" to the youth.

After the Service, the faithful were invited to share friendship around
coffee and special Lent sweets thanks to the hospitality offered by the
Church Council and Women’s Committee.

##
View the photos here:
tos/Photos364.htm
*****
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.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Arme
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org/v04/doc/Pho
http://www.ArmenianOrthodoxChurch.org

Will Crisis Help Russia Assemble Another USSR?

WILL CRISIS HELP RUSSIA ASSEMBLE ANOTHER USSR?
Sergei Semushkin

WPS Agency
What the Papers Say (Russia)
March 19, 2009 Thursday
Russia

CAN RUSSIA USE THE CRISIS TO RECONSTITUTE A COMMON POLITICAL ENTITY
WITHIN THE CIS BORDERS?; Loaning money to CIS neighbors: potential
advantages and dangers.

CIS countries remembered Russia in their hour of need. Kyrgyzstan and
Belarus seek $2 billions from Russia each, Ukraine wants $5 billion,
and Armenia $500 million…

Will the loans change their attitude toward Russia for the better
or will it be just a wasted goodwill gesture? Moskovsky Komsomolets
approached experts for comments.

One of Moscow’s latest promises – to loan Kyrgyzstan $2 billion – set
the pot of the expert community literally boiling. There are absolutely
no guarantees that Russia will ever see its money again. Up to 60%
of the GDP of certain Central Asian republics are produced in Moscow
where the so called Gastarbeiters work and transact what they make
to their families at home.

"Loans to Kyrgyzstan should be regarded as a geopolitical project
rather than a financial gesture," suggested Aleksei Vlasov, Director
General of the Center for Sociopolitical Studies in the Post-Soviet
Zone. "Bishkek did show the US airbase the door. By and large, it’s
a perfect moment for strengthening our positions there."

"Crisis offers a unique opportunity to establish a common zone,"
Director of the Institute of CIS Countries Konstantin Zatulin said. "I
say Russia should finance its neighbors. Particularly because money is
often loaned on certain terms. When $2 billion were loaned to Belarus,
for example, we brought up the matter of dumping."

Mikhail Delyagin, Director of the Institute of Globalization, agreed
that Russia should finance neighbors but only on rigid terms that
would benefit Russia. "Post-Soviet zone is a zone of chaos. There is
nobody around here but Russia to keep this chaos in check because
nobody else really cares. Should we be so foolish as to let this
chaos spread, it will certainly spread into Russia before long. What
does absence of a firm state rule in Tajikistan mean? It means drugs
in Moscow. It follows that we do not really have a choice and must
assist these territories," Delyagin said.

Even Ukraine swallowed its pride and asked Russia for a loan. Prime
Minister Yulia Timoshenko appealed to Russian Foreign Minister Aleksei
Kudrin for a loan of $5 billion.

"Ukraine is a different matter altogether. It is a complicated problem
indeed," Vlasov said. "The first thing that comes to mind is the
question concerning who Russia will have to ask for its money again
afterwards. I reckon the Russian leadership will think twice before
committing itself."

"Sure, money should be loaned even to Ukraine," Zatulin assumed. "Once
again, it is terms of the loan that count. Why wouldn’t we offer
money to some CIS countries on the terms they may get loans from
the West? After all, some Ukrainian regions are expressly banned to
interact with Russian regions. I’d say that we should bring it up
when terms of the loan are discussed."

"Should Kiev permit Russian businesses to expand into Ukraine
and accept a plan of integration, it will warrant loaning the
Ukrainians $10 billion instead of the $5 billion they are asking for,"
Delyagin announced. "The matter of the Crimea and Sevastopol may be
settled within the framework of this integration plan to everyone’s
satisfaction. The peninsula will eventually become a Turkish province
otherwise."

Russia’s relations with its neighbors are far from ideal. Every
involved party plays its own game. Lukashenko in Minsk threatens
to borrow from the International Monetary Fund which Russia could
do without because Belarus will have to dance to the tune of IMF
principal creditors then, namely of the United States and European
Union. Azerbaijan hints that it just might join Nabucco and start
building a gas pipeline bypassing Russia. Even Armenia requests
recognition of Nagorno-Karabakh from Russia every now and then… And
all of them aspire to borrow from Moscow at the same time. Let’s
say Russia lends a sympathetic ear and loans them the requested
sums. What if they turn their backs on Moscow again once the money is
transacted? All experts Moskovsky Komsomolets approached recognize this
danger as existing indeed. Moscow had better remember the Soviet Union
which was so free with loans that it eventually led to its own undoing.

* * *

Alexander Rahr, Director of Russian and CIS Programs of the German
Foreign Policy Council: Moscow will reestablish control over energy
economy

The crisis does offer Russia a chance to reclaim leftovers of the
erstwhile Soviet Union. Your neighbors need colossal sums. Western
banks refuse to finance them and the International Monetary
Fund demands control over their economic policies in return for
loans. Sure, Russia wants this control too. It means that countries of
the Commonwealth have to choose who to give this partial control to –
the West or Russia.

Ukraine is Russia’s priority… or should be. Moscow might try
and economically reconnect Russia and at least the eastern regions
of Ukraine and the Crimea because the population there is mostly
pro-Russian. Belarus is the second priority and Kazakhstan too.

There is also Tajikistan to consider. It needs aid and Russia is
in the position to offer it. Moreover, Russia needs Tajikistan to
close the border with Afghanistan across which drugs are smuggled
into Tajikistan and then to Russia itself.

The way I see it, restoration of the energy complex of the former USSR
is the prime task. It is the countries controlling energy resources
that will recover faster than anyone else after the crisis. The
question is whether Russia has money for it.

The Armenian Weekly; Feb. 16, 2008; Features

The Armenian Weekly On-Line
80 Bigelow Avenue
Watertown MA 02472 USA
(617) 926-3974
[email protected]

http://www.a rmenianweekly.com

The Armenian Weekly; Volume 74, No. 6; Feb. 16, 2008

Features:

1. ‘Complicity With Evil’ Blasts Lack of UN Will to Stop Genocides
By Andy Turpin

2. Albert Bagian: An ARS Servant for 30 Years
By Tom Vartabedian

3. Sayonara Saccharin
By Garen Yegparian

4. Far-Away Sky
By Knarik O. Meneshian

5. Three Questions to Vahan Hovannesian

***

1. ‘Complicity With Evil’ Blasts Lack of UN Will to Stop Genocides
By Andy Turpin

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)-One-stop shopping to understand what’s wrong with
the UN. That’s the most concise summary and best compliment I can think to
give London Times’ Central Europe correspondent Adam Lebor’s book,
Complicity With Evil: The United Nations in the Age of Modern Genocide (Yale
University Press, 2006).

Lebor was on the ground for the entirety of the Bosnian war and its lead up
in the early 1990s, but his book goes into an in-depth, play-by-play detail
of the genocides that followed Bosnia in Rwanda, the Congo and Darfur.

Yet, amid the pulp and firestorm blitzkrieg of books on the market about
Darfur and current geo-politics, what makes Complicity with Evil hold its
own-and indeed stand alone-is Lebor’s way of making accessible and highly
readable the mechanisms and major blind spots of the UN, especially
regarding its practices when it comes to actually stopping genocide around
the world as it’s happening.

On a short list of books that are essential reading on the topic of
genocide-incuding Samantha Power’s A Problem from Hell: America and the Age
of Genocide and Canadian UN general Romeo Dallaire’s Shake Hands with the
Devil: Humanity’s Failure in Rwanda-Lebor makes the grade.

Much of the book’s most heavy-handed indictments focus on the events during
the UN’s missions to Bosnia and Kosovo-events that are becoming all the more
prominent in the news again as Kosovo inches closer to declaring its
independence in the face of a newly elected pro-Western Serbian president.
This aspect is not to be faulted though, as Lebor can only be accused of
spending more time on the crisis zone he knows best firsthand.

His personal mission clearly shines through to "scream" resoundingly about
the causes and absurdly preventable bureaucratic Snafus in the UN that
resulted in the Serb-perpetrated massacre of Bosnian civilians at Srebrenica
in 1995, and the UN’s passive allowance for it occur through non action and
military impotence.

As was the case with Dallaire and his force in Rwanda-and as is often the
case in genocide-certain officers and isolated soldiers (usually going
against or around their given orders) are shown to have individually taken
stands against genocide.

One such case is that of American NATO general Smith, who took advantage of
a particular changing-of the-guard in the UN to selectively air strike the
Dr. Mengele of the Bosnian War, Dr. Ratko Mladic. This was an action that,
Lebor notes, had it been done by the UN and NATO in full force against the
Serbs in the early days of the war, could have prevented genocide before it
started.

Lebor writes, "General Smith showed a streak of ruthlessness. He ordered
repeated attacks on a military facility in the village where Mladic’s
parents were buried to show the Serbs that Mladic could not protect their
graves, a great shame in Balkan culture. He also ensured that this news was
leaked to the Bosnian press."

All aspects of what constitutes, provokes and propagates genocide are
addressed, however, including the roles new technologies and "the Internet
Bubble" period played in genocide in recent years. Lebor notes, "The
privatization of Serb Telecom bankrolled Milosevic’s next war: the Serb
assault on the Albanian-dominated Serb province of Kosovo in 1998."

According to Lebor, "The ethnic cleansing of the Bosnian war mirrored the
Turkish genocide against the Armenians in 1915, or the massacres of the
earlier Balkan Wars. The Ottomans had deployed the bashibozouks, wild and
undisciplined irregulars, many of whom had been released from prison, who
lived off plunder and looting. Milosevic opened Serbia’s jails to provide
recruits for the paramilitary units that committed many of the atrocities."

He then follows it closely by contexting the fiend Dr. Mladic when he
states, "’Atrocity by policy’ meant that the Bosniaks were not human beings
but ‘Turks.’ Mladic proclaimed, ‘I return the city in the tradition of the
Serbian struggle against the Turks as we have overcome the Dahije [Ottoman
governor].’"

Lebor is also very clear in his analysis that solutions to genocide are
available and straightforward. He states, "The lessons of Bosnia and Rwanda
were clear: genocide is stopped by confronting and militarily engaging the
perpetrators, by the robust use of airpower, and by deploying substantial
numbers of armed peacekeepers on the ground."

Lebor also debunks the fears, myths and excuses for UN troops not
effectively engaging in anti-genocide operations (even those that this
reporter held valid when thinking about the British Victorian expeditions to
Darfur and their own ineffectiveness because of Sudan’s geographic size).

He iconoclasts the UN notion that "’Bosnia could not be saved because it was
small and mountainous. Darfur cannot be saved because it is large and flat.’
[However].the actual conflict zones are small, with very limited means of
warfare from the Janjaweed [Sudanese death squads]."

Lastly, Lebor shines light on the fact that often genocide warlords are
protected by nations’ intelligence services to ensure global security
alliances. Such pacts cost not only turning a blind eye to arresting these
warlords, but in fact ensuring their continued existence, as was the case
with MI6 when "General Salah Abdallah, the head of the Sudanese Mukhabarat
[the intelligence service that coordinates and runs the Janjaweed] . was
certainly made welcome when he was given a British visa and visited London
in early 2006 for medical treatment."

It’s all enough to make one violently ill, but not stupid or ill-informed.
———————————— ————————————————–

2. Albert Bagian: An ARS Servant for 30 Years
By Tom Vartabedian

In what is primarily a woman’s organization, Albert Bagian remained an
infinite role model when it came to the Armenian Relief Society (ARS).

Forget the gender or the politics, the social differences and other
contrasts more suitable for men.

Bagian spent 30 years as a consummate servant in promoting the ARS cause and
ensuring its stability at a time when it needed a boost.

As chairman of the ARF Central Committee in 1972, he appointed himself as a
representative to the ARS. Little did he realize at the time that it would
turn into a tenure that extended three decades and well into his 80s.

And over that time, he never missed a meeting while commuting to meetings
>From Philadelphia to Watertown, regardless of inclement weather, illness or
any other family commitment. Never a plane, either. Always by car, leaving
the house at 4 a.m. to arrive punctually by 9:30 a.m.

He also attended every convention over that span. What he got in return was
a good command of the Armenian language-something he never had when he
started.

"You might say the ARS developed into my passion," said the 90-year-old. "I
believe in everything this organization does in terms of charity, education
and public service. I’ll be celebrating its centennial in 2010 with extreme
sentiment."

It wasn’t exactly a breeze for Bagian. At the time, he was developing his
own machinery business for the textile industry and attending night school
at Drexel University in Philadelphia, where he spent 12 years pursuing an
engineering degree.

Nobody supported him more than Takouhi, his wife of 62 years, a fervent
ARSer since 1943 in Philadelphia, where she served several terns on the
Central Committee and taught Armenian school over 60 years.

Together, they donated $50,000 to the ARS Mother-Child Clinic in Yerevan and
served as benefactors to several other charities.

Bagian’s mother (Satenig Zoolalian) was an ARS member in 1914. A photograph
of her in a white Red Cross uniform serves as a family heirloom.

Bagian recalls the early years when he was a charter member of the
Philadelphia Sebouh AYF Chapter and recruited 55 new members by banging on
doors. He became the very first AYFer to graduate into the ranks of the
Gomideh.

The ARS honored Bagian with its Agnouni Award for outstanding service and
dedication, named after its founder.

Bagian’s role was invaluable. He guided the organization professionally and
put it in a sound financial position through shrewd investments. A lot of
reorganization was taking place in the 1970s and Bagian remained in the
thick of it.

"Evidently, the women liked what I did and appointed me to special
committees," he said. "Most of them had to do with finances. Being the only
guy in a roomful of women was a bit scary at times, but we all got along
this fine with mutual respect."

Bagian finally completed his tour of duty in 2002, the year he turned 85.
Whether it was the travel that took its toll or simply the longevity factor,
he left with a clear mind and a kind heart. The admiration continues.

"The ARS is an organization that has distinguished itself on every
continent," said Bagian. "Any organization that has survived a century must
be doing something right. A lot of blood, sweat and tears went into it.
Without it, a lot of charitable causes would have been deprived."
———————————- ————————————————– —–

3. Sayonara Saccharin
By Garen Yegparian

Finally, we may be on the verge of getting rid of those disgusting tasting
sweeteners.

A study conducted at Purdue University in Indiana and funded by the school
and the U.S. National Institutes of Health made an interesting discovery.
Rats fed saccharin-sweetened madzoon before their regular meal gained more
weight after five weeks than rats fed madzoon sweetened with glucose (the
simplest form of sugar, what the body actually burns for fuel). The
saccharin rats consumed more calories, too.

So what does this mean for dieters? Nothing firm, yet. But if this kind of
result is observed in studies with other sweeteners and in humans, then the
notion that eating sugar-free foods helps to lose weight will be relegated
to the dust-bin of dieting history.

What the scientists observed was a smaller rise in body temperature after
eating among the saccharin rats than among the glucose rats. Body
temperature rises because energy is burned to digest food. This is
significant because when the tongue conveys the message of "sweet," the body
expects a rush of calories. But when this doesn’t happen, as in the case of
saccharin, the suspicion is that the body de-links the "sweet-taste" trigger
>From the "calories-coming" reality. Thus, when calories eventually do come,
the animal-rat or possibly human-is less prepared to burn them off. They’re
stored, as fat.

Nobody really likes the taste of diet soda, heck diet anything. But we get
used to it. Doing the Atkins Diet several years ago, I too developed a
tolerance for diet soda. But muffins, and a whole host of foods, just don’t
taste right with aspartame. Did you ever think or say, "*****h, yummy! Here
comes the pakhlava with stevia syrup!"

These findings are in line with other observations of perverse dieting
results. This may be a biological cause of much frustration. It’s also the
way that the multi-billion dollar diet foods industry keeps laughing all the
way to the bank. Up to now, dieters’ gaining weight was suspected to be the
result of the dieters’ own (mis-)behavior, i.e. midnight-snack-cheating.
Now, we may be discovering otherwise.

Couple these results with material I’ve occasionally seen attributing other
health risks to some of these sweeteners, and I can only cheer and hope for
the doom of these substances. Most importantly, from a gustatory
perspective, this is happening before the preparation of our Armenian foods
has been tainted significantly by these substances. As it is, the no/low fat
craze has made inroads-think store-bought madzoon, or families’ sometimes
excessive avoidance of butter/animal fat these days.

After all this, I should probably say to those with diabetic or other
sugar/insulin issues that this news, sadly, doesn’t get you off the hook.

Let’s keep eating normal foods, freshly prepared, organically grown,
minimally processed, preservative-free, not bioengineered (no
Franken-foods), maybe even un-cloned and tasty. That’s what our bodies are
designed to handle. Let’s keep our national cuisine unadultered.
————————————- ————————————————– ——–

4. Far-Away Sky
By Knarik O. Meneshian

We climbed the hill,
My brother and I,
We climbed until we reached the top.
In the distance stood the mountains called Verdugo.

The California sky was bright,
And the air was crisp
As the March winds stirred
On this first day of spring.

Despite the wind,
It was peaceful here,
Among the rows and rows
Of old and new
Level-with-the-ground headstones.
In the distance,
Lay red flowers-another headstone to be placed.

We walked, my brother and I,
Until we came to the place
Father and Mother were laid to rest.
We looked up at the sky-their far-away sky,
The rambling green vastness, flowers and trees,
Down at their embossed names
And the words describing
Who they were-

Husband, Father, Grandfather.
Wife, Mother, Grandmother.
But they were so much more.
He, the man from the Mountains of Armenia,
the Land of Ararat,
She, the woman from the Alps of Austria,
the Land of Edelweiss,
Both surviving horrors…

We kneeled, my brother and I,
And lit a dish of frankincense.
As the smoke rose,
Filling the air with its ancient, sweet scent,
In the language of our father,
We began-"Hayr Mer.Our Father."

Here they were-
Together, resting forever
Under the California sky,
Among countless others
Who too had come to make these mountains-
Mountains of America-
Their home.
——————————————– ——————-

5. Three Questions to Vahan Hovannesian

On Feb. 12, The Hairenik and Armenian Weekly asked presidential candidate
Vahan Hovannesian about his views on Armenia’s relations with the Diaspora,
Turkey and Georgia. Below are his answers:

Armenia-Diaspora Relations

It is imperative to form a state committee dealing with issues of the
Diaspora, and only after that can we talk about the content and details of
these relations. Regarding the financial aspect, it so happens that Armenia
is in difficult economic state and expects assistance from the Diaspora. But
I also think that now, the country has an opportunity to stand on its feet.
If the right choice is made [during the presidential elections], that
opportunity would be seized and changes would take place at a faster pace
and Armenia would be in a position to help the Diaspora in a meaningful way,
>From providing textbooks to economic, political, legal and other kinds of
support. In this issue, a greater role would also be ascribed to the
structures working on dual citizenship.

Armenia-Turkey Relations

In effect, there are no relations with Turkey today. There are only verbal
attacks-like the recent extremely aggressive response of [Turkish President]
Erdogan to our Foreign Minister [Vartan Oskanian]. We can talk about the
existence of relations only when Turkey establishes diplomatic relations
with Armenia. The interests of Armenia, Artsakh and the Diaspora are the
priorities of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation. The ARF will not allow
any adventurous venture that can harm those interests. We must structure our
relations with Turkey with great patience, simultaneously working with both
Turkish statesmen and the country’s civil society, in order to make our
opinions known to Turkey. The ARF, unlike many newborn organizations, is a
patience political party and this will be a great advantage in our relations
with Turkey, as well as Azerbaijan.

Armenia-Georgia Relations

Georgia should always be regarded as a good neighbor-never an enemy or
adversary. We should propose to Georgian authorities the formation of a
small union-similar to Europe-with Armenia. This union could start with the
creation of a common market, the building of new highways and the gradual
removal of custom restrictions and duties between Armenia and Georgia. This
is beneficial for both countries. In this context, the politically and
ethnically charged atmosphere in Javakhk also becomes relieved. Javakhk is
the only place where Armenians and Georgians are living together. In other
areas across the border, the Turks and Azeries have come between the
Armenian and the Georgians-a separation created by the Turkish and Azeri
governments. We should be able to being Georgia out of the political
influence of Azerbaijan and Turkey by presenting alternatives-and the link
between us and the Georgians should be Javakhk.

"18-30 Modern Armenian Prose" Anthology Is Published

"18-30 MODERN ARMENIAN PROSE" ANTHOLOGY IS PUBLISHED

PanARMENIAN.Net
19.03.2009 15:29 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ All Armenian Educational and Cultural Union published
"18-30 Modern Armenian Prose" anthology, authored and edited by RA
MP Lilit Galstyan and the literature expert Armenik Nikoghosyan.

The anthology includes works of modern Armenian prose writers: Hrachya
Saribekyan, Mher Beyleryan, Hambatsum Hambartsumyan, Sevada Grigoryan,
Harut Davtyan, Areg Azatyan, Lilit Karapetyan, Maryan Asryan, whose
works not only determine the modern Armenian prose but also foreshadow
its line of development.

Pyunik out to fend off pretenders’ claims

Pyunik out to fend off pretenders’ claimsTuesday 17 March 2009
by Khachik Chakhoyan from Yerevan

More teams than ever have genuine title aspirations as the new
Armenian season kicks off on Saturday, but FC Pyunik are unlikely to
give up their seven-year monopoly on the crown without a mighty
battle.

Magic formula
An unexpected decision to concentrate on youth development led many to
predict that Pyunik’s six-year spell as Armenian champions would come
to an end in 2008. However, their inexperienced squad showed what
could be achieved through a combination of raw energy and desire, with
right-back Sargis Hovsepyan, 36, and 20-year-old midfielder Henrik
Mkhitaryan running the show.

Double target
It took a 2-1 play-off victory against FC Ararat Yerevan to settle the
title after the two sides finished level on 59 points at the end of
the season, but Pyunik prevailed, and coach Vardan Minasyan is
targeting a double this time round. "We want to win the league and the
Armenian Cup as well," he said. "It will not be easy but we are not
afraid of what lies ahead."

Ararat optimism
Five sides are angling to deny Pyunik on both fronts, with Ararat
perhaps the least credible rivals, having lost seven first-team
players since last season. Coach Ashot Kirakosyan has not given up
hope, though, and said: "We lost a number of key players but are still
strong enough with a mix of experienced competitors and young players
who want to achieve more." ‘Time to win something’
FC MIKA have banked on foreign talent, bringing in Croatian coach Ivo
Šušak and a raft of new players, including former Real Madrid CF
trainees Pedro López and Ulises Montenegro Cano. "It’s time to win
something," said MIKA director Armen Petikyan. "We are working very
professionally and our newcomers feel comfortable so there is nothing
to disturb us."

Long-shot contenders
FC Banants, like Pyunik, have chosen to bank on young talent under
respected coach Armen Gyulbudaghyants, who has improved the atmosphere
in the team and adopted new attacking tactics since taking over
towards the end of last season. FC Gandzasar Kapan, who finished third
last year, also fancy their chances as do FC Ulis Yerevan in what
should be the most competitive Armenian campaign yet.