Minister Oskanian’s speech at the UN

Permanent Mission of the Republic of Armenia
to the United Nations
119E 36th street, New York, NY 10016
Tel.: 1-212-686-9079
Fax: 1-212-686-3934
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

September 29, 2004

PRESS RELEASE

Minister Oskanian participated at the United Nations General Debate

Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian delivered Armenia’s annual message at the
United Nations on Wednesday, September 29, 2004. The Minister addressed the
59th Session of the General Assembly on such issues as UN reform, the
Millennium Development Goals, and the fight against terrorism. At the same
time, he addressed the Nagorno Karabagh conflict, and Armenia’s position on
prospects for its resolution. Local students and representatives of Armenian
organizations were present to hear the statement, and later participated in
a short question-and-answer period with the Minister.

The speech came at the conclusion of a three-day visit during which the
Minister met with various UN officials, as well as foreign ministers. On
Wednesday, the Minister met with Mr. Kofi Annan, Secretary General of the
United Nations, with whom he discussed various UN issues, as well as matters
related to Armenia-UN cooperation. At the Secretary General’s request, the
Minister briefed Mr. Annan on the Nagorno Karabagh peace process.

Earlier in the day, Mr. Oskanian also met with the Secretary General’s
Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide Mr. Juan Mendez. Minister
Oskanian held a short meeting with Mr. Amre Moussa, Secretary General of the
League of Arab States, where the two welcomed Armenia’s inclusion in the
Arab League with observer status. Within the margins of the UN, Minister
Oskanian conferred with the foreign ministers of China, Turkey, Egypt, and
Lebanon. He also met with the US Undersecretary of State Mark Grossman, the
US Co-chair of the Minsk Group Ambassador Steven Mann, and the Deputy
Foreign Minister of Italy.

Please find below the text of the speech in full.

STATEMENT

by
H.E. Mr. Vartan Oskanian
Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Republic of Armenia

at the

59th SESSION OF THE UNITED NATIONS GENERAL ASSEMBLY

New York, September 29, 2004

Mr. President,

Our congratulations to you, Mr. Ping, our thanks to Mr. Julian Hunte and to
the Secretary General for their efforts during this difficult year.

Last year, we marked our concern for the restoration of sovereignty in Iraq,
and the reinvigoration of the Middle East peace process. This year we wish
to especially note the critical need to end the tragedy in Darfur.
Armenians, victims of the 20th century’s first genocide, know well the
long-lasting effects of victimization and homelessness. This is no way to
begin a new millennium. The benefits of globalization should be utilized to
defeat this newest global crisis.

We comprehend all too well that peace and security abroad and at home are
clearly correlated with social and economic dignity today, or, faith in
their possibility tomorrow.

Neither self-satisfied smugness on the one hand, nor self-righteous violence
on the other, are solutions to the great inequalities around the world, and
within each of our countries, even those most developed. Terrorism, in all
its manifestations, affects security, political and economic stability in
our neighborhoods and on our planet. Terrorism from Madrid to Beslan, in
all its manifestations, is inexcusable and unacceptable.

Cognizant that the success of counter-terrorism efforts is conditional on
collective measures, Armenia has readily joined the global fight against
international terrorism. This fight must go beyond effective regional and
international cooperation. It must include the very goals of the Millennium
Declaration – replacing deprivation, poverty and injustice by a universal
respect for human rights and democracy, economic development, equality and
social justice.

In Armenia, we have had a year in which economic growth went hand-in-hand
with increased participation in international organizations, particularly
the UN. Our position in the Human Development Index gives us the confidence
to continue on this path of economic development.

We will also work hard to bolster public-private partnership. We are proud
that Armenia’s major enterprises are each finding ways to contribute to art
and culture, to invest in public life, and become partners in our society’s
pursuit of happiness and quality of life.

In 2005, the international community will review the progress that’s been
made in the implementation of the global development agenda. It would be
most useful if we could focus our resources on implementation of that agenda
rather than on restating our collective good intentions. In other words, we
must find the political will to make the political and financial commitments
necessary to overcome the outstanding obstacles.

Mr. President,

The Millennium Development Goals are guidelines for Armenia. To this end
empowerment of women, child protection, fight against poverty are not just
goals for us, but they are indeed building blocks for a prosperous, healthy,
stable society. The Government of Armenia has approved national action plans
for the Protection of the Rights of the Child, on Improving the Status of
Women and Enhancing Their Role in Society, and for Prevention of Trafficking
in Persons. In addition, a broad anti-corruption strategy, developed with
the participation and counsel of the international community, will
complement the Poverty Reduction Strategy Program that is already beginning
to yield results.

We continue our effective collaboration with UN bodies on a number of
important issues including use of information and communication technologies
to improve governance and institutionalize public-private interactions. With
donor community support, focused institution building and good governance,
we expect that the human rights and democratic reforms of the last decade
will go beyond the solid legislative framework that’s been developed, and
take root, psychologically and socially, in our society.

Armenia, as an active member of ECOSOC and the Commission on Human Rights,
will remain involved in international development cooperation. At the same
time, we will participate in the effort to improve the consultation and
coordination mechanisms that are essential for the effectiveness of the
collective security system and we look forward to the assessment of the
High-level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change.

We stand for broader cooperation between the UN and regional organizations
as a measure for ensuring broader involvement and commitment by countries in
decision-making and implementation processes. Reform is necessary within
these valued organizations, if we are to effectively address today’s
realities and challenges, and resolve tomorrow’s problems. For this, we
cannot work with yesterday’s mechanisms. In the UN, a revitalized General
Assembly is indispensable for effective action. We would also support India,
Germany and Japan joining countries from Africa, and Latin America as
permanent members of an enlarged and more representative Security Council.

Mr. President,

In these short years, we have done away with the false proposition that we
must choose between East and West, between the old world and the new. We
have done away with the myth that our neighbors can control the pace of our
economic growth and shape its direction. Now, we want to do away with the
dangerous suggestion that yesterday’s adversary is an enemy forever.

Armenia is ready to compromise and collaborate with neighbors who are ready
to join us in making history, not rewriting it. We want to work with an
Azerbaijan that understands its place in a rule-based international order,
not one whose policies, practices and statements threaten the fragile peace
and stability of our region.

Azerbaijan was first in introducing ethnic cleansing to the Soviet space,
first in engaging mercenaries and international terrorists in its own
defense, first in discarding the rules of engagement in international
organizations.

Let me explain. The Armenian presence in this region has been long and
extensive. Denying or revising this history requires systematic planning,
energy and resources. Unfortunately, the government of Azerbaijan has not
spared such resources. Azerbaijan succeeded in eliminating the
Armenians of Nakhichevan who comprised more than half the population. There
are none there today. In Baku and Sumgait, and throughout Azerbaijan, there
were over 400,000 Armenians in the Soviet years. There are none there today.
The Azerbaijani experiment in ethnic cleansing worked.

A decade ago, Azerbaijan retained the services of some of our region’s most
notorious mercenaries and international terrorists — the same names which
you hear again and again — to fight against the Armenian men and women who
were defending their lands and their lives against aerial bombings and
proximate shelling. The terrorists lost, Armenians won.

Finally, Azerbaijan’s leadership dismisses the opportunities offered by
membership in international organizations to build bridges and seek
solutions. Azerbaijan rejects mediation by those who wish to help halt drug
trafficking through its territory. Azerbaijan also dismisses efforts by
Council of Europe and other monitoring groups to come to the region to see
first hand the destruction of thousands of irreplaceable historic and
cultural markers. It crows about its desire for NATO membership even as it
repeatedly prohibits an alliance partner’s participation in NATO exercises.
Worse, Azerbaijan not only does not rebuke, it champions the Azeri military
officer who decapitated a fellow Armenian officer in a NATO training course
in Budapest. It maligns the Minsk Group of the OSCE in order to hide its own
refusal to consider proposals that have grown from the discussions and
negotiations in which its own leadership has participated. For more than
half a decade, it has rejected every proposal placed before it from the
Common State Proposal in 1998 to the Key West document of 2001.

Mr. President,

Armenians prevailed in the military confrontation unleashed by Azerbaijan as
a response to the peaceful demands of the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh for
self-determination. Contrary to the assertion of Azerbaijan’s president,
Armenians have occupied those lands for over 2000 years, and not just in the
last 10. Today, Nagorno Karabakh has reversed the injustice of the Stalin
years and is free and democratic, tolerant of minorities. Nagorno Karabakh
holds regular elections, has state and security structures, complete control
over its territory, and a growing economy.

If in the last century, Armenians and Azeris were forcibly linked together,
in this next century, where we have earned the right to our own destinies,
we can determine to live together peaceably. If we are serious about
becoming full, deserving residents of the European neighborhood, where
borders don’t matter, but intentions and tolerance do, we will have to come
to terms with our past, with our history, with the realities that have
gripped our region.

Thank you.

http://www.un.int/armenia/

UAF’s 130th Airlift Delivers $3.7 Million of Aid to Armenia

UNITED ARMENIAN FUND
1101 N. Pacific Avenue # 301
Glendale, CA 91202
Tel: 818.241.8900
Fax: 818.241.6900

For Immediate Release

27 September 2004

UAF’s 130th Airlift Delivers $3.7 Million of Aid to Armenia

Glendale, CA – The United Armenian Fund’s 130th airlift arrived in
Yerevan on September 25, delivering $3.7 million of humanitarian
assistance.

The UAF itself collected $3.2 million of medicines and medical
supplies for this flight, most of which were donated by AmeriCares
($1.7 million); the Catholic Medical Mission Board ($935,000) and
MAP International ($542,000). Other organizations which contributed
goods for this airlift were: Nork Marash Medical Center ($150,000);
Dr. Stephen Kashian of Illinois ($53,000); Fondation Semra of
Switzerland ($38,000); Armenian Missionary Association of America
($28,000); Harut Chantikian of New Jersey ($27,000); and the Armenian
American Medical Society of California ($24,000).

Also contributing to this airlift were: Gil Harootunian of New York
($21,000); Women’s Guild Central Council ($21,000); Armenian Relief
Society ($18,000); Helmer Labs ($15,000); and the Armenian American
Health Association of Greater Washington ($11,000).

Since its inception in 1989, the UAF has sent $391 million of
humanitarian assistance to Armenia on board 130 airlifts and 1,103
sea containers. The UAF is the collective effort of the Armenian
Assembly of America, the Armenian General Benevolent Union, the
Armenian Missionary Association of America, the Armenian Relief
Society, the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, the Prelacy
of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America and the Lincy Foundation.

For more information, contact the UAF office at 1101 North Pacific
Avenue, Suite 301, Glendale, CA 91202 or call (818) 241-8900.

###

Adventurous cooks will enjoy ‘Simply Armenian’

Adventurous cooks will enjoy ‘Simply Armenian’

By SILAS SPAETH
For The Salinas Californian

“Simply Armenian: Naturally Healthy Ethnic Cooking Made Easy” (Mayreni
Publishing. $17.95) by Barbara Ghazarian.

* Local connection: Pacific Grove resident Barbara Ghazarian is
passionate about Armenian cuisine. In her cookbook, she shares “the
wisdom of generations of grandmothers” along with all the practical
information needed to produce some truly outstanding Armenian food. *
Content: The 150 recipes featured in the cookbook range from
appetizers, soups and salads to main courses and delicious desserts.

Get out your food processor and try one of the nine delicious spreads
listed in the opening pages of the book. Using ingredients such as
chickpeas, eggplant, walnuts, yogurt and kalamata olives, you can whip
up some muhammarah (spicy hot walnut spread) or a carrot-potato dip
with marinated artichoke hearts.

The extensive salad section offers recipes for bulgur salad with
chickpeas and greens, Armenian potato salad, a cucumber-tomato, feta
salad and beet and walnut salad.

Because lamb is a “preferred meat” in Middle Eastern cuisine, it will
come as no surprise to discover 18 ways to prepare the meat including
lamb stuffed grape leaves (sarma), eggplant and ground lamb, baked
stuffed meat pie (sini kufteh), and lamb with quince slices.

Those not counting calories will find instructions for making such
mouth watering sweets as almond cookies, apricot squares, paklava and
fresh candied-pumpkin slices dipped in chocolate.

If you have developed a taste for the quince, an exotic, yellowish
fruit primarily grown in the United States here in California, you’ll
be happy to discover recipes for quince preserves, coffee cake,
cookies and jelly.

* Author quote: “I have taken the intimidation factor out of Armenian
fare, but not the taste, smells and exotic look of the food. Nor have
I made it fancy. For centuries, Armenians have been eating like
sultans on what others considered scraps and pantry basics. Now you
can, too.”
* Audience: If you enjoy sampling ethnic cuisine and are a venturesome
cook, this is a cookbook you’ll want to own. If you prefer lamb to
beef, enjoy lots of vegetables (especially eggplant) and would rather
munch on stuffed grape leaves than a Ritz cracker with cream cheese
smeared on it, this is a book you want to seriously consider
purchasing. If green onion and pine nut pizza sounds odd yet
appetizing — you’ve come to the right cookbook!

SILAS SPAETH of Monterey writes about Central Coast Authors on an
occasional basis for the Arts & Books page of The
Californian. Comments for Spaeth may be sent to The Salinas
Californian, c/o Central Coast Authors, P.O. Box 81091, Salinas 93912;
or e-mailed to [email protected].

Originally published Saturday, September 25, 2004

Armenia and Russia restore scientific links

RIA Novosti, Russia
Sept 24 2004

ARMENIA AND RUSSIA RESTORE SCIENTIFIC LINKS

YEREVAN, September 24, (RIA Novosti’s Gamlet Matevosyan) –
Prime-Minister of Armenia Andranik Markaryan received on Friday a
delegation of academic institutions of higher learning of the South
Federal District of Russia led by President of the Southern research
center of the Russian Academy of Sciences academician Gennady
Matischev. As RIA Novosti was told on Friday at the public relations
and press department of the Armenian government’s staff, during the
meeting Markaryan highlighted the necessity of restoring scientific
links between Armenia and Russia, promoting cooperation in social
sciences and, in particular, in the sphere of the regional policy
research.

Markaryan pointed out a great significance of the agreement signed in
June of this year between the Armenian National Academy of Sciences
and the Southern research center of the Russian Academy of Sciences
on cooperation in the field of science and technologies, in
particular in astrophysics, power engineering, the study of the
ecological state of the Armenian lake Sevan and the restoration of
life in it, as well as creating an efficient computation system.

In his turn, Matischev noted that directions and trends in the
development of science and technologies in the two states coincide,
which makes it possible to set feasible tasks and solve them
efficiently.

The prime minister confirmed the Armenian government’s readiness to
promote links between the research centers of the two states and
stressed that the Armenian-Russian non-governmental commission for
economic cooperation would be of great help in this.

BAKU: Court of appeals acquit GLO members

Assa-Irada, Azerbaijan
Sept 23 2004

Court of Appeals acquits GLO members

On Wednesday the Court of Appeals acquitted six members of the
Garabagh Liberation Organization (GLO), including its chairman Akif
Naghi. The six activists, sentenced to 3-5 years in prison late in
August, were released from arrest in the courtroom.
However, the court found the defendants guilty and issued a two-year
suspended sentence to chairman Naghi and a one-year suspended term to
the other five GLO members. The defendants pled not guilty and said
they intend to struggle for a complete acquittal. The six GLO members
were accused of blocking traffic on the Tbilisi Avenue, breaking into
the hotel and disrupting a NATO conference underway and inflicting
damage to the hotel estimated at 1.7 million manats ($340) while
protesting against the Armenian officers’ planned participation in
NATO exercises in Baku.
The defendants rejected the charges saying that they were simply
trying to protest the Armenian officers’ planned arrival in
Azerbaijan in front of the hotel.
The previous sentence of the GLO members was condemned by Azerbaijani
public, representatives of political parties and parliament members.
President Ilham Aliyev also regarded the sentence as too harsh.*

Dallaqyan Signing Under Oskanyan’s Statement

DALLAQYAN SIGNING UNDER OSKANYAN’S STATEMENT

A1Plus
23-09-2004

‘Justice’ Bloc Secretary Viktor Dallaqyan labeled the statement by
Armenian FM Vardan Oskanyan who said `Karabakh is priceless’ as the
one of a field commander but announced he was as well signing under
it. But Dallaqyan disagrees to the standpoint of the Minister that
Armenia can progress without participating in the regional
developments, without railway, gas pipe line and opened frontiers.

Mr. Dallaqyan drew parallels between the present Armenia and the one
in the beginning of the last century saying he had found numerous
similarities between those 2 states, particularly how they both became
independent, their problems with the neighboring countries, June of
1919 when Authorities falsified the election results, etc.

Viktor Dallaqyan advised to look through `People’ Newspaperof People’s
Party of Armenia of that time. The party boycotted the elections and
the newspaper published it.

Talking about settlement of Karabakhi conflict, Dallaqyan again said
that the not elected president, who doesn’t enjoy trust of people,
canâ=80=99t find solution to the problem. `When in 1999 December in
Istanbul Kocharyan signed the paper on recognition of the territorial
integrity of Azerbaijan, Karabakhi problem reached a deadlock’, he
thinks.

He also considers risky that some super states – Russia, China, have
started announcing that they recognize the territorial integrity of
Azerbaijan. Dallaqyan called such developments as the `consequence of
the weak policy conducted by the not elected Authorities’.

The standpoint saying the Azerbaijani Authorities are anti-popular and
not elected, either, but the international society mainly shows
stances not favorable for Armenians, was posed to Dallaqyan combined
with the question on what ` Justice’ Bloc version over the conflict
settlement was: `The principle of self-determination of the nations
and recognition of Karabakh as a negotiating part’ , he said.

BAKU: Azeri FM, European officials discuss Karabakh settlement

Azeri foreign minister, European officials discuss Karabakh settlement

MPA news agency
22 Sep 04

BAKU

Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov yesterday received the
special envoy of the OSCE chairman-in-office for Armenia and
Azerbaijan, Filip Dimitrov, a responsible employee of the Bulgarian
Foreign Ministry, Dimitr Dimitrov, and the special envoy of the OSCE
chairman-in-office, Andrzej Kasprzyk. The press service of the Foreign
Ministry told MPA that the guests expressed the hope that they will be
able to assist a peaceful solution to the Armenian-Azerbaijani
conflict. Mammadyarov pointed out that the world community could have
a positive influence on the settlement of the problem on the basis of
the norms and principles of international law.

On the same day, the Azerbaijani foreign minister had a meeting with
the British special envoy for the South Caucasus, Brian Fall. Touching
on the development of economic relations between the two countries,
Minister Mammadyarov pointed out the need for British entrepreneurs to
invest in the oil and non-oil sectors. The minister highly rated the
level of political contacts and expressed the hope that Britain would
support Azerbaijan’s position on the settlement of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

The foreign minister also received Italian MP Marco Zacchera yesterday
who is on a visit to our country with the aim of gathering information
and preparing a report on Azerbaijan. Mammadyarov pointed out that all
conditions will be created for the MP to work successfully. The
Azerbaijani foreign minister stressed that Azerbaijan is a member of
the European family which has taken the path of democratic
development. In this connection, European institutions should increase
their role and participation in the settlement of the
Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict.

Tentatives de vol d’essence. Deux hommes interpelles

Le Télégramme , France
21 septembre 2004

Tentatives de vol d’essence. Deux hommes interpellés

LANVOLLON. Dans la nuit de samedi à dimanche, deux hommes ont tenté
de voler de l’essence à la station service de Lanvollon.

Ils s’en sont pris aux camions qui étaient stationnés devant le
commerce. C’est le propriétaire de la station qui les a mis en fuite.
Les deux hommes, un Géorgien et un Arménien, ont été interpellés
dimanche par les gendarmes de Plouha et placés en garde à vue. Ils
sont gés d’une vingtaine et d’une trentaine d’années. Les deux
hommes seront convoqués devant le tribunal de grande instance de
Saint-Brieuc.

Iraq’s Persecuted Christians

TIME
Sept 20 2004

Iraq’s Persecuted Christians

Members of one of Iraq’s minority faiths face new repressions and
discrimination after the fall of Saddam’s regime

By CHRISTOPHER ALLBRITTON/ BAGHDAD

SAMANTHA APPLETON / AURORA FOR TIME

Layla Istifan, 23, prays in her local church days after her brother
was killed. She and her family have been repeatedly threatened
because of their Christianity

When Keis Isitfan headed home from work one recent night, he had
reason to watch his back. As a laundry worker for the U.S. embassy
inside Baghdad’s green zone, he risked being attacked by insurgents
targeting Iraqis who work for the U.S. But there was another source
of anxiety: Isitfan, 27, is a Christian and, like others of his
faith, is facing growing hostility from hard-line Islamic groups who
accuse Christians of being sympathetic to the Western occupiers.

As Isitfan was driving home on Sept. 7, his worst fears came true.
After he left the green zone, two cars pulled up alongside, and
attackers inside opened fire. Four bullets hit Isitfan, who died on
the street. His family, convinced Isitfan was killed for his faith,
plans to flee the country. “Christians in Iraq are weak,” says his
sister Layla, a translator for the U.S. embassy. “All they can do is
leave here, like we will do.”

Between 10,000 and 30,000 of Iraq’s 800,000 Christians have fled the
country since the fall of Saddam Hussein’s regime, according to
Christian groups in Baghdad. Although Christians make up only about
3% of Iraq’s 25 million people, the U.N. High Commissioner for
Refugees has said they account for about 20% of the refugees fleeing
Iraq for Syria. They are escaping a climate of violence and a surging
Islamic radicalism that have made the practice of their faith a
deadly enterprise.

The worst moment came on Aug. 1 when Islamic insurgents – most likely
connected with terrorist leader Abu Mousab al-Zarqawi, according to
Iraqi government officials – attacked five churches in Baghdad and
Mosul with car bombs, killing a dozen people. While Muslim
authorities in Iraq widely condemned those attacks, local Christians
say security has continued to deteriorate. Says Layla Isitfan: “If I
can’t go to church because I’m scared, if I can’t dress how I want,
if I can’t drink because it’s against Islam, what kind of freedom is
that?”

Like the larger insurgency targeting U.S. troops and the new Iraqi
government, the campaign against Christians appears to be becoming
more organized. Sa’ad Jusif, a Chaldean-Assyrian Christian, was
kidnapped on Sept. 8, according to Dr. Munir Mardirosian, who heads a
political party for Armenian Catholics in Baghdad. His captors showed
him a list of 200 names, most of them Christian, and demanded to know
where they lived. When he refused, he was hung from the ceiling and
beaten with iron pipes. He was released only when his family paid a
$50,000 ransom on Sept. 13. He left the next day for Jordan. Says
Mardirosian: “If they opened the doors to America or Australia, I can
say there would not be one Christian left in Iraq.”

The violence in Iraq threatens one of the world’s oldest Christian
communities, dating back 2,000 years. The population includes
Chaldean Assyrians (Eastern-rite Catholics who recognize the Pope’s
authority); Assyrians, who form an independent church; Syrian
Catholics; and Armenian Catholics. Under Saddam, Christians coexisted
more or less amicably with the Muslim majority. Easter services were
broadcast on state television, and Christians were allowed to own and
operate liquor stores.

Christians today keep a low profile. While most of the anti-Christian
violence has been committed by a small group of Islamic extremists,
Christians say they are encountering rising anger among their Muslim
neighbors. Layla Isitfan says taxi drivers have insulted her when
they realized she was Christian, in some cases saying all Christians
should be shot and killed. At work, she wears a Muslim head scarf and
tells colleagues that she is Muslim. Raja Elias, a Syrian Catholic in
Baghdad, says that recently a neighbor began to dump garbage on her
front porch. When Elias complained, the neighbor said, “You are a
Christian, and I can put it inside your house if I want to.”

With so many other problems to contend with, the new Iraqi government
hasn’t done much to protect Christians. Businesses traditionally
owned by Christians, such as liquor stores and beauty salons, have
been regularly vandalized by Islamic fundamentalists who some suspect
may be loyal to Shi’ite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr. Elias, who ran a
dental clinic in central Baghdad before the war, recently asked the
Health Ministry to reopen it. But she was told to work in Sadr City,
the seething Shi’ite slum dominated by al-Sadr’s men. So her clinic
remains shuttered. “I think they will come for me sooner or later,”
she says.

For Iraqis like Elias, the best option is to leave. Many Iraqi
Christians say their reversal of fortune has been especially
disappointing given the backing the Bush Administration receives from
evangelical Christians. “Why did the U.S. come here?” asks
Mardirosian, the Armenian-Catholic leader. “To protect the Christians
or allow others to kill them?”

– With reporting by Samantha Appleton/Baghdad

Conference at Haigazian University (September 2005)

HAIGAZIAN UNIVERSITY
DEPARTMENT OF ARMENIAN STUDIES
Dr. Ara Sanjian
Haigazian University
Rue Mexique, Kantari
P.O. Box 11-1748
Riad El Solh 1107 2090
Beirut, Lebanon
Telefax: 961-1-349230/1; 961-1-353010/1/2
E-mail: [email protected]

CALL FOR PAPERS

“The Armenians of Lebanon:
Their Past, Present and Future”

Conference organized by the Department of Armenian Studies,
Haigazian University, Beirut, Lebanon, September 13-15, 2005.

The Department of Armenian Studies at Haigazian University is organizing
a groundbreaking academic conference entitled “The Armenians of Lebanon:
Their Past, Present and Future.” The conference will be one of the
central activities celebrating the fiftieth anniversary of the founding
of the University.

This multidisciplinary gathering will analyze the Armenian presence on
the territory of modern Lebanon from ancient times to the present, with
emphasis on the period following the mass migration of Armenians to the
country in the early 1920s.

Papers are invited on aspects of Lebanese Armenian community life, such as:
. The social, economic and political history of the community from
earliest times to the present within both the Lebanese and pan-Armenian
contexts;
. Demography and geographic distribution; influx and exodus of Armenians
to and from Lebanon, and population movements within the country.
. Religious, political, philanthropic, cultural and athletic
institutions and organizations;
. Armenian media and education in Lebanon;
. Identity and psychosocial issues;
. Intellectual life, literature, culture, the arts and architecture;
. Contemporary concerns of the community and current perceptions of the
community’s future development.

Scholars from Lebanon and around the world, who are interested in
presenting papers at the conference, are requested to submit a one-page
proposal by February 1, 2005. The proposal should include, the title of
the paper, a 250-word abstract, a brief biography/institutional
affiliation of the author(s), and contact details.

All proposals will be peer reviewed by an ad hoc committee of
specialists from Haigazian University and outside. The selection
criteria are based on academic standards, including originality and
calibre of the research, theoretical insight, soundness of the
methodological approach, objectivity of analysis, and the relevance of
the paper to the conference topic. The authors of accepted papers will
be notified by March 15, 2005 at the latest.

The deadline for the drafts of accepted papers is August 1, 2005. The
organizers will circulate these drafts to the other participants before
the opening of the conference.

The presentations should be a maximum of 25 minutes. An equal amount of
time will be allocated during the conference for the discussion of each
paper.

The conference will take place on the Haigazian University campus on
Tuesday to Thursday, September 13-15, 2005.

The working language of the conference will be English. The papers
should preferably be presented in either English or French. However, the
organizers will consider papers in Armenian and Arabic as well.

Haigazian University has limited funds to provide travel and
accommodation assistance to some of the participants. Presenters
requiring such assistance should submit a request along with their
proposal.

Selected conference papers will be published as a special volume of the
Haigazian Armenological Review. The deadline for the final papers will
be set for approximately six months after the September 2005 gathering
(March 2006). It is hoped that in the final version authors will take
into consideration ideas and suggestions aired during the discussion of
their presentations at the conference.

Proposals should be submitted, by February 1, 2005, to:

Dr. Ara Sanjian
Department of Armenian Studies
Haigazian University
Rue Mexique, Kantari
P.O. Box 11-1748
Riad El Solh 1107 2090
Beirut, Lebanon
Telefax: 961-1-349230/1; 961-1-353010/1/2
E-mail: [email protected]

The organizers also welcome your comments, inquiries or suggestions
regarding this conference at the same address.

www.haigazian.edu.lb
www.haigazian.edu.lb