Armenia Welcoming Restoration of Georgia’s Territorial Integrity

A1 Plus | 16:03:08 | 06-05-2004 | Official |

ARMENIA WELCOMING RESTORATION OF GEORGIA’S TERRITORIAL INTEGRITY

Answering the question posed by “ArmenPress” News Agency over the situation
in Georgia, Hamlet Gasparyan, Press Secretary of Armenian Ministry of
Foreign Affairs, said:

“We express satisfaction that the tense conflict between Adzharia Autonomy
and the central power of Georgia was settled peacefully and bloodlessly.

This outcome was a significant step in the way for establishing stability
and peace in Georgia, so in the whole Southern Caucasus. We commend the
resolute policy of top leadership of Georgia thanks to which it turned to be
possible to overcome that obstacle”.

UCLA Armenian Communities Conference Series – Iran

PRESS RELEASE — April 30, 2004

Contact: Richard Hovannisian
Department of History
University of California, Los Angeles CA 90095-1473
e-mail [email protected],
telephone: 310-825-3375; Fax 310-206-9630

UCLA–The Armenian Communities of Iran will be featured in the 14th
UCLA conference on Historic Armenian Cities and Provinces. Scholars
from seven countries will make presentations on the history, culture,
art and architecture, political activities and involvement, and
current state of the Iranian Armenians. The first session is in
Armenian and will be held in the Glendale Presbyterian Church on
Friday evening, May 14, at 7:30 p.m. The remaining sessions on
Saturday, May 15 from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. and on Sunday, May 16,
from 1:30 to 5:30 p.m. will be held in Young Hall in the Court of
Sciences on the UCLA campus. Parking in Structure no. 2, entrance
from Hilgard Avenue at Westholme. The conference is open to the public
at no charge.

Further details may be found on the web at UCLAArmenian. org.

————————————————————————-

The Armenian Communities of Iran

Friday-Sunday, May 14-16,
2004
Glendale Presbyterian Church (Friday, 7:30-9:30 p.m.)
UCLA, Court of Sciences 50 (Saturday, 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m, Sunday, 1:30-5:30
p.m.)
University of California, Los Angeles

Sponsored by
Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History
University of California, Los Angeles

Co-Sponsored by
Armenian Society of Los Angeles
and the UCLA
International Institute
G.E. von Grunebaum Center for Near Eastern Studies
Center for European and Eurasian Studies

————————————————————————-

Friday, May 14, 7:30-10:00 P.M.
Glendale Presbyterian Church
125 South Louise Street (at Harvard), Glendale, California 91205

Friday Evening Session in Armenian

Conference Opening: Armenian-Persian Relations
Richard G. Hovannisian, University of California, Los Angeles

Salmast–Its History, Ethnography, and Role
Onnik Hayrapetian, Mashdotz College and Glendale Community College

The Life and Work of Archbishop Nerses Melik-Tangian, Prelate of Atrpatakan
Gohar Avagyan, National Archives of Armenia, Erevan

The Monasteries of Saint Thaddeus (Tade) and Dzordzor
Armen Hakhnazarian, Research on Armenian Architecture
————————————————————————-

Saturday, May 15, 2004, 9:30- a.m. 5:30 p.m.
Court of Sciences 50 (Young Hall), UCLA Campus

Sessions in English – 9:30 a.m.-1:00 p.m.

The Armenian Communities of IranAn Introduction
Richard G. Hovannisian, UCLA

Armenian Iran in the History of Vaspurakan, 9th-10th Centuries
Anne Elizabeth Redgate, University of Newcastle, England

Armenian Activities in Tabriz under the Il-Khans, 13th-14th Centuries
Peter Cowe, University of California, Los Angeles

Armenian Reactions to the Fall of the Principality of Maku in 1426
Hovann Simonian, University of Southern California

INTERMISSION

Ottoman Military Operations in Azerbayjan, the Silk Trade, and the
Armenians, 16th-18th Centuries
Thomas Sinclair, University of Cyprus, Nicosia

Epigraphic Documents (Inscriptions) as a Source for Study of the
Socio-Political Life of the Armenians in Northern Iran, 17th-19th Centuries
(Armenian with English summary)
Gabriella Uluhogian, University of Bologna, Italy

Armenian Rural Settlements in Central Iran, 17th-19th Centuries
Vazken Ghougassian, Prelacy of the Armenian Church, New York

LUNCH RECESS

2:00-5:30 p.m.

The Place of the Atrpatakan Region in the Armenian Liberation Movement
Rubina Peroomian, UCLA

“Our Country”: Iranian-Armenian Identity during the Iranian Constitutional
Revolution
Houri Berberian, California State University, Long Beach

The Massacres in Khoi–Experiences of Armenians and Iranians, 1914-1918
RoseMary Cohen, Los Angeles

INTERMISSION

Raffi’s Stories on Iranian Armenian Life
Gayane Hagopian, UCLA

Hakob Karapents’ Iran
Anahid Keshishian, UCLA

Persian Armenian: The Third Literary Dialect of Modern Armenian
Bert Vaux, University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee

DISCUSSION

————————————————————————-

Sunday, May 16, 2004 -1:30-5:30 p.m.
50 Court of Sciences, UCLA Campus

First Session in Armenian (Summaries in English)

Bibliographic Sources on the Persian Armenians in the16th and 18th Centuries
Armen Ter Stepanyan, Mashtots Matenadaran, Erevan

Armenian Gharadagh
Armen Hakhnazarian, Research on Armenian Architecture

Armenians in the Iranian Theater and Cinema
Artsvi Bakhchinyan, Erevan

INTERMISSION

Second Session in English

The Armenian Bourgeoisie in the Economic Life of Iran, Late 19th -Early
20th Centuries
Samvel Stepanian, Glendale, formerly Institute of Oriental Studies, Erevan

The Armenian Community of Tehran–Past, Present, Prospects
Aida Avanessian, Tehran, Iran

The Economic and Social Integration of Armenian Iranians in Southern California
Claudia Der-Mardirosian, UCLA, and Anny Bakalian, New York University

DISCUSSION
Photographic Exhibit by Richard and Anne Elizabeth Elbrecht,
Davis, California
Open to the Public* No Charge* Limited
Seating*
Parking Structure No. 2, Hilgard and Westholme Entrance

Polar Ice worth cool million: Diavik diamonds on weekend display

Edmonton Journal (Alberta)
April 30, 2004 Friday Final Edition

Polar Ice worth cool million: Diavik diamonds on weekend display

by Paul Marck

EDMONTON – When Chad Snider is polishing a diamond, his sense of
sound is as keen as his sight and his touch as he carves out edges
and facets to the rough gem-stone.

“You can hear it when something’s not right,” says the 23-year-old
from Yellowknife, originally from Lloydminster. If there is a crack
or other imperfection in the jewel, the sound it makes grinding on a
spinning, diamond-dust covered cast-iron wheel is different from that
of an unblemished stone.

Snider is in Edmonton for a weekend promotion at Crowley’s Jewellers
and Goldsmiths in Kingsway Mall, featuring $1-million worth of
Canadian Polar Ice diamonds.

Snider has been a professional, certified diamond polisher for the
past three years, after graduating from an apprenticeship program in
Armenia.

He works for Arslandian Cutting Works, an Armenian-based gem outfit
that is among three international and one domestic cutting and
polishing shops in Yellowknife that finish Canadian diamonds from the
Diavik mine. Arslandian is the biggest diamond polisher in Canada,
with more than 50 certified staff.

So, what is it about diamonds?

“The best part of it is the romance of the stone,” says Snider.

“When you think of what it means in love, in marriage, it’s the
ideal.”

Snider said the prime traits that make a good diamond polisher are
patience and confidence.

“Mistakes happen,” he says of the fractures, inclusions and human
errors that detract from a diamond’s value.

While retail diamonds are often sold in half-carat valuations, gem
cutters work in much smaller dimensions, .015 of a carat, in grinding
the rough stone.

“If you go under a fraction of that, it’s a lot of money lost,” says
Snider.

“You’ve got to be able to adapt to different situations. If a mistake
happens, you’ve got to pull through it.”

Shay Basal, owner of Montreal-based Basal Diamond Inc., which
consigned the $1 million worth of gems to Crowley’s, says as far as
he is concerned, there are no inferior Canadian dia-monds. Basal
deals in Polar Ice diamonds, one of two branded gems with
certificates of authenticity and provenance issued by the N.W.T.
government.

Each one is laser etched with a logo and serial number, matched to
the certificate bearing its origin and when it was mined.

Clarity and colour, the two prime factors in diamond value, are
superior to just about everything else on the market, including
leaders Botswana and South Africa.

“There’s no such thing in diamonds as rejects. What’s beautiful about
the Canadian rough is that it’s all white.”

For jeweller Mary Crowley, the dozens of jewelry pieces featuring
Polar Ice diamonds is an opportunity for her store to celebrate its
10th anniversary and renovated location this weekend.

“It’s a grand opening. I just wanted to do something different and
exciting.”

The two most valuable items in the sale are a $70,000 necklace,
featuring 15.29 carats total in gems, and a single-stone ring valued
at $59,000, its diamond a hefty 2.01 carats.

[email protected]

GRAPHIC: Colour Photo: Larry Wong, The Journal; Mary Crowley, owner
of Crowley’s Jewellers & Goldsmiths, holds a handful of rough
diamonds valued at $50,000.; Colour Photo: Larry Wong, The Journal;
Polisher Chad Snider works on one of a collection of Polar Ice
diamonds worth more than $1-million at Crowley’s Jewellers &
Goldsmiths in Kingsway Garden Mall.

Foreign Students Study in Greek Schools

Hellenic Resources Network

OVER 100,000 FOREIGN STUDENTS STUDY IN GREEK SCHOOLS
Athens, 30 April 2004 (14:22 UTC+2)

A total of 98,241 students whose parents are foreigners and 31,873 students
whose parents are repatriated Greeks study in Greek schools making up 9% of
the student population in the country.

The overwhelming majority (72%) comes from Albania, Bulgaria (3%), Georgia
(2.2%), Russia (2.1%), Ukraine (1.5%), Romania (1.2%) and Armenia (1.1%).

Russians Again Foreigners in Latvia

Los Angeles Times
MAy 1 2004

Russians Again Foreigners in Latvia

As the Baltic state begins its integration with the West, resentment
of the past empire surfaces to close many doors to longtime residents.

By Kim Murphy, Times Staff Writer

RIGA, Latvia – Viktor Dergunov has lived in this graceful old city of
church spires and cobblestone streets since 1961, when the Soviet army
dispatched his father to this tiny Baltic republic that once formed
the forbidding edge of the Iron Curtain.

Over the decades, the Russian family came to see Latvia as their
home. Dergunov met and married Yelena, who was born in Riga. So were
their children and, last year, a granddaughter. But when Latvia
entered the European Union today along with nine other nations,
Dergunov and his family did not join other Latvians as new EU
citizens.

Their Latvian passports are marked “alien.” They will not be able to
travel through the rest of Europe, at least for the next few years,
without obtaining a visa. There are limits on the jobs they can hold
and the property they can own. They cannot vote, although a Spaniard
who establishes residence here is now eligible, as an EU citizen, to
vote in municipal elections.

When Dergunov, a 53-year-old anesthesiologist, was asked about
Latvia’s decision to join the European Union, he was blunt. “I can say
one thing: They didn’t ask us. We didn’t take part.”

The hundreds of thousands of Russians still living in Latvia, Estonia
and Lithuania 13 years after independence are among the most visible
reminders of the stunning transformation of the post-Cold War
landscape. In recently joining NATO as well as the EU, republics that
once were part of the Soviet Union are for the first time becoming
members of an alliance that for years was Russia’s sworn enemy.

In the Baltics, the Iron Curtain’s fault line still looms large. The
region carries the footprints of Hitler and Stalin’s armies, of five
decades of Soviet rule, of a grass-roots independence movement that
helped close the book on Russian dreams of enduring empire. In Latvia,
with half as many Russians as ethnic Latvians, there is little chance
of agreement on which is the greater cause for regret.

“To the majority of the Russian people, Latvia is something that was
ours and got away,” said Karlis Kaukshts, vice rector of the Baltic
Russian Institute. “It’s like an unfaithful husband.”

For Latvians, NATO membership represents security for a nation that
was subjected to Nazi and Soviet occupation. The tiny nation lost more
than half a million people to death, deportation and flight during
World War II, including more than 90,000 Latvians, Jews and Gypsies
who were killed in Nazi concentration camps.

Thousands more were deported to Siberian gulag camps after the war.

“It seemed peculiarly appropriate after the removal of the Iron
Curtain, and the whole of Eastern Europe finally being free of this
tyranny, to join a community of nations that had been totally
expanding, and at every wave of expansion had gained in strength,
gained in effectiveness and had shown visible benefits to every
country that had joined,” President Vaira Vike-Freiberga said in an
interview.

Moscow has watched the Baltics defecting to the West with
ill-concealed anxiety. When NATO F-16s began patrolling Baltic
airspace last month, a Russian jet illegally probed the edges of
Estonian airspace. Six Russian diplomats have been expelled from the
Baltics for alleged espionage since February, and Moscow has
reciprocated.

The greatest uproar occurred in March, when Vladimir V. Zhirinovsky,
the flamboyant Russian nationalist politician, predicted that NATO and
Russia would come to apocalyptic blows in the Baltics.

“Hatred of the Russians is pushing the Baltics into the paws of NATO,
and this puts them on the brink of death,” Zhirinovsky said. “The
conflict between NATO and Russia will be in the territory of the
Baltics. We will not be bombing Brussels. We will bomb Vilnius, Riga
and Tallinn.”

Leaders in those Baltic capitals issued furious protests.

“This is the head of a party who represents, what, 15% of Russian
voters? This is the vice speaker of their Duma. Make your own
conclusions,” Vike-Freiberga said. “What do you call it if someone
says they’re going to wipe you off the face of the Earth?”

The U.S. ambassador to Latvia, Brian E. Carlson, said there is no talk
of NATO bases in the Baltics. Yet he declined to downplay the fears
that drove Latvia into NATO’s embrace.

“The face of Russia seen up close is maybe not as benign as it looks
from a distance away,” he said. “People who are living here have
memories. Russia has marched into these countries before, and the idea
that people like Zhirinovsky are looking for an invitation to reoccupy
these countries to them is not that farfetched.”

Russia’s ambassador to Latvia, Igor Studennikov, said Russia “presents
no threat” to the Baltics. “We are proceeding from the assumption that
every country is entitled to join the alliances it wants,” he said.
“But we doubt it will enhance security in the region…. Humankind is
now faced with new kinds of threats – terrorism, illegal transborder
migration, drug trafficking – and these alliances do not protect
anyone from these threats.”

Many Russians in Latvia, like ethnic Latvians, opposed the Soviet
state and demonstrated for independence beside them in the streets of
Riga. They felt cheated after Latvia granted automatic citizenship
only to those who were citizens before Soviet occupation in 1940 and
to their descendants. For naturalization, residents must pass a test
on Latvia’s history and language, which many Russians see as an
insult.

“We grew up here. Our children grew up here. We buried our relatives
here. I’ve paid taxes. Do I really need to pass a test for that?”
Dergunov said. “Does the state really need this moment of palpable
humiliation to forgive me my origin?”

Conservative politicians have argued that Russians who do not wish to
learn Latvia’s language and history don’t belong.

“Most of the Russian people in Latvia are children or grandchildren of
the occupiers and colonizers of our homeland who invaded our country
in 1940…. After the war was over, their army was supposed to go
away, but they stayed,” said legislator Peter Tabunas, a member of the
nationalist Fatherland and Freedom faction.

“We made a very big mistake by going the long way of compromises with
them,” he added. “If they were really discriminated against, if they
really thought their life was so bad here, they’d be going back to
Russia. But they’re not.”

With EU membership likely to bring an influx of entrepreneurs lured by
Latvia’s low wages and prices, many Latvians see the preservation of
their language as a matter of national survival. The population is
dwindling at the rate of 1,000 a month – Latvia has the lowest
birthrate in Europe – and for many it is worrying that Russian is the
mother tongue of nearly 40% of the people.

Vike-Freiberga, who spent many years working as a psychologist in
Canada before returning to Latvia in 1998, began to understand the
problem when she went to a clinic for a vaccination.

“You arrive at the clinic speaking Latvian, in a country where Latvian
is the official language, and you find that nobody can answer you,”
she recalled. “It can be very distressing. And I think it could be
even more distressing for a Latvian to call up the fire station to say
there’s a fire, and be told, ‘Chto?’ ” – Russian for “What?”

Lawmakers ignited a firestorm in 1998 when they called for public
schools to teach only in Latvian. About 80,000 Russian-speaking
children attend school in Latvia, many at state-funded
Russian-language schools. Public universities already conduct all
instruction in Latvian.

Furious Russian teachers and parents appealed to the EU, arguing that
the move was an affront to European human rights standards. Latvian
officials compromised, backing regulations that will require secondary
schools to conduct at least 60% of their instruction in Latvian
beginning in September.

Karina Rodionova, a native of Armenia who met her Latvian husband
while attending college in Riga, sent her 14-year-old daughter,
Ruzanna, to a Latvian school for the first time last September. But
Ruzanna began failing all her classes and said the teachers refused to
help.

“Geography was a total humiliation,” the girl said. “The teacher
turned to me, looked me in the eye, and she said … ‘If Russians want
their education in Russian, why don’t they go the hell back to
Russia?’ All the children turned their heads. They were not laughing,
but they were looking at me. I rushed to the bathroom and cried.”

Rodionova scheduled a meeting with her daughter’s Latvian literature
teacher, who Rodionova said had repeatedly castigated the girl in
front of the class for being “stupid.”

The teacher spoke in Latvian. Rodionova speaks Russian, Armenian and
Georgian fluently but has never learned Latvian. ” ‘What’s the matter,
don’t you speak Latvian?’ ” Rodionova recalled the teacher asking. “I
said no. And she continued speaking in Latvian, even though she is
completely able to speak Russian. That’s the moment I began to
understand everything.”

Such stories are relatively rare in a country that has been
multiethnic through much of its history. The school debate has been
more political than personal, and in cities such as Riga, residents
seem to slide between the languages with little thought.

“I think it’s abnormal if a person is living here for 13 years and
can’t learn one language on an elementary level,” said Janis Olups, a
26-year-old waiter.

“But I think we young people, to continue to live a normal life, we
have to forget about the past. We should live in one nation. Because
we cannot resolve problems that were created by Stalin and Hitler.”

Times staff writer Sergei L. Loiko contributed to this report.

TV talker says pot is healing

Albany Times Union, NY
May 3 2004

TV talker says pot is healing

After he was diagnosed with multiple sclerosis in 1999, TV talk show
host Montel Williams tried a battery of prescription drugs to combat
the extreme pain in his legs and feet.
OxyContin. Vicodin. A morphine drip that left him “in the corner,
drooling.” Nothing worked.

Then he tried pot.

“I tell you that the only thing that seems to work for me and make me a
contributing member of society is marijuana,” Williams said from London
during a recent telephone interview.

Williams said he prefers eating marijuana, but in a pinch, a few tokes
can bring his pain from a “level five down to a three.”

Williams has even started a company to package and market pot in
countries where it’s legal for sick people to use.

And, he’ll be in Albany Tuesday to lobby for legalization of medical
marijuana. He said he is scheduled to meet with Assembly Speaker
Sheldon Silver, D-Manhattan, and Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno,
R-Brunswick.

The Democrat-led Assembly Health Committee has twice passed a bill to
allow marijuana prescriptions primarily for terminally ill patients. It
is widely endorsed by the medical community.

Nine states have passed such laws, but Bruno and Republican Gov. George
Pataki are opposed.

Williams, an ex-Marine and U.S. Naval Academy grad who says he voted
Republican or independent all his life, isn’t for legalizing marijuana
— or any other drug — for general use. But for those who are ill, his
opinion is clear.

“A doctor told me I could take up to 30 pills of OxyContin a day, yet
you’re going to tell me it’s not OK for me to take the equivalent of
one gram of pot and eat it in a cookie in the comfort of my own home?”
said Williams, 47. “Do you want a junkie or someone who’s paying their
taxes? I’ve been paying them real well for the past four years.” As of
Friday, the Powers Crane & Co. lobbying firm was no more.

After months of acrimony, founder Constance Crane and her partner since
2001, former state GOP Chairman Bill Powers, chose to go their separate
ways.

On May 1, Crane officially opened Crane & Vacco, with former state
Attorney General Dennis Vacco, who joined Powers Crane last fall, and
her husband, Jim Crane, a partner in the law firm Crane, Greene &
Parente.

Powers’s son, Matthew, will stick with dad. The firm’s clients will be
divvied up, and both firms will remain at 90 State St. It’s no secret
Republican President Bush is way behind in New York. But is he losing
some of his loyal base?

At the state Capitol last Monday to mark the Armenian Genocide Day of
Remembrance, Rep. John Sweeney, R-Clifton Park, said he hopes a
resolution he’s introduced will pass so future anniversaries will be
honored by Congress and the president, “whoever that is.”

Could Sweeney, a key Bush operative during the 2000 Florida recount,
doubt Bush will be around much longer?

“Not at all,”said Sweeney’s press secretary Demetrios Karoutsos. “Our
support for the President hasn’t changed a bit.”

The remark, Karoutsos said, likely referred to all future presidents —
whoever they are. Contributors: Capitol bureau reporters Elizabeth
Benjamin and Erin Duggan. Got a tip? Call 454-5424 or e-mail
[email protected].

Blake upset in first round of Munich Open

Sports Illustrated

Blake upset in first round of Munich Open

Posted: Monday April 26, 2004 3:05PM; Updated: Monday April 26, 2004 3:05PM

BERLIN (Reuters) – Armenia’s Sargis Sargsian upset American eighth-seed
James Blake 6-4, 7-6 in the first round of the Munich Open on Monday.

Blake’s compatriot Taylor Dent, seeded seventh, advanced by beating France’s
Antony Dupuis 7-6, 7-6.

Other first round winners included 2003 French Open runner-up Martin Verkerk
of the Netherlands. The fourth seed beat Sweden’s Joachim Johansson 6-4,
6-2.

Unseeded Russian Nikolay Davydenko knocked out Romanian sixth-seed Andrei
Pavel 7-6, 6-4. On Tuesday German top-seed Rainer Schuettler will face
Sweden’s Robin Soderling, who beat him in the first round of the Australian
Open in January.

Schuettler reached the final of the Monte Carlo Masters on Sunday but was
thrashed by Argentina’s Guillermo Coria.

Germany’s Tommy Haas, back after a 15-month break due to injury and fresh
from winning in Houston eight days ago, faces Bohdan Ulihrach of the Czech
Republic on Tuesday.

Nova Scotia: Forever in her debt

The Halifax Herald, Nova Scotia, Canada
April 22 2004

Forever in her debt
Armenians remember N.S. nurse who saved thousands of orphans
By STEPHEN MAHER / Ottawa Bureau

OTTAWA – A Nova Scotia woman was honoured Wednesday on Parliament
Hill for saving the lives of thousands of orphans in 1922.

Eighty-two years ago, Greece lost the city of Smyrna (now Izmir) to
Turkey. After the city fell, Turkish soldiers massacred thousands of
Greek and Armenian civilians and then set the city ablaze.

Sara Corning, a Red Cross nurse from the Chegoggin area of Yarmouth
County, helped to rescue 5,000 children, escorting them through chaos
to the harbour, where they were rowed in small boats to safety aboard
an American destroyer.

A year later, Ms. Corning was decorated for her bravery by King
George II of Greece, receiving the Silver Cross of the Knights of the
Order of the Saviour, which is similar to the Order of Canada. She
died in 1969 at the age of 97.

On Wednesday, Bagrat Galstanian, the bishop of the Canadian diocese
of the Armenian Apostolic Church, presented relatives of Ms. Corning
with an encyclical – a papal letter – from Karikan II, the
Catholocos, or pope, of the church.

As Armenian-Canadians, dignitaries and relatives of Ms. Corning
struggled to hold back their tears, the encyclical was read:

“The name of the late philanthropist Sara Corning is very cordial and
precious to Armenians living around the world. Despite grave dangers
and difficulties in the Ottoman Empire, brought up by unprecedented
massacres, as a nurse she brought care and help to the persecuted
Armenians and those who survived unbearable tortures,” the letter
said.

“More specifically, we acknowledge with deep gratitude her efforts to
salvage several thousands of Armenian orphans from burning cities and
rural villages. With her life and her accomplishments, Sara Corning
confirmed to the world and condemned the great holocaust of the
Armenians.”

Ms. Corning’s grandniece, Margaret Pedersen, who lives in Toronto,
thanked the bishop for the letter.

“It is a great honour to have this,” she said. “And a full circle has
been completed. And I think we should all rejoice.”

Ms. Corning, who trained as a nurse in New Hampshire, joined the
American Red Cross during the First World War. She served in Turkey
during the war and afterward ran an orphanage for Amenians at the
foot of Mount Ararat.

She described her experience in Smyrna in a letter to an alumni
magazine.

“The Turkish army was just taking the city as we arrived, but we went
ashore and as the place was crowded with many sick refugees, we
opened a clinic to care for as many of them as we could, but it was
soon closed by the soldiers.

“We then went to another place and opened up, but before we could do
more than one or two dressings, they closed that also. After the city
was looted, then they began to burn it down, then the refugees had to
get to the shore, but many were drowned rather than be burned.

“Then we had to evacuate Miss Morley’s orphanage. They were counted
carefully as they came out and I was sent with the first ones to the
quay. From there they were taken by the sailors in small boats out to
the destroyer.”

Canada became one of few countries to formally recognize the genocide
of Armenian Turks during the First World War in a strongly worded
motion adopted 153-68 in the House of Commons on Wednesday.

Government members were discouraged from voting for the motion, which
is sure to anger a Turkish government that has never recognized the
massacre of 1.5 million Armenians starting in 1915.

Nova Scotia MPs Alexa McDonough and Robert Thibault were present at
the reception Wednesday. There was a display of photographs from the
Yarmouth County Museum of Ms. Corning at work with orphans in Turkey.

Mary Anne Saunders, Ms. Corning’s first cousin twice removed and a
volunteer at the museum, was one of the relatives present for the
reception.

Sarkis Assadourian, the Armenian-Canadian Liberal MP for Brampton
Centre, organized the reception. In the House of Commons late
Wednesday, MPs voted 153-70 in favour of a private member’s bill
recognizing the massacre.

Ms. Corning’s relatives described her as a quietly determined woman
who was motivated by her strong Baptist faith. She retired to the
Chegoggin area in the late 1930s or early 1940s.

Ms. Corning rarely talked to her relatives about her experiences in
Turkey and Armenia, and her surviving relatives say they were in awe
of her as children.

“I think the people in my hometown were in awe of her because she had
travelled so and she had done something wonderful,” Ms. Saunders
said.

“And that didn’t come to many of her family. They were farmers who
stayed in the area, so she was really looked up to.”

Ms. Corning’s headstone bears the epitaph: “She lived to serve
others.”

Bishop Galstanian said that there is a lesson for everyone in the way
Ms. Corning lived.

“Looking at her story, we understand that justice shall prevail in
this world,” he said Wednesday.

“For us, her memory is very, very dear. Unfortunately, we couldn’t
recognize her in her lifetime properly. But now we’re happy that we
have this opportunity to recognize her memory and pray to the
Almighty for everlasting life for her.”

The bishop said we should remember the message on her headstone.

“The memory of Sara Corning tells us to be dedicated and selfless
people. This is a good model for us, for us to live and create and
pray in this way.”

http://www.herald.ns.ca/stories/2004/04/22/f107.raw.html

Canadian Parliament recognizes Armenian genocide

Canadian Parliament recognizes Armenian genocide

By David Ljunggren

OTTAWA, April 21 (Reuters) – The Canadian Parliament on Wednesday
ignored long-standing government policy and angered Turkey by formally
declaring that Ottoman Turks committed genocide against Armenians in
1915.

The House of Commons voted 153-68 to support a motion declaring the
events of 90 years ago as genocide, despite a plea from Foreign
Minister Bill Graham not to aggravate NATO ally Turkey.

Armenians say some 1.5 million of their people were deliberately
slaughtered by Ottoman Turks between 1915 and 1923. Turkey denies the
charges of genocide, saying the Armenians were among the many victims
of a partisan war raging during World War One as the Ottoman Empire
collapsed.

Graham quickly issued a statement after the vote stressing the motion
would not alter Ottawa’s official policy, which is that while the
events of 1915 were a tragedy, they did not constitute genocide.

Our “position on this issue … has not changed. Canada has had
friendly and cooperative relations with Turkey and Armenia for many
years. The Canadian government is committed to make these
relationships even stronger in the future,” he said.

But the result looked certain to harm ties with Turkey and represented
a sound defeat for the government, which had instructed Cabinet
members to vote “no.”

Before the vote, Graham sent a letter to Liberal lawmakers saying he
was “deeply concerned that it (the motion) could have far-reaching
negative consequences” for Turkey and the region.

“We must recognize we must have good relations with our NATO colleague
in Turkey … (which) is a very important NATO ally that we work with
closely in many areas, including Afghanistan,” he told reporters.

Despite his efforts, no less than 75 Liberal legislators voted for the
resolution. In recent years, parliaments in more than a dozen
countries — including France, Russia and Switzerland — have adopted
similar motions.

Ankara has fought hard to block attempts to press for international
recognition of the events as a genocide.

“Certainly, relations with Canada will suffer as the result of
adopting such a motion,” Turkish Embassy counselor Fazli Corman told
Reuters, citing the example of Canadian companies seeking to sign
contracts in Turkey.

France’s parliament backed the Armenian case in 2001, prompting Turkey
to freeze official visits to France and temporarily block French
companies from entering lucrative defense contracts.

The U.S. Congress dropped a similar resolution in 2000 after the White
House warned it would harm U.S. security interests in the Middle East.

(Additional reporting by Randall Palmer in Ottawa)

04/21/04 20:54 ET

HE Archb. Bargev Martirosyan visits Armenian Church Canadian Diocese

PRESS OFFICE
Contact; Deacon Hagop Arslanian, Assistant to the Primate
615 Stuart Avenue, Outremont Quebec H2V 3H2
Tel; 514-276-9479, Fax; 514-276-9960
Email; [email protected]
Website;

His Eminence Archbishop Bargev Martirosyan visits
Armenian Church Canadian Diocese

Upon the invitation of His Eminence Bishop Bagrat Galstanian, Primate
of the Armenian Church Canadian Diocese the Primate of the Diocese of
Artsakh His Eminence Archbishop Bargev Martirosyan will be visiting
Canada from the 22nd to 29th April 2004.

-On Friday night, 23rd April 2004 Abp. Martirosyan will participate in
the Martyrs Prayer and Ecumenical service to be held at St Gregory the
Illuminator Armenian Cathedral commemorating the 89th anniversary of
the Armenian Genocide. Present will be Montreal Church leaders and
eminent politicians.

-On April 24, Abp Martirosyan will be celebrating the Holy Divine
Liturgy at Holy Trinity Armenian Church of Toronto, where regional
Church Leaders and ecumenical representatives will be attending the
special requiem service dedicated to the victims of the Armenian
Genocide.

-On 25th and 26th April, Abp. Martirosyan will visit the Armenian day
school of Toronto and will meet with the representatives of the
Armenian Community of Toronto.

-Upon the instruction of His Eminence Bishop Galstanian, Primate of
the Armenian Church Canadian Diocese, a meeting will be held on the
27th April, 2004 with the Youth of Greater Montreal Area.

On 28th of April, a special reception will be held in honor of His
Eminence Archbishop Bargev Martirosyan, giving an opportunity to
Armenian Community members to meet with His Eminence Archbishop
Martirosyan.

His Eminence Abp. Martirosyan has been the spiritual leader of and an
active participant in the war of liberation of Mountainous Karabakh
(Artsakh province of Historic Armenia). His Eminence was one of the
first Armenians to enter Shoushi, the strategic stronghold that was
held by the Azerbaijani forces. Shoushi’s conquest became the turning
point of liberation of Artsakh. Abp. Martirosyan immediately cleaned
up the All Saints (Amenapergitch) Armenian Church of the city and
celebrated the Divine Liturgy, giving thanks to the Lord for the
liberation of the once vibrant Armenian city of Shoushi. The Primate,
Diocesan clergy, Diocesan Council members and faithful are delighted
and honored to welcome His Eminence Abp Bargev Martirosyan, Primate of
the Diocese of Artsakh.

DIVAN OF THE DIOCESE

www.armenianchurch.ca