Sports: Russia’s silver Olympic medalist may represent Armenia in future

PanArmenian, Armenia
May 5 2018

PanARMENIAN.Net – Olympic silver medalist, two-time world championEvgenia Medvedeva may represent Armenia in the near future, as the father of the figure skater is Armenian businessman Arman Babasyan, Allsportinfo.ru reports citing sources familiar with the matter.

According to the platform, 18-year-old Russian figure skater will compete for the Armenian national team in order to prolong her participation in official competitions.

Also, according to the publication, the Olympic medalist will move to Canada to work with famous coach Brian Orser, a two-time Olympic silver medalist and World champion himself.

According to the media, the athlete can leave for North America after the Annual Skate Japan in June.

Medvedeva is the 2018 Olympic silver medalist, a two-time world champion (2016, 2017), a two-time European champion (2016, 2017), a two-time Grand Prix Final champion (2015, 2016), and a two-time Russian national champion (2016, 2017). Earlier in her career, she won the 2015 World Junior Championships, the 2014 Junior Grand Prix Final, and the 2015 Russian Junior Championships


Sports: Armenia to get locally produced kits for Tokyo Olympics

MediaMax, Armenia
Armenia to get locally produced kits for Tokyo Olympics
Teams in large sport competitions are remembered not only for medals and wins, but for unique and attractive kits as well.
Everything matters in modern sport, from the way athletes behave and look to how fashionably they dress.
In the last edition of the column we dedicated to activewear, Mediamax Sport tells about Armenia’s Olympic kits from 2008 to 2016.
The best and prettiest: Beijing 2008 kit

Just 10 years ago the world saw one of the best Olympic Games. Beijing organized a colorful and entertaining competition, and Armenian athletes looked no less bright in their kits. The Beijing kit is a strong favorite among them now.

Armenia won 5 medals in 2008 Olympics: 4 bronze ones and 1 silver.

Weightlifter Gevorg Davtyan (77kg) was one of the bronze medalists.

“I still wear our kit from Beijing Olympics. I’m trying to keep it in good condition. I won a medal in 2008, so the kit is all the more dear to me. I feel like I’m wearing that medal when I have the Beijing kit on,” said Davtyan.

Armen Grigoryan was the Secretary General of Armenian National Olympic Committee in 2008. He recalls affectionately how they were working on the design of the Beijing kit:

“Russian company Bosco wanted to cooperate with us and I worked directly with the head of Bosco. We were always in touch and exchanged solutions, and in the end, we agreed on the final design. Everyone loved both color versions of the kit – they were bright, memorable, and most importantly, of good quality.”

Wrestler Arsen Julfalakyan has told us that the Beijing kit had the best quality and design out of all kits he wore in three Olympics (Beijing, London, Rio de Janeiro).

“Many people in Beijing noticed how well our kit looked. Athletes from other teams approached us and asked to exchange shirts. Only teams with really good kits get that kind of offers. I exchanged only one shirt, with a French athlete, because I was so fond of our national kit I didn’t want to give it away,” said the wrestler.

The Armenian delegation wore white from head to toe during the parade. An Armenian designer firm made it in Yerevan by the order of the National Olympic Committee.

“We chose to dress in Italian style – without the tie, less formally. We all wore Armenia’s national emblem on our chests. Those costumes were a product of another successful cooperation,” told Armen Grigoryan.

Lack of desire to stand out and the London Olympics

Armenian team was wearing the kits from Russian company Forward in London Olympics. It was the first time that the company organized an exhibition and presented the kits.

Silver medalist of London Olympics Arsen Julfalakyan recalls:

Forward kits were far behind Bosco’s by quality. We had a large batch of activewear, but there was nothing special in style and design. The color was classic Forward, they just put our emblem and flag on the kits.”

National Olympic Committee Secretary General Hrachya Rostomyan has remarked that mega companies like Adidas and Nike don’t want to work with Armenia.

“They have no interest in Armenia, because we send only a few athletes to the Olympic Games and therefore, the order will be small. Forward did what we asked. They made the kits and adopted the colors the way we wanted,” said Rostomyan.

The parade outfit was classical. Armenian athletes liked it and wore it for the opening ceremony.

“It was my first Olympics as the Secretary General. I announced a tendering for the parade outfit. Can you imagine that we only had one contestant? So we dressed in classic style in London and didn’t stand out.”

Rio de Janeiro: European kit of questionable quality

Two years ago Rio de Janeiro hosted the Summer Olympics and Armenia won a gold medal after 20 years without putting a hand on the Olympic gold. We remember vividly the red kits on Artur Aleksanyan and Mihran Harutyunyan and the white kits Simon Martirosyan and Gor Minasyan wore during the awarding ceremony.

Armenian athletes went to Rio with kits from the Spanish company Kelme. Hrachya Rostomyan has told us that the National Olympic Committee wanted athletes to wear European kits, which was a better option both in price and quality.

However, the athletes weren’t too happy with Kelme kits. Arsen Julfalakyan has noted that the design was fine and the colors were bright and noticeable, but the kits became unusable after just one or two washings.

According to Rostomyan, the set of kits per athlete (with the exclusion of official and parade outfits) for the Olympics costs around USD 2000.

Wrestler Simon Martirosyan won the silver medal in Rio. He has said that although the kits were out of order very quickly, he wasn’t very upset.

“I met a lot of athletes in dull kits in Rio. Our colors were bright and the quality wasn’t that bad. Gor Minasyan and I were wearing the white kits during the awarding ceremony. We were told to do so beforehand,” Martirosyan said.

The Olympic Committee starts organizing the purchase of kits around a year ahead of the Olympics. Adviser to National Olympic Committee President Ruben Hakobyan has stated that he was responsible for the parade outfit for Rio and the Russian factory Bolshevichka made it.

“If you go to a country where the weather is hot, you need to wear light colors. That what conditioned our color decisions for Rio. I think the Rio kits were fine, although some people didn’t like them. There are countries that win no medals but remain in people’s memories because of the kits and the show they put up at the Olympics. We aren’t in that category, because our mentality is quite outdated,” said Hakobyan.

As of the moment, Armenia has always participated in the Olympics in strictly classical, conservative clothes.

“Our society, including people involved in sports, is closed-off and doesn’t want to make interesting changes. There were other offers as well, but the majority didn’t approve them,” Rostomyan remarks.


New Armenian brand ahead of 2020 Olympics

The upcoming Olympic Games will take place in Tokyo, the global center of innovation.

The Armenian National Olympic Committee has decided that Armenian athletes will perform in Japan in kits from an Armenian brand.

“The name of the company is Insport. It is an Armenian brand and the designers are Armenians, although the manufacturing isn’t located in our republic. They need to calculate certain things and then buy the equipment to transfer the entire production to Armenia,” said Hrachya Rostomyan.


The National Olympic Committee has also decided to organize discussions during the selection of parade outfits, in which sportspeople, journalists and different interested persons can participate.

Gohar Nalbandyan, Hasmik Babayan


See photos at the link: http://sport.mediamax.am/en/news/articles/28196






















Song dedicated to “My Step” movement (video)

Legendary “36,6” rock band presented a song about the events taking place in Armenia these days.

It is devoted to  Armenians and the “My Step” movement.

The song was written before the end of the event.

The song urges not to step back.

The group is active in Poland and it is interesting that not all members of the group are Armenians.


Music: Armenian State Symphony Orchestra gets standing ovation and multiple encore requests after Hamburg performance

ArmenPress, Armenia
Armenian State Symphony Orchestra gets standing ovation and multiple encore requests after Hamburg performance


YEREVAN, MARCH 30, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian State Symphony Orchestra delivered a concert March 28 in Hamburg’s ElbphilharmonieHall. The Orchestra and cellist Narek Hakhnazaryan performed SymphonyNo.2by Aram Khachaturian and the Cello Concerto of contemporary composer Eduard Hayrapetyan.

Sergei Smbatyan, artistic director and conductor of the Orchestra, told ARMENPRESS that it is very important to perform modern and classic Armenian music in Elbphilharmonie, one of the world’s most demanded and popular halls.

“Eduard Hayrapetyan composed a Cello Concerto specially for this concert. It is wonderful when foreign audiences see the rich and unique traditions of Armenia in the music area”, he said.

“All tickets were sold out several months before the concert, we received a standing ovation after the performance and the audience was demanding an encore for several times”, he said.

English –translator/editor: Stepan Kocharyan

AYF Camp Filled to Capacity as AYF Juniors Gather for 2018 Winter Getaway

 

 

WRIGHTWOOD, Calif.–The AYF Camp was at capacity over the weekend of February 16 to 19 as 130 members of the Armenian Youth Federation Juniors gathered for their annual Armenian Youth Federation Juniors Winter Getaway.

“For the last several years, the Juniors Central Council has worked with our chapter directors to create programs that help develop our members into future leaders, who achieve academic excellence and pursue ambitious goals while doing their part to secure a prosperous homeland,” said Sylva Khayalian, a member of the AYF JCC and lead organizer of the camp.
The slogan for the theme of the weekend was “Generation, Nation, Innovation” and held under the leadership of camp Co-Directors Dr. Talar Chahinian and Sevag Manuelian.
“It was an absolute pleasure spending the weekend with AYF Juniors at camp. I was in awe of their ability to think creatively, critically and independently,” said Chahinian. “I’m still carrying their energy with me. It was inspiring!”
Joined by some thirty AYF Seniors, who volunteered as counselors, the campers enjoyed classic AYF Camp activities, such as Steal the Bacon, Wacky Olympics and Butt Volleyball, alongside captivating educational presentations and workshops about the February Revolt, how innovation helps strengthen our homeland, Armenian musical instruments and songwriting, Javakhk and self-defense classes.
“I loved all the people, all of the games, all of the lessons, all of the songs and everything about AYF Camp, which I will proudly cherish as fun memories that I cannot forget,” said Tony Ordoukhanian, a member of the Burbank chapter and one of the 2017 AYF Junior Achievers. 
 
Sunday night, after the conclusion of the day’s agenda, campers were delighted by the surprise visit by well-known community artist Tro Krikorian, who joined the juniors in singing patriotic and revolutionary Armenian songs along side musical accompaniment by unger Arick Gevorkian.
“Our youth give us the encouragement that we will have a bright future. They illustrate the power of hope and re-ignite our souls and spirits so that collectively we can inspire our nation and make this world a beautiful place,” said co-director Sevag Manuelian. “I had the privilege of spending a weekend with our youth. They truly are powerful and our path to a future we deserve as a people.”
 
“We would like to extend our sincere gratitude to the AYF Seniors counselors, AYF Camp Management Board, the getaway directors, Shahan Atmajian our volunteer EMT, our juniors, their parents, our chapter directors, our donors, Dr. Razmig Shirinian, Arick Gevorkian, Berj Parseghian, Hay Katch Do and Tro Krikorian – each for doing their part in making the 2018 AYF Juniors Winter Getaway a success,” said AYF JCC Chairperson Saro Shirinian.
The AYF Juniors strives to nourish its members with experiences, information and resources to become ambitious and successful in their pursuit of civic, academic and career excellence, so they are best equipped to serve our communities, nation and cause. We serve our mission through active participation in our communities and during weekly gatherings held at all ten of our chapters in the Western United States. For more information or to join, visit AYFJuniors.org, e-mail [email protected] or call (818) 500-8883.

Sports: Armenia’s training ahead of Lithuania friendly

News.am, Armenia
Armenia’s training ahead of Lithuania friendly

The national football squad of Armenia is holding a training ahead of a friendly match against Lithuania.

Armenia starting XI: Gor Manukyan, Varazdat Haroyan, Gaël Andonian, Hayk Ishkhanyan, Robert Darbinyan, Gevorg Ghazaryan, Rumyan Hovsepyan, Henriikh Mkhitaryan, Sargis Adamyan, Erik Vardanyan, Norberto Briasco Balekian.

Armenia and Lithuania are 91st and 147th, respectively, in the current FIFA World Ranking.

On March 24 Armenia played a 0-0 friendly against Estonia.

Video at

From keyboard-less piano to 3D printed chess pieces – Armath lab students have their own production

ArmenPress, Armenia
March 5 2018


From keyboard-less piano to 3D printed chess pieces – Armath lab
students have their own production



YEREVAN, MARCH 5, ARMENPRESS. The Armath engineering labs, which unite
more than 5,000 school children from Armenia and Artsakh, have
transformed from knowledge consumers to small manufacturers, sometimes
even providing self-sustainability.

ARMENPRESS presents the joint projects of coaches and students of
Armath labs from Sevan, Vardenis, Talin and Devi schools.

Pendants upon order: Designed by students, made by Armenia-made 3D printer

Various themed pendants, such as car license plates or custom made
ones, are made and sold in the Sevan Armath lab.

The group which has more than 40 students design the pendants, which
is later made by a 3D printer. The proceeds from the sales is used to
acquire the printer’s filling material.

“We also take into account the market demand, we take orders, we
prepare the picture with the program and print it. We try to solve the
self-sustainability issue, we use the sale proceeds to buy the filling
material,” coach Hasmik Arakelyan says.

Chess pieces and Christmas decorations with CNC device

In Vardenis, Armath students created an Elephant-Puzzle, which is an
intellectual game for children. Each puzzle piece depicts a letter
from the English alphabet.

“The design is entirely made by the children, and then the CNC device
does the printing,” coach Mary Barseghyan says.

The students of the lab also used the CNC device to make New Year’s
decorations, and even chess pieces.

Augmented reality app made by 14-year-old

14 year old Arman Barseghyan from Talin’s Armath lab founded the
Zoomar AR app in collaboration with a friend, Vigen Khachatryan, also
14.

The app is already available in Google Play and the iOS version will
soon be available.

“The essence of the program is that we add AR to the pages of
children’s books, which includes interactive animated 3D models”, the
children said. They already take orders from different organizations.

“In the future we want to make reforms in education and include
biology and physics book pages in our app and present it under AR. We
plan to make a proposal to the education and science ministry”, the 14
year old said.

Arman has decided to become a programmer and specialize in VR and AR.

Armath and radio-engineering lab students come together over
keyboardless piano idea

Armath students of Vedi have joined forces with the students of the
radio-engineering lab of the same city and created a piano without
keyboards. It is a uniquely designed box, which plays from hand
movements. It plays like a piano with assistance of infrared rays.

Coach Orbel Khachatryan says the keyboardless piano is a genius
invention, but the kids however think they’ve done a simple thing.

English –translator/editor: Stepan Kocharyan



Food: Tracing true origins of baklava, a flaky pastry

Gulf Times
February 9, 2018 Friday


Tracing true origins of baklava, a flaky pastry



RICH: The origin of this scrumptious delicacy is quite controversial
and undocumented. Photo by author

The origin of this scrumptious delicacy is quite controversial and
undocumented with several ethnic groups claims it. Greek, Turkish and
Middle Easterners claim baklava as their own and prepare it in their
own ways. Assyrians had been preparing this sweet pastry as early as
8th century BC by layering unleavened flat bread with chopped nuts in
between, drenching it in honey and then baking it in primitive wood
burning ovens. The modern day baklava went through a number of
transitions as the history of the area kept on changing. Middle East,
East Mediterranean, Balkans, Turks, Arabs, Jews, Greeks, Armenians,
Bulgarians of today who introduce baklava as their national dessert
were all part of the Ottoman empire once.


Just like there is difference of opinion over baklava origins, the
source of the word baklava is also disputed. The word baklava entered
the English language in 1650, a borrowing from Ottoman Turkish.
Turkish historians claim of its Turkish origin whereas some say
“baklava” may come from the Mongolian word “bayla” meaning to tie or
wrap up. According to another source “The Armenians even insist that
the word itself–baklava—reveals its Armenian origins as the word
appears to be related to the Armenian word for bakh (Lent) and halvah
(sweet).” The name baklava is used in many languages with minor
phonetic and spelling variations. In the Arab world Baqlawa/ baklawa
is used, whereas, the Greeks call it baklava.

There is no denying the fact that the dessert that we delectably
consume today was perfected during the Ottoman Empire in the 15th
century after invading Constantinople (present day Istanbul). And for
over five hundred years the kitchens of the Imperial Ottoman Palace in
Constantinople became the ultimate culinary hub of the empire. The
oldest reports about baklava are present in Topkapi Palace kitchen
notebooks from that period. According to this report baklava was baked
in the Palace in 1473. Baklava elaborated from a simple pastry into a
dessert which needed skill in order to please the dignitaries and the
rich people.

Till the 19th century baklava was thought-of as a luxury; which only
the very wealthy could afford. To this day, it is a very common
expression in Turkey that “I am not rich enough to eat baklava every
day”. People would bake baklava only on special occasions, and
religious events or wedding. However, the times have changed so much
now that giving a baklava gift basket or baklava business gifting is
just a click away and you can buy baklava online anytime. Although the
exact baklava origins remain uncertain it is an undeniable certainty
that baklava was enhanced every time there was wind of change in The
Middle East or Near East. The region has seen many of the world’s
oldest cultures and civilisations come and go, with each of them
modifying the baklava to their preference.

Whenever food crosses boundaries it is modified and the recipe is
changed according to the people’s food preference and eating habits.
The same thing happened with baklava when it started to get popular
and crossed boundaries different cultures influenced its preparation
and modified the recipe.

The Greek seamen and merchants travelling to Mesopotamia soon
discovered the delights of baklava. It mesmerised their taste buds.
They brought the recipe to Athens. The Greeks’ major contribution to
the development of this pastry is the creation of a dough technique
that made it possible to roll it as thin as a leaf, compared to the
rough, bread-like texture of the Assyrian dough. In fact, the name
“Phyllo” was coined by Greeks, which means “leaf” in the Greek
language. The Armenian Influence – When the baklava was discovered by
the Armenian merchants on the eastern border of the Ottoman Empire
located on spice and silk routes they integrated cinnamon and cloves
into the texture of baklava.

Further east the Arabs introduced the rose-water and orange blossom
water. The taste changed in subtle nuances as the recipe started
crossing borders. Of all the countries in the Middle East, Lebanon is
notably credited with contributing the most to baklava.

In Persia, the renowned pastry is cooked since antiquity, invented the
diamond-shaped baklava which contained a nut stuffing perfumed with
jasmine.
As the Ottomans invaded Constantinople to the west, they also expanded
their eastern territories to cover most of ancient Assyrian lands and
the entire Armenian kingdom. Cooks and pastry chefs who worked in the
Ottoman palaces contributed enormously to the interaction and to the
refinement of the art of cooking and pastry-making of an empire that
covered a vast region. Towards the end of 19th century, small
pastry-shops started to appear in Constantinople and in major
provincial capitals to cater for the middle class.

Baklava

Ingredients
Phyllo pastry 1 pkt
Unsalted butter 1 1/4 cup
Walnuts, chopped 400 gm
Cinnamon powder 1 tsp
Castor sugar 1 cup
Lemon juice 2 tbsp

Water 3/4 cup
Honey 1/2 cup

To garnish
Chocolate chips to garnish
Walnuts, chopped to garnish

Method
Thaw phyllo pastry overnight in refrigerator and then leave it at room
temperature for about an hour


Trim phyllo pastry to fit your baking dish, keep covered with damp
towel prevent it from drying
Butter the bottom and sides of the baking dish


In a medium sauce pan, combine 1 cup sugar, 1/2 cup honey, 2 tbsp
lemon juice and 3/4 cup water
Bring to boil over medium heat, stirring until sugar is dissolved
Remove from heat and let syrup cool down while you prepare baklava
Chop walnuts in a mixer until coarsely chopped
In a medium bowl combine chopped walnuts and cinnamon powder
Place 10 phyllo sheets into baking pan one at a time, brush each sheet
with clarified butter once it is in pan
Spread 1/5 of nut mixture over phyllo dough
Add 5 buttered sheets of phyllo then another later of walnuts
Repeat it 4 times and finish off with 10 layers of butter phyla sheets
Brush the top with butter, cut pastry into 1 1/2 wide strips then cut
diagonally to form diamond ships
Bake in a preheated oven at 325 Degree Fahrenheit for 1 hour and 15
minute, until tops are golden brown
Remove from oven and immediately spoon cooled syrup evenly over the hot baklava
Let baklava cool completely uncovered at room temperature for 4-5
hours so that the sugar syrup penetrates the baklava and sweetens it.

* Chef Tarun Kapoor, Culinary Mastermind, USA. He may be contacted at
[email protected]

Sports: Arsène Wenger: In Armenia, you need special character to become great footballer

News.am, Armenia
Feb 5 2018

Arsenal manager Arsène Wenger has made a comparison between Armenia national squad captain and midfielder Henrikh Mkhitaryan and Spain midfielder Santi Cazorla, and he also spoke about Armenia.

“There are similarities there [between Mkhitaryan and Cazorla],” The Telegraph newspaper of the UK quoted the French football specialist as saying. “Santi was an exceptional football player. I met Mkhitaryan before [he joined Manchester United] and I always liked his game. He’s a player dedicated totally. He comes from a country, Armenia, where you need special character to become a great football player. He looks happy to play football because he just loves it.”

In Arsenal’s English Premier League 5-1 thrashing of Everton, Mkhitaryan started for the Gunners for the first time, played the full game and made three assists, and Whoscored.com named him Man of the Match.

Chess: Tradewise Chess Festival: Aronian claims second victory in a row

Panorama, Armenia
Jan 26 2018
Sport 11:22 26/01/2018Armenia

Armenian GM Levon Aronian has claimed his second victory in a row at Tradewise Gibraltar Chess Festival (10 rounds, Swiss system) taking place from 23 January to 1 February.

At Round 3 of the chess tournament, the Armenian chess star outplayed Sarah Hoolt of Germany with white pieces, the National Olympic Committee reported.

Another representative of Armenia Lilit Mkrtchyan played a draw with French Fabien Libiszewski with black pieces.

After three rounds, Aronian comes 24th with 2.5 points. With 2 points collected, Lilit Mkrtchyan is taking the 78th position.