CIS defence ministers agree on WMD, air defence system

CIS defence ministers agree on WMD, air defence system

ITAR-TASS news agency, Moscow
21 May 04

Yerevan, 21 May: The defence ministers of CIS countries have supported
the initiative of the Russian Foreign Ministry to coordinate the
positions of the CIS states on the issues of non-proliferation of
weapons of mass destruction.

Russian Defence Minister Sergey Ivanov, who chaired the meeting,
said that the participants of the session “unanimously supported
the proposals to coordinate the positions of our countries on this
essential international issue”.

When summing up the meeting of ministers, Sergey Ivanov announced that
a great deal of attention was paid to the issues of the functioning
of the CIS unified air defence system. Yet another important and
effective measure for perfecting multilateral cooperation in this area,
he said, “will be the adoption of a targeted programme for ensuring
the comprehensive countering by the armed forces of the CIS of the
forces and means of an aerial attack” by a potential enemy. “Its draft
was approved today and will be sent to the council of the heads of
government of the CIS countries,” the minister noted.

According to Sergey Ivanov, the participants in the meeting took
important decisions on joint actions on operational preparations of
the armed forces of the CIS for 2005, on organizing the activities of
collective forces to maintain peace in the CIS, increasing the safety
of air force flights, creating a unified communications system and
improving cooperation on hydrometeoroligical support.

The meeting of defence ministers was attended by all CIS countries,
with the exception of Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan.

The defence ministers were today received by Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan. As the chairman of the session, Sergey Ivanov briefed the
president on its results. He stressed that the decisions adopted
at the meeting “will facilitate the strengthening of security and
stability in the entire space of the CIS”.

Sergey Ivanov, who arrived in Yerevan on a working visit, yesterday
held talks with his Armenian counterpart Serzh Sarkisyan. “Yet
another important step has been taken on the way towards deepening the
Russian-Armenian strategic partnership, the security of our countries
and the maintenance of peace and stability in the Transcaucasus,” he
said when summing up the results of the meeting with his counterpart.

Anahid Literary Award 2003 of Columbia Armenian Center

COLUMBIA ARMENIAN CENTER ANAHID LITERARY AWARD COMMITTEE
PRESS ANNOUNCEMENT
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT: Michael Haratunian <[email protected]>
May 17, 2004

COLUMBIA ARMENIAN CENTER AWARDS 2003 ANAHID LITERARY PRIZE

New York City, NY — The Armenian Center at Columbia University is
pleased to announce that Patricia Sarrafian Ward has been chosen as
the recipient of the 2003 Anahid Literary Award.

Patricia Sarrafian Ward’s debut novel, The Bullet Collection,
was published in May of 2003 by Graywolf Press to great critical
acclaim. Booklist hailed the work as, “A startlingly insightful tale
of female coming-of-age in a time of war.”

In lyrical, dreamlike prose, The Bullet Collection describes the
embattled landscape of Beirut through the eyes of a young girl,
and shows the devastating effects of war on both the city and the
child. Excerpts from the novel, which in an earlier version was the
recipient of a Hopwood Award at the University of Michigan in 1995,
appeared in Jusoor: Post Gibran Anthology of New Arab American Writing
and in ARARAT Literary Magazine.

Patricia Sarrafian Ward was born in Beirut, Lebanon, in 1969 and
moved to the U.S. in 1987. She now lives in New Jersey.

The Anahid Literary Award was created by an anonymous patron to
recognize the achievements of American writers of Armenian descent to
encourage the development of their careers and to foster publication
of their work. A stipend of $5,000 is given to each recipient. The
awards committee consists of Peter Balakian, Marjorie Housepian Dobkin,
Nancy Kricorian and Peter Sourian.

Gelndale: A Celebration of Heritage

Glendale News Press
LATimes.com
May 17 2004

A Celebration of Heritage

Aremnian Relief Society’s annual festival features foods, dance
shows, singers, arts and crafts

By Darleene Barrientos, News-Press

NORTHEAST GLENDALE — Delicious food, rousing music, arts and crafts,
elaborate fashions and spontaneous dance circles — there was a little
bit of everything at the Armenian Relief Society’s third annual
festival.

Between 7,000 and 8,000 people passed through the doors of the
Glendale Civic Auditorium, 1401 N. Verdugo Rd., for the weekend
festival by Sunday afternoon, and at least 3,000 more people were
expected until the doors closed at midnight, said Nova Hindoyan, one
of the society’s executive board members. Hindoyan admitted she was
one of the dozens of people who joined the spontaneous dance circles
that broke out in the middle of the eating area on the auditorium’s
second level.

“It’s been very good, a very good turnout,” she said. “People are
enjoying the dancing.”

The upper level of the auditorium was filled to capacity with people
eager to watch the dancing and watch Armenian clothes be modeled by
local teenagers. Vendors lined the auditorium on both levels, selling
artwork, ceramics, jewelry, T-shirts, food, drinks, books, clothes
and desserts. Informational displays were available on the lower
level of the auditorium, filled with postcards and stamps from
Armenia and pictures of the country’s men and women and their fashion
from different eras.

People throughout the festival greeted old friends with shouts, hugs
and hearty handshakes.

Robert Yacoub, 51, of Pasadena, took his wife, his son and his baby
daughter to the festival after his mother told him about the event.

“I wanted to come,” Yacoub said. “I wanted to see the dances.”

His wife, Michelle, 32, said she was more interested in the fashion.

“I’m actually looking forward to the wedding,” she said of the
traditional wedding ceremony scheduled to be demonstrated.

Julia Mangurian Haviland, 81, of Studio City, took her daughter and
teenage granddaughter to the festival. Haviland said she wanted her
family to learn about their culture.

Haviland said she had been trying to teach her family about their
Armenian heritage and had sent them to Armenian dance classes, which
her granddaughter enjoyed.

“There are a lot of people out there who love the music, but they’re
just not aware,” she said.

NFB leads Canada at Cannes Film fest

Canadian Press
May 11 2004

NFB leads Canada at Cannes

Toronto — No Egoyan. No Cronenberg. No Arcand.

This year, as it has so often in the past, the National Film Board
will be carrying the can at Cannes for Canada.

The NFB is bringing several shorts and documentaries to the
prestigious festival, which opens Wednesday and runs until May 23.
And at least one of them has the potential to spark an international
incident.

What Remains of Us (Ce qu’il reste de nous) is a feature-length
documentary that follows a young Tibetan refugee in Quebec who
smuggles a forbidden videotaped message from the Dalai Lama back into
her native land and shows it to various Tibetan families. Chinese
authorities could impose severe penalties on any Tibetan caught
viewing the five-minute tape of the exiled spiritual leader and major
security precautions were taken when the film was screened recently
at Toronto’s Hot Docs festival.

There have been fears that if the Chinese get their hands on a copy
of the film, they might be able to identify and track down the
anonymous Tibetans who allowed their reaction to the tape to be
filmed.

Two years ago when Atom Egoyan’s Ararat was screened at Cannes there
were concerns the film would spark protests from the Turkish
community because of its politically charged theme that the Turks
inflicted genocide on the Armenians during the First World War.

Trouble never materialized and the co-producer of What Remains of Us,
Francois Prevost, isn’t anticipating any this time either. But he
says security will be in place anyway.

“The reason for security obviously is not to have any pictures going
out of the theatre,” he says.

Prevost is also in touch with a network of people within Tibet and
says that so far nothing has happened to any of the 17 people there
who were brave enough to take part.

But he does hope the film initiates an international dialogue, with
both foreign governments and the Chinese communities in their
countries about the half-century of oppression of six million Tibetan
people.

“We see this culture disappearing,” Prevost says. “Countries don’t
want to face China about this issue and they all want to keep their
economic links. So that’s a major, major, major point that is not
talked about enough.”

The film will be screened out of competition next Sunday but
co-director Hugo Latulippe isn’t looking for any prizes, just the
international exposure.

“It’s already a prize for us really to go there and bring our message
to the world. It’s fantastic.”

Another major film board entry will be a very avant-garde digital
animation short called Ryan.

The creation of Toronto-based animator Chris Landreth, it uses
surreal 3-D imagery to tell the story of one of Landreth’s
predecessors, Ryan Larkin, a groundbreaking animator with the NFB
back in the 1960s, whose decline, apparently a combination of
creative block, alcohol and drugs, has left him panhandling on the
streets of Montreal today.

Larkin was nominated for an Academy Award back in 1968, but lost to a
Disney entry. Landreth himself was also an Oscar nominee in 1996 for
a creative digital short called The End — which bears some style
similarities to Ryan — but he lost to Brit Nick Parks, creator of the
Wallace and Gromit films.

While none of Canada’s major directors are represented at Cannes this
year, the half-dozen titles submitted are still considered quite
significant.

Danny Chalifour, director of operations and international relations
for Telefilm Canada, the federal funding agency that operates the
Canada pavilion at Cannes, said there’s more to do at Cannes than
screen films.

While he prefers not to use the word shmooz, Chalifour says bilateral
discussions with delegations from Britain, France, Germany, Australia
and New Zealand are vital for the future of the Canadian film
industry, both in terms of export sales and co-productions.

“If we’re looking at financing a feature-film budget in excess of
$6-$7 million in Canada, we basically need a partner. We can’t fund
it internally.”

Antelias: President Kocharian in Antelias

PRESS RELEASE
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E- mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

President Kocharian in Antelias

Antelias, Lebanon – On Wednesday morning, 12 May 2004, President Kocharian
of Armenia, who has been visiting Lebanon upon the invitation of President
Lahoud, met His Holiness Aram I in Antelias, at the spiritual center of the
Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia. The clergy serving in the Catholicosate
and the members of the Executive Council also attended the meeting.

On the first day of his visit to Lebanon, a breakfast-meeting has already
taken place between His Holiness and President Kocharian. This meeting was
an occasion for both leaders to discuss issues pertaining to Armenia and
Diaspora-Armenia relations. They emphasized the importance of strengthening
the national unity at this critical point of the history of our people.

##

View printable pictures here:

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The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates of
the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the history and
the mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer to the web page of
the Catholicosate, The Cilician Catholicosate, the
administrative center of the church is located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm#42
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Pictures2.htm#bm
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Pictures2.htm#
http://www.cathcil.org/

AAA: Sarbanes Urges Armenians to Continue Fight For Genocide Affirm.

Armenian Assembly of America
122 C Street, NW, Suite 350
Washington, DC 20001
Phone: 202-393-3434
Fax: 202-638-4904
Email: [email protected]
Web:

PRESS RELEASE
May 7, 2004
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]

SENATOR SARBANES URGES ARMENIAN COMMUNITY TO CONTINUE FIGHT FOR GENOCIDE
AFFIRMATION

Washington, DC – Senator Paul Sarbanes (D-MD) stressed the importance of the
Armenian-American community working together with Washington policymakers to
secure affirmation of the Armenia Genocide in a speech April 19 to
participants of the Armenian Assembly’s National Banquet.

Sarbanes, as the banquet’s keynote speaker, also highlighted the importance
of the event sponsors – the Armenian Assembly of American, the Armenian
General Benevolent Union (AGBU) and the Eastern and Western Diocese of the
Armenian Church, uniting for the betterment of the community for the
first-ever National Conference and Banquet, held April 18-20 in Washington,
DC.

Below is the full-text of Senator Sarbanes’ remarks:

It is a pleasure to be here tonight with such good friends on this important
occasion. It is a great honor to be in the company of His Eminence
Archbishop Barsamian and His Eminence Archbishop Derderian and I want to
particularly acknowledge the wonderful work they do and the leadership they
provide to the church. I know how important the church is to the community
and how much of an organizing principle for the community it is. I speak
from the perspective of my own community in this regard, and I just wanted
to say how appreciative we are to have both of the Eminences here.

I also want to thank Berge Setrakian, the President of the Armenian General
Benevolent Union, for joining tonight with the Assembly for this event. In
my first campaign for the U.S. Senate, Alex Manoogian, the driving force of
the AGBU and for many, many years its president, took me under his wing, so
to speak, when I went to Detroit. He was a very strong supporter of mine in
that first effort to the United States Senate, and we remained close friends
until his death. The AGBU has done wonderful work. The “benevolent” in the
union’s name is really reflected in the benevolence of its work including,
in my view, the especially strong support for education, making sure the
young people in the community have an opportunity to gain a top-notch
education and move forward.

I want to thank Ambassador Kirakossian for the work that he does. We work
closely with him on the Hill, and know how effectively he represents the
Republic of Armenia.

I would like to honor two other people: Frank Pallone and Joe Knollenberg
who serve as co-chairs of the Armenian Caucus in the House of
Representatives. I know their commitment to this cause and how effective
they’ve been. We have been privileged to work across the aisle and across
the Capitol with them. They work together across the aisle, just as I do
with Mitch McConnell, whom you heard from at lunch. We have been able to
join together in a partnership on issues that are of such concern to all of
us.

And finally, I want to thank the leadership of the Armenian Assembly –
Hirair Hovnanian, Anthony Barsamian, the Executive Director Ross Vartian and
of course Annie Totah whose vision and commitment and plain hard work have
made this conference possible.

Now let me tell you something about Annie Totah. Of course, you know all
about her. She’s not only a vice chair but she was the first woman chair of
the organization in its 32-years existence and, of course, she is always a
steady voice on the issues of concern to the Armenian-American community,
and many other issues as well. She is both thoughtful and passionate in her
convictions. Annie and her husband Sami are residents of Maryland. They’re
constituents and very dear and close friends of mine, and they represent the
best of informed and responsible citizens. These are the sort of people,
just as so many others in this room, who make American democracy work.

Tomorrow you will be meeting with your representatives in the Congress of
the United States. You have important issues to put before them and I urge
you, as Frank Pallone said, to make your voices heard as never before.
Although you are a relatively small community among the many that make up
our nation, you enrich our national life out of all proportion to your
numbers–in the arts and sciences, in medicine, and law and business, in the
daily life of our communities across the nation. Perhaps your family came to
this country as refugees fleeing the persecutions and the genocide of the
Ottoman Empire, or perhaps your family sought out this country for its
democratic institutions and its economic opportunities. Whatever the
circumstances, each generation has prospered. You have raised your children
to participate fully in American life while continuing to honor their
Armenian heritage and traditions. The newly independent Republic of Armenia
to which you have contributed in so many ways has helped to strengthen these
ties. This is in the best American tradition.

I make this observation from first-hand experience. My parents came from
Greece and settled on Maryland’s Eastern Shore where I grew up and went to
school. They ran a restaurant. Interestingly enough, on this occasion, it
was named the Mayflower Grill. Thank you for bringing us to the Mayflower
Hotel.

I learned from my parents what it meant to be an American-to live in a
democratic society and to assume the responsibilities of citizenship while
at the same time, taking pride in my family’s Greek heritage. This is how,
in group after group across our country, we have built this nation and this
is what diversity means. We should be proud of our diversity and what it
stands for and the strength it has brought to America.

The Armenian Assembly exemplifies this spirit. Since its founding in 1972,
the Assembly has marshaled the talents of the Armenian-American community to
speak to the nation’s leadership. The Assembly is today one of our country’s
most effective advocacy groups. Let me just mention the internship program,
which I regard as a major achievement, as many of you who have participated
in it know first hand. Each year I meet with a new group of interns. We have
very interesting sessions. One member of my staff, Greg Aftandilian, who
serves on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee staff, first came to
Washington in 1977 to participate in this internship program. Dean
Shahinian, another senior staff member, who works with me on the Banking
Committee, ought to be considered an honorary member of that program. In
2001, Dean helped to organize the visit to Washington of the Supreme
Patriarch and Catholicos of all Armenians, His Holiness, Karekin II. In
fact, Dean has been a lay delegate who has gone to Etchmiadzin to
participate in the assembly which elected His Holiness. I was gratified to
play a small part in arranging for His Holiness to deliver the Senate’s
morning prayer during his visit to this country, and a number of you that I
see here were present on that occasion.

Another great achievement is the Assembly’s advocacy program, which is what
brings us here tonight, and I want to emphasize how important that is. Just
think of the urgent issues before us: parity and U.S. military assistance to
Armenia and Azerbaijan, Section 907 and the issue of assistance to
Azerbaijan; Nagorno Karabakh; non-military assistance to Armenia; permanent
normal trade relations for Armenia and acknowledgement and commemoration of
the Armenian Genocide. We shall turn to these issues in order.

The Administration’s budget request this fiscal year disregards what I
consider to be a good faith understanding between the Administration and the
Congress for maintaining parity in military assistance to Armenia and
Azerbaijan. The budget sets the assistance levels at $2.75 million and $8.75
million, respectively. In my judgment, this is not acceptable. The
Administration actually sought to tip the balance last summer, using a
congressional notification procedure to add $2 million in assistance to
Azerbaijan beyond the initial budget request. We held up that notification,
and eventually the Administration agreed to add the same amount for Armenia,
and parity was restored.

This year the challenge is greater, first because the gap in the budget
request is much greater – $8.75 million as against $2.75 million – and
second because the request cannot simply be held up by a few members’
objections, but will be put to a vote. A critical vote will probably be
taking place in the Foreign Operations Subcommittees of the two
appropriations committees in the House and the Senate and, therefore, it is
extremely important that you make your views known to the Subcommittee
members. This policy of imbalance, in my judgment, will contribute to the
destabilization in the South Caucasus and make more difficult, not less
difficult, the war against terrorism.

Section 907 of the Freedom Support Act must be upheld.

That Section restricts U.S. government assistance to Azerbaijan in response
to the Azerbaijani blockade of Armenia. In the wake of 9/11, the
Administration obtained a waiver for Section 907. As approved by Congress,
however, the waiver specifies that any assistance shall not “undermine or
hamper” the Nagorno Karabakh peace process or be used for offensive purposes
against Armenia or Armenian communities in the South Caucasus. It is in our
national interest to adhere to the letter and spirit of Section 907.

The Nagorno Karabakh peace process must have our active support.

The prospect for real progress in the negotiations which seemed to be
opening up at the Key West talks in April of 2001 between Presidents
Kocharian and Aliyev unfortunately did not materialize. President Aliyev
went back to Azerbaijan and shifted his position markedly from what seemed
to be developing in Key West, much to our great regret. This, in fact, is
another reason to maintain parity in U.S. military assistance. Tipping
toward Azerbaijan will only give that country less reason, not more reason,
to negotiate in good faith over Nagorno Karabakh.

Now let me turn to non-military assistance for Armenia which is essential of
course to building democratic institutions and strengthening the economy.
The administration’s continuing efforts to cut assistance are short-sighted.
For the current fiscal year, the Administration had requested $50 million.
Through hard work in the Congress, through your friends, again, on both
sides of the aisle, both Republicans and Democrats, we were able to raise
that figure by 50% to $75 million dollars. For the next fiscal year, the
budget now before us, the Administration has asked for about $62 million. I
can assure you that efforts to ensure a higher funding level will continue,
and again, you need to raise this funding issue with your representatives in
Congress.

You should remind your representatives that the Azerbaijani and Turkish
blockades of Armenia raise the cost of doing business there by at least 30%
and constitute an obstacle to the economic development Armenia seeks and
needs, and it constitutes a rationale for raising this assistance level.

We have been focused for quite some time on the effort to extend permanent
normal trade relations – PNTR – to Armenia. Both countries would benefit
from normalizing the trade relationship. Last year on the Senate side,
Senator McConnell and I joined together with Senator Boxer in introducing
legislation for this purpose, as did Frank Pallone and Joe Knollenberg in
the House of Representatives. It was encouraging to learn that earlier
today, appearing here at your sessions, Beth Jones, the Assistant Secretary
of State for Europe committed the Administration to support PNTR for
Armenia. This is, of course, good news for all of us but now, we must
continue to press the Administration and the relevant committees in the
Congress to expedite this important issue and carry through on this
proposal.

Finally, I want to speak to you about the need for us to continue to work
together to secure at last the acknowledgement and commemoration of the
Armenian Genocide.

You have had some encouraging developments. Plans for the Armenian Genocide
Museum in Washington are moving forward, which, of course, means it will
serve an important educational function right here in the nation’s capital.
In Europe, a number of governments have formally recognized the Armenian
Genocide – France, Italy, Sweden, Belgium, Switzerland, Greece, Russia,
Cyprus, as well as the European Parliament.

Through your efforts, an increasing number of states in our own country are
passing resolutions recognizing the Armenian Genocide, and I want to
acknowledge the presence here tonight of my former chief of staff Peter
Marudas who, many of you know, played a very instrumental role as the
Maryland legislature was considering this resolution and was able to dismiss
from the scene some arguments that were being raised, arguments that were
entirely spurious.

Furthermore, a new spirit of inquiry is beginning to appear in some Turkish
academic circles. According to a New York Times feature report on March 6th,
Professor Taner Ackam at the University of Minnesota has called the Turkish
government’s continuing denial “a misrepresentation that has to be
confronted.” Another Turkish historian, Fikret Adanir of the Ruhr University
in Germany, has said, “we have to deal with history, like the Germans after
the war. It’s important for the health of the democracy, for civil society.”

Both of these academics are outside of Turkey but it may be the beginning of
important new thinking about this question because, in my view, Turkey’s
interests and its prospects for the future are not served by the
government’s refusal to face the facts, and our task is to help set the
historical record straight.

Every year I join with many of my colleagues to commemorate the great human
tragedy that was the first genocide of the 20th century. Our resolutions are
routinely met by arguments about the alleged “strategic interests” of our
foreign policy. But any strategy based on a denial of the truth has a
dubious foundation, particularly the truth involving basic human rights.

Your voices can make the difference. In 2001, as I indicated, the active
support of the Armenian Assembly and other Armenian organizations was
critical to the passage in the Maryland legislature of a resolution on the
Genocide in the face of vigorous opposition. Evidence of the Armenian
Genocide is available in our own National Archives. In addition to
Ambassador Morgenthau’s dispatches, the Archives include reports from other
U.S. officials stationed throughout the Ottoman Empire at the time. I have
read those reports myself.

In his recent history, the Burning Tigris, the Armenian Genocide and
America’s Response, Peter Balakian has done a masterful job of bringing the
documentary evidence together. As he observes, “The breadth and intensity of
American engagement… is an important chapter in American history and one
that has been lost.” Professor Balakian is correct. This chapter is
important to Armenian history and it is important to American history.

As you make your rounds, you may hear the familiar arguments that your
concerns reflect only narrow, ethnic interests and disregard the broader
needs of an effective U.S. foreign policy. Do not let that deter you. We
have a national interest – an American national interest – in seeing that
our foreign policy is grounded in the same principles on which this nation
was founded-respect for the truth, the rule of law and democratic
institutions.

As you make these rounds and you do your advocacy in a thoughtful and
well-informed and courteous way, remember that an American foreign policy
worthy of the support of the American people should be based on principles
and values. In making your arguments on these issues that I have
enumerated, you are speaking out as American citizens for an American policy
true to our values and principles. So do not be hesitant in taking this
message to your representatives. You have my best wishes as you set out in
that endeavor.
Thank you.

The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based nationwide
organization promoting public understanding and awareness of Armenian
issues. It is a 501(c)(3) tax-exempt membership organization.

NR#2004-039

www.armenianassembly.org

Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/07/04

PRESS RELEASE
Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
138 East 39th Street
New York, NY 10016
Tel: 212-689-7810
Fax: 212-689-7168
e-mail: [email protected]
Website:
Contact: Iris Papazian

CROSSROADS E-NEWSLETTER: May 7, 2004

THE PASSING OF ARCHBISHOP ZAREH AZNAVOURIAN
His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, and His
Eminence Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate, the Religious and Executive
Councils of the Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America,
announce with deepest sadness the passing of His Eminence Archbishop Zareh
Aznavourian, on Friday, April 30, 2004, in Antelias, Lebanon. His Eminence
was 57 years old.
Archbishop Zareh faithfully served the Armenian Apostolic Church as an
ordained celibate priest for 38 years, most of which was spent at the
Catholicosate of the Holy See of Cilicia in Antelias, Lebanon, except for
two years in Rome where he pursued higher education and three years as the
Prelate of Cyprus.
Archbishop Zareh was an eminent teacher at the Cilician See’s
Theological Seminary and director of the Holy See’s Christian Education
Department. He was a noted composer of both religious and secular music, a
gifted scholar, a Biblical translator, and an author of textbooks and
commentaries. He was considered to be one of the most noted Biblical
scholars within the Armenian Church.
Many of our faithful came to know, love and respect him during the
various times he was in the United States for medical treatment. He lectured
last year during the Lenten Lectures series and he conducted the sacraments
and preached in some of our parishes. His death is a great loss for the
Armenian Church.
The Extreme Unction took place during a solemn Divine Liturgy service at
the Cathedral of St. Gregory the Illuminator in Antelias, on Monday, May 3.
Interment followed in the Zarehian Mausoleum of the Holy See of Cilicia.
Archbishop Oshagan traveled to Lebanon to participate in the services.

PRELATE WILL VISIT WAUKEGAN THIS WEEKEND
Upon his return from Lebanon, Archbishop Oshagan will immediately travel
to St. Paul Church of Waukegan, Illinois, where he will join the parish
members in welcoming their new priest, Rev. Fr. Arsen Kassabian at a banquet
Saturday evening. The parish will also bid a fond farewell to Rev. Fr.
Arshag Daghlian who has been serving the community as an outreach priest for
nearly fifteen years.
On Sunday Oshagan Srpazan will officiate at the Divine Liturgy and also
preside over the ordination of deacons, sub-deacons, and acolytes.

NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY
WILL CONVENE IN PHILADELPHIA
The National Representative Assembly (NRA) of the Eastern Prelacy will
convene in Philadelphia, May 19 through 21, during which time the clergy and
lay delegates will deliberate on current issues as well as long-range
planning for the future. The host church is St. Gregory the Illuminator, one
of the Eastern Prelacy’s largest and most vibrant parishes.
The NRA is the highest authority of the Armenian Apostolic Church of
America, and is charged with the task of supervising the ecclesiastical and
administrative bodies of the Eastern Prelacy. The first session will begin
Wednesday afternoon, May 19 and continue through Friday, May 21. The NRA
will conclude with a closing banquet Friday evening.
The Keynote Address will be delivered by Professor Vigen Guroian, who
will speak about The Armenian Christian Family Under Fire. Dr. Guroian is
professor of theology and ethics at Loyola College, Baltimore, Maryland.
Various coveted awards will be presented including: Woman of the Year,
to Mrs. Alice Sachaklian and the Spirit of Armenia award to Aram Hamparian.
K. Yervant Terzian will receive the Knight of Cilicia insignia issued by His
Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia.
For more details visit the Prelacy web-site:

PRELACY LADIES GUILD MOTHERS DAY
LUNCHEON ATTRACTS MANY
Once again the annual Mothers Day luncheon sponsored by the Prelacy
Ladies Guild (PLG) attracted an over-flow attendance from the tri-state area
and beyond at the St. Regis in midtown Manhattan.
In a surprise announcement the current PLG members were honored rather
than one individual as the Mother of the Year. V. Rev. Fr. Anoushavan
Tanielian, Vicar of the Prelacy, represented the Prelate, Archbishop
Oshagan, who was in Lebanon for the funeral of his spiritual brother,
Archbishop Zareh. Hayr Anoushavan explained how it was the wish of Srpazan
that the current members of the PLG be honored this year on the occasion of
the 30th anniversary of the Guild. In his message printed in the special
30th anniversary program booklet, His Eminence said: “This year’s luncheon
has special significance because it also marks the 30th anniversary of the
Prelacy Ladies Guild. It can be said that the Prelacy Ladies Guild has
fulfilled the duties of a mother for the Prelacy. For the past three decades
these dedicated and loving women have generously given their time,
resources, and talents to tend to the needs of the Prelacy. Just like a
loving mother, they have done this without any expectations of glory and
thanks. They have done it simply because of love.”

PRELACY EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
WILL DELIVER PAPER AT UCLA
Dr. Vazken Ghougassian, the Executive Director of the Prelacy, will be
traveling to California on Wednesday, May 12, where he will participate in
the UCLA international conference series on historic Armenian cities and
provinces. The conference will concentrate on the history and culture of the
Armenian communities of Iran from ancient to modern times. The three-day
conference will bring together an impressive gathering of scholars and
specialists.
Dr. Ghougassian, a graduate of Columbia University, will speak about
Armenian Rural Settlements in Central Iran, 17th to 19th Centuries. He is
the author of The Emergence of the Armenian Diocese of New Julfa in the 17th
Century, published by Scholars Press.
The conference is organized by Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, holder
of the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at
UCLA, and is co-sponsored by the Armenian Society (Iranahay Miutiun) of Los
Angeles and the UCLA International Institute, G.E. von Grunebaum Center for
Near Eastern Studies, and the Center for European and Russian Studies.
The conference program may be viewed at

DATEV SUMMER PROGRAM
BRINGS YOUTH TOGETHER
The annual summer program of the St. Gregory of Datev Institute brings
together junior and senior high school age students in one of the best youth
programs available. The Datev Summer Program will take place June 27 to July
4, at the St. Mary of Providence Center, Elverson, Pennsylvania. For
registration and information visit the Prelacy website at
and also read all the comments from
Datevatzies who have attended the program.
The Datev Institute is organized and sponsored by the Armenian Religious
Education Council (AREC) as part of the youth programs of the Eastern
Prelacy.
It has been a life-changing experience for many who have attended in the
past.

THIS SUNDAY MARKS APPARITION OF THE HOLY CROSS
According to the liturgical calendar of the Armenian Church this Sunday,
May 9, the Apparition of the Holy Cross (Yerevman Sourp Khachi). It is the
fifth Sunday of Hinounk and commemorates the apparition of the cross in
Jerusalem.
In the year 351, the sign of the cross was seen in the sky in Jerusalem,
stretching from Golgotha to the Mount of Olives. It remained for hours and
all the people of Jerusalem viewed it as it overshadowed the sun.
Awe-stricken at this miraculous sight, the faithful led by the clergy rushed
to church to offer their thanks to God. Patriarch Giuregh in a letter
addressed to Constantine of Byzantium, related this miraculous event and
advised him to remain firm in his faith. Only the Armenian and Greek
Churches observe the Feast of the Apparition of the Cross. The Greeks
celebrate it always on May 7 while the Armenians celebrate it on the fifth
Sunday of Easter (fourth Sunday after Easter). Just as the people of
Jerusalem did centuries ago, it has become a custom for people to go to
church on this feast day and glorify God.

THIS SUNDAY IS MOTHERS DAY
This Sunday is also Mothers Day. It is a day to honor our mothers and to
praise motherhood, and to remember those mothers who have passed on to the
eternal kingdom of God.

Many women have done excellently, but you surpass them all. (Proverbs 31:29)

http://www.armenianprelacy.org
www.armenianprelacy.org
www.uclaarmenian.org
www.armenianprelacy.org/datev.htm

Deadline of operation of casinos within communities

Azat Artsakh – Republic of Nagorno Karabakh (NKR)
May 5, 2004

DEADLINE OF OPERATION OF CASINOS WITHIN COMMUNITIES

Last year the National Assembly adopted the law on gambling and
playhouses according to which the owners of casinos were to move
casinos from the territories of the communities. This article of the
law is enacted since July 1, 2004. Before the adoption of the law
casinos operated in Karabakh, and their activity was regulated by
other legislative acts. Before the adoption of the law the National
Assembly raised the question of playhouses in Karabakh, which work
without licence and therefore do not pay state taxes. After the
adoption of the law we were informed at the Ministry of Finance that
after the payment of 600 thousand drams of licence fee the playhouses
received licences. According to the vice minister of finance Maxim
Hakobjanian, all over Karabakh 8 licenses were granted to 5 subjects.
The legal person wanting to open casinos at different places,
according to the law, pays the state levy and receives the licence for
each playhouse. Besides, if the casino will operate after 24:00, the
owner must pay additional 400 thousand drams state levy. According to
the head of the department of finance and economy of the City Hall of
Stepanakert Nairi Harutiunian, the additional fee was paid by 4 legal
persons. According to the article 169 of the Code of Administrative
Lawbreaking, illegal entrepreneurship is controlled by the tax
agencies. Against the 7 licenses granted in Stepanakert we counted
eight playhouses (which have signs), one of them does not operate. We
do not know how many playhouses operate without signs,
i.e. illegally. According to the law, operation without licence is
fined five times over the licence fee (5 x 600 thousand drams). By the
way, those legal persons who acquired licence presently, were not
fined although everyone knew that they operated before the autumn of
2003. Casinos are profitable business, therefore the owners must pay
adequate taxes to the state and the community budgets. However, people
are more interested in the risk of addiction to gambling than their
fiscal activities. Therefore the National Assembly maintained that
persons under 21 cannot enter a playhouse. People under 21 should be
refused entrance. We found out that the Ministry of Finance will
regulate this procedure. There is another circumstance. As it has
already been mentioned, July 1 is the deadline after which arcade
games and casinos may not operate within the territories of the
communities. We know that several owners of casinos have already
started the construction of new buildings outside the town. According
to the head of the architectural department of the City Hall of
Stepanakert Nwer Mikaelian, after the adoption of the law no area was
provided in Stepanakert for building casinos. The head of the NA
committee of finance and economy M. Danielian informed that not only
the casinos but also separate game machines will be forbidden to
operate in Stepanakert.

NAIRA HAYRUMIAN

American youth choir finds new friends in unknown Armenia

ArmeniaNow.com
April 30, 2004

Song Solidarity: American youth choir finds new friends in unknown Armenia

By Gayane Abrahamyan
ArmeniaNow arts reporter

`Song of Unity’, a week-long choir festival and the first to unite
American and Armenian youth, concluded April 24.

Directors from Armenia and America were impressed.

A secondary school choir from Lexington, Massachusetts was guests
participants with choirs from the Mother See St. Echmiadzin, the
Armenian General Benevolent Union’s House of Armenians in Nork, Guymri
Art School and Little Singers of Armenia.

The choral week was carried out by Yerevan Municipality and Little
Singers of Armenia children’s philharmonic society.

`The idea was born when the Lexington choir expressed a wish to visit
Armenia, so by using this small opportunity I decided to activate a
little bit the choral life of Armenia,’ said maestro Tigran Hekekyan.

The festival took place in Yerevan, Ashtarak and Gyumri and the days
were full of concerts and parties, joining hundreds of children.

`We didn’t know where we were coming, many of the parents were against
this journey but today I simply don’t want to return. People are so
kind here, hospitable and open-hearted,’ says Katya Dreyer-Oren, a
member of the Lexington choir.

The Lexington choir brought 30 of its choir’s 150 members. Some,
according to conductor Brian O’Connell, stayed at home after hearing
about political turmoil in Armenia.

`But we’re here and we can say for sure that there isn’t a more calm
and beautiful country in the world,’ O’Connell said.

Youngsters from overseas who had not even heard about Armenia, were
warmly singing Armenian spirituals such as `Surb-surb’ and `Hayr Mer’.

The concerts took place in concert halls and in old Armenian churches.

`The divine voices of Armenian Little Singers’ choir echoing in the
ancient church will always be in my head,’ O’Connell said. `They were
singing wonderfully and suddenly I was touched and didn’t feel how
tears started falling from my eyes.’

Besides the cultural mission, the Lexington choir arrived in Armenia
for also charity purposes, bringing stationery, clothes, musical
instruments and other gifts, the majority of which were given to
Gyumri’s Huis (Hope) orphanage.

`I’ll never forget the sad eyes of the orphans, the same way as I
won’t forget our journey, Armenia’s unique nature and the warm and
dear friends,’ says 17 year old Ryan Moore.

The festival concluded with performances at the Genocide Memorial

The last performance of the choir festival took place April 23 at the
Genocide Memorial in Yerevan.

That was supposed to be the last joint event, however in the evening
the youngsters made an unexpected decision. On the night of April 24
at 2 AM before going to the airport they visited Tsitsernakaberd once
again.

‘We haven’t heard about the Genocide and the sorrow was so great that
before leaving we wanted to pay homage to the victims of that evil
once again,’ Ryan Moore said.

Under the night sky full of stars the group of singers was walking up
towards the memorial, the candles in their hands were flashing in the
dark like lighthouses. They sang again near the eternal fire and the
echoes of their songs spread on the sleeping town.

`I was astonished how foreign children could perceive so deeply our
tragedy. They were standing still and quiet before the fire for about
half an hour,’ says the artistic director of Little Singers of Armenia
choir Tigran Hekekyan.

http://www.armenianow.com/2004/april30/arts/choir/

Noah’s Ark Found? Turkey Expedition Planned for Summer

Noah’s Ark Found? Turkey Expedition Planned for Summer

Hillary Mayell
for National Geographic News
April 27, 2004

Photo caption: This satellite image of Mount Ararat in Turkey shows what
looks like a large object emerging from melting snow. An expedition is
planned to visit the site to see if it is Noah’s Ark.

Image Courtesy Shamrock/DigitalGlobe

Satellite pictures taken last summer of Mount Ararat in Turkey may
reveal the final resting place of Noah’s ark, according to Daniel
McGivern, the businessman and Christian activist behind a planned summer
2004 expedition to investigate the site.
“We’re telling people we’re 98 percent sure,” said McGivern, a member of
the Hawaii Christian Coalition. “In one image we saw the beams, saw the
wood. I’m convinced that the excavation of the object and the results of
tests run on any collected samples will prove that it is Noah’s ark. ”

McGivern wrote a list in his Bible more than 20 years ago of ten great
projects. Finding Noah’s ark was at the top of his list.

McGivern began his quest in earnest in 1995, when the publication of a
book on the topic moved him to arrange for satellite images to be taken
of Mount Ararat.

Attempts to take satellite images in previous years had been foiled by
clouds, unavailability of imaging equipment, and lack of image
resolution. But the attempts had helped pinpoint the location. In the
summer of 2003, everything came together.

“Last year was the hottest summer in Europe since 1500; more than 21,000
people died of the heat wave,” McGivern said. “The summer melt was far
more extensive than it has been in years.”

DigitalGlobe, a commercial satellite-imagery company, confirmed that
they took the images that McGivern is using.

An international team of archaeologists, forensic scientists,
geologists, glaciologists, and others is being recruited to investigate
the site sometime between July 15 and August 15.

Ahmet Arslan, a professor in Turkey who has climbed the mountain 50
times in 40 years, will lead the expedition. Arslan reported an
eyewitness sighting of the ark and took a photograph in 1989 from about
220 yards (200 meters) away. However, he couldn’t get any closer, and
the picture is not definitive.

“We hope to assemble what we’re calling the Dream Team,” Arslan said.
“The slopes are very, very harsh and dangerous on the northern face-it
is extremely challenging, mentally and physically.”

Noah’s Ark

The story of Noah’s ark is told in the Book of Genesis. It says God saw
how corrupt the Earth had become and decided to “bring floodwaters on
the Earth to destroy all life under the heavens.” God is said to have
told Noah, an honorable man, to build an ark 450 feet (137 meters) long,
75 feet (23 meters) wide, and 45 feet (14 meters) high, and fill it with
two of every species on the Earth. It reportedly rained for 40 days and
40 nights. After about seven months, the waters receded, and the ark
came to rest, according to the Bible.

Three major world religions-Christianity, Judaism, and Islam-believe in
Noah and his ark. Reports of ark sightings have been numerous. Witnesses
often describe an old wooden structure sticking out of the snow and ice
near the summit of Mount Ararat.

Despite the numerous sightings and rumors-of pictures taken by the CIA
and locked in vaults, of lost photographs taken by a Russian expedition
at the behest of Tsar Nicholas Alexander in 1918-no scientific evidence
of the ark has emerged.

“On the one hand, I’m hopeful. On the other hand, I’m very skeptical” of
the validity of the satellite images, said Rex Geissler, president of
ArcImaging (Archaeological Imaging Research Consortium). “There is no
publicly available picture that readily shows a man-made object that has
any clarity whatsoever . Some of the photos are outright
misrepresentations, non-scientific, and do not prove anything.

“We think that with the hundreds of explorers who have visited the
region, if the ark was jutting out of the ice, it would be obvious.”

ArcImaging was the first organization to receive permission from the
Turkish government to survey the mountain since 1981. The archaeological
research organization conducted a preliminary investigation of the
icecap using ground-penetrating radar in 2001.

The Search Continues

The Bible states that Noah landed in the region of the ancient kingdom
Urartu. Mount Ararat (its name probably a corrupted version of Urartu)
has been the focus of those seeking the ark because it-at 17,000 feet
(5,165 meters)-is the highest point in the area.

A volcanic mountain, Ararat is covered by an icecap from 14,000 feet
(4,300 meters) to 17,000 feet (5,200 meters). The icecap is about 17
square miles (44 square kilometers) in size and is as deep as 300 feet
(90 meters).

Known to locals as Agri Dagi-Turkish for “mountain of pain”- Ararat is
not easy to access. Located in eastern Turkey-close to the borders of
Armenia and Iran, and only 150 miles (240 kilometers) from Iraq-the
region is politically volatile and often dangerous. Much of the region
is part of a military zone, and getting permission to explore it is
extremely difficult.

The ArcImaging team hopes to visit the region to continue their mapping
of the icecap this summer.

McGivern is optimistic his group will also be on the face of the
mountain this summer. He and Arslan met last week with the Turkish
ambassador to the U.S. Arslan, who at one time worked in the Turkish
prime minister’s office, plans to meet with the prime minister next
week.

“The ark is broken into a minimum of three pieces, up to six, from a
huge earthquake that occurred in 1840. But it’s been miraculously
preserved. The satellite imagery shows vertical beams, and one
horizontal beam,” McGivern said.

© 2004 National Geographic Society. All rights reserved.