Armenian Envoy To India Denounces 1915 Genocide; Says People Still Waiting For Justice

India –
Written By

Ajeet Kumar

Calling the Armenian genocide "The Sin of Ottoman Empire", the Armenian ambassador to India again raised the voice for the millions of people who were killed around a century ago. Armenian ambassador Yuri Babakhanian, while speaking at a book launch event on Sunday, April 24, reiterated his demand to sue the country responsible for the mass killing of Armenians in 1915. He said the victims are still waiting for justice. Notably, the strong condemnation from Babakhanian came when he was speaking at the book launch of the "Armenian Genocide, The Sin of Ottoman Empire".

The Armenian genocide was considered the systematic destruction of the Armenian people and identity in the Ottoman Empire during World War I. It was estimated that more than 1.5 million Armenians were killed during the First World War.
"…More than a century has passed since the Armenian Genocide, the deprivation of the Armenian people of their homeland and property. However, the entire Armenian people are still waiting for justice because the crime of genocide cannot have a statute of limitations," he said. According to Yuri Babakhanian, if the first genocide of the 20th century had been recognized and condemned by the then world leaders, there would have been no subsequent genocide at all. 

Babakhanian called the genocide– "a terrible tragedy", and added about half of the Armenians lost their homeland and their family members during the mass killings. "It is also the history of survival and struggle," he said and added, "It was a fight in the name of life, struggle to preserve identity, struggle not to lose the memory of the nation, and the right and the opportunity to pass it on to the next generations." He appealed to the other countries to condemn the genocide and urged the world leaders to get united in the matter in order to prevent such incidents in the future. As of now, around 33 countries including, the United States, Germany, France, Italy, Canada, Uruguay and Brazil, formally recognized the Armenian Genocide. 

Interestingly, Russia, which has escalated the brutal war against its neighbouring country, Ukraine, also recognised the incident as "genocide".On the other hand, Turkey acknowledges that many died in that period, but it says that the death toll is inflated. It considers the deaths resulting from civil unrest. According to the Turkish government, Muslim Turks were also killed. On Sunday, US President Joe Biden also condemned the incident and used the anniversary to appeal to the leaders to lay down a set of principles for foreign policy against genocide. In a reply, Turkey's Foreign Ministry issued a counter-statement saying, “Statements that are incompatible with historical facts and international law regarding the events of 1915 are not valid."

Armenian, Lithuanian and Israeli boxing teams hold training camp in Tsaghkadzor

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 13:31,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian National Boxing Team is holding a training camp in Tsaghkadzor ahead of the May 21-31 European Championship that will take place in Yerevan.

The national boxing teams of Lithuania and Israel have joined the training camp, the Boxing Federation of Armenia said.

One more training camp will be held before the championship kicks off.

Nizhny Novgorod TV tower lit up in Armenian flag colors

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 15:19,

YEREVAN, APRIL 21, ARMENPRESS. The TV tower of the Russian city of Nizhny Novgorod was lit up in the Armenian flag colors on the occasion of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan’s visit.

[See video]
Pashinyan visited Nizhny Novgorod on April 20 as part of his official trip to Russia.

In Nizhny Novgorod, the Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia first visited the factory of GAZ Automobile Plant, where, accompanied by the chairman of the company Vadim Sorokin, toured the plant, got acquainted with the products.

Afterwards, the Prime Minister visited the Nizhny Novgorod Kremlin, laid a wreath at the eternal flame, paying tribute to the memory of the victims of the Great Patriotic War. Nikol Pashinyan toured the Kremlin State Art Museum, the Bell Tower, the Alley of Military Glory, and the Cathedral of Archangel Michael.

The Prime Minister had a private conversation with the Governor of Nizhny Novgorod Oblast Gleb Nikitin, discussed the possibilities of developing cooperation in various fields.

The Prime Minister also visited the Armenian Holy Savior Church, lit candles.

Nikol Pashinyan concluded his visit to Nizhny Novgorod with a meeting with representatives of the Armenian community, during which the Prime Minister referred to the results of his official visit to Russia and answered various questions, which referred to the situation around Nagorno Karabakh, economic cooperation between Armenia and Russia, implementation of investment programs in the Motherland and other topics.

Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen of Armenia, China Foreign Trade Center sign agreement on enhancing cooperation

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 17:12,

YEREVAN, APRIL 20, ARMENPRESS. The Union of Manufacturers and Businessmen of Armenia (UMBA) and the China Foreign Trade Center signed an agreement on cooperation on April 20.

Under the agreement, the sides will aim at establishing mutually-beneficial relations in the business sector between the two countries and enhance lasting cooperation, implement joint projects, namely organizing the China Import and Export Fair (Canton Fair).

UMBA President Arsen Ghazaryan and China Foreign Trade Center Deputy Director-General, Deputy Secretary-General of the Canton Fair Ye Jijiang signed the agreement at the event.

The signing of the agreement will enable to more comprehensively explore and study and advantages of the Chinese market, the opportunities for enhancing bilateral cooperation and increasing mutual trade turnover, according to Arsen Ghazaryan.

“Despite the difficult times related to various circumstances, we must try to strengthen and deepen our economic relations as much as possible,” said Yu Yi, Deputy Director General of the Foreign Affairs Office of the Canton Fair.

Yi said that Armenian products are highly valued in the Chinese market and that direct cooperation with Armenian colleagues and the agreement will boost bilateral partnership expansion.

Armenia’s Culinary History Hides in a Museum’s Manuscripts




Homemade gata, a traditional Armenian pastry. THE PICTURE PANTRY / ALAMY

AT THE MATENADARAN, A MUSEUM in Armenia’s capital city of Yerevan, is a manuscript written in Middle Armenian, an archaic version of the language used today. It’s a little mysterious, but researchers believe it presents the recipe for a cake or sweet bread: The list of ingredients seems to contain sugar, flour, and nuts. Another manuscript, probably even older, has a diagram of a cow and its cuts on one of the yellow stained pages.

The Matenadaran (known in English as the Mesrop Mashtots Institute of Ancient Manuscripts) contains over 23,000 of Armenia’s oldest, rarest, and most valuable documents. Just 10 of these manuscripts relate to food. Few researchers have shown interest in them, with one notable exception: Sonia Tashjian. Tashjian, a researcher and leading expert in Armenian cuisine, is one of the most devoted visitors to the Matenadaran. Its modest collection of food manuscripts is helping her discover how Armenians ate and lived in centuries past. Guided by documents like these, she aims to recover an essential part of the country’s threatened history.

An ancient cow in an ancient manuscript. DAVID EGUI

Born in Anjar, a small village of Armenians in Lebanon, Tashjian moved to Armenia when she was 20. There she began a quest to define Armenian food and identify its influence. Fueled by her discoveries, she hosted a TV show named Grandma’s Cuisine. “Nothing says as much about Armenian identity as its culinary heritage,” she says. According to her, food has become a vital integrity factor for millions of Armenians worldwide.00

Armenians have survived repeated annihilation attempts. Byzantines, Persians, and Seljuks all conquered them before Ottoman Turks colonized Armenia in the 16th century. Armenians suffered large-scale massacres in the 19th century. Then came the genocide of 1915-1917, which claimed more than a million lives. For Armenians, ancient manuscripts aren’t just important. These are the documents that attest to their existence and identity as a people.

Hundreds of thousands of genocide survivors found refuge in various parts of the world, resulting in a diaspora of more than 7 million Armenians in more than 100 countries—compared with the 3 million who live in Armenia. Many witnessed their history and customs being threatened to the point of potential extinction. Cooking their ancestors’ recipes around the world has been a way to keep the flame alive.

Herbs and flowers collected in Armenia. DAVID EGUI

“Because gastronomy, unlike other fields, is a knowledge transferring from one generation to another”—or “from mouth to ear,” as Tashjian prefers to say—“it remains steady.”

While cookbooks and recipes are scarce in Armenian museums, Tashjian has found new methods of unearthing culinary history through her work at Sardarapat Ethnographic Museum. “My main and irreplaceable source is the notebooks from the genocide survivors,” she says. “Many wrote memoirs after the 1915 genocide, reminiscing [about] life in their lost birthplaces. There are a lot of wonderful ethnographic themes in those books, mainly recipes and cooking techniques.”

In addition to the exodus caused by the genocide, many Armenians left during the dissolution of the Soviet Union, when their country, a former Soviet Socialist Republic, gained independence. Each diasporic community is part of what Armenian people worldwide call “the Armenian nation,” a collective that transcends geographical borders. “That’s why it is challenging to address the question of our gastronomy,” says Arpine Asryan, a staff researcher at the Matenadaran. It also explains why it is hard to find official publications that focus on Armenian cuisine—especially those published in the Armenian alphabet (developed around 405 by Mesrop Mashtots).

A manuscript with a recipe, probably for cake. DAVID EGUI

The first culinary study of Armenian manuscripts, “Dishes and Feasts in Ancient Armenia,” was published at the beginning of the 20th century by Mekhitarists church father Vardan Hatsun. In 2021, Hayk Hambardzumyan, a specialist in Armenian literature and head of the Publishing Department at the Matenadaran, wrote about the dishes featured in the Armenian epic David of Sassoun. He highlighted dishes such as pilaf rice and jazhik, a cottage-like cheese, considered to be the food of the poor in the epic.

In 2014, UNESCO added Armenian lavash to its Intangible Cultural Heritage list. The flatbread, eaten in the South Caucasus and Western Asia, is part of a flatbread-making culture in Azerbaijan, Iran, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Turkey. In situations like these, the manuscripts and ancient recipe books collected by Matenadaran become crucial. “It’s a good reason to look through the sources and find out who had or prepared that very dish first,” says Asryan. “When one country applies for a particular dish, others try to prove that that dish doesn’t belong to only that country. And at that very moment, they all refer to the old cookbooks, manuscripts, and recipes to prove their point.”

The Matenadaran façade. DAVID EGUI

According to Asryan, many Syriac Armenians moved to Armenia in the wake of the humanitarian crisis resulting from Syria’s civil war. Armenians have also come back from Iran and Lebanon in recent years. “Nowadays, our cuisine has many variations thanks to [the return of] Iranian Armenians, for instance, brought oriental elements, mainly the culture of spices. Armenians create national dishes in every country by adapting to its food capacity and availability,” she says. Many who returned to Armenia also brought back family manuscripts and recipe books that have been kept for years, which also help tell the story of Armenian cuisine and how it influenced many cuisines around the world. Tashjian’s job is to bring together these pieces that, though scattered around the world and often attributed to other cultures, bear Armenian fingerprints.

“I gather the recipes of our historical fatherland, from western to eastern Armenia regions, passing through Nagorno-Karabakh, old Cilicia, Polis and around. But also from Iran and Georgia Armenian regions, where the Armenians have lived for centuries,” Tashjian says. She then tries to replicate the dishes as accurately as she can and publishes them on sites such as Houshamadyan, a digital project that revives Ottomanian-Armenian culture.

By interviewing genocide survivors, Tashjian can track down family documents that preserve Armenia’s cultural and culinary legacy. For a nation forced to split across the world, her job, she explains, is to get all the Armenian dishes back on the table.


https://www.atlasobscura.com/articles/armenian-food-history-manuscripts

Majority Leader accuses opposition in exploiting Artsakh issue to carry out coup d’état

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 10:49,

YEREVAN, APRIL 12, ARMENPRESS. Parliament Majority Leader Hayk Konjoryan (Civil Contract) accused the opposition in carrying out a “provocation” by boycotting the parliament session and traveling to Artsakh. He accused the opposition in exploiting the Artsakh issue and the security issues in Armenia to carry out a coup d’état in Armenia.

Konjoryan cited Hayastan faction leader Seyran Ohanyan’s post-election statement where he’d said that entering to parliament is a trench for them, and they must fight in that trench. Konjoryan accused the opposition in attempting to de-value the parliament and paralyze it. “And perhaps they think they have solved their objective in this trench and now they are traveling to Artsakh to perhaps take another trench, most likely against the government and people of Armenia,” Konjoryan said.

Speaking on the opposition bringing the flag of Artsakh to parliament, Konjoryan said he doesn’t understand the demonstrative installation of the flag in Armenia against anyone.

“The flag of Artsakh and Artsakh is in the hearts and thoughts of everyone. Our people sacrificed its finest children for Artsakh. And the opposition ought to install the flag of Artsakh, defend the interests of Artsakh where it is needed to raise awareness on the issue of the rights and freedoms of our compatriots in Artsakh. But what does this opposition do? They boycott all inter-parliamentary platforms where they ought to go and defend the rights and interests of Artsakh and its people, so to say raise the flag of Artsakh there for the world to see,” Konjoryan said, accusing the opposition in not fulfilling the mandate they received from the people.

“Today, with this step the parliamentary opposition is not defending Artsakh but rather making a provocation, it is escalating the security issues of Artsakh and of Armenians,” Konjoryan said.

He further accused the opposition in exploiting the Artsakh issue and the security issues for carrying out a coup d’état in Armenia. “Today they are entrenching in the domestic-political life of Artsakh to generate more domestic intrigues. But we, with our people, won’t allow this,” Konjoryan said.

Lavrov wants clarification on Azerbaijan’s incursion into Karabakh

PanARMENIAN
Armenia – April 8 2022

PanARMENIAN.Net - Russian peacekeeping contingent will continue their activity in Nagorno-Karabakh in strict accordance with its mandate, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told his Armenian counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan on Friday, April 8, TASS reports.

Lavrov noted that Moscow will continue to ensure the implementation of the trilateral agreements between the leaders of Russia, Azerbaijan and Armenia on Nagorno-Karabakh, including the activities of the Russian peacekeeping contingent.

"There are three groups of agreements on the Karabakh settlement, reached at the highest level in November 2020, in January and November 2021. And we will continue to ensure the implementation of these agreements, including the activities of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Karabakh in strict accordance with its mandate," he said.

According to Lavrov, the circumstances of the Azerbaijani incursion into the area of responsibility of Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh are not completely clear to Russia.

"We are convinced that Armenia trusts the Russian peacekeeping contingent, and the occasional calls for the responsibility of the Russian side and an internal investigation do not reflect a real attitude to the huge role of Russian peacekeepers in Karabakh," the Russian diplomat said, referring to calls from Yerevan urging Russia to return the status quo.

Also Friday, Lavrov said Russia will continue to assist Armenia in ensuring the protection of its borders and strengthening the country's defense capability.

Azerbaijan has broken into Nagorno-Karabakh, and the incursion has left three Armenian soldiers dead and at least 14 others injured. On March 24, Azerbaijan stormed into the zone of the responsibility of the Russian peacekeepers stationed in the area and is refusing to completely withdraw its forces from strategic heights.

Armenian Ambassador presents credentials to President of Israel

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 12:05, 8 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Ambassador of Armenia to Israel Arman Hakobyan presented his credentials to President Isaac Herzog, Israel National News reports.

President Herzog and Ambassador Hakobyan discussed the 1,700-year-old history of the Armenian community in the Holy Land and affinities between Jews and Armenians as peoples with independent states and worldwide Diasporas.

President Herzog noted that his father, the late Sixth President of Israel, Chaim Herzog, received the credentials of the first Armenian Ambassador to Israel after the establishment of diplomatic relations. The Ambassador extended President Vahagn Khachaturyan’s personal greetings to the President and the people of Israel.

At the end of the ceremony President Herzog invited the Armenian Ambassador to walk down to the reflecting pool with him, to show him the works of ceramic art by Armenian-Jerusalemite artist Marie Balian introduced to the President’s Residence by the President’s late mother, former First Lady Aura Herzog.

Armenia to hold census in October 2022

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 14:32, 8 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 8, ARMENPRESS. Armenia will hold a census on October 13-22, 2022.

Deputy Prime Minister Hambardzum Matevosyan chaired a session on April 8 on the preparations for the national census.

The preparation works are organized within the framework of the guidelines of the UN and the UN European Economic Commission 2020 round censuses.

The questionnaire for the census was also discussed.

Discussions on Parukh didn’t lead to common assessment – PM on Brussels meeting

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 15:25, 7 April, 2022

YEREVAN, APRIL 7, ARMENPRESS. During the Brussels meeting between Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and European Council President Charles Michel the worsening of the security environment in Nagorno Karabakh was also addressed, particularly the incidents in Parukh, however these discussions didn’t lead to a common assessment of the situation.

“Naturally there was a discussion around the worsening of the security environment in Nagorno Karabakh, particularly the incidents in Parukh,” Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said at the Cabinet meeting. “But these discussions didn’t lead to a common assessment of the situation. I myself didn’t find the further discussion of this topic to be appropriate in the Brussels platform because nevertheless this is about the Azerbaijani military invasion into the area of responsibility of the Russian peacekeeping contingent in Nagorno Karabakh, and this issue ought to be discussed with participation of our Russian colleagues, which we are doing and will continue to do.”

Reiterating the Armenian side’s stance over this issue, the PM added: “Therefore we expect that the Russian peacekeepers in Nagorno Karabakh will take steps to ensure the withdrawal of the Azerbaijani military units from their zone of responsibility. We also attach importance to holding an investigation into the adequateness or potential inaction of the Russian peacekeeping troops’ actions during the course of development of the events and in the theater of operations.”

The PM said he spoke about this during his phone call with Russian President Vladimir Putin.