Armenpress: Malkhas Amoyan defeats Turkish wrestler becoming three-time European champion

 21:48,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 13, ARMENPRESS. Member of the Armenian Greco-Roman wrestling team, Malkhas Amoyan has won the title of European champion for the third time at the European Greco-Roman Wrestling Championships held in the Romanian capital, Bucharest.

 Malkhas Amoyan competed against Turkish wrestler Emre Basar in the final of the 77 kg weight category of the European Greco-Roman Wrestling Championship. Amoyan secured the European gold medal for the third time with a 7:0 victory over his opponent.

The California Courier Online, February 15, 2024

The California
Courier Online, February 15, 2024

 

1-         We Must Keep
the Memory and Dream Alive

            To Recover
Artsakh and Western Armenia

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

2-         5,000-year-old
human shelter, bones and blades discovered in Armenia

3-         Mayor Bass,
Council President Krekorian Lead Groundbreaking for TUMO L.A.

4-         Experimental
Cinema and Soviet Ideology Versus National Dignity:

            Two Films
by Hamo Bek-Nazaryan

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************

 

1-         We Must Keep
the Memory and Dream Alive

            To Recover
Artsakh and Western Armenia

            By Harut
Sassounian

            Publisher,
The California
Courier

            www.TheCaliforniaCourier.com

 

There is a dispute among those who want to struggle for the
recovery of Artsakh and those who say that Artsakh is lost forever and that we
should forget about it. The latter shameful position is promoted by the current
regime in Armenia
which is responsible for losing Artsakh and is now doing everything possible to
bury its memory.

I would like to share with the readers my decades-long view
on the recovery of Western Armenia and its
parallels to actions we need to take for Artsakh.

After every lecture I have given around the world on the
Armenian Genocide and Western Armenia, some of
the attendees immediately ask: what is the point of pursuing such a lost cause,
particularly since the powerful Turkish military is occupying our historic
lands?

I respond by saying that the worst thing Armenians can do
now is to forget about Western Armenia. That
is the surest way of losing forever our Armenian territories.

In addition to doing everything possible now, Armenians need
to transmit to the next generation our demands for Artsakh and Western Armenia in order to keep the dream alive. If we
don’t, our future generations, not knowing anything about our historic lands,
will have no idea that they belong to us. Consequently, even if someday the geostrategic
situation on the ground changes and an opportunity arises to recover our lost
lands, our future generations will not show any interest in them.

Remember that for over 2,000 years, the Jewish people had
lost their homeland and were dispersed throughout the world. The succeeding
Jewish generations passed on the knowledge of their homeland to their
offspring. For more than 2,000 years, parents transmitted the memory of Jerusalem and Israel to their children and they
in turn passed it on to their children, and so on. They did not forget their
roots and history while living in exile in Russia,
Europe and elsewhere. They repeatedly told
their children and grandchildren, ‘next year in Jerusalem!’ Two thousand years later, when
the opportunity arose to recover their lands, they took advantage of it and
realized their long-held dream. Palestinians, who were and still are forcefully
displaced from their lands, are in a similar situation. They too are struggling
to keep their dream alive and are proclaiming the right of return to their
ancestral homes.

If Jewish people can keep their dream of returning to their
homeland for 2,000 years, why can’t Armenians keep their dream alive of
returning to Artsakh and Western Armenia
someday? Armenians should tell their children and grandchildren: ‘next year in
Shushi’ and ‘next year in Van’.

The question is: how can Armenians return to their lands
someday if powerful enemies are occupying Artsakh and Western
Armenia? We should not forget that nothing remains constant forever.
There is not a single country in the world that has had the same boundaries
since the beginning of history. Over the years, some countries have enlarged
their borders, while others lost their territories. Some have become large
empires, while others have disappeared from the face of the earth. But one
thing is clear: No one can claim that today’s boundaries of Azerbaijan and Turkey will remain the same
forever. Just 100 years ago, the vast and powerful Ottoman Empire was reduced
to the much smaller territory of the Republic
of Turkey. Even though it
is not possible to predict the exact date when the boundaries of Azerbaijan and Turkey will change, they will
certainly not remain the same. How will such changes come about? There are
several scenarios, such as regional wars, even world war, civil war, and
nuclear or other types of disasters. Such events have happened in the past and
will surely happen again in the future.

When changes on the ground do take place, will future
generations of Armenians know and have the memory that Artsakh and Western Armenia are part of their historic homeland or
will they be clueless, having never heard of Shushi and Van? If they are
deprived of that knowledge, when opportunities arise in the future, even if an
unlikely benevolent Azeri or Turkish leader returns those lands to our
grandchildren, they will not be interested in them, since they had never heard
of them.

In conclusion, my advice is to keep the dream alive. While
we are deprived of our lands due to the actions of our enemies, it is up to us
not to lose the memory and dream of someday returning to our lands. Let’s pass
on our demands to future generations. The enemy took away our lands, but did
not and cannot take away our memory. By forgetting about our historic lands, we
ourselves will be helping our enemies put the final stone on the grave of our
cause!

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
2-         5,000-year-old human shelter,
bones and blades discovered in Armenia

By Brendan Rascius

 

(Sacramento
Bee)—Researchers in Armenia
recently uncovered a human shelter filled with artifacts that dates back
thousands of years.

The ancient dwelling was discovered during the
archaeological exploration of a rock shelter in the Yeghegis
Valley in central Armenia.

The shelter — found in 2020 — featured a collapsed roof and
wall-like structure, which appeared to have ancient origins, according to a
study published on February 1 in the Journal Antiquity.

In 2022, a 6-foot-deep trench was dug next to the shelter
entrance, revealing several distinct layers littered with signs of human
activity.

Approximately 8,000 animal bone shards were found at the
site, most of which belonged to goats and sheep, while others belonged to pigs,
deer and cattle. An even smaller portion were traced to canines and bears

The bone shards from four separate layers were subjected to
radiocarbon dating — the oldest of which dated back over 5,300 years.

Through this technique, researchers were able to estimate
that the site was occupied by humans for at least 300 years.

About 2,000 other artifacts were also found, including
pieces of copper, obsidian blades, beads and pottery.

“Preliminary results from the Yeghegis rockshelter
underscore the potential of this site to provide important insights into human
lifeways during the Chalcolithic,” which is also known as the Copper Age,
researchers said.

Additional excavations are planned to further explore the
site to shed light on ancient human activity in the region.

 

************************************************************************************************************************************************
3-         Mayor Bass, Council President
Krekorian Lead Groundbreaking for TUMO L.A.

 

Los Angeles Mayor Karen Bass was on hand for the
groundbreaking ceremony at the future home of the TUMO
Center for Creative Technologies L.A.
headquarters in North Hollywood, located at 4146 Lankershim Boulevard.

“We are committed to empowering Los Angeles’ next generation of youth to gain
skills that will prepare them for jobs in the technology industry,” said Mayor
Bass.

“TUMO LA will provide much needed design and technology
education to local youth through after school and weekend programs completely
free of charge. This Center will allow Los
Angeles youth to maximize their potential by
discovering their passions for creative technologies and building the
cutting-edge skills essential for navigating the ever-evolving digital world,”
Bass added.

Mayor Bass was joined by L.A. City Council President Paul
Krekorian, Former Assemblymember Adrin Nazarian, who is running for a Los
Angeles City Council seat in district 2, and TUMO Founder Sam Simonian at the
ceremony.

“The creation of TUMO in the East San Fernando Valley will
bring much needed creative and educational resources to low income youth and
teenagers that would otherwise not be exposed to the fantastic learning
opportunities that TUMO creates” said Krekorian. “This center will shape the
next generation of creative leaders that will keep our entertainment industry
strong and thriving.”

TUMO LA will provide much needed design and technology
education to local teens for after school and weekend programs completely free
of charge. TUMO centers globally serve more than 25,000 teens each week, in 13
centers across nine countries.

This first TUMO center in the United
States was made possible through a $23.25 million dollar
grant from the State of California, secured by
former Assemblymember Nazarian, as well as an additional $3 million dollars in
Community Development Block Grand funds from the City of Los Angeles, secured by Krekorian.

“As a former State Assemblymember of the East San Fernando
Valley, I am proud to announce the establishment of a TUMO
Technology Learning
Center in North
Hollywood. The TUMO
Technology Learning
Center focuses on placing
teenagers, aged 12 to 18 years, in control of their learning experiences and
enabling them to unlock their full potential by identifying their passions and
equipping them with the skills necessary to shape their future. This Center
will create life-changing experiences for our children and build the next
generation of leaders for our communities” said Nazarian.

The TUMO
Center for Creative
Technologies is a free-of-charge educational program that puts teenagers in
charge of their own learning.

Founded by engineer and entrepreneur Sam Simonian, TUMO’s
mission is to allow teens to maximize their potential by discovering their
passions and building the skills and self-confidence required to shape their
future.

This program offers free education and training to teens in
14 different subjects, from music, filmmaking and animation to programming,
robotics and 3D modeling.

 

**********************************************************************************************************************************************

4-         Experimental
Cinema and Soviet Ideology Versus National Dignity:

            Two Films
by Hamo Bek-Nazaryan

 

By Lucine Kasbarian

 

NYC’s Museum of Modern Art (MoMA) in recent weeks screened two
Armenian films: “The House on the Volcano” (1928) and “Land of Nairi”
(1930) directed by Hamo Bek-Nazaryan, widely considered the “founding father of
Soviet Armenian cinema.” Both films were silent with Russian, Armenian and
English intertitles and/or subtitles and accompanying music. Both contained
staged material as well as actual documentary, location footage in Baku and Armenia.

Of the many films created by Bek-Nazaryan and other Armenian
avant-garde film auteurs such as Ardavasd Peleshian, MoMA selected the above
two films for its screening showcase with the aid of a translator, Director of
the National Cinema Center of Armenia Shushanik Mirzakhanyan.

From a storytelling standpoint, “A House on a Volcano” is a
historical-melodrama-meets-disaster-film chronicling the lives and struggles of
Armenian and Tatar oil refinery laborers and their Armenian bosses’ brutal
suppression of an oil worker’s strike in pre-Soviet Baku (in what is
present-day Azerbaijan).

The title of the film refers to the highly flammable gas
leaks that circulated under the petroleum fields where the management knowingly
and precariously built nearby housing for their laborers and families. In
graphic detail, these seemingly dispensable workers were shown to be toiling 12
hour shifts a day under hazardous conditions.

The film plot, rife with Machiavellian machinations, creates
an environment of accumulative intrigues which culminate in a crashing
crescendo and chilling finale.

From a visual standpoint, “The House on a Volcano” is a
stunning, gritty, mesmerizing art film one doesn’t soon forget. Even today,
nearly 100 years after the film was produced, the close-up images of faces,
places and machines remain arresting. Creative set designs, offset in black and
white, are inventively employed using shading and light to accent scene compositions.
The repetitive motions of industrial gears grinding and oil derrick pumps
plunging into the black earth are in equal parts rhythmical, hypnotic and
terrifying. The death-defying work undertaken by the laborers is frighteningly
and effectively portrayed. According to restorer Galstyan, some movie sets were
deliberately lit on fire for actors to run through and be filmed in real time.
Viewing “The House on a Volcano” in the Millennium, one can recognize many
manners of post-modernist industrial worker and labor union imagery the world
later came to associate as uniquely Soviet.

From an ideological standpoint, the film is a Soviet
propagandist’s dream come true. Bek-Nazaryan constructs a plot that plays out a
specific vision of how racial and class divides are at the root of all evil.
Alas, students of history know too well how the overthrowing of one predominant
or exploitative group, class or race is often replaced by another, also quite
true during the Communist Revolution. In a bid to mandate Soviet brotherhood
over national unity, we see browbeaten Armenian and Tatar oil workers
overcoming their ethnic differences and joining forces to overpower their
malicious Armenian overlords—even when Armenian laborers are simultaneously
suspected of being subversives who will serve their exploitative masters at the
expense of their enslavement just to stick it to the Tatar-Azeris. Pun
intended, the actors were almost uniformly striking (not just for going on
strike) for their prominent ethnic physical features, frequently rough, coarse
or ghoulish. The film’s visual interplay between light and dark often cast
shadows on the player’s faces, giving them a dark tone, which served the
widespread notion that there was a desire by the Soviets to pejoratively portray
Armenians as the “negroes” of the soon-to-be Soviet Union.

What is telling is that during the early 20th century oil
boom of Baku,
there were many more Turkic and Jewish oil tycoons than Armenian ones. Even so,
Bek-Nazaryan chose to make the villains in “The House on a Volcano” an Armenian
oil baron and his cronies.

The  premise of “Land Of Nairi”
was to show the obstacles that Armenia
had to face and overcome as it was altered from an independent republic to a
Soviet state. Bek-Nazaryan used many of the same sorts of filmmaking techniques
as he did in “The House on a Volcano”. Nairi being one of the ancient names for
Armenia, the main character
of this film was Armenia
itself. Bek-Nazaryan created a number of raw, unrefined tableaus to demonstrate
the challenges of rebuilding a nation and conspicuously steered clear of
depicting the many glorious panoramas that characterize the Armenian homeland.

To illustrate a morally bankrupt aspect of capitalism,
Bek-Nazaryan employed ham-handed concepts to depict how American relief aid to
Armenians after WWI was both inadequate and patronizing. As flocks of peasants
opened parcels from abroad, they discovered second-hand top hats and tails and
beaded flapper dresses which were useless to the laborers as they donned these
togs and tilled their fields in bitter exhaustion. The film offered no
explanation for why Americans should assist Armenia, even though the rest of
the world knew of the massive relief aid that was sent to support the
genocided, “starving Armenians.” By the same token, Bek-Nazaryan offers many
quixotic, poetic shots of men laboring in rhythmical unison—demonstrating the
contractions of state formation—their well-built, topless torsos dripping with
sweat in tribute to the muscle grease which erected the Leninakan (Gyumri) Canal and other industrial
achievements. Bek-Nazaryan shows us the anatomy of successful communes and
collectives, mysterious saboteurs of the Canal, and also throws in gratuitous
shots of poor Armenian bumpkins transforming into doctors, lawyers and
engineers thanks to Soviet ingenuity and instruction.

“Land of Nairi” even goes so far as to state that the
hard-won, newly independent Republic of Armenia of 1918 was a fascist
enterprise that caused widespread typhus, starvation and other tragedies to
befall its citizens without mentioning the elephant in the room: these
besieged, famished, beaten, exhausted, diseased and genocided Armenians had
just miraculously fought off complete extermination from marauding Turks and
complicit Soviets, both of whom remained antagonistic and aggressive upon the
declaration of Armenian independence. This had everything to do with the state
of Armenian human health at that time. It was not the Soviets who saved the
Armenians from complete extermination in 1918, but the Armenians themselves
who, in the 11th hour—pitiful refugees, orphans and terminally ill among
them—repelled Turkish hordes from devouring what was left of Armenia while the
Russian army withdrew from Kars and ran for the hills. The Soviets wasted no
time toppling this fragile independent Armenia,
but one would never know the above from viewing “Land of Nairi.”
Witnessing the plot devices and characteristics assigned to the Armenian
principals, it was clear to this viewer that a strategic cinematic objective
was to introduce themes that discouraged Armenians from perceiving their worlds
along national, patriotic, free-thinking or entrepreneurial lines.

What we must realize is that Soviet Armenian auteurs knew
that in order to achieve prominence in the USSR in their fields of endeavor,
the national dignity of the Armenian people would have to be sacrificed.  That was the price to be paid.

Thus, we have two cinematic offerings that omit any
reference to the very real Russo-Turco hostility towards Armenia and
Armenians. Likewise for “The House on a Volcano,” the history of Armenians in
the Baku oil
industry—and what happened there to change the existing dynamic—is left
unexplained. There also is no mention of the roles Russia
and Turkey played in fomenting
the Armenian Genocide nor their designs to absorb Armenia in 1915, 1918 and 1920.

The imagery and stories told in both films leave the
unsuspecting viewer with the notion that Armenia was a savage backwater before
the Soviets came along and civilized them, creating doctors, lawyers and
engineers as if Armenians never before entered those professions. Quite the
contrary—Armenians were the most accomplished peoples of Asia
Minor and the Transcaucasus.

“The House on a Volcano” was jointly produced by Soviet
Armenian and Soviet Azerbaijani film studios in the year 1928.

 

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California Courier Online provides readers of the Armenian News News Service with a
few of the articles in this week's issue of The California Courier. Letters to
the editor are encouraged through our e-mail address, .
Letters are published with the author’s name and location; authors are required
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California Courier subscribers can change or modify mailing addresses by
emailing .

Russian president’s visit to Turkey postponed – source

 20:50, 7 February 2024

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 7, ARMENPRESS: Russian President Vladimir Putin’s visit to Turkey, which was scheduled for February 12, has been put off, a diplomatic source in Turkey told TASS without elaborating.

"The visit has been postponed. No details are still known," the source said.

Earlier, Hande Firat, a journalist for the Hurriyet newspaper and a columnist for the CNN-Turk television channel, announced that the visit had been canceled, Tass reports.

Media outlets previously reported that Putin would visit Turkey on February 12, but the Kremlin did not confirm this information.

Ready to provide any assistance Armenia needs for further development: Iranian Ambassador to Armenia

 18:06, 6 February 2024

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 6, ARMENPRESS.  The common border between Armenia and Iran has been the safest and has served as a guarantee for expanding ties and contacts between the two sides, as well as ensuring the well-being of both peoples. Tehran has demonstrated through its actions that it will not tolerate any geopolitical changes in this region, Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Islamic Republic of Iran to the Republic of Armenia Mehdi Sobhani stated during a meeting with experts and journalists.

“Today, Iran pursues the most independent domestic and foreign policy, and without Tehran, not a single equation in the region can be resolved. Our country is part of the solution to the crises and problems of the region. Despite the pressure and conspiracies against Iran over the past 45 years, our country has made significant progress and, despite the sanctions imposed on us, has achieved remarkable advancements in all areas," Sobhani emphasized.

According to the Ambassador, Iran conducts a balanced policy with the countries of the region, with particular emphasis on its neighboring states. In particular, relations between Armenia and Iran have consistently developed since their establishment. Following Armenia's independence, the achievements in cooperation between the two countries have shown reliable trends of development. The will and desire of officials from both countries to expand historical and cultural foundations, to promote neighborly coexistence and enhance human contacts and relations have been a strong foundation, promoting further progress.

“The volume of trade, economic relations, and trade turnover between the two states are recording steady growth, strengthening cooperation, especially in the fields of economics and infrastructure. The peoples of Iran and Armenia have always stood side by side amidst moments of joy and sorrow. Today, Iran supports the territorial integrity and sovereignty of the Republic of Armenia and, as before, is ready to leverage all its resources to develop cooperation," the Ambassador said.

Sobhani stressed that official Tehran supports the "Crossroads of Peace" initiative put forward by the Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, the content of which is the establishment of peace and stability in the region and is based on the mutual recognition of territorial integrity and sovereignty of countries. According to the ambassador, the official position of Yerevan is more than logical and in line with international norms.

 Speaking about the "3+3" format, Sobhani reminded that it is primarily designed to solve the existing problems between the countries of the region with their own capabilities. He  noted that if the format registers tangible achievements, then all countries will be interested in involvement and participation in the meetings.

"If there are escalations and conflicts in our region, they have a negative impact on all the countries of the region; therefore, they should become guarantors of solving the problems with joint efforts. It is necessary to be guided by sincere motives and be consistent in establishing real peace and stable security," explained the diplomat.

Touching upon the issue of the “Zangezur Corridor” proposed by Azerbaijan and Turkey, the Ambassador emphasized that there is a generally accepted approach in the world, according to which the corridor is perceived as an opportunity for communication. However, in our region, this is perceived completely differently. Therefore, Iran has very clearly demonstrated with its steps that it will not tolerate any geopolitical changes in this region.

"We welcome the unblocking of all roads and communications, if it happens based on the interests of countries and under their sovereignty. We support the strengthening of Armenia and the establishment of peace and stability. Therefore, only the balance of forces in our region will contribute to all of this. We are ready to provide any assistance that Armenia will need for further development," Sobhani assured.

“For Iran, Armenia is the best direction for access to the north and the Black Sea. And for Armenia, Iran is also the best direction for access to the south, to the same Chabahar Port of Iran.

The key issue in the economy is ensuring transportation and the reliable operation of infrastructure. The construction of the Kajaran-Agarak road section is an important factor in facilitating transportation and increasing trade volumes. In order for the route passing through Armenia to be more profitable and attractive, it is necessary to simplify laws, reduce road tariffs, and improve the existing infrastructure,” added the Ambassador of Iran to Armenia.

Manvel Margaryan




Turkish Press: Classical concert at historic Armenian church in Türkiye attracts visitors

Jan 31 2024
Culture  |

Editor : Koray Erdoğan
2024-01-31 15:17:35 | Last Update : 2024-01-31 17:36:15

The Duored Group's half-hour classical music concert at the centuries-old Surp Giragos Armenian Church, located in Türkiye's Diyarbakır province, attracted great interest from visitors

The church is considered to be the largest church of the Armenian community in the Middle East.

Umut Volkan Yilmaz, the guitarist of the band, who gave a concert in the church said that both the Mardin concert and the concert in Diyarbakır were very good for them.

Stating that they enjoyed it a lot when they combined their music with historical places, Yılmaz said: "Our repertoire is mainly classical period. In addition, it comprises composers from the modern and romantic periods. We arranged some of the works and adapted them to guitar and violin. The acoustics of the churches are very nice. Professionally, we are fed a little bit from this."

Violin virtuoso Seda Gülşen Kinis recalled that they first started the concerts in Mardin and then gave a concert here.

Stating that it was a very nice experience to give a concert in such historical buildings, Kınış said: "It was very pleasant and exciting to meet the audience here. It is very different from giving a concert in a normal hall. We are very excited and happy to be here."

https://www.turkiyenewspaper.com/culture/18082

Armenian Foreign Minister, Foreign Policy Advisor to Iran’s Supreme Leader discuss security in South Caucasus

 17:03,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 29, ARMENPRESS. Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan  on January 29 met with Kamal Kharrazi, Foreign Policy Advisor to Iran's Supreme Leader  and Head of the Strategic Council on Foreign Relations of Iran.

The sides discussed the multi-sectorial cooperation agenda between Armenia and Iran, underscoring the high level of political dialogue and the dynamic development of relations between the two countries, the foreign ministry said.

The interlocutors highlighted the significance of the close collaboration in energy, infrastructure, economic, and other domains. The importance of implementing joint projects aimed at strengthening the friendship between the two peoples and promoting stability in the region was emphasized.

Taking this opportunity, Minister Mirzoyan once again expressed condolences on behalf of Armenia in connection with the terrorist attack that occurred in Kerman at the beginning of the year. During the meeting, issues related to security and stability in the South Caucasus were discussed. Minister Mirzoyan presented Armenia's approaches in detail, emphasizing the need for unconditional respect for territorial integrity, the inviolability of borders, and the sovereignty of Armenia as key elements for ensuring lasting peace in the region.

In the context of unblocking infrastructure in the region, Ararat Mirzoyan lauded Iran's positive position regarding the Crossroads of Peace project developed by the Armenian government.




What the New York Times Gets Wrong About Lemkin’s Work on Genocide

Common Dreams
Jan 22 2024

On January 11, 2024, the New York Times published an article by Isabel Kershner and John Eligon titled “At World Court, Israel to Confront Accusations of Genocide.” From the standpoint of critical media literacy and ethical journalistic practices, the article exhibits framing biases, historical and contextual omissions, and overly simplistic reasoning that attempts to explain why “Israel has categorically rejected the allegations being brought this week in the International Court of Justice by South Africa.” We assert that this editorial spin does a disservice to journalism and adds to a faulty record that enables human rights violators.

The overall tone is in lockstep with corporate media’s bias toward Israel—a bias credibly substantiated by the likes of the Lemkin Institute for the Prevention of GenocideThe InterceptThe GuardianMint Press News, and Common Dreams. While multiple aspects of the article are troublesome, the third sentence provoked our immediate response letter to the Editor of the New York Times. That sentence is as follows.

Oversimplifying Lemkin’s endeavors does a shameful disservice to his legacy. Such a decontextualized presentation edits out the foundation of his body of work and contracts the character of his mission.

“Genocide, the term first employed by a Polish lawyer of Jewish descent in 1944 to describe the Nazis’ systematic murder of about six million Jews and others based on their ethnicity, is among the most serious crimes of which a country can be accused.”

Days later, echoing a similar mischaracterization of Raphael Lemkin’s work, USA Todaypublished a piece by Noa Tisby titled, “Is Israel guilty of genocide in Gaza? Why the accusation at the UN is unfounded” (January 16). Tisby’s article, like that of Kershner and Eligon, amended the breadth and depth of Lemkin’s work to accommodate a particular narrative.

Considering the New York Times’ reputation as a leading U.S. paper of record, the need for public correction therein took precedence over the op-ed in USA Today. Hence, our letter:

As two Armenian Americans who grew up in the shadow of the 20th century’s first genocide, an attorney and a media expert respectively, we found critical context lacking in “At World Court, Israel to Confront Accusations of Genocide,” by Isabel Kershner and John Eligon (January 11). Any discussion of genocide and Raphael Lemkin is grossly incomplete without citing how the Armenian genocide informed the Polish-Jewish lawyer’s noble work.

Lemkin (b.1900), while a university student in the 1920s, learned of the Ottoman Turk's coordinated mass slaughter of Armenians that culminated in 1915. The extermination of Armenians informed Lemkin's life mission to establish international laws and treaties making genocide a punishable offense. In 1944, Lemkin finally named that crime genocide.

This article implies that Lemkin advocated solely for the Jewish cause. A humanitarian first, Lemkin sought to establish protections for all people. For example, he worked with Algerians who sought to hold accountable their colonizers for crimes against humanity.

The Armenian Genocide impelled Lemkin to action. Absent this historical context, the article reinforces the Israeli government's illogical claim that Jewish people are the sole victims of genocide. South Africa’s charge that the Israeli government is engaging in genocide reflects Lemkin’s commitment to the denunciation of the crime irrespective of ethnicity.

The New York Times ignored our letter.

Oversimplifying Lemkin’s endeavors does a shameful disservice to his legacy. Such a decontextualized presentation edits out the foundation of his body of work and contracts the character of his mission. It ignores the events that prompted and preoccupied his thinking on international discourse toward establishing laws against the crime that he came to term “genocide.” Lemkin was horrified that the Ottoman Turkish government could kill its own citizens—albeit “dhimmi,” or second-class citizens—with impunity. His application of the term genocide to the Ottoman Turk’s systematic mass slaughter of the Armenians predated the Holocaust. Years later, as a formidable advisor to prosecutors at the Nuremberg Trials, Lemkin drew conclusive parallels to the Nazis’ genocidal massacre of Europe’s Jewish citizens.

To selectively invoke Lemkin’s work on genocide as a defense against the charges brought against Israel banks on the idea that public memory is short.

Editing the Armenian Genocide from Lemkin’s life work has contemporary and historical implications. In light of increasing attacks by a radicalized right-wing contingency in Israel on Jerusalem’s Armenians, deleting the Armenians from current reporting sets a dangerous tone for Armenians living under current threat. The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention has featured articles on Armenphobia and on the Armenians’ right to exist, and has issued statements of concern over recent attacks on the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem.

Jerusalem’s Armenians, or “East Jerusalemites” as they are designated by the Israeli government, like other Palestinians, live in a system that privileges Israel’s Jewish population. Hostilities from Jewish fundamentalists toward Armenians in Jerusalem are nothing new. However, the level and frequency of aggressions have intensified thanks to Netanyahu’s far-right government which has energized and normalized them. With attention concentrated on Gaza, Israeli extremists are free to act without fear of consequences. The Lemkin Institute explained that this can be “viewed as another attempt by Israeli extremists to create a homogenized Jewish ethnostate in the Palestinian territories.”

The New York Times article’s abridged version of Lemkin’s work emboldens those who continue to deny that the 1915 Armenian Genocide occurred. To selectively invoke Lemkin’s work on genocide as a defense against the charges brought against Israel banks on the idea that public memory is short. A well-worn quote reported by A.P. Berlin bureau chief, Louis Lochner, from a speech given by Hitler to his military generals before the 1939 Nazi invasion of Poland rhetorically asked, “Who today, after all, remembers the annihilation of the Armenians?” With hot wars blazing and existential alarms blasting, we not only remember the Armenians but uphold this New York Times article as a cautionary tale that words matter.

MISCHA GERACOULIS

HEIDI BOGHOSIAN

FM Mirzoyan urges Russian colleagues to refrain from attributing baseless accusations to Armenia

 18:50,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 23, ARMENPRESS. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia, Ararat Mirzoyan, has urged his Russian colleagues to accurately narrate the chronological sequence and refrain from attributing accusations to the Armenian side for which Armenia is not guilty.

Mirzoyan said on Tuesday, referring to the accusation from Russia that the Nagorno Karabakh issue, including the status issue, was closed when Nikol Pashinyan signed a statement in Prague in accordance with the Alma-Ata Declaration.
The Armenian Foreign Minister has accurately presented the sequence of events.

“In August 2022, Russia presented proposals that included the following provision: the status of Nagorno-Karabakh is postponed indefinitely. By the end of August, Armenia agreed to these proposals, but Azerbaijan expressed its disagreement. Subsequently, in September 2022, Azerbaijan initiated an attack on the sovereign territory of Armenia.

Then Armenia turned to Russia and the Russian side stated  that the boundaries are not clear enough, consequently, Russia faces difficulties in assessing the extent to which the sovereign territory of Armenia has been violated.

Afterward, in October 2022, Armenia and Azerbaijan signed a quadrilateral statement in Prague, in which they agreed that the delimitation of borders should occur based on the Alma-Ata Declaration. The declaration specifies the border between Armenia and Azerbaijan, coinciding with the administrative border between the two former Soviet republics.

I want to urge my Russian colleagues to narrate  the cause-and-effect relationships and chronological sequence correctly and at least not to attribute to the Armenian side accusations in which the Armenian side has no guilt," said the Foreign Minister.

“On the contrary, there were expected and supposed actions by others, and in the absence of that action, Armenia took concrete steps, including in the form of the Prague statement,'' the FM said.




Armenia has always supported One China principle – Foreign Ministry

 16:47, 15 January 2024

YEREVAN, JANUARY 15, ARMENPRESS. Armenia has always supported the One China principle, foreign ministry spokesperson Ani Badalyan told Armenpress when asked to present Armenia’s position regarding the 2024 Taiwanese “presidential election”.

“Armenia has always supported the One China principle. We reiterate our position on this occasion,” Badalyan said.

Armenian President meets with Iraqi Kurdistan PM Masrour Barzani in Davos

 11:08,

YEREVAN, JANUARY 19, ARMENPRESS. The President of Armenia Vahagn Khachaturyan has met Prime Minister Masrour Barzani of Iraqi Kurdistan at the World Economic Forum in Davos.

Khachaturyan and Barzani discussed “a number of agenda items of bilateral interest,” the Armenian President’s office said in a readout. They also discussed “the general situation in the region and beyond, as well as current developments.”