An Armenian in America

The New Republic Online

An Armenian in America
by Aghavnie Yeghenian

Only at TNR Online
Post date: 07.03.04
[ In 1915, roughly 2 million Armenians lived in Turkey. By 1923, the
government had murdered one and a half million of them. In this article by
Armenian-American Aghavnie Yeghenian, published in 1921, the author asks why
America’s morals have not matched its might. Yeghenian questions the moral
fiber of a nation–“so beloved, so rich, free”–that did nothing to stop the
Armenian genocide despite full knowledge of its existence. Today, some
30,000 black Africans have been murdered in Sudan; once again, America has
failed to act. Will we do anything about the Sudanese genocide? Or will our
morals once again fail to match our might? –Eric Herschthal ]

June 29, 1921

How does it feel to be an Armenian in America?” asks a thoughtful friend. I
stare at him. Does he wish to change places with me just once? “Write it, if
you can’t tell me,” he urges. Yet even while I write these lines I wonder if
he will really read what promises to be so painful.

Being an Armenian–an Armenian anywhere–gives one strange feelings. My mind
is torn by the conflict of opposing emotions growing out of my racial
inheritance and my living experience. Fear struggles with courage; pain with
the will to endure; worry with optimism; depression with buoyancy; sorrow
with faith; despair with hope; overshadowing death with promising life.

The injection of my friend’s question into such a consciousness makes me
gather my life into a shifting scene in which we Armenians, bleeding,
wounded, murdered, outraged, drowning in the sea of barbarism, beaten by the
waves of civilized cruelty, call out to the multitudes dwelling on the shore
of security.

We cry the story of our life-long suffering, of our murdered manhood, our
outraged womanhood, our dying babies, our tortured mothers, our crucified
leaders. We cry in anguish and pain. We show our wounds. We call for help.
The crowd on the shore throw out some handfuls of pennies which fall leaden
into the waters. Our cry has not been understood.

Perhaps that band of strangers will be stirred by the story of our marvelous
history of heroism. We tell of our struggle for liberty through the ages, of
our martyrs who are countless, of the ever-undaunted courage of our men and
women, of our undying faith in the triumph of right, and our unfailing hope
of human goodness. Again we have failed to thrill the crowd upon the shore.

What has happened to the people who look out at the Armenian sea of
suffering? They are incomprehensibly unresponsive. They seem almost
motionless. We detect, however, a slight movement. It seems to spring from
an emotion like that described in a cartoon published in a well-known
American magazine, showing the gaunt figure of Armenia disturbing the peace
of a fat congressman, who, handkerchief to his eyes, exclaims, “Get out. You
are breaking my heart.” Yes, there almost seems to be a slight movement, a
turning of the back to avoid a harrowing picture.

The scene gives way in my mind to a question that stands out in letters of
living fire: Has the world a heart? Alas! this is Armenia’s eternal and
unanswered question. People who appear great and noble talk about the heart
of the world. Do they really believe in it? Are they sincere? Have virtue
and love of human valor died? Is there only the false and pretentious?

The suffering that comes from feeling that we live in a shallow and isolated
world is more tragic than the danger of impending death. For death we have
always met fearlessly, but it is life,–good, brave, real, serious
life,–which Armenia craves; and the time when she feels her wings most
broken is not when the Turk is out killing and plundering, but the time when
England is deceiving her and France is betraying her, and when America is
turning her back to avoid the painful picture. To be an Armenian in America
is to be bitterly disappointed. To this country, this America so beloved, so
rich, free, happy, it seems impossible to impart the sadness of an
Armenian’s life.

But why do I suffer? Haven’t I the privilege of living in America, a
privilege envied by others of my countrymen? Haven’t I all the opportunities
of an American? All this I have, freedom, position, opportunities, friends,
but the happy smile of an American I can neither achieve nor buy. I walk
about like one in a dream, my head heavy, my throat choked, my spirit
crushed. I go to church and the minister reads from the old prophet of
Israel, “How doth the City sit solitary that was full of people! She is
become like a widow, that was great among the nations! Is it nothing to you,
all ye that pass by? Behold and see if there be any sorrow like unto my
sorrow.” I do not comprehend the application of the words. I keep asking
myself, “Isn’t it of me that the minister speaks? Is there anyone else in
the congregation who has lost his country, even as did the prophet?” I
review the desolate cities of Armenia, its burned homes and ruined churches,
its solitary hills and deserted streets. The rest of the minister’s words
are lost to me. As I walk out I cry silently to the passing crowds, “Is it
nothing to you, O Americans, that I suffer, that my people are murdered,
that my country is destroyed, that the virgins of Armenia die in shame in
Turkish harems, that our children are starving, that our youth are still
falling in the field so sacred to you, the battlefield of liberty? Is it
nothing to you?”

I go to a concert, and the singer begins Mignon’s passionate love song for
her country, “Connais-tu le pays ou fleurit l’oranger–? C’est là, c’est là
que je voudrais vivre, aimer, aimer et mourir.” A desire to sob aloud seizes
my whole being. I want to run away from the audience sitting there politely
and smiling while they listen, they who cannot understand. I cry silently
once again, “Is it nothing to you who have a country that I have none?”

I go to the mountains and the memory of the green hills of Armenia takes me
back to its present valleys of tears. I leave the mountains and run away to
the beach in despair. The gay crowds marching up and down bring to me the
dark picture of columns of women and children marching up and down the
plains of Armenia in search of herbs for food. I attend a dinner party and
note the luxurious gowns and wasted food, and I am forced to think of the
rags in which the once wealthy and beautiful women of my land are now clad.
I pass through the streets where American children play, pretty, happy,
careless, and in my vision rise the rows of our orphanages with their pale,
solemn-faced babies. The bright side of every situation points out to me
with unmistakable clearness the other, the darker side, the Armenian side,
and so, confined in my Armenian being, I cannot step into the freedom of
America. I wait, still I wait for America to break my chains.

This is how it feels to be an Armenian in America.

Aghavnie Yeghenian

BAKU: Europe wants to assist Karabakh settlement

Europe wants to assist Karabakh settlement

MPA news agency
1 Jul 04

Baku, 1 July: “The Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe
[PACE] is able and wants to render assistance in resolving the
Nagornyy Karabakh conflict although the OSCE Minks Group is dealing
with the issue,” PACE Secretary-General Bruno Haller said today (1
July) following his talks with Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov.

Mr Haller stressed that PACE does not intend to substitute the OSCE in
the settlement of the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict. PACE will soon
appoint a rapporteur on Nagornyy Karabakh and the report will be ready
in late 2004 – early 2005, he said. The new rapporteur will continue
working on the report on the basis of information collected by Terry
Davis. The new rapporteur will visit the region to familiarize himself
with the conflict, Mr Haller said.

He expressed satisfaction with his meeting with the Azerbaijani
Foreign Minister and said that the strengthening of parliamentary
cooperation between Baku and Strasbourg and PACE’s role in the
Karabakh conflict settlement were discussed during the talks.

Egoyan heads to 1970s Los Angeles in Somebody Loves You

Egoyan heads to 1970s Los Angeles in Somebody Loves You

Screendaily
by Denis Seguin in Toronto
June 17, 2004

Canadian auteur Atom Egoyan is preparing his tenth feature, entitled
Somebody Loves You, with long-time collaborator Robert Lantos of Serendipity
Point Films producing.

The Academy Award-nominated Egoyan wrote the screenplay based on the novel
Where The Truth Lies by Broadway wunderkind Rupert Holmes. Sandra
Cunningham, a co-producer on Egoyan’s Ararat, will perform a similar role.
Principal photography is slated to commence in August in Toronto.
Serendipity would not confirm casting.

Set in 1970s Los Angeles, the story follows a young celebrity journalist as
she tracks the secrets of a showbiz duo who were driven apart by a bizarre
death in which one of them may have played the part of murderer. The deeper
she digs the more she finds herself involved with both men and perhaps
risking more than she bargained for.

It’s the third adaptation of a novel for Egoyan, after 1997’s The Sweet
Hereafter and 1999’s Felicia’s Journey. Egoyan acquired the rights to Where
The Truth Lies in early 2003, well before its publication date last autumn.
It was recently released in paperback in North America.

Where The Truth Lies is the first novel by Holmes, whose Broadway musical
The Mystery of Edwin Drood won Tony Awards for Best Book, Best Music and
Best Lyrics, making him the first person to ever win all three prizes
solely.

Produced by Serendipity Point Films and Ego Film Arts, the project is backed
by Telefilm Canada. Other backers will likely include The Harold Greenberg
Fund, Super Ecran and The Movie Network.

AAA: Board of Directors Chairman Meets With Kocharian, Ghoukasian

–Boundary_(ID_Yu+g60TCROCy/7B58l3BHQ)
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From: Assembly <[email protected]>
Subject: AAA: Board of Directors Chairman Meets With Kocharian, Ghoukasian
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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
June 29, 2004
CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
E-mail: [email protected]

ASSEMBLY BOARD OF DIRECTORS CHAIRMAN MEETS WITH PRESIDENTS KOCHARIAN,
GHOUKASIAN IN ARMENIA
Official 10-Day Visit Includes Stops to Karabakh and Georgia

Washington, DC – Armenian Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony
Barsamian concluded a series of high-level meetings in Armenia Saturday,
assessing first-hand the impact of U.S. policies and actions in the region
and exchanging perspectives on a wide range of regional and bilateral
issues. During the course of a 10-day, three-country visit, Barsamian and
Country Director for Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh Arpi Vartanian conferred
with several government leaders, including Presidents Robert Kocharian and
Arkady Ghoukasian and Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania.

Beginning in Armenia on June 18, Barsamian and Vartanian met with Prime
Minister Andranik Margarian, Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian and Trade
Minister Karen Chshmaritian. Talks centered on economic development
initiatives – with emphasis on the Millennium Challenge Account, a new U.S.
financial assistance program which Armenia is eligible to apply for. The
Assembly delegation also raised issues pertaining to Armenia’s economic
growth during talks with President Robert Kocharian on June 25.

“Regional integration and economic development will be a vital component to
the growth and sustainability of the Armenian economy,” said Barsamian, who
was on his first visit to Armenia since assuming chairmanship of Board. “We
appreciate the willingness of government leaders to work with us in
promoting sustainable development programs and initiatives.”

While in Yerevan, Barsamian and Vartanian also met with NKR President Arkady
Ghoukasian – addressing ways in which to keep that country’s development
moving forward – before traveling to Karabakh for meetings with Prime
Minister Anoushavan Danielian and Foreign Minister Ashot Ghulian.

The Assembly delegation also visited Georgia for meetings with Prime
Minister Zurab Zhvania, as well as Armenian community leaders, including
Armenian Ambassador Georgi Khosroev, Georgian Parliamentarian Van
Baybourtian and Archbishop Vazgen Mirzakhanian, Primate of Georgia.
Barsamian, in those meetings, encouraged Georgia to build transportation
infrastructures between the Capital city of Tiblisi and Javak, a region in
southern Georgia populated largely by Armenians.

Barsamian and Vartanian also met with several U.S. officials including
Ambassador to Georgia Richard Miles and outgoing Ambassador to Armenia John
Ordway, who spoke about his tenure in Armenia and hopes for the country’s
future.

Prior to returning to the U.S., Barsamian also met with His Holiness Karekin
II and visited historical sites in and around Armenia including the
Gandzasar Monastery, the Amenaprkich Church in Shushi and the Pantheon in
Tiblisi where famous Armenians such as writer Hovhannes Toumanian and
composer Magar Yegmalian are buried.

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#2004-062

Photographs available on the Assembly’s Web site at the following link:

Caption: Armenia President Robert Kocharian, far right, with Assembly Board
of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian and Country Director Arpi Vartanian
in Yerevan.

Caption: Nagorno Karabakh President Arkady Ghoukasian flanked by Assembly
Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian and Country Director Arpi
Vartanian.

Caption: L to R: Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian,
Georgian Prime Minister Zurab Zhvania and Country Director Arpi Vartanian.

Caption: Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian, seated,
listens as a HALO Trust official explains the importance of clearing deadly
landmines that threaten people and livestock in Nagorno Karabakh.

Caption: Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian and Country
Director Arpi Vartanian with Father Hovhanes at the Gandzasar Monastery in
Nagorno Karabakh.

Caption: Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian with NKR
Prime Minister Anushavan Danielian.

Caption: Assembly Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian with His
Holiness Karekin II, Catholicos of All Armenians.
–Boundary_(ID_Yu+g60TCROCy/7B58l3BHQ)–

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www.armenianassembly.org

ANKARA: Gul holds bilateral meetings with world leaders

Cumhuriyet, Turkey
June 29 2004

GUL HOLDS BILATERAL MEETINGS WITH WORLD LEADERS

Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul yesterday held bilateral meetings with
several leaders attending the current NATO summit in Istanbul. In
talks with his British counterpart, Gul urged Jack Straw to lend
support to end the international isolation of the Turkish Republic of
Northern Cyprus (TRNC). Gul also called on Britain to begin direct
flight to the TRNC soon. For his part, Straw said that both the
European Union and Britain had been working seriously on the matter.
Furthermore, the Turkish foreign minister also met with his
Macedonian, Azerbaijani and Armenian counterparts. /Cumhuriyet/

Armenia, Iran to start gas pipeline construction

Interfax
June 28 2004

Armenia, Iran to start gas pipeline construction

Yerevan. (Interfax) – Armenia and Iran intend to immediately begin the
construction of a gas pipeline between the two countries, says a
report from the Armenian presidential press service.

The report discusses the results of a visit by an Armenian delegation
headed by Artashes Tumanyan, who heads the Armenian presidential
administration and is co-chairman of the bilateral intergovernmental
commission on economic cooperation, to Iran on June 21-24.

The terms for starting the construction are not given in the
statement. A source in the Armenian government told Interfax that it
will probably be decided before the visit of Iranian President
Mohammad Khatami to Yerevan, which is scheduled for September.

The agreement between Iran and Armenia on construction of the pipeline
was signed in Yerevan on June 13, 2004. The document envisages
supplying 36 billion cubic meters of Iranian gas to Armenia over 20
years in exchange for electricity.

The length of the pipeline will be 141 kilometers, 100 of which will
be located on Iranian territory. The total estimated construction cost
is $210-$220 million. It is expected that gas supplies to Armenia will
begin before January 2007.

BAKU: Muslim leader, MPs set to bail out jailed Karabakh activists

Azeri Muslim leader, MPs set to bail out jailed Karabakh activists

ANS TV, Baku
28 Jun 04

The head of the Azerbaijani Spiritual Board of Muslims of the
Caucasus, Allahsukur Pasazada, has said that he is ready to bail out
Akif Nagi, chairman of the Karabakh Liberation Organization [KLO], and
another four members of the organization. The five were arrested on 22
June outside Hotel Europe for protesting against the arrival of
Armenian military officers in Baku [to attend a NATO meeting] and
sentenced to two months in prison.

Pasazada blamed the radical behaviour of the protesters on their
emotional state and brutalities that had been perpetrated in Karabakh
by Armenians. This is an indication of the current public mood, and by
visiting Baku, the Armenian officers instigated sabotage.

Today, five MPs – Sabir Rustamxanli, Zalimxan Yaqub, Qudrat
Hasanquliyev, Alimammad Nuriyev and Mais Safarli – appealed to
Prosecutor-General Zakir Qaralov to release the KLO members on bail.

[Passage omitted: minor details]

Yesterday’s seeds, today’s harvest

Los Angeles Times
June 27, 2004 Sunday
Home Edition

Yesterday’s seeds, today’s harvest;

Beasts of the Field A Narrative History of California Farmworkers,
1769-1913 Richard Steven Street Stanford University Press: 904 pp.,
$75; $29.95 paper * Photographing Farmworkers in California Richard
Steven Street Stanford University Press: 330 pp., $39.95

by Mark Arax, Mark Arax, a Times staff writer, is the author of “In
My Father’s Name” and co-author of “The King of California: J.G.
Boswell and the Making of a Secret American Empire,” written with
Times business editor Rick Wartzman.

My grandfather, Aram, took the long road to California in the spring
of 1920. His migration covered 7,000 miles by ship and train. There
was no turning back.

Everything along the way seemed so farfetched to him — the Statue of
Liberty, the nation’s capital, the budding factories of Detroit. It
wasn’t until the tracks reached Fresno that America came true.
Outside his window, at the foot of the Sierra, the San Joaquin Valley
shimmered. Vineyards and orchards and vegetable fields, row after
perfect row. As his train chugged into town, my grandfather kept
muttering the same words in Armenian. “Just like the old land.”

The old land was a lazy village beneath the Mountain of Mist in
Bursa, Turkey. Every month the Anatolian sun ripened another fruit,
but it was the silk from the mulberry that gave the village its
wealth. “We had a very easy life,” he told me. “Our village was too
prosperous to do its own work. The poor Turkish workers did it all.
We used to have a name for them — ‘almost like slaves.’ ”

My grandfather survived the 1915 genocide at the hands of the Turks
by hiding in an attic with Maupassant and Baudelaire. He came down
after a year with plans to attend the Sorbonne University and write
for a living. Then the letters from his Uncle Yervant in Fresno —
“watermelons as big as small boats” — arrived. My grandfather was 19
when he took the bait.

He might have been forgiven for assuming the best when his uncle
drove up to the depot that day in a shiny Model T Ford. It wasn’t a
week later that they headed three hours south on a country road and
landed in Weedpatch. There, long before the Okies and Steinbeck
arrived, my grandfather dropped to his hands and knees and began
picking potatoes. Up and down the valley he trailed the harvest.
Watermelons, peaches, grapes, oranges and olives. This new land
wasn’t like the old land. My grandfather had become one of the beasts
of the field.

He was far luckier, it turned out, than the legions of migrant
farmhands who came before him, men whose American rebirths and brutal
journeys are vividly captured by Richard Steven Street in “Beasts of
the Field,” a stunning narrative history of California farmworkers
from 1769 to 1913. It took my grandfather four seasons working
alongside his widowed mother, sister and brother to go from fruit
tramp to farmer. He would watch his brother, Harry, become a cop
killer in 1934 and his son, Ara, become a murder victim in 1972 after
both strayed from the farm.

My grandfather taught me, the oldest child of that murdered son, that
our drama was part of a larger drama that played out in California
agriculture long before his arrival. Because I spent years gathering
his story, I thought I understood why the dreams of so many
immigrants are swallowed up by the fields. Because I live in the San
Joaquin Valley, the most productive farm belt in the world, a place
built on the backs of fieldworkers, I thought I understood their
lives. For the last six years, I’ve collected and written the
narratives of the black sharecroppers, Mexicans and Okies who came
here to pick the cotton for such giants as J.G. Boswell.

But “Beasts of the Field” is a history book that reaches into the
present and changes the way we see things. I now understand why the
lives of farmworkers so often end in the same broken place. Because
it has always been this way — as far back as the native Chumash and
Gabrielinos who plowed the first fields in the shadow of the missions
and the Chinese who erected the levees to drain the waters of the
great Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta and the white Europeans who
threshed the wheat as the giant metal harvester, the farm’s first
breathing machine, snorted and clawed at the earth.

For the first time, thanks to Street’s 25-year labor of love, the
whole extraordinary tapestry of that early era is before us. A
photographer, journalist and scholar, Street hails from no academy
and works for no publication. Logging thousands of miles from field
to library to newspaper morgue, he has produced a work of monumental
scholarship. One might ask if the subject hadn’t been thoroughly
mined. Countless academics and journalists, after all, have
documented in articles and books the peculiar institution that is
California agriculture. But although readers may believe that Carey
McWilliams’ seminal 1939 work, “Factories in the Field,” offered the
definitive word on the feudal empires of the soil, Street provides a
far more exhaustive, layered and satisfying portrait. Simply put,
Street’s remarkable book belongs on the short shelf of such
indispensable works of American history as Oscar Handlin’s “The
Uprooted” and Bernard Bailyn’s “Voyagers to the West.”

He steers clear of the polemics and dry scholarly treatments that
have undermined less ambitious books on the subject. Instead of
shouting his moral indignation at the lot of farmworkers, Street
builds his case pound for pound with an assiduous weighing of the
facts. He does so with language that may not be lyrical but serves
his chronological narrative well, giving a voice to those who have
always appeared to us hidden under hats, muffled in bandanas, backs
to the sun, hands in the earth.

Notably, Street, who is the Ansel Adams fellow at the Center for
Creative Photography and a onetime Guggenheim fellow, has
accomplished this while putting together a companion volume,
“Photographing Farmworkers in California,” that stands out as a
comprehensive visual record of farm labor from 1850 to the early
1990s. In the more than 270 images, we see workers picking, striking,
fighting, dancing, resting, praying and dying in photographs shot
through the lens of the famous (Dorothea Lange) and the obscure
(Ernest Lowe). His third volume, set for publication in fall 2005,
will complete the massive history, focusing on the period 1913 to
2000 and the farmworkers’ struggle to unionize.

“Beasts of the Field” follows the migrant field hands dawn to dark
through the early evolutions of a California agriculture destined for
industrial greatness. First, the missions sought a blend of salvation
and self-sufficiency. Then the bonanza wheat farms chased the numbing
notion that bigger is better. Finally, the vineyard and orchard
growers recognized that the Golden State offered a one-of-a-kind
union of soil and climate. Why waste it on mere wheat?

Street gives the reader the look, smell and taste not only of those
fields but also of the Chinatown opium dens and the skid rows
crackling with liquor, prostitution and murder where the workers’
long day ended. Nowhere in the 625 pages of text (and more than 200
pages of notes) does he shy away from his singular focus, and why
should he? The story of agriculture is the story of California from
Junipero Serra, the Franciscan friar who brought the first field
hands north, to Japanese immigrant Kinji Ushijima, the Potato King
who harvested 28,000 acres of spuds in the early 1900s on reclaimed
delta land. Every epic migration that transformed the state was a
migration rooted in the fields.

“Adrift in a landscape of ordered beauty,” he writes, “the
[farmworkers] illustrate the human costs required to produce a
geography of abundance, telling us not only about irony, suffering,
misery, acrimony, disorientation, resentment, cynicism and violence
but also about hope, tenacity, sacrifice and generosity.”

Who, precisely, were the first campesinos in California? That they
were brown-skinned peoples native to the land down south should come
as no surprise. By early 1769, Spain had kicked the Jesuits out of
Baja California and installed the Franciscans as missionaries who
would claim the Pacific Coast. The Franciscans dragged a group of
Cochimi Indians north for the “Sacred Expedition.” By summer’s end,
more than half the Cochimi — 180 in all — had died of disease and
starvation.

Street deals head-on with a question that has long divided scholars
of the mission period. Were the padres taskmasters or slave drivers?
Were the Indians ennobled or exploited? What was so bad about
Catholicism, hard work and an adobe roof over the head, even if they
came with the dreaded disciplina, the rawhide whip?

The padres weren’t monsters, Street agrees. They fed the newly
baptized California natives well, sweated alongside them and rarely
demanded more than a 40-hour workweek. And for their part, the
natives could be exasperating. By the droves, they feigned illness
and ran away from the missions and hid in the tules of California’s
interior, where they became addicted to booze and games of chance.
But Street ultimately comes down on the side of mission critics,
concluding that the system reduced natives to “childish dependence,
prepared them for nothing, exposed them to diseases.”

Measuring the agricultural legacy of the missions is easier. The
California natives who joined the Cochimi planted the first vineyards
and wheat fields, erected the first brush dams and dug the first
irrigation canals. A peek into the state’s future grape and wine
industry could be glimpsed at the San Gabriel mission where the
170-acre La Vina Madre, “the mother vineyard” had taken root.
Likewise, the practice of labor contractors acting as go-betweens in
the California fields began with the mayordomo, boss men selected
from the ranks of mission guards.

For the better part of a century, the male natives bent, stooped,
squatted and crawled with their poles, clippers, sacks and buckets.
The women, who weren’t allowed in the fields, had their own quotas to
meet grinding wheat and corn. Their positions hardly changed after
Mexican rule replaced Spanish rule and the natives were supposedly
free to pursue a life of small-scale farming. Instead, cast adrift,
they huddled in dusty camps like the one on the outskirts of El
Pueblo de Los Angeles, where they led “vicious and irrational lives.”

Growers in the 1850s were still so reliant on native field hands that
they pushed the newly minted U.S. state of California to enact a law
that controlled the natives and forced them to work. The Indian
Indenture Act, in the words of McWilliams, “competed favorably with
slavery.” Only when the native population dwindled to a band of old
and crippled field hands did the farmer begin his eternal search for
a new group of desperate and poor.

The late 1860s and 1870s brought fresh laborers to the fields:
hard-luck Americans of European stock who had come West with gold
fever but who now found themselves threshing and bagging California’s
booming wheat crop. Street brings to life the grinding toil of the
men who wandered farm to farm, their worldly possessions packed tight
in a bindle. He does his best writing describing how they mounted the
first leviathan wheat harvesters and bounced all day over rough
ground, jolting themselves silly. They could not escape the Central
Valley sun.

“The heat had an almost metallic characteristic,” he writes. “It was
a weight that men carried on their backs, a fiery warmth that cracked
their leather boots, heated equipment to the point where it could not
be touched without gloves and baked straw so crisp that it snapped
like glass filaments underfoot.”

He lingers on the wholesome meals served to the wheat threshers and
on the songs they sang, always swearing off another harvest season:
“Don’t go, I say, if you’ve got any brains. You’ll stay far away from
the San Joaquin plains.”

As the crops grew more diverse, the call for more dependable
farmworkers grew louder. It was answered by peasant Chinese farmers
from the Guangdong province who poured off ships in the 1850s and
fanned out to Stockton, Sacramento, Fresno, Sonoma County and Los
Angeles. Among the myths Street debunks is the notion that the
Chinese constituted a significant minority of farm laborers at any
one time. Of the 50,000 Chinese in California in 1861, only about
1,500 had moved onto farms.

Nowhere was their imprint more lasting than in the delta, where they
drained hundreds of thousands of acres of wetlands with an incredible
latticework of levees. The Chinese boasted their own system of
mayordomo: “China bosses” who made good on the promise that each
field hand would pick 1,500 to 2,000 pounds of grapes a day. The
bosses won many jobs by agreeing to a pay scale of $1 a day —
cheaper than the wage for Mexicans, $1.25, and for whites, $1.50.

“Beasts of the Field” makes clear that the issue of wages has long
pitted field hand against field hand, striker against grower and
reformer against politician. The debate always seems to start and end
in the same place. The farmer believes he isn’t exploiting the field
hand because what he offers is so much better than what the worker
had back home. The reformer shouts back that the farmer is engaging
in the cheapest form of moral inoculation. It is the ideals of this
country — not the Third World exigencies of their old land — that
judge morality. A dime a day in Guangdong doesn’t excuse a dollar a
day in Weedpatch.

The picker does hold certain leverage. Crops left too long in the
field perish. A two-week delay in picking might bring a grower to his
knees. This math drove the Chinese to strike again and again in the
1880s, shutting down the fruit harvest in Santa Clara and the raisin
pick in Fresno until they got their way, the same wages as the white
man.

That the “coolies” had the cheek to strike only played into the
anti-Chinese sentiment sweeping across the land. Farmers didn’t know
what side of the fence to stand on, with their white neighbors or
with their ethnic field hands. Some tried appealing to logic:
“Americans can not go out in the hot sun and stoop over the vines all
day when the thermometer is probably 115 degrees in the shade,” one
grower asserted. “Our American sons won’t do that.”

For all its breadth, “Beasts of the Field” never quite makes the case
that agriculture’s exploitation differed from the brutality imposed
by industrial America. Was farm work worse because it took place
under the searing sun? Were the white farmers greedier as a class
than white factory owners? Were the bottom-line impulses of
agriculture different from the quotas that industry imposed on their
beasts of the steel mill?

Occasionally Street tips the scale of judgment in error. He quotes a
1913 editorial by Chester H. Rowell, a longtime editor of the Fresno
Republican, likening the perfect field hand to a manifold beast.
Rowell, it turns out, wasn’t expressing his view but what he regarded
as the unfortunate view of the farm lobby. The sarcasm is not noted
by Street.

Back on firm ground, Street details how the racist views of the
Yellow Peril culminated in the 1882 Chinese Exclusion Act that, over
time, dried up Chinese labor. The Japanese then staged their own
rising. At the height of their influence in 1909, about 30,000
Japanese worked on California farms, accounting for nearly 42% of the
labor force.

More than any other ethnic group, the Japanese saw fieldwork not as
an end but as a means to buy their own farms. Toward that goal, they
became tough negotiators. They confronted and boycotted growers,
withheld labor at key times and walked out during harvests. By 1910,
many Japanese had realized the dream of becoming farmers; they had
bought 17,000 acres and leased 89,000 more, dominating the
strawberry, melon and sugar beet crops.

The Yellow Peril soon raised its ugly head again. The so-called
Gentlemen’s Agreement in 1907 halted Japanese immigration. As always,
Big Ag didn’t know where to turn. Into this vacuum, miraculously,
came the Greeks, the Sikhs, the Portuguese and the Armenians.

My grandfather didn’t have the benefit of those hobo songs to steer
him clear of the San Joaquin plains. The only song he heard was his
Uncle Yervant’s naively sweet one. For that second harvest, he
returned to Weedpatch with his mother, sister and brother, this time
to work for Villa Kerkorian, a grape grower with a ferocious mustache
resembling Pancho Villa’s.

My grandfather and his family slept in the Kerkorian barn on a bed of
raisin crates and hay until one night when they began feuding.
Grandpa’s 17-year-old brother, Harry, had the gall to question the
arrangement by which Uncle Yervant picked very little and played
pinochle a lot. Challenged for the first time, Yervant stormed out of
the barn.

“That boat that brought you over,” he shouted. “I would have been
better off had it brought a sack of potatoes instead.”

They didn’t speak again for years. By that time, Harry was well on
his way to killing a cop in Long Beach and serving a life sentence in
San Quentin. My grandfather was married and farming raisins outside
Fresno. In his 80s, as he grew blind, he gave me a stack of poems he
had written to the memory of the grape and cotton pickers: “To my
white, brown, yellow and black brothers and sisters who toiled under
the hellish sun.”

A few weeks ago, as another harvest neared, I drove to Weedpatch and
tried to find the old Kerkorian ranch. Villa Kerkorian had lost all
his land during the raisin bust of 1920-28. Not long after, they
found an ocean of oil beneath his old grapes. Kerkorian didn’t live
to see his get-even: His youngest son, Kirk, came to rule MGM and
rank as one of the world’s wealthiest men.

At the edge of town, a few miles down the road from where John
Steinbeck encountered the Okies, I met a young Mixteca who had
arrived the week before from deep in Mexico, her land turning to
dust. She had been smuggled across the border in the back of a
Suburban and was using her wages from the bell pepper fields to pay
off a $1,900 debt to the coyote. I asked her why she had come and she
began to tear up. She had left behind two young children with her
mother. “For their future,” she explained. In another few days, she
will stop harvesting peppers and begin picking grapes. In the powdery
loam, she will trace the footsteps of my grandfather and the other
“beasts” whose imprint Street has so faithfully recorded.

They still walk through these fields. *

GRAPHIC: PHOTO: FIELD HANDS: Laborers pick lettuce in the Salinas
Valley in 1935, from “Photographing Farmworkers in California.”
PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by Dorothea Lange Courtesy of Stanford
University Press PHOTO: SUBSISTENCE: A farmworker from Mexico, idled
by freezing weather, cradles a baby outside his home next to an
Imperial Valley pea field in 1937. PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by
Dorothea Lange Courtesy of Stanford University Press PHOTO: LOCAL
CREW: Chinese laborers sewed wheat sacks in the San Fernando Valley
in 1898, 16 years after the Chinese Exclusion Act cut the workforce.
PHOTOGRAPHER: Courtesy of Stanford University Press PHOTO: ON THE
COVER: “Cheng’s Hands and Hat,” Roger Minick’s 1966 photograph, is
included in Richard Steven Street’s “Photographing Farmworkers in
California.” PHOTOGRAPHER: Photograph by Roger Minick Courtesy of
Stanford University Press

ARKA News Agency – 06/24/2004

ARKA News Agency
June 24 2004

Today Armenian officers to leave Baku for Tbilisi

Italian edition of Charles Aznavour’s memoirs presented in Milano
Theater Dal Verme

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

TODAY ARMENIAN OFFICERS TO LEAVE BAKU FOR TBILISI

YEREVAN, June 24. /ARKA/. The Armenian officers participating in
conference on planning of filed exercises of NATO Cooperative Best
Efforts – 2004 to leave today Baku for Tbilisi, as stated by RA
defense Minister Arthur Aghabekyan. Touching upon the incident
related to staying of the Armenian officers in Azerbaijani capital,
Aghabekyan stated that the Azerbaijani authorities underestimated the
`opposition movement in Baku’. At the same time, in his opinion, the
incident was not directly organized by Azerbaijani authorities. At
the same time, he said that on the first day of the conference the RA
Defense Ministry demanded that the US Embassy in Baku was in charge
of security of the Armenian officers, however after insisting request
of the Azerbaijani side, the RA Defense Ministry agreed that this was
done by the Azerbaijani side. He also added that two days of the
conference went calmly and the Armenian side was given a number of
positions on exercises. `We, as minimum have five various positions
for officers on subdivision and on headquarter level, Aghabekyan said
adding that possibly an Armenian journalist would participate in the
exercises. He also said that to all probabilities 5-7 Armenian
officers to participate in Baku exercises.
On evening, June 21 Armenian officers – Colonel Murad Isakhanyan and
Senior Lieutenant Aram Hovhannisyan representing the Armenian
delegation arrived in Baku for participation in the conference.
To remind that on the eve of the conference, the activists of
Karabakh Liberation Organization (KLO) made an attempt to hamper a
three -day final conference in Baku devoted to planning of field
exercises Cooperative Best Efforts -04. KLO protesting against the
arrival of the Armenian delegation in Baku, KLO organized a picket in
front of Hotel Europe where the conference is going on. On June 22
around 100 picketers continued action protest and even 3-4 members of
eth organization were able to cross the police cordons as well as
security employees and approaching the doors of the hall where the
session was on. Seeing that the doors were closed they by broking the
door entered the hall, from where they were pushed out.
Simultaneously other members of the KLO tried closing the traffic on
the Tbilisi Avenue, where the hotel was located. The hotel was
patrolled by intensive unit of the police. T.M. -0–

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

ITALIAN EDITION OF CHARLES AZNAVOUR’S MEMOIRS PRESENTED IN MILANO
THEATER DAL VERME

YEREVAN, June 24. /ARKA/. Italian edition of famous French singer of
Armenian origin Charles Aznavour’s memoirs `Past days’ was presented
in Milano Theater Dal Verme As RA Foreign Ministry Information and
Press department told ARKA, the ceremony of the event was opened by
the Director of the largest publishing group RCS Libri Feruccio de
Bartoli. After this former Italian Ambassador in Russia Sergio Romano
red a paper `Reasons of Forgetting the Armenian Genocide’. Famous
Italian piano player Michele Campanella performed on the concert
organized on occasion of the presentation of the book.
The book is published by famous Italian publishing house Rizoli. The
presentation was attended by RA Ambassador Extraordinary and
Plenipotentiary in Italy Gagik Baghdasaryan. T.M. -0–

Kocharian: Nagorno Karabagh Republic today an established state

Robert Kocharian: Nagorno Karabagh Republic today is an established state

24.06.2004

YEREVAN (YERKIR) – Address by Armenian President Robert Kocharian at
the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe.

Mr. President, Members of the Parliamentary Assembly, Ladies and
Gentlemen,

It is an honor and pleasure to address you. Last time I have addressed
the Assembly on a very significant day for Armenia the day of
accession to the Council of Europe.

These were three demanding years of reforms that have touched upon all
the domains of life in our country and necessitated full time
employment of allour efforts.

Today I am here to announce that Armenia has fulfilled the vast
majority of its accession commitments. For the few outstanding ones,
there is a timetable agreed with a deadline fixed at the end of this
year. Still, if asked of the single most vital achievement I would
definitely answer: change in the perceptions in the Armenian society
about own future. The people of Armeniais now more involved in the
everyday life of the country. Formation of the Civil Society is on the
move.

Does this mean Armenia has achieved the desirable level of democratic
freedoms? The obvious answer is NO. Democracy has a long way to go in
any country with high poverty indicators. To assure fully inclusive
participation by the people in the democratic process, it is essential
to achieve at least minimal level of social guarantees. That is
precisely why we have strived to synchronize reforms in economy,
political system, judiciary and the social field.

In essence, Armenia has completed the process of dismantling the
former centralized system of power and economy, which allowed for a
total control over the society.

Armenian economy has undergone radical transformation both in terms of
activity fields and of property forms. The scope and depth of the
reforms allowed for a full scale enactment of market economy.

At present over 85% of Armenia’s GDP is produced in private sector,
over 38% of it in small and medium enterprises. Annual GDP growth has
averaged at I2% for last three consecutive years, regardless of the
blockade implemented bytwo fellow members of this very organization.
That dynamic economic growth has allowed us to develop a long term
Poverty Elimination Strategy.

The first time in Armenia this governmental program was developed in
close cooperation with international financial institutions and also
with wide involvement of the society. That Strategy now guides us in
the political decision making and in choosing our budget priorities.

Fighting corruption is Yet another important step towards effective
democracy. The Government of Armenia watches corruption as a systemic
evil,which cannot be eradicated merely through rhetoric or a couple of
sampler prosecutions.

We concentrate on the systemic change aimed at ruling out the sources
of corruption. That is exactly why we have joined the GRECO group
where we canlearn from the experience of other states on combating
corruption. Through a wide discussion including the OSCE, we have
developed a comprehensive Anti corruption strategy. A few weeks ago I
have established an AntiCorruption Council.

As an urgent measure directed at eradication of corruption in Armenia
I shall prioritize the necessity of deepening the judicial reforms,
improvement in tax and customs administration, and formation of an
effective system of Civil Service. All these are key tools for
implementation of anti corruption policies.

In terms of a broader effort aimed at reducing corruption risks, I
would like to particularly mention the importance of establishing
competitive climate, predictability of governmental action,
simplification of procedures, transparency thereof and public
control. Those are our current priorities aimed at achieving the
sustainability of the reforms and irreversibility of the
democratization process in Armenia.

Ladies and Gentlemen, I know many of you wonder: what was happening in
Armenia last spring? What fostered the activity of the opposition that
surrogated the parliamentary work by revolutionary rallies? You are
right to wonder, since you have been all informed by the monitoring
group Rapporteurs who had visited Armenia only very recently, in
January, that there are significant advancements in fulfillingthe
commitments accepted at the accession. And you know that most of those
deal with advancing democracy.

Expert evaluations of Armenia by international financial institutes
are more than optimistic. Two digit figures of economic growth and
budgetary proficit, by default cannot fuel the revolutionary
atmosphere. Moreover, there are three full years before the next
parliamentary elections.

Therefore, there were no internal prerequisites for increase in
political activity. Accordingly, what has happened? The answer is
easy. The opposition, encouraged by the results of the “rose
revolution” in neighboring Georgia, decided to duplicate it in the
Armenian reality, which, however, had nothing in common with the
Georgian one.

They disregarded the fact that Armenia’s economy, as opposite to
Georgian, undergoes dynamic advancement, the government is efficient,
and the democratic achievements are safeguarded by institutional
structures, including the law enforcement system capable of protecting
the public order.

The history has many times demonstrated that inspiration by foreign
revolutions never results in positive outcomes. Unfortunately,
learning often comes only from own experience. That also happened in
our case. The opposition left the parliament and unfolded street
activity.

They openly declared the goal: to destabilize the situation in the
country, cumulate the maximum possible number of participants in a
street action, surround the building of the Presidency and force me to
resign. Once the opposition witnessed lack of public interest towards
their action plan, they decided to increase the tension, most probably
to attract attention. They blocked the most loaded avenue of the city
of Yerevan.

That resulted in disruption of the traffic, prevented normal
functioning of the National Assembly, of the Administration of the
President and of the Constitutional Court. Four embassies, the
National Academy of Science and one of the biggest schools are located
at the same avenue. The organizers called on the public for
demonstrative disobedience. The police was left with no choice; the
public order was restored quickly, without any significant damage to
the health of the participants.

Necessity of implementation of similar police operations is always
regrettable. Still, authorities have to protect the society from
political extremists. It is particularly important in young
democracies, which still lack the advanced traditions of the political
and legal culture. Even more so when part of the population lives in
poverty and can be easily manipulated by populist rhetoric.

I would like to particularly mention that the parties comprising the
ruling coalition have many times offered cooperation to the
opposition. Unfortunately, those offers were rejected. The opposition
probably thinks that cooperation would undermine the revolutionary
temper of their supporters.

Our country is in the important stage of its advancement, and I am
confident that there are many directions that require non partisan
effort. We have offered the opposition to work together on the most
important issues the Constitutional reform and the new Electoral
Code. The offer is still valid,however the discussions shall be held
in the parliament, not in the street.

Ladies and gentlemen: I would now like to turn to another important
issue: the honoring of obligations by the new members of the Council
of Europe. May I remind you that most of the reforms to be implemented
by a new member are sensitive issues in domestic politics? Often,
implementation of the reforms clashes the inertiaof the public
opinion. In the case of Armenia examples of such issues are the
Constitutional reform, abolition of the death penalty and the new
Electoral legislation.

Active implementation of commitments by the authorities usually
results in increased internal tension and meets active resistance of
the opposition. For example, the parliamentary opposition of Armenia
openly contested the abolition of the death penalty and the new
edition of the Constitution, drafted in close cooperation with the
Venice Commission.

Honoring the obligations is a heavy political load accepted by the
entire country, not only by the authorities. Our application for
accession to the Council of Europe was signed by all the parliamentary
factions. In this Assembly the country is presented by the entire
parliamentary spectrum.

Therefore, the duty of honoring the obligations shall bind the
opposition as much as the government. One ought not purposefully fail
to comply with own obligations for the sole purpose of discrediting
the ruling political authorities in face of the Council of Europe.

I would never talk about all this if “not the recent resolution of the
Parliamentary Assembly on Armenia. I regret that some of our MPs drew
the PACE into that discussion. I am confident that the Council of
Europe is not the best choice for the place to practice the opposition
authority contention. For that purpose there is national parliament:
the main political mise en scene of Armenia.

Mr. Chairman: I would now like to turn to one of the priority interest
issues for Armenia. At the time of accession Armenia undertook to
make steps towards peaceful settlement of the Nagorno Karabagh
conflict. We have done so because we highly appreciate the necessity
of friendly relations among neighboring states. However, to be able to
effectively secure a long lasting solution, one needs to deeply
understand the essence of the conflict. I would like to outline two
important factors characteristic of the Karabagh conflict.

First of all: Karabagh has never been part of independent
Azerbaijan. At the time of collapse of the Soviet Union two states
were formed: the Azerbaijani Republic on the territory of Azerbaijan
Soviet Socialist Republic and Republic of Nagorno Karabagh on the
territory of the Nagorno Karabagh Autonomous Region. Establishment of
both these states has similar legal grounds. The territorial integrity
of Azerbaijan, henceforth, has nothing to do with theRepublic of
Nagorno Karabagh. We are ready to discuss the issue of settling that
conflict in the legal domain.

Second: the war of I992 94 was launched by the aggression of the Azeri
authorities, which attempted to implement ethnic cleansing of the
territoryof Nagorno Karabagh with the purpose of its annexation. The
situation in placetoday is the result of a selfless fight of the
Armenians of Nagorno Karabagh for survival on their own land. It is a
classical example of both the implementation of the right for self
determination and of misusing the “territorial integrity” concept as a
justification for ethnic cleansings.

The people of Karabagh has prevailed in it’s strive for independent
life in an egalitarian society. Independence of Karabagh today has I6
years of history. An entire generation grew up there that can think
of no other status for the country. Nagorno Karabagh Republic today is
an established state, in essence meeting all of the Council of
Europe’s membership criteria. It is the reality which cannot be
ignored. That is exactly why we insist on direct participation of
Nagorrio Karabagh in the negotiations, in which Armenia actively
participates.

The solution shall emerge from the substance of the conflict and not
from the perception of the possible strengthening of Azerbaijan
through future “oil money”.

“Oil money” approach is the formula of confrontation and not of
compromise. Armenia is ready to continue and advance the cease fire
regime. We are ready for serious negotiations on a full scale solution
for the conflict. That is exactly why we have accepted two last
formulas of solution offered by the international mediators, which,
unfortunately, were denied by Azerbaijan.

It is difficult to overstate the importance of advancement of the
regional cooperation in the Southern Caucasus. There is a wide
spectrum for potential cooperation: from synchronization of
legislation to restoring the interconnected transportation systems and
to joint projects in the energy sector. We are confident that regional
cooperation is the right route to the settlement of conflicts.

We have no doubt that South Caucasus as a region of inclusive economic
cooperation will be able to achieve much more than three states of the
region can dream of doing on their own. We believe in peace and
cooperation.

Southern Caucasus has always been sensitive of external
influences. Located at the crossroads of civilizations with vast
potential in resources and numerous transit roots, it has always been
a zone of increased interest. These considerations guided us in
forming our foreign policy of “complimentarity.”

That policy is based on the concept of seeking advantages in softening
the contradictions of the global and regional powers, and not in
deepening the gaps. We are responsible for the regional stability and
our actions shall help to solve problems, instead of creating new
ones. That approach allowed us to develop trustworthy relations with
the United States, the European Union and Iran, and to strengthen the
traditional kinship with Russia.

In this context I would also like to concentrate on the Armenian
Turkish relations, or rather on their absence. Those relations are
shaded by the memories of the past: the Genocide, its consequences and
lack of repentance. Nowadays the situation is worsened by the blockade
of Armenia by Turkey. I would like to outline two principals which in
my view are crucial to finding the way out from this impasse. First
of all: Developing practical ties and deliberations over the inherited
problems shall take place in different dimensions and shall not
influence one the other.

Second: Armenian Turkish relations shall not be conditioned by our
relations with a third country (Azerbaijan). Any precondition
terminates all positive expectations.

Dear Mr. President, ladies and gentlemen: Concluding, I would like to
assure you that Armenia perceives its future in full scale integration
with the European family. A few days ago the European Union has
decided to include Armenia in its “new neighborhood” initiative. This
will further advance our resolve to satisfy the European criteria, to
be able to contribute and fully benefit from the cooperation between
our states and nations. We walk this road with deep belief and
confidence and we appreciate your efforts to help us in that uneasy
but crucial effort.

Thank you for your attention.