Turkish Press: Russia sees EU presence in Armenia as attempt to oust it from region

Turkey –

Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova said on Wednesday that the European Union’s presence in Armenia was organized with the goal of ousting Russia from the region.

Commenting on plans to open three operational centers of the EU observation mission in Armenia, Zakharova said in a statement that from the very beginning, Brussels’ activities in this regard lacked transparency.

“The deployment of the European Union presence in Armenia was carried out forcefully, under serious pressure from Brussels. The EU members practically imposed their presence,” she said.

She noted that the launch of the mission, which ostensibly aimed to help normalize relations between Azerbaijan and Armenia, took place without the consent of the Azerbaijani side and other regional players and without proper reporting.

"This only confirms the true motive of the EU policy in the region, the main purpose of which is to squeeze Russia out of the Transcaucasus and turn the South Caucasus into an arena of geopolitical confrontation to the detriment of the core interests of the people living there,” she said.

According to Zakharova's assessment, the increase in the number of EU monitoring points "has nothing to do with the task of establishing stability and peace in relations between Baku and Yerevan."

"The non-accountability of the EU mission to the international community and, above all, to Azerbaijan and Armenia, reinforces suspicions of the existence of a hidden agenda in EU activities 'on the ground,' the presence of a 'second bottom' in the mission's mandate under the guise of its 'civilian' nature," she said.

The spokeswoman said that Moscow is not the only one who has "numerous reasonable questions" about the real motives of the EU's activities in the region.

“We continue to believe that the continuing expansion of the EU extra-regional factor in the Transcaucasus, behind which the anti-Russian objectives of the United States and NATO can be seen, can only exacerbate the existing contradictions here,” she said.

"There is no ‘added value’ from the dubious activity of EU 'experts' near the Armenian-Azerbaijani border. Moreover, they are not able to ensure security and compliance with the cease-fire agreements reached with the decisive role of Russian mediation," she said, arguing that the presence of the Russian peacekeeping contingent remains a guarantee of peace in the region.

The development of the situation shows that the trilateral agreement between Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia is the most sustainable base for the settlement, she said.

Zakharova also promised that Russia will continue to assist the parties in ensuring security and stability in the region.

Indian ambassador thanks Pashinyan for government’s care and attention towards wounded workers in Azeri shooting

 17:25,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has held a meeting with the Ambassador of India to Armenia Nilakshi Saha Sinha.

The Prime Minister congratulated the ambassador on assuming office and expressed hope that as a result of her active work the Armenian-Indian relations will continue to develop in various directions, the Prime Minister’s Office said in a readout.

PM Pashinyan said that Armenia is eager to expand ties with India, including in the economy and culture.

At the same time, the Prime Minister also discussed the Azerbaijani border shooting targeting a metallurgical plant which is under construction involving foreign investments in the village of Yeraskh, which resulted in two Indian citizens involved in the construction works being wounded. The Prime Minister wished speedy recovery to the wounded construction workers.

Ambassador Nilakshi Saha Sinha thanked the Government of Armenia for the attention and care for the health condition of the two Indian nationals wounded in Yeraskh.

The PM and the Indian ambassador also discussed issues related to the expansion of business ties, IT, tourism, education and culture partnership. Organizing high-level mutual visits and strengthening of the close ties between the two countries was highlighted.

Asbarez: A Good Father

Rev. Dr. Vahan H. Tootikian


BY REV. DR. VAHAN H. TOOTIKIAN

The third Sunday in June has been observed in many places for quite some time as Father’s Day. We know there are many stories and jokes belittling the role of fathers in the home and the family. But fathers do have a most important role to play. In most instances, it is the father who is the breadwinner. By that term we usually mean that the father works at whatever his job or profession may be thus providing the financial care of his family.

Just as important as providing for the physical needs of the family is the role of the father, it should also be his involvement in every aspect of his home.  In the years past the father was somewhat of a dictator.  He gave orders and it was rarely that his orders were disobeyed because he was also a strict disciplinarian.  In later years, even though discipline is usually administered by the father, his role has become more and more that of a counselor and advisor. Where parents have counseled with and advised their children about the ways of life, where parents have been more and more concerned about the example they are setting for their children, and where parents by word and example have tried to instill Christian principles into their teaching, family life has improved.

A good father cannot give in to every whim of the child, for in so doing he would instill a lack of respect for law and order.  I believe that many of the problems of our nation are the improper relationship in the home. I also believe that home is what we make it! As the homes are, so is the nation.

Where does a Christian father get his direction, wisdom and guidance but from our Heavenly Father who is the source of wisdom, mercy, love, patience, and provision.  A wise father also trusts in God and fears Him, which means, loves, awes and respects Him.

The Holy Scriptures devote much time and attention to the question: What is God like? The Psalmist offers this answer: “As a father…so the Lord” (Psalm 103:13-14). Jesus took his concept of God as father and made it the theme of his life and teaching. He taught his disciples to pray: “Our Father, Who is in heaven…” There is no sermon of which it does not appear, no prayer from which it is omitted. The first record of his speaking is this: “Didn’t you know that I had to be in my Father’s house” (Luke 2:49). The last words that he spoke was: “Father, into Your hands I commit my spirit” (Luke 23:46).

A good father must have those characteristics that our Heavenly Father has. He must be a loving, caring and giving person. He must be a good provider to furnish his family with the necessities of life. He must discipline his children. He must give correction to their lives. He must have a vital, personal relationship with them. He must be kind and gentle. He must be constant source of comfort, understanding and strength.

Happy Father’s day to all good fathers.

Rev. Dr. Vahan H. Tootikian is the Minister Emeritus of the Armenian Congregational Church of Greater Detroit and the Executive Director of the Armenian Evangelical World Council.




Azerbaijani military again opens gunfire at U.S.-affiliated steel plant construction site in Armenian village

 10:24,

YEREVAN, JUNE 16, ARMENPRESS. Azerbaijani forces again opened gunfire at 10:00 on June 16 at the steel mill which is under construction in the Armenian village of Yeraskh, the ministry of defense said in a statement.

“On June 16, at 10 a.m., the Armed Forces units of Azerbaijan opened fire from different caliber small arms on the under-construction metallurgical plant in Yeraskh, which was being built with foreign investment,” the ministry of defense said on Facebook.

The steelworks came under Azerbaijani gunfire on June 13 and 14 as well.

2 Indian construction workers were wounded during the June 14 shooting.

Reacting to the June 14 shooting, United States Department of State spokesperson Matthew Miller Washington was “deeply concerned” that two civilian workers of the U.S.-affiliated company sustained injuries from “gunfire from the direction of Azerbaijan.”

The steel manufacturer building the plant on June 15 that construction would resume as planned.

https://armenpress.am/eng/news/1113405.html?fbclid=IwAR3tI7RadzgFrqMYQNRTibdqTKx0Vos4tTsEwo-XzcqVHhyYFH0kvAlB1q0

Azerbaijan wants to disrupt development of Armenian border towns, says governor of Ararat after Yeraskh shooting

 13:46,

YEREVAN, JUNE 15, ARMENPRESS. Ararat Governor Sedrak Tevonyan has assured foreign diplomats visiting the village of Yeraskh that the steelworks which is being built in the village doesn’t pose any environmental threats.

Tevonyan dismissed the Azerbaijani claims alleging that the plant’s construction poses environmental hazards and noted that Azerbaijani authorities actually want to disrupt the development of Armenia’s border towns.

“The Azerbaijani actions seek to disrupt the normal course of development of Armenia’s border towns. They make claims about environmental issues, but I assure you that no such issues exist,” the governor told foreign ambassadors who visited the village a day after the construction site came under Azeri cross-border gunfire, wounding two workers.

200 people are involving in the construction of the plant.

Approximately 1000 people will work at the plant when it gets launched.

Photos by Hayk Manukyan




Construction Underway for Armenian-American Steel Plant in Yeraskh

June 7 2023
In a recent Facebook post, Armenian Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan shared exciting news about the construction of a substantial Armenian-American steel
Armenian Steel PlantImage Source – Eurasianet
Strategic Research Institute

In a recent Facebook post, Armenian Economy Minister Vahan Kerobyan shared exciting news about the construction of a substantial Armenian-American steel plant in the village of Yeraskh, located in the Ararat region. This ambitious project is set to bring significant economic and industrial growth to the region.

With an estimated investment of around $70 million, the steel plant is being built from the ground up. The production workshop stands at an impressive height of 30 meters, covering an expansive area of 16,500 square meters. Once fully operational, the plant is projected to manufacture 180,000 metric tons of steel products annually.

The construction of this steel plant is a testament to the commitment to fostering industrial development and creating job opportunities in Armenia. The project has already provided employment to 200 individuals, and it plans to expand its workforce further, aiming to hire an additional 800 employees once the plant is commissioned.

The establishment of the Armenian-American steel plant in Yeraskh represents a significant milestone in the country's efforts to bolster its industrial capabilities. This venture is expected to contribute to the overall economic growth and enhance Armenia's position in the steel production sector.

https://www.steelguru.com/steel/construction-underway-for-armenian-american-steel-plant-in-yeraskh

Strawberries in the snow: overcoming resistance to introduce new technologies in Armenian agriculture

June 7 2023

Farmer Garegin Muradyan has been growing strawberries for 5-6 years in the village of Tavshut, in the Shirak region of Armenia, on a field that is covered only with a net, without the possibility of heating, without additional “excesses”. He says he’s doing well.

“At first I didn’t believe in the result either, but then I fell in love, started to love this business,” says Garegin, who until 2017 had never been involved in agriculture.

He says that last season he harvested about 1.6 tons of strawberries from one hectare of land, which he sold or distributed, “except for the ones we ate,” he jokes.

However, in Armenia’s agricultural sector, successful people like Muradyan are more often the exception than the rule. Such success seems beyond reach to many of those working in agriculture due to the need for financial investments, infrastructure and weather conditions.

Garegin Muradyan

Vardan Khachatryan, who runs a greenhouse in the village of Khoronk in the Armavir region, says planting strawberries wouldn’t work for them. And the problem is access to water, with no irrigation system and not enough money to install his own.

In Khachatryan’s case, the greenhouse is a source of income. But Martun Vardanyan from the village of Lernakert in the Shirak region uses his land to grow crops for his family. He also adds cold weather as a problem specific to their village. Lernakert is located on the slopes of Aragats, in a mountainous area.

Vardanyan explains greenhouses are not an option for him, as gas consumption will be higher than, for example, in the warmer Ararat Valley, and their production would not be competitive.

However, these problems are familiar to Garegin Muradyan. The fact is that Garegin Muradyan grows strawberries not in some settlement with favorable conditions, but in one of the highest and coldest places in Armenia. The village of Tavshut, where he harvests, is located in the Ashotsk region.

According to the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Infrastructure, the lowest point of the Ashotsk region is 1,968 metres, the highest is 3,196 metres; 46% of the year in Ashotsk is frosty, 43% of the year the region is covered with snow.

When we inform Vardanyan and Khachatryan about Muradyan’s successful example, they get curious. But they also indicate that there may be limits. Muradyan, who has a normal crop of strawberries, confirms that not everyone succeeds.

“Actually, the whole of Armenia was very surprised that we are at an altitude of 2,100 meters and we get very good quality strawberries,” explains Muradyan.

Regarding the cold, he notes that in winter the snow covers the plants, and they do not freeze. It’s actually worse when there is no snow cover, as was the case this year. According to him, the plants caught a cold outside, but fortunately, the roots were not affected, and the growth continued.

A greenhouse for growing strawberries

Statistics, however, show that agriculture in Armenia is not yet perceived as a full-fledged business. In particular, most of the crop or livestock production produced in the regions neighboring Yerevan is sold, unlike in outlying regions. In other words, in the regions far from Yerevan, farmers consume their harvest in the villages. And since they sell less, they produce less.

“Armenia’s geographic location, zoning and other factors create the opportunity for so much diversity that with the right use of technology, you can get the best result,” says organic farming expert Vardan Torchyan.

The expert explains that the cost of implementing new technologies also depends on crops, water quality, etc.

“On average, the cost of installing a drip irrigation system per hectare is about $5,000-6,000, and anti-hail nets are about $14,000-15,000,” he notes, adding that most of the farmers service loans larger than the specified amount, and they do so at the expense of agricultural products. And the problem is not so much the lack of money.

According to him, even if many farmers are offered such systems for free, most of them will refuse, and he knows this from his experience.

“The availability of money is not an absolute or the only necessary condition for the introduction of new technologies. A more important condition is one’s awareness of why you need it, what it will give you. The biggest problem is that people don’t believe in themselves, let alone believe in their neighbour. They need time to do something themselves and see that it will work,” the expert explains.

According to Torchyan, a test-experiment can last 7-10 years, but even then it may not be clear to the tester why it worked or why it didn’t. In this case, it is important that people just believe and immediately introduce new technologies.

Torchyan also recalls that the government now supports the introduction of new technologies, but often it is not the villagers who benefit from this, but people who have never had anything to do with the village, who simply read, studied and decided to invest. Most of them are people living in cities.

The anti-hail nets for strawberries

Indeed, strawberry grower Garegin Muradyan had no experience in agriculture. As for costs, Muradyan confirms that all these infrastructures require initial investments, money. Muradyan found a solution to this problem in the development programmes of international donors. In particular, with funding from the United Nations.

“They set up an anti-hail nets and drip irrigation system. We only provided the land and fenced it, and they did the rest of the job. That’s how I started doing this,” he says.

In the beginning, half of the 1,000 metre garden was planted with strawberries and half with raspberries. The farmer then received additional support with the “EU Green Agriculture Initiative in Armenia” (EU GAIA) project, including a two-wheel tractor, an extended irrigation system and more anti-hail nets. His strawberry production has now turned into one of the showcase training centres through which the EU tries to promote sustainable agriculture programmes in Armenia.

“I am so glad that our beneficiaries are now serving as an example to apply to our programme, that there is such an opportunity. For example, we have beneficiaries from remote villages who found us and we are now giving them a solar plant or a drip irrigation system and so on. In other words, people, seeing what others have received, believe that they can also apply. And it’s good that our farmers like to look at each other and say, ‘Well, if he’s doing it, I’ll do it too’,” says Emma Petrosyan, the project’s communication manager.

The specialist also highlights that spreading good practices is one of their goals, and they do this through demonstrative or educational experimental farms. About 15 such farms demonstrate both the work of new types of equipment and the technology of growing new crops.

She explains that one of the targets of the project is the development of agribusiness in the northern regions of Armenia. One of the other targets is the development of organic agriculture, and this applies to all regions.

“The programme includes both farmers and primary producers, as well as processors, because the entire value chain must be closed. We start from primary production and work our way up to the fork, as they say. We also have support for post-harvest companies to maintain that chain and bring it to the market,” Petrosyan notes.

The programme can provide equipment, both with anti-hail nets and drip irrigation systems, and with refrigerators and recycling technologies, but the limitation is that the applicant for the project must also have a contribution, for example, provide land or carry out construction.

The poultry farm by Armine Martirosyan

As of now, the project has more than 160 beneficiaries all over Armenia. The beneficiaries are engaged in gardening, field work, animal husbandry and poultry farming.

Armine Martirosyan is the founder of such a poultry farm. Her farm already has 1,200 birds and the possibility of expansion.

“I am not from a farming family, I was born and raised in Kanaker, however my grandmother always kept chickens, they were always in front of our eyes. It seemed to us that we knew what kind of business it was, and my brother and I decided to start such a business,” says Armine Martirosyan.

In 2016, they bought the land, in 2018 they built the poultry house, and in 2019 they started poultry farming.

After that, there were complications and, according to Martirosyan, they learned from their mistakes and failures. There have been losses due to lack of knowledge about vaccinations, the emergence of new producers and artificially low prices, market volatility, etc.

Twice they benefited from the support programmes for organic agriculture and women entrepreneurs. Now they are expanding what they already have. They brought 600 chicks and plan to add 300-400 birds annually. Initially, sales were made by delivering individual orders from door to door, but already this month the product will be presented in one of the supermarket chains.

“We are no longer dependent on support programmes, it is a stable business,” says Martirosyan.

Emma Petrosyan, EU-GAIA project Communications Manager, also mentions that although their support is temporary, many people still have knowledge and change their approach. Moreover, in the case of specific organic agriculture, one can see how many of the participants stay in that field. According to Petrosyan, 50-60 per cent of their beneficiaries remained in that sector even after the end of the support.

Author: Garik Harutyunyan

Article published in Armenian by Ampop.am

https://euneighbourseast.eu/news/stories/strawberries-in-the-snow-overcoming-resistance-to-introduce-new-technologies-in-armenian-agriculture/

Pashinyan broaches possibility of returning key exclave to Azerbaijan

EurasiaNet.org
June 7 2023
Joshua Kucera Jun 7, 2023

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan has raised the prospect of ceding control of an occupied exclave of Azerbaijani territory inside Armenia. But it remains unclear if that is a signal of an impending Armenian concession or a rhetorical attempt to lower domestic expectations, analysts say.

In a question-and-answer session at a June 2 appearance with Moldova’s Armenian community, Pashinyan was asked about Karki. That is one of the vexatious bits of territory, a relic of idiosyncratic Soviet border-drawing practices, that are effectively islands of de jure Azerbaijani territory inside Armenia, or vice versa. These exclaves are one of several tricky issues that Armenia and Azerbaijan are trying to resolve in ongoing negotiations to comprehensively resolve their decades-long conflict.

Pashinyan’s answer seemed to indicate that Armenia was willing to give up Karki, which was part of the Azerbaijani Soviet Socialist Republic but was entirely surrounded by the Armenian SSR. It was taken over by Armenia in the first war between the two sides in the 1990s and is now home to a small community of Armenians who moved there following the war. From a national security perspective, the village is critical because it lies directly on the country’s main north-south highway.

Delineating the countries’ shared border is one of the main tasks of the peace talks, and  Pashinyan has repeatedly said that 1975 Soviet maps – the most recent and precise available – should be the standard by which Armenia and Azerbaijan should draw their border today. In his comments in Moldova, he said that should be the basis for determining the fate of Karki. “If it turns out that it belongs to Azerbaijan by that map, then we don’t have any problem,” he said. 

As Pashinyan no doubt already knew, it does in fact turn out to belong to Azerbaijan according to that map

He continued by minimizing the road issue: “There’s no such enclave that could cause the kind of road problems for us that would be unsolvable. There’s no such issue. If the road can’t pass this way it will pass that way. There is no problem whatsoever. We are actually developing our road network in Armenia to such a level that there is no unsolvable issue,” Pashinyan said.

His comments created the impression among some that this and a few other territories were already virtually signed away.

"If Nikol Pashinyan remains in power and continues with his current policy, Tigranashen [the Armenian name for Karki] will face a fate far worse than that of Shurnukh [a village on the Armenia/Azerbaijan border that Armenians lost partial control of as a result of the 2020 war],” Artur Khachatryan, a member of parliament from the opposition Armenia alliance, told reporters following the prime minister’s remarks. 

"The handover of enclaves to the enemy will create more favorable conditions and temptation for them to continue the war on Armenia’s territory. As a result, the peace treaty will become a war treaty,” Vazgen Manukyan, a former prime minister now allied with the political opposition, wrote on Facebook.

Karki and several other villages in similar conditions emerged as contentious issues even before the end of the 2020 war. In initial media reports about the November 10 ceasefire statement that ended that war, the agreement contained language stipulating the “return to the Azerbaijani side the territory held by the Armenian side in the Gazakh region of the Azerbaijani republic.” In the document that was formally published, however, that line had been deleted. (Two of the Azerbaijani exclaves that were surrounded by the Armenian SSR are part of Gazakh region. Karki, the third, is near Nakhchivan. There are also several bits of territory contiguous with Azerbaijan that Armenia sliced off during the first war in the 1990s. There was one Armenian exclave inside the Azerbaijani SSR, Artsvashen.)

Since then, the issue has periodically bubbled up into public discussions about Armenia-Azerbaijan negotiations. The Armenian position has typically been that the two sides should just keep the territories inside their borders (i.e. they would give up Artsvashen and get the seven Azerbaijani territories in return). “Our hope is that the possible solution is that the exclave of Armenia is left to Azerbaijan, the exclaves of Azerbaijan, which are in the territory of Armenia, are left to Armenia,’” the head of Armenia’s National Security Council, Armen Grigoryan, said last May. 

The stated Azerbaijani position, meanwhile, has been that its Soviet-era territories should be returned to its control.

In a June 5 statement, Azerbaijan’s foreign ministry again reiterated that position, complaining that “Armenia […] is still occupying 8 villages of Azerbaijan” and is delaying the “return of 8 villages to Azerbaijan under various pretexts.”

Pashinyan’s statement might appear to be a reversal of Armenia’s previous position. But he may simply be lowering expectations so that if in the negotiations Armenia managed to hold on to the territories inside its borders, it could be presented to the Armenian public as a diplomatic victory, said Benyamin Poghosyan, an analyst and head of the Center for Political and Economic Strategic Studies in Yerevan.

“He has to have two options,” Poghosyan told Eurasianet. “If he keeps the exclaves, he can show it as a victory for himself. And if the exclaves are given up, then he has to show that it’s not a tragedy.”

A solution that would give back all territories to their Soviet-era owners would create logistical headaches, in particular among the territories that are fully surrounded by the other country. It would raise the prospect of the contention around the Lachin Corridor being multiplied and expanded to a new Karki Corridor, Artsvashen Corridor, and so on. 

As such, Azerbaijan may not be interested in a pure exclave-for-exclaves trade, but in bargaining over a solution that would see it gain as much territory as it stands to lose, said one Baku-based political commentator, who asked not to be named so as to be able to speak more candidly. Baku may be looking at a solution that would include Azerbaijan regaining control over the villages that are contiguous to Azerbaijan’s borders; a trade of the exclaves; and retaining control over enough of the Armenian territories that it now controls as the result of military advances since 2020 to make the ledgers work out, the commentator said. (Baku says that the border near the territories it took as a result of those operations is not demarcated and so should be the subject of negotiations; Armenia says they were incursions onto its internationally recognized territory.)

The deal also could include Nrnadzor, a village deep inside southern Armenia that until 1928 was part of the Azerbaijani SSR and was known as Nyuvadi. Azerbaijan has sought to regain control of that village in previous negotiations and may seek to do so again, the commentator said. 

Delimitation and demarcation of the countries’ shared border is being undertaken by a trilateral commission led by the deputy prime ministers of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Russia. 

Azerbaijan accuses Armenia of dragging its feet on cooperation with that commission. “Instead of insisting on special reference to some 1975 map, it would be more useful for the Armenian side to start the delimitation work,” Azerbaijan’s Foreign Ministry said in a June 4 statement. “It should not be forgotten that after the Patriotic War of 2020, it was Armenia that did not respond to the proposal of delimitation of the borders with Armenia for a long time.” 

In an appearance before parliament on June 5, Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan was asked about the issue and said it should be the purview of the commission. 

“Politically, yes, we know that such enclaves existed in the territory of Armenia during the last period of Soviet Armenia, but I think that this is an issue that should be dealt with by the delimitation commission itself,” he said.

Joshua Kucera, a senior correspondent, is Eurasianet's former Turkey/Caucasus editor and has written for the site since 2007.

ACYOA Juniors Meet in Watertown for Hye M’rtsoom Weekend

ATTENTION EDITOR: Two photos attached with captions below. Additional photos can be downloaded here:

https://stjameswatertown.smugmug.com/ACYOA-/Hye-Mrtsoom-2023-ACYOA-Junior-Sports-Weekend/

 

 

HEADLINE:

ACYOA Juniors Meet in Watertown for Hye M’rtsoom Weekend

 

Over Memorial Day Weekend, 130 ACYOA Juniors from 11 parishes throughout the northeast, together with their chaperones, enthusiastically gathered at St. James Church in Watertown, MA, for the 45th annual Hye M’rtsoom ACYOA Juniors Sports Weekend.

 

This year’s gathering, hosted by the St. James ACYOA Juniors chapter and parish, was the first Hye M’rtsoom event since 2019.

 

On Friday evening, participants gathered with anticipation as buses began to arrive from out of town to kick-off the weekend. Its theme, “Aim Hye,” was selected by the ACYOA members.

 

Saturday’s events began with a morning service and welcome from parish pastor Fr. Arakel Aljalian, Youth Minister Maria Derderian, and Dn. Adam Bullock representing the Eastern Diocese. The service was followed by a day of sports competitions, including basketball, volleyball, and individual sports.

 

Opportunities for fellowship continued throughout the weekend, including an icebreaker before the games began, and a service project, where participants prepared sandwiches for donation to a local shelter.

 

Evening events on Saturday and Sunday gave participants opportunities to enjoy fellowship, dancing, and a trophy ceremony on Sunday to celebrate the tournament’s victors (see below for the roster of award-winners).

 

Participants, host families, chaperones, and volunteers gathered for breakfast on Monday morning before returning home with new friends made and new memories formed. The weekend was a welcome return to the beloved Hye M’rtsoom tradition.

 

Click here to view photos.

 

 

* 2023 Hye M’rtsoom Awards

 

INDIVIDUAL SPORTS & GAMES

 

Beginner Tavloo
1st Place – Cameron Santerian (Holy Trinity, Cheltenham)
2nd Place – Christina Hovnanian (Holy Trinity, Cambridge)

 

Beginner Chess  
1st Place – Arek Gulbankian (Holy Trinity, Cambridge)
2nd Place – Ishkhan Ishkhanian (St. James, Watertown)

 

Advanced Tavloo
1st Place –Andrew Gorgissian (Holy Martyrs, Bayside)
2nd Place – Mark Boyajian (Holy Translators, Framingham)

 

Advanced Chess
1st Place – Vardan Karapetyan (Holy Trinity, Cambridge)
2nd Place –  Gary Nercessian (Holy Martyrs, Bayside)

 

Girls Ping-Pong
1st Place –  Perri Simonian (St. Sahag & Șt. Mesrob, Wynnewood, PA)
2nd Place – Lucine Chagnon (St. James, Watertown)

 

Boys Ping-Pong
1st Place –  Harry Chakmakian (St. James, Watertown)
2nd Place – Alex Kurkjian (St. James, Watertown)

 

* * *

 

TEAM SPORTS

 

Girls Basketball
1st Place – Holy Trinity Cambridge team, including players from Holy Martyrs, Holy Translators, and St. George
2nd Place – Sts. Vartanants/St. Leon Combined Team

 

Boys Basketball
1st Place –St. James A
2nd Place – Philly A

 

Volleyball
1st Place – St. James A
2nd Place – Holy Trinity, Cambridge A

 

3 Point contest
Boys, 1st Place – Christian Diaz (St. James)
Boys, 2nd Place – Paul Kasaryan (St. Leon)

Girls, 1st Place – Christina Hovnanian (Holy Trinity)
Girls, 2nd Place – Grace Yacobe (St. Sahag & St. Mesrob)

 

Sportsmanship Awards
Boys – John Kurkjian (St. James)
Girls – Jessica Ciaffi (Holy Translators)

 

Overall Champion
St James Watertown

 

* * *

 

CHRISTIAN SERVICE & CHARACTER

 

Archbishop Tiran Nersoyan Vision Award
Jacob Topakbashian (St. Sahag & St. Mesrob, Wynnewood, PA)

 

—6/1/23

 

* * *

 

PHOTO CAPTION 1:

For Memorial Day weekend, 130 ACYOA Juniors from 11 parishes gathered at St. James Church in Watertown, MA, for the Hye M’rtsoom ACYOA Juniors Sports Weekend.

 

PHOTO CAPTION 2:

Fr. Abraham Makhasyan (Bayside, NY), host parish pastor Fr. Arakel Aljalian (Watertown, MA), Fr. Khachatur Kesablyan (Chelmsford, MA), and Dn. Adam Bullock of the Eastern Diocese’s Ministries department, along with two young tbirs, during services at the ACYOA Juniors Hye M’rtsoom weekend.

 

# # #

 

 

The Enduring Cost of War

June 6 2023
 

The Russian aggression against Ukraine shows once more that we have not learned the lessons of history and are paying a high price for it. Future generations will also pay a significant price for our generation’s sins: fractured and destroyed families; poor social and health services; and a polluted environment. Children with mental and developmental problems are the clearest examples of the intergenerational effects of war.

The tremendous stress of war increases the chances of interpersonal violence, particularly against women. When the victims of violence are pregnant women, the intergenerational effect manifests as the increase of still births and premature births among them. Mothers who were the children of Holocaust survivors were shown to have higher levels of psychological stress and less positive parenting skills. During the siege of Sarajevo, perinatal mortality and morbidity almost doubled, and there was a significant increase in the number of children born with malformations.

By analyzing the number of people killed indirectly by the “War on Terror” in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Pakistan, Somalia, Syria, and Yemen, a report by the Costs of War Project at Brown University’s Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs estimates that the war in those countries resulted in 3.6 – 3.7 million indirect deaths, while the total death toll in those same countries could reach at least 4.5 – 4.6 million, and counting.

Stephanie Savell, the Costs of War’s Co-Director and author of the report states, “wars often kill far more people indirectly than in direct combat, particularly young children.” Almost all the victims, says Savell, are from the most impoverished and marginalized populations. Most indirect war deaths are due to malnutrition, pregnancy and birth-related problems, and infectious and chronic diseases.

According to the report, more than 7.6 million children under five in post-9/11 war zones are suffering from acute malnutrition. Malnutrition has serious long-time effects on children’s health. Among those effects are increased vulnerability to diseases, developmental delays, stunted growth, and even blindness, reports UNICEF. Those children affected with malnutrition are also prevented from achieving success in school or having meaningful work as adults.

Although using doctors, patients and civilians as a human shield is a war crime, they are frequent targets of uncontrolled violence. Now in Sudan, Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) reports that their staff in multiple locations, have been repeatedly confronted by fighters entering health facilities, and stealing medicines, supplies, and vehicles. It is estimated that 70 percent of health facilities in areas in conflict are out of service, and 30 among them are targets of attacks.

In U.N.-sponsored health missions, I was able to see the consequences of war in countries such as Mozambique, Malawi, Angola, El Salvador and Nicaragua, a sobering experience that left painful memories. The sadness and feeling of helplessness I saw in the eyes of women and children still haunt me.

Repeated violence has numbed us to its consequences, our senses overwhelmed by cruelty. Faced with the tragic complexity of life, we are unable to savor its sweet moments of care and tenderness. Eager to escape brutal reality we watch the latest TV news and then mindlessly change the channel to a baking show.

But does war only produce negative effects? What we see now in Ukraine is that the Russian aggression against people of all ages -both soldiers and civilians- has produced millions of displaced people, but it has also given rise to the solidarity of Ukraine’s neighbors, who at high personal and social cost have provided refuge to tens of thousands of families fleeing the war.

Ukrainian women of all ages have also taken up arms to defend their country from Russian aggression. Currently, more than 60,000 Ukrainian women serve in the military, while tens of thousands more are helping their country as journalists, paramedics, teachers, and politicians. At the same time they continue being the center of support for their families. Because men are on the front lines, women must keep hospitals, schools and even villages themselves in operation, often without basic supplies. Although these actions are an example of the best of the human spirit, they do not erase the harrowing cruelty of war.

In his poem “The Dance,” the poet Atom Yarcharian, better known as Siamanto, who was killed by the Ottoman military during the Armenian genocide, expresses the horror of war,

                        The Dance

In a field of cinders where Armenians

were still dying,

a German woman, trying not to cry

told me the horror she witnessed:

“This incomprehensible thing I’m telling you about,

I saw with my own eyes.

From my window of hell

I clenched my teeth

and watched with my pitiless eyes:

the town of Bardoz turned

into a heap of ashes.

Corpses piled high as trees.

From the waters, from the springs,

from the streams and the road,

the stubborn murmur of your blood

still revenges my ear.

Don’t be afraid. I must tell you what I saw,

so people will understand

the crimes men do to men.

For two days, by the road to the graveyard . . .

Let the hearts of the whole world understand.

It was Sunday morning,

the first useless Sunday dawning on the corpses.

From dusk to dawn in my room,

with a stabbed woman,

my tears wetting her death.

Suddenly I heard from afar

a dark crowd standing in a vineyard

lashing twenty brides

and singing dirty songs.

Leaving the half-dead girl on the straw mattress,

I went to the balcony on my window

and the crowd seemed to thicken like a forest.

An animal of a man shouted, ‘you must dance,

dance when our drum beats.’

With fury whips cracked

on the flesh of these women.

Hand in hand the brides began their circle dance.

Now, I envied my wounded neighbor

because with a calm snore

she cursed the universe

and gave her soul up to the stars . . .

In vain I shook my fists at the crowd.

‘Dance,’ they raved,

‘dance till you die, infidel beauties.

With your flapping tits, dance!

Smile and don’t complain.

You’re abandoned now, you’re naked slaves,

so dance like a bunch of fuckin’ sluts.

We’re hot for you all.’

Twenty graceful brides collapsed.

‘Get up,’ the crowd roared,

brandishing their swords.

Then someone brought a jug of kerosene.

Human justice, I spit in your face.

The brides were anointed.

‘Dance,’ they thundered–

here’s a fragrance you can’t get in Arabia.’

Then with a torch, they set

the naked brides on fire.

And the charred corpses rolled

and tumbled to their deaths . . .

Like a storm I slammed the shutters

of my windows,

and went over to the dead girl

and asked: ‘How can I dig out my eyes,

how can I dig, tell me?’ “

Armenian; trans. Peter Balakian and Nevart Yaghlian

Dr. Cesar Chelala is a co-winner of the 1979 Overseas Press Club of America award for the article “Missing or Disappeared in Argentina: The Desperate Search for Thousands of Abducted Victims.”