Author: Suren Karakhanian
Armenia gets set for sustainable tourism
This blended training program has been delivered as part of the Integrated Rural Tourism Development (IRTD) project, which is financed by the Russian Federation and implemented by UNDP Armenia in close partnership with the Ministry of Territorial Administration and Development.
The training will serve a first pilot strategic action to certify sustainable management skills, with the goal of supporting long-term objective of creating sustainable income-generating opportunities to reduce rural poverty, and to empower community members to achieve sustainable development"It has been great to learn about many innovative and forward-thinking project examples from across Armenia, addressing key development challenges and sustainability issues through tourism. With their newly acquired knowledge in effective project management, our training participants will be able to approach their projects in a smarter, more efficient and productive manner, focusing on making a difference for the sustainable development of rural communities." Said Silvia Barbone, PM4SD Trainer, Managing Director, Jlag
Relevant links
UNDP Armenia IRTD project website:
http://www.am.undp.org/content/armenia/en/home/operations/projects/poverty_reduction/integrated-rural-tourism-development–.html
Valere Tjolle
In search of Leonard, my martyred ancestor
Eastern Turkey had a large and thriving community of Christians a little over 100 years ago, but since then most have been dispersed or killed. The BBC's Eli Melki went to look for traces of a relative, who was martyred at the age of 33.
One evening in June, I sat in the sunset among the Roman ruins of Zirzawan hill, in south-east Turkey. This is where it's said the remains of one of my ancestors are buried in a mass grave. Leonard Melki was about 33 years old at the beginning of World War One, and his fate was determined by his Christian faith.
At that time, between a fifth and a quarter of the inhabitants of eastern Turkey – then part of the Ottoman Empire – belonged to an array of Eastern denominations of the Christian Church, including the Armenian Apostolic Church, the Syriac Church, the Church of the East (Nestorians) and the Chaldean Church.
Image caption
All except the Armenians worshipped in Syriac – a dialect of Aramaic, the language of Christ.
They lived among the empire's Muslim majority and, while many prospered, at some times and in some places they were subject to outright persecution; in World War One, it went far, far beyond that.
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Leonard, my great-grandfather's cousin, was born a member of one of the Eastern churches – the Maronites – but later became a Capuchin friar, and in his mid-20s he was sent to run the order's school in the city of Mardin, close to what is now the border between Turkey and Syria.
At this point Christians represented between 35% and 40% of Mardin's inhabitants. The Capuchin monastery, where Leonard taught boys the rudiments of the Christian faith, stood alongside a Franciscan monastery in a prominent position in the city centre.
To find out more about Leonard, I spoke to his great-nephew, Fares Melki, who has set up a website dedicated to Leonard and other missionaries from Baabdat, the small town near Beirut where we were both born. As we sat under our family oak tree, he told me that Leonard was born Yusuf (Joseph in Arabic) in about 1881, one of 11 children. As a boy he would have tilled the land around where we were sitting.
Fares showed me some yellowed letters and photographs Leonard sent to relatives and to his superiors. They reveal a young man dedicated to his faith, attached to his sister Tamar, and eager – despite problems with his health – to embark on a mission 1,000km from his picturesque and prosperous home in Mount Lebanon.
In one letter, written in 1912, he wrote about young Muslim men from Mardin being sent to fight in the Balkan Wars.
"Poor souls, I pity them. They are marching like sheep to the slaughter, poorly trained and equipped, but displaying an admirable courage despite of it all. Lacking everything – even bread – they end up by devastating everything and terrorising people wherever they set foot. May God put an end to all this misery, and grant peace and tranquillity to the land.''
But not long afterwards, World War One did the opposite, and the nationalist Young Turks then in control of the Ottoman Empire began to fear a possible alliance between the local Christian populations and Russia, which had quickly gone on the offensive.
Eli Melki made a documentary for BBC Arabic on the Christians of Turkey and Iraq
The English-language version – the Last Christians – was shown on BBC World News
The decision was taken to deport the Armenian population into the interior provinces – though in practice men were often simply executed, and women and children forced into convoys that morphed into death marches.
While these actions were directed against the Armenians, they had the effect of signalling that all Christians in the region had lost the protection of the state. The result was a wave of pogroms, carried out both by the local Ottoman authorities and some Kurdish tribesmen.
Some Syriac Christian churches are estimated to have lost up to half their congregation in the violence. They call this Seyfo, the Year of the Sword, and Leonard was one of the victims.
Today, almost nothing remains of Mardin's ancient Christian heritage. There is no trace of the Capuchin monastery in Mardin, though by chance I met a local historian – possibly the last Armenian living in the city – who was able to point out the precise location of the neighbouring Franciscan monastery. Using old photographs and the memoirs of her grandmother – once a pupil at the girls' school run by Franciscan nuns – she has been able to pinpoint exactly where each arch of the building stood. Today the site is a busy and noisy car park among the narrow shopping streets of this Turkish city. It's hard to imagine now the sounds of the schoolyards and the monastery bells.
But below ground level, in a former public bath building, my Armenian guide showed me an archway, a remnant of one of the two defunct monasteries. And suddenly in my mind's eye I could see Leonard and his pupils passing by – or being dragged along after his arrest.
Leonard was seized in June 1915, when the authorities rounded up a number of clergymen and other notables of the city on trumped up charges of collaboration with the enemy, usually the French. Christians had widely come to be seen as a fifth column of the Western powers, and the missionaries treated as enemy agents.
We walked along the winding old main street referred to by a Dominican monk, Jacques Rhétoré, in his account of the arrests.
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"Father Leonard, a Capuchin, was in front of the convoy of detainees, between two students of Saint Francis's school. As he passed by his convent, he looked upward, in a last salute to the holy house where he lived in the bliss of doing good deeds. There, the soldier flanking him dealt him a blow on the head with a club, yelling at him: 'Walk straight you dirty Fraranji (Frenchman)!'"
The convoy, one of many, was led towards the city of Diyarbakir, where the detainees were to be tried for treason. However, in the middle of the journey, the column of detainees, now in a sorry state, was led to the hill of Zirzawan.
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Their final hour was recounted by another Dominican, Hyacinthe Simon.
"They were killed by groups of four, with knives, daggers and scimitars, or clubbed to death, then their bodies were thrown in the wells. The old fortress still holds their bones and the secret of their last moments," he wrote.
Sitting on Zirzawan hill, I wondered what must have gone through Leonard's mind as his life was about to end. Did he remember our peaceful hometown, the family land with its majestic oak tree, his fellow friars, his beloved sister?
For me, Leonard personifies the tragedy of hundreds of thousands of mostly innocent and unarmed people, who were were killed during the fateful spring and summer of 1915 in the eastern part of the Ottoman Empire. It helps me to fathom the enormity of this disaster.
Image copyright Getty Images
In the distance, I could still see the sprawling new city of Mardin. The old road taken by the death march has now been replaced by a motorway, emblematic of a resurgent Turkey, a country where the two-millennia-old Christian presence has been reduced to the ruins of places of worship. And to about 2,500 Syriac speaking people, who still cling, against all odds, to a handful of towns and villages in the nearby region of Tur Abdin, the "Mountain of the Worshippers".
What was once one of the most ancient and dense Christian presences in the world now stands on the brink of extinction.
Image copyright Alamy
Twenty-five years ago a new church was consecrated in the town of Deir al-Zour in eastern Syria, dedicated to the Armenians killed en masse in 1915. Ironically the building erected in memory of the victims of violence has now been destroyed by bombs.
https://www.bbc.com/news/stories-46650910
Asbarez: Editorial: Looking Ahead to Brighter Days
2018 will undoubtedly become one of the most monumental years in modern Armenian history. The tectonic changes that took place in 2018 will not only set the course for the next year, but will certainly shape the our every-day reality for the foreseeable future.
The popular movement that forced the resignation of president Serzh Sarkisian and toppled his corrupt regime provided the people of Armenia a chance, not seen since Armenia’s independence in 1918, to determine their own fate. Armenia’s independence generation rose to the challenge and was unrelenting in its resolve to ensure that the next generation will have a brighter future in its own homeland.
Armenia will welcome the new year with a new government, whose mandate should not only be to correct the wrongs of the past, but to also establish a new path for a more just and prosperous Armenia, where the rights of its citizens are not trampled upon but are protected.
The challenges that have sprung up since the popular movement must now become the concern of every Armenian, because there is no turning back. Every Armenian must take ownership and be prepared to roll up their sleeves in order to ensure a strong Armenia, without which all the other facets of the Armenian Cause will falter.
The parliamentary elections earlier this month also presented an unprecedented change from elections past, in that it was the first truly free and fair elections since Armenia declared independence in 1991. This means that those who voted also will have strong mandate to hold their newly-elected government responsible and call them to task.
More important, however, is the reality that as the euphoria of the past spring subsides, it will be up to Armenia’s new leadership to govern in a way that will benefit all Armenians, and not just those in power. This means that the new leadership must usher in a new culture of governance that is short on rhetoric and is focused on actions that will ensure that the institutions and branches of government function independently and truly become a checks and balance system that has been lacking in Armenia due to previous regimes’ consolidation of power.
Inevitably, the changes of the past year have not been welcomed by all circles in Armenia or the Diaspora. These elements must understand that the unhealthy status quo has been toppled and the new rules of the game will not allow a return to past norms, since it was those practices that became stranglehold for the people. Hence, whether they are opposition forces or extra-parliamentary factions, must operate within the current realities and must, first and foremost, take steps that will benefit the country instead of divide it.
Armenia and the Armenian Nation are facing critical—and existential—challenges. The tenuous peace in Artsakh is under constant military threat by Azerbaijan. International pressures on Armenia regarding regional priorities of other nations pose undue demands on Armenia to recalibrate its domestic and foreign priorities.
These challenges are of national importance and the new government, as well as the political forces in Armenia, must recognize that only through a united front can we, as a Nation, confront the obstacles that endanger the national security of our homeland and threaten the well-being and right to self-determination of the Armenian people, be that in Armenia proper or in Artsakh.
In its year-end editorial last year, Asbarez called on the leaders of Armenia to apply “the tenets of the 1918 Republic—social justice, democracy and the inclusion of every Armenian in the well-being of the state” when they were to choose a new prime minister in April.
“We hope that the lessons of 1918 do not fall on deaf ears and we, as a nation, will choose a path toward true change that will guarantee life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness for all Armenians in their homeland,” Asbarez said last year.
Well, the leaders failed and were deposed and the people prevailed. That victory must be nurtured and advanced. More important, the aspirations of the new generation of Armenians, who stood up to injustice, must not be compromised. We all have work to do.
Happy New Year!
Protesters demand closure of Russian base in Armenia
Protesters voiced their demands in front of the Russian Embassy to Armenia – the demonstration was immediately followed by a gathering of Armenian Communists under the slogan "Forever with Russia"
Two demonstrations took place in Yerevan yesterday in front of the Russian Embassy to Armenia. The first demanded the closure of a Russian military base in the country, and the second, organized by Armenian communists, expressed their support for Russia.
On 3 December, a woman was murdered in Gyumri, the second largest city in Armenia.
Julieta Gukasyan, 57, was allegedly assaulted by a serviceman from the 102nd Russian military base in the city. After the attack, she was taken to hospital where she was able to convey who had attacked her on her way to work. However, her injuries were too severe and she passed away.
She had worked as a janitor in the Gyumri municipal housing department.
Almost immediately after news of her death, it was reported that she had been killed by a Russian serviceman. However, his name and the reason for committing the crime are still unknown.
Protesters’ demands
Protesters demanded that the Russian military base be closed down. They said they were outraged by the behavior of the Russian military, which threatens the security of Armenian citizens.
They justified their demand not only by referring to the last murder, but also to the tragedy of the Avetisyan family: in 2015, Russian serviceman Valery Permyakov killed seven members of the family, including an infant.
There are also numerous other stories about how drunken Russian soldiers have organised fights and shootouts which have resulted in dozens of civilian injuries.
Demonstrators complained that the current government of Armenia has continued the same policy towards Russia as the previous authorities.
“We are forming a new political agenda for Armenia, and this is one of the priorities of our political agenda. Yes, this is a political question. This is a matter of the lives and safety of the citizens of Armenia, because we don’t know when, where, or with whom [a] Russian soldier will meet and what atrocities they will commit,” said one of the organizers of the protest, journalist Narine Mkrtchyan.
Immediately after the first demonstration, Armenian communists came out in support of Russia under the slogan “Forever with Russia”, and stated that the 102nd Russian military base is necessary to ensure security in Armenia.
Armenian media, experts mull Putin’s remarks
Sports: Armenian playmaker won Kazakhstan Premier League’s Goal of the Season award
Armenian national football team and Aktobe forward Marcos Pizzelli has won Kazakhstan’s Premier League goal of the season for his superb individual strike against Shakhter Karagandy. In the match of the 16th tour of the Premiere League.
The interception in the middle of the pitch in the 52nd minute was followed by a Pizzelli lovely shot from outside the area, bending the ball inside the far post. the match ended with a Aktobe win 2-0.
’s-Goal-of-the-Season-award/2048574
Former Non-Profit President Pleads Guilty to Scheme to Conceal Foreign Funding of 2013 Congressional Trip
Armenpress: Armenian caretaker FM to attend Resolute Support ministerial session in Brussels
Armenian caretaker FM to attend Resolute Support ministerial session in Brussels
10:35, 3 December, 2018
YEREVAN, DECEMBER 3, ARMENPRESS. Caretaker Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Zohrab Mnatsakanyan will depart for Brussels on December 4 to participate in the foreign ministerial session of NATO member and non-member countries participating the Resolute Support mission, the ministry said.
Edited and translated by Stepan Kocharyan
Republican candidate challenges Nikol Pashinyan for a debate
The first vice-president of the Republican Party of Armenia, Vigen Sargsyan, who heads the RPA electoral list, has invited the Acting Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, the leader of "My Step" bloc to a debate. He mentioned several conditions.
"Taking into account the fact that for the third consecutive day you are building your campaign against the Republicans, deepening your vicious policy of dividing the society into blacks and whites, as well as the fact that during the campaign you allow the worst and indecent flow of the electoral process, I consider it necessary to have a bilateral debate of the electoral list leaders on RPA – My step format by preserving my commitment to participate in a public debate of the candidates leading the electoral lists of the parties.
I propose to debate through three TV channels (public and one of your and one of my choice), with two presenters (one of your and one of my choice), on 4-6 topics (the half by your, and the half by my choice) with the opportunity to ask each other questions. Taking into account your work overload, I leave the choice of the debate day toyou," Vigen Sargsyan wrote on his Facebook page.