Iraq’s Beleaguered Believers

IRAQ’S BELEAGUERED BELIEVERS
By Charles Tannock

Fort Worth Star Telegram, TX
Oct 8 2006

The world is consumed by fears that Iraq is degenerating into a civil
war among Shiites, Sunnis and Kurds. But in this looming war of all
against all, it is Iraq’s small community of Assyrian Christians that
is at risk of annihilation.

Iraq’s Christian communities are among the world’s most ancient,
practicing their faith in Mesopotamia almost since the time of
Christ. The Assyrian Apostolic Church, for instance, traces its
foundation back to A.D. 34 and St. Peter. Likewise, the Assyrian Church
of the East dates to A.D. 33 and St. Thomas. The Aramaic that many
of Iraq’s Christians still speak is the language of those apostles —
and of Christ.

When tolerated by their Muslim rulers, Assyrian Christians contributed
much to the societies in which they lived. Their scholars helped usher
in the "Golden Age" of the Arab world by translating important works
into Arabic from Greek and Syriac.

But in recent times, toleration has scarcely existed. In the Armenian
Genocide of 1914-1918, 750,000 Assyrians — roughly two-thirds of
their number — were massacred by the Ottoman Turks with the help of
the Kurds.

Under the Iraqi Hashemite monarchy, the Assyrians faced persecution
for co-operating with the British during the First World War. Many
fled to the West, among them the church’s patriarch.

During Saddam Hussein’s wars with the Kurds, hundreds of Assyrian
villages were destroyed, their inhabitants rendered homeless, and
dozens of ancient churches were bombed. The teaching of the Syriac
language was prohibited, and Assyrians were forced to give their
children Arabic names in an effort to undermine their Christian
identity. Those who wished to hold government jobs had to declare
Arab ethnicity.

In 1987, the Iraqi census listed 1.4 million Christians. Today,
600,000 to 800,000 remain in the country, most on the Nineveh plain.

As many as 60,000, and perhaps even more, have fled since the beginning
of the insurgency that followed the United States-led invasion in
2003. Their exodus accelerated in August 2004, after the start of the
terrorist bombing campaign against Christian churches by Islamists who
accuse them of collaboration with the allies by virtue of their faith.

A recent U.N. report states that religious minorities in Iraq "have
become the regular victims of discrimination, harassment, and,
at times, persecution, with incidents ranging from intimidation to
murder," and that "members of the Christian minority appear to be
particularly targeted."

Indeed, there are widespread reports of Christians fleeing the
country as a result of threats to their women for not adhering to
strict Islamic dress codes. Christian women are said to have had
acid thrown in their faces. Some have been killed for wearing jeans
or not wearing the veil.

This type of violence is particularly acute near Mosul. High-ranking
clergy there claim that priests in Iraq can no longer wear clerical
robes in public for fear of being attacked by Islamists.

In January, coordinated car-bomb attacks were carried out on six
churches in Baghdad and Kirkuk. On another occasion, six churches were
bombed simultaneously in Baghdad and Mosul. During the past two years,
27 Assyrian churches have reportedly been attacked because they were
Christian places of worship.

These attacks go beyond targeting physical manifestations of the
faith. Christian-owned small businesses, particularly those selling
alcohol, have been attacked, and many shopkeepers murdered. The
director of the Iraqi Museum, Donny George, a respected Assyrian,
says that he was forced to flee Iraq to Syria in fear of his life and
that Islamic fundamentalists obstructed all of his work that was not
focused on Islamic artifacts.

Assyrian leaders also complain of deliberate discrimination in the
January 2005 elections. In some cases, they claim, ballot boxes did
not arrive in Assyrian towns and villages, voting officials failed to
show up, or ballot boxes were stolen. They also cite the intimidating
presence of Kurdish militia and secret police near polling stations.

Recently, however, there are signs that Iraqi Kurdish authorities
are being more protective of their Christian communities.

Sadly, the plight of Iraq’s Christians is not an isolated one in the
Middle East. In Iran, the population as a whole has nearly doubled
since the 1979 revolution. But under a hostile regime, the number of
Christians in the country has fallen from about 300,000 to 100,000.

In 1948, Christians accounted for about 20 percent of the
population of what was then Palestine. Since then, their numbers
have roughly halved. In Egypt, emigration among Coptic Christians
is disproportionately high. Many convert to Islam under pressure,
and during the past few years, violence perpetrated against the
Christian community has taken many lives.

The persecution of these ancient and unique Christian communities,
in Iraq and in the Middle East as a whole, is deeply disturbing.

In April, the European Parliament voted virtually unanimously for
the Assyrians to be allowed to establish (on the basis of Section 5
of the Iraqi Constitution) a federal region where they can be free
from outside interference to practice their own way of life.

It is high time now that the West paid more attention, and took
forceful action to secure the future of Iraq’s embattled Christians.

Charles Tannock is vice president of the Human Rights Subcommittee of
the European Parliament and UK Conservative foreign affairs spokesman.

Charles Tannock wrote this essay for Project Syndicate in Prague,
Czech Republic.

La Suisse De Patrice Philippe Bat L’Armenie: Rugby

LA SUISSE DE PATRICE PHILIPPE BAT L’ARMENIE: RUGBY

24 Heures
03 octobre 2006 mardi
La Côte Edition

Dans le cadre du championnat d’Europe de division 3A, l’equipe de
Suisse, dirigee par l’entraîneur du RC Nyon Patrice Philippe, a pris
le meilleur sur l’Armenie 29-16 (12-16), a Vienne, en France. Une
entree en matière sur la scène continentale prometteuse et un succès
de bon augure pour la Suisse une semaine avant de recevoir la Serbie,
dans le cadre de cette meme competition ce samedi a Nyon, coup d’envoi
a 15 h, a Colovray. Deux joueurs Nyonnais, Pedro Dubois et Gareth
Jones, ont pris une part active a ce succès. Dans un match engage,
houleux, les Helvètes ont inscrit quatre essais contre un seul a
leurs adversaires. Le grand artisan de la victoire a ete le Genevois
David Mossière. Le 3e ligne centre s’est notamment fait l’auteur de
deux essais.

Vent favorable

Aidee par un vent favorable, la Suisse, menee a la pause, a fait
la difference en deuxième mi-temps grâce a un paquet d’avants
infatigable. Il s’agit de la troisième victoire acquise en cinq
matches sous l’ère de l’entraîneur Patrice Philippe. Dans ce groupe,
le Danemark et la Suède seront les autres adversaires des Suisses. Le
22avril dernier, les Suedois avaient inflige une defaite sans appel
(35-3) aux rugbymen "rouge a croix blanche". Un rappel qui souligne
la valeur de l’opposition, partant les difficultes auxquelles les
interesses seront confrontes.

Note:

Championnat d’Europe division 3 A: Suisse-Armenie 29-16 (12-16). A
venir: 7octobre a Nyon (15 h, a Colovray): Suisse – Serbie, 31mars
2007: Suisse – Danemark, 5mai 2007: Suède – Suisse.

–Boundary_(ID_+simpcds38WbqgTLUHjtWg)–

Downtown Diary: Of Jackasses And Pomegranates

DOWNTOWN DIARY: OF JACKASSES AND POMEGRANATES
by Jenni Burton

Newspaper Tree, TX –
Oct 2 2006

"El Paso. It’s your canvas." Wow — what a condescending little
mindfuck that is. For those of you who haven’t had the time or the
stomach to flip through the entire slide show, this is what a $100,000
branding contract can buy you. Mind you, this is the slogan that
was proposed for the purpose of encouraging new residents. I don’t
think I need to go into the various implications of this slogan,
but I would like you to ponder the language at your leisure.

Whoever Glass Beach’s copywriter is, I hope this was some snide little
quip that ad agency employees like to pull out when they’re feeling
cynical, and not the culmination of hundreds of hours of methodology
and analysis. "It’s your canvas" … well, let’s hope the local mural
and graffiti artists take them at their word.

I guess if El Paso is "my canvas" (heavens to Murgetroid) then I
suppose I took out the Krylon and painted it red last weekend.

It was a great weekend. Thursday started off with the opening of Dave
Ford’s exhibit Evaporosions, which is an amazing exhibit if you haven’t
had the chance to check it out. It’s inside an old factory space at 301
W. Overland Street. The after party later migrated to La Norteña. Wine,
nibblies, and simple machines mingled with blues and a crowd that was,
well … diverse isn’t quite the word I’m looking for.

Conflicted? Discordant? How so? I guess I just found it ironic that
there were so many vocal supporters of The Plan who enjoyed themselves
so freely at both the factory space and La Norteña, two spaces that
are slated for demolition under the umbrella of the redevelopment
district. Attendees included Susie Byrd and her children, Francisco
Delgado, a Chicano activist and artist who painted the piece titled
"El Plan" that is reproduced on plan opponents’ t-shirts, Mark Deutrom
— the evening’s entertainment — who has a deep and unbridled hate
for his hometown ("What is with this town, Jenni B.? The lithium
in the water?"), Rich Wright — who has a deep and unbridled love
of his hometown ("Let’s go get some tequila, guys"), and several of
my neighbours.

I met people who had recently moved into the neighborhood (the Merrick
Building and Union Plaza), who told me how much they loved their new
apartments. I met people who were more than happy to see the whole
thing bulldozed in some sort of Biblical baptism by fire.

It was fantastic to see so many people enjoying themselves and to
see the neighborhood alive, but at the same time, my cynicism got
the better of me after a few glasses of wine and some excellent tacos
de atún.

This sentiment replayed itself the next night when Bobby Byrd and Jim
Ward held their CD release party again at La Norteña. I love Norteña,
as do many of our friends, and a collective mood of elation was
expressed when it finally — FINALLY — reopened a couple of months
ago. It was so wonderful to hear music and spoken word croon through
its doorway, but again disappointment and cynicism grabbed hold of
me. After the music and poetry stopped and attendees trickled out,
my husband and I sat and contemplated the fate of this little gem. We
talked about how great it would be if there were shows there on a
weekly basis, and wondered which of our promoter friends would take
the initiative. The Tap neglected to renew its liquor license, and
currently Norteña’s our only option for a night out with the kids in
tow. It dawned on me — THIS is blight?

This business that has become a landmark, that reinvests in its
property, that hosts poetry nights and musicians. This business that
adds to the character of the neighborhood and does so on its own
terms — that’s BLIGHT? It’s going to be torn down for a stadium?

What, so we can create a dead zone? That whole neighborhood went
through revitalization efforts during the Caballero administration.

Businesses are just starting to thrive, people are moving in,
functions are being held, and for what? So that we can lose it all
over again for a stadium? Tell me, what team do we have that requires
a stadium? We can’t get bands here as it is, because Abraham Chavez
and the Coliseum don’t sell out their shows. And we want a stadium?

That night Bobby read a poem entitled "Pomegranates," and it’s funny
because I was thinking about them the night before. This is the time of
year where my son and I go door to door in Central El Paso collecting
them before they rot on someone’s front porch. We eat the seeds, press
them into juice, use them in sauces, and I also petrify the seeds for
my artwork. The two best specimens are used on my Samhain altar —
one for the goddess Ashtart, and one for my mother, who died nine years
ago. I still remember the first time my mother taught me how to eat a
pomegranate. I was three and she showed me how to extract the juice,
what foods they go well with, and how to eat them with respect.

There’s an ancient proverb in Armenian that goes "Eshoon noor oodel
chi vayaler." Roughly translated it means, "It ain’t pretty watching
a Jackass trying to eat a pomegranate." In my mother’s culture,
the pomegranate is a symbol of the beauty and durability of the
Armenian people. Pre-Christianity, it was associated with the womb
of the mother goddess, Ashtart, and for the last 1,700 years since
Armenia’s conversion it has been synonymous with the Sacred Heart. When
Armenians first came to the U.S. to escape the Turkish Massacre and
work as farm laborers, they brought their sacred plant to California,
so the story goes. We love pomegranates. They are hardy little shrubs
that can grow on mountainside or farmland. A tree can bear fruit for up
to 200 years. They have been used for thousands of years as medicine,
clothing dye, food additives, and fertility gifts. If you don’t like
to eat the whole seed — only the pulp — they are difficult and
time consuming to eat. They are a symbol of our stubbornness and our
rasquachismo. So when some Jackass violates our beloved national fruit,
we take offense.

Downtown El Paso is my beloved Pomegranate. It is unusual. It
is durable. It is strange. It is mean. It is beautiful. Like a
pomegranate, one must remove the rind to discover the tempting seeds,
which lie within. Unlike an Apple or a Pear, it is not superficial.

The Jackass who seeks to release the seeds is ill equipped and
awkward. The only way he can do so is by stomping on the fruit,
because if he just tries to bite into it, the bitter rind dirties
the taste of the pulp.

What great men have peeled back the rind of our Pomegranate and
chewed the seeds whole: Antonin Artaud, William Carlos Williams,
Jack Kerouac, and countless other thinkers and vagabonds. There are
those who would crush it to reap its benefits, but those who have
wisdom know that the only way to enjoy it is to be ginger.

I’m sick of looking at Downtown as a condemned man. I’m sick of walking
down the street wondering who’s going to be gone in five years. Just
because you give a cancer patient plastic surgery doesn’t mean he’s
going to survive.

e.sstg?c=ab46f66be2b24628&mc=26a325e11f7047b6

–Boundary_(ID_x22H35B78ZvVagk/TL8mCQ)–

http://www.newspapertree.com/view_articl

Law On Armenian Genocide Is Equal For All: French President

LAW ON ARMENIAN GENOCIDE IS EQUAL FOR ALL: FRENCH PRESIDENT

ARMINFO News Agency
September 30, 2006 Saturday

ArmInFO. France has recognized the Armenian Genocide on a legislative
level and this law is equal for all, French President Jacques Chirac
said during a joint press-conference with Armenian President Robert
Kocharyan.

Commenting on the initiative of the Socialist Party of France to
adopt a law providing for criminal responsibility for denying the
Armenian Genocide, Chirac said that France is a legal state and in
a legal state calls for hatred and racism must be punished.

Chirac, In Yerevan, Urges Turkey To Recognise Armenian ‘Genocide’

CHIRAC, IN YEREVAN, URGES TURKEY TO RECOGNISE ARMENIAN ‘GENOCIDE’

Agence France Presse — English
September 30, 2006 Saturday

French President Jacques Chirac said Saturday that Turkey should
recognize the massacre of Armenians during World War I as genocide
before its possible accession to the European Union.

Asked at a press conference if Turkey should recognize the 1915-1917
massacres at the hands of Ottoman Turks as genocide to enter the EU,
he replied: "honestly, I believe so."

"All countries grow up acknowledging their dramas and their errors,"
said Chirac, who is on a two-day visit to Armenia.

Until now, France had refused to make a direct link between the
genocide issue and Turkey’s EU membership bid. The bloc of 25 nations
has not made it a condition.

Armenia, whose border Turkey has sealed in relation to a territorial
dispute with its Turkic ally Azerbaijan, responded to the same question
much more softly.

"We don’t see any danger in this process," Armenian President Robert
Kocharian said of Turkey’s EU aspirations, "but we would like that
our interests would be discussed in the process too," he added.

Kocharian said it would be in Armenia’s interests to have a neighbor
"with a value system that allows for free movement and open borders."

Armenia’s economy has suffered because of border closures with Turkey
and Azerbaijan, that latter of which it is still technically at war
with over the ethnic-Armenian Nagorny Karabakh enclave.

Turkey began negotiations on accession to the EU in 10 to 15 years
in 2005.

Massacres and deportations of Armenians under the Ottoman Turk regime
during World War I caused the death of more than 1.5 million people,
according to Armenian sources, and between 250,000 and half a million
according to Turkey.

Turkey categorically rejects the use of the word genocide, which is
officially recognised by France, Canada and a few other countries as
well as the European Parliament.

Ankara argues that 300,000 Armenians and at least as many Turks died
in an internal conflict sparked by attempts by Armenians to win
independence for eastern Anatolia and secure assistance for their
bid from Russia — Turkey’s age-old nemesis.

France, which has 400,000 citizens of Armenian descent, officially
recognized the events as genocide in 2001, putting a strain on its
relations with fellow NATO member Turkey.

Art World Riddle: How Old Is Larry Gagosian?

ART WORLD RIDDLE: HOW OLD IS LARRY GAGOSIAN?

Art Newspaper, UK
Sept 28 2006

It might not be surprising that French economics magazine Challenges
would include Larry Gagosian (right) among its 100 most influential
people in the world, but rather more curious is the fact that he is
the only celebrity without an age or date of birth. In fact, Gagosian
does seem somewhat shy about his actual age, the one detail about
him regularly omitted from otherwise voluminous profiles including
his Wikipedia entry and even Armeniapedia (Armenia Encyclopedia) page.

Varying current estimates peg him at least around 61, having most
probably been born in Los Angeles back in 1945.

p?id=447

http://www.theartnewspaper.com/article01.as

Posponement of meeting w/Azeri FM doesn’t mean Armenia refused talks

ARMINFO News Agency
September 29, 2006 Friday

POSTPONEMENT OF MEETING WITH AZERI FM DOES NOT MEAN THAT ARMENIA
REFUSED TO CONTINUE TALKS: ARMENIAN FM

Karabakh’s participation in the talks is always on agenda and we are
waiting for the moment it becomes compulsory, Armenian Foreign
Minister Vardan Oskanyan said during a press-conference today.

If the UN approves the GUAM resolution, Karabakh’s participation will
become a condition and Armenia will make way for Karabakh in the
negotiating process. It does not mean that Armenia will leave the
process, simply Karabakh’s participation will become necessary.

Concerning the postponed meeting with the Azeri FM, Oskanyan said
that the FM meetings are not an end in itself, such meetings follow
specific goals. He said that a week before the meeting GUAM appeared
with its initiative to discuss the problem of frozen conflicts in the
UN General Assembly. The situation changed and it was not expedient
to meet until it was specified. The meeting was put off, nobody
refused to meet. Simply, we needed to consider the new situation and
for this purpose I met with the co-chairs, Oskanyan said.

Armenia did not refuse to continue the talks. We could not do it as
it is exactly we who support the document lying on the negotiating
table. Although we have repeatedly said that the document is not
ideal it is the lesser of two evils. I think it is actually a way
towards settlement, Oskanyan said.

Commenting on the statement of Armenian President Robert Kocharyan
that Armenia and Karabakh may form a federation, Oskanyan said that
Armenia will not just sit by if Azerbaijan refuses to continue the
talks or goes on thinking about solving the Karabakh problem by war.
Karabakh’s independence is priority for Armenia and if it sees that
Azerbaijan has decided to solve the problem by war, it will stop at
nothing and will do its best to ensure the security of the Karabakh
people. So, Kocharyan’s statement should be considered in his
context.

French President Jacques Chirac Arrives In Armenia

FRENCH PRESIDENT JACQUES CHIRAC ARRIVES IN ARMENIA

Armenpress
Sept 28 2006

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS: The press office of the Armenian
President said today French President Jacques Chirac will pay a state
visit to Armenia from September 29 to October 1. Chirac is coming at
the invitation of his Armenian counterpart President Robert Kocharian.

Kocharian’s press office said the French delegation includes foreign
minister Phillip Douste Blazy, transport, tourism and seafaring
minister Dominique Perben, state service minister Christian Jacob
and culture and communication minister Reno Donedio de Vabre.

President Chirac will be accompanied also by a vats delegation of
French businessmen, prominent representatives of art, culture,
academic and sport communities, members of the French Armenian
community and journalists.

The official welcoming ceremony will be held at Yerevan Zvartnots
airport . Chirac and Kocharian will speak to reporters after talks
at Kocharian’s residence. The French delegation will lay flowers to
the Genocide Memorial in Yerevan to commemorate the victims of the
1915 Armenian genocide. The French President will then be welcomed
by His Holiness Karekin II, the head of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

President Chirac will also meet with the staff of the French embassy
in Yerevan.

Kocharian and Chirac will participate also in the official opening of
France Square in central Yerevan and will attend an open-air concert
of the famous French Armenian singer Charles Aznavour in Republic
Square. All these evens will give the start of the Year of Armenia
in France held under the motto ‘Armenia is My Friend."

BAKU: Azeri Foreign Minister Blames Armenia For Refusing Direct Talk

AZERI FOREIGN MINISTER BLAMES ARMENIA FOR REFUSING DIRECT TALKS

Turan news agency, Baku,
26 Sep 2006

New York, 26 September: Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Elmar
Mammadyarov has blamed Armenia for refusing direct talks on a Karabakh
settlement. Addressing the 61st session of the UN General Assembly
yesterday [25 September], he said that Armenia was displaying a
non-constructive position on the settlement of the conflict.

The parties to the conflict as well as the [OSCE Minsk Group]
mediators view a stage-by-stage solution as "the only possible way"
of resolving the conflict, Mammadyarov said.

"There are two major sticking points – finding an autonomous status
for the population of the occupied Nagornyy Karabakh region and
the withdrawal of the Armenian troops from Azerbaijan’s occupied
territories," he said.

"We believe that the issue of status cannot be resolved today. The
status can be defined as a result of a peaceful, democratic and lawful
process with the direct participation of both the Azerbaijani and
Armenian communities of Nagornyy Karabakh," the minister added.

Mammadyarov noted that the occupying forces must leave the Azerbaijani
territories and necessary conditions should be created for the return
of the Azerbaijani refugees to Nagornyy Karabakh and to the surrounding
districts of Azerbaijan.

"Such a course of events would provide the necessary conditions for
the next stage of the settlement. In the next stage, life in the
conflict zone and also inter-community relations will be restored,
social and economic development will be ensured and an autonomous
model will be found for the region within Azerbaijan. We demand
unconditional withdrawal of the occupying forces from all the occupied
territories. This position is in line with the UN Security Council
Resolutions [on the Karabakh conflict] and an OSCE decision on the
restoration of Azerbaijan’s sovereignty and territorial integrity,"
Mammadyarov said.

BAKU: EP Report On Turkey To Be Discussed Today

EP REPORT ON TURKEY TO BE DISCUSSED TODAY

TREND Information, Azerbaijan
Sept 26 2006

(Zaman) – The controversial report on Turkey’s progress towards
accession to the E.U. will be discussed in the European Parliament
(EP) General Assembly on Tuesday, reports Trend.

The draft report prepared by Dutch rapporteur Camiel Eurlings is
at the top of today’s agenda of the EP General Assembly, which will
convene in Strasbourg this afternoon.

The provision, which makes the recognition of the so-called Armenian
genocide a precondition for Turkey’s E.U. membership, is expected to
be removed from the draft with motions. Certain amendments are also
expected to be made on the Cyprus issue in favor of Turkey.

The report also asserts that Turkey had committed genocide against
the Pontus Greeks and Assyrians.

Voting on the report is to take place on Wednesday.