121 Of 449 Entrants, Taken Exam On "Armenian Language And Literature

121 OF 449 ENTRANTS, TAKEN EXAM ON "ARMENIAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE" SUBJECT, GET UNSATISFACTORY MARKS

Noyan Tapan
Aug 10 2006

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, NOYAN TAPAN. The entrance exam on the "Armenian
Language and Literature" subject for higher educational institutions
finished on August 10. As of August 8, 449 of 503 entrants took exam
on that subject. 121 of them got unsatisfactory marks, 20 ones got
18-20 points, including 2 got 20 points. As Rita Saghatelian, the
subject commission chairwoman informed the Noyan Tapan correspondent,
as a result of the registered few appeals, the mark was changed in
an entrant’s favour, in the case of possibility. According to her
estimation, knowledge of entrants chosen the philological faculty is at
a middle or bad level. According to R.Saghatelian’s word, the entrant
takes oral exam on "Armenian Language and Literature" without being
acquainted with the fiction. In the subject commission chairwoman’s
opinion, it’s the consequence of work of schools. "Children do nothing
during all the 9 years and they decide to enter the philological
faculty at the 10th grade. And it’s impossible to read so many books
during a year," R.Saghatelian mentions.

Armenian PM Congratulates Yanukovich On Apointment As Ukrainian PM

ARMENIAN PM CONGRATULATES YANUKOVICH ON APPOINTMENT AS UKRAINIAN PM

Arka News Agency, Armenia
Aug. 10, 2006

YEREVAN, August 10. /ARKA/. Armenian Premier Andranik Margaryan
congratulated Victor Yanukovich on his appointment as Prime Minister
of Ukraine.

The information and public relations department, RA Government,
reports that in his congratulatory message Premier Margaryan pointed
out the importance of developing bilateral relations and expressed
the confidence that the new cabinet chaired by Yanukovich will make
great progress in ensuring the country’s socio-economic development.

Margaryan also pointed out that Armenian-Ukrainian comprehensive
and mutually advantageous cooperation will be developed for the two
people’s benefit.

The Armenian Premier also wished success to his Ukrainian counterpart,
and peace, happiness and prosperity to the Ukrainian people.

Ara Ayvazian Appointed RA Ambassador Extraordinary And Plenipotentia

ARA AYVAZIAN APPOINTED RA AMBASSADOR EXTRAORDINARY AND PLENIPOTENTIARY TO FINLAND, DENMARK, NORWAY AND SWEDEN

Noyan Tapan
Aug 10 2006

YEREVAN, AUGUST 10, NOYAN TAPAN. RA President Robert Kocharian signed
decrees on August 10 on pluralistically appointing Ara Ayvazian the
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of the Republic of
Armenia to the Republic of Finland, Denmark, Norway, the Kingdom
of Sweden (residence in Yerevan). The RA President’s Press Office
informs about it.

The Exclusionary Conscience

THE EXCLUSIONARY CONSCIENCE

Global Politician, NY
Aug. 7, 2006

Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. – 8/8/2006

The self-identity of most nation-states is exclusionary and
oppositional: to generate solidarity, a sense of shared community,
and consensus, an ill-defined "we" is unfavorably contrasted with a
fuzzy "they". While hate speech has been largely outlawed the world
over, these often counterfactual dichotomies between "us" and "them"
still reign supreme.

In extreme – though surprisingly frequent – cases, whole groups
(typically minorities) are excluded from the nation’s moral universe
and from the ambit of civil society. Thus, they are rendered
"invisible", "subhuman", and unprotected by laws, institutions,
and ethics. This process of distancing and dehumanization I call
"exclusionary conscience".

The most recent examples are the massacre of the Tutsis in Rwanda,
the Holocaust of the Jews in Nazi Germany’s Third Reich, and the
Armenian Genocide in Turkey. Radical Islamists are now advocating the
mass slaughter of Westerners, particularly of Americans and Israelis,
regardless of age, gender, and alleged culpability. But the phenomenon
of exclusionary conscience far predates these horrendous events. In
the Bible, the ancient Hebrews are instructed to exterminate all
Amalekites, men, women, and children.

In her book, "The Nazi Conscience", Claudia Koontz quotes from Freud’s
"Civilization and its Discontents":

"If (the Golden Rule of morality) commanded ‘Love thy neighbor as
thy neighbor loves thee’, I should not take exception to it. If he
is a stranger to me … it will be hard for me to love him." (p. 5)

Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. is the author of Malignant Self Love – Narcissism
Revisited and After the Rain – How the West Lost the East. He served
as a columnist for Central Europe Review, PopMatters, Bellaonline,
and eBookWeb, a United Press International (UPI) Senior Business
Correspondent, and the editor of mental health and Central East Europe
categories in The Open Directory and Suite101.

Until recently, he served as the Economic Advisor to the Government
of Macedonia. Sam Vaknin’s Web site is at

http://samvak.tripod.com

Corrupt Government Threatens Nagorno Karabakh Most of All

CORRUPT GOVERNMENT THREATENS NAGORNO KARABAKH MOST OF ALL

Lragir.am
03 Aug 06

Several days ago the leader of the Aryan Armenian Order Armen
Avetisyan stated referring to the recent statements of the U.S.
co-chair of the Minsk Group Matthew Bryza that the future of the
governments of Armenia and Azerbaijan depends on the willingness to
make a compromise over the Karabakh issue. In other words, he drew
the attention of the public to the threat of infringement upon the
national interest in the period of elections in 2007 and 2008.

Considering that the present "chief strategist", the Republican
defense minister Serge Sargsyan approved the proposals of the Minsk
Group long ago, we may state that Armen Avetisyan’s warning is quite
logical. In fact, in an effort to find support for their aspirations
to power the Armenian politicians make a deal with forces from the
outside. It is possible to understand the Aryan. It is also possible
to understand that he relies on the will of thousands of Armenian
citizens, who are ready to resist deals.

We would like to warn brave patriots, however, that the danger of the
game of those who hold the power and those who protect this power is
not realized. This is half of the trouble that the weakening Armenian
officials are ready to make a deal with the outside world. The main
danger is somewhere else – our worthy patriots and many honest guys
fail to understand everything.

They fail to understand that by their statements that they will
not allow return of territories they keep the mill of our political
merchants working, who are wiser than our patriots. They are wise
because they have learned to play on the patriotic feelings and
speeches of our society. And only they are interested in Armen
Avetisyan’s statements. No, not because they are going to extend the
statements of patriots to their Western sponsors: these cheap games
have stopped being interesting to anyone in the world.

The cynicism of our corrupt officials should not be underrated. They
understood the value of the "party of the war" for their political
games long ago. They need these patriots to make them scapegoats in
possible military provocations. What provocations? one may ask. The
provocations that these political merchants may undertake to justify
their deal with the outside forces. To cause the war to ignite,
accuse patriots and appear to the Armenian people and the world as
a savior and wise prophet.

Our figures are not fools to sit at the wheel of power with the
appearance of a loser. Therefore, dear patriots, if you can discern
danger in the action of our corrupt government, before calling the
public for resistance demand the public officials who have a direct
lever of influence on the situation in the conflict area to dismiss
these figures. Do not forget that presently we deal with the cynical
criminal holding the power, which feels its imminent death against the
background of the elections in 2007 and 2008. These people have already
managed to announce that "their end would be the end of Armenia".

The situation is, in fact, more complicated than it seems to dear Armen
Avetisyan. The end of the criminal will not be the end of Armenia,
but it can harm Karabakh considerably. Especially that the key levers
there are held by a man also appears unlikely to quit in 2007,
as the law provides for. And in this case one should be guided by
consciousness, not feelings. The presence of the politician criminal
at the wheel of the military and civilian government becomes highly
dangerous. Experienced Bryza did not tell the Azerbaijani president
Ilham Aliyev accidentally that the first half of 2007 may become a
favorable period for the settlement of the Karabakh conflict. He
hinted that there are people in Armenia and Karabakh who would
sacrifice everything to stay at power.

It is not accidental that Bryza said Armenia is keeping to the right
path to democratization. He was right because he finally realized that
it is the end of the criminal. So he decided to play the last game with
the criminal in the Karabakh sphere. To play and discard finally, both
the criminal and the Karabakh issue. But the criminal does not want to
be discarded. It only wants to play a successful game because there is
no more place to play. Therefore, before becoming engaged in the game,
dear patriots, think how it would end for our Homeland and for you.

MELIK AVANYAN

Antelias: His Holiness Aram I, the recipient of St. John’s Universit

Press Release
Catholicosate of Cilicia
Communication and Information Department
Contact: V.Rev.Fr.Krikor Chiftjian, Communications Officer
Tel: (04) 410001, 410003
Fax: (04) 419724
E-mail: [email protected]
Web:

PO Box 70 317
Antelias-Lebanon

Armenian version:

HIS HOLINESS ARAM I, THE RECIPIENT OF ST. JOHN’S UNIVERSITY’S PAX
CHRISTI AWARD

In a letter addressed to His Holiness Aram I, the president of
St. John’s University, Minessotta, USA, informs that the university
has decided to bestow the 2006 Pax Christi Award to His Holiness.

In the same letter, the president Dr. Dietrich Reinhart, speaking
about the life and ministry of Catholicos Aram I states: "Particularly
notable is your support for Ecumenical and Inter-religious relations,
dialogue and cooperation. Through your prolific writings, public
lectures and interventions, and your leadership in the World Council
of Churches, you have played a significant role in promoting common
values, mutual understanding, and peaceful co-existence among people
of faith throughout the world".

The Pax Christi Award is the highest honor bestowed by St. John’s
University. The conferral ceremony will take place on 6th December,
2006, at a special event honoring His Holiness at St. John’s
University.

##

The Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia is one of the two Catholicosates
of the Armenian Orthodox Church. For detailed information about the
history and mission of the Cilician Catholicosate, you may refer
to the web page of the Catholicosate, The
Cilician Catholicosate, the administrative center of the church is
located in Antelias, Lebanon.

http://www.cathcil.org/
http://www.cathcil.org/v04/doc/Armenian.htm
http://www.cathcil.org/

Member of Ruling Party Board: Armenia May Refuse From Complementary

MEMBER OF RULING PARTY BOARD: ARMENIA MAY REFUSE FROM COMPLEMENTARY
FOREIGN POLICY

Yerevan, August 2. ArmInfo. "If the OSCE Minsk Group does not change
its approaches to the Karabakh problem solution, I think, Armenia
may refuse from complementary policy", Artak Grigoryan, the member
of the Board of the Republican Party of Armenia, said at today’s
press-conference.

He emphasized that the complementary policy of Armenia had proved
itself until now, i.e. we succeeded to avoid political shocks
in the country, a stable economic growth is fixed. A. Grigoryan
introduced the content of the Federal seminar, held in Moscow , to the
journalists. The expert from Serbia Sonya Licht stated that recognition
of Kosovo sovereignty is to be expected by February, 2007, as there
are no mechanisms of Kosovo return under jurisdiction of Belgrade. To
Grigoryan’s remark that the model of Kosovo conflict is similar to the
Karabakh conflict, the British Council representative, Charles Grant
said that he is not acquainted with the Karabakh conflict history. The
western politicians tried to convince their Armenian colleague that
the Kosovo conflict is special and cannot be projected on the Karabakh
conflict. "I am sure they are perfectly acquainted with the Karabakh
conflict history, however, the policy of double standards takes more
and more open forms ", A. Grigoryan said.

NKR President and RA NAS Chairman Discuss Possibility of Founding Sc

NKR PRESIDENT AND RA NAS CHAIRMAN DISCUSS POSSIBILITY OF FOUNDING SCIENTIFIC
CENTER IN ARTSAKH

STEPANAKERT, AUGUST 1, NOYAN TAPAN. Issues relating to the highest education
system and prospects of development of the applied science in the NKR were
discussed at the July 31 meeting of NKR President Arkadi Ghukasian and
Chairman of the RA National Academy of Science Radik Martirosian. The interlocuters
discussed the possibility of founding a scientific center in the NKR by joint
efforts of the NKR authorities, Armenian scientific circles and foreign
partners. According to the NKR President’s Press Service, Kamo Atayan, the NKR
Minister of Education, Science and Sport also participated in the meeting.

Cher Auctions Off 700 Items For Charity

Cher Auctions Off 700 Items For Charity

Playfuls.com, Romania
Aug 1, 2006

Top rated singer and actress Cher is to sell all the items in her
house, excepting five of them. They are mostly pieces of clothing,
jewelry, furniture and artwork. The auction is the start of a quite
radical redecoration to take place at her Malibu home.

The approximately 700 items will go on sale at Sotheby’s and Julien’s
auction houses, after being put on display until October 3rd, when
the actual auction will take place.

"My house is so full that there’s no way to do something different
unless I totally change it," she said.

Among the items expected on sale are a Gothic revival brass bed,
made in about 1865, a 2003 H2 Hummer, outfits Cher wore on The Sonny
and Cher Comedy Hour in the 1970s, neo-Gothic art and furniture,
a 16th-century terra-cotta figurine of Jesus Christ and a Bob Mackie
gown that she wore to the Academy Awards.

"I’m truly excited about it, having had this stuff for so many years,"
she said.

"The amount of costumes I have is staggering, so this doesn’t even
make a dent."

Among the 85 items of jewelry due on sale there will be pieces Cher
has herself made. There will be also around 200 items of clothing
on auction.

A "nice percentage" of the estimated $1 million revenues will go to
the Cher Charitable Foundation, which supports numerous causes.

Cherilyn Sarkisian LaPiere (born May 20, 1946), better known by her
stage name Cher, is an Armenian-American Academy Award-winning actress,
singer, songwriter, director and author. Through her achievements in
music, television and film, she has won an Oscar, a Grammy, an Emmy
and 3 Golden Globe Awards, among other trophies.

In 1988, she won the Academy Award for Best Actress for her role
in the romantic comedy "Moonstruck." In 1999 she got a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame.

Cher frequently donated concert tickets’ revenues to families and
non-profit groups for children and youth with facial deformities.

Indian imprint on Armenia

Indian imprint on Armenia

Frontline, India
Aug 1, 2006

TEXT AND PHOTOGRAPHS BY ROMESH BHATTACHARJI

The remote village of Odzun reveals an Indian connection.

THE road from Yerevan, Armenia, to Tiblisi, Georgia, goes through
impressive terrain. The twin summits of Armenia’s Bible Mountain,
Mt. Great Ararat and Mt. Little Ararat (5,165 metres and 3,925 m
respectively), loom mesmerisingly to the south. From the shoulder
of Mt. Aragats (4,090 m) after Pushkin Pass, the steep walls of the
hills gradually move closer to the road. The space at the base of
the narrow and deep Debed Gorge is shared between a railway line
and a road that are marvels of scientific daring. Throughout this
route are strewn many relics of the Soviet past. Huge factories
that once employed thousands in these remote mountains are smokeless
and silent. Now there are only some signs of optimism checking the
otherwise all-pervasive decrepitude evident in the rows of attendant
apartment blocks that surround the many industries along the way.

High above Debed Gorge, is a surprising plateau. The zig-zag road from
the lowest point in Armenia (380 m above sea level) suddenly becomes
straight, lined with fields, and bordered with huge trees. Shepherds
with their flock hold up traffic and smile at the impatience of car
drivers. This is the lovely village of Odzun, once known an Awjun.

A 7th century Armenian church is perched on a shoulder dramatically
overlooking the deep Debed Gorge. The Armenian Orthodox Church
celebrates mass differently from the way churches do in the West.
There is no written order of service. There are no chairs. There is a
spacious domed hall in which people stand. There is usually at least
one high-vaulted porch for entrance. The focus is the altar, which,
except in the more important churches, is very simply dressed. The
service continues for hours and worshippers enter and leave at will.
This kind of freedom is much like the informality of worship in
eastern temples. The Odzun church was from A.D. 717 to A.D. 728, the
seat of the Armenian Pope Hovhan Odzntsi, better known as Catholicos
Yovhan Awjnec. This church was built before his time. He, however,
shifted to Echmiadzin near Yerevan and since then that has been the
seat of all Armenian Popes.

Photo: THE CHURCH OF Odzun and, to the left, two roughly hewn
rectangular rock obelisks encased in huge blocks of stone. The
structure is believed to be a gift an Indian king gave an Armenian
general for his help.

The Odzun church is cavernous, gloomy especially in winter, and
spartan. It is surrounded by three aisles, which have now collapsed.
It has lasted the depredations of the Persians and the Arabs, albeit
not without repair. Like most buildings in the area, it is built in
pink felsite stone. It does not appear to have windows at waist-level,
which is typical of the period. Instead, they are close to the roof,
perhaps to intensify the no-hope melancholy air. There are graves
of prominent persons from several hundred years ago to the present
in the surrounding graveyard. There is also a memorial commemorating
people from Odzun who died fighting in the Second World War; it has a
fresco of Stalin decorating one small corner of it. Stalin was born
in Gori in nearby Georgia.

Opposite the north wall of the church is an unusual monument. The
priest taking us around the ancient three-aisled Basilica said that
that structure of two roughly hewn rectangular rock obelisks encased
in huge blocks of stone was a tribute given by an Indian king for
the help given him by an Armenian general from Odzun. Local legend
has it that it is a fertility symbol. No more of this legend could
I get out of this priest. Interestingly however, on either side of a
sunrise-facing window (symbolism to be marked) stand sculpted angels
holding snakes. The two snakes entwine to decorate a bust of Christ,
a design extremely uncommon in Christian art. Veeshap is the Armenian
name for a snake, which could well have its roots in the Sanskrit
word, vish that is poison, and the Hindi word for snake, saamp. It
is said that the descendents of two Hindu princes founded a village
named Veeshap in nearby Turkey. This influence, strange and foreign,
can be seen today only in Odzun in the entire region.

I subsequently found that Armenia’s Indian connection was a fact,
though little is known about this particular bit of history. In the
appendix to an informative book published in 1937 called Armenians
in India – from the earliest times to the present by Jacob Seth,
an Armenian in Kolkata, I found an interesting story.

Photo: THE VIEW FROM the Cascades, a gigantic artificial waterfall
built in the Soviet era. This is the highest point in the capital
Yerevan.The twin peaks of Mount Ararat, now in Turkey, can be seen
in the distance.

In 149 B.C., Gissaneh and Demeter, two princes of Kannauj, Uttar
Pradesh, tried to plot against their father, Dinaks Pall. These
names are from Armenian sources and thus only vaguely resemble Indian
names, and the imagination has to be exercised somewhat to detect the
linkage. According to Seth, Gissaneh could be Krishna and Demeter,
Juganath. Dinaks Pall could be Dinesh Pal.

The conspiracy was detected and the princes fled to the sub-Caucasus
kingdom of Armenia. At that time the country was not landlocked as it
is now; it had access to the Black Sea and the Caspian Sea, and had
merchant ships that used to go to India and China. The two princes
and their families, courtiers and a small army most probably travelled
by ship and did not cross the difficult overland route to Armenia.

Photo: THE OBELISKS OF Odzun a close view.

They were welcomed hospitably by King Valarsaces, the brother of
Arsaces the Great. Sixteen years earlier the latter had lost some
territory to the Persian king Selucus, and his brother may have thought
that this could be a useful alliance. Within 15 years these two princes
were put to death for plotting against the king. However, their three
sons, Kuars, Meghtes and Horean, were allowed to rule over Taron (now
in Turkey’s province of Van) and established cities known by their
names. They later founded the city of Kharkh, high in the mountains
of north-west Armenia, and set up two temples in the names of their
fathers. These cities prospered and expanded unhindered until A.D. 301.

By then Christianity, which entered Armenia in A.D. 66, had spread
all over the kingdom. But small pockets still stuck to their old
beliefs. These were mainly Hindus who had settled there for 450
years. Any person who was not with the majority was considered to be
against it and so in A.D. 301 a fierce battle broke out between the
Armenians led by the prince of Angegh and the Hindus led by Demeter
and a soldier priest called Artzan or Arjun. A detailed description
of what followed is given by Zenob, a Syrian follower of St. Gregory,
The Illuminator, who spread Christianity in Armenia. Zenob describes
how the Hindus were eventually defeated after a prolonged conflict
in which some of Armenian troops, who were converted Hindus, joined
their former brethren. Artzan, Demeter, and a popular Armenian prince
were killed in battle. Zenob records that 1,038 Hindus were buried.
Seeing so much blood shed, a truce was called. A structure to celebrate
the Armenian triumph was built – perhaps the strange two-arched
monument holding obelisks that we see in the Odzun church today. The
obelisks could be remnants of phallic symbols from the Hindu temples
that are thought to have existed once on the site. The inscription
on the monument mentions the last of the conversions to Christianity.

Photo: THE FIRST ARMENIAN JOURNAL, printed in Madras in the 17 century.

Armenia and India have had commercial links for centuries. There
have been colonies of Armenians in India’s coastal cities for four
centuries. In Yerevan’s ancient manuscripts library, Matenadaran, is
a 17th century copy of the first journal published in Armenian, which
was printed in Madras (now Chennai). Many armies of the feudal states
in India and also the British army had Armenian soldiers and officers.

Photo: A STATUE HONOURING Catholicos Yovan Awjunec (A.D. 717-728),
whose papal seat was in Odzun until he shifted to Echmiadzin.

Odzun’s cultural and religious link has thus far gone unrecorded.
Artzan means statue in Armenian. Odzun, also pronounced as Awjun,
sounds very much like Arjun. There is little doubt that this could
have been the scene of the struggle between the two communities and
that the strange monument remembers that trial of strength.

/20060811000106600.htm

http://www.hinduonnet.com/fline/stories