Ecumenical Commemoration of Armenian Genocide

Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
3325 North Glenoaks Blvd.
Burbank, Ca 91504
Tel: 818-558-7474
Fax: 818-558-6333
Web:

Invitation to attend

Ecumenical Commemoration of the

Armenian Genocide

Under the auspices of

His Grace Bishop John Bruno, Primate

Episcopal Church, Diocese of Los Angeles

and

His Eminence Archbishop Hovnan Derderian, Primate

Armenian Church, Western Diocese

Wednesday, April 26, 2006

7:00PM

St. Marks Episcopal Church

1020 N. Brand Blvd., Glendale, California

The solemn requiem service is organized by the committee promoting
dialogue between the Episcopal Church and Armenian Church. The choirs
of St. Marks and the St. Peters of Glendale will be participating.

The commemoration begins promptly at 7:00PM

The public is cordially invited to participate in this special
service of remembrance, healing and worship.

More information is available by calling:

Western Diocese: 818.558.7474

St. Peter Armenian Church: 818.244.9696

or visiting hyeyouth.com

http://www.armenianchurchwd.com/

Glendale: A Somber History Lesson

A SOMBER HISTORY LESSON
By Fred Ortega, News-Press and Leader
TAMMY ABBOTT News-Press and Leader

Glendale News Press, CA
April 24 2006

The Armenian Genocide commemoration sought to educate the public
about the events leading up to the atrocities.

Documentarian J. Michael Hagopian showed “Germany and the Secret
Genocide” as part of the City of Glendale’s Commemorative of the 1915
Armenian Genocide at the Alex Theatre, Sunday.

Armenian Genocide commemorations tend to revolve around the cultural
and political repercussions of the genocide.

But city officials decided to use this year’s 91st anniversary of
the atrocities to focus more on educating the public about the events
that led to the systematic slaughter of more than a million Armenians.

And one of those educational moments came at Sunday’s event at the
Alex Theatre when the keynote speaker said a nation that has become
synonymous with genocide was complicit in the Turks’ extermination
of the Armenians.

J. Michael Hogopian, director of the documentary, “Germany and the
Secret Genocide,” used documents, archival footage and interviews with
survivors and German scholars in his film to suggest that Germany knew
about Turkey’s plans to eliminate its Armenian population during World
War I. And he goes further, saying that German authorities helped cover
up the massacres, and possibly even participated in them on occasion.

Hogopian shows correspondence between the head of the German-built
Berlin-Turkey-Baghdad Railway in his documentary that suggests the
German government knew the Turks were using the railway to transport
hundreds of thousands of Armenians to concentration camps and forced
labor sites in the Syrian desert.

The Turks’ use of German rail box cars — and even poison gas,
according to Hogopian — to eventually send 1.5 million Armenians
to their deaths foreshadowed the tactics that would be used by Nazi
Germany against Europe’s Jews during World War II.

Hogopian told the crowd of more than 500 at the Alex before the film’s
screening that his documentary is not meant to condemn Germany as a
nation or as a people.

“Instead, it is meant to show documentation, both visually and on
paper, of the Armenian Genocide by the Turks from the Turks’ own
mouthpiece, the Germans,” he said, noting that World War II Germany,
then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, was allied with Ottoman
Turkey.

While most past genocide remembrances have taken on a cultural tone,
reinforcing the perseverance of the Armenian people, Councilman Rafi
Manoukian said this year the city decided to take a different tack.

“We are making it more educational, describing the geopolitical
situation in the years leading up to the genocide and the influence
the alliance between Germany and the Turks had on the events that
unfolded,” he said.

It is important to continue pushing for recognition of the Armenian
genocide, especially in light of the fact that the United States has
yet to officially accept the events of 1915 as a genocide, Councilman
Ara Najarian said.

“We are fortunate the city of Glendale is committed to recognizing
the genocide and educating the public,” Najarian said.

“We need to get the word out that Armenians will not forget the
genocide, that international recognition is a must, if nothing more
than to remember the slaughter of the innocents lost in 1915.”

Also present at Sunday’s event was Rep. Adam Schiff, who has introduced
legislation that would have the United States join other countries
such as Belgium, Canada, France, Greece, Italy, Russia, Sweden and
Switzerland in recognizing the Armenian Genocide.

“Even as we move forward with legislation to recognize the genocide,
at the same time our government is trying to discipline our ambassador
to Armenia for having the guts to call the genocide a genocide,”
Schiff said.

“In a country as great as ours, this cannot stand.”

Scholar Ragip Zarakolu Could Face Jail Time

SCHOLAR RAGIP ZARAKOLU COULD FACE JAIL TIME
By Fred Ortega, News-Press and Leader

Glendale News Press, CA
April 24 2006

Publisher who acknowledges Armenian Genocide could be punished back
in Turkey.

When Turkish scholar and publisher Ragip Zarakolu returns home from
his visit to the United States, he could be facing some serious jail
time — all because he has written about a subject that many countries
consider a historical fact.

But Zarakolu, who was in Glendale over the weekend and spoke at
several Armenian Genocide memorial events, takes it all in stride. As
director of Belge International Publishers in Istanbul, he has been
engaged in an ongoing battle with the Turkish government for more
than 30 years, mainly because he has continued to publish and research
what he considers to be an essential truth: his country’s history of
injustices and atrocities against minorities including the Armenians,
Greeks and Kurds.

His latest books, two volumes about the Armenian Genocide, have
been labeled as “insulting and undermining the state” by Turkish
authorities. If convicted, he could face six years in prison. The
Turkish government to this day denies the genocide took place,
a position that has been condemned by many countries in the world
— but not in the United States, where the government has yet to
officially recognize the Armenian Genocide.

It would not be the first time Zarakolu goes to jail for his
convictions. In 1971, a military junta imprisoned him for three years
because of previous works he had published. Both he and his late wife,
Ayse Nur, were jailed by the Turkish government, and their publishing
offices were firebombed by right-wing groups.

But it is all worth it to Zarakolu, who sees his actions as simply
his duty to his fellow man. He described his efforts to expose what he
characterized as Turkey’s past atrocities as benefiting both those who
suffered under them, the Armenians, as well as the Turks themselves.

“We Turks must accept the Armenian Genocide took place in order
to build a true democratic country that provides the opportunity
for different cultures and beliefs to coexist,” said Zarakolu, who
has worked with Amnesty International on human rights issues in his
country since the 1970s and is a founding member of the Turkish Human
Rights Assn. “We must do this for Armenians, but also for ourselves,
for new generations and to prevent future tragedies.”

Zarakolu lived side-by-side with members of Turkey’s minority
populations at an early age. Growing up on the Prince Islands near
Istanbul, he said many of his Turkish family’s friends were Greeks,
Jews and Armenians.

But even in a seemingly tolerant society, no one openly talked about
the horrors of the past, he said.

“It was a silent period, and both sides did not want to speak of it to
save the children from bad memories,” said Zarakolu, who nonetheless
learned of the Armenian Genocide from his mother, who witnessed some
of the horrors first hand. His grandmother had even taken in Armenian
orphans in an effort to save them from extermination.

With the seed of the reality of the genocide planted in his head by
his mother, Zarakolu went on to Istanbul to study. There, he witnessed
a pogrom against Greek residents of the city and other minorities,
an event that further increased his resolve to speak out in favor of
his fellow countrymen, Turkish or otherwise.

The military coups in Turkey of the 1970s and 1980s helped remind
the people of the horrors committed in the past, he said.

“It raised empathy among the people,” he said. “At that time I began to
focus on studying the Armenian Genocide, and I had to conduct research
outside of the country because of the government’s censorship [and]
I could not find any documentation in Turkey.”

Zarakolu, who is wrapping up his tour of the United States courtesy
of the Organization of Istanbul Armenians Cultural Committee, has
impressed many with his ongoing efforts on behalf of his country’s
minorities. Glendale Councilman Ara Najarian called him nothing less
than a hero.

“He is one of the most courageous men I can think of,” Najarian said.

“Even in the face of hostility and incarceration at home, the fact
that he is not afraid to call what happened in 1915 a genocide makes
him one of the true heroes of the Armenian people.”

Former Glendale Mayor Larry Zarian, who interviewed Zarakolu during
a special airing of his weekly show “The Larry Zarian Forum,” said
Zarakolu’s actions were humbling and an example to all of humanity.

“This is bravery on the part of someone who doesn’t have to do this,
someone who can remain silent like many in his country and throughout
the world, and sell books and live a happy life,” said Zarian, whose
mother was a genocide survivor and who died before seeing the Turkish
government own up to the atrocities, her lifelong dream.

“This is someone who is committed to what is right, who is willing to
put his life on the line for the truth, and how can you thank someone
for that?” Zarian added.

Two countries with the same name

The Times (London)
April 21, 2006, Friday

Two countries with the same name

Have two countries with the same name ever existed in entirely
different locations at the same, or different, points of history?

Further to your previous replies (March 24, April 7), there is at
least one other example -Armenia.

Although it is now an independent country sandwiched between Iran,
Azerbaijan, Turkey and Kazakhstan, it was once much larger, with a
seaboard on the Caspian Sea, and sat beneath the Caucasian versions
of Iberia and Albania (already mentioned). In AD301 it adopted
Christianity as its state religion, more than a decade before
Christians were tolerated by Rome.

Armenia was swallowed by the Byzantines and then the Turks, and in
1064, refugees fleeing the Seljuks, created a new Armenia by the
Mediterranean, the Armenian Kingdom of Cilicia. Against the odds,
this lasted about 300 years. It was propped up by Frankish crusaders
after the First Crusade and became a French crusader state, adjacent
to Antioch and Edessa. It grew to become the Kingdom of Armenia in
1198 under Leon II, a dominion on the underbelly of Turkey from the
Euphrates to what is today Gazipasa. It ended with the Marmeluk
invasion of 1375.

Randolph Simms, Exeter

Fresno: Armenian genocide to be recalled

Fresno Bee (California)
April 21, 2006 Friday
FINAL EDITION

Armenian genocide to be recalled;
Slate of events planned to mark the 91st anniversary of killings.

Vanessa Colón The Fresno Bee

Valley events to commemorate the 91st anniversary of the Armenian
genocide will begin Saturday with a flag-raising ceremony in Fresno.

Armenian-Americans have been gearing up for Martyrs Day on Monday.
The secular holiday recalls the killing of hundreds of Armenians who
were arrested and taken from their homes in Constantinople before
dawn on April 24, 1915.

The day marks the beginning of the massive killings. Between 1915 and
1923, 1.5 million Armenians were executed at the hands of the Ottoman
Empire. The modern-day republic of Turkey evolved from the empire.

Commemorations also will include church and cemetery services, vigils
and a poetry reading.

The Turkish government denies that genocide occurred. Turkish
officials have repeatedly said that thousands of Turks as well as
Armenians died during World War I.

Armenian-American organizations hope to sway the U.S. government to
recognize the Armenian genocide.

“It’s the truth. We want the truth recognized,” said Hygo
Ohannessian, chairwoman of the Armenian National Committee of Central
California. Many Armenians perished after they were forced to march
from northeast Turkey toward the deserts of Syria.

Ohannessian said she’s frustrated that the U.S. government has not
recognized the genocide while European countries such as France and
Russia have. Turkey is a U.S. ally and its geographic location in the
Middle East plays a role in why the U.S. government won’t call the
killings a genocide, Ohannessian said.

“They [U.S. government] are just playing politics. It’s not in their
interest,” she said.

Varoujan Der Simonian, executive director of the Armenian Technology
Group Inc., said, “The key is for the Turkish government to recognize
it.”

Der Simonian sees a glimmer of hope because he said there’s a trend
among Turkish scholars, especially those outside of Turkey, to call
the killings a genocide. “We are going in the right direction,” he
said.

Earlier this week, a lecture and performance were given in Fresno on
Arshile Gorky, an Armenian-American artist who came to the United
States to escape the Armenian genocide.

Der Simonian said of the genocide: “It’s time to speak out about the
past so we can avoid future atrocities which is [already] happening
now in Africa.”

The reporter can be reached at [email protected] or (559)
441-6313.

INFOBOX

If you go

Highlights of Armenian Martyrs Day and Armenian genocide
commemorations

Saturday

Flag-raising ceremony, Fresno City Hall, 10 a.m.

Sunday

Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church requiem service, 2226 Ventura
Ave., 11:15 a.m.

Service honoring Armenian hero at Masis Ararat cemetery on Hughes and
Belmont avenues, 1 p.m.

Poetry reading, Fresno Art Museum, 2233 N. First St., 3 p.m.

Film and candlelight vigil, California State University, Fresno,
McLane Hall, Room 121, 7:30 p.m.

Monday

Armenian Martyrs Day Commemoration, St. Paul Armenian Church, 3767 N.
First St., 7 p.m.

May 13

Genocide seminar, Armenian Community Center, 2348 Ventura Ave., 9:30
a.m.

Details:

–Boundary_(ID_9OSlO uocug4IVSyUokitlA)–

www.armenianmuseumfresno.org

ANKARA: Endless Trials of Publisher Zarakolu

BÝA, Turkey
April 20 2006

Endless Trials of Publisher Zarakolu

Belge Publications House owner Ragýp Zarakolu was once again at court
this week, this time on trial for Prof. Dr. Sakayan’s book “Accounts
of an Armenian Doctor” and Jerjian’s “The Truth Will Set Us Free”.

Publisher faces 13.5 years jail if found guilty f

BIA News Center
20/04/2006 Erol ONDEROGLU

BÝA (Istanbul) – In addition to a number of cases launched against him
over the past years for his publishing activities, Belge Publications
owner and journalist Ragýp Zarakolu now faces up to 13.5 years
imprisonment if found guilty for printing and distributing the Turkish
translations of two books related to Armenians in Turkey.

Zarakolu appeared in court once again this week, this time on trial
for the Turkish language publication of Prof. Dr. Dora Sakayan’s book
“Garabed Hacheryan’s Izmir Journal: An Armenian Doctor’s Experiences
” and George Jerjian’s ” The Truth Will Set Us Free: Armenians and
Turks Reconciled”.

The prosecution demands 7.5 years imprisonment for the Turkish
translation book “The Truth Will Set Us Free” for which the court
has assigned Korkmaz Alemdar and Cafer Yenidogan of the Galatasaray
University and Prof. Dr. Emin Artuk of Marmara University as expert
witnesses. They are to read and analyse the book for an expert report.

“Garabed Hacheryan’s Izmir Journal: An Armenian Doctor’s Experiences”
promises Zarakolu up to 6 years imprisonment if he found guilty of the
charges but the court decided this week that statements taken were
fulfilling and an additional expert witness report was not required
for this publication.

Zarakolu: Court should interview author Sakaryan

Appearing before Istanbul’s number 2 Court of First Instance on
Wednesday and defended by attorney Osman Ergin, Zarakolu submitted
a petition to the bench where he explained that author Sakaryan was
a lecturer at the Mc Gill University in Canada and that his book put
on trial in Turkey had been translated into nine different languages.

Zarakolu said Sakaryan had been honours by the German Presidency for
his eminent services in recognition to 50 years of his contributions
to the German language.

He said that Sakaryan was author of the most comprehensive work on
the “Western Armenian” spoken in Turkey and requested the court to
interview the author for his views.

Judge Sevim Efendiler adjourned the case until June 21.

Charges based on controversial articles

Zarakolu faces 6 years imprisonment for the Turkish translation
publication of Sakaryan’s book on grounds that he violated the law
by publishing context that “degraded Turkisism” and “insulted and
ridiculed the Army”.

He faces 7.5 years imprisonment for Jerjian’s book on charges of
“insulting and ridiculing the State and Republic” as well as “Insulting
the memory of Ataturk”.

The two consecutive hearings on Wednesday were held in the presence
of International PEN representative Eugene Schoulgin, International
Human Rights Federation (FÝDH) deputy chairman Akýn Birdal, Pencere
publications executive Muzaffer Erdogdu, Aram publications editor
Fatih Tas and author Oner Eyuboglu who attended the court in support
of Zarakolu. (EO/II

–Boundary_(ID_wZwUYUpNtOv7wB+vaOs2iw)–

Sheep Breeding Is Developing

SHEEP-BREEDIND IS DEVELOPING

A1+
[12:21 pm] 20 April, 2006

Sheep-breeding has greatly developed in Gegharkunik since 2000. It
seriously reduced in the region in 1991 – 2000 as the fur wasn’t well
realized. The restart of carpet making workshops in Sevan, Tsambarak
and Martuni contributed to the development of regional agriculture.

A marketing and sheep-breeding program on “the development of applied
arts” is being held in the region this year. It is initiated by
the organization “Corn – 96” under the patronage of “Oksfum” and
“Jersey” fund.

The program is aimed at the curtailment of poverty index in the
region. There is also a mention to create working conditions for
women who have got specialization of carpet makers.

The organization formed small sheep-breeding farms in the villages
Zovaber, Tsakhkunk and Semjonovka in order to resume Armenian
sheep-breeding. About 12 – 13 female sheep were given to each village
and the farms included in the program will be given grass and fodder
for these sheep. There will also have veterinary and cattle-breeding
services.

“Kjavar” TV channel of Gyumri

Mayor Invites OAPs To Show For Queen’s 80th

MAYOR INVITES OAPS TO SHOW FOR QUEEN’S 80TH

Cambridge Evening News, UK
April 19 2006

MORE than 400 Cambridge senior citizens attended a special celebration
to mark the Queen’s 80th birthday.

The Mayor of Cambridge, Coun John Hipkin, hosted a show – The Best
Musicals Ever- in the city’s Guildhall, and guests also enjoyed
afternoon tea.

They also sang Happy Birthdayto The Queen, and the National Anthem.

Joyce Pilcher, 81, from Sturton Street, said: “I think it’s very
important to mark the Queen’s birthday. I think she’s a very good
Queen, she’s a very caring one.”

Eighty-nine-year-old Maude Chapman, of Staffordshire Street, agreed:
“I think she’s going to do what Queen Victoria did and reign for 60
years I hope.”

Another fan was Ruby Whitehead, 75, of St Matthew’s Street. She said:
“I saw the Queen when she opened The Grafton, I think she’s lovely –
she does a great job for the country.”

Before the tea, she said: “We’re looking forward to the whole afternoon
– I think it’s good they put on things for us senior citizens.”

Eighty-two-year-old Virginia Cole, of Rustat Road, spent three weeks
embroidering a traditional Armenian lace bookmark for the Queen’s
birthday.

She said: “I love the Queen with all my heart, I respect her, I admire
her for her selfless devotion to the nation.”

Mekhitarists’ Stolen Treasures Found

MEKHITARISTS’ STOLEN TREASURES FOUND
By Nana Petrosian

AZG Armenian Daily
19/04/2006

More than 55 works of art, including 54 books and a medieval world
map, belonging to the Mekhitarist Congregation were found after a
two-year-long series of stealing.

Lebanese-born 31-year-old man came to the Mekhitarist Congregation
in Venice to study theology and philosophy. Later on he was included
in the Congregation’s choir and served at the newly built library
compound. For two year he has been selling the Congregation’s books to
an antique shop in Vienna sending his profit of 40.000 euros to his
family in Lebanon. The false seminarian’s thefts remained unnoticed
until the November of 2005 when Haji Ahmad’s world map dated 1559
disappeared. Noticing the loss, Mekhitarist representatives informed
the police. By then, the Lebanese had sold the map for 15.000 euros;
the buyer spent additional 10.000 for the map’s restoration. All 55
items of art are now returned to the Congregation, and the suspect
is detained and has confessed to stealing.

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Opinions Differ, Baku Says

PanARMENIAN.Net

OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairs Opinions Differ, Baku Says

15.04.2006 19:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `It is early to express an opinion on the new
proposals made by OSCE Minsk Group co-chairs regarding the settlement
of the Nagorno Karabakh conflict. The proposals should be grouped and
formed in order to air an opinion on this. We will express our opinion
if a specific proposal is put forward,’ said Novruz Mammadov, Director
of Presidential Administration Department for International Relations.

The state official thinks that `the stances of the conflicting sides
not those of the OSCE Minsk Group are fundamental.’ `There should be
some changes in the sides’ stances, they should take a constructive
position and take serious steps to solve the conflict,’ he
underscored. Commenting on a statement of OSCE Minsk Group French
co-chair Bernard Fassier, who said, `The new proposals can satisfy
both sides 80 percent’ and Russian co-chairs Yuri Merzlyakov’s
statement `If both sides are satisfied 50 percent, I would think the
mediation had been fulfilled’, Mammadov said that every co-chair makes
proposals based on his certain considerations. `Even the opinions of
the co-chairs do not coincide,’ he added.

Responding to a question whether Azerbaijan will agree to the
liberation of 50% or 80% of its occupied territories, Mammadov said it
suits Azerbaijan by no means. Commenting on the stance of Azerbaijan
to the co-chairs’ suggestion of organizing a meeting between
Azerbaijani and Armenian Presidents, Mammadov stressed that the
co-chairs’ opinions do not coincide regarding this issue
either. `There can be an opinion, if there is an opportunity for the
meeting of the Presidents,’ he added.

Mammadov also touched on the American co-chair Steven Mann’s visit to
Baku scheduled for 18 April, explaining it by the recent intensified
negotiating process. `Therefore, the co-chairs often visit the region
to express their stances, exchange views and consult together on the
issue,’ Mammadov concluded, reports APA.