ARF Has Been Founded For The Armenian People,Representative Of Party

ARF HAS BEEN FOUNDED FOR THE ARMENIAN PEOPLE, REPRESENTATIVE OF PARTY BUREAU SAYS

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, NOYAN TAPAN. Over the 15 years of its activities in
Armenia, the ARF has taken deep roots in the country. Armen Rustamian,
representative of the Supreme Body of the ARF of Armenia, said this at
the ceremony of opening the new building of the ARF Bureau in Yerevan
on August 16. According to him, the party is continuing its active
work because such important problems as the Armenian Cause (Hay Dat),
the Karabakh conflict, strengthening the country, etc. have not been
solved yet. “We have been founded for Armenia and the Armenian people
and must solve all the problems facing our people,” representative of
the ARF Bureau Hrant Margarian stated. He noted that the opening of
the new building in Yerevan marks ARF’s 15-year presence in Armenia,
as well as the 115th anniversary of the party’s foundation. The ARF
Bureau building was purchased and repaired with funds of the Armenian
Diaspora, with the American Armenian couple Varand and Guri Melonian
making most of the contribution. In his speech, V. Melkonian pointed
out the necessity for providing assistance to historical Homeland in
the future too: “We are the Armenians living in Homeland and in the
Diaspora and we must complement one another.” Head of the Georgian
diocese Bishop Vazgen Mirzakhanian conveyed the words of greeting and
congratulation of Catholicos of All Armenians. The opening ceremony
was attended by members of the Armenian government, representatives of
the Republican party, and leaders of the opposition, including Stepan
Demirchian, Raffi Hovhannisian, Albert Bazeyan, Paruyr Hayrikian.

PACE Chairman Rene Van Der Linden To Arrive In Armenia On August 18

PACE CHAIRMAN RENE VAN DER LINDEN TO ARRIVE IN ARMENIA ON AUGUST 18

YEREVAN, AUGUST 17, NOYAN TAPAN. By RA NA Chairman Artur Baghdasarian’s
invitation, Rene van der Linden, the Chairman of Parliamentary Assembly
of the Council of Europe will be on an official visit to Armenia on
August 18-20. Noyan Tapan was informed about this by the RA NA Public
Relations Department. The PACE Chairman’s meetings with ambassadors
of the member countries of the Council of Europe, representatives
of public organizations are scheduled for August 18. Rene van der
Linden will lay a wreath to the Tsitsernakabert Memorial Complex in
memory of the Armenian Genocide victims. Karekin II, Catholicos of
All Armenians will receive him the same day. Meetings with the NA
delegation to the PACE, members of the RA NA Interim Committee on
Foreign Relations, with the NA political forces are scheduled for
August 19. Rene van der Linden will have a private conversation with
Artur Baghdasarian, the RA NA Chairman. Meetings with Vardan Oskanian,
the Foreign Minister; David Haroutiunian, the Minister of Justice;
RA President Robert Kocharian are scheduled for the same day.

BAKU: Azeri minister says peace deal with Armenia not to be reached”

Azeri minister says peace deal with Armenia not to be reached “soon”

MPA news agency
16 Aug 05

Baku, 16 August: [Azerbaijani] Foreign Minister Elmar Mammadyarov
has ruled out the possibility that an agreement may soon be signed
with Armenia over [disputed region of] Nagornyy Karabakh despite the
predictions by some US experts. “Azerbaijan and Armenia have not yet
reached the level of signing a document,” he said.

Mammadyarov’s meeting with his Armenian counterpart Vardan Oskanyan has
been postponed till 24 August, as the council of CIS foreign ministers
will convene in Moscow on 23 August. The two ministers will head for
Kazan [Russia’s central republic of Tatarstan] following the meeting
on the same day, Mammadyarov said.

The sides will try to formulate a common concept of how to settle
the Nagornyy Karabakh conflict. Mammadyarov said that seven to
nine elements of the settlement were on the agenda of the talks
with Armenia.

“Our first priority is to restore Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity
and to have refugees return to their native lands,” Mammadyarov
stressed.

City leader sparks row by backing claim of genocide

City leader sparks row by backing claim of genocide
By GARETH ROSE

The Scotsman
16 Aug 05

COUNCIL leader Donald Anderson has become embroiled in an international
row over whether the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians during the First
World War was genocide.

Armenia has called for an international investigation into whether the
massacre was ordered by the Ottoman Empire which ruled Turkey in 1915.

Turkey has always insisted the people died during civil unrest while
its authorities attempted to deport them.

Councillor Anderson first became involved in the issue when the
Capital hosted a Holocaust Memorial Day in 2003.

But now, the city leader plans to go one step further and put forward
a motion to the council in October recognising that “it was indeed
genocide”.

The proposed motion has been welcomed by Armenians in the Capital.

But the move has raised the ire of the Turkish community in Edinburgh
and Councillor Anderson has also received complaints from the Turkish
ambassador, who has pointed to the fact that history accepts many
Turkish people died at Armenian hands.

In a letter to the ambassador, Cllr Anderson said: “Having researched
this issue, I am in no doubt that the Armenian community suffered a
genocide at the hands of the Ottoman regime.

“There are substantial eyewitness accounts that are well documented
and there is, I believe, wide support for the view that the historical
evidence is robust and compelling for genocide.

“You mention in your letter that atrocities were carried out against
Turks by the Armenian side and undoubtedly this is true. There were
atrocities on all sides of what was an extremely bitter period
of ethnic conflict. However, this was not genocide and was not
state-sponsored.”

He added: “As council leader I have to advise you that I am convinced
of the need to support recognition for what I believe was genocide.

“I would encourage you as ambassador for a great and dynamic country
to reconsider your position.”

The council leader was asked earlier by the Armenian community if the
city would host a commemoration service to mark the 90th anniversary
of the deaths, which was held on April 24.

Armenian Dr Hagop Bessos, 55, of Marchmont Road, Edinburgh, today
said Edinburgh’s recognition that genocide took place would be a
“significant” step.

Dr Bessos, who is chairman of the Scottish branch of UK organisation
the Campaign for Recognition of Armenian Genocide said: “It would be
very important for Edinburgh City Council to recognise what happened
was genocide.”

Dr Bessos, whose parents survived the massacre, added: “Many countries
across the world already have done. The UK and the US are the principal
ones which have not.”

A total of 15 nations, including Switzerland, Russia and Argentina,
classify the killings as genocide. France, which has a large
Armenian population, passed a law officially recognising the events
as genocide in 2001, cooling relations with Turkey and scuppering a
major arms deal.

The disagreement is also seen as the biggest stumbling block facing
Turkey as it attempts to join the European Union.

But far from backing down, Turkey has remained defiant.

Murat Toruntay, chairman of the Turkish Association, said: “There
are two sides to the story and I am pleased Cllr Anderson is prepared
to listen to both. I was in Turkey recently and it was being talked
about. The government does not accept that it was genocide.”

Pasadena: Condo project enrages neighbors

Pasadena Star-News (Pasadena, CA)
August 10, 2005 Wednesday

Condo project enrages neighbors

by Gene Maddaus, Staff Writer

PASADENA

Neighbors have been annoyed by the abandoned gas station at Allen
Avenue and Brigden Road for a long time. On a pleasant street where
Armenian bakeries and unassuming mom ‘n’ pop outfits sit
cheek-by-jowl with charming bungalows, the old gas station with its
peeling paint and imposing fence is an eyesore.

Now, a developer has decided to tear it down and put up something
new.

And that’s where the real problem begins.

Ara Tchaghlassian’s plan to build a three-story condominium complex
on the site has triggered neighborhood outrage and a 45-day citywide
moratorium on similar developments, which was approved unanimously by
the City Council late Monday night.

The project, neighbors say, is simply too big. From San Marino to
Altadena, nothing else on Allen Avenue is three stories tall. Next to
the low-slung bakeries and the single-story bungalows, it will look
hulking, towering a monster.

“This is a dreadful project for the neighborhood,’ said Councilman
Paul Little.

The moratorium will not affect Tchaghlassian’s project he already has
a building permit. Assuming, as seems likely, that the moratorium
will not be renewed in 45 days, it will not affect anything, said
Planning Director Richard Bruckner.

“It doesn’t look like there are any projects currently that are teed
up for entitlements that would be impacted by this moratorium,’ he
said.

Turning its focus back on Tchaghlassian, the City Council went so far
Monday night as to consider the extremely unusual and quite possibly
illegal move of revoking his building permit.

Little, who represents the neighborhood, even suggested in jest, he
says that the city refuse to provide power and sewer hook-ups to the
project once it’s completed.

“That may be leverage to get him to be more friendly with the
neighborhood,’ Little said. “That’s an extreme.’

Tchaghlassian pointed out that his project complies fully with the
zoning of the lot. He sought no variances.

The parcel has carried these automatic entitlements for decades,
Bruckner said. It is only recently, with skyrocketing land values,
that developers have been able to take advantage of them. There are
several more parcels in the same neighborhood that could be similarly
developed, if the owners had a mind to do it.

The moratorium is designed to give the city’s planners “breathing
room’ to draft new zoning rules to prevent further projects that are
out of scale with their neighborhoods.

As for Tchaghlassian, the City Council decided to meet privately with
him next week to attempt to resolve the issue. The city could either
pay Tchaghlassian not to build the third story or purchase the land,
among other options.

“Ara said he had some compromises in mind, like having the city buy
the property outright,’ said Liane Enkelis, of the Brigden Ranch
Neighborhood Association, which has protested the development the
loudest. “All of these compromises would not be made without a
monetary benefit to Ara.’

Enkelis has suggested that the city buy the land and turn it into a
pocket park.

“Older Armenian gentlemen could sit and sip coffee and play checkers,
while younger moms could stroll with their kids,’ she said.

It would be an unusual outcome.

“The circumstances surrounding this whole thing are unusual. There’s
nothing normal about this,’ said Councilman Chris Holden. “We’re
grappling with the right way to respond.’

With Isabel Bayrakdarian

The Guardian (Prince Edward Island), Canada
August 12, 2005 Friday

with Isabel Bayrakdarian

Who: Isabel Bayrakdarian.

Place of birth: Lebanon.

Currently resides: Toronto and Madrid (Spain).

Next concert: After the Indian River Festival concert on Aug. 14, it
will be the Opening Night Gala Concert in New York.

When and where: Sept 18, 2005 Metropolitan Opera House, New York.

Type of music performed: Opera, Le Nozze di Figaro, by Mozart, in the
role of Susanna

CDs released: Joyous Light, Azulao (2004 Juno for Best Classical
Album), Cleopatra (2005 Juno for Best Classical Album) and Pauline
Viardot: Songs

Most dominant musical influences: Armenian sacred music, Mozart,
Middle-Eastern music, and Fado (the folk music of Portugal).

Most important personal influences: Christian faith, the books of
Paulo Cuelho, mezzo-soprano Marilyn Horne!

Defining career moment: winning the Metropolitan Opera National
Council Auditions in 1997

What is it that inspires you to sing? By believing in yourself and
having faith in God, you can accomplish almost anything.

Favourite place to sing: Any concert hall which has excellent
acoustics.

Favourite song to perform: An Armenian lullaby called Oror which my
mother used to sing to me.

Favourite singer: Classical singer: Cecilia Bartoli and Renee
Fleming, and Non-Classical: Cesaria Evora

Favourite movie: The Princess Bride.

Favourite food: Sushi.

Person I most admire: My mom!

Best thing about being on the road: Seeing incredible new sights,
experiencing and living with different cultures and, of course,
shopping for unique items and gifts.

Worst thing about being on the road: Doing all the things above
without my husband, Serouj Kradjian, with whom to share everything!

Ultimate ambition: To still have the same wide-eyed enthusiasm and
joy about life and music 50 years down the road!

If you weren’t a singer, what career would you choose? Biomedical
Engineering, in which I actually hold an honours degree from
University of Toronto.

Website:

GRAPHIC: Isabel Bayrakdarian will be on stage at St. Mary’s Church in
Indian River on Aug. 14, as part of this year’s Indian River
Festival.

www.bayrakdarian.com

Farmington chamber leader one of few Armenian performers in Genre

World musician is one of a kind

Farmington chamber leader is one of a few Armenian performers in U.S. to
play genre

The Detroit News (Detroit, Michigan)
August 11, 2005

By Jennifer Youssef

FARMINGTON HILLS, MI — Haunting music filled the home of Ara Topouzian
as he gently pulled the strings of the kanun, a 76-stringed Middle
Eastern dulcimer-like instrument perched on his lap.

When Topouzian of Bloomfield Township isn’t fulfilling his duties as
president of the Farmington/Farmington Hills Chamber of Commerce, he can
be found playing an array of Middle Eastern instruments such as the
kanun at ethnic festivals and events throughout the state such as the
upcoming Experience Petra ancient Middle Eastern exhibit at Calvin
College in Grand Rapids next week and the Concert of Colors in Detroit
last month.

Although he is of Armenian descent, Topouzian, 35, says playing the
instruments allows him to stay connected to his roots and gives him an
opportunity to entertain and educate others about Middle Eastern history
through music.

The interest in music from that part of the world has increased, he
said, and there has been a growing demand for him to perform at Arabic,
Armenian, American and Greek weddings, festivals and events.

“What’s kind of nice is that everybody likes this,” said Topouzian, who
grew up listing to Arabic songs and music though nobody else in his
family took an interest in it.

“It’s almost become mainstream.”

Topouzian began playing Middle Eastern instruments 15 years ago and is
one of the only Armenian musicians in the country to perform Middle
Eastern music, he said.

He’s had many opportunities to play for audiences — up to 40 each year
— but the one that sticks out most in Topouzian’s mind is when he
played at Calvin College for Prince Firas Raad, son of the lord
chamberlain to His Majesty King Abdullah II of Jordan in April.

“I just love the sound of it,” said Topouzian, who developed his own
record label American Recording Productions and has produced 45 world
music albums, including 15 of his own.

“It’s a form of relaxation and I can play it for hours,” he said.

Topouzian also performed at this year’s Concert of Colors, Metro
Detroit’s diversity music festival at Chene Park in July.

The three-day festival was presented in part by the Arab Community
Center for Economic and Social Services in Dearborn.

“He’s a great artist,” said Steve Heath, a booking agent for SRO
Artists, based in Middleton, Wis., and a former ACCESS employee who
asked Topouzian to play at the Concert of Colors. “We are seeing more
interest in Middle Eastern music partly because of the political climate
right now.

“It’s growing,” Heath said of world music, “but it’s not commercialized
the way pop music is. We’re happy to see more live venues for world music.”

World music is becoming more popular, but Metro Detroiters have had
access to that genre for more than 30 years through Detroit’s public
radio station WDET 101.9 FM, said Judy Adams, director of the Judy Adams
Program, which airs weekdays and features local artists.

“Our world is getting smaller and smaller,” Adams said.

“People can get on the Internet and listen to music from thousands of
miles away. People have found that world music is enjoyable and infectious.”

For Topouzian, playing his instruments is beneficial in many ways,
including providing a reminder of his ancestry.

“I think so many people lose their ethnicity and spend a lifetime trying
to get it back,” Topouzian said. “The only way for me to do it is to
play it.”

Photo Caption [Ankur Dholakia / The Detroit News] — “Ara Topouzian
plays the kanun, a Middle Eastern instrument. He says playing the
instruments gives him an opportunity to educate others.”

Upcoming shows by Ara Topouzian:

Aug. 13: Experience Petra, a comprehensive exhibition on the ancient
Middle Eastern city of Petra at Calvin College in Grand Rapids
Sept. 19: Farmington Public Library main branch
Sept. 24: World Music at the Civic, Civic Theater, Farmington

Legislature again delves into racism lessons in schools

Legislature again delves into racism lessons in schools

By MICHAEL GORMLEY
Associated Press Writer

August 11, 2005, 4:54 PM EDT

ALBANY, N.Y. — A politically appointed state panel will examine
whether slavery and the “physical and psychological terrorism” against
Africans in the slave trade is adequately taught in schools and
textbooks.

The panel called the Amistad Commission was approved by the
Legislature and signed into law last week by Gov. George Pataki. It is
charged with recommending to the Legislature and governor changes in
curriculum and textbooks, which because of New York’s buying power
could influence texts used in other states, according to the National
Council for the Social Studies. The panel could also recommend
state-sponsored educational programs on slavery and racism, and
training for teachers.

The commission is named for the slave ship Amistad that was
commandeered by the slaves it carried. They eventually won their
freedom in U.S. Supreme Court.

Such lessons are critical for all students to understand American
history and the role of slaves and black Americans in it, supporters
say.

Other states have sought public input in recent years to include
international studies and “financial literacy” in schools, said Peggy
Altoff, president-elect of the national council and a social studies
facilitator in Colorado Springs.

She said the goal of the commission is laudable, but said educators on
the panel should be part of any panel recommending changes to make
sure they’ll work.

“There’s only so much time to teach the history of this country
… what’s going to go?” she said.

Letting officials who need no academic expertise make curriculum
recommendations may be a new wrinkle on government’s management of
classroom instruction.

“I haven’t heard of that,” said Susan Adler, a professor of teacher
education in social studies at the University of Missouri at Kansas
City who helped write standards for social studies education for the
national council.

“I kind of like having public input, but ultimately I think educators
need to be the decision makers about curriculum,” Adler said. “Public
input is good. Public decision making makes me nervous.”

New York’s law is the latest legislation aimed at requiring lessons
about ethnic groups.

Under state law, children must learn about the Irish famine, the
Holocaust, slavery and the Underground Railroad.

“There’s no question that it’s dabbling,” said Carl Hayden, the former
state schools chancellor who led the Board of Regents in developing
higher academic standards. “The single most difficult standard that
the Regents dealt with was the history standard, because it is so
potentially controversial.” He said there were extensive discussions
on how to teach slavery before the standard was set.

“It’s not to say (the commission) is a bad idea, but education should
be approached comprehensively,” said Hayden, an Elmira lawyer.

He noted schools are already “overwhelmed” with mandated lessons.

Assemblyman Clarence Norman Jr., a Brooklyn Democrat and co-sponsor of
the law, said he’s unsure why the qualifications for joining the
commission don’t include academic credentials, but said he has faith
that educators and those “well versed in this type of issue” will be
appointed.

“We feel there is, indeed, a void in our education curriculum in New
York state when it comes to the issue of slavery and the
de-humanization of Africans at that time” and of the racism against
black Americans since, he said. He said the state’s education policy
making board, the Board of Regents, hasn’t acted and needs to be
prodded by the Legislature.

He said the legislation should prompt more laws to revamp or create
lessons on other oppressed racial and ethnic groups. “Commonalities of
struggle,” he said, “create a common bond.”

Norman and the proposal’s prime sponsor, Democratic Assemblyman Keith
Wright of Manhattan, are black leaders in the Legislature.

“A great deal” on slavery is already required in schools and more
would be better, said department spokesman Jonathan Burman. He said he
expects the commission to rely on experts, but was disappointed the
law includes no funding.

“Scholarly interpretation of history should be left to professional
historians,” said Candace de Russy, a State University of New York
trustee and national lecturer and writer on academic issues. “This
bill opens the door to endless group advocacy-oriented
legislation. Inherent in it, Jews will decide how to teach the
Holocaust, the Irish the Great Famine, Armenians the Turkish genocide,
Indians the French and Indian War, and so on. Gays will decide gay
history, women women’s history and so on.”

State Conservative Party Chairman Michael Long, meanwhile, said “To
talk in terms of terrorism is certainly out of line.”

The commission will include 19 unpaid members: Eight appointed by the
governor, the rest by the state secretary of state, who is appointed
by the governor; the state education commissioner and majority leaders
of the Legislature.

Panelists need not be academics. They will be “chosen with due regard
to broad geographic representation and ethnic diversity, who have an
interest in the history of the African slave trade and slavery in
America and contributions of African-Americans in our society,”
according to the law’s text.

The commission will be authorized to call for data from any state,
municipal department or school and those offices must cooperate, the
law stated.

The panel will focus on African and African American experiences under
“the concerted effort of physical and psychological terrorism that
deprived groups of people of African descent the opportunity to
preserve many of their social, religious, political and other customs.

“And in spite of these events, there are endless examples of the
triumphs of African-Americans and their significant contributions to
the development of this country,” the law states.

Armenian, Latvian prosecutors sign cooperation memo

Armenian, Latvian prosecutors sign cooperation memo

Mediamax news agency
9 Aug 05

YEREVAN

The prosecutor-generals of Armenia and Latvia, Agvan Ovsepyan and
Janis Maizitis respectively, signed a memorandum “On legal assistance
and cooperation” in Yerevan today.

Ovsepyan said that the document would allow the law-enforcement
agencies of the two countries to exchange experience and fight crimes
more effectively. He said that practical cooperation between the
Armenian and Latvian prosecutors-generals has not been established
yet, but “the signing of the memorandum acquires significance given
the fact that interstate and economic relations have becoming active”.

Maizitis invited his Armenian counterpart to pay a visit to Latvia to
familiarize himself with the activity of the Latvian
Prosecutor-General’s Office which is based on the EU norms.

Ovsepyan pointed out the necessity of adopting a new Armenian law “On
prosecutor’s office” in line with the European norms which would be
totally different from the current law adopted in 1999.

Tehran: Remains in Saint Stephanus Church may be bones of John theBa

Remains in Saint Stephanus Church may be bones of John the Baptist: archbishop

MehrNews.com, Iran
Aug 5 2005

TEHRAN, Aug. 5 (MNA) — The Armenian Orthodox primate of the diocese
of Tehran, Archbishop Sebuh Sarkisian, said on Thursday that some of
the remains recently discovered in Iran’s St. Stephanus Church may
be the bones of John the Baptist.

In late July, Shahriar Adl, the director of the team documenting three
Iranian churches for registration on UNESCO’s World Heritage List,
said that they had discovered the bones of one of the successors of
the Apostles of Jesus at the St. Stephanus Church, which is located
near Marand in East Azarbaijan.

“About the box, which contains the remains of the apostles’ bodies
and was found under the altar of the St. Stephanus Church, it is
said that the box contains the body of John the Baptist. According
to Armenian historian Arakel Davrizhetsi (17th century), the box,
which was located under the main altar of the Church of the Holy
Trinity in old Jolfa and contained the sacred remains and a scroll,
was given to Shamun, the archbishop of St. Stephanus Church, after
the Church of the Holy Trinity was destroyed,” Sarkisian explained.

“The remains may very likely have historic value. According to the
tradition of the church, we know that after St. Gregory the Illuminator
was consecrated as archbishop of Caesarea in Cappadocia, in a friendly
gesture, he gave some remains of John the Baptist to Quintius, the
archbishop of the region, during his return trip to Armenia. The
remains were transferred to the John the Baptist Cathedral in the
city of Mush in Armenia.

“Now, the remains were somehow transferred to another place, as a
consequence of the wars and chaotic conditions prevailing in the land
over past centuries, in which believers and church fathers changed the
location of the box in order to safeguard it. A French traveler (Jean
Baptiste Tavernier, 1605-1689), who saw a box at the St. Stephanus
Church when he visited the place in the 17th century, had said that
the box contained the body of one of the Apostles,” Sarkisian said.

Some historical sources, such as some photos kept at Tehran’s Golestan
Palace, and the photos taken by Ali Khan Vali, the governor of northern
Azarbaijan during the reign of the Qajar king Nasser ad-Din Shah and
kept in the Adl family archives, indicate that the bones of Saint
Stephanus (Saint Stephen), Saint Matthew, and the Prophet Daniel,
are being kept in the St. Stephanus Church.

The bones have been examined by a team of anthropologists of the
Cultural Heritage and Tourism Organization (CHTO).

Unfortunately, the bones have been damaged because of the bad
condition of the place. Thus, the team could only determine that
they are the bones of a single body but the individual bones can not
be distinguished.

The experts have said that the complete skeleton belongs to a man
with a strong physique who was about 50 years old when he died.

The bones have been transferred to the Prelacy of Azarbaijan in
Tabriz because restoration work is currently underway in the church,
but they will be returned after the renovation is complete.

Hayk Ajimian, an Armenian scholar and historian, recorded that the
church was originally built in the ninth century CE, but repeated
earthquakes in Azarbaijan severely damaged the original structure.
The church was renovated during the reign of the Safavid king Shah
Abbas (1588-1629).

The general structure of the St. Stephanus Church mostly resembles
Armenian and Georgian architecture and the inside of the building is
adorned with beautiful paintings by Honatanian, a renowned Armenian
artist.

The CHTO plans to submit an application to UNESCO to register the St.
Stephanus Church as well as the St. Thaddeus and Zorzor churches in
West Azarbajian on the World Heritage List.