ANKARA: Armenia-Azerbaijan: Close A New War?

Journal of Turkish Weekly, Turkey
2005-03-30 12:35:03

Armenia-Azerbaijan: Close A New War?

(JTW) – Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan accused Azerbaijan of
preparing for a military attempt to recapture the territories occupied by
the Armenian forces, according to the Armenian sources.

Oskanyan said that Azerbaijani troops have moved closer to Armenian
positions along the heavily militarized frontline in recent weeks. 20
percent of Azerbaijani territories are under the Armenian occupation. Many
international institutions and conferences including the EU called Armenia
to withdraw their troops from Azerbaijani territories, however Yerevan
Government rejected all the calls from the US, EU and others. The Armenian
troops had occupied the Azerbaijani territories with the Russian military
assistance. Armenia is still a `Russian base’ while Georgia and Azerbaijan
have good relations with Washington and the EU.

The Oskanyan’ s remarks are considered `the starkest yet warning about a
resumption of the Karabakh war voiced by a senior Armenian official since
the signing of the May 1994 ceasefire agreement’.

Oskanyan threat Azerbaijan saying `The Armenian army is ready to give an
adequate response to any Azerbaijani offensive’.

Azerbaijan regularly repeated that the international community should
convince Armenia to withdraw the Armenian troops from Azerbaijain, otherwise
a war would be inevitable. However Russia, France and the US did very little
in convincing Yerevan. Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliev repeated over the
weekend. `The people will liberate their native lands at all costs.’ `We
hope a mutually acceptable solution meeting all the international law norms
will be found as a result of the Prague process,’ Aliyev said.

(JTW)
30 March 2005

The mechanism of denial

The mechanism of denial
Editorial

Yerkir/arm
25 March 05

As it has become a tradition, a great deal of stories on the Armenian
Genocide appeared in the Turkish press during the past week.

The Radikal and the Turkish Daily News ran an article by Gunduz Aktan,
probably the most anti-Armenian member of the Turkish-Armenian
Reconciliation Commission (TARC). In the article titled “Some Aspects
of the Armenian Cause,” Aktan cast his support for the joint action of
the Turkish government and opposition aimed at the Armenian Genocide
denial, and especially their campaign against the British diplomatic
collection known as the Blue Book.

He insisted that the Armenian Genocide issue should be left for the
historians and called on Yerevan not to damage Turkey’s international
image because the Armenians “should not think they could make the
United States or the European Union pressure us to admit to the
genocide.”

In general, according to Aktan, the international organizations are
not the place where the Armenian-Turkish relations must be discussed.
In addition Aktan said that “Jews were killed with no reason — only
because they were Jewish. Armenians were deported because of their
upheaval and their collaboration with the invading Russian troops.”

Another Turkish newspaper, Zaman, quoted a deputy from the People’s
Republic Party as saying that no breakthrough in the Turkish-Armenian
relations is possible because Yerevan is not ready for a dialogue
between historians and the Armenian historians “won’t clean up their
history.”

Sukru Elekdag, who had served as Turkey’s ambassador to the U.S. in
the past, also said that Armenians had killed (exactly) 517,995 Turks
according to the Turkish archives and perpetrated other atrocities
against Turks. He urged the government to conduct a more active policy
against the Armenian Genocide claims. He also denounced Turkish
professor Halil Berktay for the latter’s position that the events
occurred during the WWI could be qualified as genocide.

According to another article in Zaman, 16 deputies representing the
ruling Justice and Progress party have condemned the pro-Armenian
statements of two Turkish authors, Berktay and Pamuk, calling on them
not to endorse “Armenian claims.”

El mosaico de Asia Central tras la [UNKNOWN]=?UNKNOWN?Q?desintegraci

El Mundo
Domingo, 27 de marzo de 2005

CAMBIOS EN EL ESCENARIO INTERNACIONAL
El mosaico de Asia Central tras la desintegración de la URSS

IÑAQUI ORTEGA (EFE)

MOSCÚ.- La revolución popular en Kirguizistán, la tercera en el
espacio postsoviético en los últimos 18 meses tras Georgia y Ucrania,
amenaza con desatar un ‘efecto dominó’ en el patio trasero de Rusia.

Según los expertos, la desintegración de la Comunidad de Estados
Independientes (CEI), que agrupa a las 12 repúblicas ex soviéticas a
excepción de las bálticas, parece inevitable y todos los Gobiernos se
hacen la misma pregunta: ¿Seremos nosotros los próximos?.

Muchos dedos apuntan a la vecina Tayikistán, la república ex
soviética más inestable, pero el recuerdo de la guerra civil
(1992-97), que dejó más 100.000 muertos, y la fortaleza del
presidente, Emomali Rajmónov, que ha anunciado su intención de seguir
en el poder hasta 2020, descartan un escenario revolucionario. Rusia
cuenta con importantes intereses en este país, limítrofe con China,
donde aún conserva una importante presencia militar.

Turkmenistán, cuyo régimen también es denostado por EEUU y la Unión
Europea, parece a salvo, dados los intereses energéticos del gigante
del gas ruso Gazprom y la dependencia del gas turkmeno por parte de
Ucrania. El presidente vitalicio de Turkmenistán, Saparmurat Niyázov,
de 65 años, se mantiene aislado de la comunidad internacional, pero
no representa ninguna amenaza para sus vecinos.

Uzbekistán, el país más poblado de la zona con 26 millones de
habitantes, celebró a principios de año elecciones legislativas, que
se saldaron sin incidentes a pesar de que fueron excluidos todos los
partidos de la oposición. Islam Karimov, en el poder desde 1989 y con
ambición de seguir hasta 2012, se refugia en la latente amenaza
islámica, que le ha granjeado el apoyo de EEUU, pero la posibilidad
de un estallido de violencia está muy presente.

Kazajistán es el país más estable y con mayor nivel de vida de la
zona, lo que no quita que el presidente Nursultán Nazarbáyev no
cuente con grupos opositores, a los que ha perseguido y clausurado
sus sedes. En los últimos dos años, ha introducido profundas reformas
constitucionales y ha optado por la integración regional como forma
de combatir las ‘revoluciones de terciopelo’ en Asia Central.

En el Cáucaso, Armenia es el único aliado de Moscú, que dispone de
una base militar en su territorio, pero su presidente Robert
Kocharián no ha podido sacar a su país del atraso económico, lo que
ha acrecentado el malestar social.

Según la prensa occidental, Washington ya ha dado el visto bueno para
el cambio de régimen en Azerbaiyán, por temor a que Ilham Alíyev, que
reemplazó a su padre, Heidar, en unas elecciones “fraudulentas” en
2003, se eternice en el poder. Bush habló de este asunto con el
dirigente del movimiento juvenil ucraniano Pora durante su visita
oficial a Bratislava a finales de febrero, tras lo que decidieron
crear un “Centro de Expertos” para la propagación de la democracia en
la zona.

En Bielorrusia, las cartas están echadas después de que Rice
incluyera entre los “reductos de la tiranía” al régimen de Alexander
Lukashenko, que se presentará el próximo año a la reelección tras
reformar la Constitución en un plebiscito criticado por la comunidad
internacional. Este país parece el eslabón más débil, como
demostraron las protestas de varios centenares de opositores el
viernes en Minsk, pero Rusia tiene demasiados intereses políticos y
económicos para quedarse con los brazos cruzados.

En Moldavia, el hecho de que los comunistas, ganadores de las
elecciones legislativas de marzo, rompieran lazos con Moscú, le ha
dado al régimen de Vladímir Voronin carta de legitimidad ante
Occidente. “Hemos derrotado a la contrarrevolución”, proclamó Voronin
tras ganar los comicios, en los que no participaron los habitantes de
la región separatista de Cisdniéster, que se escindió de Chisinau
tras una guerra en la que contó con el apoyo militar de Rusia.

–Boundary_(ID_A7jlqMqAYShzd7/+ipmouQ)–

Music

The Washington Post
March 26, 2005 Saturday

Music

[parts omitted]

We don’t get enough all-percussion concerts, despite the fact that
today’s wide-ranging percussion ensembles can provide hypnotic
melodies in addition to hard grooves and explosive outbursts. So it
was enterprising of Strathmore’s Art After Hours series to host a
concert by Ko’mm Percussion in the mansion on Wednesday night. The
group, consisting of local percussionists Leon Khoja-Eynatyan,
Richard McCandless, Rich O’Meara and Joseph Jay McIntyre, presented
works by the latter three.

Three of the eight works Ko’mm played stood out. The mesmerizing
minimalist-style marimba arpeggios of O’Meara’s “Island Spinning”
wobbled dangerously after some subtle metrical twists, but the piece
righted itself like a top given an extra spin. O’Meara followed that
with “301,” a work commemorating the official conversion of Armenia
to Christianity, in which Khoja-Eynatyan played breathtakingly quiet
ruminations on the marimba as his daughter Tatevik rang an Armenian
hymn on hand bells. The concert ended with a piece by McCandless
called “Pile Driver,” which he introduced with the half-boast “This
piece is not subtle,” but the poetry McCandless found in the
cacophony made “Pile Driver” absorbing.

Yet even the less successful pieces were interesting; for example,
the world premiere of McIntyre’s “Negative” found the composer using
real mallets to strike a nonexistent drum, cuing two bass drums
behind him to stop rumbling and thus “playing” silence. The
reverberations of the drums prevented the silence from cutting
sharply through sound, but it was fun to see the idea tried. And as
the members of Ko’mm worked hard to make the music sound good, they
proved that the sheer athletic spectacle of a percussion concert can
be a lot of fun to watch.

— Andrew Lindemann Malone

Darchinyan plans a quick bout

The Age, Australia
March 26 2005

Darchinyan plans a quick bout
By Brad Walter
March 27, 2005

Vic Darchinyan doesn’t like to make predictions about how long his
fights will last.

“I look to finish as soon as possible,” the International Boxing
Federation world flyweight champion said on the eve of tonight’s
title unification bout against South Africa’s Mzukisi Sikali at
Sydney’s State Sports Centre.

“If I can finish in 10 seconds, I will. My fitness is very good but I
don’t look to be punching long distance. I go to kill.”

Having won 17 of his 22 fights since moving to Sydney from Armenia
after the 2000 Olympics to train under Jeff Fenech, the undefeated
Darchinyan’s record speaks for itself. “He’s so cocky that sometimes
it’s scary,” Fenech says. “He comes back after a round and says, ‘You
want me to knock him (out) now? This round, I finish?’ ”

Fenech says 29-year-old Darchinyan is pound for pound the hardest
puncher in Australia.

Having shed 8.5 kilograms in the past five weeks to get down to 50.8
kg for the fight, he can bench-press more than twice his own weight.
“He’s just so strong, mate,” Fenech said. “If he hits anybody,
they’re gone. That’s it, fight over. He can knock anybody out.”

Advertisement
AdvertisementDarchinyan’s greatest win to date was last December’s
11th-round knockout of unbeaten Irene Pacheco, who was making his
seventh defence of the IBF title.

Darchinyan hopes to unify the belts, then move up to bantamweight.
First, he has to overcome Sikali, the International Boxing
Organisation flyweight champion, who is unbeaten since 1999 and has
defended his title three times.

Fenech said the bout would be Darchinyan’s biggest test so far, but
the southpaw is confident.

“He is a smart boxer, a good mover,” Darchinyan said. “. . . But I
know . . . I am much stronger than him and much smarter. I don’t
think it will go the distance.”

Amman: National football team leave for friendly in Cyprus

Jordan Times, Jordan
March 25 2005

National football team leave for friendly in Cyprus
Jordan’s FIFA ranking drops to 42

By a staff reporter

AMMAN – The national football team left for Cyprus on Thursday ahead of
Saturday’s friendly match against the Cypriot national team in Larnaca.

The lineup for the Cyprus match will miss Faisali’s players, due to
their participation in the Arab and Asian championships, as well as
professional players Hassouneh Sheikh and Bashar Bani Yasin, both
playing in Bahrain.

Jordan will play Iraq on June 9 and Qatar on Nov. 16, while the Jordan
Football Association (JFA) also confirmed two matches against the
Armenian national team in Amman, on Aug. 17, and in Yerevan, Armenia,
on Oct. 6.

Meanwhile, Jordan’s FIFA world ranking dropped one place to 42nd
from the highest ever of 37th in August 2004, compared to 96th in
August 2002.

In the latest rankings, headed by Brazil, France and Argentina,
Jordan is still 5th among Arab countries in the rankings (behind Saudi
Arabia, Egypt, Morocco and Tunisia) and 5th in Asia (behind Japan,
Iran, South Korea and Saudi Arabia).

Jordan’s ranking shot up around 100 spots in two years after reaching
the 2004 Asian Cup finals for the first time in the event’s 49-year
history and maintaining a good showing in the first leg of the 2006
World Cup qualifiers.

The national team was revamped at the beginning of the year following
an assessment of Jordanian football in the past two years after
Jordan’s elimination from the first round of the World Cup qualifiers
as well as the finals of the Asian Cup in 2004.

The match in Cyprus will be the second one after head coach Mahmoud Al
Johary revamped the lineup, dropping well-known faces and replacing
them by younger players, mostly under 25 years of age with the hope
that they would have the consistency and competitive form when Jordan
next plays in the Asian Cup qualifiers early next year.

The revamped team held Norway to a goalless draw in a friendly match
in Amman, proceeds of which were donated by the JFA to support victims
of the Dec. 26 devastating tsunami that ravaged Southeast Asia killing
over 280,000.

Hoping for long-term results, Johary made clear that many well-known
names were dropped as they were no longer performing as expected,
including veterans who no longer displayed the fighting spirit,
and being replaced by not so well-known faces that made their mark
in the Premier League Championship.

Those dropped were team captain Abdullah Abu Zame’h, Mouayyad Salim,
Haitham Shboul, Rateb Awadat and Amer Deeb.

Johary told the press that the new lineup intended to have a median
age of 26 by 2007, adding that the list was by no means final.

“We will continue to assess and reassess and only the best will stay,”
Johary said, adding that the final lineup will be announced in December
prior to the Asian qualifiers in February 2006.

The Crescent and the Cross – Communities of God

Global Politician, NY
March 24 2005

The Crescent and the Cross – Communities of God

3/25/2005

By Sam Vaknin, Ph.D.

“From the beginning, people of different languages and religions
were permitted to live in Christian lands and cities, namely Jews,
Armenians, Ismaelites, Agarenes and others such as these, except that
they do not mix with Christians, but rather live separately. For
this reason, places have been designated for these according to
ethnic group, either within the city or without, so that they may
be restricted to these and not extend their dwelling beyond them.”
Bishop Demetrios Khomatianos of Ohrid, late 12th century and early
13th century AD

“The Latins still have not been anathematized, nor has a great
ecumenical council acted against them … And even to this day this
continues, although it is said that they still wait for the repentance
of the great Roman Church.”

“…do not overlook us, singing with deaf ears, but give us your
understanding, according to sacred precepts, as you yourself inspired
the apostles … You see, Lord, the battle of many years of your
churches. Grant us humility, quiet the storm, so that we may know
in each other your mercy, and we may not forget before the end the
mystery of your love … May we coexist in unity with each other,
and become wise also, so that we may live in you and in your eternal
creator the Father and in his only-begotten Word. You are life, love,
peace, truth, and sanctity…” East European Studies Occasional Paper,
Number 47, “Christianity and Islam in Southeastern Europe – Slavic
Orthodox Attitudes toward Other Religions”, Eve Levin, January 1997

“…you faced the serpent and the enemy of God’s churches, having
judged that it would have been unbearable for your heart to see the
Christians of your fatherland overwhelmed by the Moslems (izmailteni);
if you could not accomplish this, you would leave the glory of your
kingdom on earth to perish, and having become purple with your blood,
you would join the soldiers of the heavenly kingdom. In this way,
your two wishes were fulfilled. You killed the serpent, and you
received from God the wreath of martyrdom.” Mateja Matejic and Dragan
Milivojevic, “An Anthology of Medieval Serbian Literature in English”,
Columbus, Ohio: Slavica, 1978

Any effort to understand the modern quagmire that is the Balkan must
address religion and religious animosities and grievances. Yet, the
surprising conclusion of such a study is bound to be that the role of
inter-faith hatred and conflict has been greatly exaggerated. The
Balkan was characterized more by religious tolerance than by
religious persecution. It was a model of successful co-habitation
and co-existence even of the bitterest enemies of the most disparate
backgrounds. Only the rise of the modern nation-state exacerbated
long-standing and hitherto dormant tensions. Actually, the modern
state was established on a foundation of artificially fanned antagonism
and xenophobia.

Religions in the Balkan were never monolithic enterprises. Competing
influences, paranoia, xenophobia and adverse circumstances all
conspired to fracture the religious landscape. Thus, for instance,
though officially owing allegiance to the patriarch in Constantinople
and the Orthodox “oikumene”, both Serb and Bulgarian churches
collaborated with the rulers of the day against perceived Byzantine
(Greek and Russian) political encroachment in religious guise. The
southern Slav churches rejected both the theology and the secular
teachings of the “Hellenics” and the “Romanians” (Romans). In turn,
the Greek church held the Slav church in disregard and treated the
peasants of Macedonia, Serbia, Bulgaria and Albania to savage rounds
of tax collection. The Orthodox, as have all religions, berated other
confessions and denominations. But Orthodoxy was always benign – no
“jihad”, no bloodshed, no forced conversions and no mass expulsions –
perhaps with the exception of the forcible treatment of the Bogomils.

It was all about power and money, of course. Bishops and archbishops
did not hesitate to co-opt the Ottoman administration against
their adversaries. They had their rivals arrested by the Turks or
ex-communicated them. Such squabbles were common. But they never
amounted to more than a Balkanian comedia del-arte. Even the Jews –
persecuted all over western Europe – were tolerated and attained
prominence and influence in the Balkan. One Bulgarian Tsar divorced
his wife to marry a Jewess. Southern Orthodox Christianity (as opposed
to the virulent and vituperative Byzantine species) has always been
pragmatic. The minorities (Jews, Armenians, Vlachs) were the economic
and financial backbone of their societies. And the Balkan was always a
hodge-podge of ethnicities, cultures and religions. Shifting political
fortunes ensured a policy of “hedging one’s bets”.

The two great competitors of Orthodox Christianity in the tight market
of souls were Catholicism and Islam. The former co-sponsored with the
Orthodox Church the educational efforts of Cyril and Methodius. Even
before the traumatic schism of 1054, Catholics and nascent Orthodox
were battling over (lucrative) religious turf in Bulgaria.

The schism was a telling affair. Ostensibly, it revolved around
obscure theological issues (who begat the Holy Spirit – the Father
alone or jointly with the Son as well as which type of bread should
be used in the Eucharist). But really it was a clash of authorities
and interests – the Pope versus the patriarch of Constantinople, the
Romans versus the Greeks and Slavs. Matters of jurisdiction coalesced
with political meddling in a confluence of ill-will that has simmered
for at least two centuries. The southern (Slav) Orthodox churches
contributed to the debate and supported the Greek position. Sects
such as the Hesychasts were more Byzantine than the Greeks and
denounced wavering Orthodox clergy. Many a south Orthodox pilloried
the Catholic stance as an heresy of Armenian or Apollinarian or Arian
origin – thus displaying their ignorance of the subtler points of
the theological debate. They also got wrong the Greek argumentation
regarding the bread of the Eucharist and the history of the schism.
But zeal compensated for ignorance, as is often the case in the Balkan.

What started as a debate – however fervent – about abstract theology
became an all out argument about derided customs and ceremonies.
Diet, dates and divine practices all starred in these grotesque
exchanges. The Latin ate unclean beasts. They used five fingers
to cross themselves. They did not sing Hallelujah. They allowed
the consumption of dairy products in Lent. The list was long and
preposterous. The parties were spoiling for a fight. As is so
often the case in this accursed swathe of the earth, identity and
delusional superiority were secured through opposition and self-worth
was attained through defiance. By relegating them to the role of
malevolent heretics, the Orthodox made the sins of the Catholics
unforgivable, their behaviour inexcusable, their fate sealed.

At the beginning, the attacks were directed at the “Latins” –
foreigners from Germany and France. Local Catholics were somehow
dissociated and absolved from the diabolical attributes of their
fellow-believers abroad. They used the same calendar as the Orthodox
(except for Lent) and similarly prayed in Church Slavonic. The only
visible difference was the recognition of papal authority by the
Catholics. Catholicism presented a coherent and veteran alternative to
Orthodoxy’s inchoate teachings. Secular authorities were ambiguous
about how to treat their Catholic subjects and did not hesitate
to collaborate with Catholic authorities against the Turks. Thus,
to preserve itself as a viable religious alternative, the Orthodox
church had to differentiate itself from the Holy See. Hence, the
flaming debates and pejorative harangues.

The second great threat was Islam. Still, it was a latecomer.
Catholicism and Orthodoxy have been foes since the ninth century.
Four hundreds years later, Byzantine wars against the Moslems were
a distant thunder and raised little curiosity and interest in the
Balkan. The Orthodox church was acquainted with the tenets of Islamic
faith but did not bother to codify its knowledge or record it. Islam
was, to it, despite its impeccable monotheistic credentials, an exotic
Oriental off-shoot of tribal paganism.

Thus, the Turkish invasion and the hardships of daily life under
Ottoman rule found Orthodoxy unprepared. It reacted the way we all
react to fear of the unknown: superstitions, curses, name calling. On
the one hand, the Turkish enemy was dehumanized and bedevilled. It
was perceived to be God’s punishment upon the unfaithful and the
sinful. On the other hand, in a curious transformation or a cognitive
dissonance, the Turks became a divine instrument, the wrathful
messengers of God. The Christians of the Balkan suffered from a post
traumatic stress syndrome. They went through the classical phases of
grief. They started by denying the defeat (in Kosovo, for instance)
and they proceeded through rage, sadness and acceptance.

All four phases co-existed in Balkan history. Denial by the many
who resorted to mysticism and delusional political thought. That
the Turks failed for centuries to subdue pockets of resistance (for
instance in Montenegro) served to rekindle these hopes and delusions
periodically. Thus, the Turks (and, by extension, Islam) served as
a politically cohering factor and provided a cause to rally around.
Rage manifested through the acts against the occupying Ottomans of
individuals or rebellious groups. Sadness was expressed in liturgy,
in art and literature, in music and in dance. Acceptance by conceiving
of the Turks as the very hand of God Himself. But, gradually, the
Turks and their rule came to be regarded as the work of the devil as
it was incurring the wrath of God.

But again, this negative and annihilating attitude was reserved to
outsiders and foreigners, the off-spring of Ishmael and of Hagar,
the Latins and the Turks. Moslem or Catholic neighbours were rarely,
if ever, the target of such vitriolic diatribes. External enemies –
be they Christian or Moslem – were always to be cursed and resisted.
Neighbours of the same ethnicity were never to be punished or
discriminated against for their religion or convictions – though
half-hearted condemnations did occur. The geographical and ethnic
community seems to have been a critical determinant of identity even
when confronted with an enemy at the gates. Members of an ethnic
community could share the same religious faith as the invader or the
heretic – yet this detracted none from their allegiance and place in
their society as emanating from birth and long term residence. These
tolerance and acceptance prevailed even in the face of Ottoman
segregation of religious communities in ethnically-mixed “millets”.
This principle was shattered finally by the advent of the modern
nation-state and its defining parameters (history and language),
real or (more often) invented. One could sometimes find members of the
same nuclear family – but of different religious affiliation. Secular
rulers and artisans in guilds collaborated unhesitatingly with Jews,
Turks and Catholics. Conversions to and fro were common practice,
as ways to secure economic benefits. These phenomena were especially
prevalent in the border areas of Croatia and Bosnia. But everyone,
throughout the Balkan, shared the same rituals, the way of life, the
superstitions, the magic, the folklore, the customs and the habits
regardless of religious persuasion.

Where religions co-existed, they fused syncretically. Some Sufi
sects (mainly among the Janiccary) adopted Catholic rituals, made
the sign of the cross, drank alcohol and ate pork. The followers of
Bedreddin were Jews and Christians, as well as Moslems. Everybody
shared miraculous sites, icons, even prayers. Orthodox Slavs pilgrims
to the holy places in Palestine were titled “Hadzi” and Moslems were
especially keen on Easter eggs and holy water as talismans of health.
Calendars enumerated the holidays of all religions, side by side.
Muslim judges (“kadis”) married Muslim men to non-Muslim women and
inter-marriage was rife. They also married and divorced Catholic
couples, in contravention of the Catholic faith. Orthodox and Catholic
habitually intermarried and interbred.

That this background yielded Srebrenica and Sarajevo, Kosovo and
Krajina is astounding. It is the malignant growth of this century. It
is the subject of our next instalment.

End

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.

What’s for dinner? Look out back

Los Angeles Times
March 24, 2005

SPRING GARDENS ISSUE

What’s for dinner? Look out back

More people are growing edible plants, and they aren’t necessarily
garden-variety. Among the food choices: eggplant, sweet cucumber and even a
sugar substitute

By Tony Kienitz, Special to The Times

Throw on your grubby clothes, folks: The warm season is just offstage and
out in the kitchen garden, the cool weather crops are setting seed and the
compost pile is raring to go. Once again, it’s the season for planting
tomatoes, beans, papalo, sunflowers and good old corn.

Hold on. Papalo?

Papalo is a Bolivian herb that tastes distinctly like cilantro. If you’ve
grown cilantro, you know that it goes to seed as soon as the temperature
reaches 80 degrees. Hence, cilantro is short-lived here. By planting papalo
in the spring instead, you can toss together homemade chilaquiles and
garnish them with homegrown spice in the dead of August.

Well into my second decade of following the gardening maxim, “something old,
something new,” I’m wholly devoted to unearthing fresh things to grow. I’m a
gardener first and a farmer not at all, so I can play with my food. My list
of indispensable plants expands every season. And apparently, I’m not alone.

“People, I think, since 9/11, are starting to use their yards like they did
100 years ago,” says Jimmy Williams, owner of Hayground Organic Nursery.
“The interest in homegrown, edible gardening has quadrupled in just the last
year. I see young people, young teenagers, growing unusual tomatoes these
days. And I got a lady growing rat tail radish, which has a beautiful
flower. Not many ornamentals are prettier than that. We’ve got people trying
all kinds of different things. I’ve got a new, rare kohlrabi from Sweden.
Grows to 10, 20 pounds.”

Creamy-white Casper eggplants actually look like eggs. But if it’s truly
exotic eggplants you’re hankering for, such as the 6-foot-tall,
head-thumping, African Tree eggplant, talk to Williams at the Hollywood
Farmers Market on Sundays.

In the “something old, something new” philosophy, “old” might refer to the
Armenian cucumbers you’ll raise again this year. Great choice. But why not
try pepino dulce? Pepino dulce (meaning “sweet cucumber”) has a flesh that
reminds the taste buds of cantaloupe and cucumber, and an amber skin
squiggled with violet-purple graffiti. The fruit, close in size to a Roma
tomato, is a classy addition to both your garden and your plate. What’s
more, pepino dulce is vastly easier to grow in this town than thirsty cukes
are.

The amaranth you let go to seed seven or eight years ago will, as it always
does, poke up in the garden wherever it sees fit to. If it’s thoroughly out
of place, pluck it up and add it to the manicotti. Otherwise, let the
“keepers” grace your land with their gaudy summer plumes of burgundy and
gold, picking a few leaves, as needed.

Quinoa, like amaranth, is a South American grain crop possessing leaves you
can cook as a potherb. Planted from seeds available straight from the bulk
bins at Whole Foods, it requires semi-arid conditions for growing, which is
exactly what we’ve got. Quinoa is a goofy-looking plant and it gets fairly
tall, so inter-plant it with something traditional, perhaps Russian
sunflowers (whose young leaves you can cook up too).

Stevia, a non-caloric sugar substitute, embroiled in an ongoing debate as to
whether it is 200 times or 300 times sweeter than sugar, is a must-have
herb. Experts do agree that stevia grows quite nicely here (nicely enough to
be sold at hardware stores) and that it’s wicked cool to use a sprinkling of
stevia leaves in your homegrown, herbal iced teas. For example, this spring
pinches of new growth from your Camellia sinensis (a petite, white flowered
camellia) can be steamed and dried, then steeped with stevia for a delicious
pot of white tea. Your summertime choice might be the Long Life Tea, brewed
from the leaves of gotu-kola, a shade-tolerant groundcover. According to
“Cornucopia II, a Source Book of Edible Plants,” gotu-kola tea “was
regularly consumed by Professor Li Chung Yon, who reputedly lived 265 years
and married 24 times.” Who wouldn’t want some of that? Sweetened with
stevia, no less?

Jerusalem artichokes, commonly dug up and eaten by the Founding Fathers, are
often overlooked today. They’re not from Jerusalem and they’re not
artichokes, so, in a way, it’s fitting that they should be described as
“nutty.” The tasty rhizomes can be eaten raw, steamed or baked. Again,
starter roots can simply be bought from an organic market. They’re invasive,
so plant them in a big pot and thrill at the extra bonus Jerusalem
artichokes provide: flowers ~W jillions of little sunflowers. These plants
can tolerate light shade so they can also be used to brighten an otherwise
dappled corner of your world.

And, naturally, you’ll want tomatoes in your garden. To not plant tomatoes
in the kitchen garden is a scandalous act, an embarrassment to the
neighborhood. I’ll plant my old stand-by, Mr. Stripey, because I have grown
the lightning-struck fruit every year since discovering it at an heirloom
tomato sale. But there are new ones to try, ‘Black From Tula’ could be this
year’s choice if you are keen on the complex, smoky flavors of black
tomatoes. You’ll find all the tomatoes you need at Tomatomania, a weekend
festival at three different Southern California locations in April (see
above) but these days most nurseries carry a healthy selection of heirloom
and hybrid varieties. It’s almost too easy to find tomatoes in newfangled
shapes, sizes and hues.

David Diaz, whose nursery, Bountiful Gardens, sells heirloom tomatoes as
well as a whole slew of other hard-to-find flowering plants, believes that
“people are looking for the old flavors, the tastes they remember from when
they were kids. So, customers are planting what they can’t find in the
supermarket. It makes them happy.”

Maybe it’s just that. Maybe we experiment with dishes from other cultures,
plants from faraway lands, fruits from times long ago, because to do so
makes us happy. Is there any other reason necessary?

BAKU: Radical group calls on public to get ready for war

AzerNews
24/03/2005 11:41

Radical group calls on public to get ready for war

The Garabagh Liberation Organization (GLO) has called on the public
to get ready for war. This follows frequent ceasefire violations by
Armenia over the last month, which resulted in killing and wounding a
number of Azerbaijani soldiers. Although international organizations
have been informed of frequent ceasefire breaches by Armenia of late
and this country’s failure to return three Azerbaijani soldiers,
who accidentally passed to the Armenian side of the frontline on
February 15, they have not adequately responded to these facts,
the GLO said in a statement.

“These actions confirm that Armenia is unwilling to settle the Upper
Garabagh conflict peacefully and give up its policy of aggression. The
GLO believes that the future activity of international organizations
will yield no results either.”

Support

54.4% of young Azerbaijanis support settling the Upper Garabagh conflict
through military action, says a public opinion poll conducted by the local
National Youth Organizations Council.

Only 30.2% of respondents said they support resolving the conflict
peacefully, while 1.8% – using the pressure of international
organizations. 4.8% of the participants said they do not believe
in the conflict resolution, while 2.6% had difficulty answering the
question, and 6.2% made other proposals.

The poll was conducted among 1,500 people aged between 16 and 35. 500
respondents participated in the first stage of the poll covering
Baku. The poll showed that young people are mainly concerned with
the problems relating to education, unemployment, and financial
constraints.

The next stage of the poll will be held in Azerbaijani regions in April.

‘War possible’

President Ilham Aliyev said that a possibility exists for the launch
of war between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

“The start of war is possible any time, as we have no peace agreement”,
Aliyev told journalists on Monday. The frequent ceasefire violations
do not meet Azerbaijan’s interests, he said.

Aliyev said that if the international community does not take steps
against Armenia to settle the Upper Garabagh conflict, Azerbaijan will
have to do so on its own, as there would be no other alternative. He
also stressed the importance of strengthening the country’s army and
economy for influencing Armenia.

Concern

The US ambassador to Azerbaijan Reno Harnish has expressed concerns
over the frequent ceasefire breaches.

“Washington is perturbed over the frequent ceasefire violations on
the Armenia-Azerbaijan frontline”, Harnish said. The conflict is not
frozen and major efforts should be made to settle it, he said.

The frequent ceasefire violations necessitate new approaches to the
conflict resolution, Harnish said. He emphasized the importance of
preventing such instances, highly assessing the activity of the OSCE
chairman’s special envoy Anzhei Kaspshik.

By Nazira Khankishiyeva
& Rashad Jafarov
Azernews Contributors

Putin to leave for Armenia Thurs to open Year of Russia

Putin to leave for Armenia Thurs to open Year of Russia

ITAR-TASS News Agency
March 23, 2005 Wednesday 6:19 PM Eastern Time

MOSCOW, March 24 — President Vladimir Putin of the Russian Federation
leaves for Yerevan on Thursday. The main purpose of his visit will
be to attend a ceremony to open a Year of the Russian Federation in
Armenia together with President Robert Kocharyan.

A Kremlin official has pointed out, “This large-scale event accords
with the traditional ties of friendship, spiritual and cultural
proximity of the two peoples”. The programme of the Year of Russia
provides for about 120 joint political, economic, humanitarian,
scientific, technical, and inter-regional activities. They acquire
special importance in view of this year’s celebration of the 60th
anniversary of the Victory in the Great Patriotic War (VE-Day). A
Year of Armenia in Russia is planned out for 2006.

Putin is also to meet with Garegin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos
of All Armenians. “The leaders of Russia and Armenia render very kind
of assistance in the development of cooperation between the Russian
Orthodox Church and the Armenian Apostolic Church,” the Kremlin
official emphasized.