Lighting Candles Against Jehovah’s Witnesses

LIGHTING CANDLES AGAINST JEHOVAH’S WITNESSES

A1 Plus
19-10-2004

‘Rebelling against `Jehovah’s Witnesses’ comes to prove love of people
towards the Armenian Apostolic Church and does not oppose the
sectariansâ=80=9D, Clergyman Zohrab Kostanyan, Vice-Director of
`Shoghakat’ TVCompany said at the round table in Araratian Diocese.

Registration of JW caused his anxiety. `Law is imperfect. There aren’t
instruments to control activity of JW’, he says.

Robert Makaryan, Chairman of Student Board of Academy of Agricultural
Sciences, thinks JW was registered because there was the connivance
atmosphere of the society. He is sure marches and demonstrations must
be held to struggle against JW.

Karen Avagyan, Chairman of Student Board of Medical University
suggests launching student pickets. `As a result of them a committee
from social organizations must be set up, which will control all
these’, he said. Karen suggests holding pickets mainly in front of
Justice Ministry that registered â=80=9CJehovah’s Witnesses’.

Hayk Akarmazyan, Chair of Student Board of Polytechnic University has
another point of view. `We must not have any demand from our
Authorities and Justice Ministry regarding the problem. It’s the CE
demand to register them’, he says. Hayk is against the version of a
picket or a demonstration since he thinks the society is sick and
tired of it. The young activist has his own suggestion: `We will fight
against Jehovah’s Witnesses and any kind of sects through our belief’.

Emin, a young man had a concrete proposal: `We can hold a peaceful
march to Saint Sargis Church and light candles there’.

Young people together with Press Service of Araratian Diocese will
work out the common strategy of fighting and the results will later be
made public.

ReOrient’s Short Plays Explore Middle East

ReOrient’s Short Plays Explore Middle East
By KEN BULLOCK Special to the Planet (10-15-04)

Berkeley Daily Planet, CA
Oct 15 2004

ReOrient, in its sixth year of “exploring Middle Eastern culture and
identity as represented throughout the globe,” is a festival of short
plays staged by Golden Thread Productions that’s opening this weekend
at the Ashby Stage after a run at SF’s Noh Space.

ReOrient is becoming a Bay Area institution without losing that
sense of being a well-kept (maybe too well-kept) secret that delights
whoever discovers it, bringing them back every year. The excellent
second series of three plays is playing in alternation with the first
series, of five plays.

The first play, “Don’t Eat the Tomatoes” is by Fatma Durmush, a
Turkish woman poet and playwright, born in Cyprus, who writes in
English. This is a strangely humorous tale of a young couple setting
up housekeeping by a graveyard thronged with mothers whose sons were
killed in the terroristic war with the Kurds. Durmush’s play takes
stylized dreamlike turns that could be called Absurdist, for want of
a better term to describe an original poetic logic.

The mourning mothers become tomato plants, bear tomatoes (“In truth,
the more sorrow, the better they taste”) and find peace; the young
wife, pregnant and abandoned by her husband, markets this cemetery
crop and becomes a consumer; her errant husband, newly educated
(“To live without reason is worse than being a tomato!”) and weary
of cities, returns.

The situation of the Kurds in Turkey and the controversy around
Kurdish militant Abdullah Ocalan’s condemnation to death isn’t so well
known here. Torange Yeghiazarian (Golden Thread’s founder-artistic
director) has directed this play with the sense of a parable or fable,
underlining what’s in common with our own interminable War On Terror,
and its almost familial social and cultural resentments.

The second, “Compression of a Casualty,” by Brooklyn playwright Kevin
Doyle, plays the fatuous smiles and mannerisms of TV news anchors
announcing a death in Fallujah, then “moving on,” against the young
fallen GI trying to recapitulate his own life and death amid the
repetitions of teleprompter copy. Such a brief description misses the
true compression and offbeat pace of banal, brutal meta-language with
Laura Hope’s taut direction of three fine actors (Tiffany Harrison,
Patrick MacKellan, Zak Kilberg) that drive this piece.

“Dinner/Khnamakhos” by Lilly Thomassian–again with fine direction,
by Meredith Weiss Friedman–is the barely-controlled madness of
a dinner party in an Armenian home in Glendale to celebrate an
arranged marriage. No one can see or hear the bride-to-be (Sara Luna),
commenting on the crazy comic melodrama her family and the groom’s are
playing out around the table. The groom-to-be looks oddly familiar–and
he finally remembers where he’s seen her eyes before (as he stares at
her picture with the bride-to-be looking over his shoulder). A chamber
play out of one of Bunuel’s surreal movies, Sheri Bass, Maximilienne
Ewalt, Ann Marie Donahue and Lisa Tateosian (all from “Don’t Eat the
Tomatoes”) and David Fierro make a savage portrait of two families.

The first series features “Chocolate in Heat, Growing Up Arab in
America,” written and performed by Betty Shamieh; “Disheartened,”
by Melgis Bilgin, “Between the Eyes,” by MacArthur Award winner Naomi
Wallace; “Falling,” by William Borden (about the World Trade Center);
and “Taziyeh” (the name of the Shi’ite passion play of Hussain’s
martyrdom at Karbala) by Novid Parsi.

Golden Thread Productions’ ReOrient 2004 Sixth Annual Festival of
Short Plays Exploring the Middle East runs Oct. 15-24, Thurs.-Sat. 8
p.m., Sun. 3 p.m. and 7 p.m. Series 2 will run Oct. 15, 17, 22, and 24
matinee. Series 1 will run Oct. 16, 17 matinee, 21 and 23. There will
be no show the evening of Oct. 24. The Ashby Stage, 1901 Ashby Ave.,
986.9194,

www.goldenthread.org.

Another Attack On Journalists Reported In Armenia

Another Attack On Journalists Reported In Armenia
By Armine Geghamian 14/10/2004 10:44

Radio Free Europe, Czech republic
Oct 14 2004

The editor of an independent newspaper in southeastern Armenia said on
Wednesday that a group of local loyalists of Prime Minister Andranik
Markarian attacked him and ransacked his office after it ran articles
questioning government policies.

Samvel Aleksanian of the “Syuniats Yerkir” weekly based in Kapan,
the administrative center of the Syunik region, said the attack was
carried out in the morning by three young men led by the head of the
local branch of Markarian’s Republican Party (HHK). He claimed that
they hit and injured him with wooden clubs. “Right after that they
told me that the newspaper must not write anything about the country’s
prime minister and the Syunik governor anymore,” Aleksanian told RFE/RL
from Kapan. “Otherwise, they said, the newspaper offices and car would
be burned down. As they left they shouted more threats and insults.

“I replied that the newspaper will now be more consistent in its
work. From now on, we will provide an even better coverage of issues
which they don’t want to be highlighted.”

The editor appealed to President Robert Kocharian and Armenian
law-enforcement agencies to investigate the incident. “If they
don’t punish those thugs we will be forced to take measures for
self-defense,” he said

An officer at the Syunik police headquarters told RFE/RL that they
have already launched an investigation. According to Aleksanian, the
police found and returned to the newspaper a mobile phone stolen by
the attackers. It was not clear if anyone was detained or questioned
in the process, however.

In Yerevan, meanwhile, Markarian said he is not aware of the reported
incident. “I hear about that for the first time. I will try to
clear things up,” he said. “In any case, I consider the beating of
journalists inadmissible.”

At issue, according to Kapan journalists, is an article in a September
issue of “Syuniats Yerkir” that questioned government motives for the
recent closure of two regional secondary schools as part of massive
nationwide lay-offs of teachers.

“We directed that question to the country’s prime minister and
education minister,” Aleksanian said. He added that the local
authorities responded on September 28 by evicting the newspaper staff
from offices which they rented in the Kapan building that houses the
regional administration. But the paper again addressed the issue in
its next edition, he said.

Syunik’s governor, Surik Khachatrian, has close ties with the HHK. He
was based in the regional town of Goris before his appointment by
the central government last March. Goris and the surrounding villages
have long been considered a de facto fiefdom of Khachatrian and his
extended family.

The “Syuniats Yerkir” editor said Khachatrian, better known with his
“Liska” nickname, and other regional officials are extremely intolerant
of dissent. “They think that there must be no other opinion in the
Syunik region,” he said. “You are not supposed to question anything.”

The reported violence in Kapan is the latest in a series of attacks
on Armenian journalists which have raised domestic and international
concerns about the state of press freedom in Armenia. It came just
two days after a court in another part of the country sentenced to
six months a man who reportedly beat up a photojournalist for taking
pictures of expensive houses belonging to senior government officials.

Court clears Jumbo flight to Armenia, Elephant Mahout gets passport

Star of Mysore, India
Oct 9 2004

COURT CLEARS JUMBO’S FLIGHT, MAHOUT GETS PASSPORT

Zoo story

Mysore, Oct. 9 (BRS)- The gift elephant Komala is all set to travel
to Armenia on October 14. That big news may be overshadowed by the
Court’s permission to the mahout accused in a criminal case to
accompany Komala to Armenia.

The surprise packet by the Third Judicial Magistrate First Class
enables Nagaraju, the mahout in the Mysore Zoo to travel to Armenia
along with Komala.

The Mysore Zoo made the necessary preparations for the jumbo’s
journey abroad, following the announcement by President Dr. A.P.J.
Abdul Kalam about gifting an elephant from India to Armenia.

Dropped

One of the mahouts in the Mysore Zoo, Mahadeva, who was to accompany
Komala to Armenia was to be dropped because of his alleged
involvement in the Mysore Zoo twin death of elephants case. Fortune
then smiled on Nagaraju, another mahout in the Mysore Zoo.

Mr. Manoj Kumar, the Zoo Director addressed a letter to Mr. Bipin
Gopalakrishna Police Commissioner, seeking permission to send
Nagaraju to Armenia, while he is facing charges in a criminal case of
taking part in a strike of employees.

Court

However, the Police Commissioner, responding to the letter suggested
to the Director to approach the court because there was no provision
in the Police Department to give permission to an accused.

In the meantime, Nagaraju, the Zoo mahout consulted advocates
Venugopal and Nagaraj. Appearing for his client Nagaraju, in the
court of the Third Judicial Magistrate First Class here, advocate Mr.
Venugopal informed the Court that the President of India had gifted
an elephant to Armenia.

Venugopal further argued that elaborate preparation for sending the
elephant Komala were in final stages, involving lakhs of rupees and
if permission was not granted to the mahout to accompany the elephant
to Armenia, not only these would be a huge loss of money but also it
would be the country’s prestige.

Permission

After hearing the argument, the judge permitted the mahout Nagaraju
to travel to Armenia and be with Komala from Oct. 14 to Dec. 14.

Advocates Mr. Venugopal and Nagaraj appeared for the mahout Nagaraju.

RusAl to invest $70 million to upgrade its Armenal plant

Prime-Tass English-language Business Newswire
October 8, 2004

RusAl to invest $70 million to upgrade its Armenal plant

MOSCOW, Oct 8 (Prime-Tass) — Russia’s largest aluminum producer
Russian Aluminum (RusAl) plans to invest U.S. USD 70 million
upgrading its 100%-owned foil making subsidiary in Armenia, Armenal,
starting later this month, RusAl said in a press release Friday.

According to the press release, RusAl will invest USD 25 million of
its own funds and another USD 45 million will come as a long-term
export loan from a group of German banks, led by Bayerische
Landesbank.

RusAl plans to modernize equipment and raise the capacity of the
plant, concentrating on production of thin foil.

Germany’s Achenbach, having made a feasibility study for Armenal’s
upgrading program, is to act as a contractor. The project is to take
18 months to complete, and is to produce the first pilot batch of
thin foil by the end of 2005.

After realizing the project, Armenal’s output of thin foil, six-nine
micrometers in thickness, is expected to increase to 18,000 tonnes
per year. The plant has never produced thin foil for industrial
purposes, the press release read.

By 2008, Armenal’s share of the world market for thin foil production
is expected at about 2.5%, the press release read.

In 2003, Armenal’s output amounted to 10,476 tonnes of foil.

RusAl is the third largest primary aluminum producer in the world,
established in March 2000 from the merger of a number of the largest
smelters and other aluminum producers located in the CIS. RusAl
accounts for 75% of Russia’s primary aluminum output and 10% of the
global primary aluminum output.

The company’s shareholders are Oleg Deripaska and the Governor of the
Chukotka Autonomous District Roman Abramovich, who hold 75% and 25%
respectively. End

En France, la droite et la gauche sont de plus en plus reticentes

Les Echos , France
6 octobre 2004

En France, la droite et la gauche sont de plus en plus réticentes

CÉCILE CORNUDET

La question de l’entrée de la Turquie dans l’Union européenne a cette
double particularité en France : elle divise profondément chaque
parti politique, de gauche ou de droite, et le nombre des réticents a
tendance à grimper à mesure qu’approche le référendum sur la
Constitution européenne. L’extrême droite et les souverainistes de
droite ont toujours été très hostiles à l’idée d’une Turquie
européenne, pour une question de culture et de religion
essentiellement. Or, depuis le printemps dernier, ils ont été
rejoints par la droite libérale et européenne. François Bayrou, le
président de l’UDF, a, le premier, pris ses distances au nom de l’«
homogénéité » de l’Europe, qui doit se renforcer avant de s’ouvrir à
nouveau. Fin avril, il a été rejoint par Alain Juppé, alors président
de l’UMP, soucieux d’ôter un thème de campagne aux souverainistes à
quelques semaines des européennes de juin dernier. Depuis, cette
prise de distances a fait tache d’huile, les responsables UMP
craignant que la peur suscitée par la Turquie ne conduise les
Français à voter « non » au référendum sur la Constitution
européenne. Aujourd’hui, la quasi-totalité de l’UMP est contre
l’entrée de la Turquie, que ce soit pour des raisons culturelles – «
Voulons-nous que le fleuve de l’islam rejoigne le lit de la laïcité ?
», s’est interrogé Jean-Pierre Raffarin il y a dix jours – ou plus
généralement pour des raisons démographiques et politiques : « Avec
100 millions d’habitants, elle deviendrait le premier pays d’Europe
en poids politique », rappelle Nicolas Sarkozy.

Chirac, une exception de taille

Cette unanimité souffre toutefois d’une exception de taille. Jacques
Chirac est, par solidarité avec l’Allemagne, favorable à l’ouverture
de négociations avec Ankara, tout comme son ministre des Affaires
étrangères, Michel Barnier. D’où la solution de compromis proposée la
semaine dernière par le président de la République : un référendum
sur l’entrée de la Turquie à l’issue d’un long processus de
négociations d’une dizaine d’années.

La gauche, elle, est plus partagée, mais plus les semaines avancent,
plus le camp du « non » à l’entrée de la Turquie se renforce. Au
printemps dernier, le PS ironisait encore sur les divergences entre
l’UMP et le chef de l’Etat. Aujourd’hui, il est nettement plus
discret. Il est vrai que les partisans du « non » à la Constitution
sont tous contre l’entrée de la Turquie, y compris Laurent Fabius,
qui estime que « l’UE n’est pas en situation de l’accueillir ». Du
coup, les partisans du « oui » à la Constitution commencent, eux
aussi, à s’inquiéter. François Hollande fixe des conditions à
l’entrée de la Turquie, en matière de droits de l’homme et de
reconnaissance du génocide arménien. Pierre Moscovici, responsable du
PS pour les questions européennes, de plus en plus prudent, parle de
« mariage de raison », alors qu’il estimait il y a encore peu que le
devoir de l’Europe était de défendre l’islam modéré en intégrant la
Turquie. Quant à Ségolène Royal, elle renvoie désormais la question
aux calendes… grecques et plaide pour un statut d’« Etat associé »
avec l’Europe.

East to West

Tri City Herald, WA
Pct 3 2004

East to West

This story was published Sunday, October 3rd, 2004

By Cara Fitzpatrick Herald staff writer

Boris Tarasov covered his face with his hands, bowed his head and let
his tears run.

Around him, rows of people wept in the sanctuary of the Family of
Faith Center in Kennewick, as they do every Friday and Sunday.

But the next prayer, the Lord’s Prayer, prompted people to look up
and quietly repeat the words together.

“Our Father who art in Heaven, hallowed be thy name …”

The words, familiar to Christians throughout the world, are spoken in
Ukrainian here by more than 250 residents of Kennewick, Richland and
Pasco. Immigrants from the former Soviet Union share the church to
hold services, Bible study and choir practice in their own language
and their own style.

On the last Friday of the month, they move their worship about a mile
away to a Russian church, where they join 300 other people of similar
origins for a joint service.

That so many people from half a world away have been able to form not
one church, but two, is testament to the number of immigrants from
the 15 former Soviet republics who have made a home for themselves in
the Tri-Cities.

That number might appear small when compared with how many
Tri-Citians claim German, Irish or Mexican descent, but the Russian
group increasingly is being recognized in schools, neighborhoods and
the workplace.

Those who work with the immigrants through church programs or relief
organizations say the trend is in its third or fourth wave, with new
arrivals joining relatives and friends already here.

Tarasov, his wife, Sofiya, and their six children left Stadniki,
Ukraine, almost five years ago. What they knew about the United
States came from Soviet propaganda and stories from Sofiya’s sister,
who had moved to Richland six years before.

“She told us, ‘We found a good place,’ ” he said.

That simple description was enough to convince Tarasov.

After staying with relatives for two weeks, the family settled into
the McMurray Park Apartments in downtown Richland. He spoke a little
English and yearned for a job.

“I wanted to do something,” he said.

He began doing odd jobs around the apartment complex, fixing things
and cleaning the pool. He didn’t get paid, but it filled some of his
need for work.

Then he found a job at Simplot and began working the night shift in
addition to doing odd jobs during the day.

“I slept only three hours at night,” he said, smiling. “I worked and
only thought about sleeping.”

Sofiya Tarasov kept similar hours working at the Samovar Russian
Restaurant & Bakery in Richland and cleaning vacant apartments at
McMurray. Their school-age children — then 17, 16, 14 and 8 —
adapted to their new life by becoming immersed in Richland schools.

The oldest two children — Alex, then 21, and Valentina, then 19, —
entered the work force immediately and learned English with the help
of friends and family.

Now, Tarasov’s three oldest sons have married other immigrants from
the Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. He has become the full-time maintenance
worker for the apartment complex and his wife works at Lamb Weston.

Three grandchildren have been born here — all American citizens.

Then and now

Ten years ago, there were fewer resources available for immigrants
from the former Soviet Union. Many had to rely on faith and the
kindness of strangers to get out of their homelands and become
established in the United States.

Vasily Doroshchuk learned in the middle of the night in 1989 that his
family was fleeing the Ukraine as religious refugees when his father
woke him to pack.

Vasily, then 15, wasn’t so sure.

“He said, ‘We’re leaving the country,’ and I said, ‘That’s great,
bye,’ ” he said.

But Vasily joined his parents, brother and two sisters in the
family’s flight, which took four months. Three other siblings stayed
behind.

Upon their arrival in Austria they were given three choices:
Australia, Canada or the United States.

His father chose America.

At that time, there was a new Soviet family arriving in the
Tri-Cities each week, he said.

Those numbers have slowed with time and the heightened security since
the 9/11 attacks, said Frank LaSalle of West Side Church in Richland.

The church has made serving new arrivals one of its core missions,
and has volunteer-based programs to help immigrants find housing,
learn English and get jobs.

Often, families are placed into the church’s temporary housing — six
houses that are nearby. Typically, families stay six months or less,
“depending on what their situation is,” LaSalle said.

Many then go into apartments, which are more flexible and less
expensive than other housing options, he said.

Scott Michael, affiliate director of World Relief in Richland, said
the majority of Russian and Ukrainian families have settled in
Richland and Kennewick because of the two cities’ affordable housing.
And many prefer smaller towns because they are less overwhelming than
big cities, he said.

“It really gives them a chance to survive and make a go of it,” he
said.

In the 2000 Census, 877 people in Benton County identified their
ancestry as Russian, while another 616 people said they were
Ukrainian. Smaller groups also checked Estonian, Latvian, Armenian
and Lithuanian. In Franklin County, there were 115 Russians, 179
Ukrainians, 63 Armenians and 15 Lithuanians.

Those numbers have continued to rise since that data was collected.

World Relief helped settle 552 immigrants from the former Soviet
Union between 1999 and August 2004.

Michael said the total number includes new arrivals who have
relatives here and those immigrants known as “free” cases, who come
without friends or relatives to help. In those cases, World Relief
helps them find housing and furniture, look for jobs, learn English
and register their children for school, he said.

Little Ukraine

Boris Tarasov says it’s easy to pick out the Ukrainian and Russian
immigrants at the McMurray Park Apartments: They’re the ones standing
outside talking.

Evenings in the Ukraine or elsewhere in the former Soviet Union are a
time traditionally spent outside chatting with neighbors and watching
the children play. He said other immigrants thought they would learn
English by talking with their neighbors in the evening.

“But Americans aren’t outside,” he said, laughing.

Instead, that tradition has been brought to the Tri-Cities by
Russians and Ukrainians who live near each other.

Tarasov said there are two apartment complexes in Richland where
small enclaves of immigrants live — the McMurray Park Apartments on
Pike Avenue and the Orchard Hills Apartments on Leslie Road. About 20
families live at McMurray and another 15 at Orchard Hills. And there
are a few areas in Kennewick and Pasco where some families also live
near each other, he said.

“It is almost community,” he said.

Despite the vast breadth of the former Soviet Union, Tarasov said
people from the “east to the very west” of the massive country were
taught to speak Russian and received the same education. Their
traditions are also similar because of that, he said.

“It’s no matter if they are from different republics, the culture is
almost the same,” he said.

Pastor Viktor Grinchuk said the Ukrainian church provides a place for
Soviet immigrants to share problems, worship in their own language
and keep cultural traditions alive.

There are activities at the church almost every day of the week,
including choir practice, youth group, Bible study and regular
services. Similar activities occur at the Russian church, where
services are held in Russian.

“Sermons are based on what kind of problems our church has or our
brothers in Ukraine,” he said, adding that they also invite speakers
to come from other churches. Recently, visitors came to speak from
Bulgaria and Uzbekistan, he said.

The church also has sparked many marriages.

Tarasov’s two oldest sons met their wives at church. Both women are
from the same region of Ukraine as their husbands.

His other son, Yuriy, met his wife, Irina, through a mutual friend.
Yuriy attended Hanford High School, while Irina attended Pasco High
School.

The two shared a common language — Russian — and the Pentecostal
faith, but her family of 10 immigrated from Kyrgyzstan. The
landlocked country in central Asia has a population of 5 million who
speak Kyrgyz and Russian and are split between Muslims and Russian
Orthodox.

That difference has not deterred the couple, however.

Irina Tarasov said she speaks English, Russian and a little
Ukrainian. Her family lives in Pasco and attends the Russian church,
while she lives at McMurray in Richland and attends church with her
husband’s family.

While Boris Tarasov said it is important to keep their cultural
traditions, he also has been excited to learn American ones and to
improve his English by reading books, magazines and newspapers.

Part of his eagerness to learn comes from having a father whose
passion was to learn English and one day meet an American. The Cold
War prevented Tarasov’s father from fulfilling his dream before his
death in 1994.

But his son is proud to be part of the wave of immigrants breaking
down the old barriers.

“I am living his dream,” he said.

Soccer: The Armenian Squad for World Cup qualifying games

sportinglife.com, UK
Oct 7 2004

DUO SET FOR ARMENIA BOW

Armenia coach Bernard Casoni has called up two new faces for the
World Cup qualifying double-header against Finland and the Czech
Republic.

The Frenchman, who took over the reins of the Armenian national team
in August, has brought in Aram Voskanian and Edel Apula Edima Bete
for Saturday’s trip to Tampere to take on the Finns and the home
clash with the Czechs four days later.

Cameroon goalkeeper Edima Bete impressed Casoni in a recent Under-19
tournament in Macedonia and has been given international clearance to
play for Armenia.

Roman Berezovski and Artavazd Karamian are injured while Albert
Sargsian is suspended for Saturday’s match but will play in Yerevan
against the Euro 2004 semi-finalists.

Armenia lost their opening two Group One clashes against Macedonia
and Finland.

Squad:

Armen Hambardzumian (Slavia Sofia), Edel Apula Edima Bete, Nikolay
Sargsian (both Pyunik Yerevan); Sargis Hovsepian, Aleksandr
Tadevosian (both Pyunik Yerevan), Karen Dokhoyan (Krylya Sovetov
Samara), Harutyun Vardanian (FC Aarau), Artur Mkrtchian (Daryda
Minsk), Romik Khachatrian (Olympiakos Nicosia); Albert Sargsian
(Alania Vladikavkaz), Artur Petrosian, Yeghishe Melikian (Metalurg
Donetsk), Karen Aleksanian (Pyunik Yerevan), Davit Grigorian (Mika
Ashtarak), Hamlet Mkhitarian (MTZ-RIPO Minsk), Rafael Nazarian
(Daryda Minsk); Ara Hakobian (Metalurg Donetsk), Arman Karamian
(Rapid Bucharest), Andrey Movsisian, Galust Petrosian, Edgar
Manucharian (both Pyunik Yerevan), Aram Voskanian (Yesil-Bogatyr).

ANCA “Hye Voter Turnout” Campaign In Full Swing

Armenian National Committee of America
888 17th St., NW, Suite 904
Washington, DC 20006
Tel: (202) 775-1918
Fax: (202) 775-5648
E-mail: [email protected]
Internet:

PRESS RELEASE
October 6, 2004
Contact: Elizabeth S. Chouldjian
Tel: (202) 775-1918

ANCA “HYE VOTER TURNOUT” CAMPAIGN IN FULL SWING

— Record Armenian American Turnout
Expected on November 2nd

WASHINGTON, DC – With only a few weeks left to the November 2nd
Presidential and Congressional elections, Armenian National
Committee of America (ANCA) chapters have teamed up with activists
across the country, as part of the ANCA’s “Hye Voter Turnout”
campaign, to make their last push to ensure record levels of
Armenian American participation in the electoral process.

Over the past several months, local ANCA chapters have been working
within their communities to raise awareness about federal, state
and local candidates and the issues facing the Armenian American
community. A powerful tool in this effort has been the ANCA
Candidate Questionnaire, available on the ANCA website, which has
provided candidates from across the nation with the opportunity to
speak directly to their Armenian American constituents. The ANCA
Congressional Candidate Questionnaire includes nine different
questions on the topics of the Armenian Genocide; U.S. support for
Armenia and Nagorno Karabagh; U.S.-Armenia economic relations;
Self-determination for Nagorno Karabagh; Conditions on U.S. aid to
Azerbaijan; the Turkish blockade of Armenia, and; the U.S. subsidy
of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline bypass of Armenia. For an Adobe PDF
version of the ANCA Questionnaire, visit:

The ANCA has also teamed up with local Armenian Youth Federation
chapters in national voter registration efforts, working to
increase the Armenian American voice at the ballot box. Activists
have set up registration tables at local churches, community
centers and even local business establishments, providing the forms
and information needed to register. These efforts have made it
easy for young people to register through the ANCA voter
registration website and “Rock the Vote,” MTV’s youth voter
education program.

At the national level, the ANCA has endorsed Senator John Kerry as
clearly the better candidate on issues facing the Armenian American
community. At the same time, the ANCA – locally and nationally –
continues to highlight the powerful leadership demonstrated by a
great many Congressional Republicans on Armenian issues, notably by
Armenian Caucus Co- Chairman Joe Knollenberg (R-MI), Genocide
Resolution author George Radanovich (R-CA), and Senators such as
Mitch McConnell (R-KY), John Ensign (R-NV), George Allen (R-VA),
Elizabeth Dole (R-NC), and many others.

Working with local chapters or Armenians for Kerry, the ANCA has
spent the past several months raising awareness of Senator Kerry’s
20-year record of supporting Armenian American concerns – on issues
ranging from recognition of the Armenian Genocide and self-
determination for Nagorno Karabagh, to increased aid, expanded
trade, and an end to the blockades of Armenia. The ANCA
endorsement of Senator Kerry includes a full review of the
Senator’s record as well as a listing of the many areas in which
President has disappointed the Armenian American community. This
text can be found at:
;pressregion=anca

The ANCA’s “Hye Voter Turnout” four-part strategy in support of the
Kerry-Edwards ticket was formally launched on August 28th, with the
Armenstock 2004 / Kef for Kerry event in Massachusetts
(). This major day-long music festival featured
leading Armenian musicians and speeches by Armenian activists and
elected officials, including Congressmen Barney Frank (D-MA) and
James McGovern (D-MA), as well as State Representatives Peter
Koutoujian and Rachel Kaprielian. Additional get-out-the-Armenian-
vote concerts are planned as part of the Kef for Kerry Tour of
Battleground States. The tour includes stops in the key swing
states of Wisconsin – October 8th, Michigan – October 23rd, Florida
– October 24th, and, Pennsylvania – October 29th. For additional
information, visit:

The second element of the ANCA plan was the “Friends for Kerry
Postcard Campaign,” which debuted at Armenstock. This campaign
circulated tens of thousands of pre-addressed postcards which were
sent by Armenians in solidly pro-Kerry states like New York and
California to fellow Armenians in twelve swing states: Arizona,
Arkansas, Florida, Ohio, New Hampshire, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada,
Pennsylvania, Tennessee, Wisconsin, and West Virginia. The
postcard urges voters to “compare the records of Senator Kerry and
President Bush on Armenian issues, to weight the importance of your
ballot for the future of US-Armenian relations, and the please
consider casting your vote for the Kerry-Edwards ticket on November
2nd.”

The third part of the ANCA plan is a series of “Calling for Kerry”
weekends on October 9-10 and October 30-31. Building on the
postcard campaign, local activists are teaming up with Armenian
Youth Federation and Armenians for Kerry chapters in hosting
gatherings and “cell phone parties” to reach out to thousand of
Armenian American households in sixteen swing states. In addition
to supporting the Kerry-Edwards ticket, activists will highlight
the need for strong turnout for friends of Armenia in Congress,
both Democratic and Republican. The fourth and final part of the
ANCA effort is a grassroots “Canvassing for Kerry” program that
will go door-to-door to getting out the vote for John Kerry and
other friends of Armenia on Election Day.

http://www.anca.org/election/candidate_questionnaires.asp
http://www.anca.org/pressrel.asp?prid=605&amp
www.anca.org
www.armenstock.com
www.kefforkerry.com.