Armenia’s Theatrical World Lost Levon Tukhikyan

ARMENIA’S THEATRICAL WORLD LOST LEVON TUKHIKYAN

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
09.07.2009 18:46 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ One of the brightest actors of Armenian theater
passed away from a life, a man who changed society for the better,
Levon Tukhikyan. His play in the cinema and the theater had a special
charm, and instantly inprinted in memory for the rest of the life.

After the film "Boys of musical band" fans of the actor called him
by the name of his hero Tsolak Darbinyan.

Actor, director, playwright Levon Tukhikyan was born in 1931 in
Leninakan (now – Gyumri). In 1975 he graduated from the Yerevan
Institute of Theater and Art. For many years he worked at the Academic
Theater after Sundukian simultaneously filmed in a movie. In 1972
he was awarded the title of honored Artist, and in 1981 – People’s
Artist of Armenia. A farewell ceremony will be held on June 11 at
the State Drama Theater after Ghaplanian.

Office Of Armenian Financial Ombudsman Holds Seminar At VTB Bank Arm

OFFICE OF ARMENIAN FINANCIAL OMBUDSMAN HOLDS SEMINAR AT VTB BANK ARMENIA

/ARKA/
July 9, 2009
YEREVAN

A hand-on seminar "Financial Ombudsman of Armenia: legislation,
structure, tasks" was held at the head office of the VTB Bank Armenia
on July 6. The bank’s press service reported that the seminar was
prepared and conducted at a high professional level by Hranush Aghayan,
expert the RA Office of Financial Ombudsman, and Hay Ohanesyan,
lawyer for the office.

Participating in the seminar were the managers of VTB Bank Armenia
branches, as well as the heads and staffers of the bank’s core
departments – lawyers, specialists in retail service promotion,
branch network development, and personal service. The participants
raised numerous interesting questions and exchanged views. The seminar
organizers made note of some of the proposals to thoroughly discuss
them within the terms of reference of the RA Financial Omudsman’s
office.

The participants actively discussed various situations involving
individual complaints about financial institutions’ incompetence
resulting in losses.

The VTB Bank (Armenia) CJSC (Armsavingsbank until June 20, 2006)
joined the VTB Group in 2004. The VTB Group is sole owner of VTB Bank
(Armenia).

Happiness Index: Don’t Move To Vanuatu

HAPPINESS INDEX: DON’T MOVE TO VANUATU

Register
The bogus logic of ‘sustainability’

Andrew Orlowski
8th July 2009 11:21 GMT

Free whitepaper – Securing your Apache web server with a Thawte
digital certificate

Did you know people in Haiti, Burma and Armenia are all better off
than in Britain? And the Congo is happier than the USA? That’s what
the London think-tank New Economic Foundation reckons in its second
"Happy Planet" rankings. But even NEF admits that its "happiness"
rating or HPI doesn’t really measure human happiness, and that it’s
sacrificing truthiness for the publicity its reports can generate.

Like the notorious Carbon Calculator, the Happy Planet Index is an
advocacy tool for limiting, rather than promoting, human health
and happiness, and it too is based on the idea of an ecological
"footprint". This Neo-Malthusian concept was developed by
population-control advocate William Rees, a professor at British
Columbia University, and his splendidly-named pupil Mathis
Wackernagel. The latter has since turned it into a successful
consultancy business.

NEF uses older surveys where people expressed happiness, multiplies
it by life expectancy, and divides it by the "footprint". Factors
such as crime, freedom, or infant mortality rates are not considered.

So not surprisingly, given this skew, the "Happiness Index" produces
some very odd results. The last survey was topped by the Republic of
Vanautu. The south sea nation has a population of just over 200,000 and
an infant mortality rate of one in 20 – about 10 times that of the UK.

The authors urge industrialised economies urgently need to become
more like the underdeveloped. In human terms, that would mean over
300,000 unnecessary child deaths in the UK each year. Such is the
price of happiness, NEF argues.

NEF co-author Saamah Abadallah NEF also frowns on India and China
for improving the material welfare of their people. Accompanying the
report is a spreadsheet which hindcasts the NEF "happiness" figure
retrospectively. It tells us that since 1990, China and India’s
"HPI rating" has fallen.

In the latest survey Costa Rica tops the poll, and Vanautu has dropped
out completely. Jamaica ranks third, Columbia is at six, Bhutan (with
74 deaths per 1,000 live births) and Laos (89 per 1,000) is in the
Top 20 – far higher than any OECD country.

It’s too bizarre even for some anti-capitalist environmentalists.

"Colombia comes in at number six on the index out of 143
countries… yet death squads commonly clear peasants from the land for
biofuels. Doesn’t sound that good a place to me," writes activist Derek
Wall, author of Babylon and Beyond: The Economics of Anti-capitalist,
Anti-globalist and Radical Green Movements on his blog.

"But maybe I am just one of those old fashioned left greens who
worries about little things like human rights and the environment?"

Ankara: Imported Nannies Join Black Market

IMPORTED NANNIES JOIN BLACK MARKET

Hurriyet
Wednesday, July 08, 2009 11:21

ISTANBUL -Whether to watch over a child or care for an elderly
person, black market nannies, who are mostly women from former Soviet
republics, are coming to Turkey in search of work and offering bargain
wages. ‘We earn a fortune here,’ says one nanny. Turkish caretaker
agencies are decrying the women’s negative impact on their business
and the risk to family security A great number of women flooding
Turkish shores from former Soviet republics willing to become nannies
at bargain prices have harmed the local sector and created a black
market that is very open to abuse.

Despite being the early hours of the morning, Dadaþ Park in Istanbul’s
European neighborhood of Laleli is very crowded. Calling the area
a park is a mistake, because it is basically a street surrounded by
hotels and shops. Foreign women of all ages are grouped around certain
points in the park with their suitcases. This is the nanny/caretaker
market where Moldovan, Ukrainian, Turkmen or Georgian women find jobs.

Once we, two Referans reporters acting as a couple, enter Dadaþ Park
in Laleli trying to find a nanny, we are surrounded by tens of women
willing to work for $600 a month.

With the number of women who have entered the job market increasing
over recent years, the caretaker market has boomed. There are two ways
to find a caretaker. One can approach one of the 165 licensed agencies,
which only work with Turkish caretakers. Or one can approach one of
the many unlicensed agencies. Or go to Dadaþ Park.

Nationals of the former Soviet republics are feeding the black side
of the employment market. Key countries in this illegal trade are
Moldova, Ukraine, Georgia and Central Asian Turkic republics. Between
300,000 and 400,000 people from these countries enter Turkey with
tourist visas and some of the women among them illegally enter the
caretaker market. Those in the know say there are around 10,000 such
women in Turkey.

The worth of this illegal market is said to be in the millions. There
are around 80 unlicensed agencies in Bakýrkoy, with many more said to
be based in Laleli. Women working for these agencies do not demand any
social security and are willing to work for $600 a month and prefer
live-in work. Unlicensed agencies receive a commission from both the
women and their employers. Due to the fact that there is no official
contract between the employer and the caretaker, the norm is for the
employer to take away the woman’s passport.

The reason foreign caretakers are more attractive to local families
is the fact that they are cheaper, better educated, knowledgeable in
foreign languages and prefer live-in work.

Licensed agencies can legally work only with Turkish nationals,
who ask for at least 1,000 Turkish Liras and refuse live-in work,
which is a disadvantage for those looking for caretakers for elderly
people. Most foreign nannies stay past the expiration date of their
visas, and if caught, are asked to pay 90 liras for every month they
stayed in Turkey illegally.

‘Buys and sells shoes’ The bargaining with Moldovan women at the
Dadaþ Park starts from $750. When told that the maximum that they
can receive is $400, we are told that it is impossible.

Still, a woman called Angel approaches us and hands over a card,
saying, "This person may be able to help you." The card reads,
"Party Birol Ð Buys and sells all types of shoes and slippers."

Party Birol is just one of the hundreds of illegal agents. He tells
us $400 is impossible, but for $500, we could get a Georgian or
Armenian nanny. He provides a two-week trial run, after which the
local couple can return the woman. During the trial run, the couple
holds the woman’s passport. Couples are asked to give the caretaker
a 25 to 30-lira stipend for a weekly day off. Birol asks for a $150
commission from both the woman and us.

Afterward, we go to the area where women from Turkmenistan frequent,
having been told that they are cheaper.

Nanny found We are at the front bureau of a decrepit hotel in
Laleli. An employee, Cetin, tells us he will help and calls in a woman
called Sultan. When she hears about the $400 we are offering, she
grimaces but finds a solution. She goes up and brings another woman,
24-year-old Zarina. Zarina left Turkmenistan and her 4-year-old son
a week ago. She arrived in Trabzon on the Black Sea coast by ship
and then took a bus to Istanbul. She speaks almost no Turkish and
accepts $450 a month.

Sultan says: "Once she starts speaking Turkish, she won’t work for
$450. She accepted the money because she is new. She can do anything
and gets a day off every week. You can take her passport and she
won’t create any problems for you."

While Zarina doesn’t understand the conversation, she nods her head
when $450 is mentioned.

When Sultan sees that we remain unconvinced, she says: "She looked
after her own son. Don’t worry; she knows how to take care of
children."

When we note our concern over the fact that she is illegal, Sultan
says: "Her duty is not to get caught. If you want, you can pay a fine
and make her legal but it’s not really necessary."

Dadaþ Park not only works as an illegal employment agency, but also
a financial center with a system these caretaker women can use on
certain weekdays to send money home.

Buses take off from Dadaþ Park to their native countries. One woman
says banks ask for huge fees to transfer money, while the fee at the
park is 3 percent. Moreover, the park is a way to communicate with
home, sending clothes, food and every kind of item back and forth.

Boxing: The Sweet Science 07.06.09: Darchinyan Vs. Agbeko, Chris Arr

THE SWEET SCIENCE 07.06.09: DARCHINYAN VS. AGBEKO, CHRIS ARREOLA
Igor Frank

411mania
07.06.2009

A look into next weekend’s bantamweight fight between IBF titlist
Joseph Agbeko and Vic Darchinyan. Plus, what’s next for Cristobal
Arreola? Find out in this week’s The Sweet Science with Igor Frank.

Next Saturday Vic "Raging Bull" Darchinyan is taking yet another
step in the direction of super stardom. The Armenian power hitter is
moving up to bantamweight to challenge an IBF king Joseph Agbeko for
his crown in a twelve round title fight scheduled for July 11th at the
Bank Atlantic Center in Sunrise, Florida to be televised by Showtime.

"I believe I represent probably a fighter who will go down as one
of the greatest boxers to ever fight in the lower weights in the
history of boxing," said Gary Shaw who promotes Vic, during last week’s
telephone conference: "Vic only wants to fight the best fighters. Vic
and Elias don’t care about weights. They only want the best fighters
and they believe right now that "King Kong" Agbeko is the best fighter
at 118 pounds."

Should Darchinyan be successful in his challenge of African slugger,
which by the way is no small feat, he would be a champion in three
different weight divisions.

I was ringside for the last three fights that involved Vic Darchinyan,
all at 115 pounds; he first brutalized Dimitry Kirilov in February of
2008 and took away his IBF belt within five rounds, then in November he
dominated and stopped Christian Mijares within nine rounds thus earning
two more belts, he defended all his titles this February at the Honda
Center in Anaheim, California punishing and beating to the punch game
Mexican warrior Jorge Arce. Doctor stopped the fight at the end of
eleventh on cuts saving Arce from receiving further damage. Instead
of defending his titles again, Vic decided to move up to bantamweight.

"I can’t spend my career just defending, defending, defending," said
32 year old Darchinyan:" I have to move up in weight and go after more
titles. I have the power to demolish anyone. I am going to keep moving
up. I have seen Agbeko’s fights and they don’t impress me. You will
see nothing compares to my power. I will knock him out with my power. I
can open my jaw and let him punch it and he still won’t hurt me."

Let’s hope that it is just trash talk that Vic has become famous for,
because if he sticks his chin in the air he will get knocked out as
Agbeko is a heavy handed puncher with power in both hands. "I know I
am better than Vic Darchinyan," said Agbeko:" I know he can punch. I
am really, really ready for his punches. I know he’s never been on the
receiving end of someone who punches like me." The African champion is
not called King Kong without reason; he has a knock out percentage of
81.5%, which is actually higher than that of Darchinyan (76.5%). The
only blemish on Agbeko’s record is a controversial majority decision
loss to Sidorenko in Germany, a fight many including Vic thought
Agbeko won.

Aside from matching his opponent with power and strength, Agbeko
seemed to be just as fluid at trash talking. "Why didn’t he talk like
this when Nonito Donaire beat him?" instigated Agbeko:" I wanted him
to talk more and I want him to realize that I’m going to beat him
more than Donaire beat him. I just want him to know that this is the
biggest mistake he has ever made in his career because he is going
to get the worst beating of his life."

"I’m going to demolish him (Donaire) in a rematch!" exclaimed
Darchinyan. And then getting back to Agbeko:" I hope he is working
hard and training extra hard for this fight. I don’t want it to be
an easy fight. I want to be your nightmare after this fight and not
before because I want you to get a good night’s sleep."

The high level of trash talking will most certainly be upstaged by
the violence and the skills in the ring. Don’t miss this one; the
4th of July fireworks will seem like a show for kids.

What’s next for Cristobal Arreola?

"Desperate times call for desperate measures," should have been the
name for the press conference that was hosted by Dan Goossen last
Tuesday at Sisley’s Italian Kitchen in Sherman Oaks to discuss the
future plans for Arreola.

Despite blowing out all of his opponents in the last few years in a
spectacular fashion and currently being a huge favorite with HBO and
fans, number one ranked WBC heavyweight Chris Arreola does not have
a fight on the schedule.

"I just want a title shot and I will keep working hard to get it,"
said Arreola: "It doesn’t matter who it is. People call the world
champions (Valuev and the Klitschkos), but all their recent fighting
has been in Europe. They should be called European champions. They
need to come across the pond and fight here. They need to come to the
U.S. and fight me. If they don’t want to give it to me, I’m going to
kick that door in."

Under heavy criticism for his weight and suspect training regiment
Arreola and his team have hired strength and conditioning coach.

"I haven’t been this sore in years," said Arreola:" But at the end
of the day, I go home and say I’m sore, but it feels good."

"There’s one main reason why we’re here," continued Chris:" because
I want everyone to know what’s happening now, just the facts. I feel
like I’ve been pushed to the side because of the threat I am to the
champions. I come to fight. I believe I’ve earned the right to be
among the best heavyweight fighters in the world. Who doesn’t want to
watch a heavyweight event in Los Angeles? Who doesn’t want to watch
a Mexican make history?"

The last memorable heavyweight fight in Los Angeles took place six
years ago when undisputed heavyweight champion Lennox Lewis took on
a late replacement Vitali Klitschko. The capacity crowd at Staples
Center was delirious with excitement as two giants traded bombs
with unparalleled intensity. Despite loosing due to a horrendous
cut, Klitschko has silenced his critics by displaying incredible
courage and heart worthy of a champion. Six years later Vitali is a
champion and his representative Tom Loffler was present at the press
conference. According to Tom the older of the Klitschko brothers is
currently considering two opponents; David Haye and Chris Arreola.

"I have fought heavyweights. David Haye hasn’t fought anyone," said
Arreola: "I don’t think David Haye has done anything to deserve a
shot at that title."

That might be true, but unfortunately, boxing is like real life is
unfair and most of the match ups are based on economic sense. Haye is
a lot bigger fight in Europe than Arreola in United States, which
makes Chris a second option. Vitali Klitschko plans to be in Los
Angeles next week, hopefully I could report to you more by then.

"Cristobal is the most important heavyweight in the world because
he has all the intentions of bringing that heavyweight title back
to America," said Dan Goossen:" We believe he would knock out any
heavyweight champion right now because of his fighting style. He’s
ready now, but he’s just going to get better and better if they keep
fighting in Europe." Could this statement provoke Klitschko to fight
Chris? I don’t know. But this statement by Chris did get a rise from
somebody." There are a lot of old guys and former champs sitting
around there that we need to take care of. Their time is up. They
need to go. I will go out of my shell. I will fight to my last breath."

The quiet man John Ruiz wasn’t so quiet responding to Arreola’s
comments.

"He wants to be the first Mexican to win the world heavyweight
championship," said Ruiz:" Be a macho Mexican, Arreola. Walk the walk
and fight the first and only Latino world heavyweight champ to really
prove yourself."

Let’s hope Arreola can keep his eyes on the prize and ignore John
Ruiz completely: nobody, I repeat, nobody wants to see John Ruiz
fight ever again.

Homework Time Read "The Croxley Master" by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle,
one of the most compelling short stories about boxing that I have
read in a long time.

I would like to express my condolences to the family of Alexis
Arguello. I am deeply saddened by his early departure. The boxing
world has lost a great man. I consider Arguello one of the finest
pugilists to ever lace up the gloves and his first fight with Aaron
Pryor, years later still brings tears to my eyes.

One Participant Represents Armenian Team At "Imagine Cup – 2009" Com

ONE PARTICIPANT REPRESENTS ARMENIAN TEAM AT "IMAGINE CUP – 2009" COMPETITION

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
06.07.2009 15:23 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ The final tournament of "Imagine Cup – 2009" passed
in Cairo from July 3 to 8. A teams of software engineers of TechSquad
represented Armenia in the contest.

As Grigor Barseghyan, Director of Microsoft-Armenia told a
PanARMENIAN.Net reporter, all team members of TechSquad did not visit
the "Imagine Cup – 2009" contest. Armenia was represented only by one
participant. Instead, the Microsoft-Armenia organized an on-line video
and audio conference with Cairo, which enabled the Armenian team to
submit its works, as well as to answer the questions of the jury.

The final results will be published on July 8.

Ankara: Istanbul’s Stories Told Through Songs In New Compilation CD

ISTANBUL’S STORIES TOLD THROUGH SONGS IN NEW COMPILATION CD

Today’s Zaman
02 July 2009, Thursday

Many poems have been written and songs composed about Istanbul
throughout history. Of course having hosted so many different cultures,
religions and languages through the centuries, Istanbul and its
sheer beauty have been an ample and enduring source of inspiration
for foreign and Turkish musicians alike.

A selection of songs written by foreigners on their impressions of
Istanbul has been gathered on an album called "Songs for Istanbul."

Kultur A.Þ. head Nevzat Bayhan was the project’s artistic director
and the songs were arranged by musician Ahmet Koc.

The album, which took six months to put together, offers listeners a
reinterpretation of many foreign songs about Ýstanbul, using local
Turkish instruments, such as the baðlama, ud, kanun, ney, darbuka
and bendir.

The songs are sung by well-known Turkish artists, and their
reinterpretation using traditional Turkish instruments gives listeners
the opportunity to hear how foreigners have reacted to Ýstanbul,
as well attuning their ears to these instruments, not as well known
in the West.

The album starts off with the French song "Ýstanbul," composed
in Ýstanbul by ethnic Armenian French artist Marc Aryan. Other
notable highlights include another song called "Ýstanbul," composed
by French musicians Belle Du Berry and David Lewis; "Ýstanbul (Not
Constantinople)," originally recorded in 1953 by the Canadian group
The Four Lads; "Ýstanbul ist Weit," made famous by Freddy Quinn; and
"Venezia Ýstanbul," written and composed by Franco Battiato.

One particularly notable piece included on the album is world-renowned
Canadian musician Loreena McKennitt’s "The Gates of Ýstanbul." You can
also find "She Took My Soul in Ýstanbul," a piece written by British
artists Marc Almond (known as the "father of electronic music") and
Billy McGee, on the album. Other great songs included are "Telephone
Call from Ýstanbul," "Turkey Turkey" and "Heute fahrt die 18 bis
nach Ýstanbul."

Despite the fact that these songs were all written and composed by
foreign artists inspired by Ýstanbul in different ways, they are
sung by Turkish or Turkey-based artists in the songs’ original
languages. Some of the singers featured on the album are Hakan
Aysev, Þevket Uðurluer, Attila Demircioðlu, Zeliha Sunal, Tuba Onal,
Andy Clayburn, Paul Dwyer, Tanju Aþanel and Bulent Ay. There is
an additional treat awaiting listeners with this new album: a CD
featuring instrumental versions of the songs.

Support for 2010 European Capital of Culture The album’s artistic
director, Bayhan, says the primary goals of this album were to see
Ýstanbul promoted both nationally and internationally and to highlight
the city’s cultural wealth. "When we first set out to look at what
songs had been written and composed about Ýstanbul we were simply
amazed at the sheer number of songs. The work done by my colleagues
Zeliha Sunal and Ahmet Koc, as well as the ideas offered up by the
musicians who worked on this project were all very important," says
Bayhan. Bayhan also notes that this album, with its focus on Ýstanbul
and the inspiration it has provided to art and music over the years,
will also contribute in the upcoming Ýstanbul 2010 European Capital
of Culture venture.

The 12 songs on the album were chosen during a selection period
that lasted six months. Koc, who arranged the songs on the album,
points to the dual dimensions of having songs written and composed
by foreigners but with Turkish interpretations, featuring Turkish
performers and instruments, a combination able to capture all the
aspects of the cultural kaleidoscope presented by this city.

Saakashvili Important Factor In Regional Politics

SAAKASHVILI IMPORTANT FACTOR IN REGIONAL POLITICS

/PanARMENIAN.Net/
30.06.2009 22:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ Negative emotions about decoration of Georgian
President Mikheil Saakashvili with Armenian Order of Honor are
exaggerated, a Russian expert said.

"Symbols are traditionally important in politics. But to be
honest, the Order of Honor was not the best choice for the Georgian
President. Nevertheless, I would not overestimate the significance
of this symbolic act," said Andrey Areshev, deputy director general
of the Strategic Culture Foundation.

"Managing to retain power in his country, Saakashvili is still an
important factor in regional politics. He still enjoys the west’s
support and rearms his army. So, Russia should decide who will be its
political and diplomatic ally if hostilities resume in the Caucasus,"
he said, Analitika.at.ua reported.

Seyed Ali Saghaian: There Is No Political Crisis In Iran

SEYED ALI SAGHAIAN: THERE IS NO POLITICAL CRISIS IN IRAN

Noyan Tapan
July 1, 2009

YEREVAN, JULY 1, NOYAN TAPAN. "There is no political crisis in
Iran, Iran has kept is sovereignty and has not lost its good name,"
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of Islamic Republic of
Iran to Armenia Seyed Ali Saghaian stated during his July 1 meeting
with journalists. In his words, in spite of West’s efforts to cause
problems for Iran, Iran managed to smooth over all problems, "glorious
elections took place in Iran."

According to Seyed Ali Saghaian, post-electoral developments in Iran
and Armenia cannot be compared. He connects the events that occurred
in 2008 in Armenia with West’s wish to carry out velvety revolutions
in CIS states, which "was prevented thanks to Armenian leaders’
reasonable steps."

In connection with Iran’s future the Ambassador said that within
the Constitution and laws any change is acceptable. He said that
new appointments of ministers and ambassadors will take place in the
future, and the new generation in itself will bring changes.

These Ancient Faiths Are Driving People Apart

THESE ANCIENT FAITHS ARE DRIVING PEOPLE APART
Andrew Bolt

Melbourne Herald Sun
July 01, 2009 12:00am

THAT’S twice I’ve now visited Jerusalem’s holiest sites without
feeling a skerrick of uplift.

True, I’m not Christian, Jewish or Muslim. But surely a city so
inspiring to three great faiths shouldn’t leave me so cold?

In fact, flying back into Melbourne on Saturday, I felt even our new
city – not even two centuries old – better lived the gospels preached
in Jerusalem for more than two millennia.

The problem is not that so many of Jerusalem’s churches, mosques
and synagogues are so sparsely decorated, as if beauty were a sin,
and only the severe were holy.

(That’s not a mistake made in Catholic Italy, Savonarola aside. Thank
God, a Sistine Chapel makes a worshipper of even a pagan like me.)
The real problem is that the faiths as practised within this most
sacred of cities divide, rather than unite, and seem to bring men
not closer to God but further from each other.

Even the Christianity there seems tribal in a pre-Christian way.

Take the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, which should be more revered
than any other church in Christendom, being built on the very spot on
which Christ is said to have been crucified, entombed and resurrected
from the dead.

The dark, shambolic building, marred by graffiti, is controlled by
six warring Christian denominations – Roman Catholic, Greek Orthodox,
Armenian Orthodox, Coptic, Syrian Orthodox and Ethiopian – who so
distrust each other that the church’s keys are in the care of two
neutral Muslim families.

The battle for control over every cranny of the building is fierce. In
2002, a Coptic monk moved his chair into some shade, which Ethiopian
clerics read as an invasion of their space. Eleven monks were admitted
to hospital after the punch-up.

On Palm Sunday, just last year, more people were carted off for
treatment after a fight over a Greek monk who’d strayed over some
invisible line.

And this brawling is not new. Under one window is a ladder placed
there nearly two centuries ago, and left ever since because none of
the rival churches can agree where it must go.

One result of this endless bickering over who may touch what, is
that parts of the church now risk collapse – especially a monastery
on the roof.

And another result is that a stranger tends to feel that in a war
between such tribes, there’s no place for him. In fact, I’ve felt more
at home in a humble church on Burke Rd than I have on the church on
the rock where Christ died.

As with the church, so with the city, whose every square inch is
contested.

NOT only does the Old City have its traditional four quarters, divided
between Jews, Muslims, Christians and Armenians, but Palestinians
also claim political control of the half that Israel seized from
Jordan in 1967, when Arab armies tried to destroy the Jewish state.

Meanwhile, rich Jews buy buildings in the Arab quarter and defiantly
fly the Israeli flag, while Muslim youths throw stones down at Jewish
worshippers from the walls of the Dome of the Rock, which Muslim
conquerors built precisely over the ruins of the Jewish temple as
the ultimate so-there.

In such a place, who can feel that faith makes us brothers and sisters
under an all-forgiving God? Instead, the call to the newcomer is to
pick a side – or get out of the way.

No wonder so many Israelis, particularly secular ones, flinch from
their capital and live somewhere less contested, such as cosmopolitan
Tel Aviv. Indeed, if people wanted Jerusalem less, we’d all like
it more.

As it is, it now stands as a memorial to division, and especially to
the way faiths can cut us off from the rest of humanity.

Oddly enough, it’s Melbourne that more truly lives what many imams,
rabbis and especially priests claim to profess. Here we do have all
churches from all faiths, free to worship where they wish and how
they wish, with none of that "I was here first".

Well, none, other than native title claims by some activists and
their faddish supporters insisting they are the "First Australians"
despite being born around the same time as you and I. That’s that
Jerusalem spirit that’s best avoided.

We’re better off sticking to the creed we’ve developed and now
demonstrate so beautifully, if imperfectly, in this country – that
people are judged best by their character, and not their skin, faith,
sect, origin or ancestry.

Really, that was the essence of Christ’s preaching, too, or so St
Paul said to the non-Jews he sought to embrace.

If only the monks now tending the holy place where he died could
better heed what he said when he lived.