A treasure trove of Ottoman Empire photographs now available online

The National, UAE
Jan 28 2019
 
 
A treasure trove of Ottoman Empire photographs now available online
 
Thousands of images have been made freely available by the Getty Research Institute
 
 

In the 1980s, Pierre de Gigord, the son of a wealthy French businessman, began buying antique photographs in the markets of Istanbul. Concentrating on the late 1800s and early 1900s, the photographs came in all kinds: daguerreotypes, albumen prints, lantern slides, glass negatives, gelatin silver prints, paper-­mounted postcards and photo albums. Gigord eventually amassed one of the most important collections of images of the Ottoman Empire in its waning years: 6,000 images, more than half of which have now been digitised and made freely available from the Getty Research Institute in Los Angeles. They show Istanbul’s famous palaces and fortresses, as well as its souks and fish markets; posed studio portraits; and sultans, dervishes, firemen, and families at home.

“Gigord was a brilliant man who had a passion for photography,” says Isotta Poggi, curator of photography at the Institute. “He had a real eye: he didn’t just collect images of architecture, but of people. He was interested in types, so you see all the different types of society.”

The collection came to the Institute in 1995, in the early days of its establishment. The Research Institute – which is connected to the Getty Museum, also in LA – supports art-historical scholarship through its library, archives, grant schemes and research projects, and licenses many of the images used for academic art publications.

“This collection gives us an enormous amount of resources on the Ottoman Empire, which are not always easy to come by,” says Poggi. “The Ottoman Empire is an ­extremely important area for art-historical research, from Byzantine to Arab art history to the history of photography.”

A strange accident of circumstances has made these photographs even more significant: they give a rare glimpse into the Armenian population of Istanbul, most of whom were forcibly dispelled – or killed – after 1915 in the Armenian Genocide. This is because of the division of labour that developed under the Ottomans. Many Armenians had been employed as chemists and goldsmiths, giving them a facility and knowledge of chemical reactions that allowed them to work easily with ­photography when it were first introduced.

A number of the main studios in Istanbul, such as Pascal Sebah, Gulmez, and Abdullah Freres, were run by Armenians, giving the Armenian people an outsize representation in photographic documentation – as well as in this collection – that has become all the more important since the erasure of their history within Turkey. Many of the images in the Gigord Collection come from the studios on one street, the Grand Rue de Pera, a swanky avenue that hosted embassies and acted as a meeting point for intellectuals. Photography studios opened there in the mid-1800s, and Gigord’s Collection contains some of the portraits that local middle and upper-class individuals, as well as tourists, would have posed for.

Other images are like snapshots, showing the life of the city – ­laundry-hanging, children playing, men serving drinks in brass samovars carried on their backs. The types of photograph themselves also vary; it wasn’t until the 1890s that one method of capturing images became standardised, which was thanks to George Eastman, inventor of the Kodak roll of film, with his easy-to-use Brownie camera.

The diversity for the Ottoman collection was a great challenge in the digitisation process. Some hand-painted images were ­individually photographed, while a suite of 10 albumen prints – a technique that uses egg-whites to produce the images – was combined into one extraordinary panoramic view of the Istanbul skyline in 1878. And the images that Gigord acquired as albums were digitised individually and in their original layout, so that they retain their album form. “Which is very important,” stresses Isotta. “Because albums have a structural logic and are a way of telling their own story.”

Perhaps as importantly, the images are being offered to download – in high resolution – without any charge – as part of the Getty’s Open Content Project, which it launched in 2013. “Part of the mission of the Institute is to make research available for free, and we apply where we can: either those for which the trust holds the copyright, or those images that are in the public domain,” explains Poggi.

These images date from 1852 to 1950, setting most of them in the public domain. The only images the Institute couldn’t make available were press photographs, for which they could not determine the ­copyright, and archival documentation about the photography studios. In total, around 3,750 files have been put online. This means that the Gigord Collection joins a number of digital initiatives that are – in an as-yet unplanned way – assisting scholars of the ­Middle East, for whom materials and access are frequently dispersed or unavailable.

Many major collections of Ottoman and early Arab photography that circulate academically were put together by Europeans or Americans. The Institute holds another such trove, the Jacobson Collection, of more than 4,500 photographic images of the Middle East and North Africa between 1850 and 1920, put together by an English couple. The geographical distribution compounds questions of Orientalism – how much have these images been coloured by the lens of their European photographers? – which the Gigord Collection largely evades, but having been acquired by the Institute, it participates in a pattern where the representation of the region remains outside of the region.

Digitisation initiatives are thus particularly crucial for scholars based in the Middle East. The Department of Culture and Tourism – Abu Dhabi has chosen book digitisation as its primary topic for this year’s Publishing Forum, taking place from today until Wednesday. Under the direction of Abdulla Majed, the symposium looks at the impact of technology on access to material and the capacity to spread ­knowledge globally. NYU Abu Dhabi has similarly made itself a hub for ­digitalisation efforts, particularly of Arabic primary material.

Its ­Arabic Collections Online initiative, in collaboration with key ­international universities, digitises out-of-copyright Arabic-­language books and makes them freely ­available online. It proved so ­popular, it had to recalibrate its scope, as its audience turned out not to be just the scholarly community, but a mass readership hungry for access to Arabic books. Other UAE ­initiatives, such as the ­philanthropist Juma Al Majid’s project to help resource lacking Arab libraries sterilise and ­digitise their manuscripts, are using Gulf wealth to address research-­capability impoverishment elsewhere.

Poggi, though she works for an academic institution, also ­underlines that the importance of the Gigord Collection is as much in its art-historical value as in its humanistic value – it simply expands the knowledge base of this period of history.

“An extraordinary thing­ happened while I was working on the digitising,” she recalls. “I came across a big op-ed in The New York Times where Orhan Pamuk talked about the archive of Ara Guler,” an Armenian ­photographer for Magnum, whose images were ­purchased by Gigord. “He talks about the different streets of Istanbul, ­remembering the walks he took with Guler and the city of his childhood. It helped me to look at the photographs in the Gigord Collection as personal memories. That made it more interesting in a different way, to understand these images as the present of the past.”

After Genocide and a Devastating Earthquake, Armenia Remains a Place of Hope

Chicago Now, IL
Jan 29 2019


After Genocide and a Devastating Earthquake, Armenia Remains a Place of Hope


By lauravasilion, today at 2:38 pm

The Iron Fountain of Gyumri, Armenia. The fountain survived the 1988 earthquake. While all the surrounding buildings of the Polytechnic Institute were torn apart, this fountain had no damage at all. Many homeless people, waiting to receive a new house, settled in huts all around the fountain in an area that is now known as "Fountain District". Some of them are still there. Photo courtesy of Lusine

My only knowledge of Armenia comes from its tragedies: the Armenian Genocide of 1915 that killed 1.5 million Armenians and the 1988 Armenian earthquake that killed more than 60,000 people.

How does a country recover from such devastating events? How do the people go on? What lasting impact have those tragedies had on today's Armenians?

Answers to those questions and more came from an Armenian woman named Lusine. A teacher and program coordinator, Lusine lives in Gyumi with her husband and two children. Currently, she is a manager at Techno-Educational Academy and a tutor at Birthright Armenia. She is also a former coordinator at American Corner Gyumri.

Mike Dixon, an architect I met when I did the interview on Kosovo, helped me secure this interview. Mike spent time in Armenia when he was with the Peace Corps and worked with Lusine. Graciously, he offered to put me in touch with her. Thank you so much, Mike. Again.

My Interview with Lusine

Please look out a window in your home and describe what you see.

When I look from my window I see a rising city. A city that is a symbol of culture and traditions. A city that suffered a terrible earthquake in 1988 but survived and gave birth to many artists and world champions.

What is the ethnic makeup of your village and Armenia?

The area of modern-day Gyumri was known as Kumayri during the period of the Kingdom of Urartu. It is likely that the name has been originated from the Cimmerians who conquered the region and probably founded the settlement. Under the domination of the Turkic tribes, Kumayri was Turkified as Gümrü. In 1837, Kumayri was renamed Alexandropol after of Tsar Nicholas I's wife, Princess Alexandra Fyodorovna.

Gyumri is known as a city of arts and crafts, a city of ancient churches. Gyumreci (Gyumrian people) used to say that Gyumri is the center of the world.

Ancient Armenian Relief (photo credit: upsplash)

Which languages do you speak?

Armenian people are multilingual people. Every Armenian school student studies and speaks at least two foreign languages. Most popular foreign languages are English, Russian, German, and French.

Armenians also have their own language, Armenian. Armenian (classical: hayeren) is an Indo-European language spoken primarily by Armenians. It is the official language of Armenia, historically being spoken throughout the Armenian Highlands. Nowadays Armenian is widely spoken throughout Armenian Diaspora. In 405 AD Mesrop Mashtots created the Armenian Alphabet. It is widely believed that Armenians could survive many wars and hardships thanks to the fact that they had their own official language.

Did the Armenian Genocide impact anyone in your family? If so, please describe.

I think you would never be able to find any Armenian in Armenia or in Diaspora that hasn’t suffered family member loss during the Armenian Genocide, as we call it, and I am among them.

My ancestors have lost their family members: brothers and sisters. Till the end of their lives my grand-grandfather and grand–grandmother didn’t lose their hope to hear something from their family members, to understand whether they have died or still survive somewhere on the globe. My granny was singing the Armenian song “Dle Yaman” about the Genocide and I could always see tears in her eyes which were mixed with some hope to see Kars, where she originated from. Longing, this is the feeling that all Armenians experience even after so many years.

Who is your favorite Armenian author, musician, or artist? Why?

I am myself a kind of person who has a keen interest in the arts and especially music. I have a long list of favorites but I would mention Charles Aznavour, the French Armenian singer. Besides being an incredible genius musician, he was a kind-hearted and patriotic person who has always been next to his people, the Armenians, by helping them to overcome hardships. He is my most favorite Armenian singer.

What is your favorite time of year in Armenia and why?

I think the best time in Armenia is autumn. I like Armenian autumn because of the nice weather. It is neither cool nor hot, and because school starts in autumn and you can see many children hurrying up to school or home.

What brings you joy?

I am myself a busy person, as like other members of my family (my husband, son, and daughter). For me, pleasure is when we are all together doing something: traveling, playing a game, watching a film. Those moments inspire me through all working hours and keep me motivated, as I know what for and whom for I have to work so much.

What frightens you?

In my whole life (I am 34 years old) most of all I was frightened from human emptiness, even when I was a child. I think people should work more on their knowledge, read more books, which will educate them and make them more human, more kind, and honest.

If I were to come to your home for dinner, what traditional meal would you serve to me?

Armenians are hospitable people. They usually serve khorovats, grape leaf dolma, harissa. Those are the most famous traditional dishes to serve to foreigners. Also Ararat, which is Armenian cognac. It is famous for its good quality around the world.

What is the most surprising or unusual thing about Armenian culture?

For me, the most surprising or unusual thing about Armenian culture is that during New Year (December 31-January 6) all Armenians should visit their relatives and neighbors, taste something at their houses, and others would visit them back. If not, that will mean that you insult this or the people.

What does your city/country do well? What do you wish it did better?

I think the biggest problem with my country is its geographical location. We are surrounded by countries who have different religions and we have always suffered from that difference with many wars and attacks. But we still keep on living.

Armenians are smart people. In my opinion, the best thing that we have so far done is that we are still alive and we are a nation, an official country.

Recently, thanks to the Velvet Revolution, many things have been changed in my country. All Armenian people are filled with hope to become one of the exemplary countries in the IT field and in Arts and Crafts. We have huge potential: our human resource. We hope that we can make things better for future generations.

What is your opinion of the United States?

I love that country! Yes! Of course, there are lots of issues in every country but the way America keeps and preserves its history. In every library, one can see a small history museum. I always compare Armenia with the U.S. in terms of preserving history. Armenians are ancient people. They survived by starting from Noy (difficult) times till now, but we don’t value our history and we never use the possibility to spread a word about us among other countries or even in our country, whereas American people would keep and preserve every single detail of their history.   That’s why I have huge respect for your government and people.

Who or what inspires you?

There is no a specific person that inspires me. All those people who are hard-working, kind, human, smart, ready to help someone, can inspire me, independent from their nationality, religion, education degree.

In terms of nature and natural beauty, what are the most remarkable things about Armenia?

Armenia is surrounded by wonderful, huge, proud-spirited mountains. And my most favorite lake, Lake Sevan. I think there is something mystic in that lake. It is impossible not to admire its beauty.

Lake Sevan
Photo courtesy of Lusine

What one word best describes your country?

Hope…

Azerbaijani Press: Why EU Parliament indifferent to death of Armenian journalist?

AzerNews, Azerbaijan
Jan 29 2019

By  Trend

Silence of the European Parliament and other international organizations on the death of Mher Yeghiazaryan, an Armenian journalist and politician, is an example of double standards, Bakhtiyar Sadikhov, Azerbaijani MP, told Trend.

Being the head of an online media outlet and deputy chairman of the “Armenian Eagles: United Armenia” party, Mher Yeghiazaryan was considered both a journalist and a politician. While in the “Nubarashen” correctional facility in Yerevan, he went on a hunger strike.

“The European Parliament has so far not made any statement on Armenia, about why this journalist was detained. Until now, the European Parliament has never made a statement as to why the leader of an opposition political party was arrested,” added Sadikhov.

According to him, the only reason for this silence and indifference emanating from the European Parliament is double standards.

The deputy noted that in the case of Mehman Huseynov, who was detained by a court decision, did not go on a hunger strike and did not experience any problems with the conditions of detention, the European Parliament was, for some reason, very concerned, and made biased statements about Azerbaijan.

"Look at the conditions which they held the journalist in, the leading face of a political party in Armenia. Despite him going on a hunger strike, no one attached any importance to this, and intentionally created conditions for him to die in prison. Why does the European Parliament keep quiet? This shows that double standards still prevail in international organizations," Sadikhov added.

The MP believes that it is necessary to condemn this action of the European Parliament, to forward an appeal in light of this.

"I even think that it is necessary to hold discussions on this issue during the plenary session of the Milli Majlis on February 1, and to send a letter to the European Parliament about when they will stop applying double standards," Sadikhov said.

Music Review: At 80, composer Tigran Mansurian finds the spiritual essence of Armenia

Los Angeles Times, CA
Jan 28 2019
Vatsche Barsoumian conducts a performance of Tigran Mansurian's "Ars Poetica" on Sunday as part of a Dilijan Chamber Music Series tribute to the Armenian composer at Zipper Concert Hall in downtown L.A. (Silvia Razgova)

Sunday was Mozart’s birthday. It was also Édouard Lalo’s and Jerome Kern’s, as you might find in any “on this day in classical music” source. Neglected just about everywhere, though, was the fact that on Sunday the Armenian composer Tigran Mansurian turned 80.

Even so, Mansurian does have an international following for his spiritually riveting, exquisitely fabricated scores that link him stylistically with prominent Eastern European contemporaries such as Estonia’s Arvo Pärt, Poland’s late Henryk Górecki, Ukraine’s Valentin Silvestrov and Russia’s Sofia Gubaidulina and the late Alfred Schnittke. Mansurian, moreover, is championed by a number of prominent musicians, including violist Kim Kashkashian, pianist Alexei Lubimov and violinists Leonidas Kavakos and Patricia Kopatchinskaja, all of whom have made sterling recordings of his music mostly for ECM. Once you hear something by Mansurian you are not likely to forget it.

Yet the main (only?) birthday tribute Sunday was not in Armenia’s capital, Yerevan, where Mansurian lives and is a celebrated cultural figure, but at the Colburn School’s Zipper Concert Hall as part of the Dilijan Chamber Music Series presented by Glendale’s Lark Musical Society. The three-hour concert opened with a short video made for the occasion by Armenia’s president, Armen Sarkissian, praising the composer as the national treasure he is.

Dilijan, which features works by contemporary Armenian composers along with typically world-class performances of standard repertory chamber works, has been Mansurian Central from the start. Fifteen years ago, violinist Movses Pogossian and Mansurian mapped out the series at a Starbucks in Glendale, where the composer used to quietly spend part of the year composing far from the Yerevan limelight.

Quietly, indeed. Over the years Dilijan has been the main conduit for Mansurian’s music in the U.S., and it featured stellar performances, but it never attracted much attention outside of the large local Armenian community. Sunday’s full house was no exception, attracting little outside attention despite offering commanding performances from musicians like Kashkashian, Pogossian and Los Angeles Philharmonic principal clarinetist Boris Allakhverdyan.

The program covered a fairly narrow, if exceptionally deep, swatch of Mansurian’s output, with works written between 1993 and 2006. They were all of intense poetic content, rapt in their relationship to the soul of Armenia and its music, dealing with matters of love, life and, especially, death. We feel, we suffer and then we die, these works seemed to suggest, so how do we make our short existence matter?

It would, nonetheless, be a mistake to get too wrapped up in the monastic side of Mansurian. For all of his spiritual intensity, he achieved his mature voice the hard way, and he has always been of many sides.

That late voice, the one Mansurian is known for, strives for a purity of sound and _expression_ based on elements of traditional Armenian melody and the country’s traditional and liturgical music, its language and poetry, to say nothing of its landscape. But under it all is a highly cosmopolitan composer.

Early on Mansurian participated in the post-World War II European avant-garde. He wrote film music including the soundtrack for the dazzling 1969 Soviet art film classic “The Color of Pomegranates” and, of all things, a much later L.A. police thriller, “Camera Obscura.”

The earliest piece on Sunday’s program was Mansurian’s agitated String Quartet No. 3, a musical letter written in 1993 during Armenia’s struggle for independence. Rather than escaping into spiritual grace, Mansurian pulls Armenian melody apart with dark, mournful dissonant counterpoint, a startlingly vivid description of what was happening to his country.

The biggest piece was “Ars Poetica,” an hour-long a cappella choral setting of 10 poems by Armenian poet Yeghishe Charents. There are songs of sleepless night and its terrors; enchanting odes to the feminine, be that Mother Mary or Manon Lescaut; doleful songs of autumn, dramatizing the inevitable; and a long epilogue in which the poet imagines how he will be remembered, if he is remembered at all.

Mansurian makes these sentiments stick, gripping us in our fears and desires, and the Lark Master Singers, led with arresting physical immediacy by Vatsche Barsoumian, added an extra shot of raw vitality. This is an amateur volunteer chorus able to enter fully inside the score with an immediacy that makes a professionally polished ECM recording feel a little tame in comparison.

“Ars Poetica” was finished in 2000, and the “Three Medieval Taghs” for viola and percussion and the clarinet quartet “Agnus Dei” followed over the next six years. This is the kind of music for which Mansurian is best known. Through melody of condensed _expression_, every tiny gesture resonates as it lingers with a sense of timelessness in the air.

Mansurian gives the impression here of not so much overcoming anguish (let alone transcending it) as accepting and absorbing the pain of loss. He evokes spiritual pain to remind us what it means to be alive, to feel closer to our bodies and being.

When Allakhverdyan’s clarinet floated, barely heard, in “Agnus Dei,” it became the listener’s job to try to hang on to the life of sound waves. When Kashkashian’s viola and the metallic percussion seemed to cry for all the sorrow in “Tagh for the Funeral of Our Lord,” there was a sense that this elegy is supposed to go on forever, lest we ever forget to value each breath.

There was, thus, much sadness on this birthday. But there was also the happy alternative when at the end, Barsoumian conducted the audience in a Mansurian ode to the “sun-zested fruit of sweet Armenia.” Although typically plaintive, this patriotic “Hymn to Armenia” was honeyed by a composer who knows far better than most the value sweetness and zest.

Dr. Nerses Krikorian, a Unique and Celebrated Armenian-American

LEGENDARY SCIENTIST DR. NERSES “KRIK” KRIKORIAN, A  UNIQUE AND CELEBRATED ARMENIAN-AMERICAN

 

Armenian News Network / Armenian News


BY FLORENCE AVAKIAN


 

Nerses Krikorian was four years old when he first stepped on U.S. soil.    Born on the side of a Turkish road in 1921 as his parents were fleeing the Armenian Genocide, his family spent the next four years moving from country to country with only the bare clothes on their backs. On the way, his brother was born in Aleppo, Syria. 

 

Canada became their final refuge. The family finally found its American home in Niagara Falls, NY when Krik was four, his father becoming a factory worker, and his mother a homemaker giving birth to his youngest brother.

 

He remembered many years later, that all that moving from place to place was a “tortured way of living, because you don’t belong anywhere.”

 

A FAMED SCIENTIST AND ANALYST

 

With such bleak beginnings, Nerses “Krik” Krikorian’s future seemed anything but promising. From age 4 to 96 when he died in Los Alamos, New Mexico, his story is anything if not amazing. He was one of the most famed scientists and intelligence analysts in America, having been a major player on the Los Alamos Manhattan Project which eventually created the first nuclear weapon.

 

 His first job was at Union Carbide in 1943, following a bachelor’s degree from college in chemistry. The lab made highly enriched uranium. He was unaware that he was ensconced in the Manhattan Project which dropped the first atom bomb on Hiroshima.


 

He said at the time, “Well, the war is going to end.  And I hope we never have to use it again for any purpose.”

 

After the war, Union Carbide cut down its uranium work, and he went to New Mexico to continued working on the Manhattan project.

 

Many years later, when his father visited him, He mentioned to Krik that the rugged mountains and dry climate of New Mexico reminded him of the old country.   Krik felt that “deep down, maybe I had some connection to it that I didn’t even remember”.  

 

It was also at Los Alamos that he met his wife, Katherine Patterson who had also come in 1943 to work on the Manhattan Project as a member of the Women’s Army Corps.  There, they raised their only child, a daughter Debra, now a retired Army lieutenant colonel.

 

 THE ARMENIAN CONNECTION

 

And so began an illustrious career for Krik that spanned four and a half decades.  It was in 1972, when he was asked to join an intelligence unit, though he didn’t know why.  He suspected that the reason also included the fact that he spoke fluent Armenian, and some Russian.     

 

As a child, his parents had forced him to speak and write Armenian, as well as to learn the history, culture and literature of Armenia. 

 

“As a kid, I thought it was useless,” he remembered. Why do I need to learn a language that hardly anyone speaks. I guess God knew what was coming.”    

 

He found out why in the 1960’s that he had to translate Russian chemistry books into English. This information became very useful to the U.S. government at the time.

 

“I’m an American,” he said.   Feeling a deep commitment to America’s national security, he felt that the intelligence analysts were all motivated to keep the peace. “I feel obligated to this country. Look at what I have been able to accomplish here.”

 

Krik was always amazed that as a boy he had arrived in this country with papers that labeled him as “stateless”, and could rise to a position of security head for a U.S. intelligence unit. 

 

As the holder of six patents, Krik retired in 1991 after receiving countless honors, including the Los Alamos Medallion (its highest award), two honorary doctorates, the CIA’s Intelligence Community Medal, and in 2005, election as an honorary Doctor to Armenia’s National Academy of Sciences.

 

NOSTALGIC REMEMBRANCES

 

Recently, Krik’s daughter Debra, in a telephone conversation, reminisced about her father’s strong link to his heritage. “My father felt strongly about his Armenian background.   He was fluent in both modern and liturgical Armenian, and could read and write.”

 

Debra revealed that her grandparents suffered during the Genocide, with her grandmother’s immediate family all killed. Her grandfather’s brothers split, with the eldest moving to Canada, and the other brother going to Yerevan.  Her grandfather with his wife and son Krik came to Canada via Syria, Greece, and France.  

 

“My grandparents apparently masqueraded as Kurds during a portion of this odyssey as both were fluent in Kurdish. They never spoke to me about the Genocide,” Debra remembers.

 

She relates that when her father moved to New Mexico, there were very few Armenians, but in the 1950’s and 1960’s, a group of about 60 came together.     “When I was a child we would get together with these families frequently even though it was 100 miles each way to see each other. During the 1980’s there were enough to establish a cultural organization as well as an Armenian church which my parents supported.”

 

She recalls that her father often read Armenian poetry, history and philosophy, and translated many writings “which he left to me. During the last days before his passing, he reverted to speaking Armenian and spoke to several of his Armenian friends. In short, he went back to his Armenian roots.”

 

Krikorian had opportunities to go to Armenia in the 1990’s, first at the request of the U.S. State Department to assist and engage with the scientists there.   Later he visited and assisted through the audits of scientific projects funded through the International Science and Technology Center.


 

During these visits, he also happily met his relatives there. It was his wife “who had the heart and soul of an Armenian” who first went to Armenia in 1979, and found his relatives who still keep in contact with daughter Debra to this day.

 

BENEVOLENT GOAL

 

A scientist “in soul and heart”, Dr. Krikorian had been regularly contributing to one of the most effective Diasporan projects supporting cutting edge R&D in Armenia – the Armenian National Science and Education Fund(ANSEF), run by the Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR) in New York City.   

 

Following his personal wishes, a special Endowment Fund was established at FAR by his daughter Debra after the eminent scientist passed away.   Its goal is to perpetually support young researchers educated in universities in Armenia.


 

In a 2017 interview, Krikorian reflected, “things have worked out far beyond what I ever imagined.  I think of my parents, and wonder, ‘How did they ever do it’.  My parents instilled in me the importance of doing the right thing and giving back to your fellow man.  I hope I have done that.”

 

A1+: Premiums should be returned to the budget – Narine Dilbaryan (video)

Today, linguist Narine Dilbaryan expressed an opinion that if the premiums were given by violation of the law, these amounts should be returned to the state budget.

“Premiums were given to the employees who have worked for 2-3 months. They tell us that they work for 14 hours, but if you are a bad manager, then you are ineffective at your time.”

According to the linguist, they can give premiums in case of success.

Referring to the recent death of Mher Yeghiazaryan in Nubarashen penitentiary, who was responsible for haynews.am, Narine Dilbaryan mentioned that nn indifferent attitude has been noticed.

“He was a victim of indifference, I think everyone should be held accountable. It is impossible to ignore a person who is on a hunger strike. Indifference is unacceptable.”

Sociologist Aharon Adibekyan says that if a person is entering the penitentiary, it should be found out who he is, what his health condition is, whether he needs treatment.

“Penitentiary institutions should have privileges to solve issues rather than appeal to the prosecutor or the court.”

A1+: Zohrab Mnatsakanyan: The status and security of Artsakh remain the most urgent issues for Armenia. (video)

During a conversation with journalists in Yerablur, Foreign Minister Zohrab Mnatsakanyan highlighted the creation of favorable conditions for peace in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“We have not deviated from our position regarding exclusively peaceful settlement within the framework of the OSCE Minsk Group Co-Chairmen. The most important thing we have said is that the status and security of Artsakh remain the most urgent issues for Armenia. The talks are about it.”

According to the observation about what kind of steps have been taken after the change of power to involve Artsakh in the negotiations, Zohrab Mnatsakanyan noted that Armenia cannot take all the obligations without Artsakh.

“This is a practical issue, if everything does not happen at once, that does not mean we have forgotten it.”

“We will maintain peace. The primary issue is the status and security,” emphasized Zohrab Mnatsakanyan.

They were saying whether you want to give birth at the university – student of YSU (video)

“I was too little when I knew my future husband, I was 16 years old. We were friends; he was my big friend, since he is 8 years older than me,” recalls Anush Qeyan, who is studing at YSU Faculty of Oriental Studies, Department of Arabic Studies.

Then, the friendship turned into marriage.

“I was admitted to the university, we got married a year later and then I got pregnant. I went to classes even during a pregnancy. The lecturers were joking, saying that you wanted to give birth at the university.”

Anush tells what has changed in her life: “I was reading and studying during the nights. Anyway, I did not study badly, I studied well.”

According to her, it is interesting to study and meantime to know that a baby is waiting for you at home. “The first person that is an example for the child is his own mother. She should not be not-groomed, always a working and angry woman at home. She should always be a busy, successful woman with her job. I think we should do everything we can to accomplish that,” says Anush.

Victims of April war prevented a global disaster – Adam Sahakyan’s mother (video)

On the occasion of the 27th anniversary of the Armenian Army, the relatives of Robert Abajyan, Adam Sahakyan and Armenak Urfanyan, who died in the four-day April war, visited the Yerablur Military Pantheon.

Today, on January 28, Armenak Urfanyan would become 29 years old.

“I congratulate the officers of the Armed Forces and I want them to be always stable and powerful. They are the people’s trust, without them we cannot exist,” said Hamest Nersisyan, mother of Armenak Urfanyan.

Robert Abajyan’s grandfather, Gevorg Abajyan, mentioned that Yerablur complex has become a sanctuary for them.

“I feel both pride and pain,” noted he and adding that it is nice that people remember them. “I congratulate everyone who are on the border, who are serving and those who have completed their service.”

Adam Sahakyan’s mother, Gayane Sahakyan, with pain in the heart, appreciates that people are not indifferent to the war victims.

“Heroes, who died for the homeland are the heroes who are sacred, and they are all, they are the wealth of the people. The large crowd of people is not surprising. The victims of April war prevented a global disaster, and with their characters, they once again shook and woke up the Armenian people. They seemed to send a message to the Armenian people to keep their hands on the pulse.”

Congratulations, Armenian Army! – FFA

The Armenian Football Federation (FFA) and some of the top Armenian football clubs have congratulated the Armenian Army Day.

The Football Federation of Armenia has written on its Facebook page: “Congratulations, Armenian Army!”

Also, Yerevan’s champion Alashkert, newcomers Ararat-Armenia and Artsakh FA congratulated the Armenian Army.