A new bridge inaugurated between Iran and Azerbaijan

MEHR News Agency, Iran
Dec 30 2023

TEHRAN, Dec. 30 (MNA) – A new border crossing between Iran and Azerbaijan was inaugurated in the border district of Astara in the presence of Iranian and Azeri officials during a ceremony at the shared border on Saturday.

The Co-Chairmen of the Azerbaijan-Iran Joint Commission – Deputy Prime Minister of Azerbaijan Shahin Mustafayev and Minister of Roads and Urban Development of Iran Mehrdad Bazrpash attended the inauguration ceremony of the bridge.

The local economic officials have said that the bridge plays a major role in reducing traffic jams at the shared border for traders and travellers.

The officials argue that the bridge also would play a major role in boosting bilateral border trade.

Accoridng to the official website of the Iranian road ministry, the bridge length is 89 m, width 30.6 m, and sidewalk width 2.5 m in 4 traffic lanes and is constructed with €5.8 million fund. 

The bridge project is expected to boost trade and cooperation between the two neighboring countries and diversify transport between Iran and Azerbaijan. 

Iran and Azerbaijan signed a MOU in January 2022 for cooperation in constructing the bridge over the Astarachay border bridge. The MOU was signed by Iran Deputy Minister, Kheirollah Khademi and Azerbaijan’s Deputy Minister of Digital Development and Transport, Rahman Hummatov, in Baku.

In his visit to Ardabil, Bazrpash also inaugurated 6,600 urban and rural houses within the 'National Housing Movement' plan and visited the 175-km Miyaneh-Ardabil Railway which is currently under construction. 

Including this inaugerated bridge, the MoU for the construction of Aghbend road bridge over Aras River was also formally kicked off in October 2023 during the visit of Iran's Minister of Roads and Urban Development to Azerbaijan and the MoU for a railroad bridge was also reached. The project is meant to form a new transit route, the Aras Corridor, in order to link the East Zangezur economic region of Azerbaijan and the Nakhchivan Autonomous Republic through Iran's territory. The Corridor stretches from Aghbend to Jolfa and is important for Azerbaijan, Iran and the region as a whole.

Opinion: The U.K. and Armenia know the dangers of the war in Gaza

Dec 30 2023

Small wonder that staunch supporters of Israel are now calling for paths to a sustainable ceasefire.

Posted4:00 AM
Marc Champion

As Israel comes under growing international pressure to change its tactics and agree to a ceasefire in Gaza, its leaders have made clear they aren’t interested. Foreign Minister Eli Cohen said the shift would hand a victory to terrorism, while Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said he was “proud” to have blocked the creation of a Palestinian state alongside Israel, seen by allies as the prerequisite for any sustainable peace.

Two examples from recent history – from Northern Ireland and Azerbaijan – warn that these could be catastrophic miscalculations for the state of Israel.

Ben Wallace, the U.K. secretary of state for defense until August, made the Irish comparison in an article published this month in the Daily Telegraph, a solidly pro-Israel U.K. newspaper. The Troubles, as more than three decades of sectarian bloodshed over Northern Ireland’s status are known, escalated dramatically, he recalled, after the British government tried to end them through a draconian combination of military force and a suspension of legal due process, called internment.

Internment involved the jailing without trial of thousands of people suspected of having connections to the Irish Republican Army. That in turn prompted the 1972 tragedy of Bloody Sunday, when British paratroopers shot 26 Catholics with live bullets at an anti-internment protest in the town of Derry, killing 14 of them. The result was a huge increase in membership for the Provisional IRA – a more radical splinter group of the Irish Republican Army – from a few dozens to about 1,000, funded by a boom in the group’s funding by sympathizers in the U.S. and elsewhere.

“Northern Ireland internment taught us that a disproportionate response by the state can serve as a terrorist organization’s best recruiting sergeant,’’ Wallace wrote. Two decades of intensified terrorist attacks followed Bloody Sunday, with the IRA expanding its bombing campaign to the U.K. mainland. Nothing worked to halt the violence until the U.K. government did what it said it never would and publicly opened negotiations in 1994 with the IRA’s political wing, Sinn Fein.

The price of peace was a power-sharing deal together with expanded self-government for Northern Ireland, plus the right to an eventual referendum on the region’s status, among other concessions made on both sides. The consequences for the U.K. were greater still because the deal forced it later to grant similar rights of self-government and potential secession to Scotland and Wales.

For sure, Northern Ireland is a different and in many ways much simpler case than the one Israel faces, not least because the Palestinian question plays a role far beyond Israel’s borders. The bloodshed in Gaza risks spurring recruitment not just for Hamas, but for Islamist terrorist organizations across the Middle East and beyond.

Small wonder then that such staunch supporters of Israel as France, Germany, the U.K. and the U.S. are now calling for Netanyahu to change tactics and look for paths to a sustainable cease-fire. As if to underscore the counterproductive nature of Israel’s scorched-earth tactics, the Israel Defense Forces recently acknowledged mistakenly killing three of the hostages they were sent into Gaza to rescue, even though they were waving improvised white flags of surrender.

The example of Armenians in Nagorno-Karabakh should be still more sobering for Israelis considering the road that Netanyahu and his government are taking. More than 30 years ago, I stood with an Armenian general at the top of a plateau as he pointed toward Mount Ararat in Turkey and territories beyond as far as Syria, which had once belonged to the Kingdom of Armenia but were now controlled by Muslim enemies. He called his predominantly Christian nation “the Israel of the Caucasus,” surrounded by sometimes genocidal hostility and obliged to rely on arms for its survival.

That was 1992. War was raging in Nagorno-Karabakh, a part of neighboring Azerbaijan that for centuries had been populated mainly by ethnic Armenians. They were now contesting Azeri control as the collapse of the Soviet Union gave sudden meaning to the USSR’s once notional internal borders. Karabakh’s Armenians wanted either to be independent or annexed, and by 1994 they had won a crushing military victory, backed by Armenia and its security guarantor, Russia. The future seemed secure, even without a political settlement to accompany the cease-fire that Armenia had forced on its defeated rival.

The U.S. and some in Armenia, including then President Levon Ter-Petrossian, worried this wasn’t sustainable. They argued for negotiating a long-term deal with Baku while Yerevan held most of the cards. The idea was that Armenians, including in Karabakh, should recognize Azerbaijan’s sovereignty over the enclave, in exchange for Baku accepting international peacekeepers, a land bridge from Karabakh to Armenia, and strong political autonomy for the enclave.

Ter-Petrossian’s proposals for compromise contributed to losing his job. He drew the ire of nationalists, including a hawkish diaspora, for whom the history of Armenian expulsion and genocide – committed by Ottoman Turkey in 1915 – required relentless vigilance and force, to ensure it could never happen again. Besides, why negotiate when Armenia had comprehensively won and enjoyed the support of regional hegemon Russia?

The answer to that question became apparent this summer. Azerbaijan’s oil and gas fields had slowly transformed the balance of forces over the years, allowing it to build and equip a military far in excess of anything Armenia could afford. Russia, meanwhile, became disenchanted with Yerevan, just as a resurgent Turkey grew willing to throw its weight behind Turkic Azerbaijan, disregarding objections from Moscow or Washington. Azerbaijan struck back in 2020, recovering many of its losses. And this year, with Moscow busy invading Ukraine, a further offensive took just a day to force Karabakh’s total surrender.

Ethnic Armenians fled, fearful of the coming Azeri revenge, and by now few if any remain in their ancestral homes. This tragic turn of events came about because Armenia fell victim to the “illusion of absolute security,” according to Thomas de Waal, a Caucasus specialist and senior fellow at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “Times change, alliances change, and the military balance changes,’’ he said. And by the time that happens, it’s too late for diplomacy.

Getting to a settlement with Azerbaijan that was acceptable to both sides would have been difficult, even when Yerevan held the advantage. It took painful compromises for the U.K. to cut a deal with the former IRA commanders running Sinn Fein in 1998. And the hurdles to a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine would be even bigger. Years of failed peace talks, rocket attacks and Hamas’ Oct. 7 atrocities have combined to harden views on both sides, including against the very concept of a two-state solution. Yet Israel, too, may not always be in a position of military dominance, enjoying the full backing of a superpower. Palestinians and Israelis have reason to despair of each other, but neither rage nor despair is a policy. After three-quarters of a century, nobody has come up with an alternative to the creation of two separate states that offers even the possibility of peaceful coexistence.

The much-derided two-state idea proposes not a utopian Shangri-la of cohabitation, but a divorce aimed at cutting short the fundamentally genocidal dreams of extremists. The terms of that divorce would need to guarantee the security of each state against the other, taking Gaza’s administration and policing out of the hands of both Hamas and Israel. That would not be easy, but the attempt couldn’t be worse than anything Netanyahu’s effort to crush not just Hamas, but Palestinian rights and hopes, can produce.

Our Top 5 People Stories of ’23: #1 Marking the 100-year legacy of the Georgetown Boys

Halton Hills Today, Ontario, Canada
Dec 31 2023
The final instalment in HaltonHillsToday's countdown of the best stories about people in the community: We honour a major milestone in the history of the Georgetown Boys – the Armenian refugees whose lives were changed a century ago when they came to live at Cedarvale Farm

A version of this article was originally published on HaltonHillsToday on April 24.

They are all gone now, so we can never directly hear what they have to say about Georgetown’s Cedarvale Park. But Canada and Armenian Canadians have not forgotten the role the local green space played in history. 

Dubbed the Georgetown Boys – a misnomer as there were many girls too – they were rescued by Canadians from the clutches of an orphan’s lonely death. In Georgetown, the federal government and several benefactors hoped to turn these orphans into good farmers. Cedarvale Park, then a farm, served as their home and proving ground. 

But the absence of the boys and girls today creates an undeserved illusion that Cedarvale Park is unremarkable. The painstaking work of historians, archivists and community leaders, many of whom are Armenian, keep the memory alive. Without them, visitors would miss the park’s connection with the First World War and, more importantly, the Armenian Genocide. 

“Armenians are obsessed by 1915,” said Lorne Shirinian, a descendent of the so-called Georgetown Boys. 

Shirinian is the son of Mampre Shirinian, a Georgetown Boy and Mariam Mazmanian, a Georgetown Girl. Her brother, Ardeshes Mazmanian, was also a Georgetown Boy. 

Lorne Shirinian's mother and uncle, Mariam and Ardeshes Mazmanian.

The Mazmanian siblings likely survived when their parents gave them to Turkish neighbours. Neither appeared to know how they escaped the genocide as they were too young to remember. What they do know is that they lost a brother and both parents in the chaos. 

Lorne Shirinian’s father did not talk much about his experiences with the genocide. Shirinian the younger understands that his father was alone from 1915 to 1918. 

The orphans getting picked to come to Canada was, in effect, a lottery. 

“My father tells me one day all the boys, almost a thousand boys, were lined up and the relief workers came and they asked, ‘Who wants to go to Canada?” Lorne Shirinian said. 

“They went through picking randomly. ‘You, you, you.’ And my father was randomly picked. And my uncle did come to Canada randomly.”

Ardeshes and Mariam were separated at some point. While her brother languished at a Corfu orphanage, Mariam ended up at one in Syro, Greece. Once he arrived in Canada with the first group of boys in 1923, Ardeshes pleaded with ARAC to have his sister come to Georgetown. They were reunited in 1927. Mampre Shirinian arrived in 1924 with the second group of boys. 

Mampre Shirinian and Mariam Mazmanian married in 1935 after meeting at Cedarvale Farm. Their son Lorne was born 10 years later, beginning a long life of being surrounded by the Georgetown orphans.

“The Georgetown Boys would drop in all the time. On the weekends, there would be parties. There would be making sheesh kabob on the barbecue. There were dances in the backyard, much to the chagrin of the neighbours,” Shirinian added.

What Shirinian appreciated most was “their joy and vitality for having survived.”

“I always had the feeling that they looked on me and other offspring of the Georgetown Boys as special because not only did we survive, but we are multiplying.” 

Shirinian has added his voice to multiple sources that have crystallized the memory of the orphans. Through those sources, we can tell their story and get to know who they were. 

The Ottoman Empire – the modern-day Republic of Turkey – was in decline in the late 1800s. Looking for a scapegoat to mask their economic mismanagement, the government took aim at ethnic minorities, especially the Armenians. 

Abdul Hamid II is often called the “Red Sultan” as his throne was soaked with blood.

In 1908 the Young Turks seized power from Abdul Hamid. But the Armenians were not safe. One of the Young Turks’ goals was to turn the Empire into an ethnically homogenous nation. 

After the Battle of Sarikamish ended in a catastrophic defeat for the Turkish army, they had their excuse. The war minister Enver Pasha – who planned the battle – blamed the Armenians.

On Apr. 24, 1915, Ottoman Interior Minister, Talaat Pasha, had 250 Armenian intellectuals arrested in Constantinople. The genocide had officially begun. By 1923, mass deportations, starvation and outright killing wiped out virtually all Armenians in Anatolia. Despite the best efforts of some righteous Turks to save Armenians, it is estimated that some 1.5 million people died.

The government of the Republic of Turkey denies the genocide to this day.

The work of Canadian historians has made Cedarvale Park an equally important piece of the puzzle as the genocide itself. 

Author Jack Apramian, who himself was brought to Cedarvale Farm, wrote the book The Georgetown Boys. Isabel Kaprielian-Churchill authored Like our Mountains, a book about the Armenian Canadian experience. Parts of it tell the story of Cedarvale Farm.

Cedarvale Farm today. Mansoor Tanweer/HaltonHillsToday

Through these two, we know how Canadians got involved in the lives of the orphans. Using various means, Armenian children found themselves at an orphanage on the Greek island of Corfu. The Armenian Relief Association of Canada (ARAC), with the blessing of Ottawa, brought the boys to Canada. 

It should be noted that the events are important not just to Georgetown, but also to the nation . “This is the first time in Canadian history that we helped people in need. And we help them by bringing them to the country,” said local historian Mark Rowe. 

By 1920, Canada was only 53 years old. Canadians had engaged in international humanitarian work, but only as individuals. Thanks to the ARAC and the federal government, Canadians were saving lives abroad as a nation, setting the tone for future aid to refugees. 

https://www.haltonhillstoday.ca/local-news/our-top-5-people-stories-of-23-1-marking-the-100-year-legacy-of-the-georgetown-boys-8043244

ARMENIA MOVES VIOLIN CONTEST TO CHINA – WITH PREDICTABLE RESULTS

Dec  31 2023
NEWS

Norman Lebrecht

This year’s Khachaturian violin competition was moved, for unspecified reasons, from Erevan to Beijing.

The results?

1st prize: Zou Meng (China)
2nd prize: Zeng Nigodemu (China)

3rd prize: -not awarded-
4th prize: Zhao Yinan (China)

5th prize: Bobiljun Eshplatov (Uzbekistan)
6th prize: Zhang Haoya (China)
Winner of the Best Chinese Work Award: Zou Meng (China)
Special Award: Ovsanna Harutyunyan (Armenia)

https://slippedisc.com/2023/12/armenia-moves-violin-contest-to-china-with-predictable-results/

Rose Parade 2024: ‘Armenian Melodies’ float pays tribute to heritage, motherhood and struggle

Pasadena Star News
Dec 29 2023

By VICTORIA IVIE

For La Crescenta resident Sarineh Ghazarian, decorating a float in the upcoming 2024 Rose Parade is a family affair.

Ghazarian, her nephew and two children spent some of their winter break volunteering to decorate the American Armenian Rose Float Association’s sixth parade float. It was the first year to decorate for the children, who are of Armenian descent, and a special memory Ghazarian will always cherish.

The 55-foot-long “Armenian Melodies” float — decorated with pomegranates, drums, and birds playing musical instruments — features aspects of Armenian culture, symbolism, history, current events and more. It’s the sixth year the association has participated in the annual Rose Parade.

The 2024 float is among a line-up of new and returning entries, special guests and performances that aim to reflect diversity represented in the parade’s theme: “Celebrating a World of Music: The Universal Language.”

At the center of “Armenian Melodies” is a mother, dressed in vibrant, traditional garb, holding her child. The figures are surrounded by important symbols of Armenian heritage, such as cranes. Cranes are known as “krunk,” which are long-depicted symbols in Armenian art and folklore, organizers said.

Armenian birds play a major role on the float — such as the crane, chukar and the little ringed plover; a bird indigenous to the Armenian Highlands — surrounding the mother and child.

The mother’s dress, called a Taraz, is designed with red Christmas mums, whole pomegranates, dried apricots, cranberry seeds and green Ti leaves. The crane and other birds are decorated with orange lentil, blue and purple statice, red cranberry, lima beans, kidney beans and yellow strawflower. Drums seen on the front and back of the float are made of flax seed, blue and pink statice, black onions, ground rice and other materials.

Float designer Johnny Kanounji, one of the founders of the American Armenian Float Association, said that cranes are often seen as a symbol of hope. He said the float’s design pays respect to both Armenian culture and current events in Armenia. All the float details, down to which fruits are represented on the float, are connected to Armenian lore.

Apricots, one of the fruits, are so often associated with Armenia that Kanounji said they are sometimes called “Armenian apples.” Pomegranates, known as “noor” in Armenian, symbolize good fortune and prosperity, especially in fertility, Kanounji said. Armenian culture is “very matriarchal.”

“The mother symbolizes everything to the Armenian community. She is the root of all that holds the family together,” said Kanounji. “Mothers show daughters what Armenian culture, music, and everything is; passing the torch from mother to daughter.”

Kanounji, a Pasadena resident, said that each year’s parade entry aims to highlight different aspects of Armenian culture, lifestyle, and even Los Angeles County — home to over 200,000 Armenians.

This year’s float called for “nearly $350,000” of fundraising, a feat Kanounji said “wasn’t easy.” But with the amount of money used towards the project, Kanounji said he wants to make sure to design thoughtful floats each year.

Past parade entries from the American Armenian Float Association have also won awards — including the President’s trophy — in 2015, 2017 and 2018, respectfully.

“We like to give back to the community,” Kanounji said. “We want to engage our people. So this has become its own community… it’s a happy occasion, not a sad occasion… we’re saying ‘Hey, we’re here.’”

Lana Ghazarian, Sarineh’s daughter, said the float’s continued presence is “a big deal because of what’s happening right now in Armenia.”

The mountainous region of Nagorno-Karabakh — known as Artsakh to Armenians — is in the middle of a decades-long feud between the ethnic Armenians who live and have organized there, and Azerbaijan, according to Reuters. Though Nagorno-Karabakh is geographically recognized as part of Azerbaijan, tensions in the area have risen over the past year, after reports of increasing military presence and road blockades cutting off access to goods. In September, Azerbaijan forces conducted a deadly attack on Nagorno-Karabakh, causing almost all Armenian people to flee.

“It shows how us Armenians care and that we’re strong,” Lana Ghazarian, 12, said. “We’re such a small country, and representing ourselves shows who we really are. It makes me feel really proud because (of) our community coming and helping; (it) shows how we care about the people that are struggling right now.”

Her brother Alex Ghazarian, 13, said that the mother depicted on the float, holding her child, shows “how strong the Armenian women are during the war right now, and how they took care of family members.”

The “Armenian Melodies” float pays homage to the “tapestry” of the Armenian spirit, volunteers say, while staying in the Rose Parade’s overall musical theme.

Traditional woodwind instruments are heavily featured — such as the duduk, shvi, blul and parkapzuk — some of which are native to the Armenian Highlands. The blul is deeply rooted in pastoral traditions, according to Kanounji. The crane, seen at the front of the float, plays a duduk, similar to a flute.

The dhol and nagara, both percussion instruments, round out the float’s “floral orchestra,” organizers said.

The float’s most prominent colors are red, blue and orange, representing the Armenian flag. Organizers said the purposeful use of forget-me-not flowers serves as a reminder of the Armenian genocide of 1915. Many local Armenians fear another Armenian genocide could happen in Artsakh.

“What’s happening in Armenia is not very good,” volunteer Haig Nahapetian, 14, reflected. “There’s a lot of Armenians living in this area, especially Glendale… so representing Armenia on television is always great.”

https://www.pasadenastarnews.com/2023/12/29/rose-parade-2024-armenian-melodies-float-pays-tribute-to-heritage-motherhood-and-struggle/ fbclid=IwAR1JEqfPuCDpF28s0TNYC_9WCYmM4YnF-EpqeCnFiuil2-NfEdQaFTlnNeo

‘Religious Cleansing’ threatens Armenian Christians’ existence, Human Rights leaders warn

Dec 30 2023

The ongoing war between Azerbaijan and Armenia threatens the existence of Christian communities in the near east, former ambassador-at-large for international religious freedom Sam Brownback and other Christian leaders warned in a Tuesday press briefing.

Brownback’s statements were delivered just days after he returned from afact-finding trip to Armenia with the Christian human rights group Philos Project.

Brownback, who is a Catholic, called Islamic Azerbaijan’s invasion of Armenia and its ongoing blockade of the Nagorno-Karabakh region the latest attempt at “religious cleansing” of the Christian nation.

“Azerbaijan, with Turkey’s backing, is really slowly strangling Nagorno-Karabakh,” Brownback said. “They’re working to make it unlivable so that the region’s Armenian-Christian population is forced to leave, that’s what’s happening on the ground.”

The ambassador added that if the United States does not intervene, “we will see again another ancient Christian population forced out of its homeland.”

Brownback called for Congress to pass a “Nagorno-Karabakh Human Rights Act” to “establish basic security guarantees for the Nagorno-Karabakh population.”

He also called on the U.S. to reinstate previously used sanctions on Azerbaijan should it continue its blockade.

Christians in the near east have been subjected to similar attacks before, Brownback said. Yet according to the former ambassador, this time the religious cleansing is being “perpetrated with U.S.-supplied weaponry and backed by Turkey, a member of NATO.”

Sandwiched between the Muslim nations of Turkey and Azerbaijan in the southern Caucasus, Armenia has Christian roots that go back to ancient times. Today the population is over 90% Christian, according to a 2019 report by the U.S. State Department.

Conflict over the Nagorno-Karabakh region has been ongoing since Armenia and Azerbaijan, both former Soviet territories, claimed the land for themselves after the dissolution of the Soviet Union. After the First Nagorno-Karabakh War in 1994, Armenia gained primary control of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Tensions between the two nations once again broke into outright military conflict in September 2020 when Azerbaijani troops moved to wrest control of the disputed region. The open conflict lasted only about two months, with Russia brokering a peace deal in November.

The conflict resulted in Azerbaijan gaining control of large swathes of the region. This left Armenia’s only access point to Nagorno-Karabakh a thin strip of land called the “Lachin corridor.”

A study published in the Population Research and Policy Review estimates that 3,822 Armenians and at least 2,906 Azerbaijanis were killed during the 2020 conflict.

Today, an Azerbaijani blockade of the Lachin corridor, in place since December, is crippling Armenian infrastructure in Nagorno-Karabakh.

“The situation is extremely urgent and existential,” Philos Project President Robert Nicholson said. “This is the oldest Christian nation facing again for the second time in only about a century the possibility of a genocide.” He was referring to the deaths of up to 1.5 million Armenians more than a century ago in waning years of the Ottoman Empire that the U.S. now recognizes as a genocide, a characterization that Turkey has sharply denounced.

According to Nicholson, there are 500 tons of humanitarian equipment “unable to get into Nagorno-Karabakh because of the blockade that Azerbaijan has placed upon that region.”

“There has been no natural gas flowing since March and other energy supplies, [such as] electricity, are spotty at best,” Nicholson added. “Families have been separated. Surgeries have been canceled. The 120,000 people inside [Nagorno-Karabakh] are really desperate for help.”

Though much of the media coverage about the Armenian-Azerbaijani war has characterized it as simply a territorial dispute, according to both Brownback and Nicholson, the conflict is more one of ideology and religion.

“This is in fact not just a territorial dispute,” Nicholson said. “While there are territorial questions, I see this dispute absolutely as one of values.”

According to Nicholson, “the Armenians are not asking for much.”

“The Armenians we met, and we met a lot of them, were quite minimal in their demands,” he said. “They want to live in their homeland, and they want to do so securely.”

Despite the dangers, Nicholson said that the Armenian Christian communities’ plight “is not a lost cause.”

“Shockingly, despite all the threats that they are facing, Armenia is actually quite vibrant,” Nicholson said.

“There’s room,” he added, “for the United States to play a very constructive role in helping these different parties, both of which are our allies, to reach a peaceful and just solution to end the conflict.”

https://www.thecatholictelegraph.com/religious-cleansing-threatens-armenian-christians-existence-human-rights-leaders-warn/94643


Armenian Winemaker with Local Ties Celebrated in Special Lincoln Theater Event

The Lincoln County News, ME
Dec 30 2023

Damariscotta businesses Bred in the Bone, Damariscotta River Grill, and Lincoln Theater collaborated in a special dinner and wine event on Thursday, Dec. 21, to celebrate a documentary made about an Armenian father-daughter team making wine.

The documentary, “Cup of Salvation,” the fourth film in the “Somm” series, directed by Jason Wise, follows Aimee Keushguerian and her father Vahe, along their journey of reviving the grapes and wines of their Armenian homeland. Their production facility, WineWorks, is in Yerevan, Armenia’s capital.

Aimee Keushguerian, who attended Great Salt Bay Community School in Damariscotta and Lincoln Academy in Newcastle, said wine was a critical component of Armenian culture until the 19th century when the nation was absorbed by the Soviet Union.

During this time, the Soviet Union directed Armenian’s to abandon their longstanding vineyards and start production on brandy, according to Keushguerian, favoring grapes better suited for that production.

Prior to the showing of the documentary at Lincoln Theater, Armenian-inspired dinners were served at both the Damariscotta River Grill and Bred and the Bone, where diners were able to enjoy cuisine that paired with wines from the Keushguerians’ vineyard.

Tim Beal, co-owner of Damariscotta River Grill, said that when Christina Belknap, the organizer of the event and executive director of Lincoln Theater, reached out about participating in the event, it was an easy call.

“It was a no brainer,” Beal said.

Keushguerian, who was in attendance at Bred in the Bone with family in friends, including her mother, Andrea Keushguerian, a Damariscotta Select Board member, spoke about each of the wines being served with dinner.

Wines included Zulal Areni, a medium bodied red wine with bright acidity; Zulal Voskehat, a dry, light to medium body white wine using Aremenia’s signature white wine grape; Keush Origins, an invigorating and fresh brut; Keush Rose, an extra brut rose aged for 22 months; and Keush Ultra, a Blanc de Noirs aged for at least 36 months.

After diners had their fill, they crossed Main Street in Damariscotta to Lincoln Theater for the documentary, where the wines served at dinner were also available for purchase.

Belknap said the event was a success and that aside from learning about a local wine connection, she got to see the community come together.

“The best part of this, aside from learning about wine and the connection with the community, was that we has such great partnership with so many businesses right here in Damariscotta,” Belknap said.

Aimee Keushguerian, who moved to Maine from Italy in 2008, said she learned a lot from living in Maine, but that community was one of the most important lessons.

And while she and her father have had to try an reinvigorate Armenia’s post-Soviet infrastructure, the lesson of living in Maine are ones she’s held close.

“Community,” Keushguerian said.” “You really can’t build a nation without a community behind you.”

Jenny Begin, co-owner of event sponsor Salt Bay Trading Co., said her kids went to school with Keushguerian, and these types of events really bring the community together.

“This is the sort of event that makes me so excited to live in this town,” Begin said.

For more information about the documentary, go to sommfilms.com/cup-of-salvation or wineworks.am to learn more about Keushguerian and her father’s efforts in the Armenian wine industry.

SPbPU Presents At Scientific Conference Hosted By Russian-Armenian University

Dec 30 2023

The 17th Annual Scientific Conference of the Russian-Armenian University (RAU) took place in the first week of December. A representative delegation of leading professors and staff of the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade (IIME&T), the the Institute of Humanities (IH) and the Institute of Biomedical Systems and Biotechnologies (IBS&B) of Polytechnic University came to Armenia to attend the conference.

Rector of the Russian-Armenian (Slavonic) University, full member (academician) of the Academy of Pedagogical and Psychological Sciences of Armenia Edward Sandoyan welcomed the participants of the conference: Nowadays many researchers can use their skills and knowledge to develop a new product, which can be monetized in the future. Today science is a true and real sector of the economy, with the help of which it is possible to create future strategies for the development of a country. I would like this conference to give us a new potential for the development of the future. I hope that in each section interesting questions will be voiced and answers will be found.

Olga Vlasova, Director of the Graduate School of Biomedical Systems and Technologies of IBS&B SPbPU, delivered a plenary report on «New Biophysical Methods of Neuron Research» at the opening of the conference. The multidisciplinarity of Polytechnic University developments made a special impression on the audience consisting of specialists from various fields.

SPbPU employees presented reports at the «Biological and Chemical Sciences» section. Nikita Zernov, a postgraduate student of SPbPU, research engineer at the Laboratory of Molecular Neurodegeneration, demonstrated the results of a joint research project with Lernik Unanyan, Head of the Structural Bioinformatics Laboratory of RAU, and postgraduate students Ani Makichyan and Victor Kamaryan.

Associate Professor Anastasiya Bolshakova presented research opportunities for students in graduate and postgraduate programs.

During the conference, IBS&B staff participated in a master class and workshop at the RAU Structural Bioinformatics Laboratory.

The workshop participants discussed the specificity of a potential therapeutic compound for the treatment of Alzheimer’s disease being investigated both in silico and in vitro, and clarified the conditions for molecular docking.

The visit of the SPbPU IBS&B delegation to RAU has taken a new turn in the development of cooperation between our universities.

The delegation of the Institute of Industrial Management, Economics and Trade presented 12 reports in face-to-face and online format on key problems of management, economics and finance, sustainable development, economic theory.

Associate Professor of the Graduate School of Production Management Natalia Alekseyeva made a report on «Managing the value of intellectual capital of the innovation-industrial cluster» at the «Management» section. Alex Krasnov, Associate Professor of the Graduate School of Service and Trade, made a report on «Strategies of interaction with influencers for consumer segmentation within the concept of influencer marketing».

Associate Professor of the Graduate School of Production Management Nikita Lukashevich held a master class on «Economics of project activity: how to understand that the project is profitable?» for students of the Department of Management and Business of the RAU Institute of Economics and Business. Associate Professor Natalia Alekseyeva held a master class on «Time Management: Skills of a Successful Manager».

Students of the Department of Economics and Finance attended the «Digital Resources in Scientific Research» master class by Victoria Brazovskaya, assistant professor of the Higher School of Engineering and Economics, Chair of the IIME&T Student Scientific Community.

There was also a meeting with the chairman of the RAU Student Scientific Society, where the main directions for cooperation in student science were defined. At the Department of Economics and Finance, ten students were awarded certificates of advanced training on the program «Data analysis in digital environment based on Python programming language».

Undoubtedly, the exchange of pedagogical and managerial experience that took place at the conference will be the beginning of fruitful international cooperation in the field of linguistics, Russian studies, jurisprudence, media communication, pedagogy, psychology and others. The work of the sections took place in different formats. Scientific reports were presented, interactive lectures, round tables and master classes were organized, devoted to topical problems in different fields of science.

The open lecture by Natalia Chicherina, Director of the Institute of Humanities, on the existing models of multilingual university and language practices implemented in them aroused keen interest not only of the student but also of the pedagogical community. The participants of the interactive lecture discussed whether SPbPU and RAU are multilingual universities and what language practices are accomplished in these universities.

Cooperation in the field of teaching Russian as a foreign language is of special significance for Russian-Armenian relations. Anna Rubtsova, Director of the Graduate School of Linguistics and Pedagogy, took an active part in the work of the «Rusistics» section, where innovative approaches in the methodology of teaching Russian as a foreign language, various linguocultural and philological issues were discussed. Anna Rubtsova also held talks on the creation of a network educational program for teaching Russian as a foreign language.

Marina Arkannikova, Director of the Graduate School of Media Communications and Public Relations, made a report «World Trends and Drivers of Development of the Communications Industry», introduced the conference participants to the educational project of the Graduate School of Media and Public Relations «Engineers of Meanings» and proposed to organize with the Institute of Media, Advertising and Cinema of the RAU a joint round table within the framework of the 17th anniversary International Scientific and Practical Conference «PR and Advertising Technologies in the Information Society» in SPbPU in April 2024.

At the «Political Science» section, Alexander Kholod, Director of the Center for Social Communications Research at GSOMISO, spoke about the projects that create an image of the future for Polytechnic University of 2030, and invited RAU professors and students to take part in the project «Engineers of Meanings» aimed at training specialists in the communications sphere.

Associate professors of the Higher School of Law and Forensic Expertise Alexander Isaev and Alexander Tebryaev made reports and held master classes on the problems of forensic expert examination in law enforcement, on conducting engineering and technical transport expertise, as well as discussed with colleagues from RAU the prospects of cooperation in criminalistics.

Maria Kukushkina, assistant professor of the Higher School of Linguistics and Pedagogy of the Institute of Humanities, conducted a master class devoted to the work with fear of public speaking. RAU students, participants of the master class, derived the «formula of successful performance» and brilliantly applied the obtained knowledge in practice in working with cases.

During the visit to the RAU Institute of Media, Advertising and Cinema, the polytechnic agreed with its director Karen Markarian on academic mobility, joint research projects and organization of a round table at the XVII International Scientific and Practical Conference «PR and Advertising Technologies in Information Society» of SPbPU.


https://indiaeducationdiary.in/spbpu-presents-at-scientific-conference-hosted-by-russian-armenian-university/

"2023 was quite successful for Armenia" – Finance Minister’s assessment

Dec 30 2023
  • JAMnews
  • Yerevan

“We will end 2023 with economic growth close to eight percent, although a month ago we forecast growth of about seven percent,” Armenian Finance Minister Vahe Hovhannisyan said.

In financial terms, he assessed last year as “quite successful” for Armenia, as the high economic growth rate of 2022 was maintained. More in taxes were received than planned, but the minister did not say what amount was expected. He said that in 2023, the country saw a significant increase in capital expenditure, which is likely to continue next year.


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It has been reported for a long time that income declaration will be mandatory for residents, and the minister said that everyone who has an employment contract will have to submit a declaration of income. The declaration for 2024 will have to be submitted next year.

“In the near future, an information platform will be launched through which everyone who has to submit a declaration will have the opportunity to do so. There will be a website as well as a mobile app so that people can easily fill out the declaration,” he said.

By launching the system of mandatory declaration, according to Vahe Hovhannisyan, the aim is not to “gather significant financial inflows”. The goal is to obtain information about who receives what type of income, and this “will be useful for policy development and better targeting of assistance programs.”

There will also be an incentive scheme in education, health and housing. Individuals who have completed a declaration will be able, for example, to get back some of the expenditure made in education from the income tax they have paid.

“It will be possible to reduce expenses in the education sphere by 100 thousand drams [about $250] per year, and in healthcare by 50 thousand drams [about $125],” the minister clarified.

Expenditures on programs to support Karabakh refugees will amount to 47.3 billion drams [about $120 million]. This item is included in the state budget for 2024. With this amount, the government will try to solve their most urgent needs. But according to the Finance Minister, it will not be enough to solve all the problems. In addition, it is planned to develop new programs in January and February, and additional funding from the reserve fund will be allocated for these projects.

Financial aid to refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh will lead to a budget deficit of 4.6 percent instead of the originally planned 3.2 percent, says Hovhannisyan. But he immediately explains that this “will not be an additional burden on the state debt.”

“The additional debt burden is not due to these expenses at all, but due to the fact that the government of Nagorno-Karabakh had debts to the banking system of the Republic of Armenia. And a few days ago it was decided that the Armenian government will take over this debt. In this regard, there will be an impact on our debt in the amount of a little more than three percent.”

According to the finance minister, new spending obligations will result from paying this debt:

“In 2024 the budget was approved with a reserve fund of RD$156 billion [about $390 million]. However, the government has already cut 20 billion drams [about $50 million] due to the assumption of Nagorno-Karabakh’s debt.”

Hovhannisyan once again proudly emphasized that this is an unprecedented reserve fund. Presumably it will be used to manage various risks, including in a possible devaluation of the national currency.

Hovhannisyan said that 554 billion drams [about $1.4 billion] will be allocated to the defense sector in 2024, and there is an “annex of priorities” in the draft state budget, where additional needs of the country are outlined.

“If there is an opportunity, we will allocate an amount 200 billion drams [about $500 million] more to the Defense Ministry,” he said.

This would only be possible if additional funds become available.

“And new funds may appear, for example, if tax revenues are oversubscribed or some planned program is not implemented and the money returns to the reserve.”

He notes that there are other areas that may also need funds, such as infrastructure development, social protection and education.

Armenian Community Fights to Preserve Historic Land in Jerusalem

Dec 30 2023

By: Shivani Chauhan

In the heart of the ancient city of Jerusalem, a quiet struggle unfolds. The Armenian community, long-standing residents of the Armenian Quarter in East Jerusalem, are embroiled in a peaceful protest against a controversial real estate project. This project, led by Australian-Israeli investor Danny Rothman’s company, Xana Gardens Ltd., seeks to erect a luxury hotel on land that comprises nearly a quarter of the Old City’s Armenian Quarter. This plan, conceived and agreed upon without the Armenian residents’ consent, has elicited anger and consternation within the community.

In 2021, without consulting the local Armenian residents, the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem and Father Baret Yeretzian agreed on the land deal. As the details emerged, many in the community felt a sense of betrayal. Upon discovering issues with the transaction, the Patriarchate later sought to annul the deal in court.

(Read Also: Armenian Community’s Fight Against Luxury Hotel Construction in East Jerusalem)

The Armenian residents have set up a sit-in protest, their tents, stoves, and mattresses transforming the threatened land into a bastion of resistance. Weeks of guarding the land have not been without incident. Tensions recently escalated when over 30 armed individuals assaulted Armenian community members, including clergy. The community accuses investor Danny Rothman of coordinating this attack.

(Read Also: Violent Assault on Armenian Christians in Jerusalem’s Old City)

The ongoing legal battle underscores the Armenian community’s resolute efforts to safeguard their historic land. This struggle resonates deeply within a city known for its religious and political significance. The situation also casts a spotlight on the broader issue of land rights in East Jerusalem, where Israeli settlement expansion is considered illegal under international law. The Armenian community’s struggle represents a microcosm of these larger complexities, their story a testament to the human element interwoven into these geopolitical dynamics.

https://bnnbreaking.com/world/israel/armenian-community-fights-to-preserve-historic-land-in-jerusalem/