Serzh Sargsyan: No statement can dissolve Artsakh Republic

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

Armenia’s third President Serzh Sargsyan has shrugged off the statement on the dissolution of the Artsakh Republic signed by its President Samvel Shakhramanyan.

He signed a decree to dissolve Artsakh's all state institutions from 1 January 2024 in line with the ceasefire deal with Azerbaijan in September.

"The Nagorno-Karabakh Republic cannot be dissolved by anyone's statement,” Sargsyan told reporters following a court hearing in his trial on Thursday.

Separately, the ex-president refused to comment on the would-be peace treaty between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

"How can I make any comments If I haven't seen the document?" he said, calling out the Armenian authorities for failure to disclose the agreement.

Opposition activist Avetik Chalabyan again rejects ‘politically motivated’ charges

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

Opposition activist Avetik Chalabyan, a member of the Hayakve initiative, on Wednesday again rejected the charges levelled against him as politically motivated.

His comments came after the prosecutor dealing with his case asked the Yerevan court to find Chalabyan guilty for trying to pay students of the Armenian National Agrarian University to participate in anti-government protests in Yerevan back in 2022 and ban his political activities, including holding rallies, for over two years.

“The whole process is politically motivated,” Chalabyan told reporters after the court hearing, vowing to challenge any ruling in his case in higher courts.

“I’d like to call attention to the prosecutor's paradoxical idea that the failure to plead guilty is an aggravating circumstance. This is something absurd because everyone has the right to freedom of opinion and it has nothing to do with the gravity of the act in question,” he claimed.

Mikael Vardanyan donated the maternity hospital of the Surb Grigor Lusavorich Medical Center the modern medical equipment amounting 116 million drams

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

The maternity hospital of the Surb Grigor Lusavorich Medical Center of the RA Ministry of Health has been equipped with modern medical equipment of European, American and Japanese production.

Thanks to the financial support of benefactor Mikael Vardanyan, the maternity hospital already has new neonatal incubators, a neonatal portable ultrasound system, a high frequency neonatal ventilator, birthing, neonatal resuscitation and medical electric-hydraulic operating multifunctional tables, a neonatal electroencephalograph and MRI patient monitoring system.

Benefactor Mikael Vardanyan donated 116 million drams for the purchase of 15 life supporting equipment.

Opposition leader: Azerbaijan must be held to account for crimes in Artsakh

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

Azerbaijan must be held to account for its crimes in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh) in mid-September, Armenian opposition leader Seyran Ohanyan insists.

“The whole world should know that in a follow-up to Azerbaijan's criminal policy, the 10-month blockade of Artsakh by Baku which began in December 2022 was culminated in the illegal “anti-terrorist” operations, as a result of which genocide through forced exile was actually committed against the people of Artsakh,” Ohanyan, head of the opposition Hayastan parliamentary faction, told a press briefing.

The MP emphasized that the Artsakh issue has yet to be resolved through talks. "There is no alternative to negotiations," he said.

"Every Armenian realizes that the Artsakh issue has not been resolved. Only those with no sense of homeland can think that the time and resources spent on it were pointless, denying the fact that for more than a quarter of a century Artsakh was the guarantor of Armenia’s freedom and security," Ohanyan stressed.

None of repatriated Armenian soldiers hospitalized, minister says

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

None of the Armenian servicemen, who returned from Azerbaijani captivity on Wednesday, has been taken to civilian hospitals, Health Minister Anahit Avanesyan said.

“They underwent a preliminary medical examination. None of them has been transferred to a civilian hospital,” she told reporters on Thursday.

"All necessary examinations have been conducted at Muratsan Hospital and needs have been assessed. There is no need for additional examinations currently," the minister added.

Azerbaijan released 32 Armenian soldiers in exchange for Armenia's release of two Azerbaijani servicemen in line with an agreement announced last week that also said the two countries would work towards a peace treaty.

Repatriated Armenian prisoners being questioned as victims

Panorama
Armenia – Dec 14 2023

Some of the Armenian prisoners who returned from Azerbaijani captivity on Wednesday are being questioned as victims, Armenia’s Investigative Committee said.

“All necessary investigative measures will be taken with regard to all of them. Those who are being interrogated have the victim status," Investigative Committee spokesman Gor Abrahamyan told Panorama.am on Thursday.

Azerbaijan released 32 Armenian prisoners in exchange for two soldiers held in Armenia.

A Visit to Australia and the Unfolding of My Stories

Catherine Yesayan feeding a kangaroo in Sydney, Australia


BY CATHERINE YESAYAN

I’d like to start my report on Australia with a personal anecdote.

A few years ago, I was babysitting my grandson, who was five or six years old at the time. He suggested that we play a board game. I had to ask him questions provided on a stack of cards, and he had to answer them in writing. 

The first question I pulled was: “Where do you want to celebrate your birthday?” I thought he would say Chuck E. Cheese or somewhere like that. When he finished writing, he showed me his answer. It was “Rmenia.” 

I was quick to realize his thought process. He had figured out that since the letter “r” sounds like “ar,” then there was no need to start with the letter “a.” I was very amused for two reasons; his skills and the fact that he wanted to please me, because he knew my sentiments toward Armenia. 

The next question was: “Name an exotic place.” For that question, he asked me, “Nana, how do you write the letter ‘sh’?” I said, “When you put the two letters (s and h) together it sounds like ‘sh.'” 

So he started to write, and I was curious to know what his thought process was. When he finished, he showed me what he had written — “Oshtrelia.” He meant Australia. I couldn’t help but notice the intelligence of this new generation of kids. 

Yes, of course, Australia, because nobody can deny that when thinking of Australia, the first thing that comes to mind is the most exotic wildlife, and you may very well consider Australia an exotic place.

So on March 29, my husband and I boarded a Fiji aircraft to first meet the Armenian community in Auckland, New Zealand, and then to fly to the exotic “Oshtrelia.” 

Our first stop in Australia was the city of Melbourne, and later Sydney. Although, today, my focus is on their Armenian communities, I’d like to say that the highlight of our trip in Australia was to visit the exotic animal sanctuary in Melbourne and then to see the March of the Penguins. It was an extraordinary experience.

FFtom left: Seta Hovakimian, Sylvia Iskenderian, Arax Mansourian, Catherine Yesayan

Now, about Sydney. I contacted three Armenian women who live in Sydney separately. However, I later found out that those three women knew each other. The first woman was Seta Hovakimian, who I had met in Armenia last year, and she had told me that she would be happy to meet me in Sydney and direct me to the local Armenian communities. 

The next woman I met was Sylvia Iskenderian. I met Sylvia through her daughter, Lisa, who was an instructor at a paint night organized by Hamazkayin, an Armenian benevolent group in Glendale. While I was talking to Liza at the paint night, by chance, I found out that her parents live in Sydney. 

The third woman was the well-known and beloved Armenian opera singer and professor, Arax Mansourian.

On the last day of my stay in Sydney, these three women had arranged a get-together at the Westfield Mall in downtown Sydney.

By any means, it was a remarkable plan. First, Westfield Mall was next to the hotel where we were staying, and the timing was just perfect. Right before meeting them, I met with the Mayor of the city of Ryde, where most Armenians live. Shortly, I will tell you about my meeting with the mayor.  

First, I’d like to give you a little background on these three distinguished women, how they arrived in Australia, and the ways they’re involved in the Armenian community.

When I met Liza at paint night, she told me that her parents are very involved with their local Armenian community in Sydney, and she was indeed correct. 

Liza’s mother, Sylvia, and her parents immigrated to Australia from Egypt in 1963. That was the start of the emigration of Armenians from Egypt, because of the socialist regime that the prime minister Gamal Abdel Nasser had created.

Sylvia met her husband, who was from Jerusalem, in Australia.

In 1992, when the Republic of Artsakh was newly created, Sylvia and her husband, with two other friends, supported the Republic of Artsakh by building a hotel in its capital city Stepanakert. 

They named the hotel Nairi. It served as a vital bridge between the Diaspora and Artsakh. For many years, it has accommodated many dignitaries as guests. 

Sylvia has been very much involved with several Armenian organizations, but she’s engaged chiefly with the Armenian Relief Society and Hamazkayin, where she has served for many years.

In 1999, she organized a one-day Armenian Cultural Symposium on Armenian history, architecture, language, and culture. The symposium was attended by many dignitaries, including Australian and indigenous guests, and members of parliament. 

Sylvia is also a freelance journalist with articles published in Armenian and Australian magazines. She and her husband are also benefactors of the AGBU Alexander Primary School in Sydney.

Arax Mansourian was born in Beirut, Lebanon. She was an infant when her parents, due to the post-WWII repatriation movement, decided to leave everything behind and move to Armenia. Arax has many nostalgic memories of growing up in Gyumri, Armenia. Life was not easy, however, she cherished the warmth of her tight-knit family. 

Arax was the youngest of four, having two older brothers and a sister. As a young girl in her school years, she demonstrated great musical aptitude, and performed in several concerts. 

She studied at the Romanos Meliqyan College of Music and later graduated from the Yerevan State Komitas Conservatory, where she was the only performer of modern atonal vocal classical music by young composers, who were writing songs specifically for her to sing. 

During her studies, Arax participated in different music festivals throughout the Soviet Union and, after graduation, she soon started to sing at the Yerevan State Opera as a soloist. Around that time, she received many invitations to perform in different countries, including Australia. 

Arax’s debut with the Sydney Opera House was in 1995, as Liu, in Puccini’s Turandot opera. She received great reviews for her performances in the principal role in that opera. Around that time, she met Jacob Kiujian, who she married and has been with for the last 30 years. 

The Sydney Opera House

Later, Arax worked at the Australian Institute of Music as a classical vocal teacher. Many of her students have learned Armenian songs and have performed in Armenia. She and her husband wish to move to Armenia soon.

Arax’s brother, Tigran Mansurian, is a world-famous Armenian composer of classical music and film scores, and is known as the “People’s Artist.”

Seta Hovakimian was born in Aleppo, Syria, where she was married and had four daughters. She, her husband, and her three girls, moved to Australia in 1989.

Today, three of Seta’s daughters live in Sydney. She has nine grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. She attends a local Armenian Evangelical church, where she is the chairperson of the spiritual counsel and the lady’s auxiliary. The Evangelical church was established in 1965 in Willoughby, where many first-generation migrants from the Middle East lived. However, most Armenians living there later moved to other suburbs.

Armenians began to arrive in Australia, during the gold rush in the 1850s, from the Middle East and later from Turkey due to the political upheaval and other tragic events such as the Hamidian massacres in the 1890s, the 1915 Armenian Genocide, and after WWII.

In recent history, the main influx of Armenians arrived in the 1960s from the Middle East, mainly from Egypt, when Prime Minister Gamal Abdel-Nasser came to power and created a socialist regime.

Then, migrants arrived from Cyprus after the Turkish occupation of the island, and later from Lebanon and Syria due to civil unrest. The Armenians from Iran mostly arrived in the 1980s, right after the Islamic Revolution. 

In the early 1990s, a small number of Armenians from Armenia migrated to Australia to escape the hardships created by the collapse of the Soviet Union, the devastating 1988 Spitak earthquake, as well as the Azerbaijani aggression in Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh).

Today, the Armenian community of Sydney is estimated to be around 40,000. The number of Armenians in Melbourne is less, maybe around 10,000. In both communities, there are established Armenian organizations that cater to the educational, cultural, athletic, and welfare needs of the Armenian community. 

Melbourne has two Saturday language schools and St. Mary’s Armenian Apostolic Church.

Here, I need to mention that Melbourne had been ranked by the Economist Intelligent Unit as the world’s most livable city for seven years in a row, from 2011 to 2017. That’s a rare feat for a city.

The Australian-Armenian communities take pride in their significant contributions to politics, business, academia, sports, and culture.

The main concentration of Armenians in Sydney is in the suburbs of Ryde and Willoughby. Also, smaller communities exist in Adelaide, Brisbane, and Perth. Each year, Armenians in Sydney hold an annual festival that attracts over 25,000 visitors.

In 1966, the Church of Holy Resurrection was inaugurated in Chatswood, next to Willoughby. Also, as I mentioned before, the Armenian Evangelical Church of Sydney in Willoughby was inaugurated in 1965.

Sydney, the largest and most populous city in Australia, is best known for its opera house — which is built in the form of a sailboat — and the sweeping views of the harbor. It’s a city to fall in love with.

We arrived in Sydney on the “Holy” Thursday, before Good Friday. An old friend, who lives in Sydney, picked us up from the airport and drove us to Downtown. We crossed the iconic Sydney Harbor Bridge, made from steel and built in 1932, which is known as a “Coat Hanger.”

Our hotel was on George Street, across from the iconic Queen Victoria Mall.

The Queen Victoria Mall, built in the 1890s

Unaware of the neighborhood, we had chosen the best spot for our hotel. The stupendous Victoria Mall, built in the 1890s with impressive architecture similar to a grand cathedral, took my breath away. 

A few days later, when we had a chance to visit the inside of that mall, we were surprised to see the it had a similar floor plan to today’s malls. It was mind-boggling that, so many years ago, such a building was erected. To me, the most exciting aspect was the huge elevator and the original colorful floor tiles.

On Easter Sunday, my husband and I headed to the Apostolic Church of Holy Resurrection in the suburb of Chatswood, which has served the Armenian community for the past 65 years.

The weather was just perfect in the low 70s. It was a joyful day and everybody was in a festive mood. Many families were enjoying the beautiful Easter Sunday. I had a big appetite to learn about the church and its activities.

Catherine Yesayan at the Queen Victoria Mall

Right next to the church, I noticed a stretch of fresh lawn where a booth was set up. I approached it. At the booth, there was an Easter Bunny character in costume and a few other young adults. They all were wearing the same uniform — a three button-down, white short-sleeve shirt with an emblem which read: ‘ACYA,’ an acronym for “Armenian Church Youth of Australia.”

As I introduced myself to them, they explained that the Youth Club has 25 members. They help with activities and the entertainment that the church organizes, such as picnics and other events. They said that there’s an activity that they help to organize almost every month. They also attend bible study and contribute to the publishing of the Looyce magazine.

It was a little late to watch the kids’ interaction with the Easter Bunny, because they had already dispersed.

After chatting with the Youth Club members, I stopped at the church office to get some more information. The Armenian Apostolic church of Holy Resurrection is located in Chatswood, New South Wales. The church, under the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, has a Sunday school with 30 kids between the ages of four and 12.

The church has an 11 member Diocesan Council, who take care of the many requirements of the church such as repairs, finances, and other needs. The church also publishes two magazines: Looyce and Paros. 

An Easter Bunny with members of the church youth group at the Holy Resurrection Church in Sydney

The Holy Resurrection Apostolic Church has a women’s auxiliary committee who prepare cookies and coffee for after the liturgies. Also, the church offers a welfare center, funded by the government, for senior citizens. The church has a total of 380 paid members.

The church has three different choirs. The participants of the first group are between 15 to 22 years old. The next group, which is named “Vardanantz,” consists of individuals between 20 to 30 years old, and then the last group is called “Loussavoritch,” which is for adults 30 years and older. 

Here’s the list of other Armenian churches:

  • The Armenian Apostolic Church of Holy Trinity in Wentwothwille, New South Wales
  • The Armenian Catholic Church is located in Lindcombe. New South Wales
  • The Armenian Evangelical Church is located in Willoughby, New South Wales 
  • The Armenian Brotherhood Holy Trinity Church is located in Ryde, New South Wales
  • The Armenian Evangelical Brethren Church is located in Northbridge, New South Wales

The following are lists of Armenian organizations in Australia, which I pulled from Wikipedia.

The traditional Armenian political parties established in the country include:

  • Social Democratic Hunchakian Party
  • Armenian Democratic Liberal Party
  • Armenian Revolutionary Federation

There are also many associated political groups, including:

  • Armenian Youth Federation of Australia
  • Armenian National Committee of Australia

Other operating social and cultural organizations within the Armenian-Australian community are:

  • Armenian General Benevolent Union
  • Hamazkayin Regional Committee breaking down into subdivisions/committees.
  • SBS Armenian Radio
  • Armenian Chamber of Commerce in Australia
  • Homenetmen Australia
  • Hye Hoki

In Sydney, there are several cultural centers where Armenians gather. One such center is located in Willoughby, in New South Wales, and is called the “Armenian Cultural Centre.” Another center, the “Armenian Cultural Panoyan Centre,” is located in Bonnyrigg, New South Wales. There are smaller cultural centers in Neutral Bay, City of Ryde, Frenchs Forest (Ararat Reserve), and Naremburn, Sydney. Melbourne also has several cultural centers.

Armenian Schooling has become stronger throughout the Australian community, with two full-time schools operating in Sydney. These include the Galstaun College and the AGBU Alexander Primary School.

There are also a number of Saturday schools, including:

  • Toomanian Armenian Saturday School
  • AGBU Alex Manoogian Saturday School
  • Tarkmanchatch Armenian Saturday School
  • Serop Papazian Armenian Saturday School
  • Looyce Armenian Catholic School

Two days after Easter Sunday, on a Tuesday, a friend had made a prior arrangement for me to meet with the Mayor of the City of Ryde. Nearly 10,000 Armenians live in Ryde, which is the largest concentration of Armenians in Australia. The city is situated in the Northern part of Sydney, in the state of New South Wales.

Mayor Sarkis Yedelian with Catherine Yesayan in his office

Mayor Sarkis Yedelian welcomed my friend and I to his office, and we had a nice chat together. Yedelian is Armenian. He and his family arrived in Sydney from Beirut in 1979. He is a graduate of the Armenian Hamazgayin College in Beirut. A few years after of his arrival, in 1983, the very ambitious Sarkis Yedelian started an Armenian radio station, called “Sardarabad Radio.”

He also co-founded the Armenia Weekly magazine and served on its Editorial Board. Later, from 1994 to 2007, he established a community TV station, called “TV Sydney,” and helped young filmmakers air their productions. He also volunteered to train young journalists in video production and operating cameras.

Yedelian was first elected as an Independent Councillor for the City of Ryde in 2004, and was later re-elected for a second term in 2008. In May of 2010, Yedelian joined the Liberal Party and was re-elected for a third term. He was also re-elected for the fourth and fifth terms. He’s known as the longest serving councillor.

The City of Ryde is composed of twelve councillors. All members are elected for a fixed four-year term in office. The mayor is elected by the councillors for a two-year term at the initial council meeting.

Yedelian has served as Chair of the following committees: Ryde Planning and Environment, Ryde Community Harmony Reference Group, and the Ryde Economic and Development Advisory committee. 

Yedelian was instrumental in buying an old building in Ryde and turning it into a multicultural senior center.  

He has a background in journalism and electronic engineering. He is self-employed and runs an IT telecommunication and precision instrument consulting services company. He retired in 2019 and has dedicated his time to community needs. He is married with two adult children.

Yedelian is the first elected Councillor in Australia of Armenian decent and played a key leadership role in Ryde’s Multicultural Advisory Group, which advises Council on all multicultural issues. 

His fluency in five languages — Armenian, Arabic, French, English and Turkish — has helped him communicate with the immigrant and diverse ethnic population of the city of Ryde.

In 2005, Yedelian introduced a motion to recognize the Armenian Genocide to the council. As a result, the city of Ryde became the first local council in Australia to recognize the Armenian Genocide In June of 2018, a motion to recognize the Armenian Genocide was accepted for debated by Australia’s House of Representatives for the very first time.

Mayor Sarkis Yedelian and Catherine Yesayan at the Memorial Park where a Cross Stone is installed in the memory of the victims of the Armenian Genocide

First we met the mayor at his large offi,ce and then he took us around City Hall and showed us the chambers,where the council has sessions. We had the chance to take pictures in front of Queen Elizabeth’s portrait.

Afterward, the mayor took us to a nearby park to visit the memorial plaque installed in 2005 in memory of the Armenian Genocide, following the bipartisan recognition of the genocide by the city of Ryde. We also had the opportunity see the more recently erected khachkar (cross-stone) made of volcanic rock and imported from Armenia. We took some pictures and then returned to City Hall.

Here it is fitting to tell you that Gladys Berejiklian, who is of Armenian descent, was elected to serve as the 45th Premier of New South Wales and as the leader of the New South Wales division of the Liberal Party from 2017 to 2021.

To conclude my report of the very active enclave of Armenians in Australia, I’d like to tell you about an Armenian woman who runs a very successful business selling Indigenous art.

 

Anoosh Safarian in her store where she sells indigenous artifacts

On the last day of our stay in Sydney, our friends took us to the Sydney Harbor where there’s a small shopping center. Anoosh Safarian, an Armenian from Iran, opened a shop selling indigenous artifacts nearly 30 years ago.

Anoosh was 18 years old when, in early 1970s, her family immigrated to Australia. She has two sons, one of whom manages the store.

I had a great appetite to learn more about Australia’s Aboriginal culture. Anoosh explained that the Australian Aboriginals have been around for more than 65,000 years. 

Their tradition is rich, and it translates into thousands of relics and stories that celebrate their heritage. The art produced by indigenous people are not just relics – they tell stories of their history, laws, religion, and culture. 

We couldn’t say goodbye to Australia without buying some souvenirs, and Anoosh was very generous in offering us significant discounts.

Catherine Yesayan

This is how 10 fabulous days in Australia ended. We left the country with many fond memories, to say the least.

Catherine Yesayan is a regular contributor to Asbarez, with her columns appearing under the “Community Links” heading. She can be reached at [email protected].




Sardarabad Bookstore Re-Opens at Glendale Youth Center

The entrance to the Sardarabad Bookstore's new location

The Sardarabad Bookstore, which has been part of the Armenian community in Los Angeles for 45 years, has relocated to the Kirkor and Mariam Karamanougian Armenian Youth Center in Glendale, adjacent to St. Mary’s Church.

A grand re-opening ceremony was held on December 10, bringing together community members and book lovers, who toured the new facility in the heart of the Armenian community.

“For us, Armenians, a bookstore is not merely a commercial establishment. It is a home, which spreads our culture, music, songs and traditions,” said Very Reverend Zareh Sarkissian, the pastor of the St. Mary’s Church in his remarks, after officiating the traditional bread and salt blessing ceremony.

Very Rev. Zareh Sarkissian officiates the traditional blessing of salt and bread ceremony

“That is why I blessed the salt, bread and water, because this is our home, so it can also become the home for our generations to advance and serve our nation,” added Very Rev. Sarkissian.

The Sardarabad Bookstore was established as a result of hard work and dedication by many dedicated individuals.

“In 1978, a group of book loving 17- to 18-year old members of the AYF Sardarabad chapter members —Salpi Ghazarian, Sako Berberian, Viken Hovsepian — decided that it was important to spread the Armenian culture and literature, thus establishing the ‘Sardarabad’ Bookstore,” Harut Mekerdichian, the director of the bookstore told Asbarez’s Nane Avagyan in an interview.

Sardarabad began as a mobile bookstore in 1984 and later was moved to the headquarters of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation Glendale Aharonian chapter on Brand Boulevard in Glendale.

After occupying several brick and mortar storefronts in Glendale, “Sardarabad returned to its roots, in the center that now serves as the Aharonian chapter’s headquarters,” Mekerdichian added.

He recalled and praised the hard work by former bookstore directors — Apo and Ani Boghigian, Arman Baghdoian, Rita Demirdjian and Varoujan Ourfalian — for maintaining and elevating the bookstore’s mission.

After assuming the directorship of the bookstore in 2017, Mekerdichian and board member Arto Keuleyan conceived of the idea to relocate Sardarabad Bookstore to the Armenian Youth Center in Glendale. The move was affected by the Covid-19 pandemic, but finally in December of this year, the mammoth task of relocating the bookstore to the center was finally achieved.

Mekerdichian also offered words of gratitude to Carmen Ohaninan and the ARF Aharanian chapter, as well as to Shoushig Arslanian, Arman Baghdoian, Varouj Baghdasarian, Harout Madenian, Garine Izmirlian, Arto Keuleyan, Ankine Izmirlian, Houri Markarian and others supporters for their hard work and “their belief in the Armenian culture, Armenian literature and advancement of the Armenian community.”

“During my many visiting to this center, which belongs to the Aharonian Chapter, I have witnessed the bevy of activity by the youth, who feel at home in this center,” said Mardig Gaboudian, who delivered remarks on behalf of the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee during Sunday’s event.

“From now on, young Armenians will also have the added opportunity to visit and use the bookstore, which has not become a part of this ‘home,’ and will greatly enhance it offerings,” added Gaboudian.

He thanked the dedicated supporters, especially the input and dedication of Jacklin Avakian, the bookstore manager for her unwavering effort to advance the bookstore. He also offered words of gratitude to Mekerdichian.

“The relocation of Sardarabad will provide new impetus to the bookstore, because we are surrounded by various Armenian organizations,” said Avakian, who expressed hope that the parents of the children and youth will become the store’s permanent visitors and customers.

“We are also very happy that within this Youth Center, we will have the opportunity to organize events, which will become another opportunity to draw in our community,” added Avakian.

She said that the bookstore offers another new feature: Visitors may order coffee, refreshments and snacks and enjoy them in the bookstore’s cafe.

Sardarabad Bookstore offers an impressive array of books in Western and Easter Armenian dialects, publications on Armenian history, the Genocide, art, books for children and other subjects, as well as souvenirs, mementoes and gifts, which are primarily made in Armenia.

Avakian said that a special effort has been made to expand the bookstore’s children and young adults offerings, the latest of which are the works by children’s author Aline Bezdigian, whose two new books are now available in Eastern and Western Armenian.

“There was a great need for such a venue in our community,” said author Bezdigian. “It is the first time that book lovers can enjoy literature at a cafe in the same facility.”

Present at the bookstore reopening were members of the ARF Western U.S. Central Committee and the Aharonian Chapter, as well as community leaders, cultural and literary figures and academicians.

“In these extremely difficult times for our nation, I am very pleased when I witness that despite these trying times, our culture and literature are thriving,” Dr. Rubina Peroomian told Asbarez’s Nane Avagyan.

“I get encouraged when I see that our people have such values,” added Peroomian.

Lemkin Institute Calls on U.S., Israel’s Allies to Guarantee Due Process for Jerusalem Armenians

A Jerusalem police officer engages with representatives of the Armenian community


The Lemkin Institute for Genocide Prevention said Tuesday that it is deeply concerned by threats to the integrity of the Armenian Quarter in East Jerusalem.

“We call on the United States and other close allies of Israel to take it upon themselves to guarantee the Armenian community due process in this land dispute. The global Armenian community has already lost one important historical land this fall — Artsakh (Nagorno-Karabakh), which was forcibly depopulated when Azerbaijan invaded, massacred Armenians, and terrorized almost the entire Armenian population into fleeing. The Armenian people cannot lose another,” said the Lemkin Institute in a statement.

The Armenian Quarter makes up about one-sixth of the city of Jerusalem. It is 1,600 years old, dating back to the reign of Roman Emperor Constantine. The first settlement of Armenians in Jerusalem predates even Constantine, with Armenians having settled in Jerusalem as early as the first century BCE when the Armenian Empire controlled nearby territories in Syria. Although the Armenian population in Jerusalem today is very small, the Armenian Quarter remains an important part of the Armenian Diaspora presence as the oldest remaining living diaspora of Armenians. The Quarter houses a diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church.

In July 2021, the Armenian Patriarchate signed an agreement to lease a significant plot of land (called the “Cow’s Garden”) to Australian developer Danny Rubenstein for 98 years at a low annual rent of a few hundred thousand dollars per year. Rubenstein planned to build a luxury hotel on the site, necessitating the destruction of many of the existing buildings.

The deal came as a shock to the local community, the greater Armenian Diaspora, and Palestinian authorities, the latter of which felt as if the deal encroached on their own sovereignty. It also raised eyebrows due to its asymmetric rewards.

In response to this opposition, the Patriarchate announced on November 1, 2023, that it would be canceling the deal. However, Danny Rubenstein’s company, XANA, has refused the Patriarchate’s cancellation. It has brought bulldozers to the site and is beginning construction in the Cow’s Garden area.

Local Armenians have responded to the destruction of Cow’s Garden with peaceful protests in the form of public gatherings and a sit-in where construction had begun.

Israeli police and civilians have met these protests with violence, using dogs and firearms to intimidate the peaceful protestors. Danny Rubenstein and George Warwar, Chairman and Director of XANA International, appear to be using force and intimidation to deter the Armenian community from attempting to protect its land.

The cultural heritage of the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem must be safeguarded from the developers and the armed settlers who are enabling them, ostensibly with the aim of creating a homogenized Jewish ethnostate in Palestinian territories.

“We stand with the Armenian community as they continue to resist the development of this land through peaceful demonstrations and by refusing to leave the premises. The Armenian community has already lost one significant historical community in Artsakh/Nagorno-Karabakh this year. It must not lose another,” said the Lemkin Institute.

Asbarez: EU’s Michel Refuses to Use the Word ‘Karabakh’

Council of Europe President Charles Michel during an interview with RFE/RL on Dec. 12


YEREVAN (Azatutyun.am)—The European Union’s top official, Charles Michel, has said that the EU keeps “working very hard” to help Armenia and Azerbaijan negotiate a comprehensive peace agreement.

“We are determined on the EU side to work with the partners and with them to ensure that as soon as possible a peace treaty will be signed between both sides,” Michel told RFE/RL in an interview.

In that regard, the president of the EU’s decision-making Council was encouraged by last week’s Armenian-Azerbaijani agreement to exchange prisoners reached as a result of direct negotiations.

“I would like to say that if it was possible for Armenia and Azerbaijan to make some joint announcements a few days ago, this is partially because we help them,” he said. “We encourage them. We suggested some options and some ideas to bring them closer to each other on the topics that have been announced. And we are still working on additional steps to encourage a peace treaty, a normalization agreement between Armenia and Azerbaijan.”

Michel was scheduled to host Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev and Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan in October for further talks on the treaty. However, Aliyev cancelled the talks. Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Jeyhun Bayramov likewise withdrew from a meeting with his Armenian counterpart slated for November 20 in Washington.

Michel declined to comment on Baku’s moves. “We are still working on a meeting that could take place in Brussels,” he said without giving potential dates.

Michel would also not say whether the EU or other world powers are ready to act as guarantors of Yerevan’s and Baku’s compliance with the would-be peace treaty. Nor did he clarify whether the treaty will likely make any reference to the rights and security of Karabakh’s ethnic Armenian population that fled to Armenia following Azerbaijan’s September 19-20 military offensive.

He pointedly declined to use the word “Karabakh,” referring instead to “this part of Azerbaijan” until recently populated by Armenians.

“We think that they [Karabakh Armenians] should have the right to return or at least to be able to visit this part of Azerbaijan and their security and rights must be guaranteed and there are international standards in terms of protection of the minorities that must be respected in line with the constitution of Azerbaijan, which should be a framework to guarantee those protections of minorities,” he said.

Brussels is therefore trying to “convince the Azerbaijani authorities to demonstrate that … they want to protect the minorities and to guarantee that the international standards are respected,” added Michel.

Even before their mass exodus triggered by the Azerbaijani offensive, Karabakh’s leaders and ordinary residents made clear that they will not live under Azerbaijani rule. Only a few dozen Karabakh Armenians are believed to remain in the territory recaptured by Baku. More than 100,000 others fled their homes later in September.