Armenia and Azerbaijan discuss the delimitation of their borders in Moldova

Nation World
June 2 2023

President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev and Prime Minister of Armenia Nikol Pashinyan held a meeting this Thursday on the sidelines of the second summit of the European Political Community in Moldova and with the mediation of European leaders.

The meeting was also attended by French President Emmanuel Macron; the Chancellor of Germany, Olaf Scholz; and the President of the European Council, Charles Michel, who classified the meeting as a “very good meeting” with a view to reducing positions.

According to Michel, the parties have addressed issues of “connectivity, security, rights, border delimitation and peace treaty”, with the appointment serving as “preparation” for the next meeting on 21 July in Brussels. .

For its part, the French Presidency has commented that Aliyev and Pashinyan have promised to move forward in the delineation of borders and “affirmed mutual respect for the territorial integrity” of the two countries.

Meanwhile, Macron, Scholz and Michel have urged Armenia and Azerbaijan to honor their commitments, particularly in the context of the conflict in Nagorno-Karabakh, to release prisoners of war “as soon as possible”.

The President of the European Council has invited the other four leaders present at the meeting to participate in the next summit of the European Political Community to be held in the city of Granada.

Michel himself had already pointed out at the beginning of the week that it was necessary for Aliyev and Pashinyan to abandon “maximalist positions” before this Thursday’s meeting, and called talks between Azeri officials and the Armenians of Nagorno Karabakh “vital”.

Armenia and Azerbaijan have been involved in various conflicts in recent years over control of Nagorno-Karabagh, a region with a majority Armenian population that has been at the center of conflict since Azerbaijan decided in 1988 to secede from the region, which is part of . the Soviet Union.

https://nationworldnews.com/armenia-and-azerbaijan-discuss-the-delimitation-of-their-borders-in-moldova/

Podcast | Where are the Armenia–Azerbaijan peace talks going?

June 2 2023

Armenia and Azerbaijan have recently been engaged in a series of frequent meetings between the country’s leaders and foreign ministers in an attempt to reach a peace agreement. Despite hopes that the two countries would sign new agreements in at least one of Moscow on 26 June or Chisinau on 1 June, neither meeting broke new ground.

This week in the Caucasus Digest, we spoke to Bahruz Samadov, a PhD candidate at Charles University in Prague, and Tigran Grigoryan, a political analyst and head of the Regional Centre for Democracy and Security, about the Armenia–Azerbaijan peace talks.

Listen to the podcast at the link below: 

Armenian, Azerbaijani FMs to meet in Washington on June 12

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 21:44, 1 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. On June 12, the meeting of the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Armenia Ararat Mirzoyan and the Minister of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan Jeyhun Bayramov will take place in Washington, USA, ARMENPRESS reports, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during the meeting with the Armenian community in Chișinău.

"I would like to inform you that on June 12, a meeting in the format of the foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan will take place in the United States, in Washington," said the Prime Minister.

The Chișinău meeting was a good preparation for the next meeting. President of the European Council

 20:53, 1 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. European Council President Charles Michel summarized the five-sided meeting of Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan, French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf Scholz, European Council President Charles Michel and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev held in Chișinău, ARMENPRESS reports, the statement was published on the official website of the Europe Council.

"We recently had a very good meeting with President Aliyev, Prime Minister Pashinyan, French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz.

We had the opportunity to address all the topics discussed in Brussels in May: communication, security and rights, border delimitation, peace treaty.

This meeting was a good preparation for the next meeting to be held on July 21 in Brussels. It means that we are working hard and intend to support all positive efforts towards normalization of relations.

I have also announced that I plan to invite President Aliyev, Prime Minister Pashinyan, Chancellor Scholz and President Macron again within the framework of the next meeting of the European Political Community, which will take place in Spain. It means that the EU will do everything to help, support, and make greater progress in the direction of normalizing relations," said Michel.

Armenpress: A tripartite meeting of the Deputy Prime Ministers of Armenia, Russia and Azerbaijan will take place in Moscow on June 2

 21:50, 1 June 2023

YEREVAN, JUNE 1, ARMENPRESS. The meeting of the tripartite working group of Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Armenia Mher Grigoryan, Deputy Prime Minister of the Russian Federation Alexey Overchuk and Deputy Prime Minister of the Republic of Azerbaijan Shahin Mustafayev will take place in Moscow on June 2, ARMENPRESS reports, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said during a meeting with the Armenian community in Chișinău.

"On June 2, a meeting of the working group dealing with regional communications is scheduled in Moscow," said the Prime Minister.

Asbarez: Pashinyan, Aliyev Agree to Continue Talks in July in Brussels

European Council President Charles Michel (center) hosts the leaders of Armenia and Azerbaijan in Moldova on June 1


A meeting between Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan, held on Thursday at the invitation of the European Council President Charles Michel, ended in Moldova’s capital Chisinau with the sides agreeing to resume talks in Brussels on July 21.

After the one and half-hour long meeting, no joint announcements were released or agreements signed, with Michel saying that the Thursday meeting was “a good preparation” for upcoming talks.

“We had the opportunity to address all the topics that we discussed in Brussels in May – connectivity, security and rights, the border delimitation, the peace treaty,” Michel said in a statement following the meeting.

President Emmanuel Macron of France and the German Chancellor Olaf Scholz took part in talks before, Pashinyan, Aliyev and Michel held a separate meeting.

“This meeting was a good preparation for the next meeting that will take place in Brussels on 21 July. It means that we are working hard, and we intend to support all the positive efforts in the direction of normalization of the relations,” Michel added.

“I also announced that I intend to invite again President Aliyev, Prime Minister Pashinyan, Chancellor Scholz, and President Macron in the margins of the next meeting of the European Political Community that will take place in Spain. It means that we will do everything on the EU side in order to help, to provide assistance, to make more progress in the direction of normalization of the relations,” Michel said.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz joined the talks in Moldova on June 1

“During the meeting, issues related to the unblocking of regional transport and economic infrastructures, border delimitation and border security between the two countries, the agreement on the normalization of relations between Armenia and Azerbaijan, the need to address the rights and security of the people of Nagorno Karabakh, as well as POWs, missing persons and other humanitarian issues were discussed,” Pashinyan’s office said in a press statement following the meeting.

The last time Pashinyan and Aliyev met with Michel in Brussels on May 14, they agreed that Armenia and Azerbaijan would recognize each other’s territorial integrity based on the 1991 Alma Ata document that delineated the borders of the Commonwealth of Independent States after the fall of the Soviet Union.

In a statement following the May 14 meeting, Michel said that he called on Aliyev to ensure security guarantees for the “Armenians living in the former Nagorno-Karabakh Autonomous Oblast,” a term used to describe Artsakh before it declared independence and held a referendum affirming that vote in 1991. Michel used the same terminology ahead of the Chisinau (pronounced Kishniyev) meeting on Thursday.

Pashinyan clarified later that his pledge to recognize Azerbaijan 86,600 square kilometers of territory meant that Artsakh would fall under Azerbaijan’s control, a declaration that created uproar among opposition forces in Armenia, the government and people of Artsakh and various forces in the Diaspora.

Pashinyan and Aliyev also met with President Valdimir Putin of Russia in Moscow where they pledged to accelerate efforts to unblock transport routes between Armenia and Azerbaijan.
Despite these agreements and the West optimistic and positive outlook for an eventual peace deal between Yerevan and Baku, Aliyev continued his belligerent threats against Armenia’s sovereignty and the Armenians of Artsakh.

In an address delivered on May 28 in Lachin, which has been blockaded by Azerbaijan since December 12, Aliyev essentially threatened ethnic cleansing of Armenians living in Artsakh if they did no subject themselves to Baku’s rule. He demanded that government structures in Artsakh be dismantled, after which he would consider “amnesty” for the Artsakh leadership.

The United States welcomed Aliyev’s offer of “amnesty” as an encouraging sign of progress in peace talks. The American reaction was met with denouncements by Armenia and Artsakh, whose foreign ministries pointed to Aliyev’s aggressive threats against Armenia and Artsakh.

Armenian Church Leaders Unite to Warn Biden that Forcing Artsakh into Azerbaijan is a Death Sentence for Christian Armenians

The Armenian Apostolic, Catholic, and Evangelical Churches speak with one voice in supporting Artsakh’s right to self-determination.


Apostolic, Catholic, and Evangelical Churches Speak with One Voice in Defense of Artsakh
 
NEW YORK/LOS ANGELES —The spiritual leaders of America’s Armenian Apostolic, Catholic, and Evangelical faithful have joined forces in a powerful public warning to President Biden that forcing Artsakh under Azerbaijan is a “death sentence for the Armenians of this sacred land, home to 120,000 men, women, and children.”

In a letter sent yesterday to the White House, the Church leaders wrote: “We, the spiritual leaders of American Christians of Armenian heritage, call on you to stand firmly against any attempt to force the Christian Armenians of Artsakh under Azerbaijan, a country that is openly committed to ethnically cleansing the indigenous population of this ancient part of the Armenian homeland.”

The signatories to the letter are Archbishop Hovnan Derderian (Western Diocese Prelate), Archbishop Anoushavan Tanielian (Eastern Prelacy Primate), Very Rev. Mesrop Parsamyan (Eastern Diocese Primate), Bishop Torkom Donoyan (Western Prelacy Prelate), Bishop Mikhael Mouradian (Eparch Armenian Catholic Eparchy), Reverend Hendrik Shanazarian (Interim Minister, Armenian Evangelical Union), and Zaven Khanjian (Armenian Missionary Association of America Executive Director).

The full text of the interdenominational letter is provided below.

May 30, 2023

President Joseph R. Biden
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, DC 20500

Dear Mr. President:

We, the spiritual leaders of American Christians of Armenian heritage, call on you to stand firmly against any attempt to force the Christian Armenians of Artsakh under Azerbaijan, a country that is openly committed to ethnically cleansing the indigenous population of this ancient part of the Armenian homeland. Any settlement that subordinates the at-risk citizens of democratic Artsakh to dictatorial Azerbaijan is a death sentence for the Armenians of this sacred land, home to 120,000 men, women, and children, and, of course, countless holy sites.

We make this urgent appeal in the wake of our longstanding calls for you to withdraw your waiver of Section 907 of the FREEDOM Support Act and fully enforce this provision of U.S. law. As we have shared with you in the past, Armenia, the world’s first Christian nation, remains a landlocked, blockaded, genocide-survivor state, striving to survive on the frontiers of global freedom. Our great nation must stand with Armenia in every way, beginning with a suspension of U.S. military aid to Azerbaijan, a country that would erase our ancient nation from the map of the world. We must never, as Americans, be complicit in such genocidal violence.

We look forward to learning of your renewed leadership in saving Christian Armenian lives and advancing a truly democratic peace that respects the right to self-determination of Artsakh, an early cradle of Christianity.

We pray that the Almighty Lord bless you abundantly and His wisdom leads your endeavors with success, spreading peace, justice, and prosperity to the world.

Sincerely,

Archbishop Hovnan Derderian
Western Diocese Prelate

Archbishop Anoushavan Tanielian
Eastern Prelacy Primate

Very Rev. Mesrop Parsamyan
Eastern Diocese Primate

Bishop Torkom Donoyan
Western Prelacy Prelate

Bishop Mikhael Mouradian
Eparch Armenian Catholic Eparchy

Reverend Hendrik Shanazarian
Interim Minister, Armenian Evangelical Union

Zaven Khanjian
Armenian Missionary Association of America Executive Director

Asbarez: Manoogian School Titans Women’s Volleyball Has Another Historic Run

The AGBU MDS Titans 2022-23 Varsity Girls Volleyball team during a match. Danielle B. Robinson is seen shooting the ball


The AGBU Manoogian-Demirdjian School’s Titans 2022-23 Varsity Girls Volleyball team earned significant accolades through its accomplishments during the sports season this past fall, kicking off historic and award winning seasons for several of the school’s varsity teams.

The Titan Varsity Girls played all season, every point, every play with only eight players. One of those players was senior and co-captain Danielle B. Robinson who plays the Middle Hitter position.

AGBU Titan Danielle B. Robinson

Danielle B. Robinson has attended AGBU since the 2nd grade and became interested in volleyball in 9th grade. Volleyball became of great interest to Danielle the more she played. She took her athletics to the next level when she started playing Club Volleyball for Supernova Allstars Volleyball Club in late 2021.

Between playing for her school team and her club team, Danielle was able to elevate her level of play pretty quickly. There’s no question that her love of the game was her motivation, as between school and club play there were nearly nine months a year of practices, games, and travel tournaments.

The team started the season a little slow, losing their first few matches. However, they quickly acclimated to each other and became a sensational team of young ladies, lead by Head Coach Mike Ter Minassian and Assistant Coach Rodney Hairapetian. The AGBU MDS Titan Varsity Girls volleyball team went on to win 16 straight games with a league record of 9-0 leading into the CIF Southern Section Division 9 championship game versus Excelsior Charter.

Danielle B. Robinson during a home game Danielle B. Robinson shoots the ball during a match Danielle B. Robinson shoots the ball over the net during a home game

This was an incredibly exciting time for them as they packed the AGBU Nazarian Center Gym to capacity to play for the CIF Southern Section Division 9 Championship. There was an undeniable electricity running through the sports program as the girls were being recognized for already qualifying for the CIF State Championships. They ultimately lost the Championship game to the tough Exclesior Charter team.

The 2022-23 Titans Varsity Girls Volleyball team have achieved the most success as girls volleyball team at AGBU in over 20 years, and possibly ever. They finished the season with an overall record of 19-6 and a league record of 9-1. They qualified for the CIF State Championships for the first time in school history and were named CIF Division 9 runner-ups.

A social media post congratulating the AGBU MDS Titans 2022-23 Varsity Girls Volleyball team for their accomplishments through9out the season

Danielle was named Independence League MVP, Team MVP, Team Best offense, de Toledo Tournament MVP, and All CIF Southern Section First Team. Danielle was accepted to eight universities including Cal Lutheran, Point Loma Nazarene, University of Texas – San Antonio, as well as several California State universities. Danielle will be furthering her volleyball career in college with aspirations of playing at the Division II level. It was certainly a sports year to remember at AGBU MDS.

AW: Magnificent Vision

The great bass horn of the steamship thundered over the din of the busy port city of Smyrna (lzmir, Turkey). A slight young woman, back straight, eyes tearing, was waving down to her family on the quay. It had been a long and difficult journey to reach this place and time.

Tokvor Topalian was the trainmaster of all Smyrna. He was a respected, powerful and wealthy man since Smyrna was the largest port city in the country, and nothing moved in or out of the port without his signature.

The third of Topalian’s five children was, as they say, the apple of his eye. Little Dicranouhi preferred to “read” and play with the books in her father’s library rather than with dolls like the other little girls. This disturbed her mother, for it was accepted that while a father’s place was to train the sons to be men, a mother’s role was to prepare the daughters to be homemakers and mothers themselves.

Members of the Topalian family, circa 1914-1915, including Dicranouhi’s father Tokvor, her mother and her three sisters. Her mother and the youngest sister pictured on the left, along with her brother (not pictured) were the only Genocide survivors who made it to the US.

The most education for girls in turn-of-the-century Smyrna was six to eight years. This was enough to keep the accounts of the household and supervise the servants. By the time Dicranouhi completed six years of elementary school, she was not only above and beyond all of the boys, she was at the top of the class. Topalian looked down at his daughter on that day asking, “What now, Dicky?”

“I would like to go to the French school, the Gymnasium,” she replied.

Four years later, upon returning home after graduation from this institution with honors, she presented the diploma to her stern, but proud, father.

“What now, Dicky?” he asked.

“I would like to go to the American University in Smyrna,” she responded.

“Daughter, your mother is going to be angry with us,” said her father.

Four years later, Dicranouhi, now a young woman, stood once again before the great oaken desk in her father’s library. They had just returned from the graduation ceremony where Dicky had delivered the valedictorian address.

“What now, Dicky?” came the familiar query.

“I would like to help people,” she told her father. “I would be a doctor.”

The portly patriarch stroked his Vandyke and rose behind the desk gazing at his dark-eyed daughter replying, “Well then, I suppose I will have to deal with your mother, won’t I?”

Topalian expended a great deal of his influence and power, not to mention some of his wealth, and the time arrived when he was standing in his carriage waving his gold-headed walking stick at his third child, sailing to a foreign land. Tears stole from his eyes into his trimmed beard as he thought of the cold, damp climate of England. The board of directors of the medical school of Manchester University had granted admission, contingent on performance.

Dicranouhi Topalian, Manchester University Medical School, circa 1915-1917

One day, at the very end of the second year of medical school, the housemistress at the residence handed Dicranouhi a letter from home. It was written by a longtime assistant to her father. Some two hours later when a classmate shook her and asked the reason for her sobbing, the house was filled with the wail of mourning. 

The Turks had gone on the rampage of ethnic cleansing. The Christian Armenians were put to the sword – the first genocide of the 20th century. All of her family was gone, dead. Her father was killed fighting at the front gate so that his family could flee from the rear. They were caught, beaten, raped, stabbed and shot. In that moment, the wealthy young woman became a penniless orphan.

Some weeks later, when the heat of the soul-shattering news cooled to the ashes of reality, Dicranouhi took stock of her prospects. Pressed by the demands of her limited assets, months later the arrangements were made. The authorities of the medical school, based on the training she had completed, granted her a license as a registered nurse. Some personal effects, such as jewelry, books and a microscope, were sold, and a second-class steam ticket to New York was purchased.

Dicranouhi pictured with her fellow nursing students (second from the right), circa early 1920s

When the ship dropped anchor in New York’s harbor, the young woman was ferried to Fort Clinton (Castle Clinton) at the base of Manhattan. It was the Battery for the first- and second-class passengers; Ellis Island for the lower classes, steerage.

It was good luck, or Providence, when a kindly old immigration officer, after hearing her tragic tale told her, “Lass, you get yourself up to the northern end of this island. On 187th Street around the corner of St. Nicholas Avenue, you will find an Armenian church. Those that you find there will help you.”

Many hours later, she found herself standing before an Armenian church. After leaving her baggage in the vestibule, she staggered up the aisle and, exhausted, collapsed into a pew. The sight of the familiar Eastern Orthodox altar and the comforting scent of incense swept over her like a soft blanket. Shortly after the beginning of a prayer of gratitude, she was draped over the back of the pew in front, sound asleep.

A gentle hand on her shoulder roused her. Seated at her side was a priest. No. Upon closer inspection of his hooded robe, there sat the bishop! Dicranouhi clutched his hand, kissed the ring and apologized for disturbing the holy man.

He listened to her story, and having learned her name, with a twinkle in his eye said, “If you can stand, take my arm and come with me.” They left the church, walked to the comer and crossed the broad expanse of St. Nicholas Avenue. A few feet to the south, he led her into a small shop. The tinkle of the little bell at the top of the door brought a man from the back room. For a moment, the two were frozen in silence, and then they flew into each other’s arms. It was her brother Michael. The happy noise brought yet another miracle from the back room: her mother and baby sister. Michael had been able to reach the waterfront with them and bribe his way onto a ship about to leave for New York. In the midst of the reunion, the hooded cleric boomed, “I expect to see you all in church, often, to thank God. He has surely smiled upon you this day.”

Within days of her taking up residence near her newly-found family, she was working as a nurse at the Jewish Memorial Hospital only two subway stops to the north. Making a new life settled down to working long hours, family, the church and the social life that came with it.

Dicranouhi, circa mid-1920s

Several years later, while sitting on the grass in Van Cortlandt Park watching a group of young men from the church playing soccer, one of them caught her eye. He was not the fastest nor the biggest nor the best. He was, however, the most persistent. Every time he was knocked down, he sprang up and charged his opponent once again. Over the following months, she learned that his drive to reach a goal was not limited to the soccer field; this man never quit. With this trait he pursued her, until she caught him.

I am the product of their union. It is my very good fortune that when each of them fled the Genocide, they both chose America as their new home and to wed. I can picture, even today, my mother striding forth in the traditional uniform of the registered nurse: the white dress, hose and shoes, the white cap – hers with the two black stripes of a supervisor – and, of course, the navy blue cape with the red piping. A magnificent vision that would have made her father proud.

George and Dicranouhi Kutnerian on their honeymoon in Atlantic City, NJ, 1933

Raffi G. Kutnerian was born (1936) and raised in NYC where he attended the city's public schools and NYS Community College. Kutnerian joined the Army National Guard at age 17 ½ with the written permission of his parents. He was awarded a four-year scholarship to Columbia University School of Painting and Sculpture, from which he graduated in 1959. Kutnerian married his childhood sweetheart Louise Spodick at age 21; they were married for 62 years until her passing on September 17, 2020. After a career as a photo engraver, Kutnerian entered the court reporting business and retired after 25 years. He still resides in the home he shared with Louise in the Village of Rye Brook for the last 53 years and is learning to “play solo after playing duet for a lifetime.”


NAASR awarded $150,000 Cummings grant

BELMONT, Mass. – The National Association for Armenian Studies & Research (NAASR) is one of 150 local nonprofits that will share in $30 million through Cummings Foundation’s major annual grants program. The Belmont-based organization was selected from a total of 630 applicants during a competitive review process. It will receive $150,000 over three years.

“We are extremely grateful to the Cummings Foundation for their generous support that will allow NAASR to work with teachers and librarians to promote active engagement and newfound understanding to help prevent future genocides,” said NAASR chairperson Judith Saryan. “NAASR is a prime institution of research and education in Massachusetts with a vast collection of valuable and trustworthy primary sources on the Armenian genocide as well as the Holocaust and other genocides.”

The funding from the Cummings Foundation aims to provide librarians and teachers with trustworthy genocide education materials leading to a more accurate and enriched understanding of genocide for educational purposes in schools and in their communities. The funds will be used to create an online curated genocide resource center featuring leading documentary resources suitable for users at a high school level education and to promote the new online genocide resource center to librarians and schoolteachers within the communities of Essex, Middlesex and Suffolk counties.

The Cummings $30 million grant program primarily supports Massachusetts nonprofits that are based in and serve Middlesex, Essex and Suffolk counties.

Through this place-based initiative, Cummings Foundation aims to give back in the areas where it owns commercial property. Its buildings are all managed, at no cost to the Foundation, by its affiliate, Cummings Properties. This Woburn-based commercial real estate firm leases and manages 11 million square feet of debt-free space, the majority of which exclusively benefits the Foundation.

“The way the local nonprofit sector perseveres, steps up, and pivots to meet the shifting needs of the community is most impressive,” said Cummings Foundation executive director Joyce Vyriotes. “We are incredibly grateful for these tireless efforts to support people in the community and to increase equity and access to opportunities.”

The majority of the grant decisions were made by about 90 volunteers. They worked across a variety of committees to review and discuss the proposals and then, together, determine which requests would be funded. Among these community volunteers were business and nonprofit leaders, mayors, college presidents and experts in areas such as finance and DEI (diversity, equity and inclusion).

“It would not be possible for the Foundation to hire the diversity and depth of expertise and insights that our volunteers bring to the process,” said Vyriotes. “We so appreciate the substantial time and thought they dedicated toward ensuring that our democratized version of philanthropy results in equitable outcomes that will really move the needle on important issues in local communities.”

The Foundation and volunteers first identified 150 organizations to receive three-year grants of up to $225,000 each. The winners included first-time recipients as well as nonprofits that had previously received Cummings grants. Twenty-five of this latter group of repeat recipients were then selected by a volunteer panel to have their grants elevated to 10-year awards ranging from $300,000 to $1 million each.

This year’s grant recipients represent a wide variety of causes, including housing and food insecurity, workforce development, immigrant services, social justice, education, and mental health services. The nonprofits are spread across 46 different cities and towns.

Cummings Foundation has now awarded $480 million to Greater Boston nonprofits. The complete list of this year’s 150 grant winners, plus nearly 1,500 previous recipients, is available online.

Founded in 1955, NAASR is one of the world’s leading resources for advancing Armenian Studies, supporting scholars, and building a global community to preserve and enrich Armenian culture, history, and identity for future generations.