ANCA Local Grassroots Seminar inspires and educates rising Armenian American leaders

Participants converse with John Hairabedian, former mayor of Sierra Madre and candidate for the California State Senate.

GLENDALE, Calif. – A broad and diverse group of rising Armenian American high school and university students gathered for an Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Local Grassroots Seminar on May 13, 2023. The gathering was co-sponsored by the ARF Shant Student Association and drew a number of Armenian American students who are interested in working in the field of politics and learning more about how the ANCA works on the local, state and federal levels to advance the Armenian Cause across the United States. The ANCA Local Grassroots Seminar included the participation of a number of community leaders, political activists, local elected officials and individuals seeking public office.

Ardashes Kassakhian, Glendale City Councilmember, converses with fellow participants.

“The ANCA was pleased to convene this productive and forward-looking seminar to provide ladders of opportunity to young Armenian Americans exploring a career in politics,” remarked ANCA National Board member Zanku Armenian. “The seminar offered a welcome opportunity for emerging Armenian American leaders to learn – first hand – what life is like if you choose to pursue a career in American politics,” Armenian added.

ANCA chairman Raffi Hamparian shares the ANCA 360 and describes Armenian advocacy on the federal level.

The impressive lineup of speakers at the ANCA Local Grassroots Seminar featured a number of ANCA leaders, including ANCA National chair Raffi Hamparian, ANCA Hollywood chair Lara Yeretsian and ANCA Orange County chair Garo Madenlian. Leading the dialogue on a session entitled “What it Takes to Work in Politics and Run for Office” were Glendale City Councilmember Ardashes Kassakhian, former Sierra Madre mayor and candidate for California State Senate John Hairabedian and respected political consultant Natalie Bruton-Yenovkian. The speakers drew on their vast personal experiences to encourage those in attendance to consider a career in politics – whether as a public official, political staffer or lobbyist.

Lara Yeretsian, ANCA Hollywood Chair, and Natalie Bruton-Yenovkian, and Baydsar Thomasian, respected political consultants, speak with participants.

“This ANCA Local Grassroots Seminar is the first of many forums we are planning this year to educate, motivate, and activate Armenian Americans who are eager to enter the political arena,” remarked event organizers and ARF Shant Student Association members Kevork Madenlian and Areni Hamparian. “We believe that more than ever – especially with the critical situation in Armenia and Artsakh – Armenian Americans have a unique opportunity to effectively help our homeland through direct advocacy on the local, state and federal levels. This seminar and future gatherings will help provide the tools that will empower Armenian American students to advocate for the Armenian Cause,” they added.

Kevork Madenlian, ARF Shant Gomideh member, offers opening remarks to participants.

The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) is the largest and most influential Armenian-American grassroots organization. Working in coordination with a network of offices, chapters and supporters throughout the United States and affiliated organizations around the world, the ANCA actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


RFE/RL Armenian Report – 05/19/2023

                                        Friday, May 19, 2023


Russia Sounds Caution On Armenian-Azeri Peace Deal
May 19, 2023

Russia - Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov hosts talks between his Armenian 
and Azerbaijani counterparts, Moscow, May 19, 2023.


The foreign ministers of Armenia and Azerbaijan have narrowed their differences 
on a bilateral peace treaty, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on 
Friday after hosting fresh talks between them in Moscow.

But he suggested that the two sides need to restore Armenian-Azerbaijani 
transport links, start delimiting their long border and bolster the ceasefire 
regime in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict zone before they can finalize such a 
treaty.

Lavrov held separate talks with Foreign Ministers Ararat Mirzoyan and Jeyhun 
Bayramov of Azerbaijan before sitting down with them in a trilateral format.

“Work on the peace treaty is undoubtedly fundamental,” he told the press after 
the trilateral meeting. “But our partners confirmed today that without solving 
the issues of delimitation, unblocking transport and economic links and an 
overall improvement of the security situation in both Karabakh and on the 
Armenian-Azerbaijani border it’s very hard to make progress on concrete aspects 
of the peace treaty. We discussed all this together.”

Lavrov said in that regard that a Russian-Armenian-Azerbaijani task force 
dealing with practical modalities of the transport links will meet next week 
after a long pause.

“We hope that a positive result will be achieved as a result. The parties are 
already very, very close to a final agreement,” he said without elaborating.

Lavrov further announced that a separate Armenian-Azerbaijani group working on 
the border delimitation and demarcation with Russian assistance will also resume 
its activities soon.

“Regarding the peace treaty, I think that on a number of articles which we 
discussed today we managed to bring the two sides’ understandings closer to a 
common vision,” added the top Russian diplomat.

As Lavrov spoke Bayramov and Mirzoyan continued their negotiations in his 
absence. Mirzoyan’s press office said afterwards that the two ministers had a 
“constructive exchange of views on issues on which the parties have 
differences.” It did not disclose those issues.

U.S. - Secretary of State Antony Blinken hosts talks between the Armenian and 
Azerbaijani foreign minsters in Arlington, Virginia, May 4, 2023.

According to the U.S. State Department, Bayramov and Mirzoyan made “tangible 
progress” towards the Armenian-Azerbaijani peace deal during their four-day 
talks held outside Washington earlier this month.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev 
tried to build on that progress when they met in Brussels on May 14. Pashinian 
afterwards reaffirmed Armenia’s readiness to recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial 
integrity through the document currently discussed by the two sides.

The two leaders are due to meet again in Moscow on May 25 at Russian President 
Vladimir Putin’s invitation.

Another Armenian-Azerbaijani summit is slated for June 1. Aliyev and Pashinian 
will be joined by French President Emmanuel Macron, German Chancellor Olaf 
Scholz and European Union chief Charles Michel. Analysts believe that the United 
States and the EU are pressing the parties to sign the far-reaching deal.

Moscow has repeatedly accused the West of trying to use the Karabakh conflict to 
drive Russia out of the South Caucasus. It maintains that Armenian-Azerbaijani 
agreements brokered by Putin are the only viable blueprint for settling the 
conflict.




Yerevan Elections Slated For September 17
May 19, 2023
        • Anush Mkrtchian

Armenia - A view of the Victory Bridge in Yerevan, February 28, 2023.


The next municipal elections in Yerevan will take place on September 17, 
according to Armenia’s Central Election Commission (CEC).

Speaking to state television, the CEC chairman, Vahagn Hovakimian, said the 
election date, which has to be confirmed by the Armenian government, is mandated 
by an Armenian law on local self-governance.

Yerevan residents will to go the polls to elect a new municipal assembly that 
will in turn appoint the city’s mayor.

Yerevan’s last mayor, Hrachya Sargsian, stepped down on March 17 after only 15 
months in office. The Armenian capital has since been effectively run by Tigran 
Avinian, a deputy mayor nominated by the ruling Civil Contract party for the 
vacant post.

Sargsian’s resignation is believed to have been designed to boost the party’s 
and Avinian’s chances in the upcoming polls.

Avinian has kept a high profile for the last two months, chairing meetings with 
municipal officials, issuing instructions to them and talking to ordinary 
citizens. Critics accuse him of abusing his position to prematurely conduct his 
election campaign.

The 34-year-old vice-mayor allied to Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian dismissed 
these claims as he chaired a recent session of the current city council.

Unlike several fringe parties, none of Armenia’s leading opposition groups has 
nominated a mayoral candidate so far. Artsvik Minasian, a senior member of the 
main opposition Hayastan alliance, said on Friday that it clarify its intentions 
later this month.

The last Yerevan elections were held in September 2018. Pashinian’s bloc won the 
overwhelming majority of seats in the city council and installed TV comedian 
Hayk Marutian as mayor. The council ousted Marutian in December 2021 after he 
fell out with Pashinian.




French Firm To Halt Armenian Brandy Exports To Russia
May 19, 2023
        • Robert Zargarian

Armenia - Grapes delivered to a Yerevan Brandy Company facility in Ararat 
province, 7Sep2015.


Armenia’s leading brandy producer heavily dependent on the Russian market may 
face an uncertain future after its French parent company’s decision to stop 
exports of all its international brands to Russia.

The Pernod Ricard giant announced the decision, clearly linked to Western 
sanctions against Moscow, late last week.

“We will also cease the distribution of our portfolio in Russia, a process that 
we anticipate will take some months to complete,” it said in a statement.

Pernod Ricard’s worldwide subsidiaries include the Yerevan Brandy Company (YBC), 
Armenia’s largest brandy maker and wholesale buyer of grapes. The YBC could not 
be reached for comment on Friday.

The Russian news agency TASS quoted an unnamed YBC source as saying that the 
company is continuing brandy shipments to Russia for now. The source did not 
elaborate.

“I have not yet received official information, but it seems official: the 
Yerevan Brandy Company will stop its exports to Russia,” Armenian Economy 
Minister Vahan Kerobian told lawmakers on Thursday.

Most of the brandy produced by YBC and other Armenian firms is exported to 
Russia. These exports reportedly totaled $180 million in 2021.

Armenia - Export-bound brandy stored at the Yerevan Brandy Company.

According to Avag Harutiunian, the head of the Armenian Union of Winemakers, YBC 
has accounted for roughly one-third of grapes grown in the South Caucasus 
country and purchased by local producers of wines and spirits.

“There will now be very serious tensions in our market,” Harutiunian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“We have to wait and see what the situation will be,” Kerobian said in this 
regard. He acknowledged that Pernod Ricard’s decision will have an adverse 
impact on Armenian grape farmers.

The minister promised that the Armenian government will mitigate the anticipate 
fallout. But he did not specify concrete steps that could be taken by the 
government.

Other Armenian brandy makers already cut back on grape purchases last year, 
sparking protests by their suppliers. Some of those grape farmers said last fall 
that they will have to cut down their vineyards.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Replacing the invisibility of genocide remembrance with indivisibility


Greece – May 19 2023
OPINION

Greece should advocate a new approach to genocide remembrance. Currently genocides are memorialized on a parochial basis. Different days throughout the year commemorate different genocide victims: January 27 for the Jewish holocaust, April 7 for the Tutsi genocide, April 24 for the Armenian genocide, May 19 for the Pontic Greek genocide, May 20 for the Cambodian genocide, August 2 for the Roma genocide, August 7 for the Assyrian genocide, September 14 for the Asia Minor Greek genocide, etc. These days of remembrance pass by unrecognized for the most part by anyone other than the victims’ descendants. Thus, in effect, the parochial approach promotes the “invisibility” of genocide and does little to make genocide less likely. 

Israel Charny, the renowned genocide scholar, well explained the limitations of a proprietary and parochial approach to genocide. Using poignant examples from multiple groups, he demonstrated the tendency of genocide victim groups to:

1) assert moral superiority and refuse to believe their kind could be capable of atrocities. 

2) “obscure, ignore, conceal, or at least minimize awareness of other victims who died alongside ‘their’ ‘preferred’ victim group in a given genocide.” 

3) dispute and deny well-documented cases of genocide other than their own as if doing so makes their group’s suffering less significant.

Charny argues we need to recognize “all victims of each genocidal event,” a position that seems self-evident. Yet, as he relates, there is intense resistance to such an inclusive approach. Individual scholars and advocacy groups fervently want to focus just on the suffering of their own kind. This attitude has greatly complicated widespread recognition of well-documented genocides, so much so that the world does not currently recognize genocide based on best evidence. Instead, it does so based on narrow political calculations of national advantage. 

The result is that even countries with populations that have suffered genocide often ignore the same horrors elsewhere. Armenia did not recognize the Greek and Assyrian genocides until 2015, almost a hundred years after they took place. Greece still recognizes only the Pontic Greek genocide even though authoritative scholarship demonstrates it is “incontrovertible” that Turkish leaders planned, orchestrated, and executed the genocide of all Asia Minor Christians. And, despite lobbying from Charny and others, Israel does not recognize these other genocides. Wikipedia charts “genocide recognition politics” country by country, but it all boils down to elevating marginal political interests above a common concern for genocide recognition, restitution, and prevention. 

Individual genocides vary by numbers of victims and the means of their demise, but all genocides are attempts to destroy a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group, in whole or in part. They all entail large-scale mass murder of innocents. They all unfold in a common pattern that makes them predictable. Scholars label the stages differently, but the overall process is the same. Thea Halo offers a simple formulation that is easy to remember. She emphasizes three “Ds” of genocide: dehumanization, demonization, and destruction. She notes a likely fourth “D” is denial, as most perpetrators try to avoid accountability for their deeds. 

Halo is the author of a riveting memoir (“Not Even My Name”) of her mother, Sano, and her escape from genocide. Sano’s experience speaks eloquently to the commonalities of genocides. First, she lost all the members of her Pontic Greek family. An Armenian family took her in, and they fled ongoing massacres too. Then, at age 15, she was wedded to an Assyrian Christian who also fled from genocide, and that enabled her escape to safety in the United States. Ottoman Greeks, Armenians, and Assyrians were distinctly different ethnic groups, but they all shared the common experience of being targeted for extinction because they were Christians.

Even the labels used to identify genocides help illustrate their fundamental similarities. The Nazi genocide of Jews is called “the holocaust,” which is derived from the Greek word for “conflagration.” However, as two Israeli scholars note, the annihilation of Asia Minor Christians was also called a “holocaust.” Moreover, the culminating event in the Asia Minor genocides, the destruction of Smyrna and its accompanying conflagration, was widely called “the Smyrna holocaust.” “Catastrophe” is also a shared label. Greeks refer to their Asia Minor genocides as, “the catastrophe,” and many Jews use “Shoah,” the Hebrew word for catastrophe, to describe their holocaust. “Holocaust,” “conflagration,” and “catastrophe,” whether expressed in Greek or Hebrew, all communicate the same horrific, widespread desolation, and all peoples who have suffered genocide share a common interest in ensuring it never happens again.

That day will never come unless the world resolves to punish genocide. In 1918, Theodore Roosevelt decried the Armenian genocide as “the greatest crime of the war” and argued “the failure to deal radically with the Turkish horror means that all talk of guaranteeing the future peace of the world is mischievous nonsense” and just so much “insincere claptrap.” Roosevelt was proven right. The great powers that won World War I failed to punish Turkey for committing genocide, even though it was one of their explicit wartime objectives. They were too focused on Germany and conflicted and exhausted by war to impose peace terms. The Germans watched with amazement as the Turks transformed their defeat into an unprecedented victory by continuing the war, defeating the Allied powers, forcing them to renegotiate their peace treaty, and wiping out their “internal enemies” to produce a homogenous Turkish national entity. The Nazis admired the Turks for this, and later emulated their model of genocide against Jews and other “undesirables.”

The world needs a broader consensus on the critical importance of making genocide counter-productive, and thus less likely. One hundred years ago, George Horton, an American diplomat, sacrificed his career to combat the cover up of the Asia Minor genocide of Christians. Eighty years ago, Jan Karski, a member of the Polish resistance, risked his life to reveal the Nazi genocide of Jews. Recently, a Turkish basketball player in the NBA, Enes Kanter Freedom, sacrificed his career to protest China’s ongoing genocide of Uyghur Muslims. Sadly, such heroic protests are not widespread. Activists of all stripes are more willing to protest much lesser injustices or even poor policies while ignoring the much greater evil of genocide. They prove Soviet leader Joseph Stalin right when he cynically observed: “The death of one man is a tragedy. The death of a million is a statistic.”

It is time to emphasize a different approach, one that will replace the “invisibility” of genocide with the “indivisibility” of genocide; that is, a common recognition that all genocides must be punished wherever they occur. It would help if a country showed the way forward. Why not Greece? Ancient Greeks pioneered Western civilization and the concept of individual liberties. During the Asia Minor genocides, modern Greeks gave the world a wonderful example of forbearance and generosity, as Horton noted:

“The conduct of the Greeks toward the thousands of Turks residing in Greece, while the ferocious massacres [in Asia Minor] were going on, and while Smyrna was being burned and refugees, wounded, outraged and ruined, were pouring into every port of Hellas, was one of the most inspiring and beautiful chapters in all that country’s history. There were no reprisals. The Turks living in Greece were in no wise molested, nor did any storm of hatred or revenge burst upon their heads. This is a great and beautiful victory that, in its own way, rises to the level of Marathon and Salamis…witness also its treatment of the Turkish prisoners of war, and its efforts for the thousands of refugees that have been thrown upon its soil.”

Dr Esther Lovejoy, who was also present at Smyrna, agreed. She noted Greece accepted all Asia Minor refugees – Greek and non-Greek – when other European nations would not accept any. “The Golden Age of Greece in art and literature was over two thousand years ago,” she argued, “but the Golden Age of Greece measured by the Golden Rule” was evident in the universal Greek response to “the catastrophe.” Just as Greece once accepted all the surviving Christians from Asia Minor, it should now formally recognize them all as victims of genocide. 

Greek leaders have been encouraged to do this before, but Greek diplomats worry it would irritate Turkey. That is a concern, but it is doubtful that refusing to acknowledge the Asia Minor genocides will make Greece safer. Turkey’s authoritarian president, Recep Erdogan, promotes neo-Ottoman rhetoric and makes the risible claim that his country was disadvantaged by the Lausanne treaties. If he thinks he can get away with attacking Greece, he will do so whether Greece recognizes the Asia Minor genocides or not. America, Britain, France, Germany, and Italy all played roles in helping cover up Turkish atrocities. The sooner Greek allies in Europe and the United States understand the true history of genocide in Asia Minor, the more likely they will be to punish past genocides and resist new acts of aggression, and the safer Greece and all peace-loving people will be. In that regard, taking a stand on behalf of genocide recognition is the prudent as well as the right thing to do.


Ismini Lamb is the director of Modern Greek Studies Program at Georgetown University. Her article on Europe’s role in covering up and then rewarding the Asia Minor genocides, “Europe’s Killing Fields,” was published by The New European on April 4, 2023, and her co-authored biography of George Horton, “The Gentle American,” was published in 2022.

Why is France trying to play into Russia’s hands?

 eureporter 

By

 James Wilson

France is starting to supply weapons to Armenia. Initially, it involves the delivery of 50 armoured vehicles, but in the future, deliveries of French Mistral surface-to-air missile systems are also possible – writes James Wilson.

This information has been published by several Israeli and European media outlets and later was confirmed by the statement of one Rachya Arzumanyan, a former high-ranking official of the separatist administration in the Armenian enclave of Karabakh, situated on the occupied Azerbaijani territory. Arzumanyan, speaking to the Armenian channel 1inTV, stated that “significant changes would occur in the military sphere in Armenia in the next two months”. He also added, "I cannot openly talk about it yet… We need to forget about cooperation with Russia in the military sphere… We don't have time to talk and wait."

Earlier, several Ukrainian outlets and the state television channel of Moldova reported on the upcoming supplying of French weapons to Armenia, emphasising that "Western military equipment supplied to Yerevan could be used by Russians to counter the Ukrainian Armed Forces' counteroffensive. This is apparent, considering the close military cooperation between Yerevan and Moscow."

Commenting on the reports of Moldova's state TV regarding the French arms supplies to Armenia, Ukrainian military expert Roman Svitan stated "If France carries out such deliveries, it is playing into the hands of Russia."

Kyiv has feared all along that Western military hardware, delivered to Armenia, may be used by the Russians. This is why Ukrainian intelligence services have actively surveilled the developments within the Armenian-Azerbaijani conflict zone since mid-2022. Their concerns primarily stem from the understanding that such equipment may be reverse-engineered to enhance Russian capabilities in countering the same weaponry supplied by the West to support Ukraine's counteroffensive against Russia's invasion.

The probability of this outcome is very high, considering the close military collaboration between Yerevan and Moscow. After all, Armenia even allowed two Russian military bases to be established within Armenian territory.

Obviously, Russians are eagerly following any developments in direct military cooperation between France and Armenia. The partnership itself was announced during a visit by Armenian Defense Minister Suren Papikyan to Paris in September 2022. Various sources, including  the U.S. analytical outlet on international security, Global Security Review, wrote about the supply of arms: “The pro-Armenian rhetoric of [French] President [Emmanuel] Macron could lead to an agreement regarding air defence.”  This May, Russian outlet REX reported that the military aid that France plans to supply Armenia “at the initial stage includes lethal weapons.”

In the wake of the discussions about French military aid to Armenia leading Western media outlets like The New York Times published various articles about the role that Armenia plays in aiding and abetting Russia to circumvent sanctions, including secret exports of chips and microcircuits for its military, as well as additionally serving as a trans-shipment hub for Iranian weapons sent to Moscow.

Those Iranian weapons, especially drones, are already very much in use by Russia in Ukraine, but also the same drones were used during clashes in April and May between the armed forces of Azerbaijan and Armenia. 

There is also a significant likelihood that French weaponry could potentially find its way into the possession of Iranian forces. Given Iran's history of employing reverse engineering techniques, this strategy presents an opportunity for Iranian arms manufacturers to upgrade and enhance their own arsenal. Such advancements could then be channelled into the arms exported to various terrorist organisations, actively seeking to disrupt stability in the Middle East.

The timing of France's weapon deliveries to Yerevan, coinciding with the upcoming presidential elections in Turkey is rather important. Over the past three years, Erdogan has consistently portrayed himself as a counterbalance to Macron, particularly concerning developments in the Eastern Mediterranean and the South Caucasus. This rivalry between the two leaders was notably amplified during the aftermath of Azerbaijan's victory, with the backing of Turkey and Israel, in the Second Karabakh War in 2020.

Besides that, weapon deliveries from France to Armenia put France on a collision course with Israel, for whom Azerbaijan is a close strategic partner. Israel is also one of the of the main suppliers of weapons to Baku's defence forces.

Prominent Israeli expert Ron Ben Ishay has issued a warning about the heightened threat posed by the modernization and improvement of Iranian munitions. He asserts that the utilisation of Russian weaponry in Ukraine will inevitably contribute to enhancing Iranian capabilities, thereby intensifying the danger for all powers currently opposing Iran's aggressive military activities. This development, notably, includes Israel.

Should Erdogan face electoral defeat in Turkey, Israel could potentially emerge as the sole strategic ally for Baku, which consistently faces threats from Tehran. This shift in the political landscape could have significant implications, reshaping the dynamics of regional alliances in the ongoing geopolitical landscape.

Conversion Story of a Nation: How Suffering Led Armenia to Christ

Article by 

Edward L. Smither

Professor, Columbia International University

In 2001, Armenia celebrated its 1700th anniversary as the first Christian nation in the world. If you were to ask members of the Armenian Apostolic Church today about their church’s origins, they likely would answer that the apostles Thaddeus and Bartholomew first brought the gospel to Armenia in the middle of the first century. They may also mention a major event from AD 301. After hearing the gospel from the missionary Gregory the Illuminator (ca. 240–332), King Trdat (250–330) believed in Christ and was baptized. Then, new believer as he was, the king declared his kingdom to be a Christian nation.

Marked by protracted suffering, remarkable displays of God’s power, and witness in the highest political spheres, Gregory’s late third-century mission to Armenia has much to teach us about mission across the globe today.

According to the Armenian historian Agathangelos, Gregory the Illuminator first came from Asia Minor in the late third century to serve the Armenian King Trdat. When Gregory refused to make sacrifices to an Armenian goddess, Trdat had him tortured and then thrown in prison for thirteen years. Agathangelos recorded that, during those years, Trdat, his household, and all his servants became afflicted by demons and fell deathly ill. Desperate and running out of options, the king summoned the imprisoned Gregory to pray for them. Gregory did, and God answered his prayers. The king and his household were healed and delivered from demonic oppression. Trdat rewarded Gregory by giving him the freedom to preach the gospel throughout Armenia. Then, along with the royal household and the Armenian nobility, Trdat embraced Christianity for himself and was baptized.

Taking his newly found faith a step further, the king, however naively, declared Christianity the national religion of Armenia in 301, ordering the baptism of some four million Armenians. To place these events in a global context, Trdat’s conversion took place a decade before the Roman emperor Constantine’s (ca. 272–337) conversion and decision to give peace to the church in his empire. Trdat was also nearly a century ahead of Emperor Theodosius I (347–395), who made Christianity the official religion of the Roman Empire around 390. Though the Kingdom of Armenia was relatively small, King Trdat’s actions set in motion a pattern of high-level and national conversions that would continue through the Middle Ages.

So what lessons might we take away from Gregory’s historic mission?

Gregory suffered greatly in his mission to Armenia. Before God used his witness to win a nation, Gregory languished in prison for thirteen long years. Not unlike Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, Gregory encountered hardship because he refused to pay homage to a false god. Suffering for his integrity as a Christian played a central role in his patient witness to the king.

Gregory’s suffering witness wasn’t anything new. God’s people have always been a suffering people. Joseph, Daniel, and especially our Lord Jesus suffered in the work of making God’s name known among the nations. Luke tells us that Herod, seeking to persecute the church, killed “James the brother of John with the sword” (Acts 12:2). After describing some of his own hardships on account of the gospel to Timothy, Paul concluded, “Indeed, all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted” (2 Timothy 3:12).

“Gregory the Illuminator’s story reminds us that suffering in mission is part of normal Christian living.”

Many global Christians today — pastors, evangelists, and everyday Christians in places like India, Pakistan, China, and Iran — suffer daily for following Jesus. While we in the West pray for suffering believers and advocate for religious freedom around the world, we shouldn’t be surprised when we also suffer for the gospel. God may be pleased to allow us to go to jail or lay down our lives while serving him. We might lose our jobs and places of ministry or get canceled because of our commitment to the gospel. Gregory the Illuminator’s story reminds us that suffering in mission is part of normal Christian living.

When Gregory prayed and laid hands on King Trdat and his household, they were delivered from demons and healed from sickness. In missiology, we call this a “power encounter.”

While accounts of healing and deliverance might challenge our rational and scientific worldview (or perhaps they raise doubts because of charlatan faith healers we’ve known or heard about), power encounters are normal in Scripture and in mission history. God delivered Israel from captivity through the mighty act of parting the Red Sea. Daniel interpreted the dreams of Babylonian kings. Jesus healed the sick, gave sight to the blind, delivered people from demons, and even raised the dead. Jesus himself was raised from the dead through God’s power. The apostles’ ministries were accompanied by powerful signs. The ascended Lord Jesus met Paul on the road to Damascus in an act of power that led to him to embrace Christ. Throughout Scripture, the gospel often comes with manifest and miraculous power.

In missions today, we of course must emphasize truth encounters. We proclaim Christ crucified, buried, risen, and ascended, and we invite nonbelievers to turn from their sins and put their trust in him. At the same time, power is probably the biggest spiritual concern of peoples in the Global South, so missionaries from the West would do well to make room for power encounters in their mission theology and practice. At a mission consultation in 1978, some majority-world Christian leaders stated,

[We] have spoken both of the reality of evil powers and of the necessity to demonstrate the supremacy of Jesus over them. For conversion involves a power encounter. People give their allegiance to Christ when they see that his power is superior to magic and voodoo, the curses and blessings of witch doctors, and the malevolence of evil spirits, and that his salvation is a real liberation from the power of evil and death. (Willowbank Report, 7D)

“Following Gregory, do we pray for healing and deliverance in our ministries?”

Following Gregory, do we pray for healing and deliverance in our ministries? Are we praying that God would deliver us from the evil one and make his kingdom come in our midst?

Gregory’s mission (in suffering and power) took him to the royal palace. He ministered to the king and his family and to the Armenian nobility — the highest echelon of society.

Though Gregory’s engagement with political leaders may seem remarkable to some twenty-first-century eyes, he was merely imitating Daniel, who, because of his job as a government administrator in Babylon and Persia, witnessed to kings and high-ranking officials. Gregory’s mission also resembles the later work of missionary monks, including Augustine of Canterbury, who proclaimed the gospel to the English King Ethelbert in 596, and Columba, who enjoyed similar favor with the Pictish King Bridius in 635.

Most global missionaries today, especially those serving in restricted countries in the Muslim world, tend to steer clear of government authorities and political leaders. They want to stay under the radar. In some contexts, that may be a wise decision. However, some Christians today are following the example of Gregory by building relationships in the realm of government and politics.

Take, for example, a former elected US official who has forged relationships with leaders around the world. While part of his work is advocating for religious freedom for persecuted Christians, he also leads Bible studies in very unexpected spaces. Or consider one African pastor who met regularly with the president of his nation for Bible study and prayer. The president enlisted the pastor as a close advisor to help him wrestle through how to apply biblical principles in matters of state. Though neither of these men is a missionary in the formal sense, both realized that people holding the highest political office still need the gospel of Jesus. The political sphere became their mission field.

The mission of Gregory the Illuminator to Armenia in the third and fourth centuries may challenge how we think about and approach missions today. Will we, the global church, accept and embrace suffering as a normal part of our witness today? Will we proclaim the good news of Christ with our words while expecting God to work in power as we pray and minister? Will we make disciples of all nations and in all spheres — among the poor, the rich, and even those who govern and rule nations?

Edward L. Smither (PhD, University of Wales-Trinity St. David; PhD, University of Pretoria) serves as Professor of Intercultural Studies and History of Global Christianity and Dean of the College of Intercultural Studies at Columbia International University. His books include Christian Mission: A Concise Global History and Mission in the Early Church: Themes and Reflections.

Azerbaijan, Armenia close to reach agreement, Lavrov says

MEHR News Agency 
Iran –

TEHRAN, May 20 (MNA) – Armenia and Azerbaijan are close to agreeing on an end to a blockade of transport links but more work is needed to seal a peace deal between the warring neighbors, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.

Lavrov spoke after he brokered a meeting between the foreign ministers of both nations. Russia helped secure a truce to halt a six-week conflict in 2020, but the agreement has not led to lasting peace, and armed clashes are common along the border, according to Reuters.

Armenia and Azerbaijan were due to discuss the unblocking of transport links at a meeting next week, where Russia will also be present.

"We hope the outcome will be positive. The parties are already close to a final agreement," Lavrov said in a statement but did not give details.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan said on Thursday he had agreed to peace talks in Moscow on May 25 with Azeri President Ilham Aliyev and Russian President Vladimir Putin mediating, the Interfax news agency reported.

But during Friday's talks, the two nations confirmed that without progress on settling disputes over borders and transport links, as well as improving the security situation in and around Karabakh, "it is difficult to move forward on specific aspects of the peace treaty", Lavrov said.

MNA/PR

https://en.mehrnews.com/news/200928/Azerbaijan-Armenia-close-to-reach-agreement-Lavrov-says

Zionists infiltrate Azerbaijan

Iran –

The conflict between Armenia and Azerbaijan has long been used as an opportunity for imperialistic intervention by the Zionist entity.

Iran has historically supported Armenia in the conflict over the breakaway republic Artsakh (also known as Nagorno Karabakh). Armenia is also a member, with Russia of the Collective Security Treaty Organization.

Azerbaijan is a former member. Following the second Karabakh war in 2020 three districts of the break away Artsakh republic, which is predominantly ethnically Armenian were captured by Azerbaijan.

Each borders the Islamic Republic of Iran and the Zionist entity has wasted no time in infiltrating these areas via agricultural companies active in the so called “smart villages” project. The potential for spying and surveillance this opens up is significant.

Zionist Agriculture Minister Oded Forer visited the first smart village May 2022, reportedly the highest official “to come that close to the Iranian border” since the Revolution.

Spying concerns are heightened by the cooperation between Zionist university Technion, and the Azerbaijani Ministry of Digital Development and Transport, to establish the Azerbaijani Cyber Security Center in Baku in March this year.

This is clearly intended to serve as a subversive lever to further Zionist foreign policy priorities. Trainees will be indoctrinated in Zionist subversion techniques and awarded a certificate by the Technion. Despite recruiting some 50,000 to 70,000 Azeri Jews to become colonists in Palestine, Azerbaijan continues to welcome significant arms supplies from the Zionist entity including drones and artificial intelligence.

In return Azerbaijan also supplies some 40% of Israel’s oil imports. Recent Zionist overtures have included the visit of Israeli Defense Minister Benny Gantz to Baku in October 2022, the opening of the Azerbaijani embassy in Tel Aviv in April this year and the visit of Israeli Foreign Minister Eli Cohen to Baku in the same month.

During a joint press conference with his Azerbaijani counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov at the opening ceremony for the Azerbaijani embassy in Israel, Cohen announced that he “agreed with Bayramov in forming a united front against Iran”.

An Iranian Foreign ministry spokesman warned in response that Iran "cannot remain indifferent" to the "conspiracy" of Israel against it "from the territory of the Republic of Azerbaijan".

Relations between Tehran and Baku have rapidly deteriorated since an attack on the Azerbaijani Embassy in the Iranian capital, Tehran in January.Embassy security staff head was killed and two others injured.

Azerbaijan evacuated the embassy and all the diplomatic staff in a special plane.

Recent tensions between Azerbaijan and Iran as a result of Zionist imperial meddling suggest the Zionist entity is preparing for a potential proxy war.

Armenia Claims Azerbaijan’s Attack On Its Territory With Mortar Fire

ALASKA COMMONS

Armenia has accused Azerbaijan of launching mortar attacks on its territory while peace talks are taking place in Moscow. The aim of the meeting between the Armenian Prime Minister, Nikol Pashinyan, and the Azerbaijani President, Ilham Aliyev, is to normalize relations between the two countries. The talks are being organized in the context of recent deadly clashes that have occurred along the border demarcation which has remained unresolved since the two countries gained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991.

This meeting follows two major conflicts between the two South Caucasus nations, fought in the early 1990s and in 2016, over the Nagorno-Karabakh region. Nagorno-Karabakh is an internationally recognized part of Azerbaijan but has been controlled by ethnic Armenian separatists since the end of the 1988-1994 conflict. The violent separatist movement has affected both countries, claiming thousands of lives and displacing more than 1 million people.

The Russian Foreign Minister, Sergey Lavrov, has been mediating the preparatory talks between the Armenian and Azerbaijani counterparts. Both Armenia and Azerbaijan are former Soviet republics and still have close relations with Moscow. Russia is also a key mediator in the Nagorno-Karabakh peace process and has regularly taken part in talks alongside the United States and France.

The latest escalation of tensions between Armenia and Azerbaijan highlights the need for a lasting solution to the ongoing conflict. Both countries need to find a way to live in peace with each other and establish mutual respect to ensure a peaceful future for future generations. Therefore, it is an encouraging sign that they are willing to participate in peace talks and work towards a peaceful resolution. It remains to be seen if the Moscow talks will lead to any substantial change in the status quo but both parties must persevere with peaceful dialogue for the sake of their people.

https://www.alaskacommons.com/armenia-claims-azerbaijans-attack-on-its-territory-with-mortar-fire/

Armenia: Activists to protest for prisoner release in Yerevan, through mid-May

Activists are likely to continue protests in central Yerevan through mid-May to call for the release of Gayane Hakobyan. Hakobyan is suspected of attempting to kidnap the son of the prime minister of Armenia. Several hundred protesters blocked Arshakunyats Avenue, and then gathered in front of the Shengavit District Court of General Jurisdiction, May 19-20.

Heightened security and localized transport disruptions are likely near protest sites. While the gatherings will probably pass peacefully, minor skirmishes between police and participants remain possible.

Avoid the protests as a safety precaution. Allow additional time to reach destinations in central Yerevan. Heed instructions of authorities.

Turkish Press: Russian FM hosts Azerbaijani, Armenian counterparts for talks

DAILY SABAH
Turkey –

Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov hosted Azerbaijani Counterpart Jeyhun Bayramov and Armenian Counterpart Ararat Mirzoyan in Moscow on Friday to discuss a roadmap to normalize ties between the two neighboring countries.

Opening the meeting, Lavrov said he expects his interlocutors to inform him about steps that Russia should take to contribute to the implementation of the trilateral agreements, which ended the Second Karabakh War.

"We met quite a long time ago, and a lot of new topics have appeared. I hope that today's meeting will take place in a constructive atmosphere and that your direct dialogue will help achieve additional results," he said.

Lavrov suggested focusing in the trilateral format on the possibilities that Russia has that can be used to define steps for normalization between Armenia and Azerbaijan.

"We are entirely interested to have stability and peace in this region (South Caucasus), where Russia's interests are directly involved, we will pursue implementation of the solutions that will lead to the stabilization," he said.

Lavrov called on the two diplomats to address humanitarian issues, unblock transport and economic ties, and agree on a text of a future peace treaty.

Ahead of the meeting the minister also held separate bilateral meetings with Armenian and Azerbaijani top diplomats.

With Azerbaijani Foreign Minister Bayramov, Lavrov suggested discussing issues related to arranging a presidential meeting.

For his part, Bayramov thanked Russia for preserving the memory of Azerbaijani leader Heydar Aliyev and organizing events to commemorate his 100th anniversary.

He also invited Lavrov to discuss the bilateral agenda, which is "always very intense" due to the close cooperation between Azerbaijan and Russia.

At the talks with Armenian Foreign Minister Mirzoyan, Lavrov urged to find solutions for three "key" issues – a peace treaty, unblocking communications and border delimitation.

For his part, Mirzoyan said Yerevan is committed to the trilateral agreements of the leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan and Russia.

However, he accused Baku of violating the accord, naming as such the establishment of a border checkpoint on the Lachin road.

Yerevan has grown increasingly frustrated over what it calls Moscow's failure to protect Armenia in the face of a military threat from Azerbaijan.

With Russia bogged down in Ukraine and unwilling to strain ties with Azerbaijan's key ally Türkiye, the United States and European Union have sought to steer the talks.

On Sunday, Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian and Azerbaijani President Ilham Aliyev met in Brussels for a new round of talks hosted by European Council President Charles Michel.