Unearthing History: Armenia’s 6,000-Year-Old Tomb Reveals 30,000 Relics

Feb 21 2024
Momen Zellmi
Imagine, if you will, the sun rising over the rugged landscapes of Yerevan, Armenia, casting its first light on a group of archaeologists as they stand at the brink of a historic discovery. It's a scene that captures not just the beauty of exploration but the thrill of unearthing secrets long buried. This isn't a tale woven from the threads of imagination, but a real-life narrative unfolding at the Yeghegis 1 archaeological site, where over 30,000 relics have been discovered in a tomb dating back 6,000 years.

In the heart of Armenia, a country cradled by the mountains and steeped in history, the discovery at Yeghegis 1 has illuminated a pivotal chapter in human civilization. The artifacts, which range from the remains of both domesticated and wild animals to intricately crafted tools, serve as a testament to the transitional period when societies began the monumental shift from hunting and gathering to more settled agricultural practices. This discovery is not just a window into the past but a mirror reflecting the intricate journey of human progress.

What makes the site truly remarkable is its ability to draw international attention, highlighting Armenia's crucial role in the historical migration of people and animals. The presence of both domesticated and wild animal remains sheds light on the coexistence of hunting and emerging farming practices, providing invaluable insights into the lives of our ancestors. The significance of Yeghegis 1 has resonated across continents, attracting experts and expedition teams eager to delve into its depths.

Armenia's rich tapestry of history has long been a subject of study, but the findings at Yeghegis 1 have catapulted the country onto the global archaeological map. The site's allure lies not just in the quantity of the relics but in the stories they tell, of a time when humanity stood on the threshold of a new world. This discovery underscores the importance of international collaboration in unearthing the mysteries of our past, with teams from around the world joining forces with local experts.

The ongoing interest in Yeghegis 1 has set the stage for continued excavations, scheduled to resume in July 2024. As the world waits with bated breath, the promise of more discoveries looms on the horizon, each potentially rewriting chapters of human history. The site has become a beacon for archaeologists and historians, a place where every unearthed artifact adds another piece to the puzzle of our collective past.

As the excavations at Yeghegis 1 continue to unfold, the site stands as a testament to the enduring quest for knowledge and understanding. The relics, each telling its own story of survival, innovation, and adaptation, offer a glimpse into a world vastly different from our own. They remind us of the complex journey of human civilization, from nomadic tribes to settled societies, from hunting and gathering to the dawn of agriculture.

The significance of these findings extends beyond the realm of academia, reaching into the hearts and minds of anyone who marvels at the vast tapestry of human history. As we look forward to the next chapter in the Yeghegis 1 story, we are reminded of the power of discovery to connect us with our ancestors, offering insights not only into their lives but into the very essence of what it means to be human.

https://bnnbreaking.com/history/unearthing-history-armenias-6000-year-old-tomb-reveals-30000-relics

Watch live: France inducts Resistance hero Manouchian into Panthéon

FRANCE 24
Feb 21 2024

French President Emmanuel Macron leads a ceremony Wednesday honouring Missak Manouchian, a stateless poet of Armenian origin who died fighting the Nazi occupation during World War II. Manouchian becomes the first foreign Resistance fighter to enter France's Panthéon mausoleum for national heroes. 

The belated honour to Missak Manouchian has been seen as long overdue recognition of the bravery of foreign communists – many Jewish – who fought the Nazis alongside French Resistants.

"Jewish, Hungarian, Polish, Armenians, communists, they gave their lives for our country," President Emmanuel Macron said this weekend.

"It's a way of ensuring all forms of internal Resistance enter (the Panthéon), including some too long forgotten," he told communist newspaper L'Humanite.

The bodies of Manouchian and his wife Mélinée, also a member of the Resistance, will be transferred from the Parisian cemetery where they were buried together to the Panthéon.

The names of 23 of his communist comrades-in-arms – including Polish, Hungarian, Italian, Spanish and Romanian fighters – will be added to a commemorative plaque inside the monument.

Under Macron, since 2017 three people have been awarded a place inside the Panthéon: writer Maurice Genevoix, women's rights icon Simone Veil, and US-born entertainer and French Resistance member Josephine Baker.

Baker – the first black woman to receive the honour – had been awarded French nationality before the war.

Last year the president said Manouchian would receive the honour too, paying tribute to his "bravery" and "quiet heroism".

At the time, parliament was debating a controversial immigration bill, which Macron eventually signed into law earlier this year.

He has also called for former French justice minister Robert Badinter, who in 1981 brought an end to capital punishment in France, to be "pantheonised" after he died earlier this month.

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)


Armenian Resistance fighter Manouchian joins France’s Pantheon heroes

The Citizen
Feb 21 2024
A stateless Armenian poet who died fighting the Nazi occupation of France during World War II becomes on Wednesday the first non-French Resistance fighter to enter the Pantheon mausoleum for national heroes. The honour to Missak Manouchian has been seen as long-overdue recognition of the bravery of foreign communists — many Jewish — who fought the Nazis alongside members of the French Resistance.

Watch the video at the link below
https://auburnpub.com/partners/video-elephant/news/armenian-resistance-fighter-manouchian-joins-frances-pantheon-heroes/video_6c78b11c-84eb-533e-b574-607e772963a4.html
Also at 
https://www.townsvillebulletin.com.au/news/world/armenian-resistance-fighter-manouchian-joins-frances-pantheon-heroes/video/f6ec8d76025be4302fa62c03b8352169
https://www.thechronicle.com.au/news/world/armenian-resistance-fighter-manouchian-joins-frances-pantheon-heroes/video/f6ec8d76025be4302fa62c03b8352169

‘He wanted to fight for France’: Manouchian honoured as symbol of foreign Resistance fighters

FRANCE 24
Feb 21 2024

Eighty years to the day since he was executed by the Nazis near Paris, Armenian Missak Manouchian, figure of the French Resistance, takes his place in Paris's Panthéon mausoleum alongside other French national heroes on Wednesday, February 21. His induction is seen as a tribute to all foreign Resistance fighters. 

"I joined the Army of Liberation as a volunteer, and I die within inches of victory and the final goal. I wish for happiness for all those who will survive and taste the sweetness of the freedom and peace of tomorrow. I’m sure that the French people, and all those who fight for freedom, will know how to honour our memory with dignity." Two hours before he was shot at Fort Mont-Valérien in the western Paris suburb of Suresnes, Missak Manouchian wrote a final letter in which he expressed the hope that his adopted country would not forget his sacrifice.

Eighty years to the day after these words were written, the Armenian Resistance fighter's wish will be granted. He is being inducted into the Panthéon on Wednesday, February 21 alongside his wife Mélinée.

Manouchian embodies the "universal values" of liberty, equality and fraternity, in the name of which he "defended the Republic", said the Élysée Palace last June, when announcing his "panthéonisation". "Blood spilled for France is the same colour for everyone," French President Emmanuel Macron said in a press release. 

"This is a turning point in the way we pay tribute in our collective memory. He is the first foreign Resistance fighter and the first communist Resistance fighter to enter the Panthéon," said historian Denis Peschanski, scientific adviser to the group that campaigned for him to be inducted into the Panthéon. 

Born in 1906 in the town of Adiyaman in the southeast of present-day Turkey, Manouchian was an orphan of the Armenian genocide. He was just nine years old when his father was killed fighting the Turks, and his mother died shortly afterwards, swept away by famine during the deportation of Armenians. Taken in by a French-speaking orphanage in Lebanon, he quickly discovered a love for French literature and began writing his first poems. 

Missak Manouchian (near the cross) at the orphanage in Jounieh, Lebanon in 1919. This French-speaking orphanage was run by Sauvegarde du Proche-Orient, a humanitarian organisation founded by the United States. © Wikimedia

In 1924, he managed to immigrate to France and settled in Paris with his brother Garabed. Missak worked as a lathe operator at the Citroën factories. But three years later, misfortune struck again, when Garabed died of tuberculosis. "Missak was orphaned, first by his parents, then by his brother. Death was very present in his life," said Peschanski.

After losing his job during the Great Depression, he survived with one odd job to the next. He audited courses at the Sorbonne and published articles on French and Armenian literature. He also frequented communist circles. Outraged by the rise of the far right, he eventually joined the French Communist Party (PCF), through which he met his future wife Mélinée Assadourian, also an orphan of the Armenian genocide. 

When World War II broke out in September 1939, he was arrested as a communist following the German-Soviet pact. After a short stay in prison, he voluntarily enlisted in the French army. "He wanted to fight for France, but the French Communist Party, following orders from Moscow, saw it as an imperialist war in which the working class had no part to play," said Peschanski. "But Manouchian's love for France went beyond all that."

Garabed and Missak Manouchian in 1924 in La Seyne-sur-Mer, situated in southeastern France, shortly after their arrival in France. © Wikimedia

Demobilised after the June 1940 armistice, Manouchian resumed his militant activities. He was interned by the Germans in June 1941 at the Royallieu deportation camp in Compiègne, northern France, after they ordered roundups within communist circles in the wake of Operation Barbarossa. He was later released for lack of charges.

Missak Manouchian in 1940 dressed in French uniform at the Colpo military base in Morbihan, northwest France. A keen gymnast, he was in charge of training recruits. © Wikimedia

In 1943, he ended up joining the Francs-tireurs et partisans – main-d'œuvre immigrée (FTP-MOI), a wing of armed Resistance fighters composed mostly foreigners. "They were organised into detachments that roughly corresponded to nationalities and origins. There were a lot of anti-Fascist Italians and Spaniards who had fought in the Spanish Civil War, but also Polish Jews and Germans opposed to the Nazis," said historian Fabrice Grenard, a researcher at the Resistance Foundation in Paris.

Appointed military commissioner for the Paris region, Manouchian launched a series of daring attacks. In Paris, one of his groups executed SS Colonel Julius Ritter, who was in charge of the Compulsory Work Service in France.

After long being hunted by a special intelligence unit of the French police under the Vichy regime, Manouchian was finally arrested on November 16, 1943. He was tortured and handed to the Germans along with 23 of his comrades. 

After a show trial, 10 of the Resistance fighters became the emblematic faces of the now-famous "Red Poster", thousands of copies of which were plastered across Paris with the objective of denouncing a "criminal army" of foreigners threatening France. The campaign had the opposite effect, transforming them into heroes. They were further enshrined as symbols when surrealist poet Louis Aragon wrote a poem about them in 1955. The composer Léo Ferré set the poem to music in 1961. 

Reproduction of a poster that was put up in towns across France during the German Occupation by the German propaganda services. Known as the "Red Poster", it featured photos of 10 of the 23 members of the French Resistance who were sentenced to death and shot at Fort Mont Valérien on February 21, 1944. AFP

"Manouchian not only became a legend because of his actions as the military leader of the FTP-MOI, but also because of this German propaganda operation. The Germans wanted to show that the Resistance was made up of foreigners, métèques (an insulting term for immigrants), Jews and communists who were killing good Frenchmen. But this operation failed. The opposite happened. Some people still think that this is a poster showing the members of the French Resistance," said Peschanski.

On February 21, 1944, Manouchian and 21 of his comrades were executed at Fort Mont-Valérien. Three photos secretly taken by a German soldier immortalised the deaths of those featured on the "Red Poster". The only woman in the group, Olga Bancic, was transferred to Germany and beheaded a few weeks later.

A reproduction of a picture taken on February 21, 1944 by German soldier Clemens Ruther shows Georges Cloarec, Rino Della Negra, Cesar Lucarini and Antonio Salvadori being executed at the Mont Valérien military camp by German soldiers. French lawyer and Nazi hunter Serge Klarsfeld handed over to AFP three photographs, two never released, showing the killing of Resistance members belonging to the Missak Manouchian group, authentified by the French defence ministry. © Clemens Ruther, AFP

Before his death, Manouchian wrote a final letter to his wife Mélinée. In it, he said that he did not hate the German people, and also declared his love for France and his wife. "I have one profound regret, and that’s of not having made you happy; I would so much have liked to have a child with you, as you always wished. So I beg you to marry after the war, and to have a child; fulfil my last wish, marry someone who can make you happy."

Peschanski feels that this is one of the most beautiful letters in French history. "All letters written by those shot by firing squad are tragic, but this one is particularly special and poetic. He fulfilled his literary destiny with this last magnificent letter." Gérard Streiff, author of the book "Missak et Mélinée Manouchian: Un couple en Résistance" ("A couple in Resistance"), agrees. "This letter is absolutely splendid, both for its passionate love and humanist purpose. You've got to be extremely high-minded to be able to express fraternity with the German people when you've got two hours to live."

Mélinée Manouchian, who died in 1989, will be buried alongside her husband Missak Manouchian in the Pantheon. © Wikimedia

After Paris was liberated in August 1944, Mélinée Manouchian made her husband's last words public. She never remarried or had children. She remained faithful to Missak and kept his memory alive by publishing some of his writings. The couple will enter the Panthéon together. The two coffins will rest side by side in the temple’s crypt during the ceremony presided over by the French president. For Streiff, they are inseparable. "She played an important role in his life. They had the same ideals, the same anger. They rebelled against all forms of exploitation. She also played an active role in the Resistance as a member of the FTP-MOI. She only managed to escape the November 1943 roundup because she was in hiding."

However, this joint entry has been met with some criticism. In an article published in November and signed by several historians, Annette Wieviorka, a World War II specialist, said it was unfortunate that Manouchian's comrades had been relegated to the background. "A number of us felt that it was both unfair to the families and an affront to history that only Missak and Mélinée Manouchian, and not all 23 of the fighters, will be inducted in the Panthéon. They were shot and fell together. Honouring only Missak and Mélinée means that the group’s diversity is being forgotten. It has also been said that they were foreigners, but there were also four Frenchmen. The legend has been rewritten," she said.

In a recent book entitled "Anatomie de l'Affiche Rouge" ("Anatomy of the Red Poster"), Wieviorka denounces the "glamourisation" of this Panthéon induction and talks about the backgrounds of all the group’s members: Celestino Alfonso, "the red Spaniard"; Marcel Rajman, "the Polish Jew"; Spartaco Fontanot, "the Italian communist". "It is also important to remember that on the 'Red Poster', the Nazis chose to focus on the Jews by including seven of them, out of 10 men featured. Their implication was that the Jews were the instigators of the crimes committed by foreigners," said Wieviorka.

However, at the entrance to tomb number 13, where the remains of Missak and Mélinée Manouchian will be laid to rest, a plaque will be added to pay tribute to their 22 FTP-MOI comrades and their leader, Joseph Epstein. "This is merely a consolation prize. There are already quite a few plaques [at the Panthéon] and we don't see them. It's not the same as having a place in the Panthéon," said Wieviorka.

Peschanski, for his part, does not understand the controversy surrounding Missak and Mélinée Manouchian’s "panthéonisation." He says that inducting them into the Panthéon is above all a symbolic gesture. "Their names will be inscribed in golden letters. It's a way of honouring them officially." Fabrice Grenard, a specialist in the French Resistance, also does not see the move as controversial. "When De Gaulle admitted Jean Moulin to the Panthéon in 1964, it was also seen as a way of paying tribute to all members of the Resistance. This is the same thing. It makes no sense to admit 23 people. No one's name would be remembered. Through Missak Manouchian, we are paying tribute to all foreign resistance fighters. That's why this 'panthéonisation' is important."

Memorial considerations were far from Manouchian’s thoughts in his final moments. "The sun is out today. It’s in looking at the sun and the beauty of nature that I've loved so much that I say farewell to life and to all of you, my beloved wife, and my beloved friends."

A mural in Paris's 20th arrondissement pays tribute to Missak Manouchian. © Miguel Medina, AFP

This article has been translated from the original in French. 


France inducts Resistance hero Manouchian into Panthéon

Feb 21 2024

French President Emmanuel Macron led a ceremony Wednesday honouring Missak Manouchian, a stateless poet of Armenian origin who died fighting the Nazi occupation during World War II. Manouchian becomes the first foreign Resistance fighter to enter France's Panthéon mausoleum for national heroes.

The belated honour to Missak Manouchian has been seen as long overdue recognition of the bravery of foreign communists – many Jewish – who fought the Nazis alongside French Resistants.

"Jewish, Hungarian, Polish, Armenians, communists, they gave their lives for our country," President Emmanuel Macron said this weekend.

"It's a way of ensuring all forms of internal Resistance enter (the Panthéon), including some too long forgotten," he told communist newspaper L'Humanite.

The bodies of Manouchian and his wife Mélinée, also a member of the Resistance, will be transferred from the Parisian cemetery where they were buried together to the Panthéon.

The names of 23 of his communist comrades-in-arms – including Polish, Hungarian, Italian, Spanish and Romanian fighters – will be added to a commemorative plaque inside the monument.

Baker – the first black woman to receive the honour – had been awarded French nationality before the war.

Last year the president said Manouchian would receive the honour too, paying tribute to his "bravery" and "quiet heroism".

(FRANCE 24 with AFP)


Armenian Resistance hero Manouchian joins France’s Panthéon luminaries

Feb 21 2024

Armenian Resistance fighter joins France’s Pantheon heroes

Feb 21 2024

Armenian Resistance fighter joins France's Pantheon heroes

AFP

A stateless Armenian poet who died fighting the Nazi occupation of France during World War II becomes on Wednesday the first non-French Resistance fighter to enter the Pantheon mausoleum for national heroes.

The honour to Missak Manouchian has been seen as long-overdue recognition of the bravery of foreign communists — many Jewish — who fought the Nazis alongside members of the French Resistance.

"Jewish, Hungarian, Polish, Armenians, communists, they gave their lives for our country," President Emmanuel Macron said this weekend.

"It's a way of ensuring all forms of internal Resistance enter (the Pantheon), including some too long forgotten," he told communist newspaper L'Humanite.

The bodies of Manouchian and his wife Melinee, also a member of the Resistance, will be carried into the Pantheon at around 18:30 pm (1730 GMT).

The names of 23 of his communist comrades-in-arm — including Polish, Hungarian, Italian, Spanish and Romanian fighters — will be added to a commemorative plaque inside the monument.

– Refugee turned fighter –

Manouchian arrived in France as a young man in the mid-1920s, after fleeing World-War-I-era mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire as a child to French-mandate Lebanon.

He joined the French communist party's armed resistance in 1943, soon leading dozens of foreigners fighting the German occupiers in the Paris region.

Under his watch they carried out sabotage, derailed trains, attacked German soldiers and assassinated a German SS colonel in charge of the forced enlistment of French workers.

Manouchian was arrested in November 1943 and tortured before being shot dead by firing squad aged 37 with around 20 of his comrades in February 1944.

After their death sentences, a Nazi propaganda poster showing images of ten from the group on a red background, which became known as the "red poster", sought to demonise them as members of a "criminal army".

But it backfired, and later inspired a poem by French poet Louis Aragon, a song and several films.

– Foreign fighters –

Manouchian, who pursued poetry and literature while working in a shipyard and a factory before the war, had requested French nationality in 1933 and 1940, both times without success.

He was one of many foreigners in the French Resistance.

They were mostly "anti-Nazi Germans and Austrians, Spanish Republicans who had fled Francoism, anti-fascist Italians, Poles who had fled anti-Semitism, Armenians, and Jews from eastern Europe and Germany", according to the French defence ministry.

It is unclear how many exactly of the 2.2 million foreigners in France at the time joined the Resistance.

But of the 1,000 Resistance fighters executed by the Nazis at the Mont-Valerien fort outside Paris during the occupation, 185 were foreign, historian Denis Peschanski told AFP.

That was a much higher proportion of foreigners than in the country's pre-war population of around 40 million.

– 'Quiet heroism' –

Under Macron, since 2017 three people have been awarded a place inside the Pantheon: writer Maurice Genevoix, women's rights icon Simone Veil, and US-born entertainer and French Resistance member Josephine Baker.

Baker, the first black woman to receive the honour, had been awarded French nationality before the war.

Last year, Macron said Manouchian would also receive the honour, paying tribute to his "bravery" and "quiet heroism".

At the time, parliament was debating a contentious immigration bill that Macron eventually signed into law earlier this year.

The roughly 2,000 people invited to Wednesday's ceremony include Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan and representatives of the French Communist Party.

Far-right former presidential candidate Marine Le Pen has said she would also be attending, sparking controversy.

The parliamentary leader of the anti-immigration National Rally party was invited, but Macron said this weekend that the far right should be "inspired not to be present".

Georges Duffau-Epstein, whose Jewish immigrant father Joseph Epstein is among those being honoured, said Le Pen was "not welcome".

This was "due to her line of descent, the character of those who founded" her party, he said, alluding to her father Jean-Marie Le Pen, a convicted Holocaust denier.

bur-vl-ah/as/js

https://www.news.com.au/breaking-news/armenian-resistance-fighter-joins-frances-pantheon-heroes/news-story/cefca208f5b312b88fc4b0cb91fb59f7

Defense Minister chairs consultation with top brass

 15:25,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. Minister of Defense Suren Papikyan has chaired a consultation with the Ministry of Defense top officials and military commanders.

Before discussing the agenda items, Minister Papikyan congratulated the recently appointed military officials on assuming duties.

“A number of issues pertaining to the ongoing work in the armed forces were discussed during the consultation,” the Ministry of Defense said in a readout.

Papikyan issued relevant assignments and directives to the officials.

Central Bank of Armenia: exchange rates and prices of precious metals – 20-02-24

 17:06,

YEREVAN, 20 FEBUARY, ARMENPRESS. The Central Bank of Armenia informs “Armenpress” that today, 20 February, USD exchange rate up by 0.10 drams to 404.47 drams. EUR exchange rate up by 1.16 drams to 436.87 drams. Russian Ruble exchange rate stood at 4.38 drams. GBP exchange rate down by 0.11 drams to 510.00 drams.

The Central Bank has set the following prices for precious metals.

Gold price up by 255.45 drams to 26229.74 drams. Silver price up by 1.05 drams to 300.20 drams.

7-8% growth in case of favorable conditions in 2024, forecasts Armenian economist

 16:33,

YEREVAN, FEBRUARY 20, ARMENPRESS. The Armenian economy could grow in between 3 to 8 percent in 2024 depending on various factors, according to economist Tatul Manaseryan. Speaking at a press conference, Manaseryan, the Director of the Alternative Research Center, said that growth would comprise 7-8% in case of favorable conditions, and 3-4% in case of unfavorable ones.

He said that a number of contradictory trends could impact the Armenian economy in 2024.

“The main locomotive could be the utilization of the country’s competitive advantages, if the real opportunities arising from the creation of the free economic zone between Iran and the EEU are used, as well as further intensification of ties between Russia and other EEU countries. Effective management of the economy, as well as the use of the professional potential of the Armenian Diaspora, are no less important. As a result of possible positive changes in these directions we can forecast business [sic] activity growth between seven and eight percent. Otherwise, the maximum growth would seemingly be around three or four percent,” he said.

He pointed out the following trends in analyzing the economy: geopolitical factors, stronger domestic demand, remittance inflow, fiscal policy, the traditional growth in services, IT, real estate, finance and tourism sector (which could be insufficient without improvement in the real sector – industry and agriculture). As to foreign factors, he pointed out the processes in the Chinese economy, the Ukraine crisis, which could impact the Armenian currency. A lot would also depend on the employment and social status of the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh who are now living in Armenia. Foreign policy and foreign economic policy could also affect growth, he said.

The Eurasian Development Bank has predicted 5,7% growth for 2024 in Armenia, while the IMF predicted up to 5% growth. The Armenian government seeks to achieve at least 7% growth.