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CYSCA Introduces Preventive Dentistry in Armenia

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CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—On March 4, the Cambridge-Yerevan Sister City Association (CYSCA) formally donated equipment to Yerevan State Medical University after Mkhitar Heratsi (YSMU) for use in teaching courses in preventive dentistry. The program was the initiative of Karina Matevosyan, a CYSCA Board member, who not only conceived of the program but also introduced it at the university in September 2014.

Karina Matevoysan with YSMU rector Dr. Narimanyan

“The course has been very well received,” said Matevosyan. “It is being held at the university’s Therapeutic and Family Dentistry Department, with presently 10 post-graduate students and eight university professors enrolled. This number is expected to increase in the next academic year.”

Matevosyan, an accomplished and experienced clinician from Cambridge, relocated to Yerevan in September 2014 for a three-year term leading this exciting program on CYSCA’s behalf. “The enthusiasm of the students and the faculty for this course has been overwhelming, and I am confident, that upon graduating and joining the medical workforce in Armenia, their new skills in preventive dentistry will have a positive impact on patients’ long-term health,” she said.

YSMU held a donation ceremony in its rectorate on March 4, where CYSCA and Matevosyan were recognized for their efforts in developing this first-of-a-kind program in Armenia and for raising funds for the much-needed instruments that are used in the practical portion of the course. Present at the ceremony were Dr. Narimanyan, rector of the Yerevan Medical University; David Gevorkyan, chief of foreign relations of the Yerevan Municipality; Dr. Lazar Yessayan, dean of the Dental Department and chief dentist at the Ministry of Health in Armenia; along with representatives from several local media outlets.

Karina Matevosyan with graduate student Gor Davtyan

“Preventive dentistry is very important, because these experts can help prevent a number of pathologies of dental hard tissue and inflammatory periodontal disease,” explained Yessayan. “Thanks to the efforts of CYSCA, funds were raised from the local Boston community to purchase sets of instruments and materials for use in training future dentists in preventive dentistry.”

Narimanyan concluded the ceremony, saying, “We need preventive medicine in all disciplines. The university will increase its financial commitment to expanding more preventive medicine programs in the future.”

CYSCA is an award-winning sister city organization founded in 1987 through the initiative of the Cambridge Peace Commission. Over the past 28 years, CYSCA has been instrumental in fostering an exchange of ideas and competencies among the citizens in the cities of Cambridge and Yerevan, and their regions. CYSCA’s professional development programs and teacher and student exchange programs, as well as humanitarian aid projects, have made a huge impact on the lives of thousands over the years. For more information, visit www.cysca.org.

The post CYSCA Introduces Preventive Dentistry in Armenia appeared first on Armenian Weekly.


Metro Detroit Community Remembers Genocide Victims

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Thousands Attend Ecumenical Service; Chorale Concert Set for June 19

 

DETROIT, Mich.—In an amazing display of unity, clergy and lay people gathered in the thousands in suburban Detroit on April 24 for an Ecumenical Service honoring and remembering the victims of the Armenian Genocide.

Some 3,000 people crowded the interior and exterior of St. Mary’s Antiochian Orthodox Basilica in Livonia for the service, which also celebrated the canonization of the 1.5 million Armenian martyrs of the genocide. In attendance was Ramela Carman, 101, a genocide survivor.

Fr. Garabed Kochakian and Fr. Hrant Kevorkian lead the procession into St. Mary’s carrying relics of the saints, which were placed at a special altar table. (Photo: Vaughn Gurganian)

The service was produced by the Armenian Churches of Greater Detroit Genocide Centennial Committee, an assemblage of the four Armenian churches in southeast Michigan: St. John Armenian Apostolic Church, led by Fr. Garabed Kochakian; St. Sarkis Armenian Apostolic Church, led by Fr. Hrant Kevorkian; Armenian Congregational Church, led by Rev. Shant Barsoumian; and St. Vartan Armenian Catholic Church, led by Very Rev. Fr. Mikael Bassale. Committee co-chairs were Deacon Manouk Derovakimian of St. Sarkis and Deacon Richard Norsigian of St. John.

The service began with a procession into the Basilica led by Fr. Kochakian and Fr. Kevorkian. Both carried relics of the saints into the sanctuary that were placed on a special altar table.

Other participating clergy included the Most Reverend Archbishop Allen Vigneron of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit; Archbishop Nathanial Popp, Romanian Episcopate of the Orthodox Church of America; Fr. Abraham Ohanesian, Visiting Priest of Mission Parishes, Diocese of the Armenian Church of America; the Rev. Fr. Diran Papazian, Pastor Emeritus, St. John Armenian Church; and host pastor, the Rev. Fr. George Shalhoub, Pastor of St. Mary Basilica. In addition to the participating clergy, 43 clergymen representing various Christian denominations filled the pews for worship.

Rev. Deacon Rubik Mailian leads the Detroit Armenian Chorale and Orchestra at the April 24 Ecumenical Service. (Photo: Vaughn Gurganian)

During the ceremony, 12 Armenian youth—representing each of the 4 churches, and including members of the local Hamazkayin Arax Dance Ensemble, dressed in authentic Armenian costumes—lighted candles at the altar table. Each of the 12 candles represented the regions in Turkish-occupied Armenia where lives were lost.

Bilingual prayers were offered by the leaders of Detroit’s four Armenian churches, and the homily was delivered by Archbishop Vigneron. He noted how the Christian community was “appalled by the terrible violence done to the Armenian people,” who were brought to the “brink of annihilation.”

Attendees were also mesmerized by an outdoor digital light display on the facade of the Basilica’s main building and bell tower. Projections of iconic Armenian churches and religious symbols telling the story of the genocide and the Armenian nation’s rich religious influence were presented by well-known Detroit-area photojournalist Michelle Andonian and visual artist Gabriel Hall of New D Media Arts.

The Most Reverend Archbishop Allen Vigneron of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit was the principal homilist at the service. (Photo: Vaughn Gurganian)

During a special remembrance celebration that followed at St. Mary’s Cultural Center, the triptych mural, “100 Years of Endurance: The Story of a People’s Struggle for Survival and the Desire for Truth and Reconciliation,” was unveiled. The work was commissioned for this event and painted by Andrea Kalajian, a Detroit-area artist. Her work depicts the Armenian Genocide using archived images of the atrocity transitioning into images of restoration of our historic homeland.

As the committee’s events continue, next month brings a musical and narrative commemoration of the genocide featuring the Detroit Armenian Chorale and Orchestra. Entitled “A 100-Year Journey of Remembrance and Song,” the event will tell the story of the near-annihilation of the Armenian people through special vocal arrangements and oral presentations. There will also be a guest appearance by the Hamazkayin Arax Dance Ensemble.

The front of the Basilica and the bell tower were bathed in lights from a special digital art display commemorating each of the 1.5 million genocide victims. (Photo: Vaughn Gurganian)

The curtain rises on the program at 8 p.m. on Fri., June 19, at the Detroit Symphony Orchestra Max M. Fisher Music Center, located at 3711 Woodward Avenue in Detroit. Tickets are $10 for adults; free for children under the age of 7. Free bus transportation will be provided from the parking lots at St. John, St. Sarkis, and the Armenian Congregational Church, but reservations are required.

Tickets for the concert, which is underwritten in honor of the Vanerian-Darrejian families, can be obtained by calling (248) 206-5527; by contacting the Detroit Symphony Orchestra box office at (313) 576-5111 or www.dso.org; or e-mailing armenianchurchesofdetroit@gmail.com.

The post Metro Detroit Community Remembers Genocide Victims appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

Berj Najarian to Speak at St. James

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WATERTOWN, Mass.—Berj Najarian, the New England Patriots’ director of football/head coach administration, will be the keynote speaker at the dinner meeting of the St. James Armenian Church Men’s Club on Mon., June 1.

Najarian is part of the inner circle of Head Coach Bill Belichick, along with Ernie Adams (director of football research), Nick Caserio (director of player personnel), and the assistant coaches.

Najarian is one of the most trusted confidants of Belichick and has been characterized as his “consigliere.” He helps decide which issues are worthy of Belichick’s attention, and handles the logistics of Belichick’s day, serving as his gatekeeper.

Berj Najarian has been with the New England Patriots since 2000, and in the NFL for 20 years. He is originally from Manhasset, N.Y. He is a graduate of Boston University (class of 1991). Prior to the New England Patriots, he worked in public relations at the New York Jets and was an intern for the New York Knicks.

The evening will begin at 6:15 p.m. with a social hour with mezza, followed by a kheyma and losh kebab dinner at 7 p.m., for $14 per person. The event will take place at St. James Armenian Church, Charles Mosesian Cultural and Youth Center – Keljik Hall, 465 Mount Auburn St., in Watertown. The event is open to the public; ladies are welcome.

The post Berj Najarian to Speak at St. James appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

Bar Association to Mark Silver Anniversary of Service to Diaspora, Homeland

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A star-spangled banner of activities at the Montage Hotel in Beverly Hills on June 12-14 will draw from deep within the veins of our common heritage to herald the Armenian Bar Association’s 25 years of unifying the colorful and distinct fabric of the Armenian nation.

As is its custom, the Armenian Bar will assemble to rededicate itself to the future of the Armenian people with a forward-looking vision that consolidates the redress of injustices with positive and creative expressions of identity and solidarity.

Armen K. Hovannisian, the chairman of the Armenian Bar Association, affirmed, “On the heels of the enormous momentum generated by the Armenian Genocide Centennial commemorations, our wonderful members are amplifying that energy by unveiling a weekend full of fascinating educational programs, special awards presentations, a gala banquet, and even a round of golf to honor our late chairman emeritus. This is going to be one of those extraordinary events where those who attend will be extremely happy they did, and those who miss it will wish they had been there.”

Prof. Richard G. Hovannisian

Among the many highlights is a spectacular banquet slated for Sat., June 13, at the Montage Hotel. Beginning with a rooftop reception amidst the soothing string harmonies of world-class instrumentalists, the evening’s main event will feature Prof. Richard G. Hovannisian, a world-renowned scholar of Armenian history, who will be bestowed the association’s highest honor, the Hrant Dink Freedom Award.

Following the conferment of the Hrant Dink Freedom Award, the Armenian Bar will present an award posthumously to the late attorney Robert Kardashian, in recognition of the importance of those who champion the constitutional rights to due process and equal protection under the law, even if in unpopular cases.

“We are so pleased to be able to welcome the family of Robert Kardashian to accept the honor on his behalf and also to recognize their contribution to international recognition of the Armenian Genocide,” said gala banquet co-masters of ceremonies and Armenian Bar Board members Gerard V. Kassabian and Vanna Kitsinian.

With last month’s filing of a groundbreaking lawsuit in Turkey’s Constitutional Court by His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, demanding the return of church property in the city of Sis (Kozan), the Armenian Bar Association has brought together a panel of experts in international law to discuss the timely issue of the quest for restorative justice. Moderated by the Armenian Bar’s co-vice-chair, Edvin Minassian, the panel will feature Prof. Payam Akhavan, the lead attorney representing the Holy See of Cilicia; Karnig Kerkonian, a graduate of Harvard University and the University of Chicago School of Law who holds a post-doctoral diploma in international law from Cambridge University; Steve Dadaian, assistant chief counsel of the California Department of Transportation who has extensively researched and participated in efforts to obtain reparations through his work with the Armenian National Committee of America and the Armenian Bar Association; and Seepan Parseghian of the Snell & Wilmer law firm who has worked at the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, which was established to prosecute persons responsible for the Rwandan Genocide.

Robert Kardashian

For those seeking the latest tips on effective litigation in the federal courts, Los Angeles Superior Court Judge Zaven Sinanian has assembled an all-star panel of judges on the subject, including U.S. District Court Judges Andre Birotte, Jr., Larry Burns, and Dickran Tevrizian (ret.), and U.S> District Court Magistrate Judge Jacqueline Chooljian. During a recent interview, Judge Sinanian stated, “We are so fortunate to have a panel of such esteemed judges with the extensive breadth of experience and knowledge as our panelists. This panel will be unrivaled among continuing education panels.”

In addition to the outstanding educational programs and the gala banquet festivities, the association has scheduled networking and recreational activities for members and guests to create new, and develop existing, relationships. The weekend will kick-off on Friday morning with a golf tournament at Rancho Park Golf Course in West Los Angeles; all proceeds from the event will be dedicated to the Vicken I. Simonian Scholarship Fund, which was established last year in honor and memory of the Armenian Bar’s chairman emeritus.

Following the Friday golf tournament, guests of the Annual Meeting will gather in the evening at the chic and stylish Via Alloro in Beverly Hills for a warm welcome reception and an upbeat roundup, making it fun and easy to meet, mingle, and make merry.

“For more than 25 years now, the Armenian Bar Association has had as its fundamental purposes the creation of a dynamic commonwealth of legal professionals and law students, the protection of the rights of the Armenian people around the world, and the establishment of democratic institutions and the rule of law in Armenia. Our organizing committee has been hard at work putting together an outstanding silver anniversary meeting, altogether fitting for this momentous occasion,” said Armen Hovannisian.

For more information about the Armenian Bar Association’s Annual National Meeting Weekend and to make plans to attend, visit www.armenianbar.com, write to armenianbar@armenianbar.com, or call (818) 645-2811.

The post Bar Association to Mark Silver Anniversary of Service to Diaspora, Homeland appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

A Quilt to Remember: Tufankjian’s Work to Be Displayed at Quilt Show

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HARTFORD, Conn. — Anna Tufankjian’s 2015 quilt, “Never Forgotten,” was created with respectful memory of the 1.5 Armenians who perished during the Armenian Genocide of 1915, and the diaspora that followed.

The images on the quilt include Mount Ararat; the Armenian flag; a drawing of Kecharis Monastery, representing Armenia as the first Christian nation; and a map of the early Armenian Empire, which once reached from the Black Sea to the Caspian Sea. The grapevines represent just one of the bountiful harvests grown in the shadow of Mt. Ararat and one of the traditional foods replanted worldwide through the diaspora.

Anna Tufankjian’s 2015 quilt, ‘Never Forgotten,’

The line from the poem “We Are Few” by Barouyr Sevag, written in 1965 on the 50th anniversary of the genocide, crosses the bottom of the quilt, while the same line is written at the top in the Armenian language.

The forget-me-not flower scattered over the quilt is the official emblem of the worldwide observance of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.

Family photographs of the ancestors of the Tufankjian and Hampigian families are shown as examples of two families that found a way to survive, came to America, married, and carried on their rich Armenian heritage.

The names on the borders are some of the families that survived and taught future generations their Armenian history, art, religion, music, food, literature, and especially the strength of character of their ancestors.

To educate the public on the Armenian Genocide, the quilt will be shown on Aug. 1-2 at the Greater Hartford Quilt Guild show at the Toyota Oakdale Theater. It will also be submitted for entry in the Studio Art Quilters Association’s juried art exhibit “Diaspora” at the Textile Museum in Washington in October 2015.

The post A Quilt to Remember: Tufankjian’s Work to Be Displayed at Quilt Show appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

In Memory of Unger Ara Caprielian

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On Sun. May 31, a 40-day Requiem Service (Karasunk) in memory of Dr. Ara Caprielian will be held at the St. Illuminator’s Armenian Cathedral in Manhattan, N.Y.

Unger Ara Caprielian

An active and dedicated member of the Armenian community, Dr. Caprielian passed away on April 14 in New York. He is survived by his wife Arevik and son Armen. With his passing, he left a significant void in the Armenian-American community of the East Coast, and the Armenian nation at large.

Dr. Caprielian’s ancestors hailed from the village of Havav, in the Western Armenian province of Palu. His heritage and link to Western Armenia were central to his life.

Unger Caprielian was a former member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Eastern Region Central Committee, and a long-time member of the ARF “Armen Garo” Gomideh of New York. He was one of the founding members of the New York Hamazkayin Chapter, an active member of the Armenian Heritage Cruise committee, as well as a long-time supporter and contributor to the Hairenik and Armenian Weekly newspapers.

In his most recent article in the Armenian Weekly, titled “Thoughts as We Approach the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide,” published on March 7, Dr. Caprielian concluded with the following message to the Armenian people regarding the Armenian Genocide Centennial:

“Hopefully, beginning—yet not ending—with the Armenian Genocide Centennial, we will demonstrate to friend and foe alike our unwavering pursuit of justice by channeling our intellectual and material resources toward that end. No matter how long and painstaking the struggle, we will persevere, for our Cause is just and our commitment is forever.”

Messages of sympathy and condolences poured in memory of Dr. Caprielian as a dedicated community member and advocate of the Armenian cause:

“Ara was a noble human being, and a wonderful defender of Armenian and human rights.”

“His unwavering belief in doing what is right carried him through all his days, and that has been a great inspiration and motivator to many.”

“He was a devoted and knowledgeable member of the Hamazkayin.”

“In his years serving the ARF and other Armenian organizations, he did more than his share for our cause and nation; he was a devoted and knowledgeable advocate of the cause.”

Unger Caprielian was a shining example of our noble experiment, the maintenance of our Armenian identity in exile. His citizenship may have been American, but his identity was Armenian. His memory will be revered by those who truly knew him.”

The post In Memory of Unger Ara Caprielian appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

Centennial Commemoration Week at St. Stephen’s Elementary School

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WATERTOWN, Mass.—St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School dedicated the week of April 13 to the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide. An extensive age-appropriate program was developed involving Kindergarten to Grade 5 students.

On Mon., April 13, parents were invited to attend an exhibition of student art work related to the Armenian Genocide. Grades 4 and 5 prepared life-size representations of Armenian traditional costumes, typical of regions from where Armenians were deported in 1915, such as Van, Sassoun, and Moush. Grade 3 students illustrated traditional recipes, typical of the regions from where Armenians were deported during the genocide, such as Aintab, Marash, and Ourfa. Then they created a cookbook with their illustrated recipes, adding a map of Western Armenia. Grade 2 students prepared their family tree and illustrated the letters of the Armenian alphabet. Grade 1 students prepared the logo of the Centennial, the Forget-Me-Not flower. And Kindergarten students colored Armenian national costumes.

The students staging an interactive presentation about the Armenian Genocide

On Tues., April 14, parents were invited to attend a Talent Show presented by Grades 1-5. The intent was to show that 100 years after the genocide the new generation is excelling and thriving. Some of the students performed on the piano, violin, cello, or guitar; others displayed their artistic talents through poetry and voice.

On Thurs., April 16, Grades 3-5 attended an interactive presentation about the Armenian Genocide directed by Stepan Piligian. Students were asked to line up behind signs of cities from where their ancestors were deported; then, stickers with the name of these cities were placed on a big map. This was followed by a visit to our school by Gomidas Vartabed, Zabel Yessayan, and Catholicos Sahag II, thanks to a time machine. The program ended with students asking these prominent figures questions.

On Fri., April 17, the school hosted Canadian author Marsha Skrypuch, whose 19 books include Aram’s Choice and Call Me Aram. These two books have been part of the school’s genocide curriculum for Grades 4 and 5 for the last five years; the students read them during the month of April. After Skrypuch’s presentation, the students had the opportunity to ask questions and to get signed copies of her books.

The students with Canadian author Marsha Skrypuch

On April 24, Grades 4 and 5 students participated in the commemoration events at the Massachusetts State House, as well as at the Armenian Heritage Park in Boston. They marched from the State House to the Heritage Park holding a banner that read, “We Remember and Demand.”

In the evening of April 24, St. Stephen’s Armenian Elementary School graduates took a leadership role in organizing the vigil at the Armenian Heritage Park and bringing their active participation to the program.

The students at the Mass. State House

The post Centennial Commemoration Week at St. Stephen’s Elementary School appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

Providence ARF Celebrates Liberation of Shushi, Remembers Khanasor Expedition

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PROVIDENCE, R.I.—Under a bright sunny sky, the Providence Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) “Kristapor” Gomidehoutiune hosted its annual picnic to celebrate the Liberation of Shushi and remember the Khanasor Expedition. The picnic was held in the parking lot of Sts. Vartanantz Church following church services. Armenian flags and banners of the ARF and Armenian National Committee (ANC) proudly welcomed guests as they entered the picnic area.

A scene from the picnic

Hrag Arakelian, the master of ceremonies of the event and a member of the Providence Gomidehoutiune, provided welcoming remarks that included an account of the significance of the two events in Armenian history. Arakelian shared that 23 years ago on the evening of May 8, Armenian forces captured the city of Shushi and drove out the occupying Azeris. Armenian military commanders based in Nagorno-Karabagh’s capital of Stepanakert had been contemplating the capture of the town after a hail of Azeri military bombardment had begun shelling Stepanakert.

Arakelian explained that the Khanasor Expedition was conducted by the ARF in retaliation against the Mazrik Kurdish tribe for their role in the Hamidian Massacres and their ambush on the defenders of Van. The plain of Khanasor lies between the district of Van and Iran, and was once heavily populated by Kurds.

The event was a great success that featured delicious meals and tributes to Shushi and Khanasor. The picnic included shish kebob, losh, and chicken dinners. The youth from the Homenetmen and AYF sang “Khanasori Arshvankuh,” a piece written to celebrate the Khanasor raid. The AYF Junior chapter sold ice cream as a fundraiser to offset Junior Seminar expenses. The Mike Gregian Band provided favorite songs to honor these events in Armenian history.

The post Providence ARF Celebrates Liberation of Shushi, Remembers Khanasor Expedition appeared first on Armenian Weekly.


Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemorated in Maine 

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By Anthony Mezoian

A scene from the commemoration of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide in Portland

PORTLAND, Maine—The Armenian Cultural Association of Maine observed the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide in Portland on April 18. Father Krikor Sabounjian of the Metro-West Holy Translator Armenian Church of Framingham delivered the Devine Liturgy at St. Paul Anglican Church.

A brief service was held at the Armenian Plaza overlooking the area of Portland where the Armenian settlement was located from 1920-60.

An exhibit of photographs and memorabilia documenting the Armenian experience officially opened on April 16 at the KLAHR Center, at the University of Maine, Augusta, entitled, “NOR Ashkhar: Maine Armenians and the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide.” The exhibit runs through the end of May.

Several people spoke at the opening of the exhibit, including Gerard Kiladjian, president of the Armenian Cultural Association of Maine. Paul Proudian of Gray, Maine, gave an excellent overview of the Armenian settlement of Portland (1896-2015). His talk was accompanied by a slide presentation. The Holocaust and Human Rights Center of Maine is run by Prof. David Greenham.

A scene from the commemoration of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide in Portland

Memorabilia attracted many people, especially a 3-ft long, 10-inch diameter clay pipe from the Portland Winslow Potter, where the first Armenian settlers worked. The pottery was within easy walking distance to Lancaster Street, where most of the settlers lived. Paul Proudian’s beautiful Armenian Oriental rug, which he purchased in Yerevan years ago, was also on display. “I kept pulling out money from my pocket until the dealer said, “Paveh” (Enough), said Proudian.

The Armenians of Maine gathered to honor the memory of the 1.5 million Armenians who were killed and the countless others who were driven out of their ancestral homeland in Ottoman Turkey during the Armenian Genocide of 1915-23. These observances serve to remind us of the tragic legacy of what was lost and renew the call for justice for a crime against humanity committed by the Ottoman Turks 100 years ago.

The post Armenian Genocide Centennial Commemorated in Maine  appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

Hayastan All-Armenian Fund Unveils Community Centers in Artsakh

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Delegation Visits Project Sites in Tavush

YEREVAN—The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund delegation, led by Executive Director Ara Vardanyan and comprising trustees, representatives of affiliates worldwide, benefactors, and associates, visited Artsakh’s (Nagorno-Karabagh) Askeran region on May 22 to unveil two newly built community centers in the villages of Khachmach and Shosh.

Opening of the Sosh community center

The construction of the Khachmach community center was made possible by the financial support of the fund’s Lebanese, Brazilian, Dutch, Greek, and Cypriot affiliates, as well as the government of Artsakh. The two-story facility, which houses the mayor’s office, a health clinic, a 150-seat events hall, and a computer room, will serve the 233 residents of the village.

Opening of the Khachmach community center

The Shosh community center was built through the co-sponsorship of the fund’s French affiliate and the government of Artsakh. Encompassing the mayor’s office, a health clinic, a library, a computer room, and an events hall, the structure is poised to help improve life in the community, which has a population of 610.

The festive opening ceremonies were headed by the Artsakh Prime Minister Ara Harutyunyan.

A scene from the ribbon-cutting ceremony of the Khackmach community center

Another project in Shosh, the community school, which was built with the sponsorship of the fund’s Toronto affiliate, enjoys the continued support of Toronto Armenians. A few months ago, the campus underwent extensive renovations and has a brand new look a decade after its construction.

 

Delegation Visits Project Sites in Tavush

On May 24, the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund delegation began a series of project-site visits in Armenia, starting with the Tavush region.

The delegation’s first stop in Tavush was the village of Khachardzan, where the fund is renovating the community’s school with the financial support of longtime benefactors Mr. and Mrs. Arto and Hilda Kalciyan of Argentina. With access to natural gas and equipped with a new central-heating system, the school will provide students with a comfortable learning environment year-around. The renovated and fully furnished campus will open its doors in September.

The Khachardzan School in Tavush

Assistance to Khachardzan is also being provided by the Armenia branch of the United Methodist Committee on Relief (UMCOR). After planting an orchard in the vicinity of the school, UMCOR is currently donating farm animals and beehives to 28 economically disadvantaged local families.

Also on May 24, the delegation visited the community of Lusadzor, in Tavush, for a first-hand look at the activities of a farm established through the support of the fund’s French affiliate. For the past several years, a number of far-reaching agricultural development programs have been implemented throughout Tavush, with the joint support of France’s Hauts-de-Seine General Council and the French-Armenian community.

 

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‘Ready to Fight for Armenia’: A Remembrance of Maral Melkonian Avetisyan

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When I Wake Up

When I wake up I look forward
to a good day.

When I wake up I look forward
to telling more people about Armenia. 

When I wake up I look forward
to fight for Armenia.

When I wake up I look forward
to tell people to help Armenia.

When I wake up I hope a child
from Armenia gets food.

When I wake up I look forward
to no more genocide.

I got up. I am ready to fight
for Armenia.

– Maral Melkonian, age 13
AYF Washington D.C. “Sevan” Juniors
The Armenian Weekly, April 20, 1996

***

‘Ready to Fight for Armenia’: A Remembrance of Maral Melkonian Avetisyan
(Jan. 12, 1983 – April 13, 2015)

By Elizabeth Chouldjian

Words invariably fail when we seek to speak of the tragic loss of a young friend and a comrade-in-arms in the pursuit of strengthening the Homeland and advancing our collective Cause. And so, I turn to a poem printed in the Armenian Weekly on April 20, 1996, composed by Maral, herself, to offer an early glimpse of her passion and pursuit for justice.

Maral Melkonian Avetisyan (Jan. 12, 1983 – April 13, 2015)

In “When I Wake Up”—written less than 5 years after the re-establishment of an independent Armenia and just 2 years after the tenuous ceasefire that would end the fighting in Artsakh—13-year-old Maral Melkonian issued a challenge to the Armenian nation—a Zartonki Gotch, if you will—to fight for a democratic and economically vibrant Armenia, where our children can flourish and live in a world without genocide.

It is this simple truth, this clarion call, that she would live by for the rest of her life.

But, her friends and family knew that from the start.

Born on Jan. 12, 1983, in Silver Spring, Md., Maral was always the delight of her parents Ara and Haikanouche Melkonian and older brother, Raffi. She attended St. Catherine Laboure from Kindergarten to 5th grade; St. Martin Catholic School from 6th through 8th grade; then graduated from Good Counsel High School and received her Bachelor of Arts in English language and literature in 2007 from the University of Maryland, College Park.

But her heart was always in Armenia and the Armenian community, scampering as a toddler in the Soorp Khatch Armenian Church Arabian Hall, attending and graduating from Hamasdegh Armenian School, and devoting her volunteer time to organizations including Homenetmen, Armenian Youth Federation (AYF), AYF Camp Haiastan, Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA), Armenia Volunteer Corps (AVC), and Birthright Armenia.

She led by example from the very beginning, holding multiple executive positions in the AYF D.C. “Sevan” Juniors and “Ani” Seniors and attending Camp Haiastan both as a camper and a counselor.

In Homenetmen, she inspired fellow Scouts as a khmpabed and traveled to Armenia in 1998 and 2002 to participate in the worldwide jamborees. In 2006, she would return to the Homeland, this time through the AYF, AVC, and Birthright Armenia, to spend the summer working with children at the Naregatsi Art Institute in Artsakh and the Khnko Aper Children’s Library in Yerevan. In 2007, she went back for a second consecutive summer, this time as director of the AYF Armenia Internship Program.

Upon her return, as she explored career opportunities, Maral interned at the ANCA. On the first day of her volunteer time at our D.C. headquarters, as we were coming up the stairs to our third floor offices, Maral shared, “In my years in the AYF, coming to meetings, I would listen to you and Aram [Hamparian] talk about efforts to get U.S. assistance to Armenia or demand justice for the Armenian Genocide, and I’d ask myself, ‘Are we really making a difference?’ Now, after these past summers in Armenia and Artsakh—working with the kids, speaking with the people—I get it. I know how important this work is, and I want to be a part of it.”

Maral shared those precious moments in Artsakh and Armenia with community, friends, and family in the U.S., and continued her steady and consistent stream of volunteer efforts all for the furthering of nation and Cause. She was an ardent advocate of the Armenia Volunteer Corps and Birthright Armenia, encouraging everyone she met to take the opportunity, travel to Armenia, and give back to the Homeland.

In time she would meet and marry a true kindred spirit—Tigran Avetisyan—and they, together, would embark on a journey of faith and fulfillment that would brighten the lives of all who knew and loved them.

Our community and nation hoped to cherish and grow with Maral through the decades, inspired by her smile and can-do attitude, but fate had other plans. Our Maral would leave us on April 13, 2015, just weeks before the Armenian Genocide Centennial—a milestone in the battle for justice that held such great meaning for her.

At her wake, surrounded by hundreds of friends and family members who had gathered to share their love and pay their respects, it was the poignant words of her brother, Raffi, that touched one and all. Raffi explained that when Maral learned of her illness, she turned to those most dear to her and said, “I’m sorry to put you through this,” and immediately sought to put all at ease.

That is the Maral that we will always remember—the selfless, thoughtful, blessed soul, who put family, community, and nation above all else, whether at age 13 or 31.

The Melkonian and Avetisyan families are encouraging all who loved Maral and wish to continue her good works to support the ANCA Endowment Fund. Donations in Maral’s memory may be mailed to ANCA Endowment Fund, 1711 N Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20036 or offered online at www.anca.org/inmemoryofmaral (please cite Maral Melkonian Avetisyan in the “comments” section).

So many have already joined the Melkonian and Avetisyan families through generous contributions to the ANCA Endowment Fund, including Mr. & Mrs. Ohannes and Chouchan Aghguiguian; Mrs. Jeannette Alemian; Mr. & Mrs. Steve and Sarine Altan; Mr. & Mrs. Kevork and Shoghik Altounian; Mr. Daniel Apelian; Mr. & Mrs. Simon and Sose Arabian; Mr. & Mrs. Chaha and Ani Araklian; Mr. & Mrs. Garo and Vrejoohie Armenian; Mr. & Mrs. Ara and Ani Asatoorian; Mr. & Mrs. Sebouh and Maro Asatoorian; Mr. Artavazd Avetisyan; Mr. David Avetisyan; Mr. Tigran Avetisyan; Mr. & Mrs. Bedros and Stella Bandazian; Ms. Michelle Barsamian; Mr. & Mrs. Veh Bezdikian; Birthright Armenia; Mr. Jake Bournazian; Mr. Steve Canning; Mr. & Mrs. Oscar and Eleanor Caroglanian; Ms. Elizabeth Chouldjian; Ms. Marale Damirjian; Mr. Sahag Dardarian; Mr. & Mrs. Dion and Lucy Davitian; Mr. & Mrs. Hamo and Mirra Dersookian; Ms. Elizabeth Direnfeld; Mr. & Mrs. Edward and Sosse Dombalagian; Miss Natalie Doudaklian; Mr. Haig Eskandarian; Mr. & Mrs. Missak and Ani Festekjian; Mr. & Mrs. Peter and Lilian Festekjian; Mr. & Mrs. Raffi and Kristin Festekjian; Mr. & Mrs. Yeprem and Talar Festekjian; Mr. & Mrs. Voskan and Anik Galooshian; Mrs. Seda Gelenian; Mr. & Mrs. Richard and Alleen Ghazaryans; Ms. Christine Hannett Garner; Mr. & Mrs. Nader and Sophia Hawit; Mr. & Mrs. Chris and Tsoghig Hekimian; Mr. & Mrs. Zohrob and Lorrie Hovsapian; Mr. & Mrs. John and Ardemis Jerikian; Mr. & Mrs. Sarkis & Sonia Kasbarian; Ms. Talar Kasbarian; Mr. & Mrs. Vartkes and Ani Keshishian; Mr. & Mrs. Vicken and Ani Khatchadourian; Mr. & Mrs. Norayr and Sossy Khatcheressian; Dr. Sevan Kolejian; Mr. Aret Koseian; Mr. & Mrs. Chris and Karina Krikorian; Mr. & Mrs. Dave and Isabel Kubikian; Mr. & Mrs. Jim and Nora Kzirian; Mr. & Mrs. Dickran and Paulette Lehimdjian; Mr. Bob Marsteller; Mr. Boghossian Meguerditch; Mr. & Mrs. Ara and Haygo Melkonian; Mr. Khajag Melkonian; Mr. & Mrs. Raffi and Medea Melkonian; Mr. & Mrs. Armen and Taleen Moughamian; Mr. & Mrs. Krikor and Maro Moussessian; Mr. & Mrs. Areen and Maria Movsessian; Mr. & Mrs. Sebouh and Michelle Nahabedian; Mr. Ara Nahapetian; Mr. & Mrs. Hratch and Linda Najarian; Mr. & Mrs. Maurice and Vartouhi Najarian; Dr. & Mrs. Guiragos and Sossy Poochikian; Ms. Nayiri Poochikian; Mr. & Mrs. Sevag and Natalie Poochikian; Mr. & Mrs. Rudi and Rita Shafakian; Ms. Jemma Simonian; Ms. Ojenee Simonian; Ms. Yeran Simonian; Mr. & Mrs. Martin and Sylva Surabian; Mr. & Mrs. Andre and Karineh Tarpinian; Mr. & Mrs. Haroutun and Nevart Tatarian; Mr. & Mrs. Kevork and Suzy Tatarian; Mr. & Mrs. Philip and Hakinth Terpandjian; Ms. Rita Terterian; Mr. & Mrs. Michael Torosian; Mr. & Mrs. Hampar and Mary Vartanian; Mr. & Mrs. Chuck and Sema Yessaian.

The post ‘Ready to Fight for Armenia’: A Remembrance of Maral Melkonian Avetisyan appeared first on Armenian Weekly.

Boston Armenian Community Celebrates May 28 with Aram I

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Aram I Awards Former Ambassador John Evans ‘Medal of Knight of Cilicia’

WATERTOWN, Mass. (A.W.)—More than 500 Boston Armenian community members filled the Armenian Cultural and Educational Center (ACEC) in Watertown on Thurs., May 28 for a celebration of the 97th anniversary of the establishment of the First Republic of Armenia in 1918.

His Holiness Catholicos Aram I of the Holy See of Cilicia delivered the keynote address and awarded the “Knight of Cilicia” medal to former U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans for his dedication to truth and justice.

Catholicos Aram I blesses the Armenian tricolor (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

The event, titled “Triumph over Tragedy: The Birth of the First Independent Armenia, 1918,” featured remarks by Dr. Antranig Kasbarian, a former member of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF) Eastern Region Central Committee.

The event was organized by the ARF “Sardarabad” Gomideh and St. Stephen’s Armenian Apostolic Church, with the participation of the Armenian Relief Society, the Armenian Youth Federation, Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Association, and Homenetmen.

A scene from the event (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Aram I was greeted at the door of the ACEC, where a red carpet was rolled out, by ARF Sardarabad Gomideh chairman Hovhannes Janessian, who led him and his delegation—which included the Catholicosate’s Ecumenical Officer Very Rev. Housig Mardirossian; staff-bearer, Rev. Bedros Manuelian; Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate of the Armenian Orthodox Church of the Eastern U.S.; Archbishop Mushegh Mardirossian, Prelate of the Armenian Orthodox Church of the Western U.S.; and Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar General of the Eastern Prelacy—to the Lachinian Hall, where a small reception was held. Present were community leaders and activists.

The event officially began when Aram I entered the Hovnanian Hall of the ACEC, led by Homenetmen scouts and flanked by the delegation of clergy. The Vehapar and his delegation were joined on stage by Very Rev. Fr. Andon Atamian, Rev. Avedis Boynerian, Rev. Archpriest Antranig Baljian, Rev. Stephan Baljian, Archpriest Rev. Vazken Bekiarian, Very Rev. Sahag Yemishyan, Rev. Archpriest Aram Stepanian, Rev. Archpriest Gomidas Baghsarian, Rev. Mikael Derkosrofian, and Rev. Bedros Shetilian of St. Gregory Armenian Apostolic Church. They performed the service of thanksgiving for the Republic of Armenia, which included the blessing of the tricolor flag. The singing of Armenia’s national anthem, “Mer Hairenik,” concluded this segment of the event.

Following the service, masters of ceremony Tsoler Avedissian and Nairi Khachatourian, members of the ARF “Sardarabad” Gomideh, welcomed the guests and introduced the Zankagner Performing Arts Ensemble—comprised of Kindergarten and elementary school-aged children—and their director Hasmik Konjoyan to the stage. Zankagner first sang the American anthem, followed by a patriotic medley and “Im Hayastan.”

Ani Arakelians-Avakian then offered a moving recital of excerpts from Baruyr Sevag’s “Yeradzayn Patarak.”

Kasbarian, who currently serves as executive director of the New York-based Tufenkian Foundation, delivered his remarks. Kasbarian first highlighted the role the church had played serving as both a spiritual and a national home for the Armenian people, and praised the role it had taken in “bolstering the Armenian Cause” through seeking justice—including, most recently, in the lawsuit against Turkey for the return of the historic headquarters of the Catholicosate of Sis.

Kasbarian also applauded former Ambassador Evans’ commitment to truth. “[Evans] spoke truth to power by openly acknowledging the Armenian Genocide. This was a bold, daring, and unprecedented act for which he has paid dearly both personally and professionally,” said Kasbarian.

Kasbarian then spoke of the struggles and dedication that is remembered on May 28. “May 28, 1918 marks the culmination of a heroic self-defense struggle, one that was life-or-death in the truest sense, and one that mobilized the entire resources of the nation,” he said, adding that we should not only celebrate but also evaluate the First Republic “in hopes of drawing parallels and comparisons we can use to address Armenia’s current potential and predicament.”

Dr. Antranig Kasbarian delivers his remarks (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

The First Republic encapsulates the hope, ideals, and aspirations of the Armenian people, continued Kasbarian. Despite the external and internal threats it faced—from border disputes to refugee issues and famine—“the leadership found time to forge some semblance of democracy, based on inclusiveness, tolerance, and respect. Women were found in parliament and diplomatic corps; indeed, women were granted the right to vote before such acts were taken in the U.S. and other advanced democracies. Parliament also featured minority voices alongside the Dashnak majority—not only Ramgavars, Communists, and other Armenian political factions, but ethnic minorities including Kurds and Yazidis.”

Kasbarian said his intent was not to “whitewash” the past, because certainly mistakes were made, but to stress that the leadership of the First Republic “reminds us of the need to root our actions in the life and needs of our entire people, not only the elite, but everyone without exception.”

Following Kasbarian’s remarks, vocalists Meghri DerVartanian and Hovhaness Khacheryan sang “Erebuni-Yerevan,” “Yeraz im, Yerkir Haireni,” and “Kareri Amrots.”

Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan then offered his remarks. He said that as a child, May 28 was for him—as it was for many others—a day to envision a free republic, which was realized decades later on Sept. 21, 1991. Two events stand out as manifestations of the Armenian people’s will to exist: One is the year 451, because Armenians would not have existed without the Battle of Vartanantz, he said. The other, is May 28, 1918, because without the heroes of the First Republic, we would not be here today, he said.

A scene from the event (photo: Aason Spagnolo)

Those two dates and struggles are different than any other, he said, because the Armenian people knew that if they did not struggle with one will, together, they would have ceased to exist. We must not simply celebrate May 28, but let it serve as a reminder. The results of one’s work are worth more than mere words, he said.

Aram I is not only concerned about the challenges facing Armenians, he explained, but with demanding the rights of the Armenian people.

Middlesex County Sheriff Peter Koutoujian took the podium next. He introduced retired Ambassador John Evans. “Sworn in as Ambassador [to Armenia] in August 2004, Evans took up his post in Yerevan where—as he did throughout his entire career—he served with distinction and did a commendable job. In February 2005, during speeches here on American soil, he took a principled stand, a stand in accord with the historical facts alive and of democratic and humanitarian values,” began Koutoujian. “And in keeping with America’s proud traditions of friendship with the Armenian people, he spoke the truth. He called the Armenian Genocide, a ‘genocide.’”

Koutoujian said Evans knew there would be consequences to his actions. “He was called back to Washington and at the end of it all, his professional and diplomatic career was greatly affected and ended. His crime? Telling the truth,” said Koutoujian, adding, “He was very simply too honest a man to lie, too honest an American to lie, too good a man and too good an American to allow our nation’s moral standing to be diminished for the sake of convenience or out of deference to a false ally.” Koutoujian went on to call Evans a modern day Henry Morgenthau.

Former U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans speaks after being awarded the “Knight of Cilicia” medal (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Following Koutoujian’s introduction, Evans was invited onto the stage, where Aram I awarded him with the Medal of Cilicia, to the cheers and enthusiastic applause from the crowd. In his brief remarks thanking Aram I, Evans said he had a “gentle diplomatic protest,” because “all I did was to tell the truth. And no one needs to thank me for that. All I did 10 years ago was to break a taboo in the State Department and the U.S. government—a taboo that should never have existed in the first place.” He added that his effort was successful to some degree, since the government was then forced to talk about the issue.

Aram I then delivered his keynote address. He said that yes, Armenians were able to have a free and independent Armenia, but that today’s Armenia is part of the united Armenia that is the Armenian dream. “Yes, we lost 1.5 million Armenians during the genocide. We lost churches, schools, and properties. But we also lost our homeland. We lost Western Armenia: Ayntab; Sis, Marash, Zeytoun, Adana. We lost Cilicia. Therefore, today we have land demands from Turkey.” He added that Armenians must not limit themselves to social or economic issues, that the vision of a united Armenia must remain alive—which was the same vision that kept the diaspora alive.

Aram I the delivers the keynote address (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

“Let us not forget that on the 50th anniversary of the genocide, the Armenian youth in Soviet Armenia poured onto the streets and demanded, ‘Our lands! Our lands!’ (Mer hoghere, mer hoghere),” said Aram I, adding that the spirit of May 28 reminds Armenians to remain faithful to the leaders and activists of the First Republic, and to their message: a free and independent Armenia, and united Armenians.

“Freedom is not just a human value. It is a divine gift. We must look at freedom or independence from this perspective. In creating the first man and woman, God has endowed them with freedom: freedom of reflecting and acting, freedom of fulfilling their human potentials, therefore freedom is indeed a core value imbued by divine gift. Hence, aspiration to freedom is indeed a legitimate concern and drive in human beings,” said Aram I.

“In the course of our history, the Armenian people have constantly struggled to reaffirm their independence, their freedom,” he continued. “Therefore freedom has been a permanent drive, a salient feature of our history. After the fall of the last kingdom in Cilicia in 1375, for centuries we lost our freedom and were subjected to the continued persecution of the Ottoman-Turkish government.”

More than 500 Boston Armenian community members filled the ACEC on May 28 (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Remembering the past means reaffirming faithfulness of our commitment to our martyrs, he said. “Armenians will never forget the Armenian Genocide… Diplomatic and political considerations may overshadow the truth, but no power in this world can erase this truth,” he said.

Directing his words to Evans, Aram I continued, “The Bible reminds us that the truth liberates us… By telling the truth you occupy an important place in the hearts of the Armenian people…and you paid the price.”

“For the future of our people, we must strengthen Armenia. Strengthening Armenia means strengthening the diaspora, and strengthening the diaspora means strengthening Armenia… We have one future. This is the message of May 28,” concluded Aram I.

The event ended with the St. Stephens Church Choir leading the singing of “Giligia.”

A scene from the event (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Master of ceremonies Tsoler Avedissian (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Master of ceremonies Nairi Khachatourian (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

Vocalists Meghri DerVartanian and Hovhaness Khacheryan perform (photo: Aaron Spagnolo)

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Topouzian Wins Farmington Hills ‘Artist in Residence’ Award

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FARMINGTON HILLS, Mich.—Armenian musician and Kresge Artist Fellow Ara Topouzian was chosen by the Farmington Area Arts Commission as the 2015 Artist in Residence. He was recognized on Fri., April 17, at an awards ceremony held at the Costick Activities Center in Farmington Hills.

Ara Topouzian

This year marks the 39th year of recognizing excellence in the arts in the Farmington community. The Artist in Residence Award is given each year to a resident of Farmington or Farmington Hills who displays exceptional talent and artistic accomplishments. Topouzian represents one of two musicians that have received this award since 1976.

“It’s an honor to receive this award and to be part of a family of great artists within the community,” said Topouzian. “It is especially important to me to win this award as this year marks the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, and winning such an award also helps bring awareness to the massacres that began in 1915.”

Topouzian plays the kanun, a 76-stringed laptop Middle Eastern harp. He has performed throughout

the country both as a solo artist, as well as a member of Armenian and Middle Eastern ensembles and with renowned world music, jazz, and fusion artists.

His music has been featured in several nationally aired PBS documentaries. In 2012, he performed an original concerto written for the kanun as a guest soloist with the Virginia Commonwealth University Symphony.

In 2015, Detroit Public Television aired Topouzian’s film documentary, “Guardians of Music: A History of Armenian Music in Detroit,” which pays homage to Detroit-Armenian musicians that carried the tradition of performing Armenian folk music for the community.

For more information about Topouzian and his music, visit www.aratopouzian.com.

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‘From Sacred Wrath’ Performs to Full Houses in NY

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“From Sacred Wrath,” a play about an Armenian-American family grappling with the legacy of 1915, performed two sold-out shows at the Davenport Theatre in New York City in April during Genocide Awareness Month.

The timely play, written and directed by Taleen Babayan, reflects the various outlooks and struggles facing Armenians around the world in this Centennial year of the Armenian Genocide.

Aghavni (played by Constance Cooper), an Armenian Genocide survivor, shares an emotional scene with Ayesha (played by Jamie Alana), a Sudanese Genocide survivor

The story was brought to life on stage through the cast of diverse and professional actors, which included Karnig Nercessian, playing the role of Hovsep, the patriotic patriarch of the family; Constance Cooper as Aghavni, an Armenian Genocide survivor; Ani Djirdjirian as Areni, a history teacher who has a modern outlook of reconciliation; Raffi Wartanian as Soghomon, an American-born Armenian who feels a desire to return to his homeland; Cihangir Duman as Cemal, a Turkish journalist who is unable to call the Armenian massacres a genocide; Jamie Alana as Ayesha, a Darfur Genocide survivor; and Haig Hovnanian as Alex, a childhood friend of the family’s.

“Sharing the stage with so many gifted performers was beyond rewarding, as was working on a script that allowed us to question the identity paradigms that have come to define modern Armenian life,” said Wartanian, who is a performer, writer, and musician.

Babayan received three grants to stage the production, including awards from the Dadourian Foundation, the Mabel Fenner Scholarshipm and the Armenian Youth Foundation.

A crowd gathers outside the Davenport Theatre pre-show

“From Sacred Wrath” has started a cross-cultural dialogue that has the potential to be the starting point for great change in society,” said Alana, a graduate of the Actors Studio Drama School. “There are no villains in this play, only people. People have the power to create unity even when nations, cultures, and ethnic groups cannot. With this play we were able to create unity on stage and unity in the audience.”

The two performances appealed to audiences beyond the Armenian community, and drew people of diverse age groups and backgrounds.

“It was an amazing feat to manage to combine and present the ever-prevalent diasporan issues in such a moving and visceral way all in one package,” said audience member Karén Tonoyan. “I hope this play gets staged many more times because it deserves to be seen by many more audiences.”

Aghavni (played by Constance Cooper) shares her story of survival after a century with daughter Nina (played by Nora Armani), Sudanese Genocide survivor Ayesha (played by Jamie Alana), and granddaughter Areni (played by Ani Djirdjirian)

“From Sacred Wrath” is Babayan’s second play. Her debut work, “Where is Your Groom?” (Pesad Oor Eh)—a comedic story that follows an Armenian-American family’s desire to preserve their ties while living in the diaspora—has performed for seven Armenian communities across the country. Upcoming performances are scheduled in New York and Florida.

“Taleen Babayan’s insightful writing has captured a ‘slice of life’ from the Armenian Diaspora reality with its players, points of view, and issues all rolled very successfully into one entertaining and informative stage production,” said Armani, actress and artistic founder of the SR Socially Relevant Film Festival. “Taleen not only has a deep understanding of Armenian issues, but knows how to contextualize them within a larger universal paradigm. I feel honored to have been part of this production and shared the stage with a talented cast.”

History teacher Areni (played by Ani Djirdjirian) debates the events of the Armenian Genocide with journalist Cemal (played by Cihangir Duman), who denies it ever took place

Journalist Alex (played by Haig Hovnanian) shares a scene with his friend Soghomon (played by Raffi Wartanian)

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Patrick, Barsoumian Honored at New England Pontifical Dinner

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WALTHAM, Mass.—Many would agree that the genocide memorial at Armenian Heritage Park in Boston would not have become a reality had it not been for the intervention of former Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick.

It might have just become a forlorn conclusion, despite a decade of planning and anticipation by relentless organizers.

In the end, it was the former governor who was credited with paving the way, despite the backlash he met from naysayers and critics who littered the path with obstacles.

Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan presents the Spirit of Armenia Award to the honorable Deval Patrick, former governor of Massachusetts, for his unwavering support of the Armenian community and, especially, the Armenian Genocide Memorial at the Rose Kennedy Greenway in Boston. (Photo: Albert Der Parseghian)

Today, it stands as a sacred vigil to victims and survivors of the Armenian Genocide inside Boston’s Rose Kennedy Greenway, drawing hundreds upon thousands to its midst each week.

Some 350 guests applauded Patrick at the Pontifical Banquet that took place at the Westin Hotel on May 29 after he was presented with the coveted Spirit of Armenia Award.

The tribute is made to a non-Armenian who goes above and beyond the call of duty in furthering the Armenian Cause. Patrick appeared as an all-out choice of the committee and stood before the gathering, despite previous commitments and a rather arduous schedule these days as managing director of Bain Capital, where he focuses on investments.

“The governor continually and quietly asserted his support throughout our endeavors,” said Middlesex County Sheriff Peter Koutoujian, in his introduction. “When it came down to a few critical junctures at the end of this process, the governor stood front and center for us.”

Koutoujian described how the former governor stood up against some very powerful figures who had supported his candidacy.

“He had many adversaries for this project, not just genocide deniers,” the sheriff recalled. “It was not a convenient political decision. He attended our plenary sessions and he was seen with his eyes welled up in tears. Our experience and suffering meant a great deal to him.”

Making the presentation was Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan, Prelate, who echoed Koutoujian’s sentiments with his own gratitude and appreciation.

Upon receiving the award, Patrick commended the Armenian people for their character and diligence in promoting their many communities throughout the world following the genocide years.

“Your leadership is a triumph over genocide,” Patrick brought out. “When the concept of a genocide memorial was being discussed for the Rose Kennedy Greenway, there were many disparaging moments when it came under duress. I was determined to see it through fruition. The spirit this was shown mirrors the resilience of the Armenian people through the ages.”

As an aside, it was Patrick who appointed Koutoujian, then a state representative, to his role as sheriff, and Rachel Kaprielian, also a former state representative, to registrar of motor vehicles. Both progressed into high-profile positions under and beyond the Patrick administration.

In another presentation, Missak Barsoumian was awarded the Mesrob Mashdots Medal by His Holiness Aram I, following a long but worthy introduction by Rev. Archpriest Antranig Baljian.

His Holiness Aram I presents the Meshrob Mashdots Medal to Missak Barsoumian for his vast contributions to St. Stephen’s Church, especially with its Armenian School. (Photo: Albert Der Parseghian)

 

Barsoumian was honored for his many years of service to the Armenian community. His efforts in promoting the Saturday Armenian School at St. Stephen’s Church in Watertown for many years have been exemplary. What was initially at a middle school level has now been augmented to high school level with sizeable increases in attendance and teaching staff.

Barsoumian was one of the six founders of the St. Stephen’s Armenian day school. He has been an active member of Hamazkayin, a vice president of the regional executive board, and a chairman of the Hamazkayin Boston chapter. Barsoumian was also one of the initiators of the Armenian Heritage Park project, and led the Boston Armenian Genocide Memorial Fund. Among his many acts of charity was the implementation of a $100,000 scholarship fund—together with his brothers and sister—that has gone to educating worthy students over the years.

“To perpetuate Mesrob Mashdots’ gift of the alphabet to the Armenian nation, I have done my best to transmit it to the younger generations through schools,” Barsoumian told the crowd. “I will continue serving the Armenian community to the best of my abilities.”

Once again, Aram I was his prolific self from the rostrum. After delivering such an eclectic talk in Washington, the Vehapar was more down to earth, focusing his attention to the people, not the government.

“Our country’s welfare is in good hands,” he told his flock. “The beauty of our heritage is the people—we who are seated here this evening. With our knowledge and allegiance to our church and nation, it remains our cardinal responsibility to stay attached.”

The Catholicos spoke of his meetings with people in three major diasporan communities and a pilgrimage that extended throughout the month. Tiring as it was, he managed to stay balanced.

“One question comes to mind,” he said. “What brings people of different backgrounds together? It’s the spirit of unity, a sense of belonging, a history that perpetuates our identity against affliction. The welfare of our society is imbedded into our common lives. We must all act upon it.”

The dinner also offered some poignant remarks from master of ceremonies Raffi Manjikian and the wonderful voice of Tamar Kanarian in singing the national anthems. Tamar served as co-chairman of the Pontifical Visit Committee with Astor Guzelian.

Joining the entourage was His Grace Bishop Anoushavan Tanielian, vicar; Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian, Western Prelacy; Very Rev. Housig Mardirossian, ecumenical affairs director; Very Rev. Bedros Manuelian, staff bearer; and Dertad Manguikian, Central Executive Council.

At times, the Vehapar was joined on the altar by both archbishops, along with a cadre of priests and combined choirs. During Sunday Badarak at St. Stephen’s Church, the place was packed. Particularly impressive was a section off to one side devoted to the Sunday School.

On May 28, a crowd estimated at 600 turned out at the Armenian Cultural and Education Center (ACEC) in Watertown for an Armenian Independence Day commemoration hosted by the Boston ARF. The program included a thanksgiving prayer for the Republic of Armenia, blessings of flags, and music and poetic performances by the youth and children’s choirs with remarks by Dr. Antranig Kasbarian. Aram I also delivered yet another electrifying talk.

About 100 youth then turned out for a breakfast dialogue. His focus was not only on small children but teens, youthful adults, and the middle-aged. No regard was given to age. And those attending were engaged.

When the moderator read a question about female altar servers and deacons, the audience cheered when the Vehapar said, “The place of women is not in the kitchen.”

The event drew fine coverage from the Boston Globe, which ran a striking photo of the Vehapar looking to the heavens above with his hands folded.

The headline read: “Youths Get Audience with the Catholicos.”

The intent here was to bring new vitality to the church, and his words were both intrinsic and emphatic. “In our church and community, we must take youth very seriously. This is one of my top priorities.”

Among the responses were from 19-year-old Tufts University student Nairi Krafian who was emotionally affected by the Vehapar’s remarks, along with Samuel Chakmakjian, another 19-year-old from Brandeis University.

Both students revealed how happy they were to hear the Vehapar’s advice on remaining true to their roots in a diverse society.

On June 1, Aram I visited St. Stephen’s Nursery and Elementary School, joining the students for breakfast and hearing from a Grade 5 class that had just returned from a trip to Armenia. He then spent time in each and every classroom.

“It gives a focus for us,” said Rev. Archpriest Antranig Baljian. “Armenians tend to live in the past and His Holiness is trying to give us the message that not only ties us to the past but to the future as well.”

His Holiness will be addressing the NRA Convention on June 4 at St. Stephen’s Church, ending his historic visit that was initially postponed three years ago due to the conflict in Syria.

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Armenian Genocide Centennial Observed with Musical Performances at SCSU

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NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Southern Connecticut State University (SCSU) held a series of public events on April 22-24 to observe the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide through music and art. Along with an opening reception for “Ashfall,” an installation by artist Robert Barsamian that tells the story of the victims of the genocide, guest musicians Anna Hayrapetyan and Tatev Amiryan gave in-class lectures and recitals for the university community as well as for the general public.

Anna Hayrapetyan and Tatev Amiryan perform

On April 22, Hayrapetyan and Tatev Amiryan performed a campus concert and met with students in music classes to talk about Armenian composers.
On April 23, the SCSU Symphonic Band presented a concert titled, “Music of Armenia,” featuring folk music by composers Hovhaness, Reed, Khachaturian, Komitas, and Strauss. Hayrapetyan discussed the origins of the music presented and University Band director Craig Hlavac explained the pieces’ arrangements.

On April 24, Hayrapetyan and Amiryan performed a recital in honor of the victims of the Armenia Genocide. Their performance featured pieces connected specifically with the genocide theme by Armenian composers of the 20th and 21st centuries, including Komitas, Mirzonyan, Kanachyan, and Amiryan.
Soprano Hayrapetyan graduated with her master of music degree from the University of Connecticut (UConn). With UConn’s Opera Theater, she has performed in “La Grande-Duchesse de Gérolstein,” “Little Red’s Most Unusual Day,” “The Beautiful Bridegroom,” “The Fairy Queen,” “The Pirates of Penzance,” “Bastien und Bastienne,” and a staged concert of “Fables” by Madame Isabelle Aboulker.

She received her bachelor’s degree from Sydney Conservatorium of Music in Sydney, Australia. During her undergraduate studies, she performed in scenes from “Rigoletto,” “Il Barbiere di Siviglia,” and “Eugene Onegin,” and the title role in “Anush” by Tigranyan. Hayrapetyan is the winner of the MacArthur Music Competition in Sydney, where she was awarded first and second places for sacred music and operatic aria sections, respectively. Hayrapetyan has been teaching voice, piano, and music theory for more than five years. Her students’ achievements include winning different prizes in multiple competitions as well as successfully passing entry auditions to the Sydney Conservatorium of Music and other music institutions.
Amiryan is a composer and pianist devoted to exploring the sounds of her native Armenian homeland. Influenced substantially by traditional Armenian folk and sacred music, she uses the musical language of her heritage to compose and perform new works. Amiryan received her undergraduate and graduate degrees in composition and music theory from the Tchaikovsky Special Music School and in composition and musicology from the Komitas State Conservatory of Yerevan. Currently, Amiryan is a composition Doctor of Musical Arts (DMA) candidate at the University of Missouri-Kansas City (UMKC) Conservatory of Music and Dance, and has dedicated her dissertation to the Centenary of the Armenian Genocide.

Her music has been performed extensively in the United States, Armenia, England, Germany, Poland, Belgium, and Japan by such renowned ensembles and performers as Carpe Diem String Quartet, Ensemble Oktoplus, and Metropolitan Choral of Kansas City, and pianists Artur Avanesov, Hayk Melikyan, and Takahiro Akiba. In 2013, Amiryan was commissioned a piece by North German Radio NDR Norddeutscher Rundfunk, which was premiered by Ensemble Oktoplus in Hannover, Germany, in 2014. Her piano piece, “Waiting for the Dawn,” was included in pianist Hayk Melikyan’s album of Armenian piano music “Echoes of Altar,” released in 2014 by the Ministry of Diaspora of Armenia in commemoration of the Centenary of the Armenian Genocide. Often collaborating with the Komitas State Conservatory and the UMKC Conservatory of Music and Dance, Amiryan has given a number of recitals, performing both her own music, pieces from the classical and contemporary repertoire, and piano improvisations.

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AGBU ‘Sayat Nova International Composition Competition’ Holds Gala Concert in NY

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Original Compositions Premiered by an International Ensemble of Musicians

NEW YORK—On May 11, the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU) Sayat Nova International Composition Competition held its biannual gala concert and award ceremony at the Leonard Nimoy Thalia Theater at Symphony Space in New York. The gala concert premiered compositions by the three winners of the 2014 Sayat Nova International Composition Competition, performed by an international ensemble of musicians from Armenia, France, Finland, Macedonia, and the United States. The concert also featured songs by 18th-century Armenian bard Sayat Nova on the kamancha and poems by Armenian poet Daniel Varoujan, recited by poet Lola Koundakjian.

(L-R) Dic-lun Fung, David Ayriyan, Hovik Sardaryan, Richard Melkonian, Christian Erbslöh-Papazian, Ursula von Lerber, Elizabeth Means, Talin Nalbandian, Lola Koundakjian, Vasko Dukovski, and Hayk Arsenyan

Opening remarks were given by Ambassador Zohrab Mnatsakanyan, the permanent representative of Armenia to the United Nations, and Ara Guzelimian, the dean and provost of the Juilliard School. “2015 is laced with symbolism for the Armenian people,” said Mnatsakanyan.

“For us, it symbolizes 100 years of grief, tragedy, and injustice, but I think it also very strongly symbolizes our pride, dignity, revival, and confidence. Tonight is not an exception in symbols. First, Daniel Varoujan: a man who perished in the tragic days of the Armenian Genocide. Though he disappeared physically, his strength and love of art and beauty traveled through generations and is here tonight.”

(L-R) Talin Nalbandian, Christian Erbslöh-Papazian, Vasko Dukovski, and Elizabeth Means

Guzelimian also remarked on the legacy of Daniel Varoujan in the continuity of Armenian art:

“When wars are fought and histories are written, often the most precious thing that remains of a people is its voice as expressed in its cultural creative spirit, so it is extremely appropriate that we stake our claim to the future in celebrating these commissions tonight. I was thinking about the fact that the terrible death of Daniel Varoujan was meant to silence his voice, and not only was his voice not silenced, but his poetry is treasured and remembered. The joy in these works tonight is that his poetry is a generative force. It sparks creation yet again and sparks new life and new voices. That is an extraordinary metaphor for the power of this commemoration and all of us as a people,” said Guzelimian.

The Sayat Nova International Composition Competition is designed to introduce Armenian musical traditions to a wider audience by inviting composers of all heritages to submit original compositions for an ensemble of Armenian traditional and Western classical instruments. This year, in commemoration of the Centenary of the Armenian Genocide, the competition asked composers to include in their compositions the poetry of Daniel Varoujan, one of the first victims of the Armenian Genocide.

Mezzo-soprano Talin Nalbandian and kamancha player David Ayriyan

The winners of this year’s competition were Hovik Sardaryan of Armenia/Nagorno-Karabagh, Dic-lun Fung of Hong Kong, and Richard Melkonian of the United Kingdom. “I am very happy to have participated in the AGBU Sayat Nova International Composition Competition. I really enjoyed the experience, particularly working with Western Armenian poetry and the duduk. I have never worked with such an organic composition of instruments before and I’m grateful to the organizers of the competition for this opportunity,” said Sardaryan.

“We would like to express our gratitude to the distinguished jury who offered its expertise in judging the competition and to VoxNovus for creating the online submission and evaluation software used this year as well as to the AGBU New York Special Events Committee (NYSEC) for making the gala concert possible,” said Hayk Arsenyan, director of the AGBU Performing Arts Department.

For more information about the AGBU Sayat Nova International Composition Competition, visit www.agbuperformingarts.org.

Ara Guzelimian, the dean and provost of the Juilliard School, delivers opening remarks.

 

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Centennial Commemoration Held at Ramapo College

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Zarakolu, Barsoumian Discuss Turkey’s ‘Denial Industry’

MAHWAH, N.J.— A conversation between activist, writer, and publisher Ragip Zarakolu and Armenian Weekly editor Nanore Barsoumian was recently organized by the Gross Center for Holocaust and Genocide Studies in commemoration of the Centennial of the Armenian Genocide. The event, which was held at Ramapo College, focused on “The Denial Industry in Turkey,” that is, the continued denial of the Armenian Genocide through official and unofficial avenues in Turkey.

Following opening remarks by Michael Riff, director of the Gross Center, Ani Tchaghlasian, board member of the Gross Center, introduced the two discussants.

Zarakolu, Barsoumian Discuss Turkey’s ‘Denial Industry’

The conversation touched on the state-driven education system in Turkey that vilifies Armenians; the murder of Hrant Dink and its aftermath; the Dogu Perincek case; the recent “condolences” messages issued by the Turkish government; the reality in which Armenian identity has survived among descendants of survivors in Turkey; the different views among progressive intellectuals in Turkey about what justice might look like for the Armenians; the role of the media in recent years—from the days leading up to the murder of Hrant Dink to the present; and the exporting of denial.

Zarakolu has been subjected to a lifetime of harassment from Turkish authorities. He highlighted what he called a “memocide,” or the killing of memory—the prevailing atmosphere in Turkey when he first published a book on the Armenian Genocide—and spoke about the challenges he has faced for the work done through his publishing house.

Zarakolu graduated from college in 1968 and began writing for the magazines “Ant” and “Yeni Ufuklar,” which focused on issues of social justice in Turkey. In 1971, a military government assumed power in Turkey and instituted a crackdown on writers it deemed subversive. Following a conviction and a three-year prison sentence, Zarakolu steadfastly refused to abandon his campaign for freedom of thought, striving for an “attitude of respect for different thoughts and cultures to become widespread in Turkey.”

Eventually, Zarakolu turned his attention to Turkey’s denial of the Armenian Genocide, beginning in 2004 with his publication of the Turkish translation of British author George Jerjian’s book, The Truth Will Set Us Free: Armenians and Turks Reconciled. He was immediately prosecuted under Article 159 of the Turkish Penal Code, which made it illegal to “insult or belittle” various state institutions. That was replaced in March 2005 with the now-infamous Article 301, a new version of the insult law that conservative prosecutors have since used against dozens of writers, journalists, and publishers in Turkey.

Having been acquitted for the publication of several similar titles, in June 2008 Zarakolu was convicted of “insulting the state” under Article 301 for publishing Jerjian’s book. He was sentenced to a five-month prison term, which was subsequently commuted to a fine. He is appealing the conviction.

Barsoumian’s writings focus on human rights, politics, poverty, and environmental and gender issues. She has reported from Armenia, Nagorno-Karabagh, Javakhk, and Turkey.

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Norik and Irina Astvatsaturov: From Baku with Art

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WAHPETON, N.D.—Like their name, Norik and Irina Astvatsaturov praise God for their artistic talent every day.

They also thank the Lord above for keeping their family safe and secure during the turmoil they faced in Azerbaijan. As proud Armenians from Baku, their faith and family show no compromise.

“Because of war, we were forced to evacuate our homes,” Norik recalls with disdain. “It was terrible. Our people had a very hard history, a very bad time.”

Norik Astvatsaturov showing his ‘mettle’ with metal art.

The family decided to apply for refugee status in the United States. It was not easy. For two years, they held their breath, counted their blessings, and stayed strong.

Today, Norik and Irina are firmly entrenched in North Dakota. A Methodist church in Wahpeton sponsored them as a refugee family. With just a few dollars to their name, the money was spent at the airport.

“We were hungry and we bought pizza,” Norik recalled. “After living in crowded rooms in Yerevan, we were now in heaven. God has given us the opportunity to live in this country with good children and grandchildren. They represent our entire life.”

Norik’s workbench is a constant cadence of tapping sounds as he turns metal into exquisite forms of art. His wife enjoys a similar handicraft with beadwork.

Their folk art represents their heritage, history, and life’s experiences and is currently on display at the Heritage Center and State Museum through the end of this genocide centennial year. It carries an estimated value of $100,000.

Titled, “God Given: Cultural Treasures of Armenia,” it has served as a two-fold eye-catcher with locals. Norik’s work consists of copper and bronze repousse with inlaid semi-precious stones, many with Biblical themes and ornamental pieces. Irina dedicates herself to Russian and Eastern European techniques to create colorful beadwork on black velvet.

Norik and Irina Astvatsaturov making a double imprint as ‘prairie artists’ in the Mid-West

It’s done the old-fashioned way by hammer and nail with precise hand-eye coordination.

“Metalwork dates back 2,000 years or more,” he explains. “I wanted to try it as a 19-year-old and have continued through the decades. I always try to surprise myself. It means that I have not died, that I live like art. That is the beauty of creation.”

First came an Armenian cross for his church as a gift to the people. It was made from aluminum and was very hard to maneuver. From there, the passion turned to jewelry boxes, historical figures, icons, and decorative plates.

As many as a thousand hits on each side go into the process, depending on the size and difficulty of the subject. There’s no room for error, Norik says. It’s that precise.

“With Norik and Irina, their work really does reflect their culture and history,” says Troyd Geist, a North Dakota folklorist. “It’s an interesting, rich history that involves a part of the world not many of us know much about. It touches upon very real situations going on in the world now—the tensions between Muslims and Christians… We can learn from them.”

Irina was a teacher in Baku and learned beadwork as a child. Her images include elaborate icons, birds, and flowers.

They met at an art studio in Baku 38 years ago and have 2 children, Anna (Turcotte) and Mikhail, along with 4 grandchildren.

“My parents complement each other in a sense that she guides his compositions with her advice and he does the same for her,” says Turcotte, a Maine attorney and author of Nowhere, a story of exile. “One thing my dad could do here and not Baku is using his metal embossing skills to create traditional Armenian Christian art as opposed to non-religious pieces.”

Their exhibit is enhanced with an award-winning publication written by Geist, featuring Norik’s work. He is a recipient of the prestigious Bush Foundation Fellowship.

A short documentary was shown repeatedly in the museum’s new theater. The film explores Norik’s artwork in relation to the turmoil in Baku and the Nagorno-Karabagh region between Christian Armenians and Muslim Azerbaijanis.

“My parents built our lives by putting aside their own ambitions and dreams,” Turcotte added. “My father worked 12-hour shifts in a wood-processing factory for 23 years before retiring. My mother worked odd jobs to support the family financially. They came home to their art evenings.”

In North Dakota, the family found peace and security for the first since the Karabagh liberation movement began. There are no Armenian churches or communities in the state. The closest is inside the Minneapolis area, which is four hours away.

There are Armenian families, though they’re separated by hundreds of miles. But that didn’t stop them from raising their children within the Armenian culture, not to mention the language.

“No one knew what an Armenian was,” said Turcotte. “My parents used their art and cooking skills to educate fellow North Dakotans about their rich history and culture by hosting dinner parties. That way, they could also practice their English.”

For the first six months, the family lived off food stamps. No employer would hire them because of the language barrier. Finally, Norik began working at the wood processing planting in town while Irina helped out in the high school cafeteria.

Due to Norik’s limited exposure to the Armenian folk art world, he’s relatively content about being a Baku Armenian who continues to make an imprint in the American mainstream.

“My parents maintain their Armenian identity through art, the story of Armenians they tell anyone they meet in the Mid-West,” Turcotte points out. “It’s the history they have taught their children and now their grandchildren.”

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SCSU President Mary Papazian Addresses UN Association on Genocide Centennial

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NEW HAVEN, Conn.—Dr. Mary Papazian, president of Southern Connecticut State University (SCSU), addressed the United Nations Association of Connecticut (UNACONN) in Kent, Conn., on April 25, on the occasion of the Centennial commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

Dr. Mary Papazian

Appointed as the university’s 11th president in December 2011, Papazian oversees an institution of 11,100 students, 434 full-time faculty, 1,100 staff, and an operating budget of $190 million. Mary Papazian and her husband, Dr. Dennis Papazian, were recently awarded honorary doctorates by the Armenian State Pedagogical University (ASPU) in Yerevan, Armenia. ASPU was observing the 90th anniversary of its founding and marked the occasion by recognizing leaders from a number of universities with which it has international agreements.

The United Nations Association of Connecticut is the official Connecticut state chapter of the United Nations Association–U.S. It is a nonprofit membership organization dedicated to building understanding of and support for the ideals and vital work of the United Nations among American people. The association is affiliated with the World Federation of United Nations Associations, which was established in 1946 as a public movement for the U.N.

The text of Papazian’s speech follows.

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‘A Journey Beyond Hate: The Armenian Genocide 100 Years Later’

Some years ago, my husband Dr. Dennis Papazian, a longtime Professor of History at the University of Michigan, Dearborn, wrote an article that he first delivered at a symposium in Vienna, Austria, entitled, “Genocide, the Curse of the Nation-state.” He reminded his audience that in the Peace of Westphalia of 1648, which ended the vicious religious wars in Europe, it was decided that each state would practice Christianity according to the orientation of its ruler, whether s/he was Protestant or Roman Catholic, as decided at the earlier Peace of Augsburg (1555) which established the principle cuius regio, eius religio (as the prince, so the religion).

This concept—that the religion of the ruler be the religion of the state, with no authority above the state to which anyone might appeal—was to award the state ultimate sovereignty or dominion over its inhabitants. Thus, what the state did to its inhabitants was nobody’s business. At Westphalia, sovereignty was deemed to reside in the “sovereign,” or the ruler, the chief authority over all things domestic as well as foreign affairs. The concept of  “imperial rule,” central rule over many states (e.g., the Holy Roman Empire, the Ottoman Empire, and British Empire later), was downgraded and eventually abandoned after World War I.

As the states of Europe slowly democratized in the 19th century, to one extent or another, in theory at least, the sovereignty belonged to the people. But in reality, this sovereignty was exercised by the government that might or might not respond to the desires of the population. In any case, although Westphalia presumed and demanded conformity to the religious orientation of the ruler, life was not that simple.  Most of the states of Europe continued to have minorities of different ethnic and religious origins who in the treaties were guaranteed very limited rights, chiefly the right to practice their religions in private.  Nevertheless, since there was no way to guarantee these limited rights, what the sovereign ultimately did with these minorities was nobody’s business. Thus, the principles developed at Westphalia, especially those relating to respecting the boundaries of sovereign states and non-interference in their domestic affairs, became central to the world order that developed over the following centuries and which remains in effect to this day.

Raphael Lemkin, a Polish-Jewish lawyer, coined the word “genocide” using the Armenian case as an example. It was not just a question of coining a word, however, which had been done many times in history and was usually of little or no consequence.  But the word “genocide” reflected a whole new idea of dealing with sovereignty by, at least in theory, limiting the power of the sovereign over human beings. It is just this reality that we hope someday will shape international relations. In other words, the concept of genocide as defined by Lemkin had the potential to create a new world order in which national minorities are guaranteed their lives by the international community.

Much of the discussion around the Armenian Genocide centers on whether the “G-word” should be used to describe the events of 1915-23. So why is the word genocide so important, and why did Lemkin coin the word in the first place? And why did he enshrine it in a treaty that he spent his life trying to have adopted by the United Nations?

Lemkin was born in Poland in 1900 and at a very young age was instilled with a sense of justice by a well-educated and pious family. He was a serious teenager, growing up just at the time when the Ottoman Empire was slaughtering its Armenian subjects in 1915-16. By 1921, Lemkin had entered the university and was particularly enamored of international law, which at that time was established by treaties between two states or among a group of states, there being no permanent superior authority.

It was in that very same year, 1921, when a young Armenian by the name of Soghomon (Solomon) Tehlirian assassinated Mehmet Talaat Pasha, who as minister of the interior and later grand vizier was one of the chief masterminds of the Armenian Genocide. After Turkey surrendered in the Mudros Armistice of Oct. 30, 1919, Talaat Pasha had been whisked away to safety by the German Navy. Talaat Pasha had been living comfortably in Berlin, with his wife and friends, when Tehlirian tracked him down and assassinated him in broad daylight on one of the main German boulevards.

Tehlirian made no attempt to escape. Rather, he told the gathering crowd over and over again, “He and I are foreigners, and this has nothing to do with Germany.” Tehlirian was arrested, sent to jail, and put on trial. At the trial he testified that he was haunted by his mother’s spirit, his mother who had been beheaded in front of him, and who appeared in his dreams and demanded vengeance. Of course, the Germans at that time were well aware of the vast and horrible murders that had been and were continuing to be committed against the Armenians all over Anatolia and northern Syria. Amazingly, Tehlirian was acquitted for not being responsible for his actions. This may have been the first time in history that a murderer was set free because he was not responsible, mentally and morally, for his actions.

Lemkin, who was following these events, asked the question: “Why is the killing of an individual a crime, punishable by law, and the killing of millions by their government was no crime at all?” The Allied Powers had confronted the same problem after the war and accused the Ottoman government, the Young Turk dictatorship, of crimes against “humanity and civilization, a new concept.” Thus the annihilation of the Armenians became an “international issue,” not just an Armenian issue. It was under this rubric that war crime trials were held in Malta by the British government, trials that were abandoned at the time Mustafa Kemal Ataturk was in rebellion overthrowing the Sultan’s government.

Interestingly, the Turkish government also held little-known but very important war crime trials, a series of courts-martial, and convicted the Young Turk leadership, including Talaat and others, condemning them to death. So, in a sense, Tehlirian was carrying out the punishment prescribed by the Turkish courts-martial, since the guilty had fled to other countries. The Turkish leaders were accused of war crimes, since there was no domestic Ottoman law against genocide.

Lemkin decided that what the world needed was an international law against the killing of racial, religious, or ethnic minorities by their own government; namely, to limit the sovereignty of individual states when it came to dealing with large numbers of domestic inhabitants. He spent the rest of his life working for an international agreement against genocide, a word he devised to express this newly understood crime, a crime that had been called by Winston Churchill “the crime without a name.” Henceforth, the killing of one man would be murder and the killing of a nation would be genocide. That is why it is so important to apply the word genocide to the Armenian massacres of 1915-23, since it brings those events under international law where Lemkin thought it should be. Words do matter.

In this context, how should we understand the challenge of “a journey beyond hate,” the topic of this panel? It would be inhuman if those who had experienced the mass slaughter of Armenians, namely the survivors, most of whom were children ages 6-16, and whose lives were mangled almost beyond repair, did not hate those who drove them from their homes, and who they witnessed torturing and killing their mothers, fathers, sisters, brothers, aunts and uncles, grandmothers and grandfathers, cousins and friends. Not to hate under those circumstances would be absolutely unnatural—actually inhuman, neurotic, without feeling. One must hate extreme evil when one is a witness and a victim.

As my husband often says, “They are dead, the victims and the killers, they are all dead. There is no one left to hate. Their fate is in God’s hands.”

We also understand, in a very profound sense, that to bring health to society we need to hate the crime and love the criminal. Of course, when it comes to torture and murder, this becomes a bit difficult. How many of you could watch a child being crucified, and then hate the crime and love the criminal? How many of you could watch a 3-year-old child being used by horsemen as a ball in a game of polo, and then hate the crime and love the criminal? Thank God we are not faced with that choice today. The victims and the killers are all dead.

We must also understand that some of the victims themselves, the survivors, carried hatred in their hearts for those who killed and tortured their relatives and friends, although they rarely spoke about these horrific events. It was not until approximately 50 years after the Armenian Genocide that the survivors were willing to tell their stories.

But we, today, are the children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren of the survivors. We did not personally experience being driven out of our homes and sent on death marches. We did not witness torture and murder. It is easier for us to step back and take a larger view. As we said, the victims and the perpetrators are all dead. What is left is us and the progeny of the killers.

Armenians living today, despite the adverse publicity on the part of a few individuals who project their own feelings on others, are ready to reconcile with the Turkish people. Of course, that presumes there is someone with whom to reconcile! Reconciliation must go both ways. It is a two-way street. It has been well noted that denial is the last stage of genocide, for to erase memory is to complete a genocide.

The act of forgiveness would be much easier if the progeny of the killers recognized the guilt of their predecessors and disowned those horrible events. In such a case, the progeny of the killers and the progeny of those murdered could come together and shed tears partaking in each other’s grief. Those who killed and were killed are all dead, and there are a few survivors alive today.

I am happy to report that recognition is indeed happening today in many parts of Turkey and here in the United States. The present generation of Turkish intellectuals is more inclined to take a serious look at the past of their country and to accept the realities of the past, thus freeing themselves from the burden of denial and opening themselves to reconciliation and renewal of their own country.

My husband and I for the last 15 years or so have invited Turkish students and scholars into our home so that we could recognize each other as people and not as objects. Of course, in the early days most of these Turks were deniers of the Armenian Genocide—decent and good people, but not at all knowledgeable. But in more recent times, as they have learned and studied and opened their minds and hearts, they have become acknowledgers.

It is heartwarming to watch the transformation of open-minded Turks from deniers to acknowledgers as they study the wealth of evidence that has been accumulated by international scholars, initially Armenians, and now by numerous objective European and Turkish scholars.

In matter of fact, the most learned of all these Turkish scholars is Dr. Taner Akçam, who has accumulated much archival evidence from those Turkish archives that are open and with whom my husband worked a decade ago to gather the materials on the Turkish war crime trials.

The most recent books by Taner Akçam, published both in Turkish and in English, have convinced people of good faith, with archival evidence, that the Turkish government of that time did intend to commit a genocide against its Armenian Christian minority, as well as Greek and Syriac Christians. The wholesale slaughter of Armenians is what the American ambassador in the Ottoman Empire, Henry Morgenthau, called the “murder of a nation” and “racial extermination.”

Thus, I can happily report that most Armenians today have moved beyond hatred to objective analysis and realistic attempts to bridge the gap between Turks and Armenians, both in Turkey, in America, and in Armenia. But this is not a fairytale world, and the goodness that we can imagine or desire is not always realistic. You have to deal with real people and with real situations. Still, progress is being made.

This past summer our family went on a trip to Anatolia, present-day Turkey, to visit sites where Armenians had lived for thousands of years and from which they were driven during the genocide. One of the people with whom we met was the former mayor of the old city of Diyarbakir, Abdullah Demirbas. Diyarbakir, which effectively is the capital of Turkish Kurdistan, was a city inhabited by Armenians from ancient times. Apparently, there are perhaps only a few hundred part-Armenians alive today, all titular Muslims, who are beginning to admit to and study the origins of their families.

Our small group met with Mayor Demirbas, who spent almost an hour with us in a cavernous room inside of the vast walls of the city. He told us that he had built the first Armenian Genocide Monument in Turkey, and that he had the identification written in five languages, including Turkish and English, so that all could read and understand.

He said that he wanted to apologize for the horrible crimes committed by the Kurds against the Armenians, and he explained how he was dedicating his life to the rectification of this crime. It was he who led the way towards the major repairs on the local Armenian Church, Sourp Giragos, so that it could be used once more for worship.

Of course, those interested in bringing the Armenian Genocide to a proper closure welcome the declaration of Pope Francis, the European Parliament, and the German Reichstag, the German president, and the German chancellor, who have recently announced their recognition of the vast Armenian massacres as genocide, joining other countries such as France. We also welcome remarks by the American Jewish Committee reaffirming the Armenian Genocide and urging the president to put the United States on record as acknowledging the Armenian killings as genocide.

We have been disappointed by President Erdogan of Turkey who has made nasty comments against the Pope and the European Parliament as well as the Armenians. But we applaud the hundreds if not thousands of Turks who commemorate, in Turkey, the Armenian Genocide and who seek reconciliation.

Too often the question to Armenians is, why do you demand that people use the term “genocide?” Those who are neither Armenians nor Turks would do well to stress confession and recognition on the part of Turks and Turkey rather than pressuring the Armenians to betray the past. Yes, we have moved beyond hate, but we cannot abandon rationality. One can demand justice without hate. It’s done every day in America’s courts of law. Pressure should be put on the criminal and not the victim. We must not condone genocide by ignoring it.

And so, 100 years after the Medz Yeghern—the “Great Crime” in Armenian—it is time to move beyond hate. But that can only be accomplished by an honest, truthful reckoning with the past—in Turkey, most importantly—but throughout the world, as the reverberations of this “crime against humanity,” the Armenian Genocide, continues to impact us all.

Genocide is repeated over and over again because the perpetrators believe they will not be held accountable. That is the wrong lesson to teach the evil of this world.

Thank you.

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