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California Courier Online, April 15, 2004

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  • California Courier Online, April 15, 2004

    California Courier Online, April 15, 2004

    1 - Commentary
    Turkish Minister Cancels Michigan
    Trip Because of Armenian Genocide
    By Harut Sassounian
    California Courier Publisher
    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - City of Glendale Marks
    Week of Remembrance
    3 - Armenian Communities of Iran to be
    Featured in Next UCLA Conference, May 14-16
    4 - Sixth Armenian Music Awards
    Returns to Hollywood, May 22
    5 - 'Seeking Simplicity' is Theme
    For May 14-16 FAPC Retreat
    6 - In Memoriam - Vartabed Manuel Yergatian (1954-2004)
    By Jackie Abramian
    ************************************************** **********************
    1 - Commentary
    Turkish Minister Cancels Michigan
    Trip Because of Armenian Genocide

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    The Turkish Minister of Education Huseyin Celik was planning to visit
    various universities this week in Illinois, Wisconsin, Michigan, Ohio, and
    New York. However, when the Turkish Foreign Ministry became aware of his
    itinerary, he was advised to cancel his visit to the Univ. of Michigan (Ann
    Arbor), because his host there would have been Associate Prof. of
    Sociology, Fatma Muge Gocek.
    Prof. Gocek learned that the Foreign Ministry had told the Education
    Minister to cancel his trip to the Univ. of Michigan, because she
    "recognized the Armenian claims [of genocide], had previously hosted Taner
    Akcam [a Turkish scholar who recognizes the Armenian Genocide] at the
    University of Michigan, and is currently writing a book on the issue."
    Prof. Gocek and Prof. Ronald Grigor Suny had jointly organized two
    workshops on the Armenian Genocide in the last four years -- the first at
    the University of Chicago and the second at the Univ. of Michigan (Ann
    Arbor).
    This incident is yet another indication that Prime Minister Recep Erdogan's
    repeated promises to improve Turkish-Armenian relations are not sincere.
    Under the guise of meeting the requirements for membership in the European
    Union, Erdogan's government has passed a series of "paper" reforms that
    have not been implemented. Furthermore, despite repeated assurances that
    the Turkish government is ready to open the border with Armenia, Turkey has
    not even been willing to take the first step of establishing diplomatic
    relations with Armenia. How could the Erdogan government convince anyone
    that it is seriously considering to improve relations with Armenia, when it
    can't even tolerate the holding of a conference on Armenian issues
    organized by a noted Turkish academic at an American university?
    Ironically, while Erdogan's government was ostracizing this Turkish
    professor, the University of Michigan was honoring her with the Harold R.
    Johnson Diversity Award for her "innovative efforts to open up constructive
    dialogue among Turkish and Armenian scholars, as well as her continuing
    efforts to enhance the quality of diversity on campus."
    British Ambassador to Slovakia Joins the Fray
    For the first time since the controversial comments made by the British
    Ambassador in Armenia on the Armenian Genocide, the British Ambassador in
    another country has joined the fray.
    Ric Todd, the British Ambassador to Slovakia, responded on April 5th to a
    letter sent by Ashot Grigorian, the President of the Armenian Community of
    Slovakia, complaining about the denial of the Armenian Genocide by Amb.
    Thorda Abbott-Watt. Amb. Todd expressed regret that the British
    government's position "on the events of 1915-16" had caused personal
    problems for the letter-writer, assuring him that "whatever happened will
    not be forgotten."
    Amb. Todd's letter is just as insulting as the denialist position of the
    British Ambassador to Armenia. Readers should send their complaints to Amb.
    Todd's e-mail address: [email protected].
    Meanwhile, the British Ambassador to Armenia, Thorda Abbott Watt, continued
    receiving complaints from around the world. Two major Armenian
    organizations added last week their voices to this on-going controversy.
    The Armenian Democratic League (Ramgavar Party) of France published a
    statement in the organization's organ, La Lettre de L'ADL, "condemning the
    British Ambassador's statement as "false" and "politically ill-fated." It
    stated that her denial of the Armenian Genocide "is not only an insult to
    the memory of the entire Armenian nation, but should be viewed as a
    complicity to the Genocide." The ADL of France demanded that the Armenian
    government declare her a persona non grata and immediately expel her from
    Armenia.
    The second important statement was issued by the Armenian Community and
    Church Council (ACCC) of Great Britain. In a letter addressed to British
    Prime Minister Tony Blair, the ACCC called Amb. Abbott-Watt's denial of the
    Armenian Genocide "most insensitive and an affront to our dignity.... It is
    highly offensive not only to the memory of the 1.5 million Armenians whose
    Genocide she refers to, but to all Armenians throughout the world,
    including British Armenians...." The ACCC demanded that Amb. Abbott-Watt
    "issue an unqualified and speedy retraction of her hurtful and offensive
    observation which one could easily consider to be undiplomatic,
    patronising, and most definitely unbecoming an Ambassador of Her Majesty's
    Government...."
    Furthermore, the ACCC called the British government's policy of denial "not
    only slanderous, but an immoral act, sinister in the extreme, committed
    merely for political expediency." The ACCC urged the British government to
    "re-address the issue of recognition of the Armenian Genocide of 1915,
    ...denounce the atrocities perpetrated against the Armenians of Turkey in
    1915 as Genocide, and to condemn those responsible."
    Interestingly, on the eve of April 24, "the British-Turkish
    Inter-Parliamentary Friendship Group" is visiting Turkey this week. After a
    stop at the Mausoleum of Ataturk, the British Parliamentarians will meet
    with various Turkish officials, including Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul.
    Readers are urged to continue sending e-mails to Amb. Abbott-Watt:
    Thorda.Abbott [email protected]; to Michael Jay, the Under-Secretary and Head
    of the UK Diplomatic Service: [email protected]; and to Prime Minister
    Tony Blair through the following web site:
    http://www.number-10.gov.uk/output/page821.asp (click on select a subject,
    select "international affairs," and then click on the "go" button), asking
    the British government to withdraw its Ambassador as she can no longer
    effectively carry out her diplomatic duties in Armenia. Please send copies
    of your e-mails and any responses to the Armenian Foreign Ministry:
    [email protected] and to: [email protected].

    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - City of Glendale Marks
    Week of Remembrance
    GLENDALE - A panel discussion focusing on "Man's Inhumanity to Man", a
    Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide and a book drive will highlight the
    City of Glendale's "Week of Remembrance 2004" during the month of April.
    The events are free and the public is encouraged to attend.
    The Genocide Collection Book Drive will run during the month of April.
    Donated items may include books and audio materials which will be evaluated
    for inclusion in the Glendale Central Library's "Genocide Collection." All
    donations can be dropped off throughout the month at any Glendale Public
    Library branch or at the Glendale Civic Auditorium on Saturday April 24 and
    Sunday April 25.
    The panel discussion on "Man's Inhumanity to Man" will be aired the week of
    April 19 on the City's Government Access Channel, GTV6, on Charter Cable.
    The educational student discussion will be moderated by Sonali Kohatkar of
    KPFK radio. Panelists will include Dan Alba, Program Director of the Los
    Angeles office of "Facing History and Ourselves" and Professor John Roth
    from Claremont McKenna College.
    The Commemoration of the Armenian Genocide will be held on Saturday, April
    24, between 10 am and 9 pm at the Glendale Civic Auditorium, 1401 N.
    Verdugo Road. Attendees are encouraged to view an art exhibit and donate
    blood to the American Red Cross. At 7 pm, there will be a formal program
    including musical presentations and performances. At the conclusion of the
    program, there will be a candlelight vigil outside of the Civic Auditorium
    at the future site of a monument commemorating the genocide. In addition,
    community members will have an opportunity to view the art exhibit and
    donate blood on Sunday, April 25, from 10-5 pm on the lower level of the
    Civic Auditorium.
    For additional information, contact Zizette Ayad, (818) 548-4844.
    ************************************************** ************************
    3 - Armenian Communities of Iran to be
    Featured in Next UCLA Conference, May 14-16
    UCLA-The 14th in the UCLA International Conference series on Historic
    Armenian Cities and Provinces will feature the colorful history and culture
    of the Armenian communities of Iran from ancient to modern times.
    The conference, to be held in Glendale and on the UCLA campus from Friday
    evening to Sunday afternoon, May 14-16, will bring together scholars from
    Armenia, Cyprus, Germany, Great Britain, Iran, Italy, and various parts of
    the United States. The opening session in Armenian will be held on Friday
    evening, May 14, from 7:30 to 10:00, in the Glendale Presbyterian Church at
    the corner of Louise and Harvard Streets in Glendale and will include
    illustrated lectures by Armen Hakhnazarian (Germany and Armenia), Ani
    Babayan (Isfahan/New Julfa, Iran), Onnik Hairapetian (Glendale and Mashdotz
    Colleges), and Gohar Avagian (Historical Archives, Armenia).
    The Saturday sessions on May 15 from 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. will be held on
    the UCLA campus, in Court of Sciences 50 (Young Hall), and will be
    conducted in English. The presentations will focus on the political,
    cultural and literary, economic, and social history of the Armenians of
    Iran or Persia. Speakers include Richard Hovannisian (UCLA), A.E. Redgate
    (Newcastle, England), Peter Cowe (UCLA), Hovann Simonian (USC), Thomas
    Sinclair University of Cyprus), Gabriella Uluhogian (Bologna University,
    Italy), Vazken Ghougassian (Eastern Prelacy, New York), Rubina Peroomian
    (UCLA), Houri Berberian (California State University, Long Beach), Rose
    Marie Cohen (Los Angeles), Gayane Hagopian (UCLA), Anahid Keshishian
    (UCLA), Bert Vaux (University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee).
    The Sunday afternoon sessions on May 16 from 1:30 to 5:30 will be in
    Armenian and in English with presentations by Armen Ter Stepanyan
    (Matenadaran, Armenia), Armen Hakhnazarian (Germany and Armenia), Artsvi
    Bskhchinyan (Armenia), Samvel Stepanian (Glendale), Aida Avanessian
    (Tehran, Iran), Claudia Mardirossian (UCLA), and Anny Bakalian (New York
    University). As in all previous conferences, a photographic exhibit will
    be mounted by Richard and Anne Elizabeth Elbrecht of Davis, California.
    The conference is organized by Professor Richard G. Hovannisian, Holder of
    the Armenian Educational Foundation Chair in Modern Armenian History at
    UCLA, and is co-sponsored by the Armenian Society (Iranahay Miutiun) of Los
    Angeles and the UCLA International Institute, G.E. von Grunebaum Center for
    Near Eastern Studies, and the Center for European and Russian Studies.
    All proceedings are open to the public at no charge. Parking on the UCLA
    campus is in Parking Structure 2, entrance from Hilgard Avenue at
    Westholme. The conference program may be viewed at www.uclaarmenian.org and
    Professor Hovannisian may be contacted by e-mail at
    [email protected].
    ************************************************** ***************
    4 - Sixth Armenian Music Awards
    Returns to Hollywood, May 22
    GLENDALE - First produced in 1998 at the Alex Theatre in Glendale by AMFA
    Entertainment, the Armenian Music Awards will return this year, and will be
    aired simultaneously in the United States and Armenia on May 22.
    It has successfully entertained people with the biggest stars the Armenian
    music industry had to offer. The fifth year event last November had
    included celebrities such as Stewart Copland from the Police, John Densmore
    from the Doors, Serj Tankian from System of A Down, Miles Copland founder
    of IRS Records (REM, Bangles) and producer of Sting for many years, Jerry
    Bell from the Daz Band and more.
    The sixth Armenian Music Awards will be aired on Horizon TV, May 22, 7 p.m.
    (Pacific) and 10 p.m. Eastern (Eastern).
    n past years, artists such as Charles Aznavour, Tigran Mansourian, Aram
    Khachaturian, Constantin Orbelyan, Arto Tuncboyaciyan, Harry Hadikian,
    Djivan Gasparyan and others have climbed up to the podium and have received
    their 'ANUSH'es for their contributions to our lives.
    The last Awards aired to a record audience of over 2 million people around
    the world. This year will even be a bigger draw. The event is not open to
    the public and all attendees will be contributors of the show and/or music
    & entertainment industry.
    "We have changed our venue, to The Henry Fonda Theatre in Hollywood, and
    have re-invented the evening for all those who change with the times,"
    producer and creator Peter Bahlawanian explains. The host of this year's
    gala event is none other than Kev Orkian from London.
    To oversee the judging procedure this year, the committee panel includes
    industry producers such as Stepan Partamian of Garni Music, Gagik Adamian
    of Narek.com, Daniel Parseghian of Parseghian Records, Alfred Nazarian of
    Chaterian Music, Garo Kirakosian of Armenfilm and founder Peter Bahlawanian
    of Pe-Ko Records. Emil Sardaryan is heading the marketing team and Teni
    Melidonian is involved with special groups.
    Red carpet ceremonies will start at 5 p.m., Pacific time.
    ************************************************** ************************
    5 - 'Seeking Simplicity' is Theme
    For May 14-16 FAPC Retreat
    FRESNO - "Seeking Simplicity" is the theme of the 2004 Spring Retreat of
    the Armenian Evangelical Youth Fellowship Western Region.
    The AEYF ministry weekend will take place on May 14-16 at the First
    Armenian Presbyterian Church of Fresno.
    The conference is open to high school and college-age youth and the
    registration fee is $25 per person, which includes a commemorative T-shirt.
    The registration deadline is May 10.
    Reverend Mgrdich Melkonian will be the keynote speaker for the convocation.
    A native of Aleppo, Syria, Rev. Melkonian earned a Bachelor of Arts degree
    in Armenian literature from Haigazian University in 1982 and a Master of
    Divinity Degree from the Near East School of Theology in 1984. Upon
    graduation, he served as youth director for the Union of Armenian
    Evangelical Churches in the Near East. In 1995, Rev. Melkonian accepted a
    call to become Associate Pastor for Parish Development at the United
    Armenian Congregational Church of Hollywood. In September 2003, he was
    installed as the 11th Senior Pastor of the host church.
    The Spring 2004 Retreat is a prelude to the Fourteenth Biennial Convention
    of the AEYF, a hemispheric convocation scheduled for June 23-27, 2004, in
    Fresno. The Pilgrim Armenian Congregational Church is the host
    congregation.
    Southern California students are invited to call 818-989-6208 or e-mail
    [email protected] for details. Central and Northern California students
    are invited to call 559-285-9369 or e-mail [email protected] for details.
    ************************************************** ************************
    6 - In Memoriam - Vartabed Manuel Yergatian (1954-2004)
    By Jackie Abramian
    During the tumultuous period of the early 1980's when the killings of
    Turkish officials by Armenian groups made worldwide headlines, the Turkish
    government arrested an Armenian priest by the name of Fr. Manuel Yergatian
    at the Istanbul airport and accused him of treason. The 26 year-old native
    of Istanbul was detained in 1980 for the alleged possession of maps that
    indicated Armenian territory within modern day Turkey. At the time of his
    arrest, Fr. Yergatian was accompanying a group of Turkish-Armenian students
    to the Armenian Patriarchate's Seminary in Jerusalem for the summer. He was
    the deputy director of the Patriarchate's Theological School.
    Fr. Yergatian, called Hayko Manuel Eldemir (Turkish equivalent of
    Yergatian), was charged under articles 140 and 242 of Turkish law with
    "having participated in activities against the state and damaging the
    interests of the country by utilizing his priesthood." He was sentenced by
    Istanbul's Martial law Command Military Court to 14 years in prison, to be
    followed by four years and eight months of internal exile. Amnesty
    International (AI), on the insistence of various Armenians (including Harut
    Sassounian), adopted him as a prisoner of conscience, after concluding that
    the evidence against him was baseless.
    I obtained Fr. Yergatian's prison address from AI and wasted no time to
    write my first letter - attempting to cheer him up by assuring him that he
    was not forgotten. I was delightfully surprised to receive a reply to my
    letter in a week. The airmail envelope was from "Fr. H. Manuel Eldemir"
    with small script and addressed to "Dear J. Abramian". The letter was in
    Turkish:
    "Sireli Jackline. My eyes could hardly believe your letter. It is the first
    letter I have received. I am glad to know that I am not forgotten! These
    are hard times. I'm writing in Turkish hoping that you can read my words.
    My letters are controlled so I don't want to entertain any difficulty. My
    heart and conscience is clean. I have not done anything wrong. I love
    Turkey and wanted to return to Turkey. But at the airport I was arrested
    and soon found myself in 4 walls."
    That was the beginning of our correspondence that continued until his
    release in 1986 and his subsequent internal exile at the Istanbul
    Patriarchate. Every letter that arrived was stained with black markers
    across lines indicating censored parts. I read each letter many times over
    and deciphered the Turkish with my mother's help, reading between the
    lines. Fr. Yergatian often spoke of the weather -- rainy, snowy, or cloudy.
    He was tired and not well. In the spring, he relayed his hopes for renewal,
    always underlining words of wisdom from the Bible and his devotion to
    Christ and Christianity. I would grow anxious when his letters were
    delayed. Being frequently tortured, he was often exhausted and could not
    write. Fr. Yergatian never mentioned his tortures, but simply spoke of the
    "hardships" of prison and of his "friends" - his cellmates. He spoke of his
    weak eyes, the time he spent "at the hospital" and how he had new glasses.
    Although he was young, his eyes were quite weak, he said. He spoke of being
    born in Istanbul in September 11, 1954, spending his early years in Turkey,
    his theological training in Jerusalem, his return to Turkey to serve in the
    army, and then being an ordained priest. He wrote of how he had "cried the
    day of" his ordination as he wanted nothing but to serve God and to love
    all mankind. His letters always ended with "love and peace" written in
    English, and in Armenian "Aghotkov yev sirov."
    Fr. Yergatian was an avid painter and used his art as meditation. His
    request to receive painting materials was actually granted by the prison
    guards. When he painted, he was able to relax and not "suffer," he said. He
    even sent me photos taken by the guards of his paintings - and his own
    photo, dressed in a sweater standing against an outdoor prison wall. I
    remember staring at his paintings and wondering about his inspiration for
    the serene natural setting with a river, mountains and trees, while another
    painting reflected a sail ship caught up in stormy waters and high waves.
    When his December 1985 Christmas letter ended with the words "pray for me,"
    I knew he was losing hope. We had been corresponding for years and he had
    never asked for my prayer. My contacts with the AI provided me with legal
    updates on Fr. Yergatian's case and news of his continued tortures. AI did
    not encourage further publicity of his case, fearing that it would
    undermine and damage the legal process. It was difficult to abide by AI's
    request.
    As the years passed, other more pressing matters distracted my attention
    from Fr. Yergatian's case. Then his March 1986 letter arrived with a small
    dried flower attached to its margin, bursting with happiness. He had
    received word of his release date under a Turkish amnesty law.
    "I am told that I will be released on May 18, 1986 - in the day of
    Pentecost. It is really miraculous." Fr. Yergatian wrote of his "six
    friends" and how they had all applied for an early release. In April of
    1986, a Congressional delegation visiting Turkey was pressed by the
    Armenian Assembly to discuss his case with Turkish officials. The
    delegation returned with assurances his scheduled release in May.
    Fr. Yergatian wrote that after his release his "main trouble would start
    with four years of exile in Eastern Turkey." He was anxious about this,
    the lack of Christian community in the East, and his unfamiliarity with the
    countryside. But he wrote: "Remember our Savior's words…go into all the
    world, even to the ends of the earth and I will be with you to the end." He
    considered this a "great commission and a wonderful promise…that is enough
    for me."
    I received his next letter, on May 10, 1986, from the Istanbul
    Patriarchate. I was so relieved that he had survived the "hardships" of
    Turkish prison. His letter was in English. It was full of good thoughts and
    joy but with an underlining anxiety still about his internal exile.
    "God will work wonders in the heart of men, for with God nothing is
    impossible," he said as though assuring himself. Then there was a long
    period of silence with no letters from him. I grew anxious and sent an
    urgent letter to Patriarch Kaloustian inquiring about Fr. Yergatian's
    safety, health and whereabouts. I received a kind, hand written letter from
    the Patriarchate assuring me that Fr. his health was improving, that he was
    busy with his new church duties and doing well.
    Fr. Yergatian's December 1986 Christmas card was a beautiful handmade card
    with dried flower designs. For the first time, his letter was typed and in
    Armenian. His internal exile to the Eastern Anatolia was lifted. He was
    placed under house arrest at the Patriarchate under Abp. Kaloustian's
    supervision and given a studio space to paint while conducting his priestly
    duties. He was prohibited from traveling abroad until 1994. He signed his
    letters, Manuel Vartabed Yergatian. He requested paintbrushes to be sent to
    him as he continued with his painting meditation. Even though his health
    began to fail, he never said anything about it. In his Sept. 10, 1987
    letter, he indicated that he had received the brushes. He said that his
    health was fine and that he was about to age yet another year as the next
    day he would celebrate his birthday.
    Our letters became few and far between as the years passed and as he was
    further entrenched in his religious life and duties. We promised each other
    to someday meet. Then in 2000, I learned after having been to Amsterdam
    that Fr. Yergatian was the parish priest of the local Armenian Church in a
    nearby suburb.
    My attempts to find Fr. Yergatian, his telephone number or email address
    were unsuccessful. I was unable to carry through due to my own lack of
    diligence and other preoccupations. I was, however, in peace. I knew he
    was well enough to have his own parish and was living far away from the
    tortures of his prison days.
    I received news of Fr. Yergatian's death from Harut Sassounian and was
    deeply saddened. I regret my failed promise to meet Fr. Yergatian in
    person. More importantly, I was angered by his untimely death because it
    was a direct result of the tortures that weakened and aged him prematurely.
    I was relieved, however, knowing that the devout Vartabed was now with his
    creator resting in a place free of all abuse. It was time for me to pray
    for Vartabed Yergatian -- he had traveled "to the end of the world to keep"
    our Christianity and had given his life for the mission.
    Yeghitzi Looys Vartabed Yergatian. May you rest in peace and may God
    forgive and enlighten your torturers.
    ************************************************** ************************
    The California Courier On-Line is a service provided by the California
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    ************************************************** ************************
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