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California Courier Online, August 26, 2004

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  • California Courier Online, August 26, 2004

    California Courier Online, August 26, 2004

    1 - Commentary
    Germans Apologize for 100-Year-Old
    Genocide? Is Turkey Next?

    By Harut Sassounian
    California Courier Publisher
    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - Modern Diagnostic Lab Would Boost
    Capacity to Treat Animal Diseases
    3 - APN Diocese Will
    Honor US Veterans
    At Nov. 12 Dinner
    4 - Southfield's AGBU Manoogian School
    Opens Sept. 7 with New, Improved Look
    5 - Film Foundation Plans Final
    Project in Genocide Trilogy
    6 - Dr. Mary Papazian Named Dean of
    New Jersey's Montclair University
    7 - Armenian Genocide to be
    Next Film by Mel Gibson?
    ************************************************** **********************
    1 - Commentary
    Germans Apologize for 100-Year-Old
    Genocide? Is Turkey Next?

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    Ninety years after the Armenian Genocide, the Turkish government is still
    trying to cover up the facts of this most heinous crime. But for how much
    longer?
    Last week, newspapers around the world, including the Financial Times and
    the Boston Globe, reported the German government's long overdue apology for
    the genocide committed against the Hereros one hundred years ago!
    Back in 1904, German colonial troops ruthlessly wiped out the majority of
    the 80,000 Hereros then in existence in what is now Namibia. Successive
    German governments during the past 100 years, just like their Turkish
    counterparts for 90 years, had refused to apologize and pay compensation to
    the survivors.
    A few days ago, during a ceremony marking the centenary of the Genocide of
    the Hereros, German Development Minister Heidemarie Wieczorek-Zeul said in
    Namibia: "I am painfully aware of the atrocities committed.... We Germans
    accept our historical and moral responsibility and the guilt incurred by
    Germans at that time.... So in the words of the Lord's Prayer that we share I
    ask you to forgive us our trespasses."
    But the Hereros, just like the Armenians, want more than just a simple
    acknowledgment and an apology. Kaiere Mbuende, a Herero, and a former
    government official, was quoted by Reuters as saying: "How is Germany going
    to own up to the apology? There has to be a form of redress, the injustice
    has to be undone."
    Even though Germany is Namibia's largest aid donor and has contributed $500
    million since the country's independence in 1990, Reuters reported that a
    $4 billion lawsuit has been filed on behalf of the Hereros against Germany
    in a U.S. District Court. The German government has argued that no
    compensation can be paid in this case because international laws on the
    protection of the civilian population did not exist in 1904. German
    officials have been reluctant to issue a formal apology out of concern that
    this may strengthen the demands for compensation.
    The Armenian Foreign Ministry and Armenian organizations should pay close
    attention to developments in this case, as it may serve as a legal
    precedent for demanding compensation from Turkey for the mass murder of
    Armenians as well as the confiscation of their lands and properties.
    Armenians must contact the law firm that has filed the lawsuit on behalf of
    the Hereros in order to learn the specifics of the legal arguments used in
    that case. If adequate funds are raised to hire experts on international
    law in order to pursue Armenian claims from Turkey, it is possible that by
    the 100th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide, a Turkish Minister would
    lay a wreath at the Genocide Memorial in Yerevan, apologize to the Armenian
    nation, and start a dialogue on the compensation to be paid to the
    survivors of the Genocide.
    If the remnants of a small tribe in Africa, with no lobbyists in Washington
    or other foreign capitals, and no organized communities in various
    countries defending their cause, can take such a resolute stand on their
    Genocide after 100 years, then surely Armenians with their international
    presence, political connections and lobbying organizations can and should
    do no less.

    Jewish Journalist Chastises Israel and Turkey
    The International Herald Tribune published on August 20 an opinion column
    by prominent Jewish journalist, Jay Bushinsky, titled: "The Armenian
    Genocide: Face History's Heartbreaking Truth."
    He wrote: "The carnage perpetrated by the Ottoman Turks 89 years ago, in
    which 1.5 million ethnic Armenians were killed or deported, was a tragic
    prelude to the Nazi Holocaust."
    Bushinsky said: "Hitler's determination to destroy European Jewry was
    encouraged by the world's lack of interest in the Armenian tragedy." He
    then mentioned Hitler's well-known question: "Who, after all speaks today
    of the annihilation of the Armenians?" Hitler's statement is inscribed "on
    one of the walls of the U.S. Holocaust Memorial in Washington, and rightly
    so," Bushinsky said.
    The Jewish journalist stated that various "interest groups, including
    Jewish ones, misguided or opportunistic," lobbied against the passage of
    the congressional resolution on the Armenian Genocide in order not to
    offend Turkey. Bushinsky is indignant that when Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan recently accused the Jewish State of terrorism,
    "neither Israel nor the overseas Jewish organizations dared remind Erdogan
    that leaders of nations that had committed crimes against humanity had best
    refrain from preaching to others."
    The Jewish writer expressed regret that Israel puts "contemporary
    priorities ahead of moral obligations." He recalled: "When a major
    documentary about the Armenian Genocide was due to be screened [in Israel],
    the foreign ministry intervened out of consideration for Turkish
    sensibilities." Bushinsky caustically pointed out: "It is hypocritical to
    expect compassion and sympathy from the peoples of the world for the lives
    lost in the Holocaust when 'raison d'etat' prevents Israel and most
    Israelis from commiserating with the Armenians."
    Bushinsky concluded his powerful commentary with the following admonition:
    "Historical truth must be faced regardless of how heartbreaking it may be.
    It cannot be subordinated to the ebb and flow of modern international
    relations. Anyone who visited the Armenians' grim memorial to their
    martyred brothers and sisters south of Yerevan, Armenia's capital, in the
    shadow of biblical Mount Ararat, cannot but grieve with them. Israelis,
    Jews, Zionists and their supporters should comfort the Armenians in their
    national sorrow and the Turks should accept the photographs, documents and
    above all testimony, which commemorate the Armenian Genocide, instead of
    insisting that it never happened."
    Jay Bushinsky should be commended for his humanity and honesty to the point
    of daring to criticize his own homeland for the sake of truth and justice.
    Both Israel and Turkey must realize that they will pay a heavy moral and
    political price as long as they continue denying the Armenian Genocide.
    Righteous individuals and organizations will hound the leaders of these
    countries until they stop desecrating the memory of the 1.5 million
    innocent victims of the Armenian Genocide.
    To counter the Turkish e-mail campaign against Bushinsky's column, please
    send a letter to the International Herald Tribune ([email protected])
    indicating your support for this thought-provoking commentary.
    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - Modern Diagnostic Lab Would Boost
    Capacity to Treat Animal Diseases
    By Andranik Mekailian
    YEREVAN - In a project that stands to benefit agriculture in Armenia for
    years to come, the Fresno, California-based Armenian Technology Group (ATG)
    has initiated a program that could boost the economy and improve the
    political atmosphere of the entire Caucasus. Working with the U.S. Agency
    for International Development (USAID) and USDA, ATG has proposed the
    introduction of a Veterinary laboratory that would test diseases that can
    pass from animals to humans through the food chain.
    After the break-up of the Soviet Union, the veterinary and laboratory
    systems of Armenia collapsed, negatively affecting food safety and public
    health in Armenia. According to Anoushavan Aghajanyan, head of the
    Department of Veterinary Service of Armenia, this system has been rebuilt
    from the ground floor. "We want to modernize our testing capabilities,"
    Aghajanyan stated. "This could be possible with the establishment of the
    Central Diagnostic Lab ATG is proposing."
    Currently, the government veterinary laboratory, located in the Erebuni
    district of Yerevan, tests for certain bacterial diseases, including
    salmonella. New emphasis has been placed on widening the testing to include
    a larger range of diseases. "We don't have the capabilities to test for mad
    cow disease or bird flu," Aghajanyan said. "With the close cooperation of
    ATG, including the establishment of the Central Diagnostic Lab and setting
    it up on government premises, our system can include the testing of these
    and other diseases."
    The importance of the diagnostic lab was further emphasized during a visit
    in the spring of 2004 by ATG vice-president and doctor of veterinary
    medicine James Reynolds, who journeyed to the village of Aygoot with a
    small group of ATG professionals to investigate the illnesses of cattle
    that were becoming weak and even dying while giving birth.
    Aygoot, formerly populated by Azeri Turks, is located north of Lake Sevan,
    not far from the border with Azerbaijan. The village, now populated by
    Armenians forcibly emigrated from the plains of Karabagh, has largely
    depended on foreign assistance in establishing its agricultural economy. A
    milk container, capable of storing large quantities of milk and insuring
    the use of all milk produced in the village, was recently donated to the
    farmers of Aygoot.
    During the visit, discussions centered on the nutrition of the cattle feed
    being used, and the use of Vitamin A shots to prevent disease and promote
    the animals' health. "It became apparent that the animals could be
    receiving toxic amounts of Vitamin A," Reynolds stated. "With CDL in place,
    we could test the sick animals and clarify any doubts about use of the
    vitamin and the issue of nutrition."
    At the Hrashk (Miracle) dairy on the outskirts of Yerevan, dairy manager
    Vannik Soghomonyan stressed the need for the establishment of CDL in or
    near Yerevan. "We produce milk and dairy products of the highest standard,"
    Soghomonyan said. "We want to produce products which will be certified as
    organic. The CDL can be the first step in this direction."
    The dairy employs two full-time veterinarians, who send an analysis to the
    government laboratory if an animal becomes ill. "Currently, between six and
    eight diseases are tested for at the laboratory," Soghomonyan, also
    president of the Dairy Farmers of Armenia, said. "The CDL would be more
    advanced, meeting European standards and opening new markets for our
    products."
    Advanced testing would also make it possible to expand Armenia's
    agricultural economy, as in the case of the Agro Holding company, located
    in the earthquake zone near Spitak. There, in an Italian-built complex on
    hills overlooking Spitak, pig farmers are waiting for the establishment of
    the CDL before enlarging their operations, noting that government
    laboratories lack the capacity to test on such a large scale.
    While in Yerevan, Dr. Reynolds met with USDA and USAID officials,
    discussing the need for the CDL and the positive benefits its
    implementation would have for Armenia and the entire region. Meeting with
    Trevor Gudie of the US Embassy. Reynolds pointed out that the CDL would
    bring veterinary diagnostics to Western standards "We must work with the
    purpose of finding and preventing diseases that affect society,"
    During his trip to Armenia, Reynolds visited several USDA projects where
    different methods of grazing are being studied. The projects stress the
    grazing of cattle and other animals instead of the Soviet method of keeping
    animals indoors most of the year. "The CDL has to be coordinated with the
    livestock system," Reynolds said. "That is where ATG has a distinct
    advantage, due to their extensive work in livestock and agriculture in
    Armenia."
    ATG's experience in animal breeding has also impressed Armenian agriculture
    minister Davit Lokian, who has asked USAID to facilitate the establishment
    of the CDL, under the stewardship of ATG.
    As the concept of the Central Diagnostic Lab becomes reality, the positive
    affects will go far beyond disease control. Since the CDL tests so widely,
    including both animal tissue and milk, diseases will be found in their
    earliest stages, resulting in increased production of milk and other
    agricultural products.
    As the ATG-sponsored milk containers (cooling containers) are put in place
    in rural villages, the role of the CDL will be even more important, as it
    will test for bacterial diseases such as salmonella and brucella. The CDL
    testing capabilities are so advanced that when testing animal tissue for
    salmonella, the lab can find out when the animal contracted the disease,
    before or after it became sick.
    With the establishment of the lab, other livestock will be protected, even
    animals crossing borders, a situation in which diseases such as
    tuberculosis and anthrax can be passed from one country to another. As the
    presence of these diseases diminish, markets will open up, increasing trade
    and promoting good will in the Caucasus. With the proper certification of
    Armenia's agricultural products, Armenia will proudly take its place in
    international markets, increasing income for Armenian merchants and the
    farmers of Armenia.
    ************************************************** ************************
    3 - APN Diocese Will
    Honor US Veterans
    At Nov. 12 Dinner
    BURBANK, CA - The Armenian Professionals Network of the Western Diocese of
    the Armenian Church has announced plans for a dinner event on Nov. 12,
    paying tribute to the dedication and patriotism of Armenian American men
    and women who have served in the Armed Forces of the United States.
    The community is Invited to attend the dinner at 7:30 p.m. in the
    Kalaydjian Hall of the Western Diocesan Complex, 3325 North Glenoaks Blvd.,
    Burbank, Calif.
    For reservations, contact Arture Zabounian at 818-974-9454
    ************************************************** ************************
    4 - Southfield's AGBU Manoogian School
    Opens Sept. 7 with New, Improved Look
    SOUTHFIELD, MI - The AGBU Alex & Marie Manoogian School will open its doors
    on Sept. 7 with a new and improved look. The school has experienced major
    changes over the summer. "We were dreaming about it so long, we knew
    exactly what we wanted," said Dr. Nadya Sarafian, Alex & Marie Manoogian
    School principal.
    During a recent tour of the school, Sarafian beamed when talking about the
    improvements, changes, and additions the school undertook, all in
    preparation for the 2004-2005 school year.
    Sarafian was proud of everything, from the new tile floor in the restrooms
    and the new Pre-Kindergarten facilities, right down to the fact there were
    only minor changes from the pre-construction vision of the "new" Manoogian.
    The new facility will have its familiarities, but will also be full of new
    sights including a state-of-the-art media center that will allow students
    easy access to both print and electronic sources of information, a new
    building façade will be in place with new landscaping, as well as
    structural improvements to the school's main entrance.
    There is an updated drop-off/pick-up area that will facilitate improved
    traffic flow in the school's parking lot.
    The school's courtyard on the west side of the building has been reshaped
    and enclosed, complete with new playground structures and cushioned
    flooring for the younger students.
    Another important change for the new school year is a further separation of
    Manoogian's high school students from the areas intended for the school's
    lower grades. This division is expected to promote a greater sense of
    community among the older students.
    ************************************************** ************************
    5- Film Foundation Plans Final
    Project in Genocide Trilogy
    THOUSAND OAKS - "Caravans Along the Euphrates: Anatomy of the Secret
    Genocide" is expected to be the "crown jewel" of the Armenian Film
    Foundation's "The Witnesses" trilogy project. It will be the culmination of
    a massive contribution on the 25th anniversary of the Foundation.
    Lead creative production staff met with award-winning Director/Producer Dr.
    J. Michael Hagopian in Thousand Oaks this week to critique the
    film-in-process. Those present included Co-producer Glenn Farr, an
    Oscar-winning master feature film editor and director; and Carla
    Garapedian, narrator and co-writer of the first two "Witnesses" films, who
    is a former BBC anchor about to enter into production of her own film later
    this fall. Associate Producer and Assistant Editor Barbara Gilmore, whose
    experience includes working as project director and associate producer on
    five Armenian Genocide documentaries, also was on hand.
    Hagopian, who holds a doctorate degree from Harvard University in
    international relations, places great value on the feedback of his
    talented, knowledgeable staff members who have dedicated years to helping
    preserve Armenian heritage and promote its causes. Several other screenings
    will be held to solicit input from scholars, survivors and people from
    other walks of life before the final production phase.
    Incorporated will be a penetrating storyline of survivor accounts selected
    from a collection of over 400 interviews. The interviews were
    professionally photographed by Hagopian over a span of 40 years in Europe,
    Australia, Asia and North America.
    Himself a survivor, Dr. Hagopian has devoted much of his life to
    documenting the legacy of other survivors and those whose lives were
    brutally extinguished.
    His works have to date amassed over 160 prestigious film awards and prizes
    from around the world.
    The Armenian Film Foundation now endeavors to raise funds in the Armenian
    community to help finance the remaining work on Caravans Along the
    Euphrates: Anatomy of the Secret Genocide. Completion of the film is
    targeted for 2005, the 90th commemorative year of the Genocide. Support for
    the first two films of the project, totaling $800,000, was garnered
    primarily from the California State Legislature, as well as from
    foundations and some individual sources through the efforts of ardent
    supporter and Executive Producer Walter Karabian, Esq. Those who make
    generous donations to help finance this project will receive recognition in
    the credits at the end of the Caravans Along the Euphrates film.
    For further information on this and other Armenian Film Foundation films
    and projects, visit the website at www.armenianfilmfoundation.org, or call
    their office at 805-495-0717.
    ************************************************** ************************
    6 - Dr. Mary Papazian Named Dean of
    New Jersey's Montclair University
    MONTCLAIR, N. J. - Dr. Mary A. Papazian of Michigan has been named Dean of
    the College of Humanities and Social Sciences at Montclair State
    University, announced Dr. Richard A. Lynde, Provost and Vice President for
    Academic Affairs at MSU. Papazian has been serving as Associate Dean of
    the College of Arts and Sciences at Oakland University in Michigan, where
    she has been employed since 1988.
    She began at MSU Aug. 16.
    Papazian has been Associate Dean of Oakland University's largest academic
    unit since 1999. Offering more than two-thirds of all courses at the
    university, the College is home to 240 full-time and 200-part time faculty
    members and has a yearly operating budget of $25 million. During her
    tenure, Papazian developed and gained approval for academic programs
    ranging from the Ph.D. in biological communication to an M.A. in liberal
    studies and bachelor degree programs in studio art and women's studies. She
    served as the university's coordinator for the annual Meeting of the Minds
    undergraduate research conference; as ombudsman for faculty and students;
    and as Executive Director of the Department of Music, Theatre and Dance,
    where she developed an assessment of the current state of performing arts
    at Oakland and a plan for its future. She taught English literature
    starting in 1988, was named associate professor in 1994, and full professor
    in 2003.
    "We are delighted that such a talented and visionary administrator, teacher
    and scholar has joined the leadership team at Montclair State," Lynde said.
    "Mary's guidance and vision at the largest of MSU's Colleges and Schools
    will prove invaluable as we continue our efforts to elevate the
    University's academic and programmatic offerings to the very highest
    level."
    Papazian was also chair of the Phyllis Law Googasian Award Committee at
    Oakland University; and chair of the College of Arts and Science's
    Committee on Appointment and Promotion. In addition, she participated in
    ongoing fund-raising activities; chaired the Teaching Excellence Award
    Committee; and was a member of the University Senate, Honor's College
    Council and the executive committee of the university's affiliate of the
    American Council of Education Network for Women Leaders.
    Papazian earned her B.A. in English literature in 1981; her M.A. in 1983
    and her Ph.D. in 1988, all from UCLA. She will be moving east with her
    husband, Professor Dennis R. Papazian, a long-time scholar at the
    University of Michigan, Dearborn with expertise in the history of the
    former Soviet Union and its successor states (particularly Armenia), and
    her two daughters, Ani (10) and Marie (five).
    ************************************************** ************************
    7 - Armenian Genocide to be
    Next Film by Mel Gibson?
    HOLLYWOOD, Calif. - Conservative author Bruce Walker, writing in the
    Ohio-based American Daily last week, revealed that one of the proposed
    topics for a future Mel Gibson film includes "Armenia, The First Holocaust.
    "The forgotten holocaust," as Walker calls it, was "The un-holocaust. While
    the world watched - even worse, after the Himmler, the Heydrich, the Hitler
    of Turkey had lost the war - at least one million Armenians were
    exterminated for their Christian faith and their misfortune of being a
    nation conquered by the Moslem Turks.
    "This was the laboratory for what was later used in the Gulag by the
    Soviets, then used in eastern Poland by the Soviets, then used against Jews
    by the Nazis. Moreover, this was a war on Christianity itself. Churches,
    priests, crosses all were the first objects of Turkish atrocities. Nothing
    ever happened after this holocaust. No Nuremberg Trials. No `Schindler's
    List.' No `Diary of Anne Frank.'
    "There cannot be too many descriptions of the very genuine moral and
    physical horror of the Holocaust, but each dead soul murdered in the
    Killing Fields or the barren fields of the Ukraine or in cattle cars
    leaving Poland and crammed with Polish families deserve equal memory to
    mankind and to God.
    "Why not start with the first holocaust? Why not begin with that calculated
    sadism which was the First Holocaust, the extermination in the Twentieth
    Century of millions of Christians - primarily Armenians, but also Greeks
    and others - while the world watched, then forgot, then pretended never
    happened? That, Mr. Gibson, would be my next film, if I were you."
    ************************************************** ******
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