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  • ASBAREZ Online [04-15-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    04/15/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Editorial: Say It Like You Mean It
    2) Letter to the Editor from Armenian Assembly of America
    3) Turkey Once Again Proposes Joint Commission on Genocide; Message to
    Armenia,
    However, Gets Lost in the Mix
    4) California Marchers Cross 160-Mile Mark
    5) Armenian National Committee of America Endorses Antonio Villaraigosa for
    Los
    Angeles Mayor
    6) Belgian Senate Conference on Armenian Genocide to Address Issue of
    Recognition
    7) Panic and Confusion Consume Turkey's Journey toward Europe
    8) Houston Holocaust Museum Commemorates 90th Anniversary of Genocide with
    Prof. Dadrian
    9) Nine Decades of Denial: Glendale High School Students to Commemorate 90th
    Anniversary
    10) Crescenta Valley Center Celebrates Commitment to Community
    11) UnPlucked: A one-woman show written and performed by Lory Tatoulian
    12) Letter to Editor
    13) Some Basic Questions
    14) Lord Jeffery, Smallpox Blankets, and the TARC report

    1) Editorial: Say It Like You Mean It

    Last week, we published the Armenian Assembly's response to our March 25
    editorial (see letter to the editor below), in which we had asked "Why, on the
    eve of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, is the Armenian Assembly
    of America helping Turkey deny justice to the Armenian people?"
    That question had arisen as a result of the Assembly's continued use and
    dissemination of a study commissioned by the dubious Turkish Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission and supported by the Assembly and the pro-Turkish US
    State Department. That study had confirmed, as countless others haveand as our
    editorial, in fairness, quoted verbatimthat the Armenian Genocide was in fact
    genocide; however, the study also concluded that "no legal, financial or
    territorial claim arising out of the Events could successfully be made against
    any individual or state under the Convention [on the Prevention and Punishment
    of the Crime of Genocide]."
    The Assembly's response did not answer our question regarding the Assembly's
    role in facilitating a "resolution" to the Armenian Question that would
    benefit
    joint US/Turkish interests in that part of the world (to put our question in
    less unpleasant terms). The Assembly's response merely attempted, through
    verbal gymnastics, to deflect that question. But in doing so, it provided a
    glimpse into the Assembly's actual, though unstated, position on the subject.
    The first three of the four longish paragraphs of the Assembly's response are
    devoted to convincing readers that there was nothing wrong with using the
    TARC-sponsored study, because, after all, it was done for the sake of getting
    Congress to recognize the Genocide, and surely that can't be "fairly portrayed
    as 'denying justice to the Armenian people'."
    That sure sounds like a good response; unfortunately, it doesn't directly
    deal
    with the question we asked. We were talking about the consequences and
    significance of using the TARC study as a means or tactic; we weren't
    questioning the Assembly's stated purpose for using those meansin fact, we
    called it "otherwise praiseworthy."
    In other words, we were saying the end doesn't justify the means, especially
    if those means undermine the ultimate purpose; moreover, we were highlighting
    that the means you use says a lot about who you are, what you believe, and
    what
    you're willing or capable of doing.
    Let's put it this way: The TARC study "gives" Armenians something of little
    value, and it tries to take away from Armenians (and give to Turkey) something
    of great value. What it gives (Genocide recognition), countless other studies
    have already givenso it's not worth that much. What it takes away from
    Armenians (legal, financial, and territorial reparations), no other study has
    given awayand it's too high a price to pay. So, if the Assembly insists on
    using and talking up a study that gives away something so valuablewhen it
    doesn't have towhy blame people for thinking that the Assembly too is willing
    to give away legal, financial, and territorial reparations in return for
    recognition? Otherwise, why use those means/that report? Why take the chance?
    Why give ammunition to the enemy? Why undermine your own position? All of
    which
    add up to the big why"why, on the eve of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian
    Genocide, is the Armenian Assembly of America helping Turkey deny justice to
    the Armenian people?"
    It's pretty much that simple. All the Assembly's assertions to the contrary
    are mere words; but its persistent actionsamong others, the continued use and
    hyping of that studysay and count more than any lip service about seeking
    "official, full and irrevocable US reaffirmation of the Armenian Genocide,"
    which the Assembly apparently equates with "justice to the Armenian people."
    For the ARF, justice for the Armenian people is precisely "legal, financial,
    and territorial reparation." Perhaps it's time for the Assembly to state
    unambiguously its position, for all Armeniansand all othersto know.

    * * *

    PS: The fourth, final paragraph of the Assembly's response claims that the
    TARC study's findings don't "let Turkey completely off the hook," because the
    study "does not purport to address the applicability of the Genocide
    Convention
    to the Events of, or the rights or responsibilities of concerned
    individuals or
    entities under, any other rubric of international law or the laws of any other
    nation."
    Inevitably, we are left to conclude that the Assembly is admitting that the
    TARC study at least partially lets Turkey off the hook. (So, even then, why
    use
    that study?)
    Or one might conclude that the Assembly's invocation of such legalese cant is
    the equivalent of a self-appointed middleman's attempt to convince a murder
    victim's family that a plea bargain may not be such a bad idea: "They've
    concluded that the murderer can't be charged for first degree murderbut maybe
    he can be charged for manslaughter or criminal trespass, or maybe you can
    initiate a civil suit, or see if a court in a nearby county might be able to
    exercise jurisdiction..." Talk about low.


    2) Letter to the Editor from Armenian Assembly of America

    RE: "The Big Why On the Eve of the 90th Anniversary of the Armenian Genocide"

    Your March 25th commentary on the above subject constitutes a new low on
    misrepresentation of the facts and on the position of the Armenian Assembly.
    Just in case some of your readers missed your irresponsible core charge
    against
    our organization, you opined that the Assembly is "helping Turkey deny justice
    to the Armenian people". How is the Assembly doing this? By urging
    Members of
    Congress to invoke a study published by the International Center for
    Transitional Justice (ICTJ) that affirmed the fact of the Armenian Genocide.
    The ICTJ study declared that "the Events, viewed collectively, can thus be
    said
    to include all of the elements of the crime of genocide as defined in the
    Convention, and legal scholars as well as historians, politicians, journalists
    and other people would be justified in continuing to so describe them."
    As the Assembly has done over the decades of our support for congressional
    reaffirmation of the truth, our organization references third party judgments
    on the fact of the Armenian Genocide. In this particular communication to
    Congress, we relied on four factors: President Reagan's 1981 Proclamation
    that
    affirmed the Armenian Genocide, President Bush's April 24 statements that
    employ the textbook definition of genocide without using the word, the
    statement of 126 Holocaust and Genocide scholars declaring that the Armenian
    Genocide is an "incontestable fact" and the ICTJ statement quoted above.
    Neither the separate nor the combined effect of these citations in the
    Assembly's request to Congress to properly characterize this crime against
    humanity as genocide can be fairly portrayed as "denying justice to the
    Armenian people". There can be no question that the Assembly will continue to
    seek official, full and irrevocable U.S. reaffirmation of the Armenian
    Genocide
    - and the Armenian Revolutionary Federation knows this as our organizations
    work side by side on the 90th commemorative planning committees across the
    United States and as the Assembly works collaboratively with the ANCA on the
    Armenian-American community's next effort in support of a congressional
    resolution.
    As to the Asbarez charge that the ICTJ findings "let Turkey completely off
    the
    hook for Genocide," the commentary fails to use the following quotation
    regarding redress that contradicts the charge. According to the ICTJ study,
    "It does not purport to address the applicability of the Genocide
    Convention to
    the Events of, or the rights or responsibilities of concerned individuals or
    entities under, any other rubric of international law or the laws of any other
    nation." The Turkish government is not "off the hook" - not for its global
    denial campaign, not for its intimidation of other governments and its own
    citizens, not for its recent passage of a law criminalizing public discussion
    of the Armenian Genocide and certainly not for dealing with the
    consequences of
    its inevitable acknowledgment of the Armenian Genocide.

    Sincerely,
    Ross Vartian
    Executive Director
    Armenian Assembly of America


    3) Turkey Once Again Proposes Joint Commission on Genocide; Message to
    Armenia,
    However, Gets Lost in the Mix

    YEREVAN--According to the Turkish press, a letter that Turkey's Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed to have written and sent to President Robert
    Kocharian recently, has been resent via the Armenian embassy in Georgia. The
    letter, which Kocharian said he had not initially received, proposes the
    creation of a Turkish-Armenian commission of historians that would determine
    whether the 1915 massacres and systematic deportations of the
    Ottoman-Armenians
    constituted a genocide.
    Having seen the letter for the first time late Thursday night, Armenian
    officials refused to comment on the proposal, stating only that the "Genocide
    did occur. Under no condition will we enter a debate about the topic."
    The letter has received much attention from both sides, prompting even
    Turkish
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul to discuss it during a recent appearance within
    the Turkish Parliament.
    Erdogan first publicly called for such a study on March 9, highlighting
    Turkish unease over renewed international publicity attracted by the issue
    amid
    the unfolding commemorations of the 90th anniversary of the start of the
    genocide. Yerevan rejected the offer at the time, saying it that casts
    doubt on
    the very fact of the genocide.
    "I can't say what the Armenian authorities will decide after receiving such a
    letter," the spokesman for the Armenian Foreign Ministry, Hamlet Gasparian
    said. "I would just say that there have been such calls in the past and that
    Armenia said the fact of genocide can not be a subject of debate."
    The Armenians can only agree to "discussions on eliminating consequences of
    the genocide," Gasparian added.
    This position enjoys the backing of Armenia's leading political groups,
    including those bitterly opposed to Kocharian. "If they want to discuss
    whether
    or not there was a genocide, then that is a non-starter," said Tigran
    Torosian,
    a senior member of the governing Republican Party. "It is time for Turkey to
    accept that fact and try to improve its relations with Armenia instead of
    resorting to petty tricks."
    Torosian said an unconditional reopening of the Turkish-Armenian border by
    Ankara would be the first meaningful step toward improving the extremely
    strained bilateral relations.
    A spokesman for the Armenian Revolutionary Federation similarly argued that
    acceptance of the Turkish proposal would amount to questioning the genocide.
    "That is not a step toward dialogue," said Spartak Seyranian.
    According to Shavarsh Kocharian of the opposition Artarutyun alliance, the
    genocide study offer is aimed at easing the European Union's growing pressure
    on Turkey to face it troubled past. He also said no Turkish historian selected
    for the proposed panel would dare question the official Turkish version of the
    1915 events which denies a systematic effort to exterminate the Armenian
    population of the Ottoman Empire.
    "The work of historians would be effective only if there is no political
    attitude that rejects realities obvious to everyone," the opposition leader
    said.
    Meanwhile, Turkey announced on Wednesday that it will formally ask the
    British
    parliament to reject the so-called Blue Book, published by the British
    government in 1916, which uses eyewitness accounts to conclude that Armenians
    were being systematically exterminated. Gul was quoted by Reuters news agency
    as telling the Turkish parliament that London will be asked to "recognize the
    Blue Book as invalid and baseless as a historic document."
    The 700-page book is a major source of reference for the Armenians in their
    campaign for international recognition of the genocide. The Armenian Genocide
    Museum in Yerevan has a special plaque dedicated to its main author, Lord
    James
    Bryce.
    The United Kingdom has never officially referred to the slaughter of some 1.5
    million Ottoman Armenians as genocide. Its ambassador in Yerevan, Thorda
    Abbott-Watt, provoked a storm of condemnation in Armenia and its Diaspora last
    year after publicly stating that the mass killings were not a genocide.
    The British government faced domestic criticism in January 2001 when it
    attempted to exclude Armenians from official ceremonies marking Britain's
    Holocaust Memorial Day. It eventually yielded to pressure from prominent
    public
    figures and media.


    4) California Marchers Cross 160-Mile Mark

    STOCKTON--As the March For Humanity makes its way from Fresno, to Sacramento,
    churches have warmly welcomed the group of 16 young walkers with open arms.
    "One of our main concerns when we began planning the march was where we would
    sleep each of the 19 nights," said Serouj Aprahamian, coordinator of the
    march.
    "However, many churches throughout our route sympathized with our efforts and
    became our second homes. Their kindness and generosity will not be forgotten."
    The group has developed a tradition of expressing their appreciation to the
    church administrators by presenting them a copy of Peter Balakian's Black Dog
    of Fate and a pomegranate ornament, the Armenian traditional symbol for life.
    As the marchers make their way from one city to another, public awareness
    about their undertaking continuously grows as residents of the areas they
    march
    through encourage and support their efforts by offering food, water, and even
    donations.
    "All churches we stayed at provided their facilities to us with no questions
    asked and no strings attached," said Aprahamian. "This shows that in the
    battle
    to secure justice for the victims of the Armenian genocide, we have the
    support
    of the masses, and that the masses have the understanding and knowledge to
    stand behind the righteous."
    Defying sore muscles and aching joints, the group has already marched
    close to
    160 miles in 14 consecutive days. Determined to inform the world about the
    Armenian genocide and the 1.5 million innocent lives that were lost as a
    result
    of the crime against humanity, the marchers will continue walking until they
    arrive at the State Capitol.
    The brave youth will join a large rally, organized to thank the state of
    California and the legislatures of 36 others for properly recognizing the
    Armenian genocide.
    "Alongside shelter, nutritious food is crucial for the marchers. We are
    grateful to the Armenian Relief Society for sponsoring all food expenses by
    allocated a full time staff to travel with the marchers and prepare meals for
    them," said Vicken Sosikian, director of the March For Humanity. "Other than
    great food, the staff has also been a source of guidance and inspiration,
    often
    taking the role of parents on their shoulders."


    5) Armenian National Committee of America Endorses Antonio Villaraigosa for
    Los
    Angeles Mayor

    LOS ANGELES--The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) announced on
    Friday that it has endorsed Los Angeles City Council Member Antonio
    Villaraigosa for Mayor of Los Angeles.
    The ANCA conducted a vigorous evaluation process in which it met with both
    Los
    Angeles Council Member Antonio Villaraigosa and incumbent Mayor James Hahn on
    multiple occasions in order to make an informed decision.
    "We have met with the candidates and, after careful consideration, have
    decided that the City of Los Angeles needs the kind of energetic and visionary
    leadership Antonio Villaraigosa offers to the hundreds of thousands of
    Armenian
    Americans who call Los Angeles home," stated ANCA board member Steven J.
    Dadaian.
    "Having worked closely with Antonio over the past decade on the city, state
    and national levels, it is clear that he possesses both a keen
    understanding of
    the unique diversity of Los Angeles and has a deep appreciation for the
    Armenian community. He has the skills and energy necessary to unite and lead
    Los Angeles toward a brighter future," Dadaian said.
    Villaraigosa has worked closely with the Armenian American community and the
    ANCA throughout his years as a Los Angeles City Council Member and Speaker of
    the California State Assembly. As Speaker, he led the effort to include the
    Armenian genocide in the state's mandatory curriculum for public education as
    well as outlawing foreign governments like Turkey from endowing chairs in
    state
    universities with the intent of conducting work to deny the Armenian genocide.
    "I am thrilled to receive this endorsement and upon election as mayor
    pledge to
    continue working closely with the ANCA to make sure the Armenian American
    community has a seat at the table in the life and future direction of the
    city," said Villaraigosa.
    The ANCA encourages Armenian Americans to vote for Antonio Villaraigosa for
    Mayor of Los Angeles during the run-off election on Tuesday, May 17.


    6) Belgian Senate Conference on Armenian Genocide to Address Issue of
    Recognition

    BRUSSELS--As a part of the 90th anniversary commemorations, the Belgian Senate
    will hold a conference titled "Recognition: Paving the Way for the Future,"
    dedicated to the Armenian genocide, announced the European Armenian Federation
    for Justice And Democracy (EAFJD).
    On the initiative of Senator Lionel Vandenberghe, 11 Belgian organizations,
    including the EAFJD, have played a role in organizing the conference, to take
    place in Belgium's Houses of Parliament on April 18.
    Speakers will include Belgian government officials, representatives of
    political organizations, experts, Turkish intellectuals, and political
    figures.
    Details of the conference will be posted on www.armeniangenocide.be.


    7) Panic and Confusion Consume Turkey's Journey toward Europe

    PARIS (EAFJD)--As various European bodies pressure Turkey to acknowledge the
    Armenian genocide as a prerequisite to its EU accession, the European Armenian
    Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD) characterized Turkey's latest
    initiatives as "panic and confusion."
    "Ankara's aims are perfectly clear--they try to remove the genocide
    recognition issue from the political field, especially because it is one the
    obstacles Turkey faces in its application to EU membership," stated Hilda
    Tchoboian, chairperson of the European Armenian Federation.
    Earlier this week, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan claimed to
    have
    sent a letter to President Robert Kocharian, proposing the creation of a joint
    commission to "investigate the Armenians massacres of 1915."
    To garner support for such a commission, members of the Turkish Parliament
    have sent a letter to European Parliament claiming that "until now, the facts
    have been one-sided and produced only by Armenians," and that "the unbiased
    truth will come from works on archives performed by a committee of historians
    representing both points of view of Armenia and Turkey, under the watch of an
    institutional arbitration board."
    "Their method consists of reducing this international crime to a bilateral
    issue between Turkey and Armenia in order to avoid addressing the demands of
    the international community, especially those of Europe," Tchoboian said.
    Recalling studies of independent experts who examined the Armenian genocide
    utilizing western diplomatic archives, those of the allies of Turkey, and
    through the great deal of documentation that the Turkish government neglected
    to provide--the EAFJD recapped that all three came to the same conclusion:
    what
    occurred in 1915 was a genocide in its international and juridical sense.
    Those
    experts were Jacques Vandemeulebroucke, MEP in charge of the report on the
    Armenian genocide (1987), Benjamin Whitaker, special Rapporteur of the United
    Kingdom in charge of the UN report on genocides (1985), and the prominent
    members of the Permanent People's Tribunal.
    "All this gives the impression of panic and confusion. Turkey has only one
    simple thing to do: recognize and redress the Armenian genocide," Tchoboian
    stressed.


    8) Houston Holocaust Museum Commemorates 90th Anniversary of Genocide with
    Prof. Dadrian

    HOUSTON--Zoryan Institute scholar Professor Vahakn N. Dadrian was invited by
    ANC Texas to the opening reception of the Armenian Genocide Exhibit at the
    Holocaust Museum Houston on March 29. The exhibit featured artifacts made
    available by the Armenian Library and Museum of America (ALMA), as well as
    pictures by Ara Oshagan and his work on the Forgotten Genocide.
    Dadrian's lecture was delivered before a packed audience of some 200 people,
    marking the beginning of the 90th commemoration of the Armenian genocide in
    Texas, which also includes a march on the steps of the State Capitol in Austin
    and a dedication of a `Khatchkar' on the grounds of Houston's only Armenian
    Church, St. Kevork.
    Houston Holocaust Museum Director Dick Grisham sponsored an opening
    presentation emphasizing the atrocity of genocides and the brutality of
    denial,
    followed by Professor Dadrian's "scientific" and methodical analysis of the
    Armenian genocide. The audience, fascinated by the presentations, traced their
    own roots to either events of the Genocide or the Holocaust as described by
    Dadrian, confirming that their lives have been directly or indirectly affected
    by the horrific events.
    Dadrian explained key points of Turkey's denial and the need of an
    appropriate
    methodology suited to counter and overwhelm the culture of persistent denial.
    Dadrian called it the methodology of "compelling evidence," which revolves
    around the principles of reliability, explicitness, incontestability, and
    verifiability.
    He reconstructed the Armenian genocide in terms of its four major components:
    premeditation, genocidal intention, the organization of the genocide, and the
    implementation of the genocide. His hour-long presentation was greeted with a
    standing ovation.
    Using a scholarly outline of events and a description of the historical
    context during which the genocide occurred, he eloquently described the events
    and people of the period leading up to and through the Armenian genocide.
    Dadrian explained his risky effort to find irrefutable evidence, corroborate
    dates, people and places, find eyewitness reports from among the Ottoman
    hierarchy and archives, German sources and others, and scoured for
    documentation that provided first hand accounts of the first Genocide of the
    20th century.
    The Museum Exhibit, which will be on display until the end of May 2005, has
    been possible through the dedication and efforts of the Armenian National
    Committee of Texas.


    9) Nine Decades of Denial: Glendale High School Students to Commemorate 90th
    Anniversary

    Armenian high school students from throughout Glendale will present "Nine
    Decades of Denial," on Thursday, April 21, in commemoration of the 90th
    anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
    The student-driven event, organized by members of Armenian clubs from Hoover
    High, Glendale High, Clark Magnet, and Crescenta Valley High, will feature
    guest singers and speakers, traditional dances and music, skits, poetry, and
    video presentations.
    "What these students are doing is conveying their values and their views
    about
    the Armenian genocide. It's an expression of their pain, anger, and ultimately
    hope," says GUSD Board of Education member Greg Krikorian. Highlighting the
    importance of community support for the event, Krikorian stresses that we have
    to listen to this generation and provide whatever necessary support for the
    actualization of their vision for justice, and their desire for proper
    recognition of the Armenian genocide.
    A member of the organizing committee and Clark Magnet Alumni Patrick Der
    Ohanian explains that vision: "I hope that in the future, we gain
    recognition--along with reparations. Then our job will have been complete."
    Der
    Ohanian also commended the unified effort by high school students who have
    organized similar events four years in a row now.
    The event will take place at Glendale High School auditorium on this Thursday
    at 7 p.m. sharp. Admission is free.


    10) Crescenta Valley Center Celebrates Commitment to Community

    LA CRESCENTA--About 250 members, friends, and supporters of the Crescenta
    Valley ARF "Zavarian" committee and the Armenian Relief Society's "Taline"
    chapter attended the 15th anniversary Gala of both organizations on March
    18.
    Several representatives of both organizations addressed the guests to
    emphasize the important role the Crescenta Valley (CV) Armenian Center
    plays in
    the daily lives of inhabitants of La Crescenta, La Canada, Sunland, Montrose,
    Tujunga, and North Glendale.
    The center, located at 2633 Honolulu Avenue in Glendale, was purchased
    shortly
    after the establishment of the ARF Zavarian Chapter, through the efforts of
    its
    founding members, the ARS "Taline" chapter, and the help of benefactors from
    the community. As the years went by, the center became home to various other
    organizations including the Homenetmen "Shant" chapter, the Hamazkayin
    Armenian
    Educational and Cultural Association, the ARF "Karekin Njteh" Badanegan
    Chapter, the Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) "Zartonk" chapter, as well as to
    the Armenian Elderly Society. These non-profit organizations offer numerous
    services to the community.
    The ARF Zavarian chapter's "Hai Tad" committee, otherwise known as the CV
    Armenian National Committee (ANC), has been instrumental in relaying the
    concerns of the Armenian community to area educational institutions and
    political representatives in the area. By hosting various community forums,
    the
    ANCCV has allowed political, as well as public officials, to clearly state
    their positions on various issues concerning the Armenian community, such as
    problems arising in public schools and Armenian genocide recognition.
    The ARS "Taline" chapter has been instrumental in keeping the youth in touch
    with their roots. Today, more than 60 children enrolled in the ARS Saturday
    school have the opportunity to learn Armenian, Armenian history and culture.
    For information on how to enroll in this school, interested parties may call
    (818) 248-4680. Aside from its countless benevolent deeds, the chapter has
    also
    offered many scholarships to deserving Armenian students.
    The Homenetmen "Shant" chapter, founded in 1993, is open for membership to
    boys, girls, men and women of all ages. It currently has 545 members, 85 of
    whom are scouts, 300 of whom are athletes and 160 of whom serve as
    auxiliaries.
    The chapter's executive committee can be reached for further details at (818)
    248-4680.
    The Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Association has organized
    various cultural events throughout the years, such as art exhibits, concerts,
    lectures. Children ranging from 4 to 14 have the unique opportunity to attend
    dance classes under the supervision of skilled instructors in the field. The
    Hamazkayin office can be reached at (818) 248-1100.
    The ARF "Karekin Njdeh" chapter is open for membership to adolescents ranging
    from 9 to 16 years old. It aims to educate the youth about the Armenian Cause
    and history, and to instill leadership skills. To enroll their children in
    this
    organization, parents may call (818) 248-1100.
    The Armenian Youth Federation "Zartonk" chapter, open to members from 16 to
    26, strives to serve the Armenian American Community through education,
    athletics, political activism and cultural activities. For further information
    about this organization, you may visit its website at
    <http://www.ayfwest.org/>www.ayfwest.org.
    The La Crescenta Valley center is truly open to all members of the community,
    regardless of their age, and is a wonderful resource to meet their needs and
    interests. It is the current organizations' hope that more and more Armenians
    in the area will utilize these resources and make the center their own "home."
    This past year, the Community Outreach program, In an effort to help
    community
    members in need provided the following services. A tax specialist offered help
    in Federal and State tax filing. An architect knowledgeable with the city's
    planning department's requirements offered his services free of charge.
    Students had the opportunity to receive guidance in their college applications
    and selections thanks to the counseling offered by the members of the Armenian
    Youth Federation. Finally, a family therapist was made available to help deal
    with difficult parenting issues.
    The Center renovation committee spent much time and effort in greatly
    improving the physical appearance of the center. The "Sarkis Aposhian" hall is
    available for rent to host events. The swimming pool is regularly used in the
    summer by many children for a nominal fee.


    11) UnPlucked: A one-woman show written and performed by Lory Tatoulian

    LOS ANGELES--Hip & Heen Productions presents UnPlucked, a one-woman show
    written and performed by Lory Tatoulian on Friday, April 29th at 8:00pm at the
    Assistance League Playhouse Hollywood.
    Tatoulian is an actress/playwright who explores issues of cultural identity,
    gender, and ethnic community dynamics, and whose comedic character-studies
    define the core of her style. Her explorations take root in theatrical
    monologues that meld the comedic and absurd experiences of several ethnic
    groups.
    Her intelligible character portraits range from an Avon Lady who wants to
    help
    democratize the world, to a housewife jazz singer from Beirut, to a car addict
    who contemplates her free-will on the freeway in the award-winning piece
    "Autosapiens," a comedic realization of Californians intricate relationship
    with their automobiles.
    The San Diego Union Tribune writes, "the boldly physical writer-performer
    Lory
    Tatoulian sent up SoCals car mania in her explosive satiric solo. Tatoulian is
    a find. In "Autosapiens" she creates a freeway-crazed gal who decided to spend
    her life in her car. As she eats, observes, makes love, and fights other
    drivers on the highway of life, she devolves into another species altogether,
    the Autosapien."
    UnPlucked, Tatoulian's third one-woman show, is a collection of stories and
    musical vignettes. She collaborates with talented musician and composer Ara
    Dabandjian as well as percussionist Mher Vahakn. Together they bring jazz to
    Armenian children's songs, and sheer humor to the stylings of Glendale.
    Tatoulian, who has a BA in Theatre Arts from San Diego State University, has
    also trained at the American Academy of Dramatic Arts.

    This one night only performance is followed by a food and wine reception,
    live
    music and an art show.
    Tickets are $25 and are available at the door or by contacting
    [email protected]

    UnPlucked
    Friday, April 29th
    8:00pm Assistance League Playhouse Hollywood


    12) Letter to Editor

    By Zareh Mouradkhanian

    The following is in response to Raffi Arzouhaldjian's article "On the Eve of
    the 90th, Anti-Turkism should not Equal Patriotic Armenianism" (Asbarez, April
    9, 2005).
    Had Raffi Arzouhaldjian read Nairi Mekerdithcian's article "Oh The Star
    Became
    Meteor," (Asbarez Armenian languageApril 6, 2005), he would have known that
    Armenian youth organizations, including the Nigol Aghbalian Youth Union,
    protested against inviting Filip Kirkorov to perform in Yerevan because of his
    tasteless songs and uncivilized conduct with a women reporter a few years ago,
    which was widely criticized in Russia. Since then, his popularity has sunk in
    Russia, Ukraine, and other Slovic countries.
    The students of Armenia did not protest against Kirkorov just because he
    sings
    Turkish songs. There are some beautiful Turkish songs sung by quality singers
    in Armenia. Kirkorov's concert didn't materialize, however, because of his
    lack
    of moral character.
    Arzouhaldjian writes, "This Turkophobic phenomenon exhibited by Armenian
    youth
    in Yerevan today is very similar to the worrisome anti-Armenian intolerance
    that is being practiced in both Turkey and Azerbaijan." This comparison is way
    out of proportion. A few examples of intolerance: Some fifteen years ago,
    30,000 Armenians were massacred in the northern refinery town of Sumgait,
    north
    of Baku, and some 400,000 Armenians fled for their life. During Azerbaijan's
    imposed war on Karabagh, some 50,000 Azeris, mostly living in Shushi, were
    helped to leave the province by the Armenians. During a NATO sponsored program
    in Budapest, an Azeri officer beheaded a fellow Armenian classmate with axe
    while he slept. The Azeri murderer was declared a hero in Baku.
    There are logical reasons for Armenians, in general, to be anti-Turkish. Some
    400,000 Armenians were killed in 1894 by Sultan Hamid. Then in 1915, the young
    Turks planned a systematic massacre of Armenians in our homelands. The Turks
    and Azeris have no such logical reasons to be anti-Armenian.
    The only fault of Armenians was wanting to preserve their culture and youth.
    Finally, some clarifications regarding Filip Kirkorov's character: He doesn't
    just deny being Armenian, rather, says he is ashamed of being Armenian.
    Cursing and being impolite in daily life, as reported in Russian
    newspapers is
    not behavior that should be promoted in Armenian society. It is simply
    unacceptable that someone who void of character and taste--and is ashamed of
    being Armenian--to make money in Yerevan.


    13) Some Basic Questions

    By Leonard Manoukian,
    ANCA-WR Board

    In my short, happy, life, I've learned that questioning people's motive is a
    useless exercise. Inevitably, civil discourse turns to name calling; feelings
    are hurt and dialogue ceases. So why bother? Instead, I've found that
    decisions
    and the actions that follow are better topics of discussion and more objective
    means of deliberation.
    In the recent past, two Armenian advocacy organizations, the ANC and the
    Armenian Assembly, have taken their not-so-private disagreements to the
    public.
    Those who know me also know my affiliations, so I will not feign objectivity.
    For the sake of fairness, I will limit myself to asking some questions and
    allowing the reader to answer them.
    To clarify, the disagreement centers on the Turkish Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission (TARC), which has the active support of the Armenia Assembly.
    From my perspective, here are some general questions regarding TARC. First,
    how can two individuals, nations or states "reconcile" when one has made it
    clear that it will not accept the "truth"? How can these two have a dialogue
    when one does not even acknowledge what the other has been living with for
    nearly a century?
    Second, if a nation is being represented in such a situation, what criteria
    should be used in deciding the appropriate representative? Should the sole
    consideration be politics or should deeply held national aspirations be the
    measure?
    Finally, when the entire process comes crashing down when one's "partner in
    dialogue" simply decides to stand away from the negotiation table, is it
    perhaps time to admit the abject failure of the exercise, accept
    responsibility
    for compromising a near-sacred national matter and move on?
    In a more specific vein, there are questions to be asked regarding the
    nominal
    accomplishment of TARC, and a study prepared for International Center for
    Transitional Justice (ICTJ) at TARC's request--the authors of which remain
    anonymous.
    Using the Genocide Convention as its analytical basis, this report concludes
    that:

    --Under the rubric of the Genocide Convention, the process that began on
    April
    24, 1915, was genocide.

    --Under the same framework, no reparations are due to Armenians.

    Taking a step back, one wonders why anyone would allow the most vital issue
    that has ever faced his nation be decided by a third party, especially when
    there is already universal unanimity regarding that issue? Here's another
    matter to consider, did anyone think that Turkey was going to change its
    decades' long position simply because of the report's findings?
    Several nations, many organizations and scores of scholars have already
    concluded that the Ottoman government was guilty of genocide against
    Armenians.
    What possible utility would one more report have? The facile answer, of
    course,
    is that the acknowledgment of the genocide from every quarter will have the
    cumulative effect of shaming Turkey into admission of responsibility.
    The problem, however, should be obvious; whenever anyone points to the ITCJ
    report as support for the Armenian Cause, they will necessarily, be
    pointing to
    the conclusion that no reparations are due. The Assembly overlooks all this
    and
    tells us that no one would ever accept acknowledgment without reparations.
    Fine
    sentiment, but it can't have it both ways. It must either disavow TARC and its
    product--the ITCJ report, or it must adopt both the report's conclusions.
    The last point, and admittedly the most personal, is the constant reminder
    that on the eve of the 90th commemoration of the genocide, we have better
    things to do than to discuss these matters. Really? This sentimentalizes the
    genocide. We do not remember the genocide only on April 24, we, all of us,
    live
    with the genocide and its effects every day of the year. In a manner of
    speaking, April 24 is the first day of a new year, a new year of diligence and
    work for the Armenian cause. We do not do this work simply for ourselves;
    there
    are one and a half million other reasons for it. Real leaders never forget
    that.


    14) Lord Jeffery, Smallpox Blankets, and the TARC report

    By Ani Shahinian

    Anyone who has read their high school history knows that during the French
    and
    Indian War, Lord Jeffery Amherst distributed smallpox-infected blankets to
    local Indians.
    The Indians, not knowing the implications of accepting this "gift," may have
    very well thanked Amherst for these blankets, unaware of the terrible
    suffering
    and widespread death they would cause amongst a population defenseless against
    this new disease. With the benefit of hindsight, however, we can all see
    Amherst's gift for what it was--a deliberate attempt, in his own words, to
    "extirpate this execrable race." Very simply, Amherst, using the pretense of
    providing warmth to the Indians, actually sought their destruction.
    Today, we face an analogous situation.
    In the same "generous" spirit as Lord Jeffery, the Turkish Armenian
    Reconciliation Commission (TARC) has given its "gift" to the Armenian nation.
    They have produced a study--whose authors strangely remain anonymous--that
    confirms the obvious fact that the Armenians were victims of genocide. But
    before you wrap yourself up in this blanket, consider the consequences. Just
    like the smallpox hidden in the Amherst's gift, TARC has infected its offering
    with its own brand of poison, in the form of the conclusion that the Armenians
    don't have any right to justice under the Genocide Convention. Nothing
    could be
    more damaging to the Armenian Cause.
    Sadly, we still have modern day Lord Jeffery types--now in the form of
    TARC--and they are still peddling poison in the brightly colored packages.
    Thankfully, we have the common sense to not accept such "gifts" at face value.
    Except for a small handful of naïve Armenians, we know our history well enough
    to protect our interests, to safeguard our rights, and to turn away the
    wolves--even when they come in sheep's clothing.


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    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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