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  • ASBAREZ Online [05-27-2005]

    ASBAREZ ONLINE
    TOP STORIES
    05/27/2005
    TO ACCESS PREVIOUS ASBAREZ ONLINE EDITIONS PLEASE VISIT OUR
    WEBSITE AT <http://www.asbarez.com/>HTTP://WWW.ASBAREZ.COM

    1) Socialist International Council in Tel Aviv and Ramallah
    2) ANCA Criticizes Turkey's Mockery of Freedom of Expression
    3) Groups Ask Belgian Senate to Adopt Strong Language on Genocide Denial
    4) Pallone Chides Cancellation of Armenian Genocide Conference in Turkey
    5) System Of A Down's 'Mezmerize' Debuts at Number One; First week's worldwide
    sales top 800,000
    6) A War Photographer's South Coast Interlude
    7) Youth to Hold Armenian Independence Day Festival
    8) University Students in LA Stage Extraordinary Genocide Commemorative Events
    9) San Francisco Armenian Film Festival Call for Entries
    10) Armenian Contemporary Art at Harvest Gallery
    11) Bitter Remembrances of Armenia
    12) LETTERS

    Ed Note: Due to the early holiday deadline, Skeptik Sinikian was unable to
    write his column; he, instead, opted to travel to the White House for Georgian
    dance lessons from GW.

    OUR NEXT POSTING:
    Due to the Memorial Day holiday, our next issue will be posted on Tuesday, May
    31.


    1) Socialist International Council in Tel Aviv and Ramallah

    ARF delegate delivers speech on Mid-East peace

    (SI)--Tel Aviv and Ramallah were the stage for Socialist International's
    Council meeting on May 23-24, with the participation of leaders and
    representatives from its member parties and organizations from around the
    world.
    Representatives from the Armenia Revolutionary Federation (ARF), included
    Bureau member Mario Nalbandian, along with Hagop Sevan, Manuel Hasassian, and
    Georgette Avakian. Nalbandian was one of the featured speakers at the May 24
    session.
    The Council, which convenes every six months, met in the Middle East on this
    occasion to underline the SI's commitment to searching for peace in the region
    and encouraging Israelis and Palestinians to move forward along the path of
    dialogue and negotiation at a crucial juncture for the region's future.
    Under the main theme "For a Middle East in peace, with political and economic
    democracy: the social democratic vision," the Council meeting, hosted by the
    Israel Labor Party, the Israeli Yachad Party, and the Palestinian Fatah, all
    members of the International, held two sessions, one in Tel Aviv and the other
    in Ramallah.
    The session in Tel Aviv opened on the morning of Monday 23 with contributions
    from Shimon Peres, Leader of the Labor Party and Deputy Prime Minister of
    Israel; Imad Shakur, Member of the Palestinian National Council; Yossi Beilin,
    Leader of the Yachad Party from Israel; and SI President António Guterres. A
    number of leaders from Socialist International member parties participated in
    the debate on the main theme.
    On the afternoon of the first day, the Council received a report from the
    Chair of the SI Committee on the Economy, Social Cohesion and the Environment,
    Christoph Zopel (Germany, SPD), and the position papers 'Financial and
    Economic
    Issues, The Bretton Woods Institutions and Global Economic Governance' and
    'Trade and Social Rights', prepared by the Committee, were approved, as were
    the following declarations: 'Socialist International's Second Semi-Annual
    Review on Democratic Governance for Sustainable Development in a Global
    Society'; 'Millennium Development Goals', and 'World Summit on the Information
    Society'. A position paper--'Reforming the United Nations for a New Global
    Agenda'--prepared by a special Working Group established by the last SI
    Congress was adopted, following a presentation by Maria Joao Rodrigues
    (Portugal, PS). A resolution on the establishment of a global network of
    parliamentarians from SI member parties, an area of work mandated to the SI
    Secretary General, was approved.
    The President of Israel, Moshe Katsav, delivered a special address to the
    Council meeting and welcomed the presence of the International,
    acknowledging a
    climate of expectation concerning the latest developments in the Middle East.
    The afternoon session closed with a report of the Secretary General of the
    Socialist International, Luis Ayala, detailing the activities and the focus of
    attention of the organization during the last six month period.
    In the evening, in Ramallah, the delegates to the Council had a special
    meeting with the President of the Palestinian National Authority, Mahmoud
    Abbas, who thanked the International for its continuing involvement in the
    search for peace in the Middle East.
    On May 24, the session in Ramallah opened with addresses by Nabil Shaath,
    Deputy and Acting Prime Minister of the Palestinian National Authority; Abbas
    Zaki on behalf of Fatah; Avshalom Vilan, MK, of the Yachad Party; Colette
    Avital, MK, of the Israel Labour Party; and, SI President António Guterres.
    Participants continued the discussions of the previous day in Tel Aviv on the
    main theme. (List of speakers, Tuesday 24 May)
    At the end of the debates, a Declaration on democracy and peace in the Middle
    East was introduced by Thorbjorn Jagland (Norway, DNA) on behalf of the SI
    Middle East Committee which he chairs; it was unanimously adopted.
    Finally, the Council agreed to recommend the upgrade of the Patriotic
    Union of
    Kurdistan, PUK, Iraq, and the Democratic Party, DP, Serbia, to full membership
    in the International, and of the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan , PDKI,
    and the Assembly of Democratic Forces, RFD, of Mauritania to consultative
    status. In accordance with the SI's statutes, the Council elected George
    Papandreou, Leader of the Panhellenic Socialist Movement, Pasok, Greece;
    Mohamed El-Yazghi, First Secretary of the Socialist Union of Popular Forces,
    USFP, Morocco, and Horacio Serpa of the Liberal Party of Colombia as
    Vice-Presidents of the Socialist International, to occupy positions that had
    become vacant since the last Congress.


    2) ANCA Criticizes Turkey's Mockery of Freedom of Expression

    --Discussion of Armenian genocide silenced again

    WASHINGTON, DC (ANCA)--In yet another move marking a series of Turkish
    government actions to quash freedom of speech and prevent open discussion
    about
    the Armenian genocide, the Turkish Government compelled scholars from three
    universities in Turkey, on May 24, to indefinitely postpone a conference that
    would have focused on this crime against humanity.
    "The Turkish government's actions reflect a long-standing, profoundly
    troubling, and increasingly aggressive policy of seeking to silence any
    discussion of the Armenian fenocide--domestically, through coercion and
    threats
    of prosecution, and abroad through blackmail and intimidation," said Aram
    Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. "In taking these steps, Turkey's
    leadership has made a mockery of its claims to seek a dialogue with Armenians,
    compounded international skepticism about its willingness to meet even minimal
    standards for freedom of expression, and underscored the need for our
    government and the international community to press Turkey--once and for
    all--to end its campaign to deny justice for this crime against humanity."
    The Conference, titled "Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the Empire:
    Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy," was jointly organized by
    the Comparative Literature Department of Bilgi University, the History
    Department of Bogazici University and the History Program at Sabanci
    University. Originally set to take place May 25th-27th at Bosphorus
    University, the schedule was to include over 30 papers by Turkish scholars
    from
    Turkey and abroad.
    In the days leading up to the conference, Turkish Government officials spoke
    stridently against the conference and its organizers. Turkish Justice Minister
    Cemil Cicek, in a speech before the Turkish Parliament on Tuesday, went so far
    as to accuse the academics of "treason." The Minister described the conference
    as a "a stab in the back to the Turkish nation." Cicek expressed regret that,
    as Justice Minister, he could not personally prosecute the organizers and
    participants.
    Opposition parliament members concurred with the government's views.
    According to the Agence France Presse, senior Republican People's Party
    Parliament member and former Turkish Ambassador to the US, Sukru Elekdag,
    referred to the conference as a "treacherous project."
    The government crackdown on the conference is the most recent chapter in the
    Turkish government's 90-year campaign of genocide denial. This effort has
    intensified in recent years. In 2003, Education Minister Hikmet Cetin issued a
    decree making student participation in a nation-wide essay contest denying the
    Armenian Genocide compulsory. The most recent revisions to the Turkish
    Penal Code criminalizes references to the Armenian Genocide and the removal of
    troops from Turkish occupied northern Cyprus. World-renowned Turkish writer
    Orhan Pamuk, is the latest to be charged with violation of the Turkish penal
    code for references to the Armenian Genocide. According to news reports, Pamuk
    stated, "30,000 Kurds and 1 million Armenians were killed in Turkey. Almost no
    one dares to speak out this but me, and the nationalists hate me for that."


    3) Groups Ask Belgian Senate to Adopt Strong Language on Genocide Denial

    BRUSSELS--Reminding legislators that "genocide denial is not the expression of
    an opinion but the continuation of the crime of genocide," several groups,
    including the European Armenian Federation for Justice and Democracy (EAFJD),
    have asked the Belgian Senate to adopt concise language that clearly
    criminalizes denial of the Armenian genocide.
    In the next few days, the Belgium Senate will examine a draft law that would
    expand the offense for genocide denial. The draft law approved earlier by the
    House of Representative is based on a judicial definition of the crime of
    genocide, and does not specifically penalize the denial of the Armenian
    genocide.
    The House version was enacted prior to the establishment of the relevant
    international jurisdiction. But the issue has come to prominence recently due
    to numerous instances of Armenian genocide denial in Belgium.
    As a result, nearly half of the members of the Senate are seeking to consider
    this law and examine amendments to extend penalties for the denial of those
    genocides recognized by Belgian federal legislative bodies and by European
    legislative institutions.
    "We object to all forms of grading of genocides and therefore to all
    competition between victims, and we reaffirm that the denial of the Armenian
    genocide--like the denial of other genocides--repulses in equal measure all
    groups of victims as well as supporters of humanism," write the groups.
    They also point to the scholarly works that support beyond all reasonable
    doubt, the political and concerted nature of the Armenian genocide.
    Signatories include the Association of Armenian Democrats in Belgium (AADB),
    The Kurdish Institute of Brussels, The Info-Turk Foundation, The International
    Federation for Human Rights (FIDH), The LDH Human Rights Organisation (LDH -
    Belgium), The Movement against Racism, Anti-Semitism and Xenophobia (MRAX).


    4) Pallone Chides Cancellation of Armenian Genocide Conference in Turkey

    US Rep. Frank Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ), co-chairman of the Congressional Caucus on
    Armenian Issues, criticized the cancellation of a conference on the Armenian
    Genocide in Turkey that was scheduled to begin yesterday. The New Jersey
    congressman gave the following statement on the House floor on Wednesday.

    "Mr. Speaker, I rise today to voice my outrage and great disappointment about
    a recent development in Turkey. A conference set to begin yesterday in
    Bogazici
    University, of Turkish scholars/academics entitled "Ottoman Armenians during
    the Decline of the Empire: Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy,"
    was indefinitely postponed by the University organizers.
    According to Agence France-Presse, Turkish Justice Minister Cemil Cicek
    yesterday accused Conference organizers of committing treason, saying, "We
    must
    put an end to this cycle of treason and insult, of spreading propaganda
    against
    the [Turkish] nation by people who belong to it." In addition, Turkish
    officials have demanded copies of all papers submitted to the conference.
    This development further affirms the speculation that the image that the
    Turkish government has attempted to create for itself is nothing more than a
    desperate attempt at creating a facade. Contrary to what Turkish Prime
    Minister
    Erdogan and other Turkish officials would have us believe, the government of
    Turkey is not democratic, is not committed to creating a democracy, is not
    making an effort to create better relations with Armenia and is definitely not
    ready to join the European Union.
    Over the last year, we have witnessed the government of Turkey attempt to
    move
    towards democratization. However, the manner in which they have chosen to
    do so
    is an insult to any truly democratic government. Their attempts have included
    the adoption of a penal code that in reality represents a dramatic display of
    the Turkish government's campaign to deny the Armenian genocide. Furthermore,
    this new criminal code further hindered improved relations between the
    Republic
    of Armenia and Turkey.
    Section 306 of this code punishes individual Turkish citizens or groups that
    confirm the fact of the Armenian Genocide in Ottoman Turkey or call for the
    end
    of the Turkish occupation of Northern Cyprus--with up to ten years in prison.
    Far from coming to terms with the Genocide or reaching out to Armenia- Turkey,
    in adopting Section 306 of its new penal code, hardened its anti-Armenian
    stance and undermined hopes for a reduction of tensions in the region. This
    sets the stage for possible legal action against Conference planners and
    participants. The Turkish government has refused to support rescinding this
    prohibition against free speech despite international criticism.
    With the cancellation of this conference, we find that the government of
    Turkey will go to any length to avoid facing its own bloody past. In just two
    weeks, Turkey's Prime Minister Erdogan will be in the United States for an
    official visit, proclaiming that his nation is a democracy ready for full
    membership in the European Community and asking for US support. The sad
    reality Mr. Speaker is that when it comes to facing the judgment of history
    about the Armenian Genocide, Turkey, rather than acknowledge truth, has
    instead
    chosen to trample on the rights of its citizens to maintain its lies.
    Hrant Dink, editor of the Armenian weekly Agos in Turkey, stated, "This
    (decision) strengthens the hand of those outside Turkey who say, 'Turkey has
    not changed, it is not democratic enough to discuss the Armenian issue.' It
    shows there is a difference between what the government says and its
    intentions."
    Numerous European countries, including Poland, France and Greece, have passed
    Armenian Genocide resolutions, and have continuously urged Turkey to admit its
    crime. Just this week, French President Jacques Chirac, urged Turkey to
    recognize the genocide and said failure to do so could harm Ankara's drive to
    join the EU.
    We cannot sit by and allow for any nation that we consider an ally and a
    nation that is desperately seeking admission into the EU to behave in such a
    manner. To bring this development into perspective--consider that,
    according to
    current law in Turkey, dozens of US Senators and hundreds of Representatives
    would be punished simply for having voted for Armenian Genocide resolutions,
    spoken about the lessons of this crime against humanity, or commemorated the
    victims of this atrocity. So too would the American academic establishment,
    human rights groups, the mainstream media, and just about everyone else aside
    from the Turkish Embassy and its paid lobbyists here in DC.
    Only by being prepared to admit mistakes and make amends can the Turkish
    government truly be considered a nation governed by the values of democracy.
    This recent event reveals a vulnerable side of Turkey: one that is still
    hiding
    from its history and is incapable of learning from its mistakes so as to
    ensure
    that they will not be repeated in the future.
    The United States prides itself in being the world's leader in spreading
    democracy and liberty. As an effective leader, it is our duty to recognize
    that
    Turkey is not yet a Democratic state, and it will take a sincere effort on the
    part of Turkey to make the transition from a government that currently
    advocates censorship and lack of freedom of speech, to one that embraces the
    principles of democracy in its true meaning."


    5) System Of A Down's 'Mezmerize' Debuts at Number One; First week's worldwide
    sales top 800,000

    System of a Down has done it again. The band's fourth album, "Mezmerize"
    (American Recordings/Columbia Records), enters the Billboard/SoundScan
    chart in
    the Number One position, as did their CD "Toxicity" when it was released in
    September, 2001. Since the release of "Mezmerize" on May 17, the CD has
    scanned
    an astounding 453,000 copies domestically. "Mezmerize" is the first disc in a
    2-disc set with disc two, "Hypnotize," expected out late this fall.
    "Mezmerize/Hypnotize" was produced by Rick Rubin and System's Daron Malakian.
    "Mezmerize" also came in at #1 on numerous music charts around the world
    including those in Germany, Canada, Austria, France, Sweden, Japan,
    Switzerland, Colombia, Greece, Brazil, and New Zealand, bringing the first
    week's worldwide sales in excess of 800,000 copies.
    "B.Y.O.B.," the first single from "Mezmerize," is a Top 5 track at radio, and
    the companion promo video has been in high rotation at MTV, MTV2 and the Fuse
    Network for weeks.
    "Mezmerize" has also scored big with the press:

    "A stunning work." --Associated Press
    "Every track burns with urgency." --USA Today
    "One of the most inventive, unique albums in years." --Newsday
    "Insanely good." --Entertainment Weekly
    "Everything on 'Mezmerize' hits and splits with viciously honed purpose."
    --Rolling Stone
    "Some of the smartest music in mainstream rock." --Wired
    "SOAD's music makes you wish more rock bands would take such brave and
    impressive risks." --Newsweek
    "Probably the best record NME has heard all year." --NME

    System of a Down kicked off a 23-date tour of Europe on Friday, May 27 that
    will include appearances at major rock festivals in Spain, Portugal, Germany,
    Austria, Sweden, Belgium, and Switzerland, as well as a three-night headline
    stand at London's Brixton Academy. System of a Down will headline a major
    North
    American arena tour (with The Mars Volta as special guest) beginning early
    August. Dates will be announced shortly.
    For the most current news and information on System Of A Down, log onto
    www.systemofadown.com.


    6) A War Photographer's South Coast Interlude

    By Margo Kline

    Jonathan Alpeyrie is a serious young man who speaks in low, steady tones
    as he
    describes his life, spent flying to the far-and most troubled-corners of the
    Earth.
    He has been a bird of passage since starting college at the University of
    Chicago in 1998, spending summers chasing exotic locales while working as a
    photojournalist. He landed on the South Coast this spring.
    Just back from a week's trip to Armenia, Alpeyrie explained in an interview
    Monday his decision to remain in this area for the summer. It's "because of
    someone I met here." She is Alissa Anderson, an alumna of UCSB now working as
    an art dealer.
    Alpeyrie acknowledged that a career in photojournalism might be somewhat
    offbeat for someone who majored in medieval history in college and swam
    competitively while earning his degree. What began with a desire to see exotic
    places in his time off from classes evolved into a career chasing photos in
    locations as diverse as the former Soviet Union, Congo and the Ivory Coast in
    Africa, and Nepal, where Maoist rebels are warring with the royal government.
    He also finds time to go to the country of his birth, France.
    His recent trip to Armenia provided material for a less deadline-oriented
    project, Alpeyrie said. "I've been to ex-Yugoslavia to interview veterans of
    Bosnia and Croatia who were in World War II," he said. "I wanted people who
    had
    fought in foreign armies, mostly mercenaries." The vets he interviewed and
    photographed, all Slovenians and Croatians, fought for Nazi Germany "because
    they hated Russia," he said. In researching the project, he found that,
    suprisingly, Hitler's Wermacht had about 900,000 Muslims, from what is now
    Bosnia.
    Alpeyrie, the son of a Spanish mother and a Russian father, spent his
    first 14
    years in Paris. Then he moved to New York with his father and sister. "I guess
    I call Manhattan home," he said. His father and sister still live there. His
    mother lives in Mexico, near Puerta Vallarta.
    He attended the Lycee Francaise in New York City, which he enjoyed
    thoroughly,
    he said. "It was a lot of fun. I wasn't very happy to go to college." But the
    University of Chicago proved to be "a good kick in the butt," he said.
    He started working as a photojournalist for local papers. In 2001, he took
    his
    first trip to Armenia. From there, he journeyed on to Lebanon and Syria. "They
    have Armenian communities in Lebanon and Syria, like they do now in Glendale,"
    he said. "I like the Armenians. They're very nice."
    These days, Alpeyrie shoots news photos for Getty and Agence France Presse. At
    the same time, he pursues larger projects like the Wermacht veterans, with the
    aim of publishing books.
    "Went I first went [to Armenia], I had no idea what I would find," he said.
    "There is a lot of heavy industry in Armenia. The factories were built by the
    Russians, then the Armenians worked in them. Now, they're selling them for
    scrap."
    Traveling the world has led Alpeyrie to some sobering conclusions about
    geopolitics. For instance, the Armenians are still mindful of the mass
    killings
    of their countrymen in the early 20th century by Turks. "Everybody [in
    Armenia]
    is very hard about this, most passionate about it. They really dislike the
    Turks. The Turks want to find an agreement about this that it wasn't genocide.
    In the west, we argue about what is genocide. I think it was genocide. They
    [Turks] took whole families, put them in the desert...where they died."
    Consequently, he is not sympathetic about Turkey joining the European Union.
    "Poland and France are pretty determined against Turkey in the EU. The Turks
    want to join because of money, it's not for intellectual reasons. Is Turkey
    Europe? It's not."
    His travels in Africa were also an awakening. He went to the Congo but "I
    didn't get involved with the rebels. I did a photo essay about the Binza, kids
    accused of being witches. Their families kicked them out, saying they're the
    reason the families are poor."
    The ongoing war among the Congo, Rwanda and Uganda "is worse for the kids."
    The warring factions "really mess each other up."
    Now, Alpeyrie is pausing for a few months to do freelance photography in
    California, work on his book projects and enjoy spending time with Alissa
    Anderson. Both his parents have met the young woman, he said, and found her
    "impressive. They both like her."
    She will go to Manhattan in September to attend graduate school at
    Christie's,
    the art auctioneers. Alpeyrie will return to New York at the same time, then
    leave for a month in Nepal.
    In two previous visits to the Himalayan nation, he was in a group that was
    ambushed. On one of those trips, he saw a government helicopter strafe a
    village.
    Alpeyrie said his routine in such combat situations is always the same: "In
    the field, I stay with soldiers. They know you're there shooting [photos],
    that
    you're there with them. That's what I do every time. I make friends with the
    lieutenants and captains, the platoon leaders. They lead the men into battle."
    In the same quiet voice, he added, "I am not afraid."


    7) Youth to Hold Armenian Independence Day Festival

    GLENDALE--The Armenian Youth Federation will celebrate Armenia's May 28
    Independence Day with a large-scale picnic-festival on Monday, May 30.
    Well-known singers and performers, including Nersik Ispirian, Joseph
    Krikorian, Paul Baghdadlian, Armenchik, Ara Shahbazian, Vatche Hagopian, Sako,
    and Antoine Bezjian, will entertain the crowd. Singers will be accompanied by
    the Knar Band.
    "May 28, 1918 represents one of the most significant turning points in our
    history," said Shant Baboujian, chairman of the AYF Western Region. "As a free
    public event in celebration of such a great turning point in our history, we
    view the picnic-festival as a service to the Armenian community."
    The picnic-festival, to take place at Glendale High School starting at 11am,
    will offer food, music, and games. Local businesses and organizations will
    also
    have booths through which they will make their products and information
    available to the public. For more information or details please call (818)
    507-1933.
    The AYF will also commemorate Memorial Day the same morning, with a wreath
    laying at the Glendale City Hall Veterans Memorial.


    8) University Students in LA Stage Extraordinary Genocide Commemorative Events

    By Tamar Mahshigian

    LOS ANGELES--As Armenians worldwide commemorated the 90th anniversary of the
    Armenian genocide, university students at California State University,
    Northridge and UCLA joined in organizing unique events that honored the memory
    of the 1.5 million innocent lives brutally taken under Ottoman rule.
    At Cal State Northridge, the Armenian Student Association and its companion
    fraternity and sorority groups held a month-long observance that culminated in
    a candlelight vigil on April 21. The ASA staged an impressive display in the
    quad with mounds of plastic bones splattered in blood, and 1,500 carnations in
    the grass (each one representing 1,000 martyrs). In the midst of this seeming
    graveyard were signs, one for each of the 6 Armenian provinces. The signs
    displayed the name of the province, its population before and after the
    Genocide, and the number of people who were slaughtered.
    Several days before the vigil, Armenian students set up 6 canvases around
    campus, almost 6 feet high and 4 feet wide, painted with the question: "Who
    Recognizes the Armenian Genocide?" Thousands of students and faculty signed
    the
    canvases, which were displayed at the vigil.
    The theme of the commemoration was struggle, survival, and rebirth. Newly
    elected Glendale City Clerk Ardashes Kassakhian, who was the keynote speaker,
    stressed that the massacre of Armenians was a planned extermination--a
    genocide--and that Armenians must continue to demand Turkish recognition of
    the
    heinous crimes of 90 years ago.
    Ani Asatryan, vice president of the Armenian Student Association, spoke about
    the youth not giving up until justice is served. "We can't heal, and we cannot
    grow as a nation until Turkey says 'I'm sorry,'" she told the crowd of 200 to
    300 students, some of them non-Armenians.
    In addition to the speakers, there was a poetry recitation, a capella singing,
    and a video display of Ara Oshagan's portraits of Genocide survivors, as well
    as a special dance performance by Niree Arslanian, who graduated from CSUN
    last
    year, and her sister Lori.
    As impressive as the commemorative activities were, the Armenian Students
    Association gets credit for having the expenses paid for by the Associated
    Students of CSUN. The ASA received $6,000 in student government funds for its
    various commemorative programs.
    "It was so gratifying that the students were so organized," says Professor
    Armine Mahseredjian, director of CSUN's Armenian Studies Program and an
    advisor
    to the ASA. "They did it all themselves. The students worked together to
    create
    a cohesive event that got a lot of attention from non-Armenian students and
    faculty."
    At UCLA, the Armenian Students' Association in February co-hosted a panel on
    "Genocide Denial--today and in the past." "We are living in a world today in
    which genocide is being committed, specifically in Darfur," said Raffi
    Kassabian, president of the UCLA Armenian Student Association. "If people
    continue to turn a blind eye or deny such atrocities the cycle of genocide
    will
    continue to turn."
    On April 21, UCLA Armenian students staged a Silent March through campus
    holding posters and banners protesting the denial of the Genocide. Many of the
    students wore black to make a statement about the severity of their sentiment.
    UCLA's ASA also succeeded in having the university's student government
    pass a
    resolution on April 13, to ban the sale of Turkish goods at UCLA until Turkey
    takes care of its human rights violations. "We are sending the Turkish
    government a message that UCLA students will not tolerate human rights
    violations in Turkey," says Kassabian.
    UCLA also was the site for the 2005 All-ASA Candlelight Vigil on April 14.
    Each year, the All-Armenian Student Association's Genocide Recognition
    Committee, a coalition of Armenian collegiate student groups, chooses one or
    two campuses where all Armenian college students come together to commemorate
    the Genocide. The UCLA event featured the rapper Knowledge, who belongs to
    System Of A Down's Serj Tankian's social justice organization Axis of Justice,
    and UCLA Professor Paul Von Blum, a specialist on media and genocide.


    9) San Francisco Armenian Film Festival Call for Entries

    SAN FRANCISCOContinuing on their outstanding success in San Francisco and New
    York in 2004, the Armenian Film Festival committee is presenting "San
    Francisco
    Armenian Film Festival 2006." The event is scheduled for February 2006 at the
    Delancey Street Theater.
    The film festival presents Armenian culture from throughout the world, in all
    its living diversity, and is committed to screening high quality films and
    videos produced by or about Armenians in every cultural, linguistic, and
    geopolitical setting.
    In seeking to familiarize Armenians and non-Armenians to the multiplicity
    that
    forms Armenian communities, the festival supports a large variety of works by
    Armenian film and video makers--narrative and experimental, documentary and
    fiction, features and shorts by and/or about Armenians. In addition to US
    filmmakers, filmmakers from around the world are also encouraged to submit
    works.
    Deadline for submissions is June 15, 2005.
    VHS tape or DVD (NTSC preferred where possible), promotional package, and
    contact information should be sent to:

    The SF Armenian Film Festival
    c/o Film Arts Foundation
    145 9th St., #101,
    San Francisco, CA 94103
    Email: [email protected]

    There is no entry fee for submission of films. The festival does not pay
    screening fees for selected films and videos.


    10) Armenian Contemporary Art at Harvest Gallery May 13 through June 16

    LOS ANGELES--An eclectic group exhibition featuring works by contemporary
    Armenian artists Sarkis Hamalbashian, Rouben Grigorian, Karine Matsakian, Gamo
    Nigarian, Vahan Rumelian and Arthur Sarkissian will be exhibited at Harvest
    Gallery through Thursday, June 16.
    Featuring works spanning the last decade, the exhibit presents over 20
    oil-on-canvas contemporary pieces.
    Harvest Gallery hours are Tuesday Sunday from 11:00 am to 7:00 pm (938 North
    Brand Blvd., Glendale, CA).
    For general information about the exhibit, call 818.546.1000 or visit
    <http://www.harvestgallery.com/>www.harvestgallery.com.
    Harvest Gallery: 938 North Brand Blvd., Glendale, CA


    11) Bitter Remembrances of Armenia

    The following, published in the Washington Times, is a response to Turkish
    Ambassador Faruk Logoglu's May 3, 2005 commentary "To reconcile Turks and
    Armenians," which also appeared in the Washington Times.

    Last Tuesday's Commentary contribution by Turkish Ambassador O. Faruk Logoglu
    was a vivid reminder the Turkish government still rigidly clings to its
    unseemly denial of the Armenian massacres of 1915, the first genocide of the
    20th century, even as it seeks admission to the European Union.
    Moreover, the ambassador seeks sympathy for Turks as if they were equally
    wronged. It was all a result of wartime diseases and famine and "the Armenian
    revolt in the Eastern provinces of the Ottoman Empire, in which hundreds of
    thousands of Turks and Armenians died." And then this, an astonishingly
    mendacious thing to write: "We should ... acknowledge the grief and sadness
    felt by present generations of Armenians over the terrible losses suffered by
    their parents and grandparents. The same compassion must be extended to the
    Turkish people."
    Mr. Logoglu certainly knows better. Even the Turkish government archives show
    how the Ottoman Turkish government planned and carried out the massacres of
    the
    Armenians because of their race and Christian religion, "ethnically cleansing"
    the heavily Armenian provinces in the East and other parts of Turkey,
    including
    Istanbul, with the loss of an estimated 1.5 million Armenian lives.
    The ambassador mentions some Armenian revenge assassinations of Turkish
    officials in the 1970s and '80s--abominable events, to be sure. He does not
    mention assassinations of guilty Turkish officials more than a half-century
    earlier. The story of Soghomon Tehlirian suggests why.
    He shot and killed the former interior minister and planner of the genocide,
    Talaat Pasha, in Berlin in 1921. Tehlirian's sisters had been raped and his
    brother beheaded; his parents had died on a death march that killed tens of
    thousands of Armenians. Before shooting Talaat, he shouted: "This is to avenge
    the death of my family."
    He was exonerated by a German jury that found "the official Turkish
    documents... proved beyond question that Talaat Pasha and other officials had
    ordered the wholesale extermination of the Armenians." I wrote about Tehlirian
    in my California weekly newspaper almost 40 years later. I found him still
    careful to be as invisible as possible for fear of Turkish reprisal (justified
    or not), and my story said nothing of where and how he lived. He was buried by
    the Armenians as a hero. We might have done something similar if an American
    had assassinated Adolf Hitler.
    Hitler, by the way, told his top generals as they prepared to invade Poland
    and the Nazis pressed on with the Holocaust: "Who today, after all, speaks of
    the annihilation of the Armenians?"
    Many Americans knew what was happening in 1915 and thereabouts and tried to
    help, but too late. They included Theodore Roosevelt, who criticized Woodrow
    Wilson for not sending troops into Turkey to fight to save the Armenians. "The
    Armenian massacre was the greatest crime of the war," he said, "and failure to
    act against Turkey is to condone it."
    That failure, he said, "means that all talk of guaranteeing the future peace
    of the world is mischievous nonsense." America's failure, he said, showed "our
    announcement that we meant 'to make the world safe for democracy' was
    insincere
    claptrap."
    Others who spoke out and raised funds for rescue of the Armenians over the
    next few years included John D. Rockefeller, William Jennings Bryan, Clara
    Barton, Julia Ward Howe, William Lloyd Garrison Jr., Stephen Crane, H.L.
    Mencken, Ezra Pound and (despite Roosevelt's words) Woodrow Wilson. They all
    knew this was genocide.
    Henry Morgenthau, ambassador to Turkey during the massacres, confronted the
    Turkish government about its treatment of the Armenians and led our diplomats'
    valiant efforts to help Armenians escape. He wrote when he left in 1916: "My
    failure to stop the destruction of the Armenians had made Turkey for me a
    place
    of horror."
    Religious organizations speaking out included the Central Conference of
    American Rabbis (which earlier appealed to Europe in 1909 to protect the
    Armenians from barbarism in Turkey), Protestant missionaries (numerous in
    Turkish Armenia, witnesses to the atrocities and sometimes rescuers and
    victims) and leading American Catholics.
    In due time, I hope, Turkey will be a member of the EU and by then will have
    firmly emplaced democratic government and First Amendment freedoms. But it
    would be another atrocity if that happens before Turkey accepts, as any
    European nation should, its responsibility for the massacres. Can we imagine
    Germany as a EU member if it denied the Holocaust and asked equal sympathy for
    Germans and Jews because of what happened?
    America once stood tall in response to the Armenian massacres. The pursuit of
    oil and influence in the Middle East changed that soon after World War I. It
    was easier to end the humanitarian clamor. Today some politicians even refuse
    (though not President Bush) to use the word "genocide" lest they offend
    Turkey.
    Americans in general do not even know of these atrocities, although in one of
    their finest hours Americans had cried out for the Armenians and for holding
    nations accountable for genocide.
    Maybe Hitler was right. But I have many Armenian and Turkish friends who do
    know (the latter silent just now, because of Turkish suppression of the
    truth).
    I believe young people in Turkey may change this some day if they have a
    chance, if they even learn what happened.
    Ambassador Logoglu believes this stain will just go away. We must make sure
    lies do not corrupt history as they now corrupt the Turkish government.

    Reese Cleghorn
    Washington, D.C.


    12) LETTERS:

    On April 6, 2005, Asbarez Daily published an article by Raffi Arzouhaldjian
    titled "On the Eve of the 90th, Anti-turkism Should Not Equal Patriotic
    Armenianism." In this editorial, the author intimates his disapproval of the
    courageous Armenian students who protested against the pro-Turkish and
    anti-Armenian opinions of singer Filip Kirkorov. Ultimately, the protests by
    the Nigol Agbalian Youth Union were successful in the decision to cancel Filip
    Kirkorov's concert in Armenia, and reiterated that Armenians, as a society,
    have a low threshold of tolerance for anti-Armenian slander.
    I came across the editorial by this graduate student of diplomacy at the most
    inopportune time. On the eve of the ninetieth anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide, it seemed odd that a self-proclaimed Armenophile would so
    distastefully denigrate Armenians with his pro-Turkish agenda. Clearly, Mr.
    Arzouhaldjian, your decision to come out of the closet with your Turkish
    political proclivity would have been more appropriately timed around Turkish
    Independence day, rather than April 24th. Given the communal and individual
    losses that our parents and grandparents suffered under the hands of Turkish
    atrocities, how can any individual advocate acquiescence to anti-Armenian
    sentiment among Turks. Weren't the centuries of religious, cultural, and
    political persecution of Armenians by the Turks enough? Based on your
    editorial, I suppose that you would advocate Armenian political
    acquiescence to
    Turkey for the sake of diplomatic expediency.
    Although the writer acknowledges the existence of anti-Armenian
    intolerance in
    Turkey and Azerbaijan, he seems to distort its prevalence within the
    context of
    Armenian history. He presents the issue as if it is a new phenomenon.
    Anti-Armenian intolerance in occupied Asia Minor has been rampant and public
    policy since 1064. Throughout our history, Turkish citizens have murdered,
    raped, kidnapped, and pillaged Armenians. "Ermenileri Kerajaghus" ("We shall
    slaughter the Armenians") has been part of Turkish lexicon and culture. This
    intolerance was often uniquely directed at Armenians in a systematic campaign
    to deny Armenians their intrinsic right to political, cultural, and religious
    self-determination.
    Rightfully, the writer also acknowledges anti-Armenian intolerance by
    Azerbaijan and Turkey that continues to this day. He argues that this casts a
    dark shadow over regional integration. Although the concept of regional peace
    is appealing to all parties, Armenians are adamant about maintaining cultural
    and political sovereignty and resisting the hostile and imperialistic pan
    Turanic aspirations of its neighbor states. If regional integration is the
    current state of real politics then why did the international community
    recognize the state of Armenia after the collapse of the Soviet Union? Mr.
    Arzouhaldjian, are you proposing to have all the nations that deservingly
    declared independence from Ottoman Turkey relinquish their independence
    back to
    modern Turkey because you seem to advocate a regional integration? Why not
    take
    issue with The South integrating linguistically, culturally, and politically
    from the Union before erasing borders in the Caucasus.
    The writer also states that the cancellation of Filip Kirkorov's concert
    plays
    a disservice to Armenia's fragile democracy. The mere fact that the
    protests by
    the Nigol Aghbalian Youth Union were allowed by the fledgling Armenian
    government, attests to high values Armenians place on American democratic
    values. You forget that the democratic principles that the Armenian
    diaspora in
    America espouses have been instrumental in the establishment of democratic
    principles in Armenia. Interestingly, the author supports the right of a
    foreigner with flagrant anti-Armenian views to promulgate an overtly insulting
    agenda in Armenia, but he condemns the Armenian students for their courageous
    stand and pride for their Armenian culture. His biased support of Filip
    Kirkorov is repulsive and damaging to our cultural history and pride.
    The writer insults Armenians by stating that the Armenian political agenda
    has
    been hijacked by ethnic hatred and hollow nationalism. The core of our
    nationalism has been the struggle to substantiate the sovereignty of our
    nation. The acknowledgement of the Armenian genocide, Armenian cultural,
    religious, literary and historical achievements within the context of ethnic,
    political and national genocide are an important and intangible goal of most
    Armenians.
    Interestingly, Mr. Arzouhaldjian disguises his acquiescence to Turkish
    nationalism and bigotry by claiming that he..."is a strong advocate of Armenian
    rights." Armenian rights! The vagueness of the statement is comedic. He seems
    to be more concerned about the Kurds and Alevis as suppressed minorities. Who
    remembers the Syriac, Chaldean, Nestorians, Greeks and the Assyrians who
    commemorate 1895/6 and 1915 as their genocides? What rights are Armenians
    demanding today? Going back throughout recorded history, depopulating Armenia
    has been an obsession of every empire. If he is advocating the rightful return
    of Greater and Lesser Armenia, and Cilicia, then he should have proclaimed so
    in his editorial. However, it seems more likely that he has injected that
    description of himself in order to obviate any allegations of being an
    Armenophobe. I don't remember Mr. Arzouhaldjian in the trenches of Sushi! Or
    for that matter, advocating the rights of any Armenian living today. Why the
    silence during and after the settlement of the New York Life lawsuit?
    He also claims that intolerance of a neighbor's culture is borderline racist.
    To allege that being intolerant of a neighbor's culture is borderline racist
    misses the point. We as Armenians throughout our history have not only
    tolerated but tolerated and assimilated into our receptive host countries.
    This
    is exemplified by many Armenians throughout the diaspora who have lived,
    served, and adopted our host country's language, food and culture. We as
    Armenians are not intolerant of other cultures, but rather intolerant of
    individuals coming into our country and advocating an anti-Armenian agenda and
    insulting our cultural pride. This is particularly true around the time of our
    commemoration of the 90th anniversary of the Armenian genocide.
    From the standpoint of Mr. Arzouhaldjian's editorial, we should not pick
    on an
    artist that has decided to hold a concert in Yerevan and perform songs in
    Turkish. Filip Kirkorov, a self-loathing Armenian who doesn't deny his
    ethnicity ironically behaves as an opportunistic Armenophobe. Perhaps
    mistakenly, Mr. Arzouhaldjian fails to mention Filip Kirkorov's recent conduct
    in Baku, Azerbaijian. According to reports in Azbarez Daily, Filip Kirkorov
    proclaimed that he was "ashamed that Armenian blood flows through his body..."
    during a concert in that city. This was one of the reasons why the students
    protested his concert. It is almost analogous to the American public's
    reaction
    to comments made by the Dixie Chicks. Why was Mr. Arzouhaldjian so silent when
    the Dixie Chics were condemned and many of their concerts cancelled? Why
    didn't
    he proclaim the United States public undemocratic and reactionary? Why didn't
    he criticize the country music fans and all the citizens within these United
    States as borderline racists?
    One of the most disappointing comments made in the editorial was as follows:
    "Unlike our grandparents' generation, who could not help but view Turkey from
    the perspective of individual and communal losses after the genocide, our
    generation needs a wider and more sophisticated view of Armenian-Turkish
    relations." Despite the ninety years that have passed since the Armenian
    genocide, the majority of Armenians are still deeply affected by the tragedies
    inflicted during that era and for many centuries preceding. The lives of our
    grandparents and parents, in some cases, were tragically altered in the most
    brutal ways. How can he even insinuate that we, as the new generation of
    Armenians, collectively move on and ignore these past crimes. Insulting our
    grandparent's generation of perceiving Turkey from individual and communal
    losses after the genocide not only shows the level of his immaturity but his
    insolence and naiveté. His comments are a desecration of our history.
    "...The very name of Armenia awakens memories of a tragic chain of broken
    promises for the fulfillment of which they (allies) have not raised a finger.
    After all it was a culturally gifted nation, possessing no oil wells or gold
    mines..." Fridtjof Nansen
    It seems that his ignorance of Armenian history is evident. Let us not
    rewrite
    history, but let me remind him that the Seljuk and later Ottoman Turks
    instituted a systematic campaign of cultural genocide. Therefore, our feelings
    towards the Turks have been a result of not only their invasion and usurpation
    of our lands, but the desecration of our churches, cemeteries, and the
    kidnapping, raping and murder of our people. These crimes should never be
    forgotten for the sake of diplomatic expediency.
    In another statement, the author writes: "We can't imitate the monolithic
    positions of the establishment in Ankara and its Armenophobic policies.
    "...First, the ferman (order) for massacres was issued. Then the Turkish and
    Kurdish plunderers, armed with swords, hatchets, or truncheons, would break
    into Armenian homes and start the blood bath. When the carnage reached a level
    considered adequate for that day, the government's town crier would blow the
    trumpet to signal the paydos (pause). Accustomed to the rules of the game, the
    crazed populace would suddenly stop, sheathe their swords, and quietly go
    home..."
    In Bill O'Reilly's words, this is a "NO SPIN ZONE!" But this writer tries to
    muddy the water, confuse, and distract the reader by claiming that we as
    Armenians should distinguish between Ankara and the Turkish people and
    culture.
    I have a few comments to make: How many ordinary Turkish citizens ever
    stood up
    and apologized to any Armenian during or after any massacre? The ones who did
    harbor Armenians only harbored them in return for financial incentives. The
    direct beneficiaries of the massacres weren't the politicians in
    Constantinople
    or Ankara, but the ordinary Turk. When Nelson Mandela refused the Ataturk
    Peace
    Award, he was called an "insolent African," an "Ugly African." How many Turks
    protested to Hurriet, Sahah, and Turkiye newspapers? How many Arab countries
    still maintain any vestiges of Turkish culture? You want us to respect a
    culture that had actively traded slaves from Africa less than 80 years ago!
    All
    this with no recorded apology!
    Mr. Arzouhaldjian, it is ironic that you claim we should, as a society,
    practice more tolerance of anti-Armenian and pro-Turkish tendencies among
    individuals in our free society. You advocate that as a society we should
    tolerate and respect individuals like Filip Kirkorov's pro-Turkish stance, pro
    Turkish tendencies and opinions. It is also ironic that by Asbarez Daily
    publishing your insolent, insensitive and ill-timed editorial, it has
    demonstrated a tolerance for which you accuse Armenians of lacking.
    You have SPUN this issue, knowing full well the real reason for the outrage,
    but you took the opportunity to insult Armenians. Perhaps you haven't realized
    that your comments may have offended a whole generation of Armenians who have
    personally been touched by the tragedies during and after the Armenian
    genocide. Ninety years after the genocide, Armenians have continued to
    persevere and flourish as a nation and diaspora while still respecting the
    tragic sacrifices our ancestors made to maintain our culture and identity. We
    shall never forget these sacrifices for the sake of diplomacy. Mr.
    Arzouhaldjian, perhaps you should take Henry Kissinger as a role model. He
    remained committed to American national policy while persevering and
    respecting
    his heritage.

    Hrair Karamanoukian


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