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  • ArmeniaNow 2 - 09/12/2005

    ARMENIANOW.COM
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    Technical Assistance: (For technical assistance please contact to Babken
    Juharyan)
    Email: [email protected]

    HUNGRY FOR JUSTICE: CONVICTED SOLDIER SAYS HE HAS `NO OTHER WAY' BUT HUNGER
    STRIKE
    By Zhanna Alexanyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    In a basement cell with a barred and screened window where heavy air
    smothers breathing, 19-year old prisoner Razmik Sargsyan is in his
    28th day of a hunger strike to protest the sentence for a crime he now
    says he had no part in.

    In April of last year, following five days of interrogation during
    which the teenager says he was tortured, Sargsyan, a conscript in the
    Armenian army confessed to the murder of two fellow soldiers in
    Karabakh in December of 2003. Two other soldiers were also convicted
    based on Sargsyan's confession. Razmik Sargsyan Each was sentenced to
    15 years.

    Attorneys and family members of all the convicted soldiers have
    maintained that Sargsyan and the others were scapegoats in a double
    murder that, they say, leads to unit commander Ivan
    Grigoryan. Grigoryan was not called to testify in the case, due, in
    part, to his status as a Karabakh war hero. (Also read previous
    ArmeniaNow reports: With Prejudice?, Army on Trial and Death Over
    Dishonor?.)

    The case is one of several examples of unsatisfactory conditions
    within the Armenian Army, where soldiers are routinely beaten (the
    murder victims are believed to have been tortured, then murdered),
    often with the approval or out right command of superior officers.

    It is also a case that has drawn attention from human rights agencies
    and Non Governmental Organizations who say that Sargsyan is just
    another victim of bottom-to-top corruption that prevails in the
    military.

    Sargsyan's case is under appeal, but a prison doctor has determined
    that his health is too bad for him to attend the hearings.

    According to his attorney, Zaruhi Postanjyan, Sargsyan cannot walk,
    and suffers severe kidney problems that, the attorney says, are the
    result of numerous beatings. The apparent kidney damage makes a hunger
    strike particularly dangerous for the boy. And in fact his conditioned
    dramatically deteriorated within two weeks of the strike.

    Members of an NGO observation group making a public supervision in
    prisons, consider his health condition as hard. The group was denied a
    request to view Sargsyan's medical records by head of the Nubarashen
    prison, Ara Sargsyan.

    Although press secretary of the Ministry of Justice Ara Saghatelyan
    insists they would get the information in case a proper request was
    presented the lawyers insist the two written mediations in that regard
    have been rejected.

    On the fifth day of his strike, Sargsyan announced it to the Court of
    Appeals. Judge Mher Arghmanyan replied: `Only guilty people do things
    like hunger strikes . . .' On a visit to the Nubarashen prison,
    ArmeniaNow's reporter found the boy pale, gaunt and barely capable of
    speaking. He is demanding that those who he says tortured him be
    charged with their crimes, and that the Military Prosecutor be
    dismissed from the case, and a civilian prosecutor from the Prosecutor
    General's Office be assigned.

    `I have been innocently sentenced for 15 years, and evidence has been
    extorted by beatings,' he told ArmeniaNow `How can I go out of the
    hunger strike? I have no other way.'

    `Razmik Sargsyan made this ultimate step for he does not know what
    steps to take to prove his innocence and to bring the real criminals
    to responsibility,' Postanjyan says. `Besides the fact the real
    criminals are free they have involved also innocent people into the
    case.'

    Neither Musa Serobyan nor Araik Zalyan, the other soldiers, confessed
    to the same charges raised against Sargsyan.

    Postanjayan says the Military Prosecutor's Office made its case solely
    on Sargsyan's allegedly-extorted testimony. She describes her client
    as a sensitive boy, liable to yield to pressure.

    `They purposefully chose Razmik, for he is more vulnerable, writes
    poems and loves music, so he would not stand the beatings. And indeed
    he did not. The investigator had hanged him up and threatened to rape
    him with a stick... Razmik has testified to all these in the court of
    the first instance,' says the lawyer.

    During the year and a half of their imprisonment all the three
    prisoners have declared hunger strikes at different times. The longest
    was Zalyan's, lasting 90 days.

    Due to his already poor health, Sargsyan's hold out appears more
    dramatic.

    Following a recent visit to the prison, Torgom Sargsyan said his son
    could not walk and `his face was totally swollen, his hands were
    shaking, he could hardly move his lips. He has had acute kidney
    attacks again; he urinates blood.

    `They took my child to the army for two years, and it turned into 15
    . . .'

    Read next week's ArmeniaNow for an update on the appeals court
    hearings.

    HYESANTA UPDATE: SEASONAL PROJECT TURNS INTO YEAR-ROUND ACTIVITY
    By Suren Musayelyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Editor's Note: In keeping with our commitment to show readers how
    their contributions to our charitable foundation is being managed, we
    present the following report. ArmeniaNow - and especially the
    recipients of your generosity - thank its readers and looks forward to
    future campaigns.

    As it prepares for its next charity campaign to be launched in late
    autumn, ArmeniaNow's Hye Santa project is pleased to inform its
    patrons that, in the past eight months, 15 families have received
    assistance ranging from medicines to blankets and mattresses, to
    livestock, computers and TV-sets, and worth a total of $12,365 (not
    including the value of rehabilitative care for Karabakh war survivor
    Mary Mezhlumyan.)

    Many also received continuous assistance from ArmeniaNow office staff
    and benefactors who responded generously and wholeheartedly from
    abroad and, most importantly, from within Armenia.

    HyeSanta Charitable Foundation Director Armine Petrosyan says the
    charity has goals that are not limited to satisfying people's
    essential needs only (such as food, clothes, fuel).

    `It is important that the charity's activities be aimed at creating an
    atmosphere of confidence and rehabilitation for the families, showing
    a proper attitude towards them and establishing continuous friendship
    with them,' says Petrosyan.

    When ArmeniaNow announced its second HyeSanta campaign last December,
    the first to contribute was Donna Evans, wife of the United States
    Ambassador to Armenia.

    Among the most recent, in what has become a year-round program, was
    assistance from Armenia's First Lady, Bella Kocharyan.

    Thanks to Ms. Kocharyan's involvement, Mary Mezhlumyan of Kapan, a
    victim of bombing during the Karabakh war, and a subject of the first
    HyeSanta campaign (see Smiling Through Tragedy), is now getting a new
    leg and arms.

    The Medical and Technical Commission of the RA Ministry of Labor and
    Social Affairs is providing Mary with prosthetic appliances free of
    charge.

    An artificial foot was prepared for Mary under Doctor Mkrtich
    Ginosyan's supervision, and artificial arms will be prepared for her
    in October. Further, there are also plans to present to the National
    Assembly a proposal by photojournalist German Avagyan through
    cooperation with Red Cross Armenia Chairman Mkhitar Mnatsakanyan to
    regard war-crippled children (there are about 50 of them living in
    Armenia and Karabakh today) as war disabled and give them pensions
    accordingly.

    Petrosyan also regards as important HyeSanta's cooperation with the
    Armenian Apostolic Church, in particular with the St. Hovhannes Church
    priest Ter Daniel (see ArmeniaNow's HyeSanta update of June 10, 2005).

    Four children of the Papazyans, subjects of last winter's HyeSanta
    project, were baptized in summer.

    `I need to consult Ter Daniel,' with these words widow Knarik
    Gasparyan, 39, who has three children in her care and no job (see A
    Poet's Life?), often goes to St. Hovhannes Church with her children
    before making important decisions.

    Petrosyan says one of HyeSanta's strongest allies has been the Armenia
    Interchurch Charitable Round Table Foundation of the World Council of
    Churches.

    Responding to ArmeniaNow's story depicting a gruesome picture in the
    border village of Barekamavan and with a view to create new interests
    for the local youths, at HyeSanta's request the Foundation provided
    two computers each to Barekamavan and neighboring Berkaber.

    Petrosyan says the results exceeded expectations. In particular in
    Berkaber, due to computer instructor Vladimir Ghazinyan's effective
    work, pupils are now using the Word, Excel and Photoshop programs.

    Vladimir intends to learn other computer programs to teach them to the
    pupils. For that purpose, HyeSanta bought five copies of the AutoCAD
    manual from the Department of Industrial Engineering of the American
    University of Armenia and for his impressive work Vladimir received a
    present from the manual's author Sargis Zeytunyan - a CD with a demo
    version of the program.


    The Tufenkian Foundation helped HyeSanta purchase sheep for some
    families

    `Vladimir's dedicated work within just four months shows that properly
    made investments can produce amazing results that even exceed
    expectations,' says Petrosyan. `Besides, the reassuring example of
    Berkaber has become a reliable guarantee of further cooperation
    between HyeSanta and Round Table.'

    Petrosyan says many of HyeSanta's initiatives would have been
    impossible without the active assistance and support of other
    institutional structures.

    In particular, the Tufenkian Foundation and its director Margarit
    Hovhannisyan, was instrumental in providing transportation to deliver
    a considerable part of the aid to the regions. The foundation also
    provided expertise through veterinarian Zorik Pambukhchyan who advised
    HyeSanta in the matter of purchasing cattle for villagers.

    `We assisted ArmeniaNow and HyeSanta with great pleasure,'
    Hovhannisyan said. `One thing that could be done better in some cases
    is the selection of help for families. In my opinion, some of the
    families featured in ArmeniaNow stories needed other kind of help, not
    so much material or financial, as psychological, help that perhaps
    could be provided through social workers. But I am sure it will come
    with experience.'

    Consultations for HyeSanta were also provided by the NGO Center for
    Civil Society Development.

    The experience of NGOs' work in Armenia often became a guideline for
    HyeSanta. Director Margarit Piliposyan's professional advice also
    contributed to making proper decisions.

    One of the best results of the project, according to its director, was
    achieved through continuous cooperation with Diaspora Armenians. A
    woman in New York became acquainted with the Haroyans from Echmiadzin
    (see Edik and Yura) and long ago grew into friendly
    relations. Petrosyan thinks the consistent attention of Diaspora
    Armenians is especially valuable.

    French-Armenian Anahit Sargsyan, visiting the Gasparyans made a
    wonderful practical proposal: she ordered hand-made toys from Knarik
    for the kids at her kindergarten. This opportunity of dignified
    earning will grow by the New Year into gifts from Armenia to
    French-Armenian children.

    HyeSanta is also developing a similar project with Egyptian-Armenian
    Hrair Djeghalian, who responded readily to the charity action at the
    request of the `Prkutyun' (`Salvation') charitable union for disabled
    children. Hrair's financial contribution made it possible to perform
    an eye surgery on a child, for which the NGO tried to find financing.

    `This way, HyeSanta has become a bridge between its Diaspora readers
    and Armenian NGOs,' says Petrosyan.

    Armenia Interchurch Charitable Round Table Foundation of the World
    Council of Churches donated to HyeSanta computers for two villages

    British-Armenian Rouben Galichian, Chairman of Aid Armenia & Executive
    Trustee of Friends of Armenia, has also volunteered help.

    `We have a willingness to help HyeSanta. Our attitude in all projects
    is as follows: we help people with means to earn their living
    themselves. Instead of giving a fish we give them a fishing-rod,' says
    Galichian, adding that they are willing to help communities rather
    than separate individuals.

    However, Petrosyan considers the most important achievement to be the
    cooperation of readers and TV viewers in Armenia itself.

    The responses of both ArmeniaNow readers and Shoghakat TV viewers are
    appreciable especially by their practical nature.

    Pensioner Karine continues to visit the families of the Gasparyans,
    the Yervandyans and Avetis Khachatryan (Bradyaga), phone and maintains
    a constant link with them. Enthused by the experience of cooperation
    with HyeSanta, she is now trying to rally her associates around the
    charity idea and set up a field for her own activities.

    `My friends, who were brilliant professionals in the past and after
    retiring had no possibility to apply their professional abilities, now
    understand that one can be useful to people through combined
    efforts. While working with HyeSanta I learned a lot of things, and I
    will use all this in the work of our new organization,' she said.

    The consistent attention of businessman Mesrop Saroyan, who sponsors
    the Galajyan family (see Stones For Potatoes), is exemplary. Apart
    from material assistance, he has given a job to Hamlet at his
    enterprise, and helped him improve his ruined home.

    The interest of students is also inspiring: at a meeting with students
    held upon the initiative of AUA lecturer Karine Muradyan, after
    watching the HyeSanta film, a conversation was held around the
    effectiveness of the Foundation's work. The suggestions made by the
    young people were interesting in keeping with the time.

    Besides the 12 families featuring in ArmeniaNow's stories, another
    three families received assistance.

    HyeSanta has helped three young people to become students this year by
    paying for their fees and facilitating needs connected with their
    studies. It also helped organize three baptism parties with the
    assistance of the Church in the person of priest Ter Daniel.

    Now Petrosyan says a documentary is being prepared to cover the
    activities of HyeSanta in 2005. Soon it will be shown on Shoghakat, a
    TV company that has stood by the project since last December when it
    showed televised clips about the needy families featured in
    ArmeniaNow's special Christmas issue and is also assisting in the
    preparation of this documentary.

    An English-language version of the HyeSanta TV program has been
    prepared together with Shoghakat. The process of delivering aid was
    filmed. A summary report about HyeSanta 2005's work is presently being
    prepared jointly with Shoghakat. (ArmeniaNow's 2005 HyeSanta project
    is now being planned. Meanwhile, contributions are welcomed. Click
    here.)


    90 YEARS AFTER MUSA DAGH: `I REMEMBER EVERYTHING . . .'
    By Ruzanna Tantushyan

    Ninety years ago, when she was seven, Varsenik Lagisyan heard voices
    that would follow her till today:

    `Haàààlàh, Haààlàh. We have come to take the
    priest's daughter.'


    Turkish regulars mounted on their horses shouted the words for
    villagers of Youghonoluk, in the region of Musa Dagh (Musa Ler, in
    Armenian) to hear. It is where Versenik lived with her family in
    1915. And these were the words that marked the resettlement of
    Armenians from their homes.

    Musa Dagh - made famous in Franz Werfel's `90 Days at Musa Dagh' - was
    those few Armenian populated villages, subject to exodus, where people
    didn't obey the Turkish government decree of July 26, 1915. According
    to this order Armenians were given one week to leave their homes and
    move to the deserts of Syria.

    Varsenik clearly remembers how the men and women, old and young,
    gathered and decided to fight the Turks. They thought `We will either
    kill, or be killed'. And they decided to climb up Musa Dagh. The
    mountain was rocky and hard to climb, but its thick forest made a good
    place for Armenians to hide and to defend themselves for 40 days,
    until help arrived.

    Life on the mountain was difficult. Because of the rush and obstacles
    on the road, not much could be brought to the mountain. The villagers
    would just leave their doors open and climb the mountain without
    hardly taking anything with them. It was 40 days of hardship, but the
    alternative was death.

    There were times when they had nothing to eat, except berries they
    could find in the forest. Fortunately it was fig and cornel (a type of
    berry) season.

    `Mothers had nothing to fååd their children with. Nor could they
    light a fire, since the light would bring the Turks to our shelter and
    that will be the end of all our attempts to survive,' Versenik
    recalls.

    Varsenik recollects her memories of the time spent on the
    mountain. She would help her mother and other women on the mountains
    to bake bread, do the washing, while the men were busy preventing the
    attempts of the Turks to climb the mountain.

    Varsenik's brightest memory of her childhood is the trip from Musa
    Dagh to Port Said, Egypt. After defending for 40 days Armenian white
    linen sheets, with messages signaling that Christians were in danger,
    were seen by French battle-ships and the Armenians were taken to Port
    Said. This is where Varsenik and her family together with other Musa
    Dagh villagers found their home for four years.

    `The priest said that those who have small children can not come on
    board. They will cry and the Turks will find us' Varsenik remembers
    the priest's words.

    She can remember very well the sight which they saw when their ship
    put ashore.

    `Îlive, mandarin and fig trees with their branches bent under the
    rich crop. All the children would run to gather the fruits. They
    would run from tree to tree, they would greedily gather the fruits
    with laughter and joy. I remember. I remember everything.'

    Varsenik also remembers that on their way to Egypt a woman gave birth
    to a child, symbolizing a new beginning in the history of Musa Dagh
    villagers. But Varsenik's family mourned. Their happiness of salvation
    was saddened by her uncle's death. He was wounded on the mountain and
    died on board the ship. All in all, Varsenik says she was lucky to
    have all her immediate family members alive and together.

    Varsenik had a big family. She was the eldest of the 8 children. Her
    father was a shop keeper and had a lot of goats. Her mother was a
    housekeeper.

    The family lived in Egypt for four years, during which time Varsenik -
    no more than 11 at the time - married a boy from her village, and
    would later have five children.

    After living in the country that gave them bread to eat and a roof to
    have above their head they left for Russian- Armenia that was under
    Russian rule at that time. They left for their motherland.

    They settled in AlaVerdi, but again found themselves short of money
    and food. Varsenik would knit socks and handkerchiefs to earn their
    leaving.

    If her 40 days on Musa Dagh bring black thoughts, it seems that a lot
    of good memories connect Varsenik with her temporary shelter in
    Egypt. First the brightest memories of fruits, trees, laughter and
    happiness of her relatives, friends and the second, her marriage.

    Varesenik's children have their own children. And now Varsenik's
    family is as big as it was in the times in Musa Dagh, before memories
    of Turks on horses, making threats and shaping a horrible history
    . . .

    Friends in Deed: British charity makes life better for struggling
    single women in Armenia By Suren Musayelyan ArmeniaNow reporter
    Margarita Baghdasaryan, 52, is a single mother who lives with her
    18-year-old son Hakob in a 12-square-meter room in a hostel in the
    Kanaker district of Yerevan.

    Those bare details alone frame a life of hardship that is not easily
    managed in a society so family-oriented and reliant on male
    leadership. And it is a life made even worse by a general lack of
    organized care for those of Margarita's situation.

    But it is a life lately improved by the help of a London-based
    charity, Friends of Armenia.

    Presently, Friends of Armenia are completing a $90,000 renovation of
    the hostel that houses some 90 families (about 180 residents). Most
    have situations similar to Margarita; single women whose husbands left
    for work in Russia and never returned, and some who were killed in the
    war in Karabakh.

    Most residents, too, are former employees (or wives of employees) of
    the Lamp Factory, the company to which the four-storied building
    belonged. (In Soviet times, factories provided hostels for employees
    who did not have permanent residences.) Many are refugees from
    Azerbaijan.

    The factory went out of business shortly after the collapse of the
    Soviet Union and the hostel was transferred to the local government as
    a housing for those who had fled Azerbaijan when conflict started in
    the late 1980s.

    For more than a decade the hostel suffered the effects of daily wear
    and tear, without the means for making it better.

    About two years ago, the situation was brought to the attention of
    Friends of Armenia, a non-profit organization started by London
    Diaspora in 2000.

    At first, the charity ministered to the psychological needs of the
    women.

    `We first thought of sending a psychologist there to talk to them and
    their children so that they can feel themselves worthy citizens again
    and not people left alone without jobs and without hope,' says Rouben
    Galichian chairman of Aid Armenia and Executive Trustee of Friends of
    Armenia, who spends some of his time in Armenia.

    A team of three psychologists worked with about 50 single women living
    in a nearby building. Most of them had become prostitutes. Galichian
    says most of these women have proper jobs now - some are employed as
    street-sweepers, others as laundry workers, waitresses, etc.

    `Within just two years of work with them our psychologists managed to
    convince them that they were worthy citizens of their country who had
    found themselves in difficult conditions, which, though, never meant
    that they were not worthy people,' says Galichian.

    But at 16 Banavani Street, Friends of Armenia went further, as they
    decided to improve the living conditions in the hostel.

    `When we went in first, we saw that the toilets there were a poor
    sight, with ruined walls and big holes in the floor. There was no
    water there. We repaired the toilets on almost all floors. I say
    almost, since some rooms and toilets had been privatized and it is not
    our policy to repair individual property,' says Galichian. `We got a
    written letter from the prefecture assuring us that the parts we
    repair will not be privatized and will be for general use for the
    local residents.'

    The first repairs were completed in January, others were finished
    recently. They are all clean and improved and according to Galichian,
    the women take a good care of them.

    `It has changed so much in our lives. We haven't seen such a thing
    before even from the authorities,' says pensioner Margarita, adding
    that even hammering a nail is a problem for the hostel residents as
    most of them are lonely women, some with small children, and some are
    disabled.

    Three months ago Friends of Armenia also decided to repair and clean
    the corridors and the staircases on all floors.

    Works were launched, but the roof caught fire in an accident in July,
    and repairs were suspended.

    `But we will continue the work and will try to get the prefecture to
    repair the roof before the start of rains,' says Vahan Patvakanyan, a
    physicist by training, who is one of the ten representatives of
    Friends of Armenia here.

    Patvakanyan is in charge of the hostel reconstruction project.

    `It is difficult for these women, most of whom live without husbands,
    with small children under their care, to do the repairs
    themselves. The majority of them do not have jobs, those who receive
    pensions can hardly make both ends meet with the money they get from
    the state,' he says.

    Susanna Muradyan, 53, a former employee of the Lamp Plant, has lived
    in the hostel alone since 1989. `The situation here was terrible. This
    project means a lot for us, as it has saved us from anti-sanitary
    conditions,' she says.

    Marina Minasyan, 43, is glad Friends of Armenia has reached out for
    them with this project. She only complains of her life in a small room
    that she shares with another single woman.

    `I appreciate the work of the psychologist who comes here
    regularly. Talking to her is a great relief for me and gives me hope
    that one day I will have a better life,' says Marina.

    Galichian says that psychological assistance is no less important
    thing for most of these women who live in poor conditions. `We
    continue to provide our psychological assistance to these lonely
    women. Whenever they have a difficult situation in their lives or with
    their children they call our psychologists and I am glad they feel the
    use for themselves and their children,' he says. In the summer of
    2000 a group of British Armenian professionals visited Armenia for the
    first time. They were very impressed with the capability and the high
    level of education of the local people, as well as their eagerness to
    learn and their drive to achieve something real, while living under
    difficult conditions, despite the almost total neglect of the
    authorities.

    The group returned to London and founded the charity organization the
    same year.

    So far Friends of Armenia have realized projects worth a total of
    $400,000 in Armenia, in various fields - from orphanages and old
    people's homes, to schools, kindergartens, hospitals, hostels and
    whole villages.

    FUTURE CHOICES: THINK-TANK EXERCISE GIVES ARMENIANS A CHANCE TO STEER
    THE SHIP OF STATE
    By Arpi Harutyunyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    On September 3, about 500 Yerevan residents stood before four doors
    inside the Karen Demirchyan Sports and Entertainment Complex, faced
    with choices that would symbolize their republic's future. The doors
    were marked `Russia', `Europe', `Armenia' and `No Future' - the door
    of pessimism.

    The exercise was part of the Armenia 2020 project, and its intention
    was to illustrate four scenarios created by the think-tank,
    represented in a booklet it published last year on projected paths for
    Armenia to follow in the coming 15 years: `Survival to Prosperity',
    `From Russia with Love', `Armenia and the European Union: Coming Home'
    and `Armenia - 30 years with Correspondence.'

    Founded in 2001, the Armenia 2020 project works to develop models of
    development for Armenia and helps transform them into concrete
    scenarios. (Such programs have had good rsults in Russia, Portugal
    and Belgium.)

    The project is funded by business persons of Armenian descent from
    Armenia, Russia, the USA and Europe. To date 2020 has spent about $2
    million developing patterns that might be instructional for future
    policy.

    `Our sponsors are those people with no profit expectations who do
    investments to find ways to make their homeland well off,' says
    Artashes Kazakhetyan, Director of the Armenia 2020 project. `The
    program has not received financial support from any government,
    international body or organization. This means that we are fully
    independent. And the superior aim of the project is to find the most
    acceptable models of possible ways for the development of Armenia by
    means of public discussions and voting.'

    In Yerevan last weekend, nearly half - 210 - of participants in the
    2020 exercise cast their votes in favor of the scenario that called
    for `Survival to Prosperity'.

    The content of the scenario is the following: `growth of productivity
    by means of developing strategic plans of development and their
    implementation increasing the GDP per capita income by 2020 to
    $11,200. To achieve this, correct policies in macro and micro
    economic, political, legal and social spheres should be adopted.'

    The development scenario is comprised of three stages: during the
    first stage (2004-2008) the priorities are productivity growth,
    activation of regional trade, as well as measures targeted at the
    attraction of foreign investments largely facilitated by the fight
    against corruption, decrease of the red tape and integration of
    e-governance system. The final stage (2013-2020) is the period of
    globalization. The trade borders extend to Europe and the USA.

    Participants at the exercise were of various ages, and generational
    differences were reflected by which door they chose. The younger ones
    primarily picked scenarios that drew Armenia into more global
    relations, while the older participants leaned toward the `From Russia
    with Love' model.

    `I think, the path Armenians have passed shows that our past has been
    closely tied up with Russia and we have only gained from that. Why not
    to continue strengthening our friendly, state, economic ties with that
    country,' asks pedagogue Marietta Sahakyan, 55.

    Contrary to the representative of the previous generation, Hayk
    Galstyan, an economist of 25, thinks there should be no economic
    dependence on Russia.

    `Although the age of colonization is over, it is obvious that great
    powers continue the colonial policies by means of putting smaller
    countries into economic dependence. I want to say that Armenia will
    appear in the same condition, if it becomes a Russian satellite
    again,' the young professional said.

    Besides Yerevan, scenario discussions were organized also in other
    towns of Armenia - Gyumri, Vanadzor, Ijevan, Yeghegnadzor. In the
    coming days the Syunik marz will also be engaged.

    `Up to this moment preference has been given to the `Survival to
    Prosperity' scenario, which is to mainly emphasize the intrinsic
    potential of Armenia and try to understand what should be done to
    develop in more clear and organized way,' says Kazakhetyan. `From the
    results we have received we can derive clearly that people strongly
    wish Armenia develops as an independent, powerful state and are ready
    to actively participate in the process of constructing the country.'

    >From September 19th to 20th the Armenia 2020 project will summarize
    its 3 year activities in Yerevan. More than 300 public, political and
    cultural activists, and businessmen who wish to have their say in the
    creation of the prosperous future of Armenia will participate in the
    two-day summit.

    `Armenia 2020 will publicize the results of all the discussions during
    the summit. Our future steps will be identified. And, most
    importantly, we will be able to send clear messages to our authorities
    on which way of development for the country the present day society of
    Armenia chooses,' says Kazakhetyan.

    PRAISE IN PARIS: `MELS' AND DURYAN FIND SUCCESS IN REPEAT PERFORMANCE
    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Yerevan native playwright Narek Duryan's play `Thank You, God' is
    enjoying a repeat performance in Paris, at the De Jazet Theater.

    The actor takes on many personalities

    The play was so successful during a month-long run in June, that the
    board of directors of the 700-seat theater in Bastille Square invited
    Duryan back, where he is again the featured attraction this month.

    `Stepping into this theater is a big success, for this theater is
    among the ten most important and authoritative theaters in Paris,'
    says actor and director Duryan, son of the popular conductor Ohan
    Duryan. `If we take into account that 480 performances are played in
    Paris every day, 30 percent of which have a life of only a day, than
    one can imagine how difficult it is to attract attention.'

    The character created and embodied by Duryan carries elements of self-
    biography, of a man named Mels who has passed through a socialist
    regime and is enjoying a European democracy trying to realize what
    freedom is.

    The hero's name is comprised from the quartet of socialist stalwarts -
    Marx, Engels, Lenin and Stalin.

    Fed up with the ways of the Soviet Union, Mels crosses the state
    border and finds home in the capital of democratic France. His bright
    hopes fade, but he seems to succeed in everything (although his
    marriage to a French woman turns out to not be a happy one).

    `In this performance I study the question of personal freedom and what
    is freedom,' the play's creator says. `It is a relative
    phenomenon. When was I more free, when I could not travel, for I was
    in a prison called Soviet country, but traveled around the world in my
    mind, or now, when I can go wherever I want, but I don't have money?
    This is also a kind of imprisonment, a jail.'

    Gradually developing the plot Mels tells about the way he has passed;
    he was born in Armenia, had his military service in Siberia, opening
    Siberia to the audience in a humorous manner: `It's strange but I
    remember with nostalgia our Soviet routine life, we had bread and
    cheese, we were happy, it was a prison but we rebelled and were drawn
    to Siberia. Which one is better? In dictatorship you cannot speak for
    everyone listens to what you say, and in democracy speak as much as
    you wish, no one listens to you.'

    During `independence', Mels ends up selling his valued possessions in
    Yerevan's vernisage bazaar; he puts his father's military coat for
    sale, medals he has won at the expense of his blood: `Everything is
    shown by means of humor and anecdotes, but it hurts, for he sells a
    whole history,' says Duryan.

    The author purposefully presents his hero in three societies - in
    dictatorship, in wild capitalism and democracy. And the alterations of
    the human type according to the type of the society become obvious
    when Mels says to himself in total freedom: `I saw dictatorship and
    freedom and now I understand a simple thing: freedom is measured by
    the largeness of one's cage'.

    The French press have taken notice of Duryan

    The French press and the cultural programs at the TF1 TV Company have
    covered the Armenian's performance. Elle a Paris writes: `With a great
    portion of sense of humor and deep observation Narek Duryan opened the
    closed curtains of the Soviets before us.' And the Paris Capitale says
    the performance `created a big revolution in the De Jazet Theater for
    French audience'.

    The artist, who has lived in Paris for the past 25 years, says he
    wonders when Armenia itself will open up the borders of its own
    freedom and cage together with Mels.

    Audiences in Paris have been about 20 percent Diaspora. (Duryan hopes
    to bring the performance to Armenia, but doesn't know when.) The
    Armenian audience is acquainted with Duryan's art through several
    performances - the musical `Don Quixote' by Servantes-Bulgakov,
    `Operation Nemesis' historical-documentary performance staged together
    with `Bohem' theatrical group in the Theater of Young Audience.

    The `Bohem' that has a rich experience of 15 years is the only
    professional, stable, constantly theatrical group acting abroad, who
    has never interrupted its activities and has traveled to European
    countries, the USA, Canada, Egypt and oriental countries for many
    times.

    `Although it is 25 years already that I live in Paris, I always
    considered myself a man from Yerevan, I haven't changed even my
    language; for me the acknowledgement of the audience here (Yerevan) is
    very important and I think I will get it soon,' says Duryan.

    PARODY WITH PURPOSE: `UPRISING' IS UNUSUAL TREATMENT OF SACRED SUBJECT
    By Gayane Abrahamyan
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    Parodist Vartan Petrosyan's latest performance is filled with irony
    and routinely evokes laughter.

    It is, of course, what a dramatic parody should do. The subject of his
    latest drama `Uprising', is, however, far from typical laughing
    matter. The play, that has been running for several weeks in Yerevan's
    Stanlislavky Russian Theater is about the Armenian Genocide.

    Weaving past tragedy with modern reality and often presenting
    divergent ideas on opposite sides of the same stage, Petrosyan's
    two-act drama more often brings laughter than the tears that are
    synonymous with the Armenians' saddest hour.

    At one moment Petrosyan portrays the typically fat-bellied and
    apathetic Armenian men or thick-necked oligarchs, then, in a stage
    that is changing, shifts to the divine Komitas and his sacred music
    that becomes a background for scenes of massacre.

    `I have chosen the title `Uprising', despite the fact that usually our
    works relating to the topic of genocide carry titles of mourning and
    tears and it couldn't be another way: but it is high time we seriously
    evaluate what is the genocide to us. Sorrow unites, clarifies, and we
    should have an uprising with that very power,' explains Petrosyan.

    The performance begins with Petrosyan's French friends Nathalie
    Lefevre and Lionel Emery asking in hesitation: `What is the Armenian
    Question?'

    `Well, now try to explain to a carefree European the Armenian
    Question...' says the actor and presents the tragedy of the last
    century as synthesized in cinema, theater, stage dance, and songs by
    Komitas.

    On one side of the dark stage sings Komitas who has witnessed the
    massacre, and on the other, accompanied by the stages of the massacres
    and their joyous melodies, the Europeans carelessly dance. Their
    melodies get stronger, deafening the gentle melodies by Komitas -
    symbolizing the indifference of the world and the sounds of a
    suppressed nation calling for help of the world given away to
    dis-interest.

    Through his play, the actor bitterly mocks and satirizes the huge
    portion of the Armenian society who enjoys Turkish and Arabic moughams
    (a type of Muslim music): `those very songs the Turks danced under
    while slaughtering and skinning Armenian babies'.

    `Vartan speaks about things that all of us see, but do not confess to
    ourselves; he seems to be disturbing our wounds and at the same time
    soothing them,' says theater critic Amalia Hovhannisyan.

    `I am shocked with the funny scene of the quarrel between a Jew and a
    Diaspora Armenian on who has been the first and the most slaughtered,'
    says spectator Mkhitar Kirakosyan, 52. `While laughing, you cry deep
    in your heart when you think that Jews were at least smothered by
    means of gas, their children wouldn't see it, and Armenians were
    killed in front of their children and the children who survived would
    return to those scenes throughout their lives.'

    The many faceted actor appears at times as an ignorant fool, who
    repeats time after time: `Well, that genocide has not happened to us,
    it has happened to our grandfathers'; at another time he appears as an
    oligarch, a Jew, and even a Turkish pasha.

    `This performance is not a history handbook, this is a cry to make our
    people wake up from the numbness of indifference, and remember about
    the Genocide not only on April 24,' says Petrosyan. ` . . . to start
    to turn the pages of history, to bring up generations with national
    spirit, always remembering the past and continue learning from it.'

    Besides the 15 Armenian actors in `Uprising' there are also three
    French actors, who represent Europe and who share the sorrow of the
    Genocide as people and stand side by side to Armenians.

    `Art is a powerful tool to make the world recognize its mistakes,'
    says actress Lefevre. `Even without understanding the language I feel
    the spirit of the performance. You should be stronger without
    forgetting your past, for you know better than anyone the price of
    life and freedom.'

    Perormances of `Uprising' are expected to continue through October.
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