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  • California Courier Online, September 29, 2005

    California Courier Online, September 29, 2005

    1 - Commentary

    Turkish Society Split on Genocide,
    The EU, and Many Other Issues

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The Califorrnia Courier

    2 - Catholicos Aram I Will Visit L.A.
    Armenian Evangelical Community
    3- Louisiania's Armenians Devastated
    By Hurricane Katrina and Aftermath
    4 - Musa Dagh Resistance Featured
    At Sept. 29 Lecture at Merdinian
    5 - Paul Krekorian Takes Big Lead in
    California State Assembly Race
    6 - Hamazkayin Hosts Cultural Event Marking
    1600th Anniversary of Armenian Alphabet
    7 - Catholicos Will Visit
    Montebello Armenian
    Martyrs Monument
    8 - St. James Ladies Society Plan
    Fall Luncheon, Country Store
    9 - Despite Court Challenge, Scholars Hold
    Meeting in Turkey on Armenian Genocide
    ************************************************** ***********************
    1 - Commentary
    Turkish Society Split on Genocide,
    The EU, and Many Other Issues

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The California Courier

    For 90 years, Turkish officials have denied the reality of the Armenian
    Genocide. During the past weekend, for the first time in Turkish history, a
    conference was held in Istanbul during which Turkish scholars challenged
    the revisionist position of their own government on the Armenian Genocide.
    This was not an easy accomplishment. It came about after the organizers
    struggled to overcome a series of almost insurmountable legal obstacles and
    physical attacks.
    The conference was originally planned for last May. However, Justice
    Minister Cemil Cicek caused its cancellation at the last minute by accusing
    the participating Turkish scholars of being "traitors" and "stabbing Turkey
    in the back."
    Embarrassed by stinging criticism from many European officials, Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan quietly urged the organizers to reschedule
    the conference for Sept. 23-25, just days before the planned start of talks
    for Turkey's EU membership. Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul even promised to
    deliver the opening remarks at this unprecedented gathering of Turkish
    scholars.
    However, just hours before the start of the conference, an Istanbul court
    issued an order suspending the gathering. The judge gave the organizers 30
    days to respond to a series of bizarre questions on the qualifications and
    selection of the scholars as well as the financing of their travel and
    lodging expenses.
    This eleventh-hour postponement of the conference stunned not only the EU
    officials but also most of the Turkish public, including the overwhelming
    majority of newspapers and TV stations in Turkey. Both the Prime Minister
    and Foreign Minister saw the court order as an attempt to derail Turkey's
    EU membership drive. The judge, petitioned by ultra-nationalists, clearly
    exceeded his jurisdiction by interfering in the internal affairs of an
    academic institution.
    The conference, titled "Ottoman Armenians During the Decline of the Empire:
    Issues of Scientific Responsibility and Democracy," was finally held during
    the past weekend after changing its venue to Bilgi University. The
    organizers either took or were allowed to take advantage of a loophole in
    the court order that had specifically banned two of the three co-sponsoring
    universities (Bogazici and Sabanci), but not the third - Bilgi University.
    Ultra-nationalist groups and retired military officers had urged all
    "patriotic" Turks to converge on the conference site and disrupt the
    proceedings. They called the participating Turkish scholars traitors.
    Despite the presence of a strong police force to protect the university
    from attacks by extremists, the protesters managed to pelt the participants
    by eggs and rotten tomatoes. A few trouble-makers even managed to sneak
    into the hall and attempt to disrupt the discussions.
    Once they passed the gauntlet, scores of scholars presented their papers
    over a two-day period. Most of them carefully avoided the use of the word
    genocide, due to their fear of being hauled into court and charged with
    "denigrating" the Turkish nation. Some of the participants were also weary
    of being accused of siding with Armenians on this emotionally-charged
    issue. The scholars made it clear, however, that Ottoman officials had
    organized the mass deportations and the subsequent killings of hundreds of
    thousands of Armenians.
    Even though there were very few new revelations on the topic of the
    Armenian Genocide during the course of the conference, the significant
    aspect of the gathering was the fact that it took place at all. This is the
    first time that a group of Turkish scholars, facing the wrath of many of
    their radical compatriots and a legal ban, had dared to challenge the
    official revisionist position of the Turkish establishment on this issue.
    Of course, the proximity of the date of the planned start of Turkey's EU
    membership talks on Oct. 3 played a considerable role in winning the tacit
    and reluctant support of the Turkish government for this conference.
    Neither Erdogan nor Gul were probably motivated by their "deep seated
    beliefs" in academic freedom to support the holding of such a conference in
    Turkey.
    Turkish society still has a long and uphill battle in deciding its future.
    There are powerful conflicting forces within Turkey tearing the country
    into two divergent directions: one looking to Europe and the other to an
    ultra-nationalist, Islamist, and pan-Turkist orientation.
    Before the Turks worry about whether the Europeans would allow them to join
    the EU, they themselves would have to decide the direction of their own
    society. When millions of Turks are still fanatically clinging to their old
    authoritarian mentality, no matter which new laws their government adopts
    and which agreements their leaders sign, at the end of the day, these
    documents are meaningless pieces of paper. Prime Minister Erdogan's saying
    that his country should be a part of Europe does not make it so. True
    reform must first take place in the hearts and minds of the people, before
    it can be adopted as a legal code. Such reforms cannot be imposed from
    outside. They have to come from within Turkish society.
    How long would it take to reform Turkish society is a question to which no
    one knows the answer. When millions of Turks are still adamantly opposed to
    the most basic values shared by Europeans, it is clear that they are
    neither ready now nor would they be ready anytime soon to join the EU.
    Turkey should neither be rejected right away nor accepted into the EU in
    the foreseeable future. Turkey should not be admitted now because it's not
    and would not be ready to join the ranks of civilized European nations nor
    should it be rejected outright for fear of setting completely loose a
    monster that would be a clear and present danger to its immediate
    neighborhood!
    ************************************************** ************************
    2 - Catholicos Aram I Will Visit L.A.
    Armenian Evangelical Community
    LOS ANGELES - Catholicos Aram I, of the Great House of Cilicia, has
    accepted an invitation to visit the Evangelical community of Southern
    California during his upcoming Pontifical visit to the region, Oct. 5-19,
    the Armenian Evangelical Union of North America announced last week.
    The Evangelical Church will welcome the Catholicos on October 7, at 3 p.m.,
    at the United Armenian Congregational Church located at 3480 Cahuenga Blvd.
    West, in Los Angeles.
    A reception will follow at the adjoining Ayvazian Hall.
    ************************************************** ************************
    3 - Louisiania's Armenians Devastated
    By Hurricane Katrina and Aftermath
    NEW ORLEANS, LA - Twenty-six Armenian families' homes and businesses were
    severely destroyed and damaged by Hurricane Katrina and its devastating
    aftermath. During this period of reconstruction and recovery, many of these
    families are faced with an unforeseeable future.
    The Armenian community of Louisiana is a unique community - unique in size
    and spirit. The first Armenians settled here over thirty years ago hailing
    from Syria, Lebanon, Egypt, Armenia and Iran. In 1984, a few community
    leaders gathered and decided the community needed to start a parish and
    hold church services in Armenian. In an attempt to foster growth in the
    community, Fr. Nersess Jebejian was appointed by the Primate, Archbishop
    Torkom Manoogian of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church, as the
    mission parish priest to hold services in churches in both New Orleans and
    Baton Rouge. The name St. Garabed Armenian Church of Louisiana was given to
    the mission parish.
    In January 2005, after months of fundraising, planning and construction,
    St. Garabed Armenian Church of Louisiana opened its doors as the first
    Armenian Church in Louisiana. This debut was a big step for this community,
    which has progressed slowly over the years, but nonetheless progressed.
    Now many of the Armenians living in the New Orleans Metropolitan area have
    been devastated, as many of their homes and businesses have been damaged.
    The Armenian community in both LaPlace and Baton Rouge has reached out to
    the affected community members by opening their homes to them, providing
    them comfort and consolation. Many of the community's students -
    elementary, high school and college/university students - have been
    displaced and are either registered elsewhere or absent this semester.
    Faced with the daunting task of rebuilding their homes and businesses, as
    well as the shocking sights in the area, it will be a long time before some
    will be able to move back home. It will be months before they sense or
    establish normalcy; and, even when these families are able to move back
    home and businesses are repaired and reopened, the uncertain economy will
    still create obstacles and challenges.
    Hurricane Katrina uprooted more than trees, homes and buildings, it
    uprooted lives and divided families. It has, most definitely, divided the
    Armenian community. Armenians nationwide have reached out to the community,
    sending donations to the affected community members. The Diocese of the
    Armenian Church, under the leadership of the Primate, Archbishop Khajag
    Barsamian, has sent money to the affected community members. Numerous other
    donations have arrived from individuals and organizations around the
    country as well.
    Donations may be sent to: St. Garabed Armenian Church of Louisiana, 6208
    Florida Blvd., Baton Rouge, LA 70806. Any questions or comments should be
    directed to Fr. Nersess Jebejian, the pastor, at (727) 545-0380 or Parish
    Council Chairman Vasken Kaltakdjian at (225) 413-4620. You can also e-mail
    the Parish Council at [email protected].
    Soon, these "Cajun Armenians" will celebrate Mardi Gras, host their
    crawfish boils, and cheer on the Saints, but until then faith and community
    will prevail.
    ************************************************** *************************

    4 - Musa Dagh Resistance Featured
    At Sept. 29 Lecture at Merdinian
    SHERMAN OAKS, Calif. - Dr. Vahram Shemmassian, professor of Armenian
    Studies at the California State University, Northridge, will present a
    lecture on "Musa Dagh Genocide Resistance in Light of New Evidence," on
    Sept. 29 at 7:30 p.m. at the Merdinian School Auditorium, 13330 Roverside
    Dr., Sherman Oaks.
    The presentation is co-sponsored by the ARPA INSTITUTE and the Moussa Ler
    Association of California.
    "Musa Dagh" is a household name among Armenians and "rings a bell" among
    other people. In July 1915, during the early phase of the Genocide, about
    6,000 Armenian highlanders living near the biblical town Antioch were given
    deportation orders by the Ottoman government. About one-third heeded the
    order and was exiled to the Syrian town of Hama, but the majority decided
    to take arms and resist.
    No published study exists regarding the fate of those who were dispatched
    to Hama. Memoirs published in recent years and archival materials not used
    before will be cited to shed new light on certain aspects of the
    resistance. A replica of the cross and pictures will also be presented.
    Prof. Shemmassian holds a Ph.D. in History from UCLA. His doctoral
    dissertation, entitled "The Armenian Villagers of Musa Dagh: A
    Historical-Ethnographic Study, 1840-1915," is currently being revised for
    publication.
    Dr. Shemmassian has taught Armenian History, Armenian Language, Sociology,
    and Western Civilization at the National University, Fresno, CA; Pasadena
    City College, Pasadena, CA; and Los Angeles Valley College, Van Nuys, CA.
    In 1989-1990, he was the Chair of the Armenology Department at the
    now-defunct American Armenian International College, La Verne, CA. As
    such, in addition to teaching Armenian subjects, he organized a one-day
    symposium on "Armenian-Genocide Issues, 1915-1990."
    He has conducted extensive research in some 30 governmental and
    non-governmental archival repositories in the United States, Europe, and
    the Middle East, gathering data on such areas of interest as the Armenians
    of Musa Dagh and northwestern Syria in general, as well as Armenian
    Genocide survivors in the Middle East at the end of World War I. He has
    published several scholarly articles, delivered lectures at community
    events and in universities, and participated in symposia and conferences.
    Dr. Shemmassian has also served as principal of three Armenian day schools
    in the greater Los Angeles area, namely, Chamlian School, A.G. Minassian
    School, and Merdinian School.
    There will be traditional Musa Ler Food/deserts/snacks, at the end of the
    lecture.
    For information, call Dr. Hagop Panossian at (818)586-9660.
    ************************************************** *************************
    5 - Paul Krekorian Takes Big Lead in
    California State Assembly Race
    GLENDALE - Burbank School Board President Paul Krekorian, the leading
    candidate for California State Assembly in the 43rd District, has taken a
    huge lead over his opponents in fundraising in the race. Krekorian has
    already raised well over $100,000 for the campaign, and his nearest
    competitor has raised less than half that amount, according to the records
    of the California Secretary of State.
    "This campaign continues to gain momentum every week," Krekorian said. "I
    am deeply honored to have earned the confidence of so many supporters in
    our community, and I am grateful to everyone who has generously provided
    the vital resources we need to win this election. I will continue to work
    hard to earn that support and to fight for the interests of our community
    when I am elected to the Assembly."
    Krekorian easily surpassed the $100,000 mark with only three fundraising
    events. His nearest competitor was former Assemblyman Scott Wildman, who
    is seeking a return to his old seat in the Assembly. According to the
    Secretary of
    State's records, however, Wildman has raised a total of only about
    $49,000.
    Glendale City Councilman Frank Quintero has not reported raising any
    campaign funds at all and begins his campaign at a significant
    disadvantage.
    A poll of likely voters taken earlier this year already showed that
    Krekorian is the leading candidate. Krekorian has also garnered by far the
    most endorsements from elected officials, including Glendale Mayor Rafi
    Manoukian and Burbank Mayor Jef VanderBorght. Now, the Krekorian campaign
    also has the clear advantage in fundraising.
    Krekorian is the only Armenian-American ever elected to public office in
    the history of Burbank. He is running for the State Assembly seat
    currently held by Assemblymember Dario Frommer, who will be leaving the
    office because of term limits. The district includes the communities of
    Glendale, Burbank, North Hollywood, Silver Lake and Los Feliz, and is home
    to the largest
    Armenian-American community in the United States. The election is set for
    June of next year.
    To make a contribution, call campaign manager Adrin Nazarian at
    818-512-4045.
    ************************************************** *************************
    6 - Hamazkayin Hosts Cultural Event Marking
    1600th Anniversary of Armenian Alphabet
    GLENDALE - In celebration of the 1600th anniversary of the Armenian
    alphabet, the Hamazkayin Educational and Cultural Society is organizing a
    free public cultural event on October 2, 6 p.m., at the Alex Theatre in
    Glendale, Calif..
    S. Peter Cowe, Professor of Armenian Language and Culture at UCLA and Dr.
    Stephan Astourian, Director of Armenian Studies at UC, Berkeley will be the
    featured keynote speakers.
    The event will be hosted by Ani Hovannisian-Kevorkian and Manoug
    Seraydarian.
    The event will feature musical performance by Lark and Element.
    Hamazkayin's Ani Dance Ensemble will perform and the evening will include
    an original performance, written and directed by Elly award-winning
    director Aram Kouyoumdjian.
    The year 2005 marks the 1600th year of the birth of our precious Armenian
    alphabet, a joyous occasion celebrated by all Armenians around the world.
    Sixteen long centuries have passed since the miraculous day that St. Mesrob
    Mashdotz of Hatzegatz, created the 36 letters of the Armenian alphabet.
    Translated by holy Fathers into the newly created Armenian letters, hymns
    and prayers served to preserve and protect the Armenian church from outside
    intervention, and thus served to protect the culture.
    For more information on the October 2 event, call 213-278-2020 or write to
    [email protected].
    ************************************************** ************************
    7 - Catholicos Will Visit
    Montebello Armenian
    Martyrs Monument
    MONTEBELLO, Calif. - Catholicos Aram I of the Great House of Cilicia will
    conduct a special Memorial Service at the Armenian Genocide Monument in
    Montebello on Oct. 8, at 10 a.m.
    The Pontifical Service will be followed by a brief program which will
    include as guests members of the Montebello City Council, elected officials
    and Armenian-American community representatives.
    The event is being organized by the organizing Committee of the Pontifical
    Visit under the auspices of Prelate Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian
    ************************************************** ************************
    8 - St. James Ladies Society Plan
    Fall Luncheon, Country Store
    LOS ANGELES - The ovens are hot, the kitchen is bustling with activity, at
    St. James Armenian Church where the members of the St. James Ladies Society
    are preparing for their annual Fall Luncheon and Country Store to be held
    Oct. 29, beginning at 11 a.m.
    As crowds wait for the doors to open, they are greeted by a vast array of
    home baked pastries, breads, delicacies, as well as jams, tourshi and other
    Armeniab favorites.
    Guests will enjoy a gourmet luncheon and musical program as part of the
    afternoon's festivities. Barbara Neshanian, Chair of the Ladies Society,
    reports that this luncheon continues to be one of their most successful
    events.
    "We are fortunate to have a committee that, year after year, devote their
    time, talent and energy towards its success," she said. Luncheon Committee
    chairs are Shirley Moore and Dorothy Carvello.
    St. James Church Pastor, Avak Kahana Fr. Arshag Khatchadourian commends and
    applauds the members of the Ladies Society for their hard work and
    dedication to the church and the Armenian faithful.
    While shopping at the Country Store, guests can enjoy a Champagne reception
    hosted by Susan and Pierre Pipponian. Arlene Roupinian and Jean Barsam
    chair the Raffle prizes. Alice Gondjian, Chair of the Country Store,
    expresses her pride at the wide variety of home baked pastries, as well as
    Armenian gourmet specialists, prepared by the Ladies Society. Simit and
    Khadayif are prepared by Arpi Barsam and her committee. Tourshi is made by
    Ann Vaznaian and her committee, and Alice Gondjian's celebrated choreg will
    once again delect many palates.
    Program chairman Anne Mills has brought the husband and wife duo of
    violinist Samvel Chilingarian and pianist Lucine Nargizian, to perform the
    music of Khachadourian and other Armenian composers.
    Other Committee members include Lucille Bogosian, Marion Hovivian, Anna
    Kachadorian, Naomi Edison, Jeanette Rakoobian, Madeline Taylorson, Stella
    Marashlian, Leann Stepanian and Emma Dionysian.
    For ticket and information, call Virginia Dulgarian (310) 377-0833, or
    Alice Yacoubian (310) 546-3703.
    ************************************************** **********************
    9 - Despite Court Challenge, Scholars Hold
    Meeting in Turkey on Armenian Genocide
    By Benjamin Harvey
    ISTANBUL (Associated Press) - Demonstrators throwing rotten tomatoes and
    eggs and shouting protests again greeted scholars debating the killings of
    Armenians by Ottoman Turks early in the 20th Century on the second day of
    their conference on Sunday.
    The passionately opposed conference is the first public discussion in
    Turkey about the massacre of Armenians, and the European Union said it
    would be seen as a test of freedom of expression in Turkey, which is a
    candidate for EU membership.
    The group of about 20 protesters outside the conference venue was smaller
    than the hundreds who showed up on Saturday, and organizers of the
    conference say Turks have been surprisingly supportive of their efforts,
    despite some panelists suggesting that Ottoman Turks committed the first
    genocide of the 20th Century.
    Discussing the mass killings of Armenians has long been taboo in Turkey,
    and scholars who use the word genocide can be prosecuted under a clause in
    the Turkish penal code on insulting the national character.
    The academic conference had been canceled twice, once in May after the
    justice minister said organizers were "stabbing the people in the back,"
    and again on Thursday when an Istanbul court ordered the conference closed
    and demanded to know the academic qualifications of the speakers.
    "This is a fight of 'can we discuss this thing, or can we not discuss this
    thing?"' Murat Belge, a member of the organizing committee, said at the
    conference opening. "This is something that's directly related to the
    question of what kind of country Turkey is going to be."
    The Armenian issue stirs deep passions among Turks, who are being pushed by
    many in the international community to say that their fathers and
    grandfathers carried out the first genocide of the 20th century.
    "There are so many documents in hand with respect to the destruction of
    Armenians," said Taner Akcam, a Turkish-born professor at the University of
    Minnesota, and author of books on the subject including, "A Shameful Act:
    The Armenian Genocide and the Question of Turkish Responsibility."
    On Saturday dozens of officers in riot gear kept hundreds of shouting
    protesters at bay. Some protesters pelted arriving panelists with eggs and
    rotten tomatoes.
    Inside, the audience of more than 300 people was restrained, as only those
    invited by the organizing committee and preapproved members of the media
    were allowed past security.
    The issue has been a taboo for many years in Turkey, with those who speak
    out against the killings risking prosecution by a Turkish court. But an
    increasing number of Turkish academics have called for a review of the
    killings in a country where many see the Ottoman Empire as a symbol of
    Turkish greatness.
    With the more than 350 participants once again assembled in Istanbul, the
    conference's organizers decided that "we can either do this now or we
    cannot do it all again," said Fatma Müge Gocek, an associate professor of
    sociology at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor who was on the
    meeting's advisory committee.
    Organizers had selected Bogaziçi as the venue for the meeting precisely
    because it is a public institution, but they decided they had no choice but
    to relocate to Bilgi. The rectors of all three sponsoring universities
    welcomed the participants, who met in marathon sessions to condense into
    two days a program that was to have been spread over three.
    Because the conference had received so much attention in the Turkish news
    media, participants did not even need to be notified of the change, said
    Ms. Gocek. Opponents were also aware of the new location, and about 100
    protesters showed up on Saturday to heckle participants and pelt them with
    eggs and tomatoes, she said.
    As the conference concluded, Ms. Gocek said she felt a real "paradigm
    shift" had occurred. "We had lots of Turkish journalists there who said
    they are not going to use the word 'alleged' from now on, in terms of
    talking about the genocide. They may refer to 'genocide claims,' but they
    will no longer talk of an 'alleged genocide,'" she said.
    Papers from the conference will be published immediately in Turkish, which
    was the working language of the gathering, and as soon as possible in
    English, Ms. Gocek said.
    Several governments around the world have recognized the killings of as
    many as 1.5 million Armenians in the late Ottoman Empire as genocide.
    Turkey vehemently denies the charge, admitting that many Armenians were
    killed, but saying the death toll is inflated and that Armenians were
    killed along with Turks in civil unrest and intercommunal fighting as the
    Ottoman Empire collapsed between 1915 and 1923.

    After the conference was shut down Thursday, Turkey drew condemnation from
    the European Commission.
    The court-ordered cancellation Thursday was an embarrassment for the
    country's leaders, who are set to begin EU negotiations on Oct. 3.
    Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul lamented that "there's no one better at
    hurting themselves than us," and sent a letter wishing the organizers a
    successful conference. Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan also condemned
    the court's decision, saying it did not befit a democratic country.
    The participants were all Turkish speakers and included members of Turkey's
    Armenian minority like Hrant Dink, the editor in chief of Agos, a weekly
    Armenian newspaper in Istanbul.
    "Ittihat and Terakki Party (Party of Union and Progress) had a plan to
    purify whole Anatolia from the non-Turks, starting from the Aegean Region,
    before the World War I, and this plan was carried out in entire Anatolia
    during the years of the war
    (World War I)", argued Associate Professor Taner Akcam of Minnesota
    University.
    Taking the floor on the second day of the conference titled "The Armenians
    during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire" held at
    Istanbul's Bilgi University, Akcam said that the relocation decision was
    made at the end of long discussions and debates.
    "The Ottoman documents indicate that the decision to relocate the Armenians
    was made to end a deeper problem defined as the 'eastern problem' and to
    end the dissolution process of the Ottoman Empire. This decision was not a
    result of a need that erupted during the war. There are many documents in
    hand with respect to the destruction of Armenians," claimed Akcam.
    On the other hand, Dr Ahmet Kuyas of Galatasaray University referred to the
    four members of the Ittihat and Terakki Party, and said that a serious
    massacre was made those days. According to Kuyas, the architect of this
    massacre was Enver Pasha. Kuyas expressed his view that the other three
    people who were responsible for these massacres were Talat Pasha, Dr
    Bahattin Sakir and Dr Nazim.
    Also speaking at the conference, Professor Baskin Oran of Ankara
    University's Political Sciences Department said: "Concept of class,
    criticisms of Ataturk, Cyprus, socialism, communism and Kurdistan are no
    more taboos in Turkey. There was only one taboo left, and it was Armenian
    issue. Now, it is no more a taboo."
    ************************************************** *************************
    **
    The California Courier On-Line is a service provided by the California
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    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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