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V. Oskanian: European Neighborhood Policy Brings Armenia Back Home

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  • V. Oskanian: European Neighborhood Policy Brings Armenia Back Home

    V. OSKANIAN: EUROPEAN NEIGHBORHOOD POLICY BRINGS ARMENIA BACK HOME

    Pan Armenian News
    26.09.2005 08:19

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Armenian-Italian connections are based on rich
    and ancient traditions, Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian
    stated when receiving the Grosso d'Oro Veneziano award. "It was in
    Italy in 1512, that Hakob Meghapart published the first book ever in
    Armenian. The Urbatagirk (or Book of Days) was followed in 1513 with
    the first published Armenian calendar.

    The renowned Briton, Lord Byron, referred to the Venetian island of
    San Lazaro as a fortress of Armenian independence, since the Armenian
    monks of the Order of Mekhitar had found refuge there in the early
    1700s. For the last three centuries, that haven has turned into a
    scientific and cultural locus. Today, if you ask the Mekhitarist
    fathers whether they are Venetian, they will say yes. If you ask
    them whether they are Armenian, they will say yes. One can say that
    they were pioneers in establishing a common European identity,
    about which we speak proudly, yet with some apprehension. If it
    used to be religion that bound Europe together a millennium ago, it
    certainly isn't any longer. Nor is it the economic advancement that
    was specific to Europe two centuries ago. It isn't ideology either,
    which was both adhesive and encumbrance for decades in the last
    century. Europe is more than its common history, more than geography,
    more than a club for members. All those who've said Europe is an
    idea are right. It is the idea of a Europe that is the common, if
    unattainable ideal. Even those living outside this space have imagined
    and desired a Europe which can be addressed collectively, a partner
    which can be enlisted conveniently, a Europe to which they yearn to
    belong. Armenia is Europe. This is a fact, it's not a response to a
    question. The collapse of the USSR brought us to a point of economic
    and political crisis. I remember our discussions in Armenia, before
    our entry into the Council of Europe. There were many questions about
    the choice of path to take. Dante once said that the hottest places in
    hell are reserved for those who in a period of moral crisis maintain
    their neutrality. I'm happy to say I won't be going there because I
    was among the loudest advocates of the European path. The choice was
    clear. Armenians believe in the values of the European enlightenment,
    of European civilization. The moral, ethical and existential choices
    that bring individuals and societies to select democracy over other
    forms of government, rule of law over rule of man, human rights over
    selective rights ­ those choices have been made. A people who have
    lived under subjugation, have seen ethnic cleansing and genocide even
    before the terms existed, have lived as a minority without rights,
    now belong to a world where warring neighbors have found that they
    can accept new borders based on realities on the ground and move
    on. Europe's nation-states have found that they can transcend borders,
    without diminishing or ignoring cultural spaces, without expecting
    historical identities to vanish. The European Neighborhood Policy
    brings Armenia back home since Armenia's foreign policy priority is
    the gradual integration of Armenia into European institutions. The
    double digit GDP growth, which Armenia achieved each of the last five
    years, the successful admission into the WTO, the spirit of the free
    enterprise, the changing political system and society are promising
    signs that we are on the right track. However, it is too early to say
    that the European standard is round the corner. It is not as close
    yet as Europe itself, as Venice, as Verona, as the shared cultural
    and religious values of the past and present.

    To highlight and share those values, we will be launching a two-month
    long Days of Italy in Armenia, beginning in early October. This project
    has received the blessing and patronage of President Ciampi, President
    Kocharian and Governor Galan. The centerpiece of these important events
    will be an exhibition of the riches from the Isla Armena. In light of
    all this, then, the Fondazione Masi has, in bestowing upon me this
    award, put a great stamp of approval on Armenia, its foreign policy
    directions, its European orientation, its future. I am privileged
    to receive this prestigious award, il Grosso d'Oro Veneziano. This
    is a special day for me. And this is, of course, a special place,
    a special foundation and a special family with a glorious history of
    650 years stretching all the way back to one of the greatest poets of
    all times, Dante Alighieri. Dante's descendants valued their heritage
    and helped pass on his legacy. This legacy clearly manifests itself
    in modern Italy and the Region of Veneto. Italy and Veneto also share
    a legacy with Armenians. There is much symbolism in the fact that
    Armenia's coming back to Europe is being noted and celebrated here,
    in Italy," the Minister said.

    --Boundary_(ID_x4pzqllqlg/RQ0Y4brxNlg)--
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