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The Critic Is Not The Enemy

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  • The Critic Is Not The Enemy

    THE CRITIC IS NOT THE ENEMY
    By Avedis Kevorkian

    http://www.keghart.com/op159.htm
    6 December 2008

    There are very few people I have ever met who can match the passion
    and zeal, and the boundless energy, of Bagrad Nazarian when it comes to
    matters-Armenian. To add to these, he has put his money where his mouth
    is (to use an apt, but clumsy, cliché) and has invested in Artsakh.

    Having worked with him for many years, during my time in London, I can
    attest that keeping up with him was a challenge--but one undertaken
    with joy.

    Thus it is with heavy heart, and no joy, that I respond to his
    comments about my recent essay and also, it would appear this
    web-site's policies.

    My essay was about corruption in Armenia and I used as the peg on
    which to hang the essay the petition on this web-site protesting the
    threat to freedom of the press in Armenia and I expressed my view
    that it will have no affect on the crooks and thieves and thugs who
    are ruining Armenia. (I say, again, however, if there are among you
    those who think such petitions will do any good in Yerevan, please
    sign and send the petition.)

    To those of you who have just joined us, permit me to suggest that
    you read both the petition's text and my comments.

    As a journalist, I am aware more than most about the threats to
    journalists aro und the world--and, especially, in Turkey. But I
    wasn't commenting about the threats around the world. I am aware,
    also, that corruption exists elsewhere, but I wasn't writing about the
    universal corruption (though my essay in July, "The Remittance Curse"
    touched on the world-wide corruption and the role the diasporas play
    in abetting corruption in "homelands").

    For Bagrad to suggest that Armenians in the Diaspora remain silent
    about the corruption in Armenia because it exists elsewhere is to
    suggest that because starvation exists in Zimbabwe, for instance,
    people elsewhere should not eat anything.

    Whatever shortcomings may exist in America and its press, rest assured
    that investigative journalists in America win Pulitzer Prizes,
    and my own organization--the Society of Professional Journalists,
    to which I have belonged for more than 60 years--awards prizes for
    excellence in investigative journalism and other aspects of journalism,
    as do many state-based journalism associations. The only case of a
    murdered investigative journalist I can recall was about 40 years
    ago, and the reaction was such that journalists from throughout the
    country descended on Arizona and continued the investigative work of
    the slain journalist and not only helped expose the corruption he was
    investigating but also helped find the murderer--who was arrested,
    tried, and convicted. Our press may not be perfect, but we don't beat
    journalists as20is done in Armenia.

    Neither the petition nor the essay touched on the matter of recognition
    of the fact of the Armenian Genocide, so there was no need for this
    web-site or me to be criticized.

    What I find interesting is that after I wrote about corruption in
    Armenia, earlier this year (for which I received nasty comments,
    which I chose to ignore), there followed shortly thereafter a damning
    report which showed that Armenia had slid down the scale of corrupt
    countries. Now, following my essay under challenge, there appears
    on this web-site a truly obscene report about the poor housing for
    some young people in which corruption has played a hand. Would I be
    considered immodest if I were to say quod erat demonstrandum?

    While reading that report, I could not help but think about other
    reports of the huge, luxurious villas that house the government
    officials. The land on which these villas stand were more than likely
    stolen from poor Armenians who could not fight back, and the money
    to build these villas came from money that was supposed to have been
    spent on the poor Armenian people.

    Dare I ask, "Where did their money come from?"?

    This is not the time or the place for me to relate my sad record
    of failure to help Armenia and Artsakh during and following my two
    visits to the former. But I will mention that after I narrated to
    someone who =0 Aknew how things worked in Yerevan my disappointment
    over the failure to get anywhere with any of the projects, I was
    asked, "But after you finished your proposals, did you also say,
    'and, of course, we will give you. . .

    .'?" I said "No. It was his job." He laughed so hard and so long,
    I feared he would die of a heart attack.

    In his reaction to my essay, Nazarian also is critical of Bruce
    Tasker. I did not recognize the name nor why he should be criticized,
    until I noticed his name attached to a recent essay on this web-site. I
    had read it, but failed to note the name. Re-reading it, I can
    understand why he, too, is on Nazarian's "nasties" list. Tasker is
    critical of things in Yerevan.

    Nazarian is not a spokesman for Armenia, and there was no need for
    him to be so aroused, but knowing him as I do, I am not surprised;
    he will not tolerate any criticism of Armenia. (He should hear and
    read my criticism of this country!) However, I would have hoped that
    he would have kept his remarks private.

    This is not an apology, for I have no reason to apologize, but I must
    say that because I criticize the shortcomings in Armenia does not mean
    that I am an enemy nor that I am encouraging the enemies of Armenia
    (as someone has accused me--in private).

    Armenia's most dangerous enemies are in the Armenian government.

    --Boundary_(ID_/RfaGGHK/VZcbm/8T57V4Q )--
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