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  • Armenian Reporter - 03/22/2008 - community section

    ARMENIAN REPORTER

    PO Box 129
    Paramus, New Jersey 07652
    Tel: 1-201-226-1995
    Fax: 1-201-226-1660

    3191 Casitas Ave Ste 216
    Los Angeles CA 90039
    Tel: 1-323-671-1030
    Fax: 1-323-671-1033

    1 Yeghvard Hwy Fl 5
    Yerevan 0054 Armenia
    Tel: 374-10-367-195
    Fax: 374-10-367-195 fax

    Web: http://www.reporter.am
    Email: [email protected]

    March 22, 2007 -- From the community section

    To see the printed version of the newspaper, complete with photographs
    and additional content, visit www.reporter.am and download the pdf
    files. It's free.

    1. Author chronicles the hidden story of Turkey's Armenian remnants
    (by Adrineh Gregorian)
    * Kemal Yalcin speaks in Glendale

    2. Sensitive and gentle, romantic and pleading, Bayrakdarian
    captivates (by Florence Avakian)
    * A triumphant return to Carnegie Hall

    3. A public forum at Columbia University analyzes "the Armenian
    diaspora and its discontents" (by Antranig Dereyan)

    4. Richard Hovannisian tells a N.J. audience about a journey he took
    in 2006 through Western Armenia's vanishing past (by Anoush Ter
    Taulian)

    5. A new volume collects articles that shaped British public opinion
    of the Armenians during the Hamidian massacres
    5a. Book chronicles U.S.-Armenia relationship

    6. Doctor works to register life-saving links between Armenians
    worldwide (by Alex Dobuzinskis)
    * An effort to match bone marrow donors with patients who need transplants

    7. Rooted in family (by Tania Ketenjian)
    * Insights from Jackie Speier's parents

    8. This Armenian Life by Tamar Kevonian: The surfer

    9. All about my father (by Boghos Kupelian)
    * A diet guru born before his time

    10. Longtime church members honored by Western Diocese (by Tamar Sarkissian)
    * Archbishop Hovnan Derderian gives out Hye Spirit award

    11. Gregory Djanikian disarms with his latest collection (by Armine Iknadossian)

    12. Karo Ovasapyan: the Armenian Crocodile Dundee (by Vartan Dudukjian)

    13. Exploring the furthest reaches of the diaspora
    * The extraordinary life of broadcaster Leo Sarkisian, Part II

    14. School Beat: How much homework is too much homework? (by Hripsime Moskovian)
    * Are kids overburdened with schoolwork?
    * Parents and teachers weigh in

    15. Kitchen-table wisdom (by Atina Hartunian and Ishkhan Jinbashian)
    * A book co-authored by Jackie Speier provides practical life advice

    ****************************************** *********************************

    1. Author chronicles the hidden story of Turkey's Armenian remnants

    * Kemal Yalcin speaks in Glendale

    by Adrineh Gregorian

    GLENDALE, Calif. -- On March 16, the Glendale Public Library
    auditorium was filled with an audience anxiously waiting to hear
    Turkish author Kemal Yalcin talk about his book, You Rejoice My Heart.

    Recently translated into English by Paul Bessemer and published for
    the Tekeyan Cultural Association by the Gomidas Institute, the book
    tells the seldom-discussed story of Armenian remnants, the so-called
    secret or hidden Armenians, who still live in the provinces of Turkey.

    These survivors, along with the scant ruins of churches and other
    landmarks of their communities, are the last reminders of Armenian
    civilization, which has thrived on the lands of Western Armenia for
    thousands of years before being decimated by Turkish repression and
    genocide.

    As if frozen in time, the small numbers of Armenian remnants
    continue to live on the soil of their ancestors, secretly holding on
    to their Armenian heritage and sometimes even their religion.

    In his opening remarks, Ara Sarafian of the Gomidas Institute cast a
    brief look at the Turkish treatment of minorities that remained in
    Turkey after 1915. In light of the prejudice and hostility to which
    these minorities continue to be subjected, Mr. Sarafian described You
    Rejoice My Heart as a "seminal work" which is "opening a new chapter
    of understanding Armenian history." "The Armenian Genocide didn't
    finish in 1915," Mr. Sarafian said. "Turkish nationalism has become
    institutionalized."

    Mr. Sarafian explained that concerted efforts to repress ethnic
    minorities persevered throughout modern Turkish history. By the 1950s,
    many Greeks, Jews, and Armenians who still lived in Turkey fled the
    country, and the few who remained, especially in the provinces, were
    assimilated by converting to Islam.

    Armenians survived by adopting Turkish names, no longer speaking
    Armenian, and not telling their children about their ethnic origins.
    Children usually found out that they were Armenian much later in life.

    While traveling throughout the eastern provinces of Turkey, Mr.
    Sarafian has come across Armenians who have assumed Muslim identity.
    But "they are Armenians," he said. "They will let you know if they
    choose to let you know. They all have Genocide stories [to tell]. They
    all had horrible experiences."

    Part memoir, part travelogue, You Rejoice My Heart peers into the
    world of Turkey's secret Armenians. "For the first time we have
    insight into their lives," Mr. Sarafian said. "As Yalcin collects all
    these biographies, we get a more coherent picture of Armenian
    history,... a sense of what it means to be a Turkish-Armenian over the
    past 90 years."

    * The author

    Mr. Yalcin began his address by welcoming the audience in Armenian.
    Afterward he spoke in Turkish, with an Armenian translator relaying
    his words to the audience. With a personable style that captivated his
    listeners, the author focused on his personal journey of uncovering
    the hidden links of a shared past that hold the keys to many
    unanswered questions.

    Born in the Honaz subdistrict of Turkey's southwestern Denizil
    province, Mr. Yalcin was a product of the Turkish educational system,
    which reinforces the notion of an ethnically and religiously
    homogeneous Turkish society and teaches little about minorities -- let
    alone the Armenian Genocide. After earning degrees in education and
    philosophy, Mr. Yalcin went on to become a journalist and an
    award-winning author. He moved to Germany in the 1980s.

    Mr. Yalcin recalled that there were about 1,000 Greeks in Honaz
    during the years he grew up there. His grandparents were never
    prejudiced against their Greek neighbors. In fact, they agreed to hold
    on to a Greek family's dowry for safekeeping. The Greek family never
    came to retrieve their belongings. Mr. Yalcin recalled his grandfather
    saying, "Whether it's 40 days or 40 years, we will hold on to this
    dowry until we return it to their family."

    Mr. Yalcin's family stayed true to their promise until, decades
    later, Yalcin himself handed the dowry over to the Greek family's
    grandchildren in Greece. It was there that he learned about the
    Armenian Genocide and began what would become the journey of a
    lifetime. "If you think what they did to the Greeks was bad, listen to
    what they did to the Armenians in other parts of Turkey," the Greek
    family told him.

    Mr. Yalcin then began meeting with Armenians. He took time to
    nurture relationships and gain trust in order to get the secret
    Armenians to tell their often unbearably painful stories -- which
    would eventually be included in his book.

    * The book

    You Rejoice My Heart opens in Germany, where Mr. Yalcin, working as a
    Turkish instructor, befriended an Armenian cultural-immersion teacher
    named Meline. Through her guidance, Mr. Yalcin eventually embarked on
    a project to seek out Armenians living in Turkey as Muslims or Turks.

    His journey took him on a trajectory that started with his native
    Honaz and included Amasya, Erzurum, Askale, and Kars, and ended in the
    ancient city of Ani.

    One example of the secret Armenians whom Mr. Yalcin met is Madame
    Safiye. In the book, she tells her story with the effervescence of a
    person who has waited 70 years to speak. She is one of the last
    remaining Armenians of Amasya. Born in 1931, she ran away from home to
    marry a Turkish man. Through her conversation with Mr. Yalcin, she
    opens up, for the first time since she was 15, about her Armenian
    past. She reveals that her real name is Zaruhi, after an aunt who had
    perished during what she calls "the Deportations."

    Safiye's mother, Zeytimya, was the sole survivor of "the
    Deportations." As Safiye remembers her parents, her memory drifts
    away, Mr. Yalcin explains. Her own children and grandchildren never
    knew about their Armenian past until Yalcin's arrival.

    Through her story, we learn about the lives of other Armenians
    living in Amasya after 1915. Amasya once had a thriving Armenian
    population. The community, along with its churches and schools, was
    utterly devastated during the Genocide. After 1915, only about 60
    Armenian families remained. All they knew was that they were Armenian
    and their religion was different. "We didn't let a lot of people know
    about it," Madame Safiye says. "Even so, we were so afraid!"

    Armenians tried their best to marry within their tiny community.
    They prayed in secret and adopted Armenian orphans who had survived
    the massacres. While some Armenians eventually fled, most of those who
    remained stopped speaking their native tongue and denied ever being
    Armenian.

    "These are hard things to talk about!" Madame Safiye tells Mr.
    Yalcin. "If you think about all the things that happened to us, you
    can't believe how we managed to make it till now...."

    * The aftermath

    Mr. Yalcin has been living in Germany for years and speaks freely
    about this topic, though he is aware that he might be the target of
    Turkish retribution. "I'm scared," he said. "But the reality is more
    important."

    "There is big work to do," Mr. Yalcin added. "As humans we have to
    address and expose this inhumanity." He went on to stress that his
    work is about promoting communication between Turks and Armenians.
    "Researchers deal with the archives, but my job is working with
    survivors and their grandchildren," he said.

    When asked about Turkish public opinion and whether the Turkish
    educational system will ever allow future generations to learn about
    what really happened prior to 1923, Yalcin answered optimistically,
    "Today what we see in Turkey was unimaginable 30 years ago."

    "Things are changing in Turkey regarding this matter," he continued,
    referring to the recent wave of Turkish intellectuals and authors
    writing about the Armenian Genocide. "Dividing is easy; coming
    together is hard," he stressed. "Always live with hope."

    You Rejoice My Heart has been published in Italian, Armenian,
    Spanish, and French, in addition to Turkish. After the destruction of
    the entire first Turkish edition in Istanbul on June 21, 2002, the
    book is now once again in print and widely read in Turkey.

    Mr. Yalcin has dedicated the English translation of the book to the
    memory of "his dear brother," Hrant Dink.

    The English translation of You Rejoice My Heart is available at Abril
    Bookstore (818-243-4221).

    connect:
    gomidas.org/books/KemalY alcin.htm

    *************************************** ***********************************

    2. Sensitive and gentle, romantic and pleading, Bayrakdarian captivates

    * A triumphant return to Carnegie Hall

    by Florence Avakian

    NEW YORK -- Metropolitan Opera soprano soloist Isabel Bayrakdarian
    with pianist husband Serouj Kradjian captivated an enthusiastic
    audience at Carnegie Hall's Zankel Hall on the evening of Saturday,
    March 8, with a group of classical, romantic, and Armenian selections.

    A trio of Vincenzo Bellini (1801--1835) love songs opened the
    program, sung with longing and passion. "La ricordanza"
    ("Recollection"), a song of anguish offered with appropriate pleading,
    highlighted Bayrakdarian's lush tone and warm delivery. The song's
    final phrase -- "Even if, after this bliss, grief was far more bitter;
    even if, for me, no moment matched this; Ah! How dear was dying in
    that hour" -- highlighted the equally descriptive poetry, frequently
    devoted to the magic of, and yearning for, love.

    Five songs by Francis Poulenc (1899-1963), titled "Banalities,"
    envisioning picturesque locations and memories, demonstrated
    Bayrakdarian's technical virtuosity, bright sound, and poignancy. The
    first part of the performance also included a work by modern composer,
    Jake Heggie (b. 1961), whose "Songs and Sonnets to Ophelia," to a text
    by Edna St. Vincent Millay, was a strange entry sandwiched between
    Poulence and Hector Berlioz.

    "La mort d'Ophelie" ("The Death of Ophelia"), a dark-hued
    composition by Berlioz (1803-1869), a Shakespeare devotee, was
    fashioned after Hamlet. A somber but beautifully reflective work, it
    demonstrated the singer's subtle and vulnerable portrayal, and the
    pianist's superb technique and sensitivity.

    Kradjian, who has concertised extensively throughout Canada, the
    United States, Europe, and the Far East, often accompanies his wife in
    recitals. Playing with great understanding, he never overpowered the
    singer during the concert.

    * Komitas: the highlight

    For this writer, the most heartfelt songs were those of Komitas
    (1869-1935), perhaps the greatest of Armenian composers. In the
    printed program, he was listed as "Reverend Gomidas," and the Genocide
    which wreaked such horror on this legendary clergyman/composer was
    noted as the "1915 massacres of the Armenian people."

    Bayrakdarian was truly in her element, giving the love song, "Akh
    Maral jan" ("Dear Maral") the delicacy it deserved. "Chem grna khagh"
    ("I Cannot Play"), a mischievous and playful number, was performed
    with verve and humor, eliciting laughter from the audience. And the
    well known "Alakyaz/Khungi dzar" ("Mount Alakyaz/Incense Tree")
    received the necessary subtle shadings in Bayrakdarian's rendering.

    The text of the great poet Raffi in the patriotic "Tsayn dur ov
    dzovag" ("Call to the Sea") partly says: "I wonder if the day will
    come when I will see a flag on Mount Ararat, and Armenians from all
    over the world will make their way to their dear homeland."
    Bayrakdarian's delivery of these lines was one of unforced power and
    conviction.

    Her sensitive and gentle rendering of one of the loveliest of all
    songs, "Oror" ("Lullaby"), reflected the strong maternal feelings of a
    woman who recently gave birth to her first child, which resulted in
    last October's cancellation of Bayrakdarian singing the role of
    Susanna in the Metropolitan Opera's production of Le Nozze di Figaro.

    "Five Popular Greek Melodies" by Maurice Ravel (1875-1937), with
    their unmistakable Greek inflections, and a series of charming,
    romantic works from the shores of Spain by Fernando J. Obradors
    (1897-1945), sung with passion and spirit, concluded the exciting
    program, which brought a standing ovation for the radiant artist, and
    two encores for the eager audience.

    *************************************** ***********************************

    3. A public forum at Columbia University analyzes "the Armenian
    diaspora and its discontents"

    by Antranig Dereyan

    NEW YORK -- Armenians living in the diaspora, and to some extent in
    Armenia, are a people whose history has left them with a lot of
    questions -- but perhaps not so many answers.

    That was the theme, at any rate, of a gathering on Saturday, March
    8, at Columbia University in New York, which sought to tackle some of
    the questions that have disconcerted Armenians for some time. The
    public forum, titled, "Speaking Beyond Living Room Walls: The Armenian
    Diaspora and its Discontents," was sponsored by Columbia's Armenian
    Student Association (ASA).

    Panelists asked: When will the Armenian Genocide gain proper
    recognition? Why do Armenians seem to lack sufficient political
    influence in Washington? The list of concerns ranged from diaspora
    misgivings about the Republic of Armenia, to questions of Armenian
    "identity" in environments as disparate as the New York and Istanbul.

    Alongside the questions themselves, participants offered reasons why
    such questions might exist among Armenians -- and spoke, too, on the
    possibility of resolving the questions once and for all.

    Dr. Seta B. Dadoyan struck one chord of the wide-ranging discussion
    when she advised: "We should know our history to discuss these
    subjects; and our problem is that we just do not know enough history."

    That deficiency was partially filled by some of the presentations.
    For example, when it comes to the question of Armenian Genocide
    recognition, panelist Michael Bobelian observed: "One reason for the
    lack of Genocide backing [in the past] was the lack of an independent
    Armenia to fight for the recognition of the Genocide, the way the
    Jewish people had the nation of Israel to fight for their
    recognition.... The Genocide was not on the international radar, not
    until the mid-1960s."

    Bobelian mentioned other reasons during a presentation titled "The
    Armenian Response to the Genocide."

    "It is only after 1965 that Armenians made the Genocide a concern,
    and started to hold public demonstrations to recognize the Genocide. A
    group of youth took to the streets [of Yerevan] in 1965, in what is
    now called Republic Square and the Opera House, and soon there were
    100,000 people gathered. They were carrying placards and chanting 'our
    lands, our lands' -- and this is the first demonstration for the
    Genocide and the recognition of the Genocide."

    Bobelian brought up key intellectual figures that lobbied the United
    States Congress on the issue, including Vahan Cardashian.

    (In a bow to current preoccupations, Bobelian pointed out to the
    young crowd that Cardashian bears no relation to the television
    personality, Kim Kardashian.)

    "Cardashian first started getting involved in trying to get the
    Armenian cause revealed by secretly sending letters to Congress. Later
    he established a committee -- a committee which is now known as the
    ANC [Armenian National Committee]. He dedicated his whole life to the
    cause."

    * Laws against language

    According to the March 8 participants, official recognition for the
    Genocide is not the only significant source of "discontent" among
    Armenians. Another involves trying to maintain an Armenian identity
    while living in Turkey.

    Program panelist Lerna Ekmekcioglu is quite familiar with that
    struggle, having been born and raised in Istanbul. Her parents had to
    change their Armenian last name to a Turkish-sounding one, in a bow to
    a 1934 Turkish regulation. "Any last name ending in '-ian' was
    prohibited," she said, "and so my [family] name was changed from
    Hatsvamian to Ekmekcioglu. Even Greek, Kurdish, and any other
    international last names were changed, due to this rule."

    But Lerna Ekmekcioglu added: "I am Turkish-Armenian, and I am proud
    of being who I am."

    Nevertheless, "For the Armenians living in Turkey, the challenge is
    living among the people who killed their families. Armenians were
    expected to forget the past and share the same space with murderers,
    who not only rejected having any contact with their past, but were
    never punished," said Ekmekcioglu.

    On Turkish streets, Ekmekcioglu pointed out, speaking a language
    other then Turkish is a danger. "One gets more then stares when
    speaking a non-Turkish tongue [in Turkey]; one can get put in jail for
    not speaking Turkish," she said.

    Audience members brought up names of familiar Turkish-Armenian
    figures like Hrant Dink -- a man whom Ekmekcioglu said she knew
    personally, and whom she regarded as "more than just a name."

    "He knew the risks of speaking up, but his pride and his wanting of
    justice for the Armenians was too strong for him to stay quiet,"
    Ekmekcioglu said. "His family also knew that his life was in danger
    every time he stepped outside, but they stood by Dink's side
    regardless of their fear." It was "a fear that ended up being right,"
    she added.

    * Frisson of disagreement

    When the discussion turned to Armenians living in Armenia itself, the
    words "change," "human rights," and "possibilities" became a refrain
    for a few of the panelists.

    Panelist Karen Hakobyan identified one "discontent" as revolving
    around "two aspects" of life in Armenia: "nationalism against civil
    rights," she said. From Hakobyan's perspective, solving the problems
    associated with this tension will require "more than the Armenians in
    the diaspora just sending money."

    An interesting feature of the March 8 event was its focus on
    individual, distinctive, and sometimes opposing perspectives among the
    panelists. Not only did panelists disagree on given issues, but they
    disagreed on how to solve the "discontents" outlined -- and on whether
    those issues were solvable at all.

    Dr. Dadoyan felt that "All these issues can be solved; but theory
    and analyzing strategies should be used, and I feel we need to take
    all these concepts and analyze them." She was more critical, however,
    of the tenor of much of the discussion in the Armenian community: "The
    Genocide is not the only reference to talk about when talking about
    the Armenian diaspora," she said.

    She was likewise tentative about the panel discussion itself,
    suggesting that "none of the panelist had any direction. There should
    have been some guidelines, and I feel it should have been coordinated
    better. But it was good to have all the discussions with all the
    different people."

    One issue casting a shadow over the program was the development in
    Armenia over its recent presidential election. The presidentially
    decreed state of emergency in Yerevan -- still in force at the time of
    the gathering -- was not a part of the program itself, but it came to
    the fore when audience members had a chance to ask questions.

    Nicole Vartanian was struck by the absence of discussion on the
    topic, and expressed her concerns: "For me, the events of last
    Saturday [March 1] in Armenia represent a crisis of massive
    proportions, and for the diaspora to be getting together and talking
    about really important things like culture and arts at a time when our
    homeland is in such peril, it is hard for me to think about that not
    becoming a focal point somewhat of today's discussions."

    Vartanian conceded that the election drama was "not what [the
    speakers] came here to talk about." But she added that "I feel a
    strong connection to Armenia, and I was looking for more interaction
    on this topic from the panel and the audience."

    Nonetheless, event organizer Neery Melkonian said she was very
    pleased with the forum overall.

    "I called these [panelists] to come and told them what I wanted to
    accomplish, and they all paid their own way and came here for today's
    event," she said. "These kinds of minds do not come together under one
    roof very often."

    "I love our passion as people and I wish we had more time for the
    panelist to speak," she said.

    The event was organized by Melkonian along with Silva Ajemian, Hrayr
    Anmahouni, Razmig Aslanian, Christopher Atamian, Arda Berberian, David
    Kazanjian, Lori Khrimian, Anoosh Tertsakian, and Meldiya Yessayan.

    An afternoon session of the program explored through personal
    accounts the experiences and roles of artists in Armenian communities.
    Melkonian expressed her hope that the March 8 gathering could be an
    annual forum for exploring pressing issues for the worldwide Armenian
    community.

    ***************************** *********************************************

    4. Richard Hovannisian tells a N.J. audience about a journey he took
    in 2006 through Western Armenia's vanishing past

    by Anoush Ter Taulian

    RIDGEFIELD, N.J. -- "The Vanishing of Historical Western Armenia:
    Reflections on a Journey into the Past" was the topic of a lecture and
    slide show by Dr. Richard G. Hovannisian, sponsored by the Armenian
    National Committee of New Jersey, on March 9 at Ridgefield's Sts.
    Vartanantz Church. An enthusiastic crowd of 56 people gathered to hear
    the insights of Prof. Hovannisian, who still teaches Armenian and Near
    Eastern history at UCLA, and has held 17 conferences on historical
    Western Armenia (The latest one was covered in the March 15 Reporter).

    Prof. Hovannisian's illustrated talk revolved around his two-week
    trip to historical Western Armenia in 2006, in which he followed the
    routes of the deportees from Trebizond to Gumushkhane and Erzurum, and
    to Kharpert via Erzinjan, to view the gorge of death in Kamakh.

    Hovannisian's parents were both Genocide survivors. His own journey
    to historical Armenian lands only came later in life. He related how,
    when he traveled to Istanbul with his father in 1967, after two days
    Hovannisian's father insisted on leaving: it had proved too painful
    for him to rub shoulders with Turks, whom he could only associate with
    the atrocities he had witnessed.

    Hovannisian also said he felt troubled whenever he saw videos of
    fellow Armenians who had gone on pilgrimage to the ruins of Western
    Armenia, singing hymns in the ruins of a church -- as if such
    re-creations could recreate the church itself, or its lost village
    life.

    When he finally did decide to visit Western Armenia, Prof.
    Hovannisian went with his wife Vartiter and Prof. Fatma Muge Gocek
    from the University of Michigan. Later Agos editor Sarkis Sargoyan
    joined them at Kharpert.

    "During my journey, I found many contradictions," Hovannisian said.
    "In the same city of Trebizond where Armenians were taken out on ships
    and dumped into the sea in 1915, and where the killer of Hrant Dink
    was raised, there were some people who felt a compulsion to remember
    and develop contributions of Armenians to the Ottoman Empire. For
    instance, a Turkish drama group was reading an Armenian play,
    Honorable Beggars by Hagop Baronian, which they had translated into
    Armenian."

    [The assertion about the mass drowning of Armenians in the Black
    Sea, repeated here by Prof. Hovannisian, was debunked years ago by Ara
    Sarafian. See www.gomidas.org/forum/icons.pdf and
    www.gomidas.org/forum/af8-adal.pdf]

    In the coastal cities he met some hidden Armenians who might one day
    agree to identify as Armenian -- if conditions were right. After
    Trebizond they traveled northward to the Erzurum region where they
    visited his wife's father's village of Tsi-togh. Dr. Hovannisian had
    brought along her father's reconstructed diagram of the village,
    detailing where everyone had lived, and so she was able to locate her
    father's house and met the current owners.

    The group also visited Dersim and Basmashen, the village of
    Richard's Hovannisian's own father, where the Armenian church had been
    dynamited in 1960. They saw the Hafav springs that had been built by
    Armenians, and the Keban dam which has flooded many old Armenian
    villages, and which Turkey uses to blackmail Syria by controlling the
    water supply. As a result of the dam, the ancient Golchuk Vank now
    lies underwater.

    * Kharpert

    The journey proceeded to the Kharpert region, where Hovannisian's
    parents were from, and to villages whose names he had heard as a
    child. Prof. Hovannisian showed slides of the Upper Euphrates river,
    and of a lake where thousands of Armenians were slaughtered. He also
    showed pictures of Kharpert before and after the Genocide -- images
    collected by Raymond Kevorkian and Pascal Papoudjian of Paris, who
    have published a large volume of photographs of the Armenian towns,
    villages, and communities of the Ottoman Empire.

    Prof. Hovannisian also traveled to Kemakh, where deportees from the
    Eastern provinces were marched into a narrow gorge to be massacred by
    squads of killers. Those who survived the massacres had to walk up a
    zig-zagging road that ascended to an elevation of 6,000 feet.

    Prof. Hovannisian recalled how he "met Kurdish activists who were
    critical of Turkey, who had empathy with Armenians, and who said that
    they suffered like the Armenians -- which of course is not true, since
    the degree of persecution was different. They did not fully admit that
    most of the Kurds, who were already predatory and looted one another,
    participated in the Genocide. In fact, the Turks formed special groups
    of Kurds to kill Armenians."

    He allowed that there were Kurds who helped Armenians -- notably the
    Alawis, who allowed the Armenians safe passage through their territory
    en route to Russia.

    In the book signing which followed, audience members were clearly
    excited about the presentation they had just seen. Haroutin Der
    Derian, thought the travelogue was fantastic, and though he already
    owned several of Prof. Hovannisian's books he bought six more to give
    as gifts to his family.

    A different thought was on the mind of Dr. Haikaz Gregorian, who
    said, "We have to go beyond presenting these matters as travelogues.
    These experiences of individuals visiting our ancestral lands should
    also result in putting money into educating the Kurds and Turks about
    the Armenian Genocide."

    ********************************* *****************************************

    5. A new volume collects articles that shaped British public opinion
    of the Armenians during the Hamidian massacres

    DEARBORN, Mich. -- The Armenian Research Center of the University of
    Michigan-Dearborn has just published The Armenian Massacres,
    1894--1896: British Media Testimony, edited and with an introduction
    by Arman J. Kirakossian. This new book is a companion volume to Mr.
    Kirakossian's The Armenian Massacres, 1894--1896: U.S. Media Testimony
    (2004).

    The latest volume permits readers to find in one location many of
    the articles that helped shape the British public view of the
    Armenians in the years of the Hamidian massacres.

    These articles, 48 in all, consist of in-depth pieces from weekly,
    biweekly, and monthly news magazines, which are, as a rule, longer
    than articles published in the daily British newspapers. Preceding the
    articles is a long introduction by Mr. Kirakossian, which discusses
    British relations in the 19th century with the Ottoman Empire and with
    the Armenians in particular, and lays the groundwork for the articles
    reprinted in the collection.

    Mr. Kirakossian was formerly Armenia's ambassador to the United
    States and is now Armenia's deputy minister of foreign affairs. He
    holds a doctoral degree in history and teaches history and
    international relations at Yerevan State University. His book, British
    Diplomacy and the Armenian Question, was published by the Gomidas
    Institute in Princeton and London in 2003.

    The newly published book includes a foreword by Richard Bentinck
    Boyle, the Earl of Shannon, one of the cofounders and prominent
    members of the British-Armenian All Party Parliamentary Group. A map,
    15 pages of notes, and an index round out the book, which was made
    possible by a grant from the Dolores Zohrab Liebmann Fund.

    The Armenian Massacres, 1894-1896: British Media Testimony (ISBN
    978-934548-01-1 or 1-934548-01-4) is distributed by Wayne State
    University Press and can be purchased from most retail and online
    booksellers.

    * Sidebar: Book chronicles U.S.-Armenia relationship

    YEREVAN -- A new volume on the U.S.-Armenia relationship was released
    on February 4 at the library of Yerevan State University. The 292-page
    volume brings together the speeches and interviews given by Arman J.
    Kirakossian during his tenure as Armenia's ambassador in Washington
    from October 1999 to March 2005.

    The book, titled Armenia-USA: Current Realities and Vision for
    Future, and published by the Center for Civilization and Cultural
    Studies at the university, features a foreword by Harry J. Gilmore,
    who was the first U.S. ambassador to Armenia.

    Mr. Kirakossian notes that more than 70 U.S. companies are doing
    business in Armenia today. Exports from Armenia to the United States
    doubled between 2000 and 2006 to $46.5 million. Encouraging bilateral
    trade is among the issues covered in the book, which chronicles the
    positions and efforts of the Armenian government on matters of mutual
    concern with the United States in the first half of this decade.

    The book highlights the special interest of the Foreign Ministry
    under President Robert Kocharian in reaching out to
    Armenian-Americans.

    ************************** ************************************************

    6. Doctor works to register life-saving links between Armenians worldwide

    * An effort to match bone marrow donors with patients who need transplants

    by Alex Dobuzinskis

    This article is part of a Reporter series on the work of the
    Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry, as it gears up for a worldwide
    telethon on April 13.

    GLENDALE, Calif. -- Phone calls to Yerevan in the morning and at night
    -- these are the bookends to a full day of work for Dr. Frieda Jordan,
    who spends countless hours using medicine to forge life-saving links
    between Armenians.

    Jordan, a Glendale resident, is president of the Armenian Bone
    Marrow Donor Registry, an international organization she helped found
    in 1999. The registry matches patients suffering from leukemia or
    certain blood disorders to willing donors who can provide the healthy
    bone marrow they need.

    Jordan spends more time at her volunteer job with the registry than
    she does at her regular job at a medical lab in Pomona. But thanks in
    part to her efforts, doctors worldwide are slowly overcoming the
    biggest challenge they face when seeking a bone marrow match for an
    Armenian patient -- the unique genetic makeup of Armenians.

    A good match is important, because otherwise a patient's body will
    reject the bone marrow transplant, and the patient will not get
    better.

    "In this case, being an Armenian is not an advantage," Jordan said.
    "The unique genetic makeup is not an advantage for the patient. But
    knowing that only an Armenian can help an Armenian kind of unifies the
    project, brings Armenians together."

    Jordan realized the need for an Armenian bone marrow registry while
    working in England for the Anthony Nolan Trust, an organization that
    matches bone marrow donors and patients of all nationalities.

    Jordan heard stories of patients of Armenian descent for whom
    doctors couldn't find bone marrow matches, because of Armenians'
    unique genetic profile.

    Because of their history as a Christian people living amidst Muslim
    lands, Armenians over the centuries had little intermarriage with
    people from other nationalities, making it difficult for doctors to
    find matches for Armenian patients from among the general population.

    To overcome this challenge, Jordan started the registry with the
    help of Dr. Sevak Avagyan, who is based in Armenia. The registry has
    grown to include 14,000 potential donors, and over the years it has
    helped eight patients get the transfusions they needed to have healthy
    bone marrow and fight their disease.

    * Global reach

    In running the registry, Jordan has the support of volunteers, but
    much of the leadership work falls on her.

    "I feel that it's my mission that God has given me," Jordan said.
    "I'm the expert in this field and I can help to bring hope to parents
    and children who are suffering from leukemia, and that is really
    nourishing for my soul and for my work."

    For Jordan, who has lived in the United States since 1998, running
    the registry is a job that spans time zones and continents, forcing
    her to work night and day, seek out Armenians in the countries where
    they live and convince them to sign up to be on the registry, so that
    they can donate their bone marrow if they match a patient.

    She starts her day with a 6 am phone call to Yerevan, where the
    registry has offices and a lab. The work day is just ending at that
    time in Armenia, so Jordan speaks with Avagyan, the organization's
    executive director, to find out how things went that day.

    Jordan then goes to her regular job at the Foundation Lab, a private
    medical firm. After finishing her work at the lab, Jordan begins her
    charity work with the registry.

    The work varies from day to day. Sometimes it means taking an
    unexpected call from a leukemia patient seeking advice or consolation.
    Other times, it means arranging for supplies to be shipped to the
    registry's Armenian lab.

    Earlier this month, Jordan had to attend the funeral of a woman who
    died of a blood disorder before she could get the bone marrow
    transplant she needed. The registry matched the patient with a
    potential donor in Boston, who after volunteering to be on the
    registry changed her mind and refused to donate her bone marrow -- a
    problem Jordan said she has encountered with other potential donors
    who suddenly become jittery, even though the process is safe.

    "It's very sad that the refusal comes at the last stage, when they
    have become a match for the patient," Jordan said.

    In an effort to broaden the scope of potential donors, Jordan has
    traveled to Syria, Lebanon, Bulgaria, Greece, Canada, and other
    countries, seeking out Armenians willing to share a mouth swab's worth
    of DNA so that they can be on the registry.

    She also travels to Armenia five times a year to help run the
    registry, which has 15 paid staff members in Yerevan. From her home in
    Glendale, Jordan ends each day with a 10 pm call to the Yerevan
    office, where at that time the work day is just beginning.

    * Labor of love

    Armond Aghakhanian, 36, a volunteer on the advisory board of the
    Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry, said he was inspired to join the
    organization because of Jordan's commitment to the cause.

    "She is basically not only a founder, she is the backbone of the
    organization and she is the biggest advocate when it comes to saving
    lives," he said. "And she has committed herself 100 percent to the
    cause, and I have never seen anyone committed so much, not only
    through their life but their spirit and their whole being to a cause,
    as Dr. Jordan."

    Jordan is not married. She was born in Iran with the last name
    Jordan, because her grandfather -- an Indian by nationality who
    married an Armenian woman -- had changed his name to Jordan after
    converting to Christianity.

    After years of work with the registry, which she calls "her baby,"
    Jordan said she looks forward to one day retiring and passing on her
    share of the registry's work to a younger generation of medical
    professionals.

    "It's becoming my life. I'm regretting it sometimes -- I get very
    frustrated," she said. "I want to get away [from] it... probably this is
    my destiny to have this. But my project is not completed."

    One of the goals Jordan has set for herself before ending her work
    with the registry is to create a center in Yerevan for obtaining
    non-embryonic stem cells from consenting donors, so that the cells can
    be transplanted into patients, who can then regenerate their own bone
    marrow.

    The Armenian Bone Marrow Donor Registry will hold a telethon on
    April 13, between 4:00 and 9:00 pm PST. The event, which will be
    televised and webcast in the United States and throughout most of the
    world, is being organized to raise $650,000 for a first-of-its-kind
    Pan-Armenian Stem Cell Harvest Center in Yerevan.

    connect:
    abmdr.am

    ********************* ************************************************** ***

    7. Rooted in family

    * Insights from Jackie Speier's parents

    by Tania Ketenjian

    SAN FRANCISCO -- In the past few weeks, the Armenian Reporter has
    published a number of articles on the congressional campaign and
    extraordinary life of Jackie Speier. This week we're going a bit
    further, to the source, sharing with our readers the insights of her
    parents, who have seen Jackie through every step of her life.

    Jackie was born and raised in San Francisco. Her mother, Nancy
    Speier, was born in Fresno. When she was a young child, Nancy's family
    moved to Rigley, where her father started a farm. As the enterprise
    didn't flourish as they had hoped, the family moved to the small town
    of Fowler and later back to Fresno. When Nancy was 13, her family
    settled in San Francisco. As Nancy recalls, "It was quite a change. We
    were in an area where there weren't any Armenians and we got kind of
    lost. It was during the depression, when everyone was either on
    welfare or they were just getting by. It was terrible. But we managed
    somehow. When I was looking for work, I sat there in the streetcar and
    I said, 'Boy, I am never going to be poor again.'"

    That is exactly what happened. Nancy went to school and looked for a
    job. "We would take the streetcar for five cents and I went to the
    five-and-dime [store] and JC Penney," she says. "I got jobs at those
    places but they weren't permanent." Still, Nancy continued to work
    hard and was able to raise a family with her husband, Fred. To this
    day, Nancy, who is 93 years old, continues to work, teaching
    upholstery-making.

    * Role models

    Nancy's spirit is much like her daughter's: strong, spunky, fearless.
    She shares a story about her sense of independence, a story she has
    enjoyed telling often. Back in Fowler, when she was eight years old,
    she told her mother that she wanted to visit her grandmother, who
    lived in Fresno, nine miles away. Her mother wondered how Nancy was
    going to be able to do that. "'I'll go down the highway and thumb a
    ride.' I told her," Nancy says. "So can you believe what I did? Here
    comes a car, a roadster, and I said, 'Oh no, not for me.' But then an
    old-fashioned Ford came along, with a fat man in it, and he said, 'Do
    you want a ride?' And I said, 'Sure,' and we talked the whole way
    until we got there [lots of laughter]. I can remember it like it was
    yesterday, I can see everything plain as day."

    Nancy was visiting her paternal grandmother. Everyone on her
    mother's side was killed during the Armenian Genocide. Her parents
    married in Armenia before immigrating to America. "When I was child, I
    used to wonder why my mother would cry so much," Nancy says. "I
    wouldn't ask her what she was crying about. And if I did, I would
    never get an answer. Her whole family must have been killed because
    none of them has shown up. And my mother was the most wonderful woman
    -- kind and sweet, and never yelled. I never saw a person like her. I
    used to think Mom was the best person in the world, and she was."

    Nancy also has fond memories of her grandmother and especially her
    cooking. "She made the best food," Nancy recalls. "And you know, in
    her days, she was the doctor in her village. Everyone would go to her
    to get cured and she had the old-fashioned remedies. I thought that
    was neat. I think maybe that is why I am living for so long. She was
    104 when she died."

    Even in Fresno, Nancy didn't have many Armenian friends. And while
    she doesn't speak the language, she feels very Armenian and aware of
    her roots. When she moved to San Francisco, however, it was difficult
    to keep in touch with the few Armenians she did know. She was working,
    studying, and spending time with family. When asked if she liked San
    Francisco when she first arrived there, she draws a blank. It was so
    long ago and her mind was on other things. Fred, Jackie's father, on
    the other hand, says, "I loved San Francisco when I first saw it."

    * Serendipity

    Fred Speier, a native of Germany, was inspired to move to San
    Francisco because of, not in spite of, the 1906 quake. "In 1935, I saw
    a picture of San Francisco and I was fascinated by the earthquake and
    I said, 'That's where I want to go,'" he remembers. Had he not moved
    to San Francisco and become a lodger in Nancy's home, they would have
    never met.

    When Nancy was in her 20s, she bought two flats on Irving Street in
    the Sunset District of San Francisco. She and her sister lived
    upstairs while they rented out the lower flat to lodgers. "And this
    joker came along and wanted to rent a room," Nancy quips. "And he
    would see me working on that property. I used to do a lot of the work
    that needed to be done, pulling up the rugs and things like that. He
    would watch me and I think he sized me up and said, 'Boy, she's a good
    worker [laughter.]'"

    On their first date, they went to see a movie but afterward, as Fred
    had to go see a friend, he didn't walk Nancy home. "I will never
    forget that," Nancy says. "I felt so funny because other boys that
    took me out, they brought me home. This one didn't." However, as Fred
    will attest, "But I stayed!" and they have been married for nearly 60
    years. Nancy was 33 when they got married and were eager to have a
    child. When Jackie was born, "It was like God sent me the gift of the
    world; it was beautiful," Nancy says. "She was the sweetest girl. I
    loved that girl like you wouldn't believe. She was an angel. [To this
    day] she takes interest in us, she speaks with us, spends time with
    us. I love her."

    The relationship is all the more precious because Nancy and Fred
    almost lost their daughter in Jonestown, Guyana, when Jackie was shot
    by followers of Jim Jones' People's Temple. On that day, a friend of
    Nancy called her and asked if she had heard the news. Nancy hadn't. As
    she quickly turned on the television, she learned that her daughter
    had been shot, nearly died, and was being flown back to America. "I
    was like a chicken without a head," Nancy recalls. "The doctors said
    she was three minutes from death. Can you imagine? Three minutes! When
    I think of those days, I don't know how I lived through it."

    Nancy flew to Washington to be close to Jackie as she recuperated.
    "When I saw her, I can't tell you how I felt," she says. "It was
    almost impossible to comprehend. And although she was laughing, she
    had so many operations to come. All the flesh from her upper thigh is
    gone." But Jackie survived it all. "Jackie was such a beauty child,"
    Nancy says. "She was a doll. I have a picture of her on a coffee table
    that I carry around with me in my wallet. She had black hair when she
    was born. And as a teenager, she gave me no trouble."

    Jackie got involved in politics very early on, when she became a
    "Leo Ryan girl," helping with then South San Francisco Mayor Leo
    Ryan's campaign for a seat in the California State Assembly. "Ryan
    bought them uniforms and they were so cute," Nancy recalls. Jackie
    continued to work with Ryan during her years as an undergraduate at UC
    Davis. Her father says, "I don't think anyone knows politics the way
    Jackie does, at every level."

    Jackie Speier's parents are very proud of their daughter. "You know,
    the Armenians are known to be honest and I have always drilled that
    into Jackie," Nancy says. "She did very well in school and she still
    takes part in her church. She's a dynamo. We are so proud of her. Who
    wouldn't be?"

    Jackie comes to visit her parents every single day. Even if she can
    stay for only a moment, she makes the effort. She values family -- the
    one she comes from, the one she has created -- and is passionately
    committed to making and safeguarding laws that protect families.

    *************************************** ***********************************

    8. This Armenian Life by Tamar Kevonian: The surfer

    Mike, a quiet, 28-year-old ex-surfer, ambles across the lot of the
    business he owns and runs with his father, Steve. He walks in a slow
    gait with arms swinging lazily by his side. His sloped shoulders,
    relaxed manners, and easy tone of voice are indicative of the
    laid-back lifestyle of a California surfer.

    He's been involved in the auto-detailing business for the last four
    and a half years but doesn't like the fact that it doesn't pay well.
    "It's a family business and no family business pays well," he says,
    "but it gives me time to spend time with my old man." Steve, a small,
    wiry man with a full head of gray hair, is a force in the office of
    the business they manage together. Quick-talking and hard-selling, he
    dominates the tiny space. Mike just shrugs when his father continues a
    conversation he started with a customer, as if to say, What can you
    do?

    This is the latest of several family businesses on which they've
    embarked together. Before auto-detailing, they owned a pawn shop and
    before that... it seems too long ago for Mike to remember. But in the
    beginning there was surfing. "I was a surfer and got paid for it,"
    Mike says with pride. He stumbled into it completely by accident. "My
    cousin got his [driver's] license and we would go to the beach," he
    reminisces about his older relative.

    Surfing is a very popular pastime, born in Hawaii but popularized on
    the beaches of California. In the last several decades it has grown
    from its cliquish roots into a highly competitive sport. Mike had
    managed to turn a favorite hobby into a lucrative profession. "I
    surfed everywhere. I even went to Tahiti," he says wistfully. His new
    career lasted five years until one day, about to get out of his car on
    Topanga Canyon, a winding road through the Santa Monica Mountains, he
    was hit by a car. "Some guy was trying to be cute and spun," forcing
    the tires to spin and swerve the car wildly across the road. "I almost
    went over the cliff," Mike explains. He spent a year convalescing and
    sustained permanent back injuries, at which point all his sponsors
    terminated their support.

    He misses those days. "Who doesn't miss competition?" he says wryly.
    But he would never consider returning to the profession he loved.
    Since the accident, his back has not been the same. Surfing requires
    "a lot of getting up on the board," which relies heavily on the
    muscles in the back. "When a ten-foot wave crashes on your head, your
    back gets tangled," Mike explains. Despite all these reasons, one gets
    the impression that he would still pursue surfing if he could, except
    for the fact that he now considers himself too old for the business.
    "These youngsters are a little crazier than me," he says. These days
    he indulges his passion for surfing only for fun.

    So now Mike has partnered with his father and started a family
    business. Steve and Mike spend their days in a clean but small,
    cramped office on their auto-detailing lot. A customer walks onto the
    lot and it's not clear who's in charge. There are several people
    rushing about on the tiny lot packed with cars. Mike looks like a
    customer waiting for his car and will greet you like a polite stranger
    you may pass on the street, without indicating that he's the one who
    can answer any questions you may have. Finally, as you take a peek
    into the empty, tiny office, looking for the proprietor, you realize
    that Mike has followed you, waiting for you to acknowledge him.

    * Easy does it

    Mike has carried over the casual beach culture he acquired in his
    teens into the way he runs his current business. It's a startling
    contrast to his father, who is a bundle of energy with a healthy
    mixture of humor and aggressive salesmanship. "Do both services now
    for $140. It will be $100 [for each] if you come back," Steve jumps in
    and impresses upon the customer -- a very different approach than that
    of Mike, who'll answer the customer's question but lets them make a
    final decision.

    "I like working with Dad; it's comfortable," Mike explains. He has
    an innate distaste for the corporate confines of other jobs and likes
    that his father isn't a "by-the-book boss." "But," he says, "I have to
    keep a higher level of respect." Naturally, since the two not only
    work together but also live together. Having lost his mother to cancer
    when he was only ten years old has left Mike alone with his father and
    younger sister. He doesn't have a particular love of the business. "It
    was something to do," he says -- a business that was bought to both
    keep him occupied and have him spend time with his father. "When I
    held other jobs I felt distant from my family," he says. Still,
    spending so much time together, both at work and at home, "could be
    hair raising," Mike says, displaying his dry sense of humor.

    Although he doesn't have a serious girlfriend, he believes that his
    next step is to get married and have kids. Asked whether he wants to
    get married or simply believes that it's time for him to get married,
    he shrugs and says, "I don't have a girlfriend so I guess it's that I
    think it's time." He is at an age now when all his friends have begun
    to get married and start forming families. He doesn't find it hard to
    meet people and believes that when he's ready he could meet someone at
    any time. "I'll start [a family] when I find someone special," he
    notes. He doesn't think of the future much more than that. He may
    continue in this business for another year, or five, or ten, but for
    now he's living in the moment, with a clear idea of how he wants it
    realized: "spending more time with the old man."

    ************************************** ************************************

    9. All about my father

    * A diet guru born before his time

    by Boghos Kupelian

    "Eat everything, but eat in moderation" was one of my father's most
    cherished mantras. It's what all three of my children abided by when
    they were growing up -- a fact that might well explain their fit
    physiques today.

    My father's dietary maxim was much more than that. It encapsulated
    his approach to life itself, a way of seeing things that thrived on
    simplicity and self-restraint even while celebrating the fullness of
    life.

    A confirmation of that approach, only this time based on scientific
    research, was witnessed by my daughter recently. Right after hearing a
    nutritionist utter my father's words, almost verbatim, during a show
    on a women's channels on cable television, she called me frantically.
    "Dad, you're not going to believe this," she said excitedly. "I just
    heard a diet expert say what you've been telling us for years: 'To
    maintain your figure, eat everything, but in small portions!"

    Thank God I'm not in the habit of lecturing my children. Still, I
    couldn't resist venting out a bit, a propos of our culture of pundits.
    "Sweetheart," I told my daughter in a tone of undisguised
    self-satisfaction, "you kids are always skeptical when you get advice
    from your supposedly old-fashioned Middle Eastern parents, but you're
    won over as soon as some professor repeats the same thing, as though
    announcing a mind-blowing invention."

    During this Christmas season, every thoughtful person is obsessed
    with the danger of calories and extra pounds waiting to assault them
    via the delectable treats heaped on the holiday table, those
    malevolent fats that so easily make our figures swell yet require
    countless sacrifices to be rid of.

    My father was neither a physician nor a nutritionist. He was a
    classical musician and one of the first photographers of Turkey.
    Thanks to his fluency in some six languages, he acquired up-to-date
    knowledge by reading a variety of European publications. He became a
    photographer after completing a correspondence course with a school in
    Paris. Years later, when we moved to Jerusalem following the Genocide,
    he received musical training from a local Jewish maestro.

    Throughout his long life, my father never suffered an illness more
    serious than a headache or a cold. In "extreme" cases, he would heal
    himself by popping an aspirin. He worked seven days a week, practicing
    photography during the day and performing as a musician on certain
    nights. He never skipped work, not even for a day. Where did his
    energies come from? I think it was a combination of being abstemious,
    in constant movement, and thoroughly dedicated to his family, friends,
    and community.

    Years ago, when I lived in Africa, I took a vacation in Lebanon,
    where the rest of the family had settled. In those days my father was
    the artistic director of the Armenian Catholic Brass Band. With
    military precision, he walked every night from Eshrefieh to the
    Mesrobian School in Burj Hamud, where the rehearsals took place. One
    night I decided to join him, as I had missed my friends who played in
    the band. As my father, who was 65, and I took the two-mile walk to
    Burj Hamud, he left me gasping for air. I couldn't keep up with him.

    "Our stomachs are like balloons," my father used to say. "The more
    you eat, the more the monster hidden within you will demand." Apart
    from his philosophy of moderation, my father was also punctual to the
    extreme when it came to dinnertime. He never sat down to eat a minute
    before seven o'clock, even if he were famished. Neither did he deprive
    himself of pastries or a glass of arak, though with these, too, he
    knew and honored his limits.

    My father insisted on being well-dressed for the dinner table, and
    we boys had to wear a tie on Sundays. Of course we weren't allowed to
    eat at all if we failed to attend Mass. Following his example, we
    filled our plates with only half a normal portion and never touched
    the food with our hands. After all, my father had been renowned in his
    native Marash, Turkey, as a handsome young man whose table etiquette
    extended to using fork and knife even for consuming fish. He took an
    exasperatingly long time to chew each morsel. Then, as soon as he had
    minimally satisfied his hunger, he reached for the fruit bowl. It was
    his conviction that fruits assuaged the entreaties of a half-empty
    stomach.

    Movement was my father's great ally. He hated lazy people and
    sedentariness. He walked whenever and wherever possible -- a fact that
    doubtless contributed not only to his excellent figure and health, but
    mental acuity as well.

    Fast-forward to our spoiled, excess-driven lifestyles in the West,
    and America in particular. Many of us are so enamored of, and so
    dependent on, our technological conveniences that we no longer see the
    point of exercising our muscles. The automobile, for instance, is such
    an ubiquitous presence in our daily reality that we can't possibly
    conceive of getting anywhere without driving. Soon we will drive to
    our bathrooms, if only given the chance.

    During a recent Armenian cruise, I came out of an event after
    midnight and, to my surprise, noticed several white-haired compatriots
    waiting in line for dessert. They were hankering for some crepe and
    other sweets, instead of, say, taking an invigorating walk up on the
    deck. My father, whose steely willpower helped him decline the most
    dazzling baklavas, would cringe at such a sight. If asked, he would
    probably tell you that human beings can have a perfectly healthy and
    productive life with an intake of 2,000 calories a day. He would also
    remind you that the Somalis have been managing with a mere 500.

    ******************************************** ******************************

    10. Longtime church members honored by Western Diocese

    * Archbishop Hovnan Derderian gives out Hye Spirit award

    by Tamar Sarkissian

    SAN FRANCISCO -- The Armenian spirit can be defined in a multitude of
    ways. For the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church, it's defined by
    the goodness of people willing to give of themselves without expecting
    anything in return. The Western Diocese created the Hye Spirit Award
    to honor members who have given to the church through their
    volunteerism.

    At St. John Armenian Church in San Francisco, church leaders said
    two longtime members exemplify that spirit of volunteerism. Vicky
    Palangian and Sona Thomasian have each dedicated decades to the
    church. "Both ladies have never ceased to be active in the giving of
    their time, each according to their God-given skills, without thought
    of recognition," said St. John Parish Priest, Fr. Sarkis Petoyan.

    Fr. Petoyan and the St. John Parish Council unanimously agreed to
    petition Archbishop Hovnan Derderian and the Western Diocesan Council
    to honor the women with the Hye Spirit Award. Earlier this month,
    Archbishop Derderian visited St. John to give the pair their awards.

    At a special ceremony in the St. John Church sanctuary, the
    Archbishop presented the Hye Spirit Award - a medal - to each woman,
    expressing his deep appreciation for their devotion and selflessness.
    It was followed by a banquet, where friends and family gathered to
    express their appreciation to the two women.

    Some stood to speak about Palangian and Thomasian, becoming
    emotional. They recounted how they have inspired others, and acted as
    role models and true friends.

    The women were surprised by the honor, and both said their
    dedication to St. John wasn't for an award. "I feel that I should give
    the award to the church for everything it has done for me," said
    Palangian.

    So who are these women that have gained so much respect from their
    fellow church members? Palangian was born and raised in Paris, France.
    She moved to Eritrea before settling in San Francisco in 1958. Her
    deep connection to the Armenian Church began soon after. A
    music-lover, Palangian was immediately drawn to the St. John Choir. In
    fact, she even acted as choir director for a period of time. To this
    day, she still can be found in the church choir balcony on a weekly
    basis.

    In the 50 years she's been apart of St. John Church, Palangian has
    dedicated her time and energy to help make the church what it is
    today. Her peers have entrusted her with positions of leadership,
    voting her into executive positions with the St. John Parish Council,
    the Ladies Society, and the Mr. and Mrs. Club. She's represented St.
    John at the annual Diocesan Assembly Meeting. She volunteered her time
    to work as church secretary, Bingo treasurer, and the editor of the
    church newsletter. When not in a meeting room, Palangian still spends
    countless hours in the church kitchen, working to make Armenian
    delicacies for the annual Food Festival.

    "Whenever I have seen the need, I have done it, because I learn at
    the end, and look at all the people I have met on the path. Through
    the church, I have really made a family within a family. I haven't
    given anything to the church that hasn't come back to me one hundred
    fold," said Palangian.

    Thomasian has had deep ties to the Armenian Church since her
    childhood. As a teenager, Thomasian began singing in the St. James
    Church Choir. It was her first experience serving the Armenian Church,
    but certainly not her last. Thomasian moved to San Francisco in 1946,
    and quickly immersed herself into the world of St. John Church.

    For years, Thomasian continued her childhood passion for singing
    with church choirs, adding her voice to the St. John Choir.
    Thomasian's commitments to church and family merged, when she helped
    form a parent's group for St. John's Sunday School. That was the
    beginning of a lifetime of leadership and volunteerism. Since then,
    she has held executive positions with the St. John Ladies Society, the
    Alter Guild, and the Hall Renovation Committee. Thomasian was honored
    to be voted into the position of Vice President of the Ladies Society
    Diocesan Meeting. She's chaired countless banquets, and has lead food
    preparations for the Annual Food Festival and for Hokejash luncheons.

    For more than a decade, any couple married at St. John has known
    Thomasian as the church's volunteer wedding coordinator. She
    tirelessly attends to all the bride's and groom's needs at both
    rehearsals and weddings.

    Thomasian said she was shocked when she learned of the honor. "I was
    so mind boggled that it still doesn't really sink in. I know there are
    a lot of people who have helped and done a lot for the church. People
    tell me I deserve it, but there are a lot of people that deserve it,"
    said Thomasian.

    Longtime friend and Parish Council Chairman Charles Tateosian
    explained that both women are worthy recipients of the Hye Spirit
    Award, calling them consistent and dedicated workers of the church.
    "They have served in a variety of different activities of our church,
    both in participating in Sunday church services and in the various
    social activities of our church. They have given of themselves
    willingly when asked to help," said Tateosian.

    Palangian and Tateosian both plan to continue their lifelong
    volunteerism to St. John, and they hope others will also gives back to
    St. John Church. Palangian explained, "My dream would be that the new
    generation that we are giving this church will continue moving the
    spirit. The Hye spirit ... we all have it. It's not an award -- it's a
    fact."

    connect:
    www.armenianchurchwd.com

    ************************************************** ************************

    11. Gregory Djanikian disarms with his latest collection

    by Armine Iknadossian

    GLENDALE, Calif. -- On March 10, at 7:00 p.m. Armenian time, which
    translates into 7:32 p.m. standard time, the auditorium of the
    Glendale Public Library was full of Gregory Djanikian fans awaiting to
    hear him read from his latest collection of poems, So I Will Till the
    Ground. Leon Mayer, vice-president of community events, started off
    the evening with preliminary remarks on behalf of the Friends of the
    Glendale Public Library. The organization, which sponsored the
    reading, presented the event free of charge. Mayer also announced that
    Djanikian had generously agreed to donate a portion of his book sales
    to the library and in turn received a certificate of recognition from
    the mayor's office.

    Poet Lory Bedikian, who writes the Reporter's "Poetry Matters"
    column, introduced Djanikian with a brief biography. "It's an honor to
    introduce someone who is not only a great Armenian-American poet but
    one of the greatest living poets today," Bedikian said. "Just knowing
    his work makes me feel proud to be an Armenian, an Armenian-American,
    and a poet."

    Praise for Djanikian's new collection includes Peter Balakian's
    comments printed on the back cover of the book. Djanikian's new poems
    "...move from the elegiac to the philosophical and to the heartfelt
    comedy of human love," Balakian writes. Stephen Dunn calls Djanikian
    "a gardener of the human spirit" and the latest collection "no holds
    barred, his most urgent to date." Eleanor Wilner echoes Balakian's
    sentiments, pointing out that Djanikian "does what Joseph Brodsky said
    the poet should do: begins in elegy and ends in praise."

    Djanikian received his undergraduate degree in English from the
    University of Pennsylvania and earned a Master's from Syracuse
    University's Creative Writing Program. He has taught at public schools
    in New York and lectured at both Syracuse University and the
    University of Michigan. he currently directs the Creative Writing
    Department at the University of Pennsylvania.

    Djanikian's poetry has been featured in several magazines and
    journals including The American Scholar, The Nation, Poetry, Georgia
    Review, Poetry Northwest, Shenandoah, Three Rivers Poetry Journal, as
    well as the Anthology of Magazine Verse. His four other books of
    poetry, all published by Carnegie Mellon University Press, include The
    Man in the Middle, Falling Deeply into America, About Distance, and
    Years Later. So I Will Till the Ground, the author's fifth collection
    of poems, also published by Carnegie Mellon, portrays the horrors of
    the Genocide of 1915, the ensuing Diaspora, and the emigration of the
    author and his family from his native Alexandria, Egypt, to the United
    States.

    Djanikian's family moved to Williamsport, Pennsylvania, when he was
    six years old. Being the only Armenian family in the city impressed
    upon Djanikian the fragility of his culture. His latest collection of
    poems focuses on his cultural blueprint, examining the feelings of
    loss due to the Genocide and celebrating the rich culture and family
    life so many Armenian-Americans sustain despite the tragedies of our
    past.

    After taking the stage, Djanikian first described the tripartite
    structure of So I Will Till the Ground. The poems begin with graphic
    narratives of the Armenian Genocide, then move on to the sensual world
    of Alexandria, and end with life in the United States under the shadow
    of the Genocide. Djanikian confessed, "These poems were hard to write,
    but I had to find a way to pull the reader into the poems, to not have
    them resist. It was a balancing act."

    While Djanikian read from the first, chilling, section of the book,
    which illustrates the horrors of the Genocide in graphic detail, the
    audience listened in complete silence. These poems demonstrated
    Djanikian's gift for descriptive detail, as they portrayed the
    atrocities committed by the Turks against innocent Armenian citizens.
    The poems' impact was also due to Djanikian's utilization of anaphora,
    a literary device whereby repetitive phrases throughout the poems
    magnify the sense of losing one's mind in the presence of such
    inexplicable crimes against humanity. The discomfort in the room was
    palpable -- an acceptable, even expected, reaction, and one that
    Djanikian was intentionally shooting for, it seems. After all, the
    first poem, The Aestheticians of Genocide, analyzes this exact
    situation, offering advice with a hint of sarcasm: "The trick is to
    avoid excesses/of horror so as not to scorch the mind/and strike it
    dumb, though grief may yowl/in the dirt and the villages burn."

    Afterwards one listener admitted he felt quite disturbed by the
    massacre scenes depicted by the first few poems and was barely able to
    stay in his seat. He was relieved when the tone started to shift, and
    this is where Djanikian's skill, his ability to capture his audience,
    was most evident. A good writer knows balance, and the second section
    of the book reinforced everyone's faith in Djanikian -- that there was
    much more to his collection than demonizing the perpetrators of the
    Genocide and reminding us of the nightmares we all have to live with
    as children and grandchildren of survivors.

    Poems like In the City of Languages, When I Saw My Grandfather
    Taking a Bath, The Elecrolux Salesman Visits Our Apartment, and My
    Name Brings Me to a Notion of Splendor garnered laughter and applause
    from the audience, lightening the mood and infusing the room with a
    shared sense of what is familiar, and in turn, more comfortable.

    Exclamations of "Yes!" and "That's right!" were common throughout
    the rest of the reading. The outbursts of laughter continued into the
    third part of the reading, with light-hearted pieces that focused on
    the everyday idiosyncrasies of being Armenian and our unique brand of
    neurosis, which can be at once charming and disarming. There were
    explosions of laughter when Djanikian read A Brief History of Border
    Crossings and the widely-anthologized Immigrant Picnic, followed by a
    more sobering analysis of the Armenian psyche in Buying a Rug.
    Djanikian ended the reading with the bittersweet title poem, leaving
    his listeners with lines that empower without ignoring past
    injustices: "So I will dig, perforate, hoe, scarify,/that out of these
    wounds/there might come flower and fruit/to carry forth, to
    replenish."

    Later, one audience member, with several copies of the book in hand,
    surprised herself when she confessed, "I don't even like poetry!"

    *********************************** ***************************************

    12. Karo Ovasapyan: the Armenian Crocodile Dundee

    by Vartan Dudukjian

    Thanks to the endurance and courage of Karo Ovasapyan of Burbank,
    California, the Armenian tricolor may be the only flag to have been to
    the Seven Summits of the world, as well as the North and South Poles.

    Karo has conquered the highest peaks of all seven continents, skied
    the North and South Poles, and wrestled with alligators in the swamps
    of Louisiana. This 48-year-old Armenian-American mountaineer is
    Armenia's very own Crocodile Dundee.

    The home of this surprisingly humble man is adorned with souvenirs
    from his many journeys. Karo is one of only ten people, and the only
    Armenian, to have climbed the Seven Summits and trekked the both
    geographic poles. He has just returned from a month long excursion
    through the tropical jungles of Indonesia where he and his team
    climbed the Carstensz Pyramid, a limestone mountain that soars 16,076
    feet above sea level.

    "This is truly one of the most interesting climbs I have ever
    undertaken," he said. "It was supposed to be a quick climb but we
    ended up having to go through Papua's tropical jungles in order to get
    to the mountain and we had not planned for this at all."

    What was initially supposed to be a four-hour drive through an
    American gold mine to the foot of the Carstensz Pyramid (where Karo
    and his team would embark on the two-day climb) ended up becoming a
    28-day mission of survival through the tropical jungles of Indonesia's
    largest province.

    "Although it was long and difficult, the journey was extremely
    fascinating," Karo explained. "Interacting with the natives who lived
    in the jungle was an enlightening experience. It's a completely
    different world out there. You are pitted against yourself and
    stretched to the very limit as you struggle against nature for your
    very survival."

    Every climb has its own special character, according to Karo, who
    believes that each climb triggers a unique emotional response.

    * Call of the wild

    Karo was born in Tehran, Iran, in 1959, to a family that instilled in
    him a great love for the natural world. At the age of ten he moved
    with his family to Charentsavan, Armenia. A small industrial town
    located west of Lake Sevan in Armenia's Kotayk region, Charentsavan
    was surrounded by many mountains to which Karo and his family would
    often take weekend camping trips.

    "I spent my entire childhood in those mountains," he explained. "I
    was always very active in sports as a kid."

    Growing up, Karo felt a special connection to the outdoors, spending
    his winter nights sleeping on his balcony. He immersed himself in
    books about it, reading stories about famous arctic explorers and
    mountain climbers. One of his inspirations, he recalled, was Captain
    Robert Falcon Scott, the first person to explore Antarctica
    extensively.

    "But everything I have ever achieved in my life I attribute to Che
    Guevara," Karo noted. "His ideology and the sheer power of his will
    have served as an example for me, guiding me throughout my life. He
    taught me to be strong, to never give up, and never get disheartened.
    This is the philosophy by which I live my life."

    At the age of 18, Karo was conscripted into the Red Army and was
    sent to Siberia for a two-year tour of duty. Unlike most people sent
    to the icy steppes of Siberia, Karo felt at home in Russia's frozen
    backwater.

    "You didn't really have a choice; the Soviets didn't ask you whether
    or not you wanted to serve in Siberia," he said as he laughed. "I was
    actually happy to go. I knew a lot about it and I loved the cold
    weather."

    After Siberia, Karo moved to the Russian coastal city of Sochi on
    the Black Sea, where he lived until moving to Glendale, California, in
    1989. With his two brothers he started a cabinet-making business and
    began climbing mountains as a hobby.

    * Top of the world

    Karo embarked on his quest to climb the world's Seven Summits in 2002.
    He trained by climbing mountains throughout the United States,
    including the 14,494-foot-tall Mount Whitney, which is the highest
    mountain in the continental United States. When he wasn't climbing he
    was training, pulling heavy tires attached with ropes to his belt.

    Everest is usually the last of the Seven Summits to be climbed, but
    Karo didn't want to take any chances by leaving it to be the last. It
    was his life-long dream, he said, and couldn't let anything jeopardize
    his reaching the highest peak on the planet. Before embarking on the
    ultimate climb, Karo scaled Mount Aconcagua in the South American
    Andes, Mount McKinley in Alaska, and Mount Elbrus in the Caucasus,
    which is Europe's tallest peak and the European summit of the Seven
    Summits.

    "You are struggling against some of nature's most powerful forces.
    You never know what can happen," he said as he described the perils of
    his hobby. "I am only mortal and anything can happen from one climb to
    the next."

    With an altitude of 29,028 feet above sea level, Mount Everest is
    part of the Himalaya mountain range, bordering Tibet and Nepal. Over
    200 people have died trying to conquer this colossal pyramid, where
    oxygen is thin, and the weather brutal.

    For almost his entire life, Karo dreamed about conquering Everest.
    On May 30, 2005, he became the first Armenian to gaze down upon the
    world from its tallest peak.

    "Time freezes when you get to the top," he said. "It's when you are
    at the top of the world that you realize how beautiful life really
    is."

    "It was extremely difficult, but I was never alone on my journey,"
    he continued. "The mountains are my friends; they are always with me,
    making certain that I am never distracted."

    Karo was the first in his team to reach the peak of Everest, just
    two months after he began his ascent up the north ridge. There he
    planted the Armenian and American flags, in honor of his native and
    adopted homelands.

    "I carry these flags with me on all my climbs," he said. "My
    Armenian flag is the only national flag to have been to the top of all
    seven summits and the North and South Poles."

    Six months after Everest, Karo scaled Africa's Mount Kilimanjaro. On
    December 18, 2005, he reached the top of Antarctica's Mount Vinson.
    Karo completed his mission to climb the Seven Summits on February 2,
    2006, when he climbed Mount Kosciuszko, Australia's highest peak.

    * Scaling Ararat

    On September 6, 2006, Karo stood atop the highest peak in Anatolia,
    Mount Ararat. Almost 17,000 feet above sea level, Ararat is the Holy
    Grail for Armenian mountaineers. None of the other climbs compared to
    Ararat, Karo said, as he described his pilgrimage up the sacred
    mountain, where, according to the Bible, Noah's Ark landed.

    Although it took Karo only two days to reach the top, the climb was
    an emotional gauntlet.

    "Climbing Ararat isn't as much of a physical challenge as it is a
    mental and emotional one," he explained. "You feel great happiness as
    you climb up, but you are also afflicted with a deep sorrow because
    you know that they stole this awesome mountain from you."

    "Ararat is holy," Karo continued. "It's my dream that one day we
    will all be able to climb up Ararat in peace, and as we wish."

    The Armenian Dundee now has his sights set on making a 285-mile
    cross-country skiing trek across Greenland, the world's biggest
    island.

    He plans to one day donate his Armenian flag to the National Museum
    of Armenia.

    **************************************** **********************************

    13. Exploring the furthest reaches of the diaspora

    * The extraordinary life of broadcaster Leo Sarkisian, Part II

    * Armenians in Africa

    Leo Sarkisian is probably among the minority of Armenians who spend a
    majority of their lives studying African music. In fact, Armenians
    have had an influence on African music for decades. Their connection
    to Africa is perhaps one of the great, unwritten chapters of Armenian
    history.

    During the late 1960s and throughout the 1970s, Sarkisian visited
    Ethiopia a number of times as a USIA foreign service officer. There,
    he was introduced to a large Armenian community -- one that, Sarkisian
    would come to find out, had a long and important history in Ethiopia.

    During his first visit to Addis Ababa, Sarkisian had the opportunity
    to meet Maestro Nerses Nalbandian, a man who, according to Sarkisian,
    "made a strong and lasting contribution to the development of modern
    Ethiopian music." During the course of interviews and conversations
    with Nalbandian, an amazing story unfolded before Sarkisian's eyes,
    regarding the history of 20th-century Ethiopian music.

    Regent Tafari Makonnen (known as Ras Tafari), who would go on to
    ascend the throne of Ethiopia in 1930 as Emperor Haile Selassie I, saw
    the origination and development of "modern" Ethiopian music during the
    early years of his reign. In 1924, Ras Tafari traveled to Jerusalem
    and was welcomed upon arrival by a brass band, which he promptly
    hired. "The band," Sarkisian said, "which was under the guardianship
    of Jerusalem's Armenian archbishop, and entirely composed of young
    Armenian orphans, accompanied the Ethiopian delegation back to Addis
    Ababa."

    Shortly thereafter, Ras Tafari appointed Kevork Nalbandian as the
    band's music director. "At the regent's [Ras Tafari's] request,
    Nalbandian composed the Ethiopian national anthem, which would remain
    until Emperor Selassie's death in 1974," Sarkisian said. Nalbandian
    also became one of Ethiopia's earliest playwrights and trained many of
    Ethiopia's musical performers. "Another Armenian, Garabed Hakalmazian,
    became the director of Addis Ababa's municipal brass band," Sarkisian
    said.

    Ethiopia was invaded by Italy in 1935 and remained under fascist
    rule until 1941, when it was liberated and Emperor Selassie was
    restored to the throne. Nalbandian returned to Ethiopia to head the
    Imperial Body Guard and Police bands and was later appointed head of
    music and theater for the Addis Ababa municipality. Although he
    retired in 1949, Nalbandian had brought many members of his family to
    Ethiopia. His nephew, Maestro Nerses Nalbandian, whom Sarkisian met
    and interviewed, was the one to make the strongest contribution to the
    development of modern Ethiopian music, right up until his death in
    1977. "With the Nalbandians, Garabed Hakalmazian, Hagop Manoukian,
    Mrs. Soucasian, and Azad Topalian, the Armenians were a very strong
    and potent catalyst for change in Ethiopia," Sarkisian said.

    * Global Armenians

    "What has been most exciting for me worldwide are all the interesting
    Armenians I have met and heard about," Sarkisian said. For example, on
    New Year's Day in 1955, as he landed at the Dacca airport in
    Bangladesh, he was met by a small delegation of Armenians. "The
    community invited me that same evening to celebrate with them in the
    local Armenian church," which was built in the 14th century, Sarkisian
    recalled. The church was located in a Dacca neighborhood called
    Mahalarmantullah (which means Armenian Quarters), on a street called
    Armenian Street. Sarkisian said: "The graveyard right behind the
    church had gravestones, with inscriptions written in Armenian, with
    dates as early as 1480," indicating a long history of Armenian
    presence in the area.

    In the 1800s, the governor of Afghanistan's northern region was an
    Armenian man. Also, Sarkisian said, "the accountant of the American
    Embassy in Kabul [at the time of our stay there] was a local Armenian,
    born there, and apparently the last of a fairly large Armenian
    community that had been there for several centuries."

    In the 12th and 13th centuries, as Armenia was devastated by waves
    of Seljuk and Mongol invasions, masses of Armenian refugees migrated
    east. They traveled through Central Asia and passed through northern
    Afghanistan, forming small communities along the way. "But the
    movement kept going on," Sarkisian said, through India -- where they
    built the old Armenian cathedral, in Madras -- and on to Indonesia,
    where they built another cathedral, in Jakarta.

    "When I arrived in Ghana in 1959, again I found Armenians throughout
    the entire country," Sarkisian said. "At that time, many of the
    bridges, roads, and many of the buildings as well, were built by
    them." In Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Sarkisian discovered that the local
    representatives of many large French corporations were Armenians.
    Sarkisian recounted: "I found Armenians throughout West Africa,
    Senegal, Mali, Niger, Chad, the Congo, a huge community in Ethiopia,
    in South Africa, Lesotho and Swaziland, the large and very influential
    community in Khartoum, Sudan, in Nairobi, and I even found Armenians
    in Madagascar when I visited there. Oh, and a couple on the island of
    Mauritius!" Sarkisian also spoke of a significant community of
    Armenians in Nigeria, with a large number of successful entrepreneurs
    and their families living in Lagos and Ibadan.

    "All I'm saying," Sarkisian concluded, "is how true Saroyan's words
    are: '... Destroy Armenia, see if you can do it... For when two Armenians
    meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a new
    Armenia.' Well, this is what I've experienced during the last 50 years
    of traveling around the world. I look for Armenians wherever I go... and
    we embrace and hug each other." f

    connect:
    [email protected]

    ***************** ************************************************** *******

    14. School Beat: How much homework is too much homework?

    * Are kids overburdened with schoolwork?

    * Parents and teachers weigh in

    by Hripsime Moskovian

    In a world where gas prices have reached record highs and a good job
    is becoming increasingly hard to find, how can the next generation of
    workers not feel the pressure to succeed in the ever-competitive world
    of the job market?

    Now, more than ever, there is tremendous pressure reminding
    children, students, and young adults that without hard work, one
    cannot succeed. But where is the pressure coming from? In an attempt
    to prepare students for the hard work they will no doubt face in the
    future, teachers in various schools are assigning hours of homework
    every day. But is it all necessary?

    Students, along with their parents and teachers, have mixed thoughts
    and emotions regarding the piles of homework. Is it an attempt by
    their teachers to prepare students for that paramount climb towards
    success they will be embarking on throughout their lives? But how much
    is too much, and why is it necessary for students to spend an ample
    amount of time per night on homework? And are parents complaining that
    their children have too much homework? What type of student is their
    child?

    Most teachers and parents are eager to sit and discuss the issue,
    as there is indeed much that can be said about it. Oddly enough,
    parents with children in both elementary and junior or high school are
    more than happy to accommodate a teacher who wants to assign homework
    every night, including some weekends.

    Anna Markarian, a parent who has children in both elementary and
    high school, explained that "Homework should be given to children
    every night as a review and reinforcement of the topics that were
    presented during the day. Reinforcement of the school topics covered
    on a daily basis is the reason my third-grader is doing so well in
    school." When asked about her ninth-grader, Markarian commented that,
    "From time to time, there are projects assigned that do require many
    hours to complete, but this should not be substituted for homework. I
    have found with my ninth-grader that there is a lot of stress before
    an exam, which I believe is a direct result of not receiving
    homework." In Markarian's view, homework is beneficial in the long
    term because it prevents late-night cramming and unnecessary stress.
    "Homework allows teachers to determine whether their students are
    comprehending the subjects being taught and to adjust either method of
    teaching or material. The long-term benefit is priceless."

    Other parents, whose children are having more difficulty balancing
    the work load, feel that at times the amount of homework can be
    overwhelming. "Sometimes there are just too many assignments, and not
    all from one teacher," said Iskui Chiroghlyan, the parent of a
    fourth-grade boy. "I understand that education is important but having
    life outside of the four walls of school is also important.
    Experiences with the outside world (outside of school specifically)
    can shape the thoughts and behavior of a child more than anything
    else. In other words, having too much homework is not going to teach a
    child anything."

    Most teachers of elementary and junior high schools seem to feel
    that homework is necessary -- not only for educational purposes, but
    as a tool that will prepare students to be hard-working and motivated
    well into adulthood. "It reinforces what they have learned in school,"
    said Marjorie Beatty, a junior high teacher at Mekhitarist Fathers'
    Armenian School. "It is the only way we know as teachers whether or
    not they grasp the concepts; that is where they have the opportunity
    to make mistakes and to learn from them." It goes without saying that
    each subject deserves a considerable amount of time in study and
    review. Inez Grigorian, another junior high teacher, whose specialty
    is science, feels the same way. "When [students] don't spend enough
    time on each assignment, you can tell that the quality of their work
    has been compromised," she said. "The handwriting is poor, work is
    missing details, and it is clear that the student has not gone through
    the reading material. If your time is utilized properly, the homework
    can be done in good quality."

    Teachers of upper grades feel that, on average, students are
    expected to spend at least two to three hours a night on homework
    alone, in addition to time spent on extracurricular activities outside
    of school. "Committing two to three hours from their daily routine
    will keep the discipline going rather then giving them time to play,"
    Grigorian said.

    "You can see the difference in a student who does their own homework
    because they are willing to take the chance to try, though they make
    mistakes," said Beatty, who often gets complaints from parents that
    their children are staying up until the late hours of the evening in
    order to complete assignments. This touches on the ever-growing
    concern most teachers have with parents. "Parents complain there is
    too much homework because they're the ones doing it," Beatty
    continued. "A child's work is to learn. We make it a growing
    experience now so that when they are adults, they are successful. It
    is important for the parents to stay out of it and not do the homework
    for your kid. Let them make mistakes. Check it for them, but do not
    correct it for them or they will come to depend on others all their
    lives to do everything for them. We rescue them too soon."

    Another factor contributing to parent frustration is the flurry of
    extracurricular activities students partake in on a weekly basis. From
    music lessons to sporting practice, games, and tournaments, it's no
    wonder a student may feel overwhelmed and exhausted -- often too
    exhausted to open a book. "Pick one activity or even two. There are
    too many distractions and [students] are not focused," Beatty noted.
    "If you wait until 7 o'clock to begin homework, it will take you until
    11 or 12 to finish because you are too tired and not fresh." She added
    that parents must discipline their children to begin homework early in
    the day. "When they are young, they develop habits," she said. "Teach
    them the habit of starting homework when they come home. If you
    postpone the fun things (television, video games, friends, etc.) until
    after homework is done, then students will do the homework more
    quickly."

    What seems necessary is a balance between school, homework,
    extracurricular activities, and a healthy social life. If a balance is
    achieved, then students are ready for the challenges facing them once
    they reach college and beyond. Balancing activities and other
    responsibilities with homework will equip students with the necessary
    skills to act as diligent adults. "Get the firm foundation now so it's
    a piece of cake later," Beatty said, addressing any parent who wishes
    to be helpful. "Teach them to be responsible and successful. Learning
    can be fun, but no one said it would be easy."

    * * *

    Hripsime Moskovian graduated from UCLA in 2006 with a degree in
    English literature. She is currently an English teacher for grades 2,
    3, and 4 at Mekhitarist Fathers' Armenian School in Tujunga,
    California.

    **************************** **********************************************

    15 . Kitchen-table wisdom

    * A book co-authored by Jackie Speier provides practical life advice

    by Atina Hartunian and Ishkhan Jinbashian

    In a time of great social and political uncertainty, when strength of
    character and genuine leadership are the indisputable requisites for a
    candidate running for national office, Jackie Speier makes the grade
    through both personal and public-service example. Seeking to fill the
    seat left empty by the recent passing of U.S. Representative Tom
    Lantos, Speier is gearing up for a special congressional election on
    April 8.

    Speier's almost three decades of public service -- as San Mateo
    County supervisor, California State Assembly member, and California
    State Senate member -- have been marked by a string of achievements in
    progressive legislation. What is even more remarkable is that they
    have been realized against a backdrop of extreme personal hardship and
    tribulation. Speier has survived it all to tell a story of not only
    resilience and spiritual growth, but an unbroken penchant to find
    meaning in helping others.

    Such is the context of a 2007 book Speier co-authored with Deborah
    Collins Stephens, Michealene Cristini Risley, and Jan Yanehiro. A
    sense of solidarity and hope is already tapped into the moment one
    considers the book's title: This Is Not the Life I Ordered: 50 Ways to
    Keep Your Head Above Water When Life Keeps Dragging You Down.

    * Between friends

    This Is Not the Life I Ordered is an achingly honest, unpretentious
    collection of life stories experienced by four friends, who would get
    together every month for "kitchen-table coaching sessions." Over the
    years, the four women supported and saw one other through some trying
    times: from marital problems and career bumps to financial ruin. Each
    of these personal odysseys ceded fresh insights and lessons, valuable
    wisdom that has been woven into the book.

    In nine accessible chapters, the work covers the titular "50 ways to
    keep your head above water when life keeps dragging you down." Each
    chapter is filled with practical, down-to-earth advice that can help
    readers navigate through a smorgasbord of everyday pitfalls. The
    chapters are divided into sections that provide various perspectives
    and solutions to specific issues. Beside personal narratives by one or
    all of the co-authors, each section includes stories about other
    successful women who have conquered mountains to get to where they are
    today while blazing the trail for other women.

    Also found in each chapter are clever cartoons as well as
    inspirational quotes from such women as Amelia Earhart, Maya Angelou,
    and Cher, making for an even richer reading experience. The chapters
    are concluded with suggested discussion topics which readers can take
    up for their own "kitchen conversations" with their friends. The
    topics, or exercises, are no quick-fix solutions. They require honest
    answers and a commitment to follow through.

    The idea behind the "kitchen conversations" is that though you may
    stray off your own course every now and then, the circle of friends
    you surround yourself with and talk to will not let you forget your
    goals. The co-authors stress that it is vital to have friends around
    you when struggling to overcome adversity. In fact, the very first
    exercise is about creating a support group consisting of close friends
    if there isn't one already in place.

    This Is Not the Life I Ordered also emphasizes that life is
    essentially in your hands. Even if you feel as though you are trapped
    in a spiral of despair and have run out of options, there is always a
    way, the book maintains. Our dark days and crises are temporary. Keep
    on thinking positively, and, above all, show courage in the face of
    challenges. Courage is a muscle. It needs to be flexed; and exercise
    will only make it better.

    This Is Not the Life I Ordered: 50 Ways to Keep Your Head Above
    Water When Life Keeps Dragging You Down
    by Deborah Collins Stephens, Michealene Cristini Risley, Jackie
    Speier, and Jan Yanehiro
    224 pages
    Published by Conari Press
    ISBN: 13: 9781573243056

    connect:
    thisisnotthelifeiordered.c om

    ********************************************** *****************************

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    (c) 2008 Armenian Reporter LLC. All Rights Reserved
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