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The Armenian Weekly; Jan. 10, 2009; Features

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  • The Armenian Weekly; Jan. 10, 2009; Features

    The Armenian Weekly
    80 Bigelow Avenue
    Watertown, MA 02472
    (617) 926-3974
    [email protected]

    The Armenian Weekly; Volume 75; No. 1; Jan. 10, 2009

    Features
    1-The Genie Is out of the Bottle
    Turkish Intellectuals to Armenians: We Apologize
    By Khatchig Mouradian
    2-Madame Paulette: An Armenian American Success Story
    By Yelena Ambartsumian
    3-Paul Varadian's Unique Dining Experience
    By Tom Vartabedian
    ***
    1-The Genie Is out of the Bottle
    Turkish Intellectuals to Armenians: We Apologize
    By Khatchig Mouradian
    On December 15, around 200 intellectuals in Turkey launched an
    Internet petition1 apologizing for the Armenian Genocide. Soon
    thereafter, hell broke loose.
    Although there is a wide consensus among genocide and Holocaust
    scholars that the Armenian Genocide took place, the Turkish state
    continues to vehemently deny that a state-sponsored campaign took the
    lives of approximately 1.5 million Armenians during World War I. The
    Armenians, the official Turkish argument goes, were victims of ethnic
    strife, or war and starvation, just like many Muslims living in the
    Ottoman Empire. Turkey invests millions of dollars in the United
    States to lobby against resolutions recognizing the Armenian Genocide
    and to produce denialist literature. Moreover, many Turkish
    intellectual who have spoken against the denial have been charged for
    `insulting Turkishness' under Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code.
    The fact that the text of the apology2 didn't employ the term
    `genocide' but opted for `Great Catastrophe' did not stave off
    condemnation. A barrage of criticism and attacks followed almost
    immediately. Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish
    army, many members of the parliament, and practically the entire
    Turkish establishment instigated and encouraged a public outcry
    against the apology. Threats and insults flew from left and right, and
    counter-petitions were launched from Turks demanding the Armenians to
    apologize.
    Yet despite the wave of condemnation, thousands of ordinary Turks from
    all walks of life added their names to the petition. After breaking
    the taboo against talking about the Armenian Genocide, Turkish
    scholars, writers and journalists had made apologizing for the
    Armenian Genocide an issue of public discourse. The petition did not
    simply recognize the suffering of the Armenians; rather, it went
    beyond and offered an apology, which was crucial for the initiators of
    the campaign. `I think two words moved the people: Ozur Dileriz (`We
    apologize'),' said the drafter of the petition, Prof. Baskin Oran when
    I asked him about the wording of the petition. `These are the very two
    words that kept thousands of Turks from signing it. But they were
    imperative. I don't feel responsible for the butchery done by the
    Ittihadists [the Committee of Union and Progress (CUP), the organizers
    of the Genocide] but we had to say these words. There is something
    called a `collective conscience,'' he added.
    Some criticized the text because it avoided using the term `genocide.'
    The former head of the Istanbul branch of the Human Rights
    Association, lawyer Eren Keskin, said, `I do not accept compromise
    when it comes to the use of the term genocide. Even though the word
    genocide was not used in the petition, I signed it, because I believe
    any change in a country or in a system can take place if there is an
    `internal' demand. I believe that the Republic of Turkey is a
    continuation of the Ittihadist tradition - the tradition of the
    perpetrators of the Genocide. The majority of the founding members of
    the Turkish Republic, including the leaders, were members of the CUP.'
    An apology is an obligation, Keskin told me. `Just as the Republic of
    Turkey took over the financial obligations of the Ottomans under the
    Lausanne Treaty, it should take over the obligation to apologize for
    the Genocide. I believe it is first and foremost the obligation of the
    Republic of Turkey to apologize. The individuals
    who internalize the official ideology, who do not question it, who
    ignore the fact that a genocide has been committed and who give their
    approval by remaining silent also owe an apology to Armenians,' she
    said. `I signed the statement because I think this is an initiative
    that will normalize, in the eyes of the Turkish public, the concept of
    and the obligation to apologize to Armenians.'
    Amberin Zaman, Turkey's correspondent for The Economist and a
    columnist for the Turkish newspaper Taraf, said that regardless of the
    criticism about the wording, the petition initiative was a turning
    point. `When we look back at this campaign several years from now, I
    think there can be no doubt that it will be viewed as a turning point
    - not just for Armenian-Turkish reconciliation, but more importantly
    in terms of getting modern Turkey to come to terms with one of the
    darkest chapters of its recent past,' she said. `Whether people agree,
    condemn or quibble with the wording of the text, in the end [the
    petition] has unleashed an unprecedented debate about the fate of the
    Ottoman Armenians. It has also sent a very strong signal that
    rapprochement efforts between our mutual governments [Armenia and
    Turkey] is far surpassed by the very real desire at a societal level
    to heal the wounds and move on,' she added. `The genie is now well and
    truly out of the bottle.'
    Poet Ron Margulies considers the petition a first step. `It does
    something which should have been done decades ago and tells Armenians
    that many Turks share and understand their pain, sorrow and
    grief. This apology and expression of empathy is the first step
    without which nothing else can follow,' he said. `But there is also a
    second reason which, for me, is as important as the first, and it has
    to do with Turkish politics rather than the Armenian issue in
    particular. In recent years, many unmentionables have become
    mentionable and are frequently mentioned in Turkey. These include the
    existence and rights of the Kurds, the issue of the other minorities,
    the role of the armed forces in the political life of the country, the
    competence of the armed forces and of the chiefs of staff, the issue
    of Islam, the right to wear a headscarf in public offices, etc. Once
    out of the bottle, these genies refuse to go back in. And they all
    deal serious blows to Kemalism, to nationalism, to the
    official ideology of the Turkish state. This petition, and the fact
    that 8,000 people signed it within the first day-and-a-half, is
    another such blow. We must continue raining blows on the edifice of
    the Kemalist state,' he added.
    For these reasons, Margulies notes, the wording of the petition was
    not so important to him. `Every text can be improved upon. But that is
    not the point. The petition has already had a phenomenal impact -
    because of its content and its spirit, not because of the specific
    wording,' he explained.
    When I asked why she signed the petition, author and journalist Ece
    Temelkuran spoke about the massacres, but more importantly, about the
    dispossession. `Since writing my book [The Deep Mountain], the
    conflict, which was already profoundly emotional for most of us after
    [Turkish-Armenian journalist] Hrant Dink's death, became a personal
    issue to me. The petition was a way of telling my Armenian friends
    that I share their long lasting pain and that I understand. As far as
    I observed among the Armenians in the Diaspora and in Armenia, the
    deepest and the most vital pain is the homelessness they feel. Besides
    the pain of being massacred, Armenians today, all over the world, feel
    homeless. With the petition, I just wanted to tell the Armenians that
    people still living in Anatolia didn't forget what happened and that
    they still feel the absence of their Armenian brothers and sisters.'
    1http://www.ozurdiliyoruz.com
    2 The apology read: `My conscience does not accept the insensitivity
    showed to and the denial of the Great Catastrophe that the Ottoman
    Armenians were subjected to in 1915. I reject this injustice and for
    my share, I empathize with the feelings and pain of my Armenian
    brothers and sisters. I apologize to them.'
    ------------------------------------------- -------------------------------
    2-Madame Paulette: An Armenian American Success Story
    By Yelena Ambartsumian
    Two Armenian brothers introduced Paris to caviar in the 1920's. In our
    time, Armenians continue to expand the frontiers of
    sophistication. John Mahdessian, President of Madame Paulette,
    inherited a third-generation family business in the 1980's and quickly
    transformed it into the world's leading custom couture cleaner. From
    restoring historic gowns and family heirlooms to interior cleaning of
    private yachts and estates, Madame Paulette is the vanguard of its
    industry in every imaginable service. Remarkably, what drives the most
    trusted man of the world's renowned fashion design houses is not a
    desire for fame or wealth but rather an overwhelming love for his
    family and an intense pride in his Armenian heritage.
    John Mahdessian's great uncle founded Madame Paulette in the 1950's,
    after emigrating from Cyprus and marrying a French woman who later
    lent her name to the budding Upper East Side dry-cleaning
    business. Mahdessian's father, Noubar Mahdessian, soon began working
    for his uncle by day and attending classes at New York University by
    night. `My father's aspirations were in accounting but after his uncle
    got sick, he had to work full time to support the business,'
    Mahdessian explains. `My uncle didn't get any better, and my father
    had to take over the business not by choice but by obligation to the
    family.'
    Noubar Mahdessian had to support not only his uncle's family but also
    his mother, his sister, and his new wife. Of course, this
    responsibility was not without its setbacks. Part of the store was
    destroyed due to a fire, and the insurance only covered half of the
    restoration cost. `Most people would have filed for Chapter 11, but my
    father was committed to keeping the business. He borrowed money and
    paid everyone back in cash and credit over the next five years.'
    >From a young age, John Mahdessian inherited his father's dedication
    to hard work. `I remember as a child my dad used to give me a wire
    hanger and tissue, and for each one that I made he would give me a
    penny. So, I would assemble hundreds of them and get two dollars.' In
    high school, Mahdessian sold items at the flea market. By college, he
    was selling real estate. `It never occurred to me that I was too young
    to do these things. I just knew that I had an amazing family that
    would pick me up anytime I fell down. There wasn't anything that I
    didn't think I could do,' he says.
    While Mahdessian was in college, his mother, Ann Mahdessian, had given
    up her job as a school teacher so that she could help Mahdessian's ill
    father run the family business. After graduating from college,
    Mahdessian had secured a high-paying job in investment banking, but
    before starting his career, he decided to help his father for a
    month. `And it was then that I watched my dad, and I realized that
    even if I made millions of dollars on Wall Street, he wouldn't be
    around to enjoy it.' Mahdessian felt instantly obligated to continue
    the business and gave up his Wall Street ambitions. Within a mere six
    months, he was able to retire his father.
    `Every day, I challenge myself, and it's a different situation,'
    Mahdessian says, `You just have to figure out everything on your
    own. It was a lot of methodical testing and pioneering in this
    industry.' Mahdessian remembers an early project, in which a socialite
    wanted to donate a hundred dresses to a museum. Unfortunately, the
    dresses were damaged in a flood, and the dyes transferred onto each
    other after someone had put the dresses into a garbage bag. `When I
    opened the bag, I couldn't believe it. Colors bled onto each
    other. Mildew started growing. They compounded the problem.' For over
    a year, Mahdessian spent every minute of his free time taking apart
    each garment, testing each fabric with different solutions at varying
    temperatures, and lastly re-stitching each dress by hand. `Out of the
    100 pieces that were lost in history, I brought back 90 of them. And
    that was remarkable,' Mahdessian recounts.
    Today, Madame Paulette is a nationwide brand that represents the very
    best in its industry. Mahdessian explains that Madame Paulette has
    achieved such renown due `its pioneering of new cleaning techniques
    and processes.' With more than 50 billionaires as active clients and
    recognition for its work at the Trump wedding, at VOGUE photo shoots,
    and at the Chanel and AngloMania Exhibits at the Metropolitan Museum
    of Art, Madame Paulette certainly does not have to go after clients
    the way any other business would. Instead, it is widely recognized by
    the best demographic clientele in the world.
    Madame Paulette will once again set a new standard in its industry,
    with Mahdessian's newest venture: the opening of a posh boutique. `I
    took over half the block on 2nd Avenue between 65th and 66th streets,
    in a landmark building where Grace Kelley lived.' The boutique has
    custom furniture, custom chandeliers, and custom fabrics. Not
    surprisingly, its interior designer is Armenian. Taittinger (one of
    Madame Paulette's luxury partners) will be pouring visitors
    champagne. `The dressing rooms will have the ultimate lighting
    features, and we will ask each client what the event is for - day,
    evening, or night - and we'll set the light accordingly,' Mahdessian
    explains. `We also have a black light, so we can inspect the gown on
    the client and see stains not visible to the naked eye.' The boutique
    will have its grand opening in late-February. `It will provide the
    ultimate in service. There probably isn't a nicer boutique, which I
    know of, in Manhattan.'
    Mahdessian attributes his success to his Armenian heritage. His
    grandfather was a survivor of the Armenian genocide. `At the age of 7,
    my grandfather watched his father and his brother get shot and his
    mother and sister become slaves on their own estate.' Mahdessian's
    grandfather was put into an orphanage to be converted to Islam, but
    his mother planned an escape with a distant relative living in the
    United States. `I heard many stories, as a child, from my
    grandfather. He would tell me how he worked from 10 years old on in
    the United States, and when he went to school, he had to wear
    newspapers around his shoes. The kids would make fun of him, because
    he couldn't afford a new pair,' Mahdessian says. `Those are the things
    that I remember, so for me to work 12-15 hours a day, 6 to 7 days a
    week, is nothing compared to what he had to go through.'
    `My family sacrificed everything to get us where we are today, and
    that is something that I never take for granted,' Mahdessian
    explains. `I feel it's my obligation to make sure my parents live
    comfortably, and I feel happy and blessed that I have the ability to
    do so.' Looking toward the future, Mahdessian is not shy about his
    desire to marry an Armenian woman. He feels strongly about passing on
    his success, his abilities, and his heritage. But when it comes to
    looking for his perfect match, Mahdessian jokes, `I just don't have
    enough time, because I'm keeping the world spotless.'
    --------------------------------------- ----------------------------------
    3-Paul Varadian's Unique Dining Experience
    By Tom Vartabedian
    Guess who was invited to dinner in Istanbul by Turkish President
    Abdullah Gul?
    None other than Paul Varadian, a one-time prominent AYFer from
    Providence, who has spent the past 15 years promoting World Olympic
    prosperity in Armenia.
    In his role as Chef de Mission (head of the delegation), Varadian
    organized a winter team for the 1994 Olympic Games in Lillehammer by
    recruiting a couple Providence athletes - Kenny Topalian and Joe
    Almasian - for the bobsled.
    The two aspirants proceeded to put Armenia in an arena of
    respectability that year, marking the first Olympic Games with an
    Armenian flag represented.
    What started out as a brief volunteer stint is now approaching 16
    years for Varadian, whether it's been the summer games or winter. Over
    that time, the memories have been a dime a dozen, including this
    recent dinner engagement with Gul.
    Varadian accompanied Armenian Sport Minister Armen Grigoryan to
    Istanbul, which recently hosted the General Assembly of 49 nations of
    the European Olympic Committee. The two represented Armenia and got to
    discuss matters privately with the Turkish President.
    `We discussed our abilities to overcome past differences through sport
    as highlighted by his visit to Yerevan,' said Varadian. `It was all
    done in an environment of sport. The genocide was not discussed. His
    most important words were that `courage' was necessary to accomplish a
    brighter future for us.'
    Meanwhile, Varadian remains bullish toward the future of Armenian
    Olympics, especially after his team mustered six bronze medals this
    year in China. It marked the biggest output ever for Armenia.
    `Armenia has a strong future in the Games, much of it due to wealthy
    entrepreneur Gagig Tsurakyan, who has personally provided financial
    support for the athletes,' Varadian points out. `I've been to Armenia
    several times since 1993, always to promote sport and assist in any
    way possible.'
    The 55-year-old is no back-seat driver when it comes to motivating
    Armenians and putting them into the limelight. He is General Secretary
    of the Armenia Skating Federation and for many years served on the
    United States Olympic Committee, representing the Bobsled Federation.
    When the Soviet Union became dismantled, Setrak Agonian of New York
    asked Varadian to help the fledgling Armenian National Olympic
    Committee get off the ground.
    `At the time, certain individuals were given Armenian citizenship by
    the government in a deal with the State Department and I was one of
    them,' Varadian said. `I've marched in many opening ceremonies and
    lived in the Olympic Villages, meeting so many great athletes I cannot
    count.'
    Varadian has the blessings of his wife, the former Vartus
    Artinian. The two have been wed 31 years and now live in Newton,
    Mass. with two daughters, Sonig, 23, and Nevart, 17.
    He's competed nationally in archery, rowing, track and field - and
    internationally for the USA in skeleton, including the World
    Championships.
    For the past three decades, Varadian has remained the consummate
    sports entrepreneur, developing the world's largest social network for
    athletes (www.iamsport.org).
    In his travels, he's been to 65 countries and made more than 200 trips
    to Europe. Varadian has been head New England judge for Ferrari events
    and served on the organizing committees for many major sporting
    events, including USA Track and Field Championships.
    During those venerable Providence days when he was a superb AYF
    athlete, Varadian would pile up 104 points for his chapter. His late
    father Haig was Olympic King in 1969, along with all four of his
    uncles. His mom Anahid remains a community activist in Providence,
    including ARS Woman of the Year. A sister Christine still holds the
    AYF long jump record.
    `Everything I've ever accomplished in life and sports is due to my
    parents and my extended Varadian family,' he maintains. `At my age, no
    matter where I go, I'm still proud to be referred to only as Haig's
    son. My father, with the support of my mother, has had such an impact
    on sports most people cannot appreciate.'
    Last year every New England high school championship in every sport
    was named after Haig Varadian.
    As many times as Paul Varadian has mulled retirement, he's returned to
    the forefront - a life that's more passion than duty. Creating an
    international stand for Armenia is his biggest attribute. However, an
    illness to his wife has curtailed much activity.
    `Vartus has patiently allowed me to carry out a life that many can
    only dream of,' Varadian admitted.
    The die has been cast in what could be a bonanza for future Armenian
    athletes. But not without certain enhancements.
    `We need to branch out beyond the strength and combat sports and
    include more women,' he confirms. `For the winter, it's more of a
    challenge. But with the improvements in Tsakasor winter sports
    complex, there is some hope. The recent re-opening of the Yerevan
    Sports Complex (Hamalir) offers us an Olympic ice surface for our
    skaters and hockey teams. I'm very optimistic for the year 2014 in
    Sochi.'
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