Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Samvel Karapetyan Answers Reader Questions

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Samvel Karapetyan Answers Reader Questions

    SAMVEL KARAPETYAN ANSWERS READER QUESTIONS
    Sona Avagyan

    http://hetq.am/en/society/samvel-karapety an-3/
    2009/10/12 | 18:02

    This year the RoA Prime Minister visited your office, an individual
    who is at least cognizant of the issues you have raised regarding the
    flawed renovation of monuments and the lack of attention paid to their
    overall plight, etc. Did your meeting have any positive results? Did
    you come to any understanding of what needs to be done? Can you call
    him up when necessary and say that this needs to be done or that
    certain changes need to be made?

    I must confess that the Prime Minister's visit on January 30 was
    a very much welcomed and encouraging sign for all of us. But many
    months have since passed.

    The Prime Minister promised to finance our activities and especially
    the issue of where to house our operations. This issue of finding a
    suitable space for the organization is a pressing one indeed. We have
    been situated in our present location as of 2000. We took advantage of
    the generous gift made by the late Levon Hakhverdyan, Director of the
    Art Institute at the time, to take up residence in the Institute's
    hall and two rooms. We will soon mark our tenth year here but the
    Institute is sorely in need of the space we now occupy. Right now,
    however, we have no other alternative.

    Recently, I was a guest on Shant T.V. and took advantage of the
    opportunity to present our plight to the public. I received many
    phone calls soon afterwards. The principal of a school called and
    offered us space in his school building.

    Of course, I wish to thank all those who made such similar generous
    offers of assistance. The fact remains that we have a very large
    archive of materials and if we were to relocate it would have to be
    to a permanent site. Otherwise it wouldn't make sense to move the
    entire archive to some school room for just a few months.

    It would just take a month to sort everything out again and get the
    system and computers back up and running properly.

    We pointed this out to the PM when he visited. A reporter asked the
    PM whether the government would also take care of providing is with
    a new, permanent space. He replied that, "We will take care of all
    the organization's problems."

    Sadly, months have passed since those pledges were made. This year
    was the first since 2004 that we weren't able to travel to western
    Armenia. It wasn't merely due to a lack of funds that we couldn't go,
    but because we faced big problems with maintain the archival library.

    I should note that Minister of Culture Hasmik Poghosyan visited us just
    two weeks after the PM on his directive. I laid out the situation we
    faced in detail and the minister seemed impressed with the work we
    were doing.

    By the end of March, I was forced to follow-up these visits with
    phone calls and letters since I hadn't heard back from any government
    agencies. This inaction was puzzling since at the time the Prime
    Minister had made several T.V. appearances during which he praised
    the importance of the work our organization was carrying out. I even
    remember his exact words which were, "I am amazed and moved by the
    work conducted by these sons and daughter of our nation." Important
    praise indeed coming from the PM.

    To my surprise, when I wrote to the PM, I received a response from
    his chief of staff the same day saying that they were working on the
    matter. Later that week, the same official phoned and told me that
    our letter had been passed on to the Ministry of Finance by the PM
    himself. Subsequently, I received a call from the Minister of Culture
    who told me that they had just received a notice from the Ministry
    of Finance stating that there were no more reserve funds available
    for projects not included in the budget.

    All I can say in response is that we knew that the economy would
    take an 18% dip this year. But we are talking about a mere trickle of
    funds to keep this organization on its feet. It is my firm belief that
    the problem, at least in our case, wasn't economic. In other words,
    the crisis we face is one of national consciousness, not economic.

    I can't come to terms with all this. How long can we expect to ensure
    our existence, given the national challenges we face and surrounded
    by super-nationalist states as we are, by our present passive and
    denationalized policies? This is what I don't understand. Is it that
    our authorities cannot comprehend this basic issue?

    I asked one very pointed question to the Minister of Culture when she
    visited us - "Assume for a moment that I am your Turkish counterpart,
    the Minister of Culture, and I ask you what proofs do you have when
    you speak about western Armenia or that a genocide of Armenian culture
    took place. How can you talk of such things when we have renovated
    Aghtamar and plan to so the same with Ani?" What would be the response
    of Armenia's Minister of Culture to all this?

    In other words, shouldn't we have details of the present condition of
    each and every Armenian monument that still stands? Shouldn't we have
    photographic proof to compare the present with what was captured on
    camera, even it is was one photo taken back at the beginning of the
    20th century or the end of the 19th century? Shouldn't we have all
    this information at our fingertips? The Minister replied that "Of
    course you are doing important work that is vital to our nation". It
    seems we've never been at a loss for words to praise such work but
    taking concrete action is another matter.

    To be continued
Working...
X