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California Courier Online, May 31, 2012

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  • California Courier Online, May 31, 2012

    The California Courier Online, May 31, 2012

    Commentary
    1 - Armenians Should Form a United Front
    BeforeAny Negotiations With Turkey
    ByHarut Sassounian
    Publisher, the California Courier
    2 - BakuHails NATO Statement Denounced By Yerevan
    3- USC Friends of Armenian Music
    Present`All-Star Concert,' June 24
    4- GenEdMarks Genocide Anniversary by
    ProvidingInformation to USTeachers
    5- 41st Annual Armenian Games
    To beHeld June 15-17 in Fresno
    6- Keyan School Marks Saroyan's 104th
    Birthdaywith Viewing of Kalinian's Film

    ************************************************** *********************
    1 - ArmeniansShould Form a United Front
    BeforeAny Negotiations With Turkey

    By Harut Sassounian
    Publisher, The CaliforniaCourier

    My latest column on Turkish Foreign Minister AhmetDavutoglu's efforts
    to initiate a dialog with the Diaspora generated numerousreactions
    from
    both Armenians and Turks.
    Turkish newspapers, TV stations, and websites gave extensivecoverage
    to Davutoglu's reported overtures to Armenians. The Turkish
    medialinked the Foreign Minister's initiative to Armenian plans for
    thecommemoration of the 100th anniversary of the Genocide in 2015.
    Armenians posted dozens of comments on websites and facebookin
    response to
    my column which was circulated worldwide in English, Armenian,Turkish,
    French, and Russian. The Armenian reaction was understandablyskeptical
    and cautious. Armenian government officials quietly followed
    thereports on Davutoglu's meetings without making any public comment,
    while theArmenian press in Istanbulsimply reprinted what the Turkish
    media had published on this topic.
    Armenian readers raised two key issues: Who would representthe
    Diaspora if
    and when Armenians start negotiating with Turkey, and what should be
    thespecific Armenian demands from the Turkish government?
    These are highly complex issues deserving seriousconsideration by
    Armenians worldwide. Ideally, Diaspora representatives shouldbe
    selected through elections in various countries, as proposed in my
    earliercolumns. Those elected would have the right to represent
    Diaspora Armenians inany negotiations.
    These representatives would have to coordinate theirdecisions and
    actions with the Armenian government, particularly on thecritical
    issue of negotiating with Turkey, by forming a jointdelegation. As
    Armenians learned from the recent fiasco of the
    Armenia-TurkeyProtocols, it would be unthinkable to reach a settlement
    with Turkey without the participation and agreementof both Armeniaand
    the Diaspora.
    In the absence of an elected Diasporan structure,representatives of
    the three main Armenian political parties, jointly with theArmenian
    government, could take the lead in forming a single negotiating
    team.To make the delegation more inclusive, several major community
    organizationsand prominent individuals could be asked to join,
    including representatives ofArmenians in Turkey.
    Another critical issue is framing the agenda of negotiationswith
    Turkish officials. What are the Armenians' concrete demands from
    Turkey?This
    is an extremely serious and sensitive matter that requires in
    depthknowledge of the Armenian Cause and expertise in negotiating
    strategies andtactics.
    It would be instructive for Armenians to review how Israeland 23 major
    Jewish organizations came together as the
    Conference on Jewish Material Claims Against Germany, toobtain
    restitution
    for Holocaust victims; and how these organizationscoordinated their
    positions with the State of Israel which signed a separateReparations
    Agreement with West Germany? Over the years, as a result of
    theircollaborative efforts, the coalition of Jewish Diaspora
    organizations and Israel received more than $70 billion dollars
    inrestitution from Germany.
    Additional lessons could be learned from examples offinancial
    settlements resulting from mass torts, asbestos exposure and
    productliability, and claims arising from destruction of the World
    Trade Center and the Gulf oilspill.
    There is, however, a significant difference between theHolocaust and
    the Armenian Genocide. While the Jewish people were exterminatedin
    European countries under Nazi rule, Armenians were massacred and
    forcefullydriven from their ancestral homeland. Therefore, no amount
    of monetary paymentwill fully
    compensate Armenians for the loss of their historic
    lands. Armeniansshould
    seek not only compensation for their personal losses, but also
    thereturn of Western Armenia as arbitrated by Pres. Woodrow Wilson --
    a claim Turkeyhas repeatedly rejected.
    Should serious negotiations materialize, the joint Armeniandelegation
    could ask Turkeyto take the following preliminary actions to show its
    good faith:
    -- Compensate all Genocide victims;
    -- Rebuild and return all religious sites to the ArmenianPatriarchate
    of Istanbul;
    -- Return all confiscated private and community propertiesto their
    Armenian owners;
    -- Provide the Republicof Armenia with special access to theTurkish
    port of Trabzon for commercial purposes;
    -- Give Armenians visa-free entry to Ararat, Ani, and otherArmenian
    historical sites in Turkey;
    -- Lift the blockade of Armenia;
    -- End Turkey'sofficial policy of denial of the Armenian Genocide and
    annul Article 301 of theTurkish Penal Code;
    -- Refrain from all hostile policies directed against Armeniaand
    Artsakh (Karabagh).
    These measures, if agreed upon, would represent significantprogress in
    the
    pursuit of Armenian claims from Turkey, whereas the issue
    ofterritorial restitution could be addressed separately through
    internationallegal action.

    ************************************************** *********************
    2 - Baku Hails NATO Statement Denounced by Yerevan

    BAKU (Azatutyun.am) - Azerbaijan on Tuesday welcomed a
    declarationadopted at the NATO summit in Chicago, sayingthat it
    endorsed Baku'sposition on the unresolved Nagorno-Karabagh conflict.
    Elman Abdullayev, a spokesman for the Azerbaijani Foreign Minister,
    pointed tothe declaration's support for the territorial integrity of
    Azerbaijan and otherformer Soviet republics locked in territorial and
    ethnic disputes.
    `The fact that the statement was signed by major international
    playerstestifies to serious [NATO] support for Azerbaijan's just cause
    in theNagorno-Karabakh conflict,' the Trend news agency quoted
    Abdullayev as saying.
    The NATO document made no mention of people's self-determination with
    regard tothe Armenian-Azerbaijani dispute, a fact denounced by
    Armenia.
    Official Yerevan says this is the reason why PresidentSerzh Sarkisian
    did not take part in the weekend summit unlike his
    Azerbaijanicounterpart Ilham
    Aliyev.
    Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian, who represented Armeniaat the
    summit, argued in Chicago that theexisting international peace
    proposals on Karabagh, jointly drafted by the United States, Franceand
    Russia,are based on both
    internationally recognized principles.
    The Azerbaijani Foreign Ministry reaction came the day after a senior
    aide
    toAliyev accused NATO and other international structures of not doing
    enough toaccelerate a Karabagh settlement. The official, Ali Hasanov,
    claimed that they`lack the will to intervene' in the conflict in a way
    desired by Baku, according toAzerbaijani news agencies.

    ************************************************** ****************************
    3 - USCFriends of Armenian Music
    Present`All-Star Concert,' June 24

    LOS ANGELES - The Board of Directors of the USC Friends ofArmenian
    Music announced that plans are underway for an `All Star Concert' to
    be held on June 24, at 3:00 p.m. at theZipper Concert Hall of the
    Colburn School, 200 South Grand Avenue, Los Angeles.
    The concert will feature the Armenian professional artistswho are
    graduates of the USC Thornton School of Music and were recipients of
    USCFriends Scholarship awards.
    Many of the performers are well known to the Armeniancommunity and
    include
    Irene Arutyunyan, Garineh Avakian, SamvelChilingarian, Angela
    Cholakian,
    SarkisKazarian, Salpi Kerkonian, VatcheMankerian, Marina Manukian,
    Lucy Nargizian, Peppron Pilibossian, Marina Ter Kazaryan and Garik
    Terzian.
    `We are pleased to share our pride in their successfulcareers,' stated
    USC FAM President Lily Balian, `and to provide the Armenian community,
    as well as theAmerican community, an opportunity to witness first hand
    the outstandingresults of our scholarship recipients.'
    Irene Arathoon, member of the Board of Directors, has beenworking
    closely with the artists to prepare the repertoire for the
    vocalists,instrumentalists, and trio ensemble for the upcoming
    performance.
    The USC Friends of Armenian Music Endowed Scholarship Fundwas
    established in 1984 and through the years has been augmented with
    theDaughters of Vartan Scholarship Endowment (1986); Helen Mardigian
    ScholarshipAward Endowment (1992); Audrey Babakhanian Gregor
    Scholarship Award Endowment(1998); Anne Mills Scholarship Award
    Endowment (2005); Seda MarootianScholarship Award Endowment (2007) and
    Rose Ketchoyan Scholarship AwardEndowment (2007). The organization
    continuesto raise funds to help promising Armenian students studying
    at the USC ThorntonSchool of Music to further their education and
    careers.
    In 2012, approximately $15,000 from the endowment funds wereawarded to
    ten
    USC Thornton School of Music students. Through the years over
    50students have benefited from the endowment funds.
    Tickets for the concert are $50, $35, and $15. Sponsorships for the
    concert are alsoavailable. For tickets and furtherinformation, please
    contact Hilda (818) 249-3330; Rose (818) 788-5138 orDalita (626)
    282-5295.

    ************************************************** ***************************
    4 - GenEd Marks Genocide Anniversary by
    ProvidingInformation to USTeachers

    SAN FRANCISCO- Marking the 97th anniversary of the Armenian Genocide,
    The Genocide EducationProject (GenEd) reached out to teachers and
    community members, reminding themof the importance of expanding
    instruction about the first genocide of the 20thcentury into more
    school classrooms.
    GenEd's commemorative initiatives culminated in hostingthe April 30
    presentation by Prof. UÄ=9Fur Ã=9Cngör on Turkey's seizure of
    Armenianproperty during and after the Armenian Genocide (see below for
    online link tovideo.)
    GenEd contacted thousands of teachers, offering lessonplans and a
    variety of teaching resources, noting the opportunity to tie
    thecoursework to the anniversary of the beginning of the Genocide.
    Shant Hogopian, representing GenEd, spoke to students atUC Riverside,
    and GenEd Southern California Regional Director, SuzanneDouzmanian,
    spoke to members of the Pasadena Armenia Relief Society and membersof
    the Knights of Vartan, about the scope of GenEd's work, making
    ArmenianGenocide education part of school curriculums.
    GenEd Executive Director, Raffi Momjian, was keynotespeaker at the Bay
    Area Armenian Genocide Commemoration at Mt. Davidson Crossin San
    Francisco.
    `By bringing the lessons of the Armenian Genocide into
    America'sclassrooms, we feel we commemorate the Armenian Genocide in a
    practical andlasting way every day of the year,' said Momjian. `With
    every high schoolteacher that teaches the Armenian Genocide, we reach
    at least 100 students eachyear. We work towards the day when
    everystudent in the country will graduate from high school with an
    understanding ofthe Armenian Genocide and the pattern of genocides
    that followed.'
    Quoting former United States president JamesGarfield, Momjian said,
    =80=9CNext in importance to freedom and justice is populareducation,
    without which neither freedom nor justice can be maintained.'
    GenEd hosted a presentation in San Francisco by Prof. UÄ=9Fur
    Ã=9Cngör about theTurkish government's confiscation of properties
    during and after the ArmenianGenocide.
    Ã=9Cngör's lecture was based on his two recent books,"The Making of
    Modern Turkey", which addresses how Western Armeniabecame part of the
    Turkish state, and "Confiscation and Destruction",about
    Turkey'sseizure of Armenian Property.
    Based on a decade of research on a range of unexaminedrecords,
    Ã=9Cngör argued that the Armenian Genocide was not one process
    ofdeportations and massacres, but that it encompassed a range of at
    least eightdestruction
    policies. He offered insights into the economic ramifications ofthe
    genocide and how the plunder was organized and carried out. He also
    showedhow this systematic destruction of the Armenian nation on its
    historic homelandalso paved the way for the modern Turkish nation
    state.
    Ã=9Cngör described how the Turkish government carried outvery
    elaborate and labor intensive methods to confiscate Armenian
    propertiesand businesses, enriching members of the Turkish government
    and military elite.He said properties were also given to Muslim
    refugees brought to resettleArmenian lands. The properties also served
    to finance the government's needs,including the costs of the
    deportations of Armenians during the Genocide.
    Ã=9Cngör spoke about particular families, like thePirincczade family
    of Diyarbekir, who benefited enormously from confiscationsof Armenian
    properties, especially those of previously Armenian-ownedsuccessful
    copper factories. He pointedout how the list of the members of the
    Diyarbekir chamber of commerce in 1935there was a `completoverlap with
    genocide perpetrators.' He said, `So, thisreally is the Turkish
    national
    economy in a way. This was the project thatTalaat Pasha had in mind,
    and he succeeded.'
    Prof. Ã=9Cngör is assistant professor of history at Utrecht
    Universityin the Netherlands.He is also a researcher at the
    university's Center for Holocaust and GenocideStudies and is a regular
    contributor to the
    Armenian Weekly newspaper. Ã=9Cngör received his PhD in Holocaust
    andGenocide Studies in 2009 from the University of Amsterdam. He is
    of Turkish descent, born in Turkey and raised in Europe.
    The entire presentation with slides can be viewed at:www.facebook.com/genedpro

    ************************************************** *************************
    5 - 41stAnnual Armenian Games
    To beHeld June 15-17 in Fresno

    FRESNO, CA - Armenian athletes of all ages aregetting ready to
    participate
    in the 41st Annual Armenian SummerGames. The 2012 Games will include
    basketball and volleyball, exhibitionsoftball, tennis and track &
    field. All events will be held the weekend of June 15-17 at Clovis
    NorthHigh School in Fresno, CA. Registration and details areavailable
    on the website: armeniansummergames.com.
    `Planning is well underway for another great year ofcompetition'
    proclaims Van Der Mugrdechian, President of the Western
    ArmenianAthletic Association, `many people who participated as
    youngsters are nowcoming back along with their kids to compete and
    enjoy the fellowship.'
    One of these former participants is Lance Hairabedian, whosefather,
    the late Dr. Ara Hairabedian, was a participant and
    enthusiasticsupporter of what
    started out as the Armenian Olympics in Hayward, CA. Lance explains
    that "the Armenian SummerGames provided me with an opportunity to
    compete in track and field at youngage. It combined a healthy
    competition against other Armenian athletes andfellowship that has
    lasted a lifetime."
    Since its formation in 1969, the Armenian Summer Games hasestablished
    a fun-filled tradition of providing athletic competition forArmenian
    athletes young and old. It isopen to individuals who have at least
    one parent who is
    of Armenian descent orwhose spouse is Armenian. Teams can represent
    any Armenian organization.
    As part of their registration fee all athletes will receiveand
    official Armenian Summer Games t-shirt and a delicious meal at the
    SummerGames picnic.
    First through third place finishers will receive a uniqueArmenian
    Summer Games medallion. Family and friends are welcome to attend
    thecompetition at no charge and can purchase picnic tickets on site.
    The Armenian Summer Games continues to provide a uniqueopportunity to
    see talented Armenian athletes ranging from young children toenergetic
    seniors.
    As Rena Rutledge, who has been bringing her three childrento the games
    explains, `It strengthened interestin our Armenian culture & faith,
    created bonds of friendships that can lasta lifetime, created a true
    sense of
    pride of our heritage and left us with agreater attachment to our
    Armenian
    Community, and just plain ol' fun!
    The Armenian Summer Games are a great union of sports andthe Armenian
    spirit. Contact them at [email protected]

    ************************************************** *************************
    6 - KeyanSchool Marks Saroyan's 104th
    Birthdaywith Viewing of Kalinian's Film

    CLOVIS/FRESNO---The Charlie Keyan Armenian Community School celebrated
    the
    104thbirthday of acclaimed writer and native son of Fresno William
    Saroyan
    with aviewing of the award winning documentary Saroyan,the Man, the
    Writer. CKACS students and families welcomed the film'swriter/director
    Paul Kalinian and his daughter and producer Dr. SusieKalinian.
    As described in his essay How I Shot Saroyan, photographer Paul
    Kalinian remembered how in1976 he first met Saroyan at the studio of
    the Varaz Samuelian, the notedsculptor of Fresno'sDavid of Sassoon
    statue. Saroyan
    atfirst refused to be photographed, telling Kalinian to `get lost.'
    In the end, the photographer's persistencewon out. Kalinian gained
    Saroyan's trustand, with his camera, captured the essence of the 67
    year old author in aseries of portraits. In 1991, one of
    thephotographs from this collection was adapted into commemorative
    stamps in boththe United States and Soviet Union.
    The evening program included a translated recitation inArmenian of
    Saroyan's short story TheArmenian and the Armenian by CKACS 5th and
    6thgraders. Younger students also readtheir own stories about Saroyan
    and their
    aspirations of becoming writers.
    Winner of the 1995 Gold Award, Saroyan, the Man,The Writer is an
    excellent
    biographical accountfor both Saroyan aficionados and those unfamiliar
    with
    the life of the author,playwright, and humanitarian. Increating the
    film,
    the Kalinians gathered numerous photos and memorabilia ofhistorical
    Fresnoand Saroyan's career. These still imagesare complimented by
    home movies clips from his family life and travels to Armeniaas well
    as by Susie Kalinian's touching recreations of Saroyan'schildhood.
    Actor Mike Connor narratesthe documentary, although a good portion of
    the film's audio is Saroyanhimself-speaking in both English and
    Armenian in recorded interviews.
    Following the film, the Kalinians entertained questionsfrom the
    students and parents and presented the school with one of the
    originalSaroyan portraits from the 1976 album. .


    ************************************************** ****************
    The California Courier Online provides viewers of the GroongNews
    Service with a few of the articles on that week's issue of The
    CaliforniaCourier. Letters to the editor areencouraged. However,
    authors are requested to provide their names, addresses,and/or
    telephone numbers to verify identity, if any question
    arises. CaliforniaCourier subscribers are requested not to use this
    service to change, or modifymailing addresses. Those changes can be
    made through our e-mail, [email protected], by phone,
    (818)409-0949. Thank you.
    ************************************************** ****************

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