Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Kasbarian, Najarian Take Issue With The Ny Times' Travel Article On

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

  • Kasbarian, Najarian Take Issue With The Ny Times' Travel Article On

    KASBARIAN, NAJARIAN TAKE ISSUE WITH THE NY TIMES' TRAVEL ARTICLE ON KARABAKH

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2012-10-08-kasbarian-najarian-take-issue-with-the-ny-times--travel-article-on-karabakh-
    Published: Monday October 08, 2012

    Editor's note: The following letter was submitted to the New York
    Times and shared with the Armenian Reporter

    To the Editors:

    It was disappointing to see an article about the rarely written-about
    Nagorno Karabakh Republic (NKR, or Artsakh, its ancient Armenian
    name), miss its mark ("Off the Map in the Black Garden," Sept. 21;
    http://travel.nytimes.com/2012/09/23/travel/off-the-map-in-nagorno-karabakh-
    a-region-in-the-southern-caucasus.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0).

    Writer Russ Juskalian's curiosity about his ancestry prompted his
    visit to this historically Armenian territory, and yet his reporting
    demonstrates a failure to grasp certain fundamental facts.

    Armenian Karabakh was given to Azerbaijan in 1923 by Josef Stalin
    to placate Turkey -- kin to Turkic Azerbaijan. A natural desire
    by Karabagh Armenians to be reunited with Armenia, driven by the
    1988 Azeri pogroms of Armenians in Sumgait, propelled the Armenian
    self-defense movement that culminated in the Karabakh War (1988-1994).

    Juskalian's article improperly states that the War originated because
    of pogroms on both sides and falsely claims that genocided Armenians
    genocided civilians beyond the battleground. He thus perpetuates
    falsehoods and trivializes a victorious struggle against oppression,
    especially when his article appears on the Armenian independence
    anniversary and following a deplorable Azeri act.

    In a move that shocked the world conscience, on August 31, Azerbaijan
    pardoned, promoted and celebrated a convicted and extradited Azeri
    lieutenant who savagely hacked to death a sleeping Armenian lieutenant
    attending a NATO "Partnership for Peace" program in Hungary.

    One must wonder why NATO and the "great policeman of the world"
    have done nothing about it. On September 25, Azeri snipers killed a
    19-year old Armenian soldier, the latest in countless Azeri killings
    across the line of contact. Why mislead readers about politics on
    the ground by publishing an NKR travel article when even NATO will
    not enter the region to control naked Azeri aggression, which is a
    routine occurrence?

    Sincerely, Lucine Kasbarian Teaneck, NJ Editor's note: The following
    letter previously appeared in the Armenian Mirror Spectator Juskalian's
    'Mixed Emotions' in Times' Piece on Karabagh Are Baffling By
    Dr. Carolann Najarian Russ Juskalian, in his article, "Off the Map in
    the Black Garden" (New York Times Travel Section, September 21, 2012)
    describes having "mixed emotions" during his visit to Nagorno-Karabagh,
    (the Black Garden or Artsakh) he recently visited. He writes about dual
    feelings of sadness for the Azeris forced to leave Nagorno-Karabagh
    and who cannot return because of ethnic conflict, and those he feels
    for his grandparents, survivors of the Armenian Genocide of 1915 who
    could not return to their homes in Turkey.

    Perhaps I, too, the child of Armenian Genocide survivors, would have
    had the same conflicting emotions had I, as a physician, not spent
    years (rather than the two days he did) bringing medical relief to the
    people of Nagorno-Karabagh, during and after their war of liberation.

    Referring to Armenians and Azeris, Juskalian writes, "... both ethnic
    groups were subjected to pogroms" - a statement which grossly misleads
    the reader. Even a superficial review of that history will clarify
    important facts about how the conflict started. The pogroms were
    against the Armenians living in Azerbaijan and started long before
    there was any armed conflict.

    Briefly, in February 1988, in the port city of Sumgait, Azeri gangs,
    with government issued lists of Armenian residences, went on a
    murdering rampage, house by house. The killing continued for three
    days before the Azeri government took action to stop it.

    Next, the Armenians of Baku were targeted (January 1990), brutally
    beaten and many murdered either in their homes or as they fled. All
    this was in response to peaceful demonstrations and lawfully-submitted
    petitions for self-determination by the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabagh
    to Moscow for either return of Nagorno-Karabagh to Armenia, or for
    the right to self-determination. In other words, the Armenians of
    Nagorno-Karabagh wanted to take advantage of Glastnost, promised
    by Mikhail Gorbachev, and to be free of the Azeri domination which
    Stalin had placed on them. (The history of that period - the human
    rights violations, the pogroms against the Armenians, the brutal
    crack down in Nagorno-Karabagh, the blockade of the area, and the
    war that followed are well documented and easily accessed online.)
    Fast forward to 2004, to a NATO-sponsored English language course in
    Budapest where an Armenian military officer attending the course was
    murdered by an Azeri military officer - a fellow attendee. The Azeri
    admitted to the brutal murder, butchering the sleeping Armenian with
    an ax with more than 16 blows nearly severing his head. The court
    found no other reason for the horrendous act other than the soldier
    was Armenian. Sentenced to life in prison, the murderer was recently
    extradited back to Azerbaijan by the Hungarian government, assured by
    Azerbaijan that he would serve his full sentence. Instead, President
    Ilham Aliyev not only immediately pardoned the murderer, but he was
    hailed as a national hero and promoted to a higher military rank.

    (See Amnesty International's statement
    http://www.amnesty.org/en/library/asset/EUR55/015/2012/en/8e84f955-9f8f-488cad34-c68a744b6878/eur550152012en.html)
    Mixed emotions? Yes, I too, have mixed emotions based on the fears I
    have. I fear that the fragile 1994 cease-fire between Azerbaijan and
    Nagorno-Karabagh will not hold and that the foreign powers charged
    with monitoring and negotiating full peace will fail. The consequences
    will be sad indeed for the Armenians of the regions, albeit Azeris too,
    will pay a high price in blood and treasure.

    Articles such as Juskalian's about Nagorno-Karabagh written in
    ignorance and with self-serving flagellation do a great disservice
    to these brave Armenians without advancing the cause of peace. It
    would have been better if Juskalian had stayed home.

    Carolann S. Najarian, M.D.

    President, Armenian Health Alliance, Inc.

Working...
X