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  • Armenian Organization Updates

    Please post updates and press releases from the various organizations that advocate for Armenian issues to this thread...

  • #2
    ASSEMBLY THIS WEEK Monday, September 19, 2005

    ASSEMBLY THIS WEEK Monday, September 19, 2005

    PAN-ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTION PASSES HOUSE IR COMMITTEE BY WIDE
    MARGIN
    The influential House International Relations Committee last week voted
    40 to 7 to approve the pan-Armenian Genocide resolution, thereby
    clearing an important legislative hurdle.

    H. Res. 316, which is currently backed by 140 Members, won passage
    thanks in part to Committee Chairman Rep. Henry Hyde (R-IL), and the
    bill's principal sponsors Reps. George Radanovich (R-CA), Adam Schiff
    (D-CA) and Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank
    Pallone, Jr. (D-NJ).

    "The argument has been made that these resolutions, if adopted, will be
    harmful to [the] interests [of the U.S.] by undermining our relationship
    with Turkey, which all acknowledge to be one of our key allies....Denial
    of [the Armenian Genocide] cannot be justified on the basis of
    expediency or fear that speaking the truth will do us harm," Hyde said.

    The Committee also voted 35 to 11 to approve an alternative measure,
    sponsored by Schiff, that would reaffirm the Armenian Genocide.

    "The Assembly extends its appreciation to Chairman Hyde and members of
    the Committee for properly recognizing the first genocide of the
    twentieth century and affirming the U.S. record," Assembly Board of
    Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian said following the vote. "This
    recognition, which is especially poignant during this 90th commemorative
    year, will go a long way in preventing future tragedies and give meaning
    to the phrase 'Never Again.' "

    "We also thank the original sponsors of H. Res. 316 who worked long and
    hard in helping secure today's victory," Hovnanian added.

    H. Res. 316 calls upon the President of the United States to ensure that
    the foreign policy of the United States reflects appropriate
    understanding and sensitivity concerning issues related to human rights,
    ethnic cleansing and genocide documented in the United States record
    relating to the Armenian Genocide. Also, it acknowledges the proud
    history of the U.S. intervention in opposition to the Armenian Genocide.


    The legislation is similar to the version that nearly passed the House
    of Representatives in 2000. The previous resolution, which had the
    support of 143 cosponsors, passed the House International Relations
    Committee by a vote of 24 to 11. It was later scheduled for a vote on
    the House floor, but withdrawn at the last minute due to an intervention
    by President Clinton to Speaker Dennis Hastert (R-IL) which prevented
    the final affirmative vote.

    Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian praised the Assembly's
    network of grassroots activists and the community at large for reaching
    out to lawmakers and helping secure bi-partisan support for H. Res. 316.

    "Armenian-Americans celebrate this victory, not only for our public
    advocacy efforts, but for those who dare to speak the truth," said
    Barsamian. "Today's success demonstrates that engaging our grassroots in
    the democratic process prevails over the millions spent by Turkey's
    hired lobbyists to influence decision makers. It is our hope that
    Speaker Hastert will now follow the example of President Reagan, and
    more recently, U.S. Ambassador to Armenia John Evans, and formally and
    irrevocably reaffirm the Armenian Genocide."

    The next step in the legislative process is to work with the sponsors to
    secure passage in the full House.

    ASSEMBLY MONITORING EUROPEAN HUMAN RIGHTS CASE AGAINST TURKEY
    The European Court of Human Rights is expected to announce a decision
    this week on the property rights of minority foundations. Specifically,
    the Court will adjudicate two cases filed by the Soorp Purgich Armenian
    Hospital Foundation and the Fener Greek Boys High School Foundation
    against Turkey.

    In both cases, properties gifted to the Foundations were seized on the
    basis that the bequests violated a decree disallowing non-Moslems from
    donating real estate. If the court rules in favor of the Foundations,
    hundreds of buildings seized by the Turkish government may be returned.

    Earlier this year Board of Directors Member Van Krikorian testified
    before the Helsinki Commission on freedom of religion in Turkey,
    pointing out that seizure and destruction of Armenian Church property
    has been common for centuries. "Armenians paid and in many places still
    pay a high price for their Christianity," he said. Krikorian also
    pointed to the Soorp Purgich Armenian Hospital as an example of how the
    Treaty of Lausanne and other international standards for protecting
    religious rights are not being upheld, and urged the Helsinki Commission
    to play a critical leadership role in addressing these issues.

    Corrections: The documentary "Armenian Genocide: 90 Years Later" has
    been nominated for a regional (not national) Emmy award by the Upper
    Midwest Chapter of the National Television Academy. Winners will be
    announced Oct. 22. * Fellow Trustees Steven Kradjian and Gary Takessian
    participated in the Assembly-led meeting with Congresswoman Susan Davis
    (D-CA) on September 10.


    Calendar of Events
    10/19-11/1: Annual Mission to Armenia & NKR
    10/22: International Banquet; Yerevan, Armenia
    11/13: Capital Regional Holiday Reception; DC
    3/26 - 3/28: 2006 National Conference & Banquet; DC

    ************************************************** ***************
    A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
    1140 19th Street, N.W., Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20036 (202) 393-3434
    FAX (202) 638-4904
    E-Mail: [email protected] WEB http://www.armenianassembly.org
    ************************************************** ***************

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/ RADIO LIBERTY

    U.S. HOUSE COMMITTEE PASSES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE RESOLUTIONS
    By Emil Danielyan
    Sept. 16, 2005

    A key committee of the U.S. Congress on Thursday overwhelmingly approved
    two resolutions recognizing the mass killings of Armenians in Ottoman
    Turkey as genocide and urging President George W. Bush to do the same.

    Ignoring White House objections, the International Relations Committee
    of the House of Representatives voted 40-7 and 35-11 in favor of the
    bills after months of intense lobbying by Armenian-American advocacy
    groups. The panel had endorsed a similar pro-Armenian resolution five
    years ago before its passage by the full House was blocked by its
    Speaker Dennis Hastert and then U.S. President Bill Clinton.

    "This is an important, resounding vote acknowledging the historical
    truth and squarely combating Turkey's denial of the Armenian genocide,"
    Bryan Ardouny, the executive director of the Armenian Assembly of
    America, told RFE/RL. "We hope that it will encourage Turkey to come to
    terms with its past."

    "The fight is not over as there are still steps along the way. We will
    continue to work with our friends in Congress to have this resolution
    approved by the full House," Ardouny said.

    One of the bills known as House Resolution 316 was introduced in June
    and has since been co-sponsored by 140 legislators. It calls on Bush to
    "accurately characterize the systematic and deliberate annihilation of
    1,500,000 Armenians as genocide and to recall the proud history of
    United States intervention in opposition to the Armenian Genocide."

    The other legislation, co-sponsored by 86 congressmen, similarly calls
    on Bush to "commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide on behalf
    of the people and Government of the United States." It also urges Turkey
    to "acknowledge the culpability of its predecessor state, the Ottoman
    Empire, for the Armenian Genocide" and to "promote rapprochement with
    the Republic of Armenia."

    "We are absolutely thrilled with the result. We got a strong bipartisan
    vote for recognition of the Armenian genocide," Adam Schiff, a
    pro-Armenian California congressman and the sponsor of the House
    Resolution 195, told RFE/RL.

    Successive U.S. administrations have avoided using the term "genocide"
    for fear of antagonizing Turkey, a key U.S. ally which maintains that
    the Armenian massacres occurred on a much smaller scale and were not
    premeditated by the last rulers of the Ottoman Empire. Bush has instead
    used phrases like "systematic annihilation of 1.5 million Armenians"
    which leaders of the influential Armenian-American community say
    constitute a textbook definition of genocide.

    "We have never termed the mass killings of Armenians in the Ottoman
    Empire a genocide. That is why we do not support this resolution," a
    senior Bush administration official, who asked not to be identified,
    told RFE/RL from Washington.

    "We believe that the use of the term genocide would not contribute to
    reconciliation and dialogue between the two communities," the official
    said, speaking shortly before the House committee vote. He would not
    speculate on whether Bush will follow Clinton's example and ask Hastert
    to effectively kill the resolution.

    Ardouny did not rule out such possibility. "Anything can happen but we
    will press ahead with this in any case," he said, adding that White
    House pressure on the Republican-controlled Congress is not as "intense"
    as it was five years ago.

    Schiff also noted a "growing momentum in favor of genocide recognition"
    and "very limited opposition" to the bills from the White House and the
    State Department. Still, he said "a lot remains to be done" to bring
    them before the full House of Representatives.

    The State Department sent a letter to members of the House International
    Relations Committee ahead of the votes, saying the debate "could damage
    U.S.-Turkish relations and could undermine progress by Ankara and
    Yerevan as they begin quiet talks to address the issue and look to the
    future."

    But the committee's Republican Chairman, Henry Hyde, said that he doubts
    the relationship with Turkey would be harmed and stressed the
    resolutions do not hold Turkey or the Turkish people accountable for the
    killings. He said the resolutions "merely recognize the fact that the
    authorities of the Ottoman Empire deliberately slaughtered the majority
    of the Armenian community in their empire."

    "Denial of that fact cannot be justified on the basis of expediency or
    fear that speaking the truth will do us harm," Hyde said, according to
    the Associated Press.

    The Bush administration official noted that despite its reluctance to
    call the mass killings a genocide Washington supports "serious
    examination of the history of that period." He pointed in particular to
    a "good" study conducted by a New York-based human rights organization
    at the request of the U.S.-backed Turkish-Armenian Reconciliation
    Commission (TARC). The International Center for Transitional Justice
    (ICTJ) concluded in January 2003 that the Armenian massacres fit the
    definition of genocide set by a 1948 UN convention. Armenian members of
    the former TARC say the study dealt a serious blow to Turkish denial of
    the genocide.

    In his last April 24 message to the Armenian-American community, Bush
    described the ICTJ study as a "significant step toward reconciliation
    and restoration of the spirit of tolerance and cultural richness that
    has connected the people of the Caucasus and Anatolia for centuries."
    The administration official clarified that this should not be
    interpreted as U.S. endorsement of its findings.

    "We endorsed the process of the study, not its conclusions," the
    official said. "We were not part of the study." He also praised TARC's
    four-year activities as a "serious process that involved serious
    people."

    In his 2005 statement, Bush referred to the Armenian massacres as the
    "Great Calamity." The "Great Calamity" was translated as "Mets Yeghern"
    in the Armenian-language version of the statement released by the U.S.
    embassy in Yerevan. The Armenians use this term only with regard to the
    1915-1918 slaughter of their kinsmen.

    The late Ronald Reagan was the first and so far the only U.S. president
    to recognize genocide in 1981. John Evans, the current U.S. ambassador
    to Armenia, became the second U.S. government official to do so publicly
    at a series of meetings with Armenian-Americans last February. "The
    Armenian Genocide was the first genocide of the 20th century," Evans
    declared at one of those meetings, sparking talk of an imminent change
    in U.S. policy on the issue.

    However, the State Department and Bush administration officials were
    quick to quash the speculation, insisting that the envoy expressed his
    personal opinion on the matter.

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

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    Comment


    • #3
      ARMENIA THIS WEEK September 19, 2005

      ARMENIA THIS WEEK September 19, 2005


      CONGRESSIONAL PANEL GIVES STRONG ENDORSEMENT TO GENOCIDE AFFIRMATION
      The International Relations Committee of the U.S. House of
      Representatives overwhelmingly approved last week two bills affirming
      the U.S. record on the Armenian Genocide and urging Turkey to address
      the tragedy. Armenia hailed the development and urged a full
      congressional affirmation of the Genocide. As in the past, the vote came
      amid opposition by Turkish government lobbyists.

      Co-Chairs of the Armenian Congressional Caucus Joe Knollenberg (R-MI)
      and Frank Pallone Jr. (D-NJ), as well as Caucus members George
      Radanovich (R-MI) and Adam Schiff (D-CA) championed the House Resolution
      316, which received the endorsement of 140 House members and 40 to 7
      approval in the committee. The U.S. State Department said that while the
      Bush Administration "mourns the forced exile and annihilation of
      approximately 1.5 million Armenians... as one of the great tragedies in
      human history" it "did not support" the congressional involvement,
      arguing that it might undermine Turkish-Armenian rapprochement.

      But the committee Chairman Henry Hyde (R-IL) disagreed with this
      argument, expressing his conviction that "it is in the interests of the
      United States and of Turkey and Armenia both that we take the lead in
      dealing with this paralyzing legacy [of the Genocide]. And we must start
      with recognition of the truth. For there is no possibility that this
      problem can ever be overcome if we seek to ground any solution on
      silence and forgetting." In a reversal of his past position, the
      Committee's ranking member Tom Lantos (D-CA) also voted for the
      legislation.

      Congressmen also condemned Ankara for prosecution of world-renowned
      Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk, who faces up to three years in prison for
      publicly referring to the Armenian Genocide in an interview. Rep. Ed
      Royce (R-CA) called the prosecution "as wrong as it is incredible."

      Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyib Erdogan criticized the vote in a
      meeting with Jewish American organizations on the sidelines of the UN
      General Assembly in New York. According to the pro-government Turkey
      daily Zaman, Erdogan "demanded Jewish support against Armenians,"
      pointing to Turkey's importance for Israel.

      In 2000, a similar bill on the Armenian Genocide passed the
      International Relations Committee, but it was withdrawn from full House
      consideration after Turkey threatened to suspend anti-terrorism
      cooperation with the U.S. Earlier this year, shortly before the April 24
      statement by President George W. Bush, the Turkish government approved
      the request for expanded U.S. use of the Incirlik Air Base on Turkish
      territory. According to the Turkish media at the time, the decision and
      its timing were part of the Turkish effort to avoid the use of the
      Genocide term in Bush's statement. Armenia's leading Turkey expert Ruben
      Safrastian suggested that the United States may similarly trade the
      current resolution for a more cooperative Turkish stance on Iraq and
      other foreign policy priorities. (Sources: Armenia This Week 4-25, 8-8;
      AAA Press Release 9-14; RFE/RL Armenia Report 9-15; Zaman 9-15; U.S.
      State Dept. 9-16; Regnum 9-18)

      ARMENIA OUTRANKS NEIGHBORS IN HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, BUSINESS OPENNESS
      RANKING
      Armenia continues to lead its region in economic reform and social
      progress, according to reports by the United Nations and the World Bank.
      Despite built-in geographic constraints and modest natural resources, as
      well as blockades by Turkey and Azerbaijan, Armenia has also registered
      five straight years of double-digit growth. The government estimated an
      almost 12 percent increase in the Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in the
      seven months of 2005. Foreign investments have also grown by 12 percent
      to $140 million for the first half of the year.

      According to the United Nations' "Human Development Index," which
      measures life expectancy, education level and average income, Armenia
      ranked 83rd out of 177 nations. Armenia's immediate neighbors, Turkey,
      Iran, Georgia and Azerbaijan, ranked 94th, 99th, 100th and 101st,
      respectively. Armenia's Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanian called the
      annual ranking a "report card" and welcomed the fact that it noted
      progress in Armenia, which "is doing better than [many] expected." He
      stressed, however, that the government was not satisfied with the social
      and economic status quo, pledging further democratic reforms and
      alleviation of poverty.

      The "Doing Business 2006" report prepared by the World Bank's
      International Finance Corporation (IFC) put Armenia 46th in the ranking
      of 155 countries in terms of "ease of doing business." The IFC ranked
      Russia - 79th, Turkey - 93rd, Azerbaijan - 98th, Georgia - 100th, and
      Iran - 108th. The same report ranked Armenia 9th in the world for the
      ease of registering property and 41st for starting a business. The
      annual "Economic Freedom Index," jointly prepared by the Wall Street
      Journal and the Washington-based Heritage Foundation, also ranked
      Armenia repeatedly ahead of its region, most recently as 42nd of 161
      countries surveyed. (Sources: Armenia This Week 1-10; Arminfo 8-19;
      RFE/RL Armenia Report 9-8, 13; The Armenian Foreign Ministry Press
      Release 9-9; The World Bank's http://www.doingbusiness.org 9-15)



      ************************************************** ***************
      A WEEKLY NEWSLETTER PUBLISHED BY THE ARMENIAN ASSEMBLY OF AMERICA
      1140 19th Street, N.W., Suite 600, Washington, D.C. 20036 (202) 393-3434
      FAX (202) 638-4904
      E-Mail [email protected] WEB http://www.aaainc.org
      ************************************************** ***************

      The New York Times Editorial
      Sunday, September 11, 2005

      THE TURKISH IDENTITY
      Next week, the Turkish prime minister, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, will
      address the United Nations on one of the issues threatening to slow down
      negotiations to admit Turkey into the European Union - recognizing
      Cyprus. But he should also address the question of Orhan Pamuk, the
      pre-eminent Turkish novelist who has been charged with "public
      denigration" of Turkish identity.

      In February, a Swiss newspaper quoted Pamuk on Turkey's long-standing
      refusal to discuss the Armenian genocide and the deaths of 30,000
      separatist Kurds more recently. Pamuk's remarks inflamed Turkish
      nationalists, and he left the country. He faces the possibility of three
      years in jail.

      The charges against Pamuk violate the standards of free speech, one of
      the prerequisites to Turkey's admission to the European Union. The
      charges also cut to the heart of Pamuk's writing. The question of
      Turkish identity informs his work. In "My Name Is Red," Pamuk never lets
      the reader forget the ethnic and cultural diversity of Turkey's past.
      Nor does he flinch, in "Istanbul," from reminding readers of the
      "deliberately provoked" 1955 riots that destroyed several non-Muslim
      neighborhoods in that city. Beneath the notion of a Turkish identity
      lies a tension, still noticeable today, that has nourished Pamuk's
      writing.

      It has been about six months since Pamuk's comments were published, so
      it is unclear why the charges are being brought just now. Whatever the
      motive, they are a reminder that one of Turkey's biggest obstacles in
      dealing with the West is the way it chooses to patrol its own history.



      The Washington Post Editorial
      Wednesday, September 7, 2005; A24

      Free Speech for Turkey
      Orhan Pamuk, one of Turkey's most acclaimed writers, is facing up to
      three years in prison. His offense, according to the state prosecutor?
      "Public denigrating of Turkish identity." Specifically, Mr. Pamuk told a
      Swiss newspaper in February that certain topics were off-limits for
      discussion in Turkey -- citing the massacre of Armenians in 1915 and the
      more recent conflicts between Turkish security forces and Kurdish
      separatists. "Thirty-thousand Kurds were killed here, 1 million
      Armenians as well. And almost no one talks about it," he said.
      "Therefore, I do."

      As mild as these comments sound to American ears, they touched off a
      firestorm in Turkey, where the government line is that the Armenian
      deaths were the consequence of war, not genocide, and public discussion
      of the issue is hazardous. The uproar over Mr. Pamuk's remarks, which
      included death threats and burnings of his books, culminated with the
      filing of the criminal case under Article 301/1 of the Turkish Penal
      Code, which applies criminal penalties to "a person who explicitly
      insults being a Turk, the Republic or Turkish Grand National Assembly."
      Under Turkish law, Mr. Pamuk isn't even permitted to comment on the
      charges before his case is heard in December.

      The prosecution of Mr. Pamuk is, of course, outrageous; the charges
      should be dropped as soon as possible. The ill-advised use of this
      ill-advised provision to punish Mr. Pamuk contravenes Turkey's
      commitment to comply with the free-speech provisions of international
      agreements such as the European Convention on Human Rights. It's exactly
      the wrong signal for Turkey to be sending as Europe debates its
      admission to the European Union. As Mr. Pamuk's translator, Maureen
      Freely, wrote in the British newspaper the Independent, "There is no
      doubt that it will raise questions about the wisdom of Turkey's EU
      membership bid. How can it possibly claim to be a European country if it
      has such laws on the books, and if public prosecutors can bring such
      cases?"

      This reaction, indeed, may be exactly what those pushing for a
      prosecution intended; the timing of the charges, as European ministers
      meet in Wales to discuss Turkey's membership, is suspicious. That makes
      it even more important for the national government, though it doesn't
      control the prosecutor who brought the case, to do what it can to halt
      this case and others like it. Turkey has made important strides in
      protecting freedom of expression in recent years, including reforming
      its penal code. The charges against Mr. Pamuk underscore how far it
      still has to go.

      Comment


      • #4
        ARMENIAN GENOCIDE EDUCATION Reaching Into the School Curriculum

        PRESS RELEASE
        National Association for Armenian Studies and Research
        395 Concord Ave.
        Belmont, MA 02478
        Contact: Marc Mamigonian
        Tel: 617-489-1610
        Fax: 617-484-1759
        E-mail: [email protected]
        Web: http://www.naasr.org/


        ARMENIAN GENOCIDE EDUCATION
        Reaching Into the School Curriculum
        A Panel Discussion with



        Prof. Richard G. Hovannisian

        Armenian Education Foundation Professor of
        Modern
        Armenian History, UCLA



        Margot Stern Strom

        Executive Director, Facing History and
        Ourselves



        Adam Strom

        Director of Research and Development, Facing
        History and
        Ourselves



        Dr. Henry Theriault

        Associate Professor of Philosophy, Worcester State College

        Over the past several decades a remarkable amount of work has been
        done to document and analyze the Armenian Genocide committed by the
        Ottoman Turks in 1915- 23. Yet the level of knowledge of the Genocide
        outside the Armenian community remains disappointingly low; and,
        moreover, the lessons of the Armenian Genocide and other 20th century
        genocides have not halted the practice of mass killings for political
        purposes, as recent events in Darfur attest.

        Facing History and Ourselves of Brookline, MA, has been a leader in
        producing Holocaust and genocide curricula since it's founding in the
        late 1970s. They have now published an important textbook on the
        Armenian Genocide, Crimes Against Humanity and Civilization: The
        Genocide of the Armenians, supervised by Adam Strom with significant
        input from leading scholars such as Richard Hovannisian. The
        existence of such a text, as well as the huge body of scholarship on
        the subject, raises key questions: How to get the text and the
        teaching of the Armenian Genocide into public schools in Massachusetts
        and beyond? What is the most effective way to teach the Armenian
        Genocide to non- Armenians? Can the lessons of the Armenian Genocide
        have a far-reaching effect in the prevention of future genocides?

        These and many other questions will be addressed by the panel which
        will be moderated by Marc A. Mamigonian of NAASR. Join us for the
        opportunity to engage in an in- depth conversation on this most
        relevant subject and learn more about Crimes Against Humanity and
        Civilization.

        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
        Friday
        September 30, 2005
        ------------------------------------------------------------
        TIME:

        7:30 p.m


        ---

        LOCATION:

        Belmont High School Auditorium
        Concord Ave.,
        Belmont,
        MA


        ---

        CO-SPONSORS:

        Facing History and ourselves


        National Association for Armenian Studies and
        Research


        Armenian Assembly of America



        ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~



        * Admission free (donations accepted)

        * Reception following program at NAASR Center

        * Parking is available at Belmont High School and in
        adjacent areas on Concord Ave.

        Comment


        • #5
          RE: Assembly Meets with Armenian Parliament Speaker

          Armenian Assembly of America
          1140 19th Street, NW, Suite 600
          Washington, DC 20036
          Phone: 202-393-3434
          Fax: 202-638-4904
          Email: [email protected]
          Web: www.armenianassembly.org

          PRESS RELEASE
          September 20, 2005
          CONTACT: Christine Kojoian
          Email: [email protected]

          RE: Assembly Meets with Armenian Parliament Speaker

          An Assembly delegation led by Board of Trustees Chairman Hirair
          Hovnanian met with Armenian Parliament Speaker Arthur Baghdasaryan in
          New York on September 9. The meeting, which focused on building
          stronger U.S.-Armenia relations and democratic reforms in Armenia,
          also included Board of Trustees Treasurer Edele Hovnanian, Board of
          Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian, Board of Directors Member Van
          Krikorian and Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.

          Ardouny also briefed the Speaker on key legislative issues and
          participated with him in various meetings with U.S. government
          officials in Washington. Baghdasaryan met with U.S. State Department
          officials and several lawmakers including House Speaker Dennis Hastert
          (R-IL), House Rules Committee Chairman David Dreier (R-CA), Minority
          Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-CA), Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-MD) and
          Armenian Caucus Co-Chairs Joe Knollenberg (R-MI) and Frank Pallone,
          Jr. (D-NJ), among others.

          "Armenia has a proud history and is committed to engagement with its
          neighbors to promote democracy and regional trade," Dreier
          said. "Speaker Baghdasaryan and I agreed that democracy is critical to
          security and stability in the region. I was proud to welcome the
          Speaker to the Capitol and look forward to working with him on his
          efforts in the future."

          Photographs available on the Assembly Web site at the following links:



          Caption: L to R: Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny, Board of
          Directors Member Van Krikorian, Speaker of the Armenian Parliament
          Arthur Baghdasaryan, Board of Trustees Chairman Hirair Hovnanian,
          Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian and Board of Trustees
          Treasurer Edele Hovnanian.



          Caption: L to R: Assembly Executive Director Bryan Ardouny, House
          Rules Committee Chairman David Dreier (R-CA) and Armenian Parliament
          Speaker Arthur Baghdasaryan.




          Caption: Armenian Parliament Speaker Arthur Baghdasaryan, center, with
          House Minority Whip Steny Hoyer (D-MD), far right, and Assembly
          Executive Director Bryan Ardouny.


          The Armenian Assembly of America is the largest Washington-based
          nationwide organization promoting public understanding and awareness
          of Armenian issues. It is a 501 (c) (3) tax-exempt membership
          organization.

          ###

          NR#2005-091

          Comment


          • #6
            Turkey: Conference In The European Parliament A Huge Success

            EUROPEAN ARMENIAN FEDERATION
            for Justice & Democracy
            Avenue dela Renaissance 10
            B-1000 Bruxelles
            Tel: +322 732 70 26
            Tel/Fax:+322 732 70 27
            Email: [email protected]



            PRESS RELEASE
            For immediate release
            September 23rd, 2005
            Contact :François Michel
            Tel :+322 732 70 26

            TURKEY: CONFERENCE IN THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT A HUGE SUCCESS

            The conference, held on Thursday, September 22nd, 2005 and co-organized by the
            EPP-ED Parliamentary Group (Christian Democrat) and by the European Armenian
            Federation, concluded successfully and solicited much interest in the European
            Parliament where it was held. More than 200 participants, including key
            European policy makers, parliamentarians and leaders of associations from
            around fifteen EU countries, as well as many columnists made the trip to
            Brussels to hear and express opinions on the theme “December 2004 – October
            2005: Has Turkey changed?”

            Following the welcome address given by the vice-president of the European
            Parliament, Dr. Ingo Friedrich (EPP, Germany), the fifteen speakers tackled
            issues linked in general to the EU accession criteria and Human Rights, and
            more specifically to the issues of freedom of speech, the denial of the
            Armenian Genocide, the Kurdish question and the perception of the accession
            process by European public opinions. More precisely, many Members of the
            European Parliament from different political persuasions (see attached program)
            recalled that Turkey still does not fulfil the accession criteria be it on the
            Cyprus issue or regarding the respect of minorities or the Armenian question.

            In the afternoon, a heated exchange took place between the participants and Mr.
            Pierre Mirel, the representative of the Enlargement Directorate General of the
            European Commission. It was patently apparent that a large gap and discrepancy
            exist between the EU Commission stance and European public opinion. Mr.
            Triantaphyllides (EUL, Cyprus) starkly stated, “ I have lost confidence in the
            Commission and trust only the will of European citizens”. On a different
            topic, Mr. Vahan Hovhanisyan, vice-chairman of the National Assembly of
            Armenia, highlighted the risk of the destabilization of the Caucasus because of
            Turkey’s aggressive attitude towards Armenia.

            “On the eve of October the 3rd, this conference called upon the European Union
            political leaders to show vigilance” stated Hilda Tchoboian, Chairperson of
            the European Armenian Federation. “They will have to give an appropriate
            answer to the citizens of Europe who demand more transparency in the decisions
            taken by the Commission and the Council regarding the accession conditions for
            Turkey” concluded Tchoboian.

            The proceedings and pictures of the events will be posted on the website of the
            European Armenian Federation www.eafjd.org


            --------------
            FINAL PROGRAM


            FINAL PROGRAM

            9:30 – 9:45 Mr Ingo Friedrich
            Vice-President of the European Parliament
            Welcome Address


            9:45 – 10:00 Mr Francesco Enrico Speroni (IND/DEM, Italy),

            Member of the European Parliament



            10:00– 10:15 Mr Panagiotis Beglitis (PSE/Greece),
            Member of the EU-Turkey delegation



            10:15 – 10:30 Mr. Recep Marasli
            Editor
            Will the military system disappear ? The political status of Kurds in
            Turkey.



            10:30 – 10:45 Mr Oliver Money-Kyrle
            Director, Projects Division, International Federation of Journalists
            Press Freedom in Turkey


            10:45 – 11:00 Mr Dogan Özgüden
            Founder and President of Info-Türk Agency
            What is the current situation of Human rights in Turkey?


            11:00 – 11:15 Mr Irnerio Seminatore

            Founder and President of the European Institute for International Relations
            (IERI)
            The 4th Copenhagen criterion and the global security issues. The
            destabilizing potential of Turkey


            11:15 – 11:30 Mr Franck Biancheri

            President of Newropeans

            Turkey’s Accession : ground for divorce between the European elites and the
            European citizens


            11:30 – 12:00 Roundtable


            12:00 – 1:30 xxxxtail & Lunch


            1:30 – 1:45 Mrs Hilda Tchoboian
            Chairperson of the European Armenian Federation
            The Turkish policies and the Armenian issues



            1:45 – 2:00 Mr Ioannis Kasoulides, (EPP/Cyprus),

            Member of Foreign Affairs Committee



            2:00 – 2:15 Mrs Renate Sommer (EPP/Germany),

            Vice-Chairman of the EU-Turkey delegation



            2:15 – 2:30 Mr Philippe Kalfayan
            General Secretary of the International Federation for Human Rights
            Minorities’ rights in Turkey



            2:30 – 2:45 Mr Kyriacos Triantaphyllides (EUL/ Cyprus),
            Member of the EU-Turkey delegation


            2:45 – 3:00 Mr Vahan Hovhannisyan
            Deputy Chairman of the National Assemblyof the Republic of
            Armenia Turkey’s Role in the South Caucasus



            3:00 – 3:15 Mr Pierre Mirel
            European Commission, Director of Directorate B for “candidate countries”
            in DG Enlargement


            3:15 – 4:00 Roundtable




            4:00 – 4:15 Concluding address by the European Armenian Federation





            ####


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            Comment


            • #7
              ANCA Update - 9/23/2005

              ANCA Update - 9/23/2005 -- To receive this publication in text format, please send an e-mail to [email protected] with "text format" in the Subject heading. Did this email end up in your spam/junk/bulk folder? Add [email protected] and [email protected] to your address book to ensure that you receive all future messages in your Inbox. ANCA Update - September 23, 2005 [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...l/collage.jpg]

              [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...anca_logo.jpg][http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...oinelist2.gif][http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/dec2904/donate.gif]

              [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...plogo-web.jpg]
              Capital Gateway Program
              September 23, 2005

              [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...button-13.gif]

              1) System of a Down Ask House Speaker Dennis Hastert to 'Do the Right Thing' in Support of Armenian Genocide Legislation

              Band Rallies their Fans with ANCA / AYF / Axis of Justice in front of Speaker Hastert's Batavia, IL Office
              Tuesday, September 27th at 12 Noon

              2) Send a Free WebFax: Urge Speaker Hastert to Schedule a Vote on Armenian Genocide Legislation.

              Click here to join the ANCA 10,000 WebFax Campaign.

              3) 2005 ANCA-WR Annual Banquet Draws Over 600 Federal, State, and Local Officials and Community Members

              4) Balakian?s 'Burning Tigris' Wins 2005 Raphael Lemkin Prize

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...stem1_web.jpg]
              ANCA table at recent System of a Down Concert 1) Multi-Platinum Rock Band System of a Down Ask House Speaker Dennis Hastert to 'Do the Right Thing' in Support of Armenian Genocide Legislation

              -- Band Rallies their Fans with ANCA / AYF / Axis of Justice in front of Hastert's Batavia, IL Office Tuesday, September 27th at 12 Noon

              Los Angeles, CA - September 23, 2005 ? System of a Down, one of rock's most daring and innovative bands, have just announced that they ? along with their fans, the Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA; www.anca.org), Axis of Justice (www.axisofjustice.org) and the Armenian Youth Federation (www.ayf.org) ? will visit the Batavia office of Rep. Dennis Hastert on Tuesday, September 27 (Noon) to ask Speaker Hastert to ?do the right thing? and keep his commitment to hold a vote on the pending Armenian Genocide legislation. If passed, the legislation will officially recognize Turkey?s destruction of 1.5 million Armenians between 1915 and 1923. The band have invited their fans to join with them in this effort by attending the rally and have set up a system by which fans can directly email Speaker Hastert on the issue.

              System of a Down?s four band members - Serj Tankian, Daron Malakian, Shavo Odadjian and John Dolmayan ? are of Armenian descent and have made awareness of the genocide, and genocide around the world, a central message of the band. All have lost family members to the Armenian Genocide.

              "Dennis do the right thing" stated Serj Tankian, ?I just visited my 97 year old grandfather, my only link to the far past, and promised him that I would go and try to talk to Dennis Hastert, Speaker of the House, and make sure that he takes this opportunity to bring up the Armenian Genocide Resolution to the floor of the House of Representatives. This is a personal issue to me and System.?

              The System of a Down/ANCA rally will take place at the offices of Rep. Dennis Hastert - 27 North River Street, Batavia, Illinois (about an hour from downtown Chicago). The rally is scheduled for 12Noon-2:00 PM on Tuesday, September 27. The Armenian community, activists, and the band?s fans from across the greater Chicago area are expected to attend the rally.

              Members of System of a Down and Aram Suren Hamparian, Executive Director of ANCA, are available to discuss the rally and pending legislation on Tuesday, 9/27 and Friday, 9/30, the day of their concert at Chicago?s Allstate Arena. more. . .

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...quet_html.jpg]
              Marina Manoukian with her husband and ANCA-WR board member Leonard Manoukian speaking with
              CA State Senator Jackie Kanchelian-Speier, who received the 2005 ANCA-WR Woman of the Year Award
              3) 2005 ANCA WR Annual Banquet Draws Over 600 Federal, State, and Local Officials and Community Members
              LOS ANGELES, CA?The Armenian National Committee of America ? Western Region (ANCA-WR) played host to a maximum capacity number of guests at its annual banquet held on Sunday, September 18, 2005 at the Renaissance Hollywood Hotel. Over 600 supporters of the ANCA-WR attended the annual banquet, including dozens of federal, state, and local legislators, and community leaders. The event raised over $200,000 to help the ANCA-WR advance issues of concern to the Armenian American community. Banquet benefactors Khachik and Elo Mouradian were joined by Frank and Houri Melkonian, Ashken Pilavjian, John and Asdghik Bedrosian, and Sarkis and Noune Sepetjian in cosponsoring the event.

              The ANCA-WR presented California State Senator Jackie Kanchelian-Speier (D-San Francisco/San Mateo) with the 2005 ANCA-WR Woman of the Year Award and the ANCA?s own Elizabeth Chouldjian with the 2005 ANCA-WR Vahan Cardashian Award for her dedication and tenacity in advancing the Armenian Cause. Congressman George Radanovich (R-CA), by video, joined Congressman Adam Schiff (D-29) in praising the ANCA-WR?s efforts in helping the Armenian Genocide resolutions pass through the House International Relations Committee last week. Newly elected Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa gave special remarks during the evening?s program where he expressed his appreciation for the support that the ANCA-WR and the Armenian American community have given him during his tenure as a legislator. The Mayor also used the opportunity to announce appointments of Armenian Americans to his administration. more. . .

              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              [http://www.anca.org/docs/BurningTigr...ris-small.jpg]
              4) Balakian?s 'Burning Tigris' Wins 2005 Raphael Lemkin Prize

              New York, NY -- Peter Balakian?s The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America?s Response has been awarded the 2005 Raphael Lemkin Prize for the best scholarly book in the preceding two years on the subject of genocide, mass killings, gross human rights violations, and the prevention of such crimes. The award is given by the Institute for the Study of Genocide at John Jay College of Criminal Justice/CUNY Graduate Center in New York City. The prize comes with a cash award and commemorates Raphael Lemkin, the legal scholar who pioneered the international legal concept of genocide. Helen Fein, Chair of the prize committee called The Burning Tigris ?a book of enduring scholarly value and of important contemporary meaning.? Previous winners include Samantha Power?s A Problem From Hell: America and the Age of Genocide (winner of the Pulitzer Prize), and Alison Des Forges Leave None To Tell The Story: Genocide In Rwanda.

              "We extend our congratulations to Peter on this well-deserved honor," said Aram Hamparian, Executive Director of the ANCA. "In the spirit of Raphael Lemkin, Peter has truly contributed greatly to the field of genocide studies - raising unprecedented public awareness about the crime of genocide, warning of the dangers of its denial, and explaining - in clear and forceful terms - the moral imperative of its prevention."


              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              [http://www.anca.org/assets/graphics/...one-email.gif]

              Shop Through Armenzone.com and Support the ANCA


              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

              Published by the Armenian National Committee of America
              888 17th St. NW Suite 904, Washington, DC 20006
              Tel: (202) 775-1918, Fax: (202) 775-1918, E-mail: [email protected], Web: www.anca.org


              --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

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              Comment


              • #8
                Terry Davis: "Both Turkey and Europe must honour their word"

                PRESS RELEASE
                Council of Europe Press Division
                Ref: 491a05
                Tel: +33 (0)3 88 41 25 60
                Fax:+33 (0)3 88 41 39 11
                [email protected]
                internet: www.coe.int/press


                Terry Davis: "Both Turkey and Europe must honour their word"

                Strasbourg, 26.09.2005 - Following a conference on the fate of Turkish
                Armenians at the end of the Ottoman Empire, which was held at Bilgi
                University in Istanbul this weekend, Terry Davis, Secretary General of
                the Council of Europe, made the following statement:

                "I want to congratulate the organisers of the conference on their
                courage and determination. Those believing in a modern, democratic and
                tolerant Turkey refused to be intimidated and silenced by extreme
                nationalists on the streets of Istanbul.

                I reiterate my strong support for the position taken by Prime Minister
                Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who has supported freedom of expression in Turkey.
                I hope that such an attitude will also prevail with regard to the
                shameful prosecution of one of the most renowned Turkish writers, Orhan
                Pamuk, who was recently indicted for speaking openly on the Armenian
                issue.

                I appreciate the sensitivity of this question for the Turkish
                authorities and the public opinion, but, however painful, such issues
                must be resolved through dialogue and truth, not repression and
                propaganda. As a member of the Council of Europe, Turkey is obliged to
                respect the European Convention on Human Rights, and I am confident that
                the Turkish authorities will not waver in their democratic and human
                rights reforms at this critical junction in relations between Turkey and
                Europe. I also hope that leaders in other European capitals will rise to
                the occasion, remember their commitments and honour their word to
                Turkey", concluded the Secretary General.

                To receive our press releases by e-mail, contact :
                [email protected]

                A political organisation set up in 1949, the Council of Europe works to
                promote democracy and human rights continent-wide. It also develops
                common responses to social, cultural and legal challenges in its 46
                member states.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Assembly This Week: 09/26/05

                  ASSEMBLY THIS WEEK

                  Monday, September 26, 2005


                  ASSEMBLY ENCOURAGED BY OPENING OF GENOCIDE CONFERENCE IN TURKEY
                  Assembly leaders today were encouraged by the Turkish government's
                  backing of an Armenian Genocide Conference which took place this
                  weekend, after a Turkish court attempted to derail and ban the
                  gathering.

                  The court ruling embarrassed the Turkish government around the world
                  just days before the start of its long-awaited membership talks with the
                  European Union.

                  "I want to live in a Turkey where freedoms are enjoyed in their broadest
                  sense," Prime Minister Recep Tayip Ergodan said.

                  Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian said, "This conference
                  faced heavy opposition from the outset and was postponed twice. The
                  Prime Minister's comments are a step in the right direction. The larger
                  question is whether Turkey will become further isolated by the reaction
                  of its hardliners or will the country move towards an open society by
                  reforming its penal code as it relates to criminalizing public discourse
                  on the fact of the Armenian Genocide."

                  According to the Associated Press, nationalist protesters hurled eggs
                  and rotten tomatoes at those arriving to the conference, accusing them
                  of committing treason against the Turkish state.

                  PEACE CORP DIRECTOR TO SPEAK AT ASSEMBLY'S INTERNATIONAL BANQUET NEXT
                  MONTH
                  The Assembly announced this week that Peace Corps Director Gaddi Vasquez
                  will be a featured speaker at the Assembly's International Banquet on
                  October 22 in Yerevan, Armenia.

                  The event, which will celebrate the ever-strengthening U.S.-Armenia
                  relationship, will be held in conjunction with the Assembly's 10th
                  Trustee Mission to the region.

                  Board of Directors Vice Chair Annie Totah will lead the annual trip
                  which includes expert-guided tours, private briefings with U.S. and
                  Armenia government officials, as well as social and cultural events.

                  Banquet tickets cost $50.00 per person and can be purchased by calling
                  Assembly Development and Membership Deputy Director Rita Mullane in
                  Washington at (202) 393-3434 x234.

                  NEWS & NOTES
                  * Board of Directors Chairman Anthony Barsamian will be the featured
                  speaker at Project SAVE's 30th anniversary banquet on October 1 in
                  Boston, MA. The event will be hosted by Boston Globe investigative
                  reporter Steve Kirkjian.
                  Project SAVE's mission is to collect, document, preserve and present the
                  historic and modern photographic record of Armenians and Armenian
                  heritage.
                  * The Assembly congratulates New York Times Bestselling author Peter
                  Balakian for winning the 2005 Raphael Lemkin Prize for his book, "The
                  Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide and America's Response." The
                  award commemorates Raphael Lemkin, the legal scholar who coined the term
                  "genocide' in 1944.
                  * On September 20, Rep. James Moran (D-VA) recognized Assembly Associate
                  Trustee Rita Balian for her humanitarian work on behalf of women and
                  children in the U.S. and Armenia. In a speech on the floor of the House
                  of Representatives, Moran said: "I am proud to recognize the numerous
                  accomplishments of Rita Balian. Her dedication to the people of Armenia
                  and her efforts to increase international understanding reflect a deep
                  sense of purpose and remarkable ability to achieve difficult and worthy
                  goals." Balian is founder, president and CEO of the Armenian American
                  Cultural Association, a non-profit charitable organization. In other
                  news, Balian recently discussed the work of the Armenian American
                  Wellness Center, which she established in Yerevan, during the UN DPI/NGO
                  Conference in New York earlier this month.
                  * In Yerevan, Country Director for Armenia and Nagorno Karabakh Arpi
                  Vartanian attended a concert on September 21 dedicated to the dual
                  anniversary of Armenia's independence and Armenia's National Assembly.
                  Vartanian was also interviewed by Noyan Tapan News Agency last week on
                  the recent passage of the Armenian Genocide resolution by the U.S. House
                  International Relations Committee. "It is our duty to our ancestors and
                  as American citizens to make our government recognize the truth,"
                  Vartanian said.

                  GET ASSEMBLY THIS WEEK ELECTRONICALLY!
                  Receive Assembly This Week in your inbox! In an effort to increase our
                  efficiency and better serve our members, readers can receive an
                  electronic version of this publication as an alternative to the printed
                  version. Those who are interested should send their email addresses to
                  Rita Mullane at [email protected].

                  Calendar of Events

                  10/19-11/1: Annual Mission to Armenia & NKR
                  10/22: International Banquet; Yerevan, Armenia
                  11/13: Capital Regional Holiday Reception; DC
                  3/26 - 3/28: 2006 National Conference & Banquet; DC


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                  Comment


                  • #10
                    PRESS RELEASE
                    St Nersess Seminary
                    September 28, 2005
                    150 Stratton Rd.
                    New Rochelle, NY 10804
                    Phone: 914-636-2003

                    Armeno-Turkish: Betrayal or Blessing?

                    It looks like Armenian but it's not.

                    For about 250 years, from the early 18th century until around 1950,
                    more than 2000 books were printed in the Turkish language using the
                    divinely-inspired letters of the Armenian alphabet. On the surface,
                    the phenomenon of "Armeno-Turkish" would seem like yet another sad
                    chapter in Armenian history as Armenians gradually lost their
                    language, culture and identity under Ottoman tyranny.

                    Bedross Der Matossian sees the phenomenon not as a sign of the
                    deterioration of Armenian ethnic identity, but of its extraordinary
                    endurance and resilience. In an intriguing lecture delivered at the
                    Seminary on Tuesday, September 27, the young doctoral candidate in
                    Middle Eastern Studies argued that the tradition of writing Turkish
                    with Armenian letters is an overlooked example of the versatility of
                    the Armenian alphabet and "a creative mechanism for maintaining
                    Armenian identity in a multi-ethnic environment."

                    Der Matossian's lecture, entitled, The Phenomenon of the
                    Armeno-Turkish Literature in the 19th century Ottoman Empire, was the
                    first in a series of five public lectures being offered this Fall as
                    part of St. Nersess Seminary's commemoration of the 1600th
                    anniversary of the creation of the Armenian alphabet.

                    Armenian? Turkish?


                    Armeno-Turkish books are not hard to find. If you know the 38
                    characters of the Armenian alphabet and you glance across the shelves
                    of an Armenian library or church office; or peek into the boxes in
                    medz-mayrig's (grandma's) attic, you will almost surely come across a
                    book printed in Armenian, which you will not be able to read--unless
                    you speak Turkish.

                    Armenians in the Ottoman Empire wrote books on history, fine arts,
                    religion, science, and philosophy in Turkish using not the
                    conventional Arabic script, but the ayp, pen, kim of our ancestors.
                    Armeno-Turkish business contracts, school books, dictionaries,
                    grammars, translations of European literature, Bibles, hymnals and
                    even prayer books were published in more than fifty cities including
                    Venice, Vienna, Trieste, Boston and New York.

                    This rich body of highly erudite writings can hardly be taken as the
                    last gasp of a dying culture. It marked a true cultural-intellectual
                    achievement. Der Matossian displayed a list of more than 30 distinct
                    newspapers published in Armeno-Turkish, which circulated during the
                    60's and 70's of the 19th century.

                    Der Matossian repeatedly referred to Armeno-Turkish as a "language."
                    The Armenians who wrote Ottoman Turkish were not simply transcribing
                    the sounds of the Turkish language; they meticulously preserved the
                    Turkish words, syntax, punctuation and grammatical structures. This
                    triggered the publication of Armeno-Turkish dictionaries and grammar
                    books, many examples of which survive today. The famous Haigazian
                    Pararan, the preeminent lexicon of Classical Armenian published by
                    the Armenian Mekhitarist Fathers of Venice in the early 18th century,
                    gives an Armeno-Turkish equivalent for each word found between its
                    massive covers.

                    `As the language evolved, Armeno-Turkish gradually adopted Arabic and
                    Persian words and word forms,' Der Matossian observed, "Expressions
                    which a Turk would probably not understand."

                    An Armenian Oddity?


                    Not only Armenians read Armeno-Turkish, but the non-Armenian elite,
                    including the Ottoman Turkish intelligentsia, who were exposed to
                    European literature and emerging political ideas thanks, in part, to
                    the Armenians who translated these writing into Armeno-Turkish.

                    Turkish has no native alphabet. The Turks adopted the Arabic script
                    along with Islam.

                    "Arguably, the Armenian letters function better than Arabic as a
                    script for Ottoman Turkish," said Der Matossian, a native of
                    Jerusalem, who is fluent in Armenian, Turkish, Arabic, Hebrew and
                    English. "During the First Ottoman Constitutional Period (1876) there
                    was even the suggestion that Armenian be used as the official
                    alphabet of the Empire," the young scholar said.

                    American Protestant missionaries also learned and used Armeno-Turkish
                    in their missionary efforts among the Armenians of 19th-century
                    Ottoman Turkey. `Grammatically Turkish is a simpler language than
                    Armenian but the Armenian alphabet is much easier to learn than the
                    Arabic script. This made Armeno-Turkish a highly effective tool for
                    the missionaries,' said Der Matossian. `For many Armenians of the
                    time, the Bible was only accessible in Armeno-Turkish translations
                    produced by the missionaries. The Armenian Church used only Krapar
                    (Classical Armenian), which the general population did not
                    understand,' he said. Protestant missionaries also produced an
                    Armeno-Kurdish translation of the Scriptures, as well as
                    Greco-Turkish (so-called Karamanli) and other versions.

                    For Those Who Do Not Know Armenian


                    Again and again Der Matossian insisted that the use of Armeno-Turkish
                    should be seen not as a betrayal of Armenian identity, but as a
                    creative effort to preserve it under the most unfavorable conditions.
                    Several elderly members of the audience were visibly moved when Der
                    Matossian read an Armeno-Turkish prayer that was dedicated `to those
                    who do not know Armenian.' Giving thanks to God for the blessing of
                    holy communion, the prayer had only four Armenian words:
                    haghortootyoon(communion), Heesoos (Jesus), nushkhark (Eucharistic
                    bread), and pazhag (chalice). Der Matossian said that Armeno-Turkish
                    fully exploited the Turkish language but preserved certain `sacred'
                    words in Armenian as a way of maintaining Armenian ethnic boundaries.

                    `I am hearing a language that I don't love express a thought that is
                    very precious to me,' said Edward Yessayian, tears streaming down his
                    cheeks.

                    The Language of the State and Dominant Group


                    `As a result of Ottoman domination and compulsory conversion to
                    Islam, many Armenians of the Ottoman Empire gradually lost their
                    ancestral language but they adhered religiously to their alphabet,
                    teaching it to their children even though they could no longer speak
                    the words it was intended to record,' Der Matossian said. `The
                    readiness of our people to apply the Armenian alphabet as a vehicle
                    for writing the language of the dominant group is astonishing and
                    highly significant.' It is not that the Armenians could not learn the
                    Arabic script - the intelligentsia wrote and spoke Turkish fluently.

                    `Rather," Der Matossian said, `It was their way of preserving,
                    consciously or unconsciously, their ethnic and religious identity and
                    maintaining boundaries around their distinctive identity. I would
                    even venture,' Der Matossian said in response to a question, `that in
                    developing Armeno-Turkish, the Armenians of the Ottoman Empire sought
                    to `armenize' or to consecrate for themselves a small sanctuary in
                    the hostile world they were living in. For Armenians, religion and
                    alphabet cannot be separated.'

                    "Bedross gave a 3-hour lecture in 40 minutes," said Fr. Daniel
                    Findikyan. `Here is an entirely overlooked aspect of the creative
                    genius and theological depth of our Armenian-Christian heritage and
                    forebears.'

                    Der Matossian is a graduate of the Hebrew University and currently a
                    Ph.D. candidate at Columbia University in the Department of Middle
                    East and Asian Languages and Cultures. His concentration is on
                    inter-ethnic relationships during the Second Constitutional Period of
                    the Ottoman Empire.

                    "The great reward of being a teacher is to raise a good student,"
                    said Dr. Roberta Ervine in her introductory remarks. "We are in the
                    presence of something special when we meet a young man like Bedross
                    who has devoted his life to exploring, preserving and teaching a
                    precious culture."

                    Ervine was Mr. Der Matossian's teacher in the Holy Translators' Soorp
                    Tarkmanchats School in Jerusalem. She called him "the best, most
                    perceptive student of Armenian history that I had had in 21 years as
                    a teacher in Jerusalem."

                    The next scheduled lecture in this series will take place at the
                    Seminary on Monday, October 24 at 7:30 PM. Professor Michael Stone,
                    the noted armenologist from Hebrew University in Jerusalem, will
                    deliver a lecture entitled, `Why Have an Armenian Language?'

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