Home » Georgia » Latest Armenian News:

100 Years Later – Armenian Catholicos Visits Javakhk

June 14, 2011 Armenia, Georgia, Music No Comments
Thumbnail

Yesterday, Catholicos Garegin II started off on his visit to the region of Javakhk, Georgia. It was the first time that a head of the Armenian Apostolic Church set foot in the Armenian populated area in over 100 years.

Accompanied by Ilia II, Catholicos Patriarch of All Georgia, Catholicos Garegin II, was feted in the Georgian town of Borzhom, famed for its mineral waters. The two were greeted by local church and government officials.

From there, the Armenian Church delegation made its way to the town of Akhaltskha where they were received by Lasha Jkadvan, Regional Governor of Samtskhe-Javakhki and Armenian Church Locum Tenens for Javakhk, Father Babken Salbyan.

Winners of Aram Khachatryan piano contest take their prize

Image g_image.php

The winners of the third stage of Aram Khachatryan International Piano Contest received their prizes at the Aram Khachatryan Concert Hall in Yerevan on Sunday.

The first prize – $15,000 – went to Peng Tsaon from China. Apart from the money, the winner will also be given an opportunity to have a concert with the orchestra of the Mariinsky Theater or Moscow’s State Academic Orchestra in 2011-2012 concert seasons.

The second prize – $10,000 – was shared by Zhora Sargsyan and Lilit Grigoryan from Armenia.

The third prize ($5000) was taken by Sona Arshakyan from Russia.

Anahit Dilbaryan from Armenia received a certificate of participation in the third stage of the contest.

Head of Armenian Church on landmark visit to Georgia

June 13, 2011 Armenia, Georgia, Turkey No Comments
Thumbnail

The continuing visit of Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II to Georgia, during which he has been expected to discuss the status of the Armenian Apostolic Church’s Georgian Diocese status, had been expected with great impatience.

As is known, in Georgia, the Armenian Apostolic Church has no legal status, and for this reason it has had no possibility to function properly. In other words, it is not registered as an organization that has the right to property, expanding this property, carrying out economic activities and operational management of its movable and immovable property.

Tbilisi Armenians Created this City, Says Mayor of Georgian Capital

Thumbnail

The mayors of Tbilisi and Yerevan, Giorgi (Gigi) Ugulava and Karen Karapetyan respectively, attended the opening of the Armenian cultural center “Hayarton” in the Georgian capital.

“If we’re talking about Tbilisi’s culture, we have to say in the first place that, along with others, Armenians were the creators of Tbilisi culture. Therefore, I first want to congratulate you because this city was created by you and other ethnic groups. And our city is characterized by this fact and makes all of its residents Tbilisians,” said the mayor, according to Georgia Online.

Yerevan mayor Karen Karapetyan noted the importance of cooperation between neighboring nations. “I want to thank my colleague from Tbilisi. The opening of this center will deepen our ties.”

Catholicos consecrates Armenian church in Tbilisi

Image g_image.php

In the course of his pontifical visit to Georgia, Catholicos of All Armenians Garegin II consecrated an Armenian Church in Tbilisi. Arriving in the Georgian capital with a team of priests, the Catholicos was greeted by the clergy of the Armenian Diocesse and thousands of Armenian parishioners.

The consecration ceremony was preceded by the grand opening of the Armenian center Hayartun. Founded in1921 by great Armenian poet Hovhannes Tumanyan, the institution was closed down in the 1940s. But the Georgian-Armenian diocese founded a namesake center in 2011 due to the donations of Russian-based benefactor Boris Sahakov and Georgian-Armenian businessmen.

Armenian Church Head Begins Landmark Visit To Georgia

Thumbnail

Catholicos Garegin II began on Friday a weeklong visit to Georgia which the Armenian Apostolic Church hopes will help to resolve its disputes with the Georgian government and Orthodox Church over the country’s Armenian religious heritage.

Garegin was greeted by the Georgian Catholicos-Patriarch Ilia II and several hundred mostly ethnic Armenian believers as he crossed the Armenian-Georgian border on foot. The two pontiffs met with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili later in the day following an official reception ceremony organized by Ilia in Tbilisi’s Saint Trinity cathedral.

“We are going to discuss issues preoccupying our churches and talk about ways of strengthening our cooperation,” Garegin said at the ceremony attended by hundreds of people. “We have come here with a robust spirit and a belief that our meeting will strengthen the centuries-old brotherhood and friendship of our peoples.”

Genocide may sound too radical as a political term, but historical fact should not be ignored – Georgian politician

Image g_image.php

On April 19, just a few days before the Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day, Free Georgia political movement released a statement on the Armenian Genocide, expressing support to what it called the final establishment of historical truth.

Speaking to Tert.am, the leader of the movement, Kakha Kukava, stresssed the importance of viewing the issue in the humanistic rather than the political light. Nevrtheless, he expressed willingness to raise the issue of the Armenian nation’s tragedy in the Georgian society, though he was concernted that such approach night meet the incumbent authorities’ unwelcome response.

“What are your expectations of the recent opposition rallies in Georgia? Do you think opposition forces have chances of a significant progress (early parliamentery or presidential elections)”?

Armenian Catholicos’ historical meeting in Georgia starts earlier than reported

Image g_image.php

His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians made Friday a historical visit to Georgia where he met with Catholicos of All Georgia Ilia II in Tbilisi.

The meeting of the spiritual leaders of the two countries in Saint Trinity Church (Sameba) took place more than half an hour earlier than reported.

His Holiness Karekin II is the first Armenian Catholicos to visit Georgia in the recent century.

Ilia II expressed hope that Karekin II’s visit will contribute to enhancing the historically brotherly relations between the Armenian and the Georgian nations. He also said he would personally do everything to strengthen the existing mutual ties.

Natural-Gas Coming to Lori’s Artzni Village

Thumbnail

The Hayastan All-Armenian Fund is building a natural-gas system in Artzni, a village in Armenia’s Lori Region. The project is sponsored by the fund’s German affiliate. With the construction of a 1.3-kilometer gas pipeline completed, the fund is currently building a 5.5-kilometer internal network, which will supply gas to the some 100 households of the community.

“Our goal is to not only help improve daily life in Artzni, but boost the local economy and ensure its long-term vitality,” says Ara Vardanyan, executive director of the Hayastan All-Armenian Fund. “Our cluster of implemented projects in Artsni has been sponsored variously by our affiliates in Germany, Montreal, and Great Britain as well as the government of India.”

RSS International News By CNN

  • Rights group slam guest list at Queen Elizabeth's lunch
    Rights groups have slammed a lunch being hosted by Britain's Queen Elizabeth II on Friday for including monarchs criticized over their countries' human rights records. […]
  • Kids take exams, then flee gunfire
    Tumsifu Gilaine was at school when she first heard the gun battles. The teenager said she and her friends were taking their final exams and every day from their classrooms they could hear the army and rebel soldiers battling it out for dominance. […]
  • When your name is also crude Arabic slang
    France's new Socialist government is already causing ripples throughout a Europe struggling to balance government budgets without making ordinary people's lives miserable, but it has created a completely different problem in the Middle East. […]
  • 49 decapitations: Business as usual?
    On Sunday, 49 decapitated bodies were found on a major highway outside Monterrey, Mexico, which is about 80 miles southwest of the U.S. border. […]
  • 200-year-old shipwreck found
    A wooden ship believed to be over 200 years old was discovered during a recent exploration of the northern Gulf of Mexico, according to a press release from the U.S. National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). […]
  • Blasts at Baghdad pet market kill 5
    Three roadside bombs exploded Friday in quick succession at an outdoor pet market in Baghdad, killing five people and wounding 31 others, police officials said. […]
  • Al Qaeda berates Yemen leader
    Al-Qaeda's leader is calling for the Yemeni people to rise up against the country's new president, portraying him as the stooge of the unpopular former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, and the United States. […]
  • Tycoon gets life for smuggling
    A Chinese court on Friday sentenced Lai Changxing, a tycoon who spent more than a decade as a fugitive in Canada, to life in prison for smuggling and bribery, the state-run news agency Xinhua reported. […]
  • Afghan street kids in Paris
    We're at a soup kitchen in a shabby back street in Paris, next to the canal Saint Martin, near the Jaurès metro stop. Hundreds of homeless people are queuing up for some hot food and a coffee. Most of them are from Asia; many from Afghanistan and Bangladesh. […]
  • No remorse by 'Butcher of Bosnia'
    Seventeen years after the end of the war, Ratko Mladic gives the impression he is still on the battlefield in what was once Yugoslavia, staring down his enemy, glowering across the courtroom. Even gesticulating death threats. […]

CNN International Explores the Secrets of Armenia’s Stone Henge

AdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisementAdvertisement

The Protocol

Full Text of The Armenian Turkish Protocol

Recent Comments

  • Samvel Jeshmaridian: OPEN LETTER TO MS. MARIE YOVANOVITCH Dear Ms. Marie Yovanovitch, I know the so...
  • Berge Jololian: The mayor's decision to close down squattered kiosks allover the capital to prev...
  • Berge Jololian: Turkey and Israel deserve each other. For two decades, the Israel lobby in the U...
  • Berge Jololian: The dangers of an Israeli apology. When will Israel do the right thing? Tur...
  • Samvel Jeshmaridian, PhD: Shame on You, Mrs. Clinton. Two years ago, at a press-conference Mr. Aghvan Hovs...
  • Samvel Jeshmaridian, PhD: Mr. Sarksyan, You are on the edge of the rock. If You do one more move forward, ...
  • Samvel Jeshmaridian, PhD: Dr. Aharon Adibekyan reminds me the Armenian anecdote, "Namanavand Dzis kapem ga...
  • Samvel Jeshmaridian, PhD: Mr. Hovsepyan is a US spy! Mr. Hovsepyan hopes he will die before the truth is r...
  • Tovmasyan Karen: There is no constitutional obstcle! President Ter-Petrosian will be the next pre...
  • Ara: ADORE this band, so porrful vocals and so symphonic elements in their music, hai...

Poll

Sorry, there are no polls available at the moment.

-

Featured Books

Book Reviews

John Balian’s “Novel Approach” Brings the Armenian Saga to the Masses – An interview with John Balian by Lucine Kasbarian

Gray Wolves and White Doves cover art

Armenians often wish for a tale about the Armenian Genocide and its aftermath that would make a blockbuster film and draw attention to their cause. John Balian’s new book, Gray Wolves and White Doves (CreateSpace/Amazon.com), may be that tale.

 Largely autobiographical, this atmospheric novel is presented through the eyes of an innocent young boy trying to make sense of the world as he grows up amid repressive conditions in Western Armenia/Eastern Turkey during the 1960s and 70s.

 This fast-paced, multi-layered narrative takes readers from Hanna Ibelin’s (a.k.a. Jonah Ibelinian’s) close-knit family life in the perilous Asia Minor region of Palu to terror and tragedy while en route to Syria’s Kamishli, to a bleak existence on the mean streets of Istanbul.

New Children’s Picture Book From Armenian Folklore

Teaneck, N.J. and Belmont, Mass. –  An Armenian folktale retold by Armenian-American writer Lucine Kasbarian and illustrated by Moscow-based artist Maria Zaikina debuts with Marshall Cavendish Children’s Publishers in April 2011.

The Greedy Sparrow: An Armenian Tale is from the ancient Armenian oral tradition and culture, which was nearly obliterated during the Turkish genocide of the Armenians, Assyrians and Greeks in 1915. The author learned the tale from her father, editor and columnist C.K. Garabed, who would recite it to her at bedtime. He had learned it from his own grandmother, a celebrated storyteller from the Old Country.  The tale was first put to paper by Armenian poet Hovhannes Toumanian at the turn of the 20th century.

“We Need To Lift The Armenian Taboo”

Turkish writer and publicist Ahmet Insel labels the initiative of the Turkish Nationalist Movement Party to pray namaz on the ruins of Ani as provocation.

In an interview with “A1+,” the publicist said the initiative was supported only by a small percentage of Turks.

“They offered namaz in Ani in protest against Christian rites carried out in Trabzon and Akhtamar. The leader of the Nationalist Movement Party, Devlet Bahceli said if Christians are allowed to pray inside museums, similarly he can pray namaz in Armenian churches,” said Ahmet Insel.

The Turkish writer arrived in Armenia to participate in a book festival. Presentation of Armenian version of Dialogue sur le tabou arménien (Dialogue about the Armenian Tabou) co-authored by Ahmet Insel and Michel Marian was held during the festival.

US Media Discusses The Armenian Genocide

BURBANK, CALIFORNIA –  KFI 640, a popular news/talk radio station hosted by Bill Handel on September 23 aired a live interview with Michael Bobelian, the writer of a new book titled  Children of Armenia: A Forgotten Genocide and the Century-long Struggle for Justice

The book chronicles the aftermath of the Armenian Genocide of 1915, and recounts a people’s struggle for justice in the face of a century of silence and denial.

During the interview, which was aired during the prime morning time slot, Bill Handel addressed both the efforts within the United States to ensure that the US government appropriately acknowledges the Armenian Genocide and Turkey’s ongoing denial.

Our Sponsors

Commentary

Azerbaijan wins Security Council Seat, while Armenians remain idle

Image g_image.php

By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier

Pres Aliyev was celebrating last week his country’s historic victory at the United Nations. With an overwhelming number of votes, Azerbaijan was elected for the first time to the prestigious UN Security Council for a two-year term.

This column shall address three questions: 1) how did Azerbaijan manage to get elected to such an elite body? 2) what will Azerbaijan accomplish with its newly-acquired seat? 3) what actions did Armenians take to counter Azerbaijan’s candidacy?

New Online Cultural Platform Launched in Armenia

Thumbnail

A new Armenian website for culture — arteria.am — was launched at the Khnko Apor Children’s Library in Yerevan today. Armenian Book Center NGO is the organization responsible for the site, which was developed with the assistance of the Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency (SIDA) and the Eurasia Partnership Foundation.

The website is the response to “the published book and organized exhibit, the cinema poster and the music that pours from the stage or the signs in procession down the street, the writing on the walls of establishments, the conversations given wings in city transport, which wants take form and resound as commentary or criticism,” reads the section on concept on the site, which is currently only available in Armenian.

Pres Sarkozy Says ‘Tseghasbanoutyoun’, a word Obama has yet to utter

Image g_image.php

By Harut Sassounian
Publisher, The California Courier

Flying to Armenia, French President Nicolas Sarkozy confided to his top aides last week: “I am going to toss a live grenade!” He was revealing his readiness to act firmly if Turkey continued to deny the Armenian Genocide.

Shortly after arriving in Yerevan, Pres Sarkozy courageously declared before journalists assembled at the Armenian Genocide Monument: “The Armenian Genocide is a historic reality that was recognized by France. Collective denial is even worse than individual denial.” When asked if France would adopt a law to prosecute those who deny the Genocide, the French President stated: “If Turkey revisited its history, faced its bright and dark sides, this recognition of the Genocide would be sufficient. But if Turkey will not do that, then without a doubt it would be necessary to go further.”

Visit to Nakhichevan Shows Why Armenians Can Never Again Live Under Azeri Rule

4564

By Harut Sassounian

Publisher, The California Courier

Scottish researcher Steven Sim reported about his troubling experiences in Nakhichevan, a historic Armenian territory now occupied by Azerbaijan. Since Sim’s 2006 revealing report has not been adequately publicized in the international media, I would like to present here some of its highlights.

Sim stated that he entered Nakhichevan by land from Turkey and traveled to the village of Abrakunis at Yernjak valley. When he asked a 12-year-old about an ancient church there, the boy pointed to an empty piece of land.

Kocharian Criticized Sargsyan’s Handling of Armenia-Turkey Protocols, But Said He Won’t Interfere

Thumbnail

In a Sept. 25, 2009 meeting with former President of Armenia Robert Kocharian initiated by then US Ambassador to Armenia Marie L. Yovanovitch, Armenia’s second president criticized current President Serzh Sargsyan for his handling of the rapprochement with neighboring Turkey.

 

According to a diplomatic cable sent by then US Deputy Chief of Mission Joseph Pennington to the US State Department soon after the meeting and recently published by WikiLeaks, Kocharian asked, “why should Turkey’s parliament have to ratify” a set of protocols when “the Turks did no such thing in closing the border” in 1993? In the ex-president’s view, the Turks were exploiting the protocols and Sargsyan “in an effort to embark upon a negotiating process that they had every intention of dragging out, to the detriment of Armenia’s interests… He said he would have imposed a deadline on the Turks to do both things, and criticized Sargsyan for not doing so. ‘Now Turkey is dictating the process, and we have no room for maneuver’.”