Wednesday, July 28, 2004

Boston has been buzzing with the Democratic National Convention. I haven't been down to the Fleet Center area yet, but am curious. Armenian Americans here in the area have been very excited about the event. There are some members of our community who will be at the convention. The Armostock2004 event is taking shape nicely as we are now working on logistics such as staging, picking the "kebab" people, and taking care of the sound system. Our lineup is lively and the "oud" is the main theme musicially. The "guitar"CD project is wrapping up as well.

Right now, getting Armenian Americans for Kerry and Armenians for Kerry to unite and join in this festival is the goal. As with everything, there has to be two sides. But, hopfully they can work together.

I may/may not be in Armenia in September. There is a project in Shushi I have been asked to coordinate. It's been a good 2.5 years since I've been back to Armenia. This is way to long and I feel totally unconnected since changes there are so rapid.

Here's hoping that Kojian gets back to logging.

Tuesday, July 27, 2004

if you want to see something funny, check out www.armenstock.com

Sunday, July 18, 2004

I know I know.... 2 days in Armenia, and i'm JUST NOW logging.  I've been a little tied up with the AYF group, but things are finally starting to fall into place.  There's so much to write about... here we go.
 
So for those of you traveling to Armenia, I'd like to recommend that you don't do the 12 hours layover trip in Prague ordeal.  Or atleast, it wasn't the greatest of experiences for us.  We left LA very early Tuesday morning, and got to NY  late in that day.  Then we left NY for Prague and got there in the morning.  The airline gives you a free hotel... except they don't mention that the hotel is in the opposite direction of the city, so you have to spend $40 each way to go to Prague.  Well, we figured we came so far, what was $40.  We get to Prague and walk throughout the city, spending money, eating and drinking at different cafe's, but towards 3pm, we're DEAD TIRED and can't even stand up anymore.  We took the taxi back to the village the hotel was in, showered... some preferred to nap rather than shower, and headed back to the hotel.  The check in and check out at the airport was rather fast.  I gotta give them props for that.  The prague airport is like the size of Burbank airport.  Cute.  But, overall it was WAY too long of a trip for my taste.  I prefer the 11 hrs to Amsterdam and 4 hrs to Armenia.  It's clear, straight forward... and PLUS, the service on Delta and the planes of Czech are horrible and somewhat scary.  You ask for water in Delta and the chick gives you the dirtiest look!  Ummm.. never again.
 
Vartevar today... it's been pretty chill.  I think God played the biggest "vartevar" with everyone with thunder and pouring rain.  Maybe people just put their hands down and said, "Ok, can't mess with God". 
 
Yesterday we had a long day... took the group to see Saghmosavank, Abaran, Troyi shirim, Ampert, Arakadzi leej, and M.Mashdots at Oshagan.  It kind of annoyed me that they weren't as enthusiastic about it as I expected... but I think they were just tired, cause in between, the entire van was passed out, while the driver and I discussed rabiz music. 
 
It was interesting to see everyone's reactions when they saw Ararat for the first time.  Some cried, and didn't realize why or how they were crying... some just smirked, shrugged their shoulders and went back to what they were talking about before. 
 
Today Isabella Bayrakdarian got married at Keghart... you ask how I know this.  Well her family was with us from Prague to Yerevan, and then we saw them again at Ani, and last night we ran into them at Hin Yerevan.. I think they think we're stalking them... I got a great clip of her singing with the Hin Yerevan ensemble, with my digital cam.  She's wonderful!
 
For now, these are my random updates, I'll write again, more in depth when the group leaves for Gharapagh and I have some more time to focus...
 
TSUH! :)~
 

Saturday, July 17, 2004

Congrats to the folks who pushed through the Schiff Amendment. Big news, indeed.
 
Around here, there has been a snowball effect with Armenstock 2004. Our musical lineup is solidified and now we are working on getting folks like Ben Bagdikian and Peter Balakian to speak at the all-day Festival. The Kerry campaign may be sending a few folks to help us out and there is talk that members of the Massachusetts House and Senate may send over a few folks to gain some votes for the local elections. Mind you, I am pretty much in this for the musical aspect, but, I guess the politics is important too.
 
While this next subject is sometimes taboo in our community, I will make a comment anyway. ( I am used to it at this point) There is talk that both the ANC (Armenian National Committee of America) and the Armenian Assembly may jointly sponsor this event. I will find exactly out how feasible this sponsorship thing is going to go this week at a meeting with representatives from both organizations. For now, one organization is stepping forward and showing us the cash, I hope the other can agree to do the same. A joint sponsorship for political and cultural purposes is fantastic and could lead to working together in the future. If it doesn't happen, expect a strong reaction from me next week on this log...
 
By the way, Arto Tuncboyaciyan is confirmed to play at Armenstock 2004 with Ara Dinkjian also being present. I am bracing myself for a potential partial Night Ark reunion. John Bilezikjian (oud) and John Berberian (oud) are also in and will be performing TOGETHER with Ara Dinkjian for the last act of the evening. Gor will be there, Cascade Folk Trio is in and we are working on getting the Duduk/Zourna/Davul, etc group Winds of Passion in from LA. Also, jazz prodigy Vardan Ovsepian will be there with his quintet.
 
Folks, book your plane tickets and call up the hotels in Boston, we are expecting over 1000 people at Camp Haiastan in Franklin, MA on August 28th... Tickets are only $20 for a DAY PASS! 

 'Till then

Friday, July 16, 2004

HUGE NEWS!!! The House Floor just passed the Foreign Aid Bill including Congressman Adam Schiff's Ammendment that restricts aid to Turkey from being spent on lobby efforts against the Genocide Resolution. A bit much to explain, it all happened moments ago, but this is great progress! More news later when it sinks in and when the Press Releases hit the net.

Tuesday, July 13, 2004

Take a look at this article that appeared LITERALLY on the front page of the Washington Post. I have to question the timing and relevance of this article. This followed an article in the post yesterday on the opposition protests. This seems like a deliberate attack on Armenia. Not to mention the fact that they did not use the word genocide, even after changing their policy on using the word. This may be an issue of concern, but why on earth is the Washington Post covering this today and on the front page?


Exodus Is New Chapter of Loss in Armenia's Sad Story


By Susan B. Glasser
Washington Post Foreign Service
Monday, July 12, 2004; Page A01


SEVABERD, Armenia -- First, her son left for Russia. Then a daughter. Then her other daughter. Last fall, her remaining son, daughter-in-law and three grandchildren moved. One by one over the last decade, they fled this village on a barren mountain peak, abandoning the rocky earth where the family has lived for a hundred years.

Now it is Atlas Hadjiyan's turn.

She has sold her two cows and no longer tends the vegetable garden that is necessary to survive the brutal winter. In September, she plans to become yet another reluctant emigrant, leaving the independent homeland that Armenians dreamed of for generations for the uncertain welcome of an icy Russian city a thousand miles north. "I don't want to leave," she said, "but this is no place to live."

For this village, whose name means Black Fortress, where there is no running water, no telephones, no paid work and, for much of the winter, no access to the outside world, Hadjiyan's exit will be just another quiet disappointment.

For Armenia at large, her impending departure is the latest result of a slow-motion crisis of confidence that has left the rugged mountain country hemorrhaging people for nearly all of its short history of independence. No one knows just how many have left, but even the most conservative estimates put the total at more than 1 million Armenians and counting -- with a total remaining population of no more than 3 million and perhaps as little as 2 million.

The exodus has made Armenia one of the fastest-disappearing nations in the world. "I call it depopulation," said Gevorg Pogosyan, a sociologist in the capital, Yerevan. "It calls into question whether Armenia is a country with a future. We are a weak society, weakened both politically and economically by this migration."

At the time of independence in 1991, Armenia's mere existence seemed a triumph over a tragic history. The world's 4 million-strong Armenian diaspora exulted at the idea of a national homeland less than a century after the Turks killed between 500,000 and 1.5 million Armenians.

But instead of luring home successful Armenians who had made new lives in the West, the post-Soviet country has written new chapters of loss into an already sad story. Damage remains from the 1988 earthquake that killed tens of thousands.

With broad support from its public, Armenia fought and won a war with neighboring Azerbaijan over the disputed enclave of Nagorno-Karabakh in the 1990s, capturing and holding a large swath of Azeri territory. The Armenians in the enclave supported the war. But Armenia has never concluded a peace deal and remains under economic blockade by Azerbaijan and Turkey.

In a country with no significant natural resources, a collapsed Soviet industrial infrastructure and an economy just now showing signs of recovery, many Armenians had little choice but to leave. About 80 percent headed to Russia and other parts of the former Soviet Union; the rest joined the earlier diaspora in the United States or Western Europe.

Russian experts have calculated that $1 billion from migrants in Russia flows home annually to support Armenian families -- nearly double the Armenian government's entire budget. "If not for these billions, we would have had riots and revolutions here," Pogosyan said.

The wave of departures, which hit a high of about 200,000 a year in the mid-1990s, has stabilized in recent years, but the cumulative effect remains. Far more Armenians now live outside their homeland than in it. The society that stayed has far fewer working-age men, fewer marriages, fewer births. Women outnumber men 56 percent to 44 percent. About 1.5 million people, or nearly half the official population, live on pensions or other government handouts.

There's hardly a family untouched by the shifts -- from the government official charged with stopping the migration, whose own relatives decamped for Moscow, to the television host whose wife and two children moved to California 11 years ago without him.

Lawyer Hrayr Tovmasyan has watched his circle of friends and family dwindle with each passing year. From his graduate school class of four in 1998, one lives in Paris, one in Heidelberg and one in Moscow. His wife's siblings have all left for Russia; his uncles are in the United States and Denmark. "I'm the only one here," he said.

His best friend, a professor, gave up his $70-a-month salary recently to move to Vancouver. He's now working in a furniture plant, but at least, reports Tovmasyan, who got an e-mail update from him last week, "he will get more money than his wife for the first time in his life."

"It's the good part of the population that's gone, the economically active part," Pogosyan said. "They are the ones who are supposed to create a middle class here. Instead, where is this middle class? It's in Europe and Russia."

And still it continues. Several times a day, travel agent Diana Asatryan said, she gets customers with telltale questions: What happens if you overstay a visa abroad? Can I buy a one-way ticket? "The ones who are leaving, they always reveal themselves," she said. Black-market prices for European visas are well-known in the business, she said -- a reported $8,000 to $10,000 for a visa to enter any of the 15 European countries known as the Schengen zone. Favorite destinations are France -- "if you have a baby there, you get residency," she noted -- and the United States, "if you're a young person."

No one knows just how few Armenians remain. A long-delayed official census -- the first since the Soviet collapse -- was conducted in 2001 and just released in full this year; it found an official population of 3.2 million. Independent experts, opposition politicians and many ordinary Armenians find that figure impossible to believe. "By the numbers, nothing changed," said Asatryan. "But even in my own family, 10 people left. Officially they are still here, they are still registered. But they are not here!"

Several experts said the country's population today likely is at between 2 million and 2.5 million.

The disputed figures have become a subject of urgent political debate. Opposition leaders, who united to protest vote fraud in last year's presidential election, claim the census was deliberately inflated to provide more voters for President Robert Kocharian's reelection.

More broadly, they say the constant loss of Armenians represents a widespread skepticism about the country's prospects. "Armenia is disappearing, broken into pieces," said Artashes Geghamian, head of the opposition National Unity Party. "The authorities took away the feeling of having a future from the people."

In an interview, Kocharian said there is not "a serious person in Armenia" who would dispute the accuracy of the census, and he said that "migration out of Armenia has stopped" as a result of strong economic growth on his watch that pushed the gross domestic product up by 13.7 percent last year.

U.S. Ambassador John Ordway endorsed the official head count, pointing to U.S. technical assistance. "We are very confident there was no artificial manipulation of the census figures," Ordway said. "It's not as if the last person is about to slam the door and turn the lights off," he said.

But the head of the government agency created in 2000 to deal with the migration crisis is less sanguine. "To say that the wave of migration has stopped would be wrong," said Gagik Yeganyan. Armenian society, he said, is permanently marked by the "very negative demographic and social consequences" of its lost population -- even if there are tentative signs of improvement. Births, for example, are down from about 90,000 a year in the early 1990s to around 35,000 today.

Most migrants were reluctant to leave and might be persuaded to come home if conditions in Armenia improved, Yeganyan said.

"We have a national idea -- 'One country, one nation, one culture, one religion.' It means that Armenia is considered the motherland for all Armenians living around the world, even though only 30 percent of Armenians live on the territory of the motherland," he said. "Armenians who leave always think they are not leaving forever."

Yeganyan acknowledged the government has yet to produce a comprehensive strategy for luring them back and providing opportunities once they are here. A study from 1998, he said, offered a cautionary tale: Out of 1,500 Armenians deported from Germany that year, 92 percent returned to Germany within a year.

To entice some Armenians back, at least those at the upper end of the income scale, manicured lawns and immaculate California-style suburban houses are taking shape on the outskirts of Yerevan in what is billed as the first American-inspired gated community in the South Caucasus. "Come home to Armenia," reads the sign outside the guardhouse at the Vahakni Homes and Timeshare Resort.

The brainchild of a building magnate based in New Jersey, it was originally pitched to successful expatriate Armenians ready to rebuild the country. Company owner Vahak Hovnanian "firmly believes the future growth of an independent Armenia lies in the diaspora actively coming back, not just sending money," said Arthur Havighorst, the firm's vice president.

But of about 32 houses built or in mid-construction, at prices starting at $190,000, 65 percent have been bought by local Armenians. The remainder, executive director Karekin Odabashian said, are being sold to people who left in recent years to make money in Moscow and elsewhere in East European countries and now want a place in the old country. Not a single resident has come from the United States.

Havighorst said the company has modified its pitch. In addition to ownership, it is offering overseas Armenians time shares at the rate of $6,000 for 20 years' worth of one-week vacations in the motherland. "We're very optimistic," he said. In a week in late June, he said, the firm found two takers for that deal -- "both in California."

Monday, July 12, 2004

It's been a full summer with DC in the middle of the action. Despite the unbearable humid heat that has occupied this city, Armenians from all corners of the country, even the world, have collected here. Since the internship began, I've seen so many faces of the best and brightest. I must say, the future is bright. After a point, you get used to starting the day with a political debate and ending with a feeling of accomplishment. Though we may not be building anything with our physical hands, you can almost visualize knowledge being absorbed.

For the last three weekends, I have attended weddings. This weekend I was in Detroit for the wedding of two very close friends with two VERY big families. There's nothing like a wedding with lots of happy family. It was beautiful and I'm happy to say we all had a good time. All the weddings I've attended this year have been quite amazing.

The buzz of the summer as always is AYF Olympics in Chicago this year. This year marks the return of Harout in the city that introduced him to Olympics 6 years ago. There seems to be a growing California crowd planning on coming, so I'm looking forward to fresh faces at Olympics.

Otherwise, this area is full of picnics, barbeques, and large gatherings in Georgetown of twenty-something Armenians. Last Thursday a group of 20 interns, friends, visitors, etc. went out to dinner and party. Though many of them had just met that night, everyone got along like they had known each other forever. I love looking around at times like this and realizing that we have such a rich generation.

Though things are going very well out here, I must admit, I'm missing Armenia a lot these days. Looks like I'm due for another trip soon. :)

Wednesday, July 07, 2004

First off, welcome Hagop. Finally another LA-tsi to log for us. :) Hadn't realized we could put pics with the new system.. very cool.

Ooremn, the preparations for Hayasdan are almost done. Like I needed an excuse to go to Target 500000 times! :) Hayasdan would be complete if it had a Target Greatland! Yaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!

Needless to say I'm very excited about the trip. I will be staying until November... and now the major dilemma is how do I pack in such a way, so that I can fit summer clothes and fall clothes in just 2 suitcases! If I manage this, I think I shall be dubbed "Queen Packer". :)

As for L.A. - Navasartian Games were somewhat dull this year. I was there 3 out of 4 days (I missed the closing ceremonies) and it seemed like there were less people than years before. (It wasn't too hot, so that wasn't the reason.) Of course I didn't miss Gor's double performance Friday (he opened and closed the show). He did great! Gor and the Showtime band... wooooo hooooo (wish I had a pic to post). Other than that, the only other great performance was Karnig Sarkissian on Thursday night. I'm sure you're thinking, "Big deal, he probably sang all the same songs", but the thing that was great about it was that before each song he stopped and said a few words (mini-educational) about what the song was about and a little historical background! THAT WAS GREAT, especially since a lot of the audience was filled with youth. I did watch the closing ceremonies on Horizon yesterday, and I was somewhat disturbed (lack of a better word). I guess every year there's a couple who sponsors the games (or donates a bunch of money), and just seeing those people walk in on a red carpet with yerakooyn sashes around them, wearing designer outfits, sitting in a roped off area on nice white chairs... HUH? Kind of made me think about what all that is really about, and what gets accomplished from all that "tsev". Kind of made me realize why I'm happy that I was going to Armenia - far from all that. Seems like people have their priorities mixed up. Red carpetttttt??????? huh???

July 4th was great too. Spent the day with my cousins and friends, and then went down to Redondo Beach to watch 3 sets of fireworks... very nice. Very non-Armo. Somewhat weird.

That's pretty much my update. I probably won't write again until next week this time, when I'll be in Armenia! :)

The adventure begins...

TSUH! :)~

Saturday, July 03, 2004

Ok, here is the flyer for our event on August 28th. Should be a great event for music and/or politics.



"KEF for Kerry/Armenstock2004" is produced by Armenians for Kerry (New England) and
Pomegranate Music Events. For further information or to help out with the event contact:

Sevag Arzoumanian
Armenians for Kerry
sevag_a@yahoo.com
617-233-3174

or

Raffi Meneshian
Pomegranate Music
pomegranatemusic@hotmail.com
617-825-9164