Archive for May, 2006

An Armenian Priest Possible Molester

via Boston.com New Britain priest charged with molesting 12-year-old girl

May 10, 2006

NEW BRITAIN, Conn. –The priest of an Armenian church was charged Tuesday with molesting a 12-year-old girl last year, and his parishioners responded by rallying in support of him and protesting the arrest.

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photo from www.armenianreporteronline.com

Krikoris Keshishian, 53, leader of St. Stephen's Apostolic Armenian Church in New Britain, was charged with fourth-degree sexual assault and impairing the morals of a child by sexual contact. He was released on a promise to appear in New Britain Superior Court on May 23.

New Britain police Sgt. Michael Baden said the allegations involve a single incident in May 2005, but more counts involving the same girl may be added. He said a relative of the girl called police after she told her family about the alleged abuse.

Police said Keshishian was acting in his official capacity when he inappropriately touched the girl.

Church members questioned whether Keshishian was being framed and said the arrest will devastate the church. The sexual assault charge is a felony that carries one to five years in prison.

"Someone must be trying to do something terrible to him," said church member Clara Semerdjian. "He is a loving man, a wonderful man, who would give his heart to anyone. … Something is very wrong with this."

Keshishian and his wife live in a church-owned house in New Britain. No one answered his front door Tuesday.

© Copyright 2006 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

p.s. his picture doesn't seem to be of a 53-year-old person's. I also just gave a call to this priest at his cell phone (just got it through won't-tell-from-where), nobody answered (perhaps because it is 1:31 a.m. in New Britain biggrin.gif). But the voice message seemed to be of a very young person. I am confused. Anyhow, I will not be surprised if he gets convicted. Corruption and mafia is not the only problem in the Armenian church, just like every other religous organization.

Enough Is Enough!

Two out of three winners of an international chess competition in Dubai, the 2006 Sheikh Rashid Bin Hamdan Al Maktoum’s Cup, are from Armenia.

I think it is time for Armenians to get over winning chess championships in this world and start thinking of other sports and stuff. It is becoming annoying, seriously.

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At least I keep the balance:D : I cannot even play chess. But my Dad is invincible (perhaps the only thing he is good at in this world).

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Anime Company Attacked by YOU GUESS WHO

Apparently, Turkish (and Azerbaijani) hackers do not only hack Armenian websites and “decorate” the latter with genocide denial and anti-Armenian hate messages. ADV Films, a very popular cartoon website, has been hacked by Turkish denialists. unsure.gif

As previously reported, the ADV Films webiste at www.advfilms.com was hacked on Saturday morning by a group of Turkish hackers called Ayyildiz. Webpages on the site were defaced with the Ayyildiz logo message. Ayyildiz commonly hacks websites and defaces them with a propaganda message claiming that the Armenian genocide was an act of self-defense. The message also attacks the Kurdish PKK and their backers, and states that any country that is treacherous towards Turkey will have its websites "erased from the Internet."

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A mirror of the original hack can be seen here.

ADV removed the hacked server on Saturday morning, no more than a few hours after the original hack itself. Their website resumed regular operation on Sunday evening. According to Mark Williams, CTO at ADV, they took advantage of the downtime to implement several already prepared expansions, including the addition of new servers. The reparations took longer than Williams would have liked as it was the weekend and several staff we're out of town for the weekend. "Plus," adds Williams, "We liked the Turkish terrorist music."

Williams states that the vulnerability that lead to this attack has been corrected and that the only server affected was a front end content-caching server, no customer data was affected in any way.

http://www.animenewsnetwork.com/article.php?id=8840

Chewing Gum: New Taboo That Insults Turkishness

I can't believe I missed this. Enjoy. laugh.gif

via no dhimmitude. ANKARA (Reuters) – An official in Turkey's ruling party has been arrested for chewing gum while laying a wreath at a monument to the country's revered founder Kemal Ataturk, the state Anatolian news agency said on Monday.

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The [Forever?] Sick Man of Europe
picture by Charles Henry

Veysel Dalci, head of the local branch of the Justice and Development Party (AKP) in the Black Sea town of Fatsa, was charged with insulting Ataturk's memory during Sunday's ceremony marking Turkey's National Sovereignty Day.

Christians vs. Christians

It is disappointing to see Armenia’s sole Christian neighbor, the Republic of Georgia, to continue the “Georganization” of that country’s rich Armenian heritage.

When Turkey and Azerbaijan “convert” Armenian churches to mosques (such as in Kars, Urfa and other places), to sports centers (such as in Kesaria) or to prostitution houses (such as in Afyon Karahisar), it is “understandable:” one would expect fanatic Muslims to desecrate Christian entities. But when the “second Christian nation on Earth” [Georgia] converts the heritage of the “first Christian nation on Earth” [Armenia], it is troubling.

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This is a khachkar (cross-stone in Armenian). It was erected in memory of Father Hakob in 1681, as the Armenian inscriptions on it depicted (l). In 1997, when Georgians “reconstructed” St. Gevorg Monastery of Telet Village, the inscription (aka, it’s Armenian identity) “disappeared” ®. Why? There has never been an inscription on it, according to Georgian nationalism. From www.raa.am

Hetq Online has a new article on the uncertain developments in Georgia. "Georgia is the only country in the world where not only do Armenian churches not have legal status, but they are also the subject of heated arguments,” the Prelate of the Armenian Apostolic Church in Georgia is quoted as saying.

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This is St. Gevorg Monastery of Telet Village (Republic of Georgia). The photo on the left was taken in 1988. The white marble slabs are inscriptions in Armenian and Russian telling the story of this Armenian Church’s establishment. The photo on the right is from 1990, and shows that the marble slabs have been removed. This is the traditional method of the Georganization of the Armenian culture. From www.raa.am.

The common Georgian response to the conversion of Armenian monuments is the same ol’e myth, “These monuments are originally Georgian.” So these individuals are not denying their action: they are simply justifying their vandalistic actions. The nationalists in Tbilisi, Georgia’s capital, get more angry when it is mentioned that over 90% of the mayors of that city have been Armenian and that the Armenian minority has had huge contribution to the development of that city. This could be a reason for “revenging” the Armenian culture and trying to eliminate the Armenian trace from Georgia’s history.

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What do you do when you remove the Armenian letters? Exactly! You put a Georgian inscription (from The Idiot’s Guide to Denying Georgia’s Armenian Heritage)

Since the Georgian and Armenian alphabets are different (though both were, NOT according to Georgian nationalists, created by the same person – Armenian Bishop Mesrop Mashtots in the 5th Century C.E.) the “Best Way” of Georganizing an Armenian church or another Armenian monument is the removal of the Armenian inscriptions that were usually placed during the establishment and the major reconstructions. And since Georgian and Armenian architecture are very similar (and not being an architect major, I will not dare to say that Georgian architecture is based on the Armenian architecture), “letters” are the only problem.

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This is the Sourb Astvatzatzin (Holy Virgin) Church, Shindis Village, built during 1866-1873. The Armenian inscription of the church was removed during a 1998 “reconstruction” by Georgians. From www.raa.am

The unjust treatment toward the Armenian heritage in Georgia may well invoke Armenian apprising in Javakhk (Armenian Javakheti region of that country); something that I hope will not make it to a war between the two Christian nations.

Hetq's article

Canadian Blogger Attacks Back

Charles Henry, a Canadian blogger of no dhimmitude, has posted an entry about the psychotic Turkish Ambassador of Canada who has left Canada in angst after the administration of the latter said that the Armenian genocide, by the way, did take place.

Henry quotes the Turkish Ambassador as saying, “The Armenian claims are a direct attack on our identity, on Turkey's history.”

The Canadian blogger also posts a picture of a denialist Turkey with its head in the ground.

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According to official turkish policy, it seems that we Canadians are "gravely" prejudiced for distrusting the unbiased memories of the turkish government, foolishly relying on our own memories to formulate our opinions. We are being "gravely" offensive in choosing to use facts as our foundation for understanding the history of our world. If only we could follow the noble turkish model, of using hopeful wishes instead of the "gravely" western approach of accumulating and studying data..
Turkey is increasingly resembling that great western philosopher, Chico Marx, who once remarked to a distrusting Margaret Dumont,
"Who are you going to believe, me or your own eyes?"

read the whole post at
no dhimmitude

I got an alcohol ticket and more

Monthly Personal Alerts

· I got an underage alcohol ticket last week 70 miles away from where I live. The reason? My brother got drunk and told my name to the police when he almost got arrested… Thankfully, he changed his mind and told the Police his real name. My first ticket ever was taken back by the same officers!

· I am done with the semester and have finished the two-year college I was attending. I am getting ready for a 500-people party (celebration) for Thursday, and am writing my speech for my Saturday graduation (I am the student speaker). I am also seriously thinking about the University I will transfer to: it will most likely be DU (University of Denver).

· I am still angry after learning about corruption in Armenian kindergartens. In order to get a “good role” in the theatrical performances or shows, the parents of the kids are supposed to pay about $20 to the organizers (aka, teachers)! Talent is a word worth $20 now… My sister, a theatrical director, journalist and art critic, refused to pay the amount in order to get a good “part” for my niece. No more biased comments biggrin.gif.

· I had nice time in Seattle and Long Beach, California two weeks ago. The best thing about Seattle is the gum-wall they have (that very few locals even know about). Long Beach was more fun without going into personal details. Oh, and I also met Miss South Korea 2003 (according to her cousin Hong-Ju "Jason" Lee!) there; she is not in shape now, so don’t jump on my face if you don’t like her!

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Ms. Korea 2003 (?) and me in April of 2006. Her cousin, “Jason,” got offended when I said, with good intentions, the girl looked liked a Mongolian.

· I was again in the newspapers in our state a few days ago. The same stuff about winning the All-USA award. California Courier, America’s most circulated Armenian weekly, also wrote about the awards. People around are getting annoyed with this stuff. There is this family who would always clip articles about me or written by me and they would send those to me. They have stopped doing so sad.gif

· At the end of this month I will start a summer job at the Colorado State Capitol. A prestigious but underpaid tour guide job with many prospective opportunities.

· Many new bills to pay and a damaged, one-side-mirror car to repair. A research to finish about Tibetan-Armenian trade connections. To find a way to pay for my family’s medical expenses and continue waiting for my girlfriend to return to the States. To continue thinking of moving out of the small apartment: I need more walls to hang my certificates on (as my brother-in-law says, “Simon respects himself many times” laugh.gif). To find a way out of the stupid Dean of Businesses Affairs Screening Committee. To convince Amanda to find a more creative job and to make clear to Oreet that she has to attend my graduation (READ IT, GIRL?). To send thank you notes to Coca-Cola Scholars Foundation, Mr. and Mrs. Guistwhite, USA TODAY. To hope that the number of alcoholics will not increase (I am not asking decrease) in my family.

The CIA way: "Admit nothing, deny everything"

"Admit nothing, deny everything, and make counteraccusations," this is what now resigned CIA director Porter Goss would advise students if he were addressing a graduating class of CIA case officers.

Why do I think so? Actually, Goss said those exact words on Saturday (6 May 2006) morning.

So if American policy has not made sense before, now we know why.

Another Armenian Plane Destroyed

Another Armenian airplane destroyed, this time without victims.

Armenian Aircraft In Brussels Blaze

BRUSSELS, May 5, 2006 (RFE/RL) — A plane owned by the Armenian airline operator Armavia was one of four aircraft damaged today in an apparently accidental fire at Brussels international airport

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A relative grieves during a mourning ceremony for a victim of the Airbus A-320 plane crash at a church in Adler near Russia's Black Sea city of Sochi May 5, 2006. Relatives began the grim task on Thursday of identifying bodies of some of the 113 passengers and crew killed when their Armenian airliner crashed into the Black Sea off Russia's coast. REUTERS/Eduard Korniyenko

The incident comes on a day of national mourning in Armenia for the 113 victims in a May 3 crash involving another Armavia plane.

That accident occurred as an Armavia Airbus 320 was preparing to land on the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi.

In today's incident, four Brussels airport employees were injured, one seriously.

The fire broke out around midnight in a maintenance hangar and took two hours to quell.

The other planes involved belonged to the Belgian military, the Greek carrier Hellas Jet, and Air Arabia, a low-cost airline operating out of the United Arab Emirates.

http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2006/…E72FB0CAC7.html

Photo Coverage 2: Plane Crash

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Sochi, RUSSIAN FEDERATION: Relative(s) of passengers killed, when the Armeninan aircraft that was carrying them plunged into the black Sea off the coast near the resort of Sochi yesterday, identify their kin 04 May 2006 with the aid of photographies. Russian rescue workers stepped up their search on today for bodies and wreckage from an Armenian Airbus A320 that plunged into the Black Sea Killing all 113 on board. French specialists have been appraoched to locate the jet's black boxes. AFP PHOTO / DENIS SINYAKOV

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Workers load coffins with the bodies of victims from the Airbus 320 plane crash onto a truck at a city morgue in Russia's Black Sea city of Sochi May 4, 2006. Relatives began the grim task on Thursday of identifying bodies of some of the 113 passengers and crew killed when their Armenian airliner crashed into the Black Sea off Russia's coast. REUTERS/Eduard Korniyenko

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Students mourn their two schoolmates killed in a plane crash in Adler near the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, Thursday, May 4, 2006. Search-and-rescue boats plied the waters offshore, searching for bodies and debris from the Armenian Airbus A-320 that plunged into the sea on Wednesday. So far, 47 bodies have been brought in, and 22 of them identified, according to emergency officials. French specialists who joined the search Thursday, using sonar to scan the sea floor, have picked up signals that may have been emitted by the plane's black boxes, Russian news agencies said, citing the Emergency Situations Ministry. (AP Photo/Sergey Ponomarev)

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A relative grieves during an identification procedure at a city morgue in Russia's southern Black Sea town of Sochi, May 4, 2006. All 113 passengers and crew on board an Armenian airliner were killed on Wednesday when the plane crashed into the Black Sea off the Russian coast in heavy rain and disintegrated. REUTERS/Sergei Karpukhin

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