V.H. Apelian's Blog

V.H. Apelian's Blog

Tuesday, May 27, 2025

Celebrating Republic of Armenia

 Vaհe H Apelian


Happenstance has the Armenian Americans celebrate the Armenian Republic Day on May 28, two days after observing the Memorial Day on Monday May 26, 2025. 

 Non-working Holidays enable the citizens to observe important events in the life of the nation. The U.S. Federal government recognizes 11 non-working holidays, among them the Memorial Day. Armenia observes 12 non-working holidays, among them the Armenian Republic Day – Hanrabedoutyan or – Հանրապետութեան օր.

Soviet Armenia did not celebrate May 28, but a good segment of the Diaspora, mostly affiliated with the ARF and the Cilician Catholicosate, celebrated May 28 as Independence Day.  After Armenia regained its independence, the postal service of the Republic of Armenia issued in 1992 its first stamps celebrating May 28, designating the stamp’s first day cover as Independence Day.

First Day Cover, May 28, Independence Day

But the Armenian reality had to contend with another historic day. On September 21, 1991, a referendum was held in the Armenian SSR to determine whether to secede from the Soviet Union. The overwhelming majority, 99.5%, voted in favor of independence, with a 95% turnout. This referendum followed a declaration of independence on August 23, 1990, and provided the legal basis for the Armenian SSR to declare its independence from the Soviet Union. The formal declaration of independence was made on September 23, 1991, officially establishing the Republic of Armenia. Hence the Armenian government designated September 21 as Independence Day, and May 28 as the Republic Day.

 During the years we celebrated May 28 as Independence Day, we celebrated the day for having attained independence for founding the first ever Republic of Armenia. It was in fact a celebration for the founding of the free, independent, democratic Republic of Armenia. I invite the readers to check the front cover of the May 28 special, larger than normal edition of Aztag Daily in Lebanon, posted below. The front cover heralded the 60th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia – Հայաստանի Հանրապետութեան  վաթսուն Ամեակ։  

60th Anniversary of the Republic of Armenia

Two days after observing the Memorial Day on May 26 and paying homage by remembering and honoring those who were killed on duty, we will celebrate the 107th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia. I join Armenia’s ambassador in Washington DC and all those who on May 28, celebrate the Republic of Armenia and with them I wish the Republic of Armenia a long, peaceful, prosperous existence now and forever.


An auspices day: May 26, 451-Battle of Avarayr

 We celebrate the Battle of Avarayr of the Vartanants War in February. But the war actually took place on May 26, 451. There are different interpretations as to why the war is celebrated in February when it actually took place at the later part of May. According to Dr. Antranig Chalabian, “The Vardanian War, as it came to be called in Vardan's honor, began on May 26, 451, but the Armenian church celebrates the event in February. In the past, spring was considered the season for warfare. Armenia's ecclesiastical fathers had decided to commemorate the event in February, before spring, in order to inspire the youth and prepare their minds for battle, in defense of church and fatherland.”

I reproduced Dr. Antranig Chalabian’s article about the Vartanants War in “Military History Magazine” titled “Armenians First Christians to raise up Arms in Defense of their Right to Worship." Vaհe H Apelian



"The year 428 ad brought an end to Armenia's Arsacid (Arshakuni) monarchy, which had ruled the country since 52 ad, when its founder, Trdat I, received his crown from the Roman emperor Nero. Most of Armenia then fell under the rule of the Persian Sassanids and was governed by marzbans (governors-general), appointed by the king of Persia. The marzban was invested with supreme power, including the power to impose death sentences, but could not interfere with the privileges of the Armenian nobility. Of the 35 successive marzbans who ruled during a 200-year period, six were Armenians. 
In spite of the Arsacid monarchy's demise, the Armenians preserved their cultural identity through the spiritual power of their Christian faith. King Trdat III (286¬336) had declared Christianity to be the state religion in 301 ad, thereby making Armenia the first officially Christian nation on earth. (The first Christian emperor of Rome, Constantine the Great, did not announce his conversion until 312.) Following the invention of the Armenian alphabet in 405, the Bible and works of the church fathers were translated into Armenian between 422 and 432, filling the soul of the nation with a fervent Christian zeal. 
During the marzbanic period, the Persians launched a series of intermittent persecutions against the Christian Armenians. In particular, King Yazdegird II (438¬457), wanted to pressure the Armenians to accept Zoroastrianism, which included the worship of the supreme god Ahura Mazda. By doing so, he hoped to prevent any future alliance based on religion between the Armenians and Persia's archenemy, the Eastern Roman Empire. 
Yazdegird called the Armenian nobles to his court at Ctesiphon. Mihr-Nerseh, the grand vizier, promulgated an edict enjoining the Armenians to give up "the erroneous and foolish ways of the Romans, thus depriving themselves of the benefits of the Persian perfect religion." 
After returning to their country in 449, the Armenians held a general assembly in Artashat to ponder an answer to the edict. Catholicos Hovsep presided over the meeting. It was attended by 17 bishops, 18 major nakharars (feudal lords), many noblemen and prominent priests, whose spokesman was the Erets (priest) Ghevond. 
The Armenians' reply to Mihr-Nerseh concluded with the following words: "From this belief [Christianity] no one can move us; neither fire, nor sword, nor water, nor any other horrid tortures. All our goods and our possessions are in your hands, our bodies are before you; dispose of them as you will. If you leave us to our belief, we will here on earth choose no other lord in your place, and in heaven choose no other God in place of Jesus Christ, for there is no other God but him." 
When the Persian king was informed of their rejection, he flew into a rage and sent an order for the chief dignitaries of Armenia to appear before him in Ctesiphon. Fifteen came, headed by Vassak Siuni and Vardan Mamikonian. Before receiving them in audience, Yazdegird had sworn "by the Sun God, that if tomorrow morning, at the rise of the magnificent one [the sun], the nobles would not kneel before it with him, and acknowledge it as god, they would be imprisoned and chained, their wives and children exiled into distant lands, and the imperial troops and herds of elephants would be sent to Armenia to demolish their churches."  
The dignitaries opted to make a pretense of yielding, for the sake of their homes and families. Yazdegird, in great joy, heaped honors and gifts upon them and sent them off to Armenia accompanied by 700 Magi, to convert the entire country to Zoroastrianism, or Mazdaism. 
Scarcely had the strange cavalcade crossed the frontier, 420 miles east of Dvin, when a horde of Armenian peasants, armed with clubs and slings and led by the fiery priest Ghevond, assailed the trespassers and sent them fleeing. 
The Armenian leaders, most of them ashamed of their sham apostasy, avoided appearing in public. Many young men and women were ready to fight and die for their Christian faith if the Persian king made good his threat of an armed invasion. They had implicit confidence in their commander, Vardan Mamikonian. 
Vardan was the son of Sparapet (general) Hamazasp Mamikonian and Sahakanush, the daughter of the Catholicos Sahak Bartev, a descendent of Gregory the Illuminator. The Roman Emperor Theodosius II (408¬450) and the Persian King Bahram V (421¬438) had both conferred the rank of general upon Vardan. He had visited Constantinople on diplomatic missions. As a commander of Armenian contingents of the Persian army, with a record of service in 40 engagements, he had won laurels in campaigns in Khorassan (modern Turkestan). 
With war now inevitable, Vardan dispatched a delegation to the Eastern Roman court for help, but he was met with bitter disappointment. Atilla the Hun, ruling over a territory that stretched from the Caspian Sea to the Rhine, was threatening Constantinople. The Roman emperor had drained his meager treasury to purchase peace with the barbarian. As long as the Huns menaced the very gates of the capital, no Roman emperor dared irritate that other great enemy, the king of Persia. 
On Easter Day, April 13, 451, the Persian army, numbering 300,000 men, arrived at a location between Her and Zarevand (Khoy and Salmast in present-day Iran). The army's center was held by the division of the "Immortals"--10,000 horsemen. A herd of trained elephants, each carrying an iron tower full of bowmen, was another menace. The rear guard was reinforced by a column of elephants, on one of which, in a barbed tower, sat the commander, Mushkan Nusalavurd, viewing the entire battlefield and directing movements. 
The Armenian forces, comprised of 66,000 cavalry and infantry and accompanied by a considerable number of clergy, camped near the village of Avarair in the Plain of Shavarshakan (modern Maku, in the northwestern corner of Iran). The rivulet Ighmud ("muddy"), a tributary of the Araxes River, separated the two armies. 
On May 26, Vardan, who from childhood had been well versed in the Holy Scriptures, read aloud the heroic deeds of the Jewish Maccabees, who successfully fought against the Seleucid tyrant Anthiochus IV (175¬164 bc) in defense of their faith. Then Ghevond delivered a discourse. 
Eghishé, a contemporary chronicler, described the Battle of Avarair, to which he was an eyewitness: "One should have seen the turmoil of the great crisis and the immeasurable confusion on both sides, as they clashed with each other in reckless fury. The dull-minded became frenzied; the cowards deserted the fields; the brave dashed forward courageously, and the valiant roared. In a solid mass the great multitude held the river; and the Persian troops, sensing the danger, became restless in their places; but the Armenian cavalry crossed the river and fell upon them with a mighty force. They attacked each other fiercely and many on both sides fell wounded on the field, rolling in agony." 
Upon seeing his left flank crumbling before the Persians, Vardan led a counterattack that cut off and destroyed the Persian right wing. Mushkan, however, rallied his troops and committed his reserves. Vardan and his warriors were surrounded by the Persian vanguard and went down fighting. 
The battle continued until evening. By that time, 1,036 Armenians and 3,544 Persians lay dead in heaps on the battlefield. The survivors were scattered over the hilltops and in more protected valleys. Despite the heavier Persian casualties, Mushkan had won the day. Vardan had fallen in battle, and there was no longer any chief who could rally his remaining troops. 
Though beaten, however, the Armenian army was far from destroyed. Vahan Mamikonian, son of the great Vardan's brother Hmayak, took charge and led the Armenians in a guerrilla war that flared around strongholds and along impregnable heights for the next 33 years.

During that time, the Sassanids underwent three changes of rulers, and also had to deal with external conflicts with Rome and a new wave of eastern barbarians known as the Ephthalites, or White Huns. After the death of King Peroz at the hands of the White Huns in 484, his brother and successor, Balash, made a serious reassessment of the long, inconclusive conflict in Armenia and sued for peace. Vahan sent messengers to the Persian camp, with proposals for liberties in Armenia, the main one being: "Religious worship in accordance with Christian doctrines and rites to be declared free in Armenia, and fire altars to be removed." 
Balash accepted Vahan's terms, and in 484, a treaty was signed in the village of Nuwarsak. Vahan was appointed marzban of Armenia. His victory was celebrated in the Cathedral of Dvin, with the Catholicos Hovhan I Mandakuni (478¬490) officiating. Armenia had regained her autonomy and freedom of the national church and culture. Vahan ruled for 20 years (485¬505). 
Vardan Mamikonian's analogy comparing the Armenians' struggle to that of the Jewish Maccabees proved to be remarkably apt. In both cases, followers of the Bible had fought for the right to worship in the face of religious oppression, and in each case the long, protracted struggle ended in a negotiated settlement assuring those rights. Both struggles also produced martyred heroes--Judas Maccabee the Hammer and Vardan Mamikonian the Brave. 
The Vardanian War, as it came to be called in Vardan's honor, began on May 26, 451, but the Armenian church celebrates the event in February. In the past, spring was considered the season for warfare. Armenia's ecclesiastical fathers had decided to commemorate the event in February, before spring, in order to inspire the youth and prepare their minds for battle, in defense of church and fatherland.  "

An auspicious day: May 27, 1907 - Battle of Soulouk

 Vaհe H Apelian

The year one thousand nine hundred and seven,

The twenty-seventh of  beautiful May,

Is the feast of the death of the much toiled Gevorg,

Native of Sassoun, the famed brave.

Murat Bridge, Armenians called it Soulouk/Souloukh Bridge, over Murat River, Armenians
called Aradzani river and its marshes in Mush, Turkey

Vartan Tashjian reminded of the legendary freedom fighter Kevork Chavoush. Vartan had posted the lyrics of a song about the death of  the legendary Kevork Chavoush, whose surviving picture gives credence to his legend. As a matter of fact it is the only picture of Kevork Chavoush that exists and what an iconic picture of him it is! The picture was taken by Vahan Papazian, who wrote under the penname Goms. He took the picture  on the Island of Aghtamar in Lake Van where the freedom fighers – fedayees – had gathered. Vahan Papazian recalled that he had Kevork Chavoush stand next to a rock, not far from the Cathedral on the Island, for a snap shot that has gone into Armenian history. 

The lyrics of the song Vartan Tashjian posted is well known and is sung to this day. I imagine that there is no youngster who has joined ARF related youth organization  who has has not onlyheard that song, but also in all likelihood had sang it in a group singing. The first four sentences of the song are the following:

In the year one thousand nine hundred and seven,

On the twenty-seventh of beautiful May,

It is the feast of the death of the much toiled Gevorg,

Native of Sassoun, the famed brave.

***

Vahan Papazian's picture of Kevork Chavoush

In 1963, James Mandalian, the long standing editor of Haierink published a concise translation of Rouben Der Minassian memoirs titling the book “ Armenian Freedom Fighters – The memoirs of Rouben Der Minassian”.  The book is 245 pages long. He has devoted a long chapter to Kevork Chavoush (Sergent Kevork). The chapter starts on page 134 and ends on page 163, comprising approximately 12% of the book.

The text of the chapter is elaborated under the following titles: Kevork Chavoush Succeeds Serop Pasha, The Second Rebellion of Sassoun, The Return of Kevork Chavoush, The Enounter at Araz, The Encounter at Kars, The Marriage of Kevork Chavoush, Rouben and Kevork Chavoush Meet, Sheer Audacity, The Death of Kevork Chavoush.

Rouben recalling his meeting with Kevork Chavoush and the other legendary freedom fighter Magar of Sbaghan constitute one of the finest readings of Rouben’s memoirs. Regretfully not a single snap shot of Magar of Sbaghan has reached us and that has made a huge impact on retaining an image of Magar Sbaghan’s in our imagination about whom Rouben Der Minassian wrote: “People said Kevork (Chavoush) is a wolf or a tiger but keri (uncle) Magar is a raging bull," - indeed continued Rouben -  "with large and bloody eyes, a big head, giant of a body, that fearless person, during a combat, looked neither to his left nor to his right, with a roaring voice, his hands over his dagger, he either charged forward or stood still even if hundreds of cannons exploded around him.”

Kevork Chavoush was killed in the marshes at the bridge Armenians called Soulouk (Souloukh) over Armenians called Aradzani river. The bridge stands to this day and is known as Murat Bridge over Murat River in Muş, Turkey.

Rouben Der Minassian wrote in his memoirs that “The battle of Soulouk  took place on May 27, 1907, and lasted until the morning of the 28th.  There was something symbolic in the day.  Exactly 11 days later, to the day, there was to be born the Independent Republic of Armenia – the final consummation of the blood and sacrifice of the galaxy of Armenian heroes, like the immortal Kevork Chavoush.”

In the same battle one Turkish Pasha, known as Keoseh Binbashi was killed. The prevailing honor code among the Turks and the Kurds was that only a high ranking person could kill an enemy of same rank, such as be a Turkish pasha or Kurdish bek. The killing of the Turkish Pasha Keoseh Binbahi was attributed to Rouben Der Minassian who had come to the region as an envoy of ARF and hence commanded a hight stature.  From that day , Rouben Der Minassian wrote “The Turks and the Kurds honored me with the exalted title of “Pasha”, a title which had clung to me to this day. Apparently it weill be nothing short of a resurrection of the dead Pasha to rid of of the Turkish title”, 

Rouben Der Minassian wrote that “The battle of  Soulouk became the theme of many Armenian, Turkish and Kurdish songs.” Indeed the Armenians sing it to this day (see below)

The fates of Kevork Chavoush's wife Yeghso and his son Vartkes remain unknown (see the link)

                                        ***

Link:  What a difference a picture makes (Magar of Sbaghan, Kevork Chavoush, and Yeghso) - https://vhapelian.blogspot.com/2019/05/what-difference-picture-makes.html




Remembering Onbashi Stepan Panossian - ՔԵՍՊԸՑԷՆ (The Kessabtsi)

Onbashi Stepan Panossian, the father of Dr. Razmig, the Director of the Armenian Department of the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation, in Lisbon, Portugal, wrote the attached limerick.  Stepan inherited his ‘Onbashi’ monicker from his father who became a commissioned military officer in the French foreign legion and took part in the famed Arara battle. Shoghag Apelian-Ayanian had posted the poem in the 28th edition of the Kessab Yearbook (1988). I had translated  and posted it on my blog on June 19, 2017 and reproduced it here as a token of appreciation to all those who continue publishing the Kessab Yearbook year after year . Vaհe H Apelian 

ՔԵՍՊԸՑԷՆ
(The Kessabtsi)
Գըրից Քեսպըցա,  Ստեփան Ունպաշա
(Wrote Kessabtsi Onbashi Stepan)

Cover of books written by Stepan Panossian



Ճուպրագլու տէքէն, միր Քեսպու գըղիէն (From the foot hill of Mount Jabal Akra, from our Kessab village)
իլան գըղընտիէն, ճաղպիցուն գեցէն(and from the other villages, they were scattered and went away)
Չմնուոց տիէղ մը եաշշխերհէն ըրվան (There remained no place on this world,)
Չհեսուով Քէսպըցէն (Kessabtsis did not reach).

Քեսպըզէն հենից, աշխերհէն բիժնից (Kessabtsis gave and shared with the world)
Մինծ, մինծ տէոքթըրնա, էնճէրնիորնա, (Great, great medical doctors, engineers,)
Քենը իրիեց, քենը պատուելա, (Many priests, how many pastors,)
Գարեցին Բ. Կաթաքկիւս, Եպիսկուպուսնա։ (Karekin II Catholicos, and archbishops)

Քեսպըցէն գընուոց հեր եօրը մնուոց,  (Kessabtis went, it remained with them)
Ի տիոց վարժապիտ,  շըրքէթը գործիչ, (Giving educators, industrialists,)
Սիրից զկարդիլը, վարժատուն հիմնիլը, (Loved education, founded schools,)
Մառցուով երաժիշտ, գրագէտ դառնիլը (Neglected being musicians, and writers)

Քեսպըցէն Ուսումնասիրաց Միւթիւն կիւնա (Kessabtsis have Educational Association)
Ըղուոժ է քառսուն – յիսոն տարա, (Its been forty – fifty years,)
Պէորուտու բռնի դըգը եամերգա, (From Beirut, all the way to America)
Դըգը Լօս-Անճելըս Քալիֆորնիա։ (All the way to Los Angeles, California.)

Էսունք Քալիֆորնեա, Քեսպըցէն կիւնա, (Let’s say California, Kessabtsis have)
Թէօղթ մը ըլլայք հասցէնա, (A book full of addresses,)
Ծըննուէող, խիսուղնա, պըսեկւուղնա, (Notices of births, deaths, marriages)
Տարեդարձ տօնուող, վարժատուն խելըսուղնա։(Those who celebrated anniversaries, graduation from schools.)

Քեսպըցէք իլիէք, քուով-քիւվա էրկիէք, (Kessabtsis get up and come together,)
Զառ-ձառա տըւիէք, Քեսպընուոք շերեցիէք(Hold each other's hands, sing in Kessabtsi dialect)
Նատուոր Կարնաք մեր լիզէոն զիւրցիցէք, (As much as you can, converse in Kessab language)
Մեր պեպկըններէնն իսկըրւունը խընտեցուցէք։ (Bring laughter to the bones of our ancestors.)

Իս էլի Քեսպըցա,  Ստեփան Ունպաշա (I am also a Kessabtsi, Stepan ‘Onbashi’)
Հա ուգում էսիլ Շընիֆիւր Նիւ Տարա(I want to say, Happy New Year)
Բերը Զետէկ ըննիւ ալըննէդ(May it be a good Christmas for all of you,)
Եէօրը կիւ Քեսպըցա, եէօրը կիւ Քեսպըցա։ (Wherever there are Kessabtsis, wherever Kessabtsis are.)


Sunday, May 25, 2025

Observing Memorial Day and Republic Day

Vaհe H Apelian

Happenstance has the Armenian Americans have more of a reason to be particularly receptive to the last week of the month of May because they will be observing the Memorial Day on the last Monday of the month and the Armenian Republic Day on May 28, three days before the end of the month. It has happened that both holidays have been observed on the same day.  This year the Memorial Day will be observed on Monday May 26, 2025. The Armenian Republic Day will be observed two days later, on Wednesday May 28, 2025.

 Non-working Holidays enable the citizens to observe important events in the life of the nation. The U.S. Federal government recognizes 11 non-working holidays. Armenia observes 12 non-working holidays. We all know that during the non-working holidays, the government and most businesses are closed, and employees are typically not required to work. The government of Armenia has designated May 28 as Republic Day – Hanrabedoutyan or – Հանրապետութեան օր։

Soviet Armenia did not celebrate May 28, but a good segment of the Diaspora, mostly affiliated with the ARF and the Cilician Catholicosate, celebrated May 28 as Independence Day.  After Armenia regained its independence, the postal service of the Republic of Armenia issued in 1992 its first stamps celebrating May 28, designating the stamp’s first day cover as Independence Day.

First Day Cover, May 28, Independence Day

But the Armenian reality had to contend with another historic day. On September 21, 1991, a referendum was held in the Armenian SSR to determine whether to secede from the Soviet Union. The overwhelming majority, 99.5%, voted in favor of independence, with a 95% turnout. This referendum followed a declaration of independence on August 23, 1990, and provided the legal basis for the Armenian SSR to declare its independence from the Soviet Union. The formal declaration of independence was made on September 23, 1991, officially establishing the Republic of Armenia. Hence the Armenian government designated September 21 as Independence Day, and May 28 as the Republic Day.

I will refrain from engaging in any debate on the designation of May 28 for the Armenians. But I will unequivocally state during the years we celebrated May 28 as Independence Day, we celebrated the day for having attained independence on that day for founding the first ever Republic of Armenia. It was in fact a celebration for the founding of the free, independent, democratic Republic of Armenia. I invite the readers to check the front cover of the May 28 special, larger than normal edition of Aztag Daily in Lebanon, posted below. The front cover heralded the 60th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia – Հայաստանի Հանրապետութեան  վաթսուն Ամեակ։  

60th Anniversary of the Republic of Armenia

Two days after observing the Memorial Day on May 26 and paying homage by remembering and honoring those who were killed on duty, we will celebrate the 107th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia. I join Armenia’s ambassador in Washington DC and all those who on May 28, celebrate the Republic of Armenia and with them I wish the Republic of Armenia a long, peaceful, prosperous existence now and forever.


 

Remembering Mr. and Mrs. Samuel and Dikranouhi Arukian

Vahe H Apelian

St. George (Sourp Kevork) Armenian Apostolic Holy Orthodox Church, Ethiopia 

Armenian Alpha News reported a video conversation with Vartkes Nalbandian about the Ethiopian Armenian community.  He reported on the deep-rooted Armenia and Ethiopia history. But at the present, he said the Ethiopian Armenian community numbers 100.  Armenian community school in Addis Ababa was closed recently. The school had operated as Armenian community school until 2000, after which it had closed as the Armenian community school because of dwindling number of students enrolling in the school and had become an international school teaching in English until its recent closure.

Vartkes Nalbandian said that most of the community members are in various trades. Two are medical doctors, one of whom is a pediatrician, the other is a dentist. Vartkes Nalbandian is the author of two books in English. His book about the Armenians in Ethiopia is being translated in Armenia. He spoke in Western Armenian but noted that the newer generation do not speak Armenian.  

Vartkes Nalbandian’s reporting on the state of the Ethiopian Armenian community remined me of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel and Dikranouhi Arukian. I met them when they stayed in Hotel Lux, the inn my parents ran in Beirut, on their way to the United States to be with their son Hrach after having taught at the Armenian Evangelical high school in Anjar, Lebanon. 

Attached is the blog I had written remembering the Arukian family. I reproduced the blog in its entirety.  

***

Of Arukians and Sevags (February 12, 20`4): https://vhapelian.blogspot.com/search?q=Arukian

                                   

Saturday, May 24, 2025

Մեր լեզուն, այս լեզուն

 Պետրոս Աֆէյեան

Տէր եւ Տիկին Պետրոս Աֆէյեան


Observing Republic Day

Vaհe H Apelian


Happenstance has the Armenian Americans have more of a reason to be particularly receptive to the last week of the month of May because they will be observing the Memorial Day on the last Monday of the month and the Armenian Republic Day on May 28, three days before the end of the month. It has happened that both holidays have been observed on the same day.  This year the Memorial Day will be observed on Monday May 26, 2025. The Armenian Republic Day will be observed two days later, on Wednesday May 28, 2025.

 Non-working Holidays enable the citizens to observe important events in the life of the nation. The U.S. Federal government recognizes 11 non-working holidays. Armenia observes 12 non-working holidays. We all know that during the non-working holidays, the government and most businesses are closed, and employees are typically not required to work. The government of Armenia has designated May 28 as Republic Day – Hanrabedoutyan or – Հանրապետութեան օր։

Soviet Armenia did not celebrate May 28, but a good segment of the Diaspora, mostly affiliated with the ARF and the Cilician Catholicosate, celebrated May 28 as Independence Day.  After Armenia regained its independence, the postal service of the Republic of Armenia issued in 1992 its first stamps celebrating May 28, designating the stamp’s first day cover as Independence Day.

First Day Cover, May 28, Independence Day

But the Armenian reality had to contend with another historic day. On September 21, 1991, a referendum was held in the Armenian SSR to determine whether to secede from the Soviet Union. The overwhelming majority, 99.5%, voted in favor of independence, with a 95% turnout. This referendum followed a declaration of independence on August 23, 1990, and provided the legal basis for the Armenian SSR to declare its independence from the Soviet Union. The formal declaration of independence was made on September 23, 1991, officially establishing the Republic of Armenia. Hence the Armenian government designated September 21 as Independence Day, and May 28 as the Republic Day.

I will refrain from engaging in any debate on the designation of May 28 for the Armenians. But I will unequivocally state during the years we celebrated May 28 as Independence Day, we celebrated the day for having attained independence on that day for founding the first ever Republic of Armenia. It was in fact a celebration for the founding of the free, independent, democratic Republic of Armenia. I invite the readers to check the front cover of the May 28 special, larger than normal edition of Aztag Daily in Lebanon, posted below. The front cover heralded the 60th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia – Հայաստանի Հանրապետութեան  վաթսուն Ամեակ։  

60th Anniversary of the Republic of Armenia

Two days after observing the Memorial Day on May 26 and paying homage by remembering and honoring those who were killed on duty, we will celebrate the 107th anniversary of the Republic of Armenia. I join Armenia’s ambassador in Washington DC and all those who on May 28, celebrate the Republic of Armenia and with them I wish the Republic of Armenia a long, peaceful, prosperous existence now and forever.


 

 

Friday, May 23, 2025

“Diasporic Strategies, Stateless Action,”

 Prof. Khachig Tölölyan 

On Wednesday May 21, 2015. Prof. Khachig Tölölyan lectured to an audience that had come together having accepted the public invitation of the Dr. Herand Markarian on behalf of the NY Hamazkayin Chapter. The title of the Prof. Khachig Tölölyan’s address was “The Armenian Diaspora: “Today, and  Perhaps Tomrrow.” The text of his address is not available yet.  Prof. Khachig Tölölyan also delivered the keynote address at the conference organized by Viken Hovsepian for the Los Angeles Armenian community’s PAC Leadership: “Diasporic Strategies, Stateless Action,” It was delivered in Glendale, CA., 29 April 2023. I have attached the text of that address he referenced in his May 21, 2025 address.

 

A partial view of the attendees of Prof. Khachig Tololyan's address at the NY Hamazkayin Chapter's soom meeting organized by Dr. Herand Markarian

Between 1995 and 2000, a sociology professor at Harvard named Robert Putnam developed a concept he named “bowling alone.” With historical analysis and extensive statistics, he showed that the American nation had started out as a society of joiners. The French scholar Alexis de Tocqueville had noted in the 1830s, after traveling all over the US, that Americans eagerly joined not just church-related but also civic social organizations and kept inventing new ones enthusiastically. By World War II, even small towns had several such organizations – we still know some of them, like the Elks and the Shriners, the Masons and the Knights of Columbus, the Kiwanis and Rotary Clubs; women had the Women’s Christian Temperance Union, the National Organization of Women Voters and dozens based on domestic life and hobbies. There were also bowling leagues everywhere, for every race, gender and class. However, Putnam showed, starting in 1948, TV started to keep families at home watching, and this trend accelerated with the rise of the computer and online networks. As a result, fewer people showed up for volunteer organizations – and while people still bowled, they did so “alone”, which is to say with just family or a few close friends; they declined to join bowling leagues. The cell phone and social media, not yet invented when Putnam first wrote, have accelerated this trend.

I begin with this example because I think it illustrates a social reality that affects Armenian diaspora communities. After the genocide and the 1923 Lausanne treaty whose centenary we note this year, wherever diaspora communities developed, they were characterized by Armenians establishing and joining numerous organizations.  These could be compatriotic, social, political, educational, philanthropic. They developed old media, primarily in newspaper form, but also there was a proliferation of youth-centered and athletic organizations, and of course church-connected groups. Some of these categories have changed more than others – for example, a hundred years ago, a new Armenian elementary school that opened in Aleppo was the modest but hopeful shape of diasporic education; now a new multimillion dollar Chair in Armenian Studies carries a similar valence of hope and possibility. In addition, a few innovative organizations have emerged and endured, notably the Armenian Assembly, now 51 years old, and the Zoryan Institute, now 41-years old. These old and new organizations and institutions remain a key element of how Armenian diasporas work. 

Except that they are not working well now. Our experience as active Armenians suggests this, and surveys like the Gulbenkian’s ADS, Armenian Diaspora Survey, hint at it. Diaspora Armenians and especially the young are reluctant to join organizations. Metaphorically speaking, they bowl alone.

I mention this reluctance to join, this refusal to be recruited to traditional organizations, because I regard you, my audience, as the managerial elite of this diaspora community, as the executives and intellectuals in charge of the organizations that constitute the infrastructure of Armenian Los Angeles.  You face such local challenges, but others on the national and transnational levels also face similar issues. 

You might be interested to hear what diaspora studies has to offer as ways of addressing this trend. The bad news is that diaspora studies has very little to say about it that is helpful. I am a retired professor who has read a couple of thousand articles and several hundred books on diasporas, and participated in over a hundred national and international conferences on diasporas and transnationalism. But I have heard practically no extended, detailed and pragmatic analyses of this topic, except in a few discussions of the Jewish diaspora. Yet by one estimate, there are now 119 diasporas, a number that keeps growing because many scholars regard as diasporas all transnational communities recently shaped by migration. Despite the numbers, specific problems encountered by local organizational efforts that sustain diaspora communities are not discussed. Diasporas are discussed at a larger scale, past and present conditions and problems are documented and analyzed, but specific solutions are not usually offered. Scholars tend to offer Վերլուծում but not լուծում, analyses but not solutions, except when we join the army of professional consultants who move from analysis to strong recommendations and sometimes prescribe a course of action that might lead to actual solutions – often, I will add, bogus solutions. 

My talk today is that of a professor who wishes he could put on a consultant hat and recommend real solutions. Unable to do that, I will do what I can to reorient perspectives so that we can rethink together the contemporary situation of the Armenian diaspora and what we might be able to do in it with different perspectives, analyses and attitudes.

On the question of recruiting the young, I will offer comments based on my fifty years of experience teaching and observing the behavior of American college students aged 18-22. 

They are intensely engaged by questions of individual and social identity and issues of personal exploration and growth – questions others may discuss today, about which I will only say now that sadly, the young do not see devoted participation in traditional organizations as pathways to personal growth. The Yale historian Michael Denning once said that in the 1930s, being a member of the American Communist party was not just a political position, it was the path for constructing an identity. The same may have been said about some Armenian political parties. No longer. Educated American youth, white or non-white, whether coming from wealthy, upper class or poor families, avoid traditional organizations. Fraternity participation has declined from 80 to 20 percent of the student body at elite colleges. Membership in on-campus political groups has declined drastically. 

And yet it would be a mistake to think that these young Americans are indifferent to political issues or social action. They remain passionate. But they do not want to join long-established organizations with traditions and rules they have had no part in formulating, with plans and intentions formulated over time and changing too slowly to suit them. They join organizations reluctantly, but join projects eagerly. Some create projects and recruit fellow students to them, and are active for months or at most two or three years while on campus. Later, as they mature in the world, postgraduates who remain in contact with me still do not report joining organizations except when they find ones that sponsor activities conceived and organized by the young for the young. For example, they join theater groups that put on one act plays by minority youth; they undertake difficult small group hikes on the Appalachian trail; they join book clubs oriented to specific topics like climate change or glaring economic inequality; they volunteer for political campaigns in urban neighborhoods; they use new media collaboratively to make documentaries, etc. They are eager to be active in groups, to develop projects concerning causes and pursuits they consider worthwhile but neglected.  Even when such activities and projects are hosted and funded by traditional groups, they mostly do not lead to eventual commitment to the sponsoring long-standing organizations, except by a minority of those engaged. And yet it is often from the ranks of this maturing minority that future leaders will emerge.  Traditional Armenian organizations might want to learn to accommodate, host and support the activities and projects of such individuals and small groups even when they do not promise an immediate pay-off. They are investments in the future.

The announced title of my talk is ‘diasporic strategies and stateless power.’ The extended example I just offered illustrates one possible “strategy” for diasporic organization. Before I move on to the topic of stateless power, I want to stress that in my view the adoption of new strategies in diaspora is no longer optional. Innovative risks must be taken. The first factor that limits and constrains the adoption of new strategies is the lack of imagination and the hesitation of leaders to take action when quick and concrete results are not guaranteed.   It is feared that investment in new projects cannot be justified to the organization’s membership because immediate results and pay-offs may be far off. But refusal to invest in such long-rage recruitment is no longer an option, in my view.

I will add without developing the topic that diaspora Armenians have demonstrated a willingness to invest in the Republic of Armenia and Artsakh, in projects that have not only been useful but also imaginative on some occasions. From TUMO to reforestation, from the founding of AUA to the support extended to organizations that protect abused women, or certain environmentally oriented NGOs, diasporic investment has sometimes shown that it can be simultaneously imaginative and practical. Ironically, a comparable imaginative support of practical new initiatives and investments in diaspora institutions have not kept pace. It is of course understandable that the homeland should stimulate our donations and investments. But the diaspora, by definition, does not live in the homeland. As we never tire of saying, close to two thirds of all Armenians don’t – they live in diaspora. If they are to continue to exist, function and develop as diasporas, they will need imaginative organizational investment. Their infrastructure must be constantly renewed. The diaspora needs that for its own sake and for the sake of the homeland. For many decades to come, Armenia will need the diaspora. 

To support this claim, I will permit myself a small detour from the main issues of this talk and stress that Israel, currently an extraordinarily successful and increasingly problematic state, needed the Jewish diaspora from 1880, when immigration to Palestine began to develop, to 1897, when Zionism emerged, and then until 1948, when the State of Israel came into being; it then needed its diaspora again, to support its development on every front, until Israel’s economy became fully self-sufficient, around 1990. So for a total of 110 years, from 1880 to 1990, the demographic, political, military and economic development of Israel needed the diaspora. It needed both what the Jewish diaspora sent directly and what it persuaded and pressured others to send, especially the USA and Germany. I want to give you a sense of the scale of what the Jewish diaspora and the allies it recruited achieved. Israel was founded on May 11, 1948. From 1950 to 1965, Israel’s real GNP grew at an annual rate of over 11 percent because Israel was receiving huge capital inflows. The US made what are called “unilateral transfers”, aka gifts to Israel; it also loaned money at favorable rates. Germany, though shattered by World War II and busy rebuilding, nevertheless started to pay reparations to individual survivors after 1952, as it should have, but also made payments to the state of Israel. Meanwhile, Israeli bonds sold to the diaspora raised large sums; the Jewish Agency coordinated astonishing annual diasporic fund drives specifically for agriculture and immigrant settlement – housing, keeping new immigrants fed and clothed and in school until they found jobs. The sums raised annually, consistently, to support both the local activities of American Jewish organizations and Israel, are stupendous. For me as a diaspora specialist, reading around in the American Jewish Yearbook: The Annual Record of the North American Jewish Communitiespublished since 1899, is simultaneously a humbling and inspiring experience.

That minor digression over, I will now turn to the other part of my title, ‘stateless power.’ I have been using the term since 1995 to designate ways in which diasporas or their constitutive organizations may exercise something called ‘power’. Some have welcomed the term, a few have criticized it directly and orally, and most have expressed skepticism. To be diasporized, scattered and stateless has long been synonymous with powerlessness. At a moment in Armenian history when we all celebrate պետութիւն and պետականութիւն, state and statehood, what can it mean to also claim some form of power for պետութենազուրկ, stateless diasporas?

Most observers who like to think of themselves as realists believe that at least in the Western world, since 1648 and the Treaty of Westphalia, power has belonged to the state. That is certainly true about a certain kind of power: the state can kill legally, in that it can execute its own citizens for crimes; it can also send its citizens to fight in wars, to kill and to die. Thus the state has a ‘monopoly on legitimate violence’, as Max Weber affirmed. This is disputed by rebels and terrorists, but otherwise settled. We can find occasions in which non-state entities, including diasporic organizations, have killed members of their communities – Palestinians have done it, and as Professor Ara Sanjian’s research has shown, during the first Lebanese civil war of 1958, Armenian organizations and lawless individuals also did, killing around 35 fellow Armenians. But the point is that the exercise of such power is widely considered both exceptional and illegitimate. 

However, there are other definitions of power. For decades, political scientists debated Robert Dahl’s classic affirmation that power means “the ability of A to compel B to do something he or she would not otherwise do.” This definition extends the possibility of who can hold and exercise power beyond the state and legitimized violence. In his early articles and major books, like Polyarchy, Dahl was arguing that democracies were governed by numerous but still a quite limited number of groups of actors – wealthy elites, corporations, some civic organizations all had and exercised power. He did not specify any diasporas, but did argue that foreign policy is not simply established by some abstract entity, called the State, for the benefit of an equally abstract entity, the Nation. The nation-state, the ազգ-պետութիւն, theoretically responds through democratic voting to the needs and views of all citizens. In practice, nation-states and their foreign policies are shaped by the hugely uneven participation of a small number of actors, and nothing prevents diasporic groups from being among those who exercise or try to exercise such power. The Jewish diaspora has long recognized this, the Greek diaspora has tried and failed to organize for this purpose, and the activities and commitments of the Armenian Assembly and the ANC indicate that the Armenian American community recognizes this, although we avoid the term power and speak instead of “influence.”

Finally, there is a third concept of power, whose origins are too tangled and convoluted to summarize here, but which can be exemplified for us today by the name of Michel Foucault, the French intellectual who is the most cited, most quoted intellectual of the West between 1960 and 2000. Two of his terms relevant to us today are pouvoir/savoir meaning power/knowledge, and governmentality, a single compound word he invented combining the words “govern” and “mentality”. My colleague Vahe Sahakian has thought more about governmentality than I have, but I have thought about Foucault’s assertion that in the modern era the exercise of power is inseparable from knowledge. To simplify, it’s not just that “knowledge is power,” it’s that governments need knowledge to exercise power, while those who create new knowledge by a variety of means, do so with an awareness of power, working with and sometimes against it. The purpose of saying this is to remind us that diasporas and other minorities can specialize in the generation of certain kinds of knowledge that can shape the environment in which power operates and can lead power to new conclusions and new actions. In addition, the practice of power/knowledge is linked to the soft power of performance. You may not link the performance of music or the writing of articles and novels to power, but in fact repeated and effective performance reshapes collective consciousness. In this perspective, Vahe Berberian and Ruben Hakhverdian, Atom Egoyan and Serj Tankian, Peter Bakalian and Richard Hovannisian, Vahe Oshagan and Armenchik are all exercising various forms of soft power that involves either knowledge or performance or both, in a way that can reshape both a diasporic community and its larger interlocutors. To repeat, these are some of the ways in which diasporas exercise stateless power.

I want to close by returning to the Armenian diaspora in the US, particularly here in Los Angeles, and to say more about the kind of engagement projects in which Armenian organizations can exercise stateless power or diasporic soft power. The area of such activity I want to discuss is involvement in electoral politics. You are all familiar with such involvement, so in a sense I am in danger of telling you what you know. But I hope that by presenting in a less familiar frame the kind of activity that the Armenian Assembly and the Armenian National Committee carry out, I will be able to underline the indispensable nature of that engagement project in a fresh way. Once again, as with Putnam’s Bowling Alone, I will move back and forth between the scholarly and the actuality of daily life as it is practiced by community leadership elites like yourselves.

Political sociologists have studied the relationship between ethnic populations and elections for a century. Until recently, the model that shaped their analyses and their advice to campaign managers had to do with the fact that new immigrants, both the ethnic and the diasporic, settled in large urban areas where they could find work – the nineteenth century Irish in Boston and New York, the 20th Century Poles in Chicago, then the African Americans from the South in all major northern cities, etc. Within these communities, certain processes happened linearly or serially – first the immigrants became economically integrated; then socially and linguistically; finally, ethnic political entrepreneurs emerged and, working against or allied with the dominant old white elites, recruited the immigrants’ descendants into political campaigns. What has changed is due to the belated understanding that immigrants, including Armenians, now move directly into suburbs that sociologists have characterized as “ethnoburbs” which can be mobilized by ethnic and diasporic entrepreneurs before their full social and cultural integration happens. In studies of the Armenians of Hollywood, Glendale and the San Fernando Valley, the sociological pioneer has been a scholar named Daniel Ferrante, whose new book will be appearing from Cornell University Press soon, but whose articles have already appeared in the past five years. Ferrante identifies figures from among LA Armenians, also from the Taiwan Chinese settling in Monterey and some other groups as pioneers in ethnoburban political entrepreneurship. Paul Krekorian, Raffi Mouradian, Ardashes-Ardy Kassakhian and Adrin Nazarian are figures that emerge in this perspective as being different from earlier figures such as Walter Karabian and Governor George Deukmejian. These ethnic entrepreneurs do not just ask for money; they ask for votes from voters they themselves can organize because suburban Armenians have been politically integrated, reversing the old patterns of social and cultural integration coming first. Extrapolating from what Fittante argues in scholarly detail, I would say that he is making an argument for stateless power: in any situation where most voters are from multiple suburban ethnic communities, a minority community, well organized and led, can hold the balance of power in elections and gain influence at the state and federal levels out of proportion to its numbers. Educating young and ambitious leadership cadres in this kind of work, which has been done before but not systematically and armed with power-knowledge, should be one of the enterprises of the near future. 

I said “should be.” Scholars are trained not to say that – instead they/we say things like X is recommended or Y should be considered. I will describe two more things that I think should be and sit down. First, Armenian leadership everywhere knows that Unity is a good and safe thing to advocate. It is also an unhelpful idea, because in the near future it can’t be realized any more than the Sevres treaty can become a norm in international affairs. I would urge leaders not to set up unattainable feel-good goals and to say instead, in Armenian, ոչ միութիւն այլ միասին։ Not Unity but Solidarity, not unity but acting together on specific issues. In the circumstances of ordinary life, long before unity, effective cooperation must be mastered. There are exceptions – in the days just before Sardarabad, the people who fought didn’t wait for the practice of cooperation; squadrons of Armenians from the former Tsarist army, members of several political parties, fedayees, and peasants barely armed with old muskets went to the front together because it was fight together or die together. It was a moment analogous to the one in 1792 in the French revolution when the Marseillaise urged “Aux armes, citoyens!” But the Sardarabad unity lasted less than three months and the rest of the politics of the Republic of Armenia was still that of distinct groups trying to work together for different goals, or not. Our nation went to Versailles in 1919 with a Badviragutyun-Delegation from the Republic of Armenia headed by Avetis Aharonyan and another from the western Armenian diaspora symbolically headed by Boghos Noubar Pasha. At a moment when the Treaty of Versailles was working out the post-War reality of the defeated Ottoman Empire, we felt as a people that we needed two representatives. Fortunately, the evidence is that except for the image of non-Unity, more damage was not done to the Armenian cause by that dual presence. They weren’t united but they had solidarity, they worked together. At least they were Միասին եթէ ոչ միացեալ։

And finally, I want to urge the leadership gathered here today to try to address problems in a way that seems deeply counter-intuitive, in a way that you might even think is irresponsible. I invite you to make analyses and decisions not primarily based on the past, nor on your anticipation of the future. The Armenian collective mind does not handle decisions based on the past or anticipated future well. With my consultant hat on, and with an apology for lecturing at you, I end by saying that you and we all should try harder to plan and act on the basis of a cold-eyed assessment of the present, the here and now. Թող ձեր կարգախօսը ըլլայ

Հոս եւ Հիմա: Thank you.