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ZZZZZ ffff,0000,0000ZENDA is a
Weekly Assyrian Online Magazine ZZZZZ
ZZZZZ ZZZZZ
ZZZZZ Vol III, Issue 33 ZZZZZ
ZZZZZ I Tishreen 20, 6747 October 20, 1997 ZZZZZ=20
ZZZZZ ZZZZZ =20
ZZZZZ =20
zenda@ix.netcom.com ZZZZZ
ZZZZZ P.O. Box 20278 San Jose, California 95160 U.S.A. =20
ZZZZZ
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0000,0000,ffff T H I S W E E K =20
I N Z E N D A=20
The Lighthouse............. Mesopotamian Mathematics
Good Morning Bet-Nahrain... Clinton's Report to Congress, on Iraq
Fighting Erupts Between Kurdish Groups
Iraqi Census=09
Surfs Up................... "above our church and tribal affiliations."
Surfers Corner............. Ancient Assyrain Artifacts in Iraq
Assyrian Cornerstone Ceremony
Israeli Journal's Interview with Waled Phares
News Digest................ News Bits from Mid-East
Calendar of Events......... Library Tour of the Near Eastern Collection
Khudra..................... October-December 1997=09
Entracte................... Athletic Organization Dance Party in San
Jose
Intelligentsia............. Meetings & Classes
Abzu....................... Assyrian Radio & TV Programs
Assyrian Surfing Posts..... Liturgy of the Assyrian Church of the East
Pump up the Volume......... Blanket and Pillow =09
Back to the Future......... Revolts of 770's & the Akkadian Language
Literatus.................. The Sensual Experience of Assyrian
Sculptures
This Week in History....... Justin Perkins
Bravo...................... Assyrian National Foundation of America=09
The Directory.............. ZENDA News Sources =20
Bshena..................... Glenview and Manchester=09
Salute..................... Lena, Nadia, and Ron
DEAR READER:
PLEASE NOTE THAT THIS WEEK'S ISSUE IS ALSO ATTACHED AS AN "HTML" FILE
WHICH YOU MAY OPEN USING YOUR WWW BROWSER (I.E. MS EXPLORER OR NETSCAPE).
WE ENCOURAGE YOU TO REPORT ANY PROBLEMS IN USING THIS FILE. BEGINNING
WITH OUR FIRST ISSUE IN NOVEMBER ALL ZENDA ISSUES WILL BE FORWARDED TO
YOU AS AN "HTML" FILE SO THAT WE MAY INCLUDE BETTER FORMATTING, PICTURE,
SOUND, AND VIDEO.
ALWAYS LOOKING AHEAD TO IMPROVE YOUR READING ENJOYMENT,
STAFF OF ZENDA
=20
ffff,0000,0000-------------THE L I G H T=20
H O U S E----------------- =20
=20
MESOPOTAMIAN MATHEMATICS
=20
Five thousand years ago a remarkable scientific and engineering
revolution took place in Mesopotamia. Bet-Nahrainian invention of wheel
and writing, the use of metals, and potteries with geometric figures
brought forth a rapid move towards urbanization in Sumer, Babylonia, and
Assyria. =20
Around 6000 years ago in southern Bet-Nahrain the Sumerians still had not
recognized the concept of a number. Two apples from differentiated from
two oranges, but they resisted the additions of two unlike things.
However, by 3100 B.C., they had developed the concept of numbers
independent of the objects they represented. In about 2500 BC, by Royal
Edict, weights and measures were standardized in Babylon. A practical
business decision it eliminated much tension in the marketplace. The
smallest unit of length was the finger, about 2/3 of an inch. The cubit
was 30 fingers. The cord (surveyor's rope) was 120 cubits, that is, 3600
fingers. The league was 180 cords, about seven miles. The smallest unit
of weight was the grain (about 45 milligrams), the shekel was 180 grains
(about =BC ounce) and the talent was 3600 shekels (about 67 pounds).=20
By 2000 BC, there was a calendar with a year of 360 days, 12 months of 30
days each, with an extra month thrown in every six years or so to keep
synchronized with astronomical observations. By this time a day was
divided into hours, minutes and seconds; and the circle was divided into
360 degrees. Notice that all these standards of measurement include
multiples of 60- obviously, 60 was the Babylonians' favorite number.=20
To appreciate what constitutes a good counting system, it is worthwhile
reviewing briefly our own system. In our system 1 can mean 1 or 10 or 100
depending on where it appears in the expression -- the 1 in 41 means a
different quantity from the 1 in 145, for example. We say the value of a
symbol has "positional dependence" -- its actual value depends on where
in the expression it appears. Our convention, as you well know, is that
the number to the far right in our system is the number of 1's, the
number to its immediate left is the number of 10's, to the left of that
comes the number of 10x10's, then of 10x10x10's and so on. We use the
same set of symbols, 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0 in each of these positions, so
the value of such a symbol in a number depends on its position in that
number.=20
To express quantities less than 1, we use the decimal notation. We put a
dot (in some countries a comma) and it is understood that the number to
the immediate left of the dot is the number of 1's, that to the immediate
right the number of tenths (10-1's in mathematical notation), the next
number is the number of hundredths (10-2's) and so on. With this
convention, =BD is written .5 or 0.5 and 1/5 is .2. Unfortunately, 1/3
becomes .33333..., rather inconveniently, and 1/6 and 1/7 similarly go on
for ever. (Actually, this decimal system with the dot is, historically
speaking, rather a recent invention---it was created by a Scotsman called
Napier about 400 years ago.)
Babylonian number system has only two basic elements, the first of which
is clear on examining the first nine numbers. Evidently, these nine
numbers are all constructed of a single element, a mark easily gouged
with one twist of a stick in the soft clay, and the number of times this
element is repeated is the number represented. The numbers 10, 20, 30,
40, 50, are represented by the symbols.
It is clear that again we have simple repetition of a basic element,
which we will conveniently represent by <<, and again it's a mark not
difficult to make in the soft clay. Thus, any number between 1 and 59 is
represented by a symbol from the second diagram followed in the usual
case by one from the first diagram, so 32 would be written <<<<<<11,
approximately. When they get to 60, the Babylonians start again in a
similar way to our starting again at 10. Thus, 82 is written as=20
1<<<<11,
where the first 1 represents 60. So the Babylonian system is based on the
number 60 the same way ours is based on 10. Ours is called a "decimal"
system, theirs a "sexagesimal" system.
There are some real problems with the Babylonian number system, the main
one being that nobody thought of having a zero, so both sixty and one
look exactly the same, that is both are represented by 1! Actually, since
there is no decimal point, the way to write 1/2, which we write 0.5, for
five tenths, they would write <<<<<<, for thirty sixtieths---but with=20
no
zero, of course, and no dot either. So if we see <<<<<< on a clay tablet,
we don't know if it means 1/2, 30 or for that matter 30x60, that is,
1800.=20
This is in fact not as bad as it sounds---sixty is a very big factor, and
it will usually be clear from the context if <<<<<< should be
interpreted as 1/2 or 30. Also, in columns of figures, a <<<<<<
representing 30 was often put to the left of <<<<<< representing 1/2.=20
The Babylonian system is really wonderful for fractions! The most common
fractions, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6 all are represented by a single number
(1/2=3D <<<<<< , 1/3=3D <<<< , 1/5=3D <<11, etc.). That is, these fractions =
are
exact
numbers of sixtieths---sixty is the lowest number which exactly divides
by 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6. This is a vast improvement on the
decimal system, which has infinite recurrences for 1/3 and 1/6, and even
=BC needs two figures: .25.=20
Of course, even in Babylonian, eventually we are forced to go to the
second "sexagesimal" number, which would be the number of sixtieths of
sixtieths, that is, of three-thousand-six-hundredths. For example, 1/8 is
seven-and-a-half sixtieths, so would be written as seven followed by
thirty---for seven sixtieths plus thirty sixtieths of a sixtieth. And,
1/7 is as much of a headache as it is in our own system.
In order to make their bookkeeping as painless as possible, The
Babylonians had math tables - clay tablets with whole lists of
reciprocals. The reciprocal of a number is what you have to multiply it
by to get 1, so the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2 written 0.5 in our system, the
reciprocal of 5 is 1/5 written 0.2 and so on. The point of having
reciprocal tables is that dividing by something is the same as
multiplying by the reciprocal, so using the tables you can replace
division by multiplication, which is a lot easier.=20
Surviving clay tablet examples of Babylonian reciprocal tablets look like
this:
11 <<<<<<
111 <<<<
1111 <<11111
11111 <<11
111111 <<=20
11111111 1111111 <<<<<<=20
We have cheated a bit here to avoid creating a graphics file---the
numbers 4, 5, 6, etc. in both columns should really have their 1's
stacked as in the first figure above.=20
Let's take as an example how much food a family needs. If they consume
120 shekels of grain each day, for example, that's 12 talents of grain
per year. (One talent =3D 3600 shekels). Just imagine the parallel
calculation now - if the family consumes 30 ounces of grain a day, what
is that in tons per year? If you were transported to the Babylon of four
thousand years ago, you would hardly miss your calculator! Admittedly,
the Babylonian calculation is a bit more difficult every six years when
they throw in an extra month.
Some of the clay tablets discovered contain lists of triplets of numbers,
starting with (3, 4, 5) and (5, 12, 13) which are the lengths of sides of
right angled triangles, obeying Pythagoras' "sums of squares" formula. In
particular, one tablet, now in a collection at Yale, shows a picture of a
square with the diagonals marked, and the lengths of the lines are marked
on the figure: the side is marked <<<<<< meaning thirty (fingers?) long,
the diagonal is marked:=20
<<<<<<<<11 <<<<11111 <<<<<<11111. This translates to 42, 25, 35, meaning
42 + 25/60 + 35/3600. Using these figures, the ratio of the length of the
diagonal to the length of the side of the square works out to be
1.414213=85=20
Now, if we use Pythagoras' theorem, the diagonal of a square forms with
two of the sides a right angled triangle, and if we take the sides to
have length one, the length of the diagonal squared equals 1 + 1, so the
length of the diagonal is the square root of 2. The figure on the clay
tablet is incredibly accurate-the true value is 1.414214=85 Of course, this
Babylonian value is far too accurate to have been found by measurement
from an accurate drawing - it was clearly checked by arithmetic
multiplication by itself, giving a number very close to two.=20
An Old Babylonian tablet from Yale University Collection (No. 7289)
includes the calculation of the square root of two to three sexagesimal
places. The Babylonian value for the square root of 2 is equal to
approximately 1.414222, differing by about .00008 from the true value.=20
Such accuracy was only surpassed by the mathematicians around 500 years
ago. Babylonian tablets also show successive powers of a given number,
calculations analogous to logarithms and antilogarithm, solutions to the
complete three-term quadratic equations, cubic equations, and the
geometric properties of the "length", "area", and "volume."
Around 600 B.C. the intellectual activity of Bet-Nahrain lost its vigor
and the Greek islands became the new centers of learning. By this time
Greeks had become familiar with the works of the "practical" Mesopotamian
mathematicians and in the next two hundred years applied much of this
knowledge to the development of their "rational" mathematics. Consumed by
"logical inferences" and the rational nature of numbers Greek
mathematicians wrote "proofs" for every conceivable geometric and
algebraic problem. Mathematics in Bet-Nahrain was a practical activity,
whereas that practiced by the Greeks had an intellectual and spiritual
meaning- to liberate the soul from its material bonds. =20
Centuries later, the Assyrian communities of Bet-Nahrain continued to
possess a remarkable knowledge of astronomy and mathematics. In the
third century A.D., the university-hospital of Gantha-Shapirta (Beautiful
Garden) was founded near the present day city of Ahwaz in Iran. Assyrian
scholars taught medicine, mathematics, astronomy, and logic. They also
translated Greek texts into Syriac. In Nisibin (Nisibis) and Urhai
(Edessa) these Syriac texts were translated to Arabic and during the
Crusades were transported to the centers of learning in Europe.=20
Henceforth was the mathematics of Sumer and Babylon, admired and refined
by the Green mathematicians, introduced to the Latin, French, German, and
English scholars of the Renaissance era.
Sources:
The World Treasury of Physics, Astronomy, & Mathematics, Timothy Ferris
A History of Mathematics, Carl Boyer
Michael Fowler's Physics Lectures
[In 1948 Israel adopted the Babylonian Shekel as its currency unit.=20
Pythagoras lived in the Greek island of Samos from 581 to 497 B.C.]
ffff,0000,0000---G O O D M O R N I N G=20
B E T - N A H R A I N---
EXCERPS FROM PRESIDENT CLINTON'S REPORT ON IRAQ TO U.S. CONGRESS
(September 23)...Regarding northern Iraq, the United States continues to
lead efforts to increase security and stability in the north and minimize
opportunities for Baghdad or Tehran to threaten Iraqi citizens there. An
important part of this effort has been to work toward resolving the
differences between the two main Iraqi Kurd groups, the Kurdistan
Democratic Party (KDP), led by Massoud Barzani, and the Patriotic Union
of Kurdistan (PUK), led by Jalal Talabani. Talabani visited the United
States in late July to meet with National Security Advisor Sandy Berger,
Under Secretary of State Thomas Pickering, and U.N. Ambassador Bill
Richardson. At these sessions, he reaffirmed his interest in the "Ankara
process" of ongoing reconciliation talks jointly sponsored by the United
States, the United Kingdom, and Turkey. Recently, the KDP's Barzani has
also accepted our invitation to Washington.
As part of the Ankara process, the United States provides political,
financial, and logistical support to the neutral, indigenous Peace
Monitoring Force (PMF), comprised of Iraqi Turkomans and
Assyrians. The PMF has demarcated and monitors the
cease-fire line established between the two Kurdish groups in October
1996. United States support takes the form of services and commodities
provided in accordance with a drawdown that I directed on December 11,
1996, and funds for other nonlethal assistance provided in accordance
with a separate determination made by former Secretary of State
Christopher on November 10, 1996.
The PMF also helps the Iraqi Kurds move forward on other
confidence-building measures, including joint committee meetings to
address a range of civilian services and humanitarian issues affecting
all residents of the north. Local representatives of the two Kurdish
groups, the three co-sponsors of the Ankara process and the PMF continue
to meet at least biweekly in Ankara to discuss, inter alia, other
confidence-building measures.
The PMF began full deployment in mid-April 1997 and its size is expected
to double later this year to more than 400. The PMF continues to
investigate and resolve reported cease-fire violations. Its work has
become more difficult as elements of the terrorist Kurdistan Workers
Party (PKK) have moved from the Turkish border toward the PUK-KDP
cease-fire line. The KDP alleges that PKK elements have been operating
across the cease-fire line to attack the KDP. The KDP also alleges that
the PUK has joined in some of these attacks, a charge that the PUK
denies. The United States, together with the United Kingdom and Turkey,
continues to stress the importance of strict observance of the
cease-fire.
Another important aspect of our commitment to the people of northern Iraq
is in providing humanitarian relief for those in need. As part of this
commitment, AID's Office of Foreign Disaster Assistance will direct an
additional $4 million for relief projects to the region. These
supplemental programs, announced July 31, will provide emergency health
and nutritional support to 80,000 displaced women and children and
improve water supplies and sanitation, particularly in the PUK-controlled
province of Suleymaniyah.
The oil-for-food arrangement under UNSCR 986 was reauthorized by UNSCR
1111 on June 4, 1997, and went into effect on June 8, 1997. Under UNSCR
1111, Iraq is authorized to sell up to $1 billion worth of oil every 90
days, for a total of $2 billion during a 180-day period (with the
possibility of UNSC renewal for subsequent 180-day periods). Resolution
1111, like its predecessor, requires that the proceeds of this limited
oil sale, all of which must be deposited in a U.N. escrow account, will
be used to purchase food, medicine, and other material and supplies for
essential civilian needs for all Iraqi citizens and to fund vital U.N.
activities regarding Iraq. Critical to the success of UNSCR 1111 is
Iraq's willingness to follow through on its commitments under the
resolution to allow the U.N. to monitor the distribution of humanitarian
goods to the Iraqi people. Although UNSCR 1111 went into effect on June
8, Iraq unilaterally suspended oil sales until a new distribution plan
was submitted and approved. The U.N. Secretary General approved a
distribution plan on August 13 and oil sales have resumed.
....The U.N., in its most recent reports on implementation of UNSCR 986,
recognized that the Government of Iraq continues forcibly to deport Iraqi
citizens from Kirkuk and other areas of northern Iraq still under the
Iraqi government's control. The Government of Iraq shows no signs
of complying with UNSCR 688, which demands that Iraq cease the repression
of its own people. The effort by various Iraqi opposition groups and
non-governmental organizations to document Iraqi war crimes and other
violations of international humanitarian law, known as INDICT,
continues.
....Iraq remains a serious threat to regional peace and stability. I
remain determined to see Iraq comply fully with all of its obligations
under U.N. Security Council resolutions. My Administration will continue
to oppose any relaxation of sanctions until Iraq demonstrates its
peaceful intentions through such compliance.
I appreciate the support of the Congress for our efforts and shall
continue to keep the Congress informed about this important issue.
Sincerely,
WILLIAM J. CLINTON
FIGHTING ERUPTS BETWEEN RIVAL KURDISH GROUPS IN NORTHERN IRAQ=20
(ZNAF: Ankara) Fighting has broken out between the Kurdistan Democratic
Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) in northern Iraq,
breaking a year-old Western-brokered ceasefire. A PUK official confirmed
the clashes at the city of Shaklawa in the Haj Umran area near the
Iranian border but said his group had acted in self defense. KDP led by
Massoud Barzani, has been fighting with Turkish troops against a third
Kurdish group, PKK. The PUK, headed by Jalal Talabani, said Barzani's
forces had attacked it. Iran's official news agency reported last Friday
that Patriotic Union of Kurdistan has captured the town of Jelaleh and 87
villages (40 square miles) from Barzani's groups in the Belek region. It
added that PUK allied forces were presently entrenched on Hasan-Beig
heights which looks over Bradust region. The PUK had previously claimed
to have captured the towns of Haj-Omran, Qasra, Chuman and Nav-Bordan in
the Balek region. 57 KDP fighters have been killed so far, the PUK
claimed Tuesday. The PUK has protested to Turkey over alleged air raids
on Allane and Balisan, two villages in northern Iraq under its control,
which left four civilians dead and four injured.
The PUK and KDP disagree on such issues as the sharing of revenues,
setting up a new administration in northern Iraq and disarming Arbil.
Last year Saddam Hussein sent troops to the north to help Barzani take
the key city of Arbil from Talabani's forces, reportedly supported by the
government of Iran. KDP radio said that separatist Turkish Kurds of the
Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) were assisting the PUK while the KDP
forces were backed by the Turkish army. The PKK, which has rear bases in
northern Iraq, is fighting for a separate homeland in Turkey. Turkish
troops and KDP have killed over 900 PKK rebels in three weeks of fighting
following an army incursion into northern Iraq that is now about to=20
end.
Turkey said the army units taking part in the campaign continued to
withdraw from northern Iraq, with scores of armored vehicles entering
Turkish territory Tuesday. The army Monday put its death toll at 15, with
140 others injured. The PKK has been fighting the Ankara government for
an independent Kurdish state in Turkey's southeast since 1984. More
than 26,000 people have died in Turkey in the conflict.
A United Nations representative said the fighting between the KDP and PUK
was running in an arc from Shaklawa in northeastern Iraq to Haj Omran
near the border with Iran. Many trucks used for food distribution in
areas affected by the fighting were used by the warring factions for
military purposes. A children's vaccination program was set for October
18-20. Last October, as part of the peace process brokered by Britain,
Turkey and the United States, a peacekeeping force of Turkomans and
Assyrians was deployed on the line of demarcation now violated by the KDP
and PUK fightings. The United States, Britain and Turkey, jointly called
Friday night on the two factions to accept another ceasefire, but clearly
blamed the PUK for the latest round of violent rivalry. Both PUK and KDP
finally agreed to this latest cease-fire and returned UN trucks they
seized in northern Iraq after declaring a truce. However, at least 12
people were killed in fighting after the signing of the ceasefire.=20
Electrical power has since been restored in Arbil.
Roger Vivarie, Deputy Head of Mission for the UN High Commissioner for
Refugees said that an influx from the fighting which has caused internal
displacement of Iraqis in the north is feared. The impact of such a mass
movement on the Assyrian population in the north remains to be seen. The
governor of Iran's Kurdistan province, Abdollah Ramezanzadeh, said the
province was mobilizing all facilities to cope with the possible exodus
of Iraqi refugees. Up to 45,000 Iraqi Kurds fled similar fighting in
northern Iraq last year to Iran, which is already home to two million
refugees from Iraq and Afghanistan making it one of the world's biggest
host countries of refugees.
IRAQ CONDUCTS POPULATION CENSUS
(ZNUP: Beirut) The official Iraqi News Agency says Iraqis are
cooperating fully with a population census, the first since 1987.
A dispatch monitored in Beirut said 160,000 census takers and 9,500 local
officials are carrying out the census. Iraqi authorities declared a 4:00
a.m. to 8:00 p.m. curfew on Thursday to prevent movement and travel and
allow for an accurate count. Northern Iraq is likely to be left out of
the latest census. The Ministry of Culture and Information has organized
a tour in Baghdad for Arab and foreign journalists to observe the
process. This year's census is meant to gather information about Iraq's
social and economic potential. It will include a house count, demographic
details on citizens, and a record of agricultural land-holdings and
crops. The agency quotes the top census official as saying data
collection is proceeding smoothly. Preparations for the census began last
March. The agency says Iraqi citizens living in neighboring Jordan are
flocking to the Iraqi embassy in Amman and five other points to fill out
census forms. There may be as many as 14,000 Iraqi Assyrians living in
Amman. The first modern census, conducted in 1927, showed there were
about 3 million Iraqis. Eric Falt, spokesman for the UN coordinator
office of humanitarian operations in Iraq, said the World Food Program
had carried out its own census in the north and determined the population
at 3.1 million people. According to official estimates, Iraq's overall
population is 21 million, including four million residents of Baghdad.
The 1987 census put more than half of the population under the age of 20.
The growth rate is around 3.4 percent a year, and the United Nations
estimates that the population will have reached 46 million in 2025.
ffff,0000,0000------------------S U R F S =20
U P !------------------------
"After reading your story about Mr. Malek Yusuf I was tormented even more
that my people "Assyrians" have been pushed and pulled every direction
for the past century. Westerners have used us to fight their ugly wars
since they are not interested to lose their own sons and daughters. I
Would like to raise a question to all Assyrian parents: why is it that
your off-springs carry a Western name (including my name that is
Albert)?. My parents are surprised to find out that I do not like my
western given name. If you were to ask where they have learned these
names, the answer is movies, magazines, and tabloids. Do you think Jews
would ever name there sons Hitler? Since we know how Westerners have
treated us in the past we should not use their names. To me it is very
ugly when our first name is European and then the family name is a
village in Urmi, such as Albert Sborkhan or Albert Khosroabad- shall I
continue? I think you got my message including my own family. I hope you
publish this on Zenda and maybe some parents wake up."
Albert Issaco
Sutter Creek, California
***************
"With all due respect to Mar Bawai Soro, I have a few comments regarding
his recent reply in the October 13, 1997 issue.
I grant that the previous attempts towards reconciliation of the two
Churches of the East have not been fruitful, but it has not been due to
a lack of effort or interest on the part of the Church of the East (Old
Calendar). In fact Mar Addai outlined the history behind these
reconciliation efforts in his August 15th interview on AssyriaVision. =20
I
am rather baffled as to what I should conclude considering that both
parties have made attempts at reconciling their differences with no
avail.
In regards to Patriarch Mar Addai's trip to California, it was critical
and necessary at the time. Since his seat is in Baghdad, Iraq, it is
incumbent upon His Holiness to visit with his parishes in every
representative community in their respective states when he visits a
country.
Mar Bawai Soro writes: " Their Holinesses our two Patriarchs Mar=20
Raphael
and Mar Dinkha, in Chicago, personally called Patriarch Mar Addai, who
was then in California, on the 13th of August (4:10 pm) and invited him
to come to Chicago and co-consecrate Mart Maryam Church with them." It
was my understanding that this event, which marked a milestone in our
history, was to take place on the 15th of August. It is inconceivable
that His Holiness Mar Addai could walk away from his massive obligations
within such short notice. Granted, His Holiness was visiting in the
Chicago area for approximately a month prior to his departure to
California, during which an official invitation to this holy event would
have resulted in a much more favorable response.
In my humble opinion, if we are in reconciliation talks with each other,=20
publicizing such detailed examples could have counterproductive
consequences and would alienate the process furthermore. This issue will
most probably warrant a clarification response from the Church of the
East-Old Calendar, expressing their point of view on this situation.
Ultimately, these finger-pointing stratagems are detrimental to our
church, people, and faith. I am extremely concerned that such
unrelenting exchanges can only divide us further. As an Assyrian, my
nation's UNITY is imperative, standing above our church and tribal
affiliations."
Ed Williams
Chicago
ffff,0000,0000---------------S U R F E R S =20
C O R N E R----------------
PRESERVATION OF ASSYRIAN ARTIFACTS IN IRAQ
Present-day Iraq, as we are all well too aware, has its share of
problems. As Assyrians, it pains us greatly to witness the devastation
taking place in our ancestral homeland. What has mainly been at the
forefront of our concerns as of late has been the plight of the Assyrians
living in northern Iraq. Many Assyrians living outside Iraq have been
quite committed to the task of supporting our brothers and sisters still
inside. Despite the American-led sanctions, a large portion of Assyrians
have done their best to send medical supplies and other needed
necessities into Iraq. Whether motivated by guilt, generosity, or a
sense of obligation, we have all in some ways made our contributions,
however small.
Now another current event in Iraq desperately beckons our help. It
appears that the state of poverty and misery which has engulfed Iraq is
now affecting the country's ancient treasures. Archeological sites and
museums housing ancient Mesopotamian artifacts have been looted and sold
or smuggled out of the country. According to Donny Youkhana, Director of
Antiquities in Iraq, with the government's assets frozen and the
country's infrastructure in ruins, little remains to help support and
protect Iraq's antiquities. Desperate Iraqis have attempted, and been
successful, at looting local museums - some were actually the security
guards hired to protect them. Many have started their own archeological
search for ancient artifacts in the hopes of smuggling them out of the
country or selling them for far less than what they are actually worth.=20
Most of the treasures that are found are smuggled into Turkey, although
it is unclear whether they remain there or are then sold to the outside
market. In some cases the findings are cut into pieces in an effort to
smuggle them out of the country. This was the case with tablets dating
back to the reign of Nebuchadnezzar, as well as with one individual who
had destroyed the head of the Assyrian Winged Bull. Another item that was
smuggled into Turkey was an antique gazelle-leather-bound Bible allegedly
worth $1.5 million. Obviously, the negative effects of these actions
will forever remain. Evidence of our nation's greatness are being
dismantled, and in some cases vanishing all together. As we all know,
the world at large knows little, if anything, of our great culture and
people. These valuable antiquities and archeological sites are testament
to our nation's greatness and achievements. To have them destroyed is
not only tragic, but threatens our very identity.
Iraq's official response to this latest disaster has been to, again,
blame the United Nations. They state that certain UN workers have taken
advantage of their diplomatic privileges by helping themselves to the
country's wealth of archeological findings. Although I am personally
reluctant to agree with anything said by the current corrupt regime in
Iraq, apparently a UN worker from Chile was caught red-handed with some
of these items. Prosecuting such an action, if true, is out of the
question due to diplomatic immunity.
What I personally also find disappointing is that there are many of our
own people who actually support the removal of these antiquities. They
feel that housing these treasures in western countries (if that is where
these pieces are going) will be an improvement, and that they will be
better protected. First of all, I find this argument to be racist. The
notion that people in the Third World are so backward and incapable of
managing their own affairs that they need western countries to intervene
on their behalf to save them from themselves is demeaning. Which is the
goal - in order to justify any action taken against any
individual/nation, the offense is usually to downgrade or dehumanize the
other side, thereby making any action justifiable. Hitler used this
tactic against the Jews, and the United States against the North
Vietnamese. Besides, even if this were the case, how would one explain
the success that both Egypt and Syria have had in protecting their
archeological sites (Egypt obviously with its pyramids, Valley of the
Kings, and numerous tomb findings, and Syria with Palmyrna, as well as
others.) Secondly, despite our disgust with the governments in the=20
Middle East, particularly Iraq, we must remember that situations change. =20
One day, however impossible this may be to believe now, Iraq and
hopefully other Middle Eastern countries, may actually enjoy democracy
and stability. =20
Removing antiquities is not a temporary thing - once they leave, they're=20
gone forever. Finally, even if one agrees with the idea that western=20
nations can better protect such items, the actual removal in itself is
still destructive. Would the world still be in such awe of Egypt's great
history if the pyramids' stones were displayed in different museums in
different parts of the world? How about if only half of the Greek
Acropolis columns were to remain? It definitely takes away from the
whole picture, doesn't it? According to Dr. Elizabeth Stone, Professor
of Anthropology at the State University of New York in Stonybrook, the
process of removing these treasures is itself destructive. Looters and
buyers alike are only looking for the most valuable of these antiquities;
in order to smuggle them out, they actually must be dismantled, therefore
resulting in the loss of much information. Dr. Stone equates those who
take part in this illegal activity to those involved in organized crime.=20
She states that until the buyers are held responsible for their actions,
little can be done.
So how may these people be held responsible for such actions? The
majority of our Assyrian organizations have made supporting our people
still inside a priority, and rightly so. How can our small nation still
keep this as a priority, as well as lobby for the protection of our
ancient artifacts? In trying to find the best organization that could
assist our community with its historic preservation, I was directed to
Dr. McGuire Gibson at the Orient Institute of Chicago. He provided me
with a number of suggestions, among them: that Assyrians internationally
should contact their respective Customs Department. According to Dr.
Gibson, a UNESCO treaty was signed in the early 1970's against the
purchase of any illegally obtained archeological find. This law,
however, is rarely enforced unless one draws attention to the matter,
making it vital that we contact our respective Customs Department when we
hear of such matters, and demand that this law be enforced. Other
contacts that were provided include Scotland Yard, INTERPOL, an
international police organization based in Paris, and IFAR- International
Foundation for Art Recovery, based in New York City. =20
Let me say that I realize that a heavy burden has been placed on the=20
Assyrian community outside Iraq - we feel obligated to aid those still in=20
our homeland, maintain our cultural identity outside, be model examples
of our people, and instill our traditions, language, and national pride
in our children. At times it may feel like our efforts are pointless - a
drop in the bucket, if you will. Unfortunately, I am not aware of any
method of measuring how successful we have been at conducting all of the
above. I suppose if one were to be taken, we would score pretty well and
maybe that would be our reward or incentive. Until then, we must
convince ourselves to the best of our abilities that we are making a
difference - this I honestly believe. We Assyrians are in a unique
situation - because of our size, we have always had to depend on
ourselves. In a way, this as proven to be our own reward - any
achievements we have ever made we can say that we did ourselves. This
independence, in both cultural achievements and national survival, is
something we have always taken great pride in. These ancient
archeological sites and artifacts are evidence of this pride; bkhalit
Allah, one day the world will come to Bet-Nahrain to view these
achievements in their native beauty.
Elki Issa
California
ASSYRAIN CORNERSTONE CEREMONY
An in-depth article about the Assyrian Cornernstone ceremony which took
place on June 12, 1997 at the University of Chicago is featured in the=20
Oriental Institute News and Notes, No. 155, Fall 1997 issue. For more
information, please contact:
=20
Tim Cashion
(773) 702-1677
oi-membership@uchicago.edu
http://www-oi.uchicago.edu
TZEDEK'S INTERVIEW WITH WALED PHARES
There is an interesting interview at an Israeli magazine TZEDEK (Justice)
or ZEDKE' with Dr. Waled Phares. You can read it at
www.btzedek.co.il/lebanon.htm
=20
Martin Mirza
Chicago
ffff,0000,0000---------------N E W S D =20
I G E S T-----------------
NEWS BITS FROM THE MIDDLE EAST
A Greek military patrol on Sunday arrested 111 Iraqi immigrants
abandoned
on a lonely Greek island in the Aegean Sea. The group, including 27
women and 53 children, was abandoned by a boat that transported them from
the Egyptian port of Suez.
An Egyptian Christian was killed by a stray bullet during a police
manhunt for Moslem militants as he worked near the site of a deadly
attack against police earlier this week.
President Saddam Hussein's son Uday, appearing with a walking stick at an
Iraqi Olympic Committee ceremony in Baghdad, called his wounds from an
assassination attempt against him in December "an opportunity offered by
God" to share the Iraqi people's suffering. Uday was struck by 14
bullets.
More than 1,230 Iranians, mostly intravenous drug users, have been
diagnosed as carriers of the HIV virus which causes AIDS, and 155 people
have died of the disease
Fast-food giant McDonald's says it has signed an agreement to open the
first McDonald's restaurant in Beirut in late 1998, with additional
restaurants following shortly.=20
Some 600 Arab officials and businessmen took part in the seventh Arab
Investors' Conference in Beirut. The forum at the sea-front Summerland
hotel is designed to help boost investment between Arab nations, discuss=20
problems hindering inter-Arab investment and encourage economic,financial
and stock exchange cooperation.
Iran currently leads Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and China by four points in =20
Group A of the qualification games for next year's World Cup
(Soccer/Football). The winners of the two qualifying groups in Asia
advance to the World Cup while the two second-place teams meet in a
one-game playoff to determine the third automatic berth. The loser of the
second-place game will then meet Australia for the 32nd and final World
Cup spot.
=20
ffff,0000,0000------C A L E N D A R =20
OF E V E N T S----
Oct 25 A Discussion on "The Assyrians": The Second of Joan Grande's
Series of Gallery Talks on the Development of Civilization.
British Museum, London
Coffee Bar (inside the museum)
11:00 AM
=A31.50
Oct 30 Library Tour of the Near Eastern Collections
Main Library of UC, Berkeley
4:00 pm
=09
Nov 22-24 Middle East Studies Association's 31st Annual Meeting
San Francisco, California
Hyatt Regency San Francisco
=
=
0000,0000,fefehttp://www.mesa.arizona.edu/=
mesa97.htm
Selected Topics:
-Christian Persian Notables: Patrons and Leaders in East Syrian
Christian Society
-Iraq and the Assyrians, 1925-1933
-Dawn at Tell Tamir: The Assyrian Christian Survival on the Khabur
River
-The Future of Iraq=09
-Recognized Religious Minorities in Iran=09
-An Ethnic Perspective on State Formation in Iraq
-Lebanon's Culture and National Identity
-Sons of Noah in Eastern Christian Tradition
Dec 7 General Meeting of the Assyrian Foundation of America
Berkeley, California
Agenda: General Elections
Dec 11-13 British Association for Near Eastern Archaeology
1997 Annual Conference
University of Durham
United Kingdom
=
=
0000,0000,fefehttp://www.dur.ac.uk/Archaeo=
logy/confs/BANEA.html
Dec 20 Maestro Nebu Issabey's Nineveh Choir=20
San Jose State University Music Hall
8:00 PM
(Tickets are on sale!)
Through In the Presence of the Gods: Art from Ancient Sumer
Mar 8,1998 The Smart Museum of Art
5550 South Greenwood Avenue
Chicago
Free Admission
A presentation of 43 4,500-year-old Sumerian temple offerings,
including statues from Tell Asmar, tablets, carved stone vessels, and
relief panels showing banquet scenes.
=20
=20
ffff,0000,0000--------------------------K H U D=20
R A------------------------------
Oct 26 Third Sunday of Moses
Oct 31 Dokhrana 'd Mar Elia (of Hirta or Khirata)=20
Nov 1 Dokhrana 'd Mar Mikha d'Alqosh
Nov 3 Dokhrana 'd Mar Gewargis, Sahda (The Martyr)
Nov 19 Commemoration of Mar Yacoub m' Pasqa
Nov 22 Dokhrana 'd Mar Odisho d'Urmi =20
Dec 7 Annunciation of the Virgin Mary (Soobara)
Dec 8 Immaculate Conception
Dec 13 Mar Yacub d'Nsiven (St. James of Nisibin)
Dec 20 King Abgar V
Dec 22 Mar Yousip (St. Joseph)
Dec 25 Christmas (Julian Calendar)
For the Church Liturgy of the Assyrian Church of the East visit:
=20
=
0000,0000,fefehttp://www.cired.org/liturgy=
..html
=20
ffff,0000,0000-------------------------E N T R=20
A C T E-------------------------
Oct 24 Annual Dance Party
Assyrian Stars Athletic Organization
Assyrian American Association of San Jose
Entertainers: Franco & Star Band
Robert Khnanishan & Immigrant Band
D.J.- Noel Bodaghi
Awana of the Church of the East
680 Minnesota Avenua, San Jose
ASAO Members: $10.00
Non-Members: $20.00
At the door: $25.00
Contact Wilson Eshou at 408-980-1797
Dec 31 New Year's Eve Party
Assyrian American Association of San Jose
Entertainers: Black Cats & Franco
Marriott Hotel
Santa Clara, California
ffff,0000,0000----------------------I N T E L L I G
E N T S I A-----------------------
CHICAGO Introductory & Advanced Modern Assyrian
Room Numbers C13 & C33
Instructor: Rabbie Zaia Kanoon
Wednesdays, Thursdays, & Saturdays
7:00-9:00 PM
Location: North Park University, Carlson Tower
language@aas.net or 1-800-454-6979.
=09
Assyrian Athletic Club Soccer Development Program
Ages 7-14
7:45-9:45 PM
Mondays
Warren Park Gymnasium
Western Avenue & Devon Street
------------------------------------------------------
HARVARD 1997-98 Syriac Classes Taught by Dr. J.F. Coakley
UNIVERSITY Elementary Syriac
Instructor: J. F. Coakley
Basic Syriac grammar and syntax with selected readings from=20
the Syriac Bible and other early texts. =20
------------------------------------------------------
Readings in Syriac I
Historical and theological texts, and early poetry
------------------------------------------------------
Readings in Syriac II
Special attention to exegetical texts and to reading
manuscripts.=20
------------------------------------------------------
NORTH Assyrian Boy Scouts =20
HOLLYWOOD Assyrian American Association of Southern California
Assyrian Club
5901 Cahuenga Blvd
North Hollywood, California
9:30am to 12:30pm =20
Sundays =20
Contact Sargon Gewargis @ fishtale@juno.com
(818) 891-3705 after 7:30 PM
------------------------------------------------------
Assyrian Student Union
California State University, Northridge
Assyrian American Association of Southern California
Assyrian Club
5901 Cahuenga Blvd
North Hollywood, California
6:00pm
Contact Sargon Gewargis @ fishtale@juno.com
(818) 891-3705 after 7:30 PM
------------------------------------------------------
SAN JOSE English as a Second Language & Conversational English
(Adults) Instructor: Jacklin Bajan
Mondays
7:00-9:30 PM
AAA of San Jose BETA
------------------------------------------------------
Nisibin School for Children (Classes begin on 10/6/97)
Various Instructors
Saturdays
10:00-1:00 pm
AAA of San Jose BETA
------------------------------------------------------
Citizenship Classes
Instructor: Jacklin Bajan
Mondays & Tuesdays
7:00 PM
AAA of San Jose BETA
20000 Almaden Road
------------------------------------------------------
Maestro Nebu Issabey's Nineveh Choir Practice
AAA of San Jose BETA
8:00 PM
Thursdays
------------------------------------------------------
ONTARIO Nisibis School=20
10:30-1:30 =20
Saturdays
The Church of the East=20
Toronto, Canada
Assyrian Student Association
12:00 pm (noon)
MSA Room, Fennell Campus
Hamilton, Canada
ffff,0000,0000-----------------------------A B Z=20
U---------------------------------=20
RADIO PROGRAMS=09
Assyrian Voice of Canada Ontario-Canada
Saturdays=09
3:00 - 4:00 PM Cable 91.7 and 91.9
10:00 PM - 12:00 AM (midnight) AM 1430
Voice (905) 279-6206
Fax (905) 279-7347
-------------------------------------------------------------------
TELEVISION PROGRAMS
AssyriaVision KBSV-TV 23 Modesto/Turlock-California
Bet-Nahrain Inc.
Daily (Saturday-Friday)=09
7:00 AM - 2:00 AM PST=20
(209) 538-4130
0000,0000,fefehttp://www.betnahrain.org/kbs=
v-tv23.html
--------------------------------------------------------=
-----------
Assyrian National Magazine San Jose/Bay Area, California
(with George Maragolof)=09
Live Show (Every first and third Tuesday)
6:00 PM - 7:00 PM "live show"
Weekly Show (Fridays)=20
7:00-8:00 PM
Channel 15A (TCI Cablevision)
0000,0000,fefehttp://wwwdeanza.fhda.edu/26/=
shows/assyrian.html
--------------------------------------------------------=
-----------
Atour TV (Assyrian American Association) San Jose, California
Weekly (Mondays)
8:30 PM - 9:00 PM
Channel 15A (TCI Cablevision)
=20
ffff,0000,0000---A S S Y R I A N S U R
F I N G P O S T S-----=20
=20
Selections from the Liturgy of the Assyrian Church of the East
http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/basis/assyrlit.html
ffff,0000,0000-------------------P U M P UP
THE V O L U M E-------------------=20
0000,0000,ffff English Modern Assyrian
Blanket koosh/pa [F]
=20
Pillow bisa/dee/ta [M]
Note: "Bisa/dee/ta" is often mispronounded as "Spadeeta." Other such
mispronounced words include:
Incorrect Correct
gneeveh (eyebrows) gveeneh
khmaatda (needle) mkhaadta
gdeela (ice) gleeda
________________________________________________________________________
F =3D Feminine M =3D Masculine P =3D Plural =20
=20
=20
=20
ffff,0000,0000-------------B A C K TO THE =20
F U T U R E----------------
BC (770's)
The Assyrian army is defeated in the north (Urartu), Syria, and the Lake
Urmi region. The kingdom of Urartu (today's Turkey & Armenia) controls
the traffic in metal, resulting in the revolts of Assyrians in Ashur,
Arbakha, and Gusana. King Ashur-Dan III was unable to subdue these
revolts. His successor Ashur-Nirari V was even less capable. With the
revolt in the city of Calah (Kalakh) Ashur-Nirari perished with every
member of his family. The revolt in Calah resulted in the accession of
Tiglath-Pileser III to the throne. Under the new king, Assyria quickly
recovered, defeated the Urarti kings, neutralized the revolts, and
expanded its dominions further than before.
=20
<<<< The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume III >>
AD (1845)
The Swedish Isador Lowenstern advocates the view that Akkadian is a
Semitic language. He observed that as in Hebrew, Arabic, and modern
Assyrian the Babylonian cuneiform writing left the vowels unrecorded. He
found no less than five different signs representing "r-"
(ar,ir,er,ur,ra,ri, and ru). Five years later Edward Hincks recognized
that these signs did not represent consonants, but syllables. He was
able to state decisively that the Babylonian cuneiform writing contained
"not one single sign standing for a simpler consonant, but signs
representing a consonant preceded or followed by a vowel."
<<<< Extinct Languages, Friedrich >>
=20
=20
ffff,0000,0000--------------L I T E R =20
A T U S-----------------
THE SENSUAL EXPERIENCE OF AN ASSYRIAN SCULPTURE
The visual mobility which Assyrian sculpture promotes could be taken as
the model for a nonclimactic sensuality. Marquis de Sade speaks of such
a narrative form of sexuality, a sexuality in which the orgasmic climax
closes an incident of desire. Sade translates into scenarios of literal
violence the calculated organization of erotic activity in view of
explosive culminations. His work illustrates the relation between a
commitment to narrativity and a commitment to certain types of pleasure.=20
Sade thereby proposes that the life of the body does not merely happen;
we cultivate, organize, dismiss or concentrate on sensations just as we
order our thoughts and dismiss or linger over spectacles in the external
world. The Assyrians de-center their representations and keep our
attention constantly on the move; they plunge us into a network of
shifting relations which destabilize narrative structures. In this
visual mobility the spectator moves between two forms with a residual
impression of the first form and in anticipation of a second. This
constant mobility leads us to postulate an esthetic pleasure brought
about not be esthetic objects but by the spaces between their constituent
parts. We may define this pleasure as an agitated crossing of the
intervals which separate forms. Assyrian art is a lesson in interstitial
sensuality.
<<<< The Forms of Violence, Bersani & Dutoit>>
ffff,0000,0000--------T H I S W E E K =20
I N H I S T O R Y--------=20
October 20, 1833: Dr. Justin Perkins, the first American missionary,
arrives in Urmi.
ffff,0000,0000-----------------------B R A =20
V O-------------------------
ASSYRIAN NATIONAL FOUNDATION OF AMERICA (BERKELEY)
The Assyrian National Foundation was established in 1964 and has since
been "dedicated to the advancement of Education of Assyrians." "The
Berkeley Club" is better recognized for its publication of the Assyrian
quarterly magazine, Nineveh. During last week's general meeting the
following list financial assistance in 1997 was reported:
Needy Assyrian Families: $ 20,000
(in northern Iraq & 54 families in Jordan)
Assyrian Students (scholarships) $ 10,000
($ 1,750 were sent to students in northern Iraq)
Publication of Books $ 3,500
To contact ANF or subscribe to Nineveh Magazine:
P.O. Box 2620
Berkeley, California 94702
U.S.
The next General Meeting of this organization is schedules on December 7,
1997 during which time a new Board of Directors will be elected.
ffff,0000,0000--------------------the D I R E=20
C T O R Y----------------------
ZNAA (Assyrian Academic Society-Chicago)
ZNAD (Assyrian Democratic Organization)
ZNAF (Agence France-Presse)
ZNAM (Archeology Magazine)
ZNAP (Associated Press International)
ZNBN (Bet-Nahrain Inc/ KBSV-TV "AssyriaVision")
ZNIF (Iraq Foundation)
ZNDA (Zenda: zenda@ix.netcom.com)
ZNIN (Iraqi National Congress)
ZNMN (San Jose Mercury News)
ZNNQ (Nabu Quarterly)
ZNNV (Nineveh Magazine)
ZNQA (Qala Atouraya- Moscow)
ZNRU (Reuters)
ZNSH (Shotapouta Newsletter)
ZNSJ (San Jose Mercury News)
ZNSM (Shufimafi Lebanese News)
ZNTM (Time Magazine)
ZNUP (United Press International)
ZNUS (US News & World Report)
ffff,0000,0000---------W E L C O M E =20
T O Z E N D A--------
CORPORATE ACCOUNTS=20
=09
UNIVERSITY ACCOUNTS
University of Manchester, England=09
PERSONAL ACCOUNTS =09
Glenview, Illinois =09
ffff,0000,0000-------------------S A L =20
U T E----------------------
This Week's Writers & Reporters:
Lena Mushell San Jose, California News
Nadia Joseph Chicago, Illinois Surfers Corner
Raman Mikhail Chicago, Illinois Good Morning Bet-Nahrain
& We Thank The Following Individuals For Referring Us to New Readers:
Firas Jatou Chicago, Illinois
ffff,0000,0000----------------------------------------=
--------------------------------
0000,0000,ffffIn Our Upcoming Issues:
=09
October 27 Assyrian Women
November 3 ZENDA's Readers Survey
November 10 The Assyrian American Association of Chicago
November 17 Of Dolma and Haseeda: Assyrian Chefs & Cookery
November 24 The Urmie Manifesto
Would you like to know more about a particular topic on Assyrian culture,
arts, history, language, politics, etc. Drop us a note!
Are your old Assyrian books and magazines sitting at home eating dust?=20
How about sending them to ZENDA so we may share their information with
our readers. ZENDA will gladly cover your cost of postage and=20
handling.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ZENDA is a weekly online magazine distributed on Mondays. Views expressed
in ZENDA do not necessarily represent those of the ZENDA editors, or any
of our associated staff. This publication reserves the right, at its sole
discretion, not to publish comments or articles previously printed in or
submitted to other journals. ZENDA also reserves the right to publish
and republish your submission in any form or medium. All letters and
messages require the name(s) of sender and/or author. All messages
published in the SURFS UP! section must bear the name of the author(s).=20
Distribution of material featured in ZENDA is not restricted, but
permission from ZENDA is required. This service is meant for the
exchange of information, analyses and news. To subscribe, send e-mail to:
zenda@ix.netcom.com with the message body "subscribe ZENDA Firstname
Lastname". To unsubscribe, send e-mail to the above address, with the
message body "unsubscribe ZENDA".
zenda@ix.netcom.com
P.O. Box 20278 San Jose, California 95160 U.S.A.
=20
=20
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=
ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ=
ZZZZ
ZENDA
&nbs=
p;
A Weekly Assyrian Online Magazine
&nbs=
p;
Vol III, Issue 33
&nbs=
p; &n=
bsp;
I Tishreen 20,=
6747  =
; &nb=
sp; &=
nbsp;
October 20, 1997
THI=
S
WEEK IN ZENDA
The=
Lighthouse  =
;
Mesopotamian Mathematics
Good Morning=
Bet-NahraiN
Clinton's Report to Congress, on Iraq
 =
; &nb=
sp;
Fighting Erupts Between Kurdish Groups
 =
; &nb=
sp;
Iraq Conducts Population Census
Surfs=
Up &=
nbsp;  =
;
"above our church and tribal affiliations."
Surfers=
Corner &nb=
sp;
Ancient Assyrain Artifacts in Iraq
 =
; &nb=
sp;
Assyrian Cornerstone Ceremony
 =
; &nb=
sp;
Israeli Journal's Interview with Waled Phares
News=
Digest &nb=
sp;
News Bits from Mid-East
Calendar of=
Events &nb=
sp;
Library Tour of the Near Eastern Collection
Khudra  =
; &nb=
sp;
October-December 1997
Entracte &nb=
sp; &=
nbsp;
Athletic Organization Dance Party in San Jose
Intelligentsia &nb=
sp;
Meetings & Classes
Abzu &=
nbsp;  =
;
Assyrian Radio & TV Programs
Assyrian Surfing=
Posts
Liturgy of the Assyrian Church of the East
Pump up the=
Volume &nb=
sp;
Blanket and Pillow
Back to the=
Future &nb=
sp;
Revolts of 770's & the Akkadian Language
Literatus &n=
bsp; =
The Sensual Experience of Assyrian Sculptures
This Week in=
History &n=
bsp;
Justin Perkins
Bravo =
&nbs=
p;
Assyrian National Foundation of America
The=
Directory =
ZENDA News Sources
Bshena  =
; &nb=
sp;
Glenview and Manchester
Salute  =
; &nb=
sp;
Lena, Nadia, and Ron
THE
LIGHTHOUSE
&nbs=
p;
MESOPOTAMIAN MATHEMATICS
Five thousand years ago a remarkable=
scientific
and engineering revolution took place in Mesopotamia. Bet-Nahrainian=
invention
of wheel and writing, the use of metals, and potteries with geometric=
figures
brought forth a rapid move towards urbanization in Sumer, Babylonia, and
Assyria.
Around 6000 years ago in southern Bet-Nahrain
the Sumerians still had not recognized the concept of a number. Two apples
from differentiated from two oranges, but they resisted the additions of
two unlike things. However, by 3100 B.C., they had developed the concept
of numbers independent of the objects they represented. In about 2500 BC,
by Royal Edict, weights and measures were standardized in Babylon. A=
practical
business decision it eliminated much tension in the marketplace. The=
smallest
unit of length was the finger, about 2/3 of an inch. The cubit was 30=
fingers.
The cord (surveyor's rope) was 120 cubits, that is, 3600 fingers. The league
was 180 cords, about seven miles. The smallest unit of weight was the grain
(about 45 milligrams), the shekel was 180 grains (about ¼ ounce)
and the talent was 3600 shekels (about 67 pounds).
By 2000 BC, there was a calendar with a year
of 360 days, 12 months of 30 days each, with an extra month thrown in every
six years or so to keep synchronized with astronomical observations. By
this time a day was divided into hours, minutes and seconds; and the circle
was divided into 360 degrees. Notice that all these standards of measurement
include multiples of 60- obviously, 60 was the Babylonians' favorite=
number.
To appreciate what constitutes a good counting
system, it is worthwhile reviewing briefly our own system. In our system
1 can mean 1 or 10 or 100 depending on where it appears in the expression
-- the 1 in 41 means a
different quantity from the 1 in 145, for=
example.
We say the value of a symbol has "positional dependence" -- its actual
value depends on where in the expression it appears. Our convention, as
you well know, is that the number to the far right in our system is the
number of 1's, the number to its immediate left is the number of 10's,
to the left of that comes the number of 10x10's, then of 10x10x10's and
so on. We use the same set of symbols, 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,0 in each of these
positions, so the value of such a symbol in a number depends on its position
in that number.
To express quantities less than 1, we use the
decimal notation. We put a dot (in some countries a comma) and it is=
understood
that the number to the immediate left of the dot is the number of 1's,
that to the immediate right the number of tenths (10-1's in mathematical
notation), the next number is the number of hundredths (10-2's) and so
on. With this convention, ½ is written .5 or 0.5 and 1/5 is .2.
Unfortunately, 1/3 becomes .33333..., rather inconveniently, and 1/6 and
1/7 similarly go on for ever. (Actually, this decimal system with the dot
is, historically speaking, rather a recent invention---it was created by
a Scotsman called Napier about 400 years ago.)
Babylonian number system has only two basic
elements, the first of which is clear on examining the first nine numbers.
Evidently, these nine numbers are all constructed of a single element,
a mark easily gouged with one twist of a stick in the soft clay, and the
number of times this element is repeated is the number represented. The
numbers 10, 20, 30, 40, 50, are represented by the symbols.
It is clear that again we have simple=
repetition
of a basic element, which we will conveniently represent by <, and again
it's a mark not difficult to make in the soft clay. Thus, any number between
1 and 59 is represented by a symbol from the second diagram followed in
the usual case by one from the first diagram, so 32 would be written=
<<<11,
approximately. When they get to 60, the Babylonians start again in a similar
way to our starting again at 10. Thus, 82 is written as 1<<11,
where the first 1 represents 60. So the=
Babylonian
system is based on the number 60 the same way ours is based on 10. Ours
is called a "decimal"
system, theirs a "sexagesimal" system.
There are some real problems with the=
Babylonian
number system, the main one being that nobody thought of having a zero,
so both sixty and one look exactly the same, that is both are represented
by 1! Actually, since there is no decimal point, the way to write 1/2,
which we write 0.5, for five tenths, they would write <<<, for
thirty sixtieths---but with no
zero, of course, and no dot either. So if we
see <<< on a clay tablet, we don't know if it means 1/2, 30 or
for that matter 30x60, that is, 1800.
This is in fact not as bad as it=
sounds---sixty
is a very big factor, and it will usually be clear from the context if
<<< should be
interpreted as 1/2 or 30. Also, in columns
of figures, a <<< representing 30 was often put to the left of
<<< representing 1/2.
The Babylonian system is really wonderful for
fractions! The most common fractions, 1/2, 1/3, 1/4, 1/5, 1/6 all are=
represented
by a single number (1/2=3D <<< , 1/3=3D << , 1/5=3D <11,=
etc.).
That is, these fractions are exact
numbers of sixtieths---sixty is the lowest
number which exactly divides by 2, 3, 4, 5, and 6. This is a vast=
improvement
on the
decimal system, which has infinite recurrences
for 1/3 and 1/6, and even ¼ needs two figures: .25.
Of course, even in Babylonian, eventually we
are forced to go to the second "sexagesimal" number, which would be the
number of sixtieths of sixtieths, that is, of three-thousand-six-hundredths.
For example, 1/8 is seven-and-a-half sixtieths, so would be written as
seven followed by thirty---for seven sixtieths plus thirty sixtieths of
a sixtieth. And, 1/7 is as much of a headache as it is in our own=
system.
In order to make their bookkeeping as painless
as possible, The Babylonians had math tables - clay tablets with whole
lists of
reciprocals. The reciprocal of a number is
what you have to multiply it by to get 1, so the reciprocal of 2 is 1/2
written 0.5 in our system, the reciprocal of 5 is 1/5 written 0.2 and so
on. The point of having reciprocal tables is that dividing by something
is the same as multiplying by the reciprocal, so using the tables you can
replace division by multiplication, which is a lot easier.
Surviving clay tablet examples of Babylonian
reciprocal tablets look like this:
11 <<<
111 <<
1111 <11111
11111 <11
111111 <
11111111 1111111 <<<
We have cheated a bit here to avoid creating
a graphics file---the numbers 4, 5, 6, etc. in both columns should really
have their 1's stacked as in the first figure above.
Let's take as an example how much food a=
family
needs. If they consume 120 shekels of grain each day, for example, that's
12 talents of grain per year. (One talent =3D 3600 shekels). Just imagine
the parallel calculation now - if the family consumes 30 ounces of grain
a day, what is that in tons per year? If you were transported to the Babylon
of four thousand years ago, you would hardly miss your calculator!=
Admittedly,
the Babylonian calculation is a bit more difficult every six years when
they throw in an extra month.
Some of the clay tablets discovered contain
lists of triplets of numbers, starting with (3, 4, 5) and (5, 12, 13) which
are the lengths of sides of right angled triangles, obeying Pythagoras'
"sums of squares" formula. In particular, one tablet, now in a collection
at Yale, shows a picture of a square with the diagonals marked, and the
lengths of the lines are marked on the figure: the side is marked=
<<<
meaning thirty (fingers?) long, the diagonal is marked:
<<<<11 <<11111=
<<<11111.
This translates to 42, 25, 35, meaning 42 + 25/60 + 35/3600. Using these
figures, the ratio of the length of the diagonal to the length of the side
of the square works out to be 1.414213=85
Now, if we use Pythagoras' theorem, the=
diagonal
of a square forms with two of the sides a right angled triangle, and if
we take the sides to have length one, the length of the diagonal squared
equals 1 + 1, so the length of the diagonal is the square root of 2. The
figure on the clay tablet is incredibly accurate-the true value is 1.414214=
=85
Of course, this Babylonian value is far too accurate to have been found
by measurement from an accurate drawing - it was clearly checked by=
arithmetic
multiplication by itself, giving a number very close to two.
An Old Babylonian tablet from Yale University
Collection (No. 7289) includes the calculation of the square root of two
to three sexagesimal places. The Babylonian value for the square root of
2 is equal to approximately 1.414222, differing by about .00008 from the
true value. Such accuracy was only surpassed by the mathematicians around
500 years ago. Babylonian tablets also show successive powers of a given
number, calculations analogous to logarithms and antilogarithm, solutions
to the complete three-term quadratic equations, cubic equations, and the
geometric properties of the "length", "area", and "volume."
Around 600 B.C. the intellectual activity of
Bet-Nahrain lost its vigor and the Greek islands became the new centers
of learning. By this time Greeks had become familiar with the works of
the "practical" Mesopotamian mathematicians and in the next two hundred
years applied much of this knowledge to the development of their "rational"
mathematics. Consumed by "logical inferences" and the rational nature of
numbers Greek mathematicians wrote "proofs" for every conceivable geometric
and algebraic problem. Mathematics in Bet-Nahrain was a practical activity,
whereas that practiced by the Greeks had an intellectual and spiritual
meaning- to liberate the soul from its material bonds.
Centuries later, the Assyrian communities of
Bet-Nahrain continued to possess a remarkable knowledge of astronomy and
mathematics. In the third century A.D., the university-hospital of=
Gantha-Shapirta
(Beautiful Garden) was founded near the present day city of Ahwaz in Iran.
Assyrian scholars taught medicine, mathematics, astronomy, and logic. They
also translated Greek texts into Syriac. In Nisibin (Nisibis) and Urhai
(Edessa) these Syriac texts were translated to Arabic and during the=
Crusades
were transported to the centers of learning in Europe. Henceforth was the
mathematics of Sumer and Babylon, admired and refined by the Green=
mathematicians,
introduced to the Latin, French, German, and English scholars of the=
Renaissance
era.
Sources:
The World Treasury of Physics, Astronomy,=
&
Mathematics, Timothy Ferris
A History of Mathematics, Carl Boyer
Michael Fowler's Physics Lectures
[In 1948 Israel adopted the Babylonian Shekel
as its currency unit. Pythagoras lived in the Greek island of Samos from
581 to 497 B.C.]
GOO=
D
MORNING BET-NAHRAIN
EXCERPS
FROM PRESIDENT CLINTON'S REPORT ON IRAQ TO U.S. CONGRESS
(September 23)...Regarding northern Iraq, the
United States continues to lead efforts to increase security and stability
in the north and minimize opportunities for Baghdad or Tehran to threaten
Iraqi citizens there. An important part of this effort has been to work
toward resolving the differences between the two main Iraqi Kurd groups,
the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), led by Massoud Barzani, and the=
Patriotic
Union of Kurdistan (PUK), led by Jalal Talabani. Talabani visited the United
States in late July to meet with National Security Advisor Sandy Berger,
Under Secretary of State Thomas Pickering, and U.N. Ambassador Bill=
Richardson.
At these sessions, he reaffirmed his interest in the "Ankara process" of
ongoing reconciliation talks jointly sponsored by the United States, the
United Kingdom, and Turkey. Recently, the KDP's Barzani has also accepted
our invitation to Washington.
As part of the Ankara process, the United=
States
provides political, financial, and logistical support to the neutral,=
indigenous
Peace Monitoring Force (PMF), comprised of Iraqi Turkomans and Assyrians.
The PMF has demarcated and monitors the cease-fire line established between
the two Kurdish groups in October 1996. United States support takes the
form of services and commodities provided in accordance with a drawdown
that I directed on December 11, 1996, and funds for other nonlethal=
assistance
provided in accordance with a separate determination made by former=
Secretary
of State Christopher on November 10, 1996.
The PMF also helps the Iraqi Kurds move=
forward
on other confidence-building measures, including joint committee meetings
to address a range of civilian services and humanitarian issues affecting
all residents of the north. Local representatives of the two Kurdish groups,
the three co-sponsors of the Ankara process and the PMF continue to meet
at least biweekly in Ankara to discuss, inter alia, other=
confidence-building
measures.
The PMF began full deployment in mid-April
1997 and its size is expected to double later this year to more than 400.
The PMF continues to investigate and resolve reported cease-fire violations.
Its work has become more difficult as elements of the terrorist Kurdistan
Workers Party (PKK) have moved from the Turkish border toward the PUK-KDP
cease-fire line. The KDP alleges that PKK elements have been operating
across the cease-fire line to attack the KDP. The KDP also alleges that
the PUK has joined in some of these attacks, a charge that the PUK denies.
The United States, together with the United Kingdom and Turkey, continues
to stress the importance of strict observance of the cease-fire.
Another important aspect of our commitment
to the people of northern Iraq is in providing humanitarian relief for
those in need. As part of this
commitment, AID's Office of Foreign Disaster
Assistance will direct an
additional $4 million for relief projects
to the region. These supplemental programs, announced July 31, will provide
emergency health and nutritional support to 80,000 displaced women and
children and improve water supplies and sanitation, particularly in the
PUK-controlled province of Suleymaniyah.
The oil-for-food arrangement under UNSCR 986
was reauthorized by UNSCR 1111 on June 4, 1997, and went into effect on
June 8, 1997. Under UNSCR 1111, Iraq is authorized to sell up to $1 billion
worth of oil every 90 days, for a total of $2 billion during a 180-day
period (with the possibility of UNSC renewal for subsequent 180-day=
periods).
Resolution 1111, like its predecessor, requires that the proceeds of this
limited oil sale, all of which must be deposited in a U.N. escrow account,
will be used to purchase food, medicine, and other material and supplies
for essential civilian needs for all Iraqi citizens and to fund vital U.N.
activities regarding Iraq. Critical to the success of UNSCR 1111 is Iraq's
willingness to follow through on its commitments under the resolution to
allow the U.N. to monitor the distribution of humanitarian goods to the
Iraqi people. Although UNSCR 1111 went into effect on June 8, Iraq=
unilaterally
suspended oil sales until a new distribution plan was submitted and=
approved.
The U.N. Secretary General approved a distribution plan on August 13 and
oil sales have resumed.
...The U.N., in its most recent reports on
implementation of UNSCR 986, recognized that the Government of Iraq=
continues
forcibly to deport Iraqi citizens from Kirkuk and other areas of northern
Iraq still under the Iraqi government's control. The Government of Iraq
shows no signs
of complying with UNSCR 688, which demands
that Iraq cease the repression of its own people. The effort by various
Iraqi opposition groups and
non-governmental organizations to document
Iraqi war crimes and other
violations of international humanitarian law,
known as INDICT, continues.
...Iraq remains a serious threat to regional
peace and stability. I remain determined to see Iraq comply fully with
all of its obligations under U.N. Security Council resolutions. My=
Administration
will continue to oppose any relaxation of sanctions until Iraq demonstrates
its peaceful intentions through such compliance.
I appreciate the support of the Congress for
our efforts and shall continue to keep the Congress informed about this
important issue.
Sincerely,
WILLIAM J. CLINTON
FIGHTING
ERUPTS BETWEEN RIVAL KURDISH GROUPS IN NORTHERN IRAQ
(ZNAF: Ankara) Fighting has broken out between
the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) and the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan
(PUK) in northern Iraq, breaking a year-old Western-brokered ceasefire.
A PUK official confirmed the clashes at the city of Shaklawa in the Haj
Umran area near the Iranian border but said his group had acted in self
defense. KDP led by Massoud Barzani, has been fighting with Turkish troops
against a third Kurdish group, PKK. The PUK, headed by Jalal Talabani,
said Barzani's forces had attacked it. Iran's official news agency reported
last Friday that Patriotic Union of Kurdistan has captured the town of
Jelaleh and 87 villages (40 square miles) from Barzani's groups in the
Belek region. It added that PUK allied forces were presently entrenched
on Hasan-Beig heights which looks over Bradust region. The PUK had=
previously
claimed to have captured the towns of Haj-Omran, Qasra, Chuman and=
Nav-Bordan
in the Balek region. 57 KDP fighters have been killed so far, the PUK=
claimed
Tuesday. The PUK has protested to Turkey over alleged air raids on Allane
and Balisan, two villages in northern Iraq under its control, which left
four civilians dead and four injured.
The PUK and KDP disagree on such issues as
the sharing of revenues, setting up a new administration in northern Iraq
and disarming Arbil. Last year Saddam Hussein sent troops to the north
to help Barzani take the key city of Arbil from Talabani's forces,=
reportedly
supported by the government of Iran. KDP radio said that separatist Turkish
Kurds of the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) were assisting the PUK while
the KDP
forces were backed by the Turkish army. The
PKK, which has rear bases in northern Iraq, is fighting for a separate
homeland in Turkey. Turkish troops and KDP have killed over 900 PKK rebels
in three weeks of fighting following an army incursion into northern Iraq
that is now about to end.
Turkey said the army units taking part in the
campaign continued to withdraw from northern Iraq, with scores of armored
vehicles entering Turkish territory Tuesday. The army Monday put its death
toll at 15, with 140 others injured. The PKK has been fighting the Ankara
government for an independent Kurdish state in Turkey's southeast since
1984. More than 26,000 people have died in Turkey in the conflict.
A United Nations representative said the=
fighting
between the KDP and PUK was running in an arc from Shaklawa in northeastern
Iraq to Haj Omran near the border with Iran. Many trucks used for food
distribution in areas affected by the fighting were used by the warring
factions for military purposes. A children's vaccination program was set
for October 18-20. Last October, as part of the peace process brokered
by Britain, Turkey and the United States, a peacekeeping force of Turkomans
and Assyrians was deployed on the line of demarcation now violated by the
KDP and PUK fightings. The United States, Britain and Turkey, jointly called
Friday night on the two factions to accept another ceasefire, but clearly
blamed the PUK for the latest round of violent rivalry. Both PUK and KDP
finally agreed to this latest cease-fire and returned UN trucks they seized
in northern Iraq after declaring a truce. However, at least 12 people were
killed in fighting after the signing of the ceasefire. Electrical power
has since been restored in Arbil.
Roger Vivarie, Deputy Head of Mission for the
UN High Commissioner for Refugees said that an influx from the fighting
which has caused internal displacement of Iraqis in the north is feared.
The impact of such a mass movement on the Assyrian population in the north
remains to be seen. The governor of Iran's Kurdistan province, Abdollah
Ramezanzadeh, said the province was mobilizing all facilities to cope with
the possible exodus of Iraqi refugees. Up to 45,000 Iraqi Kurds fled similar
fighting in northern Iraq last year to Iran, which is already home to two
million refugees from Iraq and Afghanistan making it one of the world's
biggest host countries of refugees.
&nbs=
p;
IRAQ CONDUCTS POPULATION CENSUS
(ZNUP: Beirut) The official Iraqi News Agency
says Iraqis are cooperating fully with a population census, the first since
1987. A dispatch monitored in Beirut said 160,000 census takers and 9,500
local officials are carrying out the census. Iraqi authorities declared
a 4:00 a.m. to 8:00 p.m. curfew on Thursday to prevent movement and travel
and allow for an accurate count. Northern Iraq is likely to be left out
of the latest census. The Ministry of Culture and Information has organized
a tour in Baghdad for Arab and foreign journalists to observe the process.
This year's census is meant to gather information about Iraq's social and
economic potential. It will include a house count, demographic details
on citizens, and a record of agricultural land-holdings and crops. The
agency quotes the top census official as saying data collection is=
proceeding
smoothly. Preparations for the census began last March. The agency says
Iraqi citizens living in neighboring Jordan are flocking to the Iraqi=
embassy
in Amman and five other points to fill out census forms. There may be as
many as 14,000 Iraqi Assyrians living in Amman. The first modern census,
conducted in 1927, showed there were about 3 million Iraqis. Eric Falt,
spokesman for the UN coordinator office of humanitarian operations in Iraq,
said the World Food Program had carried out its own census in the north
and determined the population at 3.1 million people. According to official
estimates, Iraq's overall population is 21 million, including four million
residents of Baghdad. The 1987 census put more than half of the population
under the age of 20. The growth rate is around 3.4 percent a year, and
the United Nations estimates that the population will have reached 46=
million
in 2025.
SURF'S
UP!
"After reading your story about Mr. Malek=
Yusuf
I was tormented even more that my people "Assyrians" have been pushed and
pulled every direction for the past century. Westerners have used us to
fight their ugly wars since they are not interested to lose their own sons
and daughters. I Would like to raise a question to all Assyrian parents:
why is it that your off-springs carry a Western name (including my name
that is Albert)?. My parents are surprised to find out that I do not like
my western given name. If you were to ask where they have learned these
names, the answer is movies, magazines, and tabloids. Do you think Jews
would ever name there sons Hitler? Since we know how Westerners have treated
us in the past we should not use their names. To me it is very ugly when
our first name is European and then the family name is a village in Urmi,
such as Albert Sborkhan or Albert Khosroabad- shall I continue? I think
you got my message including my own family. I hope you publish this on
Zenda and maybe some parents wake up."
Albert Issaco
Sutter Creek, California
&nbs=
p; &n=
bsp;
***************
"With all due respect to Mar Bawai Soro, I
have a few comments regarding his recent reply in the October 13, 1997
issue.
I grant that the previous attempts towards
reconciliation of the two
Churches of the East have not been fruitful,
but it has not been due to a lack of effort or interest on the part of
the Church of the East (Old
Calendar). In fact Mar Addai outlined the
history behind these
reconciliation efforts in his August 15th
interview on AssyriaVision. I
am rather baffled as to what I should=
conclude
considering that both
parties have made attempts at reconciling
their differences with no avail.
In regards to Patriarch Mar Addai's trip to
California, it was critical and necessary at the time. Since his seat is
in Baghdad, Iraq, it is incumbent upon His Holiness to visit with his=
parishes
in every representative community in their respective states when he visits
a country.
Mar Bawai Soro writes: " Their Holinesses our
two Patriarchs Mar Raphael
and Mar Dinkha, in Chicago, personally called
Patriarch Mar Addai, who
was then in California, on the 13th of August
(4:10 pm) and invited him to come to Chicago and co-consecrate Mart Maryam
Church with them." It was my understanding that this event, which marked
a milestone in our history, was to take place on the 15th of August. It
is inconceivable that His Holiness Mar Addai could walk away from his=
massive
obligations within such short notice. Granted, His Holiness was visiting
in the Chicago area for approximately a month prior to his departure to
California, during which an official invitation to this holy event would
have resulted in a much more favorable response.
In my humble opinion, if we are in=
reconciliation
talks with each other, publicizing such detailed examples could have=
counterproductive
consequences and would alienate the process furthermore. This issue will
most probably warrant a clarification response from the Church of the=
East-Old
Calendar, expressing their point of view on this situation.
Ultimately, these finger-pointing stratagems
are detrimental to our church, people, and faith. I am extremely concerned
that such unrelenting exchanges can only divide us further. As an Assyrian,
my nation's UNITY is imperative, standing above our church and tribal=
affiliations."
Ed Williams
Chicago
SURFERS
CORNER
&nbs=
p;
PRESERVATION OF ASSYRIAN ARTIFACTS IN=
IRAQ
Present-day Iraq, as we are all well too=
aware,
has its share of problems. As Assyrians, it pains us greatly to witness
the devastation taking place in our ancestral homeland. What has mainly
been at the forefront of our concerns as of late has been the plight of
the Assyrians living in northern Iraq. Many Assyrians living outside Iraq
have been quite committed to the task of supporting our brothers and sisters
still inside. Despite the American-led sanctions, a large portion of=
Assyrians
have done their best to send medical supplies and other needed necessities
into Iraq. Whether motivated by guilt, generosity, or a sense of obligation,
we have all in some ways made our contributions, however small.
Now another current event in Iraq desperately
beckons our help. It appears that the state of poverty and misery which
has engulfed Iraq is now affecting the country's ancient treasures.=
Archeological
sites and museums housing ancient Mesopotamian artifacts have been looted
and sold or smuggled out of the country. According to Donny Youkhana,=
Director
of Antiquities in Iraq, with the government's assets frozen and the=
country's
infrastructure in ruins, little remains to help support and protect Iraq's
antiquities. Desperate Iraqis have attempted, and been successful, at=
looting
local museums - some were actually the security guards hired to protect
them. Many have started their own archeological search for ancient artifacts
in the hopes of smuggling them out of the country or selling them for far
less than what they are actually worth. Most of the treasures that are
found are smuggled into Turkey, although it is unclear whether they remain
there or are then sold to the outside market. In some cases the findings
are cut into pieces in an effort to smuggle them out of the country. This
was the case with tablets dating back to the reign of Nebuchadnezzar, as
well as with one individual who had destroyed the head of the Assyrian
Winged Bull. Another item that was smuggled into Turkey was an antique
gazelle-leather-bound Bible allegedly worth $1.5 million. Obviously, the
negative effects of these actions will forever remain. Evidence of our
nation's greatness are being dismantled, and in some cases vanishing all
together. As we all know, the world at large knows little, if anything,
of our great culture and people. These valuable antiquities and=
archeological
sites are testament to our nation's greatness and achievements. To have
them destroyed is not only tragic, but threatens our very identity.
Iraq's official response to this latest=
disaster
has been to, again, blame the United Nations. They state that certain UN
workers have taken advantage of their diplomatic privileges by helping
themselves to the country's wealth of archeological findings. Although
I am personally reluctant to agree with anything said by the current corrupt
regime in Iraq, apparently a UN worker from Chile was caught red-handed
with some of these items. Prosecuting such an action, if true, is out of
the question due to diplomatic immunity.
What I personally also find disappointing is
that there are many of our own people who actually support the removal
of these antiquities. They feel that housing these treasures in western
countries (if that is where these pieces are going) will be an improvement,
and that they will be better protected. First of all, I find this argument
to be racist. The notion that people in the Third World are so backward
and incapable of managing their own affairs that they need western countries
to intervene on their behalf to save them from themselves is demeaning.
Which is the goal - in order to justify any action taken against any=
individual/nation,
the offense is usually to downgrade or dehumanize the other side, thereby
making any action justifiable. Hitler used this tactic against the Jews,
and the United States against the North Vietnamese. Besides, even if this
were the case, how would one explain the success that both Egypt and Syria
have had in protecting their archeological sites (Egypt obviously with
its pyramids, Valley of the Kings, and numerous tomb findings, and Syria
with Palmyrna, as well as others.) Secondly, despite our disgust with the
governments in the Middle East, particularly Iraq, we must remember that
situations change.
One day, however impossible this may be to
believe now, Iraq and hopefully other Middle Eastern countries, may actually
enjoy democracy and stability.
Removing antiquities is not a temporary thing
- once they leave, they're
gone forever. Finally, even if one agrees
with the idea that western
nations can better protect such items, the
actual removal in itself is still destructive. Would the world still be
in such awe of Egypt's great history if the pyramids' stones were displayed
in different museums in different parts of the world? How about if only
half of the Greek Acropolis columns were to remain? It definitely takes
away from the whole picture, doesn't it? According to Dr. Elizabeth Stone,
Professor of Anthropology at the State University of New York in Stonybrook,
the process of removing these treasures is itself destructive. Looters
and buyers alike are only looking for the most valuable of these=
antiquities;
in order to smuggle them out, they actually must be dismantled, therefore
resulting in the loss of much information. Dr. Stone equates those who
take part in this illegal activity to those involved in organized crime.
She states that until the buyers are held responsible for their actions,
little can be done.
So how may these people be held responsible
for such actions? The majority of our Assyrian organizations have made
supporting our people still inside a priority, and rightly so. How can
our small nation still keep this as a priority, as well as lobby for the
protection of our ancient artifacts? In trying to find the best organization
that could assist our community with its historic preservation, I was=
directed
to Dr. McGuire Gibson at the Orient Institute of Chicago. He provided me
with a number of suggestions, among them: that Assyrians internationally
should contact their respective Customs Department. According to Dr. Gibson,
a UNESCO treaty was signed in the early 1970's against the purchase of
any illegally obtained archeological find. This law, however, is rarely
enforced unless one draws attention to the matter, making it vital that
we contact our respective Customs Department when we hear of such matters,
and demand that this law be enforced. Other contacts that were provided
include Scotland Yard, INTERPOL, an international police organization based
in Paris, and IFAR- International Foundation for Art Recovery, based in
New York City.
Let me say that I realize that a heavy burden
has been placed on the
Assyrian community outside Iraq - we feel
obligated to aid those still in
our homeland, maintain our cultural identity
outside, be model examples of our people, and instill our traditions,=
language,
and national pride in our children. At times it may feel like our efforts
are pointless - a drop in the bucket, if you will. Unfortunately, I am
not aware of any method of measuring how successful we have been at=
conducting
all of the above. I suppose if one were to be taken, we would score pretty
well and maybe that would be our reward or incentive. Until then, we must
convince ourselves to the best of our abilities that we are making a=
difference
- this I honestly believe. We Assyrians are in a unique situation - because
of our size, we have always had to depend on ourselves. In a way, this
as proven to be our own reward - any achievements we have ever made we
can say that we did ourselves. This independence, in both cultural=
achievements
and national survival, is something we have always taken great pride in.
These ancient archeological sites and artifacts are evidence of this pride;
bkhalit Allah, one day the world will come to Bet-Nahrain to view these
achievements in their native beauty.
Elki Issa
California
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ASSYRAIN CORNERSTONE CEREMONY
An in-depth article about the Assyrian=
Cornernstone
ceremony which took
place on June 12, 1997 at the University of
Chicago is featured in the
Oriental Institute News and Notes, No. 155,
Fall 1997 issue. For more
information, please contact:
Tim Cashion
(773) 702-1677
oi-membership@uchicago.edu
http://www-oi.uchicago.edu
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p;
TZEDEK'S INTERVIEW WITH WALED PHARES
There is an interesting interview at an=
Israeli
magazine TZEDEK (Justice) or ZEDKE' with Dr. Waled Phares. You can read
it at www.btzedek.co.il/lebanon.htm
Martin Mirza
Chicago
NEW=
S
DIGEST
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NEWS BITS FROM THE MIDDLE EAST
A Greek military patrol on Sunday arrested
111 Iraqi immigrants abandoned
on a lonely Greek island in the Aegean Sea.
The group, including 27 women and 53 children, was abandoned by a boat
that transported them from the Egyptian port of Suez.
An Egyptian Christian was killed by a stray
bullet during a police manhunt for Moslem militants as he worked near the
site of a deadly attack against police earlier this week.
President Saddam Hussein's son Uday, appearing
with a walking stick at an Iraqi Olympic Committee ceremony in Baghdad,
called his wounds from an assassination attempt against him in December
"an opportunity offered by God" to share the Iraqi people's suffering.
Uday was struck by 14 bullets.
More than 1,230 Iranians, mostly intravenous
drug users, have been diagnosed as carriers of the HIV virus which causes
AIDS, and 155 people have died of the disease
Fast-food giant McDonald's says it has signed
an agreement to open the first McDonald's restaurant in Beirut in late
1998, with additional restaurants following shortly.
Some 600 Arab officials and businessmen took
part in the seventh Arab Investors' Conference in Beirut. The forum at
the sea-front Summerland hotel is designed to help boost investment between
Arab nations, discuss
problems hindering inter-Arab investment and
encourage economic,financial and stock exchange cooperation.
Iran currently leads Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and
China by four points in
Group A of the qualification games for next
year's World Cup (Soccer/Football). The winners of the two qualifying groups
in Asia advance to the World Cup while the two second-place teams meet
in a one-game playoff to determine the third automatic berth. The loser
of the second-place game will then meet Australia for the 32nd and final
World Cup spot.
CALENDAR
OF EVENTS
Oct=
25 &=
nbsp;
A Discussion on "The Assyrians":
&nbs=
p;
The Second of Joan Grande's Series of Gallery Talks
&nbs=
p;
on the Development of Civilization.
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British Museum, London
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Coffee Bar (inside the museum)
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11:00 AM
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£1.50
Oct=
30 &=
nbsp;
Library Tour of the Near Eastern Collections
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Main Library of UC, Berkeley
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4:00 pm
Nov=
22-24
Middle East Studies Association's 31st Annual Meeting
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San Francisco, California
&nbs=
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Hyatt Regency San Francisco
http://www.mesa.arizona.edu/mesa97.htm
&nbs=
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Selected Topics:
&nbs=
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-Christian Persian Notables: Patrons and Leaders in
&nbs=
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East Syrian Christian Society
&nbs=
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-Iraq and the Assyrians, 1925-1933
&nbs=
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-Dawn at Tell Tamir: The Assyrian Christian Survival
&nbs=
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on the Khabur River
&nbs=
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-The Future of Iraq
&nbs=
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-Recognized Religious Minorities in Iran
&nbs=
p;
-An Ethnic Perspective on State Formation in Iraq
&nbs=
p;
-Lebanon's Culture and National Identity
&nbs=
p;
-Sons of Noah in Eastern Christian Tradition
Dec=
7 &n=
bsp;
General Meeting of the Assyrian Foundation of America
&nbs=
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Berkeley, California
&nbs=
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Agenda: General Elections
Dec=
11-13
British Association for Near Eastern Archaeology
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1997 Annual Conference
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University of Durham
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United Kingdom
http://www.dur.ac.uk/Archaeology/confs/BANEA.html<=
/FONT>
Dec=
20 &=
nbsp;
Maestro Nebu Issabey's Nineveh Choir
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p;
San Jose State University Music Hall
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p;
8:00 PM
&nbs=
p;
(Tickets are on sale!)
Through Mar 8,1998 In the Presence of
the Gods: Art from Ancient Sumer
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The Smart Museum of Art
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5550 South Greenwood Avenue
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p;
Chicago
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Free Admission
A presentation of 43 4,500-year-old Sumerian
temple offerings, including statues from Tell Asmar, tablets, carved stone
vessels, and relief panels showing banquet scenes.
KHUDRA
Oct 26 Third Sunday of Moses
Oct 31 Dokhrana 'd Mar Elia (of Hirta or=
Khirata)
Nov 1 Dokhrana 'd Mar Mikha d'Alqosh
Nov 3 Dokhrana 'd Mar Gewargis, Sahda (The
Martyr)
Nov 19 Commemoration of Mar Yacoub m'=
Pasqa
Nov 22 Dokhrana 'd Mar Odisho d'Urmi
Dec 7 Annunciation of the Virgin Mary=
(Soobara)
Dec 8 Immaculate Conception
Dec 13 Mar Yacub d'Nsiven (St. James of=
Nisibin)
Dec 20 King Abgar V
Dec 22 Mar Yousip (St. Joseph)
Dec 25 Christmas (Julian Calendar)
For the Church Liturgy of the Assyrian Church
of the East visit:
http://www.cired.org/liturgy.html
PUM=
P
UP THE VOLUME
English
Modern Assyrian
Blanket
koosh/pa [F]
Pillow
bisa/dee/ta [M]
Note: "Bisa/dee/ta" is often mispronounded
as "Spadeeta." Other such mispronounced words include:
Incorrect &=
nbsp;
Correct
gneeveh=
(eyebrows)
gveeneh
khmaatda=
(needle)
mkhaadta
gdeela=
(ice)
gleeda
______________________________________________________________________=
__
F =3D Feminine M =3D Masculine P =3D=
Plural
BAC=
K
TO THE FUTURE
BC (770's)
The Assyrian army is defeated in the north
(Urartu), Syria, and the Lake Urmi region. The kingdom of Urartu (today's
Turkey & Armenia) controls the traffic in metal, resulting in the=
revolts
of Assyrians in Ashur, Arbakha, and Gusana. King Ashur-Dan III was unable
to subdue these revolts. His successor Ashur-Nirari V was even less capable.
With the revolt in the city of Calah (Kalakh) Ashur-Nirari perished with
every member of his family. The revolt in Calah resulted in the accession
of Tiglath-Pileser III to the throne. Under the new king, Assyria quickly
recovered, defeated the Urarti kings, neutralized the revolts, and expanded
its dominions further than before.
<< The Cambridge Ancient History, Volume
III >>
AD (1845)
The Swedish Isador Lowenstern advocates the
view that Akkadian is a Semitic language. He observed that as in Hebrew,
Arabic, and modern Assyrian the Babylonian cuneiform writing left the vowels
unrecorded. He found no less than five different signs representing "r-"
(ar,ir,er,ur,ra,ri, and ru). Five years later Edward Hincks recognized
that these signs did not represent consonants, but syllables. He was able
to state decisively that the Babylonian cuneiform writing contained "not
one single sign standing for a simpler consonant, but signs representing
a consonant preceded or followed by a vowel."
<< Extinct Languages, Friedrich=
>>
LITERATURS
THE SENSUAL EXPERIENCE OF AN ASSYRIAN=
SCULPTURE
The visual mobility which Assyrian sculpture
promotes could be taken as the model for a nonclimactic sensuality. Marquis
de Sade speaks of such a narrative form of sexuality, a sexuality in which
the orgasmic climax closes an incident of desire. Sade translates into
scenarios of literal violence the calculated organization of erotic activity
in view of explosive culminations. His work illustrates the relation between
a commitment to narrativity and a commitment to certain types of pleasure.
Sade thereby proposes that the life of the body does not merely happen;
we cultivate, organize, dismiss or concentrate on sensations just as we
order our thoughts and dismiss or linger over spectacles in the external
world. The Assyrians de-center their representations and keep our attention
constantly on the move; they plunge us into a network of shifting relations
which destabilize narrative structures. In this visual mobility the=
spectator
moves between two forms with a residual impression of the first form and
in anticipation of a second. This constant mobility leads us to postulate
an esthetic pleasure brought about not be esthetic objects but by the spaces
between their constituent parts. We may define this pleasure as an agitated
crossing of the intervals which separate forms. Assyrian art is a lesson
in interstitial sensuality.
<< The Forms of Violence, Bersani &
Dutoit>>
THI=
S
WEEK IN HISTORY
October 20, 1833: Dr. Justin Perkins, the=
first
American missionary, arrives in Urmi.
BRAVO
ASSYRIAN NATIONAL FOUNDATION OF AMERICA=
(BERKELEY)
The Assyrian National Foundation was=
established
in 1964 and has since been "dedicated to the advancement of Education of
Assyrians." "The Berkeley Club" is better recognized for its publication
of the Assyrian quarterly magazine, Nineveh. During last week's general
meeting the following list financial assistance in 1997 was reported:
Needy Assyrian Families: $ 20,000
(in northern Iraq & 54 families in=
Jordan)
Assyrian Students (scholarships) $=
10,000
($ 1,750 were sent to students in northern
Iraq)
Publication of Books $ 3,500
To contact ANF or subscribe to Nineveh=
Magazine:
P.O. Box 2620
Berkeley, California 94702
U.S.
The next General Meeting of this organization
is schedules on December 7, 1997 during which time a new Board of Directors
will be elected.
----------------------------------------------------------------------=
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