Vol III, Issue 40

I Kanoon 15, 6747                   December 15, 1997


T H I S   W E E K   I N   Z E N D A

 

The Lighthouse Sad Eyes & Crooked Crosses
Good Morning
Bet-Nahrain
Still No Information on Assyrians in Saddam's Palace
Zowaa News Update from Northern Iraq (Oct-Nov)
Surfs Up "how are you compensated for your work?"
Surfers Corner An Invitation From the Journal of Assyrian Academic Studies
Assyrian Christmas Drive
Culture Without Context
News Digest Ben Elias Declares His Candidacy for Calif State Assembly
Modesto Denies Bingo Permits to Two Assyrian Churches
AANF Allocates over $35,000 to Culture/Education
Archaeological Site Reveals Bribery in Ancient Assyria
Nimrud Reliefs For Sale
Assyrian Surfing Posts Assyrian Midi Composers Exchange
Assyrian National Anthem
Pump up the Volume Recreation & Holiday
Back to the Future Solar Eclipse of 763 B.C. & The Kurdish Attacks in 1914
Literatus Iraqi Children
This Week in History Dr. Abraham Yousif is born in Kharput, Turkey
Bravo George Chaharbakhshi
 
THE LIGHTHOUSE
 
SAD EYES & CROOKED CROSSES

Christmas day.  Prepare for the Christmas day.  Decorate your tree with colorful ornaments; spend hours in shopping malls.  Buy tons of Christmas presents to please family and friends.  To please yourself rather.  Tell your children the story about the fat old man dressed in red, flying over our homes in a sledge drawn by deers.  Don't forget to fill your stockings with candies and holiday goodies.  Include the following in your shopping list:  eggnog, champagne, and Johnny Walker.  New clothes for everyone.  You are definitely not to be seen in the church yard with the same clothes and the same yellow dress you wore last Christmas.  Onward to Macy's - that it.  Why not Nordstrom's?  After all, it only comes once a year, and it's for a good cause.  It's Christmas.  A time for joy and celebration.

December 26.  The day after.  The day you remove the ornaments from the tree that you must now throw away.  The sweater your cousin bought you doesn't fit.  Your house is a mess. You wonder if they liked your presents.  Santa is gone and so are his helpers.  If you could only get your hands on that rascal nephew who spilled his eggnog on your new gray suit.  What happened to all that thrill and excitement you had a week ago?  A month ago? Was that it?  Oh, now you remember.  This year is just like any other in the past.  Today is just like the other 364 remaining days of the year.  But what's wrong? Is it just you who feels this way?  What happened to the slogans of "Peace on Earth" and "Joy to the World"?  Peace is broken everywhere:  in the battle fronts of the Middle East, in the jungles of Asia, in the prisons of Africa, and in your own heart. You have no peace.  Your heart is troubled. But why?  Did you forget to include someone's name in your shopping list perhaps?  Someone you never met in person or forgot to invite to your Christmas party?  Suddenly you remember the name and sink in your seat with shame.  You forgot the birthday boy.

Everyone called him Jesus of Nazareth (Esho Nasraya).  With a plain appearance he traveled from one city to another, from one synagogue to the other.  He associated with common working people, the sick and the blind,  He cured those others rejected and forgave the ones others condemned.  He lived with the poor and dined with the evil men.  He wiped the tears of the prostitutes and washed the feet of this followers.  He healed the wounds of his enemy and brought the dead back to life.  He lived and died for peace.  At 33 he was tried by the clergymen for sedition, handed over to the legal authorities, and led to execution on cross by an angry crowd of respectable citizens.   He was crucified on a cross next to two criminals and died a few hours later in pain and agony.

This is the man for whom we celebrate Christmas.  This is the man in whose name overcrowded malls sell merchandise and the ignorant masses go head over heel to beat the December 25th deadline.  Ever year millions of "crooked crosses" are sold to thousands of disturbed souls with the sad eyes.  None of this was meant to be.

What do you plan to buy for the birthday boy?  It must be as valuable as the gift he offered on the third day after his crucifixion when he rose from the dead.  A lofty donation to the church?  A thousand dollars in cash?   A cathedral in the name of a Christian martyr?  No, of course not.  He hated the perishable things.  That leaves you with one thing- your soul.  Enough of this foolish pride and misery.  Receive His grace today.

"Come to me, all you who labor and are overburdened, and I will give you rest.  Shoulder my yoke and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart and you will find rest for your souls."

Matthew 11: 26-29

The Word Magazine, Volume I, # 4
The Youth Group of the Assyrian Evangelical Church of San Jose
San Jose, California

GOOD MORNING BET-NAHRAIN
WHEREABOUTS OF ASSYRIAN EMPLOYEES IN SADDAM'S SERVICE REMAIN UNKNOWN
 
(ZNDA:  Amnesty International)  In March 1997 Amnesty International wrote to the Iraqi government seeking clarification of the fate and whereabouts of six Assyrians arrested in October 1996 and the details of any legal proceedings made against them.  All six Assyrians lived in Baghdad and were employed in the Presidential Palace of Saddam Hussain.  They were arrested on suspicion of involvement in an attempt to poison President Hussain.  No response has yet been received.  For more information contact International Secretariat, 1 Easton Street, London Wc1x 8DJ, United Kingdom.  The arrested are:
Gewargis Hormiz Oraha
Yousip Adam Khamo
Amira Kora Odisho
Shimon Khoshaba al-Hozi
Petros Elia Toma
William Matti Barkho

ZOWAA NEWS UPDATE FROM NORTHERN IRAQ

End of October
His Holiness Mar Dinkha came for a visit to Baghdad, Iraq.  He was in Iraq to speak to different churches, such as the Chaldean congregations.

November 2
The Zowaa Media Bureau replied to a report published by "Middle East Newspaper" (published October 16).  The report stated that Turkey had supplied arms to certain Assyrian groups in Iraq to fight alongside the Turks against PKK.  The Zowaa Media Bureau responded to this report:  there is no group that has taken arms from the Turks, and furthermore, no Assyrian group that has agreed to fight against PKK.  The reality of Northern Iraq is that peace-keeping troops sponsored by the U.S., Britain, and Turkey are further helped by Zowaa and the Turkoman front.  Our movement is NEUTRAL in the Kurdish in-fighting.

November 8
Famous Assyrian writer Aprim Shapira arrived in the Homeland.  Zowaa representatives welcomed the author and marked the occasion of his four-day visit with media interviews and political gatherings at the Assyrian Educational Center at Nohadrah and Ashur TV in Ankawa.  Shapira also presented a lecture on Assyrian political movements.  Shapira also paid a visit to Labor * Housing Minister Yousip Yaqob and Francois Herrari, governor of Arbil.

November 11
Representatives of Zowaa leadership, including Toma Khashaba, Younan Hosaya, Ishmail Nanok and Yousip Putros visited the National Turkoman Party to congratulate them on the 16th year anniversary of their establishment.

November 13
Minister of Labor & Housing, Yousip Yacob, received Mr. Youkhanna Reyes and Mr. Francois, both members of the Aradin Society (Detroit, U.S.).  They were received in the Dohuk.  They discussed the facilitation of returning displaced Aradin residents to their villages in Northern Iraq.  The Minister instructed the two officials to repair and amend the main highway to Aradin to make it easier for the villagers to re-settle.

November 15
The Zowaa Secretary General received his Holiness Abdu Ahad, Bishop of the Chaldean Church in Suleimaya, in the Central Political Office in Dohuk.  Secretary General emphasized the efforts of Zowaa to support the Assyrian people living in areas that the Bishop mentioned.

November 17
A new Assyrian school was inaugurated in Dohuk, named Houdia. The school is fully staffed by an Assyrian administration and teachers.  The school has seven grades and 227 students.

November 19
Minister of Labor & Housing, Yousip Yacob, was a member of a meeting of UN delegates presided by Pedon Sifan, UN Assistant Secretary General in charge of the Iraqi Program.  A six-month plan was requested to be drafted and implemented by UN delegate in the region.

Other November Events

In Memory of Scholar Youkhanna Dolbani (1885-1969)
Zowaa Media in Nohadrah and Arbil broadcast special programs to mark the passing of the great Assyrian scholar.

Fifth Conference on the Syrianic Language
This three day conference was sponsored by the Assyrian Orthodox Coucil (Syria) and took place in Kamishli, Syria.  A Zowaa representative was present.  The Conference focused on poems, songs, folklore stories and folklore dances.  The conference also had educational lectures on the language of Aramaic, a lecture on the original Syrianic names and villages that were traced back to the Aramaic language (presented by Father Barsoum Ayoub).  Assyrianic poems were presented by the scholar Joseph Asmar.  There was also a lecture on Cultural Arts before the time of Christ (presented by Father Mikhail Yakoub).

AAS Supports School Children
The new Assyrian students attending school in Arbil and Dohuk will now be supported by the Assyrian Aid Society, which is providing them with housing (dormitories), 3 meals a day, and transportation.  These services are provided to students who are out of the area and is considered to be absolutely essential considering the extreme shortage of area housing.

SURF'S UP!

"Merry and utmost blessed Christmas of Our Savior and Lord and a happy new year 98 with full of success for all!  Dear friends and brethren, receive and share my best wishes of blessings, peace, health and progress for all Assyrians and coworkers of the unique and excellent ZENDA magazine.  May we enjoy spiritual uplifting and evangelical renewal in this holy time of Advent and towards a living joyful Christmas of our Mshikha through a constant realization of Heavenly Kingdom (Malkutha d'Shmaya) and fruitful orthodox Christian ecumenical testimony, service and enlighten by the Holy Ghost (Rukha di Kadisha) every day of 1998 like climbing Yacoub's Ladder.  I hope to hear of you or even to visit you or welcome you sometime inshallah.  Unfortunately I cannot read regularly (like upto August) or even print them, because I have no more weekly access to a P.C. (and none at home)...Perhaps we will set a new cultural Internet Center next year with my radiologist friend...Dr. Ibrahim Hermez of Mosul and his family and Dr. Manuel Malik de Tchara (Chaldean allergist) or of Dr. Sargon Bit-Chavor who all greet you fondly.  We'd like to have your prints, publications, church and federation news by common post way.  While I reorganize I haven't received any answer from St. Mary's Church or from Mar Sarguis.  "In basma loukh."  Do you know a singer called Julie Issa Thuma?  I embrace you all in name of our roots and faith an of my Aramean ancestors...Sea una Navidad plean de Luz, Pazy Amor trascendentes en NS, J.C en elpio corazon Ardiente!"

Jose Luis Rufino (Yosef)
Argentina



"shlamee al milat!  happy monday evening to all of you. I was wondering if I could impose on you all for some help. if anyone at all has any information for me at all about assyrian contact names for assyrian cultural societies, youth associations and/or church committees for the following cities, I would be most appreciative :) i know that this is a tall order, so thank you in
advance.:)) the contact names I seek are for all assyrians: east, west, maronite, chaldean, whatever.. thanks again. the list is as follows:
         ENGLAND:        LONDON, OXFORD
                 SPAIN:        MADRID, BARCELONA
             FRANCE:        PARIS, NICE
           BELGIUM:        BRUSSELS
 LUXEMBOURG:       LUXEMBOURG
NETHERLANDS:      AMSTERDAM
         GERMANY:       DUSSELDORF,
                                      FRANKFURT, MUNICH
 SWITZERLAND:      GENEVA
            AUSTRIA:      VIENNA
                 ITALY:        ROME, FLORENCE,
                                     VENICE, MILAN
             TURKEY:       ISTANBUL

haweetoon baseemeh raba raba. thenanit minta ewin ana minokhon. any information about anyone in any of the above cities would be greatly appreciated. thanks again everyone."

Michi
Sweden



"My congratulations for the wonderful work you are doing.  I like to pose a couple of questions to you:
1. Obviously any work of such magnitude requires time, money and professional staff.  How are you compensated for your work, if you are compensated?  2. How can one access old issues of Zenda?  Best of Luck."

Zarira
California

ZENDA is entirely written, edited, and produced by teams of volunteer reporters, researchers, editors, and graphic designers.  ZENDA receives no financial support from individuals or institutions and organizations.  Our monthly Internet storage fees and costs related to the upgrade of our equipment and new software are paid by the ZENDA Staff and the generosity of our readers.  All past issues of ZENDA will be made available on our official website.

SURFERS CORNER
AN INVITATION FROM THE JOURNAL OF ASSYRIAN ACADEMIC STUDIES
Dear friends,

The Assyrian Church of the East and the Roman Catholic Church have partaken in theological discussion over the last few years, with the hope of reconciliation. Each of them has acknowledged points of similarity in doctrine. On a parallel track, the Assyrian Church of the East is engaged in new dialogue along similar lines with Eastern churches, including the Chaldean Catholic Church, the Syrian Orthodox Church of Antioch, and the Coptic Church.

Cleavages dating back to the Council of Ephesus gave rise to these diverging confessions, and led to a formal break from the old Catholic Church.  Ironically, the current talk of unity has generated contention within the Church of the East and its leadership. Those who consider unity among all churches to be the paramount virtue, approve of the changes adopted by the new synods. Others feel that these changes can only lead to an encroachment bound to dilute the dogmatic essence of the Church of the East, while also undermining the national Assyrian legacy.
 
In answer to a broad solicitation, JAAS received several letters on this subject written in Assyrian. All of these appeared in the last issue (Vol.XI, No.1). In the forthcoming issue, we will publish letters on this
subject submitted to us in English.
 
We have sensed unusual reader interest on this subject, even before our publication in 1995 of  "The Vienna Christological Formula in an Assyrian Perspective" (JAAS, Vol. IX, No.1). While the Journal does not take a partisan political or religious position, we welcome the opportunity to air attitudes regarding this subject.

Accordingly, the upcoming issue of JAAS will publish letters received on this topic and written in English. We invite the participation of anyone willing to share his or her position. Preferably, statements should be two pages or less in length, and double-spaced. Please mail to:  Francis Sarguis, JAAS English Editor, P.O. Box 5715, Santa Barbara, CA 93150. Alternately, you may FAX it to (805) 565-0628. We ask that all submissions respect the rules of civility, avoid ad hominem invective and, where possible, furnish historical specificity.

Thank you in advance for your participation.

Francis Sarguis
JAAS, English Language

 
ASSYRIAN CHRISTMAS DRIVE
Fellow Assyrians:
 
With compassion in our hearts for the children of our nation suffering from hunger and uncertainty in our homeland Mesopotamia (Iraq), we ask you to help us in making this Christmas a cheerful one.
 
Our people, like all other innocent people in Iraq, are suffering the inhuman consequences of the sanctions imposed on the country due to political conflicts.  Never in the past has this country suffered in the manner it is suffering now.  Shortages of foods, medicines, and other necessities have resulted in the deaths of hundreds of thousands of people, malnutrition in children, and the transformation of the very culture and psychology of the people of the land.  For the first time in the history of Iraq, we are informed that people are selling body parts to survive, doctors are forced to conduct "mercy killings" on children who cannot tolerate the pain of their disease, mothers and daughters are compelled  to wander the streets begging for food  so their families may have bread on the table.
 
We are taught by our Lord and our Savior Jesus Christ that we should help the poor.   As Christians, we are commanded by God to neglect the suffering of our people in Iraq.  The ties that bind us together as a great family call upon our conscience to extend our hand and try to help our fallen brothers and sisters.  We cannot pretend that the pain faced by Assyrian families and children will disappear soon, as the political climate remains uncertain.  We can, for those who need us.
 
Assyrian organizations and churches in Chicago have taken a step to organize a fund, called THE ASSYRIANS CHRISTMAS DRIVE,  by opening an account in a Chicago bank so that donations may be made for our people in Iraq.  Your donations will be tax deductible.
 
We ask you to give as your budget will allow you and as your conscience will require of you.  As you think of a happy, safe, and comfortable Christmas you and your family will enjoy this season, do not forget the little Assyrian boy whose disease requires medicine which is family cannot afford, the hungry families who wander in the cold in search of food and clothing, the little girl who expects to receive her little doll but is not sure if Santa clause will ever come to Mesopotamia (Iraq).
 
P L E A S E   D O N A T E
 
You can let Non-Assyrians take part in helping the Assyrian children by visiting:  http://aina.org/drive.  Please make donations payable to:  Assyrian Christmas Drive    Bank of Bellwood   Account No. 07192313231-1637.   For more information, call the offices of the Assyrian National Council of Illinois 773-262-5589 or call the Assyrian Academic Society at 312-608-9071.    E-mail   staff@aas.net

AINA (Assyrian International News Agency)
AAS (Assyrian Academic Society)
ANC (Assyrian National Council of Illinois)
Chicago, Illinois
 

"CULTURE WITHOUT CONTEXT"

We have recently published the first issue of Culture Without Context, a newsletter devoted to the dissemination of information about illicit excavation and illegal trade in antiquities from countries of the ancient Near East. This newsletter is a publication of the newly established Illicit Antiquities Research Centre (IARC), funded by the McDonald Institute for Archaeological Research in Cambridge, England.
 
We will be publishing the newsletter biannually and we welcome both formal submissions of articles and informal contributions of relevant information about specific objects, legal issues, etc. The next issue will appear in May 1998. If you would like receive copies of the newsletter the annual subscription is L5.00 (cheques payable to University of Cambridge).
 
Dr Neil Brodie
njb1012@hermes.cam.ac.uk
 
Dr Augusta McMahon
Editor, Culture Without Context
amm36@cus.cam.ac.uk

NEWS DIGEST
ASSYRIAN OFFICIAL DECLARES HIS CANDIDACY FOR CALIFORNIA STATE ASSEMBLY

(ZNDA:  San Jose)  Union City Council member, Ben Elias, has declared his candidacy for California State Assembly.  Elias, an Assyrian from the San Francisco Bay Area kicked off his campaign on December 2nd in an effort to capture the majority of votes in the 18th District which includes Union City, Hayward, San Leandro, San Leranzo, Castro Valley, Sonol, and Pleasanton.  All areas are within the San Francisco/East Bay Area of Northern California.  If elected Elias will become the first Assyrian elected to the California State Assembly.  For more information and learning about ways to support Elias 98 Campaign write to elias98@alphapc.com or visit http://www.alphapc.com.
 

CITY OF MODESTO DENIES BINGO PERMITS TO TWO ASSYRIAN CHURCHES

(ZNMB:  Modesto)  Last week the Modesto City Council decided that bingo, unless sponsored by someone who already has a city license, will be illegal at the request of police and the city attorney.  Modesto's legal authorities will review the licensing
procedures for churches and non-profit organizations that make money from bingo in order to determine how much money current bingo games generate. The city now charges operators $50 a year for the permit. Two Assyrian churches  lost their permits in November.  The Assyrian Church of the East Mar Zaia Parish lost its permit because it had trouble with nonprofit certification and Church of the East Federation Bingo lost its permit when police became suspicious of the organization's three name changes. Mayor Richard Lang has stated that the two suspended Assyrian churches can proceed if they work out their legal problems. Church of the East Federation Bingo (2549 Yosemite Blvd. Modesto, California) lost its Bingo permit on November 7 after police became suspicious when the it changed its name several times. The operation, originally associated with St. Mary's Holy Apostolic Catholic Church in Hughson, was at various times known as Church Federation Inc., Church Federation Bingo and Church Federation Mission Inc.  In September, St. Mary's filed a lawsuit against several church members and board members of the bingo operation, demanding that they account for hundreds of thousands of dollars in bingo revenue believed missing.  The Assyrian Church of the East St. Zaia Parish (1457 Mable Avenue, Modesto, California) lost its permit Nov. 26 because of problems with its nonprofit certification.  Apparently the church did not have a separate nonprofit status for its bingo business and its officials may not have been aware of Modesto's regulations for bingo halls when the property was annexed into the city in June 1995.  Church of the East Federation Bingo will not get its permit back unless it proves that it is associated with St. Mary's, but the Assyrian Church of the East can reclaim its permit once it obtains the required nonprofit status.

AANF TO SPEND OVER $35,000 ON CULTURAL & EDUCATIONAL PROJECTS
(ZNDA:  New Britain)  On December 6 the delegates of various Assyrian organizations and officers of the Assyrian American National Federation gathered in New Britain, Connecticut, U.S. for their quarterly National Executive Committee Meeting.  The preliminary reports indicate that several thousands of dollars in rebates collected from the 1997 National Convention in Detroit, Michigan will be spend on educational and cultural efforts in the U.S., Northern Iraq, and Iran.  The AANF allocates a portion of the proceeds received from the Convention parties and hotel room rebates to its Assyrian Needy Fund.  The funds are to be distributed as follow:

$ 10,000.00            Twenty Two Assyrian Schools in Northern Iraq
$ 10,000.00            Assyrian Students in Baghdad
$   5,000.00            Assyrian Students in Tehran's Mart Maryam School (formerly Madrashta d'Shooshan)
$   5,000.00            Assyrian Ladies in Northern Iraq, Towards the Purchase of Sewing Machines & Equipment
$   3,000.00            Assyrian Academic Society in Chicago:  Assyrian Dictionary Project
$   1,700.00            The late "Biba" Edward Yousif's Tombstone, Assyrian vocalist
$   1,000.00            The Monument for the Assyrian American Veterans in Chicago

In other news ZENDA has learned that Mr. Ramin Odisho, president of the Assyrian United Organizations of California, was appointed as the Regional Director of AANF's Western Region.  A well-debated issue at this meeting was the selection of next year's Annual Convention- a tie between Connecticut and New York.  A decision will be made within the next couple of weeks.   
 

A NEW ARCHAEOLOGICAL SITE YIELDS EVIDENCE OF BRIBERY IN ANCIENT ASSYRIA

(ZNAP: Damascus) Dutch archaeologists have unearthed a sprawling 3,400 year-old administrative center of the Assyrian civilization and found evidence that bribery was thriving at the time. The 13th-century B.C. site in Rakka about 340 miles northeast of Damascus comprises of a 15-foot high, 2 story building with two bathroom, 2 toilets and a tiled floor.  A special archive of an interior minister was found, listing data about "employees accepting bribes, names of senior officials and a name of an Assyrian princess." The archive belonged to Ashour Adin, considered the most powerful man in the Assyrian state after the king in the Middle Kingdom.  The discovered texts indicate that the center was used as a border for trees, encompassing a tower, a palace and a workshop.  The Dutch team also found 140 other inscriptions in cuneiform writing, dating back to 1200 BC.
 

NIMRUD RELIEFS FOR SALE
(ZNAM:  New York) The stream of reliefs looted from Assyrian sites in Iraq continues to flow westward. Recently, several dealers in Europe and America have been shown photographs of two fragments from the palace of Tiglath-pileser III at Nimrud, as well as two images of pieces from the site museum of Sennacherib's palace at Nineveh. The Nimrud fragments originally decorated Tiglath-pileser's central palace and are the first from that site to appear on the market. They were awaiting publication in a storeroom at the site following a 1974-1976 Polish excavation. One of the fragments, depicting a charioteer was originally part of a larger relief that included two spearmen, a tree, and an archer. Looters used a blunt instrument to separate the charioteer from the rest of the slab. The second fragment was broken in antiquity and shows two royal officials addressing a standing king; only the king's right hand and staff survive. Photographs of one of these two pieces are known to have been shown to Robin Symes, a London antiquities dealer, who was seeking to check the provenience of the piece in advance of purchase. Symes was not eager to acquire a piece stolen from a site museum, according to Prudence O. Harper, curator of ancient Near Eastern art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Harper advised Symes to contact the Polish excavators. Samuel M. Paley, an Assyriologist at the State University of New York at Buffalo, says that 30 other reliefs from Nimrud may now be on the market.

The Nineveh pieces were originally displayed in the throne room suite of the palace of Sennacherib. Once part of a single
relief depicting a soldier leading a horse, they are the fourteenth and fifteenth sculptures to have emerged in the past two years. John M. Russell, a Columbia University archaeologist who in 1990 photographed the reliefs at the Nineveh museum, speculates that all 100 of them have been broken up and offered for sale. One of the Nineveh fragments recently surfaced in London in the possession of a British resident who bought it from a dealer in Brussels. Russell discounts the possibility that the Iraqi government is involved. "All evidence I have is that the state officially deplores this...and is doing everything it can to reclaim the fragments," he says. "The isolated nature of Nimrud and Nineveh makes them vulnerable to thieves."

See also:  "Stolen Stones: The Modern Sack of Nineveh" by John Malcolm Russell.

ASSYRIAN SURFING POSTS
Assyrian Midi Composers Exchange
Assyrian National Anthem (performed by Nineveh Choir, conductor Nebu Issabey)

 

PUMP UP THE VOLUME
English       Modern Assyrian

                                     Recreation/Entertainment         poor/ga/ya                          [M]

                                                 Holiday                  aar/yaa  or   shaal/waa             [M]

                           F = Feminine    M = Masculine    P = Plural

BACK TO THE FUTURE
 

BC (763)

A solar eclipse is recorded in Assyrian documents to have taken place in this year.  Astronomers believe that it occurred exactly on June 15th.  Therefore, this year has been used as the basis upon which most ancient Assyrian dates are calculated.

Centuries of Darkness, James
 

AD (8/1914)

The Kurdish tribes of Beisades, Tchekaks & Harkais attack Urmie and Salamas in northwestern Iran.  A number of proclamations appear in Urmie, demanding the immediate removal of the Russian forces from Urmie.  Russian generals invite the Assyrians of this region to volunteer in assisting the Russians in their defense of the area.  Assyrians accept.

Shall This Nation Die?,  Rev. Naayem

LITERATUS
 
IRAQ'S CHILDREN

I went to Iraq earlier this year as part of a peace delegation. On the plane to Amman, I heard an elderly Arab man say, "When George Bush dies, I pray he goes strait to Heaven."  "Why?" I ask.  "So he will see face-to-face all the lovely Iraqi children
he has caused to die," the man answered.

...there has been little attention paid to the humanitarian crisis...the sanctions have caused. One notable exception was a 1996 interview between Lesley Stahl of 60 Minutes and former U.N. Ambassador Madeleine Albright. Stahl asked Albright to explain the U.S. policy in light of the devastation Stahl had personally witnessed in Iraq. Albright responded: "It's a hard decision, Lesley, but we think the price...is worth it."

The price is an estimated half million children who have died from malnutrition and disease attributable to U.N. sanctions. "More Iraqi children have died as a result of our sanctions than the combined toll of two atomic bombs on Japan and the
recent scourge of ethnic cleansing in former Yugoslavia," says John Mahoney, executive director of The Link (a journal published by Americans for Middle East Understanding).
 

George Capaccio
Arlington, Massachusetts



If Iraqi children are hungry and untreated, it is because Saddam will not give up weapons of mass destruction, will not stop making more, wilt tap his bank accounts.

He knew children would begin to die. And he knew that when they did he would get cover, excuses and sympathy from countries waiting in line for Iraq's business.

And the man who once patted the head of a little British hostage as TV watched knew something else.  The very corpses of Iraqi children he killed would become as asset.  He could give orders.   Their coffins would be dragged into camera range.

A.M. Rosenthal
New York Times

THIS WEEK IN HISTORY
 

December 17, 1866:  born, Dr. Abraham Yousif, in Kharput, Turkey.  Dr. Yousif served as an Army doctor in the U.S. military and represented the Assyrian nation in the Paris Peace Conference (1919).

 
BRAVO
George Chaharbakhsi
There is no question that George Chaharbakhshi was one of the greatest Assyrian vocalists of the 70's and 80's Assyrian pop music. His songs and the groundbreaking style of layering jazz and Assyrian folklore helped usher a new era in the development of the modern Assyrian beat. His live performances are powerful and obsessed with fond memories of the the good times in Urmie and Tehran. Chaharbakhshi has recently released 48 of his original songs on three CDs (each $12.00, all three $33) - a perfect Christmas gift for his fans and Assyrian music lovers.  These CDs entitled "Songs of the '70s", "Songs of the '80's" and "Songs of the 90s" are also available on 6 cassette tapes and can be delivered within one week in time for Christmas or New Year's Eve.  The collection beautifully captures the creative spirit of the Assyrian musicians and lyricists who collaborated with Chaharbakhshi in exploring the limits of a new Assyrian musical genre.     Three decades of George Chaharbakhshi's music in one complete CD set.  For more information write to P.O. Box 59621  Schaumburg, Illinois  60159.

WELCOME TO ZENDA

CORPORATE ACCOUNTS
                                                             
UNIVERSITY ACCOUNTS
                                                                                    
PERSONAL ACCOUNTS                                        
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                                             Marysville, Ohio
                                             Monterey, California
                                             San Jose, California 

 

 

SALUTE!
 

This Week's Reporters:

                     Albert Gabrail                       Turlock, California                  Assyrian Surfing Posts
                    Arbella Issabey                     Santa Clara, California           Assyrian Surfing Posts
                    Carlo Ganjeh                         San Jose, California                News Digest
                     Firas Jatou                            Chicago, Illinois                       Surfers Corner
                     Lena Mushell                        San Jose, California                News Digest
                     Marian Younan                     Davis, California                      Good Morning Bet-Nahrain
                     Spencer Harringoton            Archaeology Magazine            News Digest
                     Tony Khoshaba                    Chicago, Illinois                        News Digest
                     William Berry                       Union City, California              News Digest

Thank You For Referring ZENDA to a Friend:

                     Albert Gabrial                        Turlock, California
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