The Lighthouse | Santa Claus of Lycia, Turkey |
Good Morning
Bet-Nahrain |
Suspected Kurdish Rebels Kill Six Assyrians in Northern Iraq
Christians Among Executed in the Iraqi Prison |
Surfs Up | "Keep your symbolism to yourself." |
Surfers Corner | Protection of Our Ancient Artifacts |
News Digest | Maronite Patriarch Meets Aoun in Paris |
Assyrian Surfing Posts | Assyrian Universal Alliance
Assyriska Demokratiska Rörelsen |
Pump up the Volume | Barber & Broker |
Back to the Future | Deification of the Mesopotamian Kings & The Wife of Hulaku Khan |
Literatus | Just A Passing Whim |
This Week in History | William Daniel |
Bravo | Nebu Issabey & His Nineveh Choir |
Despite all modern myths and legends, Santa Claus did not live in the North Pole, but in southwestern Turkey, a coastal region along the Mediterranean Sea. St. Nicholas, as was his real name, was born in the city of Patara, around the same time as the Roman emperors, Diocletian (284-305 AD) and Constantin (306-337 AD). Lycia, along the southwestern coast of Turkey, is an area dominated by mountains and covered by forests, a typical Mediterranean lowland. Before the Persians and the Greeks, Lycia was governed in the form of a federation of cities and inhabited by non-Semitic people of Anatolia. Its citizens spoke a dialect of Indo-European origin. Hittites and Egyptians referred to Lycia as the nation of Lukka. Today's school children are reminded of the famous king of Lycia, Croesus, who was defeated in the hands of the Persian king in 546 B.C. Much of the known world at the time of St. Nicholas was dominated by two superpowers, Rome and Persia. Romans adhered to their pagan religions while Christianity was fast flourishing in the Persian Empire under the spiritual guidance of the Assyrian Patriarchs. As long as the Romans remained intolerent of the Christians, the Persian kings, followers of the ancient Persian religion of Zoroastrianism, did not fear the rapid growth of Christianity in their kingdom.
In 312 AD, Roman emperor, Constantine, gave Christianity an equality of status with the pagan cults and terminated the policy of persecution by issuing the Edict of Toleration to all religions. He built churches and Basilicas in his empire, but maintained his reverence for the deities of his imperial pagan religions of Sol Invictus and Mithraism. Lycia's opposition against the Persians was rewarded by the Romans with independence from the Roman province of Anatolia. In 321 AD, Constantine in honor of the Sun god, enacted that the Sabbath must be observed on the venerable day of the Sun (Sunday), and not on Saturday. This was a purely political move to appease the discontent between the growing numbers of Christians in Rome and their pagan rivals. It was also an ingenious ploy to attract the attention of the Christians living in the spheres of Persian influence. These were mainly the members of the Assyrain Church. Until then Jesus' birthday was observed on January 6th. Constantine, in observance of both Sol Invictus and Mithraism, decreed the religious day of Natalis Invictus, a pagan ritual, the midwinter solstice on December 25th, as the Western Church's day of Christmas or the Birthday of Jesus. This is similar to the ancient festival of Yalda celebrated by Zoroastrians in Iran (ancient Persia).
At this time a controversy was troubling the leaders of the Christian world. Arius, a student of the Lucian of Antioch, had proposed that "Jesus had a beginning" and "prior to his generation he did not exist" and therefore he must be called God in name only. Arius was soon excommunicated from the Church and his followers continued to grow in number. Emperor Constantine therefore summoned all Church leaders to the The Council of Nicaea in 325 AD, the first ecumenical council to be assembled. It is said that 318 bishops attended with the aim of reaching a consensus over the status of Jesus. Constantine ruled in favor of the Nicene Creed in which the relations of Jesus to the Father was defined as of one substance. Arianism was now a heresy and those who rejected the Nicene Creed were to be banished. The Assyrian Church was not officially represented at the Council and the Assyrian bishops who did attend the Council were present only as observers (i.e. James of Nisibis & John of Persia).
It was during this time that St. Nicholas of Patara, Lycia embraced priesthood and was finally chosen as the archbishop of the city of Myra in Lycia. Prior to Constantine's Edict he was imprisoned for his Christian faith by Emperor Diocletian. In 325 AD he too attended the Council in Nicaea and is said to have struck the face of Arius with his hand. For this act, he was removed from the Council. After the ratification of anti-Arian Nicene Creed he was returned to his post with full honors. With the Christianization of the Roman Empire the Zoroastrian King of Persia, Shapur, now looked upon the Assyrian Church in his kingdom as a threat to national security. Assyrians were said to be sympathetic to the Western Christians and the powerful Patriarch a possible instigator of anti-Persian revolts. The unity of the Assyrian and Roman churches could be the end of Persian rule in Asia, thought the paranoid Zoroastrain king. In 339 Shapur decreed the persecution of Assyrians in his kingdom which lasted forty years. Four years later St. Nicholas died on December 6th, 341 AD. Three decades and hundreds of thousands of Assyrian martyrs later the Assyrian church accepted the Nicaean doctrines without accepting a formal unity of the Eastern and Western Churches.
St. Nicholas' generosity and love for children became legendary and later in the Middle Ages he became known as Santa Claus, patron of the children. St. Nicholas brought gifts to children in his red-and-white bishop's robes and rode on a donkey. Constantine too was finally baptized as a Christian on his deathbed. Today, much of the Christian world, including most Assyrian churches, observe the birth of Jesus on the day of Natalis Invictus. And of Santa Claus's North Pole? Patara in Turkey is now declared off-limits for development as a nesting place for- no not Santa's elfs and raindeers- rather sea turtles.
Staff of ZENDA
(ZNDA: San Jose) ZENDA has confirmed that in a brutal attack against a group of Assyrian travelers in northern Iraq six Assyrians from Mangesh were killed by suspected PKK rebels. A report from the Political Bureau of the Assyrian Democratic Movement (Zowaa) in Arbil, Northern Iraq indicated that on the morning of Saturday, 13 December, a group of the Kurdistan Workers Party members ambushed a group of Assyrians traveling from Mangesh to Dohuk. The attackers killed six Assyrian men and wounded a woman. The victims were identified as::
Last week the Turkish troops, backed by the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) killed 182 PKK rebels, according to the Turkish Anatolia News Agency. The PKK has been fighting for an independent Kurdish state in southeastern Turkey since 1984. Nearly 28,000 civilians and combatants on both sides have been killed in the war. The Turkish army also killed five PKK rebels as they attempted to cross into Turkey from Syria. They were detected by thermal cameras positioned on the border. There were no reports of Turkish army casualties. Turkey accused Syria of backing the rebels and of sheltering armed militants on its territory, although Syria denies the allegations.
The Assyrian Democratic Movement in Arbil has called upon "the leaderships
responsible for such practices to put an end to such policies that endanger
the lives of the innocent people and the general interests as the patriotic
struggle deviates from its essential line" The Report explains that
"such crimes will by no mean weaken our (Zowaa) will or belief in the just
cause of our people. On the contrary, such practices will increase our
determination to resume our struggle to consolidate our national existence
and fulfill our legitimate aspirations." ZENDA was unable to confirm
the identity of the killers at press time.
(ZNIN: London) According to reports from the Iraqi Broadcasting
Corporation the Iraqi regime recently carried out mass executions in the
Abu Ghraib Prison near Baghdad. As many as 1200 prisoners may have
been killed by the Special Guards as directed by Saddam Hussein's younger
son, Qusay. The reports indicate that the executions began on November
20, and continued daily. The bodies of some of the executed were returned
to their families, with several showing evidence of torture.
Of the 154 names released one was identified as Hana Polis Luqa
of Baghdad, Iraq. Other Christians are believed to have been among
the executed prisoners. Most victims were charged with treason, smuggling,
and incitement.
"Please accept my best wishes for a Merry Christmas and a blessed and
happy 1998 for the staff of ZENDA and your readers. The new ZENDA
format and its method of publication are fabulous; congratulations for
such historic achievements and may God bless you!"
Mar Bawai Soro
Bishop of Seattle
General Secretary of Inter-Church Relations
Assyrian Church of the East
Rome
Helbard Alkhass-Adeh
Santa Cruz, California
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
(ZNSM: Beirut) Last week for the first time in seven years,
the Maronite Patriarch, Nasrallah Sfeir, met with the former Prime minister
of Lebanon, Michel Aoun, in Paris. His Excellency also met the French
president, Jacques Chirac and inaugurated a Maronite Church in Marselles,
France.
Barber ga/ra/a or ga/zo/za [M]
Broker sap/sa/ra [M]
F = Feminine M = Masculine P = Plural
BC (2250)
The first king of a united Bet-Nahrain (Mesopotamia) to become a living
god (deification) was Naram-Sin, grandson of Sargon of Akkad. Deified
kings claimed to be sons or brothers of major gods.
Sargon of Akkad: 2334-2279 BC
United southern and northern Bet-Nahrain, established Akkadian rule
Rimush
2278-2270 BC Son of Sargon, killed in palace revolt
Manishtushu
2269-2255 BC Rimush's elder brother, twins, killed in
palace revolt
Naram-Sin
2254-2218 BC Son of Manishtushu
Gods, Demons & Symbols of Ancient Mesopotamia,
Black & Green
AD (1258)
Hulaku Khan, the Mongolian ruler of China and Persia, captures Baghdad
and puts the last Abbasid Caliph to death. Hulaku's wife, Duquz Khatum,
was Christian and so Hulaku became tolerant of Christians. At this
time the Assyrian Church comprised of over seventy dioceses in Asia.
The Death of a Nation, Yohannan
Now a fold,
Of late dawn,
With mother's care;
Brushes over me,
Cautious like a fawn.
Whispers in my ear;
"O here is SHE,
So lost and forlorn,
Poor little dear."
The breeze like a fold
Wraps me all around
In gentle brace.
Now I am less cold,
But I make no sound,
To disturb the grace
Of the minor key
Of music of kisses
Of featherly feel.
But the rest of poor me
Ardently misses
The delicious meal.
In answer to my wish
That nursing care
I feel it grope and seek;
Then slipping like a fish
B'neath my underwear
To fondle my right cheek.
Rolling and squeezing
Playfully biting
My willing muskmelon;
Featherly teasing,
O how I am liking
All that's being done.
The touch so nimble,
So deeply knowing,
O! Master of lore;
Feel my cheek tremble,
Hear myself moaning,
Feel asking for more.
Thrills like million darts
All over they fly
Kisses for ointment.
In various parts,
Of my burning thigh.
Delicious contentment.
The caress then serves
The bowl of my knee,
Where it lingers,
"Give her what deserves,
Little darling SHE,"
Is what say the fingers.
Lo! The eager toes,
The sensitive sole,
One by one in turn;
Under pulls and blows,
Now they stretch, now they roll,
O tongue, O lips, how they burn.
And the voice seemed to say:
"I'll visit you again,
I've traveled only,
One third of the way."
As to when, I refrain
To say, "O...when you're lonely."
To SHE,
Her very darling self.
You want her to come some day,
To travel the rest of the way?
Tapestry, William Daniel
In Memory of William Daniel who left us immortally yearning the truth, a week before Christmas Day, 1988.
December 24, 1988: William Daniel, Assyrian composer, poet, linguist, author of "katineey Gabara", and a tireless teacher of Assyrian language is buried in San Jose, California.
Nebu's style of composition and his nationalistic pride were well represented in these choral compositions. His complex music is usually easy to hear but difficult to follow. The mixture of high and low voices chasing one another in precise intervals evoked the contrasting images of blissfullness and Nostalgia. Unaccompanied by the chorus, Emil Malik's voice transformed the delightfully simple Armenian melody of "Ya Neshra'd Tkhumee" into a profoundly sophisticated movement. Issabey had succeeded in capturing the Assyrian martyr's dream of a New Assyria from his Russian prison in 1925.
"Lacrymosa" was dedicated in the memory of the late Jon Toma, Assyrian
violinist and painter who passed on earlier this year. The unbroken
Latin phrases transitioning into and out of a single theme of death were
masterfully composed. The alternating choral sections between the
tenors and the rest of the choir reflected the Maestro's new experiments
with his professionally orchestrated choir members. The San Jose
State performance was the result of eight months of weekly rehearsals at
the William Daniel Hall of the Assyrian American Association of San Jose.
The Nineveh Choir's performance on Saturday was a an exceptional holiday
treat. Issabey's choral music with its diverse forms and expressions
deserves greater attention and study.
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San Jose, California
This Week in History
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Sam Kosa
San Diego, California
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