Editorial: No Cakes for this One!

The Armenian Weekly
January 2010 Magazine

The 75th anniversary of the Armenian Weekly came and went without any fanfare. No celebration events were held, no banquets were organized, and no cakes were cut. The economy and the Turkey-Armenia protocols remained on top of the agenda and contributed to this amnesia. Anniversaries didn’t stand a chance.

But the nuclear staff of the Weekly and its large base of contributors and readers worldwide had many reasons to celebrate, and celebrate we did, by making sure we not only survived but thrived when many other national and ethnic newspapers are closing.  We continued publishing magazine issues bringing together dozens of prominent writers and scholars from across the globe.  We improved our website and made it a forum of discussion and debate for thousands upon thousands of loyal readers worldwide.  And, diligently, every week—without taking a single week off—we put out the paper as if our readers’ lives depended on it.  It all was our way of saying we are 75 years young. It all was our way of saying, There may not be any cakes, but you’ll get a better paper, a better magazine issue, and better online content every week.

And instead of trying desperately to bask in the glories of the past—retelling stories about how William Saroyan and others got their start in the Weekly—we introduced new writers and columnists, who produce work that make us proud in the here-and-now.  I am constantly amazed at the amount of work the Armenian Weekly gets done with the minimal resources we have. I thank my assistant editor for the past three years, Andrew Turpin (we wish you the best of luck in your future endeavors, Andy) and copyeditor Nayiri Arzoumanian for their efforts. The editor receives most of the credit (and all the criticism), but without the dedication of those who worked with me, this paper would not have been anywhere near where it is now. I also thank our columnists, all our contributors, and last but not least, you, our readers. Happy Holidays!

Dr. Khatchig Mouradian

Dr. Khatchig Mouradian

Khatchig Mouradian is the Armenian and Georgian Area Specialist at the Library of Congress and a lecturer in Middle Eastern, South Asian, and African Studies at Columbia University. He also serves as Co-Principal Investigator of the project on Armenian Genocide Denial at the Global Institute for Advanced Studies, New York University. Mouradian is the author of The Resistance Network: The Armenian Genocide and Humanitarianism in Ottoman Syria, 1915-1918, published in 2021. The book has received the Syrian Studies Association “Honourable Mention 2021.” In 2020, Mouradian was awarded a Humanities War & Peace Initiative Grant from Columbia University. He is the co-editor of a forthcoming book on late-Ottoman history, and the editor of the peer-reviewed journal The Armenian Review.
Dr. Khatchig Mouradian

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2 Comments

  1. Way to go folks! You really have done an outsanding job with the Armenian Weekly Online. I am very pleased with the content, authors, professionalism and overall presentation of this site. I’m genuinely grateful and humbly impressed with all of your teams efforts. Khatchig, Andrew, Nayiri and others I have missed serdis shnorhagalotyun. You guys really have outdone yourself and a mere cake would not come anywhere close to showing my appreciation for your hard work and perseverance. A plate of my Nenes hand rolled dolma and chekefteh may however!!!Lol!
    If I may, the Asbarez is also an interesting news source and they have done an incredible job as well, but the commentary is not as quickly updated as it is here thus hindering discussion with fellow Armenians. Anyhow, not a huge issue, but discussing, reading and debating issues with dozens of Armenian’s in real time over the web is valuable, entertaining, informative and adds that unique communal sense of a proud Armenian readership to any story.
    Vartzgernit Gadar.

  2. Hye, the Armenian Weekly is journalism as it was, and was meant to be. 
    Thank you, all, for your dedication to our Armenian people, to our Armenian nation.
    You, today, who follow so many of the past staff members of yesteryears, are keeping
    their efforts alive – shornagalenk.  Manooshag

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