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Lecture on Ararat Ascent in Providence

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  • Lecture on Ararat Ascent in Providence

    PRESS RELEASE
    Natioal Association for Armenian Studies and Research
    395 Concord Ave.
    Belmont, MA 02478
    Phone: 617-489-1610
    E-Mail: [email protected]
    Web: www.naasr.org
    Contact: Marc A. Mamigonian



    MT. ARARAT ASCENT TO BE SUBJECT OF ILLUSTRATED LECTURE IN PROVIDENCE


    A Boston-area couple's historic ascent to the peak of Mt. Ararat and
    the history of efforts to scale the mountain will be the subject of an
    illustrated lecture on Thursday evening, September 9, at 7:30 p.m., at
    the Egavian Hall of Sts. Sahag and Mesrob Armenian Church, 70
    Jefferson Street, Providence, RI. The event will be co-sponsored by
    NAASR and the Armenian Historical Association of Rhode Island.


    Legendary Mountain a Symbol to Armenians

    In July 2003, the husband and wife team of Philip Ketchian and Elsa
    Ronningstam-Ketchian undertook a pilgrimage up to the snowy peak of
    Mt. Ararat, a mountain cloaked in mist and steeped in legend. Nearly
    17,000 feet in height, forbidding and beautiful, it looms over the
    landscape, beckoning the adventurer up its slopes.

    Mt. Ararat, in Eastern Turkey just over the border with Armenia, had
    been only recently reopened for climbing after being closed for many
    years by the Turkish government. The couple responded to the
    challenge and signed up with a British expedition to participate in
    its inaugural trip up the rocky peak. Ararat occupies a special place
    in world history, religion, and legend. Also known as Masis, for
    Armenians everywhere it is the most important symbol of national
    identity and of their ancient homeland.


    In the Footsteps of Earlier Adventurers

    Following in the steps of such 19th-century pioneers as Parrot, Bryce,
    Lynch, and Abovian, the Ketchians surmounted the hurdles of permits,
    scorching heat, and frigid windy conditions to make their way up to
    the majestic summit. This lecture will provide a unique opportunity
    to hear a first-hand account of a journey that most have only dreamed
    of undertaking.

    The couple has climbed extensively together in the United States,
    Spain, Switzerland, and Armenia. They reside in Belmont,
    Massachusetts. Philip Ketchian is a physicist and has written a
    comprehensive series of studies of the environment in Armenia and
    articles on his hikes in the Armenian mountains. Elsa
    Ronningstam-Ketchian is an Associate Clinical Psychologist at McLean
    Hospital and Associate Professor at Harvard Medical School.
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