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  • Spitak Remembered

    SPITAK REMEMBERED

    http://asbarez.com/117113/spitak-remembered/
    Friday, December 6th, 2013

    His Holiness Karekin of the Greater House of Cilicia, surrounded by
    Spitak residents after he climbed a damaged Cathedral.

    BY HARRY L. KOUNDAKJIAN

    It was around 7 a.m. on December 7th, 1988. Our telephone woke me up.

    Our assignment editor at the Associated Press in New York was
    calling me.

    He ordered me, "Get your travel bag, all your camera gear and rush
    to the office to get some cash. You are booked to fly out at 10 am."

    "Where am I going?" I inquired.

    The Catholicoi of Armenia, His Holiness Vazken First and His Holiness
    Karekin of the Great House of Cilicia walking toward the Eternal
    Flame monument carrying their flowers.

    "Armenia," he replied.

    "I have no papers ready to leave the States as I just swore my
    allegiance to the United States," I told him. "Forget it," he grumbled
    and hung up.

    At the AP headquarters office on 50 Rockefeller Plaza I read all
    about it. The earthquake had hit the northern region of Armenia,
    still part of the Soviet Union. Reports said the earthquake measured
    6.8 on the surface and had a maximum intensity of X (Devastating)
    on the Medvedev scale.

    The report claimed the region that the earthquake occurred was
    vulnerable to occasional large and destructive earthquakes. It added
    that the area was part of a larger active seismic belt that stretches
    from the Alps to the Himalayas.

    Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev formally asked the United States
    for humanitarian help. Over 130 countries sent humanitarian aid in
    the form of rescue equipment and medical equipment. I know I missed
    all the best pictures I could have taken but just before Easter,
    Armenian organizations had several meetings in New York to arrange
    for financial assistance as well as medical help.

    I covered these meetings with political and religious leaders and
    was assigned by the AP to visit the ruined country with His Holiness
    Catholicos Karekin of the Great House of Cilicia, assisted by the
    late Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian of the Eastern Prelacy and other clergy.

    Two different views of the thousands of Armenians marching towards
    Dzidzernagapert on April 24, 1989 to the monument build in memory of
    the 1.5 million Armenian Martyrs murdered by the Ottoman Turks during
    World War ONE.

    It was a very tiring flight but we made it safely. In Yerevan, meetings
    followed meetings and everyone visited as many places as they could,
    helping as many people as they could.

    When His Holiness Karekin climbed over the crushed and broken
    cathedral in Spitak, I implored him to not risk injury in such a way
    and cautioned him that if he fell, he would be seriously hurt. His
    reply was simple: "I used to climb over mountains in Kessab where I
    was born and we are like gazelles, we do not fall."

    Non-governmental organizations had a large part in the international
    effort. One such effort was by a group of recording artists who united
    to produce several music-related contributions for the victims of the
    quake. A single produced by a duo of French composers with Armenian
    ties as well as a studio album were released by the British music
    industry featuring songs that were donated by mainstream rock bands
    and with the proceeds going to the rebuilding efforts in Armenia.

    A group of French recording artists and actors came together with the
    French writer and composer Charles Aznavour to record the 1989 song
    "Pour toi Armenie"-For you Armenia. With Armenian composer Garvarentz,
    they formed a foundation called Aznavour for Armenia and composed
    the song as a call for help for the Armenians. Rock Aid Armenia, also
    known in earlier stages as Live Aid Armenia, was another humanitarian
    effort by the British music industry to raise money for the victims
    of the earthquake.

    By July 1989, about $500 million in donations had been delivered to
    the victims in Armenia from 113 countries.

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