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Armenian-Populated Anjar Town - Peaceful Oasis Amid Violent Clashes

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  • Armenian-Populated Anjar Town - Peaceful Oasis Amid Violent Clashes

    ARMENIAN-POPULATED ANJAR TOWN - PEACEFUL OASIS AMID VIOLENT CLASHES

    [ Part 2.1.2: "Attached Text" ]

    14:24, 30 October, 2013

    Inline images 1

    ANJAR, OCTOBER 30, ARMENPRESS. The Responsible for Foreign Affairs
    of the Italian-Arab "Assadakah" centre Talal Khrais issued a remark
    titled "Armenian Diaspora... The Armenian Pearl of the Bekaa Valley"
    exclusively for "Armenpress" News Agency. The remark is dedicated
    to the Armenian-populated town Anjar, which is located in the Bekaa
    Valley.

    "There are about 4000 residents living in the Armenian town of Anjar,
    which is located in the Bekaa Valley. A girl called Sarin from the
    local community takes me to the Armenian refugees, which fled from
    Syria, so that I could interview them. Tragic past is hidden behind
    the abundant fauna of the village. The stream of memories, which links
    the Caucasus to the Near East, runs as a groove in the daily life
    of these people. The habitants of 6 Armenian villages of Musa Dagh,
    which had to leave their homes, reside in here.

    Anjar, the Armenian pearl of the Bekaa Valley, is a peaceful oasis
    in the region full of conflicts.

    Notwithstanding, looking around you realize that the Armenian people
    did not give up, because, as my partner used to repeat, the previous
    generations had created what we possess now - the Armenians from Musa
    Dagh, who initiated an armed rebellion against the Ottoman troops at
    the course of the Armenian Genocide about one century ago.

    I had a meeting with a 43-years old man called Goro. He told me that 14
    months ago he left the Northern region of Aleppo with his wife and two
    kids. Among other things he said that about 32 families fled to Anjar.

    One moment I noticed sadness in Goro's eyes. "I'll return to Syria,
    as soon as it is possible. Syria is everything for me and my family,"
    he noted. (THE FULL VERSION OF THE ARTICLE IS AVAILABLE IN ARMENIAN)
    http://armenpress.am/arm/news/738290/armenian-populated-anjar-town---peacefu
    l-oasis-amid-violent-clashes.html

    Historical Remark

    Anjar is a town of Lebanon located in the Bekaa Valley. The population
    is almost entirely consisting of Armenians. The total area is about
    twenty square kilometers (7.7 square miles).

    After being abandoned in later years, Anjar was resettled in 1939
    with several thousand Armenian refugees from the Musa Dagh area of
    Turkey. Its neighborhoods are named after the six villages of Musa
    Dagh: Haji Hababli, Kabusia, Vakif, Khodr Bek, Yoghun Oluk and Bitias.

    The majority of Anjar's Armenians are Armenian Apostolics (Orthodox)
    who belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church and Holy See of
    Cilicia. Armenian Apostolic Saint Paul Church is the second largest
    Armenian church in Lebanon.

    The Armenian Apostolic community has its own school, Haratch Calouste
    Gulbenkian Secondary School. In 1940, the chief editor of the
    Armenian newspaper Haratch in Paris, Shavarsh Missakian, organized
    a fundraising campaign among the Armenians living in France which
    enabled the building of the "Haratch" Elementary School next to the
    newly established St. Paul Armenian Apostolic Church. The official
    opening of the school took place in 1941. The administration of the
    Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation contributed to the expansion of the
    school, which was named in honor of Calouste Gulbenkian.

    Our Lady of the Rosary Armenian Catholic Church in Anjar serves as
    church for the Armenian Catholics, who also run the Armenian Catholic
    Sisters School. In the beginning, the school had two divisions,
    St. Hovsep for the male students and Sisters of Immaculate Conception
    for the female students. In 1954, these departments were united. 1973
    saw the official opening of the Aghajanian Orphan House, already
    serving as an Armenian Catholic orphanage since 1968.

    The Armenian Evangelical Church of Anjar is in operation to serve
    Anjar's small Armenian Evangelical community. The Protestant community
    school was established in 1948 by Sister Hedwig Aienshanslin as
    part of her missionary work in Anjar. In 1953, the school, which had
    already become an intermediate school, was promoted into a secondary
    school. It has day classes as well as boarding facilities for students
    from other regions who stay there throughout the winter

    http://armenpress.am/eng/news/738290/armenian-populated-anjar-town---peacefu
    l-oasis-amid-violent-clashes.html

    [ Part 2.2, Image/JPEG 17KB. ]
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