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  • Inland Armenian services scheduled

    Press-Enterprise, CA
    April 30 2004

    Inland Armenian services scheduled

    By BETTYE WELLS MILLER / The Press-Enterprise
    Armenian Apostolic Church
    What: Church service
    When: 3 p.m. Sunday
    Where: All Saints Episcopal Church, 3847 Terracina Drive, Riverside


    It's been 60 years since Norma Cosby worshipped in an Armenian
    Apostolic Church, a lifetime since she heard the language of her
    grandparents.

    Now the 67-year-old Catholic is eager to attend an Armenian service
    Sunday in Riverside, the first of what Inland Armenians intend to
    become monthly events in a parish created in February.

    "I'm a practicing Catholic, but this is a culturally intimate thing
    with the Armenian church. Your culture is a part of your religion,"
    the San Bernardino resident said in a telephone interview.

    Inland Armenians who want to attend services of the Eastern Orthodox
    Church must drive to Los Angeles or Orange counties, or the Coachella
    Valley, said Betty Kalpakian Bown of Riverside. An Armenian
    congregation in Palm Desert is completing a building this year.
    Services there have been held monthly. Riverside services were held
    once each in 1998, 2000 and 2002.

    "If we want to go to church, we drive," Bown said by phone. "We don't
    go every Sunday. It's too far. This has been my dream from the
    beginning."

    As a mission parish of the Western Diocese of the Armenian Church of
    North America, there will be monthly services in May and June, and
    again in the fall, said the Rev. Stepanos Dingilian, who will conduct
    the Divine Liturgy, or Badarak, as it is known in Armenian.

    "The service we have goes back 1,700 years," Dingilian said in a
    phone interview. The hymns and much of the service will be in
    Armenian, with English translations, the priest said.

    Cosby said Armenian services are long, ornate, and full of ritual and
    symbolism.

    "It's going to bring back a lot of nice memories of going with my
    grandparents," said Cosby, who is president of the Inland Empire
    Armenian Club. The club has more than 60 families on its mailing
    list, with members from Banning, Beaumont, Blythe, Corona, Hemet,
    Loma Linda, Redlands, Riverside, Temecula and Yucaipa. There are
    about 4,150 people of Armenian ancestry living in the Inland area,
    according to the 2000 census.

    More than 90 percent of the approximately 10 million Armenians
    worldwide belong to the Armenian Apostolic Church, Dingilian said.

    There are about 1.4 million Armenians in the United States, most of
    them residing in Southern California.

    With Sunday's service coming a week before Mother's Day, the priest
    said his sermon will emphasize the importance of womanhood. In June,
    when many students graduate from high school and college, the service
    will focus on education, a central element of the Armenian church.

    "The church itself embodies respecting the value of the individual
    person, and the importance of the family and the community," he said.


    Dingilian said that as visiting priest he will conduct seminars and
    discussions regularly. He already has met with Armenian students at
    UC Riverside.

    In 301, Armenia became the first nation to declare Christianity the
    state religion.

    The head of the church, the Catholicos of All Armenians, lives in
    Etchmiadzin, Armenia, and is elected by the National Ecclesiastical
    Assembly, composed of lay leaders and clergy around the world.

    The other three members of the church hierarchy are: the Armenian
    Church Catholicos of Cilicia, in Antelias, Lebanon; the Patriarch of
    Jerusalem, and the Patriarch of Constantinople, in Istanbul, Turkey.
    The Council of Bishops is the highest religious authority in the
    church. Some priests are celibate, and some are married.

    The Armenian Church of America was created in 1898. The Western
    Diocese, which includes California, Washington, Arizona and Nevada,
    was established in 1928.

    The church is central to the lives of many Armenians in a way that
    differs from many denominations, Dingilian said.

    "It brings all of the edification of the Bible, the meaning of
    Armenian civilization and history," he said. "They find a sense of
    empowerment, fulfillment and growth."

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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