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  • Armenia's diaspora funds a religious revival

    April 16, 2007

    http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0416/p10s01-wo eu.html <http://www.csmonitor.com/2007/0416/p10s01-woeu .html>


    Armenia's diaspora funds a religious revival

    Armenians from all over the world are hoping to revive a church
    decimated by decades of communist rule.

    By Nicole Itano | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor

    Lake Sevan, ARMENIA

    On a windswept peninsula that juts out into the blue-black waters of
    Lake Sevan, the ancient meets modern. Cassock-clad young seminarians
    wander through a sparkling new building wired for the 21st century and
    outfitted with a contemporary gym.

    But the traditions here are among Christianity's oldest. In the
    corridor, between classes at Vaskenian Theological Academy, two
    students stop and bow to a bearded man with a large silver cross
    around his neck.

    "Father, bless us," they say, each putting a hand to their hearts.

    "God will bless you," replies Father Minas Martirossian, the school's
    deputy dean, who is helping to train a new generation of Armenian
    priests to repopulate the country's depleted ranks.

    Just a decade ago, the Armenian Apostolic Church was struggling to
    survive at home after decades of communist oppression. Today, the
    Church is undergoing a rebirth fueled by tens of millions of dollars
    from the global Armenian diaspora.

    "The first years were really difficult," recalls Mr. Martirossian, a
    former mathematics professor who helped restart the seminary in 1990
    as the Soviet Union was crumbling and Armenia moved toward
    independence. "There was no electricity, no heating, no proper food
    for students. It wasn't just the seminary. It was the whole country."

    Underdeveloped, politically isolated, and partially devastated by a
    still unresolved war with its neighbor Azerbaijan that raged between
    1988 and 1994 as the Soviet Union collapsed, Armenia depends heavily
    on support from its ethnic diaspora. Hundreds of millions of dollars
    have been poured into the country to do everything from rebuild roads
    to renovate water systems to feed orphans.

    A little help from Armenia's friends

    But perhaps nowhere has diaspora money played a more visible role than
    in the Armenian Church, which has been central to Armenian culture for
    centuries.

    Armenia first adopted Christianity in AD 301 and claims to be the
    world's oldest Christian nation.

    But under communist rule, religious life there was pushed into the
    shadows. Churches were seized and shuttered, priests persecuted and
    many baptisms were conducted in secret. By the time Communism
    collapsed in 1991, only about 150 priests still remained to serve a
    population of about 3 million people, largely because of government
    restrictions on the number of new priests who could be trained.

    The situation abroad was very different. Although the church played a
    pivotal role in cultural life for the approximately 7 million
    Armenians scattered around the world - primarily in America, Russia,
    and the Middle East - during the Soviet period, the practical
    influence of the mother church, located in the Armenian city of
    Etchmiadzin, and its highest religious leader, the Catholicos of All
    Armenians, waned.

    "The Church's primary responsibility is to lead people to God, but for
    many years the Armenian church has had a second burden, the protection
    of Armenianness," says Father Ktrij Devejian, a Armenian-American
    architect from Fresno, Calif., who in 2004 became the first
    American-born priest ordained in Etchmiadzin. "In the diaspora, the
    Church was involved in every aspect of life."

    Now, Armenians outside the country are helping to rebuild the church
    at home. In the past seven years, diasporans have donated at least $50
    million for construction and fund 85 percent of the Church's overall
    operating expenses.

    Across the country, 52 new churches - and a giant new cathedral - were
    constructed, and 31 have been renovated. Five more are under
    construction and 10 more are being renovated.

    Today, Devejian - who returned to Armenia at the current Catholicos'
    request to help build the Church's international connections - marvels
    at the dramatic rebuilding and expansion underway at Etchmiadzin, the
    Church's historic headquarters. There's a large, bustling seminary, a
    new administration building, museum, and baptistery. And the original
    residence of the Catholicos is being renovated.

    "Etchmiadzin hasn't seen a building boom like this in maybe 400
    years," says Devejian. "There isn't a building in Armenia under the
    authority of Etchmiadzin that hasn't been built with diaspora money."

    'The difference today is freedom'

    The revival of a seminary at Lake Sevan is representative of a broader
    revitalization of the Armenian church in its birthplace. Under Soviet
    rule, the monastery there was shut down after more than a millennium
    in existence.

    In 1990, the peninsula was returned to the church. A few dozen
    Armenian students and teachers from New Jersey, including Father
    Minas, moved to the site to reintroduce religious instruction and a
    clergy. At first, they lived and worked in a single, unheated
    building.

    Six years later, a wealthy Armenian from Damascus funded the
    construction of a new seminary building and small church.

    Today the seminary houses 72 students and has helped double the number
    of priests in Armenia to more than 400. For the first time in many
    decades, Armenia is once again beginning to export priests to the
    diaspora.

    But Devejian admits there is still much work to be done to convince
    Armenians inside the country to return to the church's fold -
    particularly those raised under Soviet rule.

    Many of those being baptized today are adults, but Armenia's churches
    are still full of old women and young people born after the end of
    communism. Many Armenians raised under communist rule see no reason to
    abandon their secularism.

    "The Soviets did a very good job of destroying the role of the church
    as part of society," says Devejian, noting that Catholicos' main
    priority is to rebuild parish life by rebuilding churches and
    returning priests to communities.

    David Mangasaryan, a 21-year-old priest-in-training at Lake Sevan, is
    optimistic that Armenians will return to the church.

    "The difference today is freedom," says Mr. Mangasaryan. "Our
    generation is free. We can choose our God and we can choose our
    religion."

    Copyright © 2007 The Christian Science Monitor. All rights reserved.
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