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Diocesan Council welcomes new members

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  • Diocesan Council welcomes new members

    PRESS OFFICE
    Department of Communications
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Jake Goshert, Media Relations Specialist
    Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 160; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.net

    June 20, 2007
    ___________________

    JUNE DIOCESAN COUNCIL MEETING TO BE HELD AT HOLY ETCHMIADZIN

    By Jake Goshert

    The Diocesan Council of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
    (Eastern) will hold its June meeting at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin
    in Armenia. The trip, which will be paid for by the Council members, is a
    chance to meet with His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and
    Catholicos of All Armenians, and gain a better understanding of how the
    Diocese can support the work of the Mother See.

    "We welcome this opportunity for the leadership of the Diocese to get to
    meet with His Holiness in person," Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of
    the Diocese said. "It is especially critical now, as we prepare for his
    pastoral visit to our Diocese this fall."

    While in Armenia, the Diocesan Council will also meet with Armenian
    political leaders, such as President Robert Kocharian and Prime Minister
    Serge Sargsyan.

    The members of the Diocesan Council serve as the Board of Trustees for the
    Fund for Armenian Relief (FAR), the Diocesan-affiliated aid organization.
    While in Armenia they will visit several project sites run by FAR to
    familiarize themselves with the organization's work. They will also join
    the FAR Board of Directors at the dedication ceremony of the newly renovated
    Kevork and Sirvart Hovnanian FAR Yerevan Office Building, FAR's Armenian
    headquarters which are being named after the organization's founder and
    honorary life chairman.

    The previous meeting of the Diocesan Council in May was the first for the
    three new Council members elected by the delegates to the 105th Diocesan
    Annual Assembly in May: Fr. Vasken Kouzouian, Sandra Leitner, and Paul
    Mardoian.

    "During their first meeting, these new members showed their energy,
    dedication, and sense of purpose," the Primate said. "We're glad they are
    joining us on the Council and look forward to hearing more from them in the
    future."

    WELCOMING A NEW GENERATION

    Fr. Vasken Kouzouian comes to the Diocesan Council with experience serving
    in parishes -- his current assignment is as pastor to the Holy Trinity
    Church of Cambridge, Massachusetts, and he previously served the St. Mark
    Church of Springfield, Massachusetts -- as well as leading the Diocese's
    youth ministry efforts.

    "I bring to the Council experience in the area of working with the young
    people and making the Church more understandable, accessible, and relevant
    to their lives. I tend to do that to my ministry and I think I can do that
    in the Diocesan Council as well," Fr. Kouzouian said. "I look to make the
    Church significant to the lives of people, making it meaningful to their
    lives."

    He said it is vital that the Council provide support to the Diocese's theme
    of "Church and Home: One in Spirit." Programs aimed at various aspects of
    that theme will help keep the church relevant in today's busy, secularized
    society.

    "We have to talk to a new generation of parishioners. With every generation
    we move further away from the Genocide survivors of the old country; and we
    have to find ways to make the timeless message of the Armenian Church
    relevant to the Armenian people of today," he said. "It's a timeless
    message that has carried our parishioners through centuries. We must
    understand the needs of the people today so we can bridge the gap between
    the liturgical life and the life of the people."

    Fr. Vasken and his wife, Yn. Arpi, have one daughter, Alina. He received a
    bachelor's degree from Boston University and a master's degree in divinity
    from St. Nersess and St. Vladimir's Seminaries.

    CRITICAL JUNCTURE

    Sandra Leitner, a long-time leader and former parish council chair for the
    St. Leon Church of Fair Lawn, New Jersey, agrees that the Diocese faces a
    challenge in meeting the needs of today's more secular individuals. But,
    she said it is important for the Diocese to continue its work.

    "I think the Diocese is at a critical juncture in meeting the needs of
    American-Armenian Christians in our increasingly hectic and secular world,"
    she said. "Parents are seeking tools to help them keep their children safe
    and grounded in the values our Church teaches. I see that the Diocese is
    aware of these needs and I would like to help in the efforts to meet the
    challenge."

    She noted that as a mother of three -- two grown children, Allegra and Evan,
    and a teenager, Olivia -- she and her husband Jim have gone through some of
    the struggles facing modern families. That experience, she said, will help
    her on the Council as the Diocese looks at ways to communicate Christ's
    message to today's families.

    Families are important, because as in the case of Leitner, parental
    involvement leads to the next generation taking leadership positions. She
    is following in the line of her grandfather, Paul Alexander, who served on
    the parish council of the St. James Church of Watertown, Massachusetts, and
    her parents, George and Shakae Shahinian, who were involved in the life of
    the St. Thomas Church of Tenafly, New Jersey.

    "My children were raised at St. Leon, so I know they will always feel close
    to the Armenian Church," she said.

    "The biggest opportunity and challenge facing the Diocese now is to keep the
    Armenian Church as the denomination of choice and center of worship,
    identity and commitment of the next generation of American Armenians," she
    added. "I would like to see the Diocese develop the tools and impart the
    necessary knowledge to today's parents to help them accomplish this."

    BACK TO BASICS

    The third new Council member, Paul Mardoian, also sees the need to educate
    the Armenian community on the basics of our faith.

    "The basics are very important. I believe this has been a missing element
    in our Church. I'm not saying people aren't spiritual, but it seems we have
    been more focused on our culture and traditions than on our basic spiritual
    needs. In my opinion, in today's environment this type of focus leads to a
    weaker church," he said. "While our culture and traditions are important,
    it has to be about the basics, about our spirituality first; that's the
    Mission of our Church: To preach the Gospel of Our Lord Jesus Christ and to
    proclaim its message of salvation. Everything we do should revolve around
    this basic purpose."

    "To help accomplish this we need to look for and be open to new ideas," he
    added. "I believe many of our people are yearning for our Church to be more
    accessible and relevant to them. If we take the appropriate actions and are
    successful in our approach, our Church should thrive in the future."

    He said that in order to accomplish this goal, the Armenian Church must look
    for and be open to new ideas.

    "I believe many of our people are yearning for our Church to be more
    accessible and relevant to them," he said. "If we take the appropriate
    actions and are successful in our approach, our Church should thrive in the
    future."

    To foster such understanding, he hopes to work with the local parishes. "By
    providing them with tools, resources, and support, the Diocese can help them
    move forward and grow," he said.

    Additionally, he hopes to use his skills and background in insurance and
    investments to aid the Diocese in more efficiently providing benefits in
    such areas as group health insurance and retirement plans for the clergy and
    staff.

    Active in the Church as a child, in college he strayed away. That changed
    when he married a "nice Armenian girl," Susan Boyajian.

    "I lost my desire to go to Church, but she brought me back into the Church.
    Since then over time I have became more and more involved," said Mardoian,
    who is in his second six-year term on the parish council of the Sts. Joachim
    and Anne Armenian Church of Palos Heights, Illinois, and in his fifth
    consecutive year as chairman.

    He and his wife have three daughters: Rachel Talene, 18; Melissa Ani, 15;
    and Natalie Anoush, 9. A certified financial planner and benefits
    specialist, he owns his own business and also works for Midwest Insurance
    Agency, Inc.

    "I'm very excited about being a part of the Council and I look forward to
    working with Srpazan and all of the Council members to help our church move
    forward," Mardoian said.

    -- 6/20/07

    E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News and
    Events section of the Eastern Diocese's website, www.armenianchurch.net.

    PHOTO CAPTION (1): Sandra Leitner, right, one of three new members of the
    Diocesan Council, listens as Diocesan Council Chairman Oscar Tatosian makes
    a point during the May meeting, the first for the new members.

    PHOTO CAPTION (2): Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern
    Diocese, with two of the newly-elected Diocesan Council members: Fr. Vasken
    Kouzouian and Paul Mardoian.
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