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Cyprus Armenians return to occupied monastery after 33 years

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  • Cyprus Armenians return to occupied monastery after 33 years

    Cyprus Armenians return to occupied monastery after 33 years

    http://www.financialmirror.com/more_news.ph p?id=6853&type=st
    06/05/2007

    Two hundred Armenians returned to the abandoned medieaval monastery of
    Saint Magar in the Turkish-occupied northern part of Cyprus Sunday
    where prayers were said for the first time in 33 years.

    The pilgrims, most of whom used to spend holidays at the monastery up
    until the Turkish invasion in 1974, traveled in a convoy of five buses
    escorted by a United Nations patrol and Turkish Cypriot police.

    But despite the anticipation of return, the enthusiasm of many was
    dashed by the poor state of the church and the destruction of all
    inscriptions by prospective developers who had earlier set their
    sights on transforming the monastery to a casino.

    The looting of the site since the war that divided the island, had
    also taken its toll on the buildings, many of which had no roof and
    could fall within a few years, some bystanders said.

    Archbishop Varoujan Hergelian led those present in a prayer of grace,
    `Hayr Mer' in Armenian, while some had brought candles with them to
    mark the holy day of the monastery's saint, a Coptic recluse named
    Makarius, who had lived in the caves below the present site of the
    monastery in the twelfth century.

    `I held service and performed my last christening here in 1973,' added
    Hergelian, who had traveled in civilian clothes so as not to incite
    any reaction from Islamists or Turkish nationalists living in nearby
    villages.

    `It is in a tragic condition,' he said, adding that the baptismal was
    totally defaced from his last visit to the derelict monastery three
    years ago.

    But the issue of reconstruction of the monastery dating back to 1642
    is highly unlikely as the U.N. must ask the Turkish forces for
    permission since the buildings and the 9,000-acre estate of olive,
    citrus and carob trees that leads down to the northern sea shore, lies
    within a military zone and near a Turkish Army camp near Halefka in
    the Kyrenia mountain range.

    `We only managed to halt the plans for development by the intervention
    of the Vatican,' said the Armenian deputy in the House of
    Representatives, Vartkes Mahdessian, who had organised the trip.

    Previous members of the Cypriot parliament had sought the intervention
    of the Council of Europe when Turkish Cypriot developers allegedly won
    the privatisation license for the land and advertised plans for a
    casino, hotel and leisure cafeterias.

    `I remember coming here with the scouts from the Armenian AYMA club
    and we used to meet scouts from the Melkonian school,' Mahdessian
    said, adding that other youth groups also camped at the monastery
    during weekends and summer holidays, often accompanied by the then
    pastor of the community, Father Vazken Sandrouni.

    `I will try to organise a similar pilgrimage next year as well as we
    must r emind ourselves of our heritage before the older generations
    start to disappear,' the member of parliament said.

    Among the crowd was Stephan Bahdjejian, a veteran who served in the
    French Army during the second World War but remained tearful from
    seeing the destruction of the monastery he visited every month before
    the Turkish invasion.

    `Only animals would cause this destruction,' he said.
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