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  • Patriarch gets chance to use youth outreach

    NorthJersey.com, NJ
    Oct 28 2007


    Patriarch gets chance to use youth outreach

    Sunday, October 28, 2007

    By JOHN A. GAVIN
    STAFF WRITER


    FAIR LAWN -- As His Holiness Karekin II entered the hall at St. Leon
    Armenian Church on Saturday -- the last leg of his visit to the
    eastern United States -- 3-year-old Arto Steparnian of Greenwich,
    Conn., accidentally walked into his path.


    The spiritual leader of Armenian Christians, along with an entourage
    of archbishops and other clergy, led Arto by the hand to the front of
    the service, attended by about 500 people.

    The event was part of a 30-day visit within the Diocese of the
    Eastern United States, in which Karekin has met with Armenian clergy,
    educators, government leaders and church members in small
    communities.

    However, he has emphasized meeting youth groups in an effort to push
    the Old World denomination into relevance with the young.

    "The youth is that entity of life that bears strength, as with all
    society," Karekin said through an interpreter. "The church places
    great importance on education. Our churches have youth organizations
    and religious classes for young boys and girls. ... We also have a
    college ministry."

    Since being elected supreme patriarch for most of the world's 8
    million Armenians, Karekin, 56, has used his youthful energy and
    evangelizing to demonstrate how a church with ancient rituals and
    customs can become involved in today's issues.

    Earlier this month, while in New Orleans, he worked with Habitat for
    Humanity to help repaint a home that was destroyed by Hurricane
    Katrina.

    That goodwill and concern for the less fortunate has rubbed off on
    many youths, including Jeremy Badach, 16, of Wyckoff, who took two
    weeks off this summer with a church group to help repair a
    dilapidated home in Khor Virap, Armenia.

    "It wasn't a sacrifice," said Jeremy, who helped a family install
    plumbing and electricity in a shell of a home that had been
    abandoned. "I wanted to go. I wanted to help someone out."

    At Saturday's youth event, in which the service was conducted in
    Armenian, young people took part from churches and schools in New
    Jersey, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and New York.

    "It was a great experience, because I was never exposed to Armenian
    culture," said Armine Arushanova, 22, of Brooklyn, who emigrated to
    the United States three years ago from Uzbekistan.

    Arushanova, who grew up in the former Soviet state, where Islam now
    prevails, said she never had the chance to learn Armenian religious
    rituals.

    She was part of a youth dance team from a mission that teaches
    religion, history, language and dance.

    During the two-hour event, Karekin was entertained by dances and
    songs, and gave participants a chance to reflect on their religious
    heritage. The service ended with the church leader giving each young
    person a cross and official photograph of himself and the Holy
    Etchmiadzin, the church's headquarters in Vagharshapat, Armenia. Then
    they ate pizza.

    Armenians trace their church to the Year 301, when Armenia became the
    first country to adopt Christianity as its national religion. The
    country has had a turbulent history -- including mass killings by the
    Ottoman Turks during what's often called the Armenian genocide, from
    1915 to 1923.

    The U.S. House of Representatives, responding to Turkish protests,
    recently delayed action on a resolution that would formally describe
    the Turkish persecution of Armenians as genocide. Turkey is a NATO
    ally and a critical transit point for U.S. supplies heading to Iraq.

    Karekin, who grew up under Soviet religious restrictions, supports
    the resolution.

    "We believe that this is the only way -- through recognition and
    condemnation -- that we can prevent similar crimes and the taking of
    life," he said. "The decision on the resolution is a spiritual
    consolation. It's consolation for our people because each family had
    victims."

    After the youth event, the patriarch visited residents of a nursing
    home in Emerson.

    The official trip will end Thursday in Detroit.

    http://www.northjersey.com/page.php?qstr =eXJpcnk3ZjczN2Y3dnFlZUVFeXk0NSZmZ2JlbDdmN3ZxZWVFR Xl5NzIxNDM4OSZ5cmlyeTdmNzE3Zjd2cWVlRUV5eTM

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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