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Jerusalem Armenian story finally being told

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  • Jerusalem Armenian story finally being told

    Jerusalem Armenian story finally being told
    by Arthur Hagopian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2011-05-14-jerusalem-armenian-story-finally-being-told
    Published: Saturday May 14, 2011

    Jerusalem - It is a crying shame that a truly comprehensive and
    scholarly gratifying history of the annals of the Armenians of
    Jerusalem has yet to be penned.

    Armenians have been living in Jerusalem continuously for over two
    thousand years, even before their conversion to Christianity.

    That's a lot of history, by any reckoning.

    Not that this demonstrably vital colony of artists, craftsmen, and
    other creative spirits - the list is endless but runs the whole gamut
    of human experience - lacks the necessary skill or expertise to do it,
    scattered though most of its members may be around the four corners of
    the world.

    The reasons behind this omission are not mere inertia on the part of
    Armenian scribes. The lamentable fact is that the ancestors of
    Jerusalem's Armenians gave record-keeping a pedestrian glance, leaving
    their progeny with precious little reliable records or resources to
    tap.

    And let us not forget that the whole Middle East region has been so
    enmeshed in periodic patches of political upheaval over the centuries,
    the foremost preoccupation of the city's Armenian denizens has always
    been to win the struggle for survival.

    But all is not lost.

    As we look through the glass of history, darkly, though we perceive
    dark clouds of unknowing, we can also sporadically discern some bright
    lights of promise, personified in a minuscule pride of historians,
    like Ormanian and Savalaniantz.

    Their books have almost become objects of veneration, preserving for
    posterity as they do segments of the story of the Armenians of
    Jerusalem.

    Several years ago, Jerusalem-born scholar Kevork Hintlian attempted to
    fill part of the gap in the history of his people with a
    well-researched, slim but titillating volume, "The History of the
    Armenians in the Holy Land."

    It is unfortunate that this book remains generally undervalued and
    unappreciated - it deserves better. Hintlian has been urged repeatedly
    to expand it, extend its range. Hopefully, he will get around to it
    sometime soon.

    In sharp contrast to Hintlian's 80-page tome, US-based Haig Krikorian
    has just celebrated the culmination of a ten-year labor of love with a
    massive 800-page endeavor, entitled "Lives and Times of the Armenian
    Patriarchs of Jerusalem."

    Krikorian's book is a timely treasure, foraging into the profound,
    almost inaccessible niches and caves of disparate archives to
    encapsulate for perpetuity the vicissitudes of the Armenian church in
    Jerusalem.

    The Armenian nation owns this patient plodder an incalculable debt of
    gratitude for rescuing from obscurity the epic tale of the panoply of
    Armenian church leaders, with a detailed chronicle that covers over a
    millennium and a half of the lives of the Armenian patriarchs of
    Jerusalem.

    Krikorian has the good fortune of being a close friend of the current
    incumbent, Patriarch Torkom Manoogian, and that, coupled with his
    unflinching support for the Armenian Patriarchate, opened several
    doors for him and accorded him unprecedented access to existing
    records and private papers.

    Despite the heavy lifting, I could not put the book down. Krikorian's
    fluid writing style, his meticulous choice of diction and paraphrase
    and the lack of any literary mannerism of ostentation makes reading
    his book a delight.

    And there is plenty to tell his readers. Some of the facts he has
    uncovered have probably never been revealed before. How many Armenians
    are aware that Abraham (638-669), regarded by many as the first
    Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, had trekked all the way to Mecca, to
    plead with the Prophet Mohammed for protection for his flock?

    [While it is almost impossible to determine the exact number of
    Armenian Patriarchs in Jerusalem, various sources place the number
    between 75 to 100].

    Krikorian has taken great pains to trace the origins of the Armenian
    presence in the Holy Land, and in particular in Jerusalem, and as you
    read you come to realize that the story of the Armenians of Jerusalem
    is actually the story of their church, embodied in the Patriarchate of
    St James, with its grand cathedral, and that their history is linked
    inevitably to their entity as Christians.

    While recapping his chronicle, with a great eye for detail, the writer
    also delves into the deeds and misdeeds of priestly members of the
    Brotherhood of St James, an interlude that no doubt is bound to raise
    eyebrows: not many Armenians will be happy to see the dirty wash of
    their spiritual leaders aired in public.

    Krikorian is not interested in a whitewash. He emphasizes that the
    Armenian church survived the ravages of time despite the relentless
    threat of internal strife and corruption at the hands of
    unconscionable clergymen who pitted their ambitions ahead that of the
    good of the church.

    Inevitably, there is the sorry episode of the 25 manuscripts purloined
    in the late 1940's and the battle to get them back. Not all 25 were
    retrieved. Three still remain unaccounted for, languishing perhaps in
    the safe of some millionaire collector. Whether he or she would know
    or appreciate half the value of so precious a possession, nobody will
    know.

    Nor does Krikorian shy away from pointing the finger at the attempts
    by other Christian denominations, particularly the Greeks and Latins,
    to expropriate Armenian properties and subjugate the Armenian church.

    At some point down the timeline of history, Armenians are said to have
    built over 500 monasteries in and around Jerusalem. Many of these have
    been lost now - either destroyed or taken over, either through wars or
    subterfuge, and sometimes by sheer chicanery or incompetence.

    Ironically, while fellow Christians persecuted the Armenians, their
    non-Christian overlords, particularly the Moslems, seem to have viewed
    them with special favor, granting them rights and privileges they
    enjoy to this day. Krikorian points out that this was no doubt
    politically motivated, as a counter to their enemies with their
    Byzantine sympathies and loyalties.

    Krikorian, a former student at the theological seminary of the
    Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, takes us through a travelogue that
    spans the Byzantine, Arab, Crusader, Maneluke, Turk, British and
    Jordanian administrations, and down to the present era of the Israeli
    and Palestinian conflict.

    Throughout this epoch, pockmarked by frequent violence and endemic
    corruption, the Armenians continued to survive and thrive, honing
    their skills at diplomatic and politician maneuvering, alongside the
    arts and crafts.

    It is their presence that gives Jerusalem its unique flavor and
    contributes to the city's claim to be the center of the world.

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