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Garni Controversy: Ministry Official Says No Cafe Construction Near

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  • Garni Controversy: Ministry Official Says No Cafe Construction Near

    GARNI CONTROVERSY: MINISTRY OFFICIAL SAYS NO CAFE CONSTRUCTION NEAR ARMENIA'S ONLY PAGAN TEMPLE

    Arts and Culture | 10.03.14 | 09:32

    Photolure

    No cafe will be built in the territory of the Garni reserve, a senior
    Ministry of Culture official confirmed over the weekend.

    Deputy Minister Arev Samuelyan spoke to Hetq following a discussion
    hosted by the Ministry on Saturday, informing the online publication
    that they had given up the idea.

    Plans to build a cafe near the Garni temple, the only pre-Christian
    house of worship surviving in the territory of Armenia, had elicited an
    angry response from groups of activists concerned with the preservation
    of Armenian cultural and historical heritage.

    Many of those activists traveled to the territory of the museum in
    Garni (about 30 kilometers to the east of Armenian capital Yerevan)
    the previous weekend to protest against the construction project the
    spot. They, in particular, removed the sand and road-metal from what
    had been turned into a construction site near the Royal Bath area at
    Garni. They brought a few sandbags to Yerevan and put them in front
    of the Ministry of Culture building as a sign of protest.

    The Garni Castle dates back to the 3rd-2nd centuries BC, and the
    Greek-Roman temple built in the first century BC, which is the
    compositional center of the castle constructions, is the only pagan
    temple to have been preserved in Armenia after the country adopted
    Christianity in 301 AD. It was ruined in a 17th-century earthquake,
    but was restored during 1969-1975.

    The Ministry of Culture had explained the construction of a cafe near
    the monument by the need to develop tourism, at the same time giving
    assurances that the revenues made by the cafe would be directed at
    the repairs of the paved road leading to the ancient site. Besides,
    it had said that the cafe would not be a permanent structure, but
    would operate only from May to October when most tourists visit Garni.

    Many, however, disagreed with the kind of utilitarian approach,
    arguing that such a cafe would only diminish the tourist value of the
    place and, therefore, would put off many potential visitors. At the
    same time, they also voiced their conviction that the reserve could
    make enough money even without additional facilities to pay for the
    needed maintenance work.

    http://armenianow.com/arts_and_culture/52546/armenia_garni_temple_cafe_protest


    From: Baghdasarian
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