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  • Torkom Manoogian, 93, Armenian Church Leader Dies

    Pittsburgh Post Gazette
    Oct 20 2012



    Torkom Manoogian, 93, Armenian Church Leader Dies

    October 20, 2012 6:06 pm
    By PAUL VITELLO / The New York Times


    Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, the longtime leader of the Armenian
    orthodox church in the United States and a savvy communicator who used
    his pulpit in New York to broaden public awareness of the Armenian
    genocide, died on Oct. 12 in Jerusalem. He was 93.

    He had been hospitalized since January with cardiac problems, church
    officials said in announcing his death.

    >From 1966 to 1990, Archbishop Manoogian was primate of the Eastern
    Diocese of the Armenian Church in America, the larger of two dioceses
    in this country, where most of about 700,000 church members live. (The
    Western Diocese comprises Arizona and California.)

    A skilled fund-raiser, the archbishop led the final phases of
    construction of St. Vartan's Cathedral, the first Armenian cathedral
    in North America. A work in progress on the East Side of Manhattan
    (Second Avenue at 34th Street) since the 1950s, the cathedral, with a
    gilded 120-foot-tall dome, was consecrated in 1968 in a ceremony
    attended by the city's civic and religious leaders, including Mayor
    John V. Lindsay.

    In April 1975, to mark the 60th anniversary of the start of the
    Armenian blood bath, Archbishop Manoogian sponsored a series of public
    events, including one at Madison Square Garden, that brought new
    attention to the mass deaths and the Turkish government's continued
    refusal to accept responsibility for them as acts of genocide.

    Like many ethnic Armenians in the United States, Archbishop Manoogian
    was a descendant of the large Christian population that was expelled
    from what is now Turkey in a campaign of ethnic cleansing undertaken
    by the Ottoman military between 1915 and 1923. An estimated one
    million Armenians were killed or starved to death. The archbishop was
    born in an Armenian refugee camp near Baghdad after his parents fled
    their Turkish town during the killings.

    The Turkish government maintains that many died on both sides of an
    ethnic conflict between Armenians and Turks during World War I, but
    that Turkish authorities never adopted a program of genocide.
    Armenians have long demanded Turkish atonement for what most
    historians consider the first organized genocide of the century.

    Archbishop Manoogian enlisted the American Catholic Conference, the
    American Jewish Committee and the Islamic Center of Washington to join
    in demanding that Turkey acknowledge the atrocities. Gov. Hugh L.
    Carey of New York signed a proclamation demanding the same.

    The historian Barbara W. Tuchman, whose grandfather Henry Morgenthau
    Sr. was the United States ambassador to the Ottoman Empire in 1915,
    related his eyewitness account of the massacres before a
    standing-room-only crowd at the Felt Forum in Madison Square Garden.

    Peter Balakian, author of "The Burning Tigris: The Armenian Genocide
    and America's Response," said the scale of the 1975 commemoration was
    groundbreaking and well timed.

    "Holocaust studies and a new American human rights culture had emerged
    in the '60s and '70s," he said, and "the archbishop was astute in
    seizing that moment" to place the Armenian genocide "within the new
    arc of Americans' commemorative memory."

    Several days of 60th-anniversary observances culminated in a march
    from St. Vartan's Cathedral past the United Nations and into St.
    Patrick's Cathedral. There, in his sermon, Archbishop Manoogian
    addressed an audience of survivors, their descendants and other
    supporters.

    "We are here," he said. "And we were not supposed to be."

    Many were involved in organizing the events, but Archbishop Manoogian
    was the survivors' spokesman, said Christopher Zakian, a diocese
    spokesman and editor of "The Torch Was Passed: The Centennial History
    of the Armenian Church of America."

    "He was a witness to the genocide," Mr. Zakian said. "And -- not
    saying this to diminish his dignity and stature in any way -- he was
    also a P.R. genius."

    Torkom Manoogian was born on Feb. 16, 1919, one of six children of
    Nargiz and Vahan Manoogian. His parents owned a photography studio in
    a southeastern Turkish town near the Iraq border. He was sent to
    school in Jerusalem at 12 and ordained as a priest in 1939.

    He arrived in the United States for the first of several church
    assignments in 1946, serving in California and Pennsylvania. He was
    primate of the Western Diocese in 1962 and named a bishop the same
    year. He became an archbishop in 1966, soon after he arrived in New
    York.

    After the 1988 earthquake in Armenia, which killed more than 50,000
    and left many more homeless, he spearheaded church relief efforts in
    the United States.

    In 1990, Archbishop Manoogian was appointed patriarch of Jerusalem, a
    primarily diplomatic post that he held until his death.

    Archbishop Manoogian was an authority on Armenian sacred music and on
    the work of the musician-priest Komitas, who became mentally ill
    during the Armenian genocide and is considered one of its martyrs. He
    died in 1935 in Paris. The archbishop also wrote poetry under the name
    Shen Mah and completed an Armenian translation of Shakespeare's
    sonnets.

    His survivors include a sister, Dzovig Devletian, and two brothers,
    Khachig and Sooren, all of whom live in the United States.


    http://www.post-gazette.com/stories/news/us/torkom-manoogian-93-armenian-church-leader-dies-658415/

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