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Masterpiece Of Medieval Armenia Restored

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  • Masterpiece Of Medieval Armenia Restored

    MASTERPIECE OF MEDIEVAL ARMENIA RESTORED

    Independent online, South Africa
    Nov 29 2013

    November 29 2013 at 06:00pm

    Yerevan, Armenia - Standing next to a newly refurbished bell tower,
    priest Aristakes Aivazyan says it needed divine intervention to save
    Armenia's medieval Haghartsin monastery.

    But it also took a lot of money from a very unlikely benefactor --
    the Muslim ruler of the resource-rich Arab emirate of Sharjah, Sheikh
    Sultan bin Mohammed al-Qasimi.

    "I cannot recall anything similar to this happening in our history
    that some Arab sheikh, a Muslim, helped to restore and rescue an
    Armenian Christian church," Aivazyan told AFP.

    "Without doubt it was God who brought the sheikh to Haghartsin,"
    the priest, dressed in long black robes, said.

    Perched spectacularly amid thickly forested mountains about 100
    kilometres northeast of Yerevan, Haghartsin monastery is a masterpiece
    of medieval Armenian ecclesiastical architecture.

    Founded in the tenth century, the monastery - which includes three
    churches and once housed about 250 monks - survived attacks from Arab
    and Ottoman invaders and anti-religious campaigns under Soviet rule
    during its turbulent history.

    But after weathering those storms, decades of neglect in recent years
    meant the complex looked headed for collapse as plants twisted through
    walls and cracks threatened to send buildings tumbling.

    "The monastery was in need of serious reconstruction but the repairs
    were always delayed by the lack of finances," father Aivazyan said.

    That was until a fortuitous visit from al-Qasimi, who had been invited
    to Armenia by former president Robert Kocharian on a trip set up by
    the Armenian business community in the emirate.

    "In 2005 his royal highness visited Armenia and generously offered
    to renovate the complex during a tour of various Armenian regions,"
    says Varouj Nerguizian, a Sharjah-based Armenian businessman who has
    advised the sheikh.

    Nerguizian refused to say how much the sheikh had given for the
    refurbishment but local media reported that it could be around
    $1.7-million.

    Now, after years of building work including a new road up to the
    monastery to help boost visitor numbers, the refurbished structure
    was finally opened last month.

    "It falls within the natural context of his royal highness'
    philanthrophy as well respect for other religions," Nerguizian.

    Perched on the Persian Gulf, after Abu Dhabi and Dubai, Sharjah is
    the third largest of the seven emirates that make up the UAE.

    Al-Qasimi, 74, - who came to power in 1972 after his brother, then
    king, was killed in a failed coup - has sought to boost the emirate
    as a tourist and cultural hub in the region.

    Despite a thriving community of Armenian businessmen that now boasts
    its own church in the emirate of about 900 000 inhabitants that now
    boasts its own church - there have been few links between Yerevan
    and Sharjah.

    For those working at the monastery, the surprise of seeing an Arab
    leader visiting the holy Christian site remains a vivid memory.

    "He came with his entourage of about 10 people and looked around for
    quite a while at all the churches and stone crosses before asking
    to go into the main Church of Our Lady," recalled Artak Sahakyan,
    who sells candles to visiting worshippers.

    "When he came out he said that he believed that the word of God was
    really heard here," Sahakyan said.

    Armenia is considered to be the oldest Christian country in the world
    and its Apostolic Church belongs to the ancient Oriental Orthodox
    branch.

    The church is hugely influential in Armenia and two monasteries
    and its main cathedral are already listed on Unesco's list of world
    heritage site.

    After a history of conflict between Armenia and its Muslim neighbours
    of Turkey and Azerbaijan, those working at the Harghartsin monastery
    say they hope the support they have received from a Muslim ruler
    shows that the two faiths can get along.

    "The sheikh is a deeply religious man so seeing a monastery is such
    a bad state it is not surprising that he felt touched," says father
    Aivazyan.

    "It is as if the with this generous gesture the sheikh is saying that
    we need to be tolerant of other religions as in the end we all serve
    one God," Aivazyan said. - AFP

    http://www.iol.co.za/travel/world/europe/masterpiece-of-medieval-armenia-restored-1.1614508#.UpjukT_xvIU




    From: A. Papazian
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