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Patriarch, Primate, Poet: Torkom Manoogian remembered

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  • Patriarch, Primate, Poet: Torkom Manoogian remembered

    Patriarch, Primate, Poet: Torkom Manoogian remembered

    by Joyce Sulahian

    http://www.reporter.am/go/article/2013-12-28-patriarch-primate-poet-torkom-manoogian-remembered
    Published: Saturday December 28, 2013

    Patriarch Torkom Manoogian.

    NEW YORK - On March 22, 1990, a sea of change came over the Armenian
    Patriarchate of Jerusalem when the charismatic Primate of the Eastern
    Diocese of the Armenian Church in America, Archbishop Torkom
    Manoogian, was elected by the St. James Brotherhood as the 96th
    Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem.

    His controversial predecessor had passed into eternity about a month
    and a half before, and the 39 members of the Brotherhood, present and
    voting quickly, set about electing a successor to take the helm of the
    Patriarchate. Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, who had gone to Jerusalem
    as a seminary student at the age of 12, returned to that ancient city
    with all the pomp and ceremony befitting a Patriarch.

    The path of his life had taken him from the hallowed halls of the
    Vatican to the stately pillars of the White House. Throughout his long
    life he boldly faced what God had ordained without regard for personal
    comfort or convenience. Personally, he exemplified the quiet dignity,
    grace and steely, inner strength idealistically (and often falsely)
    attributed to Princes of the Church. Truly those qualities
    characterized his very being and he brought honor to his people and
    church wherever he went, a trait that continued to his last days on
    Earth.

    At the time of the Patriarchal election, Torkom Srpazan had guided the
    church in the Eastern Diocese for two and a half decades,
    magnificently, courageously, filled with an inexhaustible energy
    belying his calendar years. He gave 200 percent of himself to all he
    did, and expected the same from anyone around him. His unshakable
    faith and strict adherence to the sacred legacy of our suffering
    forefathers rebuffed any opponents; yes, of course there were some,
    but they could never vanquish the essence of his spirit.

    For the young generation active in the churches of the Diocese at the
    time, the sudden departure for Jerusalem by this energetic and vibrant
    clergyman brought on irrational feelings of abandonment. The knowledge
    that Archbishop Torkom's integrity was so needed in Jerusalem didn't
    help much in easing a profound sense of loss.

    As children without direction, searching for an identity as
    individuals and as Armenians when they first met "Father" Torkom in
    the 1950s and 60s, they had matured to realize what a wonderful and
    unique experience it had been to grow up with him in their midst.

    Archbishop Torkom's official persona and responsibilities had not
    allowed for many close friends, or the time to enjoy them. But somehow
    he always had the time-and an exceptional feeling-for the young, "the
    future," and that feeling was reciprocated in kind, as only the young
    can, with boisterous love for the extraordinary man beneath the Roman
    collar.

    Most of the time, from afar, he was "The Primate," solemn and
    intimidating, but when he entered the young people's world, he became
    their playful and ageless friend with the mischievous wit, winning
    their devotion, and frustration, with heated ping-pong games and
    chilling snowball fights. He continually challenged his young
    adversaries to surpass the boundaries of mediocrity while making them
    think they were just having fun. Their hungry minds opened for him,
    allowing the powerful lessons of a rich heritage to penetrate within
    slowly becoming an indivisible part of their being. And so their
    mutual bond grew.

    To be sure, the relationship over the years was not always smooth. The
    emerging adults sometimes angered him; his occasional intransigence
    often puzzled them. Yet apparent throughout were the unbreakable links
    of a deep attachment forged in the innocence of childhood when he had
    often soothed their fragile souls with gentle words of encouragement
    and hope, innately knowing just what to say.

    Patriarch Torkom lived long enough to feel pride in that young
    generation he nurtured. They went on to become leaders in industry and
    politics, medicine and education, and yes, even religious life. There
    must have been times he thought they'd never survive in the complex
    and competitive community called "the world." Survive they did, and
    stand even today as individual monuments to the power of his nurturing
    investment in them, saturated by the Armenian spirit and still
    dedicated to the survival and improvement of the Armenian Church and
    community. They have passed on to their own children the priceless
    lessons which he so lovingly instilled in them, and active in numerous
    church parishes of the Diocese today are the children and
    grandchildren of that generation. It is an immortal tribute to
    Patriarch Torkom's lifetime of sacrifice.

    The "Torkom" generation is now quite mature and suffered the final
    abandonment by their spiritual father on October 12, 2012, when the
    much beloved Patriarch Torkom entered his eternal rest in Jerusalem at
    the age of 93. He had occupied the Patriarchal Throne of St. James for
    22 years. Disciplined and faithful to his calling to the very end, he
    left a legacy of service and grace few will be able to surpass. The
    rich memories of his love and nurturing investment in them still lives
    in the hearts of that generation, golden memories that will sustain
    them in the years to come.

    Although Torkom Srpazan has left us, the words of this German poem are
    oddly soothing:

    "Death is nothing. I am only in the next room,
    I am me, you are you: that which I was for you, I will always be ....."

    May the soul of Patriarch Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, Patriarch,
    Primate and Poet-spiritual father and friend-be blessed throughout
    eternity until the ages of ages.

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