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Armenian Apostolic Church to open first Ariz. sanctuary

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  • Armenian Apostolic Church to open first Ariz. sanctuary

    AZ Central.com, Arizona
    Sept 20 2009


    Armenian Apostolic Church to open first Ariz. sanctuary

    Building's consecration set to take place today after a 6-year journey

    by Sean Crandall - Sept. 20, 2009 12:00 AM
    The Arizona Republic .


    St. Apkar, the only Armenian Apostolic Church in Arizona, will open
    its first and long-awaited sanctuary in Scottsdale today after a
    six-year journey.

    For the Armenian community of Arizona, it is a triumphant end to an
    effort that began in 2003 when they decided to build the church and
    started fundraising.

    In 2005, His Holiness Karekin II, the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos
    of all Armenians, came to Scottsdale to bless the ground for the new
    sanctuary. Construction began last year, and today, the
    7,000-square-foot sanctuary will be consecrated at 10 a.m. next to the
    Armenian Church Cultural Center, 8849 E. Cholla St., Scottsdale.

    The Armenian Church is only one of the Valley's many cultural
    churches.

    With religious centers as diverse as a Jain temple recently built in
    Phoenix, an Albanian Islamic center and the only Coptic Orthodox
    Church in Arizona, the idea of America as a "melting pot" is evident.

    But Paul Eppinger, executive director of the Arizona Interfaith
    Movement, doesn't like to think of it as a melting pot where
    everything is mixed together and amalgamated into one big stew.

    "I see it as a mosaic," he said. "Each stone is beautiful in and of
    itself. But when you put them together, it makes a beautiful picture."

    The mosaic metaphor correlates directly to why Eppinger thinks the
    multitude of small cultural churches is so important to the Valley and
    other communities around the world.

    Eppinger notes that there is a view in America that if you come here,
    you should learn to speak the language and do other things to fit in
    with the American culture, but people come from differing cultures
    worldwide, and their history and background are important to them.

    If they can pray in their own language or with their own traditions,
    Eppinger said, it gives them a chance to hold on to their
    culture. It's a way of keeping part of their cultural identity while
    being part of the larger American culture.

    Other examples include a Hindu temple, Buddhist temples and centers
    like the Emaho Center, and several Muslim mosques and Greek Orthodox
    churches in the Valley.

    The Scottsdale church serves 2,000 to 3,000 Armenian families living
    in Arizona. More than half reside in the Valley.

    "We (Armenians) are thrilled to finally have a traditional church
    built here in Arizona," said Donna Sirounian, church spokeswoman.

    For the past 17 years, the Armenian Apostolic Church has used the
    Melikian Hall, located in the Cultural Center, to perform church
    services and other activities. If church members wanted to attend a
    consecrated church, Sirounian noted, they had to travel to California,
    which has 30 of the 104 Armenian churches in the U.S.

    Sirounian, of Litchfield Park teaches Sunday school at the church. She
    has been attending services at the church hall since she and her
    family moved to Arizona in 2002.

    "Armenians have stayed together through the centuries because of the
    Armenian Church, and to have an actual sanctuary to pray in just makes
    going to church real."

    Although there are many religions that worship out of gymnasiums or
    store fronts, the importance of having a church is symbolic for
    Armenians, she said.

    The church has been a stabilizing influence, especially during the
    Armenian genocide in 1915 by the Turks.

    "Armenians were martyred because of their faith," Sirounian
    said. "They wanted to remain Christian and didn't want to give in to
    the Muslim faith. The church kept the Armenian people together through
    that horrible tragedy, and as Armenians immigrated around the world,
    they took their faith and traditions and began to rebuild, and they
    built churches wherever they went, including the U.S."

    The Armenian Apostolic Church, according to tradition, traces its
    roots to SS. Thaddeus and Bartholomew. Christianity was practiced
    underground for 2 1/2 centuries in Armenia until it became the
    religion of the country in A.D. 301. Soon after, the church became one
    of the most important institutions in Armenia, and Christianity became
    deeply rooted in the Armenian culture.

    Today, the church, now serving 7 million Armenian Apostolic Christians
    around the world, thrives in both its homeland of Armenia and the
    other Armenian communities around the world.

    Sirounian said the first Armenian Church in the U.S. was built 100
    years ago in Massachusetts.

    "So here in Arizona, where we are in 2009, we are finally building the
    first Armenian Church. It has taken us awhile."


    http://www.azcentral.com/news/arti cles/2009/09/20/20090920armenian0920.html
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