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Armenian Patriarchate Geared Up For Election of 97th Incumbent

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  • Armenian Patriarchate Geared Up For Election of 97th Incumbent

    Palestine News Network (PNN)
    January 23, 2013 Wednesday

    Armenian Patriarchate Gearing Up For Election of 97th Incumbent


    by Arthur Hagopian The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem is gearing
    up for one of the most momentous events in the 2,000 year-old history
    of the Armenian presence in the Holy Land. Preparations for the
    election of a new patriarch to succeed the late Archbishop Torkom
    Manoogian, are proceeding at a brisk rate, with the main event
    scheduled to take place tomorrow. Patriarchate sources told this
    correspondence tomorrow's agenda is designed to narrow down the list
    of potential candidates to five. This will later be pared down even
    further, to two, before the final vote is cast.

    Under the rules and regulations of the Patriarchate, any member of the
    Priestly Brotherhood of St James, that is, priests ordained in
    Jerusalem, would be eligible for election. But in practical terms, the
    incumbent is chosen from among the ranks of the highest princes - the
    archbishops - of the Armenian church. The total number of Armenian
    archbishops who were ordained priests by the Jerusalem Patriarchate
    today stands at 8, three of them based in Jerusalem, and the remaining
    five ministering to the needs of Armenian congregations in the
    diaspora. The sources revealed that the front-runners to become the
    97th Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, in a direct transmission from
    the first patriarch, Abraham, are the Grand Sacristan, Archbishop
    Nourhan Manoogian and Director of Ecumenical Relations, Archbishop
    Aris Shirvanian, the current Locum Tenens. Manoogian (no relation to
    the late patriarch) was born in Aleppo in 1948 and ordained a priest
    in 1971. He was anointed bishop in 1999. Shirvanian, who is older, was
    born in Haifa in 1934 and ordained a celibate priest in 1957. He
    became a bishop in 1974. Archbishop Sevan Gharibian, born in Beirut in
    1940 and made bishop in 1988, is the third potential Jerusalem
    candidate. Observers have named the Primate of the Eastern Diocese of
    the United States, Archbishop Khajag Barsamian (born in 1951 in
    Arapgir, in the former Armenian district of Malatya), as another
    leading candidate. The late Primate of the Australian and New Zealand
    diocese, Archbishop Aghan Baliozian, had been seen as yet another
    powerful possibility. As the members of the St James Brotherhood pray
    for guidance and wait for the fateful day to dawn, Armenians all
    around the world are watching developments in Jerusalem with great
    anxiety. The Armenian church in the Holy City has been forced to wade
    through the morass of debilitating challenges in recent years, and
    needs the strength and endurance to maintain its stature and standing
    not only as the second most vital font of spiritual rejuvenation after
    the Mother Church in Armenia, but also as one of the three Guardians
    of the Holy Places. Tomorrow "will be two important dates not only for
    the new person succeeding Patriarch Torkom II and leading the church
    in the Holy Land but equally importantly for the Armenians still
    living and witnessing in those biblical and also historical lands,"
    says one of the leading commentators of the Middle East religious
    scene, Dr Harry Hagopian, Ecumenical, Legal and Political Consultant
    to the Armenian Apostolic Church. Observers note that both of the
    leading contenders, Manoogian and Shirvanian, are blessed with the
    requisite qualifications to lead the church into the future. "Nourhan
    is a man of steel who is not afraid of a challenge, and has the
    charisma and bearing of a force to be reckoned with. He has been a
    pillar of strength in times of crisis for the Patriarchate. He may be
    brash at times, but his indomitable courage and determination are
    undeniable. The Patriarchate needs a strong man like him at the helm,"
    they add. Manoogian is keen to maintain Jerusalem's traditionally
    strong ties with the diaspora. His recent visit to Sydney, to attend
    the funeral services for Baliozian, has been seen as further
    indication of his inclinations. Observers believe Shirvanian's
    pronounced tact and diplomacy will be fundamentally important in
    steering the church through the morass, particularly of the political
    tint, surrounding it on all sides. "Despite his soft-spoken approach,
    Shirvanian has the inner strength of a majestic lion, his sagacity and
    wisdom evident in all the moves he orchestrates." Although Shirvanian
    is not one to shirk a challenge, his preference is for a more
    softly-softly approach. In his recent Christmas message, he dwelt
    heavily on the topic of peace in the region, among the Semitic
    cousins, Arabs and Jews, ending it with an invocation in Arabic and
    Hebrew. The late patriarch, Manoogian, has been known as a reformer
    and a modernizer, a man of vision although not all his dreams were
    realized. One of his grand designs was the construction of a hostel
    for Armenian pilgrims and tourists, another was a residential project
    that never got off the drawing board. Will the 97th Armenian Patriarch
    build on those dreams, or will he have a different agenda to follow?
    The next few days may, hopefully, give us an indication of where the
    wind will lie.

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