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Bishop Dreams To Build Museum, Or A Culture Center About Jews In Arm

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  • Bishop Dreams To Build Museum, Or A Culture Center About Jews In Arm

    BISHOP DREAMS TO BUILD MUSEUM, OR A CULTURE CENTER ABOUT JEWS IN ARMENIA

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2013/02/12/bishop-dreams-to-build-museum-or-a-culture-center-about-jews-in-armenia/
    18:38 12.02.2013
    Armenia, Jews

    Rebecca Miller, a Peace Corps volunteer in Armenia, was skeptical when
    Bishop Abraham Lazarian approached her about starting a Jewish culture
    center alongside a medieval Jewish cemetery in the village of Yeghegis.

    "I had... noted that there was not much in the way of diversity in
    the area and couldn't imagine what the point of a Jewish cultural
    center was," she said, Anna Borshchevskaya writes in article posted
    on the website of the Jerusalem Post.

    But after visiting the cemetery, she changed her mind and agreed to
    work with the bishop to help preserve it. "I talked to anybody who
    would listen about what it was," she said.

    Prior to the cemetery's 1996 discovery, there was virtually no
    evidence that Jews had lived in Armenia in pre-modern times. In a
    country that does not boast much of an ethnic or religious minority
    presence, Yeghegis is a fascinating nexus of culture and history.

    I visited Yeghegis in December 2012. The village, along the banks of
    a river by the same name, lies about 96 km. south of Yerevan, against
    the backdrop of Ararat Valley, and just 112 km. or so north of Iran.

    When the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict broke out as the Soviet Union was
    falling apart Yeghegis had a large Azeri population.

    The story of the Jewish community in Armenia dates to the early 13th
    century, when Mongol invaders devastated the region.

    Bishop Lazarian discovered the cemetery when he and his brother Mayis
    Lazarian opened the Siranush children's camp in Yeghegis to provide
    shelter, food, recreation and education for children orphaned by the
    war with Azerbaijan.

    The bishop heard there was a mineral-water spring in the area.

    He wanted to find it for the children and, as he searched, he came
    across three tombstones, where he saw writing he didn't understand.

    He first thought it was Iranian. Then one guest staying with him told
    him the writing was Hebrew, and the bishop approached representatives
    of the small Jewish community in Yerevan for help.

    He also sent photos of the tombstones to Professor Michael Stone of
    Hebrew University in Jerusalem, who confirmed the bishop's suspicion
    that what he had found was indeed a medieval Jewish cemetery. A group
    of Armenian and Israeli archaeologists and historians excavated the
    site in 2001 and 2002 and found 64 more tombstones. Many bear Hebrew
    of Aramaic inscriptions, and some are decorated with motifs of the
    Orbelian kingdom.

    The archaeological team also found three mills, which the bishop says
    show that the community had a business because one mill could feed
    several families.

    There were also numerous underground tombs without any writing. In
    one ruin, they found a millstone that had been reincorporated into
    the house structure, which shows that people lived there for quite a
    long time. They also found many stones that could have been part of a
    synagogue, but as in the tels which dot Israel (and Iraqi Kurdistan),
    much more remains undiscovered in Armenia.

    The Middle Age Jewish settlement in Armenia is very important.

    "The Jewish presence in Armenia provides a link between the old,
    well-established Jewish community in Iran, and other Caucasian and
    Pontic Jewish communities, and those even further north," wrote
    Michael Stone.

    "This will, after the necessary research is completed, require us
    to reassess the relationships between these areas, and it also has
    implications for economic and commercial history."

    In the 13th century, said bishop Lazarian, "At a time when you can't
    imagine that a country... in Europe either helped create or didn't
    destroy a Jewish settlement... It is fantastic how they could gather
    cultural, architectural symbolism of Jewish Armenians... and they
    were connected, and built one of the strongest kingdoms during time
    of Mongols."

    The bishop's dream is to build museum, or a culture center about Jews
    in Armenia, that would focus on education.

    "Because these two peoples had very ancient connections... and until
    now it is one of the few peoples with whom we had no problems,"
    he said.

    The bishop wants people to know what connections existed between
    Armenians and Jews, stories of how they helped each other during the
    Armenian genocide and the Holocaust, for instance.

    "These peoples in this region, I think have to support each other...

    They ended up having a similar destiny."

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