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Diocese begins new Armenian school year

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  • Diocese begins new Armenian school year

    PRESS OFFICE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Jake Goshert, Coordinator of Information Services
    Tel: (212) 686-0710 Ext. 60; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.org

    October 6, 2005
    ___________________

    SYMPOSIUM PROVIDES NEW TOOLS, IDEAS FOR ARMENIAN LANGUAGE EDUCATORS

    The numbers of Armenian speakers and readers in the United States are
    declining each year. The Diocese of the Armenian Church of America
    (Eastern) is committed to keeping the Armenian language and heritage
    alive through several educational programs.

    Key to the effort are local parish Armenian Schools. On Saturday,
    September 10, 2005, more than 70 educators from New York, Connecticut,
    New Jersey, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island attended a symposium
    designed to give them direction, advice, and resources to spread the
    Armenian language in their home parishes.

    "Each one of these dedicated volunteers is passionate about our history
    and culture, and they are all working to see that the next generation of
    Armenian Americans continues to use our mother language," said
    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Eastern Diocese. "They are
    giving of their time and skills to teach our children and for that each
    one of them should be commended."

    FACING THE CHALLENGE

    One of the guest speakers at the symposium, Dr. Anny Bakalian, associate
    director of the Middle East and Middle Eastern American Center at the
    Graduate Center of the City University of New York (CUNY), outlined the
    numbers for the educators.

    She said her research shows that assimilation and the maintenance of
    ethnic identity are not contradictory -- that it is not a zero sum pie.
    She spoke about immigration, integration in American society, and
    assimilation.

    "It is impossible to find Armenianness meaningful or functional if they
    are not taught to appreciate it," Dr. Bakalian said, stressing that
    culture and traditions are taught, not imbedded in our genetic make-up.
    "Where is Armenianness nurtured? In the family, with grandparents,
    traditions, and rites of passage."

    She told the educators that to be a "good Armenian" one must be a "good
    American citizen." The solution, she said, is to become bicultural, be
    conversant fluently and comfortably in two worlds.

    "The teacher is not an authority figure in the new millennium, but a
    coach to encourage," she said. "Pedagogues have discovered that
    language is best taught when the child is eager to learn. It cannot be
    imposed by force."

    CELEBRATING 1,600 YEARS

    This year, the local educators will be in the spotlight as the worldwide
    Armenian community celebrates the 1,600th anniversary of the creation of
    the Armenian alphabet by Mesrob Mashdots. During the symposium, Aram
    Arkun, coordinator of the Diocese's Zohrab Information Center, outlined
    the historical and geopolitical background of the invention of the
    Armenian alphabet, detailing the evolution of the written word from
    pictures and hieroglyphics to cuneiform and later the Armenian alphabet.

    Arkun highlighted the religious and sociopolitical motives for the
    invention of the alphabet, dealing in unfamiliar details and historical
    information that attendees said would prove useful in their classroom
    work.

    HONORING SERVICE

    The Symposium was also a chance for the Diocese to thank longtime
    educators. Central to the list of those devoting their time to teaching
    Armenian was Sylva der Stepanian, who recently stepped down as
    coordinator of Armenian studies at the Diocese after several decades of
    service.

    Honored for 25 years of service were Sue Ayrassian and Irene Eranosian
    of Providence, RI; Zabel Hatem and Lucy Martayian of Bayside, NY; Nazeli
    Sanentz of Watertown, MA; and Marie Yapoujian of White Plains, NY.
    Honored for 10 years of service were Chake Dereyan of Livingston, NJ;
    and Susan Aprahamian Clark of Fair Lawn, NJ.

    Following the opening prayer and an introduction by Mrs. Shakeh
    Kadehjian, Fr. Untzag Nalbandian, director of youth and education at the
    Diocese, spoke about the challenges teachers face and the importance of
    the collaboration between parents and teachers.

    "While it is the parents, initially, who take their children's hands and
    walk them to school, it is also the teachers who make sure the children
    are happy and learning at school," he said.

    Fr. Untzag elaborated on the educational programs being planned by the
    Armenian Diocese to celebrate the 1600th anniversary of the Alphabet.

    Gilda Buchakjian-Kupelian, coordinator of Armenian studies at the
    Diocese, praised those long-time educators and stressed the role of
    teachers to be "the primary and most important factor in language
    learning."

    In her presentation, the new Armenian studies coordinator, underscored
    the functionality of the Armenian language and suggested stylized,
    practical pedagogical methods to accommodate the student profiles of
    different age groups.

    "We are as effective as our resources, especially our human resources,"
    she said. "Not only should we be concerned with training teachers, but
    we should focus on teacher preparation as well. After all, how we learn
    is as important as what we learn."

    MANY EFFORTS

    The local parish Armenian schools are just one of the ways the Diocese
    is working to strengthen the Armenian language here in America. Through
    its Khrimian Lyceum, which opened on September 24, 2005 in New York City
    and is expected to open in Massachusetts, students who graduate from
    parish Armenian schools attend monthly classes in Armenian language,
    culture, history, and civic education.

    The Diocese is also working to educate adults through its Mesrob
    Mashdots Institute, weekly language classes held at the Diocesan Center
    in New York City. Two classes with a total of 25 students began on
    September 21.

    Plans are under way to prepare new teaching resources and outreach
    program to benefit all parish schools.

    -- 10/6/05

    E-mail photos available on request. Photos also viewable in the News
    and Events section of the Eastern Diocese's website,
    www.armenianchurch.org.

    PHOTO CAPTION (1): Gilda Buchakjian-Kupelian, coordinator of Armenian
    studies at the Diocese, right, and Fr. Untzag Nalbandian, director of
    youth and education at the Diocese, honor several local educators for
    their years of service to parish Armenian schools during a symposium at
    the Diocesan Center in New York City on September 10, 2005.

    PHOTO CAPTION (2): Dr. Anny Bakalian, associate director of the Middle
    East and Middle Eastern American Center at the Graduate Center of the
    City University of New York (CUNY), speaks to educators from local
    parish Armenian schools during a symposium organized by the Eastern
    Diocese on September 10, 2005.

    PHOTO CAPTION (3): Participants in the symposium organized by the
    Eastern Diocese for local parish Armenian school educators share ideas
    and teaching tips at the Diocesan Center in New York City on September
    10, 2005.

    PHOTO CAPTION (4): More than 70 people attended the Eastern Diocese's
    symposium for local Armenian school educators at the Diocesan Center in
    New York City on September 10, 2005.
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