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Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/13/04

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  • Eastern Prelacy: Crossroads E-Newsletter 05/13/04

    PRESS RELEASE
    Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic Church of America
    138 East 39th Street
    New York, NY 10016
    Tel: 212-689-7810
    Fax: 212-689-7168
    e-mail: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.armenianprelacy.org
    Contact: Iris Papazian

    CROSSROAD E-NEWSLETTER: May 13, 2004

    CRITICAL ISSUES OF LIFE & FAITH
    WILL BE DISCUSSED IN MID-ATLANTIC
    ADULT CHRISTIAN EDUCATION PROGRAM

    The Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC) has planned a unique
    program for adults in the mid-atlantic region. The Adult Christian Education
    program will include lectures, Bible studies, panel discussions, small group
    discussions, and worship services over the weekend of June 25 to 27, 2004.
    The seminar will take place at St. Mary of Providence Center in Elverson,
    Pennsylvania, beginning Friday evening, June 25 and continue through Sunday
    afternoon, June 27.
    The main portion of the program will take place on Saturday and those
    who do not wish to stay the entire weekend can attend the Saturday session
    only. The main speaker on Saturday will be Dr. Vigen Guroian, Professor of
    Theology and Ethics at Loyola College in Baltimore, Maryland. Professor
    Guroian is the first Armenian theologian ever elected to the American
    Theological Society and the Orthodox Theological Society of America. He has
    served on the Board of Directors of the Society of Christian Ethics, has
    been active in both the National Council of Churches and the World Council
    of Churches, and is a member on numerous editorial boards. His published
    works include nearly 150 articles, and six books with three more scheduled
    to be published later this year.
    Professor Guroian will provide an Armenian Orthodox Perspective to many
    issues that are currently in the headlines. His presentation will focus
    issues like marriage, gay marriage, abortion, euthanasia, cremation, suicide
    and reproductive technologies.
    Complete information about the seminar, registration form, and
    directions to the Center are on the Prelacy web page,
    www.armenianprelacy.org or you may contact Archdeacon Shant Kazanjian at
    the AREC office, 212-689-7810.

    EARLY REGISTRATION FOR
    DATEV INSTITUTE SAVES $$$
    A reminder that the deadline for the early-bird registration for the St.
    Gregory of Datev Institute Summer program is this Saturday, May 15. Register
    by this Saturday and save $50. To register, just go to the Prelacy website
    (http://www.armenianprelacy.org/datev.htm), print the registration form,
    fill it out and sent it in with your payment.
    The Datev Summer Program will take place June 27 to July 4, 2004, for
    junior and senior high school students, at the St. Mary of Providence
    Center, Elverson, Pennsylvania.

    JEOPARDY TOURNAMENTS CONTINUE
    St. Stephen's Saturday School team won the New England area Jeopardy
    Tournament organized by the Armenian National Education Committee (ANEC).
    The Mourad School of Rhode Island was the runner-up.
    A capacity audience attended the competition, which took place at St.
    Stephen Church, Watertown, MA, on May 8. Five teams from the following
    schools participated: St. Stephen Elementary School, St. Stephen Saturday
    School (Watertown), Armenian Sisters Academy (Lexington), Mourad Armenian
    School (Providence) and St. Gregory School (North Andover).
    The next regional competition will take place this Saturday, May 15, in
    Chicago for the Midwestern Armenian schools.

    THEATRE WORKSHOP AT SIAMANTO ACADEMY
    Nora Armani, renowned Armenian stage, TV, radio and film actress, has
    been invited to conduct a theatre workshop with the students of the Siamanto
    Academy, this Saturday, May 15, 2004. The multi-lingual, award-winning Ms
    Armani will share her experiences growing up as an Armenian in Egypt and her
    theatrical experiences in London and Paris.
    The Siamanto Academy meets every Saturday at the Armenian Center, 69-23
    47th Avenue, Woodside, New York, 11 am to 2:30 pm. The college-accredited
    Academy offers Armenian language, history and Christian studies for high
    school students. For information contact Gilda B. Kupelian, Director of the
    Armenian National Education Committee (ANEC): [email protected]

    PRESIDENT KOCHARIAN VISITS ANTELIAS
    Armenia's president, Robert Kocharian, is visiting Lebanon upon the
    invitation of President Lahoud. Yesterday, May 12, President Kocharian met
    with His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House of Cilicia, at the
    Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia. Clergy serving the Catholicosate and
    members of the Executive Council attended the meeting.
    On the first day of his visit to Lebanon, the President and His Holiness
    had a breakfast meeting at which time they discussed issues pertaining to
    Armenia and Diaspora-Armenia relations. They both emphasized the importance
    of strengthening the national unity at this critical point of the history of
    the Armenian people.

    OUTREACH ISSUE DEDICATED TO
    ARCHBISHOP MESROB ASHJIAN
    The special issue of Outreach, dedicated to the late Archbishop Mesrob
    Ashjian, is complete and can be seen on line by visiting the Prelacy web
    site, www.armenianprelacy.org

    CHRONICLE OF HIGHER EDUCATION
    FEATURES ARTICLE BY PETER BALAKIAN
    The May 7, 2004 issue of The Chronicle of Higher Education features an
    article written by Peter Balakian, entitled How a Poet Writes History
    Without Going Mad. Balakian, the author of The Burning Tigris: The Armenian
    Genocide and America's Response, as well as numerous books of poetry and the
    highly-acclaimed memoir, Black Dog of Fate, notes that a prominent Armenian
    psychiatrist asked how he is able to write about massacre, deportation,
    rape, and torture without becoming depressed or even incapacitated. Balakian
    then goes on to describe how he came to write The Burning Tigris.
    Balakian writes, In the face of such horror, can a writer even suggest
    there is pleasure and excitement in doing the work, in the act of writing? I
    came to The Burning Tigris as someone who has spent most of his life writing
    in the rhythms and image language of the lyric poem and, at the time, was
    finishing a book of new poems. In the 1990s I wrote a memoir, Black Dog of
    Fate, about growing up Armenian American in the suburbs of Northern New
    Jersey in the 1950s and 60s and gradually awakening to the history of the
    Armenian Genocide my grandparents had lived through. One of the challenges
    for me in crossing genre boundaries was to find the ways I could bring along
    the appropriate aspects of my craft. In writing a memoir, I discovered that
    the past could be opened up by finding images in memory that, like a thread,
    could unravel into a once-forgotten experience.
    Balakian concludes his long article with the observation that the
    artistic challenges of locating the events, the characters, and their voices
    in sensory, human time was an energizing force that kept me writing when the
    darkness of the subjects could have shut me down.

    ALMOST SISTERS, NEARLY BROTHERS
    BY SUSAN ARPAJIAN JOLLEY
    The current issue of TRANSFORMATIONS, The Journal of Inclusive
    Scholarship and Pedagogy, includes a beautifully written article by Susan
    Arpajian Jolley, titled Almost Sisters, Nearly Brothers.
    Susan, a high school teacher in Delran, New Jersey, in a moving
    narrative relates her emotionally charged experiences during her teaching of
    English to a group of students, including several students from Turkey. Her
    ambivalent feelings at the beginning of the journey become as much a
    learning experience for her as for her students. She remembers the stories
    of her childhood told by her grandparents and the images they conjure. She
    writes, I hold these images in my mind because Agyuls country and my
    grandparents land are the same. But Agyul is Turkish, and I am Armenian. If
    you know the history that many people do not, the story of what has been
    termed the first genocide of the modern age, you will understand.
    Susan gives poignant, if different, voices to her grandmothers. Both are
    survivors. Both have experienced unbelievable losses. Her maternal
    grandmother withdraws and the full extent of her story goes with her to the
    grave. Her paternal grandmother becomes a highly respected leader in the
    Philadelphia Armenian community, an activist, a teacher of the Armenian
    language.
    Susan concludes, This teaching and learning experience brought us
    together in ways that never would have happened otherwise, and we're all
    better for it. My new perspective will not solve any political problems
    between our two nationalities, but, at least on a personal level, it is a
    step.
    Susan is the daughter of Vazken and Rose Arpajian, active members of St.
    Gregory Church in Philadelphia, and the granddaughter of the late Kevork and
    Ardemis Arpajian and Movses and Arek Zakarian.
    The full article will be published in a forthcoming issue of Outreach.

    NATIONAL REPRESENTATIVE ASSEMBLY
    WILL CONVENE NEXT WEEK
    The National Representative Assembly (NRA) of the Eastern Prelacy will
    convene in Philadelphia, May 19 through 21. The host parish is St. Gregory
    the Illuminator. For more details visit the Prelacy web-site:
    www.armenianprelacy.org

    ST. ILLUMINATORS ARMENIAN DAY SCHOOL
    ANNUAL DINNER DANCE TOMORROW EVENING
    The annual dinner-dance of St. Illuminators Armenian Day School will
    take place tomorrow evening, Friday, May 14, 2004, at the Terrace on the
    Park, Flushing, NY, at 8 p.m. Archbishop Oshagan will honor Mrs. Anna
    Kayaloff with a special certificate of merit for her many years of dedicated
    service to the Armenian Church and the school. For details contact the
    school office, 718-478-4073.

    PRELATE WILL VISIT BOSTON, WHITINSVILLE
    Saturday, May 15, the Prelate will travel to Boston where he will meet
    with the board of St. Stephen Elementary School to discuss the proposed
    addition to the school. St. Stephen School was recently rated as one of the
    best in the area.
    From Boston, Archbishop Oshagan will go to Whitinsville where on Sunday,
    May 16, he will officiate at the Divine Liturgy and deliver the Sermon at
    St. Asdvadzadzin Church. He will also officiate at the ordination of Diran
    Der Khosrofian to the rank of deacon and Hratch Simonian to the rank of
    acolyte. Following the services His Eminence will preside over the annual
    anniversary banquet of the church where His Eminence will award a special
    Certificate of Merit to Alan Goshgarian for his many years of dedicated
    service to the Armenian Church.

    ASCENSION DAY
    Next Thursday, May 20, 2004, is Holy Ascension Day (Hampartzoum). The
    Prelate will celebrate this Feast in Philadelphia during the National
    Representative Assembly at St. Gregory Church. The faithful of the
    Philadelphia community are expected to celebrate this joyous feast-the last
    of the dominical events of the life of Jesus as written in the Gospels, by
    attending the Divine Liturgy on Thursday evening, 7:30 p.m., officiated by
    V. Rev. Fr. Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar of the Prelacy.
    After the miraculous Resurrection, Jesus appeared before the Disciples
    numerous times. On Ascension Day, forty days after the Resurrection, Jesus
    met with his disciples and gave final instructions. He advised them not to
    begin widespread teaching until the Descent of the Holy Spirit (Pentecost)
    when they would be empowered with new power and ability. Two of the
    evangelists, Mark and Luke, conclude their writings with the Ascension.
    The Ascension took place at the village of Bethany, on the Mount of
    Olives. After his final instructions, according to the Gospel, Jesus was
    received up into heaven and sat on the right hand of God.
    There are many Armenian traditions associated with the commemoration of
    Ascension Day. One tradition that has remained active is the telling of
    fortunes for young women (Vijakahanoutiun), which has been immortalized in a
    famous scene in the opera Anoush.
    The Ascension is described in the New Testament in Mark 16:19; Luke
    24:50-51; and Acts 1:9-11.

    "You will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, in all Judea and Samaria, and to the
    ends of the earth." Acts 1:8

    Visit our website at http://www.armenianprelacy.org
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