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St. Francis may become Armenian church

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  • St. Francis may become Armenian church

    St. Francis may become Armenian church
    By SCOTT BROOKS Union Leader Correspondent

    The Union Leader (Manchester NH)
    May 13, 2004 Thursday STATE EDITION

    NASHUA -- A Hollis real estate developer hopes to turn the former St.
    Francis Xavier Catholic Church into the state's second Armenian church.

    Vatche Manoukian, owner of Mile High Real Estate, successfully
    negotiated a $1 million deal last week with the Diocese of Manchester
    for the 19th-century French Hill landmark, which he plans to donate
    to the Armenian Orthodox Church.

    "It's a very unique opportunity at a very unique time, and he's
    grabbing it," said Manoukian's attorney, Gerald Prunier.

    The deal is contingent on a judgment in Hillsborough County Probate
    Court, where the diocese hopes a judge will declare the sale
    permissible under the church's 1885 deed. However, some Catholic
    parishioners, who call themselves the St. Francis Xavier Church
    Foundation, opposes the sale and plans to intervene in the case,
    the group's attorney said.

    "The parishioners want it to remain the St. Francis Xavier Catholic
    Church," said Randy Wilbert, the foundation's attorney and former
    president. "There's a statute that says it's got to be held in trust
    for members of the parish. You can't very well sell it to another
    religion and consider yourself in compliance with your obligations."

    Wilbert said he hopes to file a motion to intervene by the end of
    this week.

    The diocese closed St. Francis in 2003 due to "declining financial
    health and waning parishioner attendance," according to its May 7
    probate court filing. With the church on the market, the foundation
    offered to buy it for an undisclosed amount of money earlier this year.

    Diocesan officials said the foundation's bid would not be considered.
    Bishop John McCormack has said the church can no longer be used for
    Catholic worship once it is closed.

    Last month, the group responded by petitioning Hillsborough County
    Superior Court for a declaratory judgment to keep the church a
    Catholic facility.

    A judge stayed the case at a pre-trial hearing Monday, allowing the
    diocese to pursue a ruling in probate court.

    The diocese's filing argues a transfer to the Armenian Church would not
    violate the building's deed because it would ensure the structure's"
    continued public religious or pious use."

    In its filing, the diocese says net proceeds from the sale would go
    to the St. Aloysius of Gonzaga parish in Nashua, which absorbed the
    former St. Francis parishioners after their church was closed.

    Prunier said his client is seeking word from the Armenian Church in
    Jerusalem that it will accept the building. Manoukian, who is 54,
    is asking nothing in return, he said.

    New Hampshire currently has only one Armenian church, the Ararat
    Armenian Congregational Church in Salem.

    Manoukian's brother, Hollis Selectman Vahrij Manoukian, said there
    are few nearby churches for the Armenian community. The brothers,
    who were born in Lebanon and moved to New Hampshire in 1977, attend
    the St. Vartanantz Armenian Church in Chelmsford, Mass., about a
    half-hour drive from their Hollis home.

    "Nobody wants to travel that far," Vahrij Manoukian said. "But if we
    have one in Nashua, people will do it."

    The purchase and sale agreement is voided if the Armenian Church
    refuses the gift, although Prunier said he saw no reason that would
    happen.

    Manoukian initially asked to conceal his name from the court documents,
    but his identity remained visible through the black ink crossing
    it out.

    "The main reason for that was he didn't want to be called up by
    everyone asking for a donation," Prunier said. Also, Prunier said,
    "He didn't want to be named as a party in the suit and end up appearing
    as the bad guy."
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