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  • Hetq: Armenian children are neglected in Calcutta

    Hetq Online, Armenia
    June 29 2004

    Armenian children are neglected in Calcutta

    by Aghavni Yeghiazaryan, Edik Baghdasaryan

    `We were playing Rugby in the seminary yard and the ball hit me in
    the left ear. I felt a stab of pain, and fell into the mud; then the
    boys sat me down on the stairs. Then one day when we were playing, my
    friend Harutik whispered something in my left ear, I couldn't hear
    it, I couldn't hear it at all. Then he repeated it in my right ear
    and I heard. I realized that I couldn't hear with my left ear. I told
    the doctor. He examined my ear and said that there was nothing wrong
    with it. I put medicine into my ear for a few days, and then some
    grains of sand came out of it. That was the end of my treatment,'
    explains Narek Arshakyan, a student at the charitably-run Armenian
    Seminary in Calcutta. Narek was subsequently examined by Doctor
    Mirakyan at the Republican Hospital in Yerevan, who told his mother
    that it was too late for the hearing in the boy's left ear to be
    restored.


    The seminary in Calcutta, India was established in 1821 and is headed
    by a director appointed by the Catholicos of All Armenians, at the
    suggestion of the Board of Trustees. Since 1999, the seminary has
    been headed by Sonya John (who is Armenian by origin). Max Galstown,
    a member of the Indian-Armenian community, has been sending letters
    to us expressing his anxiety about the situation in the seminary
    since last February. He says, `This establishment, with a 180-year
    history, has been turned upside-down under Sonya John's management.'

    Another member of the community, a well-respected woman who had
    worked at the seminary with Sonya John, sent a letter to the
    Catholicos in 2003 describing John's working style and behavior. She
    never received any reply. `Since appointing the director, the
    Catholicos has not supervised her work,' Max Galstown wrote us. He
    says Sonya John misappropriates donations from Indian Armenians;
    under the pretext of allocating money to the hospital, she
    transferred 15 million Rupees to the Communist Party of India (of
    which she is a member), 30 million Rupees for the construction of the
    Armenian Embassy in New Delhi, and so on. `None of the local
    Armenians is involved in the administrative matters of the seminary.
    We consider it to be a conspiracy against us, and Echmiadzin is
    taking part in it,' Galstown writes.


    Narek's mother, Susanna Arshakyan, reported her son's hearing loss to
    Deacon Tigran from the information department of the Holy See of St.
    Echmiadzin. The deacon promised to inform the Catholicos about it.
    `The boy has lost his hearing because of negligence; if he had been
    examined and treated in time it wouldn't have happened. Our children
    are disregarded and neglected there,' Susanna says.

    Sixty seminary students came to Armenia in May for a month's
    vacation, and were supposed to return to Calcutta on June 18 th . But
    only one student, Elisa Matevosyan, and the families of teachers from
    Armenia working there went back. The postponement of the return of
    some of the students was explained by illness. It is clear that 80
    percent of the students who came home for vacation will not return to
    Calcutta.

    Narek went to Calcutta in 2001, from the Zatik children's home. Narek
    has two brothers, and his socially vulnerable single mother decided
    to send her son away to study. At the dictation of a Church
    representative, she wrote that she had given her consent to her son's
    going abroad to study for ten years. She signed another document as
    well, but she doesn't remember what was it. `Whatever I signed, I am
    not going to send Narek back. I haven't abandoned my child, have I?
    If they take the child, they are first of all responsible for his
    health. Our children were still standing on their own two feet when
    they brought them back, but we'll find out later whether they have
    any diseases,' Narek's mother says.

    All of the children returned to Armenia with medical records
    regarding annual checkups and individual diseases. There is a
    separate document stating that they don't have any contagious
    diseases and don't carry any infections. But eight children have
    already been diagnosed with malaria, and two of them have been
    hospitalized in the Nork Infectious Hospital. `They brought the
    disease with them; it is too early for local malaria, this is not a
    local malaria,' says head physician Ara Asoyan.

    Narek is not going to continue his studies at the seminary. The Zatik
    boarding school no longer has a place for him. His English is better
    than his Armenian, and it will be hard for him to go to ordinary
    school, not to mention his hearing problem. Susanna's only hope is
    the Church. She believes that the Catholicos cannot remain
    indifferent, since Narek studied at a seminary that the Church is
    responsible for.

    To be continued



    http://www.hetq.am/eng/society/0406-kalkata.html

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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