Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Jihlava Is First Czech Town To Have Armenian Cross-Stone

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Jihlava Is First Czech Town To Have Armenian Cross-Stone

    JIHLAVA IS FIRST CZECH TOWN TO HAVE ARMENIAN CROSS-STONE

    Czech News Agency (CTK)
    November 17, 2006 Friday 7:55 PM (Central European Time)

    Jihlava became today the first Czech town in which an Armenian
    memorial Cross-stone, a gift from the Jihlava-based Armenian-Czech
    society Urartu, has been unveiled.

    Mayor Jaroslav Vymazal said Armenian crosses that are a symbol of
    Christianity, freedom and friendship, have only been put up in capital
    cities in Europe to date.

    The Armenian community in Jihlava dates back to 1992. "It exists in
    a few other Czech towns as well, but I think that in Jihlava it is
    the firmest. That is why we have decided to locate the memorial in
    Jihlava," Urartu chairman Alexandr Sargesyan said.

    The society has 92 members. Besides Armenians they are Czechs,
    Ukrainians and Belarussians.

    "We are grateful to the town, we have been given a chance to adapt
    ourselves to the European society. Jihlava is our home, children
    attend school here, have their friends here, there have already been
    several Armenian-Czech weddings, children have been born from them,"
    Sargesyan said.

    The memorial is made of rose-coloured Armenian tuf. It bears an
    Armenian inscription reading "In memory of people who died without
    any reason."

    It was unveiled by Armenian ambassador seated in Vienna Ashot
    Hovakimyan and by Vymazal, and it was consecrated by Mesrop Sarpazan
    Grigoryan and Barsek Pilavchyan, from the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    Sargesyan said that the cross-stone is also to remind that Armenia was
    the first country in the world in which Christianity was accepted as
    an official state religion during the reign of King Trdat III in 301.
Working...
X