Τετάρτη 14 Αυγούστου 2013

Armenians in Jerusalem: The Politics of Survival in the Holy Land




STORY & PHOTOS BY MATTHEW KARANIAN
The Armenians of Jerusalem form one of the oldest Armenian communities outside of Armenia. The Armenian Quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem may be one of the most Armenian places in the world, too.
But this community is more than just old and Armenian. The community also controls, through the Armenian Church, at least a part of every major Christian Holy Site in the region, including the birthplace and crucifixion of Jesus, and the Tomb of the Virgin Mary.
With such a rich cultural legacy, one might guess that the Armenians of Jerusalem are strong and thriving. They are not. If the Old City were divided up today, the Armenians might barely command one street. They certainly would not lay claim to an entire Quarter, as they have for centuries.
The survival of the community is today in peril. The population is dwindling. Armenian property rights are under attack. Even Armenian pilgrims are fewer in number.
Matthew Karanian—a Pasadena lawyer and the author of several books about Armenia—traveled to Jerusalem earlier this year as part of a research and photography project. Karanian is the co-author, with Robert Kurkjian, of the best-selling travel guide Armenia and Karabagh: The Stone Garden Guide. This article is one in a series about the Jerusalem Armenians that Karanian has written and photographed for Asbarez.
POLITICS OF SURVIVAL IN JERUSALEM
Armenians have 17 centuries of history in the Holy Land, and they share or own most of the major Christian sites, including the sites where Jesus was born, crucified, and buried.
There’s also a distinct geographical area in the historic walled city of Jerusalem known as the Armenian Quarter.
This should be enough to make any Armenian feel proud. But after I had spent several days living among the Armenians of this sacred Armenian place, those 17 centuries of history instead felt like they were crushing down on me. I felt as weary as if I had been breathing too much church incense.
The Holy Land induces awe and inspiration for some. I felt this, too. I was awed. And I was inspired.
But as I became increasingly aware of the greatness of the Armenian legacy here, I also became increasingly aware that the survival of this legacy is in peril.
George Hintlian is a Jerusalem historian and a prominent member of the Armenian community. He had been my introduction to the Armenian community when I arrived earlier this year.
He sensed that I had become weary, rather than uplifted, by all that I was seeing and learning about the Armenians of Jerusalem. “This place doesn’t work only by prayer,” he said. “There’s a lot of politics.”
Unfortunately, the politics appear to be working against the Armenians. This “politics,” I feared, could one day turn the Armenian Quarter into another Aghtamar—another sacred gem of Armenian culture that is now just a “museum” that’s owned and operated by others.
WHAT’S AT RISK

The walled Old City of Jerusalem has a dense population of nearly 40,000 living in an area of less than one square kilometer.
The Armenian Quarter occupies one-sixth of this tiny walled-city, yet it has a population of only about 500 Armenians. As a result, the Quarter is a highly coveted piece of real estate. The other quarters are bursting with residents who need more room. This is especially true for the Jewish Quarter, which is adjacent to the Armenian Quarter.
“The Israelis want to take over the Armenian Quarter,” says Hintlian. Worshippers headed to the Western Wall—sometimes also called the Wailing Wall—often pass through the public streets of the Armenian Quarter. “Every day they see what we have,” he says. “They want it.”
These worshippers frequently walk directly past the home and office of Kevork Nalbandian, an attorney with a law practice in the Armenian Quarter.
Nalbandian says he is also concerned about the future of the Armenian community. “We already live in a museum,” he says, alluding to the dwindling Armenian population. “Twenty years from now, how many of us will there be?” he asks.
There had been 35,000 Armenians—some say more—in the region prior to 1948. There are about 2,000 in the region today, of whom 500 live in the Armenian Quarter of the Old City.
The population decline has several causes. Finding work is difficult, especially for educated professionals. This forces many of the most highly educated Armenians to leave Israel. Job prospects are better for an Armenian who wants to operate his own office, or work as a merchant.
So, an Armenian can make a living selling jewelry or ceramics, says Hintlian, but careers in the professions are scarce. This is because the politics of the region dictate that Arabs hire Arabs and Jews hire Jews, he says.
There’s also the intangible difficulty of simply living in Jerusalem. “People are psychologically crushed,” says Hintlian. Israeli policies—Hintlian calls it “harassment”—work to encourage Armenians to leave. And, government policy also prevents immigration to Israel by Armenians, he says. The “Law of Return,” the law that guarantees to Jews anywhere in the world the right to immigrate to Israel, also prevents immigration by non-Jews. The result is a community that cannot sustain itself, and that can only shrink.
ARMENIA’S LINK TO THE HOLY LAND
For centuries, groups have competed for control of the region’s holy sites.
These groups, including the Armenian Church, have fought—sometimes literally—for the right to hold religious rites at places such as the Church of the Nativity in Bethlehem, and at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre. These are the sites where many in the Christian community believe that Jesus was born, crucified, and buried.
In an effort to impose law and order on the religious groups, the Ottoman Empire negotiated a so-called “Status Quo” agreement with them back in 1852. The Ottomans were sovereign over Jerusalem and much of the Middle East at the time.
This agreement dictated that the ownership and rights status that existed for each of the holy sites in 1852 would be the set of rights that would exist in perpetuity. This agreement remains in effect today and is enforced by the Israelis in Jerusalem, and by the Palestinians in Bethlehem.
Negotiating this Status Quo agreement was one of the benevolent acts of the Ottomans during their four centuries of rule in the Holy Land. It has been effective in allowing the Armenians to continue to control or share ownership of most of the major Christian holy sites today. The Greek and Catholic churches are the only other religious groups that rival the Armenians in their extent of ownership and control of Christian Holy Land shrines.
Father Goruin is a member of the St. James Armenian Brotherhood. He became a priest in the Armenian church at age 23, and this year, at age 30, he was elevated to the rank of Vartabed.
The Armenian Church is able to maintain control of these sites because it has been strong over the centuries, says Father Goruin. “And the church can only be strong if there is a large community,” he says.
There are today about 100 students enrolled in the Quarter’s Armenian elementary school. This school, Saint Tarkmanchatz, or The Holy Translators, was established in 1929 and the success of its pupils is one of the keys to the survival of the community, he says.
If the community survives, it will be able to help the Armenian Church maintain its co-stewardship of sites such as the Tomb of St. Mary, as well as the Church of the Ascension, the Church of the Nativity, and the Church of the Holy Sepulchre.
Each of these shrines is built upon the site of a significant event in the life and death of Jesus.
The Tomb of St. Mary is where the Virgin Mary was laid to rest before she ascended to heaven.
The Church of the Ascension is built on the hilltop outside the city walls of Jerusalem where Jesus ascended to heaven.
The Church of the Nativity is built atop the site in Bethlehem where Jesus was born.
And the Church of the Holy Sepulcher occupies the sites within the Old City of Jerusalem where Jesus was crucified and was anointed and laid to rest.
The Armenian Church either shares ownership of these sites, or shares the right to hold religious services there, with either Greeks, or Catholics, or both. “When you consider how few Armenians there are in the world, and how many Latins [Catholics] there are, it’s extraordinary that our rights are the same or greater than theirs,” says Hintlian.
There are several additional significant religious sites that are owned or controlled by the Armenian Church, as well.
At the moment, the more immediate focus of the community is on preserving the building and the sacred relics of the St. James Cathedral, which forms the heart of the Armenian Compound within the Armenian Quarter.
The current edifice of St. James dates back to the twelfth century, and it contains a treasure trove of artwork and priceless antiquities. The monastery of St. James is even older, having been established in the fourth century by St. Gregory the Illuminator.
It was here, on a recent afternoon, that Archbishop Nourhan Manoogian of the Armenian Patriarchate presided over the elevation of four priests—four members of the St. James Brotherhood—to the rank of Vartabed. The cathedral was alight only with the flames of candles and oil-fed lamps. The mood was mystical, and the community had turned out in large numbers to witness this rare and sacred rite of the church.
Thirty students from the St. James Convent, all of them young men, filled the gallery and sang hymns from the pages of books that were lighted only by candles. There was no other music—no organ, no choir—except the singing and chanting of these 30 young men.
Back in the 1930s, the military governor of Jerusalem, Ronald Storrs, had famously stated that the Cathedral of St. James “embodies the misery and the glory of the Armenian nation.” On this evening, I understood only the glory.
_______________
Matthew Karanian traveled to Jerusalem earlier this year as part of a research and photography project documenting the Armenian community and the Old City’s Armenian Quarter. His Jerusalem photography will be included in a large format photography book to be released in 2012 with co-author Robert Kurkjian.
Karanian practices law in Pasadena, Calif., and is a former Associate Dean and member of the law faculty at the American University of Armenia in Yerevan. He is also the co-author with Kurkjian of several books about Armenia, including the best-selling photo-based travel guide Armenia and Karabagh: The Stone Garden Guide. This book is available from Borders, from Armenian booksellers in Glendale, and from the online bookseller Amazon.com.
Karanian’s photography has appeared in such magazines as CNN Traveler, Photo Life, and Photo District News (PDN). He has photographed leaders such as former Presidents Bill Clinton and Robert Kocharian, in the Oval Office of the White House, and several Miss Armenia beauty queen.

Σάββατο 3 Νοεμβρίου 2012

Armenian-Israeli relations based not only on common fates - Israeli MP

Armenian-Israeli relations based not only on common fates - Israeli MP

TEL AVIV. - Israeli MP Rabbi Michael Ben-Ari has congratulated the people of Armenia on the occasion of 20th anniversary of independence.
"I cordially congratulate the Armenian people on the 20th anniversary of Independence of the Republic of Armenia. I wish you success and prosperity, security and strength of spirit to preserve the independence forever, despite all the problems and threats our people face in shaky and unstable regions of the world," reads the letter of the MP, sent to the President of Armenia Serzh Sargsyan.
 
Israeli MP expressed hope that relations between Armenia and Israel are based not only on the common fate, marked by disasters - the Holocaust of Jewish people during Nazi regime and the Turkish Genocide of Armenians, and not only on the willingness to help each other in times of natural disasters - as it was after the earthquake in Armenia in 1988, but also on mutual understanding on development of nation states and the protection of national interests.

Armenia, Israel expand cooperation in agriculture



Armenia, Israel expand cooperation in agriculture
 Armenia and Israel are going to sign a cooperation agreement in agriculture, Israel’s Knesset MP, Minister of Agriculture Orit Noked said in Yerevan.
“I’m sure we will not only sign a cooperation agreement, but also manage to implement all its provisions,” Israeli minister said during the meeting with her Armenian counterpart Sergo Karapetyan on April 16 thanking him for a warm reception.
Noked invited Karapetyan to visit Israel in May voicing hope that the Armenian minister will come to their country despite the upcoming parliamentary elections in Armenia on May 6. Israeli MP said she is going to visit Armenia again in fall 2012.
The Israeli official further noted that the parties agreed to create a working group for a follow-up of the issues discussed within the framework of the bilateral cooperation.
For his part, Minister Karapetyan said he discussed several issues with his Israeli counterpart, in particular, development of cattle-breeding and fishery, in the context of exchange of experience and application of modern technologies, as well as development of greenhouse facilities. The agenda included consultation and staff training issues as well.
“Our relations with Israel were not quite developed yet, and the minister’s visit will promote further expansion and deepening of these ties,” Karapetyan emphasized highlighting the importance of cooperation in other branches of economy as well.
The Israeli delegation will also meet the Armenian Prime Minister Tigran Sargsyan and Catholicos of All Armenians His Holiness Karekin II.
Besides, the delegates will visit Yerevan Brandy Company, Matenadaran (the museum-institute of ancient manuscripts), and lay a wreath to the Armenian Genocide memorial.

Σάββατο 17 Μαρτίου 2012

The Virtual Jewish History Tour

The Virtual Jewish History Tour

Armenia


By Ariel Scheib 

History of Jewish Community

The Jewish community of Armenia dates back almost 2,000 years. Many historians date the arrival of the first Jewish settlement in Armenia back to the destruction of the First Temple. During the conquest of King Tigranes II the Great, Tigranes brought with him 10,000 Jewish captives to Armenia when he retreated from Palestine, because of the Roman attack on Armenia (69 B.C.E.). By 360-370 C.E., there was a massive increase in Jewish Hellenistic immigration into Armenia; many Armenian towns became predominately Jewish. During this period, however, the Persian Shapur II began deporting thousands of Jews to Iran.
Halakhic studies never prospered in Armenia, although there are a few references to the region in Jewish Hellenistic sources. During Medieval times, most of Armenian Jewry vanished as a distinct entity in the region, although many historians believe they became a part of the Kurdish Jewry. There is an ancient Jewish cemetery located in the region of Vayots Dzor, in the city of Eghegis, south and west of Yerevan. There are more than 40 tombstones dating back to the 13th century, 16 tombstones with Hebrew and Aramaic inscriptions.
Jews from Poland and Persia first began arriving in Armenia in the early 19th century. Since 1840, Jewish settlers established both Ashkenazic and Sephardic communities in Yerevan. Up to 1924, the Sephardic synagogue, Shiek Mordechai, was a leading institution among the Jewish community.

Ark in Yerevan Synagogue

During and after World War II, hundreds of displaced Jews moved to Soviet Armenia. The Jewish population of Armenia grew to approximately 5,000 people. In 1959, the Jewish population peaked in Soviet Armenia at approximately 10,000 people. Another wave of Jewish immigrants arrived in the country between 1965 and 1972, mainly intelligentsia, military, and engineers. These Jews arrived from Russia and Ukraine, attracted to the more liberal society. Today, the Jewish community has fewer than 1,000 citizens due to emigration and assimilation. Between 1992 and 1994, more than 6,000 Jews immigrated to Israel because of Armenia’s political isolation and economic depression. In 1995, the Chabad House was established in Yerevan. The Chabad House provides free meals, offers classes in Hebrew and Jewish traditions, and cares for the community elderly.
Rabbi Gershom Meir Berstein

The rate of intermarriage among Jews and Christian Armenians is very high. In an interview, Rabbi Berstein of the Yerevan Chabad described the Jewish community as “‘too small’ to be of great interest to most Jewish organizations.” Almost half of the Jewish population resides in Yerevan. Seven, Yerevan and Vanadzor have active Jewish community centers.
At the start of 2002, Rimma Varzhapetian became the president of the Jewish Community of Armenia. The only rabbi in Armenia is Rabbi Gershom Meir Berstein of the Chabad in Yerevan. In 2004, the Jewish community, through the assistance of Chabad, began producing kosher food. Slowly, the Jewish community is rebuilding itself in Armenia.

Status

The American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC) is very active in Armenia assisting the elderly, through the charity Orot Hesed. The JDC works through the Yerevan synagogue to provide finances for food supplies, fuel, and medicine. This program supports nearly 80 people.
Sunday School

The Jewish Community of Armenia (JCA) in Yerevan sponsors many programs for Jews of all ages. Some of these programs include: advanced education classes, a children’s chorus, and outreach work. In late 2002, the JCA published the community’s first newsletter. This publication helps to keep the small community aware of current events and informed of communal information, such as deaths and marriages.
The Jewish Agency for Israel (JAFI) maintains a Sunday school; a Hesed senior center, several youth clubs, and communal activities in Armenia. The Religious Society of Armenia also supports a second Sunday school and a summer camp, both located in Yerevan. Menorah, the Armenia-Israel culture group, conducts many activities in the community. Modern Hebrew has been taught at the state university since 1995.

Yerevan Synagogue

In 1992, the Jewish Religious Community of Armenia was established in Yerevan. This Chabad organization maintains a rabbi, the third Sunday school in Armenia and a Community Center for programs and gatherings. It also supports a summer camp and charity programs. There are weekly Shabbat services and holiday services held at the Yerevan synagogue. Since 1997, the Jewish Religious Community has published the newsletter, Koelet, to help keep the community informed.
There is also a small Jewish community in Sevan that occasionally holds services led by the head rabbi of the Yerevan Synagogue.

Community Relations

The Armenian Jewish community has good relations with their government. Armenian Jewry may worship and practice Jewish traditions freely due to the 1991 Armenian Law on Freedom of Conscience, amended in 1997, of separation of church and state. In 1996, the state registration agency required every communal organization to register with the state. The Jewish Religious Community of Armenia is registered with the Committee on Nationalities.
In 1999, the JCA planted trees in Yerevan in commemoration of the Holocaust and the Armenian Genocide Memorial.
A state-sponsored channel broadcasts a weekly television show highlighting Jewish and Israeli culture. The Armenian government has also been cooperating with the Jewish community to retrieve Torah scrolls confiscated in the past and placed in state collections.

Israel

Israel and Armenia have diplomatic relations; however, neither maintains an embassy in the other country. Israel is represented in Armenia by the Israeli ambassador in Tbilisi, Georgia. Yad Vashem, the Holocaust Memorial in Israel, has paid tribute to ten Armenians as “Righteous Among the Nations” for risking their lives during the Holocaust to rescue Jews. In 1988, Israel Defense Forces were sent to Armenia after a devastating earthquake. Over the past years, trade between Israel and Armenia has further increased the two nations’ friendship.
Since 1989, 1,246 Jews have immigrated to Israel from Armenia.

Contacts

Rabbi Gershon Meir Burstein
Jewish Religious Community
Chabad
23 Nar-Dosa St.
Yerevan, 375018
Tel. 37-571-968
Email: avyner@mbox.intarnet.com

Jewish Community Center Mordechai Navi
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-19-68; 57-16-77; 52-62-58
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Vladimir Kishinevsky



Burial Society
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-16-77
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Rabbi Gersh-Meir Burshtein
Charity Center Orot Hesed
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-16-77
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Leah Premysler
Kolel and Machon
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-16-77
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Rabbi Gersh-Meir Burshtein
Soup Kitchen
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-16-77
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Leah Premysler
Sunday School Tora Ohr
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-19-68
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Vladimir Kishinevsky
Weekly Newspaper Kohelet
Agatangekhosi str. 7-252
Yerevan, Armenia
Tel.: (3741) 55-34-13
Nelly Sorina
Women's Club
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-16-77
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Leah Premysler
Youth Club
Nar-Dosa str. 23
Yerevan, Armenia 375018
Tel.: (3741) 57-16-77
Fax: (3741) 55-41-32
Leah Premysler
Jewish Community Center of Armenia
Mrs. Rimma Varzhapetian
2/1 Griboyedov St., Off. 49
Yerevan, 375051
Tel. 37-236-533, 37-236-528, 37-230-652
Jewish Community of Vanadzor
Tigrana Metza av.79 - 13
Vanadzor, Armenia 377201
Tel.: (374-573) 211-96
Fax: (374-573) 446-63
Ludmila Aivazdzhan
Jewish Community of Sevan
Nairyana str. 67-2
Sevan, Armenia 378610
Tel.: (374-762) 212-61
Abram Korolev

Sources: NCSJ
World Jewish Congress
“Hebrew University Expedition Studies Jewish Cemetery in Armenia”
“Armenia,” The Jewish Travelers' Resource Guide. Feldheim Publishers. 2001.
Encylopaedia Judaica
The Federation of Jewish Committees of the CIS
“Armenia’s Jews Anxious for Calm”
IAJGS- Cemetery Project
Maps: CIA.
Picture of Yerevan Synagogue courtesy of: NCSJ
Remaining pictures courtesy of: Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS and Baltic States

'Jewish lobby behind U.S. Armenia genocide vote'


Jewish lobbyists contrived a U.S. congressional vote that labeled the World War One-era massacre of Armenians by Turkish forces as genocide, a London-based Arabic-language newspaper claimed on Saturday.

Pro-Israel lobbyists had previously backed Turkey on the issue ? but changed tack in retaliation for Turkish condemnation of Israel's policies in the Gaza Strip, the Al-Quds Al-Arabi daily said in an editorial, according to Israel Radio reports.

Israel and Turkey are traditional allies but ties took a downturn in 2009 when Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan condemned Israel's offensive in Gaza, in which some 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed.

A crisis in diplomatic relations came to a head in January when when Deputy Foreign Minister Danny Ayalon publicly humiliated Turkey's ambassador in front of press cameras.

In his leading article, Al-Quds Al-Arabi editor Abd al-Bari Atwan curged Erdogan not to give in to the Jewish lobby's "extortion" tactics.

Erdogan on Thursday recalled Turkey's ambassador to Washington after the House of Representatives Foreign Affairs Committee voted 23-22 to approve the non-binding resolution, clearing it for consideration by the full House.

"The decision of the Foreign Affairs Committee will not hurt Turkey, but it will greatly harm bilateral relations, interests and vision. Turkey will not be the one who loses," said Erdogan, speaking at a summit of Turkish businessmen.

Armenian Foreign Minister Edward Nalbandian said the vote was a boost for human rights.

The vote calls on President Barack Obama to ensure U.S. policy formally refers to the massacre as genocide, putting him in a tight spot.

In a telephone call with Turkish President Abdullah Gul on Wednesday, Obama emphasized his administration had urged lawmakers to consider the potential damage to efforts to normalize Armenian-Turkish ties, a senior administration official said.

At a news conference in Costa Rica on Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said she and Obama, who both supported proposed Armenia genocide resolutions as presidential candidates, had changed their minds because they believed the drive to normalize relations between Turkey and Armenia was bearing fruit.

Turkey, a Muslim secular democracy that plays a vital role for U.S. interests from Iraq to Iran and in Afghanistan and the Middle East, accepts that many Armenians were killed by Ottoman forces but denies that up to 1.5 million died and that it amounted to genocide - a term employed by many Western historians and some foreign parliaments.

Turkey regards such accusations as an affront to its national honor


source: http://www.haaretz.com/

Τρίτη 13 Μαρτίου 2012

Armenia and Israel going to establish military cooperation

A high-ranking representative of Armenia were in Israel to study the opportunities of cooperation in the strategic issues.

IzRus reports that the visit of Armenia's high-ranking official to Israel had been done October - early November. Considering some indirect circumstances, his task is to study the perspectives of establishing close ties in the military sphere at least within a limited format.



The portal writes that the Israeli Foreign Ministry's Eurasia-2 Division for Central Europe and Eurasia Department is engaged in preparations for the visit. The Division is in charge of the relations with the South Caucasus and Central Asia.

Δευτέρα 6 Φεβρουαρίου 2012

Armenian-Israeli Friendship




Armenian-Jewish Friendship: Armenians and Jewish Students gather together in support of each other and learn about each others cultures making Israel and Armenia's relationship bigger and better enjoying both of our cultures. 700 Jews currently live in Armenia and 3,000 Armenians live in Israel.