The epic odyssey of the boy Avedis, from the sandstorms of the Iraqi
desert, to the golden throne of St James in Jerusalem, wound down to its
inevitable close this week, as the coffin slowly descended into the
grave,You'll be able to spot your bag from a mile away with these
elegant and colorful leather luggage tag. clods of earth raining down upon the lid, a final farewell: earth to earth.
The heavens themselves seemed to blaze forth the death of the prince, Archbishop Torkom Manoogian,Custom plastic injection mould
manufacturer, Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem, 96th in line of
succession from Abraham, the first leader of the Armenian Church in the
Holy Land.
In a hauntingly solemn ceremony, his fellow princes
had led Manoogian to his final resting place in the Armenian cemetery of
St Saviors, a stone's throw from the bullet-riddled Zion Gate, one of
seven that punctuate the 500-years old Walls of the Old City.
Thousands
of people, some of whom had flown in expressly for the occasion,
watched the funeral or accompanied the cortege, the narrow streets of
the Old City and the confined space within the cemetery making it
impossible to accommodate more than a fraction of their number.
For
the first time within living memory, the whole city seemed to have
risen as one to pay tribute to the man who gave pungent definition to
the terms “glasnost” and “perestroika,” and who helped usher a new era
of stability and prosperity for his diminishing and dispirited fold.
Putting
aside their differences for a brief spell, leaders or representatives
of practically every house of God in Jerusalem, whether Christians, or
the ones who call Him Yahweh, or those who call Him Allah, and of every
political affiliation in the country, marched in the mournful funeral
procession, from the Convent of St James, seat of the Armenian
Patriarchate, to the Armenian cemetery.
The presence of the
foreign host gave tangible, vociferous recognition of the ineradicable
place Armenians continue to occupy in Jerusalem: despite the relentless
attrition wars and catastrophes have precipitated in their numbers over
the years, Armenians still prefer Jerusalem over their chief joy.
Ask
any Armenian, if he or she could remold his destiny "to the heart’s
desire," (in Omar Khayyam’s words), where would they like their home to
be, and the reply will be unequivocally divided between Yerevan, capital
of the Armenian homeland, and Yerusaghem (the Armenian name for
Jerusalem).
Pulitzer prize winning novelist William Saroyan said it
best: when any two Armenians meet anywhere in the world, see if they
will not create a new Armenia.
The unmistakable attendance of a
special envoy from the Lebanon-based Armenian Catholicosate of the Great
House of Cilicia, historic rivals of the mother church in Armenia with
which Jerusalem is aligned, gave vivid proof of this unshakable bond of
fraternity and solidarity.
And to demonstrate his affinity with
the Armenian church (as well as his own personal regard for Manoogian),
former Latin Patriarch of Jerusalem Michel Sabbah emerged out of
self-imposed retirement, to join the funeral procession.
During
the past 50 years or so, the Armenians of Jerusalem have had to bury two
patriarchs: Guregh Israelian, in 1949, just after the first Arab-Israel
war and Israel's proclamation of independence, and Yeghishe Derderian,
in 1990.
Derderian had been elected locum tenens ("caretaker")
following Israelian's death, and had adhered to that position tenuously
for decades before finally succumbing to demands for an election that
traditionally should take place after the expiration of a 40-day
mourning period.
Church sources doubt this will happen again:
within days of the death of Manoogian, the brotherhood of Armenian
priests in Jerusalem met in general assembly to elect a new locum
tenens, giving the nod to Archbishop Aris Shirvanian, director of the
Patriarchate's ecumenical and foreign relations.
It will be his job,
among his other caretaker responsibilities, to pave the way for the
election of Jerusalem's 97th Armenian patriarch.
In one of the highlights of Manoogian's funeral mass,Buy Crystal tile
online, celebrated in the ornate Cathedral of St James, Shirvanian bent
to bless Manoogian's body, dipping his finger in a receptacle holding
the holy chrism, and anointing the late patriarch's forehead and right
hand.
The gesture is a tacit affirmation of the link of
patriarchal succession and points to the symbolic importance of the
right hand of an Armenian priest (this is the hand he uses to bless the
congregation and offer communion) as evidenced by the fact that relics
of Armenian saints are usually housed in golden moulds or replicas of
the right hand.
Before coming to Jerusalem, Manoogian had held,
reportedly to popular acclaim, the highly prestigious position of
Primate of the Eastern Diocese of America, a mandate that gave him
spiritual jurisdiction over tens of thousands of Armenians living on
America's east coast. But he gave all that up to go and act as shepherd
to a mere handful, in the city of Christ.
And Jerusalem turned
out to be one mammoth challenge, a fact acknowledged by the Armenian
church, as conceded by the late Catholicos of All Armenians, Vazken I,
who said of Manoogian: “We see that his task is difficult: a heavy
responsibility weighs upon his shoulders. “
Archbishop Khajag Barsamian,Offering lowest priced printed lanyard
in Canada. Manoogian’s successor as Primate, echoed the same sentiments
in a eulogy: “He was one of the very few churchmen of his generation to
carry the weight of our church on his shoulders. He stood out . . . and
seemed to combine all the grace and dignity of the Armenian past, with
all our fondest hopes and aspirations for the future. “
Like
Manoogian, Barsamian is a member of the priestly Brotherhood of St
James, and his name has cropped up as a potential candidate to replace
succeed, a prospect he shares with half a dozen others, each no less
impressive in his credentials.
Among the front-runners of the
eligible candidates among the Brotherhood, two stand out: Archbishop
Aris Shirvanian, the locum tenens, and Archbishop Nourhan Manoogian, the
Patriarchal Vicar. The former primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
Church of Australia and New Zealand, Archbishop Aghan Baliozian, who
died recently, had also been among the undeclared runners.Tile
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The Armenians of Jerusalem know that it is not going to be easy to replace Manoogian, the reformer.
"Manoogian
was a visionary, an idealist, and despite his foibles, he was able to
inspire and consolidate the local Armenian community which had been
wrung out to dry during the previous administration," as an observer
remarked.
"Under his tutelage, division lines blurred, and
people began to feel once more a strong sense of unity, of belonging,"
he added. "Repercussions of the unhappy, traumatic age of Manoogian's
predecessor lost their poignancy. Here was a man who could deliver, who
cared for his flock, and showed it."
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