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Cyprus: Time for Govm't to pay the Armenians back for their loyalty

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  • Cyprus: Time for Govm't to pay the Armenians back for their loyalty

    OPINION - Time for government to pay the Armenians back for their loyalty

    Cyprus Mail
    Wednesday, March 17, 2004

    SO THE rumours were true: the Melkonian School is set to close at the
    end of the next school year -- June 2005 -- after a proud history of
    almost 80 years, serving Armenians on the island, as well as the wider
    region.

    The Armenian community in Cyprus has for years served as a role model
    for community relations, maintaining a remarkable balance between
    integration and identity. The Melkonian School has been a key element
    in that balance, providing the children of Armenian families with an
    education that nurtured that identity in a foreign land.

    For a diaspora community, a full secondary education is the key to
    survival, a role that cannot be filled with Sunday school lessons
    nurturing an identity as living as the sepia photographs on our
    grandparents' walls. Until now, the existence in Cyprus of a full
    Armenian curriculum taking children all the way through to adulthood
    has been a recognition of the status of the community on the island.

    The AGBU - the American-based foundation that runs Armenian schools
    worldwide - defends its decision to close the school: it points out
    the Melkonian's dwindling attendance and financial deficit, but
    focuses its criticism mainly on its recent educational performance.
    If, the foundation argues, the Melkonian had "provided exceptional
    opportunities to its students as it had done in the past, substantial
    subsidisation would be warranted. Unfortunately, this is not the
    case."

    The AGBU also points out that about 90 per cent of children in the
    diaspora are not educated in Armenian schools and the money may be
    better spent in other educational programmes.

    Fair enough. But Cyprus is different: the Armenians are a recognised
    community according to the constitution. So if the AGBU is not willing
    to maintain the school, the Cyprus government should step in. Already,
    the building has been declared a listed site, while moves are under
    way to have the grounds declared as protected forest, preventing the
    developers from barging in.

    These are steps in the right direction, but more still needs to be
    done. The AGBU clearly paints a picture of financial crisis at the
    Melkonian, and saving the school from sale is only part of the
    equation, which needs to be accompanied by a cash commitment and
    substantial reform of the institution.

    The government must show its willingness to help the school
    financially if it is to survive. Surely one of the main rights of a
    recognised community is the right to their own education. The
    Armenians in Cyprus have shown extraordinary loyalty to the Greek
    Cypriots. It is time to pay them back.

    Copyright © Cyprus Mail 2004
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