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  • Melkonian: Students lead condemnation of closure plan

    Students lead condemnation of Melkonian closure plan

    Cyprus Weekly
    Friday, March 19, 2004

    A HURRIEDLY-written placard read: "WHAT TURKEY FAILED TO DO IS BEING
    DONE NOW" as shocked students, many of them openly weeping, refused to
    go back to their classrooms at the Melkonian Educational Institute in
    Nicosia on Tuesday.

    Instead, they poured out into the schoolyard and surrounded the marble
    monument over the twin graves of the Melkonian Brothers, shouting
    "unfair" and "cruel" whilst another placard came into view which
    simply said: 1915-2004.

    The spontaneous protest, extensively covered by local and worldwide TV
    channels, came minutes after teachers and students were called into
    the school auditorium to be told by the Headmistress, Ani Lachinian,
    that the AGBU Central Board had decided to close down the school in
    June next year. The shock news came almost 80 years from the day when
    the first group of orphans of the Armenian Genocide, graduated from
    what was to become the most important centre of "Hayabahbanoum" in
    Europe and the Middle East.

    The students drew themselves together to sing the Cyprus and Armenian
    national anthems and the Melkonian school song to the sound of drums
    which members of the school band had brought out. A third grade child
    of mixed parents was numbed. She said: "I can't describe what I
    feel. I want to throw up". Soon, other placards in Armenian, English
    and Greek appeared saying: "Stealing the future of students is a
    crime", "Ataturk would laugh at us", "This is a second genocide".

    Another placard read: "In Gordon We Trusted But Now We Are Busted"
    (referring to the AGBU envoy Gordon Anderson). TV reporters on the
    scene said Anderson refused to comment and indicated that a statement
    would be released by a Cypriot advertising and public relations
    company. A parents meeting on Wednesday developed into heated
    discussion as angry reaction messages arrived from neighbouring
    countries. The meeting was followed by a candlelight vigil by students
    at the memorial of the founder brothers.

    "We wanted to do this outside the main gate but we couldn't," said a
    student from abroad. This was confirmed by Headmistress Lachinian who
    said: "They were told not to demonstrate outside the school's
    boundaries. If they do they automatically become sanctionable. As
    boarders they can only go outside with permission." Both the parents'
    union and the alumni, however, interpreted this as a threat of
    expulsion, and warned students accordingly.

    Cypriot Armenians said they planned to stage a demonstration on March
    24 against the closure of the school, while the Melkonian alumni hope
    to take legal action both on the island and in the USA.

    "It is not just a matter of the sale of the land and the flight of
    some 80 million dollars to the US in violation of a 1926 will by the
    founders," a spokesman of the alumni said. "It's also abuse of the
    rights of Armenian children who are being deprived of their human
    right to a fair education based on their cultural heritage," adding
    that the AGBU Central Board had refused to discuss ways to save the
    school because their main aim was "to take the money and run".

    "The ultimate objective is to lay their hands on the land and take the
    funds out of Cyprus," Shavasb Bohdjalian, head of the alumni, told
    local journalists.

    Since the controversy began, the Armenian community has managed to
    have the Melkonian declared a listed historical building and has
    persuaded the Forestry Department to file an application to declare
    the wooded area in the grounds as a protected forest. Legal action is
    now being considered, Bohdjalian said. If there is a case, it is
    likely to be fought in the Cyprus and American courts, he said.

    In a paid advertisement that appeared in local papers 10 days ago,
    Gordon Anderson, the American representative of the AGBU, said that
    "several options are being considered" to accommodate the 200 or so
    students at other schools so that they can gain an education "that
    will have an Armenian component", though he would not elaborate. In
    its 15 March announcement the AGBU said that "after extensive
    deliberations and thorough assessment" the Central Board had resolved
    "unanimously" to discontinue the school in June 2005.

    "The Melkonian Educational Institute, as a significant and historical
    institution within AGBU, has been a concern of the Central Board over
    many years. This decision is based largely on the Board's conclusion
    that MEI no longer meets the challenge of its mission in the present
    context of the Armenian world," the AGBU said. It added that the
    Central Board fully recognised and honoured the continued legacy of
    the Melkonian Brothers, and "is determined to perpetuate their memory
    through new educational programmes to be implemented within and
    outside Cyprus, in line with the spirit of their donation to AGBU".

    However, the alumni said the AGBU's talk of co-operating with other
    institutions, research centres, and even universities was a public
    relations gimmick.

    The move by the AGBU, which said only three months ago that the 78
    year old school was not for sale, has incensed the 3,000 strong
    Armenian community on the island as well as Armenians in Lebanon,
    Syria, Greece, Bulgaria and other countries who send their children to
    the school.

    Masis der Parthogh, vice-chairman of the alumni, pointed out that the
    Melkonian had been a haven for decades for Armenian children in times
    of war and upheaval throughout the Middle East.

    "We and the parents' association were plannning to help bring children
    from war-torn Iraq. This plan obviously has been killed."

    In an extensive report to the Armenian Mirror-Spectator, one-time Vice
    President of the AGBU Haygachen Ouzounian said, inter alia: "It will
    be the most tragic move made by the AGBU, and will cause the most harm
    to our nation. Those determining the current policy of the Central
    Board will be subject to severe indictment by our people in the court
    of history", he said.

    Ouzounian, one of the early graduates of the Melkonian, blamed the
    Central Board for the decrease in the number of boarding students. The
    school, he said, could accommodate up to 350 boarders but this was the
    thwarted by the Central Board, who hiked the fees to such that
    Armenians from East Europe, the Middle East and Armenia could not
    afford.

    Last month, Armenian Representative Bedros Kalaydjian headed a
    three-member delegation to New York in an effort to persuade the
    Central Board to stay the execution of any plans to either close down
    or sell the Melkonian.

    "The Central Board came up with a number of arguments but failed short
    of any commitments. In fact we felt that we are being clearly
    ignored", he said. He added the Cyprus government had promised full
    support.
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