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Parish or perish: Armenians in Santa Clarita establish a new church

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  • Parish or perish: Armenians in Santa Clarita establish a new church

    Parish or perish: Armenians in Santa Clarita establish a new church
    By Eugene Tong, Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Daily News, CA
    May 24 2004

    VALENCIA -- Sweetened with incense and soft hymns, a drab hall at
    Valencia High School was transformed into a house of God Sunday for
    dozens of parishioners seeking solace at the only Armenian church
    service in Santa Clarita.

    "They couldn't believe this thing finally happened," said Vartan
    Vahramian, who helped organized the parish that held its first service
    earlier this month. "The first four that came through it was a one-time
    thing, but we told them it was going to be every week."

    The parish is the latest outpost in the Western Diocese of the
    Armenian Church of North America, and a testament to how faith and
    demographic shifts are changing this increasingly diverse North Los
    Angeles County suburb.

    Bringing the church's services to Santa Clarita has been a long-time
    goal for Vahramian, who moved to Valencia from Van Nuys in 1984 in
    pursuit of affordable housing and open space.

    "I sold everything and bought a house here really cheap," said
    Vahramian, who runs a local escrow and loan firm. "Now I can't even
    buy the house I live in. We grew with the area."

    At the time, the Santa Clarita Valley was home to only 64 Armenian
    families, according to diocese estimates. With too few worshippers
    to support a local church, the faithful made weekly sojourns to the
    San Fernando Valley or such ethnic hubs as Glendale for services.

    "The closest one was St. Peter (Armenian Apostolic Church) on Sherman
    Way in Van Nuys, and that's at least half an hour," said Vahramian,
    president of the parish council. "It was a test, especially when the
    kids were young. You have to get them all dressed up, put them in
    the car, you're driving and the kids beat up on each other."

    As Santa Clarita bloomed in over the last two decades into a city of
    more than 150,000, its Armenian community also grew. By 1992, the
    number of families has almost tripled to 180, Vahramian said. When
    planning for the parish began last year, he tallied about 500.

    Most of the families arrived after the 1994 Northridge earthquake,
    when faced with the choice of either rebuilding or moving on, he said.

    "They looked at what they have in the San Fernando Valley," Vahramian
    said. "They have a 30-, 40-, 50-year-old house, or with the money
    they can get a brand new house and a brand new car, and all they have
    to sacrifice was about an hour's drive every day. That formula was
    very attractive."

    But no community is complete without its own parish. Many Armenians
    still take pride as one of the first ethnic groups to accept
    Christianity, and religion has been central to forging together a
    nation from a diaspora that has undergone centuries of upheaval.

    "Traditionally, it's been one country, one church," Vahramian said.
    "Armenians were held together for 1,700 years through their church
    unity. ... It's the backbone of our beliefs, and it's the center of
    a nation that's scattered all over. It's to get together and thank
    God that we're still alive."

    Vahramian also credited Archbishop Hovnan Derderian with helping
    to usher in the parish. Elected primate last May, he pressed the
    formation of a dozen new parishes throughout the diocese, which covers
    the western United States and Canada.

    "It's an obligation," Derderian said. "We cannot ignore the fact
    that there now exists a community (in Santa Clarita). We have to make
    sure, in the shortest period of time, that we can reach out to those
    families. ... On a regular basis, you cannot expect them to drive
    the distance to reach the (San Fernando) Valley and Glendale."

    Shepherding the fledgling congregation falls to Father Zareh Mansuryan,
    who served at a church in Armenia for a decade before moving to the
    United States in 2001. He is working on community outreach -- only
    60 people attended the first liturgy May 9 -- and to eventually build
    a permanent church.

    "We are starting a new church so the Armenian spirit and Christianity
    stays with the people in this community," said Mansuryan, 40. "With
    the help of the Armenians here, we want to establish an Armenian
    church. ... But we can't do it quickly. The important thing is
    for Armenians to come together and realize they are a family and
    a community."

    Vahramian expects a parish church will be built within five years.
    Meantime, he is searching for another home for the weekly services
    before June 30, when most Valencia High buildings will be closed for
    the summer.

    "We'll be looking for a piece of dirt to build on it soon," he said.
    "The money is there. If we shake down the diocese, they have the
    money. But we have to show good cause -- that there is plenty of
    attendance. And it needs to be attractive -- something more than a
    high school."

    Staff Writer Naush Boghossian contributed to this story.

    Eugene Tong, (661) 257-5253 [email protected]
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