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Lviv Palace of Armenian Archbishops Privatized

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  • Lviv Palace of Armenian Archbishops Privatized

    http://www.risu.org.ua/eng/news/article;5287/

    Lvi v Palace of Armenian Archbishops Privatized

    26.04.2005, [11:55] // AAC //

    Lviv- A historic building of Lviv, the Palace of Armenian Archbishops,
    constructed in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, was recently
    privatized. This was despite written appeals from the city's Armenian
    community, who want to see the building, constructed by their ancestors,
    returned to them. gazeta.lviv.ua posted this news on 22 April 2005

    `Since the palace was first built, it functioned as the Palace of Armenian
    Archbishops,' said Father Thaddeus Georgian, pastor of the city's Armenian
    church. `For centuries, it belonged to nobody but the Armenian community and
    the Armenian Church. This is not the problem of a private citizen, not even
    of the community, but of the entire Church, since this was the palace of
    archbishops of the Cathedral of the Ukrainian Eparchy of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church.'

    The palace belongs to the ensemble of the Armenian church, which, in the
    sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was the center of life of the Armenian
    community in Lviv. The ensemble consists of the Church of the Dormition of
    the Holy Mother of God, a former women's monastery, and the archbishops'
    palace. Both the church and the palace are among the most unique examples of
    Armenian architecture with elements of the European Renaissance. Even today,
    parts of the palace remaining under the roof and in its exterior are over
    five centuries old, for instance, the symbol of Armenian archbishops on the
    outside wall of the palace.

    The palace belonged to the Armenian community until the Soviet regime
    confiscated it, together with other Armenian buildings. And while the
    cathedral was returned to the Armenians after the collapse of the Soviet
    Union, the palace remained in the communal property of the city, functioning
    as a residential building. The situation is much the same today: the upper
    story has apartments, where people live, while plans are being made to sell
    the lower story, privatized in recent years.

    `After Ukraine's independence, we hoped the issue would be resolved
    democratically,' said Fr. Georgian. `But soon we saw that only the name of
    the state changed, while the ruling style remained Soviet. We were not heard
    in the City Council, or in the Regional Administration.'

    Lviv Mayor Liubomyr Buniak ignored the address to him from Archbishop
    Gregory Buniatian, head of the Ukrainian Eparchy of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church. The religious community of the Armenian Church requested to stop
    `the illegal privatization and sale of apartments on the premises of the
    Palace of Armenian Archbishops and begin a gradual transfer of the freed
    rooms to the community of the Armenian Church.' Instead, I. Kohut, deputy
    head of the Halych district administration, responded to the address, saying
    in his letter that `the building at 7 Virmenska (Armenian) St. is not a
    building of worship. It is being used as a residential house.'

    In turning to the mayor with its request, the Armenian community acted in
    accordance with presidential decree #279, "On Urgent Measures for Combating
    the Negative Consequences of Totalitarian Policies of the Former Soviet
    Union regarding Religion and Restoration of the Violated Rights of Churches
    and Religions Organizations." Parts of the document speak of the return of
    worship buildings and other church property, including buildings to the
    communities they used to belong to before confiscation. In addition, the
    Lviv City Council issued an order in February 1994, according to which the
    City Administration was supposed to gradually return the Palace of Armenian
    Archbishops as its residents moved out.

    The Lviv City Council did not think it necessary to include the palace in
    the list of Lviv's cultural heritage monuments that are not subject to
    privatization. Thus, it can be easily privatized, which was done. Now, the
    owners can do whatever they please with their property.

    Fr. Georgian says that the Armenian community is not planning to take the
    palace illegally or by force. An Armenian archbishop who is spending several
    days in Lviv intends to help the Armenian community to resolve the issue in
    the nearest future.

    The owners of the palace turned residential house are conducting renovation
    work. Therefore, the `Lviv Gazette' writes, it is doubtful, that the
    Armenians' attempts to return the buildings will be successful. The building
    was privatized, and nobody is going to return the invested money to the
    owners.

    Source:

    - http://www.gazeta.lviv.ua/articles/2005/04/22/4699/
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