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Iraqi Armenians: Learning democracy the hard way

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  • Iraqi Armenians: Learning democracy the hard way

    Azad Hye, United Arab Emirates
    Feb 3 2005

    Iraqi Armenians: Learning democracy the hard way


    AZAD-HYE (3 February 2005): Last Sunday was a day of hope for Iraq.
    Unexpected number of Iraqi marched to cast their votes in the first
    ever democratic election in a country that has a history of many
    thousand years (just like Armenia). The voters ignored the fact that
    balloting stations were declared as attacking targets by insurgents.

    Iraqis broke the barrier of fear, which for decades kept them away
    from politics. The news of successful Iraqi elections spread all
    around the world and mainly to the Arab societies. It is an irony
    that the only two free elections in the Arab World were conducted in
    places where occupation troops exist: Palestine and Iraq. Some will
    wonder if Arabs are really capable of achieving democracy without
    foreign intervention. Yet there is another question far more
    intriguing: Will the voting process in Iraq stir democratic changes
    in the Arab World and in neighboring Iran?

    ARMENIAN REALITY IN IRAQ:

    Although it is difficult to live in a country where basic security
    needs are not fulfilled and the number of minority groups is
    dwindling (only in recent ten years, half a million Christians have
    migrated from Iraq, reducing their overall figure to less than 700
    thousand), still it is worth to learn something from the democratic
    process of Sunday's elections.

    To see how far the Iraqi Armenians can be from democratic practices,
    we will narrate the story of Father Ararad, which took place last
    year.

    "To Defrock or not to Defrock?"

    To defrock a priest is to deprive him of the right to exercise the
    functions of the priestly office. Various religions have different
    procedures for doing this. But what is the procedure in our Church?
    On 12th January 2004 the following Press Release was issued by the
    `Information Services of the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin':

    "His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
    Armenians, issued a Pontifical Order whereby Rev. Fr. Ararat
    Hovsepian from the Armenian Diocese of Iraq, has been defrocked. From
    this time forward, he shall be called by his baptismal name of Norayr
    Hovsepian, and be recognized as a member of the laity. The order
    issued on January 9, is based upon information and petitions provided
    by the Primate and the National Central Committee of the Diocese,
    that the priest has exhibited demeanour and conduct unbecoming of a
    clergyman".

    This Pontifical Order does not explain what exactly Rev. Fr. Ararat
    Hovsepian did to deserve being defrocked. "Oxford Advanced Learner's
    Dictionary" explains "unbecoming" as "not suiting a particular
    person" or "not appropriate or acceptable". The Press Release
    mentions that the Order "is based upon information and petitions
    provided by the Primate and the National Central Committee of the
    Diocese". It is interesting to know what kind of investigation has
    been carried on to verify the source of this information and whether
    it was conducted in professional manner.

    Father Ararat (about 38 years old), a graduate of Babel Theological
    Faculty in Baghdad (seminar for Christian theological education in
    Iraq), aspired, after decades of stagnation, to introduce a new wave
    of thinking in the Armenian reality in Baghdad, Believing that the
    time has come for some change, he started to print a newsletter,
    where he expressed his views about how to improve the community life
    and how to introduce new measures of accountability, especially in
    the financial field. He also preached openness in discussing vital
    issues concerning the youth.
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