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PRESS RELEASE: Presentation Of 2005 Archbishop'S Writing AwardHonour

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  • PRESS RELEASE: Presentation Of 2005 Archbishop'S Writing AwardHonour

    PRESS RELEASE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia & New Zealand
    10 Macquarie Street
    Chatswood NSW 2067
    AUSTRALIA
    Contact: Laura Artinian
    Tel: (02) 9419-8056
    Fax: (02) 9904-8446
    Email: [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]>

    18 October 2005

    PRESENTATION OF 2005 ARCHBISHOP'S WRITING AWARD HONOURING 1600TH
    ANNIVERSARY OF THE ARMENIAN ALPHABET

    Sydney, Australia - Saturday, 8 October, 2005 on the Feast of the
    Holy Translators, His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian, Primate
    of the Diocese of the Armenian Church of Australia and New Zealand
    presided over the Award Ceremony of the Inaugural 2005 Archbishop's
    Writing Award that was launched in this special 1600th anniversary year
    marking the discovery of the Armenian Alphabet by St Mesrob Mashdotz.

    The Writing Award was established to stimulate thought and
    consciousness in Armenian youth about the relevance of maintaining the
    values and faith of Armenian heritage in communities of the Diaspora
    in the 21st Century.

    Submissions to the competition were received from students in Years 5
    to 11 from schools in Sydney and Melbourne including AGBU Alexander
    Primary School, St Gregory's Armenian School, Toumanian Saturday
    School, Aginian Saturday School (Melbourne), Armenian HSC Class
    as well as two independent entries. The topic for the prose was
    "The Armenian Alphabet is important for the Armenian identity".
    Students were given the option of presenting their submissions in
    different writing styles and in either Armenian or English. 80%
    of written essays were in Armenian.

    Parents and students gathered in the Edgarian Hall on the Feast Day
    in eager anticipation for the announcement of the award recipients.
    However, it was clear from the high-spirited gathering that all
    students who participated in the competition were the winners of the
    day for the time and effort spent researching the topic will continue
    to have long-lasting impact on their understanding and value of the
    Armenian Alphabet as a founding block to preserve the Armenian legacy.

    His Eminence Archbishop Aghan Baliozian presented each and every
    student with a special award certificate and a gift that would
    be symbolic of their participation and their cultural identity.
    The Primate gifted each student a wooden Armenian cross that he brought
    back from the Holy Land just one week earlier. The keystone of the
    Armenian Alphabet, the motivation and driving force to establish it,
    lay in the Holy Cross to ensure the first Christian nation would have
    a written language that would propagate the Great Commission of Jesus
    to spread the Word of God and lead them to faith.

    Awards and prizes were presented in three categories and recipients
    of prizes were as follows: Junior Category - Sergei Krjatian (St
    Gregory's Armenian School), runner-up Lenia Kelleyan (St Gregory's
    Armenian School); Middle Category - Natalie Mengolian (Aginian
    Saturday School), equal runners-up Rhaya Ratevossian (Toumanian
    Saturday School) and Zaven Fenerci (Aginian Saturday School); Senior
    Category - Maya Aghajanian (Aginian Saturday School), runner-up Talar
    Ohanessian (Armenian HSC). A special award was also presented to Nayiri
    Derartinian from St Gregory's Armenian School for outstanding thought.

    On Sunday, 16 October the Primate visited the Armenian Community of
    Melbourne and presented awards to students of the Aginian School.
    Students and parents were thrilled at having the Archbishop present
    to personally award their certificates and prizes. His Eminence
    took the opportunity to reflect on the occasion inscribing the deep
    value of Armenian heritage in the hearts and minds of the students.
    Befittingly, on Saturday, the school celebrated the 20th anniversary
    of the completion and inauguration of its school building and dedicated
    its celebration to the 1600th Anniversary of the Armenian Alphabet.
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