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  • New church unites Louisiana Armenians

    2TheAdvocate, LA
    June 24 2006


    New church unites La. Armenians

    Newly dedicated church brings La. Armenians together in BR

    By ANNABELLE ARMSTRONG
    Special to The Advocate
    Published: Jun 24, 2006

    Louisiana's first and only Armenian congregation remains small and
    spread out even after 23 years.

    But bringing the dedicated membership together for monthly worship
    preserves a connection to a history, language and culture that might
    otherwise have been left a world behind.

    "It's a great honor and privilege to pray in my own language, and to
    teach my children how to pray in the language I was taught," said
    K.G. Moutafian, who was 14 in 1980 when his parents moved to Baton
    Rouge from Beirut, Lebanon.

    Today he's one of about 80 members at St. Garabed Armenian Church,
    6208 Florida Blvd., Baton Rouge. Congregants, ranging in age from
    babies to septuagenarians, reside throughout Louisiana, most in Baton
    Rouge and New Orleans.

    "Going to church is like a family reunion," said Vasken Kaltakdjian,
    47, Moutafian's cousin and chairman of the church council.

    "Many of us are related because one family member would come to the
    United States, then bring another family member here, and so on."

    Kaltakdjian, born in Damascus, Syria, was 19 when his parents, Serop
    and Marie Kaltakdjian, moved the family to the United States.

    The Armenian language, not closely related to any other language in
    the world, is spoken in the colorful, traditional and ritualistic
    church service.

    The church sanctuary, a newly renovated labor hall, has a vaulted,
    open beam ceiling, cypress woodworking, with brick and carpeted
    flooring that lend a serene effect. The altar features an alcove with
    a dramatic mural of the baby Jesus and Mary, the work of Hiak
    Azarian, an Armenian ecclesiastical artist.

    The Apostolic Armenian Church dates back to A.D. 301, when St.
    Gregory the Illuminator started the conversion of the people to
    Christianity.

    Today's worshippers are descendants of Armenians who fled their
    homeland during the Turks' massacre of 1915, scattering to
    neighboring countries, including Russia, and now located around the
    world.

    The Louisiana church began in 1983, when then-reigning Archbishop of
    the Armenian Church of America Torkom Manoogian came from New York
    City to form a parish council.

    Garabed means Baptist, Vasken Kaltakdjian explained.

    "The church is named for St. John the Baptist, who baptized Christ,"
    he said, "also for my late grandfather, Garabed Kaltakdjian, of
    Damascus, Syria, who dedicated his entire life to the church."

    Services take place monthly now, but for years they were held every
    three or four months.

    The church met at St. James and St. Luke's Episcopal churches, but
    two and half years ago was able to secure its current
    22,500-square-foot site for $180,000 and begin $120,000 in
    renovation.

    "Now, we want to afford a full-time priest to teach our kids Armenian
    history and to have Sunday school," Moutafian said.

    Worshippers drove in from Shreveport, New Orleans, Alexandria and
    other cities for the building consecration service on May 14, when
    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, primate of the Armenian Church of
    America in New York City, officiated.

    "On special occasions we are wall-to-wall people," Vasken said.

    The priest, the Rev. Nersess Jebejian, flew in from the Tampa Bay
    area, a trip he has made for 23-plus years.

    It will be standing room only again at 3 p.m. July 22 when
    3-month-olds Gabriella Ani Moutafian and Alexander Sarkis Boyadjian
    become the first babies baptized in the new building.

    Azar Kayal, 42, a photographer who works in government law
    enforcement, plans to make the trip from Alexandria.

    Born in Syria, an American 22 years, he brings family members for
    special events.

    "It means so much to have our own church," Kayal said. "We take our
    religion seriously and try every chance we can to meet together to
    foster our heritage, family values and traditions."

    Photo: Advocate staff photo by JAMES CHANCE
    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, primate of the Armenian Church of
    America in New York City, blesses the St. Garabed Armenian Church
    building in Baton Rouge. The ceremony was held May 14 to celebrate
    the completion of remodeling work on the building the small
    congregation purchased about 2~I years ago. The Very Rev. Father
    Ararad Kaltakjian of Toronto, Canada, stands in the rear.

    http://www.2theadvocate.com/features/religi on/3221381.html?showAll=y
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