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  • "Melkonian Must Reopen If We Want Diaspora To Survive", Former PM Te

    "MELKONIAN MUST REOPEN IF WE WANT DIASPORA TO SURVIVE", FORMER PM TELLS CONFERENCE

    AZG Armenian Daily
    26/04/2008

    Diaspora

    Greeks and Turks more concerned with school's fate

    A leading member of the Armenian Diaspora believes that if the
    Melkonian school in Cyprus does not open some time soon, it will
    spell disaster for all Armenians around the world.

    Speaking at the sixth meeting of the Organising Committee of the
    Western Armenian National Council that ended in Nicosia on Sunday,
    Anoushavan Danielyan said that he would try to convince the AGBU
    in New York to reopen the historic school. He said it would be to
    the benefit of present-day Armenia to maintain such a high-calibre
    educational centre within the European Union and so close to the
    Middle East and Russia.

    "I know what it costs to maintain a school for a community, for all
    Armenia and Western Armenians. In the Diaspora we must have educational
    and financial centres to support the Republic of Armenia in every way,"
    Danielyan said.

    "If there are 1,200 schools in Armenia, adding one more would simply
    bring the total to 1,201, while closing a school in the Diaspora
    will be a national loss," the former prime minister of Nakorno
    Karapagh said.

    Danielyan was commenting on the AGBU decision to reallocate the funds
    of the Melkonian Trust in order to open a 'Melkonian Summer School'
    near the capital Yerevan to teach the Armenian language and culture
    to 400 Diaspora youths for three months each year.

    "It would be better to have a school that enjoys the moral and academic
    support of the friendly government of Cyprus and its people, to which
    we are all thankful," he added.

    But his optimism was countered by some of the six speakers who told
    the 40-member central committee meeting held at the Holiday Inn in
    Nicosia that the AGBU never wanted to discuss the school's fate.

    "The reason for the closure was neither financial trouble nor falling
    academic standards. It was their intention to exploit the valuable
    land the school was sitting on," said one panelist.

    Ambassador Nicholas Makris, a member of the Council of Europe committee
    that drafted the Charter for European Minority Languages, told the
    conference that the Melkonian must reopen otherwise the Armenian
    community of Cyprus faces extinction. He said that the government
    of Cyprus has an obligation to implement the Charter, primarily by
    reopening of the school.

    "The (CoE) committee will be visiting Cyprus again later this year when
    they will have to assess any progress on the efforts to preserve and
    safeguard the Armenian language on the island," the former diplomat
    said.

    Dr. Akabie Nassibian-Ekmekdjian, historian and principal of the
    school in the 1980s gave a historical overview, saying that the
    Melkonian Education Institute, founded in 1926 as an orphanage for
    Genocide survivors, has produced hundreds of scientists, academics,
    artists and authors who are among the leading personalities of the
    Western Armenian Diaspora. Yeran Kouyoumdjian, editor of a community
    newspaper, and Armen Urneshlian, an educator from Lebanon, argued
    that the closure of the Melkonian was not for financial reasons and
    that it is already having a negative effect on the Armenian Diaspora.

    "Schools in the U.S. need tens of Armenian language and history
    teachers and we are seeing the last of them," Urneshlian added.

    Talat's surprise

    Vartan Tashjian, former headmaster of the Nareg elementary schools,
    spoke of his personal experiences and explained how Cypriots in general
    were angered by the closure and how they supported the struggle to
    save the school.

    "In a chance meeting on Ledra Street after the checkpoint opened,
    I came face-to-face with (Turkish Cypriot community leader) Mehmet
    Ali Talat the day he crossed over to our side," Tashdjian told the
    conference delegates.

    "I greeted him in Turkish and Talat asked my name.

    When I told him I was a school teacher he immediately asked, 'What
    has happened to that school? It's a shame it closed' to which I had
    to explain that I was not a teacher at the Melkonian. I felt ashamed,"
    Tashdjian concluded.

    The final speakers of the session included Masis der Parthogh,
    journalist and alumni association member, who said that the school's
    closure was planned years in advance with the intention to exploit
    the land, and Manouk Yildizian, journalist, who explained the legal
    aspects of community and minority rights in Cyprus and gave an overview
    of the government's pledge to support the school, both financially
    and academically.

    "Have any of the old established schools in England ever closed for
    financial reasons? Never, but they are maintained to produce the
    future leaders of the country, with the occasional one or two prime
    ministers," Yildizian added.

    Present among the community members observing the conference was
    former AGBU Central Board member Benon Sevan, who said that it was
    "unfair" that only one side of the argument was heard and that the
    AGBU came under vicious attack from the panelists.

    The session's chairman argued that the AGBU's positions were very clear
    and that the committee members wanted to hear about the prospects of
    reopening the historic school.

    Dr. Ekmekdjian added that the worldwide Melkonian alumni and friends
    had always wanted a dialogue, but it was the AGBU that refused for
    years to discuss keeping the school open.

    Asked by the panel to elaborate on the fate of the 25,000 books of
    the Melkonian library that have supposedly perished and the late 19th
    century newspapers and documents that were reportedly burned, Sevan,
    who is also a member of the Melkonian Administration Committee,
    said he would "come back later with an answer." Last year, the
    University of Cyprus had asked Armenian Representative in the House,
    Vartkes Mahdessian, to intervene to help save the historic library and
    provide a temporary shelter to the books until the school reopened,
    but the AGBU refused to discuss the matter.

    This was the sixth meeting of the Organising Committee of the Western
    Armenian National Council that is expected to reconvene later this
    year to discuss several issues related to the Armenian Diaspora, such
    as social, community and historic aspects of the Western Armenian
    language, history and heritage.
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