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Jerusalem Patriarcate Computerizes Records

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  • Jerusalem Patriarcate Computerizes Records

    JERUSALEM PATRIARCHATE COMPUTERIZES RECORDS
    Arthur Hagopian

    AZG Armenian Daily
    10/07/2008

    Diaspora


    The Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem has taken steps to computerize
    and preserve the genealogical records of community members dating
    back over a century and a half, rescuing them from oblivion and the
    ravages of time and weather.

    The data, spread over more than 220 musty pages of three ancient
    "domars" (registers) maintained by the Patriarchate's scriptorium, was
    photographed by one of Jerusalem's leading artists, Garo Nalbandian.

    Patriarchate sources revealed that the pages had become brittle and
    in several cases the running ink had made the painstaking handwritten
    script almost illegible.

    Enshrined on computer CD-ROMs, the registers, which are primarily lists
    of the details of the births, marriages and deaths of the Armenian
    community of the Old City over the past 170 years, will now be
    permanently preserved for posterity within the Patriarchate archives.

    The Patriarchate has also acceded to a request by the Kaghakatzi
    Armenian Family Tree project, which assisted in the rescue effort,
    to have a copy hosted on the project website, http://www.kaghakatzi.org

    The information will be accessible to members of the Kaghakatzi
    community whose forebears appear in the registers.

    The Project's participation in the rescue operation is part of its
    efforts to safeguard the history and culture of the members of the
    unique Kaghakatzi ("native dwelling") community of the Old City.

    These efforts have resulted in the compilation of a database listing
    close to a hundred Kaghakatzi clans, covering more than 2400 names.But
    only as far back as 1840.

    What of those who went before?Armenians have been living in Jerusalem
    even before the advent of Christianity - but documents or records
    attesting to their presence in the Holy Land around that era are hard
    to come by.

    Even before Thaddeus and Bartholomew, the two apostles of Jesus
    of Nazareth who according to tradition brought Christianity to a
    heathen Armenia, a large number of the denizens of that rocky region
    had already set up home in Jerusalem, the sleepy village that had
    become a distant outpost of the empire carved out by Armenian emperor
    Tigranes II some 150 years before the birth of Jesus.

    Tigranes invaded Syria and Palestine, extending his empire from the
    Caspian Sea to the Mediterranean, and left behind sizeable garrisons
    and colonies of Armenians to hold the fort and show the flag.

    When in 301 AD King Tiridates adopted Christianity as Armenia's state
    religion, the epoch-making move gave added impetus to an enthusiastic
    influx of Armenians eager to chase the lodestone of rejuvenation in
    the new faith, in the city of the Christ.

    The colonies endured and flourished. Caught up in the zeal of the
    new religion, the Armenian pilgrims laid down streets and put up
    houses, established churches and monasteries, and created mosaics and
    institutions. Out of that exuberance emerged a whole new compound,
    claiming over a quarter of the Old City of Jerusalem as its private
    enclave.

    In the middle of that enclave, the Armenians crafted a magnificent
    church within a convent and there established the Holy See of St James,
    with Abraham later becoming its first patriarch.

    The pilgrims were lavish in their largesse to the church and the
    Patriarchate soon became a major repository of Armenian treasures. The
    Armenians gave free rein to their creative spirit, giving the city
    its first printing press and photographic studio.

    For over two millennia, the Patriarchate of St James has held and
    added to its variegated treasures, mementos of the caravan of Armenians
    who had lived, worked and died in the Old City of Jerusalem.

    And during all that time, Patriarchate scribes continued to keep a
    running commentary of the lives of the community and the congregation,
    tracing their lineage, encrusting their names and memories into its
    venerable domars. Although the genealogical records that have been
    unearthed so far go back only as far as 1840, there is uncertainty
    about the existence of any prior ones.

    The current incumbent of the Holy See, Patriarch Torkom Manoogian,
    has almost single handedly streamlined the laborious archival system
    of the patriarchate of St James, propelling it into the IT age,
    but despite all his heroic efforts, there is still much left to do.

    His fondest dream is to computerize the whole range of the
    Patriarchate's extensive archives, a job too daunting to even
    contemplate at the moment: a researcher could spend a lifetime
    delving into the Patriarchate's paper mountain, and still come short
    of sorting everything out.

    There are countless numbers of ancient records languishing in one
    corner or other of the Patriarchate, but hardly anyone on the
    Patriarchate staff can spare the time or effort to research or
    catalogue or computerize them.

    And few are qualified to undertake the job.

    "It is true the patriarchate has more employees than there are
    able bodied men and women in the community," Patriarchate sources
    say. "But what it requires is someone of the calibre of Archbishop
    Norayr Bogharian" (who spent years creating a definitive catalogue of
    the thousands of illustrated Armenian manuscripts owned by St James).

    In the meantime, the Kaghakatzi Armenian Family Tree project continues
    to forge ahead with its mission, adding another batch of names to
    the database of genealogical information it has compiled.

    The number of names now stands at over 2400. And still counting.

    "There are still many gaps left to fill," the organizers say. "We
    need more information - we've barely scratched the surface. The
    Kaghakatzis thrived on custom and tradition, on anecdotes and tall
    tales, on escapades and adventure, on songs and jokes. On exquisite
    cuisine. On Khoren the Jamgotch's Sunday call to prayer. Our aim is to
    elicit these reminiscences and memories, and preserve them. And out
    there among Kaghakatzi descendants, there must still be truckloads
    of old photographs, pleading to be brought back to life."

    "A-avodyan lov3s e /akovm," Khoren would sing, as he pounded the
    cobblestones lining the alleys of the Armenian Quarter. "In the
    morning, light has dawned."

    If the Kaghakatzi Armenian Family Tree project has its way, that
    light will never wane.
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