Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

New Campaign To Re-Open Melkonian

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • New Campaign To Re-Open Melkonian

    NEW CAMPAIGN TO RE-OPEN MELKONIAN
    Claudia Konyalian

    Cyprus Mail
    April 23 2009

    A RENEWED campaign to save and reopen the Melkonian Educational
    Institute (MEI) has been launched in the form of an international
    petition through an on-line facility, www.midk.org, and is running
    until the middle of May.

    "This petition is published not only in Cyprus, but also in newspapers
    in the US, Canada, Armenia, Lebanon, Greece, Turkey and Bulgaria, and
    is not limited to Armenians, but to anyone who supports the cause,"
    said Masis der Parthogh, a Melkonian alumnus and one of the main
    protagonists in the movement to save the troubled, historic school.

    "We are hoping to collect at least 8,000-10,000 signatures. Once we
    have a significant number, we will form a delegation to see President
    Christofias about the future of the school," der Parthogh said.

    On the timing of these actions, der Parthogh explained that the
    two-year lease between the the Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU)
    and the Ministry of Education to house the Aglandjia Gymnasium at the
    Melkonian facilities - while the Gymnasium was undergoing repairs -
    is expiring this summer. The Ministry has requested an extension,
    according to der Parthogh, to remain at Melkonian further. Meanwhile,
    however, the current AGBU chairman visited Cyprus in January to meet
    President Christofias and House President Garoyian.

    "Our fear was that he was here to settle the issue of the estate once
    and for all," der Parthogh said. "Obviously they [AGBU] aspired to
    have the preservation orders removed, hence the high-level meetings,"
    he added.

    This rent-free agreement made by the AGBU, whose Central Board in
    New York decided on the closure of the Melkonian school in 2005, amid
    rampant allegations that the land was to be sold off for profit, was
    seen by many as a 'good PR stunt' in building relations with the local
    authorities. The AGBU had been entrusted with the administration of
    the MEI by the founding Melkonian brothers. Legal proceedings ensued
    against the AGBU, leading only to a "legal stalemate" - the judges in
    Nicosia deciding there were no grounds to proceed - while a similar
    case is still "lingering in court" in the US, der Parthogh said.

    Students, parents, teachers, and members of the Armenian community
    in Cyprus and across the diaspora were outraged at the decision that
    brought an end to the only Armenian secondary school in the European
    Union with a unique boarding facility that attracted students from
    around the world for nearly eight decades, giving young diaspora
    members the opportunity to study together and maintain their language,
    culture and history. The lease deal nevertheless came as a welcome
    delay in the proceedings that threatened the selling off of the real
    estate in a prime area of Nicosia, where the 83 year old school stands.

    Established in 1926, the Melkonian Educational Institute (MEI)
    first operated as an orphanage that housed hundreds of Genocide
    survivors. The trees making up the mature forest in front of the school
    were planted by the orphans themselves to represent those Armenians
    that survived around the world, and this land is part of the 60 per
    cent of the total 125,000 sq.m. plot that is under preservation order
    by the Cyprus Government. A memorial to the founding Melkonian brothers
    stands on the school's grounds.

    "Thousands of Armenians who have passed through the Melkonian have
    excelled in their communities, becoming leaders in their fields and
    contributing to the development of the Armenian culture, education,
    language and national identity," the petition website states.

    "The government has some obligations toward the Melkonian," der
    Parthogh said, pointing out that the MEI is mentioned in the Council of
    Europe Charter on Minority Languages, to which Cyprus is subscribed,
    as well as to maintain the preservation order that is in currently
    in place.

    Along with the petition, the group will present revised plans for
    the reopening of the school that have been developed by educational
    experts from outside Cyprus, taking into consideration future trends
    in education, der Parthogh said. The school is important not only
    historically, he explained, but to preserve the community's heritage,
    language and culture, that is threatened by the closure of the MEI.

    "With no option for continued Armenian education, many parents are
    choosing not to send their children to the Nareg elementary schools
    either, which potentially threatens those schools' future also," der
    Parthogh said, while referring to a similar situation developing in
    Greece. He added that the movement to reopen the MEI is supported in
    full by the Armenian Representative in Parliament, Vartkes Mahdessian,
    and has the backing of DISY MP Dr. Eleni Theocharous and Green Party
    Spokesman, George Perdikis.
Working...
X