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Jack Antreassian Remembered In A Memorial Service At St. Vartan Cath

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  • Jack Antreassian Remembered In A Memorial Service At St. Vartan Cath

    JACK ANTREASSIAN REMEMBERED IN A MEMORIAL SERVICE AT ST. VARTAN CATHEDRAL

    http://www.reporter.am/index.cfm?furl=/ go/article/2009-08-20-jack-antreassian-remembered- in-a-memorial-service-at-st--vartan-cathedral& pg=2
    Thursday August 20, 2009

    New York - A large group of family, friends, and admirers of the
    late Jack Antreassian gathered at New York's St. Vartan Armenian
    Cathedral on the afternoon of Sunday, July 26, 2009, for a memorial
    tribute to the man who, in important respects, defined the critical,
    formative years of the cathedral and Diocesan Center.

    As executive director of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of
    America from 1968 to 1975, Mr. Antreassian worked with then-Primate
    Archbishop Torkom Manoogian to realize an ambitious vision of the
    St. Vartan Cathedral Complex - a vision that remains influential more
    than three decades later.

    For the July 26 memorial service, Mr. Antreassian - who died on July
    4 of this year - was remembered as a writer, editor, and leader of
    such major Armenian institutions as the Eastern Diocese and the AGBU.

    Readings were done by his daughter, Elise Antreassian Bayizian, his
    grandchildren Kohar and Vahan Bayizian, and nieces and nephews Ashod
    Antreassian, Haigoohi Cefalu, Tony Moscato, and Susan DeLeo.

    Also reading from Jack Antreassian's writings were Michael Zeytoonian,
    Ed Setrakian, and Nishan Parlakian. Musical selections were performed
    by Sahan Arzruni and Julie Hoplamazian. Florence Avakian played the
    cathedral organ.

    Presiding over the occasion was the Diocesan Primate, Archbishop
    Khajag Barsamian. What follows is the text of the message delivered
    by Archbishop Barsamian during the July 26 memorial service.

    In the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit. Amen.

    The news of Jack Antreassian's passing was a deeply sorrowful occasion
    - not only for his family, but for the entire Armenian-American
    community. I am grateful that we have gathered today - in this great
    cathedral that Jack loved, and which will always be closely associated
    with him - to say a proper goodbye, as a community, to this great
    and influential figure.

    What can one say of a man who was the architect of so much that we
    hold dear - so much of what we identify with, as Armenians in America?

    It was not simply the case that he led our greatest institutions,
    most notably the Diocese and the AGBU. Jack Antreassian actually set
    the pattern by which they would be led, and set the standard for all
    subsequent executives.

    It was not simply the case that he enriched and built on the Armenian
    inheritance. Jack Antreassian actually created whole forms of
    literature - and our young writers of today are merely re-fashioning
    the forms Jack Antreassian gave us. He was a man of many parts:
    Intellectual, publisher, executive, impresario. Above all, I would say
    - as perhaps he, too, would have insisted - a "man of letters." That
    describes his aspiration, and the range of talents he brought to
    bear in pursuing it. It is common enough to call such a person a
    "Renaissance man." Many people would fit that description, and Jack
    was certainly among them. But there is a deeper truth to that phrase,
    which Jack was virtually alone in embodying: the ideal of marrying
    different kinds of human activities in a single individual: the
    life of contemplation with the life of action; the habit of artistic
    detachment with the vocation of passionate commitment. That was the
    deeper dream of the Renaissance. And as I say, in our community,
    Jack Antreassian was without peer in fulfilling it.

    In 1968, at the request of Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, then
    the Primate of our Diocese, Jack took the helm of the Diocesan
    Center. Starting on the eve of the cathedral's consecration,
    and continuing to 1975, Jack executed an ambitious vision of this
    complex as a hub of constant activity. As the center's first executive
    director, Jack was a pioneer, and his tenure is still regarded as a
    "golden age" of creativity and public service. The same was true,
    it should be said, of Jack's time as director of the AGBU.

    The Diocese turned to Jack again in the days following the 1988
    earthquake in Armenia, when Archbishop Torkom asked him to oversee
    the Diocese's relief efforts. That effort was the core of what would
    eventually evolve into the Fund for Armenian Relief.

    I know that to his family, all of these distinctions seem beside the
    point, at this moment. Jack was a husband, a father, a friend. Each
    of those roles is deeply personal, and the way Jack joined his soul
    with those around him was especially intimate.

    I think of his sweet marriage to Alice, and his tender ministry to
    her these past, difficult years.

    I think of the heroic regard in which he held his parents, Vahan and
    Satenig; his brothers Ardashes, Ashod and Antranig; and his sisters
    Anne and Varsenig.

    I think of the love and pride he felt for his children, Michael
    and Elise - and his noble desire to regard them as peers, when they
    blossomed as accomplished individuals in their own right.

    I think of the way Jack celebrated the advent of his grandchildren,
    by writing a book expressing his innermost thoughts to them.

    To hereafter be separated from such a powerful, personal force is
    supremely painful - like losing a part of one's own self.

    At the same time, one can understand that living in the orbit of such
    a man demands certain sacrifices from his family members - no matter
    how dearly he loves them and wishes to benefit them.

    And yet I can only observe that the Antreassian family has always
    been a model of love, mutual support, and quiet pride. That spirit has
    enfolded all the generations, from parent to child. In their own ways
    - perhaps in ways they do not yet realize - each member of the family
    has contributed to the great project that Jack pursued all his life.

    This fact is, perhaps, the most beautiful testimony to the goodness
    of his life's work.

    For decades, his dear wife, Alice, was another constant force here
    at the Diocese. She could always be found here, and even donated all
    the proceeds of her famous book on Armenian cuisine to this center.

    And of course, for more than thirty years now, Jack and Alice's
    daughter, Elise, has been a true leader on the Diocesan staff. Under
    her creative inspiration, our Christian education programs have
    flourished, and thousands of young Armenians have been brought closer
    to their heritage of faith.

    As happens in the case of all truly great men, the news of Jack's
    passing brought a sensation of physical weight - as if the burdens of
    the world would be that much heavier for the rest of us, now that he
    is gone. What we have witnessed now is the passing of a great spirit,
    whose living presence comforted and even magnified us.

    Now he has gone to our Lord's kingdom, and the magnitude of our task,
    as the living, is gradually coming into focus. We cannot do better
    than to try to live up to Jack's ambition, embodied in an institution
    like St. Vartan Cathedral: To portray the world in the fullness of
    its truth, and to shape it under the aspect of love.

    To his loved ones - to his surviving sister Varsenig; to his daughter
    Elise and her husband Papken, and their children Kohar, Aris, and
    Vahan; to Jack's son Michael and his wife Brenda, and their son Adam;
    and especially to Alice, who has lived these years under her own trials
    - I convey my deepest sympathies and prayers. May God be with you,
    now and always. And may our Almighty Creator keep Jack Antreassian
    in His holy presence, until we are all re-united in God's eternal
    Kingdom. Amen.
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