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Indian Express: An Armenian Link, Fading

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  • Indian Express: An Armenian Link, Fading

    AN ARMENIAN LINK, FADING

    Indian Express
    Jun 07, 2009 at 0245 hrs IST

    >From a distance, it almost looks like a mosque, complete with a dome
    and mini minar or chhatri-like projections on its four sides, of
    which only two have survived. Its peeled-off plaster and dilapidated
    state reveal layers of slim bricks dating back to the later Mughal
    period. A closer look and one can spot a plaque announcing the Armenian
    Association in Kolkata as the trustee of the place. A faded signboard
    identifies the building as a nearly three-century-old Armenian chapel.

    Located near the Kishanganj Railway Station in Sarai Rohilla area,
    this is the only surviving Armenian place of worship in the city. Built
    most likely around 1781-82, this rundown building and some tombs at
    its back survived the Revolt of 1857 only to be encroached upon by
    a colony that's now called the 'Christian Compound'.

    The place was not always as congested as it is now. Professor
    A. Dasgupta, a retired Delhi University teacher, has fond memories
    of a quiet cemetery and a medieval structure adjoining it when she
    stayed in the vicinity as a child. "The solitude, the all-pervading
    silence and shaded greenery of the cemetery, the adjoining kuchcha
    road with no habitation, except the railway colony, are part of my
    cherished memory of the place. Every day, I was taken for a morning
    walk to the place. Of all the graves, that of a six-year-old girl
    used to haunt me-perhaps because I was a child myself," she says
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