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Eastern Diocese: Primate Ordains Deacon at St. Peter Church

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  • Eastern Diocese: Primate Ordains Deacon at St. Peter Church

    PRESS OFFICE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Karine Abalyan
    Tel: (212) 686-0710; Fax: (212) 779-3558
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: www.armenianchurch.net

    November 25, 2009

    ___________________________________________

    PRIMATE ORDAINS DEACON AT ST. PETER CHURCH OF WATERVLIET, NY
    Community Marks Parish's 110th Anniversary, 95th Anniversary of Women's
    Guild

    Growing up at St. Peter Armenian Church in Watervliet, N.Y., Yervant
    Kutchukian learned important lessons about service - lessons he would take
    with him to Washington, D.C., New Rochelle, N.Y., and Oxford, England.

    After spending years away from his home parish, Kutchukian returned to the
    St. Peter Church, where last month he was ordained to the diaconate by
    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian Church
    of America (Eastern). The October 18 ordination coincided with the
    celebration of the 110th anniversary of the parish's establishment, and the
    95th anniversary of its Women's Guild.

    "One of the oldest parishes in our Diocese, St. Peter Church is very active
    and deeply involved in the life of the Albany area community," Archbishop
    Barsamian said. "The passage of more than 100 years has not slowed the
    parish's activity - it has only made it more lively."

    Serves with humility and love

    A native of New York State's Capital District, Kutchukian attended Armenian
    School at St. Peter Church as a boy. In college, he studied International
    Relations at Georgetown University in Washington, D.C., where he also
    attended the city's St. Mary Armenian Church.

    Kutchukian was baptized at St. Mary Church in 2001, and the following year,
    he began graduate work at St. Nersess Armenian Seminary in New Rochelle,
    N.Y., where he studied Armenian language in the context of faith. By the
    time he received his master's degree in 2005, Kutchukian had earned the
    ranks of acolyte and sub-deacon.

    He followed his passion for languages to Oxford, England, where he spent a
    year studying Syriac. Upon his return to the U.S., Kutchukian settled again
    in the Albany area, where he is now in his second year of Clinical Pastoral
    Education residency at Albany Medical Center. He spends the workweek
    ministering to patients in the psychiatric and prison wards. On Sundays, he
    serves on the altar at St. Peter Church.

    "He always serves with humility and love, and has given back to the church
    community a hundredfold," said the Rev. Fr. Stepanos Doudoukjian, director
    of Youth and Vocations at St. Nersess Seminary, and the former pastor of St.
    Peter Church, who attended Kutchukian's ordination last month.

    Reflecting on the ordination, Kutchukian said he was stirred at the point in
    the service when the bishop asks the congregation if the candidate is worthy
    of the rank to be bestowed on him. "That was a really moving moment,"
    Kutchukian said, "and also a moment of recognition of people's expectations
    and people's trust in me, and in the ways I can contribute to the church."

    He said he was encouraged by the faces of family and friends attending the
    day's events, and by the many letters of support he had received in the
    mail. At the banquet following services, Kutchukian spoke about the
    inspiration he drew from the warm community at St. Peter Church.

    "The vocation of the diaconate is a vocation of service," he said. "Some of
    my best examples of service were in that room." From Armenian School
    teachers to parish council and Women's Guild members, Kutchukian said,
    "everyone in that parish has a role to play in building up the church."

    Backbone of the community

    The October 18 service and banquet were part of this fall's celebration of
    the 110th anniversary of the parish's establishment, and the 95th
    anniversary of its Women's Guild.

    At the banquet, Armenian School students performed songs and recited a poem.
    Archbishop Khajag Barsamian spoke about the accomplishments of the upstate
    New York parish. He thanked Fr. Stepanos Doudoukjian and the Rev Fr. Garen
    Gdanian, pastor emeritus of St. Peter Church, for their contributions.

    Fr. Gdanian, who served as pastor of St. Peter Church from 1970 until his
    retirement in 1989, was honored at the church last spring on the occasion of
    the 60th anniversary of his ordination to the priesthood. During the October
    18 banquet, parish council chair Richard Hartunian presented the beloved
    priest with a framed print of Christ on the cross, again expressing the
    parish's gratitude for Fr. Gdanian's dedication and guidance.

    On Saturday, October 24, the St. Peter Church community continued its
    celebration with a dinner-dance. The following Sunday included a requiem
    service for deceased benefactors of the church.

    Established as a parish on January 2, 1899, St. Peter Church purchased its
    first building in Green Island, N.Y., in 1913. The new house of worship was
    consecrated on July 30, 1916, and served the community for two decades,
    until the relocation of the church to Troy, N.Y., in the spring of 1928.

    The present sanctuary in Watervliet was built in 1970, and consecrated on
    September 19, 1971. Last fall the parish completed an expansion project,
    which saw the addition of office and storage space, as well as the
    installation of an elevator.

    "St. Peter Armenian Church offers hope, love, faith, and community to all
    Armenians in the Capital District, and to those who continue to move to the
    area," Fr. Doudoukjian said.

    The parish Women's Guild was established on May 4, 1914. Today the
    organization has 50 members, who organize the parish's annual Christmas
    party, Mother's Day lunch, and Holy Thursday Communion breakfast. The
    Women's Guild also prepares memorial meals traditionally served after
    requiem services, runs the bakery at the church's yearly festival in June,
    and assists with other activities.

    "They're an extremely important component of our parish," Hartunian said.
    "Without them, I don't know where we'd be."

    Women's Guild members were recognized for their contributions throughout
    last month's anniversary events. Even then, Hartunian said, they were busy
    making sure that the programs ran smoothly.

    "The women are the backbone of the community, as in many of our parishes,"
    Fr. Doudoukjian said. "The women of St. Peter Church have endless energy,
    endless love for their church, and endless love for each other."

    ###

    Photos attached.

    Photo 1: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, Primate of the Diocese of the Armenian
    Church of America (Eastern), ordains Yervant Kutchukian to the diaconate at
    St. Peter Armenian Church in Watervliet, N.Y.

    Photo 2: Archbishop Khajag Barsamian, the Rev. Fr. Stepanos Doudoukjian, the
    Rev.Fr. Garen Gdanian, Yervant Kutchukian, altar servers at St. Peter
    Church, and St. Nersess seminarians pose for a group photo following
    services on October 18.
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