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Glendale hospitals help local Armenians celebrate Christmas Eve

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  • Glendale hospitals help local Armenians celebrate Christmas Eve

    89.3 KPCC, CA
    Jan 6 2012


    Glendale hospitals help local Armenians celebrate Christmas Eve

    5:00 a.m. | By Ashley Bailey and Paige Osburn | KPCC

    You may have thought Christmas had come and gone, but some communities
    are still celebrating. Thursday is Christmas Eve for Christians in the
    Armenian church, who celebrate Jesus's birth every Jan. 6.

    Glendale Memorial Hospital and Health Center, housed in one of the
    area's largest Armenian communities, is hosting its annual observance
    with a special guest. Archbishop Moushegh Maddirossian, prelate from
    the Western United States, visited the center along with one other
    Glendale hospital on Thursday.

    Glendale Memorial spokeswoman Arpi Kestenian spoke about the impending visit.

    `We'll do a celebration of Christmas, we'll do a blessing of the
    water, he will give his kind words..."

    She summed it up with two words: "Bountiful blessings.'

    Archbishop Moushegh Mardirossian and Archbishop Hovnan Derderian
    toured the hospital Thursday evening, visiting patients and blessing
    gata bread (a traditional Christmas dish for Armenians).

    At the Glendale Adventist Medical Center, the archbishop handed out
    the blessed bread and Dixie cups of holy water to the patients that
    wanted them, shuffling from room to room.

    Alicia Gonzalez, a spokeswoman for the Center, spoke of one
    65-year-old woman who took a loaf and cup to share with her children
    when they came to spend Christmas Eve surrounding her hospital cot.

    The event has been running for "at least a decade," Gonzalez said, but
    it's only been in recent years that the attendance has "sky-rocketed."

    "Last year we had a couple seats still available," said Gonzalez.
    "This year, no seats. People standing all over the place, in the main
    room, in the hallways."

    She agreed with Kestenian's assessment of the event as a blessing.

    "There was at least one patient I noticed that was not Armenian," she
    recalled. "But he sat there and there were tears in his eyes. He was
    touched by the ceremony even though it was mainly done in Armenian."

    She sighed. "It was very beautiful."



    http://www.scpr.org/news/2012/01/06/30677/glendale-hospitals-help-local-armenians-celebrate-/

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