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Critics' Forum Article - 04/07/2013

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  • Critics' Forum Article - 04/07/2013

    Critics' Forum
    Literature
    Lamenting Jerusalem: The Armenian Quarter in the Old City
    By Tamar Boyadjian

    For the last two millennia, Jerusalem has been represented as a space
    of desire - a place that has been perennially occupied and lost, and
    an area whose borders are contested until today. Jerusalem - as both
    a spiritual and secular space - has over the years attracted the
    attention of many different groups of people, including Armenians.
    Armenian presence in Jerusalem dates back over 1,500 years, with
    documented evidence from the 5th century. The Armenian Quarter in
    Jerusalem, which encompasses one-sixth of the Old City, is unique in
    that Armenians are the only people to have a quarter in the Old City
    along with the three monotheistic faiths: Christianity, Islam, and
    Judaism.

    My own interest and fascination with the city of Jerusalem comes from
    the desire to examine the ways in which both Armenians and other
    cultures represent the city in their medieval literary traditions. On
    Friday the 8th of February, I had the pleasure of delivering a paper
    about Armenians and the city of Jerusalem in the crusader period, at a
    symposium entitled, "Armenian Jerusalem: Past and Present." The
    event, organized by the Armenian Studies Program at California State
    University, Fresno, in cooperation with the non-profit organization
    Save the ArQ (Save the Armenian Quarter of Jerusalem), also featured
    presentations by my colleagues - Dr. Bedross Der Matossian (University
    of Nebraska, Lincoln); Dr. Sergio La Porta (California State
    University, Fresno); and Prof. Barlow Der Mugrdechian (California
    State University, Fresno). The lectures on the program covered a rich
    array of topics, such as: the history of the Armenian community of
    Jerusalem from the early period to the contemporary; issues that
    relate to the negotiations between the sacred and the secular;
    pilgrimages to the city; and the current political and social events
    taking place in the Armenian Quarter, including the election of the
    new Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem in January of this year.
    Archbishop Nourhan Manoogian succeeded the late Patriarch Torkom
    Manoogian, becoming the 97th Armenian Patriarch of Jerusalem.

    Conversations during this symposium were also interspersed with
    personal experiences of both living and traveling to the Armenian
    Quarter in Jerusalem. These types of intimate familiarities were
    significant in that, alongside providing an outline of the vital role
    Armenians have played in the far extended history of Jerusalem, these
    experiences also brought to the forefront one of the main goals of the
    symposium - raising awareness about the Armenians currently living in
    Jerusalem's Old City .

    Currently, the Armenians in Jerusalem face many types of difficulties,
    due to socio-economic and political factors impacting the region.
    While much of the connection between Armenians and Jerusalem has been
    and continues to be religious in nature - and more specifically
    related to pilgrimage - a strong and prominent secular dimension also
    exists. Armenians in Jerusalem have made significant contributions to
    the history and development of the city from the period of early
    Christianity to the present. Moreover, in order to better understand
    the current condition of the Jerusalem Armenians, one must look at the
    historical transformations that Armenians in general experienced under
    the 19th-century Ottoman Empire, and later under British Mandate,
    Jordanian rule, and the current administration of Israel. In order to
    elaborate upon these historical complexities, I find it useful to
    briefly draw upon the highly valuable work of my colleague,
    Dr. Bedross Der Matossian, Professor of Modern Middle Eastern History
    at University of Nebraska, Lincoln.

    The collapse of the Ottoman Empire and the Armenian Genocide during
    World War I led to the mass migration of Armenians from Cilicia to
    Jerusalem, with thousands of Armenians pouring into the Armenian
    Quarter. At this point, the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem
    detached itself from the authority of the Istanbul Patriarchate and
    the Armenian National Assembly, to which it was subordinate during the
    period following the Armenian National Constitution in 1863. During
    the period under British Mandate, the Patriarchate kept amicable
    relations with the British authorities, who largely maintained the
    Ottoman millet system and allowed administrative matters concerning
    the Armenian refugees and local population to be handled by the
    Patriarchate. Following the Arab-Israeli war of 1948 and the
    subsequent withdrawal of the British, the Jordanians and the Israelis
    had disputes over Jerusalem; and subsequent to the Cold War, Jerusalem
    became a contested space for the Holy Sees of Echmiazin and Cilicia.
    In the 1970s and 1980s, the Patriarchate pursued a subtle policy with
    the Israeli government, but with the breakout of the first Intifada in
    1987, the position of the Patriarchate towards the Palestinian
    authorities and the Israeli government relatively cooled, and dozens
    of Armenian families began to leave Jerusalem. In fact, the
    population of Armenians living in Jerusalem has greatly declined since
    then. During the British Mandate period, over 10,000 Armenians lived
    in greater Jerusalem. Today, that number is under 1,000.

    The decline in population is just one of the many challenges that
    Jerusalem Armenians face today. These current difficulties are
    multifold; and as Armenians, we should be aware of these circumstances
    to help maintain this historically significant and long-standing
    Armenian diaspora community. The first obstacle Jerusalem Armenians
    face pertains to their citizenship status. Most Armenians are
    considered Jordanian citizens and fall under the legal category of
    "Eastern Jerusalemites." For this reason, many of them have
    difficulty obtaining travel and marriage documents. They also face
    obstacles when attempting to bring spouses or other family members
    into Jerusalem. The depressed economic environment discourages and
    makes it difficult for Armenians to open up and maintain businesses in
    Jerusalem. Housing also remains one of the biggest obstacles facing
    the Armenians in the Old City. Not only is space limited because of
    overpopulation in the Old City, but real estate is very expensive.
    Most Armenians, given their current income, simply cannot afford to
    maintain their primary residence there. Moreover, Armenians living in
    East Jerusalem would find it virtually impossible to obtain a house in
    West Jerusalem, due to exorbitant costs and their citizenship status.

    Armenian education in the Old City also faces serious challenges and
    needs the aid of Armenians in the diaspora. The Armenian
    Sts. Tarkmanchatz Secondary School has adopted neither the Israeli nor
    Palestinian education systems. Rather, the school follows the system
    that was put in place under the British Mandate. As a result,
    children graduating from this school are having difficulty both being
    accepted and transitioning into Israeli and Palestinian universities.
    Amidst these challenges, sweeping reforms and renovations have been
    implemented under the supervision of Rev. Father Norayr Kazazian, the
    current Dean of Sts. Tarkmanchatz Secondary School. Similarly, Mihran
    Der Matossian, the director of the school's education system, has
    undertaken the task of radically restructuring the school's curriculum
    and education program. These reforms have been put in place to
    prepare students graduating from the school to enter institutions of
    higher education in Israel and abroad.

    In face of these challenges, what are some of the things we can do as
    Armenians living in the diaspora to help the Armenian community in
    Jerusalem? One way to get involved is through the aforementioned
    non-profit organization, Save the ArQ, co-founded by Mary M. Hoogasian
    and Bedross Der Matossian, which has an Executive Board and supporting
    members. The organization's mission is to create awareness of the
    significant religious, cultural, and historical presence of Armenians
    in Jerusalem and to encourage the revitalization of the Armenian
    Quarter in the Old City. The organization engages in both short-term
    and long-term projects to help sustain the Armenian Quarter's future.
    One of its key objectives is to build housing units to re-populate the
    Armenian Quarter in the Old City. The organization's other projects
    are devoted to bettering the community's life by supporting education
    at Sts. Tarkmanchatz Armenian School; renovating the compounds within
    the Armenian Quarter; building a park and playground in the Quarter;
    renovating sections of the Helen Mardigian Museum of Armenian Art and
    History; organizing academic workshops, conferences, and seminars at
    the Gulbenkian library; and aiding the Armenian clubs in the Quarter.
    One of the most recent contributions of the organization is the
    donation of lab equipment to the school to enhance students' study of
    the sciences. The organization also intends to set up a program at
    the school, whereby teachers living abroad will be invited to teach
    there and provide the latest tools and technologies necessary for
    educational advancement. The school is also in desperate need of
    up-to-date textbooks and school supplies, which could be donated by
    both schools and individuals in the diaspora.

    Another way Armenians living abroad can help the Armenian community of
    Jerusalem is by making a "pilgrimage" to the Armenian Quarter. One
    need not be convinced of the historically significant and highly
    stimulating experience of visiting a place like Jerusalem. Though
    many Armenians abroad may fear traveling to Israel because of the
    current political climate, Save the ArQ will begin organizing tour
    groups for Armenians interested in visiting the city. There are also
    a number of non-Armenian and Christian tour groups which arrange
    frequent trips to the Holy Land. These visits will both morally and
    financially support the Armenian community in the Old City, along with
    being a rewarding experience for the visitors themselves.

    One final component that needs special attention pertains to the
    preservation of the manuscripts and archival material of the Armenian
    Patriarchate of Jerusalem. As a medievalist, and someone who both
    collects and works with manuscripts, the preservation and maintenance
    of this collection is particularly important to me. We are very
    fortunate to have the invaluable magnum opus of Archbishop Norayr
    Bogharian - a twelve-volume manuscript catalog, which provides
    detailed information about all of the manuscripts belonging to the
    Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem. This highly significant catalog
    is no longer published in print form, but through my efforts at UCLA,
    I have been able to convince the university to digitize it. However,
    it is vital that we support efforts to preserve and digitize the
    actual manuscripts and archival material - yet another project being
    put in place by Save the ArQ. Just like Jerusalem itself, this
    material is a palimpsest upon which Armenian culture and history have
    been inscribed and preserved; and it is significant that we create
    permanency of our own history and culture through modern technologies,
    such as digitization.

    Through efforts such as these, we can help our brothers and sisters in
    Jerusalem maintain this historic and vital community. Let us remember
    some of the opening lines of Catholicos Grigor Tgha's 12th-century
    "Poem of Lamentation over the Capture of Jerusalem," lest we find
    ourselves lamenting (as his poem does), a once-present Armenian spirit
    in the city:

    I cry out this lamentable sound...
    You listen concerning the calamity,
    Brothers and sisters together,
    Children of the great mother Zion
    Brides of the upper room.


    For more information on Save the ArQ, please visit:
    www.savethearq.org.

    All Rights Reserved: Critics' Forum, 2013. Exclusive to Asbarez.

    Tamar Boyadjian is a Postdoctoral Fellow at UCLA, where she received
    her PhD in the Department of Comparative Literature. Her research
    interests include medieval manuscripts, crusader Jerusalem, and the
    interactions between medieval Europe and the medieval Middle East.

    You can reach her or any of the other contributors to Critics' Forum
    at [email protected]. This and all other articles published
    in this series are available online at www.criticsforum.org. To sign
    up for a weekly electronic version of new articles, go to
    www.criticsforum.org/join. Critics' Forum is a group created to
    discuss issues relating to Armenian art and culture in the Diaspora.


    To visit our group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/criticsforumarchive/

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