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Dhaka: The last of the Armenians

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  • Dhaka: The last of the Armenians

    The Daily Star, Bangladesh
    June 21 2013


    The last of the Armenians


    Once a flourishing community in Bengal, Armenians have dwindled in
    number to such an extent that only one man now represents the entire
    community in Dhaka. He is known by his Anglicised name of Michael
    Joseph Martin.

    When Martin, now in his late seventies, dies, it will throw into
    doubt the future of the Armenian Apostolic Church of Holy
    Resurrection, one of Dhaka's most beautiful churches.

    Martin, whose Armenian name is Mikel Housep Martirossian, shoulders
    the responsibility of preserving the building against the ravages of
    the weather and pollution.

    The cemetery in the church is akin to a huge history book,
    chronicling the history of the Armenian people in the region.

    Founded in 1781, the Armenian Church is a historically significant
    architectural monument situated in Armanitola in old Dhaka. The church
    bears testimony to the existence of a significant Armenian community
    in the region in the 17th and 18th centuries.

    Following the domination of their homeland by the Persian powers of
    the time, Armenians were sent by their new rulers to the Bengal region
    for political and economic reasons. They came to Dhaka for business
    and traded in jute and leather. The area where they lived came to be
    known as Armanitola.

    The now famous church was built on Armenian Street in Armanitola,
    then a thriving business district. The site was an Armenian graveyard
    before the church was built, and the tombstones that have survived
    serve as a chronicle of Armenian life in the area. Agaminus Catachik,
    an Armenian, gave away the land to build the church.

    In the fifty years following the church's construction, a clock tower
    was built on its western side. It is said that the clock could be
    heard four miles away, and people synchronised their watches with the
    sound of the tower's bell. The clock stopped in 1880, and an
    earthquake destroyed the tower in 1897.

    The church plan is rectangular. Features include an arched gate and
    an arched door. There are four doors and 27 windows. The main floor is
    divided into three parts: a pulpit enclosed by railings, a middle
    section with two folding doors, and an area separated by a wooden
    fence for seating women and children. There is a spiral staircase
    leading into the church.

    Today, the church is usually closed. It has been the subject of BBC
    and AFP documentaries, and has received recognition from the
    Bangladesh government as an archaeological site.
    Martin, the custodian of the church, came to Dhaka in 1942 during
    World War II, following in the footsteps of his father who had settled
    in the region decades earlier.

    In his advanced age, he now worries about who will look after the church.

    `This is a blessed place and God won't leave it unprotected and
    uncared for,' he told an AFP interview.

    He added, hopefully: `When I die, maybe one of my three daughters
    will fly in from Canada to keep our presence here alive.'

    Sources: The BBC, AFP, The Independent and works of Muntassir Mamoon
    and Sushil Chaudhury.

    http://www.thedailystar.net/beta2/news/the-last-of-the-armenians/

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