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Young Deacon Begins Ministry at St. Sarkis Church

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  • Young Deacon Begins Ministry at St. Sarkis Church

    PRESS OFFICE
    Diocese of the Armenian Church of America (Eastern)
    630 Second Avenue, New York, NY 10016
    Contact: Carol Krikorian
    Tel: (617) 354-0632
    E-mail: [email protected]
    Website: http://www.armenianchurch-ed.net

    November 4, 2013
    ___________________

    Young Deacon Begins Ministry at St. Sarkis Church

    By Florence Avakian


    "My calling started even before I was aware of the Armenian Church," says
    Benjamin Rith-Najarian, recently appointed deacon-in-charge at the St.
    Sarkis Church in Charlotte, N.C.

    In this new assignment, he says he is filled with "mixed emotions. I have
    spent the past eight years preparing for this. With anything new, there is
    always a little anxiety. Every day, there is something new. It's a learning
    experience. In the short time that I've been here, it has been exciting to
    meet people, and listen to their ideas for the church, all of which is
    bringing us closer to God."

    Born in Philadelphia, Benjamin and his family moved to Syracuse when he was
    a year old, then to Ojibwe, a town in northern Minnesota when he was five.
    His grandparents were born in the United States, but his great-grandparents,
    from Shabin-Karahisar, were killed in the Armenian Genocide, except for his
    great-grandmother who survived the death march. His father, Steven, served
    in the U.S. Navy and later settled in Minnesota, where Benjamin's family
    still lives.

    In his childhood, the nearest Armenian Church was in Wisconsin or Chicago, a
    10 to 12 hour drive away. But Benjamin's mother, Janet, who is of English
    and German background, and his father had instilled in him Christian values,
    and he had attended Christian services from a young age with his parents.
    "My mother was very involved in the area's Christian churches. She read the
    Bible, visited nursing homes, and brought food to the homeless," he said.

    Benjamin also remembers singing Soorp Asdvadz and other Armenian Church
    hymns with his father at bedtime. "My father also cooked Armenian
    food-pilaf, kufte, dolma, yalanche, boereg-and taught my mother to make
    these delicacies," he said.

    In 2002, the Armenian community in the twin cities of Minneapolis-St. Paul
    purchased a church, and his mother "encouraged our family to attend the
    Badarak there." Benjamin was 18 years old at the time, and it was his first
    contact with an Armenian Church.

    When Benjamin graduated from St. John's University in Minnesota in 2004,
    with a major in the natural sciences, he met the Very Rev. Fr. Daniel
    Findikyan, at the time the dean of St. Nersess Armenian Seminary. He says
    Fr. Findikyan inspired him to attend the seminary's college conferences-a
    program that would change the course of Benjamin's life.



    The Moving Force

    "I didn't go to St. Nersess to become a priest, but to be more involved in
    the Armenian Church and the Armenian language," Benjamin said. But he soon
    realized that "all of the background, the Christian love that I had been
    taught in my childhood, fit with being a priest. My parents had told me the
    story, but it was Fr. Daniel who planted the seed, and was the moving
    force."

    Benjamin became interested in learning more about the Armenian Church, its
    theology, history, and people. "All of it was new for me," he said. "I was
    realizing more and more that service was crucial, and that is where I was
    being called." In 2004, Benjamin went to Armenia and served for a month with
    Habitat for Humanity. He later enrolled at St. Nersess Armenian Seminary and
    completed his course of study in 2010.

    Following his graduation from St. Nersess, he and his wife, Chicago-born
    Danielle Der Asadourian, whom he had met at the St. Nersess summer
    conferences, traveled to Jerusalem for 10 months. At the Armenian
    Patriarchate of Jerusalem, he studied intensely and participated in the
    services, while his wife taught at the Sts. Tarkmanchatz Armenian School.

    Returning to the United States in June 2011, the young couple moved to New
    Jersey, where he started an internship at St. Leon Church in Fair Lawn. For
    two years he worked with the parish pastor, the Rev. Fr. Diran Bohajian.

    "It was my first opportunity to do hands-on ministry," Benjamin notes. He
    preached a few times a month, worked with the ACYOA, and visited homes and
    hospitals. "It was everything a priest does to run a parish."

    In January 2012, Benjamin began visiting St. Sarkis Church once or twice a
    month. He is now the full-time deacon-in-charge at the parish.

    He considers his work "a special journey." He adds, "A priest is first and
    foremost a servant of God. As a spiritual leader in the community, he is a
    role model and someone who steps forward and helps his flock in time of
    need."



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