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Georgians Appropriating More Armenian Monuments In Samtskhe-Javakhk

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  • Georgians Appropriating More Armenian Monuments In Samtskhe-Javakhk

    GEORGIANS APPROPRIATING MORE ARMENIAN MONUMENTS IN SAMTSKHE-JAVAKHK

    Kristine Aghalaryan

    http://hetq.am/eng/news/29400/georgians-appropriating-more-armenian-monuments-in-samtskhe-javakhk.html
    00:22, September 18, 2013

    Father Hakob Sahakyan, who serves as the Spiritual Director of the
    Armenian Apostolic Church in Akhaltskha, has told Hetq that the
    Georgian Orthodox Church has appropriated an Armenian church in the
    village of Damala as one of its own.

    Damala is an Armenian populated village in the region of Aspintza,
    Georgia.

    Father Hakob adds that the Georgian Church has also appropriated two
    Armenian chapels, locally known as the Brother and Sister Chapels,
    located in the south-western corner of Akhaltskha.

    Brother and Sister Chapels

    Local Armenians have contacted Hetq, claiming that Georgian priests
    have started to organize pilgrimages to the two chapels where religious
    rites are held.

    "Up till now, only Armenians visited these chapels, never Georgians. I
    don't know how they are claiming the chapels as their own," Father
    Hakob told Hetq.

    The priest says there are many artifacts remaining in the chapels
    attesting to their Armenian origins.

    Father Hakob says that Armenians always visit the Damala Monastery
    to celebrate the holiday of their village.

    Photos of the Damala Church and stone sculptures courtesy of S,
    Karapetyan's Javakhk book

    In his book dedicated to Armenian architectural monuments in Javakhk,
    Samvel Karapetyan writes that the Damala Monastery dates to the
    10th and 11th centuries and that the area is dotted with gravestones
    typical of the 15th-17th centuries.

    Father Hakob has written to the Armenian Ministry of Culture on the
    matter, and proposes that a research team be sent to the area.

    He has also written to the Georgian government but has received
    no response.

    Hakob Simonyan, who heads the Armenian Ministry of Culture's
    Historical-Cultural Inheritance Research Center, confesses that they
    have no archival evidence as to whether the two chapels are Armenian
    or not.

    "We have to go to the site and examine the structures to see what
    similarities or differences exist between Armenian and Georgian
    churches," noted Simonyan.

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