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Crossroads E-Newsletter - January 9, 2014

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  • Crossroads E-Newsletter - January 9, 2014

    PRESS RELEASE
    Eastern Prelacy of the Armenian Apost. Church of America and Canada
    H.E. Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan
    Prelate, Easter Prelacy and Canada
    138 East 39th Street
    New York, NY 10016
    Tel: 212-689-7810
    Fax: 212-689-7168
    Web: http://www.armenianprelacy.org/


    HOME BLESSING AND CHRISTMAS RECEPTION


    The Prelate's annual Christmas reception took place on the evening
    of January 6 filling the Prelacy's Vahakn and Hasmig Hovnanian
    reception hall with many well-wishers from the metropolitan New York
    area who were greeted by the Prelate, Archbishop Oshagan, and the
    Vicar, Bishop Anoushavan. The traditional Home Blessing service was
    offered by Rev. Fr. Mesrob Lakissian, pastor of St. Illuminator's
    Cathedral, with the participation of area clergy.

    The Armenian tradition of Home Blessing can be done throughout the
    year, but is especially popular during the holy days of Christmas and
    Easter. During this ceremony, the officiating clergyman blesses bread,
    water, and salt,
    all considered to be essential to life. It is customary to burn
    incense, echoing the words of the psalmist, `Let my prayer be counted
    as incense before you.' (Psalm 41)

    O Christ our God, guardian and hope of all our faithful, protect and
    keep in peace your people under the protection of your holy and
    venerable cross;
    and especially this family, their home, the bread, the salt, and the
    water. Save them O Lord from visible and invisible enemies and make
    them worthy to glorify you with the Father and the Holy Spirit, now
    and always, forever
    and ever. Amen. (Benediction from the Armenian Blessing of Homes
    service).



    Rev. Fr. Mesrob Lakissian, pastor of St. Illuminator's Cathedral,
    leads the Home Blessing service at the Prelacy. From left to right,
    Ambassador Garen Nazarian, Permanent Representative of the Republic of
    Armenia to the United Nations; Rev. Fr. Hovnan Bozoian, pastor of
    Sts. Vartanantz Church, Ridgefield, New Jersey; Archbishop Oshagan
    Choloyan, Prelate of Eastern Prelacy; Rev. Fr. Mesrob; Bishop
    Anoushavan Tanielian, Vicar General
    of the Eastern Prelacy; Archdeacon Shant Kazanjian, Director of the
    Armenian Religious Education Council (AREC); Mrs. Garen Nazarian; and
    Deacon Bedros Kalajian.



    TWO CANDIDATES FOR PRIESTHOOD WILL STUDY IN ANTELIAS

    Two candidates for the priesthood who have been studying in the United
    States will travel to Lebanon this weekend to complete their studies
    leading to their ordination as priests. The two candidates are Deacon
    Diran Der Khosrofian, from St. Asdvadzadzin Church, Whitinsville,
    Massachusetts, and Deacon Harold Nazarian from Sts. Vartanantz Church,
    Providence, Rhode Island. Accompanying the two deacons to Lebanon is
    Archpriest Fr. Aram Stepanian, pastor of Sts. Asdvadzadzin Church, who
    is chairman of the Prelacy's Religious Council.

    For two years both candidates have been following a special curriculum
    of study designed by the Prelate and the Religious Council. They will
    now travel to Lebanon to continue their studies at the Seminary of the
    Holy See of Cilicia to complete their studies. The two candidates were
    given farewell receptions recently by their respective parishes.



    Archpriest Fr. Aram Stepanian with Deacon Diran Der Khosrofian and his
    family at St. Asdvadzadzin Church in Whitinsville, Massachusetts,
    where the Ladies Guild hosted a luncheon for their deacon and his
    family.

    Deacon Harold Nazarian cuts a cake during a reception organized by the
    Board of Trustees of Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence, Rhode Island,
    expressing best wishes and success to Deacon Harold as he completes
    the final portion of his studies in the Seminary in Antelias.



    CHRISTMAS CELEBRATIONS

    Armenian Churches throughout the world celebrated Christmas on Monday,
    January 6, remaining faithful to the original date marking the birth
    and baptism of our Lord Jesus Christ. In Antelias, Lebanon, His
    Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of the Holy See of Cilicia, celebrated the
    Divine Liturgy at the Cathedral of St. Gregory the Illuminator. His
    Holiness' Christmas message was based on peace, following the
    teachings of our Lord, the Prince of
    Peace, through his parables and his blessing of peacemakers.

    The parishes of the Eastern Prelacy celebrated the birth and baptism
    with record attendance of the faithful at Christmas Eve and Christmas
    Day services. Everywhere children played a major role in the
    celebrations. Unfortunately most of our parishes in the Midwest
    cancelled services because of the Polar Vortex that brought large
    amounts of snow and record-breaking and extremely dangerously low
    temperatures.

    St. Illuminator's Cathedral, New York City



    Archbishop Oshagan celebrated the Christmas Divine Liturgy and the
    Blessing of the Water at St. Illuminator's Cathedral in New York
    City. The
    Godfather of the Cross was Haig Nadjarian (kneeling to the right of
    the Archbishop), son of Paul and Rachel Nadjarian.



    St. Asdvadzadzin Church, Whitinsville, Massachusetts

    On Sunday morning, January 5, right after morning service, the Sunday
    School presented, in drama form, the readings from the Book of Daniel,
    where three young men, Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, were thrown
    into a fiery furnace because they did not worship the golden image of
    Nebuchadnezzar. They
    were miraculously saved by Divine Intervention. The inspiring
    presentation
    was enjoyed and appreciated by the parishioners.



    Sunday School students at St. Asdvadzadzin Church present a drama from
    the
    Book of Daniel that is part of the Christmas Eve readings.



    Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence, Rhode Island



    Sunday School students at Sts. Vartanantz Church, Providence, present
    a Christmas pageant depicting the birth of Christ.



    St. Stephen's Church, New Britain, Connecticut



    On Sunday, January 5, 2014, the Sunday School of Saint Stephen's
    Armenian Apostolic Church of New Britain, Connecticut held its
    Christmas Pageant and
    luncheon. Mrs. Barbara Bagdassarian, pageant director, presented to
    the audience a beautiful rendition of the timely Christmas story of
    the birth of our Lord, Jesus Christ. Celebration and enjoyment was had
    by all.



    St. Gregory Church, North Andover, Massachusetts



    The traditional blessing of the water service at St. Gregory Church,
    North
    Andover. From left, Dn. John Saryan, Dn. Arek Kalayjian,
    Rev. Fr. Stephan Baljian, Godfather Emmanuel Ohannessian, and
    Dn. Avedis Garavanian.



    St. Sarkis Church, Douglaston, New York



    Bishop Anoushavan celebrated the Divine Liturgy and the Blessing of
    Water,
    on Christmas at St. Sarkis Church, Douglaston. The Vicar's sermon
    reflected on the message of `the love of God.' Following the Liturgy
    the Blessing of Water Service, symbolizing the baptism of Christ in
    the River Jordan took place with Hovnan Oranjian, altar server, and
    graduate of the Sunday School, as the Godfather of the Cross.



    St. Stephen's Church, Watertown, Massachusetts



    Archpriest Fr. Antranig Baljian, pastor of St. Stephen's Church,
    Watertown, with the Godfather of the Cross, Andre Avedis Monteiro,
    whose birthday is January 6. He is the son of Ted and Salpi
    (Badrikian) Monteiro, and the grand-nephew of Archpriest Fr. Zareh
    Sahagian.



    BIBLE READINGS

    Bible readings for Sunday, January 12, are: Romans 1:1-7; Luke 2:1-7.

    In those days a decree went out from Emperor Augustus that all the
    world should be registered. This was the first registration and was
    taken while Quirinius was governor of Syria. All went to their own
    towns to be registered. Joseph also went from the town of Nazareth in
    Galilee to Judea, to the city of David called Bethlehem, because he
    was descended from the house and family of David. He went to be
    registered with Mary, to whom he was engaged and who was expecting a
    child. While they were there, the time came for her
    to deliver her child. And she gave birth to her firstborn son and
    wrapped him in bands of cloth, and laid him in a manger, because there
    was no place
    for them in the inn. (Luke 2:1-7)

    For a listing of the coming week's Bible readings click here
    (http://e2.ma/click/oz02d/4f4cee/ks0y7).



    FEAST OF THE NAMING OF OUR LORD

    This Sunday, January 12, the Armenian Church celebrates the Feast of
    the Naming of our Lord Jesus Christ, in accordance with the Hebrew
    tradition. The commemoration of this event (Matthew 1:20-23; Luke
    1:30-32; Luke 2:21) comes seven days after the Feast of the Nativity
    (the eighth day of the octave of Nativity). This event of the naming
    and circumcision of our Lord is the basis for the tradition of
    baptizing children eight days after birth=80'a tradition that is
    rarely followed now.
    `After eight days had passed, it was time to circumcise the child;
    and he was called Jesus, the name given by the angel before he was
    conceived in the womb.' (Luke 2:21)

    BIRTH OF ST. JOHN THE FORERUNNER

    This Monday, January 13, the Armenian Church commemorates the Feast of
    the
    Birth of St. John the Forerunner (also known as St. John the
    Baptist). John is an important figure in the New Testament and is
    mentioned prominentl6y
    in all four Gospels, which indicates that he had an effective ministry
    baptizing those who repented their sins. He announced the coming of
    `on greater' than himself who is `to come baptizing not with water but
    with the Spirit.' (See Matthew 3:11-12; Mark 1:7-8; Luke 3:16-17; John
    1:26-27). According to the Gospel of Luke, John was the son of
    Zechariah and Elizabeth. Elizabeth was a cousin of Mary. John is
    considered to be the last of the Old Testament prophets and the
    precursor of the Messiah. John is one of the two prime intercessors to
    Jesus Christ, the other
    being Mary, the mother of our Lord.
    `Hasten to our help from on high, Saint John, apostle and prophet and
    forerunner and baptizer of the Son of God and intercede for us before
    Christ. You are the priest who offered himself on the cross; beseech
    him to grant purification from sins to me who composed this hymn and
    to those who celebrate your memory; Saint John, intercede for us
    before Christ.'(Canon for the Nativity of John the Baptist according
    to the Liturgical Canons of the Armenian Church)

    LITURGICAL CALENDAR POSTER

    The 2014 color poster of the Liturgical Calendar of the Armenian
    Apostolic
    Church is now available at the Prelacy. At a glance, one can see the
    cycle
    of feasts and fasts and seasons of the Armenian Church year, which
    begins on January 6, 2014.





    An added feature this year is a list of `Basic Facts' about the
    Armenian Church's liturgical year. This 27x36 inch poster belongs in
    every Sunday school classroom.

    To order, please contact the Prelacy at 212-689-7810 or at
    [email protected]. The cost of the poster is $5.00 plus
    shipping and handling.





    NEWS FROM THE CATHOLICOSATE



    CHRISTMAS IN ANTELIAS

    His Holiness Aram I celebrated the Holy Liturgy and delivered his
    Christmas message on Christmas at the Cathedral of St. Gregory the
    Illuminator in Antelias, Lebanon. His Holiness stressed the theme of
    peace, in keeping with
    the message of Jesus, the Prince of Peace. The Catholicos stressed
    that the peace of Jesus was built on justice and mutual love, and said
    that the Church is called upon to make peace the core of its vocation.

    His Holiness spoke of the major conflicts in the countries of the
    world, and especially those in the Middle East. In the spirit of the
    message of peace that is central to the teachings of Islam and
    Christianity, His Holiness
    asked Christians and Muslims to denounce violence. The Catholicos
    described Lebanon as the ideal model for Christian -Muslim
    conviviality. Although not exempt from regional conflicts, Lebanon has
    remained a bridge between the East and the West. He urged the Armenian
    community to remain united and to help protect Lebanon`s independence
    and integrity.

    Catholicos Aram concluded his Christmas message by speaking about the
    suffering of the Armenian community in Syria. He told the faithful
    that we must
    pray for the community while helping the community materially until it
    can
    begin the process of recovery and rebuilding of lives.

    HIS HOLINESS MAKES PASTORAL VISITS IN LEBANON
    DURING THE NEW YEAR AND CHRISTMAS SEASON

    Birds Nest Orphanage/School
    Catholicos Aram I, accompanied by members of the clergy, visited the
    Birds
    Nest Orphanage and School in Byblos, Lebanon, as well as three other
    humanitarian centers on December 23. The sisters of the Kayanian
    Order, the members of the Board, the director, faculty and staff,
    greeted the Catholicos and his entourage. After watching a special
    program prepared by the children
    that featured recitations, songs, and dances, His Holiness spoke with
    the children while the priests distributed gifts.

    The Birds Nest was established as an orphanage/school after the
    Genocide of the Armenians in Turkey. Danish Missionaries brought
    hundreds of orphaned
    children to Lebanon at that time. The institution currently serves
    children from broken or poor families and is currently also hosting
    children displaced because of the war in Syria.

    The Howard Karagheusian Association for Child Welfare
    The director of the Howard Karagheusian Association for Child Welfare,
    Mr.
    Serop Ohanian, welcomed His Holiness Aram I and transmitted the
    greetings of the General Director of the Foundation at the
    headquarters in the United
    States of America. After thanking the director and the staff for their
    reception, Catholicos Aram I expressed his appreciation for the work
    of the Karaghuesian Foundation in Lebanon for its long years of
    service to the Armenian community and particularly for its
    family-centered support. The Catholicos thanked and blessed the
    personnel for expressing God's love through their work.

    The Armenian Relief Cross (ARC) at the Araxie Boulghourdjian Social
    Center
    The president of the Armenian Relief Cross (ARC), Mrs. Maral
    Hovhannessian, and the director, Verjin Sarafian, welcomed His
    Holiness Aram I to their Center. His Holiness thanked the benefactor
    of the Center, Mr. Melkon Boulghourdjian, and the members of the ARC
    who had come to welcome him. His Holiness said that the Center was
    close to his heart because he had been involved in the planning of the
    project with Mr. Boulghourdjian while Prelate of Lebanon. He mentioned
    the important role of the Social Center during the civil war in
    Lebanon and acknowledged its contribution to alleviating the suffering
    of many needy Armenian families. He also commended the devotion and
    commitment of Armenian women through the Armenian Relief Cross and
    wished them a blessed Christmas and a fruitful New Year in 2014.

    The Armenian Home for the Elderly
    The Armenian Home for the Elderly was the final pastoral visit of the
    day for Catholicos Aram and his entourage. After the formal welcome by
    the director, Rev. Sebouh Terzian, the clergy accompanying His
    Holiness offered a prayer service. The prayer service was followed
    with a cultural program prepared and presented by the residents of the
    Home. The Catholicos thanked the
    members of the board and the director and staff of the Home for their
    services to the elderly. Addressing the residents, the Catholicos said
    the Home
    is not an institution, but a home that belongs to the community, hence
    their home. He then announced that he is declaring 2014 as the Year of
    the Armenian Elderly.

    During the visit to the Karaghuesian Foundation, the Armenian Relief
    Cross
    and the Home for the Elderly, His Holiness was accompanied by the
    Prelate of Lebanon, Bishop Shahé Panossian, other clergy from the Holy
    See of Cilicia, and Panos Manjian, a member of the Lebanese
    Government, Vrej Saboundjian, the Minister of Industry, and Hagop
    Pakradouni, a Member of Parliament.

    The Azounieh Sanatorium-Hospital
    The next day, December 24, His Holiness Aram I concluded his pastoral
    visits with a visit to the Azounieh Sanatorium-Hospital accompanied by
    members of the clergy. Following a prayer service, the Catholicos
    blessed the patients and thanked the medical staff for the care and
    attention they give the residents. Before leaving the
    Sanatorium-Hospital, the Catholicos and the clergy, visited the
    patients who were bedridden and prayed with them.





    THIS WEEK IN ARMENIAN HISTORY
    (Prepared by the Armenian National Education Committee[ANEC])



    Birth of Sergei Parajanov (January 9, 1924)

    "Everyone knows that I have three Motherlands. I was born in Georgia,
    worked in Ukraine and I'm going to die in Armenia," declared Sergei
    Parajanov, one of the most talented names of Soviet
    cinematography. Despite running afoul of censorship and repression,
    his original cinematic style made significant contributions to
    Ukrainian, Armenian, and Georgian cinema.

    Parajanov was born in Tiflis, capital of Georgia, to Iosif Parajanov
    and Siranush Bejanova. At the age of 21, he traveled to Moscow (1945),
    enrolled in the directing department of VGIK (the All-Union State
    Institute of Cinematography), the oldest film school in Europe, and
    studied under directors Igor Savchenko and Aleksandr Dovzhenko.

    In 1948 he was convicted of homosexual acts and sentenced to five
    years in
    prison, but was released under an amnesty after three months. In video
    interviews, friends and relatives contested the truthfulness of the
    charges. In 1950 he married his first wife, Nigyar Kerimova, from a
    Muslim Tatar family, in Moscow. She converted to Eastern Orthodox
    Christianity to marry him,
    and was murdered by her relatives because of her conversion a year
    later. After her murder, he left Russia for Kiev (Ukraine), where he
    produced three documentaries and several narrative films. He married
    his second wife, Svetlana Sherbatiuk, in 1956. Their son Suren was
    born in 1958 and they divorced in 1962.

    In 1964 Parajanov abandoned socialist realism (the state-sanctioned
    art style in the Soviet Union) and directed Shadows of Forgotten
    Ancestors, a poetic film over which he had complete creative
    control. He would later dismiss all films he had directed before 1964
    as `garbage.' This film won numerous international awards and turned
    him into a cult director.

    He later left Kiev and moved to Armenia. He filmed Sayat Nova in 1968,
    choosing the life of the famous eighteenth-century Armenian troubadour
    as the apparent subject, but the film was immediately banned. He
    re-edited his footage and renamed the film The Color of
    Pomegranates. The film won much praise internationally and increased
    his popularity as a venerated director.



    A still from the movie The Color of Pomegranates.



    His projects were systematically banned or scraped between 1965 and
    1973 because of charges of deviation from accepted artistic norms,
    until Parajanov was sentenced to five years in a hard labor camp in
    Siberia on charges of
    homosexuality and pornography in December 1973. Many international
    artists
    protested on behalf of the filmmaker without effect, including
    Federico Fellini, Michelangelo Antonioni, Jean-Luc Godard, François
    Truffaut, Luis Buñuel, Françoise Sagan, Yves Saint Laurent, Andrei
    Tarkovsky, and others. He obtained an early release in December 1977.

    The imprisoned filmmaker produced a large number of miniature
    doll-like sculptures and some 800 drawings and collages, many of which
    are currently displayed at the Parajanov Museum in Yerevan.



    Sergei Parajanov, Tarkovsky's Night Bird, 1987, Collage, Mixed Media.



    After his return from prison to Tbilisi, he could not pursue his
    career. He was imprisoned again in February 1982 on charges of bribery
    and freed nine months later, although his health was seriously
    compromised after the harsh conditions of the Siberian camp.

    After his release, the support of Georgian intellectuals allowed him
    to produce his last two films, which received critical and public
    acclaim: The Legend of Suram Fortress (1984) and Ashik Kerib
    (1988). He moved back to Armenia, where he started a project that
    would remain unfinished: his final film, The Confession. Its original
    film footage was assembled and released as
    Parajanov: The Last Spring, by his close friend Mikhail Vartanov in
    1992.

    Sergei Parajanov passed away on July 20, 1990, in Yerevan, a victim of
    cancer, at the age of 66. He left a legacy of sixteen films (feature
    and documentary), and ten unproduced screenplays and projects,
    including films on the Armenian legend of Ara the Beautiful and the
    Armenian epic David of Sassoun.

    Previous entries in `This Week in Armenian History' are on
    the Prelacy's web site (www.armenianprelacy.org).





    PLEASE DO NOT FORGET OUR ONGOING RELIEF EFFORTS FOR THE ARMENIAN
    COMMUNITY
    IN SYRIA WHERE CONDITIONS ARE BECOMING INCREASINGLY MORE DIFFICULT.
    THE NEED IS REAL.
    THE NEED IS GREAT.

    DONATIONS TO THE FUND FOR SYRIAN ARMENIAN RELIEF CAN BE MADE ON LINE.
    TO DONATE NOW CLICK HERE (http://e2.ma/click/oz02d/4f4cee/0k1y7) AND
    SELECT SYRIAN ARMENIAN RELIEF IN THE MENU.

    The Fund for Syrian Armenian Relief is a joint effort of: Armenian
    Apostolic Church of America (Eastern Prelacy); Armenian Catholic
    Eparchy; Armenian
    Evangelical Union of North America; Armenian Relief Society (Eastern
    USA, Inc.); Armenian Revolutionary Federation.

    Thank you for your help





    CALENDAR OF EVENTS



    January 31-Memorial Program dedicated to Sos Sargsyan, Armenian actor,
    playwright, people's artist, and political activist, organized
    by Hamazkayin Armenian Educational and Cultural Society of New York,
    featuring Karine Kocharyan, Voice of Armenians TVNY, at the Armenian
    Center, 69-23 47th Street, Woodside, New York. Suggested donation:
    $7.00. For information: 718-565-8397.

    February 1-Valentine's Day Dinner Dance, St. Sarkis Church,
    Douglaston, New York.

    February 2-St. Sarkis Men's Club, Dearborn, Michigan, presents Super
    Bowl Party, at Lillian Arakelian Hall.

    February 9-St. Sarkis Church, Dearborn, Michigan, Book Presentation by
    Deacon Shant Kazanjian following the Divine Liturgy at Lillian
    Arakelian Hall.

    February 24-26-Annual Clergy Ghevontiantz Gathering hosted by Holy
    Cross Church, 255 Spring Avenue, Troy, New York.

    March 1-St. Sarkis Sunday School, Dearborn, Michigan, Poon Paregentan
    Costume Party for everyone, at Lillian Arakelian Hall.

    March 26-St. Sarkis Ladies Guild, Dearborn, Michigan, Mid-Lenten
    Luncheon following the Lenten morning service, Lillian Arakelian Hall.

    March 28-Musical Armenia Concert presented by Eastern Prelacy and
    Prelacy Ladies Guild, at Carnegie Hall, Weill Recital Hall, 8 pm.

    May 13-17-Clergy Conference and National Representative Assembly, and
    Annual Conference of the National Association of Ladies' Guilds
    (NALG) of the Eastern Prelacy, hosted by St. Sarkis Church, Dearborn,
    Michigan.

    June 1-Ladies Guild Annual Brunch, St. Sarkis Church, Douglaston, New
    York.

    June 1-St. Sarkis Church, Dearborn, Michigan, Toronto Children's Choir
    concert in the church sanctuary.





    Web pages of the parishes can be accessed through the Prelacy's web
    site.

    To ensure the timely arrival of Crossroads in your electronic mailbox,
    add
    [email protected] to your address book.

    Items in Crossroads can be reproduced without permission. Please
    credit Crossroads as the source.

    Parishes of the Eastern Prelacy are invited to send information about
    their major events to be included in the calendar. Send to:
    [email protected]


    From: Baghdasarian
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