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Jerusalem: Palestinian Armenian community celebrates Christmas

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  • Jerusalem: Palestinian Armenian community celebrates Christmas

    Ma'an News Agency, Palestine
    Jan 18 2014

    Palestinian Armenian community celebrates Christmas


    BETHLEHEM (Ma'an) -- Armenian Christians in Palestine are celebrating
    Christmas on Saturday with a procession through the streets of Jesus
    Christ's birthplace.

    The Armenian patriarch of Jerusalem Nourhan Manougian arrived before
    noon in Bethlehem and marched to the Church of the Nativity, the site
    in the city's historic center where Jesus is believed to have been
    born.

    In anticipation of the event, streets were decorated and locals came
    out to watch. Bethlehem police director Luay Zreiqat told Ma'an that
    150 police officers were deployed along the route of the march, and
    dozens of police officers were stationed in Manger Square as well.

    Palestinian Armenian Christians who follow the Armenian Patriarchate
    of Jerusalem mark Christmas nearly two weeks after the majority of
    Armenian and Eastern Orthodox denominations, who mark the holiday on
    January 6 or 7, and more than three weeks after Western Christians
    mark Christmas, who celebrate on December 25.

    The differences in dates of celebration are due to the use of
    different calendars, as Western Christians mark the holiday using the
    Gregorian calendar, Orthodox Christians and most Armenian
    denominations mark the holiday using the Julian calendar, and the
    Armenian patriarch of Jerusalem marks Christmas using the Julian
    calendar but with a different date.

    Groups of Armenians began moving to Palestine beginning in the fourth
    century and mainly settled in Jerusalem, where, in the seventh
    century, they established a Patriarchate Complex which has since
    attracted Armenian pilgrims.

    Thousands of Armenians also arrived fleeing the massacres in the
    Ottoman Empire in the early 20th century, after which many settled in
    Palestine.

    According to Armenian sources, some 7,500 Armenians today live across
    the Holy Land. About 300 live in Bethlehem, 2,100 in Jerusalem and the
    rest live in Acre, Ramle, Nazareth, and Beersheba. There are a small
    number of Armenians in the Gaza Strip as well.

    There are around 200,000 Palestinian Christians in the West Bank, Gaza
    Strip, and inside Israel in total, while hundreds of thousands more
    live abroad.


    http://www.maannews.net/eng/ViewDetails.aspx?ID=666051



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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