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The Armenian Church In Myanmar And Its Indian Priest

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  • The Armenian Church In Myanmar And Its Indian Priest

    THE ARMENIAN CHURCH IN MYANMAR AND ITS INDIAN PRIEST

    17:39, 17 Oct 2014

    Alisa Gevorgyan
    Public Radio of Armenia

    His Holiness Karekin II, Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All
    Armenians, paid his first ever visit to Myanmar October 1-5. Fr.

    Paruyr Avetisyan, Director of the Intra Church Relations Department
    of the Mother Seer of Holy Etchmiadzin told reporters today that the
    authorities of the country gave a warm welcome to the Cotholicos.

    Within the framework of the visit the Patriarch met with
    representatives of the Armenian community.

    The issue of the Armenian Church of St John the Baptist seems to have
    been solved. Remind that "Father" John Felix, as the sign in the street
    outside calls him, had taken over the running of the church. A Burmese
    man of Indian extraction, he claimed to be an ordained Anglican priest
    which would, with the Armenians' permission, give him the right to
    perform religious services.

    The Anglican Church says, however, that he has never been a priest and
    does not have the authority to perform religious services. Fr. Paruyr
    Avetisyan said the Mother See never knew about Felix because Myanmar
    is a rather closed country, and Armenia has no priest there.

    "John Felix' father was a priest of the Anglican Church and served
    in the Armenian Church for a long time. After father's death, Felix Jr.

    conducted the religious services until the visit of His Holiness
    Karekin II to Myanmar," he added. It was announced that an Armenian
    priest based in Calcutta would be flying in every weekend to conduct
    services. His Holiness also conducted a service at the Church.

    In the early 17th century, large numbers of Armenians fled the
    Ottoman Empire and settled in Isfahan in what's now Iran. From there,
    many traveled on in later years to form a commercial network, which
    stretched from Amsterdam to Manila.

    Their influence in the British Raj reached its peak in the late 19th
    Century, when census records suggest that about 1,300 Armenians were
    living principally in Calcutta, Dhaka and Rangoon.

    Their closeness to the Burmese royal court gave them a particularly
    privileged status in Rangoon's trading community. The land on which
    the church stands is said to have been presented to the Armenians by
    Burma's king.

    http://www.armradio.am/en/2014/10/17/the-armenian-church-in-myanmar-and-its-indian-priest/

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