CYPRUS AND ARMENIA ISSUE COMMEMORATIVE STAMP
April 2nd, 2015 George Psyllides
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Marking the Armenian genocide centenary in Cyprus
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Cyprus and Armenia Post on Thursday jointly issued a stamp to
commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide.
The stamp depicts the building of the Melkonian Educational Institute,
in Nicosia, that hosted orphans from Ottoman Turkey who survived the
massacres and evolved into a landmark of Cyprus' Armenian community.
The initiative for the stamp issue belongs to Vartkes Mahdessian, the
representative of the Armenian community in the Cypriot parliament,
and the island's post office.
This year marks the centenary of the Armenian Genocide.
The Melkonian Institute, founded in 1924, housed and educated refugee
orphans who survived the massacres in Ottoman Turkey during the First
World War.
The picture of the building, depicted in the stamp, was taken in 1940
by photographer Haigaz Mangoian, while the trees planted by the orphans
in memory of their parents can also be seen in front of the building.
http://cyprus-mail.com/?p=48338
April 2nd, 2015 George Psyllides
Related post...
Almost 177,000 on north voting registry
Marking the Armenian genocide centenary in Cyprus
Agreement on criminalising denial of Armenian genocide
Cyprus and Armenia Post on Thursday jointly issued a stamp to
commemorate the victims of the Armenian Genocide.
The stamp depicts the building of the Melkonian Educational Institute,
in Nicosia, that hosted orphans from Ottoman Turkey who survived the
massacres and evolved into a landmark of Cyprus' Armenian community.
The initiative for the stamp issue belongs to Vartkes Mahdessian, the
representative of the Armenian community in the Cypriot parliament,
and the island's post office.
This year marks the centenary of the Armenian Genocide.
The Melkonian Institute, founded in 1924, housed and educated refugee
orphans who survived the massacres in Ottoman Turkey during the First
World War.
The picture of the building, depicted in the stamp, was taken in 1940
by photographer Haigaz Mangoian, while the trees planted by the orphans
in memory of their parents can also be seen in front of the building.
http://cyprus-mail.com/?p=48338