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Cross Stolen from Armenian Church in Iraq Recovered by Armenian Aust

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  • Cross Stolen from Armenian Church in Iraq Recovered by Armenian Aust

    TWC (Time Warner Cable) News
    Jan 18 2015

    Cross Stolen from Armenian Church in Iraq Recovered by Armenian Austinites

    By: Alex Stockwell


    After being stolen from a church in Iraq, an Armenian cross is in
    Austin until it can be sent back to its rightful owner. NY1's Alex
    Stockwell shows us how the destination can be just as important as the
    journey.

    If this cross could talk, it would have an amazing story to tell.

    "Just its presence, the fact that this cross is here, it is life,"
    says Deacon Narek Garabedian.

    It begins at an Armenian church in Baghdad. After being stolen from
    the church, the silver cross mysteriously made its way to a pawn shop
    in Florida.

    A curious employee of that pawn shop asked a UT Austin linguistics
    professor to translate the inscription on the back.

    That's when the professor contacted Mihran Aroian.

    "I had her email those photographs to me. As soon as I opened up the
    photographs, it was apparent that it was an Armenian cross," Aroian
    says.

    It wasn't just any Armenian cross, though.

    Garabedian just happened to be visiting from an Armenian church in New York.

    "It clearly states that this was a gift from Serop Ohanian to the
    Armenian church of the Theotokos, or the Holy Virgin Mary, in 1945 of
    Baghdad, in Baghdad," Garabedian says.

    As fate would have it, it turns out Garabedian's father is from Iraq
    and he recognized the name of the family in the inscription.

    "That's why I immediately contacted Mihran saying that this is a cross
    that needs to be recovered," Garabedian explains.

    Mihran called the pawn shop in Florida and asked them to ship it to Austin.

    "I let her know that this in fact was an Armenian cross that was
    stolen from an Armenian church in Baghdad, and we would like to be
    able to obtain the cross back," Aroian says.

    It wasn't a moment too soon; the pawn shop was about to send the cross
    to Austin anyways.

    But because no one wanted to buy it, it was going to be melted and
    sold for its silver.

    "This was God's will that this cross be found and returned back to
    Baghdad," Aroian says.

    We still don't know how the cross made its way from Iraq to the pawn
    shop in Florida.

    Coincidentally, Saturday's service at the local Armenian church was
    about lost sheep returning home.

    "This cross--though it's a small little silver item, has a huge meaning
    for the Armenian people, and we're just very excited to have been a
    part of this," says Aroian.

    Some might call what they were a part of divine intervention.


    http://austin.twcnews.com/content/news/334712/cross-stolen-from-armenian-church-in-iraq-recovered-by-armenian-austinites/

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