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St. Sarkis In Dallas Remembers 100th Anniversary Of Armenian Genocid

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  • St. Sarkis In Dallas Remembers 100th Anniversary Of Armenian Genocid

    ST. SARKIS REMEMBERS 100TH ANNIVERSARY OF ARMENIAN GENOCIDE, PLANS TO BUILD NEW CHURCH

    Dallas Morning News, TX
    March 19 2015

    By NANETTE LIGHT , Neighborsgo

    Though they share an ethnic background, they don't always speak the
    same dialect.

    Some mix Arabic with their Armenian words. Others blend in Farsi.

    But on Sundays, members of St. Sarkis Armenian Orthodox Church gather
    to worship in a sanctuary -- once an abandoned home -- in a Carrollton
    neighborhood. There, the pews creak and incense and candles fill the
    room in a smoky haze.

    The entrance to the church looks like that of any other home in the
    neighborhood, with a front door of wood and glass. Later, church
    members added a cultural hall with a large kitchen and classrooms.

    It's where they gather to eat and mingle after the two-hour service.

    More than two decades since converting the home on Random Road, the
    building remains the only Armenian church in North Texas, members
    said. Now, it's a gathering post for the ethnic group, many of whom
    immigrated to the United States from Turkey, Iran, Syria, Lebanon
    and Armenia, among others.

    "We have a belief that whenever there are two Armenians anywhere,
    together they build a little Armenia," said Hamlet Sarokhanian,
    member of the church's Parish Council and an immigrant from Iran.

    Remembering the past

    The massacre of Armenians a century earlier scattered survivors to
    five continents in search of refuge. Now, their descendants have found
    new homes in countries such as the U.S., Syria, France and Lebanon.

    In 1915, leaders of the Turkish government began a plan to expel and
    massacre Armenians living in the Ottoman Empire, many historians say.

    When it ended, about 1.5 million Armenians were dead, and others were
    forcibly removed.

    This year, St. Sarkis and other Armenian churches around the world
    will remember the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide. The
    church began planning the commemoration, which runs throughout the
    year, in 2013.

    On Thursday, author Peter Balakian spoke about the genocide at Southern
    Methodist University.

    "We believe it's an incomplete mourning. It never got resolved. It got
    forgotten," said Sarokhanian, who is also chairperson of the Armenian
    Genocide Centennial Committee of Dallas. "It's been passed down from
    generations to generations. That is what keeps us unified."

    He remembers the stories his father told him about his two uncles who
    died after walking for days through the desert from Iran to Iraq. His
    father wasn't born yet.

    "We only know the history from our families," he said. "It was chaos."

    Julieta Chatinyan and her daughters, Lusine Meeks of Plano and Anahit
    Ballard of Frisco, understand the chaos. They wear handmade purple
    forget-me-not flower pins on their shirts. They're a reminder of their
    late mother and grandmother, a survivor of the Armenian genocide who
    escaped from Palestine on one of the last trains.

    "This year's campaign isn't as much about Armenian genocide as it is
    about stop genocide," said Meeks, who also serves on the church's
    centennial committee. She and her sister were raised in the the
    former Soviet Union. Since schools were censored, the daughters
    learned about their grandmother's story from Chatinyan.

    The flowers are among 200 that Chatinyan crocheted for church and
    community members to mark the genocide's centennial. The purple
    flower is the official emblem of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian
    genocide.

    "We're wearing it as a forget-me-not of all the victims of the
    genocide, but you can wear it to remember anyone who was close to you,"
    Ballard said.

    Moving forward

    Shant Aghyarian's great-grandparents died in the march through the
    Syrian desert to Lebanon. Aghyarian, 25, a member of the genocide
    centennial committee, said the details are mostly unknown.

    Though Aghyarian was born in the U.S., his father immigrated here
    years earlier after fleeing to Cyprus when he was 13 years old to
    escape a civil war in Lebanon. His father owned a deli in Houston
    before opening a car body shop in Dallas.

    Aghyarian grew up in the church. At the time, the Armenian community
    was a small, growing population. Most, like his father, had moved
    for economic opportunities. Many were recent immigrants.

    When he was 9, his family returned to Lebanon. He moved back to Dallas
    in 2011 to pursue graduate studies in biomedical engineering at the
    University of Texas at Dallas.

    He left an infant church and returned to find it established and
    growing.

    "I was there when [the church] opened, but I was too young to realize
    what was going on," Aghyarian said. "I came back to find it getting
    bigger and bigger."

    The church opened its doors in the renovated home in 1991. Now, the
    church counts about 350 active families in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.

    People commute from around North Texas to attend Sunday services,
    and some even trek from Oklahoma.

    Now, the church plans to build a new facility about three times larger
    than its current space in West Plano near Prestonwood Baptist Church.

    It plans to expand programs and offer athletics.

    "The place we had was perfect for what could be accomplished at the
    time with limited funds and limited people. At this point, we've
    grown and it's time to expand," said Vahe Dayian, chairman of the
    church's Parish Council. "What we're trying to do now is reach more
    people who have not been part of the [church]."

    Land was donated to the church about three years ago by a member. Now,
    leaders are working to raise funds to construct the building.

    Dayian said they lack about 25 percent of the $1 million goal needed
    to begin construction.

    They hope to begin building as soon as possible.

    "It would be poetically perfect to build the church 100 years after
    we were suppose to be annihilated," Dayian said.

    Reporter Nanette Light can be reached at 214-977-8039.

    MORE INFO

    April 18: Texas Peace March to state capitol in Austin

    April 23: Dedication to Armenian composers from noon to 1 p.m. on
    Classic Cafe show on WRR 101.1 Classical Radio.

    April 24: Candlelight and peace walk to Dallas City Hall from 5 to
    8 p.m.

    April 30: Armenian genocide documentary will be shown 6:30 to 8:30
    p.m. at the Dallas Holocaust Museum, 211 N. Record St., suite 100
    in Dallas.

    http://www.dallasnews.com/news/community-news/northwest-dallas-county/headlines/20150319-st.-sarkis-remembers-100th-anniversary-of-armenian-genocide-plans-to-build-new-church.ece

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