Asadur Minasian ordained a priest at St. Mark’s Armenian Catholic Church

Rev. Asadur Minasian (Photo: Alec Balian/Talar Festekjian)

WYNNEWOOD, Pa.An overflow crowd flocked to St. Mark’s Armenian Catholic Church on December 18 to witness the historic ordination of a married Catholic priest. The momentous occasion had been delayed due to the COVID pandemic, and in light of renewed threats from the Omicron variant, masking precautions were taken by all in attendance. For the new Rev. Asadur Minasian, the day was the culmination of a 50-year journey which led him to the altar, and began a new chapter for the small parish outside Philadelphia. 

The solemn mass was presided over by the Most Rev. Bishop Mikael Mouradian, with the participation of representatives of Armenian Catholic parishes throughout the United States: Msgr. Anton Atamian, Vicar General for the United States (Detroit); Msgr. Armenag Bedrossian of Queen of Martyrs Church (Los Angeles); Msgr. Manuel Parsegh Baghdassarian of St. Gregory the Illuminator (Glendale); and Rev. Richard Shackil, associate pastor of Sacred Heart Church (New Jersey)the first married American-Armenian Catholic priest to be ordained. Also present was Rev. Raphael Strontsitskyy, a Ukrainian Catholic priest who had to brush up on his Armenian to serve an unexpected vacancy at St. Mark’s. Pastors from Philadelphia’s Protestant church and three Apostolic churches were also in attendance. 

Msgr. Armenag Bedrossian and the newly ordained Rev. Asadur Minasian

In a traditional ceremony full of Armenian rituals, Minasian knelt before the bishop, who laid hands upon his head three times in passing the priestly authority to him. The bishop then removed the deacon’s stole from Deacon Minasian’s left side and placed it behind his neck over both shoulders in the form of a priest’s stole. He entreated with words from Matthew 11:30 to “take up the yoke of our Lord Jesus Christ, for His yoke is easy and His burden light.” Bishop Mouradian declared: “Today is a day of joy and happiness in our Eparchy and the church of St. Mark’s.” He proceeded to deliver a sermon of advice for the new priest in taking up this charge. He jokingly told him “welcome to the club” of the priestly brotherhood and expressed his joy in ordaining him. “Until today, you were responsible to take care of your family of five people. Now you are called to take care of not the material goods but much more, the spiritual needs of the St. Mark’s community, and that’s a big responsibility, one which requires the grace of the Holy Spirit.” Quoting what Pope Francis tells priests when he ordains them, the bishop called Minasian to “be an apostle of mercy” and underlined the importance of patience in life. He thanked the clergy and representatives of the other local churches for being there to share in this day, calling it a symbol of strength and unity of Philadelphia’s Armenian community. 

(Photo: Alec Balian/Talar Festekjian)

As the ceremony continued, Minasian’s three children processed the new priestly robes to the front of the church and also took part serving on the altar and reading scriptures. Der Asadur was dressed in his new vestments and invited to ascend the altar to give his first blessing, as he was presented as kahana for the first time to the applause of the congregation.  

The newly ordained Rev. Asadur Minasian (Photo: Alec Balian/Talar Festekjian)

The celebration continued at a reception and banquet at the Springfield Country Club, emceed by parish chairwoman Blanche Aboyan. In her formal remarks, parishioner Sibelle Arslanian-Ewing invoked the voice of her granduncle Monsignor Stepanian who founded the church nearly a century ago and noted how proud he would be that a member of his church’s flock would answer the call to spiritually serve the church. The new Der Asadur was then invited to address the crowd, recognizing the many people who helped him along the way. He recalled his 45 years of altar service and his first measurements for a shabig (robe) at age five by deacon Patrick Dempsey, who taught him a great deal on the altar over the years. He thanked his mother and his late father, who he knew would be proud, as well as his in-laws for their support and prayers. He thanked Bishop Mouradian for all he did in helping train him for this position, and his wife Arpy for “being with me in good and hard times, through all my studies. I would not be here today without your help.”  

Rev. Asadur Minasian with his wife Arpy, daughters Nare and Sareen and son Vahe

Minasian credited Fr. Richard Shackil for taking the first step in becoming the Eparchy’s first married priest, calling it the push he needed to do the same. “Your humble personality makes me feel comfortable. Thank you for being there whenever I needed you.” In turn, Fr. Shackil addressed the crowd and told Minasian, “Remember that your priesthood is nothing that you deserve, nothing that you merited, nothing that you earned. It’s a grace given freely by God. If you keep that in mind, in your humbleness and humility, give that gift away and you will be a fine priest.” Later, Dempsey presented Minasian with an engraved chalice on behalf of the church. The celebration continued with dancing to Armenian music played by local musicians. After the difficult past years unable to gather in this way, it was a fitting celebration for a church looking to the future and embarking on a new chapter in its life.

(Photo: Alec Balian/Talar Festekjian)

Paul Vartan Sookiasian is a writer and editor based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. He has worked in Armenia as the English language editor at CivilNet and as a project associate for USAID programs. More recently he served as one of the organizers of the World Congress on Information Technology 2019 Yerevan. He is also a historian who researches and brings to light the long and rich history of Philadelphia’s Armenian community.


Asbarez: Ahead of Talks, Ankara Wants Armenian Genocide Issue to be ‘Left to Historians’

The Dzidzernagapert Armenian Genocide Memorial Complex in Yerevan

Ankara wants the issue of the Armenian Genocide to be relegated to “historians” and be removed from the agenda of political platforms—legislatures considering adoption of recognition measures—ahead of anticipated talks to begin the process of normalizing relations between Turkey and Armenia.

Yerevan has expressed willingness to engage in such talks without preconditions, but Ankara has already spelled out several points, on which Armenia must agree for talks to move forward.

Omer Celik, the Vice-President of the ruling Justice and Development party (AKP) said that Turkey’s President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has several key views on the normalization talks, among them conditions regarding the Armenian Genocide that include opening of the archives, reported the Anadolou Agency on Thursday.

Celik also said that Erdogan considers Azerbaijan’s approval of the normalization process as a key factor in proceeding with the talks.

“The initiative to normalize relations with Armenia can take place on the condition that Armenia abandons its aggressive and invasive policy against Azerbaijan,” said Celik.

“In addition, the most sensitive point for President Erdogan is that our Azerbaijani brothers and [Azerbaijan president] Mr. [Ilham] Aliyev look positively on the normalization of Turkey’s relations with Armenia,” added Celik.

Erdogan and other Turkish officials have also said that Armenia must recognize Azerbaijan’s territorial integrity, which presupposes Artsakh as part of Azerbaijan, as well as Aliyev’s proposal for the opening of a corridor linking mainland Azerbaijan with Nakhichevan and Turkey through Armenia—the so-called “Zangezur Corridor.”

Speaking to reporters last week, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan categorically rejected a “corridor” proposal, by said that Armenia has always said that it is ready to normalize relations with Turkey without preconditions, which means, he said, that the recognition of the Armenian Genocide has never been a precondition for normalization of relations with Turkey and opening of borders. During same press conference on December 24, he added that the Armenian government has clearly stated its position on the issue of the international recognition of the Genocide.

Armenia and Turkey have appointed special envoys who will engage in negotiations․ Armenia will be represented by the Deputy Parliament Speaker Ruben Rubinyan, and Turkey will be represented by Ankara’s former ambassador to the United States and notorious Armenian Genocide denier Serder Kilic.

However, before any talks, which Ankara this week signaled will kick off in Moscow, Armenia and Turkey have approved the airlines that will conduct charter flights between Yerevan and Istanbul, a provision articulated last week by Turkey’s foreign minister Mevlut Cavusoglu.

Moscow, once again, welcomed the normalization process and offered its assistance on Thursday.

Speaking to reporters on Thursday. Russian Foreign Ministry spokesperson Maria Zakharova described the appointment of the special envoys for dialogue by Armenia and Turkey as a “reasonable and logical” step, underscoring that Moscow is ready to assume a mediating and organizational role for the contacts between the envoys.

Armenian aviation authorities issued a permit to Flyone Armenia airline to operate charter flights on Yerevan-Istanbul-Yerevan route, Armenpress reported on Thursday.

“Flyone Armenia had recently applied to the aviation authorities of both Armenia and Turkey with the request to operate charter roundtrip flights from Yerevan to Istanbul. We are thankful to the Armenian aviation authorities for the approval,” President of Flyone Armenia Board Aram Ananyan said.

Asked when the flights will be launched, Ananyan said they are awaiting the permit from the Turkish aviation authorities.

Authorities in Ankara announced that the Turkish Pegasus airline would operate flights on the same route.

Armenia lifts Turkish trade ban as officials hint at a thaw in their relations

euronews
Dec 31 2021
By Michael Daventry  31/12/2021 – 11:20
Armenia has lifted an embargo on Turkish imports and is to allow direct flights to Istanbul as the two countries prepare for talks on normalising their relations.

Representatives from Turkey and Armenia are due to meet in Moscow next month as officials on both sides hinted at a thaw.

The border between the two countries has been closed since the collapse of the Soviet Union three decades ago.

In a post on Facebook, Armenia’s economy ministry said it was lifting the ban imposed on Turkish imports during last year’s Nagorno-Karabakh war because it had contributed to inflation within Armenia.

The statement added it expected Turkey to lift a reciprocal ban shortly: “The removal of the ban on imports of Turkish goods is expected to create more favourable conditions for the export of Armenian goods.”

Authorities have also granted low-cost airline Flyone Armenia permission to operate flights between Yerevan and Istanbul.

Turkish carrier Pegasus Airlines is also understood to considering a new route between the two cities.

“We understand that Russia wants to host the first meeting between our envoys,” Turkish foreign minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu told 24 TV on Thursday.

“Armenia, from what we gather, also wants this first meeting to be in Moscow.

“If it is to be a third country, it does not matter for us whether it is Moscow or another country, but because Russia has made efforts in this area we too welcome the idea of a meeting in Moscow.”

The announcements come as the two countries prepare for their first direct talks since 2009.

Turkey was one of the first countries to recognise Armenian independence, but diplomatic ties were never established because it has long supported neighbouring Azerbaijan in its conflict with Armenia over the contested territory of Nagorno-Karabakh.

Previous Armenian governments have also demanded Turkey recognises the 1915 massacre of Armenians as a genocide before diplomatic relations can be established.

But ministers under Prime Minister Nikol Pashinyan have indicated they want to hold talks with Turkish officials without preconditions.

Ruben Rubinyan, a deputy speaker of Armenia’s parliament, will represent his country in the Moscow talks.

Turkey’s envoy will be Serdar Kılıç, a former ambassador to the United States.

The two countries previously reached a deal to establish diplomatic relations and open their border in 2009.

But it was never ratified after Turkey demanded an Armenian withdrawal from Nagorno-Karabakh, which it largely occupied at the time.

Armenia lost control of most of the territory in a six-week war last year with Azerbaijan, which Turkey supported militarily.

President Sarkissian issues congratulatory message on New Year

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YEREVAN, DECEMBER 31, ARMENPRESS. President of Armenia Armen Sarkissian issued a congratulatory message on New Year. As ARMENPRESS was informed from the press service of the President’s Office, the message runs as follows,

“Dear compatriots in Armenia, Artsakh, and in the Diaspora, 

The year of 2021 is coming to its close. For our people, Armenia and Artsakh, it was a most difficult year, with a hard period of the aftermath of the war and pandemic. 

My deepest respect to the eternal memory of our sons who sacrificed their lives for the Homeland. 

I share that deep sorrow with you. I offer my condolences to the families and relatives of many of our compatriots who fell victim to the pandemic.

I wish good health to all the wounded and sick.

I will continue my international efforts for the quick return of all our captive compatriots and finding the missing. 

Dear compatriots,

Thirty years ago these days, we celebrated the New Year for the first time as citizens of the independent Republic of Armenia. Achievements and victories and, unfortunately, losses mark these thirty years. 

Today, our country is facing most serious ordeals and challenges once again. We need will to overcome those ordeals. We must have a clear vision and a plan, be honest and responsible.  It is necessary to have a deep awareness of national identity and statehood. Identity is the passport of the state, and the state is the guarantor of national identity. 

We must become a competitive country using our great global potential. Therefore, it is necessary to open the doors of the Homeland for all our compatriots.  And for this, you must first change the Constitution, so that our compatriots in the Diaspora, and all our people could freely be part of our country and serve their Homeland. 

The amendment of the Constitution will also contribute to a more effective governance of the state, to balancing state structures, to more flexible and interconnected, more understandable and responsible activities. 

It’s high time to realize that our strongest weapon is ourselves, our army, our work and our mind.  It’s time to become a state, whom they believe and trust, which is a reliable bulwark for all its citizens, around which we all unite.  I truly believe that together we can build our future. 

Believe in your strength, respect our country, respect every compatriot. And the world will respect us more: as a people and as a state. 

Dear compatriots,

New Year is a holiday of hope, faith, and expectations. I am confident that we can overcome today’s challenges. I am confident that we can become a stable and peaceful, prosperous and dignified country with strong, and invulnerable borders.  I believe that together we can build a strong Armenia. I see that way.  For our country, and for our people, for every one of you, and for your families, let 2022 be a year of health, peace, and success, a year of abundance and progress.  Let warmth and solidarity, attention, care and Love to each other reign in all our families! 

Happy New Year!”.

Lavrov, Bayramov discuss implementation of agreements of Armenian, Russian and Azerbaijani leaders

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

Russian and Azerbaijani Foreign Ministers Sergey Lavrov and Jeyhun Bayramov discussed the course of implementation of the trilateral agreements reached by the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia.

According to the press service of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of the Russian Federation, the foreign ministers summed up the results of the joint activities of the passing year, in the context of the bilateral relations between Russia and Azerbaijan, as well as the regional and international agendas.

“Success has been recorded in the Russian-Azerbaijani strategic partnership in all directions.

There was an exchange of ideas on the course of implementation of the trilateral agreements that the leaders of Azerbaijan, Armenia and Russia reached on November 9, 2020, January 11, 2021 and November 26, 2021. An agreement was reached to work on rapid and full implementation of the decisions made during the summits, including in the direction of the launch of mechanisms for unblocking of economic and transport links in the region and demarcation of the Azerbaijani-Armenian state border,” the press release reads.

According to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Azerbaijan, during the talk, “the founding meeting of the ‘3+3’ format in Moscow and the meeting of Azerbaijani and Armenian public figures were discussed”.


Erdogan opens major automobile tunnel between Turkey and South Caucasus through Georgian territory

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

President of Turkey Recep Tayyip Erdogan has opened transport communication between Turkey and the South Caucasus through Georgian territory, emphasizing that this automobile tunnel will link the countries and their economies in the region, Hurriyet reports.

“This automobile tunnel will contribute to the development of Erzurum and Ardvin as two major tourist destinations. This will also ease transit traffic to the Caucasus through these two cities,” Erdogan said in a video message on the occasion of the opening of the automobile tunnel.

The 2,246 km-long tunnel stretches from Uzundere province of Erzurum to Georgia through the bordering Ardvin city. It is expected that the investment will increase trade-economic activity between the countries of the region and will engage tourists.

According to Erdogan, the automobile tunnel will replace the old and very hazardous mountain pass, adding that the government will save nearly 18,000,000 Turkish liras thanks to the road tunnel.

Deputy police chief: Armenia has recorded a rise in the number of crimes

 News.am 
Dec 30 2021

Armenia has recorded a certain rise in the number of crimes across the country. This is what Deputy Chief of Police of Armenia Ara Fidanyan said during a briefing following the government’s session on Thursday, adding that there are objective and subjective reasons for this and that more details will be provided when the results of the year are summed up.

Fidanyan expressed confidence that the patrol service is well-established and that its work is rather fruitful.

“The fact that there are incidents and criminal cases goes to show that the Police of Armenia are open and don’t conceal anything. We also need to take into consideration how many crimes the Patrol Service has revealed. The public is content with the patrol officers’ work,” he stated.

Touching upon the case of a few police officers beating a man, he clarified that it would be inappropriate to blame the Police or the Special Investigation Service for this since the police aren’t investigating the criminal case. “The police didn’t beat him. I call on you to address the body carrying out preliminary investigation,” he added.


Is Hungary trying to make amends to Armenia?

panorama
Armenia – Dec 30 2021

Armenia’s health ministry reported on Thursday that the Hungarian government have donated 100 thousand  doses of Astrazenecca coronavirus vaccine. On Wednesday, the foreign ministry informed that through the mediation of the Government of Hungary, five Armenian prisoners of war were repatriated from Azerbaijan. 

To note, Armenia suspended diplomatic relations with Hungary in 2021 during an emergency meeting of his Security Council chaired by former president Serzh Sargsyan. The move came following the extradition of Ramil Safarov – convicted of murdering Armenian Lieutenant Gurgen Margaryan in Hungary in 2004.

“This has happened because the Government of Hungary, a member State of the European Union and NATO, has made a deal with the authorities of Azerbaijan,” Sargsyan declared then at the meeting with the heads of diplomatic missions accredited in Armenia. 

The Hungarian anti-corruption Átlátszó website later published a report, suggesting that the Orbán government’s motivation for handing back to Azerbaijan the Azeri axe murderer convicted of killing an Armenian army lieutenant in Hungary, may have been financial gain, 

In 2012, at precisely the same time that Hungary released Safarov, more than $7 million was deposited into a bank account opened at Hungary’s MKB Bank, under the name of the son of an Azeri politician. The account was linked to an offshore company that folded in 2015 and which had been closely tied to Azerbaijan’s government. The money that arrived in Hungary was transferred by a firm called Metastar Invest LLP to a Hungarian bank account linked to Velasco International Inc.

The transfer of $7 million into the mysterious MKB Bank account coincided with an improvement in diplomatic relations between Hungary and Azerbaijan. In 2014, Viktor Orbán met with President Aliyev in Budapest, where the two leaders signed a strategic partnership. 

To remind, In 2004, in Budapest Azerbaijani officer Ramil Safarov, who was participating in a training course within the framework “Partnership for Peace” programme, murdered Armenian officer Gurgen Margaryan while he was asleep by axing him to death and attacked another Armenian officer Hayk Makuchyan. Ramil Safarov, who was sentenced to life imprisonment by the Hungarian court, was transferred to Azerbaijan, where enforcement of the sentence should have been continued. However, immediately after the transfer Ramil Safarov was pardoned and glorified. 

On May 26,2020, The European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) issued a judgement in the Case of Makuchyan and Minasyan v. Azerbaijan and Hungary. The court held that there had been a procedural violation by Azerbaijan of Article 2 (right to life) of the European Convention on Human Rights and a violation of Article 14 (prohibition of discrimination). According to the judgement, there has been no justification for the Azerbaijani authorities’ failure to enforce the punishment of military officer Ramil Safarov and to in effect grant him impunity for a serious hate crime.

ECHR obliged Azerbaijan to pay the applicants jointly, within three months from the date on which the judgment becomes final, £15,143. It has found no violation by Hungary.

Pashinyan: Making decisions often does not depend only on us

panorama
Armenia – Dec 30 2021

2021 was the year of post-war repercussions, and very serious efforts were required to keep the situation in Armenia and around it controllable, Nikol Pashinyan told a cabinet meeting on Thursday, adding at the beginning of 2021 they faced that problem.

“It took huge efforts from the public administration system to be able to overcome the domestic situation in 2021 without shocks,” he said. “We encountered very serious problems in the external environment, and we still continue to encounter them. The invasion of the Azerbaijani armed forces into the Sotk-Khoznavar section since May 2021, the consequences of that act, and the incident of November 16 further underscore our security concerns.”

He proposed the participants of the meeting to observe a minute’s silence to honor all those, who sacrificed their lives for the homeland in 2021 and in the past.

Afterwards, Pashinyan referred to the plans of the government for 2022.

“We must make every effort in 2022 to make it a year of prosperity and revival. This is our main message today. It is clear that the post-war agenda and the consequences will still be felt for a long period, and we must step by step, consistently overcome this situation and try to solve all the problems that are on the foreign policy agenda. My conviction is that we must do everything in our power to find solutions. We must do our best to leave inheritance to the next generations, to the next governments, not problems that are constantly becoming more complicated, but a stable and recorded situation, which is a key precondition for ensuring the further normal development of the country,” he said

“On the other hand, of course, this is not easy; no matter how much we are willing to take responsibility for making decisions, we must also state that making those decisions often does not depend only on us. This is the most important point. We must be able to bring to maturity a process that will finally give us the opportunity to record the situation and complete the agenda of opening an era of peaceful development for Armenia and our region,” Pashinyan noted.

Zakharova comments on ‘first meeting of Armenian, Azerbaijani intellectuals’ in Moscow since war

panorama
Armenia – Dec 30 2021

On December 23-24, a meeting of Armenian and Azerbaijani public and cultural figures was held in Moscow for the first time since last year’s war in Artsakh, Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova told a weekly briefing broadcast by RT on Thursday.

“We believe that this meeting has served its purpose, namely, the establishment of good communication between representatives of scientific and cultural elites of the two neighboring countries with the creation of a favorable background for a consistent normalization of relations between Baku and Yerevan,” she said.

According to her, the participants were unanimous on the role of intellectuals in reducing the degree of distrust between the Azerbaijani and Armenian peoples.

“The mood for a constructive dialogue was demonstrated also during the discussion of sensitive humanitarian topics, including the return of Armenian prisoners of war by Azerbaijan and the handover of the remaining minefield maps by Armenia,” Zakharova said.

“We have supported and will continue to support such endeavors. We believe that such a unifying agenda is extremely relevant and will help reach substantial agreements, which will in turn create an atmosphere for moving forward in other directions as well.

“We are planning to hold such contacts on a regular basis in the future, including in Azerbaijan and Armenia,” Zakharova noted.