Karabakh changes electoral code, invites more women to politics

Netgazeti, Georgia
July 24 2019
Karabakh changes electoral code, invites more women to politics

[Armenian News note: the below is translated from Georgian]

24 July 2019: The parliament of [Azerbaijan’s] self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh has adopted a new electoral code, moving fully to the proportional electoral system from 2020. Until now, elections were held under proportional and majoritarian systems. The transition was preceded by lengthy discussions.

Nagorno-Karabakh MPs said that following the transition, Karabakh would become more democratic.

“The fully proportional system has gradually entered our political life. Until 2005, elections were held only under the majoritarian system. Then it moved to a mixed system. Now we are moving to a fully proportional system,” opposition MP of the National Revival faction, Hayk Khanumyan, said.

However, this is not the only important change in the new electoral code.

In order to engage women in politics, a new article was incorporated in the code, envisaging at least a 25-per-cent quota for women in proportional lists.

“We proposed to make this number 25 instead of 20 per cent. It was supported by parliament. I think women should enjoy the same rights in bringing up important issues,” Vardges Baginyan of the Democracy faction said.

Hayk Khanumyan, however, thinks that 25 per cent is not enough for women to enter politics.

“It is very unfortunate that women are not as active as they should be. However, the liberalisation of politics will facilitate it,” the opposition MP said.

As it became known. disabled people were not able to take part in elections in Karabakh, because they could not go to polling stations. The [newly adopted] changes also envisage introducing portable ballot boxes in order to fix this shortcoming.

[Reporting by] Tigranuhi Martirosyan, Yerevan

On this day in history: July 25, 2019

The Chronicle (Toowoomba, Queensland)
Thursday
On this day in history: 

Today is Thursday,
 
 
0326 – Constantine refused to carry out the traditional pagan sacrifices.
 
1394 – Charles VI of France issued a decree for the general expulsion of Jews from France.
 
1564 – Maximillian II became emperor of the Holy Roman Empire.
 
1587 – Japanese strong-man Hideyoshi banned Christianity in Japan and ordered all Christians to leave.
 
1593 – France’s King Henry IV converted from Protestantism to Roman Catholicism.
 
1759 – British forces defeated a French army at Fort Niagara in Canada.
 
1799 – Napoleon Bonaparte defeated the Ottomans at Aboukir, Egypt.
 
1851 – An uncredited diary entry describes the “~Yowie’ of Southeast Queensland in detail.
 
1862 – After successfully crossing Australia from south to north, John McDouall Stuart raises the British flag at the mouth of the Mary River.
 
1907 – Korea became a protectorate of Japan.
 
1909 – French aviator Louis Bleriot flew across the English Channel in a monoplane. He travelled from Calais to Dover in 37 minutes. He was the first man to fly across the channel.
 
1914 – Russia declared that it would act to protect Serbian sovereignty.
 
1924 – Greece announced the deportation of 50,000 Armenians.
 
1943 – Italian Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini was overthrown in a coup.
 
1952 – Puerto Rico became a self-governing commonwealth of the US.
 
1973 – The numbat is proclaimed as Western Australia’s official faunal emblem.
 
1984 – Soviet cosmonaut Svetlana Savitskaya became the first woman to walk in space. She was aboard the orbiting space station Salyut 7.
 
1994 – Israel and Jordan formally ended the state of war that had existed between them since 1948.

Tank crews of Russian base in Armenia drill ‘tank carousel’ tactics

Russia’s Defense Technologies Newswire
Thursday 2:57 PM GMT
Tank crews of Russian base in Armenia drill ‘tank carousel’ tactics
 
MOSCOW July 25
 
Tank crews of the Russian base in Armenia that is organic to the Southern Military District (YuVO) are using T-72B tanks to destroy enemy targets with standard shot at drills held at the Alagyaz range. The tank troopers are using a special tactical maneuver called “tank carousel”, YuVO’s press service said.
 
MOSCOW, July 25. /TASS-DEFENSE/. Tank crews of the Russian base in Armenia that is organic to the Southern Military District (YuVO) are using T-72B tanks to destroy enemy targets with standard shot at drills held at the Alagyaz range. The tank troopers are using a special tactical maneuver called “tank carousel”, YuVO’s press service said.
 
“The tank troopers have undergone a month-long training to learn to fire at targets, which simulated heavy hardware of the conditional adversary in constantly changing tactical and target situations, which helps the crews to develop prompt reaction and ability to make unconventional decisions to resolve combat training tasks. The ‘tank carousel’ maneuver is designed to deliver continuous fire to suppress the adversary. Tanks take turns in advancing to fire positions and firing at the enemy in order to compensate for the time required for reloading, YuVO said.
 
The servicemen are also using reconnaissance drones and practice quick-firing at distances of up to 2,500 meters.
 
More than 100 servicemen and about 30 units of military hardware, including unmanned aerial vehicles, (UAV) are engaged in the drills.

Looking for a better life: the Indians coming to Armenia

OC Media

Prangel Shah and his wife, Bipali Shah. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Indian immi­gra­tion to Armenia has sharply increased in the last two years, with many coming to the country in search of a better life. However, endemic racism and human traf­fick­ing have revealed the dark side of the ‘Armenian dream’.

Rahul Seteh, an Indian immigrant to Armenia who has been living in the country since 2015, vividly remembers taking a phone call from an ill friend while on a minibus in Yerevan. 

‘I was talking very quietly, trying to help them over the phone, when a woman started saying loudly that “she’s tired of these Indians”. Why? What bad thing have I done? I want to explain that I love Armenia; I consider it to be a part of me’.

After grad­u­at­ing from Yerevan State Medical Uni­vir­si­ty in 2008, Rahul returned to India.

In 2015, Rahul met Anna Avagyan in India and soon after they got married. After living in India for almost a year, the two moved to Armenia, where Anna is from. Now they both work at the Medical Uni­ver­si­ty in Yerevan. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

In previous years, Indian nationals living in Armenia were almost exclu­sive­ly students and often stayed only as long their studies demanded. But today, a lib­er­alised visa regime, higher wages, and new business oppor­tu­ni­ties have led to a new wave of Indian immi­gra­tion, whose par­tic­i­pants want not to study, but to settle. 

In November 2017, the Armenian gov­ern­ment lib­er­alised the visa regime for Indian citizens. Since then, there has been an influx of Indian nationals coming to Armenia

The Armenian Migration Service reports that last year, 1,940 Indian nationals held Armenian residence permits. Of these, 1,100 were granted for studies, 784 for employ­ment, and 54 for family reunions. In the first three months of 2019, over 9,000 Indian nationals came to Armenia — compared to only 4,226 in 2016.

But according to some, the Indian infat­u­a­tion with the country came even earlier.

‘This all started when Indian students started to come to Armenia to study’, Sam Singh, a human rights activist who has lived in Armenia for the past year tells OC Media. ‘The cost of a uni­ver­si­ty education here is cheaper in many fields as compared to India’.

Many Indian students come to eat at Indian restau­rants in Yerevan. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Tra­di­tion­al Indian food ready to be delivered to customers. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

According to him, when students first began to arrive they found few busi­ness­es that catered to them, such as hostels or Indian restau­rants. Some decided to stay and open such busi­ness­es them­selves. ‘[Less com­pe­ti­tion] and lower taxes lead more people from India to show their interest in this beautiful country’, Singh says.

It has been five years since Prangel Shah, 46, moved to Yerevan with his wife, Bipali Shah, 43. Prangel works as a diamond pro­cess­ing spe­cial­ist at a factory in Nor Hachn, a small town near the outskirts of Yerevan. 

‘When I first came here, many of the taxi drivers were trying to deceive us — they demanded more money’, Prangel tells OC Media.

He added that he also had problems when shopping, but over time, developed a method for getting around these obstacles.

‘If, for example, I wanted to buy something, I waited until an Armenian would ask the price and buy it. Then I did my shopping right after him so that the seller would not lie to me and say an expensive price’.

Prangel Shah’s wife, Bipali Shah, is a spe­cial­ist in Mehndi, a form of body art using henna. She charges a minimum of ֏5,000 ($11.00) for her services. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Bipali Shah also teaches her craft and par­tic­i­pates in exhi­bi­tions. She has both Armenian and Indian students. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Other Indians in Armenia have also report racist harass­ment — even assault. 

‘I was standing in front of my restau­rant when some people began to beat me with stones. I hadn’t done anything’, an Indian busi­ness­man who did not wish to be named told OC Media. ‘Sometimes, I’m told that my skin smells bad. To be honest, I cannot under­stand why they hate us’.

Nev­er­the­less, if you stick it out and find a job, Prangel says,  then it is ‘an ideal place to live’. 

According to five employ­ment agencies surveyed by OC Media, the number of Indian citizens seeking work in Armenia has been increas­ing, espe­cial­ly during the last half a year. 

However, employers and workers are not always able to come to a common agreement due to the language barrier. As a result, many Indians in Armenia are stuck in low-wage physical labour and many choose to work with their com­pa­tri­ots to avoid the language barrier. 

‘While I have Armenian workers, the majority of my workforce comes from India’, Vinay Bansal, an entre­pre­neur from New Delhi, tells OC Media.

By Vinay’s cal­cu­la­tion, he will stay in Armenia for at least 20 more years. He sees great potential, espe­cial­ly in the field of tourism. He says it is easier to work with the new gov­ern­ment. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Bansal has been doing business in Armenia for almost five years. He is the head of six companies and owns a hotel, a hostel, and a food court in Yerevan. He also imports Indian goods, which are sold in both Armenia and neigh­bour­ing Georgia.

‘Working in Armenia is prof­itable. That’s why I am here today’, Bansal says. ‘I have invested a lot of money; I also pay taxes punc­tu­al­ly. I think I’m not a bad busi­ness­man for Armenia, though I also help my native people’.

Anjna Bansal, 48, is Vinay’s wife. She mainly takes care of the work in the restau­rant kitchen. She says her only problem is not knowing Armenian; she is currently attending Armenian language classes. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Vinay’s son, 23-year-old Vaibhav Bansal is currently studying at the Yerevan State Medical Uni­ver­si­ty. He says that he likes Yerevan and does not plan to leave after grad­u­at­ing. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

According to Bansal, Indians in Armenia receive a salary twice that of what they would get in India. For example, the chief cook in his hotel restau­rant receives about $950 a month.

‘The amount that my chef receives as a pure profit, he would not receive in India’, Bansal says.  ‘That’s why the Armenian labour market attracts many Indians. The salaries are high here’.

Kumar Gelash, 44, came to Armenia seven months ago with his culinary team. He works at the Bansals’ Restau­rant as the chef. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Rajn Kumar, 28, says he gets a good salary in Armenia, around $600. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

Nandram Seni, 27, works at the restau­rant from 6:00 until 21:00-22:00, with only two rest days a month. But he does not complain about the job and says what’s important is that he receives a regular salary and gets paid on time. (Armine Avetisyan / OC Media)

But the increase of migration from India has also attracted a less savoury brand of business. Scammers and con-artists have deceived their victims with fraud­u­lent job offers or, in some cases, have used Armenia as a dumping ground after promising to help their victims immigrate to Western countries.   

Thirty-year-old Balu, who requested to only be referred to by his first name, came to Armenia six months ago. He tells OC Media that he did not know that he was going to Armenia.

‘I paid around $5,000 to move to the United States as a legal migrant. I was told that in the US I would be given a small apartment, a job, for which no strong language knowledge was needed, and that they would also help me to master the English language fluently in a short time’, Balu says. 

He now works at a car wash in Yerevan. He is saving money so he can return home.

Sam Singh notes that immi­gra­tion and visa con­sul­tants in India have started to market Armenia to Indians for work, education, and business invest­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties. However, some have started to take advantage of the situation and make fake offers to the unin­formed. 

Last year, the Armenian Police inves­ti­gat­ed one case in which the owner of an Indian restau­rant in Yerevan convinced several Indian nationals to relocate to Armenia with the promise of high wages.   

However, upon their arrival in the country, he took their passports and forced them to work for little to no pay.

After Singh moved to Armenia and saw how people were trying to cheat each other for money, he created a Facebook group to help enlighten Indian immi­grants. For example, he would write posts to help people under­stand how things work in Armenia, from reg­is­ter­ing a company to opening bank accounts. However, the name of the group became so well-known that many other people created groups with similar names to promote fake jobs. 

According to Singh, many of the victims who were cheated out of their money have not returned to India. 

‘Firstly, they hope that the con­sul­tant will give them their money back’, he says. ‘Secondly, they are ashamed to return empty-handed. They believe they will be a laughing-stock among their family and friends’.

Singh hopes that for all the dif­fi­cul­ties that Indians face in Armenia, they will find a place in their new home. 

‘I wish to share with the people of Armenia that Indians are all over the world’, Singh says. ‘We come with peace and are globally known for our achieve­ments in terms of education, hard work, and strong cultural back­grounds. We are not here to compete, but to lend a hand.’


Yerevan starts tackling politically charged rubbish disposal issue

BNE IntelliNews
Yerevan city hall is investing in new garbage trucks to try and resolve the city’s chronic waste problem.
By bne IntelliNews

Yerevan has received its first batch of new rubbish bins and garbage trucks, as the authorities try to overcome serious failures with waste disposal that have seen rubbish piled up around overflowing bins across the city.

The first consignment of nearly 400 waste bins arrived in Yerevan on July 23, and two new rubbish trucks bought by Yerevan City Hall are already in place, Hakob Karapetyan, a spokesperson for Yerevan mayor Hayk Marutyan, wrote in a Facebook post. More new trucks are expected soon. 

“The problem of waste will gradually be mitigated. Again, we ask our compatriots to come to terms with the garbage disposal operator’s inadequate behaviour and to be patient,” Karapetyan said in a post that attracted a flood of comments from angry residents, complaining of the stench from uncollected rubbish, litter blowing in the air on windy days and verges strewn with trash. 

According to local media, AMD900mn ($1.8mn) has been allocated from the state budget to tackle the urgent problem of waste disposal in the capital. 

Waste disposal is the responsibility of Sanitek, the Armenian division of Lebanon headquartered Sanitek International Group, that started providing services in Yerevan in December 2014. However, complaints about Sanitek have been growing over the past couple of years, and the piles of trash building up in the Armenian capital have sparked protests by local residents. According to local media reports and posts by residents on social media, the situation got worse in 2018, leading to speculation this was connected with the ousting of the former regime in the velvet revolution that spring. The company has repeatedly been fined by Yerevan city hall in the last few years, for offences such as its failure to remove rubbish from the capital effectively.

Sanitek head Nicolas Tawil defended himself at a press conference in September 2018, saying that the velvet revolution of 2018 and subsequent change of leadership in Yerevan city hall had no bearing on the company’s activities. He threw part of the blame on the public, saying that 1,000 bins had been burnt since Sanitek took over the contract, Hetq reported at the time. The bins were used as barricades during the Electric Yerevan protests in 2015. 

Tawil also criticised the failure to separate out construction waste from household trash, and the lack of repairs on the road leading to the main city dump, resulting in damage to the company’s equipment. He added that the company had been operating at a loss for the previous two years. 

However, this had little impact on popular opinion. A recent poll by the International Republican Institute (IRI) found that while at the national level household finances and jobs remain the biggest concerns, at the level of the small towns and villages it is “garbage collection” that is the number one concern, just ahead of jobs.

Yerevan mayor Marutyan has taken a strong stance on the issue, saying back in March that Yerevan residents “won’t put up with dirty streets anymore. He criticised Sanitek’s work and warned that if the company is unable to provide proper sanitary cleaning the city authorities will undertake the job instead.

Armenia isn’t the only former Soviet country where the public are pressing politicians to clean up their cities. 

Waste management has become a hot political issue in Russia as well. Following mass protests in 2018 by local residents near the main landfill that hosts Moscow’s rubbish, in January, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a decree to create an all-Russia recycling company. 

While purely political protests lead by anti-corruption blogger and opposition activist Alexei Navalny typically see only a few hundred, or at best a few thousand, protestors turn out, civic issues like smelly landfills have the power to move large numbers of people — around 25,000 in this case — which the Kremlin takes much more seriously. The urgent need to deal with growing volumes of waste became a key theme in President Vladimir Putin’s latest phone-in last month as well.

With countries across Eastern Europe becoming increasingly affluent and buying more consumer goods, the volume of packaging waste is steadily increasing, and without action by the authorities the problems are only going to get worse. 

Sports: Armenian U18 men’s basketball team heads to Andorra

News.am, Armenia

Armenia’s U18 men’s basketball team is on its way to Andorra to participate in the FIBA U18 European Championship Division C 2019 from July 28 to August 4.

In the group stage, on July 28, Armenia will compete with Malta, on July 29 — with Albania, on July 30 — with Gibraltar, on July 31 — with San Marino.

The team’s head coach Areg Vatyan has included the following players:

  1. Daniel Khani (USA)
  2. Edgar Beglaryan (Armenia)
  3. Davit Karamyan (Armenia)
  4. Alex Len (USA)
  5. Levon Vatyan (Armenia)
  6. Gevorg Ghazanchyan (Armenia)
  7. Narek Sargsyan (Armenia)
  8. Erik Tevosyan (Armenia)
  9. Ashot Hakobyan (Armenia)
  10. Yura Harutyunyan (Armenia)
  11. Samuel Buniatyan (Russia)
  12. Alexey Chizhenok (Armenia)

Turkish Press: Fugitive in murder of journalist Dink caught in western Turkey

Yeni Safak, Turkey
Fugitive in murder of journalist Dink caught in western Turkey

News Service 09:08 AA

A fugitive from justice in the 2007 murder of journalist Hrant Dink was captured Friday in Turkey’s Aegean region.

Tuncay Uzundal was arrested in his home located in Çesme in the coastal Izmir province.

On July 17, a court in Istanbul sentenced Uzundal in absentia to 17 years in prison as an accessory to murder as well as terrorist group membership.

Dink, editor-in-chief of the Armenian-Turkish newspaper Agos, was killed outside his office on Jan. 19, 2007.

Rebuilding Aleppo: Before & after PHOTOS show reconstruction of key Syrian sites

Russia Today
Rebuilding Aleppo: Before & after PHOTOS show reconstruction of key Syrian sites

<img src=””https://cdni.rt.com/files/2019.07/xxs/5d3ad8e2dda4c89b688b45ec.jpg” class=”media__item ” alt=”Rebuilding Aleppo: Before & after PHOTOS show reconstruction of key Syrian sites” />
Syria’s ancient city of Aleppo was filled with bustling markets and historical buildings before it was engulfed in the devastating conflict. Now, before and after photos show progress in rebuilding its war-torn sites.

The reconstruction challenge is stark: In December 2018, the UN cultural agency UNESCO said 10 percent of Aleppo’s historical buildings had been destroyed, and as much as 60 percent of the Old City, a World Heritage Site, was severely damaged.

<img src=””https://cdni.rt.com/files/2019.07/original/5d3acfccfc7e9340698b459f.jpg” />

Also on rt.com Bake bread not war: Russian military helps Syrians restore Aleppo bakery (VIDEO)

After Damascus regained control over the whole city in 2016, some restoration work began – however, significant progress has been hindered from outside. While allies like Russia, Iran, and China have made investments in the country, reconstruction efforts have been complicated by sanctions imposed on President Bashar Assad’s government by Western countries.

Some locals finally began to enjoy the fruits of their labor by the end of March, when an Armenian church, Forty Martyrs Cathedral, hosted its first mass. Restoration work on the 14th century church began more than a year prior to bring it back to its former glory after it was damaged in April 2015 during shelling. 

<img src=””https://cdni.rt.com/files/2019.07/original/5d3acfcafc7e9340698b459e.jpg” />


CSU Summer Arts is the perfect pick-me-up for creative juices

Fresno Bee, CA
CSU Summer Arts is the perfect pick-me-up for creative juices

It is Day One of CSU Summer Arts at Fresno State. This is not new to me. I’ve been taking writing classes since 2008 in an effort to be the best storyteller, memory keeper, columnist and author humanly possible.

Arriving early, finding a patch of shaded grass, I remove jewelry as if some sacred ritual is about to take place. Off comes the silver bracelet cuff, my favorite necklace – a giant untarnished heart, wedding rings, oversized earrings, reading glasses outlined in zebra stripes. Unearthed of worldly props, I make a journal entry that reads: Who am I when nobody is looking?

The Starbucks coffee cup unevenly placed on the ground tips over, its liquid stain sinking into the earth as if running from the scene, disappearing before my eyes. For an instant, I disappear, too, or at least consider rethinking my decision to enroll in yet another memoir writing course. As the brochure underscores, this program pushes students beyond limits, breaks boundaries, and is quite possibly the hardest work you’ll ever do to master your craft, whether it’s writing, dancing, acting, animating, painting, photography or making music.

Read more here:
Read more here:

If ancient Rome hadn’t collapsed, would Christianity have faded away?

Keep the Faith, UK

Early Christians in the first 300 years after Jesus’ crucifixion weren’t, as is widely assumed today, universally persecuted and fed to lions for entertainment in the Roman Coliseum.

History indicates they certainly were periodically harassed and mistreated over centuries in scattered parts of the sprawling Roman Empire, but as the empire slowly edged toward its imminent doom, the faith steadily if slowly strengthened due to gradual official government acceptance, conversions of common people to the faith (and sometimes the elite), and wars won by rulers favorable toward the faith.

A 1,700-year-old letter from one Christian man, Arrianus, to his brother, Paulus, as early as approximately 230 AD indicates that even some elite, well-connected members of societies in the empire were unapologetic Christians at the time. The letter is the oldest extant Christian writing outside the Bible.

“The earliest Christians in the Roman Empire are usually portrayed as eccentrics who withdrew from the world and were threatened by persecution. This is countered by the contents of the Basel papyrus letter,” said Sabine Huebner, professor of ancient history at the University of Basel in Switzerland, where the letter has been stored for more than a century.

Examples of two highlighted nomina sacra. The “IY” and “OY” represent Jesus and God, respectively. (Codex Vaticanus, Public Domain)

The rare document, identified in academe as P.Bas 2.43, originated in Theadelphia, a village in central Egypt. It reveals the brothers as Christian because of several apparent references to Jesus, most notably including the use of a known Christian abbreviation, a nomen sacrum, meaning “I pray that you fare well in the Lord.”

“The use of this abbreviation – known as a nomen sacrum in this context – leaves no doubt about the Christian beliefs of the letter writer,” Huebner said. “It is an exclusively Christian formula that we are familiar with from New Testament manuscripts.”

Also indicative was that the letter’s receiver was named “Paulus,” likely after Jesus’ apostle Paul, because Huebner said the name was “extremely rare” at the time.

Here’s the full text of Arrianus’ letter:

“Greetings, my lord, my incomparable brother Paulus. I, Arrianus, salute you, praying that all is as well as possible in your life.

“[Since] Menibios was going to you, I thought it necessary to salute you as well as our lord father. Now, I remind you about the gymnasiarchy, so that we are not troubled here. For Heracleides would be unable to take care of it: he has been named to the city council. Find thus an opportunity that you buy the two [–] arouras.

“But send me the fish liver sauce too, whichever you think is good. Our lady mother is well and salutes you as well as your wives and sweetest children and our brothers and all our people. Salute our brothers [-]genes and Xydes. All our people salute you.

“I pray that you fare well in the Lord.”

The road to the Christianization of Europe and parts of the Middle East was a long one. According to the website Medievalists.net:

“Starting with the first followers of Jesus Christ, Christianity spread out into the Middle East and along the Mediterranean Sea to other parts of the Roman Empire. Although believers faced periodic Roman persecutions, the religion would grow, with some scholars suggesting that its idea about the resurrection of the dead and immortality of the spirit were appealing theological ideas, while others believe that the practical efforts of the church to help the poor was important in its increasing popularity.”

It began to reach critical mass in 301 AD, when evangelical Christian St. Gregory the Illuminator convinced Armenian king Tiridates III to endorse Christianity as his state religion. When Roman Emperor Constantine officially recognized Christianity early in the 4th century as an authorized religion in his empire, the faith began to soar.

By the time the empire finally imploded in 476 AD when barbarian Germanic leader Odoacer ousted Emperor Romulus, Christianity was already ascendant throughout the empire.

Then, nearly a millennia of severe intellectual erosion began as most of the literate, educated elite fled the failing empire because government officials were no longer needed in the chaos.

Most of the people remaining after the fall of Rome did not speak or read the languages of classical scholarship and knowledge (Greek and Latin); indeed, most couldn’t read at all. Endless scrolls of Greek and Roman classic treatises, containing most of the accumulated knowledge of Western civilization to that time, lay unread and gathering dust on their shelves in private libraries and monasteries, and monks and other Christian prelates became virtually the only literate citizens remaining.

For centuries hence, the “Word of God” was virtually the only “knowledge” remaining that citizens of the lost empire would be exposed to. During this period is when Christianity became not only a spiritual superpower but also, intermittently, a temporal one as well.

It wasn’t until the Italian Renaissance of the 13th and 14th centuries that classical knowledge, including some of the works of Aristotle and Plato, began to broadly re-emerge in Western Europe, brought from the Eastern Empire and environs by Muslim conquerors of Spain.

But the endorsement of Christianity by the Armenian and Roman rulers in the 4thcentury had cast the die for the faith’s spectacular rise to European dominance—and its eventual deep embedding in the New World enclave of colonial America.

This is why separation of church and state is essential today.

Main image: Fragment of letter written on papyrus by a Christian man, Arrianus, to his brother, Paulus, in the 3rd century AD. Copyright: University of Basil, Switzerland, Christian Headlines

Written by: Rick Snedeker

First published 18.07.19: https://www.patheos.com/blogs/godzooks/2019/07/ancient-letter-christianity-history/