Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian, who
faithfully served the Armenian Church for half a century, including
twenty years as the Prelate of the Armenian Apostolic Church of
the Eastern United States and Canada, died Tuesday, December 2,
2003, in New York City, of a massive heart attack. His Eminence
was 62 years old.
Since 1998, when he concluded his service in
New York, Archbishop Ashjian lived in Armenia where he did extraordinary
charitable work including the care of orphans, the elderly, the
re-transmission of the faith to the people after 70 years of Communist
rule, bringing back to life centuries-old monasteries and churches,
and the publication of hundreds of historical and literary books.
His Eminence was in the United States visiting his family and
planned to return to Armenia on December 8.
The Wake Service will take place Friday, December
5, from 7 to 9 p.m., at St. Illuminator’s Cathedral, 221
East 27th Street, New York City. The service of Final Unction
will take place during the Divine Liturgy service at St. Illuminator’s
Cathedral on Saturday, December 6, at 10 a.m. Officiating at the
services will be the current Prelate of the Armenian Apostolic
Church of America, His Eminence Archbishop Oshagan Choloyan.
Archbishop Ashjian’s final journey will
be to his spiritual home in Antelias, Lebanon, where he will be
placed in eternal rest in the Mausoleum of the Holy See of Cilicia,
on Monday, December 8.
* * *
Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian was born in Beirut,
Lebanon, on January 3, 1941, to Nercess and Martha Ashjian, and
baptized with the name Hrair. His early schooling and religious
training took place in Beirut where he attended the St. Nishan
School. Among his teachers were: Yetvart Boyadjian, Yetvart Daronian,
Yervant Bedrossian, and a young priest, Karekin Sarkissian, who
years later was to become Catholicos and Supreme Patriarch of
All Armenians. An ardent churchgoer and enthusiastic singer in
the choir of St. Nishan Church, he gained the attention of Bishop
Khoren Paroyan, then the Prelate of Lebanon. He was ordained a
deacon of the Armenian Church in June 1958. After completing theological
and armenological studies at the Seminary, he was ordained a celibate
monk on May 28, 1961, by Catholicos Zareh I, who named him Mesrob
in honor of the 1600th anniversary of the birth of Mesrob Mashdotz,
the founder of the Armenian alphabet. In 1963 he received the
rank of Vartabed (doctor) by Catholicos Khoren I; in 1977 he was
elevated to the rank of Bishop and in 1983 to Archbishop by Catholicos
Karekin II.
A man of keen intellect, with a life-long love
for learning and books, Archbishop Ashjian furthered his studies
at the Ecumenical Institute of Bossey, Switzerland; participated
in the International Student Fellowship, a pilot project of the
World Council of Churches and the United Presbyterian Church;
and Princeton Theological Seminary where he received a Master
of Theology in 1970. He had completed all of his course work for
a doctorate when he received word of his election at the Prelate
of the Diocese of the Armenians in Iran and India. He was elected
to serve at the Prelate of the Eastern Prelacy in December 1977,
and began his tenure in January 1978. In 1991, Princeton Theological
Seminary awarded him a second Master’s Degree in recognition
of the work he had completed toward the doctorate.
During his career as a teacher, he enthusiastically
embraced the positions of Assistant Dean and Dean of the Cilician
Seminary, a teacher and preacher at the Karen Jeppe College in
Aleppo, Syria, and Principal of the Mardikian School in Antelias,
Lebanon.
As a dedicated ecumenicalist, he participated
in the International Student Fellowship, attended conferences
in Lebanon, Jordan, France, Switzerland, Ghana, Finland, Egypt,
and Odessa. He served as a member of the standing committee of
the Conference of the Heads of the Oriental Orthodox Churches,
and was a delegate to the World Council of Churches’ Assembly
in Vancouver, British Columbia, as well as in Canberra, Australia.
In 1991, His Eminence was appointed to serve on the World Council
of Churches’ Faith and Order Commission. His travels have
taken him to every corner of the world where he has lectured,
preached, met with world leaders, and sought out Armenian historical
sites.
Following the earthquake in Armenia in 1988 he
spearheaded a campaign to provide immediate aid to the stricken
people. He was also in the forefront of bringing international
attention to the Karabagh struggle.
A prolific reader and writer, Archbishop Ashjian
has written many articles and at least three dozen books in Armenian
and English.
In 1995, His Holiness Karekin I, Catholicos and
Supreme Patriarch of All Armenians, appointed him as the Executive
Director of the 1700th anniversary commemorating of Armenia’s
official acceptance of Christianity as a state religion, which
was to be marked worldwide in 2001. Archbishop Ashjian assumed
this post while still serving as Prelate in the United States.
In 1998 he moved to Armenia to devote all of his time to the commemorative
events.
For the past three years, he has intensified
his mission work in Armenia through a wide variety of activities,
all of which directly benefited the people. A project that was
particularly close to his heart was the renovation of the St.
Gevorg of Moughni Monastery in Armenia, which was accomplished
through generous donations by his friends on the occasion of the
35th anniversary of his ordination. Throughout his service he
approached his duties with love and an enthusiasm that earned
the love and respect of those around him.
He was an honorary member of the National Academy
of Armenia, a member of the Writers Union of Armenia, and a founding
member of the Land and Culture Organization, USA, as well as a
director of Land and Culture International and the Foundation
for the Safeguard of Armenian Historical Monuments.
The Archbishop’s immediate survivors include
a brother, Hovhaness Ashjian, of Beirut, Lebanon; a sister, Hripsime,
and her husband Mesrob Seropian, of New York; a nephew, Hrair
Seropian of New York; and a niece Liza and her husband Bedros
Yessaian of New York. A brother, Hagop, predeceased him.
The “Archbishop Mesrob Ashjian Fund for
Publications” has been established at the Eastern Prelacy
in his memory and in tribute to his life-long devotion to the
written word. Donations to this fund may be made payable to the
Armenian Apostolic Church of America, 138 E. 39th Street, New
York, NY 10016.
# # # |