Exhibition Dedicated To 100th Death Anniversary Of Khrimian Hayril O

EXHIBITION DEDICATED TO 100TH DEATH ANNIVERSARY OF KHRIMIAN HAYRIL OPENS IN NATIONAL ARCHIVES

Noyan Tapan
Dec 21, 2007

YEREVAN, DECEMBER 21, NOYAN TAPAN. The exhibition of documents opened
in the National Archives of Armenia on December 20 was dedicated
to the 100th death anniversary of Mkrtich Vanetsi Khrimian, that is
Khrimian Hayrik, the Catholicos of All Armenians, the torch-bearer
of the Armenian freedom, and the artist of idea and freedom. The
exhibition mainly includes the manuscripts, letters, documents of
the period, when Khrimian Hayrik was the Catholicos (1892-1907),
as well as numerous wirtings and letters addressed to him.

The scientists and clergymen gathered on the occasion of the 100th
death anniversary of patriarch Khrimian in the National Archives once
again appreciated the spiritual and public activities of Khrimian
Hayrik during that difficult period for the Armenians.

Archbishop Navasard Kchoyan, the eparchical vicar of the Ararat
patriarchal diocese, expressed conviction that Catholicos Khrimian
is contemporary today as well with the activities he conducted:
"His thoughts and ideas can be used with the same rightness today
as well. Khrimian Hayrik not only led the spiritual activities the
right way, but was also after the public-political events of those
times. With an insight decent for a skilful political scientist,
he exposed the policy of the European states towards the Armenians
in the congress held in Berlin in 1878," the eparchical vicar of the
Ararat patriarchal diocese stressed.

In the conviction of Ashot Melkonian, the Head of the Institute
of History of the National Academy of Sciences, at the end of the
19th century Khrimian Hayrik made a very important revelation for
the Armenians with his skilful spiritual-political activities during
that period of vital significance for the Armenian people: "A person
should work on himself/herself in order to save himself/herself." The
participation of Khrimian Hayrik in the 1878 Congress of Berlin became
a turning point for the Armenians. The wise clergyman and political
figure clearly saw that the Armenian people can exist only "due to
its own power and thought," and that if it relies upon foreign states,
it will be drawn to its end.