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Believe it or not - Playing the war game - The disturbing results of a recent war simulation
Har har etz ^ | Saturday, June 22, 2002 Tamuz 12, 5762 | Amnon Barzilai

Posted on 06/22/2002 8:16:51 AM PDT by Phil V.

Saturday, June 22, 2002 Tamuz 12, 5762

w w w . h a a r e t z d a i l y . c o m


Believe it or not

The events began to unfold on the morning of June 5, 2002: Almost nine months after the terror attack on New York's World Trade Towers, the United States launched an attack on the strongholds of Iraqi President Saddam Hussein. Thus began the war scenario in the simulation game conducted by the School of Government and Policy at Tel Aviv University, headed by Prof. Zeev Maoz. But from that point on, the game branched out into surprising directions that left even the experienced players gaping.

About two weeks ago, the participants met for three days at Kibbutz Nir Etzion. Overlooking an amazing view from Mount Carmel, they conducted a war game. Unwittingly, as pawns in the hands of the simulation management that devised the scenario, the participants expressed the government of Israel's ineffectiveness and paralysis, its predictable moves and lack of imagination and creativity. Israel's decision-makers were caught in the grip of the concept.

The idea - developed by Maoz and Haim Assa, who served as head of the strategic team of the late prime minister Yitzhak Rabin - was presented to National Security Council chairman Major General Uzi Dayan over six months ago. The two proposed to Dayan that they hold a war simulation with an emphasis on the policy aspects, so that the lessons would provide food for thought to decision-makers and also perhaps improve their functioning. A management team was set up and comprised of Dayan, Maoz, Assa and Brigadier General (res.) Dr. Shimon Naveh.

Premature enthusiasm

In order for the game to approximate reality closely, Dayan wanted to involve senior officers to represent the General Staff and also to put them in the other side's shoes, and not just use experts from academia and the media. Thus, for example, it was suggested that the coordinator of government activities in the West Bank and Gaza, Major General Amos Gilad, would play the head of the Palestinian team and perhaps assume the role of Palestinian Authority Chairman Yasser Arafat. His successor at Military Intelligence, research division head Brigadier General Yossi Kuperwasser, was to be director general of the Arab League. The head of the Plans and Policy Directorate, Major General Giora Eiland, was supposed to have represented the Israel Defense Forces General Staff.

Dayan expected that there would be sensitivity on the political level and, therefore, the only one to hold a position in the virtual government was Minister Dan Meridor, who was happy to accept the offer to be prime minister.

However, the enthusiasm was premature. The Israeli establishment had reservations about the American model from which the initiators took their idea. Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Shaul Mofaz reacted angrily and forbade his officers to take part. The Prime Minister's Office also reacted coldly. Prime Minister Ariel Sharon said that he was not interested in war games in which the players have anything to do with him or his government.

Those administering the exercise figured that Sharon was suspicious about the meanings or interpretations that would be given to the game. Though it was promised that the simulation would take place under a heavy blanket of secrecy, there could be no guarantees against leaks. The suspicious Sharon might have suspected that they would serve his opponents. And also, either the lessons drawn from the game would limit his actions, or would be held against him if something under his responsibility did not function well.

Nevertheless, the decision was not to give up on the simulation, and its management was transferred from the National Security Council to TAU's School of Government. Instead of officers on active duty, senior reserve officers were invited. Meridor was replaced by Dr. Uzi Arad, who was the policy advisor to former prime minister Benjamin Netanyahu. Former chief of staff Lieutenant General (res.) Dan Shomron was appointed defense minister. Dr. Yehuda Ben-Meir, formerly the deputy foreign minister, was bumped up to foreign minister and Major General (res.) Dr. Yitzhak Ben-Yisrael was appointed chief of staff. The attorney-general was Prof. Ze'ev Segal. The representatives of the right in the government were played by Yisrael Harel, and the representatives of the left by former minister Prof. Yuli Tamir.

On the Palestinian side, former head of Military Intelligence, Major General (res.) Shlomo Gazit, played Arafat. Israel's former ambassador to Jordan, Oded Aran, served as U.S. President George W. Bush and Ha'aretz commentator Ze'ev Schiff played Vice President Richard Cheney. On the Arab team, Middle East specialist Prof. Dan Shiftan took the role of King Abdullah of Jordan and other Middle East specialists represented other Arab states. An international team and a terror team were set up. Participants on the media team were Prof. Gabi Weiman, Dr. Mina Zemach and journalists Yair Stern and Rami Tal.

Collapse of Jordan

Several hours after the American attack on Iraq was launched, an American spy satellite reported movements by Iraqi military forces in the direction of Jordan. As a result, during the next five days, the following events occurred: Hundreds of thousands of Palestinians in Jordan flew Iraqi flags and displayed pictures of Saddam Hussein and Osama bin Laden. The Palestinians rioted and the Jordanian army lost control. The kingdom was on the verge of anarchy. A correspondent for the Sky network reported that, according to rumors from Amman, King Abdullah had been killed in an armed attack on his vehicle. At a joint press conference, Syrian President Bashar Assad and Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak warned Israel not to exploit the degenerating situation in Jordan in order to invade its territories.

The simulation game came into play on June 10, the fifth day of the American attack on Iraq. Because of the fear of an Iraqi invasion of Jordan, the government of Israel took several steps: It requested consultation with the United States, called up reserves and ordered the Home Front Command to distribute protective kits against atomic, biological and chemical attacks on civilians for fear that ground-to-ground missiles armed with these substances might be launched.

Before that, the White House made a surprising move that, in retrospect, had far-reaching effects on events: At a press conference, the president declared his support for the collapsing Jordanian regime and for sending rapid deployment forces to save it. The PA appealed to Israel's Defense Ministry with a request that protective kits be distributed to the Palestinian civilian population as well. Those in charge of the game decided to leak this to the international media.

From the headquarters it set up, the game management headed by Prof. Maoz used a computer to follow the work of the various teams, which were located in nearby buildings. Each team had a student and a psychologist attached to it. One documented the events in the room; the other evaluated the feelings and the relationships that developed among the team members, and among them and the other teams.

"I'm playing God here," joked Maoz when, from time to time, he sent out instructions to the teams. Once he limited the duration of the reserve call-up to two days. Another time, he restrained the response of the terror organization team when he estimated that an exaggerated number of attacks would overturn the intentions of the game.

Although the battles were raging in Iraq, the simulation game's managers asked that attention be focused on three areas: the Palestinian ferment in Jordan, the PA and the government of Israel. In the latter, an argument broke out over the future of Jordan. The right wing (Harel) argued that a Palestinian takeover of Jordan would be a long-term strategic outlet for lowering pressure for the establishment of a Palestinian state in the West Bank. At his own initiative, Harel contacted the Palestinian team about this, but was rebuffed. The left wing (Tamir) dismissed this and said scornfully that on this issue, the right represents "a vociferous but very small element."

`Ripe fruit'

The chief of staff suggested deploying IDF troops around the centers of power in Jordan, to protect them from the Palestinians. The right pressured: It won't work. The Americans can deploy forces wherever they want, but if 70 percent of the population is not prepared to come to terms with the regime ...

The chief of staff: "In Lebanon, the Americans were successful."

The right: "If the Americans see that the royal house is not significant, they will leave Jordan. And then a Palestinian regime will arise and we will be facing another hostile state."

The media pressured the government of Israel to react to rumors that Israel would take a positive view of a Palestinian takeover of Jordan.

The prime minister replied: "The rumors do not reflect Israeli policy. Our policy is to restore law and order in Jordan quickly."

The foreign minister reported that U.S. Secretary of State Colin Powell had told him regarding the situation in Jordan that "we should not think of anything connected to moving people from place to place."

In the government, the following discussion ensued:

The prime minister: "I want to take preemptive action."

The chief of staff: "I suggest that we don't take the IDF into Jordan. But this needs a policy discussion, not a military discussion."

The foreign minister: "Let us suppose that the regime falls and a republic is declared in Jordan."

The defense minister: "This means that a Palestinian state would arise between the Iraqi border and Qalqilyah."

The prime minister: "What are the alternatives for Israel? Can the Plans and Policy Directorate of the IDF produce alternatives?"

The defense minister: "The state of Palestine will be established in Jordan."

The foreign minister: "What do you gain from this?"

The right: "The public opinion surveys are showing full support for the establishment of the state of Palestine in Jordan."

The prime minister, in an interim summation, expresses satisfaction with his policy. Syria is sitting on the sidelines. Lebanon deploys its army in the south. "The righteous have their work done for them by others. The Americans are dealing with Iraq, in Jordan there are upheavals and to this day, not a single Israeli has been killed," notes the prime minister (Arad).

The left mentioned the way then prime minister Yitzhak Shamir acted during the Gulf War, adding: "We are satisfied with the situation and with the government's policy of restraint."

At the same time, the Palestinian team also discussed the situation in Jordan. The collapse of the monarchy and the establishment of a Palestinian state are not in accord with Arafat's interests.

Said Arafat (Gazit): "The Israelis want to get rid of a Palestinian state west of the Jordan. A Palestinian state in Jordan will fall into their hands like ripe fruit. This could serve as an excuse for transfer and will distract attention from our effort to establish a Palestinian state in the West Bank."

Chemical missiles in Israel

Warning sirens shake Israel on the seventh day of the American attack on Iraq. The Israeli radar system warns of an attack by 15 missiles launched from Iraq. Twelve of the missiles are intercepted by Arrow missiles and three missiles bearing chemical warheads land in Haifa, Tel Aviv and Yavneh. There are casualties.

The government discusses its response to the firing of the missiles. The chief of staff reports that the Americans are planning to bomb Iraq with atomic weapons and have called upon the inhabitants of Baghdad to evacuate the city. A Channel One reporter bursts into the government meeting room and announces that a smart bomb has hit Saddam's bunker and killed him. Then the government also wakes up to action.

The chief of staff: "What do you think of eliminating Arafat on the background of the general upheaval?"

The defense minister supports the proposal.

The prime minister: "An IDF force has acted in response to the Palestinian provocations and aggression and has eliminated the leaders of the PA and Arafat."

By Amnon Barzilai




TOPICS: Crime/Corruption; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; Front Page News; Government; Israel; News/Current Events; Philosophy
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Comment #61 Removed by Moderator

Comment #62 Removed by Moderator

To: Phil V.; Yehuda; monkeyshine
To: Yehuda
"...The first war immediately followed the proclamation of the State of Israel, May 14, 1948. Arab forces from Egypt, Transjordan, Iraq, Syria, and Lebanon occupied the areas in southern and eastern Palestine not apportioned to the Jews..."
Yes, Yes and yes
# 56 by Phil V.

*************************

You failed to mention that the Arab forces stopped at the areas "not apportioned to the Jews" because the Israeli forces wouldn't let them go any farther.

The stated, well publicized goal of the Arab invasion was to "drive the Jews into the sea."


So, No, No, and no to your argument.

63 posted on 06/23/2002 9:57:46 AM PDT by exodus
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To: stryker; mikegi; The Great Satan; Phil V.
To: mikegi
"The Koran plainly states that the entire world is to be brought under Islam and ruled by Islamic law..."

"...As to the first problem, it is up to us to wake up and start screaming to our representatives that we will not absorb an attack with a WMD when such an attack can clearly be averted by closing our borders, checking every shipment of every package that enters our harbors, deporting all non-resident aliens of Islamic origin..."

"...As to the second problem, even though the enemy is a religion, it is a unique religion because it is a religion with a country and a city as it's capital..."

"...Therefore, a version of the MAD doctrine can be developed stating that if the United States is attacked with a WMD, then upon thirty days notice, the holy city of Medina will be destroyed with a small nuclear warhead such that no one will be able to inhabit Medina for hundreds of years. Should the United States be attacked a second time with a WMD, the city of Mecca will be destroyed on the same terms..."

*************************

What a horrible idea!!

Sounds good to me.
Let's do it.

64 posted on 06/23/2002 10:12:22 AM PDT by exodus
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To: exodus; Phil V.; Yehuda
Actually the Arab armies were stopped beyond the areas apportioned to the Jewish state. Consider these maps:

...

Map 1: Partition Plan by UN
Map 2: Armistice lines after 1948 war.

Isreael gained ground in the east and in the north after the war of 1948, areas which are now recognized as a part of Israel proper.

65 posted on 06/23/2002 10:34:41 AM PDT by monkeyshine
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To: The Ghost of Richard Nixon
Preach it, brother!
66 posted on 06/23/2002 10:37:10 AM PDT by The Great Satan
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To: Yehuda
. . . there are no "PALESTINIANS; they are squatters . . .
[previous] | [next]

Palestine, history of Palestine and the Palestinians (1948-67) The partition of Palestine and its aftermath

If one chief theme in the post-1948 pattern was embattled Israel (for greater detail on the history of Israel, see Israel, history of) and a second the unremitting hostility of its Arab neighbours, a third was the plight of the huge number of Arab refugees . The violent birth of Israel led to a major displacement of the Arab population. Many wealthy merchants and leading urban notables from Jaffa, Tel Aviv, Haifa, and Jerusalem, disproportionately Christian, fled to Lebanon, Egypt, and Jordan, while the middle class tended to move to all-Arab towns such as Nablus and Nazareth. The majority of peasants ended up in refugee camps. More than 350 Arab villages disappeared, and Arab life in the coastal cities (especially Jaffa and Haifa) virtually disintegrated. The centre of Palestinian life shifted to the Arab towns of the hilly eastern region later called the West Bank.

Like everything else in the Arab-Israeli conflict, population figures are hotly disputed. About 1,300,000 Arabs lived in Palestine before the war. Estimates of the number of Arabs displaced from their original homes, villages, and neighbourhoods during the period from December 1947 to January 1949 range from about 520,000 to about 1,000,000. Some 276,000 moved to the West Bank; by 1949 more than half the prewar Arab population of Palestine lived in the West Bank (from 400,000 in 1947 to more than 700,000). Between 160,000 and 190,000 fled to the Gaza Strip. More than 20 percent of Palestinian Arabs left Palestine altogether. About 100,000 of these went to Lebanon, 100,000 to Jordan, between 75,000 and 90,000 to Syria, 7,000 to 10,000 to Egypt, and 4,000 to Iraq.

The term "Palestinian"

Henceforth the term Palestinian will be used when referring to the Arabs of the former mandated Palestine, excluding Israel. Although the Arabs of Palestine had been creating and developing a Palestinian identity for about 200 years, the idea that Palestinians form a distinct people is relatively recent. The Arabs living in Palestine had never had a separate state. Until the establishment of Israel, the term Palestinian was used by Jews and foreigners to describe the inhabitants of Palestine, but it was rarely used by the Arabs themselves; mostly they saw themselves as part of the larger Arab or Muslim community. But after 1948 (and even more so after 1967) for Palestinians themselves the term came to signify not only a place of origin but, more importantly, a sense of a shared past and future. The Arabs of Palestine, and then of the West Bank and Gaza only, began widely using the term Palestinian to indicate the nationalist concept of a Palestinian people and, after 1967, of a Palestinian state.

[previous] | [next]

Click here for a list of other articles that contain information on this subject


67 posted on 06/23/2002 10:59:00 AM PDT by Phil V.
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To: The Ghost of Richard Nixon
Exceptional analysis...

but I'll have to take you to task on one point: TR as the greatest of the 20th Century? ;^)

68 posted on 06/23/2002 11:19:40 AM PDT by Teacher317
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To: Teacher317; The Ghost of Richard Nixon
Exceptional analysis...

Indeed! Exceptionally frightening that TGORN is willing to "throw the baby out with the bath".

He who trades freedom for security deserves neither. For my country to follow the path of action recommended by TGORN is for my country to transmogrify into some grotesque caricature of itself, unrecognizable, unlovable and (ultimately) unfree to the vast majority.

69 posted on 06/23/2002 1:37:32 PM PDT by Phil V.
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To: mikegi
You must understand the importance of Mecca in the Islamic religion to understand why MAD would work with the Moslems. One thing a Moslem must do to attain heaven is make a pilgrimage to Mecca and conduct certain religious rites there. If he cannot, then he must have this done by someone in his stead. Islam cannot exist without Mecca. It can exist without the Dome of the Rock, and without Medina, but not without Mecca. It is there the Holy Rock sent by the moon god Allah is preserved. It is there that the Moslems must march in circles around that rock for forgiveness of their transgressions and to honor Allah. To destroy the rock, and Mecca, is to destroy the religion. The destruction of Mecca for the Moslems is the equivalent of the Christians discovering the body of Jesus crucified and decayed. The only problem would be one of some third party antagonistic to the Moslems hitting the US in order to get the US to act on the MAD doctrine a second time to destroy Mecca. Without Islam, there is no telling what would hold the Islamic world together; what ideology would spring up to replace Islam. It could be one even more dangerous than what we face now. This is the only weak point I see in adopting the MAD doctrine once again to preserve the peace as we did in the cold war.
70 posted on 06/23/2002 4:22:13 PM PDT by stryker
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Comment #71 Removed by Moderator

Comment #72 Removed by Moderator

Comment #73 Removed by Moderator

To: Phil V.; Teacher317; The Ghost of Richard Nixon; mikegi; stryker; Yehuda; The Great Satan; ...
To: Teacher317; The Ghost of Richard Nixon
"...He who trades freedom for security deserves neither.
For my country to follow the path of action recommended by TGORN
is for my country to transmogrify into some grotesque caricature of itself,
unrecognizable, unlovable and (ultimately) unfree to the vast majority."
# 69 by Phil V.

*************************

The Patriot Act did just that; it took "a little" of our freedom
in order to provide safety for our people.
Don't bother saying "we are at war," that is plainly a lie.

A war has someone to be at war with.
A war doesn't worry about offending the same people
we're supposed to be at war with.

74 posted on 06/23/2002 8:03:06 PM PDT by exodus
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To: Phil V.; Yehuda
To: Yehuda
"...there are no "PALESTINIANS; they are squatters..."
"...The violent birth of Israel led to a major displacement of the Arab population..."

"...The centre of Palestinian life shifted to the Arab towns of the hilly eastern region later called the West Bank..."

"...Although the Arabs of Palestine had been creating and developing a Palestinian identity for about 200 years..."

Until the establishment of Israel, the term Palestinian was used by Jews and foreigners to describe the inhabitants of Palestine, but it was rarely used by the Arabs themselves; mostly they saw themselves as part of the larger Arab or Muslim community..."
# 67 by Phil V.

*************************

Jews are the only people who wanted Palestine. For hundreds of years, Jews prayed "next year in Jerusalem."

The only claim Islam has on Jerusalem is that it was Muhammad's first choice as his holy city. That claim was abandoned when Muhammad chose Mecca instead.

Until the Jews made the place prosperous, Arabs had no use for Palestine.

Until the Nazi war criminal Arafat claims as his uncle said so, Jerusalem itself meant nothing to the Arabs.

75 posted on 06/23/2002 8:28:44 PM PDT by exodus
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To: exodus
Keep pounding this point home to everyone that will listen, Exodus. I am tired of wearing a bullseye, being told that it is not only a possibility but an inevitability that the American people will be attacked with a weapon of mass destruction. 9/11 and what I have learned since--the number of perpertrators from Saudi Arabia, the number of schools throughout the Islamic world teaching fundamental Islam, the bizarre news coverage of their television, the purposeful killing of children by children whose families then accept payment from the Saudis, Iranians and Iraqis. I have no doubt who the enemy is, nor whether we are at total war. We just need to wake up the public who will in turn wake up the Congress.
76 posted on 06/23/2002 8:35:34 PM PDT by stryker
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To: stryker








                                                                 





   Pre-Christian Era 

   Early Roman Era 

   Early Christian Communities in The Holy Land 

   Beginning of Formal Christian Era 

   Invention of Armenian Alphabet 

   Concept of ONE CHURCH Splintered 

   Muslim Arab Era 

   Crusader Period 

   Ayyubid Period 

   Memluk Period 

   Ottoman Period 

   End of Ottoman Rule 

   The British Are Coming 

   Legacy Of British Rule 

   Came the Partition 

   Some Closing Comments 

   Armenian Presence In The Holy Land 


 

                                              

                                              

Pre-Christian Era

                 

               The historic connection between the Armenian people and the Holy Land (or
               Palestine) goes back to the days of Assyria and Babylon before the advent of
               Jesus Christ. At one time, Armenia and Palestine were part of the same empire.
               According to recorded history, the Armenian King Tigran II (95 to 55 B.C.),
               The Great "King of Kings," conquered most of the northern part of the fertile
               crescent including Syria and for a short time, extended his political influence over
               Palestine which at the time was ruled by the Jewish Hasmonean kings. 

Early Roman Era

                 

               There is recorded evidence that during the Roman era ( 55 B.C. to A.D. 323)
               Armenian traders, artisans, Legionaries and government administrators were
               recruited by the Romans to settle in what they called Palestina. After the total
               destruction of Jerusalem in A.D.70 by the Roman general Titus and the expulsion
               of all Jews from the city and its surroundings, a small number of Armenians were
               part of the remaining non-Jewish population living in the immediate vicinity of
               Jerusalem which was in total ruins for more than a decade.


Early Christian Communities in The Holy Land 

                 

               During its early years Christianity was essentially an underground movement
               whose followers were persecuted by the suspicious Romans who believed that
               the early Christians were members of another Jewish sect since Jesus himself and
               most of the apostles, disciples and followers were of Jewish origin. By A.D.100
               Christianity had spread throughout Asia Minor including Armenia where the
               disciples Thaddeus and Bartholomew separately arrived and spread the words
               of the Gospel among a small community of Jews, and converted some influential
               members of the Armenian nobility as well. The early Christians in Armenia were
               persecuted and martyred like their brothers and sisters in the Roman Empire.
               Therefore, they sought support and guidance from like-minded people in Greek
               cities such as Antioch, Ceasaria, Jerusalem and Alexandria. Although the original
               Christians were primarily Jews, by the beginning of the second century
               non-Jewish (gentile) Christians became a majority and dominated the hierarchy
               of the church. This fact was exacerbated by the continued persecution by the
               Roman emperors of non-Christian as well as Christian Jews who were not
               permitted to reside inside the walls of Jerusalem. 

                 

               Christians were not permitted to build their own places of worship inside the city.
               Instead, they held clandestine meetings in existing buildings. One of these
               buildings was the Upper Room, a house on Mount Sion located outside the city
               walls, which they liked to call "Mother of the churches." They also owned a
               throne which they believed belonged to St. James, the brother of Jesus,
               considered being the "First Bishop of Jerusalem." The current St. James
               Cathedral is named after him and it is believed that his head is housed in its main
               sanctuary. Here, the Armenian presence cannot be disputed since the current
               Armenian Quarter is acknowledged to include the site of the original Mount
               Zion. 

                 

               In A.D. 135, Emperor Hadrian crushed the last Jewish rebellion and
               systematically wiped out the entire Jewish population of Jerusalem and its
               surroundings. He proclaimed that Jews will no longer be permitted to live in
               Jerusalem which again, was in total ruin. At the same time he renamed the city
               "Aelia Capitolina," a name officially used by the Romans until A.D.326. By the
               end of the third century very few people remembered the original name of the
               city.

                 


               There is no clear documentary evidence that Armenians lived in Jerusalem and its
               surroundings during the second and third centuries. The only viable testimony is
               recorded by Christian historian Eusebius (260-339) who in A.D. 313 was
               installed Bishop of Ceasaria. Eusebius, universally acknowledged as the father of
               ecclesiastical history, writes about written contacts between Bishop Dyonesius of
               Alexandria and Moushegh, Bishop of Armenia in 254. It is believed that this type
               of communication could have only been done through the Armenians in
               Jerusalem. Although there is no tangible historical evidence that Jerusalem was a
               center of Christian pilgrimage in the second and third centuries, and few sites
               were identified as holy sanctuaries, documents in the archives of the St. James
               Monastery in Jerusalem speak of a Bishop Macarius of Jerusalem presiding over
               the discovery of holy sites and the construction of edifices as mentioned in
               communications with bishops in Armenia between 325 and 335. 

                 

               It must be noted here that up to the beginning of the fifth century, there was no
               denominational difference among the followers of Christ. The prominent
               languages in the church were Greek, Syriac or Aramaic and the church hierarchy
               was invested in the bishops of various cities without any regard to nationality or
               ethnicity. Hence, the scant number of the Christian Church sanctuaries in the
               Holy Places was used by all Christians. They shared the multiracial monastic
               facilities, and in due time they founded a number of private monasteries and
               churches throughout the Holy Land. In essence, as an underground organization
               the Church was multinational, international and ecumenical. 

Beginning of Formal Christian Era 

                 

               Two important events at the beginning of the fourth century changed the nature
               and dimension of the Christian world: 

                      

                    1) In 303, King Terdat III proclaimed Christianity as the only
                    official religion of Armenia with the help of St. Gregory the
                    Illuminator. 

                      

                    2) Constantine I, Emperor of the Roman empire, proclaimed
                    Christianity in his Edict of Milan in 323, as one of the accepted
                    religions of his empire, which made it as one of the official religions
                    along with paganism.

                 

               The primary benefit derived from these two events was that Christians were no
               longer persecuted and marginalized. They were able to move about freely,
               perform religious services and practice their religion without fear of persecution.
               For the next hundred years Christians lived side by side in harmony. 

                 

               The process for the discovery and construction of Holy sites began in earnest
               with the visit of dowager empress Helena, mother of Constantine. Armenians
               were active in this process. Now that Christianity was an accepted religion
               Christians began to work in the open without fear of persecution. The sites of
               Golgotha, the Nativity of Christ in Bethlehem, St. Mary's birthplace, what is now
               known as The Holy Sepulcher and other important sanctuaries of today were
               discovered through the efforts of Queen Helena assisted by Armenian religious
               leaders.. 

                 

               The fourth century also saw the beginning of the great monastic age in which
               Armenians have had a crucial historical role. One of the earliest founders of
               monasticism in the Holy Land was Bishop Euthymius (377-473) of Melitene
               (Malatia). He is internationally recognized as one of the major pioneers of
               monasticism. He is also credited for establishing at least fifteen monasteries in
               locations between Masada in the south and Bethlehem in the north. He was
               regarded by his contemporaries as the second Adam. His exemplary life was
               thought to have launched a new era for humanity. As a talented organizer and
               reformer he set the pattern for future monastic endeavors by all nations. He
               authored regulations and a comprehensive code of living patterns and conduct
               for all aspects of monastic life which became the model for future monastic
               periods. Soon, monasticism became the "fad"of the time. Latins. Ethiopians,
               Persians, Georgians, and others flocked to the Judean monasteries thus giving
               the movement an international flavor and character. 

                 

               Archives in the St. James convent indicate that many other illustrious Armenian
               monks followed, contributing to the development of the canons, liturgy and
               customs of the Armenian Church. It is believed that between the fourth and
               eighth centuries Armenians had established more than seventy monasteries
               throughout the Holy Land. The monks or hermits who flocked into the mountains
               surrounding Jerusalem as well as the Sinai desert were highly motivated
               individuals whose primary goal was to work in the service of God under
               primitive and austere living conditions. In their monasteries the monks planted
               their own gardens and fruit trees contributing to the blooming of the area in
               general. Monasteries were populated by a minimum of two and a maximum of
               400 monks. Each monastery undertook a project or projects ranging from
               handwriting books, copying manuscripts, creating colorful illustrations, preparing
               liturgical procedures and hymns as well as formulating church dogma. Some
               undertook the manufacture of goods. Rope-making was a favorite trade. Some
               were the predecessors of our modern day think-tanks where they prepared the
               guidelines for religious laws, church services, hymns and theological positions
               which affected all Christendom. 


Invention of Armenian Alphabet

                 

               The above described endeavors could not have been realized without the most
               important event that took place in Armenia and changed the destiny of the
               Armenian people: the invention of the Armenian alphabet and grammar in
               A.D.405 by St. Mesrob Mashtotz, encouraged by Catholicos St. Sahag
               Bahlavouni. The first undertaking following this miraculous event was the
               translation from the original Greek and Aramaic, of the Old and New testaments
               of the Bible which they named "Asdvadzashoonch," meaning, The Breath of
               God. Church scholars translated a large number of Christian writings into
               Armenian and historians were able to document national and international events
               in Armenian. The development of the Armenian alphabet provided an impetus
               for the establishment of monasteries not only in Armenia proper but throughout
               the Holy Land where, between the fifth and eighth centuries, thousands of
               Armenians made their pilgrimage to pursue scholarly endeavors: writing
               theological works and developing what is currently known as the Armenian
               Lectionary which consists of sacred liturgical services, the calendar of church
               holidays, the dates for the commemoration of saints and an inventory of
               appropriate hymns. It must be pointed out that Jerusalem played a major role not
               only in the formation and evolution of the Armenian church liturgy and rites in
               Jerusalem, but it exercised great influence in the crystallization of Christian rituals
               into fixed forms throughout the Armenian world. The uniqueness of Jerusalem is
               vested in the fact that to this day it adheres faithfully to the exact letter of the
               forms, customs and traditions established by the scholarly monks and church
               leaders of the earlier Christian era.

                 

               At present, the Armenian Patriarchate maintains more than 4000 manuscripts
               and colorful illustrations carefully stored and catalogued in an underground vault
               in St Toros Church adjacent to the St. James Cathedral. They are vivid and
               irrefutable testimony of the legacy passed on over the past fifteen hundred years
               by the dedicated and hardworking monks. 

                 


               What is remarkable about the influence of monasticism in the Holy Land is that
               many facets of Armenian church liturgy practiced today originated in Jerusalem.
               The liturgical calendar is a remarkable document in that it provides guidelines and
               procedures for church services for every day of the year. This pocket-sized
               document continues to be published by the Patriarchate annually. In essence, it is
               a compact encyclopedia and a compendium of relevant religious events,
               chronological facts and organizational data. It also provides a schedule for the
               commemoration of Saints in the Latin church as well as information on the
               Islamic calendar.

                 

               Mosaic floors excavated during the second half of the nineteenth century in and
               around Jerusalem provide indisputable evidence of the existence of a great
               number of Armenian establishments believed to be constructed in the fifth and
               sixth centuries. Most of the finds were mainly on Mount of Olives on the grounds
               of the current Russian Convent. These archeological finds consist of six mosaic
               floors of different sizes accidentally uncovered from under the rubble while
               digging for the foundation of the Russian monastery. All six have inscriptions in
               Armenian letters. 

                 

               In 1895, another mosaic floor bearing Armenian inscriptions, was uncovered in
               the Moslem Musrara Quarter about 200 meters from Damascus Gate. This
               intact floor made up of forty medallions each depicting a bird and arranged in
               rows of five, measures about ten by twenty feet. This writer visited this site in the
               summer of 1992. An inscription in Armenian letters reads: For the memory and
               salvation of all the Armenians whose names the Lord knows. It is believed to be
               the funerary chapel of St. Poleucte, an officer of the twelfth Roman legion, who
               along many of his soldiers lies buried under the floor. The room in which this
               floor is located was purchased by the Patriarchate in 1912. It is the only
               significant mosaic floor owned by the St. James Brotherhood. The remainder of
               the building including the second floor is still owned by one of two original
               Moslem families assigned as the doorkeepers of the Holy Sepulcher. 

                 

               As recently as in 1992, while the Israeli Government was excavating a hill
               outside the old city of Jerusalem for the construction of a major boulevard,
               workers came upon a mosaic floor containing an inscription in Armenian letters.
               After much debate and litigation, it was agreed that the floor is the property of
               the Armenian Patriarchate, and in order not to disturb the relatively large floor it
               should remain in place for the time being. Today, it is preserved in place in a
               cement chamber under the boulevard. 

Concept of ONE CHURCH splintered 

                 

               During the first half of the fifth century we see the birth of sectarianism in the One
               And Only Church. It was caused by Christological pronouncements on the part
               of certain bishops. Prominent among these was Nestorius, Patriarch of
               Constantinople, who believed in the separate and distinct character of Christ's
               divine and human natures. In A.D.431, the Third Ecumenical Council was
               convened at Ephesus. Although the council condemned Nestor and his followers
               as heretics (called Nestorians), the debate over this controversy continued for
               twenty years, while the Christian Church was divided into two camps for the first
               time in its short history. The Armenian church leadership in Etchmiadzin, being
               under Persian domination, did not send representatives to Ephesus., thus was not
               informed of the decisions made. Following Ephesus, the banished Nestorians
               were welcomed by the Persian rulers as enemies of Byzantium , and by
               implication the Armenian Church was erroneously considered Nestorian since
               they were under Persian control.

                 

               Since at the time, Armenia was partitioned between the Persians who occupied
               the eastern two-third of the country and the Byzantium emperors who occupied
               the western one-third , the Armenian Church was generally left alone in its
               conduct of its religious and cultural affairs, holding its own church councils. After
               A.D.439, with the ascension of King Hazgerd II to the Persian throne, the
               relatively peaceful situation in Armenia changed dramatically. Hazgerd and his
               court wanted to assimilate the Armenians by imposing Zoroastrianism on all
               non-Persian people within his empire . His despotic treatment of the Armenians
               culminated in the Battle of Avarair in A.D.451followed by the protracted
               Vartanank rebellion and guerilla warfare which lasted until 484 when the
               Persians were finally defeated. 

                 

               The final blow to the unity of the Christian world was struck at the Council of
               Calcedon in A.D.451, while at the same time Armenians were deeply involved in
               resisting Persian persecution which in May of that year culminated in the Battle of
               Avarair. Again, the Armenian Church was not represented at the council, and for
               many years information about its decisions trickled into Armenia while the
               country was immersed in the Vartanank wars.

                 

               The final splintering of the Christian World was the direct result of certain
               Christological decisions made at the Council of Calcedon, which created a
               serious theological and ecumenical breach among the Christian leadership
               practically dividing them into two opposing camps. The primary point of
               contention between those attending the council had to do with the nature of
               Christ while revisiting Nestorianism. The majority faction (consisting of the
               Bishop of Rome, the Greek Patriarch of Constantinople and other Byzantine
               bishops) decreed that Christ's two natures were not separate as Nestorius
               claimed in Ephesus, but that they were united without confusion, change or
               division. Hence the term Dyophysite. The minority faction consisting of the
               Eastern churches ( the Coptic, Syrian, Ethiopian and others, led by the Patriarch
               of Alexandria, Egypt), contended that Christ had only one nature, partly divine,
               partly human. They were known as Monophysites. Thus, the splintering of the
               Christian Church had begun in earnest. For many years thereafter religious
               leaders, realizing the seriousness of the chasm, attempted to find ways to
               reconcile the dissenting groups. Several councils were held and edicts issued to
               modify as well as clarify the previous wording. They were not successful. 

                 

               Over the next thirty years the decisions of Calcedon and its variations gradually
               arrived in Armenia in a variety of versions. Finally, when the Persian threat had
               subsided, the Armenian bishops convened in Vagharshabat in A.D.491. They
               rejected the decisions at Calcedon. At a subsequent convocation in A.D.506,
               they also rejected the Monophysite label placed upon them by the Roman and
               Greek churches. Essentially, the Armenian church is not Monophysite; but,
               according to church experts it comes close to it. The Armenian Church has
               followed its own unique interpretation regarding the nature of Christ. It views the
               two natures as one and indivisible. It believes in the divinity of Christ and by
               recognizing the humanity it does not emphasize it. 

                 

               The wide breach created by the Council of Calcedon at first did not seriously
               affect the religious harmony among the homogeneous Christian communities in
               the Holy Land and Jerusalem. For about a century thereafter, all Christians
               remained under the spiritual authority of one patriarch regardless of his ethnic
               origin. They maintained the Holy Places and worshiped in common with harmony
               while the Greek Patriarchs in Constantinople were exerting their authority upon
               other churches in Asia Minor, and the Patriarch of Rome claimed supremacy
               over all Christians since the emperors ruled from Rome. There was much
               quibbling and strife among the "Faithful".

                 

               The harmonious relationship among the Christians in Jerusalem ended with the
               reign of Emperor Justinian I (527-565 ), an avowed dyophysite, who proclaimed
               that all Christians residing in the Roman empire must become dyophysites and
               began persecuting all those who did not comply. Many monophysite clergy
               abandoned their monasteries in Jerusalem and sought refuge in other inaccessible
               regions of the Holy Land and in neighboring countries. Those capable of
               remaining in the Holy Land established their own distinct episcopal hierarchy
               independent of the Calcedonian Greek Patriarch. With the encouragement of the
               Catholicoi in Etchmiadzin, the Armenians in Jerusalem installed their own
               independent bishopric and established a hierarchy having authority over the
               Eastern monophysite communities (Jacobites, Syrian, Coptic and Abyssinian), a
               practice essentially in effect in Jerusalem to this day. On the other hand, the
               Greek Patriarch exercised his authority over the dyophysites, all Christians in the
               Roman empire regardless of nationality or language. There was no Latin
               patriarch in Jerusalem at the time.

                 

               The actual extent of Armenian religious establishments in he Holy Land during
               the Byzantine period is not easily determined. A document in the archives of the
               St James Monastery attributed to a seventh century monk, Anastas Vartabed,
               contains a list of seventy monasteries and churches owned by the Armenians at
               the time in and around Jerusalem. The document asserts that a number of
               monasteries confiscated by the Greek Church during the dyophysite persecutions
               were eventually returned after some Armenian princes paid large sums of money
               to Emperor Justinian I. Soon after, when the Byzantine authorities in Jerusalem
               warned the monophysites, including the Armenians, that unless they adhered to
               the Calcedonian doctrine they would not be allowed to live in Jerusalem, it is
               said that some five hundred monks were advised by Catholicos Hovhannes II
               (557-574 ), to abandon their monasteries rather than submit to the threats of the
               Greeks and compromise their core beliefs. Many monks are said to have left for
               the city of Ceasaria on the coast of Palestine and to Cairo , Egypt , where large
               Armenian communities existed at the time. However, some Armenian clergy
               somehow remained in Jerusalem to maintain and protect the Holy Sites and
               institutions in spite of heavy-handed harassment by the Greeks who were eager
               to lay their hands on the Armenian properties. Thus, in the face of constant
               Byzantine coercion Armenians held on until after the Persian conquest of
               Jerusalem in A.D.614 and the subsequent Arab conquest in A.D. 638. 

                 

               In retrospect, the Council of Calcedon proved to be a crucial milestone and a
               highly significant watershed in the history of Christianity. It demonstrated the
               human shortcomings of the people who preached the message of love and peace
               proclaimed by the Son of God. Yet in practice they germinated the seeds of
               dissension and intolerance. The legacy of Calcedon can be characterized by a
               spirit of distrust and a deep chasm along Christological, ethnic and racial lines
               resulting in the eventual fragmentation of the Christian world and the
               establishment of a multitude of denominations, sects, and constantly warring
               religious groupings well into the twentieth century where brother still kills brother
               in the name of God. 

                 

               As to the Armenian Church, by affirming both a unique doctrinal position and
               their apostolic traditions, the Armenians maintained their National Church and
               distinct identity. Pressures from Byzantium, and in later years by the Latin
               Church, over the past fifteen hundred years has not shaken the Armenian people
               from their deep-rooted faith. By the start of the sixth century the Armenian
               Church made a clean break from the dominance of the Byzantine Church. 

                 

               In A.D.551, it adopted its own calendar and in A.D.554, at the second Council
               of Dvin, a complete break from Constantinople was officially proclaimed. By
               A.D.609, an independent National Armenian Church was declared, which meant
               that the Bishop of Jerusalem among others, became directly responsible to the
               Catholicos.

                 

               After the wide-spread destruction of Jerusalem by the invading army of the
               Persian king Khosrov II in A.D.614, Armenians took an active part in the
               reconstruction of the Holy sites. Preserved correspondence between Patriarch
               Modestus of Jerusalem and Catholicos Komidas of Armenia show the extent
               and importance of their cooperation. 

Muslim Arab Era

                 

               The rule of Byzantine (Roman) emperors ended when the army of Arab Caliph
               Omar Ibn-El- Khattab (634-644) entered Jerusalem in February 638. Thus
               began the first phase in the era of Muslim rule lasting until July 15,1099, when
               the Crusaders entered Jerusalem under the command of Godfrey De Bouillon. 

                 

               There is a historical irony in that the Muslim conquest of Palestine which the
               Arabs called "Falastin", also gave impetus to the growth of the Armenian
               presence in the Holy Land. Under the rule of the Roman emperors the Armenian
               church was relegated to a secondary position behind the Greek church and was
               represented by a small bishopric while the Greeks had a Patriarch. However, the
               situation changed with the arrival of Caliph Omar who seemed to have been well
               disposed toward the Armenians. Having fought the Byzantine emperors, he
               distrusted the Greeks, and it seemed to him that he could rely on the loyalty of
               the Armenians.

                 

               The first Armenian Patriarch on record is Bishop Abraham I (638-660). He was
               elevated to the position of Patriarch under a charter issued by Caliph Omar in
               A.D.640. Since then there have been uninterrupted successive regimes of
               patriarchs, suffragans and lay custodians to this day. The current Patriarch is His
               Beatitude Archbishop Torkom Manoogian who ascended the holy throne in
               September 1990. 

                 

               Throughout three successive Arab dynasties, the Umayiad (638-749), the
               Abbasid (749-970) and the Fatimid (971-1099) spanning over 400 years,
               Armenians enjoyed with very few exceptions, the goodwill of several Caliphs.
               There is ample historical evidence through both Arab and Armenian as well as
               European chroniclers, proving that Arab rulers enjoyed the trust and loyalty of
               the Armenians not only in Jerusalem, but also in Egypt during the Fatimid
               dynasty.

                 

               Caliph Omar in his charter also enumerated the rights and privileges of the
               Armenian Patriarchate over certain Holy Places thus guaranteeing the integrity
               and safety of the properties and lives of the Armenians in Jerusalem .
               Consequently, each successive dynasty recognized and reaffirmed this right. 

                 

               One significant aspect of the Arab conquest of Palestine is that for the first time
               in the history of the country an invading army entered Jerusalem peacefully. Not
               a single life was lost or any property forcibly taken by the Islamic soldiers.
               Caliph Omar, one of the most austere and passionate Companions of the
               Prophet Muhammad, continued to live as simply as Muhammad had done. In
               spite of the riches conquered by his armies he lived a Spartan life and insisted
               that his officers do the same. He had more compassion than any previous
               conqueror and true to the Prophet's belief, he considered Jerusalem a revered
               and holy city. The Arabs continued to call the city Ilya (Aelia) or Bayt
               al-Maqdes ( house of the holy) and in later years as Al-Quds (The holy place).

                 

               As a result of the tolerant nature of the Islamic religion, Armenians developed
               close relationships in several regions of the Arab empire. It is said that because
               of their apolitical nature Armenians got along with the Arab rulers. During the
               Fatimid dynasty of Egypt they enjoyed special status not only in Egypt but in
               Jerusalem as well. Many high ranking officials in the military and the government
               were known to be of Armenian descent. History also records two Abassid
               Caliphs whose mothers were Armenian including several Grand Viziers and
               generals.

                 

               Armenians settled in Egypt early in the Roman era. However, their numbers
               increased appreciably during the Fatimid rule. It is said that during this period the
               Armenian population in Egypt numbered more than 30,000 . It is believed that
               this was due to the fact that Armenians who were in key positions of leadership
               encouraged their countrymen to settle in countries ruled by the Fatimid Caliphs.
               This fact obviously enhanced the position of Armenians in the Holy Land. There
               is tangible evidence that the Armenian community had begun to congregate
               around the original site of the St. James Church and several churches and
               monasteries in the immediate vicinity on Mount Zion, which constituted the core
               of the Armenian Quarter as we know it today.

Crusader Period

                 

               The Crusader period (1099-1187) is also considered an era in which Armenians
               enjoyed growth, prosperity and fair treatment. Several factors contributed to this
               situation: 

                      

                    1) Even though at first the Crusader hordes came in as conquerors
                    pillaging and ransacking cities and committing many misdeeds and
                    atrocities in Cilicia or Lesser Armenia, their leaders soon realized
                    that they would benefit more by creating alliances with the
                    prevailing Armenian kings and princes in the region. On the other
                    hand, the Armenian princes welcomed this unruly invasion of more
                    than 100,000 soldiers who assisted them in defeating and expelling
                    the Seljuk Turks in the east. They agreed to the establishment of
                    Norman and Frankish princedoms and Kingdoms in the area as a
                    buffer. Thus crusaders became the Lords of Antioch and Edessa
                    where the inhabitants were mainly Armenian.

                      

                    2) Wherever the Crusaders went, they found influential Armenian
                    allies in the population of the cities. Armenians were found in all
                    major cities along the Mediterranean coast a well as in the main
                    cities of Palestine: Jerusalem, Acre, Ceasarea, Gaza, Kerak,
                    Nablus and surrounding areas.

                      

                    3) Intermarriage was common between the Frankish nobility and
                    the Armenian Royal Houses of Cilicia. It was a means of
                    guaranteeing binding alliances between the parties .For example:
                    Queen Arda, daughter of Baron Toros of Cilicia, was the wife of
                    Baldwin of Boulogne, prince of Edessa, who became King Baldwin
                    I of Jerusalem after the untimely death of his brother Godfrey of
                    Bouillon of typhoid fever in July 1100. Morphia, daughter of
                    Gabriel, Governor of Melitene (Malatia), was married to King
                    Baldwin II of Jerusalem . Upon the death of Baldwin II in 1131, his
                    daughter Melisend succeeded him as Queen along with her
                    husband Fulk, Count of Anjou.

                 

               In the spring of 1099 the Crusader armies arrived outside the walls of Jerusalem
               preceded by their reputation as ruthless warriors. Their cruelty and ruthlessness
               was so bad even Christians, including the Greek Patriarch, fled the city. It is said
               that the Armenian Patriarch, Simeon (1090-1109), did not think it necessary to
               leave the city until the actual siege began. The Crusaders laid siege to the city
               and since they did not have the basic knowledge and the means to scale the
               walls of a highly defended city as Jerusalem, they remained outside the walls of
               the city for several months, until a fleet of ships arriving in Jaffa from Genoa,
               Italy, brought in the necessary materials. They also dismantled their ships using
               ropes , hooks and the masts to build two wooden towers which they were able
               to wheel up to the walls- a device totally unfamiliar to the defending Muslims. 

                 

               On July 15, a soldier in Godfrey's command managed to penetrate into a tower
               of the city wall through one of these wooden towers. He was followed by the
               rest of the soldiers who entered the city in sufficient numbers to not only
               overwhelm the Arab and Jewish defenders; but for three days they killed every
               Saracen and Turk they found in the city. It is said that more than 30,000 people,
               including women and children were put to the sword. They pillaged the city and
               cold-bloodedly appropriated houses as they pleased without any distinction
               between them . It is said, the streets were literally filled with blood of their
               enemies. Those Muslims and Jews they did not kill were chased out of the city.
               By the time peace and normalcy resumed in Jerusalem out of a population of
               100,000 only a few hundred remained.

                 

               For some time the city was in shambles until Baldwin arrived in the Holy City on
               the ninth of November 1100. He was welcomed with enthusiasm and joy not
               only by the remaining Crusaders but by the local Christians including the
               Armenians, Greeks, Assyrians, who waited for him outside the walls of the city.
               Baldwin realized that if his countrymen had to survive in the Middle East he had
               to trust the local Christians in particular the Armenians since his wife was
               Armenian. He proceeded to gain the trust and confidence of the Christians. 

                 

               On November 11, 1100, Baldwin was crowned "King of the Latins" in the
               Nativity Church in Bethlehem. During his reign many Armenians flocked into
               Jerusalem from Antioch, Edessa, Tarsus, Cilicia and Cappadocia; some
               establishing permanent residence . Until 1187, Armenians thrived in the Holy
               Land and were given preference . Special laws were enacted granting Armenians
               and other Christians trade privileges, tax exemptions and other incentives to
               promote their settlement in Jerusalem. Ancient maps depicting the layout of the
               walled city of Jerusalem in Crusader times show the existence of an Armenian
               compound at its southwest corner. Although relatively small in number,
               Armenians seemed to be well established in the Holy Places.

                 

               In historical perspective the Crusader era was relatively short-lived. (it lasted
               about 88 years). However, the Frankish rulers left a solid legacy that has made
               its mark on Jerusalem to this day. The fanatically religious and intolerant
               invaders, in time, became civilized secular leaders who rebuilt the city and
               introduced a Western flavor to the society, that has lasted to this day. Their
               architectural accomplishments are living testimony to their sense of decorum. For
               example, the current edifice of the Holy Sepulcher was rebuilt during this era and
               remains today as proud monument of religious art and beauty. The most enduring
               accomplishment of this period was the construction of the large Armenian
               cathedral of St James consisting of a complex of sanctuaries which, besides the
               relics of the apostles James the Great and James the Younger, included the
               chapels containing the tombs of St Makar and St. Minas.

Ayyubid Period

                 

               In 1174, a Kurdish general by the name of Yusuf Ibn Ayyub vanquished the
               Shiite Fatimid sultan of Egypt and began conquering most of the Middle East and
               by 1187 he entered Palestine from the north. He defeated Guy De Lucignan,
               then King of Jerusalem, in July of that year effectively ending Christian rule in
               Palestine. Yusuf is usually known in the West as Saladin, an abbreviation of his
               title Salah ad-Din ( "The Righteousness of the faith"). A charismatic man, he was
               known for his kindliness and piety as well as tolerance toward non-Islamic
               religions. 

                 

               On October 2, 1187, Saladin entered Jerusalem. It was the day Muslims
               celebrate The Prophet's Night Journey before he went to heaven. For the
               second time in the history of Jerusalem, not a single Christian was killed or
               molested. The Frankish Barons and the rich simply paid ransom and left the city.
               Although the entire population was considered prisoner, Saladin set them free to
               go about their business. Ironically Christian chroniclers depict Saladin as a man
               of charity who behaved more Christian than the Crusaders. It is said that Saladin
               had a very positive attitude toward Armenians. He is considered the founder of
               the Ayyubid dynasty. As such he set the tone for future Sultans in their treatment
               of Christians and in particular the Armenians, with respect and dignity. 

                 

               As an avowed enemy of the Latins and ever suspicious of the Greeks, Saladin
               found it expedient to endow the Armenians of the Holy Land with greater
               privileges. The Armenian Patriarch Abraham III (1180-1191) and his leading
               clerical associates are said to have hastened to pledge their loyalty to the sultan
               and to pay the prescribed poll taxes. Unlike other Christians, the Armenian
               population of the city, comprising some five hundred monks and one thousand
               families, were neither expelled nor taken as slaves by the lieutenants of the
               Sultan. Instead, Saladin granted the Armenian Patriarch a charter guaranteeing
               the security of all Armenians, the integrity of their possessions, the prerogative of
               keeping their Holy Places and the freedom to worship throughout his entire
               domain. 

                 

               The Ayyubid period was relatively less turbulent until the invasion of the
               Karizmian Turks in 1244. There was widespread destruction and loss of life.
               The city was sacked and destroyed and the population expelled. The Holy
               Roman Emperors continued sending Crusader expeditions to Jerusalem but to
               no avail. They were either defeated or disintegrated before they arrived at their
               destination. It took three years (1096-1099) for the first Crusader to arrive at
               the gates of Jerusalem. The seventh and last crusade was headed by King Louis
               IX of France. Not only the venture was an abject failure, he and his entire army
               was taken prisoner in Egypt in 1250, and remained captive for a few months
               until they were ransomed, by the Memluk general, al-Zahir Baybars who in
               1251, led a rebellion against Sultan Turan Shah, the last Ayyubid sultan. 

Memluk Period 

                 

               Sultan Al-Zahir Baybars (1260-1276) is considered the founder of the Memluk
               dynasty. The Memluks (or Mamaliks ) were not Arab. They were a mixture of
               Eurasian tribes mostly of Turkish origin from the steppes of central Asia. It is
               said that they were sold as slaves to an Egyptian sultan by Jinghis Khan.( In
               Arabic the word Mamluk or Mamalik means "possessed", "slave"or "serf"). They
               converted to Islam and being naturally good horsemen, they became an elite
               cavalry force in the Muslim army. 

                 

               While occupied in conquering the rest of the Middle Eastern kingdoms including
               Cilicia, the Memluks were not in a hurry to capture Jerusalem since they did not
               consider it a strategic city and upon entering it they did not bother to reinforce its
               walls. However, until the end of their dynasty in 1513 (over 250 years),
               historical evidence shows that they did not persecute the Christians in Jerusalem
               and because of the existence of an Armenian colony in Egypt they looked
               favorably toward the Armenians. 

                 

               Unfortunately, during this period considerable manipulation, bribery and intrigue
               on the part of the Christian denominations for the possessive rights of the Holy
               places were prevalent. Arbitrary decisions taken by certain Memluk rulers were
               motivated by bribery, favoritism and sheer whim. For instance, the Georgian
               church whose members had close family ties with the Memluks, became the
               main beneficiaries, usurping properties and holy places owned by other
               Christians including the Armenians, by simply bribing the sultan of the day. 

                 

               One very important negative pattern characterizing this period which continued
               throughout the subsequent Ottoman rule and through our time, is the emergence
               of clear divisions within the Christian communities in the Holy Land resulting in
               three principal and adversary communities: Greek, Armenian and Latin. They
               eventually became the principal custodians and uneasy partners of the Holy
               Places. In the process, greed, intrigue and political machinations were the norm
               of the day. The Latins and the Greeks constantly conspired to usurp the rights of
               the Armenians. At the end, the Greek Orthodox Church became the greatest
               beneficiary of the infighting. 

                 

               Being part of a relatively small nation and without the backing of a strong
               country, Armenians had the added burden of defending their rights against the
               larger and more influential churches backed by the strength of the Latin and
               Greek governments in the West. Without a doubt, the leadership and
               statesmanship of the Armenian Patriarchs had a great deal to do with the survival
               of the Armenian presence in Palestine coupled with the fact that pilgrimage to the
               Holy Places continued on by Armenians living in many countries of the Middle
               East and elsewhere.. Some chose to settle there and help the church to built
               income properties and provide support and protection. 

                 

               One bright period in the Memluk era was the ascendance to the Memluk throne
               of Sultan Al-Zahir Chaqmaq (1438-1453) who, because of his dislike of the
               Crusaders, was fiercely intolerant toward the Latins . He closed their churches
               and did not allow them to rebuild their sanctuaries. However, for some
               unexplained reason he was positively disposed toward the Armenians whom he
               favored. One possible reason is that even though they were closely involved with
               the Crusaders, Armenians never espoused their hatred of Islam. As a result of
               past tribulations they had learned not to take sides in political conflicts and
               remained neutral. Consequently, they were the only community that had
               remained in its own quarter without being dislodged or molested during the
               upheavals of the previous three hundred years . 

                 

               In 1438, Sultan Chaqmaq issued a special decree in favor of the Armenians,
               forbidding the emir of Jerusalem to harass them with unnecessary taxation and
               instructed that an inscription to this effect be engraved at the entrance of St
               James Convent. Today, as the visitor enters the main gate of St. James Convent,
               on the back wall behind an ornate stone fountain there is an elaborately carved
               inscription in Arabic letters, which loosely translated warns all intruders:

                      

                    "This decree from Our Lord Sultan and King Al-Daher Abu
                    Sayid Muhammad , cursed be all those and their sons
                    through generations and may the Almighty Allah curse
                    whosoever causes harm or inflicts an injustice of any kind
                    upon this holy place. Abu Kheyer Razan hereby guarantees
                    this to the Armenian Convent of Jerusalem. In the year of
                    Muhammad 854" (1438 A.D.) 

                 

               Like most Oriental cities, Jerusalem was divided into distinct neighborhoods or
               quarters. The inhabitants of Jerusalem tended to live in separate districts
               according to their religion and ethnic origin. The Armenians and the Maghribis
               (Westerners) lived together in one quarter in the southwestern corner. Muslims
               from various countries in Asia ( including Iranians, Afghanis and Indians) lived
               next to the Haram or the Mosque of Omar in the northwest corner. The
               relatively small group of Jews lived in the southeastern corner. However, there
               was no strict rule for segregation. There were neighborhoods where Muslims,
               Jews and Christians lived side by side. Shops, trades and businesses were
               conducted without distinction between the various religious and ethnic groups. 

Ottoman Period

                 

               Sultan al-Ashraf Aqnouk al-Ghuri (1513-1516) was the last Memluk ruler. In a
               crucial battle outside Cairo in 1515, he was defeated by Sultan Selim I of the
               Ottoman dynasty effectively bringing the end of 250 years of Memluk rule. In
               December 1516, Sultan Selim arrived outside Jerusalem. The leaders of the
               Muslim, Christian and Jewish communities welcomed him with opened arms.
               Hence, there was no bloodshed nor forceful conquest. In reality, the people of
               Jerusalem were greatly relieved to see the Turks and gladly handed the sultan the
               keys to the city.. Being a pious man , it is said that upon seeing the El-Aqsa
               mosque and the Dome of the Rock, Selim jumped off his horse, got on his knees
               and shouted "Thank be to God! I am the possessor of the sanctuary of the first
               Qiblah (House of God) !".

                 

               The subsequent history of the Holy Places in Jerusalem and its environs has been
               a long story of bitter animosity and contention among rival Christian churches, as
               well as the cause of international conflicts. As one of the principal custodians of
               the dominical sites, the Armenian Church was frequently victimized by these
               developments. The stronger and continuous challenge to the Armenians and their
               holdings in the Holy Land came from the Greeks who continuously attempted to
               ignore and bypass the charters issued in march 1517, to the Armenian and
               Greek Patriarchs by Sultan Selim I on the basis of ancient edicts issued by the
               previous Arab sultans who effectively had sanctioned a status quo in the holy
               Land. Sultan Selim's edict guaranteed the integrity of the age-old Armenian
               possessions within and outside Jerusalem, as well as those of their dependent
               communities. The edict also prohibited members of imperial families, government
               officials and other communities from disturbing the ecclesiastical rites of the
               Armenians as well as those of their dependent communities; it prohibited the
               molestation of Armenian monasteries , sanctuaries and other possessions. 

                 

               The Ottomans, as the westerners call them, were originally Seljuk Turkish tribes
               out of the steppes of central Asia, who migrated west to Asia Minor following
               the armies of Jenghis Khan. Initially they dominated parts of Anatolia. Osman I
               (or Uthman Ghazi, 1258-1326) overthrew the Seljuk sultan and began the
               conquest of the rest of Asia Minor. He is considered being the founder of the
               Osmanli, hence Ottoman, empire. By the time Sultan Selim entered Jerusalem
               the Ottoman empire was establish throughout the entire fertile crescent , Egypt,
               Persia and parts of Europe. After the capture of Constantinople from the
               Byzantines in 1453, the empire extended to the Balkans.

                 

               At first the Ottomans brought law and order to the city of Jerusalem. In spite of
               their Islamic beliefs they were quite tolerant of Christians and Jews. However, as
               a result of their battles in the conquest of Europe they distrusted the Latins who
               in turn hated them. This situation benefitted both the Greeks and the Armenians
               since they were already well known to the Turks and were classified as official
               "Millet"(nations) within the vast Ottoman Empire. Of course the existence of
               Greek and Armenian Patriarchates in Istanbul (Constantinople) was of great help
               to both nations.

                 

               The status of Jerusalem improved dramatically during the reign of Sultan
               Suleiman The Magnificent (1520-1566). Jerusalem was the chief beneficiary of a
               cultural awakening. Between 1536 and 1541, he rebuilt the walls around the city
               which stand to this day . He also undertook the construction of many buildings
               that benefitted all the communities in the city. He promulgated laws and
               administrative procedures that lasted 400 years . Since the entire Asia Minor
               was under one rule pilgrims began visiting the Holy Places in large numbers.
               Armenians of all classes made their pilgrimage to the Holy Land through land and
               sea. The Convent of St Nicholas in Jaffa, the seaport, was the starting point for
               the seafarers who came from Anatolia and points in Europe. These pilgrims
               brought gifts and riches to enhance the status of the Armenian Church. Some
               settled to form a sizable community which over the years became the Armenian
               Quarter as we know it today. 

                 

               After the death of Suleiman in 1566, weaker sultans began to neglect Jerusalem.
               They assigned minor functionaries to govern the city which eventually ended up
               being governed by local Arab families. The Greek Orthodox patriarchs were
               well placed in Istanbul to pull strings in the royal court bribing the sultans and
               high level functionaries. Corruption, graft and intrigue were encouraged by the
               sultans as a means of keeping the adversaries off balance, and the ownership of
               the Holy Places changed hands according to who gave the most bribe. By the
               middle of the nineteenth century total chaos prevailed. There were daily fights
               among the followers of the "Man of Peace" for the control and maintenance of
               the Holy Places. Competition was so fierce and ruthless between the Greeks and
               the Latins, it compelled European and Russian governments to interfere in the
               internal affairs of the Ottoman empire. It may sound quite incongruous for our
               time, the bitter feuding between the Greeks and the Latins led to a full-scale war
               between the European powers. In 1847, a very serious brawl took place
               between the Greek and Latin priests which led to bloodshed amid accusations
               over the disappearance of a silver star belonging to the Latins in the Church of
               Nativity in Bethlehem. This led to a diplomatic clash between France and Russia,
               the so-called "protectors " of the two churches. This quarrel gave Britain and
               France the excuse to start the Crimean war in 1854, in which the Turkish sultan
               Abdul Majid fought the Russians on the side of the allies. The Russians were
               defeated.

                 

               In February 1852, Abdul Majid issued his famous Firman (edict) on the status of
               the Holy Places. It became the official declaration of Status Quo which
               established and regulated all religions in the Holy Places and froze in place the
               rights and privileges of the parties as they stood at that time. The document also
               promulgated that these rights cannot be amended or modified in any way shape
               or form . The main beneficiaries of this edict turned out to be the Greek Church.
               The Status Quo was confirmed and recognized by the Paris Convention in 1856,
               the Treaty of Berlin in 1878, the Versailles Peace Treaty in 1919 and the
               Palestine Order-in-Council in 1922, after the defeat of the Ottomans in World
               War I.. This last council added the following statement. "It is understood that no
               alterations can be made in the Status Quo of the Holy Places". Since 1967, the
               Israeli government has given partial acceptance to the Status Quo as it pertains
               to the Christian sites, reserving their right to those holy places they consider
               historically and traditionally belonging to the Jewish people.

                 

               The reader may ask, "How did the Armenians come through all these
               struggles?". History tells us that for a small nation, Armenians have done quite
               well. Deserved credit must be given to the leaders of the Armenian Church
               namely, the Patriarchs of Constantinople and Jerusalem backed by certain
               strong-willed Catholicoi in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries .It is
               demonstrated by the fact that the Status Quo recognized the Armenian Church
               as one of three principal custodians of the Holy Places on equal standing with the
               Latin and Greek churches. No other denomination has standing within this
               scheme. 

                 

               In all matters of principle relating to the Status Quo in the Christian Holy Places,.
               only the three major rites - Greeks, Armenians and Latins were taken into
               exclusive consideration. The three Patriarchs had the right to enter the Holy
               Sepulcher in formal procession. They alone had the right to ask that its entrance
               be opened by the Muslim door keeper, a descendant of the original family to
               whom the task was given in the nineteenth century.

End of Ottoman Rule 

                 

               The end of Ottoman (Osmanly) rule came inauspiciously in the first decade of the
               twentieth century. The last Ottoman ruler, Sultan Abdul-Hamid was deposed by
               the Turkish army in Macedonia led by a dissident group called the Young Turks
               who proceeded to establish a constitutional government on July 24,1908. Thus,
               the rule of Ottoman sultans, which started with the capture of Constantinople in
               1453, and ended ignominiously in the summer of 1908, was also the beginning of
               the end for Turkish supremacy over the countries in southern Europe (the
               Balkans), northern Africa and the Fertile Crescent. On January 23, 1913, a
               coup led by Turkish ultranationalists gave dictatorial powers to a small group led
               by the infamous triumvirate of Enver pasha, minister of War, Talaat pasha,
               minister of Interior and Jamal Pasha, minister-governor of Constantinople.
               Ignoring from the start the provisions of the Turkish Constitution which gave
               certain rights to all segments of society, they ruthlessly suppressed all opposition.

                 

               In the fall of 1914, the Turkish leaders were persuaded by the Germans to join
               them and their allies in the war against Britain, France and Russia. Atrocities
               toward the Greek and Armenian populations had already begun. Between 1915
               and 1918 they intensified their efforts resulting in the tragic genocide of the
               Armenians, a catastrophe presaging another future tragic event that would have a
               profound impact on the history of the Holy Land- the persecution and
               destruction of the Jewish people by Nazi Germany.

                 

               As a result of territorial losses in the Balkan wars of 1908-1912, and the
               declaration of independence by Albania, the Turkish government had to contend
               with the relocation in western Armenia, of its more than 500,000 displaced
               Muslims who were obviously anti-Christian, the idea of relocation worried
               Armenian leaders, since it meant the dislocation of Armenians in certain areas of
               Turkey. In order to make room for these refugees, the official Turkish policy was
               to vacate certain Armenian villages. The code word they used was "deportation".
               In reality, their undeclared objective was to establish a pan-Turkish hegemony,
               by eliminating all non-Turks or to Turkisize all minorities and bring together all
               the Muslim people from Transcaucasia, Iran and Central Asia into one Turkish
               empire. In particular, they would eliminate with one stroke " The Armenian
               Question"and consequently, it was the undeclared objective of the infamous trio
               to exterminate the Armenians in Turkey with the help of the Germans who were
               anxious to build the Berlin-Baghdad railroad.

                 

               The genocide of the Armenians effectively started on the night of April 24, 1915,
               a date that has gone in infamy , and is remembered by Armenians throughout the
               world to this day. After rounding up and executing more than two hundred
               Armenian intellectual, religious and political leaders in the country, the Turks
               proceeded to implement the systematic extermination of the Armenian population
               in major cities and villages under the pretext of "deportation" just as it turned out
               to be the case in Nazi Germany during World War II. 

                 

               In February 1915, Armenian soldiers had already been disarmed and relegated
               to work details, and many young men were shanghaied in the Turkish army and
               forced to perform humiliating menial jobs and treated as prisoners along with
               other minorities (Greeks and Jews in particular). Explicit orders were given to all
               the governors and military commanders of the Armenian provinces to remove the
               Armenians by force from their ancestral homes. The ethnic cleansing was
               systematic and well planned. They assembled all the able-bodied men they could
               find in the towns and villages, took them out of town and shot them dead. The
               remaining helpless old men, women and children were driven out of their homes
               and herded into caravans without food and water. Those who fell along the
               wayside were shot by the Turkish soldiers and Kurdish irregulars. Some were
               pushed into rivers and those who did not drown were shot by the soldiers.
               Those surviving these atrocities were driven toward the southern desert of
               Turkey. On the way, Turkish, Kurdish and Arab families snatched away the very
               young children to make them members of their families, young women or teenage
               girls were either raped or taken to become wives and concubines, or house
               maids to rich Turks . Finally, those arriving in the desert of Deir- Zor were shot
               and left to die in the hot sun in freshly dug pits. Thus, more than one and a half
               million Armenians were mercilessly exterminated. Fortunately, another million
               succeeded in escaping the first major genocide of the twentieth century. In later
               years, Hitler is known to have said "Who remembers the Armenians? " as he
               was "deporting" and exterminating the Jews.

                 

               It is an irony of history that the Armenian population in Jerusalem survived the
               genocide. At the time, Jerusalem was the headquarters of the VIII Corps of the
               Turkish Seventh Army commanded by Jemal Pasha, assigned to defend
               Palestine against a possible attack by the British in Egypt. The port city of Gaza
               in the south was fortified for this purpose leaving a relatively small garrison in and
               around the Old City of Jerusalem ( a couple of thousand troops in all). The
               Armenian population of Jerusalem called then and now in Armenian,
               "Kaghakatsi" (City folk or locals as against "Kaghtagan"-refugees) were not
               molested or massacred like their brothers and sisters in Turkey proper.
               However, those working for the city government were removed from their
               positions. With the British threatening from Egypt, the understaffed Turks were
               suspicious of all minorities, Jews, Arabs, Greeks and Armenians alike . They
               began forcibly conscripting young men from the city and sending them to
               Anatolia to do menial work. Some young men escaped. Jews in the Jewish
               Quarter hid in synagogues and with friends, Arabs hid in the Mosque of Omar
               while Armenians took refuge inside the safe confines of St. James Convent. 

                 

               Because of its sacred status, the Turks were reluctant to commit atrocities within
               the Old City. The average citizenry, including Armenians went about their
               business, and family life continued as usual. It is believed that one important
               factor in this situation was attributable to the Arab leadership in Jerusalem .
               Although the governor of Palestine was a Turk generally residing in Damascus,
               the city was actually run by Arab functionaries, including the Mayor and his
               deputies. At this time the mayor of Jerusalem was Hussien Selim Al-Husseini, a
               member of three ruling Arab families who over the past hundreds of years had
               administered the affairs of the city and its associated institutions.

                 

               Historically, the Arabic speaking local Armenians had close ties with their Arab
               neighbors who prevented any incursion against their age-old neighbors. Further,
               the Turks were quite aware that as a religious institution, the St James Monastery
               was protected by the edicts of Arab as well as Turkish Sultans. Consequently,
               the St James Brotherhood was able to open its doors to not only young
               Armenian deserters from the Turkish army but also provided shelter and food to
               refugees from the Turkish massacres. This activity was unprecedented since in
               the past the secular public was not permitted to take indefinite residence within
               the confines of the monastery. Although this decision was quite praiseworthy in
               its face, it created an endemic situation with serious repercussions in the future
               status of the St James Monastery which will be discussed later .

                 

               The Ottoman empire spawned the most corrupt rulers of the Holy Land. The
               only positive legacy they left was the establishment and enforcement of the Status
               Quo in the Holy Places,. which contributed to an equitable distribution of rights
               and the potential for balanced harmony among the Christian communities.

The British Are Coming 

                 

               By 1916, the British government had amassed a large military force in Egypt.
               Prime Minister Lloyd George and his cabinet decided that they needed some
               kind of spectacular victory in the Middle East that would distract attention from
               the stalemated trench wars in France. They had already faced the Turks in
               Gallipoli with disastrous results and were about to start a campaign in
               Mesopotamia.

                 

               The British Egyptian Expeditionary Force consisted of several divisions from
               England, France, Australia, New Zealand and India. They were supplemented
               by an Armenian volunteer brigade called the Armenian Legion as well as the
               Jewish Brigade, among others. The commander of the forces, General Murray,
               was replaced in the summer by General Edward Allemby who was told by the
               prime minister to capture Jerusalem as a Christmas present to the British people. 

                 

               Allemby crossed into the Sinai Peninsula along the Mediterranean coast and
               prepared to capture the towns of Beersheba and Gaza at the southern end of
               Palestine. On October 30,1917, Beersheba was taken and on November 7,
               1917, against strong Turkish resistance, Gaza fell to the expeditionary forces
               leaving open the road to Jerusalem as the Turkish army retreated to the north.

                 

               On November 21, 1917, Allemby's forces took positions in the hills in sight of
               the city of Jerusalem, and between December 4 and 8, the last attack was
               launched against the Turks deployed in the hills surrounding Jerusalem Many
               Turkish soldiers were killed and the rest retreated toward Jericho. By nightfall on
               December 8, the panicky Turks abandoned the city for good after some looting.
               Thus, The Turkish rule of Jerusalem lasting almost four hundred years
               (1516-1917) came to a humiliating end. The day before, Turkish police
               succeeded in forcing some Greeks and Armenians (about 300 ) to abandon the
               city marching them on foot toward Jericho facing severe hardships on their was
               to Damascus. However, they did not have time to drive the rest of the population
               from the city, thus saving them form an uncertain fate.

                 

               In the morning of December 9,1917, the Arab Mayor of Jerusalem, Hussein
               Efendi Al-Husseini, the highest official left in Jerusalem, carrying a makeshift
               white flag made out of a large sheet borrowed from an American missionary and
               bearing the symbolic keys to the city, set out to surrender the city to the British
               forces bivouacked a short distance away. He was accompanied by a group of
               Christian priests, Muslim Imams, Jewish rabbis and some children. It seems that
               the British soldiers were still sleeping in their tents. At some distance from the
               northwestern entrance to the Old City they met two unsuspecting British soldiers
               who were out looking for water. Privates H.E. Church and R.W.J. Andrewes
               did not know what to do with this delegation. A typically British shuffle up the
               chain of command ensued. After several hours, the delegation was finally met by
               a brigadier-general who accompanied them back to the city and told them to
               wait for Major General Shea to accept the surrender of the City officially in the
               name of the commander-in-chief, Allemby. 

                 

               On December 11, 1917, following precise instructions laid out three weeks
               earlier by London, General Allemby entered Jerusalem for the formal ceremony
               of surrender. Out of deference to the "Holy City" he entered the city on foot
               through the Jaffa Gate . In spite of the fact that the Turkish forces were
               positioned about four miles north of the city on the road to Ramallah and on the
               Mount of Olives to the east preparing to counter attack, the population of the
               city was celebrating their liberation with great enthusiasm. Fortunately, the
               Turkish offensive was repulsed the next day forcing them to retreat further north.

                 

               For the first time since the Crusaders arrived in Jerusalem in 1099, Christmas
               was celebrated under the rule of a Christian power. Even though the Holy City
               was no longer within range of its guns, the Turkish army was not driven out of
               Palestine until September 1918, almost a year after the liberation of Jerusalem.

                 

               On December 30, 1918, the Turkish government signed an armistice, ending in
               defeat and ignominy and effectively obliterating an empire that started in 1453
               with the conquer of Byzantine Constantinople 563 years before. 

                 

               On December 28, 1918, British military rule was formally declared in Palestine.
               On July 22, 1922, with the approval of the Council of League of Nations, the
               British mandate for Palestine began. When on May 15, 1948, the last British
               soldier left on a ship from Haifa, 31 years of British presence in Palestine ended
               inauspiciously.

                 

               In the Armenian cemetery, outside the southern wall of the Old City and
               adjacent to the St. Savior Armenian Convent, there stands a stone monument in
               memory of fallen members of the Armenian Legion. Buried in these sacred
               grounds are some (23) of the men who gave their lives for the liberation of the
               Holy Land from the Ottomans. Each April 24, led by the Patriarch of Jerusalem
               and accompanied by members of the St. James Brotherhood, Armenians gather
               around this monument in solemn commemoration of the fallen heroes ( about 25)
               whose names are engraved on the monument. They also remember and pray for
               the victims of the Turkish genocide. 

Legacy Of British Rule

                 

               The British rule in Palestine can be characterized as one of sustained deviousness
               on the part of its leaders and a repudiation of their public image as the saviors
               and do-gooders of the Holy Land. Even before the conquest of Palestine the
               government in London was instructing its commanders in the field to make
               contradictory promises designed to attain their objectives. The subsequent
               two-faced approach to governing during the British mandate, spawned the
               pattern of contradictory decisions that set the pattern of unrest and violence
               among both Jews and Arabs, that was to become the curse of the Holy Land
               lasting to this day, eighty years after their first entrance in Jerusalem.

                 

               While their armies in the field had barely begun the invasion of Palestine, the
               government in London was sowing the seeds of contradictory decisions. In
               March 1915, Herbert Samuel, a member of the British Liberal Government and
               a Jew, proposed the establishment of a British protectorate over Palestine into
               which Jews from all over the world could settle. It was supported by other
               members of the government. In October 1915, as they were preparing to drive
               the Turks out of Mesopotamia and the Arabian Peninsula, British functionaries in
               the field were promising the Arabs four cities , Damascus, Homs, Hama and
               Aleppo in Syria, to be part of their autonomous territories in return for their help
               in vanquishing the Turks. Instead, at the end of the war in 1918, Syria was
               placed under French mandate. At the same time the British kept to themselves
               their intention to occupy all lands west of the of the Jordan river, including
               Jerusalem which would become the center piece of British controlled territory.
               As the war against the Turks in Mesopotamia progressed with the help of Arab
               tribes, the British government repeatedly broke faith and reneged or modified
               their promises to the Arabs. 

                 

               The proposal for a home for the Jews in Palestine was revived on November
               9,1917. Foreign Secretary Arthur J. Balfour, with the approval of the British
               cabinet headed by Prime Minister Lloyd George, made public a letter sent to
               Lord Rotschild a week earlier, in which Balfour promised to use British influence
               to establish a "National Home in Palestine " for the Jews. Upon reading this letter
               in public. Herbert Samuel in a speech stressed that there must be "Full, just
               recognition of the Arabs who constitute a majority of the population of that
               country" adding that at the same time they must demonstrate "a reverent respect
               for the Christian and Muslim Holy Places which in all eventualities should always
               remain in the control and charge of the representatives of those faiths."


               The true intentions of the British government came into light when on February
               27, 1920, the military officer administering the government of Palestine, Major
               General Louis Bols, issued a proclamation that the British Government intended
               to carry out the promise of the Balfour Declaration. This act triggered serious
               riots by the Arab population of Jerusalem and elsewhere in the country. It was
               the beginning of continuous unrest, rioting, and guerilla warfare that plagued the
               Holy Land throughout British rule.

                 

               The arrival of the British in Jerusalem in December 1917, was met with great
               jubilation and relief by every segment of the population including the Armenians.
               The fear of persecution by the Ottomans had dissipated forever. Because of their
               apparent humanitarian approach, the British were unlike any other conqueror in
               the tortured history of Jerusalem. Working with the American red Cross, they
               began providing food and shelter to more than seven thousand refugees,
               Armenians, Syrians, Latins, Greek Orthodox, Protestants, Jews and Muslims.
               Several hundred Armenian refugees were settled by the red Cross in one of the
               most neglected and run-down areas in the Old City called the Cotton Market.
               At the same time, the St. James Brotherhood opened its doors further providing
               additional shelter to the Armenian refugees inside the walls of the convent. 

                 

               Since at the time the throne of the Armenian Patriarchate was vacant, the British
               military rulers in Egypt invited Archbishop Torkom Koushagian, then prelate of
               the Armenian church in Egypt, to visit Jerusalem and preside over the Easter
               celebrations to be conducted under Christian rule for the first time since the
               Crusaders. This move turned out to be quite beneficial for the Armenians. It
               helped ensure that their rights and privileges in the Holy Places were reaffirmed .

                 


               In March 1918, General Storrs, the military governor of Jerusalem, called a
               meeting of all the community leaders in Jerusalem , Moslem, Christian, Jewish
               Orthodox, and the local Arab government dignitaries. The purpose of this
               meeting was to introduce a newcomer from England, Chaim Weizmann,
               Chairman of the newly established Jewish Zionist Commission . Also present
               was Archbishop Torkom Koushagian. Weizmann attempted to allay the fears of
               the attendees by telling them that the aim of the Zionists was not to establish their
               power over the other communities , but to work together for a common goal of
               self-determination. This message was received with mixed feelings by all present.
               Future contacts with members of the Zionist Commission made the Arabs wary
               of their intentions. 

                 

               As acting Patriarch, the presence of Archbishop Koushagian in Jerusalem
               proved to be crucial to the future well-being of the Armenian church. His strong
               and determined representation of the rights and privileges of the Armenian
               church in the face of blatant attempts by the Greek Orthodox church to
               invalidate the Ottoman edict of Status Quo and usurp some of the Holy Sites
               owned by the Armenians , ensured that the British recognized and affirmed these
               rights. After the defeat of Germany ending World War I, the Armenian National
               Delegation which included Archbishop Yeghishe Tourian, the near future
               Patriarch of Jerusalem, lobbied the participants of the Versailles Treaty
               Conference in 1919 to ensure recognition and acceptance of the Ottoman Status
               Quo, which they did. In 1922, the Palestine Order in Council again reaffirmed
               the Status Quo, adding: "It is well understood that no alteration can be made on
               the Status Quo of the Holy Places."

                 

               In spite of the continued conflict and violence which started in 1921 throughout
               the British Mandate, the Armenian community in the Holy Land enjoyed a
               remarkable period of rejuvenation and growth socially, culturally, and religiously
               under the benevolent, open-minded, and progressive rule of successive British
               governors. Armenians continued their traditional way of living uninvolved in the
               struggles around them, retaining their age-old custom of apolitical behavior by
               embracing an even-handed neutrality, and under the guidance of the Patriarchate
               did not participate in the political conflict engulfing the Arab and Jewish
               communities. Although they were not considered combatants , on certain
               occasions some became innocent victims of violence from both sides.

                 

               The duplicity of the British rulers with respect to the status of the Jews and
               Arabs in Palestine was root-cause of the conflict that reached its crescendo in
               the latter part of the 1940s. In May 1921, Arabs began to riot against the
               continuing British policy of allowing the massive immigration of Jews into
               Palestine. On the other hand, extremist Jewish groups began a campaign of
               terror against both the British and the Arabs culminating in the indiscriminate
               killing of British soldiers, Arab as well as Jewish innocent civilians. By the spring
               of 1939, Jewish terrorists were killing British soldiers in protest of British refusal
               to allow Jewish refugees escaping Nazi Germany to land into Palestine. Those
               caught were sent to internment camps in Cyprus.

                 

               During World War II (September 1939-August 1945), terrorist activities from
               both sides were somewhat curtailed. However, after the unconditional surrender
               of Japan to the United States (August 28, 1945), the violence resumed with a
               vengeance. The most devastating terrorist attack took place on July 22,1946.
               When members of Irgun Zvi Leumi, an extremist Jewish group which included
               two future prime ministers of Israel, Menachem Begin and Itzhak Shamir,
               disguised as Arabs placed explosive charges in milk churns into the hall outside
               the Regence Cafe in the basement of the King David Hotel in Jerusalem, where
               the British Military Headquarters and other government offices occupied the
               third through the fifth floors. At 12:37, the explosives went off . Above the cafe,
               the entire south wing of the hotel , all five floors containing twenty fives rooms
               collapsed. Ninety two people were killed, buried helplessly under the rubble.
               Among the dead were military and civilian personnel, soldiers, clerks, typists,
               janitors, messengers, and drivers. Four Armenians were also victims; three
               female secretaries and a driver, Garabed Paraghanian.

                 

               Faced with the increased violence and indiscriminate killings, Armenians began
               to take steps to ensure their neutrality. The men began wearing Russian style fur
               caps and grew moustaches to distinguish them from the Jewish men who
               normally wore fedoras, and from the Arab men, dressed in their traditional red
               and white checkered Bedouin headgear. The women were ever so careful not to
               expose themselves to unnecessary dangers by abstaining from going to movies at
               night or go shopping in Jewish areas without escort. They generally stayed inside
               their own neighborhoods. 

                 

               There is an ironic element in the inconsistent style of governing by the British in
               Palestine in that, in spite of the ongoing struggles and violence they caused, they
               also introduced a Western influence on all the divergent segments of society.
               Like the disciplined missionaries they were, they encouraged the awakening and
               development of educational and cultural endeavors in each and every community
               in the country without distinction to religious and ethnic background. Ethnic and
               parochial schools and institutions of higher education, athletic clubs, musical and
               literary societies were established and maintained with professional efficiency.

                 

               Although the intellectual and literary awakening which had begun in the middle of
               the nineteenth century in Western Armenia was given a mortal blow by the Turks
               with the murder of more than two hundred prominent creative leaders,
               Armenians attempted to regain the impetus of rebuilding their cultural base in
               Jerusalem where under the protective umbrella of British rule they could blossom
               and progress in freedom. The principal motivator of this movement was
               Archbishop Yeghishe Tourian, an experienced educator, man of letters, and
               dean of the seminary of Armash (1890-1914) in Western Armenia. In 1921 he
               was elected Patriarch of Jerusalem. A lifelong advocate of education, he set out
               to bring together the intellectuals who survived the genocide. Immediately after
               his elevation to the See, he initiated the construction of the first co-educational
               institution in Jerusalem, a four-story stone building adjacent to the theological
               seminary inside the walls of the St. James Convent. In the summer of 1929, the
               completed school building was dedicated and named Soorp Tarkmantchats
               School (Holy Translators) and opened in time for the start of the scholastic year
               in September. Also in 1929, the construction of the massive Gulbenkian Library
               named after its benefactor, millionaire oil man Calouste Gulbenkian was
               completed and opened for public use .

                 

               The theological seminary was reorganized, its curriculum modernized and the
               faculty staffed with prominent teachers fortunate to survive the genocide. The
               student body of the seminary was increased by recruiting young men orphaned in
               the Turkish massacres as well as scholastically qualified boys from countries in
               the Middle East. The printing press and other departments in the Patriarchate
               were refurbished and strengthened. A spirit of enthusiasm and rejuvenated
               energy emanated from every sector of Armenian society.

                 

               After the passing of Patriarch Tourian on April 27, 1930, he was succeeded by
               Archbishop Torkom Koushagian who was elevated to the throne on December
               1, 1931. Not being a stranger to Jerusalem, Koushagian, a graduate, subsequent
               teacher and assistant dean of Armash seminary, followed in the footsteps of his
               venerated mentor and friend. He continued with enthusiasm the constructive
               work of his predecessor emphasizing all aspects of education and intellectual
               enlightenment. As an experienced and highly capable administrator with
               international contacts ( he was fluent in four languages, Armenian, French,
               English and Turkish), he continued to improve the status of the Armenian church
               in the Holy Land as well as ensure that the financial base of the Patriarchate
               remained strong and viable.

                 

               Patriarchs Tourian and Koushagian are venerated to this day as two of the most
               prominent men in the history of the Armenian presence in the Holy Land along
               with a handful of their predecessors. In utilizing their dynamic personalities and
               charm, they established a strong foundation for future generations. Because of
               their efforts, the Armenian community in Jerusalem would thrive and grow
               producing thousands of educated and professional men and women who to this
               day are strong contributors to Armenian communities in every corner of the
               world. Between 1921 and 1948, in spite of the mortal struggles going on around
               them, the number of Armenians in the Holy land grew to about 16,000.They
               were the object of envy in other communities in the Middle East. 

Came the Partition

                 

               On April 2, 1947, the British government, weary of the chaotic situation in
               Palestine and tired of the casualties inflicted upon his majesty's subjects by both
               the Arabs and Jews, informed the United nations in NewYork that it had
               decided to give up the mandate for Palestine. The Palestine Commission formed
               soon after, published its report on August 31, 1947, offering its
               recommendations. On November 29, 1947, the united Nations Assembly
               resolved to partition Palestine according to the plan presented by the Palestine
               Commission, to take effect on September 1, 1948. However, the British
               government announced that it would leave Palestine on May 15, 1948.

                 

               This decision triggered greater violence in Palestine. For the next four months,
               while the bulk of the British forces were confined to the safety of their barracks
               and the Palestine Police effectively powerless, the warring parties began
               jockeying for positions, each side attempting to capture and hold key locations in
               anticipation of Partition Day. The killing and bombing which caused the
               displacement of people from their ancestral homes intensified while each side
               was proceeding to consolidate and secure its respective territories based on the
               majority it enjoyed in any given area. A genuine ethnic cleansing had begun.
               Mixed neighborhoods were hit hardest with noncombatants, such as Greeks,
               Armenians, European embassy people and foreign nationals becoming victims of
               mass expulsion and terror. Many well-to-do Armenians living in the outskirts of
               the Jerusalem were forced to abandon their homes and walk away, some with
               only their shirts on their backs. They found refuge in the Armenian Quarter and
               the St. James Convent whence they and their parents came many years before
               as refugees of the Turhish massacres.

                 

               By March 1948, while the British controlled the main highways and imposed
               curfews all over the countryside and with marauding armed Arab and Jewish
               combatants filtering through the hills in daily raids against each other, it became
               difficult for the neutral population to travel between cities or leave the country at
               the risk of being shot or blown up. 

                 

               At 4:40 P.M., on Friday May 14, 1948, Ben Gurion, Chairman of the Jewish
               Agency, read a declaration of independence proclaiming the establishment of a
               Jewish State to come into being at midnight the same day. The new country
               would be called "Israel ". Although the British Mandate was scheduled to end at
               midnight on Saturday, May 15, 1948, Ben Gurion and his associates decided it
               would be prudent to declare independence on Friday, the 14th, out of deference
               to the Jewish Sabbath and also to avoid the wrath of the religious Orthodox
               Jews.

                 

               On the morning of May 15, 1948, the High Commissioner of Palestine, General
               Sir Alan Cunningham, accepted the lowered British union flag outside the
               government house from a small contingent of fifty British soldiers and flew to the
               port of Haifa followed by the same contingent of his troops. At the stroke of
               midnight that same day, a ship carrying the Commissioner and the remnants of
               British officials and the military, left Haifa harbor on its way to England, officially
               ending thirty one years of British presence in the Holy Land.

                 

               At midnight the previous day ( May 14) King Abdallah of Transjordan, standing
               on the Allemby bridge, shot a pistol in the air thus ordering the troops of the
               Arab Legion to cross into Palestine, and by nightfall the next day they were
               poised at the outskirts of Jerusalem. At the end of the two-week battle that
               followed, the Arab legion took control of the Old City trapping the residents of
               Jewish Quarter. The hospital in which many Jewish wounded were being treated
               caught fire. With the help of soldiers from the Arab legion, the Armenian
               Patriarchate located next to the Jewish Quarter, provided shelter to the wounded
               from the burning hospital until a truce was called to evacuate them several days
               later. The humanitarian act performed by the soldiers of the Arab Legion
               surprised the Jewish leadership. It was act that could not be forgotten.

                 

               After the cease-fire in November 1948, and the establishment of the "Green
               Line" extending north-south cut Jerusalem in half. Armenians were caught in the
               middle. Most had lost their homes in the new city and they had to find lodgings in
               the Old City . The St. James Convent was already filled beyond its capacity and
               most had lost their jobs or businesses. Eventually, the majority found passage to
               Amman Jordan, thence to other Arab countries in the Middle East. Those with
               means and connections were able to migrate to Armenia, the United States,
               South America, England and Europe. Those who remained suffered deprivation
               and casualties since both the Armenian Quarter and the St. James Convent were
               in the middle of the battle zone. At times, mortar shells fell over some buildings
               causing extensive damage to the point that some had to be abandoned. Since
               they had no access to their cemetery on Mount Zion outside the Old City walls,
               they had to bury their dead in the garden area behind the seminary. 

                 

               It is said that Patriarch Guregh Israelian (1944-1949) died of a broken heart,
               grieving over the sorry state his beloved people and their institutions suffered. He
               was buried in the courtyard at the entrance of St. James Cathedral. The six day
               war of 1967 also caused great damage to several buildings in the residential
               sections of the convent. In particular, the seminary building and the priest's
               quarters called Baghchatagh. Both had to be evacuated and abandoned.  In
               effect, the Patriarchate was also cut off from its outlying income properties and
               was deprived of necessary funds to sustain its operations and to feed its
               refugees.

                 

               As early as the spring of 1948, the Arab/Israeli conflict created a massive
               exodus of Armenians who escaped the ravages of war and the destruction of
               their way of life. Armenians living in Jaffa, Haifa, Nazaret, Gaza and other
               locations in Palestine suffered deprivation, loss of their businesses and homes .
               They had to abandon their schools and churches to an uncertain future, never to
               return. As of this writing, the number of Armenians residing in Israel is slightly
               over two thousand, most living in Jerusalem in and around the Armenian Quarter
               in the Old City.

Some Closing Comments

                 

               The acquisition and maintenance of the Holy Sites has not been easy for the
               Armenians. History is replete with intrigue, corruption and sometimes outright
               banditry, a process in which Armenians had to "play the game." In the years
               following the edict of Status Quo, the relationship between the principal rites has
               not been cordial or cooperative. There have been incursions, scheming and
               usurpation by all parties where arbitration became necessary. Fortunately, over
               the past twenty years a spirit of cooperation and goodwill has prevailed between
               the three major rites. It seems that the legacy of ill will has vanished. An eloquent
               example is the joint effort in the restoration of the Holy Sepulcher during the
               1980's and early 1990's.

                 

               Currently, the three major Christian denominations work together in true
               harmony. The three Patriarchs hold regular joint meetings and stand together in
               the protection and preservation of their mutual interests. It is quite evident that
               they have learned the lessons of history in the true spirit of brotherhood
               proclaimed by Jesus Christ. Credit must be given to the current Armenian
               Patriarch, Archbishop Torkom Manoogian. His past ecumenical endeavors while
               Primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian church in the United States, and
               as an effective leader in the World Council of Churches, he has earned the
               respect of his colleagues for achieving true universal Christian unity through
               interdenominational cooperation.

                 

               The three Patriarchs enjoy diplomatic recognition by the Israeli government, thus
               affirming the rights and privileges of all Christian churches as well as the
               sovereignty of all the Holy Sites including those of the Muslims. Also, the
               independence of Armenia has finally provided a governmental entity that can
               underwrite the legitimacy of the Armenians in the Holy Land evidenced by the
               establishment in 1992 of an Armenian embassy in Tel Aviv. 

                 

               It is easy to conclude from the preceding account that throughout the Christian
               era Armenians have demonstrated a unique fascination toward the Holy Land.
               They wanted to see the land where Jesus preached, performed his miracles,
               where he was crucified, where he was buried and whence he resurrected. It was
               a matter of Christian pride and faith to visit Jerusalem, to be tattooed with the
               sign of the cross which they carried home on their bodies as a badge of honor-
               something they could be proud to display and be called "Oukhdavor", "Haji"or
               "Mahdesi"s (all of which mean Pilgrim).

                 

               There are still many dangers lurking as a result of the political upheavals currently
               taking place in Israel and the West bank. All Christians must exercise extreme
               vigilance to ensure that their rights are protected in order to survive through the
               twenty-first century.



                

               Armenian Presence in the Holyland

               Key Chronological Events

               A.D.70 Jerusalem completely destroyed by Roman general Titus. A small
               number of Armenians were part of a non-Jewish population outside the city.

               A.D.135 Roman Emperor Herodius, again destroys Jerusalem and renames the
               city "Aelia Capitolina", a name officially used by the Romans until A.D.326. It is
               said that by the latter date no one remembered the original name.

               A.D.254 Historian Bishop Eusebius mentions in his chronicles the existence of a
               small Armenian religious community of monks and a bishopric in Jerusalem. 

               A.D.301 Armenia becomes the first nation to proclaim Christianity as official
               state religion.

               A.D.323 Roman emperor Constatine I proclaims Christianity as one of the
               accepted religions of his empire. Paganism is maintained for another 100 years.

               A.D.405 Saint Mesrob Mashtots invents Armenian alphabet and grammar
               launching the Golden Age of Armenian history. Holy Bible also translated into
               Armenian.

               A.D.425 The beginning of the great monastic era continuing to the end of the
               eighth century. Armenian pilgrimages also began in force. Armenian mosaics
               attest to the existence of many churches and monasteries in the region. 

               A.D.451 With the decisions of the Council of Calcedon Christian unity begins to
               come apart. Battle of Avarayr takes place in Armenia.

               A.D.550 Emperor Justinian persecutes monophysites. Armenian Church makes
               a clean break from the Greek Orthodox hierarchy and estabishes its own
               independent bishopric under the authority of the Catholicoas of Etchmiadzin.

               A.D.614 Persian king Khosrov II captures Jerusalem. Armenians take active
               part in the reconstruction of the Holy Sites. Persian rule ends in A.D.624.

               A.D.634 End of Byzantine Roman rule and the beginning of Muslim Arab era
               with the conquest of Palestine by Arab Caliph Omar-Ibn-El Khattab (634-644
               A.D.) He enters Jerusalem in February 638.

               A.D.640 First Armenian Patriarch on record is Abraham I (638-669). Installed
               Patriarch in A.D.640 by edict of Caliph Omar who also constructed the mosque
               of Omar in Jerusalem.

               A.D.1099 Crusaders storm the walls of Jerusalem and massacre its entire
               Muslim population. Armenians are spared because of connections in Cilicia.
               Armenians thrive in this period because of close connections with the royal
               family.

               A.D.1187 End of Crusader era and beginning of Ayyubid Dynasty with the
               entrance of Caliph Salah-Ed-Din in Jerusalem on October 2, 1187.

               A.D.1260 Beginning of Memluk occupation of Jerusalem by Sultan Al-Zahir
               Baybars (1251-1276). Because of large Armenian presence in Egypt,
               Armenians well treated.

               A.D.1438 Armenians receive favored consideration and a written edict from
               Sultan al-Zahir Chaqmaq (1438-1453). An inscription carved on a marble
               plaque in Arabic, set in the wall facing the entrance of St James Convent can be
               seen to this day.

               A.D.1516  End of Memluk centered in Egypt dynasty and beginning of Ottoman
               rule. Sultan Selim I (1512-1520) entered Jerusalem in December 1416. Otoman
               presence lasted to December 9, 1917, exactly 401 years.

               A.D.1643 Patriarch Krikor V, Markarian, Kantsagetsi, also known as
               BARONDER, (1613-1645), great builder and fundraiser, purchases extensive
               properties and renovates Holy sites.

               A.D. 1728 Patriarch Krikor VI, Shirvantsi, (1715-1749) also known as
               SHUGHTAYAGIR, meaning, Chainbearer. Wore a heavy chain around his
               neck until 1728 when he managed to payoff the large inbebtedness of the
               Patriarchate ( accrued by incompetent predecessors) 

               A.D.1833 During the tenure of Patriarch Boghos Krikorian (1824-1840), the
               first modern printing press is installed in a building inside the St. James Convent,
               initiated by his successor, Zakaria Gopetsi. Patriarch Boghos also pays off a
               bebt of 800,000 Piasters owed by the Patriarchate. 

               A.D.1843 Patriarch Zakaria Gopetsi (1841-1846) establishes first Armenian
               theological seminary in the city of Ramleh north of Jerusalem. In 1845, seminary
               is moved into a new complex inside the St. James Convent.

               A.D.1862 During the tenure of Vertanes Vartabed Vartanian, Locum Tenens
               (1860-1864).  The first lay school is established in Jerusalem named Gayane
               Girl’s School.

               A.D.1866 During the tenure of Patriarch Yesayee Garabedian (1864-1885) the
               first Church periodical, "SION", was published by the St James printing press.
               An avid photographer,Yesayee opened to the first phographic studio in
               Jerusalem.

               A.D.1917 On December 11,1917, British General Edward Allemby, formally
               takes over the keys to the city of Jerusalem, ending 401 years of Ottoman
               Turkish rule.

               A.D.1918 In March, British invite Archbishop Torkom Koushagian , Primate of
               Egypt, to represent St. James Brotherhood ( Patriarchal throne was vacant at the
               time).

               A.D.1920 On February 20, British Military Governor in Palestine announces
               British intention of implementing the promise of the 1917 "Balfour
               Declaration"establishing a Jewish National Home in Palestine. Arabs begin to
               riot. 

               A.D.1921 On September 5,Patriarch Yeghishe Tourian ascends St James
               throne. Formerly dean of Armash seminary. Begins educational reform. Plans
               construction and establishment of first public school and library. 

               A.D.1929 In August, first co-ed public school located inside the St James
               Convent across the way from seminary is opened. Named "Soorp Tarkmanchats
               Varjaran ( Holy Translators School) after Saints Sahag and Mesrob. Also in this
               year, the Gulbenkian Library is opened, named after Calouste Gulbenkian,
               Benefactor. Patriarch Tourian dies on April 27, 1930. 

               A.D.1931 On December 1, Patriarch Torkom Koushagian ascends his throne.
               Following the footsteps of his mentor, Patriarch Tourian, he modernizes seminary
               curriculum, increases number of students and enhances quality of teaching staff.
               Dies on February10, 1939. 

               A.D.1947 On November 29, United Nations Assembly resolves to partition
               Palestine.

               A.D.1948 At midnight, May 14, David Ben Gurion declares the formation of the
               independent state of Israel. Arab/Israeli wars begin. Patrirarchate is isolated and
               separated from its properties. Palestine is divided into two camps after truce is
               established between Kingdom of Jordan and Israel.

               A.D.1967 Israel defeats Arab invading armies and occupies West Bank and all
               of Jerusalem. West Bank is under Israel occupation to this date. (December
               1997). (See Map).

December 5, 1997


                                       

77 posted on 06/23/2002 9:46:04 PM PDT by Phil V.
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To: stryker
P.S.

http://www.holyland.org/

78 posted on 06/23/2002 10:24:08 PM PDT by Phil V.
[ Post Reply | Private Reply | To 76 | View Replies]

To: Phil V.
1300? BCE : Migration and conquest of Canaan by the Phillistines and Israelite tribes.

1000? BCE : Jewish conquest of Jerusalem; reign of David; After the death of David's son, Solomon, the kingdom split into two

721 BCE : Fall of Israel (Northern Kingdom) to Assyria

596 BCE : Fall of Judea (Southern Kingdom) to Babylon

516 BCE : Rebuilding of the Second Temple under Persian rule.

331 BCE : Alexander the Great conquers Persia. The land was subject to Egyptian rule after his death, followed by Seleucid Syrian rule.

166 BCE : Revolt of Judah Maccabee

61 BC : Roman conquest of Jerusalem by Pompei.

70 AD : First Jewish revolt. Fall of the Jewish Second Temple to Romans

133 - 135 : Second Jewish revolt under Bar - Kochba crushed. Judea renamed Palestina

622 : Hijra of Mohammed. Islam is founded.

640 : Arab conquest of Jeruslem. Land was divided into the Jund of filastin, in the south (capital in Al-Lod and later in Ramlah), and the Jund of Urdunn in the north, with capital in Tiberias (Tabariyeh).

1099 : Crusaders conquer Jerusalem, slaughter most Jewish and Moslem inhabitants.

1187 : Salah-ed-din (Saladin) reconquers Jerusalem

1517 : Ottoman Turkish conquest

1699 Treaty of Karlowitz in 1699, the first ever imposed on a defeated Ottoman empire by victorious Christian European enemies.

January 1851 : Murder of foreigners including Americans at Jaffa. After a massacre of foreigners (including Americans) at Jaffa in January, a demonstration by the Mediterranean Squadron was ordered along the Turkish (Levant) coast.

1858-59 : The Secretary of State requested a display of naval force along the Levant after a massacre of Americans at Jaffa and mistreatment elsewhere "to remind the authorities (of Turkey) of the power of the United States."

JULY 3, 1908 : The Young Turks revolt breaks out in the Ottoman empire, and is eventually led by Enver Pasha; Sultan ‘Abd al-Hamid II is forced to restore the constitution of 1876, entailing the creation of a new parliament, and indirect representative elections. ‘Abd al-Hamid is then deposed (27Apr 09), and his brother Mehmet V installed. Policies for the ‘Turkification’ of the Ottoman territories promulgated through 1909, resulting in the creation of societies promoting pan-Arab ideas

1909 : Foundation of Tel Aviv by Zionists (Called Ahuzat Bayit) near Jaffa; foundation of first Kibbutz - Degania

November 18 to December 3, 1912 : Turkey. U.S. forces guarded the American legation at Constantinople during a Balkan War.

NOVEMBER 2, 1917 : British issued the Balfour Declaration, viewed by Jews and Arabs as promising a “National Home” for the Jews in Palestine.

DECEMBER 1917 : Gen. Sir Edmund Allenby captures Jerusalem from Ottomans for the British. Col. Reginald Storrs is appointed military governor.

1919 : Turkey. Marines from the USS Arizona were landed to guard the U.S. Consulate during the Greek occupation of Constantinople.

JANUARY 1919 : First Palestinian Congress advocated incorporation of Palestine into greater Syria.

JULY 1919 : General Syrian Congress (which included prominent Palestinians, Transjordanians, Lebanese & Syrians) held in Damascus, supporting the independence of an undivided Syria, and opposed to Zionism. Britain cedes authority over Syria to France after the congress finishes; Gen. Henri Gourand becomes High Commissioner.

AUGUST 28, 1919 : Henry King and Charles Crane, the US members of the International Commission of Inquiry, sent primarily on the initiative of President Wilson, present their report based on their visit to the region in June-July, against creation of a Jewish National home in Palestine.

FEBRUARY - MARCH 1920 : Two Jewish settlements of Tel Hai and Metullah in N. Palestine attacked (Feb 20). Josef Trumpeldor killed in second attack at Tel Hai (March 1)

JUNE 1920 : Haganah, Jewish Self Defense, organized by Vladimir (Ze'ev) Jabotinsky.

DECEMBER 1920 : Histadrut, the General Federation of Hebrew Workers in the Land of Israel (Histadrut Haklalit Shel Haovdim Haivriyim Be'eretz Yisrael), was formed. Remained exclusively Jewish until 1960s, when it officially dropped ‘Hebrew’ from its name (1966).

MAY 1921 : Arab riots in Jaffa against Jewish population.

JULY 24, 1922 : British Mandate for Palestine; Official establishment of Transjordan as a separate state; Britain, in military control of Syria, allows French forces led by Gourand to retake Damascus by force.

SEPTEMBER - OCTOBER 1922 : Turkey. A landing force was sent ashore with consent of both Greek and Turkish authorities, to protect American lives and property when the Turkish Nationalists entered Smyrna

AUGUST 1929 : Arab riots in Hebron, Jerusalem, Safed, Haifa, Motza and elsewhere. The Jews had set up a dividing screen at the Wailing Wall in Yom Kippur of 1928 to separate men and women worshippers, prompting rumors that the Jews wanted to build a synagogue at wall, which were spread deliberately by Haj Amin El-Husseini. Amid heightening tensions, a demonstration by Jews in 1929 and Arab incitement ignited violence and rioting again Jews. Thousands of Jews fled the ancient Jewish quarter in Jerusalem. The Hebron Jewish community was evacuated after 64-67 were killed in riots.

OCTOBER 21, 1930 : British Passfield White Paper proposes to limit Jewish immigration to Palestine

1934: The United States of America formally recognizes Afghanistan

1947 - UN Partition Plan-- The United Nations approved a partition plan in 1947 that would have created two states, one Jewish and one Arab. The Jews accepted this arrangement. The Arabs refused. Five Arab armies invaded the new state of Israel. In the ensuing war, thousands of refugees fled. Jews fled Arab nations for Israel, and Arabs fled Israel for Jordan, Egypt and Lebanon.

1964: PLO was created.

1967: Arabs attack Israel. Israel came into possession of the West Bank and Gaza only because she was attacked (again) by five Arab armies in 1967.

JUNE 8, 1967 : USS Liberty, attacked by Israeli forces in the Eastern Mediterranean

JULY 16-23, 1968 : American Sailors from USS Independence and accompanying destroyers injured by students during anti-American riots in Istanbul, Turkey

DECEMBER 19-22 , 1968 : Sailors from USS Columbus and accompanying destroyers injured by students during anti-American riots in Izmir, Turkey.

1969 : Libya. Moammar Khadaffi , or Moammar Quadafi, whatever... seizes power in Libya

1970 : Lebanon : Murder of American University of Beirut President, Malcolm Kerr, in Beirut, Lebanon.

SEPTEMBER 1970 : TWA #741 and Pan Am #93 hijacked by the PFLP and flown to Amman, Jordan.

SEPTEMBER 10, 1975 : The Christian village of Deir Ashash in the north of Lebanon was attacked. Elderly priests were slaughtered and all the people were forced to leave their homes. Syrian responsibility

SEPTEMBER 11, 1975 : The Christian village of Beit Millat was attacked. Seven people were killed, and ten were kidnaped. Syrian responsibility

OCTOBER 9, 1975 : The Christian village of Tal Abbas-Akkar, in the north of Lebanon was attacked. Fifteen people were killed. The church was burned to provoke a sectarian war between the Lebanese. Syrian responsibility

JANUARY 21, 1976 : The Christian town of Damour in the south of Beirut was attacked. Two hundred and sixty people were massacred. The majority of the victims were women, children, and elderly. Palestinian responsibility

JUNE 1976: U.S. Ambassador, Francis Meloy and two other Americans killed in Lebanon.

JUNE 13, 1976 The town of Shikka in the north of Lebanon was attacked. Thirty people were massacred. Among them were women, children and elderly. Palestinian responsibility U.S. Ambassador in Lebanon Francis Melloy was assassinated by Palestinian gunmen and the killer was apprehended by Lebanese authorities and jailed. The killer was released by the Lebanese court under pressure by the Palestinians and Syria. The U.S. protested unsuccessfully. Palestinian and Syrian responsibility.

JULY 1976 : The hijacking of Air France Flight 139 in July 1976 by terrorists, and its subsequent re-routing to Entebbe, Uganda, prompted a highly successful raid by an Israeli commando team. In the end, the hostages were freed, no ransom was paid, and the terrorists' demands went unmet.

JULY 22 & 23, 1976 : Lebanon. Helicopters from five U.S. naval vessels evacuated approximately 250 Americans and Europeans from Lebanon during fighting between Lebanese factions after an overland convoy evacuation had been blocked by hostilities.

MARCH 16, 1977 The Druze leader Kamal Jumblaat was assassinated along with his bodyguards. Palestinian responsibility

OCTOBER 1977 : Four terrorists (led by Zohair Youssef Akache) hijacked a 737 bound for Germany from the Balearic Islands. After flitting around Europe and the Middle East, the plane was finally landed in Mogadishu, Somalia. While there, the "crack" German anti-terrorist unit GSG-9, along with two British Special Air Services members on loan, successfully stormed the aircraft and rescued the hostages

JUNE 30, 1978 : The Syrians shelled the Christian area of Beirut for 90 days. The shelling killed and injured hundreds of civilians and destroyed Beirut.

OCTOBER 20, 1978 : Tens of young people were killed and others kidnaped from the village Al-Kaa-, in Ras Beirut, and Jdeided el Fakiha. Syrian Secret Service responsibility

FEBRUARY 23, 1980 : The daughter of Bashir Gemayel (Maya) was killed in a car bomb. Syrian Secret Service responsibility.

FEBRUARY 24, 1980 : The journalist Salim Lawzi was assassinated near Beirut airport. Syrian responsibility... and so on

79 posted on 06/24/2002 12:12:01 AM PDT by piasa
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To: E. Pluribus Unum
Nuke Saudi Arabia

Yes, any excuse will do.

I'm serious.

80 posted on 06/24/2002 3:30:38 AM PDT by happygrl
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