Holy Trinity Church Offers Moving Centennial Commemorative Concert

CAMBRIDGE, Mass.—The third week of April saw a wave of commemorations for the centenary of the Armenian Genocide sweep the world. Most strikingly, on April 23, at the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, the Armenian Apostolic Church canonized the 1.5 million Armenian victims of the genocide as sainted martyrs. The Armenians of Greater Boston mounted their own commemorations during that solemn week, starting on Sun., April 19, with the first spring concert of the Erevan Choral Society since the death of its inspirational founder, the Very Rev. Fr. Oshagan Minassian, in 2008.

A scene from the Armenian Genocide Memorial Concert at Holy Trinity
A scene from the Armenian Genocide Memorial Concert at Holy Trinity

The Genocide Centennial Concert, titled “Lest We Forget,” in an apt echo of Kipling’s hymn “Recessional,” was performed in the sanctuary of the Holy Trinity Armenian Church in Cambridge to a capacity crowd. The extraordinary event combined a musical program of religious and secular song, compiled and conducted by Composer Konstantin Petrossian, with moving Armenian poetry recitations spread throughout the concert by the students of the Holy Trinity Armenian School, who flawlessly offered inspirational poems by such early 20th-century poetic luminaries as Baruyr Sevak, Gevorg Emin, Kegham Sarian, and Yeghishe Charentz.

A scene from the Armenian Genocide Memorial Concert at Holy Trinity
A scene from the Armenian Genocide Memorial Concert at Holy Trinity

The concert opened with the American and Armenian national anthems and included Krikor Pidedjian’s stirring “Der Zor” (setting words of Gevorg Emin), a world premiere of Levon Chaushyan’s “Srbazan Hayastan,” and a lyrical setting by Composer Petrossian of “Akh, Vaspourakan.” Also premiered was a corrected version of Makar Ekmalian’s immensely moving “Ov Hayotz Kajer.” In addition, duduk soloist David Gevorkian offered a plangent rendering of the folk song “Dle Yaman.” The multi-talented Nune Hakobyan provided organ accompaniment throughout the concert.

Following the musical portion of the program, a traditional Hokehankisd (Requiem) Service was collectively offered by the clergy present and presided over by a former pastor of Holy Trinity, His Eminence Archbishop Yeghishe Gizirian. The success of the Erevan Choral Society’s performance testified to the talent, commitment, and devotion of singers, musicians, and readers, and the audience was enormously complementary.

As befitted the solemnity of the commemoration, the mayor of the City of Cambridge, the Honorable David P. Maher, delivered an official proclamation reaffirming Cambridge’s recognition of the Armenian Genocide, and the city’s membership in a company that newly includes the Vatican, Germany, Austria, and 43 states in the United States. His Eminence Archbishop Yeghishe Gizirian delivered a stirring closing blessing, while Fr. Vasken Kouzouian, pastor of Holy Trinity, delivered his traditional welcome and blessing with characteristic warmth, reminding the assembly that commemorations will continue for the rest of the year and beyond.

Our martyrs will not be forgotten. The ideals for which our ancestors died have not perished, stated Fr. Vasken. Our martyred relatives, he continued, died for their faith and for their national and cultural dignity. They died for a cause, and as long as the cause is alive and breathing, they live on.

 

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Guest Contributor

Guest contributions to the Armenian Weekly are informative articles or press releases written and submitted by members of the community.

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