Jewish Community Of Armenia
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

The Jewish Community of Armenia ( hy, Հայաստանի հրեական համայնք) is Armenia's oldest and largest Jewish non-governmental organization. It serves as a community center for Jewish holidays and cultural events and owns Armenia's only Jewish newspaper, '' Magen David''.


History

The Jewish Community of Armenia was founded in 1991 by a group of activists including Gershon Burstein and
William Weiner William Weiner ( he, ויליאם ויינר; hy, Վիլյամ Վայներ; russian: link=no, Вилья́м Макси́мович Ва́йнер, commonly known as Willy Weiner) (born 25 November 1955) is an Armenian–Israeli composer, vio ...
. Since 1996, it has been headed by Rima Varzhapetyan-Feller. It is affiliated with the World Jewish Congress and the Euro-Asian Jewish Congress and represents the communal interests of Armenia's Jewish citizens and residents in the Council for National Minorities. In the 2000s, the community installed a monument commemorating the victims of both the Holocaust and the Armenian genocide in Yerevan. Armenia's only medieval Jewish cemetery in
Yeghegis Yeghegis ( hy, Եղեգիս) is a village in the Yeghegis Municipality of the Vayots Dzor Province in Armenia. It has a rich historical past, with the medieval Zorats Church, the Tsakhats Kar Monastery and the Smbataberd fortress being locate ...
, previously abandoned for centuries, was cleaned up by the community and has since then become a tourist destination.


Publications

The Jewish Community of Armenia owns and operates the only Jewish newspaper in Armenia, ''Magen David''. It is published monthly and contains articles in three languages: Russian, Armenian and Hebrew. Paper copies are distributed free of charge at the community's Yerevan office, and online copies can be accessed on the organization's website. Members of the community have also coauthored and published several multilingual books on the history of Armenian Jewry, including ''Jews in Armenia: The Middle Ages'' (2009) and ''The Jews of Noah's Land'' (2020).


See also

* History of the Jews in Armenia * Israelis in Armenia *
Armenia–Israel relations A bilateral relationship exists between Armenia and Israel. From 1993 to 2007, Armenia was served by the Embassy of Israel in Georgia. In 1996, Tsolak Momjian was appointed the honorary consul of Armenia in Jerusalem. Eleven years later, the reside ...


References

{{World Jewish Congress Jewish organizations Organizations based in Armenia 1991 establishments in Armenia Jews and Judaism in Armenia