The day the Melkonian was bombed
Cyprus Weekly – Friday, July 23,
2004
By Athena Karsera
A man who lived through the
bombing of the Melkonian Educational Institute as a recently graduated pupil
was in Nicosia this week to battle for the school’s survival.
One of Nicosia’s best-known landmarks for over 77 years and the pride of the
region’s Armenian community faces closure.
The 1926 stone building and its surrounding land of 125,000 square
metres is estimated to be worth at least CYP 40 million.
Nightmares
The government has placed a
preservation order on the school since May this year, ruling that “no
alteration or construction be executed on the buildings... considered to be
on special architectural/ historical/ social importance.” While this may
have temporarily scuppered plans to sell off the school, its future beyond
June 2005 remains uncertain.
Raffi Zinzalian had just graduated from the Melkonian and had a university
place waiting for him in Lebanon when the 1974 troubles began. He had spent
the day before the invasion on the beaches of Famagusta and was in the
school building when the Turkish planes flew overhead on July 20, 1974.
“We were happy because the cease-fire would begin at 3pm and then at 2.45pm
we saw the Turkish jets overhead. We thought they were headed for the radio
station (Cyprus Broadcasting Corporation- CyBC) but they circled round and
we heard a deafening noise, we had been bombed,” he said.
Zinzalian said that even his years in war-torn Lebanon could not compare to
the fear he felt on that day. Thirty years later, and now a married father
of three, he still has nightmares of the bombing.
“The roof in the dormitories was about to cave in and we couldn’t breath. We
knew we had to escape, the roof was on fire and so we ran outside to the
principal’s residence. The fire brigade was called, but the roof had
collapsed,” Zinzalian said.
The students and teachers left at the Melkonian made for the mountains.
Turkish troops had surrounded Nicosia and the only way out was on the road
to Larnaca. For 6-7 weeks communication and travel was almost impossible and
Zinzalian was able to leave the island on a Soviet cargo ship to take up his
place in Lebanon. “Two years later, the war started there,” he said.
Following his studies, Zinzalian was employed at the Press Information
Office (PIO) as a Turkish-English translator. “I saw [then-President,
Archbishop] Makarios everyday,” he said.
Archives
Zinzalian then left for the
USA to study photo journalism and media and is now a publisher at the
University of LaVerne Press and on the board of Armenia International
Magazine (AIM). He is also the president of the Melkonian Alumni and Friends
in California.
“We are all very sad that the school may be closed. All the alumni I have
spoken to, in LA, in Ontario, in Cyprus, in Greece, in Lebanon, in Turkey,
all feel the same,” he said.
Zinzalian has spent the last few weeks on self-financed travels to lobby
members of the alumni. “There are 1300 members of the alumni all around the
world,” he said.
Having had meetings with the Cyprus alumni of the school and representatives
of the Armenian community on the island, Zinzalian said that the passion for
keeping the Melkonian up and running will be hard to beat.
“We are also looking into the archives of the school because the Melkonian
brothers who founded the school made provisions before they died for it
never to close. Before they died, they put the school in the care of the
Armenian General Benevolent Union (AGBU),” he said.
The Melkonian Institute was built as an orphanage by Krikor and Garabed
Melkonian soon after the massacres of the Armenians in Turkey.
Zinzalian said that the closing of the school was “totally unacceptable” not
only because of the Melkonian’s important cultural role and lengthy history,
but also for the potential practical problems faced by the 170 students
continuing their studies at the school following the graduation of a further
30 this past year.
“There are students at the school from all over the world who may not be
able to continue their studies as they have up until now,” he said.
“It seems ironic that the Melkonian school survived bombing and a war and
now is in peril from the people supposed to be protecting it,” Zinzalian
said.
He said that the alumni were prepared to keep up their peaceful fight for as
long as necessary, fund-raising -- the California Alumni has raised over
$370,000 for the school over the past five years -- and meeting with people
able to help the situation. “The Cypriot government has been very
supportive,” he said: “and the Cyprus alumni is the best we have.”
Zinzalian also said that he believed the AGBU did not expect to have as
large scale a fight on their hands. “I think they expected to sell off the
school and take the money back to the USA without much reaction.”
He also criticised the AGBU for sending a non-Armenian to manage the planned
closure of the school. US national Gordon Anderson has been sent to take the
place of the school’s headmaster and oversee the school’s future.
“Feeling the way we do about the school, I feel that closing it will be
impossible,” Zinzalian said.
© Cyprus Weekly, 2004