JERUSALEM
(AP) — One of the four quarters of old Jerusalem belongs to the
Armenians, keepers of an ancient monastery and library, heirs to a
tragic history and to a stubborn 1,600-year presence that some fear is
now in doubt.
Buffeted
by Mideast forces more powerful than themselves and drawn by better
lives elsewhere, this historic Jerusalem community has seen its numbers
quietly drop below 1,000 people. The Armenians, led by an ailing
94-year-old patriarch, find themselves caught between Jews and Muslims
in a Middle East emptying of Christians, and between a deep sense of
belonging in Jerusalem and a realization that their future might
lie elsewhere.
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