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St Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary - Symposium Report Eastern-Oriental
Symposium on Jerusalem |
Main presentations:
Dr. Roberta Ervine is Associate Professor of Armenian Studies
at St. Nersess Seminary. She was the first student to enroll in Columbia University’s
Armenian Studies Program when it reopened in 1979. She received her Ph.D. there
in 1988, working under the direction of Prof. Nina Garsoian. From 1981-2001,
she worked in Jerusalem, first doing doctoral research, then teaching Classical
Armenian and Armenian History in the Holy Translators Academy of the Armenian
Patriarchate, and then from 1995-2001 teaching at the Hebrew University. After
Jerusalem, she joined the faculty of St. Nersess Seminary. Her primary interests
are in the history of the Armenians in Jerusalem, medieval Armenian literature,
and the Eastern Churches. Her presentation was on the Historical Context
of Christian Relations in Jerusalem.
Fr Alexander
Rentel, a 1995 M.Div. graduate of St Vladimir’s,
is currently finishing his doctoral dissertation under the direction of Fr
Robert Taft,
SJ, at the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome. Prior to coming to St Vladimir’s
as an Instructor in Church History and Canon Law, Fr
Alexander was a Junior
Fellow in Byzantine Studies at Dumbarton Oaks, Washington, D.C. In the spring
of 2001, Fr Alexander received the E.K. Rand Dissertation Grant from the Medieval
Academy of America, which enabled him to make a research trip to Meteora, Greece.
His lecture was entitled Has Jerusalem Served to Unite or Divide Christians?
A Review of the Liturgical Evidence.
Dr Serge Schmemann is a senior writer for the New
York Times,
where he also sits on the editorial board. He has served as the Times Bureau
Chief in Moscow,
Bonn, and, from 1995-1998 in Jerusalem. In 1991 he won the Pulitzer Prize in
Journalism for International Reporting, 1991, for coverage of the reunification
of Germany. He has taught journalism at Columbia and Princeton, and is author
of the award-winning book Echoes of a Native Land: Two Centuries of a Russian
Village (1997). He will soon be moving to Paris to take up a senior post at
the International Herald Tribune. He will speak with us on the situation of
Jerusalem today.
Dr George Kiraz is a computer scientist and Syriac scholar.
He was born in Bethlehem and has served as a deacon in the Syrian Orthodox
Church, at
the Holy Sites. His doctorate is in Computational Linguistics, from Cambridge,
1996, but he holds a degree in Syriac from Oxford as well. In 1992 he founded
Beth Mardutho: The Syriac Institute, which he also directs. He is a fellow
of the Institute of Christian Oriental Research, at The Catholic University
of America. He runs Gorgias Press,
which publishes and reissues primary-source and scholarly texts relevant
to Syriac studies (available in the back of
the auditorium), and is a widely published author of his own works. His presentation
today, like Fr. Alexander's took up the liturgical side of the ecclesiastical
landscape in Jerusalem: The Swords of Candles: Syriac Orthodox Worship
in
the Holy Sites.
Panel participants:
Dr Tarek Mitri (panel moderator) studied in Beirut and Paris, where he earned a doctorate in Sociology of Knowledge. He teaches regularly at the Saint John of Damascus Institute of Theology, at Balamand, Lebanon. He has been a visiting professor in Rome, Paris, Geneva and Amsterdam. This semester he is a visiting faculty member at the Harvard Divinity School and tutoring students at the Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University. He is director of the team on Interreligious Relations at the World Council of Churches. He plays a significant role of service to his Church (the Greek Orthodox Patriarchate of Antioch) as an advisor to Patriarch Ignatius IV Hazim.
Dr Abraham Terian is Professor of Armenian Patristics and Academic Dean at St Nersess Seminary. He is also editor of the St. Nersess Theological Review, and the author of several books on Philo of Alexandria. He has more than fifty articles in historical, philological, and literary periodicals and monographs. Before coming to St. Nersess in 1997, he was Professor of Intertestamental and Early Christian Literatures for twenty years at various universities in the US and abroad, and for four years a Visiting Professor for both Classical Armenian and Hellenistic Judaism at the University of Chicago. Prof. Terian is also a native of Jerusalem.
H.E. Archbishop Cyril Mor Aphrem is Patriarchal Vicar and Archbishop of the Archdiocese of the Syrian Orthodox Church for the Eastern US. He has studied in his native Syria, as well as in Egypt, and in St. Patrick’s College in Maynooth, Ireland, where he earned the Doctorate of Divinity. He has taught at the St Ephrem Theological Seminary in Damascus, and served as secretary to Patriarch Ignatius Zakka I Iwas. He was consecrated and installed to his current post in 1996, and has served since then at St Mark’s Syrian Orthodox Cathedral in Teaneck, NJ.
V. Rev. Leonid Kishkovsky, Ecumenical Officer of the Orthodox Church in America the Orthodox Church in America, serves on countless boards and executive bodies of Church and interchurch organizations. He was President of the National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA from 1989-1990, and for three years was a member of the US Secretary of State’s Committee on Religious Freedom Abroad. He occupies leadership roles in several organizations including International Orthodox Christian Charities, Action by Churches Together, the US Conference of Religions and Peace, and serves on the Executive Committee of the World Council of Churches. And for nearly thirty years he has been parish priest at Our Lady of Kazan Church in Sea Cliff, New York.
His Excellency, Ambassador Patrick Theros served for 35 years in the US Foreign
Service, in diplomatic positions in Saudi Arabia, Lebanon, and Nicaragua, and
was US
Ambassador
to Qatar from 1995-1998. In 1992, Mr. Theros was bestowed the President’s
Meritorious Service Award, and the Secretary of Defense Medal for Meritorious
Civilian Service. Immediately before his appointment to Qatar as Ambassador,
he served as Deputy Coordinator for Counterterrorism, responsible for the coordination
of all US government counterterrorism activities outside the US. Since 2000
he is President and Executive Director of the US-Qatar Business Council. He
has formally represented the Patriarchate of Jerusalem in the US.