Garo Nalbandian, an 80-year-old photojournalist, center, listens to a speaker during an Armenian community protest of a contentious deal that stands to displace him and other residents and cede some 25 percent of the Armenian Quarter in the Old City of Jerusalem, Friday, May 19, 2023. "If they sell this place, they sell my heart," he said of the Ottoman-era barracks where he has lived for five decades among a dwindling community of Armenians. (AP/Maya Alleruzzo)

Jerusalem: In contested Old City, shrinking Armenian community fears displacement after land deal

A real estate deal in Jerusalem’s Old City, at the epicentre of the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, has sent the historic Armenian community there into a panic as residents search for answers about the feared loss of their homes to a mysterious investor.

The 99-year lease of some 25 per cent of the Old City’s Armenian Quarter has touched sensitive nerves in the Holy Land and sparked a controversy extending far beyond the Old City walls. The fallout has forced the highest authority of the Armenian Orthodox Church to cloister himself in a convent and prompted a disgraced priest who is allegedly behind the deal to flee to a Los Angeles suburb.

“If they sell this place, they sell my heart,” Garo Nalbandian, an 80-year-old photojournalist, said of the Ottoman-era barracks where he has lived for five decades among a dwindling community of Armenians. Their ancestors came to Jerusalem over 1,500 years ago and then after 1915, when Ottoman Turks killed an estimated 1.5 million Armenians in what’s widely regarded as the first genocide of the 20th century.

Alarm over the lease spread in April, following a surprise visit by Israeli land surveyors. Word got around that an Australian-Israeli investor, whose company sign appeared on the site, planned to transform the parking lot and limestone fortress of Armenian apartments and shops into an ultra-luxury hotel.

Read the article by Isabel Debre in Sight Magazine.