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Los Angeles Wildfires Destroy an Armenian School — and a Lifeline to Families’ Homeland

Araz Madatian | March 4, 2025



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Sahag Mesrob Armenian Christian School (Araz Madatian)

When Sahag Mesrob Armenian Christian School in Los Angeles went up in flames on Jan. 8, Armenian families living in the tight-knit neighborhood of Altadena also lost a lifeline to their homeland. 

Located in the San Gabriel Valley of L.A., Sahag Mesrob was one of about a dozen Armenian schools in Los Angeles offering a faith-based education. Founded in 1980 by the Altadena’s Armenian evangelical community, the school served more than 180 students from preschool through middle school. 

It was one of the L.A. schools that burned in a series of deadly wildfires that spread across the city over a three-week period, in what experts have said could be the costliest disaster in U.S. history

Hovhannes Halladjian, a local pastor, said that when the school burned it was like losing a member of the family. But the community is determined to rebuild in a new location.

“Sahag Mesrob Christian School was one of those schools that tried to do its best to teach the Christian and Armenian tradition and Christian values,” he said.

On the day the Sahag Mesrob burned, Halladjian said he was in the area helping friends and relatives evacuate when he saw the school engulfed in flames. 

Before he knew it, everything was gone.

Students in preschool through first grade have relocated to a nearby church, while second through eighth graders are temporarily holding classes at an Armenian cultural center in Pasadena. 

GoFundMe campaigns and fundraisers have been launched to support the school’s relocation effort, but rebuilding will be a long, difficult road. 

Ed Haroutonian, whose children attend Sahag Mesrob, called the loss of the school heartbreaking for his family. 

Haroutonian, who serves on the school’s board of directors, said Sahag Mesrob was a center of culture and religious faith for the Armenian community in Altadena. 

“Having two kids in private school is a big sacrifice for us, but it’s worth every penny to have our kids in,” a place, Haroutonian said, where students “learn what our faith is about, and our culture.”

Although it is Christian, Sahag Mesrob is a non-denominational school with no affiliation to any church or organization. Its mission is to provide a religious education within an Armenian heritage and cultural setting.

Vania Agojian, whose daughter Zoey attends Sahag Mesrob, said she decided to send her daughter to the school because of its legacy, community and religious foundation. 

“A lot of these public schools, when there’s like so many students, sometimes they lose touch with the kids,” Agojian said.

She said Sahag Mesrob is more than just a school, but a place where generations of Armenians have built community.

“In Zoey’s class right now, it’s like I knew their parents when their parents were that young,” Agojian said. “It’s just really neat to see generations of students that have come through.”

She said the fact that Armenians have experienced genocide due to their religious beliefs has strengthened their commitment to preserving their faith,traditions and religious-based education.

The community has suffered more than just the loss of its school. The wildfires destroyed vast swaths of Altadena, including residential blocks where many Armenian families lived, Agojian said. 

“I know at least a dozen families at Sahag Mesrob, if not more, [that] have lost their homes,” she said. “We have students who have lost not only their school, but their homes, their safe havens.”

This article is part of a collaboration between The 74 and the USC Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism.

Araz is a graduate student studying journalism at USC Annenberg. She holds a bachelor’s degree in English and Communications from the American University of Armenia.

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