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Pope: "Terrible Persecution" Of Armenians Lingers In History

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  • Pope: "Terrible Persecution" Of Armenians Lingers In History

    POPE: "TERRIBLE PERSECUTION" OF ARMENIANS LINGERS IN HISTORY

    AsiaNews.it, Italy
    March 20 2006

    Receiving members of the Patriarchate of Cilicia, Benedict XVI
    praised the loyalty of the Armenians to Christianity and expressed
    the hope that continued division between the different Churches will
    be overcome.

    Vatican City (AsiaNews) - "Metz yeghèrn, the great evil": this
    is what Armenians still call the genocide they suffered in the
    years of the First World War, at the hands of the then Ottoman
    Empire. The phrase was repeated by Benedict XVI when he received
    Nerses Bedros XIX Tarmouni, Patriarch of Cilicia for Armenians, who
    was accompanied by members of the Patriarchal Synod. He talked about
    the "great persecution" at the roots of the diaspora of that people,
    and also about the division which persists among Armenian Christians,
    expressing the hope that it will soon be overcome.

    "The Armenian Church that refers to the Patriarchate of Cilicia (in
    Lebanon n.d.r.), is certainly a full participant of historical events
    lived by the Armenian people throughout the centuries and, especially,
    of the suffering they bore in the name of the Christian faith in the
    years of the terrible persecution which remains known in history by
    the sadly significant name of metz yeghèrn, the great evil. How can
    one not remember, in this regard, the many invitations sent by Leo
    XIII to Catholics, to go to the rescue of the poverty and suffering
    of the Armenian peoples?"

    Benedict XVI continued: "The Armenians, who have always sought to
    integrate themselves with their industriousness and dignity in the
    societies where they found themselves, continue to bear witness to
    their faithfulness to the Gospel still today." This is a fidelity that
    is also a "strong attachment, sometimes even to the point of martyrdom,
    which your Community has always shown towards the See of Peter,
    in a reciprocal and fertile relationship of faith and affection".

    A relationship that the Pope would like to see extended to other
    Christian communities of Armenia, which are still divided, although
    they recognize St Gregory the Illuminator as their common father
    founder and even if "in recent decades all have resumed a cordial and
    fruitful dialogue to the end of rediscovering their common roots. I
    encourage this rediscovered fraternity and collaboration, with the
    hope that new initiatives for a shared path towards full unity will
    spring from this. And if historical events have seen the fragmentation
    of the Armenian Church, may Divine Providence allow that one day it
    will return to being united, with its hierarchy in brotherly internal
    harmony and in full communion with the Bishop of Rome."

    --Boundary_(ID_KRsltsoTMXQBn5Pcd83C6Q)--

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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