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  • Rome: Mass in Rome Marks Armenian Massacre

    Zenit News Agency, Italy
    April 26 2008


    Mass in Rome Marks Armenian Massacre


    Monsignor Hopes World Comes to Recognize Genocide

    By Robert Cheaib

    ROME, APRIL 25, 2008 (Zenit.org).- A Mass in Rome celebrated by the
    rector of the Pontifical Armenian College was among many events
    marking the 93rd anniversary of the slaughter of thousands of
    Armenians.

    Monsignor Hovsep Kelekian celebrated the Mass in the Armenian church
    of St. Nicholas of Tolentine.

    He lamented the lack of an official international recognition of the
    "'metz yeghern (great calamity) of the genocide" and expressed his
    hope that "the genocide of the Armenian people be recognized by the
    whole world" because "it is a fact."

    In 1915 and the following years, vast numbers of Armenians were killed
    within the Ottoman Empire as it broke apart. April 24, the day the
    massacre began, is marked as Genocide Day in Armenia. The massacre
    began that day when hundreds of intellectuals, doctors, lawyers,
    journalists, priests and other representatives of the Armenian culture
    and politics were arrested and eventually killed.

    "We have gathered today to honor our martyrs and give thanks to our
    relatives who gave us this life we live today," Monsignor Kelekian
    said. "We hope that we can faithfully transmit to our descendants what
    we have inherited -- our faith and our Armenian culture."

    After the Mass, prayers were said before the Khatc'kar memorial
    erected in 2006 in memory of the victims.

    The memorial Mass for the some 1.5 million victims was one of the
    events of the awareness campaign led by the council of the Armenian
    community of Rome.

    L'Osservatore Romano today noted a petition from recently elected
    Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian that the international community
    recognize the massacre. He said Thursday that such recognition is a
    priority of his presidency.

    Armenia's goal is not revenge, Sarkisian added. "We are willing to
    establish normal relations with Turkey even tomorrow, without
    preconditions, but the denial of the genocide has no future, above all
    now that many countries around the world have united their voices to
    the chorus of the truth."

    L'Osservatore Romano noted that 22 countries recognize the massacre as
    genocide. Turkey denies that the killings were a systematic "genocide"
    and considers it a crime to use that term to refer to the event.

    [Marta Lago contributed to this article]
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