VATICAN NO. 2 WRAPS UP ARMENIA VISIT
Radio Liberty
March 6 2008
Czech Republic
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's secretary of state, ended
on Thursday a three-day visit to Armenia that was overshadowed by
its grave political crisis.
The visit, originally scheduled to start on Sunday, was put off for two
days because of Saturday's clashes between Armenian security forces
and opposition supporters that left at least eight people dead and
more than 100 others injured.
The unrest was a major topic of his meetings and joint prayers with
Catholicos Garegin II, head of the Armenian Apostolic Church. "They
prayed together for the souls of the victims and asked the Lord to
keep and protect the Armenian people and reinforce them with faith,
hope and love," read a joint communique issued by the two clerics.
"The Cardinal expressed the complete support of the Catholic Church
to the Armenian Church, for her efforts utilizing her high moral
standing, aimed at providing solutions to all concerns through the
promotion of dialogue and peaceful means and fostering a common sense
of responsibility, so that the dignity of the Armenian people and state
remain unharmed within international society," said the statement.
The statement also said Bertone's visit is a "sign of the continuing
development of ties" between the two churches. "May God bless Armenia
and all Armenians - the first Christian people in the world - so
that all of Christendom can continue to enjoy their exceptional and
irreplaceable contributions," it added.
According to the Vatican's daily newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano,
Bertone told Garegin that Benedict XVI "joyfully awaits you in Rome
to express in person his admiration for the extraordinary cultural
and spiritual treasure that Armenians have given to humanity."
Benedict's late predecessor, John Paul II, became in 2001 the first
Catholic pontiff to ever visit Armenia.
Bertone also met with outgoing President Robert Kocharian and Prime
Minister and President-elect Serzh Sarkisian. Kocharian described the
cardinal's visit as "yet another indication of high-level partnership"
between the Roman Catholic and Armenian Churches.
Radio Liberty
March 6 2008
Czech Republic
Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, the Vatican's secretary of state, ended
on Thursday a three-day visit to Armenia that was overshadowed by
its grave political crisis.
The visit, originally scheduled to start on Sunday, was put off for two
days because of Saturday's clashes between Armenian security forces
and opposition supporters that left at least eight people dead and
more than 100 others injured.
The unrest was a major topic of his meetings and joint prayers with
Catholicos Garegin II, head of the Armenian Apostolic Church. "They
prayed together for the souls of the victims and asked the Lord to
keep and protect the Armenian people and reinforce them with faith,
hope and love," read a joint communique issued by the two clerics.
"The Cardinal expressed the complete support of the Catholic Church
to the Armenian Church, for her efforts utilizing her high moral
standing, aimed at providing solutions to all concerns through the
promotion of dialogue and peaceful means and fostering a common sense
of responsibility, so that the dignity of the Armenian people and state
remain unharmed within international society," said the statement.
The statement also said Bertone's visit is a "sign of the continuing
development of ties" between the two churches. "May God bless Armenia
and all Armenians - the first Christian people in the world - so
that all of Christendom can continue to enjoy their exceptional and
irreplaceable contributions," it added.
According to the Vatican's daily newspaper, L'Osservatore Romano,
Bertone told Garegin that Benedict XVI "joyfully awaits you in Rome
to express in person his admiration for the extraordinary cultural
and spiritual treasure that Armenians have given to humanity."
Benedict's late predecessor, John Paul II, became in 2001 the first
Catholic pontiff to ever visit Armenia.
Bertone also met with outgoing President Robert Kocharian and Prime
Minister and President-elect Serzh Sarkisian. Kocharian described the
cardinal's visit as "yet another indication of high-level partnership"
between the Roman Catholic and Armenian Churches.