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Armenian Orthodox leader urges world to recognize WWI-era killings

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  • Armenian Orthodox leader urges world to recognize WWI-era killings

    Associated Press
    April 7 2008


    Armenian Orthodox leader urges world to recognize WWI-era killings as genocide

    By ARIEL DAVID,AP
    Posted: 2008-05-07 09:29:57


    VATICAN CITY (AP) - The head of Armenia's Orthodox Church took part in
    Pope Benedict XVI's public audience on Wednesday and urged all
    countries to recognize that Turks committed genocide against Armenians
    early last century.

    Karekin II sat at Benedict's side during the traditional weekly
    audience in St. Peter's Square - part of a visit to the Vatican that
    is the latest high-level contact between Catholic and Orthodox
    leaders.

    Addressing a crowd of faithful assembled in the square, Karekin
    appealed "to all nations and lands to universally condemn all
    genocides that have occurred throughout history."

    "Denial of these crimes is an injustice that equals the commission of
    the same," he said. "Many countries of the world recognize and condemn
    the genocide committed against the Armenian people by Ottoman Turkey."

    Benedict's predecessor, Pope John Paul II, visited Armenia in 2001 and
    paid his respects to the Armenians killed in the last days of the
    Ottoman Empire.

    During Wednesday's audience, Benedict recalled "the severe
    persecutions suffered by Armenian Christians, especially during the
    last century."

    Armenia says an estimated 1.5 million of its people were victims of
    genocide in a 1915-23 campaign to force them out of eastern Turkey.

    Ankara denies that Turks committed genocide, saying Armenians were
    killed in internal fighting among ethnic groups as the empire
    collapsed.

    Many countries have been careful in treating the issue, because any
    recognition of the killings as genocide is likely to rattle a nation's
    ties with Turkey. Last year, the U.S. House of Representatives stopped
    short of voting on a resolution that would have called the killings
    genocide after Turkey threatened grave consequences to relations.

    Benedict is due to meet again with Karekin in a private audience on
    Friday. Karekin, the leader of the Armenian Apostolic Church, met with
    the Vatican No. 2 official, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, when the
    prelate traveled to Armenia in March.

    On Wednesday the pope reiterated his desire for closer relations with
    Orthodox Christians, saying that "we are certain that the Lord never
    abandons us in the search for unity."

    In his own speech, Karekin said that "in spite of different historical
    experiences and paths we have traversed ... we are all children of the
    one God."
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