Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Pope recalls Armenian 'martyrdom,' avoiding 'genocide' term

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Pope recalls Armenian 'martyrdom,' avoiding 'genocide' term

    Turkish Press
    May 9 2008


    Pope recalls Armenian 'martyrdom,' avoiding 'genocide' term


    05-09-2008, 15h54
    VATICAN CITY (AFP)


    Pope Benedict XVI on Friday recalled the "martyrdom" of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church during a visit by its leader Karekin II, avoiding the
    word "genocide" pronounced several times by his predecessor John Paul
    II.

    Karekin II, on the fourth and final day of a visit to the Vatican, had
    on Wednesday urged "all nations to universally denounce the Armenian
    genocide" in a speech to some 20,000 people gathered in St Peter's
    Square.

    On Friday, however, the pope said: "The recent history of the Armenian
    Apostolic Church has been written in the contrasting colours of
    persecution and martyrdom, darkness and hope, humiliation and
    spiritual rebirth.

    "The restoration of freedom to the Church in Armenia has been a source
    of great joy for us all," the 81-year-old pontiff added.

    In November 2000, a meeting at the Vatican between John Paul II and
    Karekin II ended with a joint statement condemning the Armenian
    "genocide."

    The following year, at Karekin II's invitation, the Polish pope
    travelled to Armenia where the two religious leaders again spoke of
    "the extermination of one-and-a-half million Armenian Christians in
    what is generally called the first genocide of the 20th century."

    John Paul II also spoke of the "annihilation of thousands of people
    that followed under the former totalitarian regime," referring to
    Soviet-era religious persecution.

    On Friday, Karekin II invited Benedict XVI to visit Armenia both in
    his own name and on behalf of new President Serzh Sarkisian.

    The two religious leaders had private talks after the pope led an
    ecumenical celebration in the Apostolic Palace's imposing Clementine
    Hall.

    The Armenian Apostolic Church, one of the world's oldest independent
    churches, numbers some seven million adherents of whom two million
    live in present-day Armenia.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in orchestrated
    killings during the final years of the Ottoman Empire, with more than
    20 countries officially recognising genocide as the decades passed.

    Turkey says 300,000 Armenians and at least an equal number of Turks
    were killed in civil strife when the Christian Armenians, backed by
    Russia, rose up against the Ottomans.

    The dispute has been a major obstacle in relations between Turkey and
    Armenia, which have no diplomatic ties and whose border has remained
    closed for more than a decade. (AFP)
Working...
X