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Armenian Patriarch in Talks with Pope

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  • Armenian Patriarch in Talks with Pope

    ANSA English Media Service
    May 9, 2008 Friday 2:29 PM CET



    ARMENIAN PATRIARCH IN TALKS WITH POPE

    Vatican City


    (ANSA) - Vatican City, May 9 - The head of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church, Karekin II, on Friday invited Pope Benedict XVI to visit
    Etchmiadzin, the Armenian Church's equivalent of the Vatican. Karekin
    arrived in Rome with a delegation of bishops from the Armenian Church
    earlier this week and on Friday met with the pope ahead of an
    ecumenical service at the Vatican attended by both religious
    leaders. Speaking at the event, Benedict expressed his gratitude for
    the excellent relations between Catholics and the Armenian Church, but
    said that ''there is still much to do to calm the deep and sorrowful
    divisions'' between the various Christian churches worldwide.

    ''The road towards the re-establishment of full and visible communion
    between all Christians remains long and arduous,'' he said. The pope
    also highlighted the struggle of the Armenian Church, echoing an
    appeal to the international community he made on Wednesday in St
    Peter's Square to condemn the deaths of 1.5 million Armenians at the
    beginning of the 20th century during a Turkish campaign of
    ''denationalisation''. ''The recent story of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church has been written with the contrasting colours of persecution
    and martyrdom, of obscurity and hope, of humiliation and spiritual
    rebirth,'' said Pope Benedict. He also noted that the patriarch and
    his bishops ''have personally undergone these contrasting experiences
    in their own families and lives''. The pope praised Karekin II for
    reconstructing the Armenian Church ''with significant pastoral results
    over a short time, in Armenia and abroad, for the Christian education
    of the young, the formation of a new clergy, the construction of new
    churches and community centres, charitable aid and the promotion of
    Christian values in social and cultural life''. ''The restoration of
    the freedom of the Church in Armenia has been a source of great joy
    for us,'' Benedict said. On Thursday Karekin visited the basilica of
    St Bartholomew - one of the first preachers who came to Armenia -
    where the saint is buried on Rome's Isola Tiberina. The small former
    Soviet republic of Armenia is one of the oldest Christian nations in
    the world, having adopted Christianity in 301 AD, and is surrounded by
    predominantly Muslim nations. The elected patriarch, or Catholicos, is
    head of all the Armenian communities throughout the world and has his
    seat at at Etchmiadzin.
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