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Armenians Participate in Pope Benedict's Middle East Visit

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  • Armenians Participate in Pope Benedict's Middle East Visit

    PRESS RELEASE
    CENTER FOR ARMENIAN REMEMBRANCE (CAR)
    [email protected] <[email protected]>
    PO BOX 250322 Glendale, CA 91225-0322
    Tel: 818-982-5246
    Email: [email protected]

    June 11, 2009



    ARMENIANS PARTICIPATE IN POPE BENEDICT'S MIDDLE EAST VISIT

    Alarmed by the declining presence of Christians in the Holy Land and the
    wider Middle East, Pope Benedict XVI recently visited Jordan, the West Bank
    and Jerusalem. After expressing his `deep respect' for Islam upon arrival,
    the Pontiff, on his last day in Jordan, held a public mass before tens of
    thousands at the football stadium in Amman.

    A delegation of high-ranking Armenian catholic clergy, and Armenians from as
    far away as Los Angeles participated at the high-spirited mass in the
    stadium. The Armenian delegation consisted of His Beatitude Nerses Bedros
    XIX, Patriarch of the Catholic Armenians, Kerabaydzar Raphael Minassian,
    Patriarch Exarchate and spiritual leader of the Catholics in Jordan and
    Jerusalem, Kerabaydzar Michael Vartabed Mouradian, and His Grace Father
    Antrang Ayvazian, Dzayrakouyn Vartabed and spiritual leader of the Kamishli
    Eparchy.

    Amongst the tens of thousands of the faithful at the stadium were Attorney
    Vartkes Yeghiayan and his daughter Tamar from Los Angeles.

    We asked Mr. Yeghiayan to describe the feeling in the stadium.

    "With choruses singing 'Yes to love, yes to peace,' children waving flags,
    military forces on the alert, I couldn't help but feel that I was
    participating in an extraordinary event."

    Did you have a chance to meet the Pontiff?

    "I knelt before the pontiff and after presenting rare wine from the
    world-famous Armenian Catholic Monastery of Zommar in Lebanon, I was
    inspired to tell the Holy father, 'your Holiness, we pray that the Lord will
    continue to grant you a long life, blessings, and wisdom, so that you
    continue serving and ruling your people. And I have one request. Would you
    please remember Armenians and Armenia in your prayers?' The Pope paused a
    moment and said 'Ah, the Armenians, yes,' and he gave a blessing.

    "I felt that there was a great deal of meaning behind his 'Ah,'" said Mr.
    Yeghiayan. "It's as if he instantly recalled our history from Etchmiadzin to
    the Genocide, and the current tribulations in Armenia and the Diaspora."

    In fact, the next day, the Pontiff visited the Armenian Apostolic
    Patriarchal Church of St. James in Jerusalem, and in the presence of
    Archbishop Torkom II Manougian and members of the Armenian Church, the Holy
    Father acknowledged the recent "significant growth in the relationship
    between the Catholic Church and the Armenian Apostolic Church.

    "From the first Christian centuries," said the Holy Father, "the Armenian
    community in Jerusalem has had an illustrious history, marked not least by
    an extraordinary flourishing of monastic life and culture linked to the holy
    places and the liturgical traditions which developed around them. This
    venerable Cathedral Church, together with the Patriarchate and the various
    educational and cultural institutions attached to it, testifies to that long
    and distinguished history. I pray that your community will constantly draw
    new life from its rich traditions, and be confirmed in its witness to Jesus
    Christ and the power of his resurrection."

    It is worth noting that during the past six decades, the Armenian Apostolic
    Church has drawn closer to the Vatican. In fact Pope Benedict's predecessor,
    John Paul II, and the late Catholicos Karekin II, signed a joint statement
    ending the doctrinal disputes that had plagued the relationship since the
    Council of Chalcedon in 451.

    It is also worth noting that Pope John Paul went to Armenia in 2001 to
    celebrate the 1700th anniversary of the founding of Christianity in Armenia.

    During that memorable visit, the Pontiff paid a visit to the Armenian
    Genocide Monument in Dzidzernagapert, to pay tribute to the 1.5 million
    Armenians who were killed in the early 20th century. Who can forget the
    scene of Charles Aznavour singing "Ave Maria" as the pontiff, his weary face
    buried in his hand, listened in deep reverie, remembering the fallen. Watch
    the video HERE.

    It is also instructive to once again read what the Pontiff said on that day:

    "O Judge of the living and the dead, have mercy on us!
    Listen, O Lord, to the lament that rises from this place,
    to the call of the dead from the depths of the Metz Yeghérn,
    the cry of innocent blood that pleads like the blood of Abel,
    like Rachel weeping for her children because they are no more.
    Listen, Lord, to the voice of the Bishop of Rome,
    echoing the plea of his Predecessor Pope Benedict XV,
    when in 1915 he raised his voice in defence of
    "the sorely afflicted Armenian people
    brought to the brink of annihilation".
    Look upon the people of this land
    who put their trust in you so long ago,
    who have passed through the great tribulation
    and never failed in their faithfulness to you.
    Wipe away every tear from their eyes
    and grant that their agony in the twentieth century
    will yield a harvest of life that endures for ever.
    We are appalled by the terrible violence done to the Armenian people,
    and dismayed that the world still knows such inhumanity.
    But renewing our hope in your promise, we implore, O Lord,
    rest for the dead in the peace which knows no end,
    and the healing of still open wounds through the power of your love.
    Our soul is longing for you, Lord, more than the watchman for daybreak,
    as we wait for the fullness of redemption won on the Cross,
    for the light of Easter which is the dawn of invincible life,
    for the glory of the new Jerusalem where death shall be no more.
    O Judge of the living and the dead, have mercy on us all!"

    Finally, although like President Obama, His Holiness used the Armenian
    concept "Metz Yeghérn," at Dzidzernagapert, the next day, Etchmiadzin and
    the Vatican issued a joint Declaration which read: "The extermination of a
    million and a half Armenian Christians, in what is generally referred to as
    the first genocide of the Twentieth Century, and the subsequent annihilation
    of thousands under the former totalitarian regime are tragedies that still
    live in the memory of the present-day generation."

    More recently, the Vatican, through Cardinal Walter Kasper, the president of
    the Pontifical Council for promoting Christianity, reiterated John Paul II's
    recognition of the Genocide during talks with Catholicos Aram I of the Great
    House of Cilicia. Cardinal Kasper said: "The Armenian Genocide is a reality,
    which remains a bleeding wound in the hearts and souls of Armenia's. The
    Vatican's position on this matter was articulated by Pope John
    Paul<http://www.asbarez.com/tag/pope-john- paul/>II's visit to Armenia.
    The Pope visited the Genocide
    memorial <http://www.asbarez.com/tag/genocide-memorial/& gt; monument, and as
    much as this might not please the Turks, he used the word `Genocide.''

    Please do not hesitate to contact us at this email for any questions
    regarding this press release. Pictures can be sent individually upon
    request.

    For any questions, please contact the Center for Armenian Remembrance (CAR).
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