Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Armenian Community Of Turkey Needs Active Co-Patriarch

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

  • Armenian Community Of Turkey Needs Active Co-Patriarch

    ARMENIAN COMMUNITY OF TURKEY NEEDS ACTIVE CO-PATRIARCH

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    29.01.2010 15:10 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Armenian community is the biggest in Turkey,
    so the Turkish authorities are trying their best to destroy it,
    an Armenian expert said.

    "That's why they don't want the Constantinople Patriarchate to have
    an initiative personality at the post," Ruben Melkonyan told a news
    conference in Yerevan.

    At that, he pointed out to several key problems faced by the Armenian
    community.

    "The number of Armenian schools is decreasing year by year. Only 17
    out of 32 schools operate at present, with a total number of 3000
    students. The country has 42 Armenian churches, but some have closed
    down because of not having pastors," he stressed.

    The expert also touched upon the problems of mixed marriages (40%)
    and Armenian language.

    "About 90% of Istanbul Armenians speak Turkish, with only 7-10%
    young people speaking Armenian," he noted.

    "In 1920, there were 250-300 thousand Armenian Christians in Turkey.

    Today their number has reduced to 50-60 thousand. If such tendency
    persists, we'll face a serious problem in a couple of years. The
    community is now in need of an active religious leader," Melkonyan
    said.

    According to him, there are now 3 candidates running for the post
    of joint patriarch: primate of AAC Gugark Eparchy, Archbishop Sepuh
    Chuldjyan, Bishop Garegin Bekchinyan, and Archbishop Aram Ateshyan,
    with the latter having more chances for victory. Ateshyan has already
    had met with Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan.

    The Armenian Patriarch of Constantinople also known as Armenian
    Patriarch of Istanbul is the head of the Armenian Patriarchate of
    Constantinople, one of the smallest Patriarchates of the Oriental
    Orthodox Church.

    It recognizes the primacy of the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of
    All Armenians, in the spiritual and administrative headquarters of
    the Armenian Church, the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, Vagharshapat,
    Republic of Armenia, in matters that pertain to the worldwide Armenian
    Church. In local matters, the Patriarchal See is autonomous.
Working...
X