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Rare Mass Held in Historic Armenian Church in Turkey

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  • Rare Mass Held in Historic Armenian Church in Turkey

    IndyPosted
    Sept 19 2010



    Rare Mass Held in Historic Armenian Church in Turkey

    Posted in International by Rudi Stettner with View Comments



    A Mass was held at the historic Armenian Church of Surp Khach in
    Turkey, a house of worship that was inaugurated in the year 921 CE, AP
    has reported. This marked the first time that services were held in
    the church since 95 years ago,during the Armenian genocide.

    Although the church had been restored by the Turkish government, it
    was opened until now only as a museum. Now, the Turkish government has
    allowed services once a year as a goodwill gesture to Turkey's tiny
    community of Armenian Christians.

    Armenians from Turkey, Armenia and Georgia flocked to the historic
    event at the sandstone church that had survived for almost 1100 years.
    The gesture of conciliation by the Turkish government was not without
    its limits. A large, cast iron cross that was once at the top of the
    heavily scarred church was not in place for the services, a fact that
    sparked a boycott of the services by many Armenians. One such
    individual, Hovhannes Nikoghosyan, of the Yerevan-based Public Policy
    Institute, noted as follows in his letter to Turkish Prime Minister
    Recep Tayyip Erdogan as follows.

    `It's a direct impiety towards Armenians to deny installing the cross
    on dome of the church and, moreover, holding it away from under the
    direct auspices of the Istanbul Patriarchy of the Armenian Apostolic
    Church as in the cases of other religious monuments of the Armenians
    on those holy lands. A religious ceremony in an uncrossed, unhallowed
    church, which Your Government has re-opened solely as a museum in
    2007, will not complete its anticipated aim of bridging our different
    perspectives over joint past under the Ottoman years.'

    The Turkish government, eager to forge closer ties to and possibly
    even join the EU, has been trying to show its tolerance towards its
    ethnic and religious minorities. The opening of the Church of Surp
    Khach, as well as other gestures towards Turkey's minorities are best
    s seen in this context.

    The smallest gesture or expression in Turkey can be fraught with
    political implications. Even referring to the murder of 1.5 million
    Armenians as genocide is hotly contested by secular and religious
    Turks, who contend that the deaths were a byproduct of a civil war.

    In a related development, the Turks have announced their intention to
    allow the reopening of the Halki Greek Orthodox seminary, which was
    closed in 1971 because of tensions with Greece. A sticking point that
    has stalled the reopining of the Halki seminary has been the
    insistence of the Turkish government that only Turkish citizens be
    allowed to study there, effectively excluding the vast majority of
    Greek Orthodox believers from attending the school.

    Whether it is a true change of heart or political expediency, a slow
    thaw seems to be coming to the relationship between Greece and its
    Christian minorities. Though glacially slow by western standards,
    change seems to be coming to Turkey.

    http://www.indyposted.com/111430/rare-mass-held-in-historic-armenian-church-in-turkey/




    From: A. Papazian
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