WHAT'S THE LINK BETWEEN THE NEW POPE AND ARMENIA?
EurasiaNet.org, NY
March 14 2013
March 14, 2013 - 9:08am, by Giorgi Lomsadze
Now that the Roman Catholic Church has smoked out a new pope, everyone
is looking for a local angle in the news from the Vatican. Armenia
seems to have found one.
The Armenian Apostolic Church may be an introverted, exclusive club,
much smaller than the Catholic Church, but, conceivably, backing
from the Vatican could help the Armenian cause worldwide. The global,
well-organized Armenian Diaspora has pointed out that Cardinal Jorge
Bergoglio, the newly crowned Pope Francis, has been a friend of the
Armenian community in Argentina. The community hopes that the pontiff
will take this friendship to his new home in the Vatican.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported that Bergoglio often attended
liturgies dedicated to the ethnic Armenians massacred in Ottoman
Turkey in the early 20th century. As an archbishop, he reportedly
called on Turkey to own up to the atrocities against Armenians,
which Turkey insists was collateral damage of World War I.
Along with building support for its refusal to recognize breakaway
Nagorno Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, achieving recognition of the
1915 massacre as genocide is an end that Armenia is pushing worldwide.
The Vatican is not immune to lobbying, and many ethnic Armenians,
especially those in Argentina, hope that Bergoglio will stick to his
alleged position on the massacre.
But Yerevan is not just leaving it to the Diaspora to advocate Armenian
causes in the Holy See. Earlier this month, Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan appointed his son-in-law Mikael Minasian as the country's
first-ever ambassador to the Vatican.
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66690
From: Baghdasarian
EurasiaNet.org, NY
March 14 2013
March 14, 2013 - 9:08am, by Giorgi Lomsadze
Now that the Roman Catholic Church has smoked out a new pope, everyone
is looking for a local angle in the news from the Vatican. Armenia
seems to have found one.
The Armenian Apostolic Church may be an introverted, exclusive club,
much smaller than the Catholic Church, but, conceivably, backing
from the Vatican could help the Armenian cause worldwide. The global,
well-organized Armenian Diaspora has pointed out that Cardinal Jorge
Bergoglio, the newly crowned Pope Francis, has been a friend of the
Armenian community in Argentina. The community hopes that the pontiff
will take this friendship to his new home in the Vatican.
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty reported that Bergoglio often attended
liturgies dedicated to the ethnic Armenians massacred in Ottoman
Turkey in the early 20th century. As an archbishop, he reportedly
called on Turkey to own up to the atrocities against Armenians,
which Turkey insists was collateral damage of World War I.
Along with building support for its refusal to recognize breakaway
Nagorno Karabakh as part of Azerbaijan, achieving recognition of the
1915 massacre as genocide is an end that Armenia is pushing worldwide.
The Vatican is not immune to lobbying, and many ethnic Armenians,
especially those in Argentina, hope that Bergoglio will stick to his
alleged position on the massacre.
But Yerevan is not just leaving it to the Diaspora to advocate Armenian
causes in the Holy See. Earlier this month, Armenian President Serzh
Sargsyan appointed his son-in-law Mikael Minasian as the country's
first-ever ambassador to the Vatican.
http://www.eurasianet.org/node/66690
From: Baghdasarian