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Armenian Church To Canonise Victims Of 1915 Genocide In Ottoman Empi

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  • Armenian Church To Canonise Victims Of 1915 Genocide In Ottoman Empi

    ARMENIAN CHURCH TO CANONISE VICTIMS OF 1915 GENOCIDE IN OTTOMAN EMPIRE

    ITAR-TASS, Russia
    September 27, 2013 Friday 05:07 PM GMT+4

    HOLY ETCHMIADZIN Armenia, September 27

    - Bishops' Council of the Armenian Apostolic Church has reached
    a decision to canonise 1.5 million people of Armenian ethnicity
    annihilated in amassed ethnic purges in the Ottoman Empire in 1915
    during a campaign that has become widely known as the Armenian
    Genocide.

    The Armenian bishops assembled in full force for the first time
    since 1651.

    Armenia's President Serzh Sargsyan sent a message of greetings to the
    Council participants where he emphasized the paramount importance of
    the initiative of the Armenian Church to canonise the genocide victims.

    "On the eve of the centenary anniversary since the Armenian Genocide
    in the Ottoman Empire, all the Armenians say 'no' to the crimes
    against humanity," the president said. "It is our obligation to our
    ancestors, to the innocent victims and to the whole mankind in a bid
    to do everything in our power to avert new genocides in the future."

    Unlike most other denominations of Eastern Christianity or the Roman
    Catholic Church, the Armenian Church has not done any beatifications
    or canonisations since the 17th century.

    Besides, the Bishops' Council unified the rite of the sacrament of
    Baptism in all the Armenian churches, since dioceses practiced the
    Baptism rites differently in their churches.

    The Ottoman government systematically exterminated its minority
    Armenian subjects in some provinces of their historic homeland located
    in the territory, which is incorporated in the present-day Republic
    of Turkey.

    Mass purges took place during and after World War I and were
    implemented by two separate methods -- a sweeping destrruction of
    the able-bodied male population through massacre and forced labor,
    and the deportation of women, children and the elderly on death
    marches to the Syrian Desert.

    Various estimates suggest that the resultant loss of lives in the
    Armenian nation stood at around 1.5 million.

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