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Armenian Genocide Centennial: Pope Francis Divine Mercy Sunday Mass

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  • Armenian Genocide Centennial: Pope Francis Divine Mercy Sunday Mass

    ARMENIAN GENOCIDE CENTENNIAL: POPE FRANCIS DIVINE MERCY SUNDAY MASS TO MARK HISTORIC KILLINGS

    International Business Times
    April 9 2015

    By Lora Moftah

    Pope Francis will hold a mass commemorating the centennial of the
    Armenian genocide this Sunday, in what will be one of the most
    high-profile recent acknowledgments of the historic atrocity by a
    major world leader. Ahead of the mass, Francis lamented the lack of
    consensus on recognizing the early 20th century mass killings during
    a meeting Thursday with Armenian bishops.

    The Sunday mass will be held 12 days before the official commemoration
    of the genocide's centennial on April 24. Francis expressed his
    hopes that the occasion would help "to hasten concrete gestures of
    reconciliation and peace among the nations that have not yet reached
    a consensus on the reading of such sorrowful events," in a statement
    reported by Vatican Radio.

    An estimated 1.5 million Armenians died after Turks, during the
    Ottoman Empire, began forcibly evacuating ethnic minorities in what is
    present-day Turkey in 1915. The evacuation campaign is thought to have
    wiped out more than half of the Armenian population at the time and
    is widely acknowledged as the first genocide of the 20th century. The
    Turkish government has strongly rejected this view, arguing that the
    number of deaths was inflated and the result of unrest, disease and
    famine rather than a deliberate campaign of annihilation.

    Acknowledgment of the historic tragedy by public figures around the
    world has always been a sensitive undertaking, as they are invariably
    met by vocal objections from the Turkish government. As a result,
    only a handful of countries officially recognize the atrocity as a
    genocide, a word most world leaders steer clear of when discussing
    the issue. Ahead of his election to office, President Barack Obama
    notably vowed to use the word when describing the killings but has
    yet to live up to the campaign promise. Turkey is a NATO member and
    an important ally straddling Europe and the Middle East.

    Francis himself is no stranger to the controversy, but unlike most
    other world leaders, the pontiff has not shied away from publicly
    characterizing the killings as a genocide. As a cardinal in Argentina,
    Francis led a service of remembrance in Buenos Aires on the 91st
    anniversary of the genocide in 2006, during which he called the
    killings the "gravest crime of Ottoman Turkey." Francis' homeland
    of Argentina has significant Armenian and Greek minorities, whose
    ancestors migrated from the Ottoman Empire in the wake of World War I.

    In 2013, the newly elected pope provoked a diplomatic rebuke from
    Ankara after he told a visiting delegation of Armenian Christians that
    the massacre of Armenians by the Ottomans was "the first genocide of
    the 20th century." The comments were welcomed by prominent Armenians
    around the world, with the director of the Armenian National Committee
    of South America, Alfonso Tabakian, calling them a "very important"
    step, as the first such statement from the Catholic leader since his
    elevation to the papacy, and a sign that "more states, parliaments
    and international organizations are adopting this position against
    the denial of history perpetrated by the Turkish State."

    The pope's April 12 commemoration is just as likely to produce the same
    polarized dynamic among the Turkish government, Armenians and other
    supporters of genocide recognition. The ecumenical ceremony, which
    falls on the Catholic observance of Divine Mercy Sunday, will include
    representatives of Armenia's various Christian communities as well
    as Armenian President Serzh Sarkisian. The vast majority of Armenian
    Christians follow the country's Eastern Orthodox Apostolic Church,
    although more than 350,000 are members of the Armenian Catholic Church.

    http://www.ibtimes.com/armenian-genocide-centennial-pope-francis-divine-mercy-sunday-mass-mark-historic-1876272



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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