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The Pope called the Armenian slaughter a genocide, and Turkey's not

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  • The Pope called the Armenian slaughter a genocide, and Turkey's not

    Crux
    April 12 2015

    The pope called the Armenian slaughter a genocide, and Turkey's not happy

    By Inés San Martín
    Vatican correspondent April 12, 2015


    ROME -- While honoring the memory of Armenian martyrs Sunday, Pope
    Francis said they had been killed "in the first genocide of the 20th
    century," prompting Turkey to recall its Vatican ambassador in
    protest.

    Crux confirmed by phone with the Vatican's embassy in Ankara that
    Turkey had recalled its ambassador, although the embassy to the
    Vatican declined comment. The diplomatic row comes despite the fact
    that Pope Francis was simply quoting a 2001 declaration by Pope John
    Paul II and the head of the Armenian church.

    Meanwhile, Turkey said it conveyed to the Vatican its loss of trust in
    their relationship, according to the Associated Press. In a statement,
    Turkey said the Pope's message had contradicted his message of peace
    and dialogue during a visit to Turkey in November. It said that a
    response would be forthcoming. The Foreign Ministry said that it had
    expressed "great disappointment and sadness." The statement also
    called the Pope's message discriminatory because he only mentioned the
    pains suffered by Christian Armenians and not Muslims and other
    religious groups.

    It's a matter of duty, Francis said Sunday, to remember "that immense
    and senseless slaughter" whose cruelty Armenians had to endure, "for
    whenever memory fades, it means that evil allows wounds to fester."

    The pontiff was referring to the death of an estimated 1 million to
    1.5 million Armenians as the Ottoman Empire crumbled at the end of
    World War I, which Armenians term a "genocide" and Turks insist was
    the result of a civil conflict. Turks typically also claim that the
    Armenian death toll has been inflated.

    Francis was speaking during a Vatican Mass with a number of Armenian
    dignitaries present for the 100th anniversary of Armenian suffering.

    The pontiff linked that calamity to contemporary anti-Christian
    persecution, since the vast majority of the Armenian victims a century
    ago were Christians. He said that today, too, the world is indifferent
    over "a sort of genocide" as Christians and other minorities are
    decapitated, crucified, burned alive, or forced to leave their
    homeland.

    "Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding
    without bandaging it!" the pontiff said.


    http://www.cruxnow.com/church/2015/04/12/the-pope-called-the-armenian-slaughter-a-genocide-and-turkeys-not-happy/


    From: Baghdasarian
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