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ACO Releases Statement on Armenian Genocide

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  • ACO Releases Statement on Armenian Genocide

    ACO Releases Statement on Armenian Genocide

    By Contributor on January 26, 2015
    http://armenianweekly.com/2015/01/26/aco-statement-on-armenian-genocide/


    The Action Chrétienne en Orient (ACO) Fellowship released the
    following statement calling on its member churches to devote one
    Sunday in 2015 to the commemoration of the Armenian Genocide.

    The Action Chrétienne en Orient was originally created to provide
    assistance to the victims of the genocide that struck the Armenian
    people at the beginning of the 20th century. Pastor Paul Berron, from
    Alsace, was a direct witness to the terrible sufferings, and he began
    his assistance in Aleppo in 1922. Since that moment, this work of
    solidarity between Eastern and Western Christians has continued and
    expanded.1

    In 1995 in Kessab, Syria, those who continued and expanded Pastor
    Berron's work gathered in a Fellowship, developing a community in
    which Lebanese, Syrian, Iranian, Swiss, Dutch, and French partners met
    on an equal basis.

    Twenty years after the creation of this Fellowship, our community
    wishes to remember the Armenian Genocide and the Chaldean-Assyrian
    Massacre, which began on April 24, 1915, just one century ago. The
    Turkish government still denies the existence of this genocide.

    We do not wish for vengeance or revenge and we welcome the work of
    Turkish citizens, be they journalists, philosophers, historians, who
    no longer want to obscure these dark pages of the history of their
    country.

    When a group, a government, a society, wants to eliminate another
    human group only because of its religious, cultural, or ethnic
    identity, it is genocide. And this is the worst crime against
    humanity. For, when one part of humanity decides that another part is
    not allowed to exist in this world, all of humanity is attacked...

    When a group, a government, a society, wants to eliminate another
    human group only because of its religious, cultural, or ethnic
    identity, it is genocide. And this is the worst crime against
    humanity. For, when one part of humanity decides that another part is
    not allowed to exist in this world, all of humanity is attacked, and
    its anthropological unity is denied. Our Christian faith gives us the
    conviction that every human being is created by God; that Christ gave
    his life and rose for him/her and so s/he is called to live the
    fullness of life, to receive forgiveness and to be loved. It is not up
    to one human being to decide whether life is worth living or not.

    The 20th century has known other genocides. And until now, religious
    minorities in the Middle East have to suffer because of awful violence
    against them. ACO-Fellowship finds that this Centenary should not be a
    mere commemoration of tragic events of the past but a call for
    vigilance against any speech that aims at excluding from the human
    community one of its components. Such speech must be fought and firmly
    rejected.

    ACO-Fellowship finds that this centenary should not be a mere
    commemoration of tragic events of the past but a call for vigilance
    against any speech that aims at excluding from the human community one
    of its components. Such speech must be fought and firmly rejected.

    With people of goodwill, from all origins, in the name of the victims'
    inalienable dignity, the ACO Fellowship wants to be a witness to what
    happened then, which broke so many human lives. It also wants to be a
    witness to Christ, who calls the whole of humanity to a reconciled
    life.

    The ACO-Fellowship invites all its member churches, as well as other
    churches and local communities in the Middle East and in the western
    countries, to devote one Sunday to the Commemoration of this event in
    2015, either around April 24 or on the traditional Day of the Golden
    Rule (the 2nd Advent), or at any other moment according to each
    community's own wish and pace.



    On behalf of the Executive Committee of the ACO Fellowship,
    Rev. Thomas Wild, General Secretary
    Evangelical Synod of Iran
    Union of Armenian Evangelical Churches in the Near East
    Action Chrétienne en Orient, France
    National Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon
    DM-échange et mission, Switzerland
    GZB, Netherland



    1 In 1995, ACO-France worked in the Middle East with the National
    Evangelical Synod of Syria and Lebanon (NESSL), the Union of Armenian
    Evangelical Churches in the Near East (UAECNE), and the Evangelical
    Synod of Iran; in Europe, with the Dutch churches through the
    missionary body called GZB, and with the French-speaking Swiss
    churches through their missionary department, called DM-échange et
    mission.

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