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Martyrs Of The Armenian Holocaust Remembered In Holy Land

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  • Martyrs Of The Armenian Holocaust Remembered In Holy Land

    MARTYRS OF THE ARMENIAN HOLOCAUST REMEMBERED IN HOLY LAND

    The Indian Catholic, India
    April 26 2007

    ROME (CNA): On Tuesday the Franciscans charged with the care of the
    Holy Land celebrated the "Day of Memory of the Armenian People,"
    recalling the legacy of the missionary martyrs who worked in Armenian
    territory occupied by the Turks.

    "From 1894 to 1923, an unheard-of tragedy befell the Armenian people
    without distinction for sex or age, almost completely annihilating
    this Christian people that was the first to accept Christianity in
    the year 301 as the religion of the nation," the Franciscan Custodians
    of the Holy Land said in a statement released on the internet.

    The statement also took note of the "indiscriminate massacre of
    Christians" in which "a large number of missionary Franciscans of the
    Holy Land lost their lives, and the Latin rite faithful of Armenia
    were also immolated."

    Among those remembered during the commemoration were "Blessed Salvatore
    Lilli and seven companion martyrs, killed by the Turks for their faith;
    Brother Vittore Urrutia, starved to death for helping to save other
    parishioners from the massacre; Brother Pasquale Boladian, starved
    to death; Father Patrizio Werkley, who was killed while taking care
    of typhus victims," as well as many others.

    "May the memory and sacrifice of this people obtain from God peace
    in the world and fraternal understanding between all believers,"
    the statement emphasized in conclusion.

    Armenian genocide

    On April 24, 1915, Turkey arrested and executed hundreds of Armenian
    leaders, initiating what many call the holocaust of at least a
    million and a half of the two million Armenians who lived under the
    Turkish Empire.

    The Armenian people lived as second-class citizens in the Ottoman
    Empire. Between 1884 and 1197, an estimated 300,000 were massacred.

    Between 1915 and 1917, many were deported and possibly up to a million
    and a half were executed.

    http://www.theindiancatholic.com/newsre ad.asp?nid=7285
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