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  • Catholicos likely to draw crowds here

    Chicago Sun-Times, IL
    Aug 10 2007



    Catholicos likely to draw crowds here

    KAREKIN II | 'None of the Armenian churches can hold the number of
    people expected' for Oct. visit

    August 10, 2007

    BY SUSAN HOGAN/ALBACH Religion Reporter/[email protected]
    Karekin II, the Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos of All Armenians,
    will visit Chicago for the first time during an October pontifical
    trip to the United States, church officials told the Sun-Times on
    Thursday.

    Karekin is the spiritual leader, chief shepherd and pontiff to the
    world's 7 million Armenian Apostolic Christians. He's twice visited
    the U.S. on private trips, but this is his first pontifical tour of
    America since being elected in 1999.

    To meet with Cardinal George
    "This is quite a historic trip," said the Rev. Aren Jebejian, pastor
    of St. Gregory the Illuminator Armenian Church, 6700 W. Diversey.
    Karekin will be in Chicago 1½ days, Oct. 24-25, as part of a 15-city
    tour of the Diocese of Armenian Church of America (Eastern), church
    officials said.

    On Oct. 24, he'll meet with Cardinal Francis George of the
    Archdiocese of Chicago as well as the Council of Religious Leaders,
    which includes representatives of the region's Christian, Muslim and
    Jewish communities.

    Karekin also will lead a worship service of adoration. The time and
    site of the service are still being determined, but Jebejian said he
    hoped to use either the city's Catholic or Episcopal cathedral.

    "None of the Armenian churches can hold the number of people
    expected," he said.


    'Resurgence in spirituality'
    Karekin's predecessor, Karekin I, visited Chicago in 1996 and spoke
    to a packed house at Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago on
    Michigan Avenue. He died from throat cancer in 1999.
    Karekin II was then elected the 132nd Supreme Patriarch and
    Catholicos, which means "universal leader." He occupies the throne of
    St. Gregory in the Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin, which is in
    Armenia.

    Karekin will be in the U.S. from Oct. 6 to Nov. 2. In addition to
    Chicago, he'll make stopovers in New York City; Boston; Washington,
    D.C.; Charlotte, N.C.; St. Petersburg, Fla.; Boca Raton, Fla.; New
    Orleans; Baton Rouge, La.; Dallas; Houston; Cleveland; Racine, Wis.;
    Minneapolis, and Detroit.

    "This is an opportunity for Armenian American Christians to get to
    know their catholicos," said Michael O'Hurley-Pitts, spokesman for
    the pontifical tour. "There's a resurgence in spirituality among
    Armenians."

    The diocese has parishes in five Illinois cities: Chicago, Evanston,
    Palos Heights, Waukegan and Downstate Belleville. Three other
    Illinois parishes belong to a smaller, second branch of the church
    based in Lebanon and now led by Aram I, Catholicos of the Great House
    of Cilicia.

    Church officials say 1 million members live in the U.S. -- including
    thousands in the Chicago area -- and 3 million in Armenia. There are
    also large pockets in Lebanon, Iran and Syria.

    During Karekin's meeting at the Vatican in 2000, Pope John Paul II
    turned over the relics of St. Gregory the Illuminator, whom Armenians
    recognize as their first catholicos.


    Bridge between East and West
    Armenia, which embraced Christianity in 301, identifies itself as the
    world's oldest Christian nation.
    "Armenia became a Christian nation more than a decade before the
    Roman Empire was Christianized under the Emperor Constantine," said
    O'Hurley-Pitts.

    The Armenian Church is often wrongly considered an Eastern Orthodox
    church, he said. The Armenian Church broke away from Christendom in
    451 because it disagreed with the Council of Chalcedon's declaration
    that Christ had two natures, human and divine.

    "We're not an Orthodox church, we're an Oriental church, which has
    been a bridge between the Christian East and West," O'Hurley-Pitts
    said.

    The Armenian community has thrived despite numerous incidents of
    religious oppression over the years that led many members to flee
    their country to survive.


    http://www.suntimes.com/news/metro/504817,CST-N WS-visit10.article
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