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Armenian Catholics in Iraq get new archbishop after 5-year vacancy

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  • Armenian Catholics in Iraq get new archbishop after 5-year vacancy

    Catholic News Service
    Jan 26 2007

    Armenian Catholics in Iraq get new archbishop after five-year vacancy

    By Cindy Wooden
    Catholic News Service

    VATICAN CITY (CNS) -- For the first time in more than five years, the
    tiny Armenian Catholic community in Iraq has its own archbishop.

    The Vatican announced Jan. 26 that Pope Benedict XVI had given his
    assent to the Armenian Catholic bishops' election of Father Emmanuel
    Dabbaghian, 73, as the Armenian Catholic archbishop of Baghdad.

    The post had been vacant since the October 2001 retirement of
    Archbishop Paul Coussa at the age of 84.

    The Armenian Catholic Archdiocese of Baghdad covers all of Iraq, and
    since 2001 Vatican statistics have given the Armenian Catholic
    population of the country as 2,000 faithful.

    But Deacon Michel Jeangey, head of the Armenian program at Vatican
    Radio, told Catholic News Service Jan. 26 that "probably more than
    half" the Armenian Catholics have moved, at least temporarily, to
    Armenia or Syria.

    "They will return if there is peace," he said.

    Still, Deacon Jeangey said, one Armenian Catholic priest and a group
    of Armenian Catholic nuns continue ministering at the church's
    parishes in Baghdad, Mosul and Kirkuk as well as running a social
    center and two schools in Baghdad.

    Archbishop-elect Dabbaghian was born Dec. 26, 1933, in Aleppo, Syria.
    After studying philosophy and theology at Rome's Pontifical Gregorian
    University, he was ordained to the priesthood in 1967.

    He has served as director of an orphanage in Lebanon, as a seminary
    rector and as pastor of Armenian parishes in Lebanon and in Georgia.

    At the time of his election, he was pastor of the Armenian Catholic
    parish in Tbilisi, Georgia, and director of the seminary there.
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