Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Karekin Refuses To Attend Opening Of Akhtamar 'Museum'

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Karekin Refuses To Attend Opening Of Akhtamar 'Museum'

    KAREKIN REFUSES TO ATTEND OPENING OF AKHTAMAR 'MUSEUM'

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    March 28 2007

    The head of the Armenian Orthodox Church, Karekin II, has refused to
    attend a reopening ceremony of a restored Armenian church in eastern
    Anatolia because the church will operate as a museum but not as
    a church.

    The Armenian Orthodox Church released a written statement yesterday
    and brought to mind that the invitation for the ceremony on March
    29 [tomorrow] for the reopening of the ancient Akhtamar Church
    was extended by Van Governor Mehmet Niyazi Tanýlýr to Karekin
    II, whose official title is Catholicos of All Armenians, via the
    Armenian Foreign Ministry. Karekin II will not participate in the
    ceremonies after having considered that "the Holy Cross Armenian
    Church, recently renovated by the Turkish authorities, will not
    operate as a church under the spiritual authority of the Armenian
    Patriarchate of Constantinople and instead will be designated as a
    museum, and that the opening ceremonies will be conducted solely with
    a secular program and not in accord with the canonical rites of the
    Holy Apostolic Armenian Church," the brief statement said.

    "In this new century, when there is a universal desire for mutual
    understanding and collaboration between peoples, as well as in the
    context of dialogue between religions and cultures, this action of the
    Turkish authorities against the pious Christian beliefs and emotions
    of the Armenian people cannot be perceived as a positive step on the
    path of bringing the two nations closer," the statement added. Karekin
    II, who had paid a week-long visit to the Armenian community in Turkey
    last year in June, in the past angered Turks by saying their ancestors
    committed genocide against Armenians around the time of World War I,
    an allegation vehemently denied by Turkey.

    Turkey, which has no diplomatic relations with Armenia, denies that
    Turks committed genocide, saying Armenians who lived in the Ottoman
    Empire were killed in internal fighting among ethnic groups as the
    empire collapsed.

    --Boundary_(ID_1qnN2LhfPopHxGaKO3pWXg) --

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
Working...
X