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Visiting Pontiff Finds Support In Fight To Recognize Genocide

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  • Visiting Pontiff Finds Support In Fight To Recognize Genocide

    VISITING PONTIFF FINDS SUPPORT IN FIGHT TO RECOGNIZE GENOCIDE
    By Niraj Warikoo - Free Press Staff Writer

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    Nov 1 2007

    The Armenian community's top religious leader said today in Southfield
    that the U.S. Congress will eventually label as genocide the mass
    killings of Armenians in the early 20th century.

    "We don't know when it will happen, but we have no doubt that one
    day -- today, tomorrow, at some point -- this will be accepted by
    the U.S. Congress," His Holiness Karekin II, pontiff of the Armenian
    Orthodox Church, said through a translator after a luncheon in his
    honor at St. John Armenian Church in Southfield. "Which country,
    if not the country that bears the legacy of democratic values,"
    will condemn the genocide.

    "Moral values should never be held hostage to political interests,"
    he added.

    Karekin is in Detroit this week as part of a national tour of the
    U.S. He happened to deliver a prayer in Congress last month on the same
    day that a House committee voted to recognize the Armenian genocide,
    setting off strong protests from the Turkish government and the Bush
    administration. The resolution appears to be stalled for now.

    During the luncheon, Detroit Cardinal Adam Maida, of the Roman
    Catholic Church, along with local heads of the Greek and Romanian
    Orthodox churches, also condemned the genocide.

    Karekin said recognizing the Armenian genocide is important not just
    for Armenians, but for all who suffer because of their background
    or religion.

    "The world suffers today with the trampling of human rights," Karekin
    said. "It is vital that genocide be condemned."

    Karekin also said that the Armenian community in the U.S. is strong
    despite increasing assimilation.

    He said that Armenians who marry outside their ethnicity often have
    spouses who are very active in the Armenian church and "play a great
    role in the Armenian community." The non-Armenians are sometimes
    "even better Armenians than their Armenian spouses," Karekin said.
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