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National Council Of Churches Of Christ In USA Calls On Congress To R

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  • National Council Of Churches Of Christ In USA Calls On Congress To R

    NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES OF CHRIST IN USA CALLS ON CONGRESS TO RECOGNIZE ARMENIAN GENOCIDE

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    12.11.2007 12:23 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ November 7, 2007, the General Assembly of the
    National Council of Churches of Christ in the USA (NCC) and Church
    World Service (CWS), holding its annual meeting here November 6-8,
    urged the U.S. House of Representatives to pass legislation recognizing
    the slaughter of Armenians in 1915 as Genocide.

    The resolution put forward by the Rev. Arem Jabejian, an Armenian
    Orthodox priest from Chicago, was passed by voice vote with six
    persons requesting to be counted as abstaining.

    In its business session Wednesday afternoon, the General Assembly
    also reaffirmed the NCC and CWS commitment to Middle East peace, and
    received "A Social Creed for the 21st Century" approved in September
    by the NCC Governing Board.

    The Armenian genocide statement as amended and approved by the General
    Assembly said it is "unacceptable that the United States has yet to
    officially recognize the Genocide of 1915, which in fact decimated
    a majority of the Armenian population then living in Asia Minor."

    The statement cited House Resolution 106 "acknowledging this
    universally recognized historical fact (and) condemning this crime
    against humanity."

    Most historians agree that the slaughter was carried out by soldiers
    of the then Ottoman Turk Empire.

    The House leadership decided not to place the legislation before the
    House because of objections from the Bush Administration, which said
    it would harm relations between the U.S. and Turkey, a NATO ally.

    "As persons of faith, we express our concern that the truth was not
    upheld by our elected representatives," the resolution states.

    The statement posted on the NCC web site "strongly urges the leadership
    of the U.S. House of Representatives to bring forth this legislation
    before the end of this Congress."

    The General Assembly also passed by unanimous voice vote a
    "Reaffirmation of Our Commitment to Peace in the Middle East in Light
    of the 1980 Middle East Policy Statement.

    Noting that the Middle East situation has deteriorated since the
    hopeful days of the 1980 Camp David Peace Accords, the updated
    policy reaffirms commitments to peace, including encouragement of
    a responsible discourse in the Middle East; a focus on issues of
    particular importance related to the Israeli-Palestinian conflict;
    concern for the alarming diminution of the Christian community of
    the Middle East; and appreciation for interfaith sensitivities among
    Christians, Jews and Muslims, as well as people of other faiths.

    "The member communions of the NCC have a profound connection to the
    Holy Land," the statement acknowledges. "It is the place where God was
    revealed in Jesus Christ through the power of the Spirit ... Therefore,
    we reaffirm these commitments, cognizant of the role our nation plays
    in the Middle East, to remind ourselves of the urgent need to influence
    our country to take right and moral actions in the region."

    "A Social Creed for the 21st Century" is an update of the Social
    Creed of 1908 developed by the NCC's predecessor organization, the
    Federal Council of Churches.

    "Just as the churches responded to the harshness of early 20th
    century industrialization," declares the creed's background statement,
    "we offer a vision of a society that shares more and consumes less,
    seeks compassion over suspicion and equality over domination, and
    finds security in joined hands rather than massed arms."

    The National Council of Churches USA is the ecumenical voice of 35 of
    America's Orthodox, Protestant, Anglican, historic African American
    and traditional peace churches. These NCC member communions have 45
    million faithful members in 100,000 congregations in all 50 states.

    Church World Service is the relief, development, and refugee assistance
    agency of these same communions, working in 80 countries around the
    world to eradicate hunger and poverty and promote peace and justice.
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