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Armenian church leader supports `genocide' resolution

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  • Armenian church leader supports `genocide' resolution

    Religion News Service
    October 11, 2007 Thursday 4:54 PM EDT

    Armenian church leader supports `genocide' resolution

    By MRINALINI REDDY

    As Congress considers legislation that brands the killings of 1.5
    million Armenians in 1915 "genocide," the patriarch of the worldwide
    Armenian Church said Turkey's resistance is "unacceptable."

    His Holiness Karekin II, the spiritual leader of 7 million Armenian
    Christians, stopped in Washington during a month-long U.S. tour and
    weighed in on a hot-button diplomatic fracas that is roiling the
    nation's capital.

    At issue is the massacre of Armenians on Turkish soil in the last
    days of the Ottoman Empire. On Wednesday (Oct. 10), the House Foreign
    Relations Committee passed a resolution that called the deaths a
    "genocide."

    President Bush issued a stern rebuke, saying the bill could threaten
    relations with Turkey, a strategic ally and moderate Islamic nation
    in the war on terrorism.

    Turkish President Abdullah Gul has expressed discontent and recalled
    Turkey's ambassador as a sign of protest.

    Karekin, speaking Thursday (Oct. 11) on the steps of the Jefferson
    Memorial in a ceremony to mark religious freedom, said, "We believe
    that similar threats are unacceptable and we would desire a more
    positive approach by Turkey itself."

    Just hours before the House committee approved the non-binding
    resolution on Wednesday, Karekin met with Speaker Nancy Pelosi and
    offered the opening prayer in the House chamber. "With the solemn
    burden of history, we remember the victims of the genocide of the
    Armenians, the consequences of which are still felt by the entire
    world in new manifestations of genocide," he prayed.

    Edward Alexander, a former diplomat and parishioner at St. Mary
    Armenian Church here, joined Karekin on his visit with Pelosi and at
    the Jefferson Memorial. He said he lost members of his extended
    family in the massacre.

    While the resolution may appear a symbolic gesture, it means a great
    deal to the Armenian community, he said. "This is the greatest
    country in the world," said Alexander. "It's a country of laws, deep
    democracy and justice."

    The Armenian Church holds a unique place outside of Catholicism,
    Eastern Orthodoxy and Protestantism. Armenia was the first country to
    proclaim Christianity the official state religion, in 301 A.D.,
    preceding Roman Emperor Constantine by 12 years.

    There are about 1 million Armenian Christians in three dioceses in
    the U.S. and Canada. The 1915 massacre fueled a wave of refugees to
    American shores, which helped build the U.S. church into the largest
    and most prosperous of the Armenian diaspora.

    Karekin holds a position similar to the pope, and is the church's
    132nd catholicos, or supreme partiarch.
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