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  • Armenians Ready To Host Church Leader

    ARMENIANS READY TO HOST CHURCH LEADER
    By Niraj Warikoo

    Detroit Free Press, MI
    http://www.freep.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID= /20071021/NEWS05/710210590/0/NEWS06
    Oct 21 2007

    At Sunday school last week, the priest wagged his finger at the
    children to remind them to attend a special evening service with
    their top religious leader.

    "We don't need tricks this Halloween," the Rev. Garabed Kochakian,
    pastor of St. John Armenian Church in Southfield, said he told the
    kids. "We need treats, and the big treat is that our holy father is
    here. We couldn't ask for anything more. ... There's no excuse not to
    attend. This happens once in your life. You can go trick-or-treating
    next year."

    Kochakian's message underscored the importance to the local Armenian
    community -- one of the largest in the United States -- of the
    coming visit of the Catholicos Karekin II, the supreme patriarch of
    7 million Armenian Christians worldwide. He is the 132nd leader in
    a tradition that stretches back more than 1,700 years and is deeply
    felt by thousands of Armenians in metro Detroit.

    At least 14,000 Michiganders claim Armenian roots, according to 2005
    U.S. census figures, though community leaders say there are twice
    that number and more in metro Detroit alone.

    Kochakian and a team of nearly 100 Armenians are putting in long
    hours to make sure the patriarch's visit -- the last stop of an
    18-city national tour -- will be memorable. This is Karekin's first
    U.S. tour. He visited the Detroit area briefly in 2005.

    "When he's flying back, Detroit will be the place he's thinking about,"
    Kochakian said.

    The visit, planned for months, comes at a time of close attention to
    the history of Armenians, especially the deaths of up to 1.5 million
    in the early 20th Century. The U.S. House Foreign Affairs Committee
    voted Oct. 10 to label the deaths as genocide caused by Turks, which
    infuriated the Turkish government.

    As it happens, Karekin was scheduled that day to open the U.S. House
    session with a prayer. Introduced by House Speaker Nancy Pelosi,
    a strong supporter of the genocide resolution, Karekin said:

    "Grant rest to the souls of all victims of crimes against humanity
    and bestow peace and justice on their descendants. Give pause to
    those who trample life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness."

    Later that day, the committee vote set off a fiery reaction from
    Turkey. Since then, some backers of the resolution have had second
    thoughts and indicated they would not support it in a vote of the
    full House.

    The White House has lobbied hard against the resolution, arguing
    it would jeopardize the United States' relationship with Turkey,
    an ally needed for the Iraq war and other foreign policies.

    For many Armenians, Karekin's visit reinforces their commitment to
    historical truth.

    "Throughout our history, because of our beliefs as Christians,
    Armenians have suffered," said Marty Shoushanian of Farmington Hills.

    "That's what makes this visit even more significant. All this time,
    we have not lost our faith ... but as a result we have been punished
    throughout time."

    Even if the resolution fails, the genocide issue has been pushed into
    the U.S. public arena.

    "The truth has been unleashed," Kochakian said. "The lid is off. I
    have never seen the Armenian genocide so talked about than it has
    over the past week ... and that is good. ... No matter what, we will
    not stop to speak the truth until it is acknowledged."

    Karekin started his tour Oct. 3 in New York and is making his way
    across the country, from Boston to Florida to Dallas. Along the way,
    his assistants are recording many of his appearances and posting them
    online soon after at www.pontificalvisit.org.

    In metro Detroit, St. John Church will be the main focus of Karekin's
    Oct. 30-Nov. 1 visit. With 3,000 members, St. John is the largest
    parish in the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Apostolic Church,
    which stretches east from the Rocky Mountains.

    The patriarch wants to encourage worshippers to make home and their
    families -- not just bricks-and-mortar buildings -- a focus for
    their faith. To that end, priests in metro Detroit have been blessing
    Armenian homes according to ancient rituals.

    Churches are trying to encourage a new generation of Armenians to
    sustain their ancient faith. Kochakian said he wants to make the
    faith relevant to people's lives so "it's no longer just something
    in a storybook."

    Every year, St. John helps teenagers travel to Armenia to reconnect
    with their traditions. The patriarch's visit will help those who
    can't make it abroad.

    "Not everyone can go to Armenia, but he has brought Armenia here,"
    Kochakian said.
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