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As Armenia Commemorates Massacres, Pope Calls For Hope, Reconciliati

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  • As Armenia Commemorates Massacres, Pope Calls For Hope, Reconciliati

    AS ARMENIA COMMEMORATES MASSACRES, POPE CALLS FOR HOPE, RECONCILIATION

    Catholic New York
    April 9 2015

    By CAROL GLATZ

    In the run-up to the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide, Pope
    Francis decried humanity's ability to systematically exterminate its
    own brothers and sisters.

    He asked that God's mercy "help all of us, in the love for the truth
    and justice, to heal every wound and expedite concrete gestures of
    reconciliation and peace among nations that still are unable to come
    to a reasonable consensus on interpreting such sad events."

    The pope's remarks came during a meeting at the Vatican April 9 with
    a group of bishops from the Armenian Catholic synod. The bishops were
    in Rome, together with numerous priests, religious and lay faithful,
    to take part in a liturgy April 12 that was to be concelebrated by Pope
    Francis and Armenian Catholic Patriarch Nerses Bedros XIX Tarmouni.

    April 24 will mark the commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the
    Armenian genocide. An estimated 1.5 million Armenians--more than half
    the Armenian population at the time--died in a forced evacuation from
    their traditional territory in the Ottoman-Turkish Empire from 1915
    to 1918.

    Turkey rejects the accusation of genocide, saying the deaths were
    due largely to disease and famine.

    The Armenian genocide has not received universal recognition. Some
    governments, such as Belgium, France, Cyprus, Canada and Russia,
    have adopted resolutions affirming events, while others, including
    the United States, have not formally recognized the genocide. Papal
    speeches and the Vatican have not used the term "genocide" when
    referring to the tragedy.

    Pope Francis' written speech to the bishops said the human heart
    was capable of "unleashing the darkest forces, capable of going as
    far as systematically planning the annihilation of its brother, to
    consider him an enemy, an adversary or even someone devoid of the
    same human dignity."

    However, "for believers," reflecting on the evil waged by humankind
    leads to "the mystery of the participation in the redemptive Passion"
    as many Armenians continued to proclaim their belief in Christ even
    to the point of "bloodshed or death caused by starvation in the
    interminable exodus they were forced into," he said.

    Pope Francis recalled how Pope Benedict XV intervened by asking the
    Sultan Mehmed V "to end the massacres of the Armenians."

    He also noted "with sadness" how those who survived the forced
    expulsions 100 years ago flooded to neighboring regions, which today
    are seeing their Christian presence put into danger once again.

    The suffering of the Armenian people in a certain sense is an extension
    of Christ's passion, he said, and as such gives way to the hope and
    joy of his resurrection.

    It is up to Armenian Catholic leaders to help the faithful "know how to
    read reality with new eyes" and be able to not just remember the past,
    but to draw from it new energy "to nourish the present with the joyous
    proclamation of the Gospel and with the witness of charity," he said.

    The pope noted how Armenia is considered the first country to have
    accepted Christianity as its state religion in 301 A.D. and how it
    has been able to pick itself up again "after so much persecution
    and trials."

    He invited the Armenian community always to look to the Lord and "to
    ask God for the gift of the wisdom of heart; the commemoration of the
    victims 100 years ago places us, in fact, before the shadows of the
    'mysterium iniquitatis' (the mystery of evil)."

    --CNS

    http://cny.org/stories/As-Armenia-Commemorates-Massacres-Pope-Calls-for-Hope-Reconciliation,12517




    From: A. Papazian
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