Pope defends Armenian Genocide comment, says no offense meant

Pope Francis says he decided to use the word ā€˜genocideā€™ in his speech at the Armenian presidential Palace, because ā€œit would have sounded strange not to say at least the same thing I said last year.ā€

Asked Sunday en route home from Armenia why he decided to add ā€œgenocideā€ into his prepared remarks, Francis said it was simply the term that he had always used in Argentina, where he was close to the Armenian community.

ā€œIn Argentina, when you spoke of the Armenian extermination, they always used the word ā€œgenocide.ā€ I didnā€™t know another. At the cathedral in Buenos Aires, we put a stone cross in the third altar on the left, remembering the Armenian genocide. The archbishop came, two Armenian archbishops, the Catholic and the Apostolic, they inaugurated itā€¦ also the Apostolic Archbishop in the Catholic Church of St. Bartholomew made an altar in memory of St. Bartholomewā€¦ but alwaysā€¦ I didnā€™t know. I another word come from this word. When I arrived in Rome, I heard another word: ā€œThe Great Evilā€ or the ā€œterrible tragedy,ā€ but in Armenian, I donā€™t know how to say itā€¦ and they tell me that no, that that is offensive, that of ā€œgenocide,ā€ and that you must say this. Iā€™ve always spoke of three genocides in the last centuryā€¦ always three! The first was the Armenian, then that of Hitler, and the last is that of Stalinā€¦ there are small ones, there is another in Africa, but as in the orbit of the two great wars there are these threeā€¦ Iā€™ve asked whyā€¦ ā€œbut some feel like itā€™s not true, that there wasnā€™t a genocideā€… another said to meā€¦ a lawyer told me this that really interested me: the word ā€œgenocideā€ is a technical word, itā€™s a word that is not a synonym of ā€œextermination.ā€ You can say extermination, but declaring a ā€œgenocideā€ brings with it actions of reparationā€¦ this is what the lawyer said to me,ā€ PopeĀ told reporters.

ā€œLast year, when I was preparing the speech, I saw that St John Paul II had used the word, that he used both: Great Evil and genocide. And I cited that one in quotation marksā€¦ and it wasnā€™t received well. A statement was made by the Turkish government. Turkey, in a few days called its ambassador to Ankara, who is a great man, Turkey sent us a top ambassador, who returned three months ago… But, Turkey has the right… The right to protest, we all have it,ā€ the Pope said.

Speaking of his use of the word ā€˜genocide on the first day of his visit to Armenia, the Pope said: ā€œIn this speech at the start there wasnā€™t a word, that is true. I respond because I added it. But after having heard the tone of the speech of the president and also with my past with this word, and having said this word last year in St. Peterā€™s publicly, it would have sounded strange not to say at least the same thing. But there, I wanted to underscore something else, and I donā€™t think I err that I also said: in this genocide, as in the other two, the great international powers looked in the other direction. And this was the thing. In the Second World War some powers, which had photographed the train lines that led to Auschwitz had the possibility to bomb and didnā€™t do it. An example. In the context of the First War, where was the problem of the Armenians? And in the context of the Second War where was the problem of Hitler and Stalin and after Yalta of the areaā€¦ and all that no one speaks about. One has to underscore this. And make the historical question: why didnā€™t you do this, you powers?ā€

ā€œI donā€™t accuse, I ask a question. Itā€™s curious. They looked at the war, at so many thingsā€¦ but not the peopleā€¦ and I donā€™t know if itā€™s true, but I would like to know if itā€™s true that when Hitler persecuted the Jews, one of the words, of the thing that he may have said was ā€œWell, who remembers today the Armenians, letā€™s do the same with the Jews.ā€ I donā€™t know if itā€™s true, maybe itā€™s hearsay, but Iā€™ve heard this said. Historians, search and see if itā€™s true. I think I answered. But I never said this word with an offensive intention, if not objectively,ā€ the Pope said.