ANKARA: Turkish PM Davutoglu: Pope Joined Plots Against AK Party

TURKISH PM DAVUTOGLU: POPE JOINED PLOTS AGAINST AK PARTY

Today’s Zaman, Turkey
April 15 2015

Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and his wife, Sare Davutoglu, offer
carnations to supporters during an AK Party election campaign meeting
on Wednesday. (Photo: DHA)

April 15, 2015, Wednesday/ 14:11:02/ TODAY’S ZAMAN / ISTANBUL

The Turkish government stepped up its criticism of Pope Francis on
Wednesday over his remarks characterizing the killings of Armenians
during the final years of the Ottoman Empire as “genocide,” with
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu accusing the pontiff of joining “plots”
against his Justice and Development Party (AK Party) and Turkey.

“An axis of evil is being created against us. An axis whose entire
motivation is to hinder the AK Party is being formed,” Davutoglu told
a party meeting whose purpose was to introduce AK Party candidates for
the June 7 parliamentary election and the party’s election manifesto.

He then targeted the AK Party’s rivals, the Republican People’s Party
(CHP) and the pro-Kurdish Peoples’ Democratic Party (HDP), criticizing
the CHP’s election campaign for being helped by a US-based strategic
research consultancy and calling the HDP a “project” to hamper the
AK Party’s progress.

“The pope has joined these plots against the AK Party and Turkey,”
he said.

Pope Francis angered Turkey when he publicly called the killing of
Armenians “genocide.” Turkey summoned the Vatican’s ambassador to
its Foreign Ministry and recalled its own back to Turkey after the
pontiff’s remarks on Sunday.

Davutoglu said there were attempts to “convict” Turkey on the basis of
“extremely unjust accusations” just ahead of the June 7 election.

“I am addressing the pope: Those who escaped the genocide carried
out by the Catholic world in Spain via the Inquisition found peace
and safety in our just system,” Davutoglu said.

“We are ready to look into everything but we will not let our nation
be insulted over history. We will not allow Turkey to be blackmailed
through historical debates,” the Turkish prime minister declared.

First official statement from Vatican

In the meantime, the Vatican made its first official statement on
Wednesday following the pope’s genocide remarks that angered Turkish
officials. Vatican spokesman Rev. Federico Lombardi said the Holy See
notes the Turks’ reaction to the pope’s remarks but has no intention
of getting into a polemic.

During a press conference on Wednesday, Lombardi also stated that the
pope’s remarks made President Recep Tayyip Erdogan bring up the idea
of establishing a joint commission to debate the issue, adding that
it’s an interesting offer. After reporters pointed out that Erdogan’s
idea of a joint commission is not new, Lombardi said he knew that,
adding that Turkey’s denial of “genocide” is not new, either.

Lombardi stressed that the pope always speaks directly and his remarks
referring to “the first genocide of the 20th century” were in fact
quoting a 2001 joint declaration by Pope John Paul ll and Catholicos
Karekin ll, head of the Armenian Apostolic Church. Karekin ll was also
present at Sunday’s Mass, along with Armenian President Serzh Sarksyan.

The Vatican spokesman said the pope’s way of describing the 1915
events is “clever” and asks for the issue to continue to be debated.

The spokesman also stressed that the pope’s intention was to prevent
such tragic events reoccurring in the future, as well as writing a
more accurate story.

Lombardi said that for those who acknowledge what happened in 1915,
the pope’s remarks were to the point. He stressed that the pope also
asked for reconciliation between Turkish and Armenian people.

He said the Vatican will note Turkey’s concerns and objections but
will not get into a polemic.

Meanwhile, a leading minority figure living in Ä°stanbul told
Vatican Radio that the Christian community in Turkey is worried about
bureaucratic reprisals against priests through such obstacles as not
renewing residence permits.

Speaking to Vatican Radio on Wednesday, Claudio Monge, head of the
Dominican Study Institute of Ä°stanbul for Intercultural and Interfaith
Dialogue, said after Pope Francis called the 1915 mass killings of
Armenians by Ottoman Turks a genocide, Turkey’s Christian community
may face bureaucratic obstacles. Monge said he found Turkey’s reaction
too harsh over the issue.

The contentious issue of the 1915 killings of Ottoman Armenians has
come under international spotlight once again as the centenary of the
events approaches on April 24, injecting a new element of tension
between Turkey and countries seeking recognition of the events as
genocide.

The Armenian diaspora claims that 1.5 million Armenians were
systematically massacred by the Ottoman administration during World
War I, and that this amounts to genocide. It demands an apology from
Ankara. The Turkish government denies the charges.

While accepting the killings of Armenians, Ankara says the number
put forward by Armenian historians is inflated and the events took
place amid civil unrest and inter-communal clashes and could not be
characterized as genocide.

Turkey also laments that hundreds of thousands of Muslim civilians
were also killed during the unrest between the various communities
in Anatolia, but that the international community only pays attention
to the sufferings of one particular group.

http://www.todayszaman.com/diplomacy_turkish-pm-davutoglu-pope-joined-plots-against-ak-party_378038.html

Francis Urges ‘Frankness’ Amid Row Over Armenian ‘Genocide’ Remarks

FRANCIS URGES ‘FRANKNESS’ AMID ROW OVER ARMENIAN ‘GENOCIDE’ REMARKS

Adnkronos International, Rome
Distributed by Tribune Content Agency
April 13, 2015 Monday

April 13–In a homily on Monday calling for “frankness” and “courage”,
Pope Francis appeared to defend comments calling the World War I
mass killings of Armenians “genocide” which sparked a diplomatic row
with Turkey.

“We cannot remain silent before what we have seen and heard,” Francis
said celebrating mass at the Vatican hotel on Monday.

“Today, the message of the Church is to take the path of frankness,
path of Christian courage…of freedom of speech,” Francis said.

Turkey on Sunday withdrew its ambassador to the Holy See after the
pontiff said at a service in Rome attended by Armenia’s president
Serzh Sargysan and church leaders that the WWI killings “genocide”.

In the mass in the Armenian Catholic rite at St Peter’s Basilica,
Francis said humanity had lived through “three massive and
unprecedented tragedies” in the last century.

“The first, which is widely considered ‘the first genocide of the
20th Century’, struck your own Armenian people,” he said, in a form
of words used by a declaration by Pope John Paul II in 2001.

Sargsyan welcomed his comments, saying they sent a powerful message
to the international community, but Turkey immediately summoned the
Vatican’s ambassador to Ankara for an explanation and later recalled
its ambassador from Rome.

In a furious note announcing the recall of its ambassador, the Turkish
foreign ministry slammed Francis’ remarks as biased, “unacceptable”
and said they “contradict legal and historical facts”.

While Francis did not use his own words to describe the killings
as genocide, it was the first time the term was spoken aloud in
connection with Armenia by a head of the Roman Catholic Church in
Saint Peter’s Basilica.

In 2014, Turkey’s president, Recep Tayyip Erdogan , then the country’s
prime minister, for the first time offered condolences for the mass
killings of Armenians.

But he also said that it was inadmissible for Armenia to turn the issue
“into a matter of political conflict”.

Turkey still blames unrest and famine for many of the deaths and says
ethnic Turks also suffered in the conflict.

Armenia says up to 1.5 million people died in 1915-16 as the Ottoman
Empire was disintegrating. Turkey has said the number of deaths was
much smaller.

Most non-Turkish scholars of the events regard them as genocide.

Among states which formally recognise them as genocide are Argentina,
Belgium, Canada, France, Italy, Russia and Uruguay.

The Poetry Of Atrocity By Peter Balakian

THE POETRY OF ATROCITY BY PETER BALAKIAN

The Chronicle of Higher Education

April 13, 2015 Monday

ABSTRACT

The 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide is remembered through
the echoes of language.

FULL TEXT

In the fall of 1915, an 18-year-old poet named Yeghishe Charents
joined an Armenian volunteer battalion in Russia and crossed the
border, traveling a couple of hundred miles through rugged mountainous
terrain to Van, a historic Armenian city, set on a glacial lake at
the Turkish border. Charents, who had grown up in the city of Kars,
then in Russia near the border, was hoping to fight the Ottoman army
and the killing squads that had commenced the massacre and deportation
of the Armenian population of the region, as part of an empire-wide
program to eliminate the Christian Armenian population of Turkey.

The Armenian genocide will be commemorated worldwide on April 24
because on that day in 1915 the government arrested and deported
to prisons in the interior about 250 Armenian intellectuals and
cultural leaders, killing most of them, in the first chapter in the
mass-slaughter program.

Turkey’s extermination of its Armenian population in 1915 marked
a shift in the practice of genocide, and can be seen as the first
instance carried out as part of a modern nationalist program. Behind
the screen of World War I, Turkey’s ruling party – the Committee of
Union and Progress, under the leadership of Talaat Pasha, Enver Pasha,
and Djemal Pasha – used extensive government apparatus – bureaucracy,
the military, technology and communications, nationalist ideology –
to demographically target and isolate the unarmed Christian minority
ethnic group. The purpose was to eliminate it in a concentrated period
of time. Between one million and 1.5 million Armenians perished in
the genocide; Raphael Lemkin, the Polish legal scholar who created the
concept of genocide as a crime in international law and coined the term
“Armenian genocide” in the 1940s, put the figure at 1.2 million.

The Turkish government has refused to acknowledge the genocide,
although numerous countries (excluding the United States) have done
so as a redress to Turkey’s campaign of denial.

Before long, Charents and his comrades found themselves in a landscape
of ruins and corpses. Out of that experience came his first important
poem, “Dantesque Legend” – a poem of eight sections, in which the
persona moves between a diarylike intimacy and an unsettling realism.

Not unlike those British public-school boys going off to war on
the Western front during World War I, the Armenian boys “set out,
light headed / with the bright blueness overhead, our souls buoyant,
the fresh / light soul of the happy traveler.” Nature is pastoral,
almost folkloric, with “golden spikes before us in the fields.” But
as they walk on, Charents conveys how they feel their innocence slip
away as “a shout exhaled in sleep.”

As the poet and his comrades climb a barren mountain in the Anatolian
highlands, though, the poem changes, and on a barren precipice,
the syntax tightens, decorative images vanish, language goes stark:
“Nothing animate / but us. Life become something / palpable in each
chest. We / breathed. We existed.”

As he comes upon the first sign of his murdered countrymen, it seems
as if history has split the poem between two centuries, two eras of
the poet’s life: “I looked, stiff-eyed, into the clear / water of
the pail in which also half disintegrated parts of a body / rocked
calmly.” The “stiff-eyed” seeing in the poem owes less to literary
irony than it does to an aesthetic of engaging the horror of the real
without intrusive sentiment or emotion.

In her The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World (1985),
the literary critic Elaine Scarry suggested that pain and torture
undo language. But I would argue that poetry is able to ingest, in
inventive ways, some dimensions of pain, no matter how transmuted or
metaphorized – to embody both the pain of the body and the pain of
the mind that atrocity embeds in consciousness.

When the poet reaches the Dantesque place – the “Dead City,” his trope
for Van – the language becomes even more compressed, and the restraint
in these sections anticipates some of the post-atrocity writing of
Primo Levi’s clinical-like aesthetic in Survival in Auschwitz or The
Drowned and the Saved.

Nothing breathed in the Dead City. The windows of the deserted building
stared darkly like eyes without pupils. No, sockets without eyes. And
we dared not return their stare.

I don’t know why we entered a house. The wide holes of the windows
gaped like sunless, dug-out eyes. At the threshold a cat’s body. Who
would have killed it?

We entered, and saw the broken bed, a woman drenched in blood. Naked.

The blood-stained mouth holding a laugh, open like a hole, smelling
of fear.

The rendering of the dead body is ambiguous, so the mouth and vagina
overlap – evoking rape but leaving the disfigurement an unsettling part
of the descent into an event without rhetoric. The poet then reverts
to more conventional metaphor to try to take in the traumatic shock:
“The lid of my skull disappeared then / as if my brain were not mine
/ and sky and ground danced together. Someone said: Let’s get out
of here.”

As the poem proceeds, Charents has winnowed his persona down to a
diarylike self that is recording details of atrocity. In a nightmare,
he probes the traumatized self, and in a kind of insomniac delirium,
he sees the dead in a dance of body parts. For a moment, the shattered
self loses its own sense of being:

Their dead bodies with blue legs, yellow breasts, swollen and blood-
splattered buttocks, danced, staggering before my terror-filled eyes
in the grave-pit dark.

They sang, moaned, cackled, almost as if in joy. Mixed with weeping,
in cold and horrible hollow tones that gnawed at my hearing and in my
agitated brain their song seemed to be transformed into a sad knowledge
that I too did not exist that I was part of some hot, distant dream
in which my soul was being borne away with no will to resist.

Charents’s effort to probe the psychological, to get to the traumatic,
is tied to the tropes of dream and delirium throughout the poem. The
poet is a witness at the scene of the crime, but he also brings
the hallucination that is often part of the delayed experience of
survivors, a version of post-traumatic stress disorder, into the
poem’s texture. If “to be traumatized is precisely to be possessed
by an image or event,” as the literary scholar Cathy Caruth put it in
Trauma: Explorations in Memory, then “Dantesque Legend” is a poem that
emerges from traumatized witness and, through the poet’s ingenuity,
finds a form in lyric language.

Charents’s poem reminds us that poetry is capable, somewhere in
its complex and layered structure, of registering the tremors of
the violent event. It can embody some of what Lawrence L. Langer,
a scholar of Holocaust literature, calls in Holocaust Testimonies:
The Ruins of Memory, “anguished memory” and “humiliated memory”
in the cambium of the mind’s groping after threads and shreds and
filaments of the event. Of this kind of traumatic memory, Langer notes:
“If anguished memory may be seen as discontent in search of a form,
humiliated memory recalls an utter distress that shatters all molds
designed to contain a unified and irreproachable image of the self.”

Poems that ingest violence are often shaped by this kind of interior
movement; they are propelled by a restless search for adequate or
inadequate new ways to embody the event.

The poet possessed by some dimension of trauma thinks in images and
is thus possessed by them as well. Caruth notes that post-traumatic
stress disorder “is not so much a symptom of the unconscious as it
is a symptom of history,” and I think this idea intersects with
the reach of poetry. “The traumatized,” she continues, “carry an
impossible history within them, or they become themselves the symptom
of a history that they cannot entirely possess.” Whether that is true
for all traumatized people, for the poet it seems more fully to the
point that imagination is a manifestation of both history and the
unconscious, and, of course, the conscious manipulation of language
under pressure in either formal or more open forms.

At commemorations of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide,
the power of the poetic imagination will remain an enduring force.

Caruth and others have noted that traumatic memory returns in images,
dreams, hallucinations, and fragmentary moments. That, too, is organic
to poetic imagination, although I don’t want to make any simplistic
correlations between the traumatized individual and the poet at work
in his or her strange web of linguistic inventions. Nevertheless: The
poem that witnesses, the poem that ingests violence, can move along
the frequencies of traumatized memory in the skin of its own craft
and make new and arresting waves of language – bald, graphic, plain,
clear, encoded, elliptical, symbolic. There are no formulaic, co-opting
forms or strategies for witnessing collective traumatic events.

The poem, in its severe reach, provides us with a form that captures
something of the traumatic event that has passed. But it catches the
event in its own music, in its peculiar qualities of rhythm, in the
web of language-sound that syntax creates, so that its language might
get stuck in our ear, spun in our heads. In the lyric memory that
poetry can provide, the speech-tongue-voice of the poem leaves its
imprint on us, so that the mind is sobered with an indelible imprint,
opening the way to deeper knowledge.

At commemorations of the 100th anniversary of the Armenian genocide,
the power of the poetic imagination will remain an enduring force that
allows us to see more deeply into this atrocity that inaugurated the
modern age of genocide. In May, at the PEN World Voices festival in
New York City, a special session of international writers and scholars
will honor the 82 writers killed in the Armenian genocide. At Armenian
commemorative events worldwide this year, Armenians will read poems
by Siamanto and Daniel Varoujan, who were killed by the Ottoman
government in 1915, and by other poets who survived like Charents
and Vahan Tekeyan – bringing shards of the event back into that echo
chamber of lyric language.

Peter Balakian is a professor of English and director of creative
writing at Colgate University. His books include The Burning Tigris:
The Armenian Genocide and America’s Response (HarperCollins, 2003)
and Black Dog of Fate: A Memoir (Basic Books, 1997). Two new books,
Ozone Journal and Vise and Shadow: Essays on the Lyric Imagination,
Poetry, Art, and Culture, will be published by the University of
Chicago Press this month.

GRAPHIC: Yeghishe Charents

http://chronicle.com/article/The-Poetry-of-Atrocity/229221/
www.chronicle.com

Removal Of Customs Obstacles Is Major Achievement Of EEU – Armenian

REMOVAL OF CUSTOMS OBSTACLES IS MAJOR ACHIEVEMENT OF EEU – ARMENIAN PARLIAMENT SPEAKER

13:46 16/04/2015 >> ECONOMY

Speaker of Armenian National Assembly Galust Sahakyan on Thursday
attended the international forum “Eurasian Economic Prospects” in Saint
Petersburg, the press service of Armenian National Assembly reports.

Addressing the event, Mr Sahakyan said, in particular, that the
Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) provides great opportunities to expand
interstate cooperation in trade and economic sectors.

According to him, by joining the EEU, Armenia became a part of an
around 170-million market and this makes the country attractive
for investments.

Armenia’s parliament chief also noted in his speech that the removal
of the customs obstacles is one of the major achievements of the EEU.

In conclusion, he said that Armenia is ready to carry out the
agreements that have been reached within the framework of the EEU.

Source: Panorama.am

Sonya Orfalian Per "Passioni" (RAI-Radiotre)

SONYA ORFALIAN PER “PASSIONI” (RAI-RADIOTRE)

RAI-Radiotre – Voci dal silenzio: cento anni dal Genocidio degli
Armeni, di Sonya Orfalian

SABATO 18 APRILE e DOMENICA 19 APRILE 2015 – h. 14.00

In questo fine settimana RAI-Radiotre mandera in onda due puntate della
trasmissione Passioni realizzate e condotte da Sonya Orfalian con il
titolo “Voci dal silenzio: cento anni dal Genocidio degli Armeni”. In
queste due puntate, Sonya Orfalian, scrittrice e figlia della
diaspora armena, racconta il genocidio del suo popolo raccogliendo e
componendo insieme in un affresco sonoro le voci di chi ha testimoniato
direttamente l’orrore di un crimine che attende ancora giustizia.

http://www.radio3.rai.it/dl/portaleRadio/Programmi/Page-5f6a383c-7e48-4074-9b27-115f3e971eb2.html?set=ContentSet-7727e719-af61-4a5c-acce-facf7bea61df&type=A

Bombardments Of Aleppo: Syrian Armenians Appeal For Saving Children

BOMBARDMENTS OF ALEPPO: SYRIAN ARMENIANS APPEAL FOR SAVING CHILDREN FROM UNSAFE CITY

NEWS | 16.04.15 | 12:19

By SARA KHOJOYAN
ArmeniaNow reporter

News from Aleppo, Syria, about fresh bombardments of the
Armenian-populated quarters of the city as well as injuries among
Armenians caused more concerns in Yerevan, which has given refuge to
thousands of Syrian Armenians fleeing the conflict in their country
during the past four years.

Syrian Armenians have appealed for action to evacuate from Aleppo
at least the children who, they say, have been driven to the “edge
of death”.

“Aleppo Armenians are in a desperate situation and are on the verge
of death. They want their children to be saved,” Hrach Kalsahakian,
a Syrian Armenian, wrote on his Facebook account.

He noted that school will end on May 12 and that the children need
to be taken temporarily to safe countries like Lebanon and Armenia
before the summer sets in bringing with it terrible conditions for
the children. The activist described it as a cause for the nation
that needs to be realized urgently “before it is too late”.

Vahan Kevorkian (name changed), another Syrian Armenian in Yerevan
who spoke to ArmeniaNow on condition of anonymity because of being
concerned for the fate of his children back in Aleppo, said he came
to Armenia a week ago to rent a home here and bring his family,
including two teenage daughters, along.

“I was at the airport in Beirut when I heard the news [about the
bombardments],” said Kevorkian, adding that only days later he could
learn that everything was fine with his family.

According to Kevorkian, like many other Aleppo Armenians he has also
got accustomed to the war ranging around in Syria today. “It was bad
also before, but at least it was calmer,” he said.

According to him, only one of the three Armenian schools is open to
children in Aleppo today and Armenian children from the entire city
attend it.

Kevorkian said that the conflict in Syria at times reminded him of the
horrors that Armenians experienced during the Ottoman-era massacres.

“Voices of Turkish and Muslim militants a few blocks from my home were
very disturbing for me as I feared that any moment they could come
and attack our home. It was very difficult and it seemed that we were
again going through genocide,” says the man who, as a young man, was
recording stories of 1915 Genocide survivors for the Hay Dat office.

Kevorkian is a silversmith by profession. He hopes to find a job
in Armenia in order to maintain his family while the conflict in
Syria continues.

“Here I have a narrow circle of friends, good guys from Lebanon,
Syria, local guys. If I can find means to maintain my family we will
stay here, but I haven’t decided anything yet,” he said.

Kevorkian also visited Armenia many times before and twice went to
the 1915 Genocide Memorial at Tsitsernakaberd. According to him,
this year, which marks the centenary of the Genocide, he will lay
flowers at the Memorial on April 24 and go back to his war-stricken
home to bring his family to Armenia.

http://armenianow.com/news/62418/armenia_region_syria_bombardments_help

" La Cathedrale De La Memoire " De Jirka

> DE JIRKA

CACHAN

Dans le cadre des activites du Centenaire du genocide armenien,
une exposition intitulee “La cathedrale de la memoire” de JIRKA est
programmee a l’Orangerie de Cachan(Val-de-Marne,15 rue Gallieni)
du 13 Avril au 16 Mai 2015de 10ha 12h et de 14h a 18h. Nocturne le
jeudi jusqu’a 19h.

Le vernissage de l’exposition a l’Orangerie de Cachan a lieu le jeudi
16 avril 2015 a 19 heures en presence de Jean-Yves Le Bouillonnec,
Depute-maire de Cachan.

A travers cette exposition artistique spectaculaire, fruit de la
synthèse de son activite d’architecte et de plasticien, et de son
armenite, JIRKA tend a frapper les visiteurs sur l’aspect commemoratif
de son travail. Il a choisi le mois d’avril 2015, Centenaire du
Genocide des Armeniens, pour rendre un hommage a ses parents (orphelins
en 1915), a toute la famille (massacree), a son pays d’origine, a toute
la communaute diasporique, utilisant l’art comme outil revendicatif
des valeurs universelles

Feud Erupts Over Pope’s ‘Genocide’ Declaration; Turkey Pulls Vatican

FEUD ERUPTS OVER POPE’S ‘GENOCIDE’ DECLARATION; TURKEY PULLS VATICAN AMBASSADOR IN RESPONSE

National Post (Canada)
April 13, 2015 Monday
National Edition

by: Joseph Brean, National Post

Turkey has accused Pope Francis of promoting hatred by declaring the
slaughter of Armenians by Ottoman Turks a century ago was genocide
on a scale with Nazism and Stalinism.

The killings in the last days of the Ottoman Empire were not simply
part of the broader violence of First World War, but a calculated
effort to exterminate a race, “the first genocide of the 20th century,”
Francis said in a Vatican mass on Sunday to mark the centenary. He
urged other world leaders to recognize it as such, and to prevent
similar atrocities “without ceding to ambiguity or compromise.”

Failing to call genocide by its name creates a climate in which it
becomes easier, Francis said, and urged Catholics to heed the “muffled
and forgotten cry of so many of our defenceless brothers and sisters
who, on account of their faith in Christ or their ethnic origin,
are publicly and ruthlessly put to death – decapitated, crucified,
burned alive – or forced to leave their homeland.”

The claim that Ottoman Turks conducted genocide against Armenians is
not new, even for a pope. Francis himself cited a statement made by
Pope John Paul II in 2001, when he prayed at an Armenian memorial,
comparing the victims to the Biblical Abel, murdered by his brother
Cain, who denied it.

And Francis, formerly an Argentine cardinal, has made similar comments
to the large Armenian diaspora in Argentina.

But Francis has become a pontiff who is admired even by non-Catholics
for speaking blunt truths, which seem somehow different and deeper
when he expresses them from his high office.

“He is living dangerously,” said Donald Boisvert, chair of religion
at Concordia University. “He certainly puts himself in vulnerable
positions where he knows that he is making enemies.”

When he visited Israel a year ago and entered the West Bank, for
example, he made sure to refer to it as the “state of Palestine.”

Likewise, the most famous comment of his papacy – “If a person is gay
and seeks God and has good will, who am I to judge?” – was delivered
off the cuff to journalists on a plane. He was even lavishly praised
last year for acknowledging the truth of evolution and the Big Bang,
which have long been accepted in Catholicism.

His remarks on Sunday were significant, though. They were made in
a mass in the Armenian rite at St. Peter’s Basilica, on the 100th
anniversary of the genocide, and in the presence of Serzh Sargsyan,
President of Armenia, who later praised Francis for “calling things
by their names.”

“It’s consistent with the man’s style,” Boisvert said, citing examples
of Francis’s efforts at moral suasion in pursuit of justice, and
contrasting him to Pius XII, whose inaction during the Holocaust has
drawn great criticism. “He’s a very forthright, honest and direct
man who also knows full well what he’s saying.”

Turkey was outraged. As the state that succeeded the Ottoman Empire,
it does not deny the violence, in which more than a million people
were killed by murder, forced labour and death marches, but strongly
denies it had a genocidal purpose.

Canada formally acknowledged the genocide in 2004, for example, and
as recently as 2013 a Turkish ambassador to Ottawa said it remains
an obstacle to trade.

In response to the Pope’s comments, Turkey’s embassy to the Vatican
cancelled a planned news conference. In the Turkish capital Ankara,
diplomats summoned the Vatican ambassador to express displeasure,
and released a statement expressing “great disappointment and sadness.”

“The Pope’s statement, which is out of touch with both historical
facts and legal basis, is simply unacceptable,” Foreign Minister
Mevlut Cavusoglu tweeted. “Religious offices are not places through
which hatred and animosity are fuelled by unfounded allegations.”

Richard Rymarz, professor of Catholic religious education at St.

Joseph’s College at the University of Alberta, said the declaration
fits with Francis’s recent emphasis on the persecution of Christians,
such as the recent terrorist murders of Copts in Libya and Christian
students in Kenya.

Armenia holds a special place in the Christian historical imagination,
as the first nation to officially adopt Christianity as a state
religion in 301 AD, beating the Roman Empire by almost a century.

“By drawing attention to (the Armenian genocide), I think Francis is
underlying that broader concern he has that Christians all over the
world today, and in the past, are suffering for their faith,” he said.

“I think he’s doing this quite deliberately … He’s not just shooting
off at the mouth. I think that he realizes that he can use the media
to promote things that are close to his heart.”

He noted that Francis was recently in Turkey and did not make similar
comments then, which “would have been catastrophic.”

Rymarz also suggested Francis has been inspired by the decision of
his predecessor Benedict XVI to break with centuries of tradition
and resign rather than die in office. It was a pioneering decision
that altered the role of the papacy, emphasizing the office over its
occupant, he said. Francis has openly said he expects his own papacy
to be short, and even hinted he might also consider resignation.

“One of consequences could be that popes do act with a bit more
urgency,” Rymarz said. “There may be a touch of that in Francis’s
papacy.”

National Post [email protected] Twitter.com/JosephBrean
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GRAPHIC: Gregorio Borgia, The Associated Press; Pope Francis is
greeted by the head of Armenia’s Orthodox Church Karekin II, right,
during a mass on Sunday, marking 100 years since one million Armenians
were killed by by Ottoman Turks. Turkish leaders dispute the genocide
label.;

Forbes Russian Has Included Seven Armenians In Its Annual Ranking Of

FORBES RUSSIAN HAS INCLUDED SEVEN ARMENIANS IN ITS ANNUAL RANKING OF THE 200 RICHEST BUSINESSMEN IN THE COUNTRY.

15:05 * 16.04.15

President of Tashir Group Samvel Karapetyan is the 26th on the ranking
with estimated assets of $4 billion.

The next Armenian is Danil Khachaturov, the director of the insurance
company Rosgosstrakh. The 43-year-old businessman has climbed down
from the 54th position in 2014 to the 68th position this year, with
his assets having decreased by $1 billion to $1.6 billion.

An influential figure on the ranking is Ruben Vardanyan, the founder
of the business school Skolkovoa, who is the 92nd on the ranking
(against last year’s 124th). His assets have increased by $0.1 billion
to 0.95 billion since 2014.

The brothers Nikolay and Sergey Sarkisov, who represent the company
Reso Garantia, rank respectively the 105th and the 106th .

Albert Avdolyan, (Wooden Fish Agency), with $0.75 billion, is the
120th on the index. His assets haven’t changed since last year.

The businessmen included in the publication’s top 10 list are:

1. Vladimir Potanin (Interros, Norinkel), $15.4 billion

2. Mikhail Fridman (Alpha Group), $ 14.6 billion

3. Alisher Romanov (Matalinvest, Mail.ru Group, Megaphone), $14.4
billion

4. Victor Vekselberg (Rosal), $14.2 billion

5. Aleksey Mordashov (Severstal), $13 billion

6. Vagit Alekperov (Lukoil), $12.2 billion

7. Leonid Mikhelson (Sibur, Novatek), $11.7 bilion

8. Vladimir Lisin (Novolipetsk Steel), $11.6 billion

9. Gennady Timchenko (Novatek), $10.7 billion

10. Mikhail Prokhorov (Onexim), $9.9 billion

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/04/16/forbes-200/1647930

MEPs Call On Turkey To Recognise Armenian Massacre As ‘Genocide’

MEPS CALL ON TURKEY TO RECOGNISE ARMENIAN MASSACRE AS ‘GENOCIDE’

EuroNews
April 15 2015

15/04 18:49 CET

MEPs have called on Turkey to recognise the massacre of Armenians by
the Ottoman empire during the First World War as ‘genocide’.

Turkey opposes the use of the word ‘genocide’ and disputes that up
to 1.5 million Armenians were killed.

Ankara has pledged to ignore the motion; President Recep Tayip Erdogan
said any such statement would go “in one ear and out from the other”.

“It’s a genocide. And we have to state that we cannot solve conflicts
between nations when we are denying facts or trying to reverse them,
but when we face the past honestly,” said Benedek Javor, a Hungarian
Green MEP.

Members of the Armenian diaspora want other parliaments around the
world to follow suit.

“I see this as a step forward, Its better than nothing. And it
shows that this question need a further solution. And it is not
forgotten. I hope that this is just one step in the whole process,”
said Emma Argutyan, an Armenian now living in Brussels, Belgium.

Turkey has protested against the move, saying that politicians should
not interfere and leave such work to historians.

“The European Parliament has made an historical mistake again
by slighting Turkey. It offends the Turks and Turkey. This is
unacceptable. It is a unilateral decision without consultation or
dialogue. This has no legal value. It does not matter for Turkey
or for EU-Turkey relations because the European Parliament cannot
speak on behalf of the European Union,” said Selim Yanel, the Turkish
ambassador to the EU.

The European Parliament itself first recognised the mass killings as
genocide in 1987.

Twenty countries, including France, Italy and Russia share that view.

http://www.euronews.com/2015/04/15/meps-call-on-turkey-to-recognise-armenian-massacre-as-genocide/