France Not Likely To Cede Role To Germany In Minsk Group – Armenian

FRANCE NOT LIKELY TO CEDE ROLE TO GERMANY IN MINSK GROUP – ARMENIAN ANALYST

16:55 * 22.01.15

In an interview with Tert.am, political analyst Aghasy Yenokyan
commented on possible changes in the OSCE Minsk Group format,
addressing the reports that Germany may replace France as a mediator
in the Nagorno-Karabkh conflict settlement talks.

Addressing German Chancellor Angela Merkel’s statement expressing
her country’s readiness to act as a negotiator in the process, the
expert said he doesn’t think that such a scenario would be promising
for Armenia.

“I find that the Minsk Group does fulfill its main functions, i.e. –
conducting negotiations and preventing a large-scale war. Hence,
I do not think that it would be right to speak of Minsk Group’s
non-effectiveness, attributing all that to France. Let me mention
meantime that France’s presence in the Minsk Group is not without any
reason tall; neither [has it been selected] it at our own will. It
resulted from serious negotiations, so to decide and replace it with
Germany is not possible,” he said.

“On the other hand, given Germany’s not quite constructive position
on Russia – especially after the Ukraine conflict – all this promises
quite a negative prospect to Armenia/”

Yenokyan further pointed out to France’s interest in the South
Caucasus. “When all this process began, France was really interested
in our region, and I don’t think its interest is any less today. So
I don’t expect it to breach the status quo and cede its position
willingly,” he added.

Yenokyan said he doesn’t expect a new format to raise the effectiveness
of the ongoing peace talks. “There have been many attempt of the kind
– to transfer [the negotiations] to the European Union, Council of
Europe or the United Nations – but the Minsk Group is exactly the
one that conducts the negotiations professionally.

Moreover, the Minsk Group has been created for that very purpose; it
is a special body pursuing its own target. Hence those organizations,
which haven’t passed that path of twenty or so years, will essentially
hamper the process,” he added.

http://www.tert.am/en/news/2015/01/22/aghasi-enoqyan/1566826

Professor Of Practice: Ambassador Baibourtian Teaches With A Global

PROFESSOR OF PRACTICE: AMBASSADOR BAIBOURTIAN TEACHES WITH A GLOBAL TOUCH

The Massachusetts Daily Collegian
Jan 21 2015

Posted by Marie MacCune

Armen Baibourtian has held many titles in his life: senior advisor for
the United Nations, deputy foreign minister of Armenia, and Armenian
ambassador to India, Indonesia and Sri Lanka, to name a few.

His most recent title, however, is visiting professor of practice for
the political science department at the University of Massachusetts.

This is Baibourtian’s third semester at UMass teaching courses focusing
on security policy, globalization, and the Caucasus region.

He uses his extensive background in diplomacy to guide his lectures.

“I always try to show some practical sides of diplomatic relations:
how does it work in the real world? You know, how this or that conflict
was arranged,” he said. “When you read (it) is great, you need (the)
theory, but you also need the practical side too.”

One way he demonstrates the practical side is through what he calls
“study visits” with students to the United Nations in New York.

Over winter break, Baibourtian took 21 of his students to the UN.

“Why I call it the ‘UN study visits’ is because there are normal
visits that are mostly tours that many universities organize, but
what I organize is very much different,” he said.

“We don’t just see the buildings and the premises,” he added. “But
what I organize is very heavily focused on meetings with people
– with ambassadors representing countries at the United Nations,
meeting with the human resources leadership – because for me it is
important that my students, and students of UMass, have an opportunity
for internships and jobs at the UN.”

During the most recent “study visit” last month, students had the
opportunity to meet with the director of the UN Security Council
Affairs Division, who organizes all Security Council meetings.

Baibourtian said, “The meeting with this director was very interesting
for the students. And the meeting (took) place in the Security Council
meeting room which is normally restricted even for the UN employees.”

“That means students had the opportunity to ask questions and interact
with these people, and at the same time be in the same environment
where decisions are made, to feel, to see, to become a part of this
entire process,” he added.

Baibourtian said he’s received “fantastic” feedback from his students
about the meetings.

“These ‘study visits’ come to complement the lectures that we have
because we study how things work, or what steps the UN is taking,
and then you have students go to the UN where it is happening and
talk to people who are the decision makers. So that makes the teaching
cycle complete,” he said.

The UN is not the only place Baibourtian has brought his students
to experience the real world of diplomacy. Last summer, four of his
students had the chance to study at the European Union Summer School
in Batumi, Georgia.

In the summer, Baibourtian teaches a course on regional security at
the Austrian University of Graz, which organizes the EU Summer School.

Baibourtian said the four students were able to learn more about the
region and network with other students from across the globe. He
explained that the experience helps students understand what kind
of life they’ll have if they choose to enter the field of diplomatic
service.

“It is a mini exercise of sorts,” he said. “And it helps them get
prepared for that.”

Baibourtian hopes to expand his “study visits” to include a trip to
Washington, with meetings at the U.S. Department of State, U.S.

Congress, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and more.

For Baibourtian, education has always been an integral part of his
diplomatic service.

“When you try to develop relations with a region or country, education
is a very important component of these relations. For any country,
in any part of the world, education is key in very many aspects,”
he said. “Normally people say political relations, or political and
economic relations, prevail in diplomacy and of course they are very
important, but education in itself – if you engage in education,
you have an impact on all other (aspects of relations).”

He explained, “When you deal with cultures in your job, completely
different cultures, and different people, different civilizations …

you always try to link them in your mind. It’s difficult to find common
features but then you realize the beauty in the diversity itself and
that you don’t need to link them. This diversity is so beautiful.”

Education has been a way for Baibourtian to understand and better
experience that diversity.

He said that through teaching, not only was he sharing his experience
with students but also learning from them at the same time.

“For me it was very important to understand different cultures,
political ideologies, mentalities of the people. And my interactions
with students was a fantastic opportunity to understand these
people and learn the countries of these people where I was posted,”
he continued. “So that is why I try to keep up with this pattern of
teaching in (so) many places.”

As he strives to understand different perspectives in his diplomatic
service, Baibourtian appreciates his students doing the same in
his classes.

“What I enjoy so often is when students speak from different sides and
perspectives when discussing really difficult issues, voicing different
opinions. (I consider that a) really excellent characteristic.”

In short, he said, “I really love this school.”

http://dailycollegian.com/2015/01/21/professor-of-practice-ambassador-baibourtian-teaches-with-a-global-touch/

The Gyumri Tragedy: Putting Armenian Tolerance To A Test

THE GYUMRI TRAGEDY: PUTTING ARMENIAN TOLERANCE TO A TEST

The Messenger, Georgia
Jan 21 2015

By Messenger Staff
Monday, January 19

The world was shocked by the tragedy that transpired in the Armenian
town Gyumri in January 2015. A serviceman from the local Russian
military base, which is stationed in Gyumri, killed a family of 6,
and wounded a 6 month-old baby, who miraculously survived and is still
fighting for his life at the local hospital. After the massacre of the
Avetisian family, soldier Valery Permyakov tried to flee the country,
but was caught at the Armenian-Turkish border.

The Armenian people, who are outraged by the tragedy, insist that
Permyakov be forwarded to the Armenian side for his trial. Russian
military base officials meanwhile keep the soldier under their
jurisdiction and plan to try him in a Russian court. This has resulted
discord between the two countries. Armenians have been protesting for
several days now, and there have been clashes with the police as well,
causing injuries to dozens of people. Many were detained with charges
of hooliganism and police resistance.

The number of Armenians insisting on the removal of the Russian base
from their country increases daily. However, a major demand is to
keep Permyakov accountable for his crime according to Armenian law.

Armenian officials are trying to maintain a balance and calm the
situation. Officials state that the tragedy should not become a
reason for starting movements against Russia and its military base,
as Permyakov has been shown to have clear mental problems.

This incident should not become the reason of confrontation between
Russia and Armenia, state officials claim. They suspect that in
the case the incident grows into a big confrontation, it looks like
everything was planned.

Armenia’s Ombudsman Larisa Alaverdian says the unsteady relations
between Russia and Armenia is in the interests of Turkey and
Azerbaijan.

NATO special envoy in the South Caucasus and Central Asia, James
Appathurai believes first of all that Gyumri became a witness to a
great human tragedy and secondly, the government of Armenia will find
the appropriate way out of this difficult situation.

Unfortunately, a similar incident took place in Armenia in 1998,
when four servicemen, from the same Russian military base, while
they were under the influence of alcohol, started a fight with an
Armenian at a local market. The soldiers who were armed, started a
fire, killing 8 and leaving 6 Armenians wounded.

http://www.messenger.com.ge/issues/3289_january_19_2015/3289_edit.html

Des Documents Inedits Sur Le Genocide Armenien Bientôt Publies Par L

DES DOCUMENTS INEDITS SUR LE GENOCIDE ARMENIEN BIENTÔT PUBLIES PAR LE VATICAN

Histoire

Avant la centième commemoration du genocide des Armeniens le Vatican
publiera un livre documente a partir de ses archives secrètes.

L’annonce a ete faite lors de l’inauguration de l’exposition >. Dans ses archives, le Vatican dispose d’un nombre de
documents qui temoignent du caractère genocidaire accompli sur le
peuple armenien. Ceux-ci seront devoiles prochainement en co-edition
avec les Archives du Vatican.

Les temoignages, a explique le responsable des Archives secrètes,
Mgr Sergio Pagano, decrivent > les

Angela Merkel S’est Declaree Preoccupee Des Violations Du Cessez-Le-

ANGELA MERKEL S’EST DECLAREE PREOCCUPEE DES VIOLATIONS DU CESSEZ-LE-FEU AU HAUT KARABAGH LORS D’UNE RENCONTRE AVEC LE PRESIDENT ALIEV

ALLEMAGNE

La chancelière allemande Angela Merkel est preoccupee par les
violations du cessez-le-feu au Haut Karabagh. Lors d’une conference
de presse le 21 janvier a Berlin en compagnie du president azeri
Ilham Aliev, Angela Merkel a fait part de sa preoccupation du conflit
armeno-azeri. > dit Angela Merkel a l’attention d’Aliev.

Krikor Amirzayan

jeudi 22 janvier 2015, Krikor Amirzayan (c)armenews.com

Armenian Investigators Question Permyakov

ARMENIAN INVESTIGATORS QUESTION PERMYAKOV

Vestnik Kavkaza, Russia
Jan 21 2015

21 January 2015 – 4:30pm

Armenian investigators are questioning soldier of the 102nd Russian
base Valery Permyakov over the murder of six members of the Avetisyan
family. Charges have already been press against the suspect, according
to Sona Truzyan, spokesman of the Armenian Investigative Committee,
Interfax reports.

Armenian and Russian chief investigators signed an agreement in
Yerevan yesterday to form a coordinating center for cooperation
in investigating the case. It consists of 9 investigators and
criminologists. The cooperation will be realized according to the
international law and legal principles of the two states.

Ararat Home Of Los Angeles Armenian Genocide Commemoration Events

ARARAT HOME OF LOS ANGELES ARMENIAN GENOCIDE COMMEMORATION EVENTS

By MassisPost
Updated: January 21, 2015

MISSION HILLS – On the occasion of the Centennial of the Armenian
Genocide (1915-2015), the Board of Trustees of Ararat Home of Los
Angeles, a home for Armenian elderly, is organizing a commemoration
and “Celebration of Life” to honor the Home’s centenarian residents
as well as the survivors of the Genocide. Two of those residents, Mrs.

Rose Garjian and Mrs. Yevnige Salibian, are survivors of the Genocide
and were honored by the USC Shoah Foundation in 2012 and 2014,
respectively.

Two events are planned for this commemoration. The first will be
a memorial service to pay tribute to the victims of the Armenian
Genocide of 1915 to 1923. It will be held on Thursday, March 12,
2015, at 10:30 a.m., in Sheen Memorial Chapel on the Ararat Home
Mission Hills campus. The program will include: a requiem service to
be officiated by the Diocese and Prelacy of the Armenian Apostolic
Church, the Armenian Catholic Church and the Armenian Evangelical
Union in the greater Los Angeles area; a musical performance by
heavenly chants flute and harp duo, Salpy and Sossy Kerkonian; the
unveiling of a memorial monument; and, a tree planting ceremony in
Heritage Courtyard by Ararat Home residents.

The second “Celebration of Life” event will reflect on the survival
of the Armenian nation by highlighting the testimonies and life
stories of the Home’s centenarian residents, which will be presented
by the future generation of Armenians – students from Los Angeles
area Armenian day schools. It will be held on Sunday, March 15, 2015,
at 3:00 p.m., in Deukmejian Grand Ballroom on the Ararat Home Mission
Hills campus. Mr. Gerald S. Papazian, Chairman of the Armenian Film
Foundation, will serve as the Master of Ceremonies, and Dr. Stephen D.

Smith, Executive Director of the USC Shoah Foundation-The Institute
for Visual History and Education, will deliver the keynote address.

The program will also include a film clip presentation by Emmy
Award winning documentary filmmaker Bared Maronian, a performance
by multi-faceted artist Dr. Vatche Mankerian as well as by tenor
Raffi Kerbabian. Near East Relief archival photos not seen in public
for nearly a century will be on exhibit. The program will conclude
with a “Celebration of Life” dance performance by Hamazkayin Nairi
Dance Group.

Board Chairman Joseph Kanimian, Esq. commended the meticulous planning
and efforts of the Co-chairs of the Ararat Home Armenian Genocide
Centennial Commemoration Committee, Maggie Mangassarian-Goschin
and Nadya Verabian, and the participation of Committee members –
Debbie Avedian, Ani Dikranian, Nora Hampar, Margarita Kechichian,
Varsenik Keshishyan, Rita Noravian and Kohar Mardirossian Pelter, –
who have worked diligently to immortalize the memory of the victims
of the first genocide of the 20th century and to celebrate the revival
and resurrection of the Armenian nation.

The public is cordially invited to attend both events. Admission is
free. For additional information, call Ararat Home at (818) 365-3000
or email [email protected].

http://massispost.com/2015/01/ararat-home-of-los-angeles-armenian-genocide-commemoration-events/

Q&A: New Fresno Armenian honorary consul Berj Apkarian shares vision

Fresno Bee, CA
Jan 20 2015

Q&A: New Fresno Armenian honorary consul Berj Apkarian shares vision, progress

By Andrea Castillo

Berj Apkarian made history last October, becoming the country’s first
Honorary Consul of the Republic of Armenia.

Apkarian, executive director of physician relations at Community
Medical Centers, immigrated to Fresno from Syria in 1979.

He wasted no time deciding what he’d do as consul. For his first big
project, Apkarian said he wants to take a team of 15-20 medical and
dental professionals to Yerevan, the capital of Armenia in October to
host a medical education conference and provide free care for needy
people in surrounding rural communities.

The Bee caught up with Apkarian to see how things are going three
months into his appointment. Answers have been edited slightly for
clarity and brevity.

Q. What have you been working on the past three months?

A. Opening the office has been very positive for the community and for
the region. In fact, since the inauguration Oct. 20, we have had
several organized events, including inviting the president of Nagorno
Karabakh to the Valley for the first time.

We started providing consular services to citizens of the Republic of
Armenia so individuals don’t need to travel to L.A. to apply for
citizenship, passport renewals and other documents.

On Nov. 2, I attended the groundbreaking of the Armenian Genocide
Monument on the Fresno State campus. On Nov. 13, we hosted the
Khachaturian Trio before their performance at Fresno State. In the
past, Armenian cultural events and meetings have taken place without
having a home that represents the homeland. So this office is key in
terms of fostering that relationship.

Nov. 19-21 I participated in a training through the Consular Corps
College in Washington D.C. On Thanksgiving day I participated in the
17th International Armenia Fund Telethon in Los Angeles (proceeds will
help construction of the Vardenis to Martakert Highway). On Jan. 9, we
did a New Year’s open house to share what we’re doing and where we are
with our vision.

Q. What is the consulate’s vision?

A. Bringing the community together in support and solidarity of the
homeland and encourage commerce, culture and enhance the relationship
between the Central Valley and the republic. This is one of the oldest
Armenian communities in the United States. One of my goals is to also
encourage the younger generation to take part in these activities.

The other thing we’re working on is trying to create a stronger
relationship between the consulate and local government. I have
reached out to the mayor.

In all our events, both consuls, the Mexican consul and honorary
consul of Italy, have taken part. We meet regularly as the three
foreign diplomatic offices in the central San Joaquin Valley.

Q. What can people expect from the consulate this year?

A. I’m working to bring KOHAR, a very famous symphony orchestra and
choir group from Armenia, at the end of May.

If you look at it from a big-picture standpoint, consular work is
applications and documents — that’s one endeavor. But this being the
centennial of the genocide, I’m also the chair of the monument
project, so making sure this project is completed is an absolute
priority for me.

The planning process has already started for the first Medical Mission
and Symposium, scheduled for Oct. 1-12. We’re going to do it annually,
in phases where we can meet the need over there as determined by the
minister of health.

Q. Has anything about your new role surprised you?

A. No, actually it has been very gratifying. Yes, it takes time away
from my family. However I think as you see the results, you see smiles
on peoples’ faces as they say, “Thank you for processing the consular
work so I don’t have to drive 200 miles,’ or when you see support from
the community in raising funds, for example, for the monument project,
that is absolutely the best that could happen to an individual who
wants to serve. The time and the effort is just well worth it. I see
that pride with every individual I interact with. This honor belongs
to them.

Q. This year marks the 100th anniversary of the start of the genocide,
which killed as many as 1.5 million Armenians in the declining Ottoman
Empire from 1915-1923. What is the consulate’s role in commemorating
the anniversary?

A. I think the presence of the consulate and the honorary consul
becomes a rock and a foundation people can lean on, and a point of
support for various endeavors that the community either seeks and/or
plans to accomplish.

I feel privileged to witness this time of history. The generation
before me gave their lives to keep our heritage, our language and to
keep the torch alive so that we never forget that such atrocities took
place. For me, it’s very important that we get a worldwide
recognition. In particular current Turkish denial continues despite
all the facts that speak very loud and clear.

The centennial, for me, it’s time for renewal of our commitment, not
to forget, but stand in solidarity with our homeland. A stronger
Armenia becomes a testimony that whatever was perpetrated did not
succeed. Here we are after 100 years, we have an independent homeland
and we have prosperous Armenian communities throughout the world.

http://www.fresnobee.com/2015/01/19/4338223_qa-three-months-in-new-fresno.html?rh=1

Ankara quells clashes as Turkish-Armenian journalist’s assassination

The Japan Times
Jan 20 2015

Ankara quells clashes as Turkish-Armenian journalist’s assassination
is remembered

AFP-JIJI

ISTANBUL – Turkish police on Monday used pepper spray and water cannon
to disperse a protest in Ankara calling for justice over the murder of
Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink, who was shot dead in broad
daylight outside his offices eight years ago.

Thousands of people had marched though central Istanbul earlier on
Monday in a peaceful demonstration to remember Turkey’s most notorious
killing of recent years that sent shockwaves around the country.

However, police moved in to disperse a smaller rally in central Ankara
in the evening as the protestors sought to march on the justice
ministry.

Twenty people were arrested as police used pepper spray and water
cannon to disperse the protest, the CNN-Turk television channel and
Radikal news site reported.

Holding signs in Turkish, Armenian and English reading “Justice for
Hrant,” protesters in Istanbul had earlier rallied around the offices
of the Agos newspaper, a bilingual Turkish and Armenian weekly, which
he edited.

The Istanbul memorial rally is an annual event but was considerably
larger than in previous years.

Meanwhile, a young man brandished a gun at a rally for Dink in the
central city of Malatya — where the journalist was born — but was
rapidly arrested by police.

Dink, 52, was shot dead with two bullets to the head in broad daylight
outside the offices of Agos on Jan. 19, 2007.

Ogun Samast, then a 17-year-old jobless high-school dropout, confessed
to the murder and was sentenced to almost 23 years in jail in 2011.

But the murder grew into a wider scandal after it emerged that the
security forces knew of a plot to kill Dink, but failed to act.

A court on Monday remanded in custody Ercan Demir, who was police
intelligence chief of the Black Sea Trabzon region where the gunman
and his suspected accomplices came from, on charges of failing to act
on intelligence that could have prevented the murder.

Demir had been controversially named police chief of the southeastern
Sirnak province, but an arrest warrant was issued for him last week
and he turned himself into the police in Ankara.

Turkey had on Tuesday arrested two lower ranking policeman on charges
of negligence for failing to prevent the murder.

Dink, a major figure in Turkey’s tiny but prominent Armenian
community, has long pushed for a reconciliation between Turks and
Armenians after decades of bitterness.

Armenians accuse Ottoman forces during World War I of carrying out a
genocide against their forebears that left an estimated 1.5 million
people dead. But modern Turkey has always vehemently resisted terming
the mass killings as genocide.

This year marks the 100th anniversary of the tragedy and the date
appeared to give the Dink memorial march additional impetus.

Some at the Istanbul protest held banners referring to the events such
as “become conscious of the genocide along with Hrant Dink.” Others
held cards reading: “We are all Hrant Dink, we are all Armenians.”

Less than 10 percent of Turks believe their government should
recognize the mass killings of Armenians in World War I as genocide,
according to a survey published on Jan. 13.

Supporters of Dink’s family have long feared that those behind the
murder were protected by the state and have asked for a deeper
investigation.

http://www.japantimes.co.jp/news/2015/01/20/world/ankara-quells-clashes-turkish-armenian-journalists-assassination-remembered/#.VL67RcYcRMs

Vatican to Reveal Unpublished Armenian Genocide Documents From Its S

Vatican to Reveal Unpublished Armenian Genocide Documents From Its
Secret Archives

Tuesday, January 20th, 2015

The Vatican’s Secret Archives

The chilling testimonies will be published in a book. The news came
during the presentation of the “Lux Arcana” exhibition which will
display the treasures of one of the world’s oldest archives

BY ALESSANDRO SPECIALE
>From the Vatican Insider

VATICAN CITY–In the Secret Vatican Archives are stored documents that
testify to the unprecedented and shocking Genocide by the Ottoman
Empire against the Armenians after the First World War, documents that
will be published soon in a book co-edited by the same Vatican
Archives.

The advanced news arrived, a little by surprise, during the
presentation in the Vatican of the exhibit “Lux Arcana”, which – from
next February – will open to the public, for the first time, the
treasures of one of the oldest and most extensive archives in the
world.

The testimonials, explained the prefect of the Secret Archives,
Monsignor Sergio Pagano, describe “in detail” the “procedures of
torture that the Turks used towards the Armenians.” For example, he
said, there is evidence of how the soldiers of the Sublime Porte would
bet “on the sex of fetuses in the wombs of pregnant women before they
quartered them and with the same knife killed the babies”.

These episodes, said the Vatican archivist, who “make me ashamed to be
a man, and if it were not for faith, I would see only darkness”.

It is easy to imagine that the publication of these documents reignite
the tension between the Holy See and Turkey, at a time when the memory
of the killing of Monsignor Luigi Padovese, Apostolic Vicar of
Anatolia, a year ago June 3rd, is still alive.

The Catholic Church is still waiting for an acknowledgment by the
Turkish state, although recently some progress has been made. For
example, it has become easier to perform pilgrimages to the church in
Tarsus, the birthplace of St. Paul.

>From the presentation of the exhibit many expected new light on the
pontificate of Pius XII, always controversial, because of his role
during World War II and with regards to the Holocaust. On this point,
Bishop Pagano announced that we must expect “interesting tidbits”
within three or four years, when the inventory of documents relating
to his pontificate will be completed and the Archive opened to
scholars.

In the exhibit, however, there will be a display of “emotional
documents” such as photographs and diaries of the war but nothing that
“can shed light on Pius XII’s pontificate, since it is still closed”.

In light of the controversy over his role during the Holocaust and the
delicacy of relations between the Catholic and Jewish communities, for
decades scholars have hoped to find a document that can attest
unequivocally that Pius XII had called on Catholic institutions
worldwide to protect persecuted Jews – a document of which there are
various indirect evidences.

The issue is still very delicate as shown by the echo caused by the
recent words of the Israeli ambassador to the Holy See, Mordechay
Lewy, who had at first defended Pacelli as a “protector” and was later
forced to clarify his statements after the controversies that erupted
at home.

The Vatican Secret Archive is surrounded by a halo of mystery, and not
just for its name (‘secret’, in this case, is the medieval Latin
meaning for ‘private’). Not surprisingly, Dan Brown set some scenes of
his ‘Angels and Demons’ and strangely enough, a video prepared to
present the exhibit points heavily on the enigmatic atmosphere of the
Hollywood movie.

Actually, for centuries the Archives preserve records and government
documents of popes and the Holy See.

The intention of the exhibit, explained Monsignor Pagano, is precisely
to dispel this storybook myth: “In addition to a natural intent for
aesthetic vision of historic relics, famous and less so, fascinating
vestments, it intends to shed light on the reality of the venerable
institution, on its nature, its contents, its activity”.

For the Vatican Secretary of State, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone, ‘Lux in
Arcana’ (light on hidden places, in Latin) is therefore a more than
appropriate title for the exhibit. “The ‘arcane’ – he explained – are
not to be construed as ‘arcana imperii’, or the secrets of the
government, but the hidden and vast areas of the archives, which by
their nature are jealous, protective, alert to the treasures they
watch over.”

At the exhibit will be displayed, for example, the ‘Dictatus papae’ in
which Gregory VII (1073-1085) sanctioned the supremacy of the papal
theocracy over any other power; the next ‘Deposition of Emperor
Frederick II’ (1245); the letter which members of the British
Parliament sent to Clement VII on the known and controversial marriage
of King Henry VIII (1530); an autographed document of Michelangelo.

Also present were two findings in the middle between the archival and
art: a letter on silk from Helen of China to Innocent X (1650) and a
letter on birch bark of the American Indians to Leo XIII (1887). Also
on display will be documents of the breach of Porta Pia and the
unification of Italy.

Among the highlights of the exhibit, there are also the authentic and
complete dossier of the trial of Galileo Galilei, including the
indictments of the Holy Office, the documents of the prosecutor Robert
Bellarmine, and the sentence and signed abjuration of the scientist
from Pisa.

http://vaticaninsider.lastampa.it/en/the-vatican/detail/articolo/genocidio-armeno-archivio-segreto-archivo-secreto-secret-archive-armenian-genocide-4385/
http://asbarez.com/130918/vatican-to-reveal-unpublished-armenian-genocide-documents-from-its-secret-archives/