Pope calls Armenian slaughter ‘first genocide of 20th century’
Francis, said it was his duty to honor the memory of the innocent men, women, children, priests and bishops who were ‘senselessly’ murdered by Ottoman Turks
Pope Francis on Sunday honored the 100th anniversary of the slaughter of Armenians by calling it “the first genocide of the 20th century,” a politically explosive declaration that will certainly anger Turkey.
Francis, who has close ties to the Armenian community from his days in Argentina, defended his pronouncement by saying it was his duty to honor the memory of the innocent men, women, children, priests and bishops who were “senselessly” murdered by Ottoman Turks.
“Concealing or denying evil is like allowing a wound to keep bleeding without bandaging it,” he said at the start of a Mass Sunday in the Armenian Catholic rite in St. Peter’s Basilica honoring the centenary.
Historians estimate that up to 1.5 million Armenians were killed by Ottoman Turks around the time of World War I, an event widely viewed by genocide scholars as the first genocide of the 20th century.
Turkey, however, refuses to call it a genocide and has insisted that the toll has been inflated, and that those killed were victims of civil war and unrest.
Turkey’s embassy to the Holy See canceled a planned news conference for Sunday, presumably after learning that the pope would utter the word “genocide” over its objections.
Several European countries recognize the massacres as genocide, though Italy and the United States, for example, have avoided using the term officially given the importance they place on Turkey as an ally.
Francis is not the first pope to call the massacre a genocide. In his remarks, Francis cited a 2001 declaration signed by St. John Paul II and the Armenian church leader, Karenkin II, which called it as the first genocide of the 20th century.
Emeritus Pope Benedict XVI, whose ties with Turkey and the Muslim world were initially strained, avoided the “g-word.”
Francis said the Armenian killings were the first of three “massive and unprecedented” genocides that was followed by the Holocaust and Stalinism. He said others had followed, including in Cambodia, Rwanda, Burundi and Bosnia.
“It seems that the human family has refused to learn from its mistakes caused by the law of terror, so that today too there are those who attempt to eliminate others with the help of a few and with the complicit silence of others who simply stand by,” he said.
Francis has frequently denounced the “complicit silence” of the world community in the face of the modern day slaughter of Christians and other religious minorities by Islamic extremists. And while he was archbishop of Buenos Aires, the former Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio referred to the Armenian “genocide” on several occasions, including three separate citations in his 2010 book “On Heaven and Earth.”
The Armenians have been campaigning for greater recognition of the genocide in the lead-up to the centenary, which will be formally marked on April 24. Sunday’s Mass was concelebrated by the Armenian Catholic patriarch, Nerses Bedros XIX Tarmouni, and was attended by Armenian Orthodox church leaders as well as Armenian President Serzh Sargsyan, who sat in a place of honor in the basilica.
Francis also honored the Armenian community at the start of the Mass by pronouncing a 10th-century Armenian mystic, St. Gregory of Narek, a doctor of the church. Only 35 people have been given the title, which is reserved for those whose writings have greatly served the universal church.
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