Fr. Lombardi briefs press corps on Pope's first day in
Armenia
(Vatican Radio) Fr.
Federico Lombardi, SJ, Director of the Holy See Press Office, held a press
briefing on Friday following the first day of Pope Francis' Apostolic Journey
to Armenia.
In the briefing, Fr. Lombardi
revisited the major events of Friday and looked ahead to the schedule for
Saturday.
"That Genocide"
He also specified the nature
of Pope Francis' use of the word 'genocide' for the Metz Yeghern, or 'Great
Evil', the massacre of some 1.5 million Armenian people in 1915.
In a speech Friday at the
presidential palace to President Serzh Sargsyan, Armenian political and
religious leaders and the diplomatic corps, Pope Francis strayed from his prepared text, adding the word
“genocide:”
``Sadly that tragedy, that
genocide, was the first of the deplorable series of catastrophes of the past
century, made possible by twisted racial, ideological or religious aims that
darkened the minds of the tormentors even to the point of planning the annihilation
of entire peoples,'' he said.
Fr. Lombardi said this was
not the first time that the pontiff has used the term “genocide” to define the
Armenian massacre and noted this is “already a clear description of what
genocide is.” The Vatican spokesman recalled that at a Mass in April 2015 at St. Peter’s Basilica marking the Centenary of the Armenian Massacres, Pope Francis had
had “very strong words” for the slaughter which the pontiff said was widely
considered “the first genocide of the 20th century.''
“Bishops and priests,
religious women and men, the elderly and even defenceless children and the
infirm were murdered,” the pope said.
Modern day Turkey objects to
the term “genocide” to describe the deaths of so many Armenians under Ottoman
rule, describing them instead as victims of a civil war.
In alluding to the
“terrible tragedies of the past century” alongside the Armenian massacre,
Fr. Lombardi said Pope Francis was referring to “Nazism and the Soviet
regime” and to the fact that “the great international powers had not [lived up
to] their responsibility.”
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