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Bishop Daniel Findikyan, primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, was joined by religious leaders Oct. 21 at St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral in New York City for an ecumenical prayer service for peace and justice in Armenia, Artsakh and the world.
Bishop Daniel Findikyan, primate of the Eastern Diocese of the Armenian Church of America, was joined by religious leaders Oct. 21 at St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral in New York City for an ecumenical prayer service for peace and justice in Armenia, Artsakh and the world.
Photo Credit: Gregory A. Shemitz | Long Island Catholic

Cardinal Dolan calls for ‘the shield of faith’ to protect Armenian Christians

Coptic Orthodox bishop called for immediate cease-fire and guarantees of ‘the right for a safe existence and freedom of worship’

WASHINGTON — Cardinal Timothy M. Dolan of New York called for “the shield of faith” to protect Armenian Christians caught in the conflict between Azerbaijan and Armenia.

Speaking at an evening prayer service Oct. 21 at St. Vartan Armenian Cathedral, Cardinal Dolan referenced a recent New York Times article in which Manushak Titanyan, an architect, spoke of her fears for her three sons at the front lines.

She said of war, “All the most horrible things that man ever created rear their heads in their most horrible manifestation.”

“Well, think again, ma’am,” Cardinal Dolan said. “Your faith and your lamentation are marked on our hearts.”

“Sometimes we believers are dismissed as naive and idealistic and unrealistic dreamers. Nonsense,” he said. Those who count on military might “are the Pollyannas, because these things never work. The shield of faith. The artillery of the spirit. That’s our strategy.”

“Jesus whispers to us this evening, ‘Take courage. I conquered the world,’” the cardinal added during the service, which was livestreamed.

The “Ecumenical Service for Peace and Justice in Armenia, Artsakh and the World” also included remarks by Greek Orthodox Archbishop Elpidophoros and Bishop David of the Coptic Orthodox Diocese of New York and New England.

Holy Savior Cathedral in the disputed region of Nagorno-Karabakh, the Armenian enclave also known as the Republic of Artsakh, was seriously damaged from shelling earlier in October. Built in 1888 and considered one of the largest Armenian churches in the world, it had been restored in the 1990s.

Archbishop Elpidophoros called the shelling “destroying the past in order to dominate the present.”

“What is happening is no less than the erasure of Christianity from this part of the world,” he added. Armenians have a “sense of extreme abandonment, and there is a sense of solitude.”

As a Christian community, “we understand the meaning of suffering,” said Bishop David, “just as cities with minority Christian populations in Egypt have suffered for generations.”

Bishop David called for an immediate cease-fire as well as “the right for a safe existence and freedom of worship.”

The latest military conflict in the region, which began in late September, is rooted in territorial and ethnic disputes in the Caucasus Mountains along the Caspian Sea that go back to the previous fighting in the 1980s, and for more than a century before that.

Azerbaijani troops have been capturing territory in Nagorno-Karabakh, which is considered part of Azerbaijan under international law.

Armenia won the last military conflict in 1994 with more than a million residents displaced, and Nagorno-Karabakh has been considered independent since then. Fears are that the war could widen into a conflict including Turkey and Russia, risking the security of oil and gas pipelines that serve world markets.

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