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Ateşyan determined to protect clout of Armenian Patriarchate

Ateşyan determined to protect clout of Armenian Patriarchate

Thursday, April 8, 2010
VERCİHAN ZİFLİOĞLU
ISTANBUL – Hürriyet Daily News
Archbishop Aram Ateşyan, spiritual leader of the Armenian Patriarchate of Turkey, opposes initiatives to ‘civilianize’ the community, telling the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review that the Armenian community is an inherently religious one

Archbishop Aram Ateşyan.

Elections planned next month for the Armenian Patriarchate are facing serious problems. It will be up to the Interior Ministry to decide whether a patriarch or a co-patriarch will be elected.

Some Istanbul Armenians are in a drive to “civilianize” the community, aiming to weaken the grip of the patriarchate. But Archbishop Aram Ateşyan, the spiritual leader of the Armenian Patriarchate of Turkey, says Armenian society is “a religious community,” adding that the patriarch “has been its leader and the patriarchate has been the highest authority in the last 550 years.”

Ateşyan is one of the strongest candidates for the patriarchate. If elected, he would be the 85th patriarch of Turkish Armenians. However, as long as Mesrop II is alive, he would have to work as the co-patriarch.

Patriarch Mesrop II fell sick after the assassination of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink on Jan. 19, 2007; some members of the community believe his illness is “suspicious.” The patriarchate announced that he has frontotemporal dementia, a syndrome caused by degeneration of the frontal lobe of the brain. His duties were transferred to the Spiritual Committee directed by Ateşyan, who has been in that post for two years now.

“Thanks to this post, I could understand better the pressure that Mesrop II was subject to,” Ateşyan told the Hürriyet Daily News & Economic Review in an interview Saturday. “It has been a very important experience for me. He was under severe pressure from both the congregation and the diaspora. Various threats he received were a factor in his illness.”

Civilianization of community

Ateşyan’s strongest rival is Bishop Sebouh Chuljyan of the Armenian Apostolic Church Diocese of Gougark. Speaking to the Daily News in a previous interview, Chuljyan defended the so-called civilianization of the Armenian community, as opposed to Ateşyan, adding that if he was elected, he would try to keep the patriarchate “out of politics.”

The reason the election process has become complicated is that there await two applications at the Istanbul Governor’s office, sources said. The first one is for the election of a co-patriarch by the patriarchate while the second is from the “Müteşebbis Heyet” (the “Undertaking Committee”), a civil organization comprised of the chairmen of the community’s foundation.

The committee announced that Mesrop II could not fulfill his duties due to his sickness, therefore the election should be for a patriarch in order to prevent possible legal complications in the future. Whereas Ateşyan says elections could only be for a co-patriarch according to rules of the clergy, adding that as long as Mesrop II is alive, he will be the sole owner of the title

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