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Chief Rabbi of Israel Recognizes the Armenian Genocide

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  • Originally posted by Kharpert
    Those people were banned from the forum because they were making overtly racist and hateful remarks, such as "Turks are scum", "Jews deserve to be killed" or things like that.

    What Reincarnated said wasn't breaking any forum rules.
    True - even if it was still rather naive IMO.

    Comment


    • Originally posted by 1.5 million
      True - even if it was still rather naive IMO.
      While people like me were defending the Armenian communities in Lebanon every day and every night by putting our lives in danger without even thinking if we were doing the right thing or the wrong thing, just doing what has to be done, smart pants such as you probably were sitting on your asses at home and criticizing us for not doing a good job or not doing the right thing.

      Comment


      • Originally posted by Reincarnated Am
        While people like me were defending the Armenian communities in Lebanon every day and every night by putting our lives in danger without even thinking if we were doing the right thing or the wrong thing, just doing what has to be done, smart pants such as you probably were sitting on your asses at home and criticizing us for not doing a good job or not doing the right thing.
        I will forgive you your ignorance - but ignorant you must remain.

        Comment


        • Originally posted by 1.5 million
          I will forgive you your ignorance - but ignorant you must remain.
          Oh please forgive me I beg you
          Like I said "smart pants"

          Comment


          • Is this a contest to see who's a better Armenian?

            Comment


            • Visit Of Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi To St.james Monastery

              JERUSALEM, JANUARY 27, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. On Sunday
              afternoon, 22 January 2006, Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi, Yona Metzger, and
              Member of the Knesset, Yuri Stern, paid a courtesy visit to His
              Beatitude Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, Armenian Patriarch of
              Jerusalem. Also present were: Bishop Aris Shirvanian, the
              Patriarchate's Director of Ecumenical and Foreign Relations, and
              Archbishop Nerses xxxabalian, from the Holy See of Etchmiadzin, in
              Armenia. The latter had met the distinguished guests during their
              audience with His Holiness Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II in
              2005.

              "I learned from that visit to Armenia that our two nations, Israel and
              Armenia, are so similar and our communities are connected from all
              over the world to our homelands. Both our peoples have suffered so
              much these last one hundred years," said Rabbi Metzger. "The emotion
              we experienced at the Genocide Memorial Mountain in Yerevan was
              heartfelt. Our interpreter was so moved that he began to weep and
              could not continue to translate."

              According to the Divan of the Armenian Patriarchate of Jerusalem, His
              Beatitude the Patriarch spoke of his visit to Yad Vashem, the
              Holocaust Memorial Museum, relating the overpowering impact of the
              image of the young boy, with hands held up, questioning his fate.
              "Next to each picture, I can place an Armenian one, and write the same
              caption as is written in Hebrew," remarked the Patriarch. He continued
              by tracing the history of survival of the Armenian people, who have
              sacrificed themselves throughout seventeen centuries of oppression to
              preserve their Christian faith.

              To Bishop Shirvanian's question about lobbying for a resolution to be
              brought for passage to the Knesset, Mr. Stern replied that, when at
              the Genocide Monument in Armenia, Rabbi Metzger had recited the
              special Hebrew burial prayer, usually said to memorialize the victims
              of the Jewish Holocaust, but remembering those who lost their lives in
              the Armenian Genocide of 1915. "We must keep working again and again
              to bring about policy changes," he said. "It's a moral issue for us."

              Rabbi Metzger presented His Beatitude with a framed photograph, taken
              during his visit to Armenia together with the Armenian Prime Minister
              and the Catholicos of All Armenians. The guests were given copies of
              the Hebrew language edition of The Banality of Denial: Israel and the
              Armenian Genocide, by Yair Auron.
              "All truth passes through three stages:
              First, it is ridiculed;
              Second, it is violently opposed; and
              Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

              Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

              Comment


              • Originally posted by Gavur
                JERUSALEM, JANUARY 27, NOYAN TAPAN - ARMENIANS TODAY. On Sunday afternoon, 22 January 2006, Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi, Yona Metzger, and Member of the Knesset, Yuri Stern, paid a courtesy visit to His
                Beatitude Archbishop Torkom Manoogian, Armenian Patriarch of
                Jerusalem. Also present were: Bishop Aris Shirvanian, the
                Patriarchate's Director of Ecumenical and Foreign Relations, and
                Archbishop Nerses xxxabalian, from the Holy See of Etchmiadzin, in
                Armenia. The latter had met the distinguished guests during their
                audience with His Holiness Catholicos of All Armenians Karekin II in
                2005.
                This is very good news, I am so happy to see that they are begining to see the errors of their ways.
                [COLOR="Red"][SIZE="4"][B]The Armenian Genocide is a reality that can not be debated[/B][/SIZE][/COLOR]

                Comment


                • Originally posted by Kharpert
                  Is this a contest to see who's a better Armenian?
                  Not me of course Kharpert

                  Comment


                  • I'm more sympathetic for Armenians and other minorities that endure daily the oppressive Turkish goverment.

                    Those I consider our allies
                    not extreme nationalist like you

                    I personally see no difference between you or the greywolwes or Aipac.Adl.Haddassa
                    "All truth passes through three stages:
                    First, it is ridiculed;
                    Second, it is violently opposed; and
                    Third, it is accepted as self-evident."

                    Arthur Schopenhauer (1788-1860)

                    Comment


                    • Originally posted by Gavur
                      I'm more sympathetic for Armenians and other minorities that endure daily the oppressive Turkish goverment.

                      Those I consider our allies
                      not extreme nationalist like you

                      I personally see no difference between you or the greywolwes or Aipac.Adl.Haddassa
                      exactly Gavur - well said...extreme racists and ultr-nationalists are the problem - no matter what ethnicity.

                      It is most shameful for any Jews to deny the Armenian Genocide - likewise it is most shameful for Armenians to be racist towards jews or any other ethnic group...after what our people have been through and suffered because of...

                      Comment

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