‘If The Thief Is Not From The House…’

‘IF THE THIEF IS NOT FROM THE HOUSE…’

Editorial 3-14 March 2015

By Edmond Y. Azadian

When the jihadists destroyed monuments and artifacts in the Mosul
Museum in Iraq last week, their battle cry was “Allahu Akbar” (God
is great). The same battle cry was heard when Islamic State (IS)
murderers beheaded their Western hostages in Syria.

This is a battle cry all too familiar for the Armenians, as the
mullahs shouted this phrase from the minarets, inciting the mobs to
murder the Christian Armenians a century ago.

What sent shivers down the spines of the Armenians for the last one
hundred years, today has become an ominous sign of an impending crime
against the world community.

In truth, pious Muslims should be most offended with the abuse of this
simple phrase praising God. “Allahu Akbar” is a call for prayer for
Muslim believers, but over the centuries, and especially today when
jihadists have declared a war against other religions — including
other sects of Islam — in the Middle East, that simple invitation
to prayer has become a fearsome rallying cry.

But this does not seem to bother Archbishop Aram Atesyan, who recently
had invited a Turkish women’s choir to perform at the Asdvadzadzin
Church in Ortakoy. And their repertoire? You guessed it: Allahu Akbar.

Admittedly, it was a tastefully-arranged musical piece, but the
message was there: Allahu Akbar sung right in front of the altar,
with a huge cross on the altar curtain, serving as a backdrop.

Call it whatever you will, perhaps a brotherhood between Armenians
and Turks, but it irritated many parishioners who are used to hearing
that call to prayer from the mosque, but never in an Armenian church.

Dikran Altun, a community leader there, commented recently in an
interview: “He [Atesyan] has become like a sovereign — highhanded. He
does not ask others about their opinions on any matter.”

Mr. Altun added that because of his worldliness and secular lifestyle,
Archbishop Aram does not typify the people’s perception of a cleric
on the throne of the Patriarchate.

Fellow seminarians from Jerusalem report that he has not even completed
his religious education and lo and behold, he has been sitting on
the Patriarchate’s throne under dubious circumstances.

A very peculiar situation has been created in Istanbul, with the
illness of the incumbent Patriarch Mesrob II Mutafyan, who has been
afflicted with an incurable diseases; an early onset of Alzheimer’s
has reduced the patriarch into a shell of his former self.

Our church needs to draft a provision in its bylaws for just such a
scenario, when a member of the clergy in a lifetime position is still
living yet incapable of performing the functions of the office. During
the 20th century, the Catholicossate of Cilicia improvised the position
of the co-adjutor catholicos twice to carry out the functions of
incapacitated office holders.

Patriarch Mutafyan has been ailing since 2008 and the medical prognosis
suggests that he may yet live for another five years.

The Istanbul Patriarchate, which is the hub of the Armenian community
life, is almost paralyzed. Initially the community was split into
two and rallied around two proposals: either to elect a co-adjutor
patriarch or to elect a new patriarch. The proponents of the latter
proposal maintained that there is no precedent to elect a patriarch
while there is someone in that position, no matter their health.

In any civilized country, the religious and administrative affairs of
a church are not regulated by the state. However, in Turkey, despite
the clauses of the Lausanne Treaty of 1923, the Turkish government
controls every aspect of the church. They have even imposed a condition
that the candidate for Patriarch has to be a Turkish citizen, though
in the meantime, they have closed the doors of the Holy Cross (Sourp
Khach) Seminary, to prevent any citizen from receiving the necessary
religious education — a classic Catch-22.

The Greek community suffered under the same restrictions. Despite
political pressure from Europe and the US, Erdogan’s government
refuses to open the Heybeli Greek Seminary. At one point, Mr. Erdogan
conditioned the opening of the seminary with the construction of a
new mosque in Athens.

Thus, when the two parties approached the government, the response
was inaction, which would conveniently paralyze the community.

The situation helped Archbishop Atesyan, who resorted to a an
unprecedented move in the history of the Patriarchate: he convened
a clergy council, all of whose members are beholden to him for
their livelihood, and he elected himself to the position of acting
Patriarch. According to Pakrat Estukyan, an Armenian-language columnist
at Agos weekly, this was an indirect imposition by the Turkish state.

Mr. Altun believes that one of the main reasons for Archbishop Aram’s
unpopularity is that the community perceives him to be a tool of
the Turkish government. One proclamation of his gives credence to
that perception: When Erdogan’s government began returning some
of the confiscated community assets, and hospitals and churches
began suing the state for the return of their own particular assets,
Atesyan announced that the community is not equipped to handle all the
assets, thus suggesting that what the government has returned thus
far is enough. That is what the Turkish government wishes to hear
from a person in the minority community in an official capacity. The
archbishop believes that every confiscated church or property belongs
to the Patriarchate, whereas the ownership of those assets rests
with the survivors of the Armenian Genocide and their descendants,
who eventually must come up with a mechanism to put their ancestral
heritage to proper use.

The archbishop is blamed in other matters as well; his financial
activities lack transparency. “We have no idea what the Patriarchate
is doing, how much money it has and where it coming from,” said Mr.

Altun. “By the way, I believe there is no money, that the situation
is difficult. But they should inform the public about their plight.”

If the Patriarchate’s dealings are not transparent, the archbishop’s
personal deals are very transparent. Indeed, it was reported in
the Istanbul Armenian press that the Archbishop asked an Armenian
family for half a million dollars as commission for helping that
family process a substantial will. When asked about the propriety
of expecting or receiving personal remuneration for having used the
authority of his office, he answered that he has rendered a service
and that he should be compensated for that service.

The community is expecting and asking for an election. At one point,
there were four candidates for Patriarch. In time, some of them were
discredited or dropped out. On the election issue, Atesyan had a
fallout with the most influential leader of the Armenian community,
Bedros Sirinoglu, chairman of the Board of the Trustees of Holy Savior
(Sourp Purgich) Armenian Hospital in Istanbul. Mr. Sirinoglu has been
a tough critic of the Archbishop and his activities and has been and
continues to be a proponent of early elections. In the meantime, he
is very flexible politician. Sensing that the Turkish government is
behind Atesyan’s actions, he has toned down his criticism. “In order
to hold the election, the community has to appeal to the government
with a report on the state of the Patriarch’s health. Who is going
to submit that report to the government, me or Atesyan?”

And then he concludes that it is not his responsibility to submit
the report and continues, “The community has to have the strength to
pressure the Patriarchate to submit the report officially, not some
individual or the chairman.”

The Archbishop is minding his own business, ignoring all calls for a
new election. He seems to be comfortable in his office, backed by the
Turkish government. And the government has all the time in the world
to wear down the opposition and keep a pliant clergyman at their beck
and call.

The latest news is that Archbishop Atesyan will not be traveling
to Armenia to take part in the centennial commemorations. It may
be a sensitive issue for a clergyman in Turkey, but all that is
necessary to defy the government position is courage, one that has
been demonstrated repeatedly by secular Turkish scholars who have
put their positions and personal safety at risk for acknowledging
the truth about the Armenian Genocide.

After all, why do we care what is taking place in Istanbul, whether the
person in charge of the Patriarchate even deserves the position or not.

But Turkey is not any country. It can use a clerical leader
against his community and for that matter, the entire world Armenian
community. There are already precedents; while Armenians all over the
world were lobbying against Turkey’s admission to the European Union,
Patriarch Mutafyan was dragged by the Turkish government from one
European capital to the other, lobbying for Turkey’s admission.

By the same token, when the Turkish government was forced to return
some of the community assets, Atesyan was the one who stood against
it. Today, we have a full century of struggle against the Turkish
state which is enjoying the loot of its ancestors and denying their
crime. It only takes a whisper from Ankara to the person on the
Patriarchal throne to say that we have no claim from Turkey.

For all instances and purposes, Archbishop Atesyan has demonstrated
that he can be the perfect candidate to tend to his Turkish masters.

There is a saying in Armenia about inside jobs, which goes like this:
“If the thief is not from the house, no one can steal the cow from
the roof.”

From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress

Emil Lazarian

“I should like to see any power of the world destroy this race, this small tribe of unimportant people, whose wars have all been fought and lost, whose structures have crumbled, literature is unread, music is unheard, and prayers are no more answered. Go ahead, destroy Armenia . See if you can do it. Send them into the desert without bread or water. Burn their homes and churches. Then see if they will not laugh, sing and pray again. For when two of them meet anywhere in the world, see if they will not create a New Armenia.” - WS