Pope Leo adds Armenian Orthodox saint to Roman calendar

Aleteia
May 20 2026
Philip Kosloski – published on 05/20/26
St. Nerses the Gracious, a saint of the Armenian Orthodox Church, was inserted into the Roman Martyrology, a move that is being called “ecumenism of the saints.”

During the past 30 years, various popes have decided to include Orthodox saints in the Roman Martyrology. The martyrology is a list of all the officially recognized saints in the Roman Catholic Church.

For example, St. John Paul II included a few Orthodox saints when the Roman Martyrology was revised in 2004, and Pope Francis added St. Gregory of Narek and St. Isaac of Nineveh to the list of saints, as well as the 21 Coptic Martyrs of Libya — the group killed in 2015 by ISIS.

Most recently, Pope Leo XIV chose to include St. Nerses the Gracious in the Roman Martyrology. This was done to coincide with Pope Leo’s meeting with His Holiness Aram I, Catholicos of Cilicia, on May 18.

Of course, the earliest saints of the Orthodox Churches are the same as those of the Catholic Church, as the saints of the first centuries came before the various schisms between East and West.

Reconciliation between churches

The Dicastery for Promoting Christian Unity released a statement that helps explain why St. Nerses is believed to be a saint and why his example matters in the 21st century:

Nerses Shnorhali (1102 – August 13, 1173), Catholicos of Armenia from 1166 to 1173, is recognized and venerated by the Armenian tradition as one of its greatest saints. Remembered as a pastor, theologian, poet, hymn writer, and forerunner of modern ecumenism, he received the title “Shnorhali” [“the Gracious” ed.] from his contemporaries for the irenic nature of his writings.

Furthermore, the Dicastery highlighted his example of ecumenism:

During his ministry as bishop and Catholicos, he worked for reconciliation among the Churches, especially between the Armenian Church and the Byzantine Orthodox Church. His hymns are part of the Armenian liturgy—both Apostolic and Catholic—and numerous churches are dedicated to him.

His name will be included on August 13, the date of his death in 1173.

It is hoped that this gesture will continue to build bridges between the Catholic Church and Orthodox Churches, recognizing men and women of heroic virtue who share a desire that one day all Christians will be united under one Church.

Stepan Zoryan’s house-museum has something new

From now on, the visitors of Stepan Zoryan’s House-Museum can watch the “Lonely Tree” animation using an optical tag (QR code).

With the ARLOOPA app, the painting “The Lonely Tree” was brought to life, becoming a living story. Using modern technology, the lines of Kojoyan’s canvas begin to move, the tree breathes, creating a living dialogue between the past and the future.


The lonely tree had great advice for Zoryan. “Perhaps it is possible to compare our people as well – No matter how difficult their conditions are, they always strive upwards, towards light, towards freedom…

“The picture still decorates my room,” Zoryan writes.


Today, the house-museum speaks to the past, preserves the present, and builds the culture of the future.

HRD calls for the exclusion of discriminatory and hate speech from the campaign

The human rights defender has issued a message urging the political forces and public actors participating in the pre-election campaign to exclude labeling and discriminatory expressions in their public speech.


“The human rights defender once again calls on all political forces and other public actors participating in the pre-election campaign to exclude in their public speech any speech that labels, discriminates and spreads hatred on the basis of gender, disability (including having mental health problems), ethnicity, religious beliefs and other similar grounds,” the message says.

The procurement legislative initiative is in committee

At the May 20 session of the RA NA Standing Committee on Economic Affairs, the package of draft laws “On making amendments and additions to the Law on “Purchasing” and “On making additions to the Law on the Budgetary System of the Republic of Armenia” was discussed in the first reading. With the adoption of the package of draft laws, it is planned to increase the efficiency, transparency and accountability of procurement, promote the competitive environment and provide an opportunity to test new mechanisms.


RA Deputy Minister of Finance Avag Avanesyan presented the proposed changes in detail. In particular, clear definitions of grant, framework agreement, public control, artificial intelligence were given. The competitive procedure, evaluation of pre-qualification, qualification and quality criteria are defined. A more flexible formulation was given to the functional description of the procurement object. Clarified cases of trademark references. New conditions for purchasing from one person have also been defined.


The proposed regulations aim to improve and modernize procurement processes, ensuring sufficient efficiency, transparency, accountability and a competitive environment.


Senior Avanesyan answered the MPs’ questions, presenting clarifications regarding the proposed changes and additions. He informed that the proposed regulations were discussed with a wide range of interested businessmen and representatives of public organizations.


The draft law received a positive conclusion.

Political retaliation against Tsarukyan. Whose interests does Pashinyan serve?

Nikol Pashinyan’s statements about the Ararat cement factory once again showed that the state in Armenia is gradually turning into a tool of political reprisal.


When the country’s prime minister publicly announces that a private factory “will be state-owned” and “congratulates its employees on the occasion of liberation”, this is a clear message that the government is ready to interfere in property relations for political purposes and pre-determine the fate of private business.


If there are legal issues related to any company’s activities, they should be resolved exclusively within the law, based on the principles of courts, legal procedures and the rule of law. However, when the Prime Minister personally announces what will happen to a specific enterprise, the impression is created that the political decision has already been made, and the legal process is just a formality.


Pashinyan’s vocabulary: “mafia”, “retribution”, “business backbone”, clearly shows that it is not about economic policy, but about political revenge. Gagik Tsarukyan has been one of the main political opponents of the government for many years and is one of the leaders of the favorite forces in this electoral process, and today it becomes obvious that an attempt is being made to attack not only his political influence, but also his economic supports.


However, this story is much deeper than the issue of one person or one factory.


Ararat cement factory is one of the important components of the industrial system of Armenia. It is a system-creating production that provides thousands of jobs, participates in maintaining the country’s construction and economic stability, and plays an important role in terms of economic self-sufficiency. Creating an atmosphere of political pressure, property redistribution and instability around such an enterprise is a blow to Armenia’s economic resilience.


All this is happening at a time when Armenia is facing serious security and geopolitical challenges. Under such conditions, any step that weakens the country’s industrial potential objectively harms Armenia’s economic sovereignty.


And here the most important question arises. Whose interests does the weakening of Armenia’s industrial system serve?


There are states in the region, Azerbaijan and Turkey, which are interested in having a weak, dependent and economically vulnerable Armenia. The processes of political pressures, property redistribution and economic destabilization around Armenia’s large production systems cannot but coincide with these interests.


At the same time, the pre-election calculation is also obvious. Pashinyan is trying to revive the old manipulative opposition of “the people against the oligarchy” before the elections, presenting to the public that “property is being returned to the people”. However, in reality, this is not a policy of social justice, this is a political technology, the purpose of which is to mobilize one’s own electorate and divert the public’s attention from the accumulated problems.


The most dangerous consequence of this process is the deterioration of the investment environment.


Which investor will invest capital in a country where the level of property protection depends not on the law, but on the political sentiments of the government, on the whim of one person? Who will trust the state where the prime minister can announce the future of private enterprise with a public speech?


In a rule of law, property issues are resolved in the courts, not in political speeches.


The fate of a businessman is determined by the law, not by the political expediency of the government or the whim of one person. The state cannot turn into a tool of pressure and punishment against political opponents.


Political scientist Suren Surenyants




Rhode Island Recognizes Greek, Assyrian, Armenian Genocide

Assyrian International News Agency
May 20 2026
Rhode Island Recognizes Greek, Assyrian, Armenian Genocide

Leonidas “Lou” Raptakis is a state senator representing Rhode Island’s District 33 since 2013, with prior service in both the state House and Senate dating back to 1992. He has focused his legislative career on public safety, fiscal reform, and consumer protection. Nationally and internationally, Raptakis is a preeminent leader in Greek organizations, currently serving as President of the World Hellenic Inter-Parliamentary Association, where he connects legislators of Hellenic descent across roughly 90 countries to advocate for issues concerning Greece and Cyprus. He is also a prominent member of the American Hellenic Educational Progressive Association.

Seyfo Center extends its gratitude to Senator Raptakis for his unwavering efforts in securing this recognition. We especially appreciate his inclusion of the Assyrian lives lost during Seyfo. His leadership honors their history and resilience.

RFE/RL – Armenian Oppositionist Denies Secret Russian Citizenship

May 20, 2026

Armenia – Opposition leader Narek Karapetian speaks during a campaign rally in Yerevan, May 8, 2026.

Opposition leader Samvel Karapetian’s nephew and right-hand man Narek on Wednesday strongly denied police claims that he hid his dual Russian citizenship from authorities in order to be eligible to run in Armenia’s upcoming parliamentary elections.

The Armenian constitution bars dual citizens, who have not lived in the country for the past four years, from holding senior government posts or seats in the National Assembly. This is why Samvel Karapetian, who has mainly lived in Russia since the early 1990s, is not on the list of his Strong Armenia bloc’s election candidates.

The list is topped by Narek Karapetian. Since his uncle remains under house arrest, he also leads nationwide campaign rallies held by the bloc widely regarded as the ruling Civil Contract party’s number one election challenger. Citing information provided by the Armenian police, the Investigative Committee said he “deliberately hid” his Russian citizenship from the Central Election Commission.

Alen Simonian, the Armenian parliament speaker and a leading Civil Contract member, was the first to make such an allegation late on Tuesday. Simonian posted on Facebook a purported document from a Russian state registry of companies which refers to Narek Kirakosian as a Russian national. The document does not specify his passport number or other personal data.

Karapetian Jr. was quick to deny having a Russian passport. “I have probably spent less time in Russia than in England or Switzerland,” he told journalists.

While not denying the document’s authenticity, he insisted that its reference to his dual citizenship is the result of a “mistake.” He said he has already asked the Russian Embassy in Armenia to certify that. He also threatened to sue the Investigative Committee if it does not refute the “fake news” within 24 hours.

As of Wednesday evening, it remained unclear whether the law-enforcement agency has formally charged Karapetian or summoned him for questioning. Nor did the Armenian Interior Ministry clarify whether it has asked the CEC to remove him from the ballot. Also, both agencies declined to say whether they will ask Russian authorities to confirm or deny Karapetian’s citizenship.

The Armenian government earlier fueled speculation about the entire opposition bloc’s possible disqualification after asking the European Union to send a “hybrid rapid response team” to Armenia for the elections. A similar EU mission was deployed in Moldova ahead of legislative polls held there last September. Two Moldovan opposition parties deemed pro-Russian were barred from the vote won by the former Soviet republic’s pro-Western leadership.

The Russian Foreign Ministry claimed in March that the EU is gearing up for a repeat of “the Moldovan scenario” in Armenia. Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Yerevan against doing that when he met with Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian in Moscow on April 1.

Pashinian Claims Good Rapport With Putin Amid Rising Tensions

May 20, 2026

Russia – Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian during their meeting at the Kremlin, Moscow, April 1, 2026.

Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian claimed to have a warm rapport with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday the day after Moscow questioned Armenia’s continued membership in a Russian-led trade bloc vital for the Armenian economy.

“We will not take any drastic action in relations with Russia,” Pashinian told an election campaign rally in the northern Lori province. “I have truly friendly relations with the president of the Russian Federation. I doubt that the president of the Russian Federation has had more contacts with any other leader since 2018. During this period, we have had more than 200 phone conversations.”

“And in general, our attitude towards Russia is very warm,” he added while alleging that the Armenian opposition is infested with Russian “agents.”

Amid the latest upsurge in Russian-Armenian tensions, Pashinian likewise accused Moscow on Tuesday of “sending agents to Armenia.”

The tensions were exposed during Pashinian’s most recent meeting with Putin held in Moscow on April 1. They rose further after Yerevan hosted on May 4-5 two European summits attended by Ukraine’s President Volodymyr Zelenskyy. Putin said on May 9 that Armenia should choose “as soon as possible” between remaining part of the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU) and striving to join the European Union.

Russia – A Eurasian Economic Union summit in Saint Petersburg, December 21, 2025.

Putin is due to raise the issue at the EEU’s May 29 summit in Kazakhstan that will be boycotted by Pashinian. Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexei Overchuk said on Tuesday that he will specifically discuss with the leaders of other EEU member statutes “Armenia’s status” in the bloc.

Responding to Overchuk’s statement, Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan stressed on Wednesday that Armenia cannot be kicked out of the EEU against its will.

“They can always talk, and we can always participate in a conversation on any topic,” Mirzoyan said of the upcoming summit in comments to RFE/RL’s Armenian Service. “But the issue of leaving the EEU is not on our agenda at the moment. Therefore, that discussion may be very amateurish or philosophical in nature.”

Overchuk also warned that the South Caucasus country can no longer combine its pursuit of EU membership with tariff-free access to the Russian market, a significant discount on the price of Russian gas and other economic advantages offered by Moscow.

Russia accounted for 35.8 percent of Armenian foreign trade last year, compared with the EU’s 11.7 percent share. Citing this and other data, Armenian opposition leaders claim that Armenia will face economic ruin if Pashinian wins the June 7 parliamentary elections

Armenia – The grandfather of a deceased soldier is forcibly removed from Nikol Pashinian’s campaign rally in Spitak, May 19, 2026.

The Russian Foreign Ministry spokeswoman, Maria Zakharova, underscored the heightened tensions with Yerevan on Wednesday when she expressed shock at Pashinian’s public altercations with disgruntled voters which have marred his election campaign. She said that Western media should pay attention to those voters instead of accusing Moscow of trying to undercut Pashinian.

“That woman who ‘should be grateful’ that, as [Pashinian] said, her head was not smashed in a toilet around the corner, that man – my heart is bleeding, look at that footage – whose grandson died [during military service] and who came to Pashinian’s rally and asked a question, and he was accused of coming there for $550,” Zakharova told Sputnik Radio.

“What does Russia have to do with that? No, it’s not us, it’s Pashinian,” added the official.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister pays tribute to Armenian Genocide victims

Armenia21:27, 19 May 2026
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Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial, the Armenian Foreign Ministry said in a statement.

“Minister of Foreign Affairs of Lithuania Kęstutis Budrys, accompanied by Deputy Foreign Minister of Armenia Mnatsakan Safaryan, visited the Armenian Genocide Memorial. Minister Budrys laid a wreath at the memorial and paid tribute to the memory of the victims of the Genocide,” reads the statement.

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Armenian Security Council Secretary, Lithuanian FM discuss bilateral ties, EU

Politics17:33, 19 May 2026
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Secretary of the Security Council of Armenia Armen Grigoryan held a meeting on Tuesday with Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys.

“I welcomed the delegation’s visit to Armenia and highlighted the high level of relations between the two countries and the active political dialogue,” Secretary Grigoryan said in a statement on social media.

“We discussed a number of issues on the broad agenda of Armenia–Lithuania bilateral relations and outlined ways for further cooperation. We also addressed issues pertaining to the agenda of the Armenia–EU strategic partnership, as well as the ongoing dialogue on visa liberalization between Armenia and the EU, noting with satisfaction the first progress report on the implementation of the Visa Liberalization Action Plan (VLAP) conveyed to Armenia by the European Commission. The report highly assessed the clear political commitment of the Armenian authorities to carry out the necessary reforms aimed at visa liberalization with the EU,” he added.

Lithuanian Foreign Minister Kęstutis Budrys arrived in Armenia on an official visit on May 19.

He met with Armenian Foreign Minister Ararat Mirzoyan earlier in the day.

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