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APOSTOLIC VOYAGE
IN ARMENIA FAREWELL CEREMONY
ADDRESS OF JOHN PAUL II
Zvartnotz International Airport Yerevan,
27
September 2001
Your Excellency President Kocharian, Your Holiness, Dear
Armenian Friends,
1. The time has come to say farewell and to thank you, Mr
President, and the members of the Government for the wonderful hospitality I
have found in Armenia. I am grateful to everyone, authorities and collaborators,
civil and military, the men and women of the media, to all who have given their
time and skills to make this visit a success.
With deep emotion I express my thanks to you, Your Holiness,
Supreme Patriarch and Catholicos, and to the hierarchy and faithful of the
Armenian Apostolic Church for the spirit of brotherly love and communion which
we have shared in these days.
2. Farewell to you, dear Archbishop Nerses, Archbishop Vartan,
Bishop Giuseppe, and to the priests, men and women religious, and laity of the
Catholic Church. With intense joy we have celebrated together the mystery of our
faith, and I have experienced at first hand your desire to work with all your
fellow citizens for greater justice and a better life for all Armenians. The
Pope keeps you in his heart, and God himself will give you strength to meet the
challenges before you.
I express once more my esteem for the representatives of all the
Churches and Ecclesial Communities who have taken part in the events of my
visit. May all the followers of Christ grow in trust and ecumenical
friendship as we move into the Third Millennium and travel the path of ever
closer union and cooperation!
3. Thank you, people of Armenia, for the warmth of your
friendship, for the prayer we have shared, for your yearning for Christian
unity. Thank you most of all for the witness of your faith, a faith you have not
abandoned in dark times, a faith which remains deeply rooted in your families
and in your national life.
Throughout history, Mount Ararat has been a symbol of stability
and a source of confidence for the Armenian people. Yet time and again that
stability and confidence were sorely tested by violence and persecution. The
Armenian people have paid dearly for their frontier existence, so much so that
the words "holiness" and "martyrdom" have become almost
identical in your vocabulary. The terrible events at the beginning of the last
century which brought your people "to the brink of annihilation", the
long years of totalitarian oppression, the devastation of a disastrous
earthquake: none of these has been able to prevent the Armenian soul from
regaining courage and recovering its great dignity.
4. It is true, these are difficult years, and your heart is
sometimes weary and unsure. Many of your young people have left the land of
their birth; there is not enough work and poverty persists; it is hard to keep
striving for the common good. But, dear Armenian Friends, hold on to hope!
Remember that you have put your trust in Christ and said yes to him for ever.
Supported by your Armenian brothers and sisters throughout the
world you are committed to the task of rebuilding in freedom your country and
your society.
The time is ripe for your nation to gather its cultural
resources and spiritual energies in a great concerted effort to develop and
prosper on the basis of the fundamental truths of your Christian heritage: the
dignity of every human being, the centrality of the person in every relationship
and situation, the moral imperative of equal justice for all, and solidarity
with the weak and the less fortunate. I pray to the Lord that the leaders of
Armenia and of the other peoples of the region will have the wisdom and
perseverance to move forward courageously on the path of peace, for without
peace there can be no genuine development and prosperity.
5. In saying farewell, I am filled with confidence, for I have
seen your resilience and the nobility of your aspirations. May Armenian hearts
ever repeat the words of your great poet Hovhannčs Tumaniān about the
homeland:
"But still you live, standing erect in spite of all your
wounds on the mysterious journey of time, past and present, still
standing, wise and pensive, and sad, with your God . . .
And the dawn of lifes happiness will come, its light at
last in thousands upon thousands of souls; and on the sacred slopes of your
Mount Ararat will shine forth at last the flame of the time to come.
Then, with the dawn, new songs and new poems will be on the
lips of the poets".
May Saint Gregory the Illuminator and the great host of Armenian
Martyrs and Saints watch over you now and in the future! And may the Mother of
Christ, Ark of the New Covenant, guide Armenia to the peace which lies beyond
the great flood, the peace of God who has set his bow in the clouds as a sign of
his everlasting love (cf. Gen 9:13).
Thank you, Mr President! Thank you, dear Brother Karekin! Thank
you all!
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