Historic Requiem Service Held at Sis Catholicosate

A delegation representing the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia held a Requiem Service at the site of the historic Sis Catholicosate on Aug. 22, according to the press office of the Holy See. The service was held in memory of the deceased Catholicoi who lived and served at the Sis Catholicosate from 1293-1915.

A delegation representing the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia held a requiem service at the site of the historic Sis Catholicosate on Aug. 22
A delegation representing the Catholicosate of the Great House of Cilicia held a Requiem Service at the site of the historic Sis Catholicosate on Aug. 22

His Holiness Aram I’s pontifical message was read during the service. According to the Catholicosate, this was the first time in 100 years that a pontifical message was delivered from the site of the Catholicosate.

In his message, the pontiff talked about the Armenian Genocide, and the demand that the Sis Catholicosate be returned to its rightful owner, the Armenian Catholicosate of Cilicia. His Holiness also reaffirmed the commitment of the church to the sacred legacy of the Armenian martyrs.

Below is a video of the requiem service released by the Catholicosate.

On April 28, the Cilicia Catholicosate filed a lawsuit in the Turkish Constitutional Court to regain ownership of the historic headquarters of the Armenian Church, which includes the catholicosate, the monastery, and cathedral of St. Sophia, a major Armenian Christian holy site located in Sis (currently Kozan), in south-central Turkey. This site was confiscated by the Turkish government following the 1915 genocide in which an estimated 1.5 million Armenians were killed or deported by the Ottoman Empire.

The catholicosate, which is the administrative center of the church, was moved from Armenia to Cilicia in the 10th century; after changing a few locations it was finally established in Sis in the year 1295, where it remained until 1921. Under the Ottoman Empire, the Catholicosate of Cilicia was recognized as an independent church.  During the Armenian Genocide, the Armenian population of Sis was massacred and deported, and its Christian holy sites were pillaged and confiscated.

 

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