ArmInfo. It is wrong to ask the question of what the Armenian Apostolic Church should do in the context of the accusations brought against it by the Armenian authorities. Political scientist, member of the Alternative Projects Group Vahe Hovhannisyan holds a similar point of view.
In his article, the political scientist draws attention to the fact that in this new abnormal situation, the right questions are more important than ever. "We need to ask the right question so that we can find answers. In my deep conviction, the question "What should the Church do?" is the wrong question. The right question is: "What should secular structures do?" In the first case, we all put ourselves in the place of observers. In the second case, we become active participants. As soon as a citizen becomes a party, an active participant, the topic is closed. Secular structures are obliged to feel responsible, formulate what they will do, coordinate their steps. If secular structures remain observers or only wait for the steps of the Church, then the authorities will be in an advantageous position, because without a "red line" they will conduct a discrediting campaign and will try to advance their plan with the help of state levers, for example, by splitting the Church or creating new dioceses, etc., etc. There are many options for ugliness," Vahe Hovhannisyan emphasized.
In his opinion, the situation around the AAC is not a problem of the church, it is a problem of Armenia, the Armenian people, therefore the reaction and responses to the attacks of the authorities should come from secular structures - political, social, educational, cultural, sports, business, etc., as well as at the individual level, including from authoritative structures and individuals of the diaspora. "This is the right approach. But it requires serious work and serious coordination," the political scientist believes.
On May 29, at a government meeting, Pashinyan said that Armenian churches resemble "closets filled with junk." The next day, he published a harsh post on social networks, in which he used rude language addressed to the hierarchs of the AAC and accused one of the archbishops of sexual promiscuity. At the same time, the prime minister demanded that all priests who violated their vow of celibacy be defrocked. The Prime Minister's wife Anna Hakobyan made similar attacks, calling the Patriarch "the main mafioso" and those who criticized the "silencing" of churches "the main pedophiles of the country." These statements provoked a sharp reaction from the clergy. Against the backdrop of the scandal, the Prime Minister proposed changing the procedure for electing the head of the AAC so that the state would have a decisive vote in the elections, and candidates would undergo an ethics check.