In the most carefully watched speech of his three-day trip, Francis ad-libbed the politically charged word "genocide" to his prepared text that had conspicuously left it out.
And rather than merely repeat what had said last year, that the slaughter was "considered the first genocide of the 20th century", Francis declared it a genocide flat out, setting the stage for another Turkish protest after it withdrew its ambassador last year and accused Francis of spreading lies.
"It's so sad how, in this case and in the other two, the great international powers looked the other way," he added, in apparent reference to the subsequent horrors of Nazism and Stalinism.
In the run-up to the visit, the Vatican had refrained from using the term "genocide," mindful of Turkish opposition to the political and financial implications of the word given Armenian claims for reparations.
"One cannot but believe in the triumph of justice when in 100 years ... The message of justice is being conveyed to mankind from the heart of the Catholic world," marveled President Sargsyn in his speech to the pope.
Many historians consider the massacres of an estimated 1.5 million Armenians genocide. Turkey rejects the term, says the death figure is inflated and that people died on both sides as the Ottoman Empire collapsed amid World War I.
"I shook the pope's hand but didn't have the time to kiss it," 42-year-old Yerevan resident Nazik Sargsyan said Friday as Francis arrived. "I'm sure God's blessing has come down on me with that handshake.
