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Turkey On The Edge

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  • Turkey On The Edge

    TURKEY ON THE EDGE
    By Congressman Ed Royce

    Greek News, New York
    http://www.greeknewsonline.com/modules.php?name=N ews&file=article&sid=7224
    EDT by greek_news
    Aug 1 2007

    As a member of NATO and a rare Middle Eastern democracy, Turkey has
    had a special place in geopolitics. In a region hostile to the idea
    of separation of church and state, Turkey has been the exception.

    While Turkey's experience with democracy and secularism has been
    tumultuous, recent events are jarring, including its attack on the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate.

    Efforts to elect Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul as Turkey's next
    President troubled secular Turks, many of whom took to the streets.

    Seen as someone who would turn back the clock on secular reforms,
    from sexual equality to consuming alcohol, they are right to be wary.

    The origins of Gul's ruling AKP party are in fundamentalist Islam.

    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoðan's political mentor and former
    Prime Minister Necmettin Erbakan came to power promising to "rescue
    Turkey from the unbelievers of Europe" and to launch a jihad against
    Jerusalem. The AKP, some say, has overcome these sentiments, but
    caution is in order.

    The steady rise of a radical brand of Sunni Islam in Turkey is
    cause for concern. Islamic brotherhoods, such as the Nurcu and
    the Fettullahci, have used loopholes in secular law to set up
    extensive private educational systems. These organizations span
    from preparatory schools, to universities, to business schools,
    molding much of the leading cultural power, both at the popular and
    intellectual level. Many secularists believe that these schools are
    the madrassas of Turkey, and fear that they may be a Trojan horse for
    radical Islam. Unqualified madrassa graduates are taking up positions
    in the Turkish civil service.

    Religious intolerance seems to have reached new levels in Turkey, as
    evidenced by massive protests to the Pope's November visit. In the
    wake of his controversial comments on the nature of Islam, tens of
    thousands of Turks rallied against the Pope. So vehement were these
    protests that the Turkish government deployed 4,000 policemen backed
    by riot trucks, helicopters, and armored vehicles.

    The Ecumenical Patriarch has long been subjected to Turkish misdeeds.

    Turkey is the only country not to recognize the 2,000-year-old
    spiritual beacon to millions of Orthodox Christians. Furthermore,
    Ankara's demand that the Ecumenical Patriarch be a Turkish citizen
    threatens the very institution, as less than 2,500 Greek Orthodox
    citizens of Turkey remain, most of them elderly.

    The Armenian Patriarchs of Istanbul endure similar hardships, having
    to abide by the same restrictions for their religious appointments
    to the Patriarchal see. The Armenian Orthodox community, the largest
    Christian community in Turkey comprising of 70,000 citizens, today
    has only 5 Armenian Apostolic priests and 2 Archbishops to oversee
    the spiritual guidance of its 38 working Armenian churches throughout
    Turkey. While Turkish authorities deny governmental interference
    in religious matters, the closure of theological seminaries in 1969
    has continued to take its toll on the Armenian Patriarch's ability
    to find clergymen who meet the criteria set forth by the Turkish
    government. Unless Turkey changes its policies, the Patriarchs
    and their respected Christian communities will disappear in the
    foreseeable future.

    In response to these affronts, I, along with several other members
    of Congress, signed a letter to Turkish Prime Minister Erdoðan
    urging him to end his limits on religious freedom regarding the
    Ecumenical Patriarch. The practices of the Turkish government,
    as we expressed to the President, "clearly reflect (his) policy of
    viewing the Ecumenical Patriarchate as a strictly Turkish institution,
    when in fact it provides spiritual and moral guidance for millions of
    believers worldwide." Congress isn't alone in its scrutiny of Turkish
    repression. The State Department's 2007 Report on Human Rights cites
    Turkey's denial of the Ecumenical Patriarchs request to reopen the
    Halki seminary on the island of Heybeli, which was closed in 1971
    when it nationalized all private institutes of higher education. If
    Turkey is to remain a secular state, it must make serious efforts
    to stop such behavior, and Congress must continue to press Turkey to
    follow a path to religious tolerance of peaceful minorities.

    Congressman Ed Royce (R) of California is the Ranking Member on the
    Subcommittee on Terrorism, Nonproliferation, and Trade.

    --Boundary_(ID_JmV1XjzCBBJbzKZJ4CJw8w)--
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