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Families Of Slain Priest, Killer Meet At Mass

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  • Families Of Slain Priest, Killer Meet At Mass

    FAMILIES OF SLAIN PRIEST, KILLER MEET AT MASS
    Nicolas Cheviron

    Middle East Times, Egypt
    Feb 5 2007

    PARENTS: Necmiye Akdin (L) and Hikmet Akdin (C), parents of the
    murderer of Roman Catholic priest Andrea Santoro, talk to Cardinal
    Camillo Ruini (2nd R) and Archbishop Luigi Padovese at Santa Maria
    Church in Turkey's Black Sea city of Trabzon February 5.

    (REUTERS)

    TRABZON, Turkey -- The parents of a Turkish teenager jailed for
    killing an Italian Roman Catholic priest last year met relatives
    of the victim Monday at a memorial service here to mark the first
    anniversary of his murder.

    The couple visited the Santa Maria Catholic Church, where Father Andrea
    Santoro, 61, was shot dead as he knelt in prayer February 5, 2006.

    There they expressed their sympathy to Santoro's mother and two
    sisters and to Cardinal Camillo Ruini, head of the Italian Episcopal
    conference, who were in Trabzon, a port city on the eastern Black
    Sea coast, for the service.

    "It was a very emotional moment. The boy's mother kissed the cardinal's
    hand and she and her husband expressed their condolences and deep
    sadness," Trabzon Mayor Volkan Canalioglu, who attended the meeting,
    told reporters.

    "Santoro's family told them they would be praying both for Santoro
    and the boy," he added.

    The priest was shot dead at a time of widespread anger across the
    Muslim world over the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed
    in European newspapers.

    But the motives of the assailant, a 16-year-old identified only as
    O.A., have never been confirmed. His trial, in which he was sentenced
    to 18 years and 10 months in October, was held behind closed doors
    because of his young age.

    Witnesses had said that the gunman shouted "Allahu Akhbar" ("God Is
    Great") as he fired two shots at the priest before fleeing.

    The expression is used in prayer by Muslims, but also as a rallying
    cry by Islamic militants.

    Several newspapers suggested that the boy's action was instigated by
    Islamist extremists, but his father said that his son had no links
    with religious groups and was receiving psychological support.

    Cardinal Ruini, who led the memorial service, called for reconciliation
    and understanding between Islam and Christianity.

    "We are here today in the spirit of Father Andrea Santoro, respecting
    Islam and considering Turkey and the Turks friends.

    "Another reason why we are here is to show that dialogue between
    religions is possible and desirable," he said.

    The Santa Maria Catholic Church was built in the nineteenth century
    on the orders of an Ottoman sultan to serve foreign visitors. It now
    has a community of about 20 worshipers.

    Trabzon, a nationalist stronghold, again came under the spotlight
    after the January 19 killing of Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant
    Dink in Istanbul.

    A 17-year old boy from Trabzon has confessed to the murder and was
    arrested along with seven alleged associates, all young people also
    from that town.

    Some media reports have suggested that the murders of Dink and Santoro
    might be linked.

    Trabzon's governor and police chief were removed from office last week
    following accusations that they had failed seriously to investigate
    groups of youths under the sway of ultra-nationalist and Islamist
    ideas in the wake of Santoro's murder.

    The killing was the most serious among several attacks on Christian
    clergymen in Turkey, virtually unheard of until last year.

    Five days after Santoro was gunned down, another Roman Catholic priest
    was harassed and threatened in the western city of Izmir and in July,
    a third was stabbed by a man described as "mentally disturbed" in
    Samsun in the north.

    During a visit to Turkey in November, Pope Benedict XVI remembered
    Santoro and called on Ankara to ensure the religious freedom of its
    tiny Christian communities.
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