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ANKARA: Patriarchate Faces Threat Over 'Ecumenical' Title

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  • ANKARA: Patriarchate Faces Threat Over 'Ecumenical' Title

    PATRIARCHATE FACES THREAT OVER 'ECUMENICAL' TITLE
    Andrew Finkel Ýstanbul

    Today's Zaman, Turkey
    July 18 2007

    An ancient grudge over baptism certificates, a far-right wing lawyer
    with a mind to make trouble and a popular Greek crooner with a
    reputation for speaking his mind have all conspired to create legal
    misery for Ýstanbul's 2000-year-old "Ecumenical Patriarchate."

    The result is that Metropolitans of the Phanar-based church are now
    under police protection.

    The troubles stem from a high appeal court (Yargýtay) decision that
    questions the right of the Greek Orthodox in Turkey to refer to itself
    as "Ecumenical" -- a title which confers the Istanbul-based church
    to be the first among equals of the over 250 million adherents of
    Orthodox Christianity -- a position enjoyed by the patriarch since
    the split with Rome in 1054.

    The decision comes as part of a ruling that allowed the patriarch
    to defrock a Bulgarian priest who rebelled over the patriarchate's
    insistence on issuing baptismal documents in Greek rather than
    Bulgarian. This has now led Bujidar Cipof, a member of the Bulgarian
    Orthodox Church council, to petition the Beyoðlu, Istanbul state
    prosecutor to pursue the patriarch on charges of "malfeasance of
    religious services."

    A spokesman for the Fener Patriarchate said it was bound by court
    decision, but that ecumenical was not a legal title but one sanctioned
    by historical usage and religious custom. "The whole world knows us
    as the 'Ecumenical Patriarchate.' In modern Turkey the state would
    not interfere in religious practice."

    This is not a view shared by Mr. Cipof. "Patriarch Bartolomeos is not
    some remnant from the Middle Ages. He should not forget that his title
    deed is given by the Turkish Republic under the Lausanne Treaty." Nor
    is Mr. Cipof the only one on the legal warpath. Kemal Kerincsýz, an
    ultra-nationalist lawyer, has also applied to the public prosecutor
    to stop the patriarch from convening a synod with metropolitans from
    other autocephalous (foreign national) Orthodox Churches.

    Mr. Kerincsiz is better known for the cases he helped instigate
    against Nobel-winning author Orhan Pamuk and assassinated Armenian
    newspaper editor Hrant Dink for insulting Turkishness. The result of
    the current action is that metropolitans of the Orthodox Church have
    now been assigned police guard by the Ýstanbul Governor's Office,
    according to the lawyer for the Patriarchate, Kezban Hatemi.

    Ms. Hatemi said so far the prosecutors' office had not requested
    statements and she denied the Patriarchate had any case to answer.

    "This is not legal code but religious law and is not something the
    state authorities in a secular country should be concerned with,"
    she said.

    Even so, that same Governor's Office banned at the very last minute
    a pop concert that the Patriarchate had arranged last Sunday to
    celebrate a youth conference. The performance at Ýstanbul's Rumeli
    Hisarý castle amphitheater featured the popular Greek singer George
    Dalaras. In a column in Hurriyet newspaper, right-wing columnist Emin
    Colaþan accused the Ministry of Culture of being at the beck and call
    of the Patriarchate for allowing one of their premises to be used by a
    man who had been an outspoken critic of Turkey over Cyprus and the PKK.

    "The cancellation was a big disappointment, but they do things like
    this. We are used to it," said Paul Gigas, a lay volunteer at the
    Patriarchate.

    --Boundary_(ID_8D41bKdLqI002hJr XKAauA)--
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