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Christians In Turkey Is A Test For Moderate Islam

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  • Christians In Turkey Is A Test For Moderate Islam

    CHRISTIANS IN TURKEY IS A TEST FOR MODERATE ISLAM
    By Father Jonathan Morris

    Fox News
    May 2 2007

    The response of the Turkish government and people to the recent
    massacre of three Christians by Islamic fundamentalists will be
    an omen for the future of religious tolerance in that country and,
    more importantly, for Islam as a whole.

    On April 18, two Turks and a German were found with their hands and
    legs bound and their throats slit at the Zirve publishing house, an
    organization known for its efforts to distribute Bibles in this 99
    percent Muslim country. The publishing house also served as a meeting
    house for Christian prayer groups. Ten people have been arrested in
    connection with the crime.

    Turkish Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said the killings were "an
    attack against Turkey's stability, peace, and tradition of tolerance."

    For a non-Muslim in Turkey, it is becoming increasingly difficult to
    see such a tradition in practice. Last year, a teenage gunman killed
    an Italian missionary priest. In January, an assassin gunned down an
    Armenian journalist, apparently because of his well-known Christian
    beliefs. All of this took place, of course, in the most tolerant
    Islamic country in the world. At least on the books, Turkey is a
    secular state.

    Most Turks are embarrassed by such extremism. Upon arriving inIstanbul
    last year to report on Pope Benedict's pastoral and ecumenical visit to
    Turkey, I asked a taxi driver whether the pope would be safe. "We don't
    like the pope," he said, "but we're not going to kill him. Our brother
    Ali Agca shot the Polish pope in 1981, and that was bad for Turkey."

    It was an honest answer, I suppose, but not very reassuring. I
    would have preferred to hear an outright condemnation of violence,
    an argument for peaceful Islam, or a promise that extremists were a
    dying breed. Not once during my week in Turkey, did anyone, from any
    social class, offer me that kind of reasoned assurance.

    But that can change. Because the Turkish people have tasted some of the
    freedoms a secular state protects, they are in a unique position within
    the Muslim world to contribute to religious tolerance and world peace.

    Their success will depend to a large extent on the current struggle
    over Turkish national identity. On Monday, secularists took to
    the streets in record number (media reports estimated the crowds
    were over one million) chanting, "Turkey will not become Iran." The
    unprecedented activism is a response to Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan's insistence on nominating his number two man, Abdullah Gul,
    as Turkey's next president. Opponents fear Mr. Gul will act in cahoots
    with the Islamist Justice and Development Party that already holds
    a significant Parliamentary majority. Together, they could work to
    introduce Sharia-based law.

    The protesters are making a monumental mistake if they think the
    struggle for Turkish national identity will be determined by street
    demonstrations or any other form of political activism alone. In a
    country where 99 percent of its citizens consider themselves Muslim,
    only religious arguments against fanaticism will be strong enough to
    counter the religious ideology of the fanatics and the masses of young
    people whom they influence. Turkey needs moderate Muslim clerics and
    moderate Muslims in general to defend political freedom and religious
    tolerance from a religious point of view.

    Some Western critics and readers of this column will immediately
    dismiss this proposal as impossible because the Koran itself is
    ambivalent, at best, about religious freedom and the nature of peace.

    But there is a growing group of scholars who see a slow, but major
    theological renewal within Islam as very possible. In fact, they say it
    is already happening in countries like Turkey and in second and third
    generation immigrants through contact with the West. While the Koran
    warns against "interpretation" and leaves no room for the development
    of doctrine, the fact is, in practice we are seeing development in
    the religious belief and practice of many Muslims.

    There are millions of self-proclaimed "moderate Muslims" who point
    to the Koran as justification for their position. Admittedly, these
    more tolerant passages to which they always refer (primarily in the
    first part of the Koran) contradict other passages that, for example,
    call for the killing of all infidels (non-Muslims). But moderates
    don't seem to mind the internal division of their "sacred" text and
    as long as they choose the former passages over the latter, I don't
    think non-Muslims should mind either.

    The best way for moderate Turks to foment Islamic renewal is
    through the defense of Christians in their own backyard. The current
    restrictions against Christian schools, the closing down of Orthodox
    seminaries, the denial of legal status to Christian church entities,
    and above all the increasing violence against Christians themselves,
    should be the shame of all moderate Muslims. It also happens to be
    the most immediate threat to the future of a secular Turkish state.

    If you are interested in the future of world peace, keep your eye
    on Turkey.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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