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  • Euro Court Takes A Stand

    EURO COURT TAKES A STAND
    By Mark D. Tooley

    FrontPage magazine.com
    http://frontpagemagazine.com/Articles /Read.aspx?GUID=ABD8FB6A-BFEB-4329-9355-5FB3681141 54
    Sept 18 2008
    CA

    Does good ever come from the European Court? Apparently yes! Or at
    least occasionally. The court ruled in favor of the Orthodox Ecumenical
    Patriarchate and against the Turkish Government this summer over a
    symbolically important property dispute.

    Orthodox Christians in what is today Turkey once numbered in the
    millions. But Islamic pressure over the centuries, continuing through
    the 20th century, wore down ancient Orthodox communities through
    attrition. About 30 percent of Turkey was Christian nearly a century
    ago, most of them Armenian or Greek Orthodox. Today, Christians may
    number fewer than 100,000 out of a population of over 60 million. And
    only about 3,000 are Greek Orthodox and under the authority of the
    Ecumenical Patriarch. Even under an ostensibly secular government
    since the 1920's, the dwindling Christian minority in Turkey has
    suffered under various legal and social pressures, including often
    insurmountable restrictions against churches retaining, much less
    purchasing or developing property.

    The Ecumenical Patriarch is largely restricted to a small island
    of property in Istanbul. Until the European Court ruling, the
    Patriarchate did not legally own any property in Turkey, including
    its own administration building. Churches and related buildings, by
    law, are governed by private foundations. Also by Turkish law, the
    Patriarch must be Turkish born, an increasingly onerous restriction
    as the number of Orthodox priests in Turkey has declined to a small
    handful. With Turkey having closed the only Greek Orthodox seminary
    over 30 years ago, there is a real question as to whether there will
    be any Orthodox priests in future decades from whom a future Patriarch
    could be selected.

    The most recent dispute between the Patriarchate and the Turkish
    Government involved an historical orphanage on the Turkish resort
    island of Buyukada, a property that the Patriarchate bought in
    1902. Since the 1930's, the orphanage was registered as a private
    foundation because Turkey would not recognize the Patriarchate as a
    legal entity. Eleven years ago, the Turkish General Directorate for
    Foundations (Vakiflar), which oversees non-Muslim religious groups,
    seized the property after deciding the orphanage's foundation no longer
    functioned. Church properties have often been seized by the government
    under this pretext, as Greek Orthodox die off or emigrate. In 1999,
    the Vakiflar sought to make the orphanage legally independent of
    the Patriarchate, which fought the seizure in the Turkish courts,
    finally resorting to the European Court.

    In July, the European Court, sitting in Strasbourg, France, ruled
    that Turkey had violated the property rights clause of the European
    Convention on Human Rights by seizing the orphanage without financially
    reimbursing the Patriarchate. The ruling is significant because
    Turkish non-recognition of property rights for non-Muslim groups is
    pervasive. And if the court ruling stands, the orphanage site will
    be the only property in Turkey legally assigned to the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate. The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom
    hailed the European Court's decision in defense of the Patriarchate's
    property, noting that Turkey chronically denies non-Muslims the
    "right to own and maintain property, to train religious clergy,
    and to offer religious education above high school."

    According to the U.S. Commission, Turkey has "consistently used
    convoluted regulations and undemocratic laws to confiscate--without
    opportunity for legal appeal or financial compensation--thousands of
    religious minority properties, particularly those belonging to the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate and Greek Orthodox community under patriarchal
    jurisdiction.

    Turkey's policies have led to the decline--and in some cases,
    virtual disappearance--of some of these religious minorities on lands
    they have inhabited for millennia." The dispute over the Buyukada
    orphanage, with an estimated real estate value of 80 million Euros,
    was the first time that the Ecumenical Patriarchate, which normally
    seeks a low profile, has directly sued the Turkish Government. Turkey
    has 3 months to appeal the European Court's decision, which, unless
    overturned, compels Turkey to return the property or pay for it.

    "This is the first time the Ecumenical Patriarchate is recognized as
    the subject of rights under international law," one of the lawyers for
    the Patriarchate told the Athens News. "This is a major guarantee for
    the church's survival in Turkey." Well, at least the ruling enshrouds
    the Patriarchate with some legal protection. But there are many
    other petty harassments of the Patriarchate by Turkish law, which
    prohibits the Patriarchate from employing the term "ecumenical" for
    itself. Turkey legally acknowledges the Patriarch as only the chief
    priest of the tiny Greek Orthodox minority in Turkey, even though
    the international Orthodox community has recognized the Patriarch
    as the communion's senior prelate for 16 centuries. And in Turkey,
    all citizens must list their religion on their identity papers,
    which helps to perpetuate different treatment for non-Muslims.

    The major seminary for the Orthodox in Turkey has been closed by the
    government for over 30 years. And non-Turkish Orthodox priests who work
    for the Patriarchate are unable to gain work visas from Turkey so they
    have to continuously enter the country as tourists. In meetings with
    Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan and other Turkish officials who belong
    to the governing Islamic party, the Patriarch has been told that wider
    freedoms for his flock depend on greater opportunities for Muslims
    living in Greece. The Patriarch has pointed out that Orthodox living
    in Turkey are native-born Turkish citizens, while Muslims in Greece,
    who do in fact have greater liberties, usually are not Greek citizens.

    Secularists in Turkey sometimes defend their government's restrictions
    on religious activity by arguing that greater freedoms would assist
    radical Islamists far more than the small Christian minority. But the
    boxing in of Turkey's tiny Greek Orthodox population, with the evident
    hope that it and its senior Patriarch will fade away altogether into
    the mists of ancient history, seems exceptionally petty. The European
    Court's defense of the Ecumenical Patriarchate's property rights,
    at least in one case, may extend to the 2,000 year old Christian
    community in Turkey at least a few more years of breathing space.

    Mark D. Tooley directs the United Methodist committee at the Institute
    on Religion and Democracy.
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