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Leaders vote to depose Patriarch of Jerusalem

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  • Leaders vote to depose Patriarch of Jerusalem

    Globe and Mail, Canada
    May 25 2005

    Leaders vote to depose Patriarch of Jerusalem

    Jerusalem cleric under suspicion for land deals says he won't quit

    By MICHAEL VALPY


    World leaders of the Orthodox Christian Church voted yesterday to no
    longer recognize the Patriarch of Jerusalem, one of the faith's most
    exalted clerics, because of alleged million-dollar land deals that
    risk igniting new Jewish-Arab violence.

    However, the vote taken in Istanbul carries no weight. The titular
    head of the 300 million-member church, the Patriarch of
    Constantinople, is prohibited by the Turkish government from engaging
    in church affairs outside the country. Two Turkish non-governmental
    organizations have asked that he be prosecuted for convening a
    religious court.

    Jerusalem Patriarch Eirinaios I, who attended the Istanbul meeting,
    has indicated he has no intention of quitting his job despite having
    been fired by the governing body of his autonomous church, regarded
    by Orthodox Christians as the mother church of all Christendom.

    In addition, the Jordanian and Palestinian governments want him
    ousted and an Israeli court has blocked the Israeli government's
    recognition of him.

    The Greek government (which immediately announced that the Istanbul
    vote "under the wise presidency" of the Patriarch of Constantinople
    should be respected) is investigating his possible links to Greek
    organized crime.

    The hottest water that Eirinaios is in involves 198-year leases worth
    $130-million (U.S.) on two venerable hotels and some adjacent shops
    that the Jerusalem patriarchate reportedly granted to anonymous
    Jewish investors just inside the Old City's Jaffa Gate at the
    junction of the Christian, Armenian and Muslim quarters.

    The Greek Orthodox Church of Jerusalem, as the patriarchate is
    officially known, is the largest landowner in Jerusalem after the
    Israeli government, having freehold title to about 20 per cent of the
    Old City.

    If the reports are true -- Israeli newspaper Ma'ariv published
    portions of the leases this year -- a Jewish foothold in a part of
    the Old City that is distinctly Arab could dramatically, and perhaps
    explosively, undermine its fragile ethnic balance.

    Two weeks ago, the British newspaper The Independent reported the
    existence of a widespread presumption that Jewish settler
    organizations, passionately devoted to an "undivided and eternal"
    Jerusalem as Israel's capital, are behind the deal.

    The main buildings involved are the early 19th-century Petra Hotel
    and Hostel, built for Russian pilgrims, and the nearby Imperial
    Hotel, built in the early 20th century.

    Eirinaios has declared he knew nothing about the leases. He has
    blamed the patriarchate's former financial manager, Nicholas
    Papadimas, who has vanished amid allegations that $700,000 is missing
    from church accounts.

    Israeli authorities are searching for his wife on a separate charge
    of money laundering. From hiding, Mr. Papadimas has told the Greek
    and Israeli press that Eirinaios, who wanted to ingratiate himself
    with Israeli authorities, authorized the deal.

    The Istanbul vote to withdraw recognition of Eirinaios has no legal
    clout because the Orthodox Church, like the Anglican Communion, is an
    umbrella faith of 16 autonomous churches of which the Jerusalem
    patriarchate is one.

    Bartholomew, the Patriarch of Constantinople, is spiritual leader,
    but is considered merely first among equals like the Anglicans'
    Archbishop of Canterbury.

    The Jerusalem church has 200,000 members, almost all Arab, and rests
    on a fat cushion of wealth generated by rents for its properties.
    Arab lay members and priests have long wanted the church leadership
    to be held by an Arab.

    Eirinaios, 66, born Emmanuel Skopeliti on the Greek island of Samos,
    went to Jerusalem in 1953 and served for many years as exarch, a kind
    of ecclesiastical viceroy, of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre,
    alleged to be the burial place of Jesus and Orthodoxy's holiest
    shrine. He was elected patriarch in 2001.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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