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Turkey's Armenians In Crisis Over Patriarch

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  • Turkey's Armenians In Crisis Over Patriarch

    TURKEY'S ARMENIANS IN CRISIS OVER PATRIARCH

    Al-Monitor
    Feb 27 2014

    Author: Orhan Kemal CengizPosted February 27, 2014

    Turkey's Armenian community is eagerly awaiting the outcome of a
    lawsuit at the Council of State, the country's top administrative
    court, that is likely to have a major impact on how the Armenian
    patriarchate of Constantinope functions in the future. The legal
    battle concerns who should elect the Armenian patriarch -- a small
    group of clergy or the broader community.

    The case has pitted one segment of the Armenian community against
    the Interior Ministry and other community members. It has also
    exposed a serious rift that sheds light on the Armenian minority's
    reality in Turkey and the government's strategies for controlling
    the patriarchate.

    The Istanbul-based Armenian patriarchate is a 553-year-old institution
    that holds spiritual authority over 42 churches. Its patriarchs have
    long been elected by the community.

    The Turkish state's attempts to control the patriarchate became more
    systematic after the 1960 military coup. In 1961, the council of
    ministers issued a decree stipulating that elections for a patriarch
    must be held on a date and at a venue selected by the Istanbul
    governor's office. Every government since has sought to control
    these elections.

    In 2007, a tragic incident paved the way for the governing Justice and
    Development Party to make one of the boldest-ever interventions in the
    Armenian elections. That year, Patriarch Mesrob II, elected in 1998,
    fell ill. His memory and cognitive abilities were severely damaged,
    so he was unable to perform his duties.

    With Mesrob disabled, two opposing views emerged in the patriarchate
    on how to resolve the situation. Rather than seeking a compromise,
    however, both sides submitted their requests to the Interior Ministry.

    The Entrepreneur Council, considered the patriarchate's "civilian
    wing," requested permission to elect a new patriarch. The Spiritual
    Council, a group of clerics, asked the ministry to approve the election
    of a "co-patriarch."

    The ministry's decision caught both sides off-guard. Since the
    incumbent patriarch was still alive, neither a new patriarch nor a
    co-patriarch could be elected, it decided. Instead, an acting patriarch
    should be elected. Thus, the post of "patriarchal deputy-general"
    was established, a position without precedence in the history and
    traditions of the Armenian Church.

    Heeding the Interior Ministry's decision, the Spiritual Council
    elected its own head, Archbishop Aram Atesyan, as acting patriarch
    in July 2010. The move led to serious rifts and heightened tensions
    within the Armenian community.

    Both applications to the Interior Ministry had sought an electoral
    process -- be it for a new patriarch or a co-patriarch -- in which all
    community members were to have voted. Instead, the "deputy-general"
    was elected by a small group of clergymen.

    For the Armenians, the Interior Ministry's intervention was unjust
    and contrary to their traditions. Their first reaction was to launch
    a petition drive. Those arguing that the entire community should
    elect the patriarch collected 5,350 signatures and submitted it to
    the ministry in 2010, but to no avail.

    Next, they filed a lawsuit at the administrative court, seeking
    nullification of the Interior Ministry's decision. The community's
    lawyers argued that by appointing Archbishop Aram as patriarch
    deputy-general, the ministry had interfered in the Armenian community's
    internal affairs and thus violated the principle of secularism. This
    is the case the Council of State is currently hearing.

    The intensity of the intracommunal rift is reflected in the language
    that the much-respected Armenian weekly Agos uses in reference to
    Atesyan. In one headline, for instance, it depicts him as patronizing
    and calls him "archbishop" to make clear it does not recognize him
    as acting patriarch. The article further underscores the paper's
    rejectionist position: "In an interview with the Jamanak newspaper,
    Archbishop Aram Atesyan has yet again made very controversial remarks.

    His comments on various issues, such as his bid for central civilian
    management, the irregularities in the foundation elections, the home
    he purchased in the [resort town of] Bodrum, and the patriarchate's
    financial accounts are the latest example of his self-righteous
    attitude."

    The newspaper Taraf has also reported on the community's objections to
    Atesyan. In a Feb. 15 article, "Crisis in Patriarch's Election," Sebu
    Aslangil, one of the lawyers in charge of the lawsuit at the Council
    of State, is quoted as saying, "The Interior Ministry imposed on us a
    deputyship office and the patriarchate went along ... Atesyan erred
    in not resisting the election of a deputy, something nonexistent in
    our traditions, and for having himself elected to the post." Another
    community member, Sahin Gezer, was reported as noting, "Aram Atesyan
    well could have rejected the post in the face of election demands."

    So, the tragic illness of the elected patriarch, the ensuing failure
    of the Armenian community to reach a compromise and their decision to
    seek the state's arbitration -- in addition to the government seeing
    the situation as a golden opportunity to control the patriarchate --
    have together created an acute crisis that may drag on for years.

    The crisis demonstrates not only the Armenian community's problematic
    relationship with the state, but also the Turkish state's unchanging
    policy of meddling and manipulation vis-a-vis its minorities despite
    changing governments. It is a typical divide-and-rule tactic,
    which constitutes a fragrant breach of religious freedom and serves
    neither the Armenian community nor Turkish democracy. The Turkish
    state's hostility toward minorities precludes any win-win policies
    in this realm.

    http://www.al-monitor.com/pulse/originals/2014/02/turkey-armenians-crisis-patriarch.html#

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