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    Boston Globe, MA
    May 11 2014



    Meeting will highlight Christianity in Turkey

    Also: Beatifying Pope Paul VI; scammers use the Vatican's name;
    Vatican diplomats shed caution; and a blueprint for papal travel

    By John L. Allen Jr.

    When Pope Francis and Patriarch Bartholomew of Constantinople meet
    this month in Jerusalem, the buzz probably will be about two
    milestones from the past: 1054, when Eastern and Western Christianity
    split, and 1964, when Pope Paul VI and Patriarch Athenagoras embraced
    in the Holy Land to begin healing the division.

    That historic meeting 50 years ago helped launch the modern ecumenical
    movement for Christian unity.

    Continue reading below

    For anyone who understands the realities facing Christianity in the
    Middle East today, however, the most relevant date actually lies in
    the future -- 2054, to be exact.

    When the 1,000th anniversary of the East-West rupture rolls around 40
    years from now, the question is whether there will still be an
    ecumenical patriarchate in Constantinople, modern-day Istanbul in
    Turkey, to mark it.

    There's every possibility that in the meantime, the historic "first
    among equals" in the Orthodox world will become another chapter of the
    slow-motion extinction of Christianity across the land of its birth.

    Turkey may be officially secular, but sociologically it's an Islamic
    society with a population of 75 million that's 97 percent Muslim.
    Although it was a center of early Christianity, today there are just
    150,000 Christians left, mostly Greek and Armenian Orthodox. They
    endure various forms of harassment, including difficulties in
    obtaining permits to build or repair churches, surveillance by
    security agencies, unfair judicial treatment, and discrimination in
    housing and employment.

    The Greek Orthodox Halki Seminary is an emblematic case. Founded in
    1844 as the principal school of theology for the ecumenical
    patriarchate, it was considered one of the premier centers of learning
    in the Orthodox world. It was forced to shut down in 1971 after Turkey
    barred private universities.

    Continue reading below

    National law also requires the patriarch of Constantinople to be a
    Turkish citizen. Given the dwindling Christian community and the
    inability to provide theological formation, many believe it will be
    increasingly difficult to find suitable clergy to satisfy the
    requirement, and that eventually the office could lapse for lack of a
    qualified candidate.

    Toward the end of 2009, the normally reserved and diplomatic
    Bartholomew appeared on CBS's "60 Minutes" and shocked Turkey's
    political establishment by saying out loud that Turkey's Christians
    are second-class citizens and that he felt "crucified" by a state that
    wants to see his church die out.

    That's not just rhetoric, as physical attacks on Christians in Turkey
    have become increasingly common and brazen over the last decade.

    In January 2006, a Protestant church leader named Kamil Kiroglu, a
    Muslim convert, was beaten unconscious by five young men. A month
    later, a well-known Italian Catholic priest, the Rev. Andrea Santoro,
    was gunned down by a 16-year-old Muslim in Trabzon. Three other
    Catholic priests were attacked shortly afterward in other locations.

    In January 2007, a prominent Christian journalist of Armenian descent
    named Hrant Dink was assassinated in Istanbul. In April 2007, three
    Protestant Christian missionaries -- two Turks and one German -- were
    tortured, stabbed, and strangled in the Central Anatolian city of
    Malatya.

    In June 2010, Luigi Padovese, the Catholic apostolic vicar for
    Anatolia and president of the country's Catholic bishops' conference,
    was killed by his driver and longtime aide, Murat Altun. Witnesses
    reported that Altun shouted "Allahu Akbar, I have killed the greatest
    Satan!"

    These travails mirror the broader realities for Christianity across
    the Middle East. All told, Christians have gone from roughly 20
    percent of the region's population in the early 20th century to no
    more than 5 percent today.

    Those who remain often face lethal threats. A coalition of more than
    200 Orthodox, Catholic, and Protestant leaders in America recently
    urged greater action by the US government to protect Middle Eastern
    Christians, an initiative spearheaded by Representative Frank Wolf, a
    Virginia Republican, and Representative Anna Eshoo, a California
    Democrat.

    Therein lies the test for Pope Francis on his first outing to the region.

    The question is not really whether he can contribute to ecumenical
    momentum, as his predecessors on both sides of the Catholic-Orthodox
    divide made that process irreversible, and his own humbler conception
    of the papacy is already accelerating the healing.

    The real question is instead whether he can translate his popularity
    and moral authority into an effective mobilization in defense of
    persecuted Christians, not as a matter of confessional self-interest
    but as an urgent human rights concern.

    Two year ago, a leading columnist for the Turkish daily Zaman
    complained that the Vatican wasn't doing anything to demand that the
    investigation of Padovese's death be "handled in a serious manner." He
    wrote that if the Vatican would do so, it would offer "a huge
    contribution to the promotion of human rights and freedom of
    religion."

    Will a similar critique of Vatican silence be possible on Francis's
    watch? Or will the world's most popular spiritual leader spend some of
    his political capital on behalf of fellow believers, most of whom are
    impoverished and vulnerable, for whom he may be the last firebreak
    before annihilation?

    Without trying to guess the answer, that's at least the right question
    to ask when Pope Francis meets the patriarch during his May 24 to 26
    outing to Jordan, Israel, and the Palestinian territories.

    Beatifying Pope Paul VI

    Having already made saints of two of his predecessors, Popes John
    XXIII and John Paul II, Francis is set to move ahead with the
    sainthood cause of yet another former pontiff. On Saturday the Vatican
    announced that a miracle has been approved for Pope Paul VI, who
    reigned from 1963 to 1978, and that the Italian pope would be
    beatified, the final step before sainthood, on Oct. 19.

    The miracle comes from the United States, and reportedly involves the
    healing of an unborn child whom doctors had diagnosed with a severe
    risk of brain damage. They recommended abortion. The mother instead
    prayed for Paul's help, clutching a fragment of the pontiff's garments
    given to her by a friend, and the child was eventually born safely
    after a caesarean section.

    The beatification ceremony will take place on the closing day of a
    Synod of Bishops set for October in Rome, devoted to discussion of
    issues involving the family.

    Four points about the beatification of Paul VI are worth drawing out.

    First, Giovanni Battista Montini, the given name of Paul VI, may be
    the modern pope whom Francis most closely resembles. Both were men of
    governance: Montini, a veteran of Vatican service, and Jorge Mario
    Bergoglio, a former Jesuit superior and then archbishop of Buenos
    Aires. Like Francis, Montini tried to reconcile the church's
    progressive and traditionalist wings. Just like today, under Paul VI,
    it was the hard-liners on either end of the spectrum who were out of
    favor and the moderates who seemed to get the plumb jobs.

    In another parallel with Francis, Paul VI launched an ambitious
    program of Vatican reform, designed to make the Vatican more
    international, more efficient, and more collegial, meaning more
    disposed to consult rather than to impose, and more driven by a spirit
    of service to local churches around the world. It's a somewhat
    ambivalent precedent, because most observers would say Paul's reform
    was only partially successful, and it remains to be seen whether
    Francis can finish the job.

    Second, the beatification of Paul VI is another confirmation by
    Francis of his commitment to Vatican II (1962-65), the reforming
    assembly of bishops that set Catholicism on a path of openness to the
    wider world. John XXIII was the father of the council and John Paul II
    its great apostle; Paul VI was the pope who brought it in for a safe
    landing and kept the church together in its turbulent aftermath.

    Third, this beatification ought to lay to rest any lingering doubt as
    to whether Francis truly is a "pro-life" pope. Not only was Paul VI
    the pontiff who gave the world the 1968 encyclical Humanae Vitae,
    reiterating the church's ban on birth control, but the miracle
    clearing his path to the altar involves the healing of an unborn child
    and a mother who refused an abortion.

    Fourth, staging the ceremony in conjunction with the Synod of Bishops
    is another indication of how important that institution is to Francis
    as an expression of collegiality, meaning the determination to make
    sure the voices of local bishops and other actors in the church are
    heard in Rome. Paul VI founded the synod in 1965 and presided over its
    first five meetings, and in some ways it's the feature on the
    contemporary Vatican landscape most associated with his reign.

    Most observers would say that over the years, the synod has been a
    mixed bag, sometimes functioning more as an expensive talk shop with
    conclusions determined in advance than a genuine instrument of
    consultation. Nonetheless, the idea of the synod clearly is key to
    Francis, who has repeatedly said that he wants to see a more "synodal"
    church.

    (A Greek term, "synod" means, roughly, a journey "on the same path,"
    and refers to cooperation among layers of authority. In Eastern
    churches, a synod of bishops generally makes decisions in tandem with
    the presiding patriarch.)

    Francis has significantly overhauled the process for the Synod of
    Bishops this time around, and so part of the drama of 2014 will be to
    see whether the reality under Francis more closely resembles the
    vision laid out almost 50 years ago by Paul VI.

    A new Vatican scam

    The discipline of Vaticanology is not exactly noted for its real-world
    applications, but it would at least have inoculated anyone who's up to
    date against a scam going around Rome that apparently took advantage
    of at least a dozen young Italians desperate for work.

    Italy has a youth unemployment rate estimated at 42 percent, the
    highest since 1977. Young Italians and their families are eager to
    pursue any opening, especially something that seems secure, and the
    Vatican strikes many as the brass ring. I can testify that anytime an
    Italian realizes you've got some sort of tie to the Vatican, however
    tenuous, requests to make an introduction for their child, or their
    cousin or nephew, usually aren't far behind.

    In that context, a group of con artists apparently passed itself off
    recently as a consulting firm working for the Vatican, offering young
    people the chance to interview for Vatican employment, for a fee, and
    then extending them a work contract for another payment. Naturally,
    the jobs never materialized, but the scammers moved on before the
    victim realized what had happened.

    The ruse has a certain surface plausibility, given that the Vatican
    under Pope Francis has hired a slew of outside consultants --
    Promontory, Ernst & Young, McKinsey & Company, and so on -- for various
    tasks. Perhaps for that reason, the Government of the Vatican City
    State released a statement Thursday asking people to "distrust anyone
    making these sorts of promises."

    "It's distressing to see anyone trying to profit from the good faith
    of many young people and their families, especially in this time of
    crisis," the statement said, inviting anyone who fell victim to the
    scam to file a complaint with the Italian police and to copy the
    Vatican authorities.

    Here's how Vaticanology could have helped: Anyone following the news
    would have known that the secretary of state, Italian Cardinal Pietro
    Parolin, imposed a hiring freeze on all Vatican departments in the
    name of the pope back in late February, and it's never been lifted. As
    a result, the offers of employment had to be fake.

    Vatican diplomats shed caution

    The Vatican boasts the world's oldest diplomatic corps, and its
    members take their tradecraft extremely seriously. They pride
    themselves on being the soul of discretion, never burning bridges,
    never shutting down lines of communication, and always having the big
    picture in view.

    The result is that Vatican diplomats rarely engage in public
    crossfire, so when they do, you know something extraordinary is going
    on.

    That's relevant in light of the dust-up following an appearance Monday
    and Tuesday by Archbishop Silvano Tomasi, the Vatican's envoy to the
    United Nations in Geneva, before the UN's Committee against Torture.
    As happened earlier this year in a date with the UN Committee on the
    Rights of the Child, the Vatican's record on the child sexual abuse
    scandals once again was put under a microscope.

    Even before the hearing, Tomasi had come out swinging in an interview
    with the Globe in which he complained that some people seem
    deliberately "deaf and blind" to the progress the Catholic Church has
    made in the fight against child sexual abuse.

    Now, Tomasi and the Vatican are pushing back again, following an
    exchange during the hearing in which one of the UN experts, Felice
    Gaer of the American Jewish Committee, who also serves on the US
    Commission on International Religious Freedom, pressed Tomasi on
    whether rape and sexual abuse should be considered forms of torture.

    It's a debated point among experts on international law. Some contend
    that "torture" applies only to acts committed by, or with the explicit
    consent of, governments and public officials, while others support a
    more expansive interpretation to include acts by private individuals.

    In brief, Tomasi replied that "I'm not a lawyer," adding that it's
    important the definition of torture adopted by the UN panel be
    consistent with the terms of the 1984 Convention against Torture.
    Media outlets quoted Gaer after the session as saying that she
    considered the reply an admission by the Vatican that rape and sexual
    abuse fall under the terms of the treaty.

    On Friday, the Vatican's Geneva office released a press statement
    vigorously disputing that notion, insisting that Tomasi was not
    offering a legal opinion. It also dispatched a letter to the head of
    the Committee against Torture warning that if the record isn't set
    straight, the perception will be that members of the panel are "biased
    and driven by personal motivations."

    The Vatican-friendly Solidarity Center for Law and Justice, based in
    Atlanta, also filed a brief Thursday asking that Gaer be excluded from
    drafting the committee's final report. It charges that Gaer wants to
    push the expansive line on the "rape is torture" debate, making her
    biased toward depicting the Vatican in the worst possible light.

    If Gaer participates in the review, the brief warns, states such as
    the Holy See "will have little choice" but to see these UN checkups as
    "politically and policy-motivated 'star chamber' inquisitions designed
    to elicit public statements . . . that one or more committee members
    can spin to the media in the hope of shaping a predetermined outcome."

    The Committee against Torture is expected to release its final
    conclusions this month, and given the fallout from the hearing, it
    looks like the Vatican isn't inclined to be bound by its usual caution
    if it takes another shot on the chin.

    It remains to be seen whether there will be long-term consequences to
    these run-ins with the UN system, such as whether the Vatican will
    become less likely to ratify future conventions out of fear that
    hearings by monitoring bodies will become a regular occasion for
    people to roll out their beefs with the church.

    As a footnote, the Vatican provided comprehensive figures to the
    Committee against Torture for the number of priests it has disciplined
    over the past decade on abuse charges. In all, the Vatican said 848
    priests have been expelled from the priesthood, while 2,572 more were
    hit with lesser sanctions.

    Those numbers include only cases handled by the Vatican, not church
    courts at lower levels around the world, so the full number of
    disciplined clergy is presumably much larger.

    For a term of comparison, the Vatican's official statistical yearbook
    reported 412,236 priests worldwide in 2013.

    A blueprint for papal travel

    In between higher profile outings to the Middle East in May and South
    Korea in August, Pope Francis will take a one-day trip to the southern
    Italian diocese of Cassano all'Jonio on June 21.

    It's being humorously billed as the "I'm Sorry" visit, because Francis
    recently made the popular bishop of the diocese, 65-year-old Nunzio
    Galantino, secretary of the powerful Italian bishops' conference,
    which means he's now splitting his time. The pope has said he wants to
    apologize to the locals while he's around.

    Cassano all'Jonio is in Calabria, a chronically underdeveloped region
    on the toe of the Italian peninsula that's also a stronghold of the
    'Ndrangheta crime syndicate. A confidential US Treasury report in 2008
    described Calabria as a failed state. Its bishops tend to be social
    justice-oriented pastors close to the people, and Galantino is a
    classic example of the type.

    Of all those who have hosted Francis since his election, Galantino may
    be the prelate who's mostly clearly intuited the kind of trip this
    pontiff wants to make.

    In public remarks after the June 21 outing was announced, Galantino
    said both the diocese and local officials in Calabria should avoid
    exploiting the trip as an excuse for "unjustified expenses." Instead,
    he called for preparations to be marked by a spirit of "sobriety" and
    "attention to one's neighbor," especially the most needy.

    Galantino advised against "spruce-up" projects involving "useless or
    superfluous" outlays of money, especially if it's for flourishes that
    will vanish as soon as the pope leaves town. Instead, he said, if
    money's going to be spent, it ought to be used to build infrastructure
    in poor areas, even if not's a neighborhood the pope is planning to
    visit.

    Such development, Galantino said, would capture the real sense of the
    pope's visit.

    Playing off Francis's joking vow to apologize, Galantino said the trip
    ought to prompt locals to ask forgiveness "for the poor left alone in
    our streets, for the nonbelievers to whom we continue to propose our
    religion without asking if it means something to them too, to our
    youth for whom we've abdicated being credible role models, to our
    young adults when we've done nothing to sustain their dreams, and to
    our territory reduced solely to a place to exploit."

    In effect, Galantino seems determined to lay out both a tone and a
    program ideally suited to the way Francis prefers to travel. Future
    hosts of papal visits, take note.



    John L. Allen Jr. is a Globe associate editor, covering global Catholicism.

    http://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2014/05/10/when-pope-and-patriarch-meet-key-date-isn-but/slG1AntnqPDJuwMn1CAOCJ/story.html

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