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ANKARA: An Unwanted Visit?

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  • ANKARA: An Unwanted Visit?

    AN UNWANTED VISIT?
    By Semih Idiz

    Anatolian Times, Turkey
    Nov 23 2006

    MILLIYET- It seems that Pope Benedict XVI's visit to Turkey will be
    troubled, and the government is experiencing uneasy days due to this
    visit. Some people say that it comes from the Justice and Development
    Party's (AKP) unhappiness with this visit. According to the latest
    news, negative interpretations in the West of this situation caused
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan to belatedly schedule a meeting
    with him during the visit. But it's not certain if this will happen
    or not. We can see the visit is worrying the government as well. The
    main reason for this is the pope's visit to Patriarch Bartholomeos.

    If the state could, it would block the visit. But it can't. The reason
    is very clear: The whole world will pay attention to this visit. Ankara
    knows that such an action would damage Turkey's international image and
    so would be more serious than the drawbacks of the pope-Bartholomeos
    meeting. So why is the visit being paid?

    Firstly, let me remind you of something. The pope was supposed to come
    to Turkey last year at Bartholomeos' invitation for St. Andreas day,
    the holiest day of the Orthodox church. As the head of the Catholic
    world, his aim was to meet with 'ecumenical' leaders of the Greek
    Orthodox world and continue the process of rapprochement between the
    Eastern and Western churches.

    Meanwhile, although we say the opposite, the world considers Patriarch
    Bartholomeos to be the ecumenical leader of the Greek Orthodox
    Church. Ankara, which was disturbed that Bartholomeos invited the
    pope, sent a state invitation on behalf of Turkey to the pope. As he
    wouldn't be able to reject the state's invitation, the pope accepted
    it but postponed his meeting with Bartholomeos. In other words,
    Ankara faced a visit that it never wanted. Meanwhile, new dynamics
    emerged and this visit started to gain new meanings. The pope opened
    his mouth and enraged the Muslim world. Erdogan himself made some
    of the harshest criticisms. So the pope's visit to Turkey took on
    a meaning of 'creating consensus between civilizations.' However,
    for that the pope shouldn't be meeting with President Ahmet Necdet
    Sezer, but Erdogan, who is considered the 'leading Muslim politician
    in Europe,' so that it would be meaningful. If Turkey had been a
    normal country, the pope would have been received at the Presidential
    Palace in Cankaya, and Erdogan, the Religious Affairs Directorate
    head, the Greek and Armenian patriarchs and the Jewish chief rabbi
    would have been invited to the banquet given in his honor. This way
    Turkey's secular character would have been emphasized and it would
    have promoted interfaith tolerance. But since this didn't happen, now I
    can only hope Ankara will come through this visit without any problems.
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