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Crumbling Churches A Sign Of Turkey's Disregard For Its Rich Religio

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  • Crumbling Churches A Sign Of Turkey's Disregard For Its Rich Religio

    CRUMBLING CHURCHES A SIGN OF TURKEY'S DISREGARD FOR ITS RICH RELIGIOUS TAPESTRY

    The Irish Times
    November 27, 2006 Monday

    Rite and Reason As the pope begins a four-day visit to Turkey tomorrow,
    attention is likely to focus more on his attitude to Islam and the
    country's application to join the EU than on the plight of Christian
    minorities there, writes Sarah MacDonald

    A few weeks ago, employees of Diyanet, the Turkish state body for
    Muslim worship, called for the pontiff to be arrested on his arrival in
    the country, accusing him of violating Turkish laws upholding freedom
    of belief and thought and of "insulting" Islam and the Prophet Mohammed
    in his Regensburg address last September.

    Some Turkish newspapers have suggested that the state has downgraded
    its welcome, while the authorities have underlined that protests
    against the pontiff will be permitted.

    No doubt the Vatican is relieved to hear that security has been
    stepped up.

    The stabbing of Fr Pierre Brunissen in Istanbul last July was the
    third attack on a Catholic cleric in the country this year. There
    are just 32,000 Roman Catholics in Turkey.

    Sadly, coverage of this historic visit - the first of Pope Benedict's
    pontificate to a Muslim country - looks likely to focus on his
    purported "bias" against Islam and Turkey. As a result, the issue of
    Turkey's discrimination against its non-Muslim minorities, specifically
    Christians (who comprise roughly 1 per cent of the population),
    is likely to be ignored, though it warranted criticism in the EU's
    recent progress report on this country of almost 70 million.

    The invitation to Pope Benedict to come to Turkey was extended by
    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, the leader of Turkey's Greek
    Orthodox Church and spiritual leader of more than 250 million
    Christians worldwide.

    The Turkish government refuses to acknowledge his ecumenical authority
    and bans the use of his title. His flock, which has a 1,500-year-old
    presence in Istanbul, is still viewed with deep suspicion.

    The French press agency AFP in July 2003 claimed Turkey was "dragging
    its heels on reforms for its Christian minority", including basic
    rights such as training their own clergy or providing an independent
    religious education. A prime example is the state's closure of the
    Greek Orthodox seminary of Halki in 1971.

    Religious communities other than Sunni Muslims cannot legally train
    new clergy. The ecumenical patriarch's requests to have the seminary
    re-opened have been continually rebuffed.

    A 2004 US state department report noted that the "Greek and Armenian
    Orthodox communities have lost property to the government in the
    past and continue to battle against more losses, because current laws
    allow the state agency, Vakiflar, to assume direct administration of
    expropriate properties that fall into disuse when the local non-Muslim
    community dwindles".

    If the number of Christians in Turkey continues to "dwindle" (down
    from 207,000 in the 1965 census to 140,000 in the 1995 census), then
    the fate of many historically significant churches looks increasingly
    likely to be at the mercy of the state.

    When I visited Anatolia's Tur Abdin region last year, members of the
    Syriac Orthodox Church complained bitterly at the crisis which these
    strictures on seminary formation were imposing.

    This ancient community still use a form of Aramaic dating from the
    time of Jesus in their liturgy, while their monasteries are some of
    the oldest in the world.

    The Mar Gabriel monastery was founded in AD 397. However, with no
    new priests being trained, they are unable to replace priests who die.

    There were just two monks left in the monastery last year.

    The conflict in the region between the Kurds and Ankara has driven
    thousands of Syriac Christians abroad over the past two decades.

    One of the most tragic examples of Turkey's disregard for its rich
    and diverse religious tapestry is its neglect of Armenian monuments
    such as the ancient Monastery of the Seven Churches of Varagavank,
    near the city of Van.

    Despite offers to fund restoration work from abroad, a permit has
    not been granted. And so each year its wonderful mosaics fall into
    a greater state of dilapidation.

    Elsewhere, the wilful destruction of Armenian material has been
    documented. Harassment of academics who attempt to collate information
    on Armenian material has prompted some to question whether Turkey
    has a policy of cultural and historical amnesia towards the Armenians.

    This time last year, writer and Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk was facing a
    possible jail sentence under Article 301 for having allegedly "insulted
    Turkishness" by his acknowledgement in an interview of the 1915-17
    genocide in which up to 1.25 million Armenians lost their lives.

    Perhaps the Bill passed by the lower house of the French parliament
    last month, making it a crime to deny the genocide, is an attempt to
    defy this policy of censorship and "forgetting".

    It is a contentious move which may kindle even stronger displays
    of Turkish nationalism, while undermining those in Ankara pushing a
    pro-EU reform agenda. It is certainly unlikely to stem the destruction
    of Anatolia's ancient Christian churches.

    For the Syriac Christians, their hope, as one of their priests
    explained to me, lies in EU membership, which they believe would
    force Turkey to adhere to European democratic standards of tolerance
    and respect for its minorities.

    Sarah MacDonald is editor of The Word magazine.
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