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BACKGROUND: The Diminishing Christian Community In Turkey

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  • BACKGROUND: The Diminishing Christian Community In Turkey

    BACKGROUND: THE DIMINISHING CHRISTIAN COMMUNITY IN TURKEY

    Deutsche Presse-Agentur
    November 27, 2006 Monday

    DPA POLITICS Turkey Religion Pope BACKGROUND: The diminishing Christian
    community in Turkey dpa infographic 3184 available Ankara One of the
    biggest issues on the agenda of Pope Benedict XVI's visit to Turkey
    starting on November 28 will be the state of Christian minorities.

    There are no official figures on the number of Christians living
    in Turkey but estimates put the figure at no higher than 100,000,
    or around 0.15 per cent of the total population. Of these, only a
    tiny minority are Roman Catholic.

    Those numbers used to be much much higher but events over the past
    century have led to sometimes massive decreases, sometimes gradual.

    During the First World War Armenian Christians sided with Russia
    against the Ottoman Empire and when the Russian armies disappeared
    from eastern Turkey following the 1917 Bolshevik revolution, the
    Ottoman authorities moved to expel from Turkey Armenians living in
    the east of the country.

    While Turkey denies that the subsequent massacres actually
    constituted a genocide, it does admit that hundreds of thousands were
    killed. Armenian historians claim as many as 1.5 million Armenians
    died. The numbers may be in dispute, but there is no argument that
    the massacres and the subsequent emigration of others completely

    changed the religious make-up of the nation. Estimates put the Armenian
    Christian population today at just 70,000.

    Just a few years later, following the war of independence and
    the founding of the modern Turkish republic, came the exchanges of
    population with Greece that saw Muslims in Greece sent to Turkey and
    Orthodox Christians sent the other way.

    In spite of those events there were still sizable Christian minorities
    in Turkey but over the years the numbers have dwindled further, both
    due to natural emigration but also due to events such as in 1956,
    when a pogrom against the 100,000 strong Greek Orthodox community in
    Istanbul led to thousands leaving the country.

    Today, there are only around 5,000 Greek Orthodox Christians living
    in Istanbul.

    Despite the minuscule numbers the Turkish authorities still today
    are deeply suspicious of Christian minorities. In the past a wealth
    tax imposed on minority groups, including Jews, impoverished many.

    Today there are still problems for minority religious groups regarding
    the owning or repair of property.

    The Greek Orthodox Church also complains that the state closed down a
    seminary on the island of Heybeli in 1971. Despite repeated calls from
    the European Union to allow the seminary to reopen, the government of
    Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has refused to move on the matter.

    Turkish analysts have said that Erdogan's hands are tied because he
    has been thwarted by the fiercely pro-secular military in watering
    down restrictions on the wearing of the Islamic-style headscarf in
    public offices and universities.

    The prime minister's own daughters attend university in the United
    States because they cannot wear the headscarf to school in their
    own country.

    As for the public at large there is certainly no obvious hatred of
    Christians. There are no complaints concerning the behaviour of the
    millions of western tourists who flock to Mediterranean resorts each
    summer but there have been a number of attacks on Christians in some
    of the more conservative areas of Turkey.

    In February an Italian Catholic priest was shot dead by a 16-year-
    old boy in the town of Trabzon. The exact motive for the murder has
    not been revealed, the court was held behind closed doors.

    Syrian Orthodox Christians have also complained that Kurdish families
    have taken over their properties and churches in south-east Turkey
    after they were forced to leave them due to poverty and conflict.

    Evangelical protestant groups also complain of harassment by the
    authorities.

    Christians may not be high in numbers in Turkey but their plight
    will be high on the agenda when Pope Benedict XVI arrives in Ankara
    on November 28.
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