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Bartholomew I Holds Great Sway In Turkey

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  • Bartholomew I Holds Great Sway In Turkey

    BARTHOLOMEW I HOLDS GREAT SWAY IN TURKEY
    By Brian Murphy, AP Religion Writer

    Associated Press
    Nov 29 2006

    ISTANBUL, Turkey -- Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I is the spiritual
    leader of the world's more than 250 million Orthodox Christians and
    is often called the "first among equals" of the Orthodox religious
    leaders.

    He has no direct authority over the various autonomous Orthodox
    churches, which are mostly broken down along national and cultural
    lines. But Bartholomew carries great sway as caretaker of Orthodox
    spirituality in Istanbul, which was the capital of the Christian
    Byzantium and known as Constantinople before the city fell to Muslim
    armies in 1453.

    The Orthodox branch of Christianity -- centered largely in Eastern
    Europe, the Balkans and Russia -- split from the Vatican nearly 1,000
    years ago amid disputes that included the extent of papal authority.

    Smaller Orthodox communities can be found throughout the world, notably
    in Israel and the Palestinian territories, Australia and North America.

    Bartholomew, 66, was born on the Turkish island of Gokceada, known
    as Imvros by Greeks, and became a deacon in 1961 and a priest in 1969.

    He was elected as ecumenical patriarch in 1991.

    He has led many religious-based initiatives, including environmental
    trips to focus attention on the state of the world's seas and rivers.

    Those excursions, which bring together religious leaders, scientists
    and researchers aboard ships, have earned him the nickname "the
    Green Patriarch."

    Bartholomew also has fostered talks between Muslims and Roman Catholics
    aimed at improving relations between the groups, and has been a strong
    supporter of expanding Orthodox ties with the Vatican.

    Bartholomew's role, however, is complicated by Turkish views that
    reject his global status and declare him only the head of the tiny
    Greek Orthodox community in Turkey. He has also pressed Turkish
    authorities to change rules governing non-Muslim religious institutions
    that led to the closure of a Greek Orthodox seminary near Istanbul
    more than 20 years ago.

    Turkey requires that the patriarch be a Turkish citizen, which
    has sharply limited the pool of potential successors because of the
    dwindling Orthodox population in Turkey. There are an estimated 2,000
    Greek Orthodox among Turkey's nearly 90,000 Christians, which include
    about 65,000 Armenians and 20,000 Roman Catholics.
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