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Pope Urges Religious Tolerance In Turkey

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  • Pope Urges Religious Tolerance In Turkey

    POPE URGES RELIGIOUS TOLERANCE IN TURKEY
    By Brian Murphy

    Associated Press
    Nov 29 2006

    Pope Benedict XVI waves as he arrives at Istanbul's Ataturk airport,
    Turkey, Wednesday, Nov. 29, 2006. The pontiff is in Turkey on a
    four-day official visit. (AP Photo/Bela Szandelszky)

    ISTANBUL, Turkey - Pope Benedict XVI began his pilgrimage among
    Turkey's tiny Christian communities Wednesday by paying homage to an
    Italian priest slain during Islamic protests and expressing sympathy
    for the pressures facing religious minorities in the Muslim world.

    The messages _ made at one of the holiest Christian sites in Turkey _
    could set the tone for the remainder of Benedict's first papal trip
    to a Muslim nation as he tries to strengthen bonds with the spiritual
    leader of the world's Orthodox Christians.

    The pope is expected to sharpen his calls for what the Vatican calls
    "reciprocity" _ that Muslim demands for greater respect in the West
    must be matched by increased tolerance and freedom for Christians in
    Islamic nations.

    But too much pressure by the Roman Catholic pontiff could risk new
    friction with Muslims after broad gestures of goodwill in the opening
    hours of the trip Tuesday that sought to ease simmering Muslim anger
    over the pope's remarks on violence and the Prophet Muhammad.

    A statement claiming to be from al-Qaida in Iraq denounced the pope's
    visit as part of a "crusader campaign" against Islam and an attempt to
    "extinguish the burning ember of Islam" in Turkey. Vatican spokesman
    the Rev. Federico Lombardi said the declaration _ posted on several
    Islamic militant Web sites _ shows the need for faiths to fight
    "violence in the name of God."

    He said "neither the pope nor his entourage are worried."

    The pope's deepening ties with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
    I _ called the "first among equals" of the Orthodox leaders _
    also is watched with suspicion in Turkey as a possible challenge to
    state-imposed limits on Christian minorities and others. Benedict has
    declared a "fundamental" commitment to try to heal rifts between the
    two ancient branches of Christianity, which split nearly 1,000 years
    ago over disputes including papal authority.

    At Bartholemew's walled compound in Istanbul, the pope stood amid
    black-robbed Orthodox clerics and urged both sides "to work for full
    unity of Catholics and Orthodox."

    The pope began the day at the ruins of a small stone home at the end
    of a dirt road near the Aegean Sea _ the site where the Virgin Mary
    is thought to have spent her last years.

    At an outdoor Mass attended by 250 invited guests, the pope noted
    the challenges facing the "little flock" of Christians in Turkey.

    "I have wanted to convey my personal love and spiritual closeness,
    together with that of the universal church, to the Christian community
    here in Turkey, a small minority which faces many challenges and
    difficulties daily," the pope said.

    At times, he smiled and showed flashes of the pastoral flair of his
    predecessor, John Paul II, in one of the most intimate papal gatherings
    since John Paul's trip to remote Mount Sinai during a trip to Egypt
    in 2000.

    Benedict went on to honor the memory of a Catholic priest who was
    slain in Turkey amid Muslim anger over the publication in European
    newspapers of caricatures of Muhammad.

    "Let us sing joyfully, even when we're tested by difficulties and
    dangers as we have learned from the fine witness given by the Rev.

    Andrea Santoro, whom I am pleased to recall in this celebration," said
    Benedict, who later walked amid the crowd as they reached to touch
    his gold-and-white robes and cried "Viva il Papa" and "Benedetto,"
    his name in Italian.

    In February, a Turkish teenager shot the Italian priest as he knelt in
    prayer in his church in the Black Sea port of Trabzon. The attack was
    believed to have been linked to outrage over the cartoons. Two other
    Catholic priests were attacked this year in Turkey, where Christians
    have often complained of discrimination and persecution.

    On Tuesday, the pope urged religious leaders of all faiths to "utterly
    refuse" to support any form of violence in the name of faith. He also
    said religious freedom was an essential element of democratic values.

    He sought a careful balance as he held out a hand of friendship and
    brotherhood to Muslims, and expressed support for measures that Turkey
    has taken in its campaign to join the European Union.

    But winning over Turkish sentiments may be easy compared with the
    complexities ahead.

    The legacy of Christianity in Turkey is a tangle of historical and
    religious sensitivities.

    Turkish armies captured the Byzantine capital Constantinople _ now
    Istanbul _ in 1453 to begin a steady decline for Christians, who had
    maintained communities in Asia Minor since the time of the Apostles.

    As the Ottoman Empire collapsed in the early 20th century, large
    numbers of Armenian Christians perished in mass expulsions and
    fighting. Turkey vehemently denies that it committed genocide against
    Armenians, though many nations have classified the World War I-era
    killings as such.

    Later, in the 1920s, Turkey and Greece carried out a massive population
    exchange under the treaty that established modern Turkey, with hundreds
    of thousands of Greek Orthodox sent to Greece and smaller numbers of
    Muslims going the other way.

    Bartholomew heads the remnants of the Greek community in Istanbul that
    now number no more than 2,000 among about 90,000 Christians in Turkey.

    But they still represent a powerful symbolic presence for the world's
    more than 250 million Orthodox, which often denounce Turkey for
    placing obstacles in the way of Bartholomew and his clerics.

    Turkey refuses to acknowledge the "ecumenical," or universal, title
    of the patriarch and instead considers him only the head of the local
    Greek Orthodox community. The Turkish worry is that granting wider
    status to the patriarch could undermine the idea of a single Turkish
    nationality _ a pillar of the nation's secular system _ and inspire
    demands for special recognition by minorities including Kurds and
    Muslim groups such as Sufis and Alawites, considered a branch of
    Shiite Islam.

    Now, Turkish officials are concerned the papal visit and support
    for Christian minorities could embolden Bartholomew to press Turkey
    for concessions, including return of confiscated property and the
    reopening of a Greek Orthodox seminary that closed more than two
    decades ago after authorities blocked new students. The EU has also
    pushed Turkey for greater religious openness to help its faltering
    bid for membership.

    "Against the backdrop of universal peace, the yearning for full
    communion and concord between all Christians becomes even more profound
    and intense," he said at the ancient Christian site.

    Nestling on a mountain in woods between the ancient city of Ephesus
    and the town of Selcuk, near the Aegean coast, St. John the Apostle
    is believed to have brought the Virgin Mary to the house to care for
    her after Jesus' death. Another belief maintains that the Virgin Mary
    died in Jerusalem.

    The ruins of the house, whose earliest foundations date to the first
    century, have become a popular place of pilgrimage for both Muslims
    and Christians since the 1950s.

    A chapel was built over the ruins, and some believe in the healing
    powers of both the chapel and waters flowing from a nearby spring.

    Of Turkey's 70 million people, some 65,000 are Armenian Orthodox
    Christians, 20,000 are Roman Catholic and 3,500 are Protestant,
    mostly converts from Islam. Another 23,000 are Jewish.

    AP writer Victor L. Simpson contributed to this report.
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