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Turkish premier showcases Turkey as a center for religions

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  • Turkish premier showcases Turkey as a center for religions

    Turkish premier showcases Turkey as a center for religions
    By SUZAN FRASER

    AP Worldstream
    Dec 08, 2004

    In a bid to showcase Turkey as a country that respects religions, Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday inaugurated a mosque, a
    synagogue and church, just days before the European Union is to decide
    on whether to start membership talks with the largely Muslim nation.

    The side-by-side houses of worship are located in a park in the
    Mediterranean resort of Belek, near Antalya, and will mainly serve
    foreigners vacationing in the region. The church is partitioned into
    Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox sections.

    "Beyond its symbolic importance, this project gives the message of
    peace and brotherhood to whole world," Erdogan said.

    European leaders will decide in a Dec. 16-17 summit whether to begin
    EU accession talks with Turkey.

    The 25-member bloc has expressed concern about Turkey's treatment
    of religious and ethnic minorities and has said that improved rights
    for minorities are a condition for Turkish membership.

    Dutch Minister for European Affairs Atzo Nicolai attended the ceremony
    and urged Turkey to decrease "state intervention in worship."

    "As friends, we owe it ourselves to be critical ... of each other,"
    Nicolai said.

    The inauguration of the mosque, church and synagogue was made possible
    after Turkey changed laws that restricted the opening of houses of
    worship other than mosques to boost its chances of EU membership.

    Earlier this month, a nearby Protestant church that was consistently
    denied permission to open finally held its first service.

    Erdogan, a devout Muslim, is keen to project a positive image of the
    country's treatment of minorities. He was the first premier to visit
    a chief rabbi _ visiting him shortly after suicide attacks on two
    synagogues last year_ and earlier this week sent a message to Jewish
    citizens for the holiday of Hanukkah.

    On Sunday, Erdogan also presided over the opening of an Armenian
    museum _ a rare gesture by a Turkish premier.

    However, problems remain.

    "Turkey's Catholic citizens cannot claim a title of ownership on the
    churches they use, let alone request permission for new ones when
    there is need," the Rev. Alphonse T. Sammut, a Vatican representative
    in Turkey, said Wednesday.

    Turkey is also under pressure to reopen an Orthodox theology school on
    an island outside Istanbul that trained generations of church leaders,
    including Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, until it was closed by
    Turkish authorities in 1971.

    Turkey is also locked in a dispute over the status of Bartholomew,
    the Istanbul-based spiritual leader of the world's Orthodox Christians.

    Turkey has long refused to accept any international role for the
    patriarch and argues the patriarch is merely the spiritual leader of
    Istanbul's dwindling Orthodox community of less than 3,000.

    The EU has said "religious freedom is subject to serious limitations
    as compared with European standards."

    But Erdogan has warned that EU risks being branded a "Christian club"
    if it excludes Turkey.

    "If the EU is not a Christian club the Turkish population, which
    is Muslim, should not pose any problem," he said in an interview
    published in Italian daily La Stampa Wednesday. "We want to have
    a dialogue between civilizations within the EU. Turkey will play a
    fundamental role in this process."
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