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  • ENI: Muslim majority no obstacle to Turkey's EU bid: Dutch churches

    Ecumenical News International
    Daily News Service / 08 December 2004

    Muslim majority no obstacle to Turkey's EU bid: Dutch churches

    By Andreas Havinga

    Amsterdam, 8 December (ENI)--Turkey's Muslim majority population
    should not be a reason for denying the country membership in the
    European Union, the Council of Churches in the Netherlands has
    said in an open letter to Dutch prime minister Jan Peter
    Balkenende.

    The EU should, however, insist that Turkey recognise the
    Orthodox and other religious minorities within its borders and
    this should be a "hard condition" for membership, said the
    council, which groups the Protestant, Roman Catholic and
    Orthodox churches. It stressed "the importance of respect for
    freedom of religion, and for religious and ethnic minorities".

    The Netherlands holds the presidency of the 25 member European
    Union. Member states will decide on 17 December about whether to
    open talks with Turkey on EU membership.

    Turkey's population of 69 million is second only to that of
    Germany's 82 million people. Demographers estimate that by the
    middle of the century, Turkey's population will exceed that of
    any of the EU's current members.

    "The fact that Turkey is a secular state with a Muslim-majority
    population certainly poses no obstacle for possible admission of
    the country [into the EU]," said the 29 November letter signed by
    Ineke Bakker, the Dutch church council's general secretary.

    The church council also pointed out that Turkey still does not
    formally recognise the Syrian Orthodox minority living within
    its borders.

    Turkey does not publish official statistics on religious
    affiliation, but estimates say there are between 15,000 and
    50,000 Syrian Orthodox Christians in Turkey, while some 12,000
    Syrian Orthodox live in the Netherlands. Totalling more than one
    million worldwide, Syrian Orthodox read and write Aramaic, the
    language that Jesus spoke. Fewer than 0.2 per cent of Turkey's
    population are Christians.

    "It would be a special confidence-building sign if the Turkish
    authorities were to publicly admit the genocide of 1915," the
    council added, referring to massacre of Armenians by Turkey's
    predecessor, the Ottoman empire, in which also Syrians were
    annihilated. Books about the genocide are banned in Turkey.

    Istanbul in Turkey is also home to the Ecumenical Patriarch of
    Constantinople, who is seen as the senior Eastern Orthodox leader
    in the world. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomeos I complained this
    month about Turkey backtracking on a promise to reopen the Halki
    Orthodox seminary, closed by the government in 1971.

    "It is important that all religious minorities gain the right to
    build and maintain buildings such as churches and monasteries,
    to set up theological training, to speak and teach in their own
    language, and to be free in carrying out diaconal and other
    church-related activities," the Dutch church council said in its
    letter.

    In the Netherlands rapid secularisation has occurred in recent
    decades while the country has received large numbers of Muslim
    immigrants, mainly from Turkey and Morocco. Christians are still
    the largest religious grouping in the country, but about 40 per
    cent of the Dutch population profess no religious faith and more
    than five per cent are Muslim.

    * * *
    All articles (c) Ecumenical News International

    Ecumenical News International
    PO Box 2100
    CH - 1211 Geneva 2
    Switzerland

    Tel: (41-22) 791 6088/6111
    Fax: (41-22) 788 7244
    Email: [email protected]
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