Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Religious diversity in Turkey spurned

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Religious diversity in Turkey spurned

    Myrtle Beach Sun News, SC
    Nov 21 2004

    Religious diversity in Turkey spurned

    Officials' dealings with groups slow
    By Susan Sachs

    ISTANBUL, Turkey - In the Panayia church, one of the few Greek Orthodox
    churches active in Turkey, ceiling panels dangle precariously and
    flying glass has pitted the frescos. Musty carpets are rolled up and
    stored beside Byzantine iconostasis.

    The building, which celebrates its 200th anniversary today, has
    been scarred for a year, since terrorists bombed the nearby British
    Consulate and the explosion shattered dozens of stained glass windows.

    Orthodox leaders, following Turkish law, asked for government
    permission to make repairs but received no response.

    After a few months, they replaced the broken windows. But they hesitate
    to start renovations because the Turkish authorities, as frequently
    happens, have not acknowledged their request.

    "That's the usual tactic," said Andrea Rombopoulos, a parishioner who
    publishes a newspaper for Istanbul's small Greek Orthodox community.
    "They don't give a negative answer. They don't give any answer at all."

    Turkey has long viewed its non-Muslim minorities with a certain
    ambivalence, defending freedom of worship while tightly regulating the
    affairs of religious institutions. Christians of Greek and Armenian
    descent, in particular, have said they are blocked from using,
    selling and renovating their churches' properties.

    Now, under pressure from the European Union and local civil rights
    advocates, Turkey has started to reassess the way it has treated
    religious minorities since the state was founded 81 years ago.

    Prime Minister Recip Tayyip Erdogan's government has prepared
    legislation that would give Christian and Jewish foundations
    more freedom to manage their own assets and elect board members.
    Parliament is expected to vote on the bill before Dec. 17, when EU
    leaders are to decide whether to open accession talks with Turkey.

    For the first time, senior Turkish officials also have broken a
    long-standing taboo and broached the idea of allowing the Greek
    Orthodox patriarchate to reopen a 160-year-old seminary that once
    served as a leading training center for priests.

    Some legal constraints on religious foundations already have been
    relaxed over the last three years, although European and American human
    rights monitors, citing cases like the Panayia church, have reported
    that local officials have been reluctant to carry out the changes.

    For many Turks, though, even a discussion of minorities raises fears
    of separatism. Some have argued that lifting government controls on
    religious institutions would undermine Turkey's secular foundations.
    And Turkey's president, Ahmet Necdet Sezer, recently warned that
    drawing attention to Turkey's sectarian or cultural diversity harmed
    the state.
Working...
X