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ANKARA: Muslims Converting Christianity of Other Religious Origins

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  • ANKARA: Muslims Converting Christianity of Other Religious Origins

    Zaman, Turkey
    March 15 2005

    Muslims Converting Christianity of Other Religious Origins
    By Istanbul
    Published: Tuesday 15, 2005
    zaman.com


    It was determined that approximately 2,000 people who converted from
    Islam to Christianity in the past 88 years were of Armenian, Syrian,
    Greek or Jewish origin.

    The weekly news magazine Aksiyon in its latest issue drew attention
    to a subject that to date has not come to the agenda, "Converted
    Christian Turks". According to the article, thousands of "house
    churches" have opened across Anatolia and tens of thousands of
    Turkish youths have converted to Christianity.

    However, Aksiyon's article indicated that the reality is very
    different. The article indicates that hundreds of Turkish Citizens
    who have Turkish names and therefore for many years have been assumed
    to be Muslims have recently returned to their former religions and
    names. It was noted in the report prepared by Hakan Guven that about
    100 people converted to Christianity through marriage.

    Among the converted who provided statements for the article are the
    relatives of soldiers, politicians and academics.

    Some of the political arguments relating to and the actual number of
    "Converted Christian Turks" can only be answered by looking at the
    official population statistics, and what nationality individual come
    from can only be established by researching the population records
    through a few generations.

    Today, the grandparents of an individual who bears a Turkish-Muslim
    name can be from different nationalities. A report that has been in
    the media recently is an example of this. The Hurriyet newspaper
    reported on February 22 that Ergun Caner who was elected as the
    theology dean at Liberty University, known as the castle of
    Evangelist Christians, was the son of an imam who immigrated to the
    US to spread Islam.

    According to the article by Aksiyon, although Caner's mother Inez
    Manica has been considered as Muslim, in reality she is a Swedish
    Christian. According to research conducted into those who converted
    to Christianity, the conversions mostly take place in Istanbul,
    Diyarbakir, Adiyaman, Batman, Sivas, Tunceli, and Malatya.
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