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    Congressional Quarterly, Inc.
    FDCH Political Transcripts
    March 16, 2005 Wednesday

    COMMITTEE HEARING

    COMMITTEE: U.S. COMMISSION ON SECURITY AND COOPERATION IN EUROPE

    U.S. SENATOR SAM BROWNBACK (R-KS) HOLDS HEARING ON GREEK ORTHODOX
    CHURCH IN TURKEY

    SPEAKER:
    U.S. SENATOR SAM BROWNBACK (R-KS), CHAIRMAN

    LOCATION: WASHINGTON, D.C.


    UNITED STATES COMMISSION ON SECURITY AND COOPERATION IN EUROPE
    (HELSINKI COMMISSION) HOLDS BRIEFING:
    THE GREEK ORTHODOX CHURCH IN TURKEY: A VICTIM OF SYSTEMATIC
    EXPROPRIATION


    MARCH 16, 2005

    COMMISSIONERS:

    U.S. SENATOR SAM BROWNBACK (R-KS)
    CHAIRMAN
    U.S. SENATOR GORDON H. SMITH (R-OR)
    U.S. SENATOR KAY BAILEY HUTCHISON (R-TX)
    U.S. SENATOR SAXBY CHAMBLISS (R-GA)
    VACANT
    U.S. SENATOR CHRISTOPHER J. DODD (D-CT)
    U.S. SENATOR RUSSELL D. FEINGOLD (D-WI)
    U.S. SENATOR HILLARY RODHAM CLINTON (D-NY)
    VACANT

    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE CHRISTOPHER H. SMITH (R-NJ)
    CO-CHAIRMAN
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE FRANK R. WOLF (R-VA)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE JOSEPH R. PITTS (R-PA)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE ROBERT B. ADERHOLT (R-AL)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE MIKE PENCE (R-IN)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE BENJAMIN L. CARDIN (D-MD)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE LOUISE MCINTOSH SLAUGHTER (D-NY)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE ALCEE L. HASTINGS (D-FL)
    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE MIKE MCINTYRE (D-NC)


    WITNESSES/PANELISTS:

    ELIZABETH PRYOR
    SENIOR ADVISER
    HELSINKI COMMISSION

    HIS EMINENCE ARCHBISHOP DEMETRIOS
    PRIMATE OF THE GREEK ORTHODOX CHURCH IN AMERICA
    EXARCH OF THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH

    RABBI ARTHUR SCHNEIER
    PRESIDENT
    APPEAL OF CONSCIENCE FOUNDATION

    CARDINAL THEODORE E. MCCARRICK
    CATHOLIC ARCHBISHOP OF WASHINGTON

    DR. ANTHONY LIMBERAKIS, MD
    NATIONAL COMMANDER
    ARCHONS OF THE ECUMENICAL PATRIARCHATE
    OF THE ORDER OF ST. ANDREW THE APOSTLE

    DR. BOB EDGAR
    GENERAL SECRETARY
    NATIONAL COUNCIL OF CHURCHES

    JAMES SILK
    PROFESSOR
    YALE UNIVERSITY LAW SCHOOL

    MARIA PULZETTI
    LOWENSTEIN INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS CLINIC
    YALE LAW SCHOOL

    CHADWICK GORE
    STAFF ADVISER
    HELSINKI COMMISSION

    EMMANUEL DEMOS
    GENERAL COUNSEL
    GREEK ORTHODOX ARCHDIOCESE

    U.S. REPRESENTATIVE FRANK PALLONE (D-NJ)

    The briefing was held at 10:00 a.m. in Room 2360
    Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, D.C., Christopher Smith,
    co-chairman, moderating.




    C. SMITH: Good morning. My name is Chris Smith. I'm the co- chairman
    of the Commission on Security and Cooperation in Europe.

    Just very briefly, by way of background, I have served on the
    commission since my second term, which began in 1983. And this
    briefing is an important briefing. And we'll get into the substance
    very, very shortly.

    But I do want to recognize that it's so good to see my old friend and
    colleague, Bob Edgar. Bob and I served on the House Committee on
    Veterans Affairs for a large number of years. Matter of fact, we were
    just talking. One of his chief assistants is now the director of
    government affairs for the Paralyzed Veterans of America and is doing
    a great job there.

    But it's so good to see you, Bob, after all these years.

    Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I do convene now this Helsinki
    Commission briefing to highlight congressional concerns regarding
    systematic Turkish government efforts to undermine the existence of
    the Greek Orthodox Church in Turkey.

    With the date for E.U. negotiations now set, Turkey has taken bold
    steps to bring its laws into harmony with European Union standards.
    At the same time, however, Turkey's policies concerning religious
    freedom and the Greek Orthodox Church have come under increased
    international scrutiny, and so they should.

    Our concerns include property expropriation and continued closure of
    the Halki Seminary, obstacles to ownership and repair of churches,
    and the steadfast refusal of Turkish authorities to recognize the
    ecumenical status of the Orthodox patriarch.

    Today we have an outstanding group of panelists who will speak to
    these concerns. And this information, by the way, will then be passed
    on to members of Congress, House and Senate, so that they can be
    better informed about what is really going on.

    In addition, the Helsinki Commission will hold a second briefing in
    the near future to highlight problems faced by Muslims and other
    faiths in Turkey.

    The justification for property seizures is complex, but the core
    issue is simple: The patriarch-owned properties have shrunk by almost
    80 percent, from 8,000 in 1936 to 1,700 at present; 1,100 of the
    remaining 1,700 are not legally recognized and are especially
    vulnerable to seizure.

    There is a pattern: Properties are threatened with expropriation when
    the population of a religious community drops below a certain level.
    The government then determines a property has fallen into disuse, as
    they call it, and assumes its management.

    Last September, Turkey did adopt regulations to improve the way the
    size of the religious community is gauged to give communities with
    legal status the ability to acquire new property.

    However, the legislation ignores the fact that these seizures are
    fundamentally illegal, while not allowing communities to reclaim
    hundreds of properties expropriated by the state.

    The most glaring property issues regarding the Orthodox Theological
    School of Halki, seized in 1971, when the government nationalized all
    institutions of higher education.

    The continued closure of the only educational institution in Turkey
    for Orthodox Christian leadership is untenable and unconscionable.

    This has had a deleterious effect on the ability of Turkey's Greek
    Orthodox citizens to train the next generation of clergy.

    The Greek Orthodox Church in other communities, like the Armenian
    Orthodox, Syrian Orthodox and Catholic churches, have been deprived
    of important cultural sites and places of worship.

    Reformers should terminate the ability of the government agencies to
    seize the property of a religious community, while also simplifying
    the process for groups to regain clear title to their lost holdings.

    Should there be no local community, the property should revert to the
    religious community and not to the state.

    Reportedly, the foreign ministry's reform monitoring committee is
    advocating for reforms that ensure the return of seized property or
    the payment of compensation. I certainly hope this happens.

    The issue is, indeed, black and white. Property must be returned and
    expropriations must end.

    Members of the Helsinki Commission have been constant and vocal
    advocates for the Greek Orthodox Church, as well as other religious
    groups experiencing problems in Turkey, be they Muslim, Christian or
    other.

    Current Turkish policies violate OSCE commitments and threaten the
    viability of the patriarch's presence in Istanbul.

    Turkey has a proud history of religious tolerance, but current
    government policies appear targeted to bring about the eventual
    exodus of the Greek Orthodox from Turkey entirely.

    I urge the government of Turkey to continue with its good reform
    program, but take immediate actions to support the Orthodox citizens
    and bring its laws and policies into conformity with the OSCE
    commitments.

    I'd like to now turn our program to Elizabeth Pryor, who is one of
    our experts on the Helsinki Commission, who will be introducing our
    distinguished panel. And then we will go into the briefing itself.

    Elizabeth?

    PRYOR: It is my pleasure to introduce our distinguished panelists
    today. After their presentations, we'll take questions.

    (CROSSTALK)

    PRYOR: After the presentations, we'll be taking questions from the
    floor. And you can also get a copy of the proceedings. Usually,
    they're available within 24 hours from our Web site, which is
    www.csce.gov.

    Our first panelist today will be His Eminence, Archbishop Demetrios,
    who was elected archbishop of America on August 19th, 1999, by the
    Holy and Sacred Synod of the Ecumenical Patriarch, convened by His
    All Holiness, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.

    He was enthroned as the spiritual leader of 1.5 million Greek
    Orthodox Christians in America at the Archdiosean Cathedral of the
    Holy Trinity in New York City on September 18th, 1999.

    Archbishop Demetrios, primate of the Greek Orthodox Church in America
    and Exarch of Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, is the sixth Archbishop of
    America since the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese was established in 1922.

    Our next panelist after this will be Rabbi Arthur Schneier. He's
    known internationally for both his leadership on behalf of religious
    freedom and human rights and his work for religious freedom and
    tolerance. He is founder and president of the Appeal of Conscience
    Foundation and spiritual leader of the Park East Synagogue, a
    historic landmark in New York City.

    Mr. Schneier is a Holocaust survivor who has devoted a lifetime to
    overcoming forces of hatred and intolerance, and has set an inspiring
    example of spiritual leadership by encouraging interfaith dialogue
    and intercultural understanding, and promoting the cause of religious
    freedom around the world.

    Cardinal Theodore E. McCarrick was installed as archbishop of
    Washington on January 3rd, 2001. He's chancellor of the Catholic
    University of America, president of the Board of Trustees of the
    Basilica of the National Shrine of the Immaculate Conception. A
    founding member of the Papal Foundation, he has served as its
    president since 1997.

    PRYOR: Cardinal McCarrick also is a member of the Board of Catholic
    Relief Services.

    For the Vatican, he serves on the Pontifical Council for Justice and
    Peace, the Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and
    Itinerant People, and the Pontifical Commission for Latin America.

    Dr. Anthony J. Limberakis is graduate of Duke University School of
    Medicine and is the president of Busselton (ph) Radiology Associates
    Ltd., a radiology practice in metropolitan Philadelphia.

    Dr. Limberakis was invested as Archon of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
    in 1987 and has served on its national council since 1989, and
    subsequently as its national secretary.

    He chaired the Archon Patriarchal Concert for Peace, featuring Nana
    Mouskouri during the recent visitation to America of His All
    Holiness, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.

    And finally, the Reverend Dr. Bob Edgar serves as general secretary
    of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the U.S., the
    leading U.S. organization for the movement for Christian unity.

    Under his leadership, the council is refocusing its energies on two
    major initiatives. One is a 10-year domestic mobilization to overcome
    poverty. The other is an exploration of an expanded ecumenical vision
    for the new millennium, a conversation that includes evangelical and
    Pentecostal churches, the Roman Catholic Church, and the council's
    member communities.

    I think we'll start with Archbishop Demetrios. And let me turn the
    floor over to you, sir.

    DEMETRIOS: Honorable representatives and U.S. Representatives and
    members of the Helsinki Commission, Representative Smith, Ms. Pryor,
    distinguished members of the panel, ladies and gentlemen:

    We thank you for giving us the opportunity to speak about the very
    difficult situation in which our venerable Ecumenical Patriarchate of
    Constantinople finds itself vis-a-vis the Turkish government.

    I'm speaking to you as the Archbishop of the Greek Orthodox Church in
    America, with a constituency between 1.5 million and 2 million
    people, a constituency which ecclesiastically belongs to the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate.

    As the archbishop of this church, I feel that what happens to the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate has a direct impact on us here, both as
    Orthodox Christians and as American citizens.

    And I'm speaking with an increased experience, because for the last
    year I have been a member of the Synod of the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate, participating there once a month for two days in the
    works of the patriarchate, therefore I have an immediate experience
    of what's going on.

    The foundation of the Ecumenical Patriarchate may be traced to the
    very apostolic times, to the 1st century A.D., when Christianity
    reached what is now Turkey.

    In the 4th century A.D., Emperor Constantine transferred to the
    capital of the Roman empire to the east to the so-called at that time
    known as Byzantium, and named the new city Constantinople.

    It was in the context -- in this context -- that the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate began to take its institutional form that we know today
    as the religious and ecclesiastical administrative center of the
    Orthodox Church worldwide.

    The Ecumenical Patriarchate and its surrounding areas served as the
    locations for the seven ecumenical councils of the undivided
    Christian church, which were convened over the course of the first
    millennium.

    The Ecumenical Patriarchate continued to exist even after the
    dissolution and the fall of the Byzantium empire in 1453. It existed
    and at times even thrived under the rule of the Ottoman Empire, and
    since the founding of the Turkish Republic in the 20th century.

    Today, there is great importance for the continued ministry of the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate in coordinating the affairs of other Orthodox
    Christian jurisdictions worldwide, in fostering dialogue with other
    Christian denominations, and in promoting peace, tolerance and
    reconciliation among the religions of the world.

    DEMETRIOS: Despite this realized importance of its ministry, the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate today and its constituency in Turkey continue
    to suffer from an unfair treatment at the hands of the Turkish state.

    A tragic instance of this treatment were the riots of 1955, carried
    out in Smyrna and Istanbul against the Greek Orthodox minority
    community.

    These sad phenomena, which were provoked by the Turkish government,
    unjustly reduced a flourishing community of over 100,000 Greek
    Orthodox citizens in the city of Istanbul alone to the present
    remnant of only 2,000 to 3,000 -- from 100,000 down to 2,000 to 3,000
    today.

    The effects of this reduction led to an expropriation against the
    Greek Orthodox community by the Turkish government (inaudible)
    continues to this day.

    Characteristic of this expropriation was the closure of theological
    school mentioned already by Mr. Smith, the closure of the Theological
    School of Halki on the island of Heybeli in 1971, on the pretext of
    its being a privately run university-level academic institution.

    In spite of numerous petitions and appeals to the Turkish government
    for its reopening, including personal appeals made by Presidents
    George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton -- and allow me to say that I was
    there when both presidents arrived and spoke on behalf of the Halki
    reopening -- in spite of this advocacy, the government of Turkey
    still refuses to allow this important school to reopen.

    The Theological School of Halki is the only institution of the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate for the training of its clergy. One cannot
    underestimate its importance for the essential survival of the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate. If you don't have a school, you don't have
    clergy. If you don't have clergy, you go down by an inexorable
    process.

    Another major problem facing the Ecumenical Patriarchate today is the
    continuous confiscation of church property by the Turkish government,
    which refuses to recognize titles to Greek Orthodox minority
    properties purchased or acquired by donation after 1936.

    Recently, the supreme court of Turkey ruled against the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate, allowing the government to confiscate a very large and
    historic orphanage belonging to the Greek Orthodox community on the
    island of Prinyaport (ph).

    Approximately 1,400 properties belonging to the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate have been confiscated, of which 152 were recently taken
    from the Baloukli hospital in Istanbul. This hospital of the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate serves the needs of the general Turkish
    citizenry, with quite advanced centers for drug and alcohol
    treatment.

    Today, the Baloukli hospital is threatened with bankruptcy by the
    recent imposition of an unbearable retroactive tax on the grounds
    that it is not considered a nonprofit organization.

    Yet another problem is the refusal of the Turkish government to
    recognize the legitimate ecumenical title of the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate. This title refers to the conciliatory role of the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate in its global ministry.

    It is a title that is historically established since the 6th century
    and internationally recognized by political and religious
    communities. Yet the Turkish government refuses to allow the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate to use this title in all contexts.

    There is not only this unhistoric prohibition of the title Ecumenical
    Patriarchate, but the government refuses to allow the patriarchate,
    as well to other religious minorities, to have a legal status as
    such.

    In closing, I would like to express my deep pain and serious concern
    at the very existence of this phenomena in Turkey today, especially
    at a time when the international community is particularly sensitive
    to the importance of religious freedom, human rights and the
    protection of the rights of religious minorities.

    These problems are all the more distressing when one considers that
    the Ecumenical Patriarchate has been a major and consistent proponent
    over the recent years in favor of Turkey's accession to the European
    Union.

    It is my hope that the commission will give urgent attention to these
    problems so that the Greek Orthodox community of Turkey and the
    patriarchate, together with all other minority communities in Turkey,
    such as the Jewish and Armenian communities, may be protected in its
    lawful right to contemplate a secure existence and a prosperous
    future.

    Thank you.

    At this point, I would like to ask for a short interference,
    intervention, by the distinguished lawyer, Mr. Emmanuel Demos, who
    has been heavily involved in the whole issue of the rights of the
    patriarchate over the last years.

    DEMOS: Thank you, Your Eminence.

    Distinguished members of the council, of the panel, I am the general
    counsel of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese. I have with me here today
    the legal basis of our case, is contained in a study, a 60- page
    study done by the Yale Law School, the Lowenstein Human Rights Clinic
    of the Yale Law School. And this will be available on the Internet,
    and you'll be able to share in it.

    And with me is Professor Jim Silk of the Yale Law School, who heads
    the Lowenstein Clinic, and one of the authors of this report, Maria
    Pulzetti, to whom I will cede part of my time.

    I just want to make a couple of comments.

    DEMOS: In addition to the complaints that His Eminence referred to,
    the most serious one at the moment is the fact that the Turkish
    government, contrary to the Treaty of Lausanne, which I'll refer to
    in a moment, insists that it has the right to approve or disapprove
    or veto the person who might be nominated to be the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate and insists that that person be a Turkish citizen.

    On top of that, they have been insisting that the members of the Holy
    Synod, which in effect in American corporate parlance is the
    executive committee of the patriarchate, which consists of 12
    archbishops or metropolitans, they have been insisting that they be
    Turkish residents and citizens.

    There is absolutely no basis in Turkish law for this. And the Treaty
    of Lausanne makes it absolutely clear that this type of interference
    is unwarranted. And the Treaty of Lausanne, within its own terms,
    states that the treaty is part of the fundamental law of Turkey and
    may not be changed by any other legislative or administrative action.

    The patriarch very bravely last year sent a letter to the Turkish
    government and informed them that this was his position, and as a
    result he named six new metropolitans and archbishops to the
    Ecumenical Synod, of which His Eminence was one. And to date the
    Turkish government has not been heard from. I mean, theoretically,
    they could have arrested the six and run them out of the country. But
    they have quietly acquiesced to that.

    So this is one of the major things that we have concern with, because
    opening the School of Halki, it would be 10, 12 years before you can
    raise, educate and give experience to students so they could rise
    into leadership positions. The Ecumenical Patriarchate, by its own
    terms, is ecumenical and is the leader of archdioceses and dioceses
    metropolises throughout the whole world, and there's absolutely no
    legal reason why this should be limited to Turkish citizens.

    I also want to make the point that this is not a Greek versus Turkish
    issue. That's for the Greek government to worry about. This is a
    human rights issue. And it's a human rights issue not limited to the
    Greek ethnic group. The Treaty of Lausanne talks about non-Muslim
    minorities. Which means it could be Jewish, it could be Catholic, it
    could be Greek Orthodox.

    As a matter of fact, the Wall Street Journal several months ago, in a
    front page story, told the story of a Presbyterian minister, the
    Reverend Balima (ph), who somehow turned up in Turkey, at first to
    minister to expats who were living and had retired to certain parts
    of southern Turkey. And he raised some money to buy a church. The
    Turkish government has refused to let him buy this church.

    In the meantime, there are Turkish people, originally Muslims, who
    apparently want to join this church. And it would seem to me, if
    you're a non-Muslim and you're a citizen of Turkey, you're protected
    by the Treaty of Lausanne as well.

    The prime minister of the Netherlands, on a trip to Turkey, bitterly
    complained to the Turkish prime minister and pointed out that there
    are over 300 mosques in the Netherlands alone, not to mention how
    many there may be throughout all of Europe. And he just could not
    understand why the Turkish government couldn't allow this.

    As His Eminence said, we wholeheartedly support the accession of
    Turkey into the European Union, because I think this will have a
    beneficial effect on all of Europe.

    But the bottom line, if you want to be part of Europe, act like a
    European.

    I will now turn it over -- because in addition to the Treaty of
    Lausanne, there are at least four or five European and other
    international treaties to which Turkey is a party, which make it
    unequivocally clear that ever action that the Turkish government has
    taken is illegal.

    And they pay great lip service that they do everything legally, but
    in effect it's a very, very cynical use of the law, because they find
    every little thing to pervert the law.

    They passed legislation in response to the European Union three years
    ago in order to make it easier for people -- for religious groups to
    register their properties, and yet they turn around and they
    administer the law where they make it even more difficult and put
    time periods and this and that.

    So, in effect, they've turned the thing on its head and make it more
    difficult for the desired objective of the European Union to be
    accomplished.

    Maria, do you want to...

    PULZETTI: Hello. My name is Maria Pulzetti, and I am a student at the
    Yale Law School and a student in the Lowenstein International Human
    Rights Clinic at the law school.

    I'd like to thank the commission and Archbishop Demetrios for
    allowing us to share our report with you today.

    I just want to give a very brief overview of the report. I think
    anyone who is interested in a more detailed analysis can pick up a
    copy outside.

    The report is titled "Turkey's Compliance with its Obligations to the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Orthodox Christian Minority." And we
    researched this report at the request of the archdiocese, and we
    found that there's a very clear international consensus that Turkey
    does not uphold its obligations with regard to the patriarchate and
    the Orthodox minority.

    As a party to several international human rights treaties, a member
    state of the Council of Europe and a participating state in the
    Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, Turkey has taken
    on binding obligations to protect the rights of religious minorities
    and to prevent discrimination on the basis of national origin,
    religion or ethnicity, all of which apply to the Greek Orthodox
    minority.

    Turkey violates these obligations with its law and practice
    restricting the activities of the patriarchate. The European Union,
    United Nations bodies and the United States have repeatedly
    criticized Turkey's discriminatory treatment of religious minorities,
    and in particular their restriction upon the activities of the
    patriarchate.

    For example, the U.S. State Department issues annual -- I'm sure
    you're all familiar with these reports -- country reports on human
    rights practices. And for each year over the past several years, and
    indeed in the report that was issued this year, on February 28th of
    2005, the State Department criticizes such issues as the legal status
    of the Ecumenical Patriarchate, the treatment of the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate's foundations, the seizure of property, the closure of
    the Halki Seminary, and the leadership restrictions upon the Synod.

    The European Union, which issues frequent reports on Turkey's
    compliance with the accession criteria, has also criticized Turkey's
    restriction on the legal personality of the Ecumenical Patriarchate,
    on the seizure of property, on the treatment of non-Muslim religious
    minority foundations, on the restrictions on the training of Orthodox
    clergy, and on reservations Turkey has made to international
    treaties, especially with regard to religious education.

    I wanted to tell you a little bit more about sort of the sources of
    international law that we looked to in making our findings.

    In recent years, Turkey ratified the two major U.N. human rights
    treaties that together with the Universal Declaration make up what we
    call the International Bill of Human Rights. These are the
    International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, the ICCPR; and
    the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,
    which has a very long acronym.

    And the ICCPR in Article 18 protects freedom of thought, conscience
    and religion. And the U.N. Human Rights Committee, which interprets
    the ICCPR, has interpreted Article 18 to protect the building of
    places of worship, the freedom to choose religious leaders, and the
    freedom to establish seminaries or religious schools.

    Similarly, the International Covenant on Economic, Social and
    Cultural Rights protects the right to education and obligates states
    not to interfere with the right of individuals and bodies to
    establish and direct educational institutions.

    Another major U.N. human rights treaty, which is actually the most
    widely ratified human rights treaty in existence today, is the
    Convention on the Rights of the Child. Turkey has ratified this
    convention. And this convention protects children's rights to
    manifest and practice religious beliefs and the right to religious
    education.

    Now, in ratifying these three treaties, Turkey did enter reservations
    to its ratification, especially with regard to religious minorities.
    And although these ratifications have some arguable force in
    international law, it is notable that the European Union has
    criticized sharply Turkey's ratifications to those central provisions
    of those treaties.

    You all here are quite familiar also with the OSCE and Turkey's
    obligations with regard to the OSCE, so I won't go on about that for
    too long. But the OSCE does include obligations to protect the rights
    of national minorities, and those are interpreted to protect national
    minorities' rights to establish and maintain their own educational,
    cultural and religious institutions, organizations and associations.

    And it's worth noting that the OSCE High Commissioner on National
    Minorities has visited Turkey to investigate Turkey's protection of
    religious minorities.

    Finally, I would like to briefly introduce the European Convention on
    Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms.

    PULZETTI: As a member state of the Council of Europe, Turkey is
    obliged to uphold the provisions of the European Convention. There
    are two relevant provisions of the European Convention to this issue.
    The first is Article 9, which requires Turkey to protect freedom of
    religion, including freedom to manifest religion and worship,
    teaching, practice and observance.

    As interpreted by the European Court of Human Rights, Article 9
    applies to religious groups and organizations, as well as to
    individuals.

    Article 1 of Protocol 1 to the convention protects the right to
    peaceful enjoyment of one's possessions. And this also applies to
    both institutions and individuals.

    The court's jurisprudence on Article 1 of Protocol 1 strongly
    protects individuals' and religious institutions' rights to own and
    enjoy their property.

    We interpret it that Turkey's seizure and restriction on the use of
    the Ecumenical Patriarchate's real property may violate Article 1 of
    Protocol 1 of the European Convention.

    And the last note I would like to make is that in the European Union
    accession process, which has been very much in the news lately with
    regard to Turkey's human rights compliance, the European Commission
    has repeatedly criticized Turkey's treatment of religious minorities.

    In their accession report of 2004, the commission wrote, "Although
    freedom of religious belief is guaranteed in the constitution and
    freedom to worship is largely unhampered, non-Muslim religious
    communities continue to encounter obstacles. They lack legal
    personality, face restrictive property rights and interference in the
    management of their foundations, and are not allowed to train
    clergy."

    In conclusion, all religious minorities in Turkey have
    internationally protected rights to practice their religion, train
    clergy, appoint religious leaders, own and use property, operate
    religious schools, and associate in religiously affiliated
    foundations.

    The Turkish government also has an obligation to protect the security
    of non-Muslim minorities and religious institutions.

    PRYOR: Thank you very much.

    And thank you, Archbishop.

    I'd like to give the floor now to Rabbi Schneier.

    You have the floor, sir.

    SCHNEIER: Chairman Smith and members of the Helsinki Commission, Your
    Eminence and members of the panel:

    It's my privilege to appear before this commission to give you some
    insights to the Appeal of Conscience Foundation's encounters with the
    government of Turkey since 1991.

    I also want to commend the United States Helsinki Commission for the
    important work it has accomplished since its inception in 1976 on
    behalf of human rights and religious and ethnic minorities.

    Appeal of Conscience Foundation since 1965 has worked on behalf of
    religious freedom and human rights and the protection of religious
    sites. In fact, in the year 2000 we took the initiative to urge the
    United Nations to adopt a resolution for the protection of religious
    sites worldwide.

    I'm happy to tell you that U.N. Resolution A55L81, which was
    unanimously adopted by the General Assembly, called for the
    protection of all religious sites worldwide, and Turkey was one of
    the signatories of that U.N. resolution, as I said, which was
    unanimously adopted.

    I have a particular interest in the protection of religious sites
    because as a child in Vienna -- and I'm a Holocaust survivor -- I saw
    my synagogue burning on Kristallnacht in 1938. And what started with
    the burning of books, and continued with the destruction and burning
    of synagogues, eventually ended up with the burning of human beings.

    So this issue of protection of religious sites and human rights and
    religious freedom is a very personal issue, which I feel very deeply
    about. It was only 60 years ago that we put an end to the Nazi
    tyranny that claimed millions and millions of innocent human lives.

    And as we have heard, so many treaties have been enacted, both at the
    U.N. and the European Community. The question is really not just the
    signing, but the implementation and the enforcement.

    And so let me recall my trip to Ankara and Istanbul in 1991, with
    Cardinal McCarrick, trustee of the Appeal of Conscience Foundation,
    then archbishop of Newark. We went to Ankara and Istanbul. Remember,
    this was the collapse of the Soviet Union. You had many, many Muslim
    states in Central Asia. And the question: Which way are they going to
    turn? And I actually made a statement on return from that trip that
    Turkey could be a role model instead of Iran being a role model for
    these Central Asian Muslim communities.

    We met at the time with His All Holiness, Patriarch Bartholomew I,
    and proposed a cosponsorship of an international conference called
    the Peace and Tolerance Conference. I have a witness here. Father
    Alex (ph) was present. And His All Holiness enthusiastically
    supported the idea.

    We met with then Prime Minister Demirel and leaders of the Turkish
    government. And after overcoming several obstacles, it was agreed
    that this conference should take place, and it did take place at the
    Bosphorus Swissotel in Istanbul in 1994.

    We brought together religious leaders from Central Asia and the
    strife-torn Balkans. Remember, this was 1994. Actually, I still
    remember the market murder in Sarajevo at the time, when the
    conference took place. And 120 religious leaders gathered in Istanbul
    under the joint auspices of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the
    Appeal of Conscience Foundation, with the support of Pope John Paul
    II, who sent Cardinal Netchkarai (ph) to this conference to represent
    him.

    Anyhow, it was a very widely supported Conference of Peace and
    Tolerance. As a result of that conference, the conclusion was -- and
    it's so prophetic in a way what we concluded then -- a crime
    perpetrated in the name of religion is the greatest crime against
    religion.

    Now, it sounds very relevant today, doesn't it? But we spoke about
    that in connection with the conflict in the former Yugoslavia, the
    ethnic conflict, that luckily did not turn into a major religious
    war.

    So Cardinal McCarrick and I, speaking to the leaders of Turkey in
    preparation for the conference, immediately hit up to a very
    sensitive issue, which I believe is still the core of the difficulty
    today. And that is, we referred to the Ecumenical Patriarch as the
    Ecumenical Patriarch.

    In talking to the government leaders, they kept on saying, "No,
    Rumpatrichanayza (ph)."

    Now, there's really a question of the definition of the legal status
    of the Ecumenical Patriarch, which is still a bone of contention. And
    I think that this issue is still haunting us. In fact, the Lausanne
    Treaty was invoked by you. There's a clear definition of establishing
    the role of the patriarch.

    Anyhow, despite the initial obstacles, the Peace and Tolerance
    Conference brought credit to Turkey as a venue for inter-religious
    cooperation in pursuit of peace and tolerance.

    It was widely reported. It was a very, very successful conference.
    And a byproduct of the conference was also the improvement of
    relations between the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Turkish
    authorities at that time.

    But, again, the ecumenical status, the legal status of the
    patriarchate still needs to be recognized by Turkey today. That's
    really the critical point.

    The Turkish government -- and this is a very firm statement -- the
    Turkish government should take advantage of the worldwide respect
    that the Ecumenical Patriarch enjoys from the international
    community. And here I really speak as a partner with His All
    Holiness. We've been together in action, not only in Istanbul, in
    Brussels, the European Community, and many, many other conference.

    I would say today he is the -- one of the outstanding leaders in
    terms of dialogue, inter-religious cooperation, preaching tolerance
    -- all the essential and critical requirements today for all of us to
    coexist on this earth.

    And the Turkish government should really take advantage of his
    standing in the international community, as well, and I emphasize,
    from his constructive role to put greater harmony in Turkish society.
    He has always emphasized that, the harmony of Turkish society.

    Another issue which the Appeal of Conscience Foundation has
    repeatedly called to the attention of the Turkish government -- and
    I've had personally many discussions with cabinet ministers -- is the
    closing of the seminary in Halki.

    A theological school is really a lifeline. And if you don't have that
    lifeline, you know, it's like you cannot breathe unless you have air.
    And the reopening is essential for the continued spiritual well being
    and continuity of the small Greek Orthodox community in Turkey.

    So I think this is an issue, Your Eminence, you have in detail
    outlined. You've given us an overview, the historical overview, but
    also specifically you made a point of this issue.

    Then, finally, I traveled to Turkey after the 2003 terrorist bombing
    of the Istanbul synagogue. And I must tell you, what came clearly
    through to me, that international terrorism makes no distinction
    between Christian, Jew and Muslim. We are all equal. And basically
    what we're facing, either we stand together and reject those who do
    not believe in coexistence or we succumb to them.

    We're not going to succumb to them because we want to live -- and
    this is a personal philosophy of mine -- to live and let live. And
    basically that's the message that I would urge the Helsinki
    Commission to convey to the Turkish government: Live and let live.
    And that means the minorities, religious and ethnic minorities.

    And the test of democracy, the barometer of democracy, is how the
    majority treats the minority. How the majority treats the minority.

    So it was devastating to see the destruction that was brought by
    these suicide bombers who had no respect for their own life, and
    certainly no respect for the life of others.

    I visited the maimed and the sick, more Muslims than Jews, in the
    hospitals, in the American hospital in Istanbul. His Holiness
    Bartholomew and I were at the funeral of many of the victims who
    perished.

    And, again, the Turkish government is to be commended for aiding the
    restoration of the destroyed buildings and business establishments.
    But it is surprising, according to reports that we received, that the
    patriarchate has been unable to receive permission to repair the
    damage it suffered to one of its churches from the bombing. I think
    these reports are correct.

    SCHNEIER: And finally, we stood shoulder to shoulder with the Turkish
    people, if you recall that tragedy of the earthquake. And it was my
    privilege -- and this was the height of summer, the end of August,
    when there's no one around in Washington -- of bringing together the
    religious leaders of this great American community to Washington, to
    the State Department, with Secretary of State Albright, including the
    acting head of the Greek Orthodox Church and the Armenian church.

    We all stood together during that tragedy trying to seek and actually
    give, to energize the American public opinion for support. And
    American Christians, Muslims and Jews, we stood together to help our
    brothers and sisters in Turkey to cope with their terrible tragedy.
    And the call for action and prayer emanated from the meeting with
    Secretary Albright.

    In the same spirit -- and with this I close -- we call upon the
    government of Turkey to support the principle of equitable treatment
    of all minorities.

    Yes, we, too, support Turkey's entry into the European Union. And
    this is why I think it's important that Turkey pay particular
    attention to the needs of its religious and ethnic minorities. And I
    believe that, again I want to repeat, I think Turkey should take a
    leadership role in showing the international community that, in
    addition to being signatory to all the various charters and
    conventions, there's a firm commitment to the principle of live and
    let live.

    Thank you so much.

    PRYOR: Thank you very much.

    My understanding is that Cardinal McCarrick is running a little bit
    late, but will be joining us later. So at this moment I'd like to
    turn the floor over to Dr. Limberakis.

    You have the floor.

    LIMBERAKIS: Your Eminence, our beloved Archbishop, Congressman Smith,
    Ms. Pryor, members of the Helsinki Commission, and distinguished
    panelists with me:

    I thank the Helsinki Commission for the opportunity to bring to its
    attention the deleterious effects and efforts of the government of
    Turkey to undermine the existence of the Ecumenical Patriarchate of
    Constantinople, the spiritual center of the world's 300 million
    Orthodox Christians located in Istanbul, Turkey.

    I am the national commander of the order of St. Andrew, Archons of
    the Ecumenical Patriarchate, which is under the direct jurisdiction
    of the Ecumenical Patriarch and its exarch in the United States,
    Archbishop Demetrios of America.

    Ladies and gentlemen, the Ecumenical Patriarchate is the victim of
    religious persecution by the government of Turkey. This persecution
    if systemic, involving multiple levels of government, including local
    and national, judicial and legislative. It is insidious, occurring
    over many decades, and devastating, designed to ultimately obliterate
    the very existence of the Ecumenical Patriarchate.

    The Order of St. Andrew is an organization comprised of leading
    Orthodox Christians in the United States whose mission is to support
    and defend the Ecumenical Patriarchate. Our ranks include members of
    Congress, such as Senator Paul Sarbanes and Congressman Michael
    Bilirakis; former member of White House administrations, including
    George Tenet and Tom Korologos (ph); businessmen, such as Alex
    Spanos, the owner of the San Diego Chargers; professionals and
    academicians, such as Dr. John Brademas (ph), former president of New
    York University, and Dr. Constantine Papavakis (ph), president of
    Drexel University; members of the federal bench; and preeminent
    stewards of the Orthodox faith throughout the United States.

    I wanted to bring to your attention various violations of religious
    human rights that the Archons have personally witnessed during our
    many pilgrimages to the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Istanbul, and our
    recent visits with government leaders in Ankara.

    LIMBERAKIS: The United States Department of State, with the
    assistance of Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman, and in
    cooperation with past and present U.S. ambassadors to Turkey,
    including Ambassadors Mark Parris, Robert Pearson and currently Eric
    Edelman, has been instrumental in fortifying our position to seek
    religious freedom in Turkey.

    Ambassador Edelman is especially committed to seeking an improvement
    in their dismal human rights record. He accompanied the Archon
    leadership in February and December 2004 to meet with cabinet
    ministers of the ruling AKP party in Ankara, including Deputy Prime
    Minister and Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul, Minister of Education
    Huseyin Celik, Minister of State Responsible for Religious Affairs
    Mehmet Aydin, and Minister of Interior Abdulkadir Aksu.

    The government of Turkey imposes severe restrictions on the ownership
    of property by the Ecumenical Patriarchate and of the Greek Orthodox
    community, as His Eminence commented earlier. It has confiscated
    thousands of properties of the Greek Orthodox community.

    And specifically, since 1936, when there were some 7,000 properties
    registered as duly owned by Greek Orthodox community members, the
    members have been gradually, systematically and dramatically
    decreasing, to approximately 2,000 properties in 1999 and now to less
    than 500 in 2005.

    Stated another way, the Ecumenical Patriarchate and its institutions
    do not have the right to buy, sell, maintain and inherit properties.

    A calamitous example of this process is taking place at this very
    moment on the island of Buyukada off the coast of Istanbul. And I
    draw your attention to a picture of this patriarchal orphanage, and
    in front of that orphanage are American citizens who took the time to
    leave their families and businesses and comforts of the United States
    and travel to the Ecumenical Patriarchate and witness -- these are
    Archons and clergymen -- and witness this religious persecution.

    Regarding this patriarchal orphanage, on October 21, 2004, the
    Turkish supreme court handed down a decision in favor of the
    government and against the Ecumenical Patriarchate to confiscate this
    orphanage, along with its vast properties, owned by the church since
    1902, predating the Turkish Republic.

    This facility once cared for 200 orphans, but due to the pogroms of
    1955 and 1964, when most Greek inhabitants of Istanbul were forced to
    emigrate, the orphanage fell into disuse and disrepair.

    You should keep in mind, ladies and gentlemen, that for centuries
    Greek Orthodox citizens comprised a steady 25 to 30 percent of the
    population in Istanbul. They not constitute less than 2,000 in a city
    of 12 million.

    At the time of the most recent Archon visit in December, we inspected
    the orphanage property and found it, as you can see in the picture,
    to be in a state of complete ruin. Repeatedly attempts to maintain
    the property were unsuccessful for decades because the authorities
    refused to grant building permits.

    Now the government of Turkey, with the approval of the supreme court,
    has finalized plans to confiscate the property.

    Another example of failing to grant building permits, which Rabbi
    Schneier -- and I'll be happy to give you an update on this, Rabbi --
    is regarding the November 2003 terrorist bombings in Istanbul. And by
    the way, the Archon delegation visited Rabbi Heleva (ph), the grand
    rabbi, chief rabbi of Turkey, offering our condolences for that
    terroristic attack, which destroyed the British consulate, destroyed
    and severely damaged two synagogues, but also severely damaged the
    Church of the Virgin Mary, a Greek Orthodox church.

    And on December 17th, it was just a couple of months ago, on that
    fateful day, regarding the European Union, on December 17th the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate did receive finally the permission to rebuild
    the church that was destroyed.

    But this waiting and not answering and ignoring requests for
    assistance in rebuilding is not just unjust and unfair, but it really
    is emblematic of the modus operandi of the Turkish government as it
    deals with the Greek Orthodox minority.

    In addition, during our recent inspection of Baloukli hospital and
    home for the aged, which is a 250-year-old patriarchal-affiliated
    institution located in Istanbul, which serves 30,000 to 40,000
    Turkish citizens each year -- and as a physician I could appreciate
    that magnitude of a hospital -- our own legal counselor, Chris
    Tutakis (ph), received a certified list, certified by Demitri
    Koriyani (ph), the board of trustees member -- chairman -- of 144
    confiscated properties of this charitable institution.

    And it is this same charitable institution that has now been informed
    it is subject to a 42 percent retroactive tax to 1999.

    Finally, another example of religious persecution, as has been
    mentioned by the panelists, is the closure of Halki School of
    Theology, resulting in the inability of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
    to train its clergy locally.

    Included among the graduates of the Halki seminary are His All
    Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and Archbishop Biyakovos
    (ph), the former Archbishop of North and South America.

    The government has refused to allow the reopening of the seminary
    despite assurances to President George W. Bush in January 2004 by
    Prime Minister Erdogan, and to President Bill Clinton in November
    1999 by President Suleyman Demirel.

    In fact, we are now even more pessimistic and discouraged that Turkey
    does not have the political will to reopen Halki, nor relax the
    religious persecution that pervaded the government after our most
    recent meeting with Foreign Minister Gul.

    In his inaugural address President George W. Bush stated, quote, "We
    will encourage reform in our governments by making clear that success
    in our relations will require the decent treatment of their own
    people." And he continues, "In the long run, there is no justice
    without freedom, and there can be no human rights without human
    liberty," unquote.

    My fellow Americans of the Helsinki Commission, Turkey is denying
    basic religious human rights to its own citizens of the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate and Greek Orthodox community. These Turkish citizens do
    not have the liberty to practice their faith without fear of attack,
    to own property, to train their clergy, or to freely elect their
    church leaders.

    It is the expectation of the Orthodox citizens of the United States,
    whose spiritual leadership is located in Istanbul, that Turkey must
    comply with the various human rights documents to which they are
    signatories.

    And if they wish to accede to the European Union, which the order
    supports, they will need to correct the systemic, insidious and
    devastating policies of religious persecution.

    In closing, I respectfully wish to submit a number of exhibits as a
    component of this presentation and thank the commission for your kind
    invitation to present this.

    PRYOR: Thank you very much.

    I now give the floor to Reverend Dr. Bob Edgar.

    You have the floor.

    EDGAR: Thank you.

    I'm Bob Edgar. I'm general secretary of the National Council of
    Churches. I want to thank the Helsinki Commission for the opportunity
    to speak today. And I'm grateful for the fact that when the bells are
    ringing I don't have to get up and run for a vote.

    My office for many years was on the floor above us, and my committee
    assignment was two floors below this particular room. I was on the
    Public Works and Transportation Committee, and also served with
    Congressman Smith on the Veterans Affairs Committee. And it's fun to
    be back in the building.

    Your Eminence, Archbishop Demetrios, it is very good to see you and
    to remember our time together, not only in New York, but also in Cuba
    last year as we dedicated the Orthodox church in old Havana.

    I want to speak to all of you just briefly as general secretary. And
    we welcome Cardinal McCarrick, who has joined us at this point. I see
    someone has twisted his arm to be here.

    (LAUGHTER)

    Many people think of the National Council of Churches as that really,
    really liberal organization that you read about in the newspapers.
    And I think it's important for us at the beginning of this period,
    and especially in this context, to recognize the texture of the
    National Council of Churches.

    We represent 36 different church traditions, from the historic black
    church traditions of C.M.E. and A.M.E., the Living Peace Church
    traditions of Quakers and Brethren, all the mainline churches, the
    Lutherans and the Presbyterians and the United Methodists.

    We also represent 13 Orthodox traditions, both Eastern and Oriental.
    And we have been focused on a cross-section of theological and
    religious perspectives for the last 55 years.

    And I might say, just for Cardinal McCarrick's benefit, the
    eighth-largest funder of the National Council of Churches in the
    United States is the Roman Catholic Church. While they are not
    members of the council, they serve on our commissions dealing with
    communications and justice and advocacy, and we work collaboratively
    on issues of justice for the poor, and we work collaboratively on
    issues relating to the environment.

    It's also important to recognize that the Ecumenical Patriarch of the
    Orthodox Church is a person that we love throughout the Christian
    community. We call him the green patriarch, because he has been a
    leader in helping the world understand the importance of the
    environment and care for Planet Earth.

    I speak today in defense of the rights of the Ecumenical Patriarch of
    the Orthodox Church, which is situated in modern-day Istanbul,
    Turkey.

    EDGAR: I do so on behalf of the Greek Orthodox brothers and sisters
    who look to the Ecumenical Patriarchate as the cradle of their
    Christian faith and who look to the Ecumenical Patriarch as their
    spiritual leader.

    The official title of the Ecumenical Patriarch says a lot about why
    we are here today. His title is Archbishop of Constantinople, New
    Rome, and Ecumenical Patriarch. History teaches us that when the
    center of the civilized world moved from Rome to Constantinople in
    the 4th century, the center of worldwide Christian Church moved with
    it to what was known as the New Rome. From this new setting,
    Christianity flourished and moved across what was then the known
    world.

    While the subsequent centuries saw the unfortunate division of
    Christianity into Roman Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox
    communities, each to experience the good and the bad of history, it
    nevertheless remains a fact that the ancient See of Constantinople
    retains its place of ecclesial prominence among Orthodox churches and
    its place of honor throughout the entire Christian world -- not,
    incidentally, something that goes unrecognized by Turkey today.

    In reality, the Ecumenical Patriarch is the symbolic leader of the
    world's 250 million Orthodox Christians, not just Greek Orthodox, and
    he has direct ecclesial jurisdiction over millions of Greek Orthodox
    Christians throughout the world, including here in the United States,
    where the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America is a member of the
    National Council of Churches USA.

    The Greek Orthodox Church in Turkey, centered in the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate, has suffered many indignities by virtue of its
    existence as the heart of the Greek Orthodox minority in that
    country. Yet, there are mechanisms in place that dictate that this
    must not be so.

    According to the 1923 Treaty of Lausanne, which was mentioned
    earlier, which ended World War I, the Greek Orthodox, Armenian
    Orthodox and Jewish communities are recognized minorities in Turkey,
    with their rights guaranteed by the Turkish government.

    So central is this treaty to modern Turkey that this treaty takes
    precedence over the Turkish constitution. While the Turkish
    constitution itself makes no reference to the recognition of these
    three specific minorities, it does state that religious freedom is a
    right to be enjoyed by all Turkish citizens.

    Significantly, as recently as 1999, Turkish government officials
    recognized the minorities mentioned in this treaty.

    EDGAR: Given this legal framework, one would think that the Greek
    Orthodox community, as well as the Armenian Orthodox and Jewish
    community has enjoyed a harmonious existence within Turkish society.
    As we all know, the converse is true.

    The issue before us today is the systematic expropriation of property
    owned by individuals and institutions, including the Ecumenical
    Patriarch, in the Greek Orthodox community in Turkey.

    An arbitrary and capricious property rights regime has allowed the
    confiscation of private properties, schools and churches. Currently,
    there are attempts to confiscate an orphanage and an old age home and
    other properties.

    One result of these actions is the disenfranchisement of the Greek
    Orthodox minority. Another result is the diminishment of their
    presence due to immigration.

    If these violations are allowed to continue, it will not be long
    before the Greek Orthodox faithful in Istanbul, which number 110,000
    in 1923 and numbers only several thousand today, will disappear.
    Istanbul riots that were subsequently determined to be provoked by
    the Turkish government at the time.

    I would simply like to close by saying that we in the National
    Council of Churches stand side by side with not only the Greek
    Orthodox Church, but all the Orthodox Christian family in suggesting
    strongly that if the Turkish government wants to be part of the
    European Union it must recognize the rights and privileges of the
    minority faith communities inside Turkey.

    The Greek Orthodox Church in Turkey is a minority community whose
    history is rich, who ecclesial tradition is vibrant, and whose people
    are faithful.

    Sadly, it is also a church whose future is threatened.

    We urge the Turkish government to change its policies, think more
    clearly about how it relates to both the church and the church's
    property, and begin moving into the future in relationship with this
    very important religious tradition that is a minority in the
    community of Turkey.

    Thank you very much.

    PRYOR: Thank you so much.

    I'd like to welcome Cardinal McCarrick, who's now joined us. We look
    forward to hearing your comments, sir.

    MCCARRICK: Thank you very much.

    My name is Theodore McCarrick. I'm the Catholic archbishop of
    Washington.

    My interest in the difficulties which the Greek Orthodox Church faces
    in Turkey goes back a long time. I'm delighted to have an opportunity
    to mention my concerns at this time to the distinguished members of
    the Helsinki Commission and to all of you who are gathered here.

    A slight digression would be that years ago I was privileged to serve
    as a public member of the Helsinki Commission and attend meetings
    both in the Balkans and in the former Soviet Union. So I know the
    good work that the commission has accomplished. I'm delighted that
    you continue to consider the difficulties of freedom of religion as
    it is now faced by the Greek Orthodox Church.

    This morning I speak not on behalf of the Catholic Church, nor on
    behalf of the Conference of Bishops. I speak solely and purely in my
    own name, as a friend of the Orthodox Church and as one who has had
    the opportunity, both because of my membership in the Helsinki
    Commission and also my privilege of serving as one of the original
    members of our own federal commission on international freedom of
    religion.

    it was in both these capacities that I became aware of the
    difficulties that the Greek Orthodox Church in Turkey is facing,
    where we have always had the hope of bringing these problems clearly
    into the light of day, so that our national might play a role in
    bringing them to a happy (ph) resolution.

    My own interest in this question came about initially when I was
    privileged to be a member of the delegation of the Appeal of
    Conscience Foundation, under the leadership of my distinguished
    colleague and dear friend, Rabbi Arthur Schneier, some years ago.

    Through the kindness of His All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew, we
    were able to visit the Island of Halki personally, and there to see
    the seminary which in past times had played so important a part in
    the life of this important religious community.

    Subsequent to that visit, I spoke to a number of agencies in our own
    government, asking that this concern be raised with the government of
    Turkey. I believe that in the administration of President Clinton
    this was done in a strong manner, perhaps for the first time. I do
    understand that it has recently been repeated because of the
    continuing interest and concern of President Bush.

    The manner in which the Turkish government, since the days of the
    republic, has treated the Greek Orthodox Church is an indication of a
    lack of understanding of the importance of this institution.
    Historically, as has been pointed out so well by Dr. Edgar, and I'm
    sure by others, the Greek Orthodox Church has been the guardian of
    Eastern Christianity over so many centuries.

    The head of the church, the Ecumenical Patriarch, has been recognized
    as a successor of the Apostle Andrew, who was first called among all
    of the apostles of the Lord. His role as the spiritual leader of the
    millions of people throughout the world who the faithful of the
    Orthodox community makes him one of the most important religious
    leaders on the globe.

    Unfortunately, to some in the Turkish government, he's regarded only
    as the pastor of a small group of several thousand Greek Christians
    living in Istanbul.

    It is perhaps here which is the basis of the difficulties with the
    church teachers. It is in a lack of true understanding of the
    importance of the patriarch and the importance of the church.

    Turkey, one would hope, would be so proud to have among its citizens
    and among its religious leaders one whose influence is felt not only
    far beyond its borders, but, indeed, throughout the world.

    The importance of His All Holiness Patriarch Bartholomew, the
    president leaders of the church, is often underlined in the deep
    respect and esteem in which he is held by the other major religious
    leaders of the world.

    One instance of this would be the manner in which the Holy Father,
    Pope John Paul, received the Ecumenical Patriarch in the Vatican and
    gives him every honor beyond that of any cardinal that I know and any
    other ecclesiastical figure. He regards the patriarch as a dear
    brother and as a true successor of the apostles in every sense of the
    word.

    It is the Holy Father's constant reaching out to the Ecumenical
    Patriarch and to the Greek Orthodox Church that prompts so many of us
    to continue our plea for that church to receive, especially in its
    central headquarters of the Fenah (ph) in Istanbul, a respect and a
    dignity that its place among the religions of the world demands for
    it.

    MCCARRICK: I know that I would speak for so many Christians
    throughout our own country when I would urge our government to be
    sensitive to the plight of the Greek Orthodox Church in Turkey and to
    do everything that is possible to make sure that these very
    reasonable and understandable requests which you've heard about
    already today are taken into consideration by the Turkish government
    and are granted for the good of the church, and, indeed, it would
    seem to me, also for the good of the Turkish nation -- and this in a
    special way as Turkey prepares to make its formal bid into the
    European Community.

    Prominent, as I began to mention before, prominent among all these
    requests is the reopening of the theological school on the island of
    Halki. This theological school was in a sense the West Point of the
    Orthodox seminary. Here, many of the leading metropolitans and the
    great theologians of the Orthodox world were trained.

    As you understand, since the patriarch must be a Turkish citizen, and
    since Turkish citizens would ordinarily be trained for the priesthood
    in a seminary such as Halki, the closing of the seminary makes it
    almost impossible for Turkey's citizens to be prepared to accept the
    highest responsibilities in the church today, thus creating an
    enormous problem for the future of the patriarchy and of the church
    itself.

    There are, of course, other difficulties which the law on foundations
    causes for the non-Muslim religious communities of Turkey today. The
    regulations which are in place for these religious institutions often
    base their relations on police ordinances, often oblige corporation
    taxes to be paid by religious institutions, contrary to what is the
    custom throughout the Western world, often freezes revenues from
    property transactions of non-Muslim religious institutions.

    For years now, the Greek Orthodox Church has tried very gently, and
    yet very firmly and very clearly to negotiate these difficult
    questions with the Turkish government and has not been successful.

    I'm honored today to take part in this session with my dear brother,
    His Beatitude Archbishop Demetrios, and Dr. Bob Edgar, and of course
    Rabbi Schneier, and those others who have gathered here because of
    this important request and this important cause that joins us all.

    MCCARRICK: This is a cause which is worth struggling for. It is a
    good worth striving for. And it is a road on which the United States
    should be walking because of so many consequences that can come for
    the good of the world if the Greek Orthodox community in Turkey has a
    chance to exercise its religious freedom and to grow in grace and
    holiness under the protection of the law and the respect of its
    fellow citizens in the Turkish nation.

    This is what I am here to ask for. This is what we all hope for
    gathering this morning.

    Thank you for letting me make this presentation.

    PRYOR: Thank you very much, Cardinal.

    And thank you, all of our panelists, for most informative and
    interesting testimony.

    We're going to open the floor now to questions. I'm going to take the
    prerogative of the chair and ask the first question, which I'll
    address to Archbishop Demetrios, although I'd be interested in
    everybody's comments on this.

    And that is, as negotiations have gone forward with the Turkish
    government for accession to the E.U., we haven't really see an
    improvement in the situation vis-a-vis the Greek Orthodox Church. I'm
    wondering if you expect an improvement as the negotiations continue.
    Is your prognosis optimistic? How do you see that situation?

    DEMETRIOS: Prophetic (inaudible) is limited to some old times, and
    predictions are extremely difficult, especially in politics and
    international politics. But that's a very, very serious question.

    I would like to say, not to use the terminology of optimistic or
    pessimism, but the terminology of hope; of hope and faith that this
    is a wonderful opportunity during this period of processing the
    accession of Turkey to the European Union. This will be a period that
    will see clear, visible improvements in the relationship between the
    Turkish government and the minority communities, especially the
    Ecumenical Patriarchate.

    It's a strong hope. And I think not only is it a strong hope, it
    seems to me it's something dictated by the very, very well being of
    the Turkish government and nation. They have to profit immensely from
    this improvement. It's not simply something for the patriarchate, it
    is retroactive much stronger for the Turkish government itself.

    Thank you.

    PRYOR: Anybody? Cardinal, please.

    MCCARRICK: I would just like to add that, if not now, then when? This
    is a moment where the eyes of the whole world are on Turkey and on
    its relationships with its minority communities.

    This seems to me to be a very special moment. And if we let this
    moment go, I'm not sure when there will be another moment that will
    have the same opportunity and the same pressure. So that I would
    really hope that there is movement now, and I think that the reason
    for our gathering at this hearing today is our common hope that this
    is the time when this will happen.

    PRYOR: All right. I'm going to open the floor to questions.

    QUESTION: A number of years ago, the Congress passed a resolution --
    rather I should say, there was a resolution, and then an amendment
    from that resolution was passed in the form of an omnibus
    appropriations bill of the State Department.

    In that amendment it says that the United States government, in its
    dealings with the Turkish government, should always be bringing up
    the issue of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and supporting its
    livelihood, and for the reopening of the Halki School of Theology.

    Can anyone from the panel please tell us today what exactly is the
    U.S. government doing today to uphold this amendment that has been
    passed as public law of the United States?

    DEMETRIOS: If I may start myself.

    I think the U.S. government has been consistently and methodically
    and systematically trying for this issue.

    I am aware especially of the efforts regarding the opening of the
    School of Halki. It has been a continuous effort.

    I have been, as I mentioned before, I have been present in
    Constantinople at the patriarchate when President Clinton, then
    sitting president, visited Turkey for some other things and had a
    long talk with President Demirel. And we were expecting him in the
    evening when he visited the patriarchate with good news that finally
    Halki is opening.

    President Clinton came, with Mrs. Clinton and their entourage. He was
    really deeply, deeply sad. I mean, he was with a face full of pain.
    He said no results, the answer at that time was the timing is not the
    proper timing and we don't have a legal formula.

    But that was indicative in the person of the president, and that was
    the same situation with President Bush. That was all along the U.S.
    ambassadors in Turkey.

    Dr. Limberakis mentioned the ambassadors in Turkey went out of their
    way in support of a policy of facilitating the enforcement by the
    Turkish government of this type of decision that will somehow
    eliminate some of the burdens from the patriarchate.

    So my impression is that it has been a continuous effort. Now, the
    results, it's another story. But I think the effort have been
    consistently made.

    PRYOR: Anybody else like to comment on that?

    LIMBERAKIS: Well, if I may, to echo what His Eminence stated.

    Undersecretary of State Marc Grossman has been in constant
    consultation with the archons and the order as we prepare our trips
    to Turkey, to Istanbul and to Ankara. It is through the State
    Department that we have been able to obtain the meetings with the
    ministers, foreign minister, minister of education, and those
    particular ministers germane to the issue of religious freedom.

    And in our presence, Ambassador Edelman a number of times
    specifically made reference to reopening Halki, the property issue,
    the succession issue of the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the
    Ecumenical Patriarch not being a Turkish citizen.

    These are items that were brought up in our presence, in front of the
    ministers of the governing AKP party this past year, 2004.

    So I feel that the United States is making an effort to stand firm on
    this.

    And lastly, I wish to make reference to what I think is an
    embarrassing behavior of the Turkish government when the prime
    minister's office, during our last trip in December, issued a
    statement to all government officials to boycott the two banquets
    that were held in honor of the Ecumenical Patriarchate Bartholomew in
    Istanbul in honor of the Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in
    Ankara that the ambassador was hosting.

    Why? Because the term "ecumenical" was utilized. And that word,
    "ecumenical," so offended the government that a statement had to be
    issued by the Turkish prime minister's office banning government
    officials to attend.

    That very evening, Consul General David Arnett (ph) in Istanbul gave
    a tremendous endorsement of religious freedom, quite frankly using
    the word and underscoring the word "ecumenical" -- you recall, Your
    Eminence, and there are other members who were with us there, Father
    -- while we were in Istanbul, underscoring the title, which was given
    to the church to that position in the 6th century, and the collegial,
    first-among-equals that his position holds among the Orthodox faith.

    So, to answer your question, I feel that the State Department,
    President Bush and President Clinton, have made strong. But you could
    lead a horse to water.

    PRYOR: I'd just like to add to that also that last May, before
    President Bush went to Istanbul for a summit, a NATO summit meeting,
    13 members of the Helsinki Commission wrote to him encouraging him to
    raise these issues. And he did raise them with Prime Minister
    Erdogan. So I agree there has been a consistent effort.

    Cardinal McCarrick has to leave us in a little bit, so is there
    anybody who has a specific question for him before he must go?

    Well, I thank you very much, sir, for being with us today.

    MCCARRICK: I thank you. I thought someone would ask what happened to
    my arm. It's from 47 years of blessings.

    (LAUGHTER)

    (UNKNOWN): With all these faith leaders here, you'd think we could
    heal it.

    MCCARRICK: I'm open to that.

    PRYOR: Other questions? Comments?

    QUESTION: To all the panelists: Why you have decided to address this
    crucial issue now and not in the past? Is there any particular
    reason?

    DEMETRIOS: To whom are you addressing the question?

    QUESTION: To all the panelists.

    DEMETRIOS: The issue is not addressed not, unless you mean the
    specific format, because the specific format is a result of
    developments through the time. The issue has been constantly
    addressed and constantly in the minds and in the talks for years.

    But somehow the event of the discussions of Turkey's accession to the
    European Union somehow facilitated, expedited, accelerated the speed,
    therefore caused this type of more intense, let's say, more specific
    meetings.

    Otherwise, that was more or less happening, in a different form, of
    course, and different formats.

    EDGAR: I was just going to answer your question about why now. I
    think Cardinal McCarrick also said it very strongly.

    This isn't the first time this issue has been raised. It's been
    raised many times. It's been raised in Democratic administrations,
    Republican administration, Protestant administration, Roman Catholic
    administrations. It cuts across all the theological and political
    lines, particularly for those of us in the United States who
    understand the situation. And with all the movement toward the
    European Union, this is a critical time for this to be raised, not
    just with the Helsinki Commission, but with all opportunities that we
    have. When we meet with the State Department. When we talk to
    Condoleezza Rice and talk to others in the administration urging them
    to continue to keep the pressure on.

    When I served in Congress, there was never a good time to raise
    issues like this. The time was always right to raise issues like
    this. And so I think it's important for us to speak.

    And I'd also commend His Eminence for not only leading this effort
    today, but we joked when Cardinal McCarrick was here about the
    breadth of religious tradition. Our colleague, the rabbi, is here,
    the Roman Catholics were here, the Protestants were here, the
    historic black church was here, the peace church was here.

    I don't know of too many other partners that could be here. We'll
    continue to talk with our colleagues in the Muslim tradition, Islamic
    tradition here in the United States.

    There's uniformity. All of us as Christian traditions are minorities
    someplace in the world. And contrary to the popular belief of
    Christians, we are a minority on Planet Earth. There are 6.5 billion
    people on Planet Earth, and Christians make up less than 30 percent
    of that total.

    So we are all minorities in some way, and we all respect religious
    facilities, religious buildings. My tears flowed when the synagogues
    were bombed in Istanbul and in Turkey. I have six grandchildren,
    three of whom are Jewish. So I am a historic interfaith family and
    think we need to stand up when others tell us to sit down and speak
    out on these issues, as creatively and as strongly as we can. We
    can't afford religious prejudice anywhere.

    PRYOR: Thank you.

    Chad?

    GORE: And I'd like to address the question from the commission's
    perspective as well.

    My name's Chadwick Gore. I'm a staff adviser with the commission.

    This is not a new topic, neither the situation with the Greek
    Orthodox in Turkey, nor the broader issue of religious liberty in
    Turkey writ large. We, as a commission, certainly have addressed
    other states within the OSCE and whether they have failed to meet
    their OSCE commitments or not.

    So this is one of a series since the genesis of the commission in
    1976 of the commission looking into whether participating states in
    the OSCE have fulfilled their commitments.

    I also want the audience to know, and the panel, that this is one of
    three briefings that are tied together.

    We are addressing the problem of the Greek Orthodox in Turkey today.
    There'll be a subsequent briefing where we look at other faiths
    within Turkey and the problems they're having, both minority faiths
    and the Muslims as well, within the foundation law.

    And then a third briefing will be held with the government of Turkey.
    I spoke with the Turkish embassy yesterday. I invited them to come
    here if they wanted to make a statement or if they wanted to take
    questions or submit a written statement for the record. They chose
    not to, for a variety of reasons. Maybe short notice was one of them.

    And so we've agreed that they will bring someone, probably from
    Ankara, and the government of Turkey will give a briefing that will
    both respond to these issues, as well as raise other issues. So at
    that briefing we intend to address the entire panoply of human rights
    and OSCE commitments within the Turkish framework.

    So I wanted everyone to be aware of that and to look forward to those
    briefings in the future. And they will be in the not-too- distant
    future. They will definitely be announced in the same manner that we
    do with press releases and so forth.

    PRYOR: Rabbi, did you have a comment also?

    SCHNEIER: Yes. There is a comment that I heard the other day from
    someone who plays the lottery. And he said, "You want to win in the
    lottery, you have to buy a ticket."

    Now, in order to gain admission to the European Union, every state
    applying for admission and accession has to assume obligations and
    responsibilities in terms of human rights, religious freedom.

    And I think what we're doing here today in a way could be a great
    service to the Turkish government, because what we're saying is, give
    the Ecumenical Patriarch -- and I made that in my statement -- who
    enjoys -- and Cardinal McCarrick reaffirmed it -- you reaffirmed it,
    Dr. Edgar -- give him the recognition that he enjoys worldwide.

    And it has been said that frequently a prophet is not recognized
    locally. I think what's we're having here. In the presence of His All
    Holiness -- and that's why we're here, Dr. Edgar -- for the affection
    we have for you, Archbishop Demetrios. You have stood with us on so
    many different issues in the Appeal of Conscience Foundation, again,
    in support of human rights.

    And His All Holiness is really a gem as a leader for what is needed
    desperately in this world today of conflict among civilizations. And
    therefore having him given the status that he deserves, that's what
    you're talking about. He can be a formidable ally in terms of
    admission of Turkey to the European Union.

    PRYOR: Thank you very much.

    I see that we've been joined by Congressman Pallone.

    I'm wondering if you have a statement, sir, that you would like to
    make. Invite you to the podium.

    (CROSSTALK)

    PALLONE: There's only 10 minutes. But I just wanted to say how
    important this issue is to me and to so many of my constituents. And,
    you know, the idea of continued intrusions and making it more and
    more difficult for the patriarchate to exist in Istanbul is, you
    know, to me totally outrageous.

    And I just appreciate the fact that you're having this hearing,
    because it very important. I mean, I have to say that not only have
    my Greek-American constituents expressed concern about what's
    happening, but also others, because, as you know, there are other
    Christian leaders, like the Armenian Patriarchate, and they're all
    very concerned about the future if something isn't done with the
    Turkish government.

    I know that a lot of people feel that because Turkey wants to join
    the European Union now that somehow a lot of these things might
    change, and that that's the leverage that can be used. And I
    certainly hope that we're able to use that leverage.

    But I find that what happens oftentimes is that the Turkish
    government will say that they're going to do the right thing when it
    comes to human rights issues or protecting religious minorities, and
    yet practically speaking it's not done.

    So as much as the advent of a possible accession to the E.U. presents
    an opportunity, it doesn't mean that we don't have to continue to put
    the pressure on, because this is not something that's just happening
    today. This has happened many times.

    But it is very important that we here in the United States and other
    countries around the world object to it and to see what we can do to
    make sure that the patriarchate and its various facilities are
    protected and are able to continue to operate.

    And I just appreciate again what you're doing here.

    I hate to run in and run out, but that's the reality around here.
    Thank you. Thank you.

    PRYOR: Thank you. Thank you. We appreciate your presence here today,
    too.

    I see that we've got a question here.

    QUESTION: It seems to me what we are doing today reminds me a little
    bit of an English expression: Preaching to the choir.

    The question arises as to the effectiveness of our activities. It is
    known that Prime Minister Erdogan himself, and also, I think,
    Secretary Gul, have made commitments to opening the Halki, and then
    they regressed.

    It is of course a fact, we all know, that presidents, Democrats and
    Republicans alike, made this point, they raised the issue again and
    again over the years. And nothing is happening in Turkey.

    Are we doing something effective? Is it possible that the Turkish
    establishment, that is the hard line of the Turkish establishment,
    has prevailed in their internal deliberations, leading them to
    conclude that the cost of doing something for the patriarchate, for
    adhering to what we call civilized behavior, is not affordable for
    the Turkish political establishment, whereas noncompliance brings no
    cost at all?

    They may look at President Clinton or President Bush or the archons
    visiting as simply pro forma movements that is perhaps activities
    that U.S. politicians have to do to placate their constituencies.
    They come and tell us, "Yes, we raised the issue." But no compliance
    on the part of Turkey bears no costs. Therefore, if they do something
    will bear a lot of cost for them, but not complying bears no cost at
    all.

    And that is the issue that we have raised earlier. We are doing all
    these things. What are we doing today, is there any follow-up? What
    do we see any effective levers? Can we pull any levers that will
    actually bring some results?

    Is it possible that the U.S. government will imply or suggest that
    there will be some consequences if they do not proceed with effective
    compliance with freedom of religion? And those are things that are
    written down in black and white, the legal provisions, as we heard
    earlier. There is clear noncompliance.

    Are there any effective levers? OSCE, can they pull any levers and
    say, "You don't comply? Well, you will be censured. You will not be
    acceptable as a member to the OSCE."

    The U.S. government may have levers which I may not know, or the
    European Union, something effective, something that will convey the
    message to the government, to Mr. Erdogan, that there will be real
    costs for noncompliance.

    Any suggestions please?

    PRYOR: Anybody want to tackle that? What would be the most effective
    measures?

    LIMBERAKIS: If I may comment on that. Two points.

    One, I believe with the European Union activity and the recent
    activity of Orthodox Christians in the United States, clearly have
    been vocal critics of Turkish persecution, but the laity haven't been
    as involved as they are now.

    I think we are seeing enhanced activity of the laity in the church to
    stand side by side with our hierarchy in fighting for religious
    freedom of the spiritual center of Orthodoxy.

    And the other analogy I wish to make is similar to that that was told
    to me by our legal counselor, who is a maritime attorney. And that
    is, when you try to change direction of an ocean liner, it takes the
    tugboat gradual turns to slowly turn the direction of the ocean
    liner.

    I think what we are dealing with, in fact, is an ocean liner that's
    had decades and centuries of a condition vis-a-vis the Greek Orthodox
    Church and minority, and it's going to take time to make changes. But
    we are having a hearing for the very first time in Washington, D.C.,
    in the Capitol, with congressmen and senators. That's never happened.

    We have the European Union opportunity in which the church, not just
    as Americans, but as universal members of the Orthodox faith, whether
    we are Orthodox from Germany or France or Greece or Britain, will
    also come to bear on this process.

    So I think there's enhanced activity, more so than has been in the
    past. And I am hopeful, as His Eminence, although we've been
    discouraged -- and we have been discouraged, because in February of
    '04 we left high-fiving the foreign ministry in Ankara, thinking
    things were going to reopen in Halki by September. And they even said
    the 2004-2005 academic year might be the year. We were very
    optimistic. But September came and went, and now it was December, and
    we were in Ankara again, and we were not given any assurances that
    things were going to improve.

    But this kind of activity, these hearings, our strategy in Europe,
    I'm hopeful, as His Eminence is hopeful, with his leadership, that
    perhaps we will make progress.

    DEMETRIOS: If I may add something.

    It's a very important question really, the idea of compliance, or
    rather how the idea will become a reality, the compliance of the
    Turkish government to the demands, the very fair, to say the least,
    and just demands.

    So there is a difficult issue, how now you proceed and you produce
    this type of not only willingness, but actual action in implying
    things.

    But we have to try. And perhaps the whole process of the accession to
    the European Union is perhaps the best opportunity, perhaps -- not
    perhaps, for sure is the best opportunity.

    I don't know what might be on the part of the State Department
    policies. They might have some other things that they can use which
    we don't know. I cannot enter this field of international politics.
    That's very difficult to speak about.

    But let me add anecdotally, I hope I'm allowed to use an anecdotal
    kind of thing that shows something. Last year we did have in New
    York, in the Metropolitan Museum, the big exhibition of the Byzantine
    art and iconography, as you remember. It was a terrific event in
    which we had 360 exhibits from all over the world, especially the
    Balkans and these areas with basically icons and other items.

    It was a long process. The title, as you know, was "Byzantium: Faith
    and Power." It was a long process, and during this process the
    organizing committee, and especially (inaudible), isolated a very
    important icon which was in Turkey. It was an icon painted on both
    sides, a very beautiful piece.

    Now, they tried to, by all means, through the Turkish agencies to get
    the icon. Just impossible. They were desperate. They said, "We need
    the icon."

    At some point, just very shortly before the opening of the
    exhibition, they said, "You need three months to apply before the
    whole thing," and there was not three months, there was a matter of
    two or three weeks.

    It so happened that Prime Minister Erdogan came to the States. And we
    asked for a meeting on a number of two or three other items. And they
    told me, "Can you bring up the subject of the icon?"

    So at the end of a meeting with two or three very serious items,
    (inaudible) was there, I said, "Mr. Prime Minister, we have an issue
    here. There is an icon. We tried by all means through the Turkish
    bureaucracy there and the people here in the museum they did
    everything possible. Can you please, when you return to Istanbul,
    arrange so that the icon will be sent?"

    Well, within one week the icon was here, in New York.

    Now, this is a compliance, so to say, to a demand, but it looks like
    a minimal thing. But, you know, (inaudible) no, it's impossible, I
    try everything, I mean, you know, there are rules here with this and
    that. No, it happened. It happened in a very good way.

    So there is always a possibility, even for much more serious things,
    to be handled in a way that will offer satisfaction to the parties
    involved. Of course, we are talking about much more serious and more
    much involving issues. However, if there is at some point the will,
    and if there is understandable the significance of a gesture, the
    gesture will be done. But one has to be convincing about that.

    PRYOR: Thank you very much.

    Archbishop Demetrios, Rabbi Schneier, Dr. Limberakis, thank you so
    much for being with us today. We know how valuable your time is, and
    we appreciate very much that you gave us so much of it.

    And thank everybody who attended today.

    Again, the transcript of this briefing will be on our Web site,
    csce.org, within a day. And this briefing is now closed. Thank you.

    DEMETRIOS: Ms. Pryor, you allow me a postscript?

    PRYOR: Yes, of course.

    DEMETRIOS: Sorry about that.

    I would like to say something that has to do with an atmosphere, so
    to say, an ambience surrounding this type of problems and events. And
    I don't want to leave this hall with the wrong impression.

    The patriarch himself, I mean if you listen to these kind of things,
    I don't know, you might get some idea about what's going on there.
    But one has to be careful about especially what the patriarch does.

    The patriarch is in an immediate, very, very cordial, very personal
    relationship with the Jewish community, the Muslims, the Armenians.
    Every time we were there it was always something. "Can we go?" -- we
    went, we were there two days after the bombing of the synagogue --
    and he said, "Can we go?" after a long -- it was a six- hour meeting
    in the Synod. He said, "Can we know go and visit the chief rabbi
    (inaudible)." He was with all these kind of ruins, et cetera, all the
    people there.

    Then we were there recently. He said, "Tonight they have the opening
    of the rebuilt synagogue." We were there.

    The next day, "You know, this is the end of the Ramadan, let's go
    there." There were the chief Muslim people there, and they were
    extremely cordial toward the patriarch and the patriarch himself.

    In and out, always plenty of photographers, journalists, reporters.

    I noticed -- and let me close with that -- I noticed something very
    interesting. It was a meeting in UNESCO, in a section of UNESCO in
    Istanbul. And here is the mayor of the city, the minister of culture
    and education, and other important people from the government, and
    the patriarch. And they speak, one after the other.

    As each one comes up, the podium was higher on the stage, each one
    comes up, the photographers come.

    Well, I was sitting there, and just noticing what's going on. Here
    comes the minister of culture and education -- there are five
    photographers. Comes down. The mayor comes up -- there are seven
    photographers.

    When the patriarch came up to speak, everybody -- I mean, there were
    30 photographers there -- everybody around there. Everybody says,
    "What's going on?" They say, "Well, the patriarch is going to speak."

    I mean, that shows a relationship which on the human side is very
    strong. It's not hostile, it's strong. And that emphasize even more
    the need of a reciprocal kind of attitude on the part of the
    government and the state agencies in order to just be on the level of
    the simple people that the journalists are, who are extremely,
    extremely friendly and recognizing the patriarch.

    So just I thought that we should keep this image on the part of the
    patriarch, because in the (inaudible) an outgoing, outstretching,
    beyond any imagination effort to reach out to the people and not have
    anything that could be in any way an excuse for not reciprocity and
    mutuality in responding.

    Thank you very much for the postscript.

    PRYOR: Thank you for those comments also.

    Thank you all for coming. And the briefing is closed.

    [Whereupon the briefing ended at 11:53 a.m.]

    END
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