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Turkey's chief rabbi attends 'Meeting of Civilizations'

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  • Turkey's chief rabbi attends 'Meeting of Civilizations'

    Jerusalem Post
    Sept 30 2005


    Turkey's chief rabbi attends 'Meeting of Civilizations'
    By SAM SER


    Turkey's Chief Rabbi Isak Haleva was one of several religious leaders
    to participate in the First Hatay Meeting of Civilizations, held this
    week in the religiously and ethnically diverse southern city of
    Hatay. During the week-long symposium, which ends on Friday, Haleva
    joined a call to banish violence from all religions and to work
    toward peace in society.

    The Anatolian Times quoted Haleva as commenting despairingly that
    civilizations were "spending $100 million every hour for tanks,
    rifles and bullets... If this is civilization, then I am not a part
    of it. Is this what our creator expects of us?" Haleva said.

    The chief rabbi, who was lightly wounded in a deadly bombing that
    severely damaged the Neveh Shalom Synagogue in Istanbul two years
    ago, added: "If religions cannot protect civilizations from
    committing suicide, all steps taken until today would be of no use."

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan opened the gathering,
    which included religious leaders from Turkey's Muslim, Greek Orthodox
    and Armenian communities, with a speech that stressed religious
    tolerance and respect for diversity.

    Zaman, a Turkish on-line newspaper, quoted Erdogan as saying, "The
    [Koran] says that we were created as diverse peoples so that we could
    get acquainted with each other. According to this, our separation
    into different nations should not cause conflicts. On the contrary,
    it should enable acquaintance and dialogue among us."

    Erdogan also simultaneously criticized Islamic terrorism and the rush
    to view Muslims as terrorists.

    "I declare Islamic-phobia a crime against humanity in the same way we
    accept anti-Semitism as a crime against humanity," the prime minister
    was quoted as saying.

    On Wednesday afternoon, US public relations chief Karen Hughes, who
    is traveling throughout the Middle East to try to improve the image
    of the United States among Muslims, took time to meet with Haleva and
    other religious leaders at Topkapi Palace in Istanbul.

    The Associated Press reported that Hughes would not reveal precisely
    what she discussed with Haleva and the others, saying simply, "We
    discussed the problems of the world."
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