Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Turkey: Non-Muslim Places Of Worship To Be Restored

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

  • Turkey: Non-Muslim Places Of Worship To Be Restored

    TURKEY: NON-MUSLIM PLACES OF WORSHIP TO BE RESTORED

    AKI, Italy
    March 29 2006

    Istanbul, 29 March (AKI) - For the first time since the foundation
    of Turkey in 1923, the government is funding an ambitious project to
    renovate and restore non-Muslim places of worship, such as churches,
    monasteries and synagogues. The Foundations General Directorate, an
    agency which regulates the status of the non-Muslim faiths, began a
    review of important sites around the country two years ago and produced
    an emergency action plan involving 750 heritage buildings out of 18,500
    such holy sites in the country. The restoration of select monuments has
    been welcomed by representatives of the minority religions in Turkey.

    Silvio Ovidio, the spokesman of the Jewish community, told Adnkronos
    International (AKI) that they welcomed the decision. "We are pleased
    with the Directorate's decision. I don't think it is related with
    Turkey's EU harmonisation process but rather, the office decided it
    on its own. There is one synagogue in Edirne [a city near the Greek
    border] included in the renovation plan," Ovidio added.

    Turkey's Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II also praised the move. "This
    shows there is no discrimination", he told reporters on Sunday, adding
    that it was a gesture of good will which he hoped would continue in
    the future.

    Besides the synagogue, six churches and one monastery will be renovated
    in the first stage of the plan. These sites belong to Greek Orthodox,
    Assyrian Christian, Greek Catholic and Armenian Orthodox communities.

    The status of assets belonging to non-Muslim communities is a source
    of tension between Turkey and the European Union which it is seeking
    to join.

    A 1936 proclamation ordered non-Muslim foundations to provide lists
    of their properties, which effectively functioned as deeds.

    However, these communities have not been allowed to register properties
    ever since 1974 when the Cyprus crisis broke out and the Turkish
    minority was being oppressed in Greece. A controversial decision by
    the Turkish Supreme Court over the Balikli Greek Hospital Foundation
    in Istanbul led to all non-Muslim foundations being banned from buying,
    owning or selling properties. The ruling also stated that they had not
    been entitled to own property since 1936, and demanded the properties
    they purchased after 1936 be handed back to the previous owners,
    or if these were dead to be confiscated by the state.

    EU officials say that this proclamation violates both human rights
    and minority rights.

    Under the Lausanne Treaty of 1923 that laid the foundations of the
    modern Turkish republic, non-Muslims are equal before the law.

    Article 40 of the treaty even specifies that this gives them the equal
    right to "establish, manage and control at their own expense; any
    charitable, religious and social institutions, any schools and other
    establishments for instruction and education, with the right to use
    their own language and to exercise their own religion freely therein."
Working...
X