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Christian flight from Turkey has halted, prelate reports

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  • Christian flight from Turkey has halted, prelate reports

    Catholic World News
    Nov 25 2006

    Christian flight from Turkey has halted, prelate reports

    Rome, Nov. 24 (CWNews.com) - The gradual disappearance of Christians
    from Turkey seems to have ended, according to prefect of the
    Congregation for Eastern Churches.

    Speaking on Vatican Radio a few days before Pope Benedict XVI (bio -
    news) begins his visit to Turkey, Cardinal Ignace Moussa Daoud said
    that the number of Christians remaining there is holding steady at
    about 30,000.

    Turkey, a "cradle of Christianity," remains an important site for
    "fraternal dialogue between religions and cultures," the cardinal
    said. He added that the Catholic community in the predominantly
    Muslim country is itself diverse. There are three Latin-rite bishops
    in Turkey's episcopal confenference, along with 2 Armenian Catholic
    prelates, and 2 patriarchal vicars: one Syrian Catholic and the other
    Chaldean Catholic. Maronite and Byzantine Catholics are also
    represented, he added. Turkish Catholicism, Cardinal Dauoud
    continued, is known for a special historic devotion to the Mother of
    God, the apostolic tradition, and the fathers of the early Church. He
    recalled that the country had been the site of some important early
    councils, such as the councils of Nicea (in 325 and 787),
    Constantinople (381, 553, 680, and 870), Ephesus (431), and Chalcedon
    (451).

    Turkey, the cardinal concluded, is "a privileged place for the
    implantation of Christianity." During the early years of the Church,
    the county say "the flowering of theologies and of rites," giving the
    land an unusually rich tradition of Christianity that endures to this
    day.

    Cardinal Daoud will be a member of the delegation traveling to Turkey
    with the Holy Father, along with four other cardinals: Tarcisio
    Bertone, the Secretary of State; Walter Kasper, the president of the
    Pontifical Council for Christian Unity; Paul Poupard, the president
    of the Pontifical Council for Culture; and Roger Etchegaray, a
    retired Vatican official who has frequently served as a special
    representative of the Holy See in delicate diplomatic circumstances.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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