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  • F18News: Georgia - "Orchestrated reaction" against religious

    FORUM 18 NEWS SERVICE, Oslo, Norway
    http://www.forum18.org/

    The right to believe, to worship and witness
    The right to change one's belief or religion
    The right to join together and express one's belief

    ========================================== ======
    Wednesday 25 October 2006
    GEORGIA: "ORCHESTRATED REACTION" AGAINST RELIGIOUS MINORITIES' BUILDINGS

    Georgian politicians and the Georgian Orthodox Church continue to deny the
    continued impossibility for religious minorities to openly build places of
    worship, Forum 18 News Service has found. "The difficulties we face are
    linked not to laws, but to a climate that has been artificially created
    and which forces us - in order not to stir up aggression - not to
    undertake construction," Catholic Bishop Giuseppe Pasotto told Forum 18.
    Amongst religious minorities facing this intolerance are Baptist churches,
    Pentecostals, the Armenian Apostolic Church, and the True Orthodox Church.
    Elene Tevdoradze, Chair of the Parliamentary Human Rights and Civic
    Integration Committee, denied to Forum 18 that problems exist, as did the
    Deputy Chair of the Committee, Lali Papiashvili. She told Forum 18 "No,
    no, that's not true. It's obviously not true." Zurab Tskhovrebadze of the
    Georgian Orthodox Patriarchate also denied that religious minorities face
    obstruction in building.

    GEORGIA: "ORCHESTRATED REACTION" AGAINST RELIGIOUS MINORITIES' BUILDINGS

    By Felix Corley, Forum 18 News Service <http://www.forum18.org>

    Three years after the change of regime that saw the end of most violent
    mob attacks on religious minorities, Georgia's political class remains in
    denial about the continued impossibility for religious minorities to build
    new places of worship openly, religious minority leaders have complained to
    Forum 18 News Service. "Especially in places which had Catholic churches
    which have been confiscated by the Orthodox, the Catholic faithful have
    the right - as a minimum - to have a church. But up till today this
    remains impossible," Georgia's Catholic bishop Giuseppe Pasotto told Forum
    18 from the capital Tbilisi [T'bilisi] on 19 October. He said there has
    been no improvement since 2003.

    Forum 18 has found that while some faiths can quietly build unobtrusive
    places of worship under the guise of private homes or offices - as long as
    they do not look like places of worship - religious communities whose
    places of worship are distinctive and indeed almost any place of worship
    of a minority faith in a small village face obstruction or de facto bans.

    "In the major centres all construction recognised as Catholic arouses an
    orchestrated reaction," Bishop Pasotto complained. "The difficulties we
    face are linked not to laws, but to a climate that has been artificially
    created and which forces us - in order not to stir up aggression - not to
    undertake construction."

    This is a long standing problem facing religious minorities within Georgia
    (see F18News 14 November 2003
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=184>). A major factor
    behind it is that some Georgian Orthodox priests persistently incite mob
    violence against religious minorities (see eg. F18News 25 May 2005
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=569>). Intolerance of
    religious minorities is widespread within Georgian society, despite some
    legal improvements (see F18News 24 May 2005
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=568>).

    Typical of the "aggression" Bishop Pasotto complained of was a mob
    invasion in September and subsequent petition campaign against the
    completion of an Assyrian Catholic centre in Tbilisi. This will also
    include a sanctuary for religious worship (see F18News 19 October 2006
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=857>).

    In 2005, a church that a Baptist community was trying to build in
    Zestafoni, a town 45 km (30 miles) east of Kutaisi [K'ut'aisi], was
    attacked. "We laid the foundations, but as soon they found out, the
    Orthodox priest came with others and broke them down," Pastor Levan
    Akhalmosulishvili, a leading member of the independent Association of
    Christian-Baptist Churches, told Forum 18 on 18 October. "The Orthodox
    told us openly: 'Society, government and parliament support us!'" Building
    work has still not been able to resume, he added.

    Also forced to a halt was construction of a home for a Baptist deacon, in
    the village of Velistsikhe in Gurjaani district of eastern Georgia. This
    was attacked by mobs in 2004 (see F18News 5 November 2004
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=446>). "The district and
    village authorities have told us not to use the half-finished building,"
    Pastor Akhalmosulishvili reported. "Criminals threatened to destroy it if
    we resume building. The authorities told us they would not defend us."

    Asked what officials say when congregations of his Association ask if they
    can build places of worship, Akhalmosulishvili responded: "They look at us
    as though we're mad. It's fantasy to even think of building."

    Giorgi Khutsishvili, head of the Tbilisi-based International Center of
    Conflict Negotiations, is blunt. "Can religious minorities build places of
    worship? No," he told Forum 18 from Tbilisi on 18 October. "This becomes
    such a hot topic." He attributes this to the "mentality of the majority"
    who, he says, regard the Orthodox Church as having the status of a state
    Church. "The Orthodox can build any church anywhere, but all others are
    alien."

    Khutsishvili says every time "fundamentalists" learn a non-Orthodox place
    of worship is being built they move in. "The government is quiet and does
    nothing," he told Forum 18. "It tries to mediate, calming the
    fundamentalists and the religious minorities. But it doesn't resist the
    fundamentalists, so they continue their activities."

    He added that the lack of a religion law that would allow religious
    minority communities to gain legal status as religious organisations (only
    the Orthodox Patriarchate has such legal status) also hinders building
    minority places of worship.

    Bishop Pasotto complains that in recent years all the Catholic Church has
    been able to build is "tiny places of worship in out of the way villages".
    He expresses frustration that officials - who he says are not opposed to
    Catholic activity - tell them they cannot change the situation. "The most
    unpleasant thing is that from the political side, for all religious
    problems - such as over a law on religion - there is complete inaction. Is
    this from incompetence? Is this from fear?"

    Bishop Pasotto's frustration is echoed by Archbishop Malkhaz
    Songulashvili, head of the Georgian Baptist Church, the largest Baptist
    church in the country. "Everyone has the right to build a church, mosque
    of temple, but this is impossible at the moment," he told Forum 18 on 4
    October. "Religious communities cannot build a place of worship, only an
    NGO office."

    But Elene Tevdoradze, a parliamentary deputy who chairs its Human Rights
    and Civic Integration Committee, denies this. "There's no such law that
    bans non-Orthodox faiths from building - if minority faiths do everything
    according to the law, they can build places of worship," she claimed to
    Forum 18 from Tbilisi on 18 October. "They shouldn't be afraid. The policy
    of the government is clear: everyone has the right to carry out their
    faith." But she dismissed the experience of religious minorities of
    repeated obstruction and threats of aggression when they try to build.

    Her lack of concern was shared by the Deputy Chair of the Committee, Lali
    Papiashvili. Asked by Forum 18 why religious minorities cannot build
    places of worship she responded: "No, no, that's not true. It's obviously
    not true." She said no religious minorities have complained to her about
    this. "The government's doesn't have a policy not to allow other faiths to
    build. Until we get complaints that they have problems I can't believe
    this." Asked whether she has talked to religious minorities she said "No."

    Zurab Tskhovrebadze, spokesperson for the Orthodox Patriarchate, equally
    denies that religious minorities face obstruction in building. "Any
    churches can be built," he insisted to Forum 18 on 19 October. "There is
    no law that says the Georgian Orthodox Church has to agree any such
    building." Asked why this happens in practice, he responded: "When we meet
    people of other faiths, they don't complain to us about this."

    One community that has not tried to build any new places of worship in the
    past fifteen years but which faces absolute refusal to return its historic
    places of worship confiscated during the Soviet period is the Armenian
    Apostolic Church. Levon Isakhanyan, assistant to the Armenian Bishop of
    Georgia, Vazgen Mirzakhanyan, said his Church is currently seeking the
    return of six churches, five in Tbilisi and one in the southern town of
    Akhaltsikhe [Akhalts'ikhe], which has a majority Armenian population. "All
    these churches, that served the Armenian community for centuries, are today
    shut and made no use of whatsoever by any denomination," he told Forum 18
    from Tbilisi on 25 October. "The condition of these churches is
    appalling."

    Isakhanyan cited the diocese's lack of status as a legal entity - a
    problem shared by all non-Orthodox religious communities that refuse to
    register as non-profit entities - as an excuse officials use to refuse to
    consider such applications. He also complained that politicians and
    nationalists who oppose the churches' return often claim that their
    ownership is "disputed". He insists the Georgian government has
    responsibility to resolve the Church's problems.

    Likewise, Bishop Pasotto complains that six Catholic churches in major
    towns - the port of Batumi [Bat'umi], Kutaisi [K'ut'aisi], Gori, Ivlita,
    Ude and Akhaltsikhe - were "illegally" given to the Orthodox and have not
    been returned, a problem he points out is shared by the Armenian Apostolic
    Church. By contrast, he says the Georgian Orthodox Patriarchate has been
    able to recover its property confiscated during the Soviet period.

    Asked why he believes non-Orthodox cannot build places of worship, Bishop
    Pasotto responded: "The idea that a church that is built would be a public
    sign which could influence people and be a source of proselytism against
    the Orthodox Church."

    Forum 18 could find only a handful of non-Patriarchate places of worship
    now being openly built without problems. Fr Gela Aroshvili, a True
    Orthodox priest under the jurisdiction of Metropolitan Ephraim Spanos of
    Boston, USA, reported that two of his congregations that had long been
    obstructed from building can now do so.

    He said the Tbilisi congregation began work on a small church in February
    in the city's Saburtalo district with permission from the local authority,
    though the church is registered as a private house. He said the exterior is
    now complete, but the interior is not yet ready to allow services to take
    place. "It looks like an Orthodox church, but there's no sign outside
    saying it's a True Orthodox church," he told Forum 18 from Tbilisi on 18
    October. "I don't know if the Patriarchate complained, but we've faced no
    problems." Fr Aroshvili added that their congregation in Kutaisi has also
    gained permission to build a house. He insisted they would build it in
    traditional Orthodox church style with a cross on the top.

    However, he said there has been no progress in rebuilding their burnt-out
    church destroyed by a mob in the village of Shemokmedi in south western
    Georgia in October 2002 (see F18News 7 April 2003
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?articl e_id=27>). "We're not hurrying,
    but we do want to rebuild," Fr Aroshvili told Forum 18. "But the
    authorities are still not responding."

    One other minority place of worship that is being openly built is a new
    church for a Russian-speaking Pentecostal congregation in Tbilisi, which
    was repeatedly prevented by the police and by violent mobs from holding
    services in the home of the pastor, Nikolai Kalutsky. Pastor Kalutsky won
    an eventual victory in the Constitutional Court in May 2005 that such
    bans, attacks and obstructions violated his religious freedom (see F18News
    25 May 2005 <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_id= 569>). Following
    this court victory, a Presidential Decree awarded the congregation land in
    Tbilisi's Isani district to build an alternative place of worship.

    Kalutsky told Forum 18 that official registration of the land as his
    property was completed at the beginning of October, and work began
    immediately. "Permission was given for a private house, but the building
    will look like a church from the outside," he told Forum 18 from the
    building site on 24 October. "We couldn't do it any other way because we
    have no legal status as a religious community." He said the Prosecutor's
    Office had summoned him to tell him that, if the community faces any
    obstruction, it is to notify the Prosecutor immediately. Pastor Kalutsky
    was told that the Prosecutor will then take appropriate measures to allow
    building to proceed.

    Asked why his congregation is now able to build on land given free of
    charge by the state, after so many years of harassment, Kalutsky
    responded: "What happened to us reached the outside world - everyone had
    heard of them. Politicians realised this."

    Bishop Oleg Khubashvili, who leads the Pentecostal Union to which
    Kalutsky's congregation belongs, told Forum 18 that the Union has been
    able to buy a building in Tbilisi to turn into its offices. (The Union has
    legal status as a non-profit organisation). "Later we plan to turn part of
    it into a sanctuary," he told Forum 18 on 24 October. "If we built a
    church from scratch, I can't say what the reaction would be."

    The Jehovah's Witnesses - who suffered more than a hundred violent
    attacks, mostly unpunished, between 1999 and 2003 - say that they have
    been able to build Kingdom Halls across Georgia in the last few years,
    including about ten in Tbilisi. "It's strange, given all the attacks,"
    Jehovah's Witness leader Genadi Gudadze told Forum 18 from Tbilisi on 24
    October. "Sometimes life is surprising," he added, laughing.

    But the Jehovah's Witnesses have been careful. "We don't advertise that
    we're building Kingdom Halls, but everyone round about knows what they
    are," Gudadze reported. "They deliberately aren't large or lavish, so
    don't attract attention."

    Like other faiths, the Jehovah's Witnesses choose not to place signs
    outside their places of worship. "We understand that in a normal country
    there should be such signs," Gudadze added. "But we don't want extra
    attention." (END)

    For the comments of Georgian religious leaders and human rights activists
    on how the legacy of religious violence should be overcome, see
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article _id=499>

    For more background see Forum 18's Georgia religious freedom survey at
    <http://www.forum18.org/Archive.php?article_ id=400>

    A printer-friendly map of Georgia is available at
    <http://www.nationalgeographic.com/xpedition s/atlas/index.html?Parent=asia&Rootmap=georgi& gt;
    (END)

    © Forum 18 News Service. All rights reserved. ISSN 1504-2855
    You may reproduce or quote this article provided that credit is given to
    F18News http://www.forum18.org/

    Past and current Forum 18 information can be found at
    http://www.forum18.org/
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