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Benedict Will Face Touchy Issues During Turkey Visit

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  • Benedict Will Face Touchy Issues During Turkey Visit

    BENEDICT WILL FACE TOUCHY ISSUES DURING TURKEY VISIT
    By Edward Pentin - Register Correspondent

    National Catholic Register, CT
    Oct 25 2006

    A look at the major issues that are involved, such as Catholic-Muslim
    relations, issues involving the Orthodox, and also the effect the
    trip might have on Turkey's bid to get into the EU and particularly
    the question of religious freedom rights in Turkey. Also, some
    Italian commentators have suggested Benedict's meeting with Armenian
    Patriarch Mesrob II could fuel the ongoing controversy regarding
    alleged Turkish genocide against Armenians in 1915.

    October 29- November 4, 2006 Issue

    VATICAN CITY - Pope Benedict XVI's upcoming visit to Turkey is both a
    diplomatic minefield and a sea of valuable opportunities.

    Analysts say the trip is of major importance for three reasons: for
    furthering religious freedom in Turkey and other Muslim-majority
    states, for improving Muslim-Christian relations, and for advancing
    the cause of Christian unity.

    As the Register went to press, the details of the apostolic voyage
    had yet to be finalized. But according to Asia News and Vatican
    sources, the Pope is scheduled to arrive in the Turkish capital of
    Ankara Nov. 28, where he will spend the day with the country's
    political authorities.

    The following day, the Holy Father will travel to the port city of
    Izmir near Ephesus where he will visit an ancient Christian
    community, before moving on to Ephesus itself where he is expected to
    visit Meryem Ana, a small house on a hilltop overlooking the Aegean
    Sea where, according to tradition, Mary lived out her final years and
    was assumed into heaven.

    On Nov. 29, Benedict is scheduled to arrive in Istanbul, where he
    will have a private audience with Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I,
    the person who first invited the Pope to Turkey.

    On Nov. 30, on the feast of St. Andrew, the Pope will attend a solemn
    Divine Liturgy presided over by the patriarch. The Holy Father is
    expected to deliver a discourse on the quest for Christian unity and
    comment on this year's resumption of the Commission of Theological
    Dialogue between the Catholic and Orthodox Churches.

    Before returning to Rome Dec. 1, the Pope will also meet with
    Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II, who leads a Christian community that
    has suffered intermittent persecution for centuries.

    Religious Freedom

    Turkish Christians still face discrimination, despite residing in the
    country for 2,000 years (the Orthodox have few rights over their
    property and are subject to special legal restrictions).

    And while Turkey is ostensibly a secular state, in recent years it
    has experienced a strong trend towards Islamism. The numbers of
    attacks on Christians have risen, the most notorious being the murder
    of Italian priest Father Andrea Santoro earlier this year.

    "We have to hope that the Pope's visit - to an ecumenical
    patriarchate that is for all practical purposes controlled by the
    Turkish government - advances the cause of religious freedom in
    Turkey and throughout the Islamic world," papal biographer George
    Weigel told the Register.

    "No one should gainsay the difficulty of that project, however,"
    Weigel said. "Not because of the Pope's Regensburg lecture, which, in
    fact, identified the crucial issues with precision, but because of
    the current jihadist drift of too much Islamic thought and
    sentiment."

    A number of senior Vatican officials hope Benedict will be able to
    reach out to Muslims during the trip by conveying the true message of
    his Regensburg speech, which sparked intense anger in Turkey and
    other Muslim countries.

    Some observers recommended caution in addressing that issue.

    "If he refers directly to it, I don't think it will help because
    Muslims are not ready to understand it," said Jesuit Father Samir
    Khalil Samir, professor of Oriental theology at St. Joseph's
    University in Lebanon.

    But others insisted that the focus of the Pope's Regensburg address -
    the need to reconcile faith and reason - is crucial to furthering
    Muslim-Christian dialogue and to helping Muslims renounce violent
    extremism.

    "Why do we have to wait to discuss this?" asked Father Justo
    Lacunza-Balda, rector emeritus of the Pontifical Institute of Arab
    and Islamic Studies. "For years, we have not confronted these issues;
    we have to begin somewhere."

    EU Membership

    Another touchy issue is Turkey's bid to join the European Union,
    which is linked to the issues of religious freedom and
    Muslim-Christian relations. The matter is made more sensitive by
    Benedict's statement in 2004 that he was opposed to Turkey joining
    the economic bloc.

    A Turkish government spokesman told the Register Oct. 20 that the
    Pope will probably have to "clarify" his position on the matter.

    The meeting with Armenian Patriarch Mesrob II might also generate
    friction. Some Italian commentators have argued that by meeting the
    patriarch, the Pope will bear witness to allegations that Turkey
    killed 1.5 million Armenians in a planned act of genocide in 1915.

    The Turkish government strongly denies those charges.

    Vatican officials, however, are playing down any such interpretation
    of the meeting.

    Benedict's meeting with Patriarch Bartholomew I is likely to be much
    less controversial, but potentially far more significant.

    The patriarch told reporters Sept. 29 he was anticipating the visit
    with "great brotherly love." That fraternal affection could be
    decisive in reaching a constructive outcome now that formal
    Catholic-Orthodox dialogue has resumed, and discussions have begun on
    the key issue of papal primacy.

    Security

    Some Vatican analysts have expressed concern about the Pope's
    security in the wake of the Regensburg controversy. The Turkish
    government spokesman stressed that Benedict will be welcomed as a
    "foreign leader of a state" rather than a "religious leader," in
    order to "give more importance" to the visit and ensure he is
    "protected as a head of state."

    The Turkish government has also moved to ease the security concerns
    by noting that the country has hosted many world leaders without
    problems, including President Bush in 2004.

    The government spokesman said that Turks view the papal visit as an
    opportunity for reconciliation, not confrontation.

    "There is no opposition to his visit, but we have been heartbroken
    and offended, recently after the Regensburg speech, but also
    [through] the cartoon crisis and the war in Iraq and Lebanon," the
    government spokesman said. "The hope is that he will bring healing,
    and there are strong indications of that."

    Edward Pentin writes from Rome.
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