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Turkish parliament fails to pass resolution to reopen Orthodox semin

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  • Turkish parliament fails to pass resolution to reopen Orthodox semin

    Turkish parliament fails to pass resolution to reopen Orthodox seminary
    By SELCAN HACAOGLU, Associated Press Writer

    Associated Press Worldstream
    September 20, 2006 Wednesday 9:48 PM GMT

    ANKARA Turkey -- Turkey's parliament on Wednesday failed to pass a
    resolution to move forward with a European Union-requested reform
    that could have allowed a Greek Orthodox theology school closed 35
    years ago to reopen.

    The parliament first voted in favor the resolution, but then stopped
    short of giving final approval amid strong opposition. The ruling
    Justice and Development Party was expected to step back and withdraw
    the change on Thursday, in a sign of internal opposition to the highly
    unpopular move.

    Lawmakers from the ruling party voted by a show of hands to allow
    foreign students to attend minority schools in Turkey upon a last
    minute request from the Foreign Ministry.

    But legislators from the opposition Republican People's Party opposed
    the reform, arguing that it would reopen the Halki Theological School,
    on an island near Istanbul, which was closed in 1971 under a law that
    put religious education under state control.

    The opposition party said the school was shut down because of lack of
    students and that the motion would allow it to reopen. The opposition
    party forced the parliament to give a one-hour break during which
    some members of the ruling party reportedly complained about the
    measure as well.

    The ruling party has a majority in the 550-member parliament and was
    expected to take back the change Thursday before finalizing other
    amendments regarding minority schools such as providing electricity
    and water at discount rates as well.

    If it had been approved, the reopening of Halki would have appeased
    the European Union and the United States.

    EU officials and Washington have repeatedly called on Turkey to open up
    the religious seminary that has trained generations of Orthodox leaders
    and restore property to minority Christian groups that were seized
    by the state due to a decline in the size of their congregations.

    The parliament is expected to address the property issue in the
    coming days too. Foreign Minister Abdullah Gul said reforms would
    address the problems of minority religious groups such as Greeks and
    Armenians but was not clear if they would allow the groups to reclaim
    property that has since been sold to other people.

    The Halki school trained generations of church leaders, including
    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I, and Orthodox officials say the
    school's reopening is important for educating future leaders.

    The patriarchate in Istanbul dates from the 1,100-year-old Orthodox
    Greek Byzantine Empire, which collapsed when the Muslim Ottoman Turks
    conquered Constantinople, today's Istanbul, in 1453.

    Istanbul-based Bartholomew I is the leader of the world's Orthodox
    Christians, although only a few thousand Greeks now live in Turkey.

    He also directly controls several Greek Orthodox churches around the
    world, including the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

    But Turkey has long refused to accept any international role for the
    patriarch, a Turkish citizen and ethnic Greek, and rejects his use
    of the title "ecumenical," or universal. It argues the patriarch is
    merely the spiritual leader of Istanbul's dwindling Orthodox community.

    Turkey's desire to contain Bartholomew's influence to Istanbul stems
    from a deep mistrust many Turks feel toward the patriarchate because of
    its traditional ties with Greece, Turkey's historical regional rival.

    Bartholomew has been actively lobbying for the reopening of Halki.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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