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  • The Greek Minority of Turkey

    Global Politician, NY
    April 5 2008


    The Greek Minority of Turkey

    Theodoros Karakostas - 4/6/2008

    Last July, Army officers in Turkey were arrested for planning the
    assassinations of Greek Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomaios I
    and Mesrob II, Patriarch of the Armenian Apostolic Church. The
    targeting of the spiritual heads of these two ancient Christian
    communities is symbolic considering the genocide of Armenians and
    Greeks in Anatolia by Turkish regimes earlier in the twentieth
    century. Human rights abuses against the Christians of Turkey,
    harassment, and violations of religious freedom continue unabated in
    Turkey. What is just as appalling as the relentless assault on
    Christianity in Turkey, is the silence and lack of diplomatic
    protests emanating from the international community.

    It has become a matter of dogma for the foreign policy establishment
    and much of the American media that Turkey is a "secular democracy".
    On the basis of strategic considerations and mythical views about the
    alleged moderation of Turkey, the Western world has stood by and
    tolerated acts of terror and violence against peaceful Christian
    communities that would have been denounced and opposed had they
    occurred elsewhere. A case in point are the notorious September 6,
    1955 pogroms that occurred in the historic Christian City of
    Constantinople. For most of the world this tragic date has no
    significance, but for Greek Orthodox Christians this date remains
    forever locked in our consciousness and represents heartbreak and
    mourning over the final stage of the destruction of Greek Orthodox
    civilization in what was once the Capital of Christian Byzantium.

    Heartbreak also because of the realization of younger generations of
    Orthodox Greeks born and raised in America years after these events
    that neither the United States, nor Europe, nor the NATO alliance
    acted to defend democratic and moral values. On that terrible
    September night, the Turkish government actively encouraged its
    criminal and extremist elements to attack the Greek community.
    Turkish police stood by while mobs of rioters physically assaulted
    Greek men, sexually assaulted Greek women, and enthusiastically
    destroyed Orthodox Churches while violating their sanctity in the
    most appalling manner. A 90 year old Greek Orthodox priest was doused
    with gasoline and set on fire. There were dozens of deaths, and in
    the aftermath of this evening of terror thousands of Orthodox Greeks
    fled from their ancestral homeland in terror.

    The purpose of recollecting these horrors emanates from the fact that
    the last vestiges of Greek Orthodoxy in Turkey are still under attack
    as a result of the policies of the Turkish government. In late 2007,
    a Greek Monastery on the island of Heybeliada was demolished, and an
    editor of a Greek minority newspaper was beaten by thugs. The
    Ecumenical Patriarchate is the victim of State sponsored
    discrimination and is unable to operate the only Seminary inside
    Turkey that would enable this historic Church to survive. The Western
    democracies took no action to protest or condemn the Turkish pogroms
    of September 1955, and that has been the active policy of the Western
    governments up to the present day. Between 1993 and 2004, there have
    been at least five arson attempts or bombings at the Ecumenical
    Patriarchate.

    Less than a century ago, Anatolia was populated with millions of
    Armenian, Assyrian, and Greek Christians. The genocide of these
    Christian peoples has been well documented by foreign diplomats,
    missionaries, relief workers, and many others. In September 1922,
    while American, British, French, and Italian warships were docked in
    the harbors of Smyrna, the Greek and Armenian populations were
    slaughtered by the armies of Turkish leader Mustafa Kemal. The future
    Turkish dictator Mustafa Kemal is well known in the West and is
    falsely represented as a liberal, despite his responsibility for the
    mass exterminations of Greek, Armenian, and Assyrian Christians
    throughout Asia Minor.

    There are many heroes and martyrs who deserve to be remembered by
    free societies everywhere. Among them is the Greek Orthodox
    Archbishop Chrysostom of Smyrna who sacrificed his life for his
    flock, and was subsequently murdered in the most horrific fashion on
    the orders of a Turkish General named Noureddin Pasha. There are a
    great many Americans from this period such as Consul General George
    Horton and relief worker Edward Hale Bierstadt who were present in
    Asia Minor during this tragedy and have left behind documentary
    evidence about the destruction of the Christians in Asia Minor.

    Unfortunately, official US policy toward Turkey has taken an
    indifferent position toward the Christians, and this remains the case
    up to the present day. Greek Orthodox Christians pray and hope for
    the security of the Ecumenical Patriarch, and for the last vestiges
    of Greek Orthodox faithful in Turkey who continue to live under
    excruciatingly difficult conditions even as their numbers dwindle to
    the point of near extinction. Furthering the devastating attacks on
    Greek Orthodoxy is the Turkish occupation of Cyprus where 200,000
    Greeks have been ethnically cleansed by the Turkish Army, and where
    over 550 Orthodox Churches have been desecrated or converted into
    Mosques.

    If democratic principles are to mean anything in reality, Ankara must
    begin to receive serious scrutiny from Western media and the
    democracies led by the United States must begin imposing serious
    sanctions on Turkey for ongoing atrocities.

    Theodoros Karakostas has a degree in Political Science and History.
    He's presently working toward a Masters degree in Eastern Orthodox
    Theology. He writes extensively on issues pertaining to Eastern
    Orthodox and Hellenic affairs, and contributed to the Boston Globe,
    Washington Post, Washington Times, Boston Herald, USA Today, the
    Financial Times, and the National Review, as well as to Greek
    publications and to various Eastern Orthodox News Sources.

    http://globalpolitician.com/24443-greece-turkey
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