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Tolerance In Turkey: Catholics Want To Reclaim St. Paul's Birthplace

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  • Tolerance In Turkey: Catholics Want To Reclaim St. Paul's Birthplace

    TOLERANCE IN TURKEY: CATHOLICS WANT TO RECLAIM ST. PAUL'S BIRTHPLACE
    By Peter Wensierski

    Spiegel Online
    http://www.spiegel.de/international/world/0 ,1518,542747,00.html
    March 20 2008
    Germany

    The Catholic Church is pushing for the construction of a Christian
    meeting center at the birthplace of the Apostle Paul in Turkey.

    German bishops are demanding tolerance for Christians in Turkey in
    exchange for their support for mosques in Germany.

    There is little left from the days when the town of Tarsus was not
    Turkish but part of the Roman Empire: a handful of columns, a few old
    walls -- and a house where, about 2,000 years ago, a man who would
    become a central figure in Christianity was born.

    "I am a Jew from Tarsus," the Bible reads. The man who was quoted
    as saying these words went down in history as the Apostle Paul,
    who brought the Christian faith into the world.

    Every year, thousands of visitors travel to Tarsus, which is near the
    Turkish-Syrian border. But Christians who wish to worship in the Church
    of St. Paul, built several centuries ago, must overcome bizarre hurdles
    to do so. A permit is required from the local authorities to celebrate
    mass in the church. In addition, worshippers are charged an entry fee
    and required to bring along the essentials -- from the altar crucifix
    to candles -- and then promptly remove them after the service. The
    church was used as a military depot for several decades, before the
    Turkish government suddenly declared it a museum in the 1990s.

    Rome has never come to terms with the fact that Christians have such a
    difficult time of it in the birthplace of the apostle. But this year,
    which Pope Benedict XVI has declared the "Year of St. Paul," it will
    become a topic of public debate. In June, Cardinal Walter Kasper,
    the president of the Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity,
    will celebrate a mass in Tarsus. A number of German bishops also plan
    to travel to Turkey.

    The Catholics are pursuing a politically explosive plan. Roughly
    2,000 years after the birth of St. Paul, they want to get a Christian
    meeting center constructed in Tarsus.

    They have chosen an auspicious moment for the scheme. With Turkey vying
    for European Union membership, the government of Prime Minister Recep
    Tayyip Erdogan (more...) can hardly afford to turn down a Christian
    project. In addition, the Church, especially the German bishops,
    is offering something in return. The Germans have often taken a
    benevolent stance toward the construction of mosques in Germany,
    a policy they intend to continue. In return, they are demanding
    tolerance for Christians in Turkey.

    The archbishop of Cologne, Cardinal Joachim Meisner, who is well
    known for his conservative views, campaigned for the initiative among
    his fellow cardinals. Meisner is closely aligned with Bishop Luigi
    Padovese, the pope's apostolic vicar in Anatolia. The two men have
    coordinated their efforts with Rome and found supporters who are now
    coming to their aid.

    For Hans-Jochen Jaschke, the auxiliary bishop in Hamburg, the proposed
    structure in Tarsus would be "an extremely important symbol." Of course
    Jaschke, who is in charge of inter-religious dialogue within the German
    Bishops' Conference, is not in favor of a simple church-for-mosque
    trade. But then he slyly adds: "It would be very helpful towards the
    acceptance of Turks in Germany if a sign of acceptance of Christians
    were to be seen in Turkey."

    Given the current circumstances of Christians in Turkey, however,
    Jaschke's wish taps into one of the most major issues in German-Turkish
    relations. Without government approval, no religious community can
    be active in Turkey. Muslim clerics must also submit their sermons to
    the authorities. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of modern Turkey,
    introduced this rule in an effort to keep Islam under control. The
    strict system is intended to guarantee the state's freedom from
    religious influences, but it also drastically restricts Christians'
    freedom to practice their faith.

    Because of these obstacles, Cardinal Meisner took the Catholic Church's
    request for approval of its planned Christian meeting center to the
    very top of the Turkish state, and wrote to the Turkish prime minister
    in February. Recep Tayyip Erdogan had already been approached once
    before, when he visited Cologne, Istanbul's sister city, during a
    state visit to Germany (more...) on Feb. 10. Cologne Mayor Fritz
    Schramma, a member of the conservative Christian Democratic Union
    (CDU), mentioned the situation at the birthplace of St. Paul to
    Erdogan and conveyed the cardinal's request to him.

    Erdogan promised his support. "As soon as the church approaches
    me with this wish, I will speak out in favor of it -- even against
    my opposition."

    Bishop Padovese, who had already submitted the same request to the
    government in writing months earlier, repeated the request. Together
    with six other bishops in Turkey, he plans to take Erdogan, who
    recently solicited German Chancellor Angela Merkel's support for his
    country's EU membership, at his word. The bishops joined forces to
    ask Erdogan to support their project. It is now up to the government
    to make Tarsus into a turning point in the Turkish state's policy
    toward Christians.

    For the German bishops, the matter has become a touchstone in the
    Church's relationship with Islam. A group of German leaders plans
    to travel to Tarsus in September. Cardinal Meisner already went to
    Tarsus more than half a year ago and held a church service there.

    Meisner was horrified by the conditions under which Christians must
    live in the aspiring EU member. In 1920, 20 percent of the Turkish
    population was Christian. That figure has declined to only 0.1 percent
    today, and the state and local authorities make life difficult for
    this small contingent. The largest group consists of roughly 60,000
    Armenians in Istanbul, who are barred access to higher government
    positions simply because the word "Christian" is stamped in their
    identification cards.

    Part 2: Fears of a Christian 'Mission'

    Turkey's 33,000 Catholics are a negligibly small group compared with
    the country's roughly 73 million Muslims. The headquarters of the
    German Bishops' Conference regularly receives horrifying reports of
    how they are treated. This has helped shape the Catholic Church's
    current position that Turkey is not yet "ready to be part of Europe."

    Many Catholics meet only in private homes, because they feel persecuted
    and discriminated against. Even in the cosmopolitan city of Istanbul,
    Christians cannot openly practice their faith everywhere. One prayer
    room was set up in a former industrial building -- naturally without
    visible identifiers like a cross or a church tower. The training of
    clergy and lay ministers is impossible; monasteries and seminaries
    were closed years ago. Even foreign personnel are generally not
    allowed to make up for staffing shortfalls.

    Admittedly, the German Protestant pastor who attends to the
    spiritual needs of tourists from Germany and the more than 10,000
    German pensioners who have settled on Turkey's southern coast is
    not persecuted. However, he is merely tolerated, because he is a
    diplomatic member of the consulate general.

    One of the fundamental problems Christians face in the country is
    their completely tentative status. Unlike Germany, Turkey does not
    recognize churches and parishes as legal entities. Ownership rights
    to old churches and other buildings are routinely challenged in Turkey.

    "Hundreds of churches and parish halls were seized, thereby depriving
    Christians of their ability to congregate," complains Otmar Oehring,
    head of the human rights office of the international Catholic mission
    society Missio. Only a few months ago, Turkey's supreme appellate
    court deprived the ecumenical patriarch of his title, to which he
    has been entitled for centuries.

    The difficult situation of religious minorities is always brought
    to the attention of the international community when violent crimes
    occur. In February 2006, a Catholic priest was murdered in Trabzon,
    followed by the killing of a Christian journalist in Istanbul in
    January 2007 and of three employees of a Christian publishing company
    (more...) in Malatya in April. A monk was kidnapped in Midyat in
    November 2007, a priest was wounded in a knife attack in Izmir in
    December 2007, and a pastor in Antalya barely escaped being murdered
    when, in January of this year, Turkish intelligence uncovered a plot
    to kill him.

    There is no evidence that anti-Christian propaganda led to these acts
    of violence, but the mood in Turkish society is being systematically
    poisoned against the minority religion. Although the number of
    Christians in the country is a tiny fraction of what it once was,
    Islamist and nationalist forces stoke completely exaggerated fears of a
    "Christian mission."

    The Turkish intelligence service and the military, as well as police
    intelligence units, spread horrific stories about Christians in
    Turkey. For example, the armed forces published a report titled
    "Missionary Activities in Our Country and in the World," in which
    they warn against the "dangers posed by converts." Governors, heads
    of intelligence and education directors in the provinces have been
    called upon to take joint action against "proselytizing Christians."

    Ironically, the Turkish Interior Ministry has registered a
    ridiculously small number of converts from Islam to Christianity:
    a mere 344 in the last seven years. For this reason, Turkish papers
    like the liberal daily Sabah are critical of the efforts to incite
    hysteria. "A lie is being spread about missionaries," the paper wrote
    in an editorial. "The public is being goaded to adopt hate-filled,
    anti-Christian positions. All of this is experienced in this country,
    and sometime, when the time comes, someone will believe the fairy
    tale that 'these are the enemies among us,' and kill three people."

    Liberal voices like Sabah's allow Padovese to be cautiously
    optimistic. He was especially pleased to read an editorial by the
    editor-in-chief of the leading secular daily Hurriyet, Ertugrul Ozkok,
    who wrote: "Turks in Germany have built more than 3,000 mosques, and
    we cannot even tolerate a few churches and a dozen missionaries. Where
    is our civilization?"

    Last week, Padovese detected the first signs of a possible easing of
    tensions: The local authorities in Tarsus assembled a commission to
    discuss the request for a Christian center in the birthplace of St.

    Paul. In other words, the Turks had put together a working group,
    a notion that elicits a smile from the bishop. "The Turks and the
    Germans are similar in that respect at least," he says.
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