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Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew Discusses Minority Rights With Turk

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  • Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew Discusses Minority Rights With Turk

    ECUMENICAL PATRIARCH BARTHOLOMEW DISCUSSES MINORITY RIGHTS WITH TURKISH PM

    Order of St. Andrew, Archons of the Ecumenical Patriarchate
    http://www.archons.org/news/detail.as p?id=326
    Aug 24 2009
    Istanbul, Turkey

    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew with Turkish Prime Minister Erdogan
    outside the Patriarchal Orphanage. The historic orphanage is the
    largest single-structure wooden building in Europe and second largest
    in the world having served as the Patriarchal Orphanage until the
    1960's. (Photo: AsiaNews)

    His All Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew had a luncheon meetng
    on the island of Buyukada with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip
    Erdogan and other senior ministers concerning non-Muslim minority and
    religious freedom rights on Saturday, August 15, 2009. The meeting
    coincided with government reform aimed to address decades-old tensions
    with the country's 12 million Kurds. His All Holiness, joined by
    leaders of the Armenian, Jewish, Assyrian Orthodox, and Catholic
    communities, delivered a report on the main problems of religious
    minorities and presented it to Erdogan.

    The 88-article report includes such issues as reopening the Orthodox
    Theological School of Halki, violations of property rights, and
    bringing attention to cultural diversity and to the problems of local
    administration on the island of Heybeliada (Halki).

    While only reporters from the Anatolia News Agency and the state-run
    Turkish Radio and Television Corporation were allowed to attend the
    meeting, Prime Minister Erdogan promised democratic reforms to the
    religious leaders. Turkey is passing through a transition period,
    Erdogan said in his remarks, admitting that problems have been
    experienced during this process along which the government has
    been exerting efforts for further democratization of the country,
    Anatolia reported.

    The government is against both ethnic and religious nationalism, he
    continued, underlining that they have kept an equal distance from every
    ethic and religious group in society. "Are there not deficiencies
    regarding implementation? Yes, there are. We will overcome these
    [deficiencies] with a struggle to be carried out all together, and I
    believe that this democratic initiative will change a lot of things in
    our country. Only if we stand hand in hand and shoulder to shoulder."

    Erdogan was quoted as saying by Anatolia. "Persians have a saying,
    'They gathered, talked and dispersed.' We should not be of those who
    gather, talk and disperse. A result should come out of this."

    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew and the Prime Minister later toured
    the Haghia Yorgi Church, where they had a private conversation in
    which His All Holiness voiced his community's concerns. They also
    visited the Patriarchal Orphanage on Buyukada, which was seized by
    the Turkish state a decade ago. The European Court of Human Rights
    issued a landmark decision last year that the Turkey Government had
    wrongly confiscated the property. The government has yet to act on
    that ruling. His All Holiness also raised the issue of the Halki
    Seminary, but Erdogan made no statement on the issue. An Ecumenical
    Patriarchate official later said. "We believe the prime minister is
    looking for a way to open the school. There is movement on this. It
    was a very positive, very friendly meeting."

    Turkey signaled last month that the seminary may open after pressure
    from the EU and U.S. President Barack Obama who, while visiting
    Turkey in April said, "Freedom of religion and expression lead to
    a strong and vibrant civil society that only strengthens the state,
    which is why steps like reopening the Halki Seminary will send such
    an important signal inside Turkey and beyond."

    The EU has made reopening Halki Seminary a test of the government's
    commitment to religious freedom for non-Muslims. The Theological
    institution was forcibly closed by the Turkish Government in 1971.

    Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew voiced pleasure over the meeting with
    the Prime Minister, saying "We have been inspired with hope; we are
    optimistic." His All Holiness was also quoted saying the meeting was
    "historical" and "a big step."
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