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  • Christians in Turkey

    Thomson Reuters
    Wed Jan 21, 2009 7:46pm EST
    Christians in Turkey
    (Reuters) - Turkey is overwhelmingly Muslim but hosts several ancient
    Christian communities -- dwindling remnants of sizeable populations that
    prospered for centuries in the Muslim-led but multi-ethnic, multi-faith
    Ottoman Empire.
    They include Syriac Christians, Greek Orthodox, Armenians and Catholics.
    Modern Turkey was founded as a secular republic by Kemal Mustafa Ataturk on
    the empire's ashes in 1923.
    Here are some details about Christians in Turkey:

    * SOME HISTORY:
    -- At the beginning of World War One, Christians still made up 20 percent of
    the population. However in May 1915, Ottoman commanders began mass
    deportation of Armenians from eastern Turkey thinking they might assist
    Russian invaders.
    -- Thousands were marched from the Anatolian borders toward Syria and
    Mesopotamia (now Iraq) and Armenians say some 1.5 million died either in
    massacres or from starvation or deprivation as they were marched through the
    desert. There are some 70,000 Armenians left in Turkey. Turkey says large
    numbers of both Christian Armenians and Muslim Turks were killed during the
    violent and chaotic break-up of the Ottoman Empire. The number of Christians
    has now fallen to around 100,000 in a total population of more than 70
    million.

    OTHER POPULATIONS:
    -- Syriacs number 20,000, the majority living in Istanbul. Syriacs migrated
    throughout the 20th century to Europe, fleeing first from persecution by the
    new secular republic, and later, from violence between Kurdish separatists
    rebels and the Turkish military in the southeast. Syriac Christians speak a
    form of Aramaic, the language of Jesus. They are not an officially
    designated minority in Turkey like the Greeks or Armenians, so have no
    special protection for rights such as private education under the 1923
    Treaty of Lausanne's provisions for non-Muslim minorities.
    -- Istanbul is the ancient seat of Orthodox Christianity but Greek Orthodox,
    who make up 20,000 of the population, often complain of discrimination and
    prejudice. Istanbul, the former Constantinople, was capital of the
    Greek-speaking Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire for centuries until it
    fell to Muslim Ottoman Turks in 1453.
    -- Turkey's 30,000 Catholics hope the government will return the St. Paul
    church, which was confiscated by the state in 1943, to Christian
    worshippers. It is used now as a museum.
    -- St. Paul, the great evangelizer of the early Christian Church, was born
    in Tarsus in modern-day Turkey and Pope Benedict proclaimed 12 months of
    events to honor him in June 2008.
    -- Pope Benedict made a sensitive, fence-mending visit to Turkey in November
    2006 after he had sparked protests from the Muslim world with a speech that
    Muslims said portrayed Islam as a religion tainted by violence and
    irrationality.
    -- He was praised for visiting Istanbul's famed Blue Mosque and praying
    there facing toward Mecca "like Muslims."

    PROPERTY AND THEOLOGICAL DISPUTES
    -- Under a reform long sought by the European Union that Ankara hopes to
    join, Turkey's parliament approved last year a law aimed at boosting the
    property rights of non-Muslim minorities. Turkish authorities have
    expropriated millions of dollars worth of property belonging to Christians
    or their churches, especially the Greek Orthodox, over the decades. The law
    would allow foundations to re-acquire some confiscated properties but not
    those sold on to third parties -- something that is unlikely to satisfy
    Christian communities. The EU has urged Turkey to create a comprehensive
    legal framework that allows all religious groups unrestricted freedom to
    operate. By law, Syriacs must attend state schools where teaching is in
    Turkish, but they can be taught about their own language and religion
    outside school hours. Brussels has raised concerns over restrictions on the
    training of Christian clergy in Turkey.

    ATTACKS ON CHRISTIANS:
    -- Turkey's Christian community has been targeted in a spate of attacks over
    several years, prompting concern among human rights groups and the European
    Union.
    -- The stabbing of an Italian Catholic priest in 2007 highlighted the
    attacks. Also in 2007, three Christians were killed at a Bible-publishing
    house at the Zirve publishing house in Malatya, a city in the country's
    southeast region.
    -- Andrea Santoro, another Italian Catholic priest, was shot dead in the
    Turkish Black Sea city of Trabzon in 2006.
    -- Prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was killed in January
    2007 in Istanbul by a young nationalist gunman. A prosecutor last month
    indicted a colonel for failing to provide protection for Dink, who had
    received death threats.
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