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Ankara: Meeting Of Patriarchs

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  • Ankara: Meeting Of Patriarchs

    MEETING OF PATRIARCHS
    BERIL DEDEOGLU

    Turkish Press
    7/8/2009

    STAR- Fener Greek Patriarch Bartholomeos and new Russian Orthodox
    Patriarch Kirill met in Istanbul last weekend. During his visit,
    Kirill expressed pleasure at the meeting, indicating a new era in
    which disagreements between the two churches will end. Many historical
    factors have fuelled these disagreements between the Fener and Moscow
    patriarchates in the Orthodox world. Although some have to do with
    faith, most of them actually concern administrative problems and power
    sharing. When states and their rivalries over regions of influence
    are considered, we can better see the political dimensions of the
    disagreements.

    The simmering tension between the churches during the West's Cold
    War-era rivalry with the Soviets for influence in the Middle East
    helped keep the Moscow-Athens-Nicosia line together on the Cyprus
    issue, while the Istanbul church helped to block further Soviet
    influence in the Middle East. In sum, these differing political
    preferences alienated the two churches from each other, and the
    rivalry intensified in the post-Soviet era, when the church in Russia
    got new life.

    The Fener Greek Patriarchate has usually expressed a balance with
    the European Union and Western tendencies, whereas the Moscow
    Patriarchate symbolized the former Soviet Union and Russian foreign
    policy. These two churches - one representing the minority in its
    region, and the other representing the majority - started to reflect
    Eastern-Western conflicts in different ways, along the lines of the
    latest disagreements over Georgia and particularly Ukraine.

    The problem was about whether the Ukrainian Orthodox Church should be
    attached to Fener or Moscow. Moscow said the former was unacceptable,
    because it should never stray from Russia's axis. Although the
    Ukrainian Church chose to move away from Moscow, Fener has avoided
    doing anything that might sow tension with the Russian Church and
    Russia.

    It seems Fener's careful relationship with Moscow, coming at a time
    of good Turkish-Russian relations, allowed the parties to reestablish
    dialogue. This shows that religious leaders are able to see global
    changes and possible new power balances, transformation processes
    based on social transition, and possible risks.

    It's sad to see similar tendencies so pervasive among political
    leaders. Iranian President Mohammad Ahmedinejad has been vexing his US
    counterpart Barack Obama, and the French president has been doing the
    same thing to Turkey. Obviously, leaders who take seriously the two
    patriarchs' stance that 'we belong to the same world' will strengthen
    their hand in the emerging global balances, but others will lose their
    positions. While the US forges ties with its old foes like Russia,
    Argentina and Cuba, and Turkey does the same with Greece, Armenia and
    Syria, countries which endanger their existing relationships might
    one day find themselves as politically isolated as Iran, Israel,
    or North Korea. The Russian Orthodox Patriarch might not have come
    to Istanbul in vain.
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