Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

ANKARA: Turkey's Dwindling Christians Fear End Is Approaching

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • ANKARA: Turkey's Dwindling Christians Fear End Is Approaching

    TURKEY'S DWINDLING CHRISTIANS FEAR END IS APPROACHING

    Today's Zaman
    http://www.todayszaman.com/tz-web/news-224386-116-turkeys-dwindling-christians-fear-end-is-approaching.html
    Oct 15 2010
    Turkey

    Andreas Zografos left Turkey in 1974 amid economic and political
    turmoil to find work in Europe, but he always knew he would return
    home.

    "The ties of this land are strong. I was drawn back by the blue of
    the sea, the color of the sky," he says. A Greek Orthodox Christian,
    Zografos, now 63, and his wife today tend to the 19th-century St.

    Nicholas Church, where his grandfather painted vibrant icons, on
    Heybeliada, or Halki in Greek, an island off the İstanbul coast.

    Heybeliada was home to a few thousand ethnic Greeks when he left,
    Zografos says. About 25 remain, part of a dwindling community of 2,500
    Greeks in İstanbul, the capital of the Greek Orthodox Byzantine
    Empire until the Ottoman conquest of 1453. İstanbul, a city of 13
    million Muslims, is still the seat of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew,
    spiritual leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox. "We are proud
    our patriarch is still here in the land where our faith began. This
    is holy land," Zografos says.

    But vast numbers of Christians have left their ancient homeland and
    now make up just 0.13 percent of Turkey's population of 73 million
    people. Some 60,000 Armenians and 15,000 Syriac Orthodox also live in
    Turkey, and there are much smaller communities of Jehovah's Witnesses,
    Roman Catholics, Chaldeans and others.

    Religious freedom is enshrined in the secular Constitution. Turkey
    spurns the outright religious rule of some Muslim states. Prime
    Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan has pledged to expand rights for
    religious minorities to meet the standards of the European Union,
    which Turkey aspires to join. But many Christians say they still
    face deep-rooted discrimination. Non-Muslims are tacitly banned from
    jobs in the state bureaucracy and security forces. Zografos finished
    primary school and began working at a hairdresser's at age 13. After
    finishing military service at age 22, he could not earn enough to
    provide for his family. "It is hard for Greeks to find work. I knew I
    had to leave. There was never a chance to make a living here," he says.

    Sporadic violence The EU has said that applications to open places of
    worship by non-Muslim citizens are generally refused in Turkey and
    that some groups say security forces monitor their worship. Attacks
    against Christians are infrequent but sensational. In 2006, a Roman
    Catholic priest was murdered. Earlier this year, a Catholic bishop was
    stabbed to death at his home in southern Turkey. The bishop's driver
    was arrested, and the Vatican said the murder was not politically
    motivated. Armenian newspaper editor Hrant Dink was slain in 2007.

    Three members of a Bible-publishing firm were tortured and killed
    the same year. No one has been convicted in these cases.

    Most of Turkey's Christians fled in the upheaval of World War I and
    the ensuing War of Independence. Hundreds of thousands of Armenians
    were massacred and 1.5 million Greeks deported in a population
    exchange. A treaty with Western powers in 1923 allowed İstanbul's
    non-Muslim communities to retain special education and property
    rights. But decades of economic discrimination and sporadic violence
    reduced Christians to less than 200,000 by 1955, according to state
    statistics. Since then, the decline has been precipitous. Today 60
    percent of Turkey's Greeks are over the age of 55, according to the
    patriarchate.

    Political tensions Zografos's departure coincided with a peak in
    tensions between Greeks and Turks in 1974, when Turkey invaded Cyprus
    in response to a short-lived Greek Cypriot coup, though he says he
    was spared any fallout and left solely for economic reasons.

    Most Syriacs, who speak a form of Aramaic, the language of Jesus,
    abandoned their homeland in southeastern Turkey more recently, fleeing
    violence between separatist Kurds and the Turkish army in the 1990s.

    Turkey has confiscated billions of dollars worth of property belonging
    to Armenian and Greek foundations when they can no longer fill
    schools or churches. The European Court of Human Rights has ruled
    these seizures are illegal. Since 1971 the government has also kept
    closed the Holy Theological School of Halki, perched on Heybeliada's
    highest ridge, called the Hill of Hope. Without a seminary, Bartholomew
    struggles to dispatch enough clergy to celebrate mass at the churches
    that do still operate.

    At St. Nicholas, Zografos often fills in as a sexton, helping the
    priest perform basic rituals for the dozen or so elderly worshippers
    who still come to pray. He remembers Sundays in the 1960s when the
    congregation would fill the basilica-style church and spill into the
    narthex. "If I don't do this, then who will?" says Zografos, who says
    he is not religious but feels a duty to serve his community. "Soon
    there will be just one or two of us left on the island. I don't see
    anything else but the end." Reuters




    From: A. Papazian
Working...
X