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TBILISI: Patriarch: Legislative Amendment On Religious Groups' Statu

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  • TBILISI: Patriarch: Legislative Amendment On Religious Groups' Statu

    PATRIARCH: LEGISLATIVE AMENDMENT ON RELIGIOUS GROUPS' STATUS 'DANGEROUS'

    Civil Georgia
    http://www.civil.ge/eng/article.php?id=23716
    July 7 2011
    Georgia

    Head of the Georgian Orthodox Church, Ilia II, expressed regret over
    hasty approval of legislative amendments on religious minorities'
    legal status, saying that the law "is dangerous" and it required
    thorough consideration.

    "This law is so important and so dangerous that lawmakers should
    have thought about what its consequences might be in ten, hundred
    years... We lack analytical thinking. Analysis should be made before
    doing something and not afterwards," Ilia II said.

    "You all know my [July 4] statement... We are not saying that religious
    [minorities] should not be granted with [legal] status. We are saying
    that we should sit down, invite academicians, clerics and specialists
    and discuss it."

    "It is regrettable that lawmakers were so in hurry that they passed
    [the legislative amendments] in one day," the Georgian Patriarch said.

    He also said that the Georgian Church's position should not be
    interpreted as being against the Armenian Church or Armenians.

    A senior cleric from the Georgian Orthodox Church, Archbishop Zenon,
    linked hasty approval of the legislative amendments by the Georgian
    Parliament to Armenia, suggesting that after a failure to agree with
    the Georgian Orthodox Church, the Armenian Apostolic Church managed
    to achieve its goal of gaining legal status through the consent of
    the Georgian authorities. Georgian Church officials also say, that the
    legal status would now pave the way for some religious minority groups,
    particularly the Armenian Apostolic Church, to formally claim ownership
    over several disputed churches in Georgia. The Georgian Patriarchate
    was insisting that the Georgian Church too should have been granted a
    legal status in Armenia in parallel to the similar decision by Georgia.

    "My statement in no way contains any opinion against Armenians.

    Despite of all conversations, Georgians and Armenians have always been
    and will be brothers; this is necessary. When Armenians are in trouble,
    we provide our help and when we are in trouble they provide us help,"
    the head of the Georgian Orthodox Church said on July 7.

    "What I said was that this is so complicated and important law and
    this law may be misused," Ilia II said.

    "For that reason everything should have been taken into consideration
    and the [Georgian Orthodox] Church should have also been involved
    in discussion, because in many cases it also concerns the Church,"
    he said.

    "Some say why the Church is touching upon the issue which is a matter
    of the state. That's not the issue only related to the state; that's
    the issue which concerns the entire nation - the Church and especially
    the state. And the process, which was being discussed yesterday have
    strained relations between the religions. That should not happen. The
    Georgian people have always been protector of other small nations and
    national minorities; the Georgian people have always been protecting
    Armenians, Russians, Azerbaijanis, Jews."

    "I want to request the President to veto this law unless discussions
    take place. The main responsibility lies on the President and I want
    him to be in calmness - he and our country. I hope everything will
    be all right," the Georgian Patriarch said.

    At the time when the Patriarch requested President Saakashvili to
    veto the bill on July 7, the document was already signed into law
    and published, meaning that all formal procedures are now completed
    and the bill is already the law.

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