Turkey’s Early Christian Roots — Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, PBS

Religion & Ethics Newsweekly, PBS
COVER STORY:
Turkey’s Early Christian Roots
January 19, 2007 Episode no. 1021
k1021/cover.html

RELIGION & ETHICS NEWSWEEKLY Cover Story Transcript: "Turkey’s Early
Christian Roots" Show #1021, PBS National Feed Date: January 19, 2007

BOB ABERNETHY, anchor: Christian holy sites in Israel are popular
pilgrimage destinations, but perhaps the most extensive ruins from
Christian antiquity are in the predominantly Muslim nation of
Turkey. Several books of the New Testament were written in and to
communities in what is now Turkey, and many foundational Christian
doctrines were established there. Kim Lawton explored Turkey’s early
Christian legacy.

KIM LAWTON: Sunday morning in Istanbul. Members of Turkey’s tiny
Christian minority gather for worship carrying on traditions that have
been practiced here for nearly two millennia. Turkey may be 99 percent
Muslim today, but Christianity has deep roots in this land the New
Testament calls Asia Minor, and that history is still literally part
of the landscape.

Allen Callahan is a scholar with the Society for Biblical Studies and
has visited Turkey several times.

Professor ALLEN CALLAHAN (Society for Biblical Studies): Pound for
pound, as it were, we have more remnants of Christian antiquity in
Turkey than anywhere else.

LAWTON: After Jesus was crucified in Jerusalem, his followers
scattered across the ancient world. What is now called Turkey was a
key crossroads between Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, and the
fledgling Christian faith took hold in this Roman province with a rich
Greek heritage. One of the most important cities was Ephesus, site of
a huge temple to the Greek goddess Artemis.

ALTAY GUR (Tour Guide): A lot of people were coming to visit the
temple of Artemis, and that was extremely good for the economic life
of the city, which brought Ephesus at that time period as the third
biggest city in the world.

LAWTON: Tour guide Altay Gur specializes in early church history. He
showed me around Ephesus, which has some of the most extensive and
best preserved Roman ruins in the world. One of the most famous views
is captured on the Turkish 20 lira bill.

Mr. GUR: On the right side you can see the temple of Hadrian, and you
can see the beautiful library of Ephesus, which was the third largest
one, and you can see the columns here.

LAWTON: According to biblical tradition, the Apostle Paul lived in
Ephesus for perhaps as long as three years, and he used it as a
stopping point during his missionary journeys.

Mr. GUR: So these are the streets where Saint Paul was walking 2,000
years ago.

LAWTON: The New Testament Book of Ephesians was addressed to the
Christians here, and scholars say Paul wrote several other books of
the Bible while staying here.

Mr. GUR: We call this library Celsius library, and Celsius was the
Roman governor.

LAWTON (to Mr. Gur): Was this here when the Apostle Paul lived here?

Mr. GUR: Yes, yes it was.

LAWTON: For many tourists, seeing the place firsthand can bring the
Bible stories to life.

Prof. CALLAHAN: Especially if one has, really, if one has a guidebook
in one hand, the Book of Acts in the other, you can creatively connect
the dots.

LAWTON: A case in point, the 24,000-seat theater. The Book of Acts in
the New Testament tells the story of a riot against the Apostle Paul,
which took place in this amphitheatre. It was instigated by a
silversmith named Demetrius who made small figurines of the goddess
Artemis. He was worried that Paul’s preaching about Christianity could
threaten his business, and he began a riot that ended up here with the
townspeople in this amphitheatre. The Bible says Paul left Ephesus
shortly after that.

The Ephesus area was also important for another early Church leader,
Saint John, known in the Bible as "the disciple whom Jesus loved."
Although some scholars disagree, tradition holds that John presided
over the churches of Asia Minor and died here of old age. In the sixth
century, Byzantine Emperor Justinian built a massive basilica over the
place where Christians say John is buried. Much of it still stands.

Mr. GUR: So now we are on the way to the house of Mother Mary.

LAWTON: John is also connected to another Church tradition that ties
the Virgin Mary to Turkey. Some Christians, especially Catholics,
believe Mary accompanied John to Asia Minor and spent her last days in
a small house outside Ephesus. That belief is based on a story in the
Gospel of John that puts Mary and the disciple at the foot of the
cross.

Prof. CALLAHAN: These two are together in that poignant moment, and
Jesus says from the cross, "Mother behold your son," then turns to the
beloved disciple and says, "Son behold your mother." He entrusts his
mother to the care of the beloved disciple, this disciple whom he
loves.

LAWTON: The Bible says from then on John took Mary into his home, but
it doesn’t say where. Sister Antonia Velasco lives on the grounds and
believes it was here.

Sister ANTONIA VELASCO: It’s known that Saint John was in Ephesus,
that he wrote the Gospel here, and that’s how we believe that Mary was
somewhere in the zone here, and then you have to believe in faith that
she was here.

LAWTON: Many other Catholics believe Mary was taken into heaven from
Jerusalem. But the Turkish tradition gained popularity after an
eighteenth-century nun who never left Germany said she saw Mary’s last
house in some mystical visions. Her descriptions matched this house,
which had long been revered by local Christians. Sister Antonia says
the place has a peace that she believes suits Mary.

Sister ANTONIA: Imagining her overlooking the ocean, with all of her
memories of the life of Christ here, contemplating, you know,
contemplating and praying over what she had lived through.

LAWTON: The New Testament does talk about many other early church
leaders who lived and worked in Asia Minor. In addition to the Book of
Ephesians, the books of Galatians and Colossians were written to
congregations here. A host of other cities in Turkey make biblical
appearances as well, if only as an aside.

The city of Hierapolis is only mentioned once in the New Testament. In
the Book of Colossians, Paul speaks briefly about the early church
leaders’ concern for the Christians here.

Asia Minor also plays a prominent role in the apocalyptic Book of
Revelation, which is addressed to seven churches, all of them in what
is now Turkey. One was Laodicea. Christians here were rebuked for
being lukewarm. In contrast to Ephesus, only a little excavation has
been done on this vast site.

Christianity flourished after Emperor Constantine officially
recognized the religion in the year 313. Seven ecumenical church
councils met here to formalize foundational doctrines of the
faith. Among them, the influential Council of Nicea in 325, which
established the creed still recited in churches around the world.

Prof. CALLAHAN: The decisions of those councils, the sort of
intellectual fruit of those councils, remain with us today.

LAWTON: Constantine proclaimed Constantinople, modern-day Istanbul,
the new capital of the Holy Roman Empire in 330, and the city remained
a center of global Christianity until it was conquered by the Ottomans
in 1453. Callahan says the lingering remnants provide both
inspiration and caution.

Prof. CALLAHAN: Life among the ruins can be sobering. So many people
invested so much time, effort, energy, and wealth into the
architectural expressions of their faith and their commitments, and
most of those expressions are in various states of decay.

LAWTON: Many visitors are surprised Turkey hasn’t done more to
excavate and develop its Christian holy sites. Callahan says it’s
been a complicated issue for predominantly Muslim Turkey.

Prof. CALLAHAN: A government or a society sees itself as standing in
one tradition. But it sees all around it the remnants, the residue, of
another tradition with which it’s had an ambivalent relationship. So,
what to do about those?

LAWTON: And there is the always challenging question of finances.

Mr. GUR: Even the U.S. government could not finance the excavations in
Turkey, because we have more than 4,000 ancient sites in Turkey, and
the economy of Turkey compared to the U.S. is very little.

LAWTON: Gur urges others to step in and help.

Mr. GUR: I believe that these ruins here belong to you as much as it
belongs to me because these are world heritage, so it belongs to us
all.

LAWTON: It’s vital, he says, that this history not be lost
forever. I’m Kim Lawton in western Turkey.

http://www.pbs.org/wnet/religionandethics/wee

OSCE Called Hrant Dink’s Assassination a `Cowardly Act’

PanARMENIAN.Net

OSCE Called Hrant Dink’s Assassination a `Cowardly Act’
20.01.2007 14:19 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ OSCE representative on Media freedom Miklós
Haraszti released a statement, which condemns Armenian journalist
Hrant Dink’s assassination in Istanbul. Particularly, the statement
says violence against journalists must not remain unpunished. `We call
upon Turkish authorities to find the murderers as soon as possible,’
says Haraszti.

`Hrant Dink was one of the most famous representatives of the Armenian
Diaspora in Turkey, who was speaking on its problems publicly. His
assassination is a cowardly act,’ Haraszti underlines, `Yerkir Media’
reports.

ANKARA: Turkish-Armenian editor shot dead in Istanbul

Yeni ªafak, Turkey
Jan 19 2007

Turkish-Armenian editor shot dead in Istanbul

A Turkish-Armenian editor, who had been convicted of insulting
Turkey’s identity over his comments on Armenians, was shot dead
outside his newspaper office in Istanbul on Friday.

A Turkish-Armenian editor, who had been convicted of insulting
Turkey’s identity over his comments on Armenians, was shot dead
outside his newspaper office in Istanbul on Friday.

Turkish broadcaster NTV said Hrant Dink, a controversial writer and
journalist, was shot by an unknown assailant as he left his newspaper
Agos around 1300 GMT in central Istanbul.

A colleague of Dink’s confirmed he had died. Police released no
further information.

Last year Turkey’s appeals court upheld a six-month suspended jail
sentence against Dink, a Turkish-born Armenian, for referring in an
article to an Armenian nationalist idea of ethnic purity without
Turkish blood.

The court said the comments went against an article of Turkey’s
revised penal code which lets prosecutors pursue cases against
writers and scholars for "insulting Turkish identity".

Dink was one of dozens of writers who have been charged under laws
against insulting Turkishness, particularly over issues related to an
alleged genocide of Armenians by Ottoman Turks during World War One.

Turkey denies genocide was committed.

The government has promised to revise the much criticised article of
the penal code. The European Union has repeatedly called on Ankara to
change the law.

Dink was editor-in-of chief of the bilingual Turkish and Armenian
weekly Agos.

Fehmi Koru, a columnist at the Yeni Safak newspaper, said the murder
was aimed at destabilizing Turkey.

"His loss is the loss of Turkey," Koru said.

Hrant Dink Killed by Those Who Didn’t Want to Hear Truth

PanARMENIAN.Net

Hrant Dink Killed by Those Who Didn’t Want to Hear Truth
19.01.2007 18:36 GMT+04:00

/PanARMENIAN.Net/ `Turkey, being exhausted by the
European Union and pretending to secure freedom of
speech solved the issue in a typical way. Hrant Dink
was killed by those, who did not want to hear the
truth,’ Armenian political scientist Levon
Melik-Shahnazaryan told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter
when commenting on the killing of the Agos editor. In
his words, the murder was committed by the forces
which do utmost to keep the truth about the Armenian
Genocide `under lock and key’.

In his opinion, Nobel Prize winner Orhan Pamuk’s life
is also under threat. The writer was also accused in
compliance of Article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code.

Press Conference with PACE president Rene Van Der Linden

Official Kremlin Int’l News Broadcast
January 12, 2007 Friday

PRESS CONFERENCE WITH PACE PRESIDENT RENE VAN DER LINDEN
INTERFAX, 14:00, JANUARY 12, 2007

[parts omitted]

Q: The Council of Europe has passed Resolution No. 1416, which
directly condemns Armenia for the occupation of Azerbaijan’s
territory, I mean Nagorny Karabakh. Why doesn’t the Council of Europe
impose sanctions on Armenia in this case? Does the Council of Europe
have such a mechanism? If it does, why is it not used? Then what is
the point of passing resolutions?

And my second question about Azerbaijani (inaudible)… in Armenia.
The Azerbaijani National Security Ministry has informed all
international organizations that 5,000 Azeris are held prisoner in
Armenia. How can the Council of Europe assist in investigating this
issue objectively and bringing the guilty party to justice and
releasing these people?

Rene van der Linden: On the last question, I cannot give you this
information. We have this special group under the leadership of
Russel Johnson who is dealing with this. And I am not informed about
this question at this point.

On the first question, we are not a military force. We are a value
community which uses soft power. That means convince people and try
through dialogue, through communication with the other party to find
peaceful solutions. And I agree that this conflict between Azerbaijan
and Armenia is a very sensitive and also a very painful one. And it
is in the interest of Armenia especially to solve this conflict
because they will suffer the most. They are quite isolated. They are
quite isolated, and if you look to the young generation, a number of
young people went abroad to look for a better future. Yet their two
leaders did not succeed and find a common solution.

The sanctions we have is to, first, we can take away the voting
rights of the members in the Council of Europe, of their delegation.
And the strongest repercussion can be that we postponed the
membership of a member state. We don’t consider this in this case.
But in the future, in the case of using force, military force,
weapons, that could happen again as it happens at that time in Greece
and in Turkey.

Ruben Torosyan Aspires for Nobel Prize

Panorama.am

19:47 11/01/2007

RUBEN TOROSYAN ASPIRES FOR NOBEL PRIZE

Ruben Torosyan, chairman of Supreme Council –
Parliamentary Club, has published a booklet stating
violations committed by several political parties. `If
I tackle these issues, I may get Nobel Prize,’ he told
a new conference today.

Among the main transgressors are Armenian Republican
Party (HHK), Prosperous Armenia, Armenian
Revolutionary Federation (Dashnakcutiun), People’s
Party of Tigran Karapetyan and Orinats Yerkir. For
example, he says HHK violates the law because Defense
Minister Serzh Sargsyan is a member of a party.
Another member of HHK, Karen Karapetyan, distributes
computers and TVs to schools in marzes.

Torosyan also names Tigran Karapetyan saying he makes
donations not through his foundation but the political
party. Also, he thinks Dashnakcutiun violates the law.
Torosyan says Dashnakcutiun is not registered in
Armenia and is supplied with foreign capital.

Source: Panorama.am

ANKARA: Menendez again blocks nomination of envoy to Armenia

Turkish Daily News , Turkey
Jan 12 2007

Diplomacy Newsline –
Menendez again blocks nomination of envoy to Armenia:

ANK – TDN with AP

Democratic senator Robert Menendez, a key backer of the Armenian
cause in the U.S. Senate, on Wednesday again blocked the nomination
of a career diplomat to be U.S. ambassador to Armenia and urged the
Bush administration to submit another candidate.

Sen. Menendez placed a hold on the nomination of Richard Hoagland
for the second time because of Hoagland’s refusal to call the World
War I-era killings of Anatolian Armenians during the Ottoman Empire
era genocide.

A hold on nominations is a parliamentary privilege accorded to U.S.
senators.

Menendez has said: `the State Department and the Bush
administration are just flat-out wrong in their refusal to recognize
the Armenian genocide. It is well past time to drop the euphemisms,
the wink-wink, nod-nod brand of foreign diplomacy that overlooks
heinous atrocities around the world.’

Hoagland’s predecessor, John Evans, reportedly had his tour of duty
as ambassador to Armenia cut short because, in a social setting, he
referred to the killings as genocide. Menendez blocked Hoagland’s
nomination after he refused to use the word genocide at his
confirmation hearing in June.

The Bush administration resubmitted Hoagland’s name on Tuesday
because it effectively expired at the end of the previous Congress in
December.

Armenia To Be Ready To Accept Iranian Gas In The First Quarter Of Th

ARMENIA TO BE READY TO ACCEPT IRANIAN GAS IN THE FIRST QUARTER OF THE YEAR

Panorama.am
Source: Panorama.am
18:53 09/01/2007

Armenian Foreign Minister Vartan Oskanyan said today that Armenia will
be ready to accept the Iranian gas in the first quarter of the year.

"I am back from Iran quite recently. Concrete arrangements have been
reached with the Iranian gas to end tests in January and open the
line in March," the minister said.

Oskanyan said he thinks it is logical to hand over 40-km section of
the gas pipeline to Hayrusgazard, Russian gas supplier. "It was my
personal suggestion," the minister said.

He said he believes the Iranian side will accept the suggestion with
understanding.

Karen Armstrong Describes Pope’s Words As "Extremely Dangerous"

KAREN ARMSTRONG DESCRIBES POPE’S WORDS AS "EXTREMELY DANGEROUS"
By Lucy Jones

Washington Report on Middle East Affairs, DC
December 2006, pages 28-29

Many European newspapers thought Pope Benedict XVI should have
shown greater sensitivity in his Sept. 12 address to the University
of Regensburg, in which he quoted a Byzantine emperor, Manuel II
Paleologus, as saying: "Show me just what Mohammed brought that was
new, and there you will find things only evil and inhuman, such as
his command to spread by the sword the faith he preached."

"Like the Danish cartoons," said the London Times on Sept. 16, "the
pope’s words provide a golden opportunity for Islamist militants to
inflame the millions who have no access to his full speech with a
distorted interpretation of his words and his intentions.

"It might have been wiser," The Times added, "if the pope had excised
from his speech any remark, especially a quotation about the Prophet
Muhammad, that could be taken out of context by those for whom
ecumenism is anathema."

Admonished Britain’s Guardian the same day: "Even if Benedict XVI,
despite his reputation for meticulous preparation, had failed to
appreciate the impact of his thoughts, his advisers should have.

"There might have been less protest had Benedict a clearer record
in favor of dialogue with Islam," the newspaper continued. As a
cardinal in the Holy See, Benedict was known to be skeptical of John
Paul II’s pursuit of conversation, the Guardian noted. One of his
earliest decisions as pope, it pointed out, was to move Archbishop
Michael Fitzgerald, one of the Catholic Church’s leading experts on
Islam and head of its council on interreligious dialogue, away from
the center of influence in Rome, to Egypt as a papal nuncio.

"[The pope] appears to have had no idea that his academic musings at
his old university in Bavaria would have such an impact," wrote The
Independent on Sept. 17, "and that is precisely why he deserves to
be criticized."

Writing in the same newspaper the following day, however, the author
Karen Armstrong found it "difficult to believe that his reference to
an inherently violent strain in Islam was entirely accidental.

"Coming on the heels of the Danish cartoon crisis," she continued,
"his remarks were extremely dangerous. They will convince more Muslims
that the West is incurably Islamophobic and engaged in a new crusade."

In Germany, however, Die Welt said on Sept. 18 that the Islamic world’s
anger about the quote was groundless because it merely expressed a
"historically documented fact."

According to the newspaper, it is neither provocative nor blasphemous
to point out that "Christianity, abuses notwithstanding, is essentially
not a religion of conquest, as practiced personally and successfully
by the prophet of Islam.

"The hysterical reactions from the Muslim world mainly show that there
are enough influential people who take advantage of any opportunity
in order to start a clash of cultures," it concluded.

"The pope does not have to apologize for expressing an opinion," said
Spain’s El Mundo the same day. "He upheld an idea we fully share:
tolerance."

But Germany’s Frankfurter Rundschau of Sept. 18 thought the pontiff’s
remarks were ill-advised.

"A pope is not a scholar who can philosophize for himself without
considering the consequences," the paper argued. "He must put himself
in the place of those listeners who feel humiliated by the West."

Echoed France’s Liberation the same day: "He is not expected to compete
with Bush’s neoconservatives in fueling… a war of civilizations,
but to preach coexistence between religions."

French Genocide Law Said to "Contribute to Dogmatization" "Pointless,"
was how France’s Liberation of Oct. 13 described a bill passed by
the lower house making it a crime to deny that the Turks committed
genocide against the Armenians in 1915.

Even if some dispute the term "genocide," the newspaper editorialized,
"The destruction of the Armenian people of Asia Minor…is an
historical fact which is hard to deny."

It went on to add, however, that the new bill "contributes to the
dogmatization of historical research, the best example which can
be found in Turkey," and concluded, "This law will hinder the very
people who are seeking progress in this area."

"It is not for the law to write history," argued Le Monde the previous
day. "It is for the people of Turkey to remember and for diplomacy
to encourage them to do so."

Turkish intellectuals who already have spoken of the genocide at home,
Le Monde pointed out, believe the French bill "would be grist to the
mill of nationalists ready to demand that Ankara impose…economic
reprisals against France."

It "borders on the absurd," noted Austria’s Die Presse of Oct. 12,
that France may make the denial of Armenian genocide punishable by
imprisonment, while in Turkey prison looms for those who say genocide
occurred.

"How can there be an open, scholarly discussion if this can land you
in prison in two countries?" it asked.

However, that day’s Der Standard supported the bill, which had yet
to be passed by the Senate and president.

While acknowledging that the vote may be the result of "consideration
for the 450,000 French-Armenians in the country," the Austrian paper
went on to argue that the killings seem to meet the genocide criteria
laid down in United Nations conventions.

"This is why the bill passed by the Paris MPs is to be approved
of," it concluded, "even though it may be based on petty electoral
considerations."

Nobel Prize for Turkish Writer Seen as Having "Strong Political Aspect"
In addition to the Nobel Prize for Literature, Orhan Pamuk "could also
have received the Nobel Peace Prize," wrote Spain’s El Pais on Oct. 13,
the day after the Turkish writer was awarded the honor. "He is one of
the intellectuals who has reflected with the greatest brilliance…on
the depravity of national, ethnic or religious fanaticism."

Awarding the prize to Pamuk was "the best decision the Nobel Prize
committee has taken for years," opined Germany’s Frankfurter Allgemeine
Zeitung the same day, likening it to 1970’s Nobel Prize to the Soviet
dissident author Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

The Czech daily Hospodarske Noviny of Oct. 13 questioned the judges’
intentions, however. "The Nobel Prize for Literature for a writer
who was charged in Turkey last year for daring to speak aloud about
the Armenian genocide and massacres of Kurds has a strong political
aspect," it said. "Pamuk’s literary qualities are unquestionable,
but the Nobel Prize committee’s decision this year was more political
than literary," it concluded.

Afghanistan Described as "Let Down By the Rest of the World" The
murder in Afghanistan on Sept. 25 of Safia Amajan, director of the
Ministry of Women’s Affairs in Kandahar, emphasized "the despicable
ideology of the Taliban," the U.K.’s Independent wrote the following
day. Amajan had opened numerous female schools and provided hundreds
of women and girls with an education that, only five years ago,
was denied them by the obscurantist Taliban.

Her murder-believed to have been orchestrated by the Taliban-underlines
how shamefully Afghanistan has been let down by the rest of the world,
said the newspaper.

"The reason is neglect," it continued, adding that President Hamid
Karzai’s warnings about the deteriorating security situation in his
country "were ignored by a world preoccupied by Iraq.

"It is now apparent that the battle for Afghanistan did not end in
2001," the newspaper concluded. "The fall of Kabul was merely the
beginning of that struggle. And, as this latest murder shows, the
terrible truth is that the forces of enlightenment and democracy are
in retreat."

Lebanon Cited as Possible Role Model for Palestinian State Germany’s
Die Welt of Sept. 21 welcomed the parliament’s approval for the
dispatch of up to 2,400 navy personnel to patrol Lebanon’s coast.

There are "good reasons" for the deployment, the paper argued, ranging
from the need to stabilize Lebanon to Berlin’s desire to become
"an important player in the Middle East."

That day’s Frankfurter Rundschau agreed, saying that parliament has
taken the correct decision. There is an "historic dimension" to the
deployment, the newspaper noted, because a stable Lebanon could serve
as a template for a future Palestinian state.

"An established state, with Beirut as the capital, in which citizens
take matters that concern them into their own hands, could turn out
to be a model for the center of the Middle East conflict," it said.

Lucy Jones is a free-lance journalist based in London.

06/0612028.html

http://www.wrmea.com/archives/December_20

Orthodox Christmas Gloomy In Bethlehem

ORTHODOX CHRISTMAS GLOOMY IN BETHLEHEM

The Gazette (Montreal)
January 7, 2007 Sunday
Final Edition

Greek Orthodox followers huddled under doorways around Manger Square
in Bethlehem as bouts of heavy rain marked the start of Christmas Eve
celebrations yesterday at what is believed to be Christ’s birthplace.

The Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Theophilos III began
Christmas ceremonies for Greek, Syrian and Coptic churches at the
ancient Church of the Nativity.

The Romanian and Ethiopian churches also joined in rites that were
attended by local tourists and international pilgrims, but in lower
numbers than in previous years. Security concerns contributed to a
drop in tourist numbers.

The Orthodox faith uses the old Julian calendar in which Christmas
falls 13 days after its more widespread Gregorian calendar counterpart
on Dec. 25.

The Armenian Church will celebrate the city’s third Christmas on Jan.
19.