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Sunday, 15 August 2010 - Orthodox flock to once-banned holy site in Turkey |
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    Edition: U.S. Article Comments (0) Slideshow Save Email Print Reprints Most Popular Most Shared Obama swims in Gulf, says beaches open for business | Video 11:17am EDT U.S. hopeful Pakistan can avert big cholera outbreak 14 Aug 2010 U.S.-South Korea drills anger North, worry China 14 Aug 2010 Afghanistan says finds 1.8 billion barrel oilfield 4:51am EDT China paper warns military thinking outmoded 2:12am EDT U.N. chief urges faster foreign aid for Pakistan | Video 11:16am EDT Apple manager charged with taking kickbacks 14 Aug 2010 Scientists find new superbug spreading from India 11 Aug 2010 Apple manager charged with taking kickbacks 6:46am EDT BlackBerry assures India on access to services | Video 13 Aug 2010 Best of the week 13 Aug 2010 Afghanistan says finds 1.8 billion barrel oilfield 4:51am EDT Martin Luther has Wittenberg in a stir 500 years on 11 Aug 2010 Cancer cells slurp up fructose, US study finds 02 Aug 2010 Obama swims in Gulf, says beaches open for business | Video 11:17am EDT Strange and unusual 12 Aug 2010 Scientists find new superbug spreading from India 11 Aug 2010 Obama backs controversial New York mosque project | Video 14 Aug 2010 Analysis: Outsourcing reversed as Brazil companies target U.S. 11 Aug 2010 Apple manager charged with taking kickbacks 6:46am EDT Commentary Iraq, America and hired guns In the often perverse logic that has driven America’s war in Iraq, as U.S. soldiers are withdrawn the number of private security contractors is set to rise, writes Bernd Debusmann.  Commentary  Orthodox flock to once-banned holy site in Turkey Digg This Tweet This Share on LinkedIn Share on Facebook Related News Turkish referendum opens wounds of 1980 coup Fri, Aug 6 2010 Related Topics World » Turkey » 1 / 2 Orthodox worshippers attend the Virgin Mary service led by Ecumenical Greek Orthodox Patriarch Bartholomew I at the ancient Sumela Monastery in the Black Sea coastal province of Trabzon, northeastern Turkey, August 15, 2010. Credit: Reuters/Umit Bektas By Ayla Jean Yackley SUMELA MONASTERY | Sun Aug 15, 2010 8:30am EDT SUMELA MONASTERY Turkey (Reuters) - Europe Papadopolous's grandparents were children when they fled their village in northeast Turkey and settled in Greece almost 90 years ago, yet she still felt she was in exile. Papadopolous, 45, was one of thousands of Orthodox faithful who journeyed to Sumela Monastery, built into a sheer cliff above the Black Sea forest, on Sunday to attend the first mass here since ethnic Greeks were expelled in 1923. "Being apart from this place feels like Ulysses: always searching for your home," Papadopolous said, tears streaming down her face and adding that even though her grandparents are dead, she was sure they could see her "homecoming." The historic service is part of a broader easing of religious restrictions in Muslim Turkey as Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan seeks to fulfill pledges to expand minority rights, which could also kickstart Turkey's stalled European Union bid. Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, spiritual leader of the world's 250 million Orthodox Christians, celebrated the divine liturgy to mark the Feast Day of the Virgin Mary. The faithful believe Jesus's mother Mary was taken up to heaven on August 15 after her death. "This monastery is the bequest of a civilization that had a culture of living together. Let's ensure this bequest survives so the pain does not recur," said Bartholomew. Security was tight. Helicopters circled above as police and gendarmes ringed the monastery, founded in the 4th century. Last year, authorities prevented Greeks and Russians from praying at Sumela, long ago stripped of its official religious status. The patriarchate this year received permission from the Culture Ministry, which administers the site as a museum. Two men in the nearby city of Trabzon who were briefly detained last week allegedly protested the service on Facebook and planned to disrupt it, the state Anatolian news agency said. NATIONALISM Incomes in Trabzon are a third less than the national average of $11,000, and poverty has fed nationalism. The teenaged gunman who shot Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in 2007 was from Trabzon. A Catholic priest was killed here in 2006. The EU, which Turkey seeks to join, says the government must boost religious tolerance and improve rights for non-Muslims. Out of a population of 72 million, 99.9 percent are Muslim. "This is a landmark event, and it won't be the last. Slowly the taboos are falling by the wayside," said Cengiz Aktar, a professor at Bahcesehir University in Istanbul. "Minorities were always alienated. Now Turkey is shedding its old skin." Next month, Armenian Orthodox followers will pray at a former church in eastern Turkey, part of efforts to repair relations with neighboring Armenia. Fewer than 3,000 Greeks remain in Istanbul, but it is still home to the patriarchate, a vestige of the Byzantine era. The Church has no legal status nor school to train clergy. It has seen millions of dollars worth of property seized by the state. PAINFUL HISTORY Although Bartholomew occasionally has led prayers in other deconsecrated churches in Turkey, Sumela was always contentious. During the upheaval of World War One and subsequent War of Independence, the Black Sea region, called Pontus by Greeks, sank into violence between ethnic militias and Ottoman forces. Historians estimate the number of Greeks killed at 65,000 to 200,000. As many as 300,000 fled by 1923. Most of the violence occurred in the western Black Sea, said Nikos Sigalas of the French Institute of Anatolian Studies. The 1923 Lausanne Treaty that forged modern Greece and Turkey's borders engineered one of the biggest forced migrations in modern history. Some 1.5 million Christians fled Turkey, and 500,000 Muslims were driven from Greece. Sumela and other holy sites were abandoned as Pontian Greeks vanished. Today, the monastery's medieval frescoes are battered, and shoddy restoration work has erased some of its glory. Perched in the Pontic Alps, the mist-wrapped Sumela was the most important monastery in the Trebizond Empire, successor to the Byzantines that lasted 250 years until the Ottoman conquest of 1461. Tradition has it that sultans prayed at the site. "For ages, Sumela had great religious significance, but it also has a serious symbolic power," Sigalas said. "It is not a place easily forgotten, even by descendants of those who left." Indeed, the draw of the ancient homeland remains strong. "In our family, we always kept Pontus alive," said Fotiy Exizov, 62, whose family settled in Sochi, Russia, after leaving in 1864. "We speak the language, we pass on the stories. We are like the birds who must return to the nest." (Editing by Michael Roddy) World Turkey     Add a Comment *We welcome comments that advance the story directly or with relevant tangential information. We try to block comments that use offensive language or appear to be spam and review comments frequently to ensure they meet our standards. If you see a comment that you believe is irrelevant or inappropriate, you can flag it to our editors by using the report abuse links. Views expressed in the comments do not represent those of Reuters.   © Copyright 2010 Thomson Reuters Editorial Editions: Africa Arabic Argentina Brazil Canada China France Germany India Italy Japan Latin America Mexico Russia Spain United Kingdom United States Reuters Contact Us Advertise With Us Help Journalism Handbook Archive Site Index Video Index Reader Feedback   Mobile Newsletters RSS Podcasts Widgets Your View Analyst Research Thomson Reuters Copyright Disclaimer Privacy Professional Products Professional Products Support Financial Products About Thomson Reuters Careers Online Products Acquisitions Monthly Buyouts Venture Capital Journal International Financing Review Project Finance International PEhub.com PE Week FindLaw Reuters on Facebook Thomson Reuters is the world's largest international multimedia news agency, providing investing news, world news, business news, technology news, headline news, small business news, news alerts, personal finance, stock market, and mutual funds information available on Reuters.com, video, mobile, and interactive television platforms. Thomson Reuters journalists are subject to an Editorial Handbook which requires fair presentation and disclosure of relevant interests. NYSE and AMEX quotes delayed by at least 20 minutes. Nasdaq delayed by at least 15 minutes. For a complete list of exchanges and delays, please click here.

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