Has the Catholic Church in Turkey been too neglected by us?

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Archbishop Ruggero Franceschini, OFM Cap. of Izmir, Turkey, and Administrator of the Apostolic Vicariate of Anatolia and President of the Turkish Episcopal Conference, gave the following intervention today. The point of noting the Archbishop's intervention here is that I believe we have to be concerned with the reality of the Catholic faithful in places outside our neighborhood. Catholics can't simply concerned with matters that are near. The June murder of Capuchin Bishop Luigi Padovese's death has remained a key point in my prayer, interest in ecumenical and inter-religious dialogue, the missionary aspect of the Church's preaching program and the extent to which one would lay down his life for the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Is Luigi Padovese a martyr? Franceschini has been clear that Padovese's death was premeditated by Islamic radicals with a hatred toward Christianity while the Turkish authorities insist the murder was personal and not politically or religiously motivated. I am not sure as I didn't know the state of his soul or his true relationship with Christ. The designation of a person as a martyr is a matter for Mother Church to make, but I might be persuaded to think in that direction. Christians comprise less than one percent of the Turkish nation.

Bp Padovese.jpg
"The little Church of Turkey, at times ignored, had her sad moment of fame with the brutal murder of Bishop Luigi Padovese O.F.M. Cap., president of the Turkish Episcopal Conference. In a few words I would like to close this unpleasant episode by erasing the intolerable slander circulated by the very organisers of the crime. It was premeditated murder, by those same obscure powers that poor Luigi had just a few months earlier identified as being responsible for the killing of Fr. Andrea Santoro, the Armenian journalist Dink and four Protestants of Malatya. It is a murky story of complicity between ultra-nationalists and religious fanatics, experts in the 'strategia della tensione'. The pastoral and administrative situation in the vicariate of Anatolia is serious. ... What do we ask of the Church? We simply ask what we are lacking: a pastor, someone to help him, the means to do so, and all of this with reasonable urgency. ... The survival of the Church of Anatolia is at risk. ... Nonetheless, I wish to reassure neighbouring Churches - especially those that are suffering persecution and seeing their faithful become refugees - that the Turkish Episcopal Conference will continue to welcome them and offer fraternal assistance, even beyond our abilities. In the same way, we are open to pastoral co-operation with our sister Churches and with positive lay Muslims, for the good of Christians living in Turkey, and for the good of the poor and of the many refugees who live in Turkey".

1 Comments

Hi Paul,
Thank you for this post, as it has helped shed light on the synod (?) that they're holding there. I will keep this Bishop's soul in my prayers, as well as my friends in Faith in Turkey!

God Bless,
Patty

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Paul A. Zalonski is from New Haven, CT. He is a member of the Fraternity of Communion and Liberation, a Catholic ecclesial movement and an Oblate of Saint Benedict. Contact Paul at paulzalonski[at]yahoo.com.

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This page contains a single entry by Paul Zalonski published on October 15, 2010 4:10 PM.

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