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Turkey refuses Pope's Tarsus request

Published: August 05, 2009

Turkey's government has refused a personal request from Pope Benedict and from other Christian leaders for the reopening of the only church in Tarsus, the city of St Paul's birth.

The Church of St Paul, built as a Catholic church in the 1800s and confiscated by the government in 1943, was used throughout the 2008-2009 year of St Paul for prayer services by Christian pilgrims, American Catholic reports.

After the end of the yearlong celebration commemorating the 2,000th anniversary of St Paul's birth, the Turkish government decided the building could not be used exclusively for worship.

Bishop Luigi Padovese, the apostolic vicar for Anatolia and president of the Catholic bishops' conference of Turkey, told the Vatican newspaper Aug. 1 that the government decided to return to the practice of allowing Christians to pray in the church as long as they made reservations three days in advance and bought an admission ticket.

Bishop Padovese told L'Osservatore Romano, the Vatican newspaper, that in addition to asking Christians to pay to enter the church, Turkish authorities have placed a time limit on Masses and other prayer services so they do not disrupt the normal operation of the museum.

"It is a lack of respect for the right to religious freedom and freedom to worship," the bishop said.

FULL STORY @

Turkish Government Denies Request for Church in Tarsus (American Catholic)

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Tarsus (Wikipedia)

 

 

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Recent Comments

  1. This confuses me. In Rome, some of the historic churches are not used for the mass - in fact, you can't even get into them without permission, even if you're clergy! The Vatican has the authority to allow or deny what happens in these sacred spaces. The same goes for the libraries. So the Turkish government is using this historic church the same way. So how is this different? You ARE allowed to say mass, and you ARE allowed into the church; you just have to go through channels [or pay] to get there.
    Sounds a lot like the pot calling the kettle black. I could see problems if the faithful were denied access, but they aren't. On the opposite side, here in New York, they actually allow people to tour St. Patrick's Cathedral while mass is going on! What?
    A lot of sound and fury, signifying...nothing.

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