A/55/280/Add.1
fundamental right of freedom of religion. He declared
that the situation was a result of the actions of
ideologically motivated bureaucrats and in particular of
certain cells that promote Kemalism and rail against
the threat of a theocratic state. He concluded that
people are much attached to religion — as shown in the
rise in pilgrimages, the increasing numbers of children
enrolled in imam schools and the number of mosques
(some 1500) that are being built each year. He also
stressed that this attachment to religion did not exclude
adherence to the principles of Ataturk. He felt that, in
practice, it was impossible to exploit religion for
political purposes in Turkey.
IV. The situation of non-Muslim
communities
68. To the extent that the status of Muslims depends
on the Department of Religious Affairs, and hence on
the State, and since their situation has already been
examined (see sect. III), the Special Rapporteur has
decided to devote his attention to the status of nonMuslim minority communities. The treatment accorded
by the authorities, and that resulting from the attitude
of society towards minorities, in the broad sense of the
term, shed considerable light on the current status of
implementation of international instruments relating to
freedom of religion and belief. The following
information reflects consultations with religious and
lay representatives of these communities, as well as
written reports received from them.
A. Minority communities recognized by
the Turkish authorities as minorities
under the Treaty of Lausanne
1. The Greek Orthodox minority
69. The Greek Orthodox Patriarch, Bartolemeos I,
declared that the Greek Orthodox community
(consisting of persons with Turkish nationality)
enjoyed full freedom of religion and worship, but he
related the following problems that his community
faces in the area of religion.
(a) Title of the Patriarchate
70. From a historical viewpoint, the Patriarch was the
bishop of Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine
Empire, and the second most important Christian
leader after the Pope in Rome, according to the Second
Ecumenical Council of Constantinople in 381. The
Patriarchate was only one of the four patriarchates of
the Early Church (which were located in
Constantinople, Alexandria, Antioch and Jerusalem),
but it was by far the most important. For these
historical reasons, the proper title of the Patriarchate,
as recognized by all Christian institutions, is the
Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople. It should
be noted that, since 1453, the Patriarchate has been
under Turkish rule, and that the constituencies of the
Patriarchate include the Orthodox Greeks of Turkey,
the archdiocese of America, the Athos Peninsula, the
Greek Orthodox churches of Western Europe and the
Orthodox Church of Australia. These are the historical
facts relating to the canons of this church. The Turkish
authorities do not accept this title, either the term
Ecumenical or the reference to Constantinople, which
was renamed Istanbul in 1930. The Under-Secretary of
State for Foreign Affairs declared that this title is not
consistent with the provisions of the Treaty of
Lausanne, and that the Patriarchate is a Turkish
institution. Patriarch Bartolemeos insisted that the title
of “Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople” was in
no sense a sign of political aspirations, but a simple
description of the religious duties incumbent upon the
Patriarchate, which is indeed located in Istanbul (and is
commonly referred to as the Patriarchate of the Fanar,
because of the site of its premises) but was historically
known as the Patriarchate of Constantinople.
(b) The legal status of the Patriarchate
71. The Patriarchate does not have the status of a
legal entity.
(c) Religious training institutions
72. With the closure by the authorities of private
religious training institutions in 1971, the Patriarchate
lost the use of its seminary on the Island of Halki. The
Patriarchate has thereby been deprived of the means for
training new clergy (from among whom the next Greek
Orthodox patriarch in Turkey will have to be selected).
The Patriarchate has therefore being compelled to train
its religious personnel abroad, a solution that is far
from ideal, because most of these people do not return
to Turkey. According to the Patriarch, reopening the
Halki seminary is essential for the future of the
Patriarchate itself and for the Greek Orthodox
community.
15