Orthodox Seminary in Turkey Awaiting Reopening
ICC Note: “If the decision is taken today, tomorrow I am ready to host the first class,” said the Archbishop of a Turkish seminary that has been closed for more than 40 years. The Theological School of Halki has been a victim of the internal politics of Turkey, as well as its foreign relations with neighboring Greece. Without a school to train future clergy the Orthodox Christian community is struggling to replace its aging leadership.
03/05/2014 Turkey (AINA) – Although shut down for more than four decades, one of the Orthodox Church’s most pre-eminent seminaries is kept in pristine condition in the hope that it may reopen one day to educate future patriarchs and clergy.
The Theological School of Halki, perched atop a hill on Heybeli Island off Istanbul’s coast, closed its doors in 1971 under a Turkish law that required private higher education to be controlled by the state. Since then, classrooms with desks dating back to the 19th century are ready to be used again at a moment’s notice while dormitory-style bedrooms await the next class of theological students.
The religious season of Lent began this week and the school isn’t any closer to reopening. But Archbishop Elpidophoros Lambriniadis, whose first name means “he who brings hope,” will be prepared if his prayers are answered.
“If the decision is taken today, tomorrow I am ready to host the first class,” said Lambriniadis, who is in charge of the monastery and the seminary on Heybeli.
Since coming to power in 2002, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s government has enacted reforms to improve the rights of ethnic and religious groups in Turkey. Despite pressure from the U.S. and the European Union, the status of the seminary remains unsettled.
Erdogan has said Halki’s reopening depends on reciprocal measures from neighboring Greece that would improve the rights of Muslims there.
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