TRANSMITE mai departe și ROAGĂ-TE! 6 biserici închise în Turcia

Iată cum acționează Turcia împotriva bisericilor. Și nu vorbim de biserici mari, ci de niște comunități firave, sufocate oricum de islam și terorism, în sud-estul țării. Am fost de două ori la Diarbakîr și am văzut cum se chinuie acei credincioși să își păstreze credința și ce preț plătesc pentru asta. În loc să se ocupe de teoriștii din zonă (care nu sunt creștini), guvernul profită de situație să mai dea o lovitură creștinilor.
Iar acum același guvern (care s-a angajat să ridice o mega-moschee în București) a închis dintr-un foc 6 biserici mici și care nu le ridicau niciun fel de probleme.
Alo! Guvernul, sunteți pe fază? Ministerul de Externe, se aude? Primăria București, aveți idee ce se petrece în lume? Presa, cineva pe fir?
Informați asta trebuie transmisă pe toate căile autorităților din România. (Vasilică Croitor)
Iata un articol interesant:
The Turkish government has seized control of six church buildings in the Diyarbakir area of south eastern Turkey. Amongst those taken include a 1,700-year-old church that predates Islam, another that was built as recently as 2003, and a 400-year-old Surp Giragos Church which is the largest Armenian church in the Middle East.
Diyarbakir once had a large flourishing Christian community, but this was almost annihilated by the genocide of eastern Christians instigated by the Turkish government a century ago. The small Christian community that remains includes descendants of those who survived the genocide and later managed to return.
The seizure is part of a much wider confiscation of local property in the Sur district that appears to be linked to the Turkish government’s war on Kurdish separatists. The Christians, however, are mainly Armenians, Assyrians, Chaldeans and Turkish converts. The decision to seize the property in Diyarbakir was made directly by the cabinet, chaired by Turkey’s Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
The Diyarbakir Municipality has launched a legal appeal against the decision, claiming that it would result in 50,000 people being displaced and that it violates at least seven articles of the Turkish constitution.
The Turkish government has claimed that it is being even-handed in occupying the church buildings, as it has also taken control of local mosques such as Kursunlu Mosque (although this was originally an Armenian church that was converted into a mosque). In fact, mosques in Turkey are already state property, with the government paying for their maintenance and the salaries of their imams.
The confiscation is part of a wider pattern of arbitrary property seizures by the Turkish government, including the annexation of two major newspapers in the past year that were critical of the government. For the churches, however, losing control of their buildings means they could be prevented from holding Christian worship at any time.
https://barnabasfund.org/news/turkish-government-seizes-six-church-buildings






