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Strange happenings in Turkey

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Nik0s

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MYSTAGOGY: Turkish Media Revealing Great National Interest in Orthodox Christianity
The Blog author didn't source any of this, and it apparently comes from a Greek newspaper on Mytilini, so take it with the proverbial grain of salt. If true however, we're living in exciting times. Could this be a new beginning of Orthodoxy in Asia Minor?
 

E.C.

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I remember several years ago on a BBC article reading on the Trebizond region of Turkey there was an unofficial "festival" of sorts celebrating the Byzantine heritage in the area. I believe it was centered around an old monastery there. Anyway, I do remember that many of the Turks who were there were singing and dancing Greek and Armenian traditional songs and dances and were wearing ties with double-headed eagles on them. It was all peaceful, until the police came and broke it up after there was a bit too much chatter in the crowd about returning to Christianity.

I've also heard that if it were "socially acceptable" for Turks to leave Islam than Turkey would become one of the major Orthodox nations since roughly 25% of the population is ethnically Greek or Armenian and knows it.

The article does not surprise me with this taken into account. God willing one day the Turks will be able to return to Christianity without fear of reprisal.
 
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buzuxi02

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I'm certainly skeptical but it may be possible. For example Turks (and the muslim conquerors in general) were never really sea people. They cared more about the mainland than those residing on the islands. So having certain islands maintaining Christian-like festivals is indeed plausible. The fact that muslims never penetrated the sea is the reason why the overwhelming majority of the eastern mediterenean islands have always been Orthodox inhabitants. Whether Cyprus or Crete or Rhodes. In fact even the very few "Turkish" islands were all majority greek Orthodox inhabitants until very recently, I m talking about very recent like 1980 just look at the Turkish island of Imbros for example.

Most Turks are really Greeks and Armenians that converted to Islam to avoid paying the tax or giving up their son to the janiserries.

My great great grandfather from my mother's side was a "Turk" from Pyrgos Greece. He converted to Orthodoxy some time in the mid 1850's a few decades after the liberation of Greece from the Ottomons, his Turkish surname: Christopoulos.

I know another person who went on a Christian pilgrimage to Turkey. She checked into a bed and breakfast one night in an area on the outskirts of the urban center. The man running the Bed and Breakfast told her the house was in his family for generations, built by his descendants. She told him that she was greek and came to see the ancient churches. The man pleasantly surprised pulled up the rug from the floor and underneath was the original mosaic floor with greek inscriptions, he claimed it was always family property built by his past relatives.
 
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