By: Huffman  S.C.R. No. 70
         (In the Senate - Filed May 4, 2009; May 4, 2009, read first
  time and referred to Committee on State Affairs; May 15, 2009,
  reported favorably by the following vote:  Yeas 9, Nays 0;
  May 15, 2009, sent to printer.)
 
 
SENATE CONCURRENT RESOLUTION
 
         WHEREAS, The Ecumenical Patriarchate, located in modern-day
  Istanbul, formerly known as Constantinople, in the Republic of
  Turkey, is the Sacred See that presides over a community of
  self-governing churches of the Orthodox Christian world; and
         WHEREAS, The See is led by Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew,
  who is the 269th direct successor of the Apostle Andrew and who
  holds titular primacy as primus inter pares, "first among equals,"
  in the community of Orthodox Churches worldwide; the Orthodox
  Church has been in existence for nearly 2,000 years and numbers
  approximately 300 million members around the world, with more than
  two million members in the United States; and
         WHEREAS, The government of Turkey refuses to recognize the
  international status and the rights and religious freedoms of the
  Ecumenical Patriarchate, the head of the Greek Orthodox Christian
  Church, which is a minority religion in Turkey; and
         WHEREAS, The government of Turkey and Turkish prime ministers
  have limited the candidates available to the Holy Synod for
  selection as the Ecumenical Patriarch to Turkish nationals who have
  performed mandatory military service in the Turkish armed forces,
  and they continue to insist that any new spiritual head of Orthodox
  Christians, including Orthodox Christians in Texas and throughout
  the United States, be approved by them; because of selective
  enforcement of laws and regulations, the once large eligible
  community of Turkish citizens of the Orthodox faith has declined to
  only approximately 2,500 persons, most of whom are elderly; and
         WHEREAS, Before its closure, the Theological School of Halki
  was the only educational institution for Orthodox Christianity in
  Turkey; the school was closed in 1971 by Turkish authorities under a
  law requiring that higher education in religion and minority
  training be controlled by the state; and
         WHEREAS, The United States Congress passed a resolution
  expressing its sentiment that the Orthodox Theological School of
  Halki in the Republic of Turkey should be reopened in order to
  promote religious freedom; and
         WHEREAS, The government of Turkey has reneged on its
  agreement to reopen the Theological School of Halki, thus impeding
  training for Orthodox Christian clergy within its borders; and
         WHEREAS, In recent years, the government of Turkey has, in
  violation of the inalienable rights of all peoples, confiscated
  more than 90 percent of the properties of the Ecumenical
  Patriarchate and has placed a 42 percent tax, retroactive to 1999,
  on the nonprofit Balukli hospital, which is run by the Ecumenical
  Patriarchate; and
         WHEREAS, The dissolution of the spiritual head of Orthodox
  Christian Churches in the coming decades is inevitable if Turkey
  continues its policy of interference in religious matters, despite
  the government's stated policy of being purely secular in its
  dealings; and
         WHEREAS, All Christians in our state, in the United States,
  and around the world stand to lose this nearly 2,000-year-old
  Sacred See, where the text of the New Testament was codified, the
  canonical structure of the Christian church was established, and
  the Nicene Creed was written and first pronounced; the
  disappearance of the Ecumenical Patriarchate would mean the loss of
  a crucial link between Christians and their religious history,
  sacred texts, and religious forebears; and
         WHEREAS, The disappearance of this See would also mean the
  end of a crucial link between Christians and the Muslim world; at a
  time when individuals hostile to the United States are attempting
  to create conflict between Christians and Muslims, the continuing
  presence of the Ecumenical Patriarchate in Turkey is a powerful
  testament to the coexistence of these two faiths in Istanbul since
  1453; and
         WHEREAS, Following the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks
  on America, the spiritual leader of Orthodox Christians, Ecumenical
  Patriarch Bartholomew, gathered international religious leaders
  and produced the first statement signed by Muslim leaders that
  condemned the attacks as "anti-religious"; and
         WHEREAS, The importance of Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew
  to the United States is reflected in the record number of
  Congressional cosponsors of the measure that bestowed on him
  America's highest civilian award, the Congressional Gold Medal of
  Honor--an award also given to George Washington, Winston Churchill,
  Nelson Mandela, Mother Teresa, and Pope John Paul II; and
         WHEREAS, The European Union, a group of nations with a common
  goal of promoting peace and the well-being of its peoples, began
  accession negotiations with Turkey on October 3, 2005; and
         WHEREAS, The European Union defined membership criteria for
  accession to the European Union at the Copenhagen European Council
  in 1993, obligating candidate countries to have achieved certain
  levels of reform, including stability of institutions guaranteeing
  democracy, adherence to the rule of law, and respect for and
  protection of minorities and human rights; and
         WHEREAS, The Treaty of Amsterdam, which came into effect in
  1999, affirms that the European Union is founded on the principles
  of liberty, democracy, respect for human rights and fundamental
  freedoms, and the rule of law; Article 13 of the Amsterdam Treaty
  enables the European Council to take appropriate action to combat
  discrimination based on religion or belief; and
         WHEREAS, Turkey's current treatment of the Ecumenical
  Patriarchate is inconsistent with the membership conditions and
  goals of the European Union; and
         WHEREAS, The United States has long been a beacon of hope for
  vulnerable and disenfranchised people around the world, and the
  State of Texas has long valued and defended the principles of
  democracy, individual liberty, freedom of speech, and freedom of
  religion; as citizens of conscience of this great land, we bear both
  the responsibility and the honor to raise our voices against
  injustice in behalf of those unable to speak for themselves; now,
  therefore, be it
         RESOLVED, That the 81st Legislature of the State of Texas
  hereby express its support for the Ecumenical Patriarchate and urge
  the United States, the European Union, and the United Nations, as
  leaders of the international community, to encourage the government
  of Turkey to cease its discrimination against one of the oldest
  institutions in Christianity, the Ecumenical Patriarchate; and, be
  it further
         RESOLVED, That the State of Texas call on the government of
  Turkey to eliminate all forms of discrimination based on religion
  and to immediately grant the Ecumenical Patriarchate appropriate
  international recognition, the right to determine ecclesiastic
  succession, and the right to train clergy of all nationalities;
  and, be it further
         RESOLVED, That the State of Texas call on the government of
  Turkey to pledge to uphold and safeguard religious rights without
  compromise; and, be it further
         RESOLVED, That the Texas secretary of state forward official
  copies of this resolution to the president of the United States, to
  the United States ambassador to the Republic of Turkey, to the
  ambassador of the Republic of Turkey to the United States, to the
  presidents of the commission, parliament, and Council of the
  European Union, to the secretary general of the United Nations, to
  the speaker of the house of representatives and the president of the
  senate of the United States Congress, and to all the members of the
  Texas delegation to Congress with the request that this resolution
  be officially entered in the Congressional Record as a memorial to
  the Congress of the United States of America.
 
  * * * * *