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Noted elsewhere: Contemporary Orthodox Turks.

OBL FORUM – In Turkey, which is the canonical territory of the Patriarchate of Constantinople, there are very few Greek parishioners left. The Orthodox community has been supplemented to some degree by Russians who have taken up permanent residence there. However, there are also some Turks who have become Orthodox in the Patriarchate. Lately their numbers have grown. Orthodox literature is being printed for them in Turkish, and articles about the newly-converted are being published. Achmet and Nejla are two of the thousand or so Turks who have changed their faith; and unlike others, they do not hide this at all. They related their stories to one Bulgarian website, ”Dveri na Pravoslavieto”—their spiritual searches which led them to Orthodoxy, and what it means to be a Christian in Turkey. (Continued at OBL Forum | More Chronicle & Notices.)

One Comment

  1. wrote:

    This reminds me of a book I recently came across — Loxandra by Maria Iordanidou. It is the autobiography of a Greek, Orthodox woman, whose family lived in Istanbul in the 19th century. It doesn’t appear to be available in English, however. (The link is to Amazon UK, since the US Amazon has priced the book very high. )

    Wednesday, 12 May 2010 at 08:26 | Permalink

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