THE LUTHERAN WORLD FEDERATIOΝ
Letters to President Erdoğan and Ecumenical Patriarch emphasize significance of “a publicly shared space”
(LWI) – The Lutheran World Federation (LWF) has cautioned that
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s recent decree designating the Hagia Sophia museum into a mosque undermines the significance of “a publicly shared space” that “symbolizes openness and inclusiveness.”
In a letter to Erdoğan today, LWF General Secretary Rev. Dr Martin
Junge called for a process of dialogue and consultation to reaffirm the
world cultural heritage “as a space for interreligious dialogue and
understanding that points to our common humanity.”
Hagia Sophia brings “Christians and Muslims as well as people of
other faiths or no faith at all into a deep understanding of the past
and its influence on the present and the future,” Junge wrote.
Hagia Sophia brings Christians and Muslims as well as people of other faiths or no faith at all into a deep understanding of the past and its influence on the present and the future
Built 1,500 years ago as the Orthodox Christian cathedral in then
Constantinople now Istanbul, Turkey, Hagia Sophia was converted into a
mosque in 1453, following the Ottoman conquest. In 1934 the Turkish
government changed it into a museum. It belongs to the world cultural
heritage under the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO). On 10 July, Erdogan announced the museum would
revert to a Muslim place of worship.
Hagia Sophia stands as a symbol encouraging all the "good efforts of
local and global faith leaders seeking to build bridges, forge mutual
understanding and work together for the sake of humankind and creation,”
Junge added.
The general secretary highlighted “a great risk of this decree
stoking animosity and antagonism, emboldening still very prevalent
hateful populist or nationalistic rhetoric globally" that may also
affect both Christians and Muslims especially where they are minorities.
He underlined LWF’s strong support for interfaith dialogue and
cooperation that transforms society for the good of all people, saying
this has inspired collaboration with “Muslim brothers and sisters in our
life-saving humanitarian and development work.” Hagia Sophia, he said,
stood as a symbol for such an approach to affirm each other’s shared
humanity.”
LWF’s call to preserve the shared heritage was also the focus of a
joint letter that Junge and LWF President Archbishop Dr Panti Filibus
Musa wrote to His All Holiness the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew I on
14 July. Expressing solidarity with the head of the Eastern Orthodox
Church, the Lutheran leaders said the decree to re-open the museum for
Muslim prayer had caused “a lot of anguish” and challenged the “openness
and cooperation” the museum represents. They emphasized LWF’s call for
“a process of dialogue that reaffirms the potential for unity that Hagia
Sophia represents.
In their letter to the Ecumenical Patriarch, Musa and Junge referred
to the nearly 40 years of ecumenical dialogue between the LWF and the
Orthodox Church. They reiterated LWFs “deep commitment to the role of
the church in the public space” and to “all our brothers and sisters in
the Orthodox Church.