Historical Greek Orphanage Will Become Environmental Foundation

Patriarch Bartholomew I, of the Istanbul-based Greek Orthodox Ecumenical Patriarchate, stands outside the rundown former orphanage.

Atop the highest hill on Büyükada (“Big Island” in Turkish), the largest of the picturesque “Princes Islands” in the Marmara Sea off the coast of Istanbul, stands a sprawling, abandoned structure rumored to be the largest  wooden building in Europe.

Once an orphanage owned by the Greek Patriarchate, the building has been empty since 1964 because of worries about its structural integrity. But soon the space will house a international civil society foundation devoted to environmental work and research, according to recent remarks by Bartholomew.

A Patriarchal decision

In 1997, Turkey’s General Directorate of Foundations took the deed to the orphanage from the Patriarchate. In 2005, the Patriarchate was stripped of any claim to the property.

But after a European Court of Human Rights ruling in June 2010 required the Turkish government to return the deed to the historical building to the Patriarchate, a board of directors for the structure was formed, and plans for its restoration began. When those are complete, in approximately two years, the environmental foundation will open.

Bartholomew, who has been dubbed “the green patriarch” for his special interest in environmental preservation, is on the board of directors for the building.

Although it may host interfaith symposia on environmental issues, the eventual foundation will function independently of the Patriarchate, and will not have a religious affiliation.

Raising the profile of environmentalism in Turkey

Global in scope, the environmental foundation will hopefully bring more international attention to ongoing environmental research and activism in Turkey.

Environmental scientists and activists here need all the support they can get. Consider the case of Onur Hamzaoğlu, who may be facing jailtime for going public with results of a study in which he found heavy metals in mothers’ milk and babies’ feces. Or the embattled citizens of Sinop Province, who have been protesting new government-backed coal-fired power plants in their region for several years now.

The foundation will also join a proud tradition of faith-inspired environmental initiatives around the Middle East. From green mosques and synagogues to inter-faith coalitions against international environmental problems such as climate change, religion and the environment are deeply intertwined on a multitude of issues.

:: Today’s Zaman

Read more about inter-faith environmental efforts:

Inter-faith Initiative Pushes to Mobilize Billions In Fight Against Climate Change

The National Religious Coalition on Creation Care Takes Interfaith Environmental Concerns to the US Government

Interfaith Climate Change Forum to Take Place Today In Jerusalem

Image via patriarchate

 

 

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Julia Harte
Author: Julia Harte

Julia spent her childhood summers in a remote research station in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado, helping her father with a 25-year-old experiment in which he simulated global warming over a patch of alpine meadow. When not measuring plant species diversity or carbon flux in the soil, she could be found scampering around the forests and finding snowbanks to slide down. Now she is a freelance journalist living in Istanbul, where her passion for the environment intersects with her interest in Turkish politics and grassroots culture. She also writes about Turkish climate and energy policy for Solve Climate News.

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