IWPR
- 17 October 2002
Posted 17 October 2002 on RELIGIOSCOPE
A
new concordat between the Georgian state and the Orthodox
Church is cementing the latter's special status in society.
Early
one morning this week, President Eduard Shevardnadze and Patriarch
Ilya II met in the Svetitskhoveli cathedral in the old Georgian
capital of Mtskheta to sign a formal agreement binding church
and state more closely together.
The
accord, signed on October 14, is the second most important
constitutional document in Georgia after the constitution
itself and confirms the already privileged place of the Georgian
Orthodox Church in the country.
The
two sides chose the day of the festival of the Protecting
Veil of the Virgin Mary for the ceremony. But by doing so
they managed to offend large number of the faithful in Mtskheta.
Ordinary churchgoers had to cross police cordons to make their
way to the festival service in the cathedral and many were
angry at the unexpected appearance of large numbers of government
officials.
The
large crowds gathered outside the cathedral were told that
they had to wait for the signing ceremony to end and the president
to leave, before they would be let in. "How dare Shevardnadze
enter the church!" protested worshipper Anna Baramian,
suggesting it was sinful to let the man she blamed for the
country's ills into a holy place.
The
concordat has been two years in the making and under discussion
for even longer than that. The Council of Europe - of which
Georgia is a member - approved the final document, reducing
some of the rights accorded to the church in the process.
From
now on the state is obliged to respect the confidentiality
of confessionals; church weddings are given the same status
as state ceremonies; and priests are exempt from military
service. The state will also help to create chaplaincies for
both the armed forces and prisons; and the church will be
able to receive funding in the form of voluntary donations,
investments and grants.
"Yes,
without doubt this is a timely and necessary agreement," conceded Tina Khidasheli, a member of the board of Georgia's
Association of Young Lawyers, a non-governmental legal organisation. "The Georgian Orthodox Church should finally acquire
a definite status."
An
estimated 70 to 80 per cent of the Georgian population are
members of the Orthodox Church and its priests and bishops
are often present on state occasions. In 1997, a bill proposed
that Orthodoxy be made the state religion and the rights of
other faiths restricted. However, Georgia was applying to
join the Council of Europe at the time and the bill was shelved.
The
new concordat stops short of naming the Orthodox Church the
official church of Georgia, but it does clearly give it a
more privileged status than other religions.
The
agreement recognises that the Orthodox authorities own their
churches, monasteries, whether working or not, the land on
which they are situated and religious treasures in museums
or collections.
Some
of the country's other faiths hope the agreement will benefit
them. "There are five Catholic churches in Georgia
and by the way we are fighting a court case with President
Shevardnadze over one of them. Without any success, so far,
it must be said," Giuseppe Pasotto, Roman Catholic
bishop in Georgia, told IWPR. " We welcome the agreement
between the state and the Orthodox Church. If it is important
for Georgia to be orthodox nowadays, let it be so. We sincerely
hope that the agreement will solve our dispute as well."
Giorgy
Andriadze, spokesman for the Orthodox Patriarchate, said that
the agreement was a logical development for Georgia, "If
we bear in mind the many centuries of history of the Orthodox
Church and the damage it suffered in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries, this agreement is completely fair. Some points
have been struck out of the document and that is unpleasant
of course. For example, we know formally that some objects
now belong to us, but we cannot them take them out of the
museums or use them."
Andriadze
stressed that before the agreement was signed, church leaders
sought and received the approval of other traditional faiths
in the country.
Asked
why the church had not sought the backing of non-traditional
Christian denominations, Andriadze seemed genuinely surprised. "We cannot meet any of them, since we don't know where
they are, who they are or whether they exist at all," he said. "With the exception of the Jehovah's Witnesses,
who do not want to make contact with us themselves."
The
Jehovah's Witnesses say they have suffered 135 attacks and
made 750 legal complaints in Georgia over the past three years.
Their spokesman Gennady Gudadze said, "We are worried
that our rights are being infringed and the state is doing
nothing to stop this. Moreover, in several cases, state officials
themselves are taking part in attacks on us." Other
Protestant groups have also complained about discrimination.
NGO
activist Tina Khidasheli said she believed the vexed relationship
between the state and other religious groups in Georgia will
only be resolved, if the government signs similar agreements
with them. But that, she concedes, is unlikely.
Lyuda
Rayeva