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Turkey gets Ecumenical Patriarch removed from Ukraine Peace Summit statement
Episode 1025

Turkey gets Ecumenical Patriarch removed from Ukraine Peace Summit statement

Bruce Clark, who writes on European affairs and religion for The Economist and has played an active role in the Ecumenical Patriarchate’s environmental initiatives, joins Thanos Davelis to look into what Turkey's intervention to remove the Ecumenical Patriarch's signature from a statement issued after the Ukraine Peace Summit says about the continued pressure the Phanar faces.

The Greek Current

June 28, 20249m 29s

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Show Notes

Earlier this month, the Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew - along with many other countries and organizations - attended the Ukraine Peace Summit. Nearly 80 countries issued a statement calling for the “territorial integrity” of Ukraine to be the basis for any peace agreement to end Russia’s two-year war. The Ecumenical Patriarch’s signature was originally on that document. Then an outraged Turkey intervened, getting the Ecumenical Patriarchate’s signature removed. Bruce Clark, who writes on European affairs and religion for The Economist, has played an active role in the Ecumenical Patriarchate’s environmental initiatives, and is the author of Twice A Stranger: How Mass Expulsion Forged Modern Greece and Turkey, joins Thanos Davelis to look into what this story says about the continued pressure the Ecumenical Patriarch is under.

You can read the articles we discuss on our podcast here:

Patriarchate removed from Ukraine summit statement following Turkish protests

SYRIZA on the brink of civil war

Von der Leyen, Costa and Kallas bag EU top jobs

European Leaders Name Top E.U. Officials, Opting for Stability