Istanbul Municipality to build cemevis, says Mayor İmamoğlu

Duvar English

Istanbul Mayor Ekrem İmamoğlu has said that the municipality will build cemevis, Alevi houses of worship, across the city. İmamoğlu made the comments as he met with the officials of Kazım Karabekir Cemevi in the Ümraniye district on June 2.

“We have a project to build cemevis in a couple of areas which will set an example. We would like to present this as a gift to Istanbul, removing the barriers. I am announcing this for the first time. This was something that always lied in my heart,” İmamoğlu said.

“You know our perspective with regards to beliefs. On top of that, as per our management understanding, it is our responsibility to make sure that every kind of belief can practice their worship in their house of worship,” he said.

Alevis
make up an estimated 15-25 percent of Turkey’s
population, the second main religious group after Sunni Islam.
Despite the fundamental differences in religious practices between
the two groups, the government to-date refuses to acknowledge
Alevi cemevi as the legitimate place of worship and to
grant cemevis the same financial support as mosques. Instead,
Turkey claims that cemevi is a cultural entity.

On
Jan. 16, the Istanbul Municipal Council voted a motion calling to
designate the city’s 93 cemevis as “official places of worship.”

The main Republican People’s Party (CHP) and İYİ (Good) Party members of the council voted in favor of the motion, but the councillors of the ruling Justice and Development Party (AKP) and its right-wing ally Nationalist Movement Party (MHP) – who hold the majority in the council – voted it down.

from Duvar English https://ift.tt/2Bryw2N

About CHP EU Representation

The CHP was founded on 9 September 1923, about one and half month before the proclamation of the Republic of Turkey. The first President of modern Turkey’s oldest party was M. Kemal Atatürk. Today CHP is a social-democratic party, member of the Socialist International and associate member of the Socialist Group at the European Parliament. The scope of the CHP bureau in Brussels is not limited to the bilateral framework of Turkey's EU accession process. Issues such as the information society, energy policies, social development, climate change, international trade and security are among the different focus areas. The EU-Turkey relations are about integration and need multiple, plural and horizontal channels of communication. The CHP supports and promotes Turkey's EU membership process also by being more present and active in Brussels The CHP's Representative to the EU is Ms Kader Sevinç who previously worked as an MEP advisor at the European Parliament and in the private sector.
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