Turkey

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  • Note: check discussion of security issues on the talk page.


Official name: Turkiye Cumhuriyeti (Republic of Turkey)
Area: land: 770,760 sq km
Government: Democracy
Official languages: Turkish
Monetary unit: Turkish Lira (YTL)
Cities:

DEMOGRAPHY
Population: 70,414,000 (mid-2006 est.)
Population density: 91/sqkm

ECONOMY
GDP (PPP):
per person:
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LIFE & LIBERTY
HDI

Contents

[edit] Geography

[edit] Location

  • Turkey is a Eurasian country that stretches across the Anatolian peninsula in south west Asia and the Balkan region of south eastern Europe, that portion of Turkey west of the Bosporus is geographically part of Europe. Turkey borders eight countries: Bulgaria to the northwest, Greece to the west, Georgia to the northeast, Armenia, Azerbaijan (the Nakhichevan exclave), and Iran to the east, Iraq and Syria to the southeast. It borders the Mediterranean Sea to the south, the Aegean Sea to the west, and the Black Sea to the north. Turkey also contains the Sea of Marmara, which is used by geographers to mark the border between Europe and Asia, which makes Turkey transcontinental.

[edit] Climate

  • Temperate; hot, dry summers with mild, wet winters; harsher in interior.

[edit] Natural Resources

  • Coal, iron ore, copper, chromium, antimony, mercury, gold, barite, borate, celestite (strontium), emery, feldspar, limestone, magnesite, marble, perlite, pumice, pyrites (sulfur), clay, arable land, hydropower.

[edit] Demographics

[edit] Peoples

[edit] Provinces

[edit] Life

[edit] Economy

[edit] Government

[edit] Religion

  • Islam 99.6%, Christianity 0.3%, Jewish 0.1%. In the last century Turkey rejected Islam as the official national religion in favour of becoming a secular state. However, Turkey remains a country that identifies strongly with Islam and Christians face harassment and persecution.

[edit] Islam

[edit] Buddhism

[edit] Judaism

[edit] Christianity

[edit] History

[edit] Churches

  • Small church growth: 1980 about 50 Christians from Muslim Background in a nation of 50 Million, 25 years later 3000 Christians in a nation of about 70 million.
  • The leaders of the churches need protection, discernment, and strength. They carry a high profile and many have received death threats. They carry heavy responsibilities. Most visitors and believers want to speak with the pastor, whether it is for genuine spiritual reasons (e.g. they have had a dream of Jesus) or because of material need.

[edit] Persecution

  • Six months after the brutal killing of three evangelical Christians in Turkey a murder trial will open at the Heavy Penal Court in Malatya, Southeast Turkey in late October 2007. According to Turkish press reports the prosecution demands multiple life sentences for five defendants, accused of murdering the German Tilmann Geske and the Turkish Christians Necati Aydin and Ugur Yuksel.
  • Christians are represented in the media in a negative way. This has been so frequent and vicious over the year 2007 that many think that the murders of three Christians in April 2007 was justified because the Christians were assumed to be immoral and were undermining Islamic culture and the nation.
  • On 6 May 2008 three men, one of them carrying a gun, drove up to a church in Ankara. When they found the church locked, they approached a church member who was outside the church. The armed man pointed his gun at the Christian and asked where the pastor of the church was. The Christian replied that the pastor was not present. At this reply, the gunman said to the church member to tell the pastor that they “were determined to get rid of him”.

[edit] Church and State Relations

  • Turkey is officially a secular country, with equal rights given to all religions to practice their faith according to the constitution.
  • Until recently this was never contested in the courts, but since the advent of an indigenous Protestant church, each violation of individual freedom has been tested in the legal system. The usual outcome is a favourable decision with regard to the plaintiff (either individual or congregational).
  • The practice of religion is officially restricted to buildings that have been registered with the local Belydeseri (local government) or religious buildings the were in existence at the time the Constitution was enacted (at the formation of the Republic).
  • Mosques continue to function as relatively independent centres of religious practice and education, apparently free of reference to the authorities (in a religious sense).
  • It is illegal to teach a young person under the age of 18 without their parents express permission.

[edit] Mission

  • Turkey is considered the largest unreached nation in the world. Few of the 70 million Muslims have ever heard the Gospel of Jesus Christ and only 15 of Turkey’s 80 provinces have a Christian Church.
  • May the barriers and prejudices against Christianity in this nation be broken down. To be a Turk is to be a Muslim, so people who decide to follow Jesus are threatened, intimidated, and can be rejected by their families. There is a deep-seated hostility towards Christians, who are identified with foreign invaders who invaded the Turkish empire during the crusades. Pray that these misconceptions would be shattered by the truth and love of Jesus Christ.
  • The situation in the Kurdish area has been generally quiet. But in March 08 for the first time a bomb exploded in front of a hotel. It was a reminder that 'security' is in the Lord's hands. A number of local people have come to faith in Christ and small fellowships of believers are beginning to form.

[edit] Church Planting

  • GOP is a district of Istanbul with a local population of 1.5 million and without a church. It is well-known for violence, drug dealers, minority groups and migrants. There are two solid local believers. Pray that this small shoot would grow, so the people in darkness will see and come to faith in Jesus.

[edit] Broadcasting

  • The Gospel is gradually penetrating into Turkey via radio broadcast. There is now FM broadcasts in three mayor cities and AM broadcasts from a powerful station in Russia.

[edit] Councils and Networks

[edit] Future Trends

[edit] For More Reading

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