http://www.upi.com/view.cfm?StoryID=20030123-035724-9153r

Pope John Paul II is lobbying European governments to officially recognize
the European Union's Christian roots, but diplomatic sources said Thursday
that secular opposition is likely to block his efforts.
Vatican diplomats, and the pope himself in meetings with European officials,
want to see a strong reference to Christianity included in the preamble to
the European Union's Constitution, now being drafted by the Convention on
the Future of Europe chaired by former French President Valery Giscard
d'Estaing.

Working through the Catholic delegates among the more than 100 European
parliamentarians attending the convention, the Vatican hopes to have a
statement written into the text identifying the EU with the Christian faith,
a senior European official in Washington told United Press International
Thursday.

The Vatican argument is that Christianity's fundamental role in shaping
European culture should be acknowledged in what is destined to become the
EU's key document.

"It's something that is apparently close to Pope John Paul's heart," the
official said. "But it won't survive the process."

A reference to the EU as a Christian institution would further complicate
the debate in Europe over whether Turkey is eligible for admission, some
analysts said. Turkey, officially a secular state, is seeing a revival of
its Muslim origins. A party with Muslim roots, the Islamic Justice and
Development Party, emerged with a majority in last November's elections. But
the main objection of some member countries has less to do with the Islamic
upsurge and more with their belief that Turkey is not a European country.

European sources said the Turkey issue is only a secondary point. Although
the picture was mixed, few of the 15 EU member states, and of the new
members scheduled to join in the next two years, include a reference to
religion in their respective constitutions. These sources report a
widespread reluctance among convention delegates to oblige the pope and
involve religion in the process of shaping the new Europe.

Even predominantly Catholic Italy and Spain are not officially described as
Catholic countries. The Italians removed the religious designation from
their post-war constitution in 1945. France's tradition of secularism goes
back to the French Revolution.

Greece is still officially an Orthodox country, but the Greek government,
under pressure from the EU, recently removed the bearer's religious
affiliation from Greek passports. Britain recognizes the Anglican Church as
the country's official religion, and the British monarch is the head of the
church.

The timing of such a statement would be difficult for European member states
in another respect, the sources argue. Putting an emphasis on Christian
values now could alienate the large immigrant populations of Muslims that
now reside in virtually every member country.

The convention expects to complete its work on determining the shape of the
EU by the autumn, after which its proposals will be sent to member
governments for approval and finally adopted at a special conference in
2004.

"If anything, the statement the Vatican wants should more correctly refer to
the Judeo-Christian culture, but that would really set the cat among the
Islamic pigeons," the European official pointed out. "But any reference to
Christianity would create additional problems, and the EU has enough of them
already."

But another official said that in seeking a strong mention of Christianity,
the Vatican was facing its own reality. Pope John Paul has often expressed
concern at the decline of religion in Europe. "The Vatican must now look on
Europe as missionary territory," the official said. "They need to conquer
lost ground."



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