http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2007/09/66475579-8c21-488a-9dac-9c2afff
c9666.html
 
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Thursday, September 13, 2007
Romanian Patriarch Elected Amid Collaboration Charges

September 13, 2007 (RFE/RL) -- The Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox
Church on September 12 elected a new patriarch -- 56-year-old Moldovan
Metropolitan and Archbishop Daniel Ciubotea, who was regarded as the
favorite among the candidates.



Ciubotea is seen as a modernizer within the church, but his reputation has
been tainted with accusations that he had ties to the country's
communist-era secret police.

Ciubotea, who becomes the sixth patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church,
expressed his gratitude to the Holy Synod upon his election. "We only want
to thank the Holy Synod and the members of the Electoral Religious
Commission for the trust they put in me," he said.

The Holy Synod chose Ciubotea from three candidates: Ciubotea, Cluj
Archbishop Bartolomeu Anania, and the bishop of Covasna and Harghita, Ioan
Selejan. The three were narrowed down from the initial pool of 30
high-ranking members of the clergy.

Ciubotea had been serving as the interim patriarch after the death of the
previous Patriarch, Teoctist, in late July 2007.

Western Education, Suspicious Background

Western-educated Ciubotea is known as a "modernist" who has supported
reforms and has been open toward the ecumenical movement. He has also
angered many traditional monasteries in Romania's eastern region of
Moldavia. 

Ciubotea spent a long time in the West, studying theology and working in
various Catholic and Protestant institutions. 

But it is that background that has cast a shadow on Ciubotea's reputation.
Many in Romania have said he was allowed to live abroad because of his
collaboration with Romania's feared secret police, the Securitate. 

Mircea Dinescu, a representative of the Romanian national council that
studies the Securitate archives, recently announced that the council knows
of a group of top Orthodox clerics who had collaborated with the secret
police. Dinescu did not disclose any names, but media reports have said that
Ciubotea was one of those implicated.

The council invited two of the candidates, Ciubotea and Anania, for an
interview, but they refused.

After the elections, the council today announced that it might fully
disclose its findings about collaboration between the clergy and the secret
police. 

Ciubotea wasn't the only candidate who was suspected of having a murky
history.

Similar accusations were also made toward the 86-year-old Anania.

>From 1965-76 he held important positions in the hierarchy of the Romanian
Orthodox Church in the United States. A former Securitate head, Ioan Mihai
Pacepa, who defected to the West in the late 1970s, has said that Bartolomeu
was sent to the United States with a "mission."

The third candidate, 56-year-old Selejan, was the only one not sullied by
accusations of involvement with the secret police. 

No Acknowledgment Of Collaboration

The issue of collaboration between the Securitate and the clergy has
received much public attention in Romania. The late Patriarch Teoctist was
criticized by many for opposing investigations into clergy members who had
been accused of collaboration. After the fall of the communist regime, the
church did not acknowledge the extent of the clergy's collaboration, nor did
it remove tainted officials. 

Alexi Kshutashvili, a Georgian theology expert living in Romania, says the
issue of collaboration is a difficult one. "The Romanian media often talk
about this -- that those members of the clergy who were allowed to study
abroad, in Western countries, during the communist period, were in some way
affiliated with the secret police, at least on the level of signing some
declaration of collaboration," Kshutashvili said.

"Now to say that one was an agent of the secret police is another thing, and
is difficult to say," he continued. But Kshutashvili said it is known that
Ciubotea "did enjoy certain support from the political establishment,
including these [latest] elections." 

RFE/RL's Bucharest correspondent Sabina Fati says some people are not happy
with the close ties between the church and the government even today. The
church receives most of its funding from the state -- and, according to
Fati, the clergy often interferes in the political process.

"The church in turn helps the state -- most blatantly during the electoral
campaign, when clerics openly support one or another candidate," Fati said.

Romania's Orthodox Church has regained its popular and influential position
in postcommunist Romania. Almost 87 percent of the country's population
identifies with the denomination. 

But Fati says that the country's clergy are not held in particularly high
regard. Opinion polls show that "70 percent of believers do not really trust
the priests," Fati said. 

The new patriarch of the Romanian Orthodox Church will be inaugurated in
three weeks. 

(RFE/RL's Romanian-Moldova Service and Georgian Service)

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty C 2007 RFE/RL, Inc.

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