Thursday, November 5, 2015

Unrest in Romania aims dissatisfaction at Church

BUCHAREST, Romania (AP) — Protesters calling for an end to widespread corruption and better governance this week have turned their anger to the powerful and rich Romanian Orthodox Church in the wake of a nightclub fire which left more than 30 dead.

Public discontent with the church is at an all-time high after it failed to address an outpouring of national grief. Pressure is mounting for its financial privileges to be reviewed.

"We want hospitals, not cathedrals!" chanted tens of thousands of protesters this week.

Protesters want an end to hefty state subsidies to the nation's biggest church, to which 85 percent of Romanians belong, and for the church to pay tax. Other officially registered churches are also given subsidies.

The Humanist-Secular Association says Romania has 18,300 churches, compared with 4,700 schools and 425 hospitals. Many were built after communism ended and religious restrictions were lifted.

In 2014, an election year, the government allocated 12 million euros ($13 million) for the "Cathedral of the Salvation of the People" a giant church under construction in Bucharest, and 30 million euros ($32.4 million) for building and repairing other churches.

Governments have been wary of challenging the influential church, which some politicians rely on for political support.

Hundreds of thousands of believers attend the church's five major annual pilgrimages, and the church has a monopoly on the production of beeswax candles.

Believers pay fees for funerals, weddings, and baptisms.

3 comments:

  1. "The Humanist-Secular Association says"

    And how is such an organization allowed to exist? Do Romanians so quickly forget the crimes of the Communists, that they now allow their foul offspring to attack and needle Romanian tradition? These mobs are foolish to an unbelievable degree to attack to the Holy Romanian Church.

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  2. I'd like to know what these "fees" are that the faithful are supposedly paying. AP probably does not know that it is customary to make donations on such occasions, but charging for them is canonically illegal - it's called simony.

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    1. And yet every church I attended or visited when I lived in Russia and Ukraine had prices ("treby") posted for baptisms, crownings, et cetera. I can't speak to Romania's situation, but it may well parallel that of the former USSR :-/.

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