Bryan couple joins interfaith tour of Turkey


Date posted: March 29, 2007

María de Lourdes Ruiz Scaperlanda, Special Correspondent

Perhaps curiosity first put the idea in their minds. Or perhaps it was simply the opportunity for exotic travel. But Freddie and Carrie Komar promptly realized that this was no ordinary tour.

“When I started, this was just a trip to Turkey. But now,” Carrie paused and smiled, “it has become a genuine journey for me.”

For 10 days in January, the Komars participated in an interfaith tour, traveling with 10 other Texans, most of them staff and faculty from St. Mary’s University in San Antonio.

The Texas group began their Turkey tour in Istanbul, formerly Constantinople, and the ancient capital of both the Roman and the Byzantine empires. Over the next week and a half, the group visited Ephesus, Izmir, Turkey’s capital city of Ankara, Urfa, and Antalya, sister city to Austin.

Traveling a mere month after Pope Benedict XVI, the Komars not only visited many of the pope’s original destinations but also met with Muslim educators, professionals, families, and religious leaders committed to promoting interfaith dialogue.

It was this one-to-one encounter that deeply moved Carrie Komar.

“When I told my friends what we were doing, coming here, they kept talking to me about the dangers. Before I came, I, too, had fear because of all the differences,” said Carrie, office manager for the Athletic Department at Bryan High School. Speaking of their first trip outside the United States, Carrie said, “Now it is clear to me that it all comes down to family and faith, and the people we met are the same as us, and we are the same as them.”

The interfaith tour was funded and hosted by representatives from the San Antonio Institute of Interfaith Dialog (IID at www.interfaithdialog.org), working in cooperation with St. Mary’s Fund for Judeao Christian Studies.

Inspired by the teachings of Turkish educator and spiritual leader M. Fethullah Gülen, the IID’s mission is to promote peace and dialogue among people of different faiths.

Turkey, officially a secular republic of 63.5 million people — with 200,000 Christians –– has been called “the Holy Land of the Church” because so many of the earliest church communities were founded there. Most of the writings that make up the New Testament originated there or were addressed to its Christian communities, inspired by the preaching of the Apostles, particularly St. Paul and St. John. According to tradition, Mary lived at Ephesus in the home of St. John.

Turkey is also the land of Abraham, a patriarch shared by Christianity, Judaism and Islam, making him a significant link for the three monotheistic religions. But the country’s population is overwhelmingly Muslim: 99 percent, to be precise.

In addition to its ancient archeological history and its New Testament theological importance as a place where St. Paul traveled, Turkey is important “as a possible practical bridge into the Muslim world, especially the former Soviet states with large Muslim populations and Turkic culture and languages,” explained Marianist Father Charles H. Miller, St. Mary’s professor of theology and archeology, and director of Roamin’ Rattlers, the university’s touring program.

During his visit to Istanbul, Pope Benedict emphasized his respect for Muslims and their faith, reiterating that Christians and Muslims can build on their mutual belief in the “sacred character and dignity of the person.” This is, added the pope, “the basis of our mutual respect and esteem… the basis for cooperation in the service of peace between nations and people, the dearest wish of all believers and all people of good will.”

Father Miller agrees. “When we realize that ‘the Other’ is as human as we are, and has many of the same values — family integrity, respect for persons, concern to bring up children in loving and positive environment, value of having children, deep faith in God — then we can start dialoguing about how to better understand each other’s core beliefs, which will not always coincide nice and neatly. Personal acceptance and the building of personal trust comes first,” explained Father Miller, who has been traveling to Turkey since 1975, acknowledging that this interfaith tour was “the first time I really had the opportunity to observe Turkish family life in the home.”

For the Komars, parishioners of St. Joseph in Bryan, their journey with interfaith dialogue began with Sept. 11, 2001.

As a response to Sept. 11, Freddie Komar, assistant chief with the Bryan Police Department, began to work first-hand with the local Muslim community. Through the Texas A&M interfaith group, the Muslim community started preparing dinners for the department as a way of meeting their police officers.

“I got to know the [interfaith] organizer and spent a lot of time talking to him,” Freddie remembered. “He encouraged us from the beginning to set aside our pre-conceived notions and open ourselves to the experience.”

So Freddie went home, invited Carrie to join him, and they attended their first interfaith meeting at the Episcopal church in College Station. “We didn’t know what to expect,” he said, remembering how at first they “just sat back and observed.”

“In my line of work,” after 28 years in law enforcement, Freddie added, “there’s a danger of becoming very skeptical. So many of the people I deal with have ulterior motives and secondary agendas. But when I first met the members of the [interfaith] group, it was refreshing. These folks were genuinely kind.”

When asked how this interfaith tour of Turkey has changed him, Freddie Komar candidly noted one observation. “We have a lot of immigrants in our area [Bryan/College Station], and our department devotes a lot of time and money to teaching our officers Spanish and to learn ing the culture,” he explained. The times in Turkey when the group wandered off without a guide and without a Turkish translator, “have helped to give me an appreciation for what our immigrants go through.”

Imam Emrullah Hatipoglu, who greeted Pope Benedict during his visit to Istanbul’s famed Blue Mosque last month, also welcomed the Texas interfaith tour group to the mosque personally, inviting them across the carpeted prayer hall into his office, where he informally answered questions. “I should thank you for coming here, for traveling so far,” he smiled, bringing his right hand to his heart. “I thank you for your vision and for your role in this important work [of interfaith dialogue].”

For the imam (or prayer leader), nothing in interfaith dialogue compares to a personal encounter. “If you’ve never met a Muslim, you don’t know them as persons. You decide what you believe based on what you hear. But if you see and meet people first hand, you begin to know each other as human,” he said.

During his visit, the pope described authentic dialogue as “based on truth and inspired by a sincere wish to know one another better, respecting differences and recognizing what we have in common.”

Carrie Komar echoed Pope Benedict’s definition. “You have to let go of your pre-conceived ideas, be willing to get to know the real person, and trust yourself to your faith.”

Source: Catholic Spirit, March 2007, Diocese of Austin http://www.austindiocese.org/newsletter_article_view.php?id=1323

Blue Mosque and Hagia Sophia

Blue Mosque and Hagia Sophia

 

 


Related News

Will Gülen Movement schools offer Kurdish-medium education?

Journalists and Writers Foundation Vice-President Cemal Ussak, regarding the Kurdish-medium education at the Gülen community schools in southeastern Turkey, said “It is a matter of course following the amendment to the current regulation.” Vice-president of Journalists and Writers Foundation, regarded as the institutional face of Gülen Movement, Cemal Ussak brought to minds the fact that the movement’s […]

The letter that united America

74 members of the Senate, which has a total of 100 members, signed a document which contains strong language against the violations committed against democracy, human rights and especially the freedom of the press in Turkey.

Gulen-linked org’s statement on Turkish Govt’s arrest of pro-Kurdish Parliamentarians

AfSV Statement on Turkish Government’s Arrest of HDP Parliamentarians  Erdogan’s Persecutions Underscore Authoritarian Slide New York (November 9, 2016) – The Alliance for Shared Values is deeply concerned about the arrests of nine members of Turkish Parliament from the pro-Kurdish People’s Democratic Party (HDP), including the party’s co-chairs Mr. Selahattin Demirtas and Ms. Figen Yuksekdag. […]

Helping hands to Kosova

Turkey extended a helping hand to Kosova, the ninth poorest country of the world, through Kimse Yok Mu Relief Foundation. Responding to cries of the orphans in the country, which gained independence in 2008, Kimse Yok Mu Relief Foundation distributed a variety of supplies ranging from sewing machines to goreceries, stationeries to toys. Aids have been distributed to those who became widows and orphans for the sake of their country’s independence. Among volunteers, there were Mujgan Koralturk, who plays Dilan character in the famous series ‘Tek Turkiye’, and Aslihan Erkisi, a famous vocal artist.

Ahmet Şık’s book and Ergenekon’s media campaign (1)

Within Turkey’s ultranationalist camps, supporters of the Kemalist system have already extended their support to the Ergenekon network. So there is a sizable community in Turkey that believes whatever is said by a suspect in the Ergenekon case. Emre Uslu, Wednesday 28 December 2011 The Odatv trial has finally begun after months of waiting. The […]

Gülen says he supports broader press freedoms

Turkish Islamic scholar Fethullah Gülen has said he advocates broader rights specifically in the arenas of freedom of expression and freedom of the press for journalists, including those who “unjustly” accuse him of conspiring against them. The allegations were recently voiced following the recent release of four journalists released pending trial in the OdaTV case, […]

Latest News

Sacramento leaders gather for Iftar dinner in celebration of Ramadan

SEO Skill Suite: Tools for Keyword Research, Technical & Backlink Analysis

Turkish inmate jailed over alleged Gülen links dies of heart attack in prison

Message of Condemnation and Condolences for Mass Shooting at Bondi Beach, Sydney

Media executive Hidayet Karaca marks 11th year in prison over alleged links to Gülen movement

ECtHR faults Turkey for convictions of 2,420 applicants over Gülen links in follow-up to 2023 judgment

New Book Exposes Erdoğan’s “Civil Death Project” Targeting the Hizmet Movement

European Human Rights Treaty Faces Legal And Political Tests

ECtHR rejects Turkey’s appeal, clearing path for retrials in Gülen-linked cases

In Case You Missed It

Pro-gov’t media continues smear campaign against Hizmet movement

Former Turkish President Gül denies having any relationship with the Gülen movement or Fethullah Gülen but history tells…

Erdogan, Gulen Combat Islamophobia, Extremism

Wife of ‘Gülen school manager’ detained in Tbilisi asks for protection

Kyrgyz President Atambayev: Sebat Turkish schools won’t be shut down

Afghans collect 1 million signatures to prevent seizure of Turkish schools by Erdoğan regime

55 students from 30 countries captivate İzmir residents with poems of praise

Copyright 2026 Hizmet News