Makrides finally observes that in modern Greece and elsewhere in the
Orthodox world,
such as Russia, anti-Western political groupings look even to
some form of confederation with Turkey based in part on the power of a visceral
anti-Western agenda. We will see how pro-Muslim and pro-Turkish feelings,
even if not part of mainstream thinking, do exist in contemporary Russia today,
reflecting some of these historic reflexes.
We see here, too, the early roots of a process
in which Islam and Eastern
Orthodoxy ultimately come to share many views on the West. Indeed, if Islam
had never emerged in the Middle East and Eastern Orthodoxy had maintained its
sway there, how far-fetched would it be to imagine Orthodoxy still carrying
single-handedly the torch of anti-Western feeling in the Middle East today?