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Controversy over cross grows amid church's reopening

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  • Controversy over cross grows amid church's reopening

    Controversy over cross grows amid church's reopening

    Arminfo
    2007-03-23 20:40:00


    In advance of the opening of the newly restored Armenian Akhtamar
    Church on Lake Van, a new controversy has emerged in Ankara over
    whether or not the church's steeple should have a metal cross placed
    on it, reports Zaman daily (Turkey).

    Akhtamar Church has undergone restoration that was undertaken at the
    behest of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Minister of Culture
    and Tourism Atilla Koc. The church will be reopened to the public at a
    special ceremony on March 29.

    Meanwhile, Patriarch Mesrob II, the spiritual leader of the Armenian
    Orthodox community in Turkey, has sent a written request to the
    Culture and Tourism Ministry asking that a cross, prepared by the
    Armenian Patriarchate itself, be placed on the steeple of the Akhtamar
    Church. The sentiments in the letter from Partriarch Mesrob are echoed
    in a similar letter sent by a group of Armenian intellectuals and
    artists to the ministry.

    With no answer yet forthcoming regarding what is to be done about the
    cross, the Ministry of Culture and Tourism has reportedly sent letters
    to the Foreign Ministry to obtain further views on the matter. Whether
    or not the cross will be placed atop Akhtamar Church in advance of the
    March 29 opening appears to depend on the views on this matter
    expressed by authorities at the Foreign Ministry.

    While the Ministry of Culture and Tourism intends for the
    1,100-year-old church on Lake Van's Akhtamar Island to be opened to
    the public as a "museum," the Armenian community is pressing for the
    church to be available for religious services. On the subject of the
    placement of the metal cross atop the church, Patriarch Mesrob
    references past photographs of the historical church as the reason why
    the ministry should allow the cross to be placed there.

    "A cross can be clearly seen on the steeple of the church in all old
    photographs of it." The official name of the church also arises in the
    content of Mesrob's letter, with the patriarch referring to the church
    as " Lake Van's Agtamar Island Surp Hac Armenian Church."

    Within this framework, the Armenian patriarch also suggests that
    annual September Sacred Cross Festival be called the Agtamar Festival,
    noting that this would have the additional advantage of drawing local
    and foreign tourists to the area, with choral groups from Istanbul and
    folkloric dancers from Van adding to the content of the festival.

    The patriarch's letter also focuses on the possible religious services
    that might take place at Akhtamar Church during the Sacred Cross
    Festival, explaining, "There could be a religious service in the
    church's old nave, followed by choral groups and folklore groups."

    Patriarch Mesrob's letter ends by noting that he is "praying to dear
    Allah for the continued success" of the ministry's restoration
    efforts. In a separate letter on the subject, a group of Armenian
    intellectuals and artists request that Akhtamar Church, which they
    refer to as "Ahdamar Church," be turned over permanently to the
    Armenian community in Turkey. They also note that a cross similar to
    the one found on the church must be placed there again, and that even
    if the church is not to be opened for religious services, the cross
    must still be placed there as a part of restoration efforts.
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