President Erdoğan
of Turkey has announced that he will read Muslim prayers in Agia Sophia
in Constantinople on April 14, Holy Friday, one of the holiest days of
the year for the Christian faith—a move that has provoked the Greek and
broader Orthodox world.
Furthermore, he has claimed that Kemal Ataturk’s order to transform Agia Sophia from a mosque into a museum is a fake, reports AgionOros.ru.
The Agia Sophia (“Holy Wisdom) church is one of the greatest and most
important churches for Orthodox Christians, serving as the seat of the
Patriarch of Constantinople from the time of its construction in 537 by
Emperor St. Justinian, until the fall of the Byzantine Empire in 1453.
Under the Ottomans it was converted into a mosque until 1931, being
secularized and opened as a museum on February 1, 1935. The church is
considered the apex of Byzantine architecture, and is home to many of
the most famous mosaics in Christendom.
Erdoğan is not the first to claim that the order to turn the building
into a museum is a fake. Turkish historian and author Mustafa Armaga has
also claimed that Ataturk’s signature under the act is a forgery,
claiming the mosque became a museum due to “American machinations,” with
American diplomats putting pressure on Turkish authorities.
“Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will hold Muslim prayer on
Friday, the eve of April 16, in Agia Sophia, together with all the
government and leading officials,” stated a source within the Turkish
government. The source also told Turkish media that the prayers “will be
a performance against the Crusades,” and a symbolic act of transforming
the museum back into a mosque...
Source
An unbelievable and obviously calculated provocation.
Well, why not. They know neither the Greeks nor the Russians (the only Orthodox nation with a decent military) will do anything about it. GOD won't intervene either.
ReplyDeleteGuess the Orthodox will have to suffer in shame. Guess you will have to wait until the Second Com ing to straighten it out, huh?
Turks desecrating a church. This is news?? They've had it since 1453, nothing to see here.
ReplyDelete