Turkey: Pressure mounts for Hagia Sophia to be converted into mosque
Pressure? From whom? It's a church. Why isn't pressure mounting to return the historic church to the Christians once and for all?
Why reward Islamic supremacism and jihad? Muslim supremacists have been furiously converting churches into mosques. There have been a number of successful mosque conversions from former Byzantine churches, one in Trabzon in the northeast Turkey and another in Iznik near Istanbul.
The most notable case of this however has yet to be completed, the Monastery of Stoudios, the largest Byzantine church in Istanbul, which will be converted into a mosque next year.
The Hagia Sophia is the most iconic and exquisite church in the world. The Hagia Sophia has been standing since 360 AD, built after the Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and moved the capital eastwards.
Just as the Dome of the Rock stands on top of the first and second Jewish temples in Jerusalem, this seizure of holiest of holies must be opposed and defeated.
"Turkey: Pressure mounts for Hagia Sophia to be converted into mosque," Michael Trimmer, Christian Today, December 13, 2013 (thanks to Filip)
We currently stand next to the Hagia Sophia mosque," so
said Turkey's deputy prime minister, Bulent Arinc last month during a
dedication of a museum of Caucasus rugs and carpets next to the Istanbul
landmark, according to the Religion News Service (RNS).
This speech was one in a line of recent statements, from
offhand remarks to outright demands that the Hagia Sophia (also known as the
"Church of Saint Wisdom" or "Divine Wisdom") be converted
from a museum and local attraction back into a mosque.
"We are looking at a sad Hagia Sophia but hopefully we
will see it smiling again soon," Arinc added.
One of the imams of the nearby Sultan Ahmet Mosque (locally
known as the 'Blue Mosque') also reportedly preached a sermon that said its
conversion must take place.
Although this has been an ongoing concern for many years,
recent events have brought the issue into sharper focus. A campaign from the
National Turkish Student Association has been targeting the issue aggressively
in recent months. Also, there have been a number of successful recent attempts
to convert former Byzantine churches into mosques. Arinc, in his speech,
mentioned two churches that had recently been converted, one in Trabzon in the
northeast and another in Iznik near Istanbul.
The most notable case of this however has yet to be
completed, the Monastery of Stoudios, the largest Byzantine church in Istanbul,
which will be converted into a mosque next year.
Engin Akyurek, a professor of Byzantine art at Istanbul
University, has said in an RNS article this would be a disastrous loss to
history.
"To use this building for some function, a mosque or
anything else, would mean to reconstruct almost 80% of the building … it will
not be a fifth-century building anymore. It will be a catastrophe for that building."
Some have pointed out that the belief that the Hagia Sofia
should become a mosque again is linked to a Sharia law principle that if a
building is ever used as a mosque, it can then never be used for any other
alternative purpose again.
A historic example of this was seen during the siege of
Jerusalem in 637 AD. After the siege,
Caliph Omar travelled to Jerusalem because Patriarch Sophronius had demanded
that he would only surrender to the Caliph in person. Once the surrender was
agreed, the Caliph was shown around the city by the Patriarch. When they
visited the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, the Patriarch offered the Caliph a
portion of the Church to pray in. The Caliph refused, explaining "Had I
prayed inside the church, the Muslims coming after me would take possession of
it, saying that I had prayed in it."
International reaction to the potential conversion of the
Hagia Sofia has been decidedly negative. Quoted by the RNS, in responding to Mr
Arinc's speech, the Greek Foreign Ministry called the action "an insult to
the religious sensibilities of millions of Christians and actions that are
anachronistic and incomprehensible from a state that declares it wants to
participate as a full member in the European Union".
Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, Archbishop of
Constantinople, talking to Turkish newspaper Milliyet in February, said that
"If it is to reopen as a house of worship, then it should open as a
Christian church… It was built as a church and not a mosque."
The Hagia Sophia has been standing since 360 AD, built after
the Roman Emperor Constantine converted to Christianity and moved the capital
eastwards. There is a legend that once the Church was finally completed in 597,
and the Emperor Justinian made his first visit inside, he supposedly exclaimed
'Solomon, I have surpassed thee'."
It was over 850 years later, in 1453, that the Ottomon Turks
seized Constantinople, taking possession of the magnificently domed building
and repurposing it into a mosque, which it would remain as for almost 500
years. Then in 1935, under the secular Turkish Republic founded by Kemal
Mustafa Ataturk, the government turned the Hagia Sophia into a museum, thereby
sidestepping difficult sectarian conflict between the Islamic majority and the
Christian minority.
Political analysts point out that with provincial elections
on the horizon in March 2014, many conservative candidates from the
Islamist-leaning Justice and Development party see converting former Byzantine
churches as a means of energising and shoring up the religious base of their
party. This is particularly necessary after widespread challenges to other
parts of their agenda, such as increased restrictions on the sale of alcohol.
But many argue that while this strategy might work, it also
has the potential to antagonise other religious groups and will definitely
leave Turkey's historical heritage significantly damaged.
"Supporting the reopening of Hagia Sophia has become
the litmus test of the true believer," said Professor Robert Ousterhout,
the director of the Centre for Ancient Studies at the University of
Pennsylvania to the RNS. "Protests by the academic community have fallen
on deaf ears."
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