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Report Warns About Heavy Loss Of Religious Artifacts In Cyprus

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  • Report Warns About Heavy Loss Of Religious Artifacts In Cyprus

    REPORT WARNS ABOUT HEAVY LOSS OF RELIGIOUS ARTIFACTS IN CYPRUS
    Julia Duin

    Washington Times
    July 21 2009
    DC

    Religious artifacts on the divided island of Cyprus are in great peril,
    according to a U.S. Helsinki Commission document to be releasedTuesday
    afternoon.

    Thousands of Orthodox icons, manuscripts, frescoes and mosaics
    have been looted from churches, chapels and monasteries in northern
    Cyprus, ending up on international auction blocks, says the document,
    theresult of a lengthy investigation by the Helsinki Commission and
    titled Destruction of Cultural Property in the Northern Part of Cyprus
    and Violations of International Law.

    A copy of the 50-page document was provided to The Washington Times
    in advance of a Tuesday press briefing and panel discussion on
    Capitol Hill.

    The panelists will include Charalampos Chotzakoglou, professor of
    Byzantine art and archaeology at Hellenic Open University in Patras,
    Greece; German art historian Klaus Gallas, who is a specialist on
    theinternational smuggling of art artifacts; and Michael Jansen,
    authorof War and Cultural Heritage: Cyprus after the 1974 Turkish
    Invasion.

    Most of the ruined property belongs to the Orthodox Church of Cyprus,
    one of the world's oldest national Orthodox churches, with the rest
    belonging to Catholic, Armenian Orthodox, Maronite and Jewish groups.

    Thirty-five years of occupation of Northern Cyprus by Turkish forces
    have ruined a plethora of archeological and religious sites, says the
    report, which adds that the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
    Cultural Organization (UNESCO) has been documenting the destruction
    since 1984.

    According to the report:

    * 500 Orthodox churches or chapels have been pillaged, demolished
    or vandalized.

    * 133 churches, chapels and monasteries have been desecrated.

    * 15,000 paintings have disappeared.

    * 77 churches have been turned into mosques, 28 are being used by
    the Turkish military as hospitals or camps, and 13 have been turned
    into barns.

    A staff member for the Helsinki Commission said a copy of the
    report had been sent to the Turkish Embassy in Washington, but an
    embassyspokesman said it had not been received.

    It sounds like a one-sided presentation, said the embassy spokesman,
    who asked to remain unidentified because he was not authorized to
    comment on the record.

    There's no input from the Turkish side. There is no coincidence the
    report is coming out this week because it's the 35th anniversary
    ofthe intervention by Turkey. Turkey respects all cultural heritages,
    the spokesman said.

    The Turkish Embassy spokesman pointed out a Nov. 28, 2001, letter
    from Tahsin Ertugruloglu, foreign affairs minister for the self-styled
    Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus, that said Greek Cypriots destroyed
    Muslim shrines and mosques in 103 villages between 1963 and 1974.

    The report by the U.S. Helsinki Commission, which monitors compliance
    with agreements among members of the Organization for Security and
    Cooperation in Europe, included this claim by Turkey. But the report
    also added that Cyprus, which exercises effective control over the
    southern two-thirds of the island, has spent about $600,000 since
    2000 to renovate 17 historic mosques.

    According to the report, the 77 churches converted into mosques have
    texts from the Koran inscribed where icons and paintings used to
    be; the St. Anastasia monastery is now a hotel with a swimming pool
    and casino; and the Byzantine-era monastery of Antiphonetes has had
    itsicons and murals removed and sold to art dealers.

    Jerome Bowers, a Northern Illinois University associate history
    professor who recently returned from studying in Cyprus, said in an
    e-mail that while Greek Orthodox artifacts in Northern Cyprus have
    been damaged, the stolen goods have been smuggled out of Cyprus mostly
    through the southern part of the island.

    There can be no denying the fact that the destruction of
    religiouscultural artifacts in the south has also taken place, he
    wrote. In Paphos, for example, the Camii Cedit was not only destroyed
    but replaced with a parking lot, and the square surrounding the
    location is nowcalled March 9th Square, named for the date of the
    mosque's destruction.

    The Christian church has ancient roots in Cyprus. Visited in A.D. 45
    by the apostle Paul along with his co-workers Barnabas and Mark (as
    recorded in Acts 13:4-12), it was ruled by Byzantine emperors for
    hundreds of years. It was during this time that the vast majority of
    churches were built in the region and decorated with brightly colored
    frescoes and tiled mosaics.

    In 1571, the island fell under the control of the Ottoman Turks, and
    in 1878, the British took over. The native Cypriots are divided into
    two camps: 80 percent Greek speakers and 18 percent ethnic Turks,
    with the remaining 2 percent divided among Armenians, Maronites and
    Latin-rite Catholics.

    According to the report, the Greek government, with the help of Cypriot
    armed forces, forced out Archbishop Makarios, the first democratically
    elected president of the island, on July 15, 1974.

    Turkey invaded five days later, taking over the northern 37 percent
    of Cyprus, ostensibly to protect Turkish-speaking inhabitants. Several
    years later, the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus was established,
    though no country in the world besides Turkey recognizes it. TheGreek
    Cypriot-led Republic of Cyprus claims to be the sole legitimate
    government of the whole island, a claim every country in the world
    except Turkey accepts.

    The report says there are 660,000 Greek Cypriots living on the island's
    southern part, 89,000 Turkish speakers in the north and 43,000 Turkish
    soldiers serving as an occupying force.

    Hilmi Akil, the Washington representative for the Turkish Republicof
    Northern Cyprus, dismissed the Helsinki Commission report as a
    propaganda exercise, adding that Turkish Cypriot and Greek Cypriot
    leaders recently agreed to set up a joint committee on cultural
    heritage matters.

    The theft of cultural artifacts takes place everywhere, including
    South Cyprus, he said. What we're objecting to is destruction,
    which has happened on both sides of the island, is being portrayed
    as something that only Turkish Cypriots have done.
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