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Ankara Officials Reconsider: Cross Will Be Placed On The Roof Of Hol

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  • Ankara Officials Reconsider: Cross Will Be Placed On The Roof Of Hol

    ANKARA OFFICIALS RECONSIDER: CROSS WILL BE PLACED ON THE ROOF OF HOLY CROSS CHURCH

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    22.01.2010 21:43 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The Culture and Tourism Ministry ends speculation
    about the historical Holy Cross Church on Akdamar Island in Van.

    Officials from the ministry say the church will be opened for prayer
    and a cross will be placed on the roof by September 2010.

    The Armenian Church was renovated and opened as a museum in 2007 by
    former Culture Minister Atilla Koc; since then, debate has centered on
    whether a cross would be placed atop the building's dome and whether
    the church would once again be opened for prayer.

    Buildings designated as museums are not allowed to host religious
    services under Turkish law.

    Current Culture Minister Ertugrul Gunay has told the Hurriyet Daily
    News & Economic Review that the ministry is making the final legal
    arrangements to allow the church to open for prayer once a year.

    Last week, however, daily Milliyet and other Turkish newspapers
    announced that the ministry was no longer considering opening Surp
    Hac for prayer. The announcement naturally attracted the interest of
    Armenian media and the Armenian diaspora as well.

    The Daily News spoke to ministry officials to get the latest
    developments about the historical church. Denying last week's news
    story, the officials said the church would be opened for prayer in
    September 2010 with a cross on the building's roof. According to
    the ministry sources, Milliyet's story was based on old information;
    in fact, they said, the legal preparations for opening the church to
    prayer are continuing rapidly.

    The 300-seat Holy Cross Church, located on a small island in the
    middle of Lake Van in eastern Turkey, is in many ways a symbol of
    the country's Armenian community. The church was built between 915
    and 921 during the reign of Armenian King Gagik I of Vaspurakan and
    was one of the most important religious buildings in the region. The
    church, whose sandstone walls and dome are adorned with carvings of
    Jesus Christ and David and Goliath, is considered one of the greatest
    examples of Armenian architecture of the period, and an inspiration
    for the Gothic style that later developed in Europe, according to the
    New York-based Landmarks Foundation, which has advised on the church's
    restoration. By the end of last century, the church was falling apart
    due to the heavy rains and winds that swept across the lake.

    Following its restoration and reopening in 2007 Holy Cross Church
    was operating as a museum.
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