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  • Visiting the world's greatest churches

    The Livingston County News, NY
    Nov 11 2012

    Visiting the world's greatest churches

    November 11, 2012 by Bill Cook


    Last week, I wrote about my recent adventures in Uzbekistan. Although
    I am thinking some day of doing a lecture series called something like
    `The Greatest Religious Buildings in the World' and might include some
    things I photographed in Afghanistan, I was largely there simply for
    the experience.

    However for nine days after leaving Uzbekistan, I was hard at work
    researching and photographing ancient Christian churches in the
    nations of Armenia and Georgia, tucked into an area called the
    Caucasus, roughly the area between the Black and Caspian Seas.

    I have signed a contract to do a 24-lecture course for The Teaching
    Company called something like `The World's Greatest Churches.' I want
    to include buildings from all parts of the world and from early
    Christian buildings to modern places of worship.

    Armenia has a credible claim to be the first Christian nation since
    Christianity was established there in 301, a few years before it was
    accepted in the Roman Empire. Georgia too traces its Christianity back
    to the fourth century.

    I knew that there were many extraordinary and ancient churches in
    these two nations, so I set off to examine and photograph the most
    famous of them. These are primarily monastic churches, and monks like
    to build their monasteries away from a busy world. I can testify that
    in Armenia and Georgia, they outdid themselves.

    Before I explain what it is like hunting down monasteries in the
    Caucasus, let me point out that both Armenia and Georgia have one
    important thing in common with Uzbekistan. All were parts of the
    Soviet Union and have been independent countries for only about 20
    years.

    This means that the capitals of these three former Soviet republics
    have similar wide boulevards and huge public buildings. They also have
    ugly factories that pollute and apartment buildings that appear
    literally to be falling to pieces.

    I stayed in one in Georgia when there was no hotel. I will never
    forget how jerry-rigged the bathroom was. It will forever be a
    metaphor for how people made do during the Soviet era.

    Back to hunting for monasteries in Armenia and Georgia. I rented
    four-wheel drive vehicles in each country; otherwise most of the
    ancient monasteries I sought out would have been inaccessible.

    Roads are not good, and there are no bypasses around these nations'
    capitals, Yerevan (Armenia) and Tbilish (Georgia). Let's just say I
    had some urban nightmares and that I was pulled over by the police one
    time in each capital. My pathetic confusion worked wonders in avoiding
    penalties for my traffic misdeeds.

    In both nations, the most spectacular aspect of their ancient churches
    is their location. Most are at the edge of great cliffs or perched on
    impossibly steep peaks. Others are nestled in remote and narrow
    valleys.

    When the Armenian and Georgian monks built monasteries to escape the
    hubbub of the world, they knew what they were doing. Both
    architectural traditions consist of small churches in terms of square
    footage with high central domes that soar toward heaven.

    Armenian churches have sparse decorations, primarily relief sculpture
    on the exteriors of their churches. In addition to sculpture, many of
    the Georgian churches are painted inside.

    Of course the style is quite different from what we find in western
    Europe; rather it is more akin to, though distinct from, the art that
    we associate with the Orthodox traditions.

    While it is relatively easy to recognize biblical stories, the saints
    of Georgia were largely unknown to me. I got to know Saint David, a
    martyr/king of Georgia and St Nino, a Christian slave woman who was
    chiefly responsible for the conversion of Georgia 17 centuries ago.

    In a remote Georgian monastery in a canyon, I met a 20-year-old monk
    with a ponytail who to my surprise spoke English. After he described
    quite beautifully the 12th-century decorations of his church, I asked
    where he learned English.

    `Oh,' he responded, `I studied for awhile at Baruch College in New
    York and lived in Bensonhurst,' a part of Brooklyn. He was even
    something of a New York Yankees fan, though neither of us knew at the
    time that they had just been ignominiously swept by the Detroit
    Tigers!

    There were not many restaurants outside the cities, so I largely made
    do with fruit and bread and some meat bought in what we would call mom
    and pop grocery stores. I did a lot of acting out of what I wanted
    because very few people spoke English.

    For obvious reasons, Russian was the second language. And since the
    Armenians and Georgians each have a distinctive alphabet, it was hard
    to decode a single word of signs and labels.

    The oddest sight I visited on the road was in Gori, Georgia, which
    happens to be the birthplace of Joseph Stalin. The city is proud of
    its most famous son, and his childhood home is now preserved in
    something resembling a classical temple. Go figure.

    Armenia and Georgia are lovely and beautiful countries with kind
    people and spectacular scenery, even genuine cowboys in Armenia, and
    monuments. Travel is not easy, but the rewards are great.

    Churches in Armenia and Georgia will indeed be featured in my `The
    World's Greatest Churches' lectures.

    http://thelcn.com/2012/11/11/visiting-the-worlds-greatest-churches/

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