ALERT Erdogan declares Hagia Sophia a mosque after Turkish court ruling

northern watch

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Erdogan declares Hagia Sophia a mosque after Turkish court ruling

July 10, 2020 / 9:21 AM / Updated an hour ago
Daren Butler, Ece Toksabay

ISTANBUL (Reuters) - President Tayyip Erdogan declared Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia a mosque on Friday with the first Muslim prayers to begin in two weeks, after a top court ruled the ancient building’s conversion to a museum by modern Turkey’s founding statesman was illegal.

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People carry Turkish flags outside the Hagia Sophia or Ayasofya, a UNESCO World Herita

Erdogan spoke on Friday just hours after the court ruling was published, brushing aside international warnings not to change the status of the nearly 1,500-year-old monument that is revered by Christians and Muslims alike.

The United States, Russia and church leaders were among those to express concern about changing the status of the UNESCO World Heritage Site, a focal point of both the Christian Byzantine and Muslim Ottoman empires and now one of the most visited monuments in Turkey.

Greece’s culture ministry described the court decision as an “open provocation” to the civilized world
, while UNESCO said it regretted it was not notified ahead of time and would now review the building’s status.

Erdogan has sought to shift Islam into the mainstream of Turkish politics in his 17 years at the helm. He has long floated restoring the mosque status of the sixth-century building, which was converted into a museum in the early days of the modern secular Turkish state under Mustafa Kemal Ataturk.

“With this court ruling, and with the measures we took in line with the decision, Hagia Sophia became a mosque again, after 86 years, in the way Fatih the conqueror of Istanbul had wanted it to be,” Erdogan said in a national address.

In a telling of history at times critical of the Byzantine Empire and the modern republic’s founders, Erdogan said Turkey could now leave behind “the curse of Allah, profits and angels” that Fatih - the Ottoman Sultan Mehmet II - said would be on anyone who converted it from a mosque.

“Like all our mosques, the doors of Hagia Sophia will be open to all, locals and foreigners, Muslims and non-Muslims,” said Erdogan, who earlier on Friday signed off on the Religious Affairs Directorate managing the site.

The U.S. State Department, which had urged Turkey to maintain the building as a museum, said in a statement it was “disappointed” by the decision but looked forward to hearing the plans “to ensure it remains accessible without impediment for all.”

APPLAUSE

The association which brought the court case, the latest in a 16-year legal battle, said Hagia Sophia was the property of Sultan Mehmet II who captured the city in 1453 and turned the already 900-year-old Greek Orthodox cathedral into a mosque.

The Ottomans built minarets alongside the vast domed structure, while inside they added panels bearing the Arabic names of God, the Prophet Mohammad, and Muslim caliphs. The golden mosaics and Christian icons, obscured by the Ottomans, were uncovered again when Hagia Sophia became a museum.

In its ruling the Council of State, Turkey’s top administrative court, said: “It was concluded that the settlement deed allocated it as a mosque and its use outside this character is not possible legally.
“The cabinet decision in 1934 that... defined it as a museum did not comply with laws,” it said, referring to an edict signed by Ataturk.

Erdogan, a pious Muslim, threw his weight behind the campaign before local elections last year which dealt a painful blow to his ruling Islamist-rooted AK Party. Members stood and applauded in parliament on Friday when his decree was read out.

In Istanbul, hundreds of people gathered near Hagia Sophia to celebrate the ruling. “Those who built this did it to worship God as well,” said Osman Sarihan, a teacher.

“Thank God today it reverted to its main purpose. Today God will be worshipped in this mosque.”

REVERSING ATATURK STEP

By reversing one of Ataturk’s most symbolic steps, which underlined the former leader’s commitment to a secular republic, Erdogan has capped his own project to restore Islam in public life, said Soner Cagaptay, director of the Turkish Research Program at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.

“Hagia Sophia is the crowning moment of Erdogan’s religious revolution which has been unfolding in Turkey for over a decade,” he said, pointing to greater emphasis on religion in education and across government.

The Russian Orthodox Church said it regretted that the court did not take its concerns into account and said the decision could lead to even greater divisions, the TASS news agency reported.

Previously, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the spiritual head of some 300 million Orthodox Christians worldwide and based in Istanbul, said converting it into a mosque would disappoint Christians and would “fracture” East and West.

Turkish groups have long campaigned for Hagia Sophia’s conversion, saying it would better reflect Turkey’s status as an overwhelmingly Muslim country.

Additional reporting by Mehmet Emin Caliskan and by Daphne Psaledakis in Washington; Editing by Dominic Evans, Jonathan Spicer, Gareth Jones and Daniel Wallis

 
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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Well I guess Erdogan felt he needed another "nod" to his supporters since Libya, Syria and Iraq are getting more "sporty"....
 

Marthanoir

TB Fanatic
Will they remove the Norse runes I wonder

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Melodi

Disaster Cat
Will they remove the Norse runes I wonder

31846383d1525b8d1bda7a5fa1e5dd40.jpg
I can't remember exactly, but Nightwolf says they say something like "Hagar was here," possibly with a date, I can check with him on it lol

This really is very serious, it is a total rejection of Ataturk's set up for a secular Turkish state, something not always achieved but the past at least existed on paper.
 

Maryh

Veteran Member
My daughter visited it and a few year later my son. The pictures are absolutely stunning. This is just such a shame!
 

northern watch

TB Fanatic
Istanbul's Hagia Sophia opens as a mosque for Muslim prayers
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has fulfilled a dream of his Islamic-oriented youth and joined hundreds of worshipers for the first Muslim prayers in 86 years inside Istanbul’s landmark Hagia Sophia

By MEHMET GUZEL and SUZAN FRASER Associated Press
24 July 2020

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Faithful wait at the historic Sultanahmet district of Istanbul, outside the Byzantine-era Hagia Sophia, Friday, July 24, 2020. Hundreds of Muslim faithful were making their way to Istanbul's landmark monument Friday to take part in the first prayers in 86 years at the structure that was once Christendom's most significant cathedral and the "jewel" of the Byzantine Empire then a mosque and museum before its re-conversion into a Muslim place of worship. The conversion of the edifice, has led to an international outcry. (AP Photo/Yasin Akgul)undefined The Associated Press

ISTANBUL -- Fulfilling a dream of his Islamic-oriented youth, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan joined hundreds of worshipers Friday for the first Muslim prayers in 86 years inside Hagia Sophia, the Istanbul landmark that served as one of Christendom’s most significant cathedrals, a mosque and a museum before its conversion back into a Muslim place of worship.

Thousands of other Muslim faithful came from across Turkey and quickly filled specially designated areas outside of the Byzantine era monument to join in the inaugural prayers. Many others were turned away, while Orthodox Christian church leaders in Greece and the United States announced a “day of mourning” over Hagia Sophia's return as a mosque.

The prayers began with Erdogan reciting from the Quran. The head of Turkey's religious authority, Ali Erbas, led the ceremony and prayed that Muslims would never again be “denied” the right to worship at the internationally celebrated 6th century structure.

As many as many as 350,000 people took part in Friday's prayers, the president said.

Brushing aside international criticism, Erdogan issued a decree restoring the iconic building as a mosque earlier this month, shortly after a Turkish high court ruled that the Hagia Sophia had been illegally made into a museum more than eight decades ago. The structure, listed as UNESCO World Heritage site, has since been renamed “The Grand Hagia Sophia Mosque.”

The move sparked dismay in Greece, the United States and among Christian churches who had called on Erdogan to maintain it as a museum as a nod to Istanbul's multi-religious heritage and the structure's status as a symbol of Christian and Muslim unity. Pope Francis expressed his sadness.

Built by the Byzantine Emperor Justinian in 537, Hagia Sophia was turned into a mosque with the 1453 Ottoman conquest of Istanbul. Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founding leader of the secular Turkish republic converted the structure into a museum in 1934.

Although an annex to the Hagia Sophia, the Sultan’s pavilion, has been open to prayers since the 1990s, religious and nationalists group in Turkey have long yearned for the nearly 1,500-year-old edifice, which they regard as the legacy of Ottoman Sultan Mehmet the Conquerer, to be reverted into a mosque.

“This is Hagia Sophia breaking away from its captivity chains. It was the greatest dream of our youth,” Erdogan said last week. “It was the yearning of our people and it has been accomplished.” Erdogan also described its conversion into a museum by the republic’s founding leaders as a mistake that is being rectified.

In neighboring Greece, bells tolled and flags flew at half-staff at hundreds of churches across the country in protest at the decision to convert Hagia Sophia into a mosque. The Greek Orthodox Church leader, Archbishiop Ieronymos, will hold a special service at Athens Cathedral later Friday. Churches in Athens, Greece’s second-largest city, Thessaloniki, are also organizing vigils.

“Today is a difficult day .. a shadow hangs over us with the transformation of Hagia Sophia into a mosque — something that genuinely shocks Christians all over the world and not only Greeks," Greek government spokesman Stelios Petsas said in an interview with private channel Open TV. "We have warned for some time that this will create an unbridgeable gap between Turkey and the Christian world.”

The history and religious traditions of the predominantly Greek-speaking and Orthodox Christian Byzantine Empire remain influential in Greece. The church protests also occurred amid a volatile dispute between Greece and Turkey over mineral rights in the eastern Mediterranean, with the Greek military on alert over a planned Turkish maritime survey in waters claimed by Greece.

In New York, the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, called the inaugural prayers a “cultural and spiritual misappropriation and a violation of all standards of religious harmony and mutual respect.” Archbishop Elpidophoros of America held a meeting with U.S. President Donald Trump and Vice President Mike Pence in Washington on Thursday to discuss concerns over the reconversion.

In his sermon, Erbas said Mehmet the Conqueror had endowed Hagia Sophia "to believers on condition that it should remain a mosque until the last day.

“Any property that is endowed is inviolable in our belief and burns whoever touches it,” Erbas said.

In Istanbul, hundreds had camped near the structure overnight. Dozens of worshipers broke through one police checkpoint to rush toward Hagia Sophia and social distancing practices, in place due to the coronavirus outbreak, were being ignored, Turkish media reported.

Turkey has vowed to protect Hagia Sophia's artifacts and has said it will remain open to visits by Muslims and non-Muslims outside of prayer hours. The structure's mosaics depicting Christian figures are being covered with sail-like white drapes during the prayers.


———


Suzan Fraser reported from Ankara, Turkey. Derek Gatopoulos in Athens contributed to this report.

 

Ragnarok

On and On, South of Heaven
Will they remove the Norse runes I wonder

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Halvdan...

Enjoy...

I pray they are still among us...

The Heimskringla: A History of the Norse Kings by Snorre Sturlason
HALFDAN THE BLACK SAGA

Halvdan the Black
View: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KNqfIxjKFjo
 
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Satanta

Stone Cold Crazy
_______________
Well. It IS in a Muslim country and the fact that they did not just blow it up [[some Buddist Status come to mind]] or burn it down [[some French Catherdrals come to mind]], maybe it is the best that can be hoped for-I doubt the U.N. is going to send in troops to free it then keep it manned and guarded.
 

Plain Jane

Just Plain Jane
This is a great coup for Erdogan. It marginalized dissent in Turkey and elevated him throughout the Islamic world.


Christians Mourns as Hagia Sofia Becomes Mosque Again


Hamdi Firat Buyuk
Sarajevo
BIRN
July 24, 202015:40
Hagia Sofia officially re-opened Friday as a mosque after serving as a holy place of both Christianity and Islam before becoming a museum

Hagia Sofia was officially opened as a mosque with Friday prayers and a special sermon that Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, other Turkish statesmen and guests from around the world attended.

Tens of thousands people held prayers in the Istanbul’s Sultan Ahmet square and streets near Hagia Sofia under tight police control.

“May Allah allow that Hagia Sofia will remain a mosque until the day of the apocalypse,” Ali Erbas, head of the Turkish Religious Authority, Diyanet, said in his sermon, thanking the Islamist President for his decision.

Meanwhile churches around the globe declared a day of mourning and condemned the move.

Church bells around Greece pealed in sorrow at midday as Muslims prayed in Hagia Sofia after 86 years for the first time. Flags were flown at half-mast to protest over what the head of the Church of Greece, Archbishop Ieronymos, called the “unholy act of defiling” the former Byzantine Orthodox cathedral.

It was “a day of mourning for all of … Christianity,” Archbishop Ieronymos said.
Balkan churches also organised special sermons on the subject of Hagia Sofia.

The Serbian Orthodox Metropolitan of Montenegro, Amfilohije, called the conversion of Hagia Sofia into a mosque “insanity”.

“Today, Hagia Sophia is endangered again and is to lose its deepest meaning by being turned into a mosque,” he said after a sermon on Friday, referencing its central role in Orthodox Christianity until the Ottoman conquest of Constantinople in 1453.

The Turkish government insists that Hagia Sofia is a matter of Turkish internal affairs and that no other country has a right to interfere.

It has also guaranteed that Hagia Sofia will remain open for everyone and all faiths and that the priceless Christian mosaics, frescos and icons will not be whitewashed or damaged but only covered by curtains during Islamic prayers.

The new-old mosque has been covered with special turquoise carpets that President Erdogan personally chose and the mosque official named Hagia Sofia Grand Mosque before the opening ceremony.

The Hagia Sophia, or church of divine wisdom, was built in 537 as a Christian cathedral, then the world’s largest, by the Eastern Roman or Byzantine Emperor Justinian the First.

It was a symbol of the might of the empire and the seat of the Patriarch of Constantinople who is the leader of the Orthodox Christian Church.

After the Ottomans conquered the city in 1453, as symbol of their victory, they turned it into a mosque.

Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, the founder of the modern Turkish state, made the ancient building a museum in 1935.

President Erdogan’s Islamist government has long sought to turn the museum back into a mosque – a decision backed by a controversial court ruling in early June.

Conservative Turks and many Muslim countries have welcomed the move while many Western countries and different churches condemned the move.
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People at the Hagia Sophia after the Friday prayer during the official opening ceremony of Hagia Sophia as a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, 24 July 2020. Photo: EPA-EFE/TOLGA BOZOGLU
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People wait for the first Friday prayer as Turkish police secure the area during the official opening ceremony of Hagia Sophia as a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, 24 July 2020. Photo: EPA-EFE/TOLGA BOZOGLU
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A view on the Hagia Sophia frescoes covered with curtains after the Friday prayer during the official opening ceremony of Hagia Sophia as a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, 24 July 2020. Photo: EPA-EFE/TOLGA BOZOGLU
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People wave the Turkish flag and wait for the first Friday prayer during the official opening ceremony of Hagia Sophia as a mosque in Istanbul, Turkey, 24 July 2020. Photo: EPA-EFE/TOLGA BOZOGLU

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northern watch

TB Fanatic
After Hagia Sophia, Turkey turns another museum into mosque

Turkey has converted another former Byzantine church from a museum back into a mosque a month after it similarly turned Istanbul’s landmark Hagia Sophia into a Muslim house of prayer

By The Associated Press
21 August 2020

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People visit St Savior in Chora church, known as Kariye in Turkish, in Istanbul, Friday, Aug. 21, 2020. Turkey on Friday formally converted former Byzantine church, St Savior in Chora, into a mosque, a month after it similarly turned Istanbul's landmark Hagia Sophia into a Muslim house of prayer, drawing international rebuke.(AP Photo/Emrah Gurel)

ANKARA, Turkey -- The Turkish government formally converted a former Byzantine church into a mosque Friday, a move that came a month after it drew praise from the faithful and international opposition for similarly turning Istanbul’s landmark Hagia Sophia into a Muslim house of prayer.

A decision by President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, published in the country’s Official Gazette, said Istanbul’s Church of St. Saviour in Chora, known as Kariye in Turkish, was handed to Turkey's religious authority, which would open up the structure for Muslim prayers.

Like the Hagia Sophia, which was a church for centuries and then a mosque for centuries more, had operated as a museum for decades before Erdogan ordered it restored as a mosque. It was not immediately known when the first prayers would be held there.

The church, situated near the ancient city walls, is famed for its elaborate mosaics and frescoes. It dates to the 4th century, although the edifice took on its current form in the 11th-12th centuries.

The structure served as a mosque during the Ottoman rule before being transformed into a museum in 1945. A court decision last year canceled the building’s status as a museum, paving the way for Friday’s decision.

And as with the Hagia Sophia, the decision to transform the Chora back into a mosque is seen as geared to consolidate the conservative and religious support base of Erdogan's ruling party at a time when his popularity is sagging amid an economic downturn.

Greece’s Foreign Ministry strongly condemned the move, saying that Turkish authorities “are once again brutally insulting the character" of another U.N.-listed world heritage site.

“This is a provocation against all believers,” the Greek ministry said in a statement. “We urge Turkey to return to the 21st century, and the mutual respect, dialogue and understanding between civilizations.”

Elpidophoros, the Greek Orthodox archbishop of America, wrote on Twitter: “After the tragic transgression with Hagia Sophia, now the Monastery of Chora, this exquisite offering of Byzantine culture to the world!”

“The pleas and exhortations of the international community are ignored,” he wrote.
Several Istanbul residents rushed to the building Friday, some hoping to hold prayers there, Turkey's state-run Anadolu Agency reported.

“Like the Hagia Sophia, this is an important mosque for Muslims,” the agency quoted Istanbul resident Cuma Er as saying. “We came here to pray after we learned about the decision. But we have been told that it has not yet been opened for prayers. We are waiting for the opening.”

Last month, Erdogan joined hundreds of worshipers for the first Muslim prayers in Hagia Sophia in 86 years, brushing aside the international criticism and calls for the monument to be kept as a museum in recognition of Istanbul’s multi-faith heritage. As many as 350,000 took part in the prayers outside the structure.

 
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