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| Volume 7 Number 37 - Tuesday, September 13th, 2005 |
A Publication of the ORTHODOX CHRISTIAN LAITY |
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The Orthodox Christian Laity
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The Orthodox Christian News Service |
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To the Central Committee of the Soviet Communist Party, July 3, 1969: Among the 20 Orthodox monasteries on the Athos peninsula in Greece is the Russian monastery of (Saint) Panteleimon, founded 800 years ago by (monks) of Russian origin. The monastery has accumulated great wealth, consisting of valuable and unique ecclesiastical objects, murals, rare books and items valued in 1913 at over 200,000 gold rubles. Today the monastery of (Saint) Panteleimon is populated by monks from Russia. Although ordinarily under the jurisdiction of the Istanbul Patriarchate, the monastery is a traditional channel for relations between Russians and Greeks. It has always been a singular seat of Russian culture in the Balkans, even though the monks have become citizens of Greece. Over the past 10 years the Greek government has obstructed contacts between the Moscow Patriarchate and the Mount Athos monastery in every way possible, trying to... expropriate valuable monastic property. The Greek military dictatorship has been particularly active recently, contravening all traditions and international treaties based on the autonomy and independence of the Mount Athos monasteries, and has declared them under state control by means of special decrees. There is the real risk that the junta will expropriate objects of inestimable value in the Russian monastery. Following recommendations by the Council on Religious Affairs, Patriarch Alexios of Moscow and All Russia has sent a telegram to the Greek government protesting the junta’s actions... and has asked the Ecumenical Patriarchate to call an emergency session of the Pan-Orthodox Synod to discuss the situation. He has called on the World Council of Churches to take the necessary steps to defend the interests of the Orthodox Churches on Mount Athos. It was decided that the USSR Ambassador in Athens would lodge a demarche with the Greek government. The Soviet press has also covered the issue.
International church circles have responded, and
the Greek government has given assurances that
it has no desire to violate the status quo on
Mount Athos, nor to interfere in monastic life.
However, it is our opinion that further steps
should be taken to avert the junta’s
interference in the monastery and to strengthen
the Moscow Patriarchate’s influence there. It
would also be useful to broaden contacts between
the Russian Orthodox Church and the monastery by
sending monks from the USSR and assistance in
restoring the monastery building damaged
recently by fire. The USSR embassy in Greece is
of the opinion that these measures are
mandatory. The USSR Cabinet’s Council for
Religious Affairs... asks the Central Committee
of the Soviet Communist Party to give the Moscow
Patriarchate permission to send: 20-25 monks
from the Soviet Union to Mount Athos to work
permanently at the monastery; a delegation from
the Russian Orthodox Church to the monastery’s
800th anniversary celebrations in early August;
building equipment to Mount Athos for the repair
of monastery buildings... (Signed by the
president of the USSR’s State Council on
Religious Affairs, V. Kuroedov.) |
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