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| Volume 7 Number 42 - Tuesday, October 18, 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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Saint Sophia in Washington, DC serves as the Greek Orthodox national cathedral, and its history illustrates the development of the church in the United States.
The celebration of the cathedral's 100th anniversary and the
consecration of its magnificent new education
building in 2004 are soon to be followed by the
recognition of its priest's remarkable 50-year
tenure at Saint Sophia. The Rev. Dr. John T. Tavlarides, born in Stamford,
Connecticut and baptized at the Annunciation
Church there, is the first American-born priest
and graduate of Holy Cross Greek Orthodox School
of Theology to serve as Dean the Cathedral. He
followed a succession of distinguished priests who
guided Saint Sophia through the 20th Century,
serving in different ways to carry out the
historic role of the Church: to transmit Greek
Orthodox Christian teaching, help its members
adjust to mainstream American life and, at the
same time, honor their Hellenic heritage. Since 1955, Saint Sophia has been located in Northwest
Washington on Embassy Row, across from the
Episcopal National Cathedral. With its renowned
iconography and splendid new education building,
Saint Sophia makes an impression. Saint Sophia had a less auspicious beginning in a downtown
neighborhood where many Greek immigrants then
worked and lived. They fit the mold of others
around the country, pushing fruit carts, running
small eateries, and living modest lives. Above
all, they shared the strong desire to worship in
their own Greek Orthodox churches. The dedication
and commitment exhibited by these people is well
known and revered. They will always be in the
church’s memory. In 1906, after two years of liturgical celebrations by Rev.
Nathaniel Sederis and other itinerant priests in
rented halls, a church was finally established by
Rev. Joachim Alexandropoulos (Alexopoulos). The
church, then on the corner of 6th and G Streets,
had previously housed the Adas Israel Synagogue,
the first Jewish house of worship in Washington,
which today is back in operation as the Jewish
Museum. Within 20 years, the rapidly growing
parish built and occupied their new church on 8th
and L Streets. Today, despite the establishment of four other large Greek
Orthodox parishes in the Washington area, Saint
Sophia has grown to more than 1,500 family and
individual members. Only 25 percent live in the
District of Columbia, with the majority in
Maryland and the rest in Virginia. The demographic
has changed in other major ways. There are still
Greeks in the food business, and many others have
had successful business careers, but few, if any,
are pushing fruit carts these days. A large
percentage of Saint Sophia’s parishioners are
still transplants, but now, they are also from
other parts of the United States – civil
servants, lawyers, doctors, journalists, teachers
and other professions. A diminishing number of members consider themselves Greek or even Greek Americans. Many see themselves as simply American. Since more than 90 percent of the weddings conducted at Saint Sophia are interfaith marriages (and have been for the past 25 years), a significantly large number of the Cathedral’s parish members are converts to the faith, according to Father Tavlarides.
By de-emphasizing social and political activities and
focusing on Christ and the historical and
theological significance of the Church, Father
Tavlarides has made it possible for this new
generation to stay with the church. His ability to
teach and preach extemporaneously has aided him in
this task. The longevity of Father John’s tenure is remarkable. His
service at Saint Sophia accounts for half of the
parish community’s historical life. Few
parishioners even know of the extraordinarily
small number of priests who helped found and lead
Saint Sophia through the past 101 years. Father John’s predecessor, the Very Rev. Aimilianos
Lalousis, with a service of 25 years at Saint
Sophia ranks second. The highly esteemed
archimandrite, reportedly a shy man, who was
consecrated a Bishop of Chicago and Charlotte in
1960, was instrumental in keeping the old 8th and
L church financially solvent by networking with
local Greek establishments for funds to help
maintain the church, and then for the purchase of
land on Massachusetts Avenue and the subsequent
construction of the present church edifice in
1955. A park facing the Cathedral is a memorial
and tribute to his outstanding ministry, which
included the establishment of an Orthodox radio
program and church publication. Three young
members of the parish in those years, Emmanuel
Gratsias, Maximos Moses and John Kotsonis, went
onto Holy Cross and were ordained to the
priesthood. Following in length of tenure was the previously noted Father
Alexopoulos at the pioneer church on 6th and G. He
served some 12 years, bringing with him members of
his family from Greece. His grand niece, Mary
Hatzyiannis and her family, are members of Saint
Sophia today. Elevated to Bishop of Boston, he
published a visionary document, "The Dangers
to the Hellenes in America and the Means of Saving
Them," noting the increasing acculturation of
immigrants from Greece and the need for the both
pastoral and liturgical use of English. In 1930, Father Alexopoulos returned to Volos, Greece where
he served as Metropolitan of Demetrias. His
courage and faith during World War II were little
known until his posthumous recognition in 1998 by
the State of Israel, for saving the lives of 700
people who were hidden by the residents of the
villages of Mount Pelion. When asked by the Nazis
to hand over the list of Jewish residents, he
refused, answering, "I am a Jew."
Identified as "Righteous among the
Nations," Father Alexopoulos’ name is
inscribed today in the Holocaust Museum in
Washington, as well as entered on the Righteous
Honor Wall at Yad Vashem in Jerusalem. Father John Papanicholas, a history professor from Macedonia,
who preceded Bishop Aimilianos as Saint Sophia’s
priest from 1926 until 1935, oversaw the
completion of Saint Sophia’s first church
building at 8th and L Streets. One of his sons was
the choir director at that time and his grandson,
Mitch Papanicholas, served as president of Saint
Sophia’s board of trustees for three critical
years, 2000-03, during the construction of the
education building. An equally devoted Orthodox Christian priest and passionate
advocate of democracy followed Father Alexopoulos.
The Rev. Dr. Basilios Lambrides, arrived at Saint
Sophia with his wife Kalliopi and two of his four
daughters in 1918. His tenure was short and
dramatic. At the age of 54, he died of a heart
attack at his home on January 8, 1921. Born in
Constantinople in 1867, Father Lambrides was a
graduate of the Patriarchal School of Theology at
Halki; received a doctorate from the University of
Jena in Germany; was ordained and served at the
Patriarchal Church in Constantinople, and for
three years in Bulgaria, where he edited an
anti-Bulgarian paper and was ultimately expelled
by the government there. In the United States, he
became nationally known, while serving at new
churches in Rhode Island, Atlanta, Birmingham and
Salt Lake City. In Birmingham in 1916, his church
raised more money than any other Greek Orthodox
parish in the United States for the Venizelist
cause, which so preoccupied the immigrants and the
church of that period. In Salt Lake City, the
local paper wrote that Father Lambrides helped
settle a bitter strike at a local copper mine,
where many Greek immigrants worked. He entered a
mine in his vestments with a gold cross held
aloft, in spite of advice that it was a dangerous
and volatile situation, and that his safety could
not be assured. The strike was soon settled. Father Lambrides sudden death was also the occasion of local
and national press coverage which ascribed his
death in some measure due to the bitter division
in the Greek American community over the conflict
between the royalist and anti-royalist factions in
Greek political life. The National Herald ran a long obituary and comments by Father Lambrides’ wife and son-in-law, claiming he was greatly upset when informed by Bishop Alexander Rodostolou that he must commemorate King Constantine during the Divine Liturgy and other Church services, and that his death was a result of his crisis of conscience, since he considered the king to have betrayed his country by supporting Germany in World War I.
Eleftherios Venizelos himself visited Saint Sophia. A photo
shows him standing in front of an American and
Greek flag draped over the entrance of the new
church under construction at 8th and L. Surviving
correspondence from an Episcopal priest at a
mission center in Elkton, Virginia also reveals
Father Lambrides ability to reach out to
non-Greeks; his interest in understanding the
situation of poor and uneducated people; and that
the use of English in the liturgy had been a topic
of conversation between the two clergymen. Father
Lambrides’ granddaughter, Daphne Ross is a
member of Saint Sophia today. By 1956, when Father Tavlarides arrived at Saint Sophia,
American acculturation had indeed taken a strong
hold. His marriage to an American-born
graduate of St. Basil’s Academy, Harriet
Anastiades, his subsequent ordination, his service
as an assistant priest at Holy Trinity Cathedral
in New York City and his assignment as assistant
priest at Saint Sophia two years later all
occurred at a time when a rising generation of
educated Greek Americans, as well as recent Greek
immigrants, placed new demands on priests serving
in Greek Orthodox churches. Father John’s new assignment was an acknowledgement that
then Archbishop Iakovos believed the young priest
had the skills and ability to deal with this
educated Greek Orthodox contingent, which was
drawn to government and politics in the
Washington, according to Elaine Daniels, a Saint
Sophia parishioner and editor of "Growing up
Greek in South Bend," who arrived in
Washington in late 1960 to work for Congressman
John Brademas shortly after Father John assumed
the head priesthood. Father Steven Zorzos, assistant priest at Saint Sophia for
the last 22 years, maintains that Father John was
a man born to be a priest, citing his
extraordinary ability to bring new members into
the church through baptism, chrismation and
marriage. Among members at that time was the
distinguished Mike Manatos from Wyoming, who
worked for the newly elected President John F.
Kennedy. Another active member, Washington lawyer
George Charles, played a prominent role at both
Saint Sophia and the Archdiocese. Chosen for their spirituality and liturgical ability, Father
John’s assistant priests have also added luster
to life and worship at the Cathedral. They include
Fathers Steven Zorzos, George Kambanis, Anastasios
Diakovasilis and Maximos Moses. The baby boom of the 50’s and 60’s also brought large
numbers of children to Saint Sophia. Education
became an even greater priority for the church.
They needed the kind of Orthodox religious
education appropriate for Americans growing up in
a country in which the Greek Orthodox tradition
was known to very few other Christian and
non-Christian religious denominations. Parents and
children needed to be able to talk about and
discuss their faith with non-Orthodox, as well as
to worship in the vernacular. And they were of a
generation which had the interest and education to
look back to the Byzantine Church which is the
basis of their Orthodox Christian heritage. Father John inaugurated a 10-week pre-Lenten lecture series
which is now in its 46th year. The
nursery-school-through-high-school program which
he developed is still on-going. Sunday School
teachers began meeting two evenings a month for
lectures and discussion led by Father John.
Service in the altar by boys attending Sunday
School was not optional; all 14 year olds served,
as well as attended an early class before the
liturgy taught by Presbytera Harriett. One of Father John’s stipulations originally caused some
controversy. In order to engage in other
church-sponsored activities, like basketball,
children must attend Sunday School regularly. A
theologically-based discussion with all Sunday
School students and teachers during the proskomide
proved to be fruitful for parents, as well. Greek
education and holiday programs, however, have not
been slighted. Saint Sophia runs a successful
Saturday program at the Cathedral, and weekday
ones in Bethesda, Maryland and Virginia. It should also be noted that a Sunday School teacher became Saint Sophia’s first woman board member in 1976. Amelia Catakis recalls that Father John sought her out to run because the board needed new blood. "It wasn’t a landslide, but I won."
In 1986-87, Angene Rafferty was elected and ably served as
the first woman president of the Board. In 2004,
Fotini Economides, a teacher and lawyer, was
elected president of the board, which includes
Diane Cerniglia, a longtime senior class Sunday
School teacher, and Vasiliki Christopoulos. The search for knowledge also led Father John on his own
theological and ecclesiological quest. An honors
graduate of Holy Cross, his vitae list graduate
studies at General Episcopal Seminary, Catholic
University, American University, Wesley Seminary
and, in 1996, a Doctor of Ministry Degree awarded
by St. Vladimir’s Theological Seminary. The essence of his teaching is expressed by Andrew Walsh, a
former altar boy and graduate of the Cathedral’s
Greek and Sunday Schools. "As a preacher and teacher, Father John has always
followed two strains of thought. One is to know
Who Christ is and the practical and ethical
questions of what He (and we) should do; and two,
a spirituality derived from the Desert
Fathers," explains Walsh, now Associate
Director of the Center for the Study of Religion
in Public Life and managing editor of the
magazine, "Religion in the Media" at
Trinity College in Hartford. Another former altar boy and perfect-attendance graduate of
Saint Sophia’s Sunday School program, the highly
regarded crime writer George Pelecanos, explains
his own Orthodox trajectory. After college, he
drifted away from the Church. Fatherhood and his
books about Washington’s inner city made him
realize that the Orthodox Christian Church was the
bedrock of that community. And it made him even
more aware of his own Orthodox identity. At home,
and when traveling on business, he often worships
at Orthodox churches. "This is my home. These
are my people. This is my community. I want my
three children to feel that way some day." The increased liturgical usage of English under Father John
also helped enhance the community’s
understanding of its faith. His inauguration of a
bi-lingual liturgy helped avert the divisive
struggle often found among parishioners in other
parishes in the Archdiocese over the use of Greek
or English. Father John’s focus on deepening the experience of worship
extended to providing Byzantine liturgical music
and a richer understanding of ancient Christian
tradition. To that end, he sought out Harilaos
Pappapostolou in Athens who, for more than 25
years as chanter and choir director, filled Saint
Sophia with more authentic Byzantine music than
could be found at many churches still using
primarily late 19th Century liturgical music.
After Harilaos’ death in 1998, Father John again
tracked down and found another gifted Byzantine
chanter in Greece, Stelios Kontakiotis, who
continues this tradition.
Alex Ross, a music critic at the New Yorker magazine, also a
product of the Sunday School and an altar boy
under Father John Tavlarides, says "It is
always thrilling to remember that my great
grandfather helped establish Saint Sophia. The
Easter service is intimately related to my work as
a classical music critic, I think, because it
taught me how to sit patiently through experiences
of long duration, and it also taught me the
meaning of epiphany – that one transforming
moment in which the meaning of a great experience
becomes clear. In this world filled with unnatural
light, electricity, technology and mechanization
of every motion, there is nothing more profoundly
moving than that one flickering light in the
immense dark space of the church." Father John also understood that teaching and worship were
not only the result of words or even Byzantine
music, but that art was a major component of
Orthodox spirituality, and that providing an
appropriate iconographic program was essential. He
turned to outstanding Byzantine scholars at
Harvard University’s Dumbarton Oaks – Drs.
Paul Underwood, Cyril Mango and Gary Vikan – for
counsel on how the new church interior could be
decorated in the authentic Byzantine tradition. It
was modeled on a 9th Century Byzantine church and
executed by the outstanding iconographer,
Demetrios Doukas. Instead of following
trends current in the 50’s (e.g., the Greek
Orthodox Cathedral of the Annunciation in
Milwaukee commissioned Frank Lloyd Wright to
design their modern church), Saint Sophia’s
decision to turn back to Byzantine models helped
to spark a Byzantine revival across the nation. It was also instrumental in causing a major controversy at
the Cathedral, however. After erudite pro-and-con
discussions at undoubtedly the largest general
membership meeting in Saint Sophia’s history,
the iconographic programs’ plan to replace
stained glass windows in memory of deceased former
members because they were not part of a truly
Byzantine tradition and style was ultimately voted
down. The dissenters were victorious. The windows are still there.
Nevertheless, it may have precipitated the
departure of some of these dissenting members to
other churches. Peter Koutsandreas, who served on Saint Sophia’s board from
1956-05, and was its president for ten years,
believes that the iconographic program will be
Father John’s most enduring legacy. "While
in his ministry Father John has touched the lives
of the thousands who have passed through the
portals of Saint Sophia, his lasting legacy is the
monumental tribute he had made to our faith in the
nation’s capital. A virgin church has been
transformed into a magnificent cathedral – a
jewel of Orthodoxy in the Americas." The selection of Saint Sophia parishioners Paula and Bill
Morris as architects of the new education building
will also contribute to this legacy. The striking
classroom and reception building built of the
limestone from the same Indiana quarry as the
church edifice to which it is it adjoined now also
helps to welcome Washingtonians, and the world, to
come and see God’s Holy Wisdom in America’s
capital.
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