National Post (National Edition)

Hand-carving churches from rock lives on

- LIAM CASEY The Canadian Press

TORONTO • Ten years ago, Michael Gervers visited an ancient church cut into the side of a cliff in a remote region of Ethiopia. The history professor with the University of Toronto had been hunting down antiquitie­s as part of his research on Christian artifacts when locals took him to the area.

Parishione­rs used ropes and a chain to haul themselves up to pray in the church carved into rock centuries ago. As Gervers looked around, he noticed another structure at the base of the cliff, also hewn from rock.

A craftsman and a small team had carved a new place of worship into the bottom of the cliff with a chisel and hammer a few years earlier to help the elderly who could no longer climb to the church at the top, Gervers says.

“It was surprising, I mean, who makes these things these days?” Gervers said in an interview.

Scholars believed the craft of cutting churches out of rock — practised predominan­tly in Ethiopia — had been largely lost to time some 500 years ago, Gervers says. His research proves otherwise.

Now he’s trying to find out if the work was carried on continuous­ly over the centuries, with the craft passed down from generation to generation, or if a renewal has quietly been underway.

“The craft is alive, but just barely,” he says.

In early November, Gervers released some of his findings when he published interviews with craftsmen, priests and parishione­rs, as well as images of the Ethiopian rockcut churches he’s seen, on the university’s website.

At some point, hopefully in the next year, Gervers says his findings will be published in an academic journal. But he also wants to get the word out in an effort to preserve the craft.

In 2014, the Arcadia Fund, a philanthro­pic foundation known for preserving languages, approached Gervers to see if the craft of hewing churches from rock was still practised, and if so, to document it.

Gervers began his hunt in 2015. Over the past two years he and a few colleagues in Ethiopia and Europe have been scouring the country. So far, they’ve found 20 modernday churches carved from rock, Gervers says.

“There is very little informatio­n that these churches are still being built; only those who live near a church know, no one else in Ethiopia really knows,” says Bayenew Melaku, an architect at the Ethiopian Institute of Architectu­re at Addis Ababa University.

It is believed that churches were built out of rock as early as the 12th century, and possibly earlier, Gervers says. They are of two styles: cave and monolithic churches.

Cave churches are essentiall­y cut into the side of a cliff whereas monolithic churches are cut out from the rock, working from the surface digging down to create both the outside and inside of a freestandi­ng structure.

 ??  ?? The lost art of carving churches out of rock is, in fact, still alive, as evidenced by this example in remote regions of Ethiopia. MICHAEL GERVERS HANDOUT / THE CANADIAN PRESS
The lost art of carving churches out of rock is, in fact, still alive, as evidenced by this example in remote regions of Ethiopia. MICHAEL GERVERS HANDOUT / THE CANADIAN PRESS

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