The Borneo Post

Jesus’ tomb restored after months of work

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JERUSALEM: The newly restored shrine surroundin­g what is believed to be Jesus’ tomb was unveiled at a ceremony in Jerusalem yesterday following months of delicate work.

Religious leaders opened the ceremony at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, built at the site where Christians believe Jesus was crucified and buried.

They stood in front of the 19thcentur­y edicule surroundin­g the tomb as hymns were sung.

Dignitarie­s including Greek Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras were in attendance.

Greek Orthodox Patriarch Theophilos III of Jerusalem, in his address to the ceremony, called the restoratio­n “not only a gift to our Holy Land but to the whole world.”

“For the first time in over two centuries, this sacred edicule has been restored,” he said, referring to the shrine built in 1810 surroundin­g the tomb.

The shrine is a key part of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem’s Old City.

The church is located in Israeliocc­upied east Jerusalem, which the Palestinia­ns see as the capital of their future state, and the shrine was briefly closed by Israeli authoritie­s in 2015 over security fears.

Centuries of candle smoke and

For the first time in over two centuries, this sacred edicule has been restored. Theophilos III of Jerusalem, Greek Orthodox Patriarch

visiting pilgrims had left the shrine discoloure­d and almost black.

Parts of it were also coming loose, with warnings that it was structural­ly unsound and posed a risk to the millions of pilgrims who visit the site every year.

Following a US$ 3.7 million (3.4 million euro) renovation led by the church’s three main Christian denominati­ons, the tomb has been painstakin­gly restored to its former glory – including a warm reddish-yellow colouring.

“Before this the monument was black,” chief renovator Antonia Moropoulou told AFP.

“This is the actual colour of the monument, the colour of hope.”

Unlike other parts of the church, which were renovated between the 1960s and 1990s, the edicule had been neglected.

Moropoulou said that restorers had systematic­ally dismantled, cleaned and renovated almost all of the edicule, including the columns and upper and inner domes.

A window has been installed to allow pilgrims to see the bare stone of the ancient burial cave for the first time.

The new structural integrity means a protective cage installed 70 years ago by the British is no longer necessary.

“The deformatio­ns of the holy edicule are addressed and the structural integrity is assured,” Moropoulou said.

Samuel Aghoyan, the superior of the Armenian Church at the Sepulchre which co-financed the project, said that after the renovation the edicule looked “like a brand new building”.

In October, perhaps the most dramatic moment in the renovation occurred when the cave thought to be the tomb of Jesus was opened for the first time in centuries.

Marble slabs were removed to allow for the chamber’s reinforcem­ent.

They found a top slab dating from the era of the Crusades, indicating that the tomb had not been opened for 700 years, Moropoulou said.

Underneath they found another from the era of Constantin­e the Great, the emperor who began the Roman empire’s transition to Christiani­ty in the fourth century AD. — AFP

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 ??  ?? A visitor photograph­s the newly restored Edicule, the ancient structure housing the tomb, which according to Christian belief is where Jesus’ body was anointed and buried, at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem’s Old City. — Reuters photo
A visitor photograph­s the newly restored Edicule, the ancient structure housing the tomb, which according to Christian belief is where Jesus’ body was anointed and buried, at the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem’s Old City. — Reuters photo

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