Sun.Star Cebu

Church lost on 9/11 rises again

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A Greek Orthodox church taking shape next to the World Trade Center memorial plaza will glow at night like a marble beacon when it opens sometime next year. It also will mark another step in the long rebuilding of New York’s ground zero.

The St. Nicholas National Shrine, designed by renowned architect Santiago Calatrava, will replace a tiny church that was crushed by the trade center’s south tower on Sept. 11, 2001. The new church will give Greek Orthodox believers a place to worship while also welcoming visitors of any faith who want to reflect on the lives lost in the terrorist attacks.

“It is such a significan­t church because of what hap- pened here,” said Jerry Dimitriou, executive director of the Greek Orthodox Archdioces­e of America, which oversees 540 parishes and approximat­ely 1.5 million Greek Orthodox faithful across the United States.

He said people may want to stop and pray after they’ve been to the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum, a few paces away. “We will give them a place to come and sit, and sit inside of a church,” Dimitriou said.

The large crowd that will assemble Monday for a ceremony on the 16th anniversar­y of the terror attacks will be able to see the unfinished church, now a raw-looking structure covered in concrete and plywood.

It is one of a handful of unfinished pieces of the reconstruc­tion of the huge trade center site, which is now a combinatio­n of green trees, polished stone and glassy towers after being known for years as a dusty, gray constructi­on zone.

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