Bangkok Post

HOSTEL RECEPTION

-

A Jerusalem lodging for Russian Orthodox pilgrims opens after a 6-year renovation.

JERUSALEM: A Jerusalem hostel for Christian Orthodox pilgrims that became a symbol of imperial Russia’s presence in the Holy Land reopened on Tuesday after six years of renovation work.

Israel handed the Sergei Courtyard in the city’s Russian Compound back to Moscow in 2008 after a long legal battle and an interventi­on by President Vladimir Putin.

The complex was funded by an uncle of Tsar Nicholas II and built in 1890 by the Imperial Orthodox Society of Palestine to house pilgrims.

It became famous for its architectu­re, enclosed garden and a tower in one corner that resembles a chess rook.

But Ottoman authoritie­s requisitio­ned it in World War I after going to war with Russia, and British then Israeli authoritie­s went on to house administra­tive agencies there.

Until recently it was home to Israel’s nature protection society.

On Tuesday, Russian diplomats and representa­tives of the Russian Orthodox Church took part in the reopening ceremony.

The 36,000-square-metre building was funded Grand Duke Sergei Alexandrov­ich, brother to Tsar Alexander III, and built with imported Russian stone.

It houses a library, a cafe and restaurant and guesthouse for pilgrims and other visitors, a short walk from the holy sites of Jerusalem’s Old City.

Russian mystic and courtier of Tsar Nicholas II, Grigori Rasputin is thought to have stayed at the hostel, Israeli public television reported.

He is said to have made a pilgrimage of contrition after a scandal involving a Russian ballerina.

 ??  ?? A Jewish man walks past the tower of the Sergei Courtyard on Tuesday.
A Jewish man walks past the tower of the Sergei Courtyard on Tuesday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand