The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Worship in a church where the roof is the open heavens

A new tour takes travellers to areas of Ethiopia few Westerners visit. But scaling the Gheralta Mountains requires strength of faith

- Sarah Marshall discovers

Illuminate­d by flickers of candleligh­t, an elderly pilgrim squats in the mud, reciting passages from a well-thumbed, leather-bound copy of the Old Testament.

Around him, figures swaddled in ghostly-white linens are stacked tightly together, covering every crack, crevice and precipice of Lalibela’s ancient rock-hewn churches. Having walked for days, the exhausted bodies lay stiller than corpses in a mortuary; but when sunlight spears the horizon in six hours’ time, heralding Ethiopia’s Christian Orthodox Christmas Day, this place will be very much alive.

Famous for its elaborate places of worship carved into the earth’s core, Lalibela, a small town in northern Ethiopia, is the heartland for religious festivals such as Genna, celebrated around January 7 every year. While the faithful queue for hours to find a patch of rock at Bete Maryam (House of Mary), one of Lalibela’s 11 monolithic churches dating from the 12th Century, I’m given privileged fast-track access.

In search of an elevated position, I clamber barefoot over human husks so weary and fragile I fear they may crumble into dust. But as dawn approaches, drums and dancing coax these chrysalide­s to unfurl, filling the holy caves with a flutter of angelic butterflie­s.

Witnessing Genna is undoubtedl­y a spectacle and an alternativ­e way to spend the festive period; but yearround, Ethiopia’s churches are open for business, and even agnostics can’t fail to be moved by an enthrallin­g ancient culture criminally overlooked in Western history books.

Home to the Ark of the Covenant (a chest containing tablets inscribed with The Ten Commandmen­ts), Ethiopia has been shaped by Christiani­ty, and many of the country’s elaborate, historic and often hard-to-reach churches are still a focus for the community today.

Lalibela is already a popular stop on the tourist circuit, but further north in the region of Tigray, which borders Eritrea, the Gheralta Mountains conceal numerous frescoed caverns sculpted more than six centuries earlier. YellowWood Adventures is the only British operator to offer multi-day camping trips in the area, and I’ve joined its pioneering tour, venturing where few other Westerners tread.

Eroded by the elements, sandstone pinnacles soar from the arid earth, swirling with an inferno of fiery colours. Trails follow a series of narrow canyons knifing the landscape, steeply rising to high-altitude plateaus at eye-level with the clouds.

Carrying baskets of injera (flatbread) and new-born babies, a train of flowing, floral fabrics leads us to Abuna

Our first night is spent sleeping beneath the boughs of a 500-year-old sycamore tree where camels graze and jackals howl

Abraham church, where a baptism is due to take place that afternoon. Inside, prayer sticks lean against a rock wall dazzling with frescoes of George and his dragon. After a three-hour trek, the wooden crutches are essential for surviving all-night services; endurance and stamina form the backbone of religion in these parts.

While some churches are easy to access by road, most can only be reached on foot, requiring us to camp along the way. Our first night is spent sleeping beneath the boughs of a 500-year-old sycamore tree where camels graze and jackals howl; 24 hours later, pitching tents in a school’s grounds fully immerses us in community life.

In the village of Dugum, our group of seven travellers is invited to a traditiona­l wedding, where we’re treated as guests of honour with platters of fresh injera and homebrew served from a rusty US Aid tin can.

Having spent all night in church, the weary white-clad couple eventually emerges from a simple homestead after dusk. As the revelry intensifie­s, I’m swept up in a fervour of beating drums and the strumming of masenqo stringed instrument­s. Even the dud AK47s proudly worn by some guests as status symbols no longer pose any threat.

Living several hours from the nearest road, these people rarely run into farangis (foreigners), making tourists a welcome novelty rather than a nuisance.

A day later, jovial farmer Abraham beckons us into his 200-year-old farmhouse, where his granddaugh­ter Medhin toasts coffee on an open fire. Sitting on baboon-skin stools, we communicat­e with laughter and sign language, and exchange our Tupperware boxes of tuna pasta for some of the finest homecooked injera and shiro wat (a chickpea stew) I’ve ever tasted.

Crawling through tunnels of paddle cacti and edging along trails with sheer drops, paths connecting the Gheralta Mountains aren’t always easy, and at times we all struggle. Reputed to be the scariest church in the world, Abuna Yemata Guh even requires a vertical climb to reach its hallowed hollows, although the availabili­ty of a harness and ropes mean even sprightly 80-yearolds can access it with (relative) ease.

Exploring these rock churches is fascinatin­g, but the real fun lies in joining the dots in between.

For our final night, we camp in the Korora cave, once used by rebel Tigrayan forces as a hideout before they marched on Ethiopia’s capital, Addis Ababa, and overthrew the ruling communist regime in 1991. Ruins of crumbling buildings can still be seen beneath an overhang, along with the slogan: “Victory for our country”, etched into the rock.

As night falls and the sky explodes with stars, villagers join us for a party. Fuelled by slow-roasted lamb and local Habesha beer, men dance around a bonfire, singing wistfully about their brothers lost in battle. Setting any sadness aside, the mood is celebrator­y and upbeat; Ethiopians, I’m learning, always focus on the brighter side of life.

Captivated by the moment, one invalid uses his crutch to leap over the ferocious flames; showing solidarity, a senior member of our group ceremoniou­sly tosses her walking stick into the pyre.

Bound by unfalterin­g faith, these people are strengthen­ed by a spirit that surpasses any religion. In the Gheralta Mountains, where time stopped at the last road many miles from here, the open heavens provide a roof for the most impressive church of all.

YellowWood Adventures (yellowwood­adventures.com; 0207 846 0197) offers nine-day trips to Ethiopia from £1,399, including accommodat­ion, meals and guides. Genna Festival takes place January 5 2020, although other trips to Lalibela and the Gheralta Mountains are available throughout the year. Get a 10% discount on any YellowWood Adventure tour departing in 2019, by quoting PA2019 at the time of booking. Ethiopian Airlines (ethiopiana­irlines.com; 01753 967980) flies from Heathrow and Manchester to Addis Ababa and on to Gondar with a modern fleet. Fares starts from £697 return.

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 ?? Pictures: PA. ?? Clockwise from far left, bottom: Farmer Abraham and his family in the Gheralta Mountains; a pilgrim reciting prayers at the Genna festival; a priest in one of the rock-hewn churches hidden in the Gheralta Mountains; camping beneath a 500-year-old sycamore tree; sandstone spires in the mountains; worshipper­s at Genna; Sarah.
Pictures: PA. Clockwise from far left, bottom: Farmer Abraham and his family in the Gheralta Mountains; a pilgrim reciting prayers at the Genna festival; a priest in one of the rock-hewn churches hidden in the Gheralta Mountains; camping beneath a 500-year-old sycamore tree; sandstone spires in the mountains; worshipper­s at Genna; Sarah.
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