San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Syrian carves model of Cologne cathedral over two years

- Daniel Niemann and Kirsten Grieshaber

COLOGNE, Germany — When Syrian refugee Fadel Alkhudr arrived in Germany in 2015, the first thing he saw when he stepped out of the train in Cologne was the city’s majestic cathedral.

Alkhudr, 42, became so fascinated by the famous Gothic landmark on the Rhine river with its twin spires and elaborate ornaments that he spent hours looking at it. He took photos of it, drew sketches and eventually started carving a wooden replica.

For 2.5 years — or around 5,000 hours, as he says — Alkhudr worked on creating a 6.5-foot-tall copy of the structure in a small basementtu­rned-workshop in Cologne’s Kalk neighborho­od.

Alkhudr, who is Muslim, said he developed such a close connection to the Catholic cathedral that at some point it felt like the building became a

part of him “like it’s a dear friend to me.”

Alkhudr, who learned carving from his father at the age of 13, first fled to Turkey and then to this western Germany city after his family’s wood-carving business in Aleppo was destroyed in the war in Syria. He said he’s often asked if it didn’t

feel strange for a Muslim to dedicate himself to Germany’s most famous Christian house of worship.

Not at all, he answers, because growing up in Aleppo before the civil war, he had both Muslim and Christian friends, and customers from different religions who came to buy wooden art at the family store.

“When we were in Aleppo we used to have … no issues between a mosque and a church,” the father of five recounts. “Our neighbors were Christian and we are Muslims, we used to invite each other into our homes and there were no problems.”

Alkhudr is one of over 1 million migrants who came to Germany from Syria, Iraq and Afghanista­n in 2015-16, escaping war, destructio­n and poverty in their home countries. He first worked odd jobs to make a living, brought his family over in 2017, and, since 2019, focused on creating the cathedral model. He hopes that in the future he can also make a living in Germany as an art carver.

Alkhudr used hard beech wood and 50-year-old tools from back home in Syria that his father had passed on to him. The end result was taller than himself, measuring 6.6

 ?? Martin Meissner/Associated Press ?? Fadel Alkhudr stands beside his wooden model of the Cologne Cathedral on display at the Domforum in Cologne, Germany.
Martin Meissner/Associated Press Fadel Alkhudr stands beside his wooden model of the Cologne Cathedral on display at the Domforum in Cologne, Germany.

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