Los Angeles Times

Hundreds join fight to save their museum

A St. Petersburg cathedral that houses ‘heritage’ may be given back to church.

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ST. PETERSBURG, Russia — Protesters rallied in St. Petersburg on Saturday against plans by city authoritie­s to give a landmark cathedral to the Russian Orthodox Church amid an increasing­ly passionate debate over the relationsh­ip between the church and the Russian state.

“We won’t give St. Isaac’s to the church. We want to save it as a museum,” Boris Vishnevsky, a local lawmaker, told protesters in central St. Petersburg.

St. Isaac’s, one of the most visited tourist sites in Russia’s old imperial capital, has been a museum since 1917. Some experts are concerned that when it gains ownership, the Orthodox Church will neglect the exhibits on display, which include a rare Foucault pendulum.

The rally Saturday by more than 2,000 people was significan­tly larger than a similar demonstrat­ion by several hundred people earlier this month.

“St. Isaac’s Cathedral is part of our cultural heritage. There are so many valuable exhibits that require the work of museum specialist­s. The Russian Orthodox Church does not have those specialist­s,” said Irina Azbel, 43, a doctor among those protesting.

A few dozen counterpro­testers gathered in the same place to support the plans.

“The return of the cathedral to the church is a return to our national roots,” said Yelena Semyonova, a 52year-old professor.

The announceme­nt this month that the neoclassic­al St. Isaac’s Cathedral will be put under Orthodox Church ownership has sparked a backlash from city residents. More than 200,000 people have signed an online petition calling on city authoritie­s to reconsider.

Prominent cultural figures, including the director of St. Petersburg’s world-renowned Hermitage Museum, have criticized the decision.

The handover has been seen as indicative of the growing power of the Orthodox Church and part of a trend of social conservati­sm in Russia, where President Vladimir Putin has appealed to traditiona­l values as opposed to Western liberalism.

 ?? Anatoly Maltsev European Pressphoto Agency ?? ST. PETERSBURG residents protest against the planned transfer of St. Isaac’s Cathedral, a popular tourist attraction, to the Russian Orthodox Church.
Anatoly Maltsev European Pressphoto Agency ST. PETERSBURG residents protest against the planned transfer of St. Isaac’s Cathedral, a popular tourist attraction, to the Russian Orthodox Church.

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