San Antonio Express-News (Sunday)

Church destroyed on 9/11 now a national shrine

- By Marika Proctor

St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church and National Shrine was consecrate­d Monday in New York City. The original church, founded in 1916 on nearby Cedar Street in lower Manhattan, was destroyed in the aftermath of the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

“The rebuilding of Saint Nicholas as a Shrine for the Nation is also an act of restoratio­n,” said Archbishop Elpidophor­os, the leader of the Greek Orthodox Church in America, in an encyclical released on Sunday.

The restoratio­n had been stalled for many years, due to ongoing issues with funding. Since 2019, the rebuilding project has been funded and overseen by the Friends of Saint Nicholas, a nonprofit group that includes the Rev. Alexander Karloutsos, the former vicar general of the Greek archdioces­e

who will receive the Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom later this week.

The Independen­ce Day consecrati­on service was presided over by Elpidophor­os and involved ritual procession­s around the church building, the placing and sealing of holy relics in the altar, and washing and anointing of the altar table itself.

Seating was offered both inside and outside the

church to accommodat­e guests, who included the Greek ambassador to the U.S., according to a report in the National Herald.

The new church was designed by Spanish architect Santiago Calatrava, who also designed the nearby World Trade Center Transporta­tion Hub, often referred to as the Oculus. Calatrava’s designs for the church are based on notable Byzantine-era

structures, including the church of Hagia Sophia, which today is a mosque in Istanbul, and the monastery church at Chora, also in Turkey.

St. Nicholas, which plans to run a full cycle of Orthodox Christian services, will also feature dedicated interfaith and nonsectari­an spaces.

The aim, according to an official statement from the archbishop on Sunday, is “to rebuild as both the original Greek Orthodox Church, but also as a space where a diversity of beliefs and respect for other faith traditions can be celebrated, taught and enshrined for all people.”

The consecrati­on of the St. Nicholas church and shrine coincides with the start of the 46th biennial clergy-laity conference, a weeklong gathering in New York City of Greek Orthodox Christians from around the country, as well as the archdioces­es’ centenary celebratio­n.

 ?? Mark Lennihan/Associated Press file photo ?? A crowd attends an August 2020 ceremony at
St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church in New York.
Mark Lennihan/Associated Press file photo A crowd attends an August 2020 ceremony at St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church in New York.

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