Tue, Feb 07 2012

Cabinet votes 420 000 leva to restore church ‘holding John the Baptist relics’

Wed, Sep 01 2010 14:44 CET 2824 Views 6 Comments
Cabinet votes 420 000 leva to restore church ‘holding John the Baptist relics’

Bulgaria's Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov, centre, and minister without portfolio Bozhidar Dimitrov at an August 5 2010 ceremony in Sozopol, venerating what its finders claim are relics of John the Baptist.

Photo: BTA

Bulgaria’s Cabinet announced on September 1 2010 that it was giving 420 000 leva (about 210 000 euro) to the church in the Black Sea town of Sozopol that, according to claims among some Bulgarian Orthodox Church leaders, an archeologist and a Cabinet minister, holds relics of John the Baptist.

The plan to vote the money for the restoration of the church was announced in mid-August, a few weeks after the purported find.

Earlier, during a visit to Sozopol, Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov announced an increase in funding for archeological projects in the area.

The discovery was announced at the end of July 2010, when a team of archeologists headed by Sofia University professor Kazimir Popkonstantinov found the supposed relics, which were inside an alabaster reliquary and consisted of a tooth stuck to a fragment of jaw, pieces of hand bones and a piece of the facial part of the skull.

The reliquary, said to date from the fifth century CE, has an inscription saying that "Thomas" carried the relics, which were found on Saint Ivan island, site of a monastery off the coast of Sozopol.

The story attracted international media attention, and minister without portfolio Bozhidar Dimitrov has been a leading proponent of claims about the relics, saying that the find would make Sozopol a "second Jerusalem" and more recently claiming that the relics had "worked their first miracles".

In the third week of August, Bulgarian National Radio reported that at the church where the fragments of bone were being kept (now held in a precious-metal container donated by Prime Minister Boiko Borissov) "the line of worshippers and curious tourists…never ends despite the scorching summer heat".

Local media have reported that a stop at the church has become a favourite among tourists from Russia and Ukraine who are members of their countries' Orthodox Christian churches.
 

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Comments

Anonymous Cosmos Mon, Sep 06 2010 22:12 CET

The church should pay for these so called remains now and in the future. The goverment should look after the living not the dead.

Anonymous Vladislav Thu, Sep 02 2010 19:23 CET

Restoring any of Bulgaria's historic Orthodox churches is a worthy project. However, care should be used in referring to these relics as other than "attributed to".

Anonymous*******Thu, Sep 02 2010 05:55 CET

This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained foul, abusive or discriminating language

Anonymous*******Thu, Sep 02 2010 02:26 CET

This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained foul, abusive or discriminating language

Anonymous jed Wed, Sep 01 2010 21:03 CET

Well, I am sure that there are many more worthy causes and I am surprised that this isn't wholly church funded.

Anonymous Jon Mills Wed, Sep 01 2010 18:22 CET

Perhaps using this money to finance the backlog of unpaid salaries to hospital staff would be better than funding some of the 100,000 body parts of John the Baptist that seem to exist. Seems fair that if anyone pays, it should be the church, or donations from believers.


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