SUMELA, Turkey—The Greek Orthodox faithful flocked to the cliffside setting of Sumela monastery in northeast Turkey on Aug. 15 after Ankara allowed Mass to be celebrated here for the first time in 88 years, reported AFP.
“After 88 years, the tears of the Virgin Mary have stopped flowing,” the head of the Eastern Orthodox Church, Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, said during the service.
Greece’s Prime Minister George Papandreou, speaking after attending Mass on the Cyclades Islands off the Greek mainland, welcomed the “historic and important event.”
It was a sign of bilateral rapprochement with Turkey and reflected “a spirit of cooperation and peace between us and our neighbor,” the prime minister said.
The site is of particular importance to Pontian Greeks, whose ancestors were massacred during the Pontian Genocide, which Turkey denies to this day.
On Aug. 15, around 500 Pontians were allowed into the 4th-century monastery, while around 2,000 others from Istanbul, Greece, Russia, and Georgia watched the mass on a giant television screen outside.
“For us the Virgin of Sumela is more important than our own mother,” Charalambos Zigas, a 51-year-old mechanic from Greece, told AFP. “You have to be a Pontian Greek to understand the importance of this Mass.”
He said that when his grandfather fled the mountainous region for exile in Russia in 1922, he lost his wife and son who were eaten by bears.