The Independent

First prayers in nearly 90 years said at Hagia Sophia

- BORZOU DARAGAHI

Wearing a prayer cap, Turkey’s president Recep Tayyip Erdogan recited verses from the Koran as the country reopened the famous Hagia Sophia as a mosque to huge crowds yesterday.

It was the first Islamic service held on the Muslim sabbath inside the 1,483-year-old former cathedral in nearly nine decades. Mr Erdogan was among those attending the high-profile Friday prayer service. The head of Turkey’s religious affairs ministry, Ali Erbas, took the pulpit to deliver a sermon.

“What could be more crestfalle­n than a mosque, the minarets of which are silent, the garden of which is deserted, the dome of which is mute, and the garden of which is lonely?” he said.

“Due to the hostility to Islam that rises each passing day, there are mosques in various parts of the world

today that are attacked, closed by force, and even bombed and destroyed,” he said. Hundreds of millions of Muslims are facing oppression... We as believers who regard the meaning of Hagia Sophia as a lofty cause and sacred entrustmen­t need to work to ensure that compassion, tolerance, peace, tranquilli­ty, and benevolenc­e prevail all around the world.”

Istanbul’s Hagia Sophia had been officially a museum until two weeks ago when Mr Erdogan redesignat­ed it a Muslim house of worship following a court decision. The move was controvers­ial, potentiall­y damaging an institutio­n that was seen as a symbol of interfaith harmony between Muslims and Christians and a nod to the secular legacy of Mustafa Kemal Ataturk, founder of modern Turkey.

But the move proved popular among supporters of Mr Erdogan and his Islamist-rooted Justice and Developmen­t Party as well as strident Turkish nationalis­ts. Hundreds of pious Turks could be seen rushing towards the Hagia Sophia to take part in yesterday’s ceremony, some chanting “God is great”.

Turkish media reported thousands of worshipper­s arriving from around the country to witness the prayers, with officials beseeching potential visitors to stay away from the area to avoid overcrowdi­ng because of the coronaviru­s pandemic. Turkey continues to report hundreds of new infections daily, adding to a total caseload approachin­g a quarter of a million.

The Hagia Sophia, considered among the most cherished masterpiec­es of Byzantine-era architectu­re, was converted into a mosque following the 16th-century Ottoman conquest of the city that was then Constantin­ople. Its status as a museum has long irked pious Turks alienated by the country’s secularist government­s.

“Today is the day when this imposition and this pressure has ended,” pro-government columnist Ibrahim Karagul wrote in the daily newspaper Yeni Safak. “The victory is ours and we are a nation which is used to having victories. The parenthesi­s of the last century when we were doomed with defeats is closed.”

Turkish pro-government voices mocked opposition leaders for not attending the prayer ceremony. But Istanbul mayor Ekrem Imamoglu, of the Republican People’s Party (CHP), said that he was not invited. Kemal Kılıcdarog­lu, chairman of the CHP, rejected an invitation to attend the ceremony.

Turkish officials have said the Hagia Sophia, a major tourism draw, would continue to be open to visitors of all faiths, and that entrance fees would be lifted. For prayer services, Turkish religious authoritie­s have covered up Christian religious icons showing human imagery considered idolatrous in the Sunni sect of Islam. There are, however, plans to allow them to be visible except for during five daily prayer times.

Turquoise prayer rugs have also been installed as part of an ongoing renovation.

Some historical preservati­onists have expressed concern. “It appears that the authoritie­s have chosen to instal a (presumably retractabl­e) curtain mechanism to conceal the mosaics of Virgin and Child on the apse, and the Archangel Gabriel,” wrote Washington-based Turkey scholar Tugba Tanyeri-Erdemir, voicing concern about the mere two-week period used to prepare the building for prayers.

“The choice of materials for the curtain is crucial. Is the fabric concealing Hagia Sophia’s mosaics fire retardant? Is it evaluated for pest control and dust accumulati­on?” she wrote on Twitter. “When we are dealing with ancient buildings we need to carefully assess all risk factors.”

 ?? (Getty ) ?? Thousands gathered at the 1,483-year-old former cathedral
(Getty ) Thousands gathered at the 1,483-year-old former cathedral

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