Friday, November 15

The Mysterious Underground World Heritage Churches That Were Seized By Rebels In Ethiopia

Rebels from the Tigray region of northern Ethiopia have taken control of the city of Lalibela, a site of the p Unesco world heritage in the region neighbor of Amhara.

2017 of the journalist of the BBC Jack Barker on Lalibela, home to rock-cut 13th century churches and a sacred place for millions of Orthodox Christians which was declared a World Heritage Site in 1978.

Officially Christian since 330 AD, Ethiopia claims to be the country follower of this religion oldest in the world .

Despite being devastated by poverty, the faith has remained strong there throughout the centuries; The medieval rock churches of Lalibela are clear proof of this.

Each of the 11 monolithic structures is dramatically inserted in the mountainous landscape , sunken from 40 to 50 meters into the ground and pierced with shaped chiseled openings of cross to allow sunlight to penetrate into its empty interior.

Who built them

There are various theories surrounding the creation of these extraordinary places of worship.

Some believe that the churches were carved by the Knights Templar , Christian crusaders who were at the peak of their power, during the 13th century, when the churches were created. But there is no concrete proof of this.

The most widespread hypothesis -and the one propagated by the small museum located near the entrance of the churches- is that they were carved under the orders of King Lalibela , Emperor of Ethiopia from the late 12th and early 13th centuries, who visited Jerusalem in 1187 just before the Holy City fell to Muslim forces.

Una de las iglesias de Lalibela
The parishioners are never lacking in these special temples.

King Lalibela built these churches in the part of Ethiopia on the Jordan River, with the intention of welcoming Christians to a “New Jerusalem” .

Without However, the museum does not seem to emphasize this theory.

Its display of construction tools includes only a fragile adze , a ax-shaped tool that King Lalibela’s servants supposedly used to carve churches from the ground.

Even counting on 900 years of wear and tear on these churches, the tool seems more suitable for pulling weeds out of the ground than for carving rocks.

In a single night

The thousands of faithful who attend the daily services within the churches accept a much more divine explanation: that the King Lalibela was aided by an army of angels , who completed the 11 churches in one night .

From a distance, the only sign of these underground temples is the flow of people in and out of the crevices.

The visits have to be timed for the moments in which the congregations diminish uyen, using breaks in daily services to agree which passageway, sometimes just wide enough for a single person, leads underground.

With my hand against the wall, I slowly descend into the shadows.

Feligreses caminan por los pasadizos estrechos
Narrow passages lead the parishioners underground, to the entrance of the churches.

Even between prayer sessions the churches are never empty.

A group of elderly believers watch me, leaning unsteadily over the prayer sticks as I untie my hiking boots and add them to the small pile of flip-flops and slippers lying outside.

When I enter Biete Golgotha ​​Mikael, considered the burial site of King Lalibela himself, the threadbare red carpet does little to mask the feeling of stone cold down or the soles of my feet.

My eyes adjust to the darkness and a medieval figure takes shape: it is Saint Peter, imprinted on the wall of New Jerusalem for eternity.

The most memorable

Narrow passageways and tunnels lead me from church to church .

But one is apart. Of the 11 houses of worship in the complex, Biete Giyorgis , near the labyrinth of the other interconnected churches, is the most memorable.

Its cross shape, immaculately buried in a gentle rocky slope, is crowned by a Coptic cross that can only be seen from above.

Its steep walls have been tanned over the centuries and it plunges 40 meters into the abyss that surrounds it .

Una vista de una de las iglesias desde la superficie
Biete Giyorgis church is shaped like a Coptic cross.

Despite being exposed to natural elements, the structure is preserved, and gracefully survives its nine centuries of existence .

Not all of them have done so well.

B iete Medhane Alem, considered the largest monolithic church in the world, is protected by a UNESCO metal plate, to prevent further erosion. And the walls of Biete Abba Libanos have some alarming cracks.

Noticing these signs of decadence, I had my doubts about the divine origins of the churches: surely if the churches of Lalibela had been built by angels, they would all be in perfect condition.

But as I exited the carved tunnel that led to Biete Giyorgis, I realized that it didn’t matter how they were built.

Far below , a new wave of visitors passed through the imposing stone entrances of the church, lintels that have been smoothed over the centuries.

They descended into the earth, disappearing into the darkness of the monoliths and emerging again, after passing through the structures, to return to sunlight.

At the edge of the crevices, the young people helped the elderly to navigate the sloping paths.

I stayed for several minutes to watch the seemingly endless stream of pilgrims return to the surface.

They had faith, and that was enough.

lalibela

Read the original story in English on BBC Travel


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