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ABOUT THE CHURCH AND THE VATICAN

Ultimo Aggiornamento: 21/07/2014 00:41
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04/01/2010 11:21
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One of those year-end news items that I missed seeing right away...

Turkey seeks return of
St. Nicholas's remains

By Jonathan Head




ISTANBUL, Dec. 28 - A Turkish archaeologist has called on his government to demand that Italy return the bones of St Nicholas to their original resting place.

The 3rd Century saint - on whom Santa Claus was modelled - was buried in the modern-day Turkish town of Demre [Myra, in ancient times, of which Nicholas was Bishop at the time of his death].

But in the Middle Ages his bones were taken by Italian sailors and re-interred in the port of Bari [to protect them from desecration and destruction by the Ottoman Turks].

The Turkish government said it was considering making a request to Rome for the return of the saint's remains.

While Christmas is by and large not celebrated in Muslim Turkey, the Christmas figure of Santa Claus certainly is, in the Mediterranean town of his birth.

He was born in what was then the Greek city of Myra in the third century, and went on to become the local bishop, with a reputation for performing miracles and secretly giving gold to the needy - on one occasion being forced to climb down a chimney to leave his donation.

After his death he was canonised as Saint Nicholas, and venerated in much of the Christian world. But when Myra was occupied by Arab forces in the 11th Century, Italian sailors came and took the saint's bones to the port of Bari, where they remain interred to this day.

Prof Nevzat Cevik, head of archaeological research in Demre, says Saint Nicholas had made it clear during his life that he wanted to be buried in his home town.

Even without the bones, the town of Demre has not been shy about cashing in on its most famous native son - today visitors to the Byzantine church there are greeted by a large, plastic Santa statue, complete with beard and red snow-suit.


It seems obvious that the motivation for this outlandish suggestion is not really archeological - the tomb and the church are still there, after all - but touristic and crassly commercial. Turkey is an avowedly secular state that is also predominantly Muslim, and the relics of a Christian saint can have no relevance to them except for commercial exploitation.

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