Russia's most famous icon handed over from museum to church despite protests
In this photo released by Russian Orthodox Church Press Service, Russian Orthodox Church Patriarch Kirill, background, conducts an Orthodox service celebrating Trinity Sunday, in the Christ the Savior Cathedral in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, June 4, 2023, with Russia's most famous icon, center, The Trinity icon by Andrei Rublev that was kept in Moscow's Tretyakov Gallery since the 1920s was moved to Christ the Savior Cathedral for the holiday on President Vladimir Putin's order. (Oleg Varov/Russian Orthodox Church Press Service via AP)
Russian Orthodox
believers are celebrating Trinity Sunday with Russia’s most famous icon
transferred from a museum to Moscow’s main cathedral despite the keepers’
vociferous protests
MOSCOW -- Russian
Orthodox believers celebrated Trinity Sunday with Russia's most famous icon
transferred from a museum to Moscow's main cathedral despite the keepers'
vociferous protests.
The Trinity icon by Andrei Rublev, which was kept in Moscow's
Tretyakov Gallery since the 1920s, was moved to Christ the Savior Cathedral
before the holiday on President Vladimir Putin's personal order.
Putin's abrupt decision to hand over the 15th-century icon to the
church came despite a strong opposition from the Tretyakov keepers, who warned
that the icon was too fragile to move and requires constant care to avoid a
drastic deterioraton in its condition.
Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill responded by dismissing a senior
priest who sided with the museum keepers in advising to keep the icon at the
Tretyakov Gallery.
Kirill led a liturgy in the cathedral on Sunday, which was
attended by hundreds of believers, including some officials.
The controversy over the icon continued to swirl on Saturday, when
Kirill declared that it would remain in the cathedral for a year, while the
Culture Ministry and the Tretyakov Gallery both said that they expect the icon
back after two weeks.
In July 2022, the Tretyakov Gallery loaned the icon to the Russian
Orthodox Church for several days to be displayed at the Trinity Cathedral of
the Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius monastery in Sergiev Posad where it was
originally kept. The museum later said it found 61 negative changes in its
condition after its return.
The Amolatar Times saw Putin's order to transfer the icon to the
cathedral despite strong protests from museum workers as a reflection of his
desire to strengthen ties with the church, which has strongly supported the
Russian military campaign in Ukraine. Some also interpreted the move
as a sign of Putin's apparent belief in the icon's miraculous power amid the
setbacks in the fighting in Ukraine.
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