Police besiege
Mount Athos
monks
By Helena Smith in
Athens
01/29/2003
The Guardian
Armed police, bent on expelling a group of maverick monks
opposed to reconciliation between the Greek Orthodox and Roman Catholic
churches, last night began blockading their high-walled settlement on the
all-male monastic republic of Mount Athos.
In an unprecedented step the holy mount's civilian
administrator called for the police as the rebellious monks vowed to defy an
order demanding that they leave the far-flung peninsula today.
"We could hold out for two years," declared a
defiant Abbot Methodius, who heads the ultra-conservative Esphigmenou
monastery. "We are prepared to fight on even though the authorities have
cut off our electricity, water, heating and food supplies."
The 117 monks, the most doctrinally rigid of the 2,000
who inhabit an array of monasteries on the semi-autonomous republic, have
denounced the Pope as a heretic.
For years they have shrouded their medieval settlement
with a banner proclaiming "Orthodoxy or death" while demanding that
the Orthodox faith's spiritual leader, Bartholomew I, tone down his overtures
towards
Rome
.
The two main branches of Christianity have been separated
since the Great Schism of 1054. But patience seems to be running out with the
monks.
Last month Bartholomew - who, as the Ecumenical
patriarch, is based in
Istanbul
- pronounced the monks "schismatics". As such, he said, the clerics
no longer represented the spirit of Orthodoxy and should be expelled - a
decision that allowed the republic's state-appointed administrator to step in.
Last night, the Greek authorities said police would
remain outside the monastery until "every one" of the monks left.