Egypt's Land Grab Threatens the World's Oldest Christian Monastery
St. Catherine’s Monastery has been continuously inhabited for over 1,500 years. An Egyptian court ruling ended the monastery's longstanding separation from the government.
In the sixth century, Christian monks built St. Catherine's Monastery in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula. The monastery is believed to be located at the very place where God appeared to Moses via a burning bush. Valuable Christian relics are stored at St. Catherine's, among them parts of the Codex Sinaiticus, which contains the oldest complete copy of the New Testament.
Since its inception, the monastery has never been destroyed, but recent efforts by the Egyptian government could effectively end St. Catherine's independence and inhibit the religious freedom of its monks.
In May, a legal ruling by an Egyptian appeals court "affirmed government ownership of land beneath the centuries-old Saint Catherine's Monastery in Sinai," although the government stressed that it would not interfere with the monastery's long-standing autonomy, reports Egyptian Streets. Despite these assurances, the monks of St. Catherine's protested against the ruling and closed the site to all visitors on June 6.
Ownership of St. Catherine's has been a contentious issue for some time. Beginning in 1980, the government "asked property owners whose land was not already listed in an official registry to file declarations of ownership," writes The Pillar. St. Catherine's did so, filing over 70 different declarations to cover its gardens, chapels, and parcels of land. Then, in 2015, authorities in Egypt's South Sinai Governorate went to the courts to "assert state ownership over the monastery's plots of land." Concerned by the legal dispute, the monks "entered into discussions with the South Sinai authorities and also the Greek government, which takes a strong interest in the institution" as St. Catherine's is part of the Greek Orthodox Church.
A draft agreement acknowledged the monastery and its land as belonging to the Greek Orthodox Church. After the text was agreed upon, an Egyptian court altered the agreement, declaring the monastery state property, while recognizing the monks' right to perform their religious duties at the site. The 160-page text was reportedly so complex that "even legal professionals struggled to grasp it fully."
Egypt's State Information Service issued a statement, claiming the ruling is merely regulating the monastery's legal status, while affirming the land as sacred. However, Egypt's constitution recognizes Islam as the state religion, which could be problematic now that Egypt holds state control over the Christian site.
In fact, it already has. St. Catherine's has a manuscript collection that rivals the Vatican, and for decades, its monks would oversee the efforts of outside researchers of these documents. In 2023, the Egyptian government seized control of the monastery's research efforts. "Since the government takeover, the new state-run system has yet to approve a single research request," writes Mariam Wahba in The Free Press.
Wahba, who was raised in Egypt's Coptic Christian community, describes the government's gradual chipping of St. Catherine's autonomy as "a microcosm of Egypt's broader campaign against the country's estimated 10 to 15 million Christians in the majority Sunni Muslim nation." The country has laws against blasphemy and discriminatory requirements for building and repairing churches, with religious persecution not uncommon for those with views the state deems as unorthodox.
"The state does not need to evict monks or fully ban prayer to undermine Christians' religious freedom. By nationalizing the site and cutting it off from the global research and religious communities that have long sustained it, the government is effectively severing the monastery from its identity and function," writes Wahba.
Egypt is also planning a development project near the monastery, called "The Great Transfiguration," described as a megacity for spiritual tourism. In a post shared on X, the government announced the national project, saying it highlights "the unique tourism, archaeological, environmental, and spiritual components of Sinai," a decision which may be responsible for the recent land grab.
Despite these troubling trends, Egypt maintains that St. Catherine's is safe. Earlier this month, Greek Foreign Minister George Gerapetritis held a meeting with his Egyptian counterpart Badr Abdelatty. After the meeting, Gerapetritis "said he received assurances that the continuity and Greek Orthodox character of the Holy Monastery of St Catherine on Mount Sinai would not be disrupted," writes Greek Reporter.
However, with the government's track record of violating religious freedom, its ownership of the monastery means that the future of St. Catherine's is now in jeopardy.
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When asked to comment about the judge’s ruling, the monks stated “Egypted us out of our monastery.”
They are in denial.
I think it is part of a pyramid scheme.
Isis what you did there.
Need to start giving people some Olympic so they can get Muslim.
This article doesn't seem to address why the Egyptian government is doing what it's doing. Seems more likely to me that it's about land taxes or foreign ownership than about something purely religious. Even if it is about something purely religious then that should be identified and explained not vaguely hinted at.
Continuing talking. Stop assuming the worst. Even if it may look bad, keeping the dialog open is more productive than shutting down dialog. Especially when you are in the minority.
Gee, what a surprise.
A Muslim nation not respecting a Christian institution that is about 1,500 years old.
Who would've thought that?
an Egyptian court altered the agreement
Pray they don't alter it further.
Sigh.
OK, if you insist.
If it hasn't been done already, a digital 3-D impression of the monastery should be taken, as well as digital copies of all valuable manuscripts. If there is obstruction by Egyptian authorities, perhaps the Greek government could help negotiate an acceptable compromise.
The vulnerability of their library concerns me most. The monks don't even fully know what they have. Some of the very old manuscripts are palimpsests, from which special imaging techniques can recover even earlier writings. Do the Muslim authorities that have taken charge of research requests consider approval/denial, based on the possibility of discovering some historical information inconvenient to Islamic doctrine? Might they also consider destroying documents, for that reason?
Christians have as much reason as Muslims to fear the uncovering of very early writings about their faith. The establishment of the Roman Catholic and Orthodox churches relied heavily on book burning.
What are you talking about? Christians love uncovering historical/archeological finds about their faith. It's constantly illustrating how all the stuff in the Bible actually happened.
Like this recent discovery: https://www.popularmechanics.com/science/archaeology/a65575032/clay-seal-hebrew-bible/
Folks can call it mythology or allegory until they're blue in the face, but the fact remains that we're pulling stuff out of the dirt all the time that corroborates it historically. Even if that's not enough to make you a believer, it should at least be a starting point to pick up your Bible and start taking what it says a little more seriously.
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