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Saidnaya
(also transliterated Saydnaya or Sednaya from the Arabic:
صيدنايا)
is a city located in the mountains, 1500 metres (0.938 miles) above sea
level, 27 kilometres (20 miles) north of the city of Damascus in Syria.
It was one of the episcopal cities of the ancient Patriarchate of
Antioch. Associated with many Biblical and religious events, local
tradition holds it as the site where Cain slew his brother Abel.
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Second only to
Jerusalem as a center of Christian pilgrimage, pilgrims from all over
the world seek Saidnaya for renewal of faith and for healing. Renowned
for its faithfulness to Christianity, tradition holds that the Convent
of Our Lady of Saidnaya was constructed by the Byzantine emperor
Justinian I in 547 A.D., after he had two visions of Mary, one that
indicated where to build the church and the other outlining its design.
Justinian dedicated the finished project to the feast of Mary's
Nativity, and annually thereafter on September 8, and through to the
present day, both Muslim and Christian pilgrims have come to commemorate
the feast day of Our Lady of Saidnaya. Also located in the convent of
Saidnaya is an icon of the Holy Mother and Child known as the Shaghurah
and reputed to have been painted by Luke the Evangelist which is
believed to protect its owners from harm in times of danger.
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Saidnaya enjoyed
religious peace throughout its history, even during times of war, such
as during the Crusades. Local Muslims visit the convent sanctuary on the
day of Friday prayers and share in the legends regarding this holy
place. Christians and Muslims from the region and from far away places
seek the shrine for healing. Numerous accounts of miraculous healings
have been reported, some which are documented in writing by those who
experienced them throughout history.
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Many other Catholic,
Eastern Orthodox, Syriac Catholic and Syriac Orthodox churches and
monasteries have been built in Saidnaya throughout history. On top of
the highest mountain in Saidnaya is the Cherubim Monastery at 2000
metres (1.25 miles) above sea level, overlooking Damascus' fertile
plains and Lebanon's mountains. There is also the Monastery of Mar
Thomas and a few massive monasteries built more recently such as St.
Thomas Roman Catholic Monastery, St. Estphariuos Orthodox Monastery, and
St. Ephram Monastery.
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The weather is cold and
snowy in winter, while it is warm and has fresh air in summer. Surviving
vestiges of caves, grottos and ancient places in and around Saydnaya
indicate that it was inhabited by different civilizations from the early
Stone Age, with artifacts from Aramaic, Greek, Syriac, Roman, and Arab
times.
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History
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Saidnaya's origins are
in ancient times, and the town has been inhabited since at least the
sixth century B.C. when it was known by its Aramaic name, Danaba.[6] It
emerged as an important center of Christianity well before it was
adopted as the official religion of the Roman empire.[6] Macarius, the
first bishop of Aleppo and later the Patriarch of Antioch, lists
Saidnaya in a seventeenth century Arabic manuscript as one of the seven
ancient episcopal cities under Damascus, the same cities represented at
the First Council of Nicaea in 325 A.D.
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The
Icon of the All-Holy Virgin
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In the late 8th
century, a certain venerable Marina was abbess of the convent, and she
was widely revered for her piety and sanctity of life. It happened that
a hermit monk, a Greek pilgrim from Egypt named Theodore, stopped at the
convent on his way to the Holy Land. When he was leaving, Abbess Marina
asked him to buy in Jerusalem a precious and fine icon of the Holy
Virgin. While at Jerusalem, he utterly forgot the task entrusted to him
and started on his return journey. However, when he had not gone far
from the city, he was stopped short by an unfamiliar voice: "Have you
not forgotten something in Jerusalem? What have you done in regard to
the commission from Abbess Marina?" Monk Theodore returned at once to
Jerusalem and found an icon of the Theotokos. During the journey back to
the convent, he was astounded by the miracles accomplished through the
icon. He and his whole caravan were ambushed by bandits, and then
attacked by wild beasts. Amidst these dangers, the hermit always invoked
the aid of the Holy Virgin while holding her icon, and he and all the
caravan were saved from every peril.
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When Theodore returned
to the convent, these events tempted him to keep the valuable icon for
himself, and he decided to bypass Saidnaya and sail back to Egypt.
However, he was unable to set sail, for such a fierce storm arose, it
seemed the ship would inevitably sink. His conscience was pricked, and
he quickly left the ship and returned by way of Saidnaya. After spending
four days in the convent, he was again possessed by an irresistible
desire to make the icon of the Mother of God his own. He apologized to
the abbess, pretending that he had been unable to buy the required icon,
and then he decided to leave the convent secretly. The next morning, as
he was about to set out on the journey back to his own country and
approached the convent gate, he was amazed to find that an invisible
power barred his way, and it was as though a stone wall stood where the
gate should have been. After many futile attempts, he was forced to hand
the icon over to the abbess, confessing his intention. With tears of
gratitude she glorified the Lord and His All-pure Mother. Since that
day, the holy Icon has remained in the convent and has been the object
of great veneration.
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The Story of
Construction of the Convent
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It is said that
Justinian I, Emperor of Byzantium, while crossing Syria with his troops
either on his way to the Holy Land or on a campaign against the
Persians, came to this desert, where his army encamped and soon suffered
thirst for lack of water. When they despaired, the emperor saw a
beautiful gazelle off in the distance. He vigorously gave chase, hunting
the animal until it tired and stopped on a rocky knoll and approached a
spring of fresh water, but without giving the emperor the opportunity to
shoot it. Suddenly, it transformed into an icon of the Most-holy
Theotokos, which shone with a brilliant light. A white hand stretched
forth from it and a voice said, "No, thou shalt not kill me, Justinian,
but thou shalt build a church for me here on this hill." Then the
strange heavenly light and majestic figure disappeared. Upon his return,
Justinian related what he had seen to his subordinates and ordered them
immediately to draw up a plan for the contemplated church. After some
time had passed and the architects were unable to resolve the problems
of the plan, the Holy Virgin — the gazelle — reappeared to Justinian in
a dream and confided a magnificent plan to him for a convent, of which
she would be the protectress. It is said that the basic structure of the
convent follows this plan to this day. The convent soon gained such
renown that it came to be ranked second only to Jerusalem as a place of
pilgrimage, and nuns from every corner of Syria, Egypt, and other lands
flocked to it. The holy Icon El Chagoura appeared many years after the
convent was constructed.
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Crusader period
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Magister Thietmar, a
German chronicler, wrote of his pilgramage to Saidnaya, devoting four
pages to a description of the icon of Holy Mother and Child found at the
convent. He describes the origin story behind the icon and its special
properties, and how a holy oil emitted from the breasts of the Virgin
Mary is believed to be a miraculous oil that can heal the sick.[9] In
September 1240, after Thibaut de Champagne concluded a treaty with the
sultan of Egypt, the Benedict of Alignan made a pilgramage to St. Mary's
of Saidnaya with the sultan's permission. The trip is seen as evidence
of both Saidnaya's importance to Christian pilgrims in the thirteenth
century and the relative safety of travel for Christians in Muslim areas
during this time.
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Chronicles from the
thirteenth century also report that Templar Knights would go to the
mountain monastery in Saidnaya to collect holy oil for Templar churches
in Europe.
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