Moscow brings together a lot of different religions and confessions. Source: Lori/Legion Media
In the early 20th century, Moscow was one of the most prayerful cities in the world. By 1917, it had nearly 1,000 churches and other places of worship, representing all the major faiths, although Orthodox Christianity was the official religion of the Russian Empire.
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It was in Moscow, at the Kremlin’s Assumption Cathedral, that Russian emperors were crowned, even after St Petersburg became the new capital and political centre of the country in the 18th century.
When the atheist Bolsheviks took power in 1917, it became dangerous to be a practising religious believer in Russia, and the country’s centuries-old religious heritage started to be systematically destroyed. Only a quarter of Moscow’s ecclesiastical institutions survived; by 1990, just over 250 places of worship remained in the city.
In the Eighties, the authorities began to gradually reopen the remaining
churches and return religious property to worshippers. The rebuilding of Russia’s main
and largest cathedral, the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour, symbolised this
movement. Built in the 1880s to commemorate the victory over Napoleon, it was
blown up on Stalin’s personal orders in 1931. The site was used for a public
swimming pool before the cathedral was eventually rebuilt in the Nineties.
Crosses and domes
Novodevichy Convent’s thick red-and-white walls
have housed many a high-ranking nun (not all of whom chose their vocation
voluntarily), including Peter the Great’s sister Princess Sophia. Now
surrounded by a picturesque little park, it is a wonderful place for peace and
quiet in the heart of the city, where you can listen to the toll of bells
instead of car horns, and watch ducks paddle peacefully on a tranquil pond.
One of Moscow’s most impressive monastic
institutions, built in the lavish Moscow
baroque style in the 16-17th centuries, the convent was declared a Unesco World
Heritage Site in 2004. A
large-scale restoration, completed in 2010, has returned the convent back to
its former splendour, and it now attracts an ever increasing flow of visitors.
Since the government began turning Orthodox property back to religious groups,
there has been an ongoing debate over whether these precious shrines and
objects should be safeguarded by the church or by museums, especially since
many of them are very valuable. Before it was completely returned to the Russian
Orthodox Church last year, the convent housed a branch of the State Historical
Museum.
Church authorities are now searching for experts to continue work on the
preservation and restoration of the convent. Among other things, the convent
takes care of the unique frescoes in the Assumption Cathedral, which date back
to the early 16th century. Commenting on the convent’s work in preservation,
its Mother Superior, Mother Margarita, told the Orthodox website taday.ru:
“Over the course of centuries, the old frescoes have become accustomed to
temperature fluctuations inside the cathedral. There are researchers in the
cathedral who monitor the condition of the frescoes.”
Stained glass and spires
Catholic churches have always been rare in Moscow. There were three before the Revolution; of these, only two remain. This year, however, Moscow’s Catholics are celebrating a double anniversary: 20 years since the Catholic Church reopened in Russia, and 100 years since the construction of the Cathedral of the Immaculate Conception of the Blessed Virgin Mary on Malaya Gruzinskaya Street.
The cathedral, which is said to be inspired by Westminster Abbey, was closed in
1938, its beautiful neo-Gothic façade changed significantly, with many of its
more impressive elements removed. In the Nineties, it was restored with the
help of donations from charitable organisations and Catholics all over the
world.
The cathedral’s superb acoustics make it a good venue for concerts, which are
also popular with the secular public. For instance, organist James McVinnie,
who played at the wedding of Prince William and Kate Middleton, performed here
this month. “You can hear a real organ not only during concerts but also at
every service,” says Lyudmila, a member of the parish.
“There are three of them in the cathedral, which creates a very special atmosphere. A café also opened here recently, and there are always many foreigners with children around. All this gives you the sense that you are not in Moscow but somewhere else in Europe.”
Kosher cuisine
Unlike places of worship for certain faiths,
synagogues don’t have to be built according to specific architectural
requirements and can be located in an ordinary room of any building.
Nonetheless, synagogues in Moscow
are becoming increasingly impressive, architecturally. The reconstruction by
architect Sergei Estrin of the synagogue at 6 Bolshaya Bronnaya was recognised
as one of Moscow’s
top architectural projects in 2005. Through the five-storey building’s glass
front, you can see the restored façade of the synagogue as it appeared when it
first opened in 1883.
The original grand building was funded through donations from Lazar Polyakov,
an industrialist, banker and philanthropist. “It was then a two-storey
building, a former mansion that was redesigned as a synagogue,” explains
Shlomo, a translator at the synagogue.
During the Soviet years, the synagogue was closed, and it became the House of
Artistic Creativity Services before being returned to the Jewish community in
1991. Today, it houses a kosher restaurant on the roof of the building, called Jerusalem, which is open
to all.
Minarets and memorials
The youngest of the three Moscow mosques, the Minskaya Street memorial mosque was
opened in September 1997 to celebrate the city’s 850th anniversary. It is
dedicated to the memory of Muslim soldiers who died in the Second World War.
This mosque is part of a larger complex called Victory Park,
which also houses a synagogue with a museum and the Orthodox Church of St
George the Victorious. The idea behind the park was to commemorate all those
who fought for their country, regardless of their religion.
The mosque is very spacious and beautifully decorated inside. Imam Shamil
Khazrat Alyautdinov explains: “Our mosque is a bit bigger than Moscow’s other mosques. We have allocated all
available space for prayer.”
People there are welcoming and friendly, even to those who come out of curiosity. They explain the etiquette expected in a mosque, offer tours of the building and invite you to attend the imam’s public lectures.
There are about two million Muslims in Moscow
and the number is growing steadily, mainly due to migration from former Soviet
republics.
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