Tue, May 22 2012
Bulgaria's Finance Minister Simeon Dyankov, centre, and minister without portfolio Bozhidar Dimitrov at an August 5 2010 ceremony in Sozopol, venerating what its finders claim are relics of John the Baptist.
Photo: BTA
Bring back the bone or Sliven will face Divine wrath, priest says.
Patriarch Maxim, the 96-year-old head of the Bulgarian Orthodox Church, invites people to come to see him at church rather than believe rumours that he is dead or dying.
Spiritual beliefs meet skepticism about the purported discovery of relics of John the Baptist in Sozopol. Let the archeologists argue; historians may remind that relics always were about making money.
The Norwegian embassy in Sofia has financed excavation works on St Ivan island near Sozopol and the restoration of the monastery.
Bulgarian media has reported that the excavations at St Ivan island off the Bulgarian coast have unearthed relics belonging to Saint John the Baptist.
Once the island was converted to Christianity, a monastical complex was built between the 5th-6th century on top of the ruins of the old Roman temple, including the Basilica of the Mother of God.
The funding is provided under the foreign military sales programme of the US army's Program Executive Office of Simulation, Training and Instrumentation.
The UK nationals were arrested after throwing beer bottles at people after being refused entry to a restaurant that had closed for the night.
Restoration and development projects include Madara Horseman, Arbanassi fortress, Magura cave.
Simeon Saxe-Coburg and his spouse Margarita opened a new heating and insulation system at the Tsar Ferdinand Hospital for Pulmonary Diseases in Iskrets, a project implemented thanks to the Embassy of the Sovereign Order of Malta in Sofia and the Nando Peretti Foundation.
According to the law's provisions, the commission will have the power to investigate individuals without prior notification and would not require a criminal conviction in order to launch an investigation.
The church should pay for these so called remains now and in the future. The goverment should look after the living not the dead.
Restoring any of Bulgaria's historic Orthodox churches is a worthy project. However, care should be used in referring to these relics as other than "attributed to".
This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained foul, abusive or discriminating language
This comment has been removed by the moderator because it contained foul, abusive or discriminating language
Well, I am sure that there are many more worthy causes and I am surprised that this isn't wholly church funded.
Perhaps using this money to finance the backlog of unpaid salaries to hospital staff would be better than funding some of the 100,000 body parts of John the Baptist that seem to exist. Seems fair that if anyone pays, it should be the church, or donations from believers.