HILL OF CROSSES,Lithuania |
Kryziu Kalnas “Hill Of
Crosses” (Lithuania, is a country
in Northern Europe): Kryziu Kalnas was originally a ceremonial
site where Lithuanians would mourn the dead lost at war. The Soviet Union
bulldozed the area twice, but locals rebuilt it to be even bigger. Today, over
100,000 crosses stand on the hill.
front view of hill of crosses |
The Hill of Crosses (Lithuanian:
About this sound Kryziu kalnas) is a site of pilgrimage about 12 km north of
the city of siauliai, in northern Lithuania. The precise origin of the practice
of leaving crosses on the hill is uncertain, but it is believed that the first
crosses were placed on the former Jurgaiciai or Domantai hill fort after the
1831 Uprising. Over the centuries, not only crosses, but giant crucifixes,
carvings of Lithuanian patriots, statues of the Virgin Mary and thousands of tiny effigies and
rosaries have been brought here by Catholic pilgrims. The exact number of
crosses is unknown, but estimates put it at about 55,000 in 1990 and 100,000 in
2006.
wishes of peoples |
The
city of Siauliai was founded in 1236 and occupied by Teutonic Knights during
the 14th century. The tradition of placing crosses dates from this period and
probably first arose as a symbol of Lithuanian defiance of foreign invaders.
Since the medieval period, the Hill of Crosses has represented the peaceful
resistance of Lithuanian Catholicism to oppression. In 1795 Siauliai was
incorporated into Russia but was returned to Lithuania in 1918. Many crosses
were erected upon the
hill after the peasant uprising of 1831-63. By 1895, there were at least 150
large crosses, in 1914 200, and by 1940 there were 400 large crosses surrounded
by thousands of smaller ones.
Captured
by Germany in World War II, the city suffered heavy damage when Soviet Russia
retook it at the war's end. From 1944 until Lithuania's independence in 1991,
Siauliai was a part of the Lithuanian Soviet Socialist Republic of the USSR.
During the Soviet era, the pilgrimage to the Hill of Crosses served as a vital
expression of Lithuanian nationalism. The Soviets repeatedly removed Christian
crosses placed on the hill by Lithuanians. Three times, during 1961, 1973 and
1975, the hill was leveled, the crosses were burned or turned into scrap metal,
and the area was covered with waste and sewage. Following each of these
desecrations local inhabitants and pilgrims from all over Lithuania rapidly
replaced crosses upon the sacred hill. In 1985, the Hill of Crosses was finally
left in peace.
The reputation of the sacred hill has since spread all over the world and every
year it is visited by many thousands of pilgrims. Pope John Paul II visited the
Hill of Crosses in September of 1993.
front view of hill of crosses |
No comments:
Post a Comment