“We want-oh mother -we want no mosques, no hodjas to call out, (oh, sweet mother, our lady aid us) We only want St. Sophia, the great Monastery”
From a Greek Song “We want no mosques here”
The Most Holy Theotokos (Mother of God) came to be viewed as the protector of Constantinople after the successful defeat by the Empire of the Avars after 626 AD. Enemy combatants described seeing a woman over the walls of the City during the fighting near the blachernae section of the city. There was a Church (and still is) dedicated to the Theotokos at that part of the city. An all night vigil was held in that Church asking for her intervention to save the City. The Icon of the Holy Wisdom (Hagia Sophia) of God. The Great Church of Constantinople is named for the wisdom of Christ Hagia Sophia in use as a Mosque during the Ottoman Empire. This image is French and dates to 1719.
Greek political poster from the Balkan Wars of 1912 to 1913. Prime Minister Eleutherios Venizelos led Greece to victory and presided over the liberation of Macedonia, Crete, and Epirus. I believe the woman he is picking up symbolizes Greece. The Angel on top is bringing in the new year of 1913. Note on the left the image of the Parthenon at Athens. On the right the double headed eagle over the image of Hagia Sophia. Greece was supposed to liberate the city.
Venizelos and his Ministers and Generals and Bishops of the Church in front of Hagia Sophia. In 1920 Herbert Adam Gibbons who reported on the campaign in Asia Minor and later sent news dispatches to the Christian Science Monitor documenting the genocide of the Greeks and Armenians published a biography of Venizelos. The last paragraph of the book.
“In the prayer of eight million Greeks, “Zeto Venizelos!” the aspirations of Hellenism are practically expressed. For if the Cretan lives, and continues to lead, he will accomplish what the greatest Meditteranean islander before him failed to accomplish. He will take possession of Constantinople.”
Venizelos lost the elections of December 1920 and Greece’s fortunes in Asia Minor collapsed. The Great Church awaits to become a Church once again…..someday
In 1453 the Orthodox Greeks in Constantinople were hoping that a miracle might prevent the fall of the City. It was not to be. Today we await again and place our hope in the Theotokos. I believe in miracles.
From another old Greek song on the Fall of Constantinople,
“Today the Churches chant, and all the monasteries, and Saint Sophia chants, the great monastery, A high voice came from the heavens, Saint Sophia is taken by the hand of infidels. Let the chanting stop and lower the sacred vessels, The Turks have taken the City”.