GREEK
ORTHODOX ARCHDIOCESE OF AMERICA
8-10
East 79th St. New York, NY 10021 Tel: (212) 570-3530 Fax: (212)
774-0215
Web: http://www.goarch.org
Email: communications@goarch.org
NEWS
RELEASE
For
Immediate Release: September 14, 2001
Contact:
Nikki Stephanopoulos
September 14, 2001
Tel: (212) 570-3530
Fax: (212) 774-0215
Web site: www.goarch.org
E-mail: nikki@goarch.org
ST.
NICHOLAS CHURCH DESTROYED IN TWIN TOWERS ATTACK
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St.
Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church as it once stood in the shadow
of the Twin Towers at the World Trade Center.
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New
York - The terrorist attack against the Twin Towers of the World Trade
Center that killed an estimated 5,000 people also destroyed the tiny St.
Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, located about 500 feet from ground zero.
On
Tuesday morning, September 11, 2001, Fr. John Romas, pastor, attempted
to go to his church but was turned back by police. Wednesday, he was
permitted to visit the site to view what was left of the church.
"It would break your heart," he said of the devastation he
witnessed. "It's one thing to see it on TV, and another thing to
see it in person. St. Nicholas is buried under debris. It is the worst
thing." He described steel girders and concrete from the towers
burying the building.
Fr.
Romas said that, at the time of the first blast, one parishioner,
Vassilios Torazanos, 50, was working in the church but rushed out of the
building moments after the first jet, American Flight 11, crashed into
the south tower at 8:48 a.m. He left his car in the adjacent parking lot
and ran all the way to Brooklyn, about two miles distant over the East
River. Normally about 45 to 50 faithful (capacity for St. Nicholas)
attend Divine Liturgy on Sundays. He said his parishioners plan to
rebuild their church and have established an account for anyone wanting
to donate. (St. Nicholas Greek Orthodox Church, Atlantic Bank, account
number 09062602, 8010 5th Ave., Brooklyn, N.Y. 11209).
Fr.
Romas also said he is attempting to locate a site in the area to hold
church services and plans to ask permission from city officials to allow
him to retrieve the church's holy relics: those of St. Nicholas, St.
Katherine and St. Sava. They were kept in an ossuary on what had been
the top floor of the four-story building.
Greek
immigrants established St. Nicholas Church in 1916 and purchased the
structure for $25,000. It was one of two old calendar parishes under the
Archdiocese until 1993 when it switched to the Gregorian calendar. Among
the church's unique characteristics are its small size and its icons,
which were a gift from the last czar of Russia, Nicholas II. Fr. Romas
expressed hope he would be able to salvage some of the icons.
The
church also was open Wednesdays at midday, for people to light a candle
and pray during their lunch breaks, to attend a Paraklisis the first
Wednesday of the month, or just for spiritual contemplation. The tiny
church building was constructed around 1832. It originally was a
residence and later housed a tavern before the founders of the parish
purchased the structure. It measured 22 feet wide in front, 20 feet, 11
inches in the back, and about 56 feet long. It was 35 feet tall. On
three sides it was bounded by a parking lot. Among its first members
were the parents of Telly and George Savalas.
The
church has been known locally for several years for its celebration of
Epiphany. Parishioners would proceed to nearby Battery Park at the south
tip of Manhattan, where a diver would jump into the icy water of New
York Harbor to retrieve the cross.
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