"Recorded history, however, does not find the site until the Sassanid period in the mid fourth century A.D. At this time, according to a popular legend not written down until eight hundred years later, a minor king named Sanharib ruled Nineveh. His son Prince Behnam had forty armed knights as his constant companions, but his daughter Sarah was afflicted with leprosy. One day Behnam was riding through the plains north of Nineveh on a hunting expedition, accompanied by his forty companions. The hunting party sighted a gazelle and gave chase, pursuing the animal up the side of Maqlub Mountain until the animal darted into a cave and disappeared. Following the gazelle through the opening on foot, Behnam entered the cave and was surprised to see not a gazelle but an old man sitting inside. The hermit was Mar Mattai, a famous Syriac saint who lived on the mountain, and after he invited Behnam to sit down the two had a long conversation during which Mattai introduced Behnam to Christianity. Behnam promised to convert if Mattai could heal Sarah of her leprosy. Mattai promised that he could, and instructed Behnam to bring Sarah and meet him at another place. When Behnam and Sarah arrived, accompanied by Behnam’s 40 cavalrymen, they found Mattai already waiting for them. The old hermit struck the ground with his staff and water flowed out. He commanded Sarah to wash in the water, and when she did so her leprosy was instantly healed. Behnam, Sarah and the 40 cavalrymen were all baptized on the spot...." ~ Shared by Father Stephen
Among the most tragic losses of the many antiquities
destroyed in Iraq by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has been the
destruction of Iraq’s seriously understudied medieval architecture. The
demolition of the mausoleum of Imam Yahya ibn al-Qasim and the tomb of Imam Ibn
Hassan Aoun al-Din wiped out two of Mosul’s prominent medieval landmarks. When
another explosion obliterated the Imam Dur mausoleum in Samarra, it wiped out
the earliest example of a muqarnas dome in the world.
While the destruction of medieval sites has received
far less media attention than attacks on better known ancient sites such as
Nimrud or Hatra, the loss of Iraq’s medieval sites is perhaps even more tragic
due to the relative lack of scholarly documentation.
An example is the monastery of Mar Behnam and Mart
Sarah, northeast of Nimrud. Destroyed only three months ago, its loss was
barely noticed, sandwiched between the carnage at the Mosul Museum and the
graphic demolition of Nimrud.
History is usually older than memory, and the
monastery of Mar Behnam is no exception. Excavations of a tiny tell next to the
monastery have revealed remains dating back over 8,000 years ago to the
Neolithic, along with later Assyrian remains.
Recorded history, however, does not find the site
until the Sassanid period in the mid fourth century CE. At this time, according
to a popular legend not written down until eight hundred years later, a minor
king named Sanharib ruled Nineveh. His son Prince Behnam had forty armed
knights as his constant companions, but his daughter Sarah was afflicted with
leprosy.
One day Behnam was riding through the plains north of
Nineveh on a hunting expedition, accompanied by his forty companions. The
hunting party sighted a gazelle and gave chase, pursuing the animal up the side
of Maqlub Mountain until the animal darted into a cave and disappeared.
Following the gazelle through the opening on foot,
Behnam entered the cave and was surprised to see not a gazelle but an old man
sitting inside. The hermit was Mar Mattai, a famous Syriac saint who lived on
the mountain, and after he invited Behnam to sit down the two had a long
conversation during which Mattai introduced Behnam to Christianity. Behnam
promised to convert if Mattai could heal Sarah of her leprosy. Mattai promised
that he could, and instructed Behnam to bring Sarah and meet him at another
place.
When Behnam and Sarah arrived, accompanied by Behnam’s
40 cavalrymen, they found Mattai already waiting for them. The old hermit
struck the ground with his staff and water flowed out. He commanded Sarah to
wash in the water, and when she did so her leprosy was instantly healed.
Behnam, Sarah and the 40 cavalrymen were all baptized on the spot.
Sanharib was none too pleased, and after repeated
attempts to talk his children out of their new faith failed he ordered that
they be put to death. Someone in the court tipped of Behnam, and he fled to the
town of Qaraqosh with Sarah and the forty cavalrymen. Sanharib and his troops
overtook them near there, but before they could slaughter them the earth opened
up and swallowed Behnam, Sarah and the forty cavalrymen.
Sanharib was devastated, and eventually he also
developed leprosy. Remembering how Sarah had been cured, his wife suggested he
also visit Mar Mattai, and the king reluctantly agreed. Mattai cured him as
well, and as a result Sanharib also converted to Christianity. He exhumed the
bodies of Sarah and Behnam and reburied them at the site of the monastery. Sunk
into the tell, the tomb became known as “al-Gibb” or “the Pit.”
Another relief of Saint Behnam from the monastery.
Photo (c) Suzanne Bott, 2009. Used with permission.
Tradition dates Behnam and Sarah’s death to December
10, 352. This tradition, however, was not written down until around the time
the monastery was massively renovated in 1164, a seemingly improbable
coincidence which has led some scholars to propose that the legend was first
developed to explain the presence of a Syriac monastery in an area where the
Assyrian Church of the East was traditionally dominant.
Regardless of the historicity of its patron saint, the
site eventually became associated with miraculous healing, both at the tomb and
at a spring three kilometers away which tradition attributed to the spring
where Mar Mattai healed Sarah. The hill behind the tomb became associated with
the mysterious Qur’anic figure al-Khidr, the “maker of things green” often
associated with fertility and renewal. Adherents of the Yezidi faith also
revered the site for its connection to Khidr, sometimes known as Khidr Elias.
The diversity of religious traditions found in
northern Iraq is demonstrated by the mixture of styles at the monastery. The
interior of the monastery featured relief sculptures of Saint Behnam as a
knight riding a horse, alongside arches, niches, and arabesques in fine Abbasid
style. According to French scholar J.M. Fiey, “Among collections in situ of
sculpture of the period of the Atabeg rulers of Mosul it has no rival; no study
of Abbasid art can pass it by without mention.” Inscriptions on the walls are
written not only in Syriac and Arabic but also in Armenian, the work of
Armenians who moved into the region in the fourteenth century following a
pogrom in Erbil in 1310.
But the most famous case of syncretism penetrating the
architecture came in 1295, when Mongol leader Baidu Khan attacked Mosul and
Irbil. A raiding party plundered the monastery of its treasures. After Rabban
Jacob (the chief of the monastery) went to Baidu Khan to complain, the Khan
agreed to return all the treasures. In gratitude the monastery added an
inscription in Uighur above Mar Behnam’s tomb asking “May the happiness and
praise of Khidr Elias befall and settle on the Il-khan and the nobles and the
noblewomen.”
The protection of the Khan helped the monastery
survive and grow. In 1415 the monastery became the seat of the Maphrian of the
Syriac Orthodox Church, second in importance only to the Patriarch of Antioch.
The Maphrian moved in 1508, but the monastery continued to be the seat of a
bishop until 1782. By the 1790s the site was abandoned, cared for only by the
Yezidis who still revered it in the name of Khidr Elias.
Eventually the Syriac Catholic Church took control of
the monastery, but it was not until 1900 that monastic life resumed. In July
2014, ISIS fighters reached the monastery, where they ordered the monks to
leave immediately. Forced to leave the monastery’s relics behind, they walked
several miles on foot before making contact with Kurdish troops.
On March 19, 2015 ISIS fighters rigged the tomb of Mar
Behnam and Mart Sarah with explosives and blew it up, completely leveling the
structure. Gone is the unique architecture blending Muslim and Christian art,
along with one of the Middle East’s few inscriptions in Uighur. The destruction
of the site fits both ISIS’ targeting of Christians and Yezidis as well as the
destruction of graves revered as shrines. It has also made Iraq and the world that
much poorer.
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