Textbook
              MYSTICAL  PETROVARADIN AND THE SECRET MESSAGE OF ITS SACRAL SYMBOLISM
                The Lady  of Tekyeh
                The last point of Petrovaradin towards Sremski  Karlovci is marked with an interesting ”cornerstone”: a  neo-gothic Catholic Church of Mary of the Snow (Our Lady of the Snow). Although  it sounds paradoxical, it is enough to say The Lady of Tekyeh, and everyone  will know. We will stop in front of this church, by which lines of vehicles  constantly pass. We’ll thus evoke spaces and times, meet a multitude of  exciting people, see temples, imbue knowledge, observe important events. While  we’re standing, all that will pass in front of us
              By:  Đorđe M. Srbulović
                Photo:  Josip Šarić, Dragan Bosnić and Archive of NR
              
                CHURCH RENAISSANCE
              
A long time ago, Hamvas said that mysticism is the highest level of  knowledge one can conceive, and that science is much below it. The confirmation  of his words is reflected in the fact that no one can say when the first temple  in this place was raised or who it was dedicated to, ”what faith it  was” – although everyone knows that ”there was always some church there”. No one knows  what the name of this area was before Islam took over Srem, and where the  present name Tekyeh comes from. So we’ll rely on mysticism – since it’s more trustworthy.  Referring to legends, aware that there’s never been any detailed archeological  or historical research, we note that, ”before the Turks”, a church dedicated to  Blessed Virgin Mary used to be here. According to Eliade, such a name would put  the temple into the XIII century. He calls it the century of church  renaissance, since the Virgin was essentially equaled with the Holy Trinity.  The Virgin is a Lady, the Church is a Lady, a Lady is a real, yet inaccessible  woman, therefore an ideal whom knights vow to faithfulness and go to wars. And  all those ladies merged into one. Let’s not enter the knight cycle, for which  this expert claims it originates from the ”monastic central  information agency” – of some northern France monasteries.
                It was noted, however, that more than a century before these monks,  strange Peter the Hermit (”Eremite”) from Amiens raised his fortification  on a rock above Petrovaradin. It wasn’t the Crusades that made him famous – ”he  made the Crusades famous”. Short and skinny, dressed in unappealing clothes, he  rode a donkey, and wherever he’d pass – people would fall into religious  trance. He blessed the believers, and tormented and put under sword those he  considered unworthy. A completely common phenomenon and completely common  behavior for the time he lived in. ”I believe I’d understand” – said Anselm, an  educated theologian, Benedictine monk and Archbishop of Canterbury in the late  XI century.
                Cistercians, made known by Bernard of Clairvaux, appeared in  Petrovaradin at the time of Hungarian king Bela IV, at the end of the fourth  decade of the XIII century. Before erecting a fort on the rock, and in it a  monastery with a church – known to local history experts as Belafons or Belakut,  they were located somewhere near the Lady of Tekyeh, perhaps in the exact place  where the present church is today, or a bit lower, by the nearby Rocco’s  Stream. The earliest mentioning of a church in this place – Blessed Virgin Mary  – is attributed to them. Dressed in monastic robes made of uncolored wool,  after which they were called white monks, the Cistercians brought humbleness,  hard work and up-to-date knowledge for those times, dried marches and promoted  agriculture, produced excellent wine, influenced the development of commerce,  and contributed to a significant improvement of ordinary people financial  status. However, these reformed Benedictines, like the ”monastic central  information agency”, also brought the inquisitors with them, so a multitude  today unknown preachers and teachers, as well as a number of their followers –  were submitted to fire. This Crusade, led against Christians whose beliefs were  not corresponding to the governing, both eastern and western, traditional Christianity,  protected and propagated by secular rulers, led to the disappearance of  Bogomils and Cathars, Armenian Paulians, Manichaeans, Waldensians, Amalricians,  Dualists, Joachimists and many other. Or perhaps they just went into hiding?  However, one shouldn’t be too harsh to the first inquisitors: they were deeply  pious, convinced that they were saving souls by giving bodies to fire. ”If  you don’t believe, you cannot understand” – Anselm used to say.
                              ERA OF THE CRESCENT MOON
              
After the breakdown of medieval Hungary in Mohacs in 1526, the Ottomans  took over Srem. The Islamic empire ruled the area until 1687. It is not known  for certain when the Church of Blessed Virgin Mary stopped existing, or when a tekyeh  appeared in its place, however, when the Holy Roman Empire reestablished the  reign of the cross, the name of the toponym Tekyeh remained as a memory of the  Muslims.
                This tekyeh was also described by the famous travel-writer Evliya Celebi  in his Travelogue. In the ”Description of the Lower City of Varadin”, Celebi  tells us: ”The population of this city deeply respects scholars,  since there are none here. There are four elementary schools for little, sweet  children. And... a tekyeh of enthralled dervishes.”
                Evliya Celebi is an interesting character himself. His name was Mehmed  Zilli, and he sometimes signed his works as ”Dervish’s Son”. Celebi  means gentleman in Turkish, but in his case it’s a toponym – an area in Cappadocia  where the writer’s family lived until the Turkish conquering of Constantinople,  when the sultan personally invited them to move. Evliya is not an ordinary  name, it’s a religious term – signifying a man with God’s blessing: evliya can  be in several places at once, he can walk on water, levitate and bow during  levitating, etc. Warriors (shahids) are recognized as evliyas if they don’t  stay in the place they were killed, but go to the place they want to be buried.  ”Dervish’s  Son” left us many gifts and paths to them...
                If we’d search for the most similar parallel to tekyehs in Orthodoxy,  they would certainly be ”vodice”. Of course, such comparisons are  relative and very conditional.
                Writing about tekyehs, the Sheikh of Sarajevo Uryan Baba – great expert  in Tradition, speaks about respecting the principle of holy history and holy  geography – as an important precondition for building tekyehs and their  existence. A tekyeh has seven mandatory elements – number seven is a holy  number and each of the elements is important in a space leading a man to God.  Those elements are: water (river), house (building and yard), rock, spring  (source), grave (tomb), cave and stairway. The road leading towards the tekyeh  goes upwards, downwards and straight – it has to correspond to the movements of  the body of Muslims during prayer. The entrance of the tekyeh is opposite from  the stream of the river nearby, one enters ”upstream”: a man  therefore has to have a firm step – so the ”water” (impure)  wouldn’t take him away, whereas the ”upstream” movement signifies the intensified  purifying of the soul, spirit and body from everything of this earth. The house  is next to the road and the yard is hidden with a high wall. Unlike a mosque,  the tekyeh lives its full life during the night. Islam is not burdened with  architectural and style features: Islam respects all traditional knowledge  which is not opposite to it, thus they used many Christian temples for their  religious needs – only slightly adapting them.
                The toponym, as well as the oldest mentioning of the spring which still  exists, remained from the Turkish reign. This is how the Church of Blessed  Virgin Mary, Lady of Tekyeh, lived from the third decade of the XVI to the last  decade of the XVII century.
                Then the cross repressed the crescent moon and ruled Tekyeh again.
              JESUITS
              
During the Great Turkish War (1683-1699), the Holy Roman Empire, the  Christian coalition, repressed the Ottoman Empire from wide areas Islam had  held up to then. Part of the newly conquered area, as Leopold I, emperor of the  Holy Roman Empire, called it, also became Petrovaradin with tekyeh. It is  believed that Petrovaradin was taken from the Turks in 1687, although battles  in its immediate vicinity – due to the significance of the Fortress, whose  construction began in 1690 – continued during the following years, until 1694.  Already in 1693, a small group of Jesuits, members of the most erudite monastic  order, came to Petrovaradin from Osek. This monastic order was notorious,  regardless of the fact that it indebted the world with a multitude of  scientific achievements, mostly in natural sciences. Active under the motto Ad  Maiorem Dei Gloriam – Everything for the Greater Glory of God – they began  their usual works, building people, churches, fortifications, monasteries,  hospitals, schools, roads. Immediately upon their arrival, they asked and  received the deserted and desolated Turkish tekyeh, which they adapted to a  church and dedicated it to Immaculata – She who is immaculate, without a stain,  that is, to the Dogma of Immaculate Conception.
                Jesuits built two churches in Petrovaradin, two forms of spirituality,  two paths towards Christ: first the monastery church of St. Yuri – military  church, dedicated to George, patron of soldiers and victor. Its pendant in the  Petrovaradin trench, present Novi Sad, will be the Cathedral Church of Holy  Martyr George, also raised as a military church in the Serbian Orthodox part of  the Danube Military Border command. The second church, dedicated to the Virgin,  Lady, Immaculata – belongs to the Undercity (Suburbium) and Mayur – Lower  Petrovaradin. The Trench also has churches-pendants in its civil part: Name of  Mary and Ascension of the Holy Theotokos. It was the time of baroque –  philosophical and religious doctrines of the Jesuits, accepted among Orthodox Christians  only after being passed through the ”Kiev filters”. Baroque is the pearl of  irregular form.
                The Dogma of Immaculate Conception is one of the two important holidays established  by the Jesuits. The second is the Heart of Christ – Christian allegory of the  grail. The Dogma states that the Virgin conceived naturally, but that she was  pervaded with God’s blessing at the time of conception and thereby – immediately  – purified from the stain of eastern sin. Only such she could give birth to the  Son of God and thereby an unbridgeable gap was created between her and the  forces of darkness. Such iconography is also present in Orthodox Christianity:  part of the Book of Revelation (12:1) is used for presenting Immaculata: ”...  A woman clothed with the sun, with the moon beneath her feet and a crown of  twelve stars on her head...” The crown of twelve stars, instead of the common  solar aureole, will be accepted much later by the European Union, which put it  in its flag, blue as the day and blue as the night. Alchemy.
              EUGENE
              
The Jesuits bordered the area of Petrovaradin with the Tekyeh church: it  is the gate for those coming from Sremski Karlovci, Belgrade, Constantinople...  or going there. On the other end of the place, as National Review wrote,  a console on the façade of the first floor of the first house at the entrance  of Petrovaradin is decorated with a statue of Immaculata, standing on the moon,  with little Christ in her hands stabbing a snake’s head with a spear. Every  day, during twenty-odd years, Jesuits, with the present Franciscans of course,  preserved the spirit, soul and body of inhabitants and soldiers of Petrovaradin  and builders of the fortress.
                Then another war broke out between Muslims and Christians. At the end of  July 1716, Grand Vizier Damad Ali-Pasha, leading a great army, crossed the Sava  and started climbing the heights above Petrovaradin. Eugene of Savoy, a famous  character of European history, waited for him with a smaller army, but greater  force. The battle took place on August 5. After a five-hour long fierce  struggle, the Holy Roman Empire (Eugene of Savoy) won a great victory over the  empire of the crescent moon (Damad Ali-Pasha). It was the day of the Lady of  Snow. The place of the battle is still called Visieratz. During retreat, the  Turks burned down all Christian churches on their way – and the only ones on  the way were Orthodox. The only exception in the devastation was the Cathedral  Church of St. Nicholas in Sremski Karlovci, where, according to some, Damad  Ali-Pasha died from the battle wounds, and according to others, he was killed  in order to be celebrated as a hero, since otherwise he would be strangled  because of the unexpected defeat. Anyway: in the Cathedral Church in Karlovci,  Damad Ali-Pasha changed sides.
                The soldier and statesmen, not a spiritual man, established a new and,  for the time being, final dedication to the cult and ritual place – Lady of  Tekyeh. Eugene of Savoy – Prince Eugene, commander of the Holy Roman Empire  army, perhaps the greatest army commander in the Habsburg Monarchy, as a great  statesman and strategist, is the author of the Penetrating to the East  doctrine. He convinced the emperor and the royal camarilla to give up on  Spanish estates – because such efforts will bring the state to disappearance,  and to permanently turn towards the Balkans and expand towards the east.  Italian aristocrat by origin, French by education, his life motto was ”Austria  above everything”, although he never spoke a single German word. Italian, French  and Latin were his choice.
                After his magnificent victory on August 5, 1716, on the day the Catholic  Church celebrates the Lady of Snow, immediately after the battle, he gave the  Tekyeh church – below the place of the battle – the warfare icon he kept in his  tent, the icon of the Lady of Snow. This icon is the foundation and essence of  the Tekyeh church as the official shrine of Roman Catholics in Srem today. Thus  Christ’s warriors: Jesuits and Prince Eugene used alchemy: bleaching and snow,  to purify Tekyeh and its surroundings.
              HERMANN BOLLE AND THE ARCHITECTURE OF TRADITION
              
The Lady of Tekyeh, soon after its establishing in the new cult, began  expanding to be able to accept the growing number of believers who came to  pray, ask Her for help for various things, most often forgiveness of sins,  health and peace in the soul. Another cult appeared besides it, related to the  death of Siegfried Breuner, Austrian field marshal-lieutenant. Historical data state  that Breuner was imprisoned by the Turks several days before the battle and  decapitated on the day of the battle in front of the grand vizier’s tent – after  the Turks had realized that the battle is lost. He was later buried in the Franciscan  monastery, present Military Hospital in Petrovaradin. Folk faith – and here we  speak about one of the two forms of ”folk religiousness” in this place, which the  Catholic Church somehow absorbed into its dogmas and thereby made it Christian  – related the place of death of this military aristocrat with Tekyeh. As an elm  tree was growing next to the church, believers created a legend that Breuner  was hung on the tree, while poets wrote odes in German, singing about his life  and his martyr’s death on the elm tree. So they began lighting candles and  reading prayers next to the elm tree, and a picture of the Lady of Seven  Sorrows was nailed to the tree. Soon a small altar was made, creating  another, ”open air” church besides the existing one.  Priests were also involved, holding masses. Thus faith grew together with the  tree. Small pieces of the tree bark were given to ill people, cooked in water  like tea – and healed. Those who don’t believe – cannot understand, Anselm used  to say. The elm tree stood between the church and the road until the 1950s:  dried and partially burned from the candles lit for centuries, but still tall.  It was cut down because of traffic regulations. The iconostasis and the picture  of Lady of Seven Sorrows were taken inside the church and are now left  from the entrance. About ten years ago, a young tree began growing in the place  the elm tree stood. Workers who take care about traffic safety soon cut it  down.
                
Since the expelling of Turks until its present appearance, the church  was expanded several times. It got its present appearance in 1881, attributed  to the forgotten priest and writer Ilija Okrugić Sremac, whose works were  performed in the Serbian National Theater and National Theater in Belgrade at  the time. Hermann Bolle, Cologne-Zagreb architect, also takes merits for it.
                In its altar part and the walls, the Tekyeh church preserved parts of  the Muslim tekyeh (and Muslims remodeled the medieval church of Blessed Virgin  Mary). It is not a temple built from the foundations. Thus the circle closed.  With his works, Bolle tells us that he is more than an architect: he  understands – because he believes. Two slim towers rise above the church  entrance, like two pillars one must pass in order to step on a path towards a  different world. That is why this church is not only the last point at the exit  from Petrovaradin, or the first at its entrance. It’s also a gate. There is a  cross on the temple dome, which ”breaks through” the crescent moon in its  foothill. Although at first glance it speaks about the victory of the cross  over the crescent moon, it is also the materialized presence of She, ”who  is clothed with the sun, with the moon beneath her feet”. The central altar –  among the three in the church – before it was replaced with a new one about ten  years ago – was dominated by the Star of David or the Seal of Solomon, saying:  as above, so below: Thy will be done on earth, as it is in Heaven.
                Thus ended the journey of time and space in front of and through us,  while we were standing in front of the church. Everyone is here and everything is  here. As it has always been.
              ***
              Way of the Cross
                The big churchyard was marked with the Way of the Cross or Stations of  the Cross in 1882, with fourteen stations, another form of folk religiousness (”vodice”  can serve as a parallel again) – which the Church somehow fit into the dogma  and liturgy, so the movements correspond with movements we make in prayer. Christ’s  sufferings were made in woodcut on the stations by an Austrian family company ”Stuflesser”,  which has been continuously engaged in sacral art for almost a hundred and  forty years.
              ***
              Codes of Neo-Gothic Art
                Hermann Bolle (1845-1926), architect, spent his first twenty-seven years  in Cologne, at the time of constructing the largest neo-gothic cathedral in  then Europe. He began as a stonecutter and stonemason in his father’s workshop  and continued in the studio of Cologne neo-gothic artists, associates of  Friedrich von Schmidt. All this permanently related him with neo-gothic art –  return to Christian medieval art – the most beautiful period in the entire  development of Europe.
              ***
              Cross on the Vizierats
                Hermann Bolle repeated symbols from the tekyeh church in the nearby  Vizierats, where he designed a monument dedicated to the victory over the Turks  in 1716. The monument is known as the Cross of Prince Eugene, erected in  1902, upon the initiative of the 70th Infantry K und K Regiment.