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[ENS] Shanghai cathedral photos, blueprints sought to aid restoration


From "Matthew Davies" <mdavies@episcopalchurch.org>
Date Wed, 16 Nov 2005 08:53:59 -0500

Monday, November 14, 2005

Shanghai cathedral photos, blueprints sought to aid restoration Anglicans
asked to consult family albums, church archives

By Bob Williams

ENS111405-01

[Episcopal News Service] A new chapter is emerging in the story of
Shanghai's former Anglican cathedral, and photos and drawings from
its early past will help shape its future at the heart of China's
state-approved Protestant church.

"If anyone can provide early photos or even the original blueprints
of Holy Trinity Church, these would greatly assist its restoration,"
said Presbyter Ji Jianhong, chairperson of the National Committee of the
Three-Self Patriotic Movement (TSPM) of the Protestant Churches in China.
[Materials may be forwarded via the contact information below.]

Voicing this request to Presiding Bishop Frank Griswold October 28 in
Nanjing, Ji praised government officials for presenting the cathedral -
built in 1869 and closed in 1949 amid the cultural revolution - to TSPM
leaders in 2004.

Working collaboratively with the China Christian Council (CCC), TSPM
continues Protestant ministry in a "post denominational era," said CCC's
president, the Rev. Dr. Cao Sheng-jie, who was herself raised in the
Anglican tradition. The CCC continues the ministries of most mainline
faith groups present in China prior to 1949.

Sir Gilbert Scott designed the cathedral church, which continued parish
ministry begun in 1847. An architectural firm, run by descendents of
Scott, has been retained to oversee the restoration, expected to commence
within the next year's time.

Added in 1893 at a height of some 50 meters, the cathedral's tower was
said to be the city's tallest pinnacle at the time. The spire is dwarfed
today by a skyline that includes several of the world's tallest and most
futuristic skyscrapers.

The Presiding Bishop took an October 27 tour of the cathedral interior
- once home to a significant 1914 pipe organ and later restyled as an
auditorium used for government purposes. Renovation of the nave will
remove the current rows of tattered theater-style seats, a dropped
ceiling, and accumulated debris.

Griswold was hosted the same day in the adjacent CCC headquarters,
built in the 1920s as a British boys school and recently presented to
the CCC for its use following an extensive restoration initiated and
fully funded by the government.

Elsewhere in Shanghai, Roman Catholics are at work restoring the Jesuit
Zikawei Cathedral, while similar efforts are desired for the blue-domed
Russian Orthodox cathedral completed in 1936 and dedicated to the
"Surety of Sinners" icon of the Theokotos.

None of the three church restoration projects should be confused with the
"Shanghai Cathedral Tower" planned by China's Ping An Insurance Company,
which expects to spend some $242 million (U.S.) to build a 150-meter-tall
skyscraper in the city's Pudong financial district.

To share copies of photos and drawings with church leaders and architects
working to restore the Shanghai cathedral, send electronically scanned
copies (jpeg or giff format) or written observations via e-mail to
news@episcopalchurch.org. A return e-mail message will be sent to
acknowledge successful receipt of each submission. Photos and comments
will be forwarded directly project managers in China.

-- Canon Robert Williams is the Episcopal Church's director of
communication.

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