Greece marks the Dormition of the Virgin Mary on Thursday, a major holiday that also traditionally signals the last mass exodus from cities for summer holidays before schools open, ANA records.
Celebrations abound every year across Greece, with the largest crowds arriving at the island of Tinos, where an 1836 royal decree extends them to August 23. The island also commemorates the sinking of the battleship “Elli” by an Italian submarine on Dormition Day in 1940, while the ship stood by out of port for the celebrations.
At the church of Panagia Soumela in northern Greece, celebrations focus around sacred objects such as the icon of the Virgin believed to be painted by Luke the Evangelist.
In Paros, the Ekatontapyliani Church at the island’s capital, Parikia, with the legendary 99 visible gates and an invisible one, is said to be a pledge by St. Helen to the Virgin to help her find Christ’s cross as she stopped over on her way to Jerusalem.
In Kozani, another monastery, that of Panagia in Mikrokastro, opens its gates to pilgrims honoring the Virgin through an icon dated to 1603, while in Siatista Christ’s mother is marked by the faithful who arrive at the area’s monastery on elaborately decorated horses, in an echo of brave fighters during the Ottoman Turkish occupation of Greece.
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