No. 142 – 14 July 2020
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Hagia Sophia as Mosque or Museum:
Religion in a Post-Secular World
By Paul Hedges
SYNOPSIS
Turkey’s decision to reinstate Hagia Sophia as a mosque, while relating to internal
Turkish political dynamics, is symptomatic of a wider dispute between conceptions of
religion and secularism.
Ayasofya (Hagia Sophia), Istanbul. Creative Commons
COMMENTARY
HAGIA SOPHIA, once Christendom’s greatest church, then a mosque under the
Ottomans, before becoming a museum in the 20th century, is now back as a mosque.
Also known as Ayasofya, the iconic building has long been a symbol of Istanbul. On
10 July 2020, it had its museum status revoked by Turkey’s highest legal authorities
and was restored to its former stature as a mosque by President Recep Tayyib
Erdogan, capping years of public pressure.
While this significant ruling surfaced on the back of Turkey’s internal political
dynamics, it underlies the fundamental tension between religion and secularism. The
ruling to revive the mosque’s former status also underscores the persistence of religion
in what scholars refer to as the post-secular world.
Historical Legacy
In 324 CE, the Roman emperor Constantine founded his new capital Constantinople
on the site of ancient Byzantium. Constantine had made an alliance with one branch
of the Christian church (today’s Catholic and Orthodox denominations) to help
consolidate power.
While Constantinople was not at first a Christian city ̶ it contained shrines to many
deities including Constantine’s patron Apollo ̶ it later became one. The Church of
Holy Wisdom (originally 360, rebuilt 537), was for a long time the largest and most
splendid church in the world. Still, today, it is hard for visitors not to be overawed by
the spectacular vista as they enter through its great inner doors.
In 1453, the Ottoman Dynasty, after many years of siege, finally took the city, and one
of the first acts of the conqueror Mehmed II was to pray in Hagia Sophia, effectively
establishing it as a mosque. Today, many Muslims reinterpret this as a fulfilment of
one of the Prophet Muhammad’s hadith, widely accepted traditionally as an end time
(apocalyptic) prophecy, concerning the fall of Constantinople to Muslim hands.
Secular Turn
The new secularist leader Mustapha Kemal Atatürk, who took power following the end
of the Ottoman Empire in 1922, turned Hagia Sophia into a museum, opening it in
1935. A site of contestation between Orthodox Christians, for whom Hagia Sophia was
still regarded as their main church, and Muslims, it was felt that a secular identity would
resolve the issue. White plaster that had covered many mosaics was removed, while
the carpets for prayer were lifted to show the impressive marble floor.
Many Orthodox Christians have long wanted Hagia Sophia restored as a church, while
many Muslims have wanted it restored as a mosque. Current opinion polls across
Turkey show over 70 per cent support for the restoration as a mosque. While guards
had long sought to stop anyone praying inside (particularly performing salat, the
Islamic prayer), under President Erdogan recitations of the Qur’an have happened,
and in 2016 a prayer was held inside.
Greece, in particular, has long protested against these actions as this change will be
a body blow for Orthodox Christians. Hagia Sophia is listed as a World Heritage Site,
and UNESCO argued, given the site’s historical importance and contestation, that
Turkey should to listen to international opinion.
The US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo and the Russia Orthodox Patriarchate have
also stepped in. In response, Turkey insisted that it is entirely a matter of its own
internal affairs. Subsequent pressure after the decision from the international
community, and Turkish opposition parties, is now unlikely to sway matters.
The Post-Secular
Stretching back to the 19th century, secularisation has long been accepted as the
norm. That is to say, there has been a widespread expectation that religion will
gradually lose ground in the public sphere and become less relevant.
However, from the late 20th century, it has become increasingly clear that religion is
not disappearing. Indeed, one of the mid-20th century’s great theorists of
secularisation, Professor Peter Berger, stated at the close of the century: “the world is
as furiously religious as ever.”
The Iranian Revolution of 1979 was a first indication of such a change on the global
stage, again 9/11 brought religion very clearly into the public eye, while President
Trump’s cultivation of the religious right, electorally influential since at least Ronald
Reagan’s time, has shown how religious rhetoric and constituencies can be politically
significant. Religion, which arguably never actually went away, is now front and centre
in world politics.
The noted German political theorist and philosopher, Jürgen Habermas, has been
amongst those who have spoken of our current world as “post-secular.” This term
refers to the way that religion persists within the secular world. Or, for some, may
indicate a new stage that comes after the age of secularism.
While theorists debate whether secularism has ended, or indeed what is entailed by
it, certainly we live in a world in which religious commitments, ideologies, and political
movements are an active, increasingly visible, part of our world.
Hagia Sophia and Post-Secularism
Given what secularism entails, it was taken for granted that the transition from church
to mosque to museum was natural. Indeed, Hagia Sophia’s new secular museum
status would trump any religious claims as it was seen to be both natural and nonpartisan. Certainly, secularism is still seen by many as a neutral ground that allows for
interreligious dialogue and coexistence.
However, as we enter a realm of the post-secular, it is perhaps only natural that claims
for secular sites to be replaced by religious sites will occur. For some, secularism is
seen as being hostile to religion rather than neutral. As such, we will expect to see
such claims. It is not simply an internal Turkish issue, but one symptomatic of a wider
global trend of the reassertion of religion.
The current decision on Hagia Sophia will not, though, settle contestation on this site,
while the wider context in which it exists will not go away. Religious and secular
demands are not a zero-sum game, but some on both sides may wish to paint it as
such.
Advocates of secularism meanwhile will need to think about how they frame their case
for its neutral, even religious-friendly, credentials if they wish to win the ideological
battle within a post-secular world of cultural wars.
Paul Hedges is Associate Professor in Interreligious Studies with the Studies in InterReligious Relations in Plural Societies (SRP) Programme, S. Rajaratnam School of
International Studies (RSIS), Nanyang Technological University (NTU), Singapore.
Nanyang Technological University
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