Archbishop Mor Anthimos Jack Yakoub with the restored ancient altar in the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchal Monastery of St Mark in Jerusalem (OSV News/Debbie Hill)
Ishtartv.com - cathnews.com
14 January 2026
The historic altar of the Syriac Orthodox Patriarchal Monastery of St
Mark in Jerusalem has been unveiled for the first time in nearly 350 years,
following an extensive restoration. Source: Catholic Review.
The January 11 reveal showcased intricate gold-leaf details and baroque
decorations long hidden beneath layers of damage and past repairs.
It was unveiled in front of members of the community and diplomats after
two years of work by a team of Mexican restoration experts from the María
Visión Mexican Catholic TV channel.
Archbishop Mor Anthimos Jack Yakoub, the Syriac Orthodox patriarchal
vicar for Jerusalem, Jordan and the Holy Land, said the completion of the work
by the five-man team was nothing short of a miracle and included an eight-month
break following the October 7, 2023, Hamas attack on southern Israeli
communities and the ensuing two-year war.
According to Syriac Orthodox tradition, the monastery is the site of the
house of Mark, where Jesus instructed Peter and John to prepare the Passover
meal and is believed to be the location of the Upper Room where the Last
Supper, washing of the disciples’ feet, post-Resurrection appearances, and
Pentecost occurred, strengthening the first Church.
“From here the first Church was strengthened and the Gospel went forth
to all peoples by the power of the Spirit. Today we inaugurate a historical
wooden structure that is far more than an artistic masterpiece,” Archbishop
Yakoub said.
The community had long wanted to restore the altarpiece, whose vibrant
colour had unwittingly been muted by chemical gold spray long ago by unknown
work.
An inscription at the top of the altar attests to the last official
restoration having taken place in 1733, and Archbishop Yakoub said that studies
of the altar have shown that it may be 400 years old.
The unique work is distinguished by gilded wooden intricate eastern
floral decorations, slender columns with small arches and capitals. Its
carvings are like “silent prayers,” the archbishop said.
Tests by an Italian restoration team working on the restoration at the
Church of the Nativity revealed the original gold leaf, silver leaf and the
beautiful colours beneath. Crucially, however, the altarpiece was also found to
be infested with termites and predicted to collapse within a year without
intervention.
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