By Catholic News Service
Doreen Abi Raad
When Islamic State fighters overran Qaraqosh, Iraq, in the summer of 2014, Mothana Butres was able to grab only a single volume from his father's collection of thousands of Syriac books and manuscripts.
Doreen Abi Raad
When Islamic State fighters overran Qaraqosh, Iraq, in the summer of 2014, Mothana Butres was able to grab only a single volume from his father's collection of thousands of Syriac books and manuscripts.
The handwritten, 600-year-old book of Syriac hymns now inspires much of Butres' work as an iconographer.
From
a modest walk-up apartment in Zahle, Lebanon, a city not far from the
Syrian border, the Syriac Catholic iconographer and refugee creates his
sacred art in a sparsely furnished living room. As he works, he sings
the hymns he has committed to memory from the sole book he managed to
save.
Butres is the creator of the Our Lady of Aradin icon, a
centerpiece of the first Catholic shrine dedicated to persecuted
Christians. The shrine is housed in St. Michael's Church in New York
City and was dedicated June 12.
"The inspiration when I was
working on Our Lady of Aradin was that it was the Virgin Mary who was
protecting the Christians," Butres told Catholic News Service.
He
chose to present Mary in the traditional wedding dress of the Aradin
area of Iraq "to represent that the Virgin Mary will always be a part of
the Christians in Iraq and that she is the protector of Christians in
Iraq and all the Middle East," Butres said.
He said that when
faced with an ultimatum by Islamic State fighters, Iraq's Christians
gave up their land but refused to give up their faith.
"The people who were persecuted, their blood is a stronger message
than anything I could ever convey," he said. But the recent persecution
and the oppression suffered by his ancestors led him "to the way I think
and the way I do my work."
Butres said he believes his icons can
be an instrument for intercessory prayer. The prayers of the people who
visit the shrine in New York and pray before the icon of Our Lady of
Aradin are joined with those of the persecuted Christians.
"Based on what Jesus told us, that 'if two people are gathered in my name, I will be among them,'" he said.
The
Syriac book Butres treasures from his father's library collection also
awakened him to the lost practice of writing books by hand, especially
in the Syriac language, which is spoken by Christians in certain areas
of Syria and Iraq, including Qaraqosh. Syriac also is used in the
liturgy of some Eastern churches, including the Syriac Catholic, Syriac
Orthodox and Maronite Catholic churches. The language is related to
Aramaic, the language of Jesus.
"I'm trying to revive the value of the handwritten texts. Books used to be handwritten," Butres said.
As
part of an ongoing personal project, Butres intends to write out the
entire Bible in Syriac on a long scroll of leather just over a foot
wide. In three months of work, the tiny, intricate text he has etched
extends 16 feet in length and comprises the first five chapters of the
Old Testament.
"I believe that in writing out the Bible, we can discover it in a new, deeper perspective, more than just reading it," he said.
In
his icons, Butres often incorporates streams of handwritten text
related to the image, which contributes to preserving the Syriac
language, heritage and spirituality. The icon of Our Lady of Aradin, for
example, includes the Hail Mary in Syriac.
Butres' introduction
to iconography began at age 12; a deacon at his church in Qaraqosh
taught him the ancient art as well as formulas for producing colors and
varnishes from natural products, for example, using eggs and wine for
shades of red, using beeswax for varnish and using deer musk to give the
icon a scent.
Prayer and religious formation were part of Butres' daily life growing up in a Syriac Catholic family as one of 16 children.
"We
were very close to the church," said. "Every day at dusk, we went to
the church to pray," he recalled, adding that for "anyone who didn't
participate, there was no dinner." The same went for missing Sunday
Mass: no lunch and dinner.
That pious upbringing fostered
vocations, he said. One of Butres' sisters became a Dominican nun. His
brother, Nimatullah, is a priest serving the Syriac Catholic Diocese of
Our Lady of Deliverance, which is based in Bayonne, New Jersey. Father
Butres attended the dedication ceremony for the Our Lady of Aradin
shrine in New York.
The artistic Butres became a deacon at age 20
and studied theology at Holy Spirit University in Lebanon, earning a
bachelor's degree.
Butres intended to complete his master's degree
in theology, carrying out his research in Qaraqosh, but had to abandon
all he had accomplished there when Islamic State attacked his childhood
home.
That home, overtaken, gutted and ruined by Islamic State, is
under repair now. From Lebanon, Butres created the Our Lady of Qaraqosh
icon as a gift for his family, intending it as "a protector of the
house where she was always present."