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Some four hours drive from Axum - plus a further two
hours stiff uphill walk from the point where the road ends - lies
the spectacular monastery of Debra Damo, situated on an isolated
cliff top in one of the wildest parts of Tigray.
Damo is unique and unforgettable although, as with
most Ethiopian monasteries, women are not allowed to enter it. Even
so, there is a daunting obstacle to the monastery: the only means of
access is a climb of twenty-five meters up a sheer cliff. Monks
lower a safety rope which visitors tie around their waists. Then
they use a second, thicker rope to climb with. Some may reflect, as
they make their way to the top, that because of this arduous,
dangerous ascent the art treasures of Debra Damo have remained
intact through the monastery-s 1,400 tumultuous years of history.
The treasures include an extensive collection of
illuminated manuscripts - among them the oldest surviving fragments
of texts anywhere in Ethiopia - and intricate carvings on the beams
and ceiling of the ancient church around which the monastery is
built. There are no murals as such, but a large number of paintings
are preserved there including several that depict the legend of the
foundation of Debra Damo by Abuna Aragawi. He is a Saint who is
believed to have been lifted onto the cliff top by a giant serpent.
According to the legend expressed in a number of the paintings, the
Archangel Gabriel stood by with a sword ready to slay the snake if
it attacked Abuna Aragawi. It did not, however, and wrapped in its
coils the Saint reached the top safely, dropping his cross on a
stone, which is today kissed by all who enter the monastery.
The bluff on which Damo stands is a real-life
Shangri-La. Remote and beautiful, far from the hustle and bustle of
the late twentieth century, the cool celestial island of rock offers
panoramic views over the surrounding countryside and complete
seclusion and peace for the hundred or so monks and deacons who live
there. Though local people give food and supplies, the monastic
community is virtually self- sufficient, growing selected crops and
rearing sheep and goats for their milk and meat. The monastery also
has its own reservoirs - spectacular caverns hewn deep beneath the
surface of the cliff-top centuries ago. It is only possible to
explore the full extent of these ancient cisterns during droughts,
when they run dry. Usually they are full and coated by a film of
green lichen. If you visit them when empty, however, you will find a
maze of tunnels and chiselled hollows strikingly reminiscent of the
rock-hewn churches of Lalibela. |