Restoration of Shroud of Turin Is Completed
Joyce Lang
Sep 23, 2002
http://www.zenit.org/english/visualizza.phtml?sid=25415
Code: ZE02092203
Date: 2002-09-22
Restoration of Shroud of Turin Is Completed
Patches and Additions Removed
TURIN, Italy, SEPT. 22, 2002 (Zenit.org).- The figure of the crucified man
imprinted on the Shroud of Turin can now be more clearly seen, following
its restoration by experts.
At the official presentation of the restored shroud Saturday, Cardinal Severino
Poletto, archbishop of Turin, explained that the purpose of the work was
to guarantee the conservation of the cloth. The work involved the removal
of patches sewn on the shroud 470 years ago.
The cardinal, who is the relic's pontifical custodian, said that the restoration
was carried out with the permission of the Holy See (which owns the shroud),
and in keeping with the advice of technical experts.
The restoration of the shroud, in which according to tradition the body of
Christ was wrapped after the crucifixion, was carried out last June and July
in the sacristy of the Turin cathedral. Work was done by a team headed by
Swiss expert Mechtild Flury-Lemberg, former director of the Abegg Museum
in Berne.
Thirty triangular patches, sewn by nuns of Chambery, France, in 1534, after
a fire damaged the relic in 1532, were removed from the shroud.
Also removed was the "Holland cloth" sewn on the reverse of the shroud 450
years ago to preserve it. The work also enabled the removal of dust and debris
that had accumulated on the cloth over the centuries. All the material removed
has been catalogued and placed in safekeeping.
During the 1978 exposition of the relic, pilgrims read a sign stating: "Do
not pay attention to the dark side borders." It was already evident at that
time that the patches and Holland cloth made it difficult to recognized the
figure of the crucified man that has remained mysteriously imprinted on the
linen.
This sign is no longer necessary. The restoration makes it easier to recognized
this image, which has undergone changes, since the holes the patches covered
are now visible.
Cardinal Poletto said the shroud must not become a source of conflict, division
or controversy, but a point of reference for deeper reflection and prayer.
He expressed the hope that Russian Orthodox Patriarch Alexy II and John Paul
II will be able to meet in Turin and pray together before the shroud. A great
devotion to the shroud exists in Russia.
The shroud, measuring 4.39 meters in length and 1.15 meters in width (14.5
feet by 3.5 feet), has now been placed in a climate-controlled urn. The chapel
of the Turin cathedral where the shroud is kept is constantly under surveillance.
The restoration resulted in a lot of digital information. For the first time,
both sides of the Shroud of Turin have been reproduced on computers.
Cardinal Poletto said a dossier will be sent to the Vatican, which could
then call for further scientific studies of the shroud.
There is historical evidence of the shroud's existence since the 14th century,
although some historians say they can document its presence earlier, with
stages in Jerusalem, Odessa, Constantinople and Athens.
A 1988 carbon-14 study, carried out in laboratories of Oxford, England; Tucson,
Arizona; and Zurich, Switzerland, concluded that the shroud was made in the
Middle Ages. Numerous scientists, however, challenged this result.
The Catholic Church has made no pronouncements on its origin. When John Paul
II visited the relic in May 1998, he said: "As it is not a matter of faith,
the Church has no specific competence to pronounce itself on these questions.
It entrusts the task of research to scientists, to arrive at appropriate
answers for questions related to this cloth."
"What really counts for believers is that the holy shroud is a mirror of
the Gospel," the Holy Father explained, emphasizing that there is a convergence
between the Gospel narrative and the image of the man on the cloth.