TENTH ANNIVERSARY OF THE SAINT
CATHERINES FOUNDATION
London 13 June 2006 - Their Royal
Highnesses Crown Prince Alexander,
Crown Princess Katherine and Prince
Philip were present last night in
the British Library London for the
10th Anniversary Gala Dinner in aid
of the Saint Catherine’s Foundation.
Their Royal Highnesses The Prince of
Wales and The Duchess of Cornwall
were unable to attend owing to the
death of The Duchess of Cornwall’s
father Major Bruce Shand on Sunday.
HRH Crown Princess Katherine is
the President of the American
Associates of the Saint Catherine’s
Foundation and board member of the
United Kingdom Association.
The Prince of Wales is the patron
of the Saint Catherine Foundation,
which has been set up to help St
Catherine's Monastery at Mount
Sinai, in Egypt, and in particular
to work with the monastery's 20
monks to conserve priceless
manuscripts and icons collected over
more than 1500 years.
The isolated Orthodox monastery's
collection of 4500 books and scrolls
are second only to the Vatican
collection in volume and importance.
St Catherine's Monastery also
houses the world's most important
collection of icons, according to
the foundation. Rare encaustic
panels from the 6th and 7th
centuries survived the ravages of
the iconoclasts - who destroyed
images used in religious worship -
thanks to the monastery's isolation.
The St Catherine Foundation was
launched in London on 14 June 1996
in the presence of The Prince of
Wales, the Archbishop of Canterbury,
Dr George Carey, and the monastery's
abbot, Archbishop Damianos of Sinai.
The site of St Catherine's
Monastery is sacred to three
religions: Christianity, Islam and
Judaism all honour Mount Sinai as
the place where Moses had the vision
of the Burning Bush and later
received the Ten Commandments.
After the Islamic conquest of the
Sinai Peninsula, the Prophet
Mohammed provided the monastery with
a letter of protection, copies of
which can still be seen at St
Catherine's Monastery.
The Anglican bishop of London,
Richard Chartres, who is a trustee
of the foundation, described St
Catherine's as "a rare and powerful
symbol of a long history of mutual
respect between the world's two
biggest religions, Islam and
Christianity".
The treasures of St Catherine's
monastery are so extensive and
precious that the Foundation and the
monks acknowledge that the resources
of the monastery have been
overwhelmed by the task of
safeguarding them.
The foundation hopes to increase
public awareness of St Catherine's
internationally and to raise funds
for the monastery's buildings and
the collections. It has enlisted
Camberwell College of Arts in south
London - one of Britain's leading
art schools - to help with a
conservation programme for the
books, manuscripts and icons.
In the Sinai desert, heat can
seriously damage books and papers,
so a priority for the foundation is
to create environmentally controlled
storage and archive systems