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Mailinglist:wwp@yahoogroups.com
Sender:G. Donald Bain
Date/Time:2004-Dec-02 20:46:00
Subject:About the Next Theme - Sanctuary

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wwp@yahoogroups.com: About the Next Theme - Sanctuary G. Donald Bain 2004-Dec-02 20:46:00
I wrote this little essay to spark ideas on how to creatively approach 
the theme for this season's World Wide Panorama. Discussion is 
encouraged. We will be asking for more attention to captions in this 
event, so think not only of how to make a memorable panorama, but of 
how to describe and explain it.

Don

========================

Sanctuary - originally, a consecrated place, a place where sacred 
things are kept.

  The sanctuary was the part of a Greek temple and later a Roman 
basilica where treasure was kept. In the Jewish Temple of Jerusalem it 
was where the Ark of the Covenant was kept, the sanctum sanctorum or 
holiest of holies. Roman basilicas evolved into Christian cathedrals 
and churches and the meaning evolved. In churches the sanctuary is 
defined as the part of the church where the altar is.

  Sanctuary can thus be taken literally - churches, cathedrals, 
basilicas, temples, mosques. Religous buildings are often of great 
beauty, the focus of community pride and a showcase for its artistry 
and wealth. They are repositories of history and art, sometimes the 
site of historic events. Churches are among the best places for cubic 
panoramas, often having elaborately decorated floors and ceilings.

By tradition fugitives could not be pursued into or arrested in a 
sanctuary, providing another meaning: a place of safety and refuge. 
This concept appears in various cultures. In Hawaii for example, the 
famous Pu'uhonua O Honaunau (and others) offered refuge from the harsh 
kapu system. The "Underground Railroad" in the pre-Civil War U.S. 
sheltered slaves moving north to freedom. Entire countries have been 
legal refuges for fugitives from persecution or prosecution.

A sanctuary can also be seen as a refuge not just from the law, but 
from strife and turmoil. The Greeks and Romans recognized sacred groves 
and forest clearings as sanctuaries. We now use the term to describe 
areas where wildlife is protected from hunting and predation. Wildlife 
refuges large and small exist all over the world, especially to shelter 
migratory birds.

A sanctuary can be any place of refuge, a shelter from the pressures of 
life, a refuge from stress and danger. It can be a library, a private 
club, a corner of the garden, a lonely hilltop, a coffee shop, or a 
friendly tavern. It could be a basement workshop, a tree-house, an 
artist's studio, a vacation cabin, a favorite campsite, even a hotel 
room or cruise ship cabin. People seek shelter in all kinds of places.

In the novel "Snow Falling on Cedars" a hollow tree is a personal 
sanctuary for several of the characters - the real tree actually exists 
in a park. To our ancient ancestors a cave would be a sanctuary. In the 
Cold War years some Americans built backyard fallout shelters as 
sanctuary in the event of nuclear war. Switzerland has an elaborate 
system of underground shelters dating back to World War II. For 
migrating birds a sheltered garden or thicket provides life-saving 
sanctuary. For Howard Hughes it was a hotel in Las Vegas. For a house 
cat it might be a cardboard box.

Sanctuary seems a topic appropriate to the time of year (at least at 
higher latitudes in the northern hemisphere), when the weather turns 
hostile and we looks inwards to the comfort of home and community. In 
much of the world it is a time of religous observance and festivity, of 
family reunion, and of giving.

We look forward to seeing all the interpretations of the concept of 
sanctuary, from grand architectural masterpieces to unique personal 
statements.


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