From http://www.irishtimes.com/newspaper/ireland/2011/1013/1224305705719.html
GARDAÍ AND priests are baffled by the theft from a historic abbey of
three relics of the “true cross” on which Jesus Christ was crucified.
The priceless artefacts were stolen by a gang of three men on Tuesday
evening from Holy Cross Abbey near Cashel in Co Tipperary.
One of
the relics, authenticated by the Vatican as a piece of the crucifix used
in Christ’s crucifixion, was handed over to the abbey in the 12th
century by King Donal Mór O’Brien, while the other two were presented by
St Peter’s Basilica in Rome in 1977.
It appears that the gang
deliberately targeted the relics. Neither local priests nor
investigating gardaí are aware of any market for such items. The
12th-century relic was contained in a silver monstrance (elaborate
cross), which itself dates from the 14th century, while the other two
pieces are in a cruciform container.
They were locked away in a
steel cabinet used to display the items within the abbey, which has
itself been a national monument since 1880.
A set of keys for the
cabinet was stolen about three weeks ago and, while the locks were
changed in the meantime, the men who took the relics used an
angle-grinder, hammer and screwdriver to forcibly open the display
cabinet.
Parish priest of Holy Cross Fr Tom Breen said the local
clergy and parishioners were “devastated”. “People worship or pray
before relics for different intentions and, over the centuries, it
became a tremendous source of devotion and pilgrimage,” Fr Breen said
yesterday. “Even three weeks ago, we had the novena here and there was a
great sense of devotion to it.”
He described the theft as
“baffling” and appealed to the thieves to return the artefacts. “Maybe
they’re under a misapprehension that it was of great commercial value
but my plea would be not to damage it and to bring it back.
“It’s very upsetting. I can understand a poor box being rifled but when you take the relic, it’s gone . . . it’s just terrible.”
A
garda said the theft was difficult to understand. “They’re not
something that could be brought down any day of the week to a car-boot
sale, but they obviously knew what they were looking for.”
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