Tuesday, 13 January 2026

“I Want to Drink the Entire Bosphorus!” On His All-Holiness Bartholomew’s 35 Years as Ecumenical Patriarch


By His Eminence Metropolitan Cleopas of Sweden

“The spirits return at night,

Little lights from unredeemed souls,

And if you look up there on the battlements,

You will see figures staring back at you.

And then a sense of lament overtakes you,

And leads you through the narrow alleys,

The City (Constantinople)—an old beloved one,

Whom you meet in a stranger’s embrace.

I want to drink the entire Bosphorus,

The borders of the world within me are changing.

I found her in the turns of poems,

Living among heavy-laden hanum women,

And I cast into the mouths of the chariots

My hollow truth—only half of it.

I want to drink the entire Bosphorus,

The borders of the world within me are changing.”

The “Bosphorus” by Nikos Zoudiaris is not simply a song of memory; it is a poetic space in which history returns at night—not to take revenge, but to ask for recognition.

The “Bosphorus” does not merely describe a place; it articulates a theology of memory. It is the passage where history, faith, and identity coexist.

The “Bosphorus” is not a geographical location; it is a metaphysical passage, a boundary between times, memories, and identities.

The “spirits” and the “little lights from unredeemed souls” do not haunt Constantinople with fear, but with responsibility. Constantinople is presented as an old beloved one, because it continues to define us, and our encounter with her engenders a silent maturity.

The “battlements” and the “figures staring back at you” transform the wanderer into a witness. Constantinople is not offered as a tourist landscape, but as a moral trial: whoever beholds her is summoned to reckon with the past.

The verses “I want to drink the entire Bosphorus / the borders of the world within me are changing” express a mystical desire for assimilation. “To drink” is not consumption; it is communion, participation.

The Bosphorus becomes a spiritual liquid that dissolves borders—not political ones, but existential ones. The human person is transformed inwardly as history passes through them, changing them, rendering them capable of bearing the weight of memory.

The Bosphorus, as both a physical and symbolic passage, becomes the boundary where it is not the borders of states that shift, but “the borders of the world within us.”

Precisely this stance of silent endurance and transformative witness has been embodied for thirty-five years by His All-Holiness Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew.

Patriarch Bartholomew is, in essence, a living bridge, like the Bosphorus of the poem.

Just as the Bosphorus unites continents without belonging entirely to either, so Bartholomew’s Patriarchal tenure has moved between East and West, tradition and renewal, faith and global responsibility, without negating either shore.

His Patriarchate was never the management of a fading past, but the ministry of a present under trial and a future in need of foundations.

Under his guidance, the Ecumenical Patriarchate became a global interlocutor, not because it sought a role, but because it refused to confine Orthodoxy within geographic or ethnic boundaries.

In inter-Christian and interreligious dialogue, in the defense of human dignity, in interventions for peace and reconciliation, the voice of Constantinople is heard clearly and recognizably.

Especially in the field of the protection of creation, the Patriarch’s witness revealed that ecology is not an ideology, but a theology; that the destruction of the world is not merely an environmental issue, but a spiritual wound—a rupture in humanity’s eucharistic relationship with the gift of life.

The ecological leadership and witness of Patriarch Bartholomew, which earned him internationally the title “Green Patriarch,” does not constitute a deviation from tradition, but a return to its core.

Creation is not neutral matter; it is a gift from God. Its destruction is not merely an ecological problem, but a spiritual one—sin!

Creation also, like the history of Constantinople in the poem, is not an object of exploitation, but a space of sacred relationship.

The presence of Patriarch Bartholomew at international conferences, universities, organizations, and international ecological symposia demonstrated that Orthodoxy possesses a coherent theology of ecology, grounded in ascetic restraint and a eucharistic relationship with the world, and made the Patriarchate a global interlocutor without altering in the slightest its ecclesiological identity. On the contrary, it rendered it visible and respected.

Of particular significance in this context is the reestablishment and reactivation of historic Holy Metropolises of the Ecumenical Throne in places where memory was in danger of becoming ruin.

This act was not an administrative formality. It was an ecclesiological statement: the Church does not abandon history, even when people are absent. These Metropolises were reestablished to testify that the Church operates by other criteria; spiritual, not circumstantial.

The First-Throned Church of Constantinople declared that it does not withdraw from history when numbers diminish, nor abandon places because voices have fallen silent. On the contrary, it bears witness that its time does not coincide with secular time, and that its presence is not measured by statistics, but by fidelity.

Within this framework, Patriarch Bartholomew emerged as one of the greatest personalities of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries, not because he imposed his voice, but because he offered it.

His All-Holiness belongs to that rare category of figures with global radiance who cannot be adequately interpreted in political or institutional terms. Simply put, as young people say, he is “a very ahead-of-his-time” Patriarch—one who dictates to history rather than follows it.

Just as in the “Bosphorus” “the borders of the world within us are changing,” so too his Patriarchal tenure shifted the boundaries of ecclesial presence—from the margins to the center of global dialogue; from introversion to universality; from managing the past to shared responsibility for the future.

In an era where power is measured by numbers, states, and armies, the Patriarchal tenure of Bartholomew proved that another form of leadership exists: moral authority without external force. From a Throne historically wounded and crucified, he elevated Orthodoxy into a global interlocutor.

The Patriarchal witness never claimed the fullness of the answer, but the authenticity of the stance.

He stood within the “embrace” of Constantinople without fear, transforming trial into ministry and memory into responsibility.

Almost thirty-five years since his enthronement on the Ecumenical Throne (October 22, 1991), Patriarch Bartholomew did not attempt to “reclaim” the City; he chose to re-signify it.

He did not seek to appropriate the Bosphorus of History, but as the Church always does, to stand upon it as a bridge; as a point of passage.

And perhaps this is the deepest message, both of the poem and of his Patriarchal journey: that the borders of the world do not change through power, but through the transformation of conscience; and that true leadership does not hold the helm in order to dominate, but to guide safely through the difficult passages of time.

Zoudiaris’ “Bosphorus” and the Patriarchal tenure of Bartholomew meet at one point: in the conviction that History is not healed by forgetting, but by transformation.

And if indeed “the borders of the world within us are changing,” this is due to personalities who, like the Ecumenical Patriarch, chose to serve not power, but the true, Christ-centered meaning of life—and the human person himself.

In the thirty-five years of his Patriarchal tenure, Bartholomew has stood with steadfastness, witness, and spiritual dignity.

Thus, Constantinople remains not merely a place of memory, but a center of responsibility, and Patriarch Bartholomew remains a guardian of memory and an architect of the future!

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