Orthodox pilgrims praying on the beach of St Columba's Bay on Iona, Scotland

katherine2001

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Being of Scottish descent, I would love to visit Scotland (which will probably never happen due to cost), and I would definitely visit Iona (and it's great that there is an Orthodox monastery on the island again). if I went there, along with the Inner and Outer Hebrides, especially the Isles of Skye, Lewis, and Mull.

The photos I've seen of Scotland show that there is much beauty there. I would love to be able to spend a long time there and really get to see as many parts as I could.
 
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katherine2001

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Hmmmmm .... I would have said that I go "to" and island, not that I go "on" an island. But I would say that I live "on" an island.

Then again, there are differences in English depending upon where one lives. And I may even have it wrong (though most of the time I am fortunate that it comes easily to me just in how it sounds). But I listen to a lot of British English, so that can trip me up as well. (And I notice that I sometimes construct VERY sloppy sentences on the internet as opposed to other written forms of communication.)

If you step foot on the island, you are "on" the island. Saying "on the island" makes perfect sense to me, and it is what I would say, but I had an aunt who was an English teacher, and I am an anglophile (and though this term doesn't exist as far as I know, a Scotophile), and I am American.
 
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Anhelyna

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Isn't the English language fun ? :)

I was chatting with our priest this morning - about language - he's Ukrainian and has some English - he's not fluent by any manner of means but is easily understandable . I usually go through the Gospel with him before Liturgy [ he uses both languages for the Gospel - though Liturgy is 99.5% Ukrainian] He preaches in Ukrainian and an abbreviated version in English. I found myself explaining today that in Ukrainian each letter has only 1 sound - but this is not so in English , and even worse, sometimes letters don't sound , but alter the sound of a preceding letter. It's not the first time there has been a gentle sound of Ангелина ? which means - 'what's the next word ?" :D
 
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Hmmmmm .... I would have said that I go "to" and island, not that I go "on" an island. But I would say that I live "on" an island.

Then again, there are differences in English depending upon where one lives. And I may even have it wrong (though most of the time I am fortunate that it comes easily to me just in how it sounds). But I listen to a lot of British English, so that can trip me up as well. (And I notice that I sometimes construct VERY sloppy sentences on the internet as opposed to other written forms of communication.)

If you step foot on the island, you are "on" the island. Saying "on the island" makes perfect sense to me, and it is what I would say, but I had an aunt who was an English teacher, and I am an anglophile (and though this term doesn't exist as far as I know, a Scotophile), and I am American.

Actually, I agree with you. :) But that's slightly different from what I said.

I go to an island.
I live on an island.
I am on the island.
I set foot on the island.

And while we're at it, I look at the island. The water is around the island. I can't expect you'd much use "in the island" or "under the island" but I wouldn't rule it out. ;)

Anyway, I think "on" the island would be the thing I would say in most cases. I think I was responding to someone mentioning they would say that they "go on the island" .... in that one case I would not use "on" but "to" instead. But then again, I might say "I go to the hairdresser on the island" if her salon is there - except I don't go much to hairdressers anyway. ;)

I may be wrong somewhere in there as well. :) Who would have thought this thread would become a discussion of prepositions, LOL.

It's great to see you, Katherine!!!
 
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Gxg (G²)

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ORTHODOX GREAT BRITAIN

st-columba-of-iona-fr-jurewicz.jpg

Saint Columba of Iona, Scotland (+521)

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Isle of Iona, Scotland

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Source:

MULL MONASTERY, SCOTLAND

ONE PHOTOGRAPH - ORTHODOX MULL MONASTERY, SCOTLAND

This is we, the pilgrims of last summer, praying on the beach of St Columba’s Bay on Iona. When I close my eyes and think back to 2015, this is the image that captures it best: a handful of people, travelling huge distances to be here and pray for a while. I love the silence of it, the strangeness of it, I love how absorbed by prayer we were and how completely unaware of being photographed.

We took the difficult path to the Bay that morning. We had woken up very early and celebrated the Liturgy in the small chapel we improvised in the dining room. We crossed by ferry from Mull to Iona, and set out on a three hour-walk through the harsh, unpopulated heights of the island. We stopped several times to rest and take in the wild beauty of this tiny piece of earth surrounded by water. There was time to pray together, and there was time to pray alone.

We must have spent an hour or even more at the Bay. We had carried an icon of the Celtic Saints with us, which we placed it on a stone and prayed. None of us knew we were being photographed. We were simply praying, each of us trying to bring light into the story of our own life, yet somehow together.

Thank you all who have joined me last summer, and thank you all who have joined me for the longer, still ongoing pilgrimage of founding this monastery. It is not an easy walk. It sometimes gets too difficult, and we must stop for a while and pray. We are all coming from our own separate stories, yet this pilgrimage somehow connects us and makes us one.

And, as we struggle and we fall, as we take one step forward and one backwards, as we intertwine our life stories with the story of this monastery – unknown to us, it all enters God’s eternal memory, like a large, silent photograph which captures it all, so that nothing is lost and nothing is wasted.

As an aside, sometimes it is hard for me to remember that Scotland actually has beaches....but being visually oriented, it adds a lot when seeing the imagery and all of the ways Scotland is truly beautiful. Hoping to go there someday.

Good stuff :)
 
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