Located to the south of the Alaeddin Hill and built by Assumptionist priests, this Roman Catholic church was made of cut Sille stone of Konya and completed in 1910. The church, which was fermented with the city's stone and soil, has survived to the present day as a concrete example of the great Sufi tradition based on tolerance. The church, which attracts great attention with its Gothic style façade, is frequently visited by Christian communities who want to see the places and regions where St. Paul, who visited Konya as part of his first missionary trip, passed, and is named after him. A clergyman from Italy informs the visitors in the church.
St. Paul’s Church stands out today...