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Thread: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

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  1. #1

    Default Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    What to say in short…the last unquestionable authority in Serbian people, widely respected among theologians of all faiths (of whom, representative of all major religions are coming to Belgrade to funeral)… 50 kg old man who waked everywhere on foot or by public transportation, known for his Jesus like modesty, being bishop in Kosovo for 33 years, in harsh years of Albanian and communist oppression, being beaten and stoned on the roads and streets where he walked alone…Any way, 3 days of mourning were declared in Serbia, line of people coming to give him last honor walking by his open coffin is around 2 km long…Funeral will be in Thursday in Rakovica monastery...



  2. #2

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    A travesty if this man is not made a Saint... R.I.P.
    قرطاج يجب ان تدمر

  3. #3
    Confederate Soldier's Avatar Ordinarius
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    This is indeed a shame, R.I.P. friend.
    Proud Crusader for the F.A.I.T.H. and Gunslinger for DIXIE
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  4. #4
    Pious Agnost's Avatar Praefectus
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    RIP

    I had never even heard of this man, and yet I am very saddened by his death

  5. #5

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    So very sad. A good man. Hopefully they will consider sainthood for him.
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  6. #6
    CtrlAltDe1337's Avatar Praepositus
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Rest in peace...


  7. #7

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Shouldn't this be in the political mudpit?

  8. #8
    Indefinitely Banned
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    my condolences to his family and his flock

  9. #9

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Hah, what are you sad about? He lived free, he died free. What a blessing...

  10. #10
    Arch-hereticK's Avatar Indefinitely Banned
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    I disagree with everything this man stood for, but he seems like an alright guy.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Condolences.

    A bringer of peace to a place where peace is difficult to find.
    This space intentionally left blank.

  12. #12

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    RIP
    “All things have sprung from nothing and are borne forward to infinity. Who can follow out such an astonishing career? The Author of these wonders, and He alone, can comprehend them.” - Blaise Pascal
    To see a world in a grain of sand,
    And a heaven in a wild flower,
    Hold infinity in the palm of your hand,
    And eternity in an hour.


  13. #13
    Barry Goldwater's Avatar Mr. Conservative
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Rest in peace.

  14. #14
    nce_wht_guy's Avatar Vicarius
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Damn! How did we not get this guy back in the 90's?
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  15. #15
    Space Wolves's Avatar Primicerius
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    R.I.P. Never knew ya, but ya got yourself some good support

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  16. #16

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Rest in piece


  17. #17
    il padrino's Avatar Protector Domesticus
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    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Rest in peace Pavle







  18. #18

    Default Re: Patriarch of Serbia have died in Sunday, aged 95

    Patriarch Pavle obituary

    The Guardian, Thursday December 3 2009
    Robin Fox

    Spoiler Alert, click show to read: 
    Patriarch Pavle obituary

    Serbian Orthodox leader who guided his church through Yugoslavia's demise

    Robin Fox
    guardian.co.uk, Thursday 3 December 2009 18.46 GMT


    His Holiness Pavle, Archbishop of Pec, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox church – it is a grand title, and in some ways seems at odds with the life of the man who bore it for almost 19 years. As far as possible, Patriarch Pavle, who has died aged 95, lived a life of humble simplicity. In the quiet and gentle way he dealt with everyone he met, it was possible to see the very deep spirituality and personal holiness and wisdom that so many people recognised in him – holiness and wisdom which, perhaps, account for the great respect and affection that so many people in Serbia, whether religious or not, had for him.

    A lively example of this – and of his quick and sometimes mischievous wit – can be seen in the frequently told anecdote of his response to the arrival of other bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church for a meeting of the Holy Synod. Looking out of the window of his rather spartan rooms in the patriarchate at the assembled Mercedes and BMWs in which his colleagues were arriving, he wondered out loud what the bishops would be travelling in had they not taken vows of poverty. He usually travelled by public transport, and was a familiar sight on the buses and trams of Belgrade.

    Pavle's tenure in the office of patriarch spanned a difficult period in the life of both his church and his country. Taking office in December 1990, he was called on to guide the church through the years of Yugoslavia's protracted and violent demise, the sanctions imposed on Serbia as a result, and, finally, the crisis over Kosovo and the Nato bombing campaign of 1999, which was the result of events there. During this period, there were moments when his actions may have seemed contradictory: making joint statements with the leaders of the Muslim and Catholic communities on Bosnia condemning inter-ethnic hatred and violence, while remaining close to the Bosnian Serb leadership; wavering between supporting and condemning president Slobodan Milosevic during the 1990s.

    He was perhaps politically naive, especially when facing the situation of a resurgent national church emerging from long decades of communist repression, and a resurgent nationalist political movement seeking to settle old scores and create a "greater Serbia", a movement that sought to co-opt the church into validating its aims. However, his main concern was always for the people and the church he loved, and he had the grace to apologise publicly when he realised that he had taken false steps in the political arena.

    Born in the early months of the first world war, Pavle was educated in his local village school in Slavonia (now in Croatia), and later in Tuzla (now in Bosnia-Herzegovina) and Belgrade, before entering the Orthodox seminary in Sarajevo in 1930 – in spite of showing a far greater aptitude for technical subjects than for theology. In 1936 he moved to the medical faculty of Belgrade University, transferring later to the theological faculty, and enlisting in the army medical corps when the second world war broke out.

    During the Nazi and Bulgarian occupation, he worked first in Belgrade, clearing debris from the bombing, and later in various monasteries as a teacher of refugee children. In this period, he was also diagnosed with tuberculosis, but after the war his health improved greatly.

    He entered monastic orders and took the name Pavle in 1948 – he had been born Gojko Stojcevic – spending time in the monasteries of Blagovestenje and Raca, and teaching in the seminary in Prizren in Kosovo. He continued his academic studies, and in 1957 he was awarded a doctorate in New Testament and liturgy by the Theological Academy in Athens, and consecrated as bishop of Raska and Prizren, a diocese covering southern Serbia and Kosovo, with large Muslim and Albanian minorities. More than 30 years later, in December 1990, he was elected patriarch, taking the place of Patriarch German, who was ill and would die the following year.

    Pavle's attachment to Kosovo remained strong throughout his life and ministry, and it caused great pain and sadness for him to see the region torn apart by inter-ethnic violence in the late 1990s. He worked tirelessly to bring the plight of the Orthodox population there – and the region's many cultural treasures in its ancient monasteries and monuments – to the attention of the world, but sadly his quiet voice often went unheard.

    The final years of his life were marked by increasing frailty and ill health, and from the autumn of 2007, he was a permanent resident in the military medical academy in Belgrade, although he continued for some time to issue public statements and comments.

    • Patriarch Pavle (Gojko Stojcevic), priest, born 11 September 1914; died 15 November 2009


    http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2009...pavle-obituary

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