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German, Serbian Patriarch

German (Serbian Cyrillic: Герман, English equivalent: Herman; 19 August 1899 – 27 August 1991) was the 43rd Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church from 1958 to 1990.[1] He was successful in revitalizing the Serbian Orthodox Church to a certain extent during the Communist period, despite two schisms that occurred during his tenure.[2]


German
Archbishop of Peć, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Serbian Patriarch
ChurchSerbian Orthodox Church
SeeBelgrade
Installed14 September 1958
Retired30 November 1990
PredecessorVikentije II
SuccessorPavle
Orders
Ordination1927
Consecration1951
Personal details
Born
Hranislav Đorić

(1899-08-19)19 August 1899
Died27 August 1991(1991-08-27) (aged 92)
Belgrade, SFR Yugoslavia
Signature
Styles of
Serbian Patriarch German
Reference styleHis Holiness
Spoken styleYour Holiness
Religious stylePatriarch
Posthumous styleHis Holiness Patriarch German of Blessed Repose

The full title of German was: His Holiness, the Archbishop of Peć, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Serbian Patriarch German (Serbian: Његова светост, Архиепископ пећки, Митрополит београдско-карловачки и Патријарх српски, Герман)

Education and early career edit

Patriarch German was born Hranislav Đorić on August 19, 1899, in the spa town of Jošanička Banja in central Serbia, in a family of teachers, and latter priest. His father, Mihajlo Đorić of Velika Drenova, graduated from Belgrade's prestigious Seminary (Serbian: Београдска богословија) in 1895. Hranislav Đorić received a broad education and was among most educated members of the Serbian clergy, attending primary school in Velika Drenova and Kruševac, seminary in Belgrade and Sremski Karlovci (graduating in 1921), studying law in Paris' Sorbonne and finally graduating from the University of Belgrade's Orthodox Theology Faculty in 1942.

He was ordained a deacon by the bishop of Žiča Jefrem, and appointed the clerk of the Canon-law Court in Čačak and also a catechist in the Čačak's high school. Due to ill health, he left the administrative jobs and 1927, he was ordained a presbyter, receiving his own parish of Miokovci. In 1931 he was transferred to a parish in Vrnjačka Banja. After the election of Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo V in 1938, father Hranislav became a referent of the Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church. In that capacity, he was elected a vicar bishop of Moravica and, becoming a widower, he took monastic vows in Studenica monastery, July 7, 1951, acquiring the name German (Herman). Patriarch Vikentije, together with bishops Valerijan of Šumadija, Nikanor of Bačka and Vasilije of Banja Luka ordained him a bishop, July 15 in Cathedral Church of Belgrade. The new bishop became at the same time the secretary general of the Holy Synod and editor in chief of the Glasnik, the official gazette of the Serbian Orthodox Church.

In 1952 he was appointed a bishop of the Eparchy of Buda in Hungary, by Holy Assembly of Hiyerarchs of Serbian Orthodox Church. However, as Hungarian authorities didn't approve his appointment neither allowed him to enter the country, so he was never officially enthroned. In 1956 he was appointed the bishop of Žiča, at that time, semi-officially, the second office of importance in the church, after the patriarch. In this capacity, he was also an administrator (acting bishop) of Budimlja and Polimlje and Raška and Prizren eparchies.

Patriarch edit

Appointment controversy edit

When Patriarch Vikentije II suddenly died on July 5, 1958, internal strife struck the church leadership and no agreement could be reached on who would succeed him. German was not even appointed as the guardian of the throne (acting patriarch), instead the bishop of Braničevo, Hrizostom Vojinović was appointed to vacate the post. It is believed that German's election was a compromise, but the still popular story is that Aleksandar Ranković, the top Serbian Communist official at that time, and later Josip Broz Tito's deputy, entered the Holy Synod's session, bringing German inside, and saying: "This is your new patriarch!"

German was elected the 43rd Patriarch of Peć on September 14, 1958. However, some sources claim a much higher number, as a result of over a dozen of people who occupied the throne, but were not officially ordained or recognized as such (such as several rebel-patriarchs in the 16th century during the Ottoman occupation) or the Patriarchs of Karlovci in Austria-Hungary which are not counted in the list of official patriarchs (especially not as patriarchs of Peć, instead calling themselves patriarchs of the Serbs).

Schisms edit

Like most Orthodox churches in the Eastern Bloc, the Serbian Orthodox Church under German was forced to strike a modus vivendi with the ruling League of Communists in order to procure the space it needed to operate. The diaspora priests, led by the vocally anti-communist Bishop Dionisije, claimed that the Belgrade "red priests" had acquiesced too early.[3] After the Holy Synod started a trial against Dionisije for allegations about his personal life, he went into schism with the church in November 1963.[4] Starting in 1977, the group assumed the name "Free Serbian Orthodox Church". It was reconciled with the SOC in 1992, under German's successor Pavle.[5]

The schism of the Macedonian Orthodox Church is a much deeper and complicated issue. It began in 1958, the very year of German's election, with an allegedly willing acceptance of the autonomy of Ohrid Archbishopric proclaimed by the archbishop Dositej. This was a great blow to German's religious authority as it was a forced acceptance, pushed by the Communist Party. In the next 9 years, the patriarch and archbishop held several joint liturgies, even with the heads of other Orthodox Churches. However, in 1967, archbishop Dositej completely split his archbishopric (within the borders of the SR Macedonia) from the mother church, claiming heritage from the historical Archbishopric of Ohrid, which had been non-existent for 200 years. German and the Serbian Orthodox Church, claiming the separation was forced and uncanonical (in other words, they deemed it a church established by the Communists) ended any canonical communication with the Macedonian Orthodox Church. In turn, German's example was followed by all the other Orthodox Churches. The problem continued after German and the breakup of Yugoslavia, and it became a highly political issue, not only with the Serbian Orthodox Church, but with the Church of Greece and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church. This schism continued until 2022, when the Macedonian church reconciled with the Serbian Patriarchate and was granted full autonomy and subsequently autocephaly by Patriarch Porfirije of Serbia.

Revitalization and consequences edit

 
Grave of Patriarch German of Serbia in Belgrade's St. Mark's Church

German set to revitalize the Serbian Orthodox Church, which (like other religious communities in Yugoslavia) received no state support. During his entire tenure, he kept a low profile, while achieving certain goals in this direction. Despite harsh conditions, he managed to form several new dioceses: Western Europe (1969), Australia (1973), Vranje (1975) and Canada (1983).

He oversaw the finishing works on the new seminary complex of buildings in Belgrade (including the campus) in 1958, so today the entire neighborhood surrounding the complex is known as Bogoslovija (Serbian for seminary). He also opened new seminary in the Krka monastery in SR Croatia. He was very involved in appointing bishops, staunchly pushing his own candidates, especially in the case of the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral after the Communists arrested Metropolitan Arsenije Bradvarević in 1954, but German managed to appoint his protégé, Danilo Dajković in 1961[citation needed]. He also sent many priests to SR Montenegro as clerical activities had almost completely ceased there after the war[citation needed].

In 1984, German visited the site of the Jasenovac concentration camp, saying a now famous line: "To forgive, we must ...to forget, we must not" (Опростити морамо, заборавити не смемо).[6]

Many consider German's greatest achievement to be his successful campaign for the resumption of the construction of the Church of Saint Sava in Belgrade, which was stopped in 1941. In 26 years from his appointment, he urged the Communist government 88 times until they finally authorized the construction to continue in 1984. Being a massive project, it took a long time and the church was completed in 2021.

Patriarch German was a pragmatic religious leader in times that were very oppressive for religion. After the death of Josip Broz Tito in 1980, he slowly pushed church issues as Yugoslav society changed and nationalism grew among the various peoples, and in the end he was universally popular among the Serbs and had become a part of the Serbian social elite.

In 1989, patriarch German broke his hip, which led to a series of surgeries and repeated injuries, so the already old patriarch was unable to perform his duties. As a result of this, the Holy Synod declared him incapacitated on November 30, 1990, and appointed the metropolitan bishop of Zagreb and Ljubljana Jovan Pavlović as the guardian of the throne and elected the new patriarch, Pavle, on December 1, 1990. Patriarch German died in the VMA hospital in Belgrade on August 27, 1991, aged 92, and was buried in Belgrade's St. Mark's Church.

His tenure of 32 years is one of the longest in the history of the Serbian Orthodox Church.

He was awarded the Order of Saint Sava,[7] Order of the Yugoslav flag, Legion of Honour, Order of George I, National Order of the Cedar and a number of other decorations and awards.[8]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Serbian Orthodox Church, history 2009-04-18 at the Wayback Machine at spc.rs
  2. ^ Вуковић 1996, pp. 133.
  3. ^ Hockenos, Paul (2003). Homeland Calling: Exile Patriotism & the Balkan Wars. Cornell University Press. pp. 121–122. ISBN 978-0-8014-4158-5.
  4. ^ Spasović, Stanimir; Miletić, Srboljub. . svetosavlje.org (in Serbian). Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2020.
  5. ^ Puzović, Predrag (1996). "Епархије Српске православне цркве у расејању" (PDF). Богословље: Часопис Православног богословског факултета у Београду (in Serbian). 40 (1–2): 87–96.
  6. ^ Administrator. "БОРБА ЗА ВЕРУ - Православни став према неправославној фрази "опростити морамо, заборавити не смемо"". borbazaveru.info.
  7. ^ Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. p. 97.
  8. ^ Acović, Dragomir (2012). Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. Belgrade: Službeni Glasnik. pp. 324–329.

Bibliography edit

  • Вуковић, Сава (1996). Српски јерарси од деветог до двадесетог века (Serbian Hierarchs from the 9th to the 20th Century). Евро, Унирекс, Каленић.
  • Serbian Church in History at the Orthodox Research Institute
  • Ko je ko u Jugoslaviji 1970; Hronometar, Belgrade
  • Srpska porodična enciklopedija, Vol. VI (2006); Narodna knjiga and Politika NM; ISBN 86-331-2933-7 (NK)
  • Mala Prosvetina Enciklopedija, Third edition (1985); Prosveta; ISBN 86-07-00001-2

External links edit

  • Documentary movie about German (in Serbian)
Eastern Orthodox Church titles
Preceded by Serbian Patriarch
Metropolitan Bishop of Belgrade and Karlovci

1958–1990
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Žiča
1956–1958
Succeeded by
Vasilije Kostić
Preceded by
Hrizostom Vojinović
Bishop of Buda
1952–1956
Succeeded by
Arsenije Bradvarević

german, serbian, patriarch, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, april, 2009, learn, when, remove, this, message, g. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations April 2009 Learn how and when to remove this message German Serbian Cyrillic German English equivalent Herman 19 August 1899 27 August 1991 was the 43rd Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church from 1958 to 1990 1 He was successful in revitalizing the Serbian Orthodox Church to a certain extent during the Communist period despite two schisms that occurred during his tenure 2 His HolinessGermanArchbishop of Pec Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci and Serbian PatriarchChurchSerbian Orthodox ChurchSeeBelgradeInstalled14 September 1958Retired30 November 1990PredecessorVikentije IISuccessorPavleOrdersOrdination1927Consecration1951Personal detailsBornHranislav Đoric 1899 08 19 19 August 1899Josanicka Banja Kingdom of SerbiaDied27 August 1991 1991 08 27 aged 92 Belgrade SFR YugoslaviaSignature Styles of Serbian Patriarch GermanReference styleHis HolinessSpoken styleYour HolinessReligious stylePatriarchPosthumous styleHis Holiness Patriarch German of Blessed Repose The full title of German was His Holiness the Archbishop of Pec Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci and Serbian Patriarch German Serbian Њegova svetost Arhiepiskop peћki Mitropolit beogradsko karlovachki i Patriјarh srpski German Contents 1 Education and early career 2 Patriarch 2 1 Appointment controversy 2 2 Schisms 2 3 Revitalization and consequences 3 See also 4 References 5 Bibliography 6 External linksEducation and early career editPatriarch German was born Hranislav Đoric on August 19 1899 in the spa town of Josanicka Banja in central Serbia in a family of teachers and latter priest His father Mihajlo Đoric of Velika Drenova graduated from Belgrade s prestigious Seminary Serbian Beogradska bogosloviјa in 1895 Hranislav Đoric received a broad education and was among most educated members of the Serbian clergy attending primary school in Velika Drenova and Krusevac seminary in Belgrade and Sremski Karlovci graduating in 1921 studying law in Paris Sorbonne and finally graduating from the University of Belgrade s Orthodox Theology Faculty in 1942 He was ordained a deacon by the bishop of Zica Jefrem and appointed the clerk of the Canon law Court in Cacak and also a catechist in the Cacak s high school Due to ill health he left the administrative jobs and 1927 he was ordained a presbyter receiving his own parish of Miokovci In 1931 he was transferred to a parish in Vrnjacka Banja After the election of Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo V in 1938 father Hranislav became a referent of the Holy Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church In that capacity he was elected a vicar bishop of Moravica and becoming a widower he took monastic vows in Studenica monastery July 7 1951 acquiring the name German Herman Patriarch Vikentije together with bishops Valerijan of Sumadija Nikanor of Backa and Vasilije of Banja Luka ordained him a bishop July 15 in Cathedral Church of Belgrade The new bishop became at the same time the secretary general of the Holy Synod and editor in chief of the Glasnik the official gazette of the Serbian Orthodox Church In 1952 he was appointed a bishop of the Eparchy of Buda in Hungary by Holy Assembly of Hiyerarchs of Serbian Orthodox Church However as Hungarian authorities didn t approve his appointment neither allowed him to enter the country so he was never officially enthroned In 1956 he was appointed the bishop of Zica at that time semi officially the second office of importance in the church after the patriarch In this capacity he was also an administrator acting bishop of Budimlja and Polimlje and Raska and Prizren eparchies Patriarch editAppointment controversy edit When Patriarch Vikentije II suddenly died on July 5 1958 internal strife struck the church leadership and no agreement could be reached on who would succeed him German was not even appointed as the guardian of the throne acting patriarch instead the bishop of Branicevo Hrizostom Vojinovic was appointed to vacate the post It is believed that German s election was a compromise but the still popular story is that Aleksandar Rankovic the top Serbian Communist official at that time and later Josip Broz Tito s deputy entered the Holy Synod s session bringing German inside and saying This is your new patriarch German was elected the 43rd Patriarch of Pec on September 14 1958 However some sources claim a much higher number as a result of over a dozen of people who occupied the throne but were not officially ordained or recognized as such such as several rebel patriarchs in the 16th century during the Ottoman occupation or the Patriarchs of Karlovci in Austria Hungary which are not counted in the list of official patriarchs especially not as patriarchs of Pec instead calling themselves patriarchs of the Serbs Schisms edit Like most Orthodox churches in the Eastern Bloc the Serbian Orthodox Church under German was forced to strike a modus vivendi with the ruling League of Communists in order to procure the space it needed to operate The diaspora priests led by the vocally anti communist Bishop Dionisije claimed that the Belgrade red priests had acquiesced too early 3 After the Holy Synod started a trial against Dionisije for allegations about his personal life he went into schism with the church in November 1963 4 Starting in 1977 the group assumed the name Free Serbian Orthodox Church It was reconciled with the SOC in 1992 under German s successor Pavle 5 The schism of the Macedonian Orthodox Church is a much deeper and complicated issue It began in 1958 the very year of German s election with an allegedly willing acceptance of the autonomy of Ohrid Archbishopric proclaimed by the archbishop Dositej This was a great blow to German s religious authority as it was a forced acceptance pushed by the Communist Party In the next 9 years the patriarch and archbishop held several joint liturgies even with the heads of other Orthodox Churches However in 1967 archbishop Dositej completely split his archbishopric within the borders of the SR Macedonia from the mother church claiming heritage from the historical Archbishopric of Ohrid which had been non existent for 200 years German and the Serbian Orthodox Church claiming the separation was forced and uncanonical in other words they deemed it a church established by the Communists ended any canonical communication with the Macedonian Orthodox Church In turn German s example was followed by all the other Orthodox Churches The problem continued after German and the breakup of Yugoslavia and it became a highly political issue not only with the Serbian Orthodox Church but with the Church of Greece and the Bulgarian Orthodox Church This schism continued until 2022 when the Macedonian church reconciled with the Serbian Patriarchate and was granted full autonomy and subsequently autocephaly by Patriarch Porfirije of Serbia Revitalization and consequences edit nbsp Grave of Patriarch German of Serbia in Belgrade s St Mark s Church German set to revitalize the Serbian Orthodox Church which like other religious communities in Yugoslavia received no state support During his entire tenure he kept a low profile while achieving certain goals in this direction Despite harsh conditions he managed to form several new dioceses Western Europe 1969 Australia 1973 Vranje 1975 and Canada 1983 He oversaw the finishing works on the new seminary complex of buildings in Belgrade including the campus in 1958 so today the entire neighborhood surrounding the complex is known as Bogoslovija Serbian for seminary He also opened new seminary in the Krka monastery in SR Croatia He was very involved in appointing bishops staunchly pushing his own candidates especially in the case of the Metropolitanate of Montenegro and the Littoral after the Communists arrested Metropolitan Arsenije Bradvarevic in 1954 but German managed to appoint his protege Danilo Dajkovic in 1961 citation needed He also sent many priests to SR Montenegro as clerical activities had almost completely ceased there after the war citation needed In 1984 German visited the site of the Jasenovac concentration camp saying a now famous line To forgive we must to forget we must not Oprostiti moramo zaboraviti ne smemo 6 Many consider German s greatest achievement to be his successful campaign for the resumption of the construction of the Church of Saint Sava in Belgrade which was stopped in 1941 In 26 years from his appointment he urged the Communist government 88 times until they finally authorized the construction to continue in 1984 Being a massive project it took a long time and the church was completed in 2021 Patriarch German was a pragmatic religious leader in times that were very oppressive for religion After the death of Josip Broz Tito in 1980 he slowly pushed church issues as Yugoslav society changed and nationalism grew among the various peoples and in the end he was universally popular among the Serbs and had become a part of the Serbian social elite In 1989 patriarch German broke his hip which led to a series of surgeries and repeated injuries so the already old patriarch was unable to perform his duties As a result of this the Holy Synod declared him incapacitated on November 30 1990 and appointed the metropolitan bishop of Zagreb and Ljubljana Jovan Pavlovic as the guardian of the throne and elected the new patriarch Pavle on December 1 1990 Patriarch German died in the VMA hospital in Belgrade on August 27 1991 aged 92 and was buried in Belgrade s St Mark s Church His tenure of 32 years is one of the longest in the history of the Serbian Orthodox Church He was awarded the Order of Saint Sava 7 Order of the Yugoslav flag Legion of Honour Order of George I National Order of the Cedar and a number of other decorations and awards 8 See also editList of 20th century religious leadersReferences edit Serbian Orthodox Church history Archived 2009 04 18 at the Wayback Machine at spc rs Vukoviћ 1996 pp 133 Hockenos Paul 2003 Homeland Calling Exile Patriotism amp the Balkan Wars Cornell University Press pp 121 122 ISBN 978 0 8014 4158 5 Spasovic Stanimir Miletic Srboljub ISTORIЈA SRPSKE PRAVOSLAVNE CRKVE U AUSTRALIЈI NOVOM ZELANDU I ЈUZhNOЈ AFRICI NASTANAK RASKOLA NA SEVERNOAMERIChKOM KONTINENTU svetosavlje org in Serbian Archived from the original on 24 September 2015 Retrieved 23 April 2020 Puzovic Predrag 1996 Eparhiјe Srpske pravoslavne crkve u raseјaњu PDF Bogoslovљe Chasopis Pravoslavnog bogoslovskog fakulteta u Beogradu in Serbian 40 1 2 87 96 Administrator BORBA ZA VERU Pravoslavni stav prema nepravoslavnoј frazi oprostiti moramo zaboraviti ne smemo borbazaveru info Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik p 97 Acovic Dragomir 2012 Slava i cast Odlikovanja među Srbima Srbi među odlikovanjima Belgrade Sluzbeni Glasnik pp 324 329 Bibliography edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to German Đoric Vukoviћ Sava 1996 Srpski јerarsi od devetog do dvadesetog veka Serbian Hierarchs from the 9th to the 20th Century Evro Unireks Kaleniћ Serbian Church in History at the Orthodox Research Institute Ko je ko u Jugoslaviji 1970 Hronometar Belgrade Srpska porodicna enciklopedija Vol VI 2006 Narodna knjiga and Politika NM ISBN 86 331 2933 7 NK Mala Prosvetina Enciklopedija Third edition 1985 Prosveta ISBN 86 07 00001 2External links editDocumentary movie about German in Serbian Eastern Orthodox Church titles Preceded byVikentije II Serbian PatriarchMetropolitan Bishop of Belgrade and Karlovci1958 1990 Succeeded byPavle Preceded byNikolaj Velimirovic Bishop of Zica1956 1958 Succeeded byVasilije Kostic Preceded byHrizostom Vojinovic Bishop of Buda1952 1956 Succeeded byArsenije Bradvarevic Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title German Serbian Patriarch amp oldid 1152443719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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