IWPR
- 24 July 2002
Posted 24 July 2002 on RELIGIOSCOPE
A
sacked bishop is threatening to reveal the names of colleagues
he says were prepared to agree to a controversial plan for
the Serbian Orthodox Church to subsume its Macedonian counterpart.
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Bishop
Jovan of Veles and Povardarje was denounced as a "traitor" earlier this month and stripped of his titles in punishment
for his efforts to incorporate the Macedonian Orthodox Church
(MOC) into the Serb body as an autonomous but subordinate
group.
Serbian
clerics, meanwhile, have said they will continue to recognise
the ousted priest and have since broken off all discussions
with the Macedonian ecclesiastical authorities.
Macedonians
have been enraged by the moves to resolve a long-standing
quarrel between the two churches, which dates back to the
country's self proclaimed autocephaly of the MOC in the Sixties.
Now
Jovan claims that he is being made a scapegoat for the row.
His synod sent him to serve 30 days penance in the Saint Georgi
Martyr Monastery in Negotin, near Veles, but he has been forced
to return to his parents' flat in Bitola after angry locals
locked the doors of the retreat. He has since declared his
family home to be a church.
This
is the most recent case in a chain of controversial events.
At the beginning of this month, Jovan locked himself in his
official residence and refused to leave, only for the local
police to force the doors while the synod was still officially
announcing its decision to sack the bishop.
He
subsequently issued a statement accusing the police of acting
illegally, as church and state are separate under the Macedonian
constitution, and claiming that the authorities had no right
to enforce ecclesiastical decisions.
Over
the border in Serbia, the church hierarchy condemned the removal
of its foremost ally. "We cease all our relations
and negotiations with the church in Skopje," Bishop
Irinej of Nis declared, omitting to recognise the Macedonian
body's official name.
The
head of the Serbian Orthodox Church (SOC), Patriarch Pavle,
issued a statement condemning police participation in Jovan's
removal from office.
In
equally combative mood, MOC spokesman Bishop Timotej of Ohrid
and Kicevo, accused the Serbian church of attempting to destroy
the former, adding that this "cannot be allowed".
Far
from repenting, Jovan has now threatened to reveal details
of the whole "conspiracy". On July 24, he
claimed in the Skopje daily newspaper Dnevnik that
other members of the local synod persuaded him to accept the
SOC offer, promising that they would back him up. According
to the bishop, his colleagues changed their minds following
the fierce reaction from the Macedonian people, who see the
proposal as an attack on their identity.
Under
the Serbian church's proposal, drafted in May in the southern
Serbian town of Nis, the MOC would have been renamed the "Ohrid
Archbishopric" and been placed under the jurisdiction
of the Serbian patriarchate.
Bishop
Jovan publicly accepted the terms of the Serbian church in
a letter to Patriarch Pavle on June 29. Russian Orthodox leader
Patriarch Alexei II was among those who welcomed his move.
The
Russian body strongly supports the Serbian position and does
not recognise MOC. The Moscow patriarchate's secretary for
relations with other orthodox organisations, Father Nikolaj
Balasov told the Skopje daily Utrinski Vesnik last
week that the Russian position on Macedonia's "schism" was "well-known for a long time".
The
Greek Orthodox Church shares the stance of the Russian and
Serb bodies towards their Macedonian counterpart. To break
out of this isolation, MOC and political delegations visited
the leading hierarch in the Orthodox communion, the Patriarch
of Constantinople, several times last year, asking him to
recognise the Macedonian church's autocephalous status.
However,
these attempts were not successful. Meanwhile, A1 TV
in Skopje broadcasted the statement of an anonymous diplomat
who claimed that Athens, Belgrade and Moscow were behind the
bid to persuade the MOC to accept autonomous status within
the Serb church and change its name.
Political
analysts in Macedonia see the ecclesiastical authorities'
action against Bishop Jovan as a sign of a "cooling off" in relations between Macedonia and its northern neighbour.
Significantly,
the Bulgarian Orthodox Church declined to join the chorus
of support for Jovan, merely saying it would examine the issue
at its synod in the autumn.
Behind
the scenes, Bulgarians, who have long maintained their own
claims on Macedonia, are thought to be quietly content to
see Serbia and its southern neighour feuding once again.
Significantly,
an article in the Sofia daily Demokracia last week
openly called on its church to recognise the autocephalous
status of the MOC - move that some observers viewed as an
attempt to stir up trouble.