Demetrius I Qadi | |
Church: | Melkite Greek Catholic Church |
See: | Patriarch of Antioch |
Patriarch Of: | Patriarch of Antioch |
Enthroned: | March 29, 1919 |
Ended: | October 25, 1925 |
Predecessor: | Cyril VIII Jaha |
Successor: | Cyril IX Moghabghab |
Birth Date: | January 18, 1861 |
Birth Place: | Damascus, Ottoman Syria (modern-day Syria) |
Consecration: | November 29, 1903 (Bishop) |
Consecrated By: | Cyril VIII Jaha |
Demetrius I Qadi (or Dimitros I Cadi) (January 18, 1861, Damascus, Syria - October 25, 1925) was Patriarch of Antioch and All the East, and Alexandria and Jerusalem of the Melkite Greek Catholic Church from 1919 until 1925.[1]
Joseph Qadi was born in Damascus, Syria. Ordained a Melkite priest in 1888, Qadi was appointed Patriarchal Vicar of Jerusalem in 1895, resigning in 1898. he was elected eparch of Aleppo on October 27, 1903, and ordained eparch on November 29, 1903, by patriarch Cyril VIII Jaha, being Gaudenzio Bonfigli, O.F.M, titular bishop of Cabasa, and Joseph Dumani, BS, Eparch of Tripoli, his co-consecrators. On March 29, 1919, he was elected patriarch by the Melkite Synod of Bishops, with the Holy See accepting his request for ecclesiastical communion on July 3 of the same year. At that point the patriarchate had been vacant for three years since the death of Cyril VIII Jaha in 1916.
During his brief reign the Melkite Church experienced a rapid expansion in the Near East as situations for the Greek Catholics improved during the period of the French Mandate for Syria and the Lebanon. Demetrius also began radical reforms in the Melkite Church,[2] [3] including preparations for Melkite councils to address canonical matters. However, Demetrius did not live to participate in these councils, and died on October 25, 1925. He was succeeded upon his death by Patriarch Cyril IX Moghabghab.
During his patriarchate he was consecrator of some Melkite eparchs: