Gavrilo V, Serbian Patriarch Explained

Gavrilo V
Honorific-Prefix:His Holiness
Church:Serbian Orthodox Church
See:Belgrade
Patriarch Of:Archbishop of Peć, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Serbian Patriarch
Birth Name:Đorđe Dožić
Enthroned:21 February 1938
Ended:7 May 1950 (his death)
Ordination:1900
Consecration:1911
Predecessor:Varnava I
Successor:Vikentije II
Birth Date:17 May 1881
Birth Place:Vrujci, Principality of Montenegro
Death Date:7 May 1950 (aged 68)
Death Place:Belgrade, Serbia, Federal People's Republic of Yugoslavia
Background:plum
Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo V
Reference:His Holiness
Spoken:Your Holiness
Religious:Patriarch
Posthumous:His Holiness Patriarch Gavrilo V of Blessed Repose

Gavrilo Dožić (Serbian: Гаврило Дожић; 17 May 1881 – 7 May 1950), also known as Gavrilo V, was the Metropolitan of Montenegro and the Littoral (1920–1938) and the 41st Serbian Patriarch of the Serbian Orthodox Church, from 1938 to 1950.

Early life

Đorđe Dožić (Ђорђе Дожић) was born on 17 May 1881 in Vrujci, Kolašin, Lower Morača, Montenegro, near Morača Monastery. His family belonged to the Medenica brotherhood.[1] He finished primary school at the monastery, as a pupil of his paternal uncle, archimandrite Mihailo.[1] He went to theological schools in Prizren (Seminary of Prizren) and the Prince Islands (Halki seminary). After that, he finished the theological faculty in Athens (University of Athens). He worked as the secretary of the monastery of Hilandar.

Bishop

After bishop Nićifor Perić of Raška-Prizren withdrew from his office (1911), due to disagreement with the Serbian diplomacy, the Patriarchate of Constantinople appointed Gavrilo as successor, as the Serbian diplomacy wanted. There was a conflict within the Serbian Church regarding the appointment of Gavrilo; the "Old Serbs" (clergy from Kosovo and Macedonia) wanted their candidate, the previous secretary of the Eparchy of Skoplje, monk Vasilije (Bogdan) Radenković. While waiting for the Ottoman government approval, the Serbian government changed the decision and ordered through the consuls that Ottoman Serbs request that Radenković be appointed instead. However, Gavrilo ended up being chosen. Meanwhile, Radenković became a founder of the Black Hand conspiracy group.

Metropolitan

After the death of Mitrofan Ban, the Metropolitan of Montenegro and the Littoral, in 1920, Gavrilo was picked as the new Metropolitan of Montenegro and the Littoral on 17 November 1920. He stayed in this position until he was chosen to become the 51st Serbian Patriarch on 21 February 1938.[2]

Detention and imprisonment in World War II

During World War II in 1941, as soon as the German forces occupied Yugoslavia, Patriarch Gavrilo was arrested by the Nazis who were looting the gold from the Ostrog Monastery.[3] Ruth Mitchell in her book "The Serbs Choose War", wrote "They took from the old man everything, even his shoes. They left him naked except for his shirt. and over rough roads, over the mountains and through the deep valleys, they made him walk, at the point of a bayonet, two hundred miles, hatless in the burning Balkan sun."[4] He later was confined in the Monastery of Ljubostinja.[5] In May 1943, he was transferred to the Monastery of Vojlovica (near Pančevo) in which he was confined together with Bishop Nikolaj Velimirović until September 1944.[6] On 15 September 1944 both Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo V (Dožić) and Bishop Nikolaj Velimirović were sent to Dachau,[7] which was at that time the main concentration camp for priests arrested by the Nazis. Both Dožić and Velimirović were held as special prisoners (Ehrenhäftlinge) imprisoned in the so-called Ehrenbunker (or Prominentenbunker) separated from the work camp area, together with high-ranking Nazi enemy officers and other prominent prisoners.[8]

In December 1944 they were transferred from Dachau to Slovenia, together with Milan Nedić, the Serbian collaborationist PM, and German general Hermann Neubacher, the first Nazi mayor of Vienna (1938–1939), as the Nazis attempted to make use of Patriarch Gavrilo's and Nikolaj's authority among the Serbs in order to gain allies in the anti-Communist movements. Contrary to claims of torture and abuse at the camp, evidence that Patriarch Dožić himself was subjected to mistreatment is doubtful. Later, Patriarch Dožić and Bishop Nikolaj were moved to Austria, and were finally liberated by the US 36th Infantry Division in Tyrol in 1945.

Last years

He was physically weakened by these vicissitudes and grew to look very old and frail. Soon after, he was taken to England. Both Dožić and Velimirović were at Westminster Abbey at the baptism of King Peter II of Yugoslavia's son and heir, Crown Prince Alexander of Yugoslavia. He then returned to what then came to be known as the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, while Bishop Nikolaj opted to emigrate to the United States.[9]

Patriarch Gavrilo died on 7 May 1950, aged 68, in Belgrade, Serbia and was buried in the Cathedral Church.[10]

He was awarded Order of Saint Sava, Order of Prince Danilo I[11] and a number of other decorations.

See also

Sources and further reading

Notes and References

  1. Book: Zapisi. 11. 1938. Cetinjsko istorijsko društvo. 193. Ђорђе Дожић, из братства Меденица, у калуђерству Гаврило, родио се 17 . маја 1881 год . у доњоморачком селу Врујцима . Основну школу свршио је у Манастиру Морачи код свога стрица познатог архимандрита Михаила, што ....
  2. Book: Šelih . Alenka . Država in cerkev: izbrani zgodovinski in pravni vidiki : mednarodni posvet 21. in 22. junija 2001 . 2002 . Slovenska akademija znanosti in umetnosti . 9789616242479 . 471.
  3. Book: Taber. George. Chasing Gold: The Incredible Story of How the Nazis Stole Europe's Bullion. 15 December 2014. Pegasus books. New York, New York. 978-1605986555. First.
  4. Book: Mitchell. Ruth. The Serbs Choose War. 1943. Doubleday, Doran & Company, Inc.. Garden City, N.Y.. 82.
  5. Book: Gevers . Lieve . Blank . Jan . Protestant, Orthodox and Muslim Communities in Occupied Europe (1939-1950) . 2007 . Peeters . 9789042919334 . 74.
  6. Book: Bojović . Boško I. . L'Église Orthodoxe Serbe: histoire - spiritualité - modernité . 2014 . Balkanološki institut SANU . 9788671790857 . 221 .
  7. Book: Boeckh . Katrin . Schon . Dietmar . Der Blick auf den Anderen: Katholisch-Orthodoxe Selbst- und Fremdwahrnehmung . 2021 . Verlag Friedrich Pustet . 9783791773513 . 112 .
  8. Book: Sundhaussen . Holm . Geschichte Serbiens: 19.-21. Jahrhundert . 2007 . Böhlau Verlag Wien . 9783205776604 . 312 .
  9. Book: Tomasevich . Jozo . War and Revolution in Yugoslavia, 1941-1945: Occupation and Collaboration . 2001 . Stanford University Press . 9780804779241 . 513 .
  10. Book: Falina . Maria . Religion and Politics in Interwar Yugoslavia: Serbian Nationalism and East Orthodox Christianity . 2023 . Bloomsbury Publishing . 9781350282049 . 141 .
  11. Book: Acović, Dragomir. Slava i čast: Odlikovanja među Srbima, Srbi među odlikovanjima. 2012. Belgrade. Službeni Glasnik. 89.