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Nikolai Velimirović
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Nikolai (Velimirović) / Николај (Велимировић); ( December 23 / January 5 , 1880 - March 5 / March 18 , 1956 ). Serbian bishop and an influential theological writer (and political emigrant at the time of the Communist diaspora of Josip Broz Tito in Yugoslavia ). He has strongly supported the unison of all Orthodox churches and has established particularly good relations with the Anglican and Episcopal Church.

As stated by the Archbishop John (Maximovitch) Of Shanghai And San Francisco and the Orthodox theologian Alexander Schmemann , Nikolai Velimirović is one "of the great theological writers," and "for all the people of Orthodox religion he is an epitome for the Orthodox spiritual quality." Bishop Nikolaj (pronounced and often written ''Nikolai'' in English) is also a saint of the Orthodox Church of Serbia, and considered by Orthodox Christians in America to be a North American saint because of his role in establishing Orthodox Christianity there.

Nikolaj Velimirović was born in the small village of Lelić in Western Serbia . He attended the Seminary of St. Sava in Belgrade and graduated in 1905 . He obtained doctorates from the University Of Berne ( 1908 ), while the thesis was published in German in 1910, whereas the doctor's degree in philosophy was prepared at Oxford and defended in Geneva (''Filozofija Berklija'' - ''Berkeley's Philosophy'', in French) in 1909. At the end of 1909 he entered a monastic order. In 1919 , then Archimandrite Nikolai was consecrated Bishop of the Monastery Zica of the Serbian Orthodox Church .

In April 1915 (during WWI ) he was delegated to England and America by the Serbian Church, where he held numerous lectures, fighting for the unison of the Serbs and South Slavic peoples. At the beginning of 1919 he returned to Serbia, and in 1920 was posted to the Ohrid archbishopric in Macedonia, where in 1935 , in Bitola he reconstructed the cemetery of the killed German soldiers.

During the " was transferred to the Monastery of Vojlovica (near Pančevo ) in which he was confined together with the Serbian patriarch, Gavrilo Dožić until the end 1944 .

On December 14, 1944 he was sent to Dachau , together with Serbian Patriarch Gavrilo, where some sources, especially the standard Orthodox Church references, record that he suffered both imprisonment and torture. {Link without Title}

After the War he left (associated with Columbia University ). He died on March 18 , 1956 .

On May 19, 2003, the Holy Assembly of Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church recognized Bishop Nicholai (Velimirovic) of Ohrid and Zicha as a saint and decided to enter him into the calendar of saints of Holy Orthodox Church (March 18 and May 13).


ALLEGED ANTI-SEMITISM

Although recently canonized as a saint by the Serbian Orthodox Church , some of his writings are viewed as controversial. Nikolaj Velimirovic was allegedly Anti-semitic and he supposedly approved of the holocaust. (See Bishop Nikolaj Velimirovic: Addresses to the Serbian People--Through the Prison Window. Himmelsthur, Germany: Serbian Orthodox Eparchy for Western Europe, 1985, pp. 161-162).

Others regard his address from Dachau as having been under duress {Link without Title} {Link without Title} and point to the lack of other anti-semitic statements in the rest of his large corpus of writings. He is recorded variously to have said that the Jews "crucified Christ ," but such a statement is historically no different from that in the Bible or what Christians have been saying for centuries, which is more an allegation of historical fact rather than the Racism which is the heart of anti-semitism.


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