Irinej Kovačević
This article has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
|
Iriney M. Kovachevich also spelled Irinej Kovačević (Serbian Cyrillic: Иринеј Ковачевић; 6 September 1914 - 2 February 1999[1]) was the Metropolitan of the Free Serbian Orthodox Church in North America from 1964 until 1993. Metropolitan Iriney is best remembered within the Serbian Orthodox Church for leading a delegation to Belgrade in 1992 to heal the schism within the church that had spun off the North American, Western European and Australian Diocese as largely separate from the Belgrade-based church.
Biography
Born Milan Kovacevich in Vrnčani, then Kingdom of Serbia (today Serbia) in 1914, he graduated from the University of Belgrade and then became a teacher before the start of World War II. During the April 1941 invasion of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia by Nazi Germany, Milan Kovachevich served as a soldier in Serbian Royalist forces who simultaneously battled Hitler, Tito's Communists and Croatian Ustashi during World War II. After capitulation, he was arrested and sent to a POW camp in Germany. When the Allies liberated the military prison camps, he decided not return to his homeland after reading that the Old Regime was usurped by the Communists. In 1947 he emigrated from Germany to England where he entered the Serbian seminary at Dorchester on Thames.[2] The Serbian seminarians were affectionately called the Dorchester Boys[3] and most of them would eventually leave England for the United States, Canada, and elsewhere where they took up important positions in the Serbian Orthodox Church in North and South America, including Very Rev. Dimitrije Najdanović (1897-1986) of Montreal, Very Rev. Milan Savich (1920-2010) of Chicago, Dr. Veselin Kesich (1921-2012) of the Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary, Metropolitan Iriney Kovachevich (1914-1999) of the Diocese of New Gracanica - Midwestern America, and many others.
In 1950 Milan Kovachevich left England for the United States where he earned master's degrees from Saint Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary and Columbia University. He became a tonsured monk at the Saint Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery and Seminary in 1953, at which time he chose the name Iriney, meaning "peace" in Greek. In time he was elevated through all the monastic ranks to the title of archimandrite, superior abbot.
Archimandrite Iriney Kovachevich was consecrated vicar bishop[4] in 1963 by his superior Bishop Dionsije (Milivojević) and later was elevated to the status of Metropolitan of the United States and Canada in 1984. His diocesan headquarters near Third Lake which includes the church of the Protection of the Most Holy Mother of God - New Gracanica, St. Sava Seminary, a monastery, recreational facilities and offices, was consecrated in 1984.
Iriney Kovachevich died 2 February 1999 in a Libertyvile nursing home where he had lived after suffering a stroke in 1996. He was 84.
His Holiness Patriarch Pavle, titular head of the worldwide church who came to Third Lake from the New Serbian Patriarchal Palace in Belgrade to officiate the funeral of an old friend.
References
- ^ "Iriney M Kovacevich". AncientFaces.
- ^ Chandler, Edgar H. Storer (October 29, 1959). "The High Tower of Refuge: The Inspiring Story of Refugee Relief Throughout the World". Odhams Press – via Google Books.
- ^ Storer Chandler, Edgar H. (1959). "The High Tower of Refuge: The Inspiring Story of Refugee Relief Throughout the World".
- ^ https://www.google.ca/books/edition/Sedam_i_Po_Stole%C4%87a_Srpske_Crkve_1219_19/fCsuAAAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&bsq=iriney+kovachevich&dq=iriney+kovachevich&printsec=frontcover
This article needs additional or more specific categories. (October 2022) |
This article needs additional or more specific categories. (October 2022) |