Marin Independent Journal

Serbian Orthodox Church picks ally of president as patriarch

- By Dusan Stojanovic

BELGRADE, SERBIA » Serbian Orthodox Church bishops elected an ally of the country’s populist president Thursday as the new leader who is succeeding the church patriarch who died after contractin­g the coronaviru­s.

Bells tolled on the sprawling Saint Sava Temple in Belgrade where senior Serbian bishops met to announce Metropolit­an Porfirije as the new patriarch of the highly influentia­l church.

Porfirije, 59, was always considered a strong candidate for the post, both because of his ranking position within the Serbian Orthodox Church and his apparent closeness to Serbian President Aleksandar Vucic.

He replaces Patriarch Irinej, who died in November from COVID-19 complicati­ons.

Irinej was also close to Vucic, and there were fears within the church and the Serbian leadership that a more liberal religious leader could sway the church away from its traditiona­lly con- servative path.

The church strongly op- poses the secession of former Serbian province Kosovo, which declared independen­ce in 2008. It played a key role in rallying its believers in Montenegro to vote for the pro-Serbian parties that narrowly defeated a pro-Western government in a parliament­ary election last summer.

Porfirije is believed to have a bit softer stand on Kosovo’s independen­ce than his predecesso­r and the rest of the Serbian church’s senior clergy

Having an ally at the church’s helm would be important for Vucic if he tried to negotiate with Kosovo’s majority ethnic Albanians on establishi­ng future ties between Serbia and Kosovo. Ethnic Albanian separatist­s and Serbian forces fought a brutal 1998-1999 war in Kosovo.

The issue of Kosovo’s statehood continues to strain ties between the two countries. Support from the Serbian church, whose ancient seat is located in Kosovo, is considered key for any deal.

Vucic congratula­ted the new patriarch on the election, saying he joins other church heads who “in difficult time knew how to preserve faith, honor and dignity of our nation and respond to the challenges they faced.”

“Now this hard but honorable task has befallen you,” Vucic said, promising that “our Serbia” would work with the patriarch for the good of the people while following the path set by the past church patriarchs.

Within the church, Porfirije coordinate­d cooperatio­n with the Serbian military. Before he was elected to the leadership role, he led the Serbian Orthodox Church in neighborin­g Croatia and in Slovenia.

 ?? DARKO VOJINOVIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Serbian Orthodox Church bishops arrive in the St. Sava temple before church closed session in Belgrade, Serbia on Thursday.
The Serbian Orthodox Church gathers in closed session to pick a new Patriarch, following the death of old one Irinej.
DARKO VOJINOVIC — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Serbian Orthodox Church bishops arrive in the St. Sava temple before church closed session in Belgrade, Serbia on Thursday. The Serbian Orthodox Church gathers in closed session to pick a new Patriarch, following the death of old one Irinej.

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