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Posts Tagged ‘Serbian Orthodox Church’

What happened in 1389?

by 1389AD ( 4 Comments › )
Filed under Headlines, History, Islamic Invasion, Orthodox Christianity, Serbia, Turkey at June 28th, 2011 - 9:57 am

“The Kosovo Maiden” by Uroš Predić (1857-1953)

Originally published on 1389 Blog.

Ever wondered what 1389 is all about?

Note: Since this post was written in October, 2007, Little Green Footballs has devolved from what was once a fairly reasonable center-right/counterjihad political forum, to a paranoid and sinister hard-left online cult, and one heavily infested with malware at that. Practically none of the same people from 2007 are there now. I no longer recommend that anyone visit or link to Little Green Footballs.

This question came up on October 13, 2007, in the Little Green Footballs: Saturday Afternoon Open thread, and I gave a brief answer there. Fellow Lizardoids followed with comments that added a broader perspective to my answer.

#14 1389

Why the rash of Houston-area school bus thefts?
A bizarre mystery that may be linked with plans for terror attacks on schools.

#23 Ma Sands

re: #14 1389
What happened in 1389? 🙂

#96 1389

re: #23 Ma Sands

1389 was the year of the Battle of Kosovo. The Serbian army, along with some allies, under the leadership of Prince Saint Lazar, knowing that they were about to die, sacrificed themselves to fight the Turkish invasion to a standstill. Their sacrifice prevented much of Europe from being overrun at that time. In their honor, I have chosen 1389 as my nom de guerre.

We are still fighting the same fight, but the weapons are more complex these days. 1389 Blog – Antijihadist Tech is a team blog, whose purpose is to offer hard-to-find news, along with Web 2.0 and tech savvy, to the antijihadist community.

I also have another, less formal, blog that offers links and notes that others can use for their own blogging; look for it here: 1389 Message Blog.

#110 cpuller

re: #96 1389
Many different battles over the years have stemmed the attacks of Muslims.

  • 732 Battle of Poitiers
  • 1529 Battle of Vienna
  • 1683 Battle of Vienna

Good work. It is helpful for us to realize that since the 7th century, Western civilization has been under almost uninterrupted attack by Muslims.

#128 dentate

re: #110 cpuller
Battle of Talas, 751. Chinese lost, but cost the Arabs enough to stop them there. As in Europe, Islam continued to spread, but as a trickle instead of a tsunami.

#196 Thanos

re: #128 dentate
There were also the back and forth battles of the 1460’s — eventually the Prince of Wallachia, Vlad Tepes III, aka Dracula lost, as you can tell by the blood libels heaped upon history afterwards.

#218 cpuller

re: #196 Thanos
And also, one must wonder how Constantinople fell into the hands of the Turks. One definitely wonders. =)

#262 Spiny Norman

re: #218 cpuller
Partly because help from Rome (Catholic Europe) depended on the Orthodox Church renouncing their “error” and recognizing the authority of the Pope.

And a Hungarian selling his new-fangled cannon to the Turks.

Politics, money and treachery. Nothing ever changes…

Well, yes, but there are always saints and heroes, then as now…

Saint Prince Lazar of Serbia

The Battle of Kosovo took place on June 28, 1389 (according to the Julian Calendar, still used for liturgical purposes by the Serbian Orthodox Church). The family of blog admin 1389 celebrates this day as our Krsna Slava.

Discover more about this inspiring story for yourself…

Prince Saint Lazar:

The Battle of Kosovo, and its meaning for all of us today:

About the Krsna Slava:


Prejudice Against Serbs Keeps Coming Up Everywhere

by 1389AD ( 57 Comments › )
Filed under Albania, Communism, Germany, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Koran, Kosovo, Media, Nazism, Orthodox Christianity, Serbia at March 5th, 2011 - 11:30 am

From: 1389AD
To: Pundit Press
Sent: Thu, March 3, 2011 12:23:11 PM
Subject: Comment on Arif Uka Pictures?

Aurelius,

I noticed that comments are closed on “Arif Uka Pictures?

However, I must answer this statement:

It must be noted that Albanians and Kosovars tend to be very pro-American. It is unclear if this man is Uka and if he is Muslim, although it appears so. Radicalization could have happened in Germany, with a large population of Muslim immigrants, and not Kosovo. We cannot paint ethnic Albanians as extremists, especially considering their rejection of al Qaeda and radical Islam in the 1990s– even as Serbs attempted to wipe out their population in Kosovo.

This is factually incorrect. Serbs never attempted to wipe out the ethnic Albanian population in Kosovo, nor did they attempt to wipe out or expel Albanian Muslims from Kosovo. On the contrary, Kosovo was formerly majority Serb. That changed when the Albanian Muslims fought on the side of the Nazis. The Muslim incursion during the Third Reich and during the Communist Tito regime expropriated and displaced many Serbs. In fact, Serbs in Kosovo have been under attack from Albanian Muslims ever since that time. While I would argue that Serbs should have the same right to defend their land and people as anybody else has, under the Tito regime and afterward, they were forbidden to do anything to protect their lives and property from attacks by Albanian Muslims or anyone else. As a result, many Serbs were forced to flee from Kosovo. By 1999, Serbs had been reduced to a small minority in Kosovo. The government of what was then Yugoslavia (now Serbia) did nothing to expel the Albanian Muslims from Kosovo.

The mainstream media in the US and Europe, and the Clinton Administration, essentially blood-libeled the entire Serbian people as an excuse to go to war on behalf of the Muslims in the Balkans. Their reason for doing that was a failed effort to appease the Saudis and other Muslim oil interests, some of whom considered the First Gulf War to be an unacceptable intrusion of “infidels” into the Muslim ummah.

Considering the evils perpetrated by Albanian Muslims in Kosovo – everything from heroin and weapons smuggling, organizing terrorist attacks, trafficking in women and girls for brothel slavery, to kidnapping and butchering Serbs for their organs – it IS high time that all Muslims be expelled from Kosovo and sent back to their homes in Albania, whence they came. They DO have homes and families and tribes in Albania, and they have moved into Kosovo simply because Albania is a misgoverned and corrupt post-Communist cesspool. It is up to them to clean up the mess in Albania rather than spreading it into the historic homeland of the Serbian people.

If you want to learn more about what has happened with the Serbian people, please read Julia Gorin’s excellent blog. Ms. Gorin is not Serbian, by the way…she just happened to find out that the war against the Serbs was wrong, and she decided to do something about it.

I have also covered some of this on 1389 Blog – which is a general counterjihad blog. It is a team blog; I provide the Orthodox Christian and Serbian-American perspective. The blog does not focus exclusively on the Balkans; it covers the worldwide counterjihad, with particular emphasis on stopping jihadi attempts to muzzle free speech for the counterjihad.

I have spent over a decade trying to combat the propaganda against the Serbian people. Nobody seems to understand what we are all about, and I am trying to change that. There is also a considerable prejudice, based solely on ignorance, against Orthodox Christianity in general and the Serbian Orthodox Church in particular. This is because, until very recently, most of the information available on Orthodox Christianity has been unavailable in the English language. Western Europeans and North Americans who are not from an Eastern Slavic background seem to be intimidated by the Cyrillic alphabet (which was, in fact, a gift from Christian missionaries to the Slavic peoples), and not many of them have gone to the effort of learning Russian or Serbian, which admittedly are not easy languages to learn. It also isn’t that easy for someone who is not a native speaker to learn Greek.

That is why it makes no sense that Orthodox Christian Serbs have been accused of engaging in aggressive war. This is a matter of the pot calling the kettle black. Although Orthodox Christianity does allow its members to serve in the military, it does not promote or encourage warfare in any way. On the other hand, Islamic doctrine DOES require aggressive warfare against unbelievers, as well as infiltration of non-Muslim lands, which is what we have been seeing all over the world ever since the recent wars in the Balkans. If you don’t believe me, it’s all in the Qu’ran. Despite what some western apologists for Islam might suppose, the earlier, “peaceful” verses have been abrogated by the later, “jihadi” verses.

Thank you very much!

1389AD


Also published on 1389 Blog.


US and NATO Allowing Persecution of Christians in Kosovo

by 1389AD ( 185 Comments › )
Filed under Christianity, Communism, History, Islamic Invasion, Islamic Supremacism, Kosovo, Leftist-Islamic Alliance, Orthodox Christianity, Russia, Serbia at December 20th, 2010 - 4:00 pm

Present-day persecution of Christians under the pro-jihadi regime in Kosovo resembles that which occurred under Communist rule, both in Yugoslavia and elsewhere in the former Soviet bloc.

Communist Persecution in Russia

Saint Tikhon, Patriarch of Moscow

Saint Tikhon, Patriarch of Moscow

Starting from the days of Lenin, the Bolsheviks, and later the Soviet Communists, were enemies of the Orthodox Church and of Christianity in general. Josef Stalin not only killed roughly forty million Orthodox Christians, but also dethroned and persecuted St. Tikhon, the legitimate patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church, and compromised the Church by installing a usurper. Like Islam, Nazism, and all other totalitarian systems, Soviet Communism tolerated no competition for the hearts and minds of its subjects.

During the Second World War, Stalin temporarily set aside his war against Orthodoxy for reasons of political and military morale. Soldiers were far more willing to fight and sacrifice for Mother Russia and for the Orthodox Church than for Stalin and the Soviet Union. After the war, and under Stalin’s successors, what little remained of the Orthodox Church remained under tight restrictions. Only with the collapse of the Soviet Union did freedom of religion return to Russia and to most of eastern Europe.

Communist Persecution in Serbia

American-born St. Varnava Nastic of Serbia

St. Varnava Nastic

The predicament of Christians in eastern Europe under the Communists was much like that of their contemporaries in the Soviet Union. Even though the Communist dictator of Yugoslavia, Josif Broz Tito, soon broke with the Soviet Bloc, his regime nonetheless continued to expropriate, marginalize, and persecute the Serbian Orthodox Church.

Serbian church to honor Gary-born St. Varnava

Varnava was born in Gary in 1914 and lived at a home near 12th Avenue and Madison Street, Kazich said.

Varnava, whose secular name was Vojislav Nastic, was the first person baptized at St. Sava when it was located in Gary.

“He grew up in a very spiritual family,” Matic said.

He also served as an altar boy at the church.

“He was at the services every Sunday,” Kazich said.

Varnava went to Froebel Elementary School while he and his family lived in Gary for about nine years. They moved Yugoslavia in 1923, Kazich said.

When he finished the equivalent of high school, Varnava’s father took him to see Bishop Nicholai Velimirovich to receive the bishop’s blessing to study theology.
[…]
Varnava was ordained a priest in the early 1940s, and the Serbian Church elected him to become a bishop in 1947, Kazich said.

Varnava began to preach against the Communist way of life after becoming a bishop, and Yugoslavia’s Communist government arrested him on treason charges.

During his trial, Varnava wasn’t allowed to deliver a final defense plea because “it was feared that he would expose and reveal the government’s criminal, terroristic and tyrannical policies,” according to a report written by Kazich.

In 1948, Varnava was sentenced to 11 years at one of the worst prisons at the time in Yugoslavia, Kazich said.

He spent about three years there, and the government intended to kill him when he was being transferred to another prison, Kazich said. He was placed on a train car with other prisoners, and the government ran another train into the car, he said.

Varnava survived the crash, but his legs were broken.

“And he suffered from that for the rest of his life,” Kazich said.

Due to health problems, Varnava was released from prison in 1951, but he always was under guard by the Communist government until he died in 1964.

Kazich said Varnava died under suspicious circumstances, and many believe he was poisoned. He said an autopsy couldn’t be conducted at the time.

Kazich said Varnava’s family knew he didn’t have a history of illness. He also wrote letters to them about his good health prior to his death.

No matter the circumstances, Varnava always remained “a follower of Christ,” Matic said.

“He became one of the strongest protectors of his faith,” he said.

Matic said Varnava remains an inspiration to many at the church.

“People still talk about him,” Matic said.

St. Varnava was canonized about five years ago…

Read the rest.

Pro-Jihadi Persecution in Serbia and Kosovo

Vladika Artemije of Raska, Prizren, Kosovo, and Metohija

Bishop Artemije of Ras, Prizren, Kosovo, and Metohija

Under the US/NATO/EU-backed occupation of Kosovo, the persecution of Christians, the destruction of Orthodox churches and cemeteries, and the interference with the Orthodox Church hierarchy has happened all over again. The persecution is far worse this time around, and it is being perpetrated on behalf of Muslim, rather than communist, totalitarianism. The US-backed regime in Kosovo is nothing more than an Islamic narcoterrorist gang elevated to political office. Nonetheless, the US/NATO/EU occupation is determined to appease the Kosovo regime by helping it to annihilate Orthodox Christianity in Kosovo and to obliterate all trace of its existence.

The Orthodox Church continues to suffer not only in Kosovo itself, but also in all of Serbia. The US constantly puts pressure on the Serbian government and on the Serbian church hierarchy to accept the illegitimate “independence” of Kosovo and to abandon the beleaguered and persecuted remnants of the Christian Serb population in Kosovo. One of the more recent abuses is the persecution of Bishop Artemije and his removal from the eparchy of Ras and Prizren in occupied Kosovo.

Why is this happening now? Very likely because, in June 2008, Bishop Artemije demanded accountability for the slaughter of Serbs and for the harvesting of organs from living Serb Christians, and because now, in 2010, the organ theft scandal has finally reached the newspapers. Bishop Artemije is an embarrassment to the purveyors of “humanitarian war” on behalf of jihadi narcoterrorism, and he must be discredited and silenced.

Logo of American Council for Kosovo

Statement by James George Jatras, Director, American Council for Kosovo, regarding Vladika Artemije’s interview of December 3, 2010

Source: American Council for Kosovo
By James George Jatras
Saturday, 4 December 2010

Friends,

I now have had an opportunity briefly to review Vladika Artemije’s thoughts as expressed in his interview made public earlier today (see below, in Serbian). Reserving room for any misunderstanding on my part due to the fact that I am working from an imprecise auto-translation from the Serbian, the following should be noted:

  • First, that if those who are responsible for the uncanonical, lawless, and inhumane effort to remove Vladika Artemije from the Eparchy of Ras and Prizren were under the impression he has been silenced and will go away quietly, such persons – and the interests they serve – are quite mistaken. True to the example of his heavenly patron and protector, Saint Artemios, Vladika Artemije remains a fighter in every sense of the word.
  • Second, there can be no mistake that the treatment meted out to Vladika Artemije has anything to do with any “irregularities” or “accusations of corruption,” or other slanders circulated in the “yellow” media in Serbia. If it were, he asks, where is the proof? He points out: Here, after 10 months, no evidence is anywhere to be shown! Even Belgrade’s requested extradition of Father Simeon Vilovski from Greece was turned down but the Areopagus. Why? Vladika Artemije asks. Because they have no evidence. So the best they can do is to repeat unsupported slanders against Vladika Artemije (and also, incidentally, against me, although my work on behalf of Vladika Artemije and the Serbian National Council starting in March 2006 was a matter of public record from the first day.)
  • Third, the real reasons for the vendetta against Vladika Artemije are patently obvious, which he describes in detail today: his refusal to cooperate any further with the foreign occupation in Kosovo and Metohija after the pogrom of March 2004; his lawsuit in Strasbourg against Germany, Italy, France, and the United Kingdom for the damage done to his flock; his objections to the unauthorized trespass into the Decani monastery by U.S. Vice President Joseph Biden; his refusal to allow supposed repairs to churches and monasteries in Kosovo to be done in substandard manner by Albanian Muslims, i.e., the people who attacked them in the first place; his opposition to the current government in Belgrade’s rejecting help from fraternal Orthodox Russia in favor of the godless and anti-Serbian agenda of Brussels and Washington; his defense of Orthodoxy and the Serbian Orthodox Church against the pan-heresy of ecumenism; and his total rejection of the policy of Belgrade and the current government, which has tacitly accepted the so-called Ahtisaari plan, allowed EULEX to come to Kosovo, and thus helped create the so-called independent “state” of Kosovo.

    That is why, as the tireless Julia Gorin reported, at a regional security meeting in Pec – already in January 2010 – “a KFOR officer informed the grouping that it was likely that Bishop Artemije of Raska and Prizren would be replaced and a new Bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church would be installed in his place, one who was open to cooperation with the West and more open to dialogue.”

    That is also why, when Vladika Artemije physically returned to his diocese two weeks ago, he was quickly removed by the joint “authority” of the NATO occupation, the current regime in Belgrade, and the KLA mafia in Pristina – and of course their collaborators inside the Serbian Orthodox Church.

  • Fourth, Vladika Artemije categorically rejects any possibility of schism in the Serbian Orthodox Church and demands, simply and without qualification, that the canons of the Church be followed. Stating his unwillingness to abide by any uncanonical directives, he remains until the end of his life the Bishop of the Eparchy of Ras and Prizren.

The fact is, those responsible in Belgrade, Brussels, and Washington will not rest until their work of destruction is done and Kosovo and Metohija, along with Bosnia, is re-Islamized. To do that, the Serbian nation and the Serbian Orthodox Church must be crushed and demoralized. And for that to happen, Vladika Artemije must be defamed and destroyed. It’s just that simple.

Text of interview here.


Originally published on 1389 Blog.