WNS They 'cast shame on themselves' 

Fri Feb 22, 2008 10:13 am (PST) 

 
<http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/newssun/news/807687,5_1_WA22_KOSOVO_S1.article>
 
http://www.suburbanchicagonews.com/newssun/news/807687,5_1_WA22_KOSOVO_S1.article

WAUKEGAN NEWS-SUN (USA)

They 'cast shame on themselves'

Serbs in Lake County offer prayers of 'crisis' over new Kosovo independence

February 22, 2008

By DAN MORAN  <mailto:DMORAN%40SCN1.COM> [EMAIL PROTECTED]

THIRD LAKE -- While many in Lake County might look at events in southeastern
Europe and wonder what to make of it, John Plavsic of Grayslake was among
those who headed out to the New Gracanica Monastery on Thursday night to
participate in moleban, a prayer service offered in the Serbian Orthodox
church in times of crisis.

"It is a prayer in a time of need, or for health, usually for someone in
dire straits," Plavsic explained. "Tonight it is intended particularly for
the Kosovo situation, and generally for Serbians who live in Serbia right
now, because of the tense situation there."

Autonomy and conflict

Kosovo's history after World War II includes decades as an autonomous region
of Serbia, which was one of the republics within the nation of Yugoslavia.
Following dissolution of the socialist Yugoslav state in 1992, Kosovo was
embroiled in conflict in the mid- and late 1990s as militants sought to
separate from Serbia.

On Sunday, a Provisional Institutions of Self-Government assembly
unilaterally declared Kosovo's independence from Serbia. The declaration was
formally recognized by the U.S. on Monday in a written statement by
Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice, while the European Union has seen mixed
reactions and Russia has joined Serbia in protesting the move.

The new nation, at 4,200 square miles, is slightly smaller than the state of
Connecticut and is home to some 2.1 million people.

As Plavsic underscored, the regional Serbian community has been monitoring
developments in Kosovo since Sunday, when a provisional government declared
independence, sparking controversy that continues to play out on the world
stage.

In the Chicago area, the faithful were drawn to the New Gracanica complex --
which is a replica of the Gracanica of Kosovo, built in the 14th century --
after Bishop Longin, head of the diocese of America and Canada, called for
the prayer service.

Nearly everyone in attendance stopped to pick up a candle, light it and
place it in a stand near the back of the church, a ritual to honor
individuals both living and dead.

"It's asking God for help," said Father Tom Kazich following the hour-long
service, which was conducted entirely in Serbian and attended by more than
300 people.

"We are a very small community, with about 150 families that are part of the
parish," said Kazich, "but people came tonight from all over the Chicago
area and Indiana and Wisconsin."

Earlier in the day, the bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church issued a
public announcement condemning the "illegal self-declaration of independence
by the so-called Albanian parliament ... (They) have cast shame on
themselves as well as their historical path, minding only their bare
interests."

But the statement added that "our concern goes to our people, which is
deeply and justifiedly embittered by this justice and violence. We know from
our ages-long church experience that every violence ends up with the
perpetrator's ruin, for, as the proverb says, 'every power is of time, and
that of God is eternal.'"

"Therefore, be not afraid, little flock! We stand upright! We are no longer
alone as we were in the times of the shameful and bloody bomb attacks
against us."

Kazich said events over the last decade, in which violence rocked states in
the former Yugoslavia, have affected local Serbians, making services like
Thursday's necessary.

"You have to let people come together. People are depressed about this,"
Kazich said. "What the bishop told us tonight was, we really shouldn't cry,
we shouldn't be depressed. God would never allow something like this to
continue ... So we have to be patient and wait, and maybe the time will
come."

 

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