Sava Trlajić
Saint Sava of Gornji Karlovac | |
---|---|
Holy hieromartyr | |
Born | Svetozar Trlajić 19 July 1884 Mol, Austria-Hungary |
Died | August 1941 Velebit, Independent State of Croatia | (aged 57)
Venerated in | Eastern Orthodox Church |
Canonized | 1998, Belgrade by Serbian Orthodox Church |
Feast | 17 July (O.S. 4 July) |
Attributes | Vested as a bishop |
Sava Trlajić (Serbian Cyrillic: Сава Трлајић; 19 July 1884 – August 1941) was a Bishop of the Serbian Orthodox Church serving as Bishop of the Eparchy of Gornji Karlovac in the Kingdom of Yugoslavia from 1938 until the beginning of World War II.[1]
He was murdered by Ustaše of the Nazi Germany-aligned Independent State of Croatia in August 1941.[2] The Serbian Orthodox Church venerates him as a Saint.[3]
Education and career
[edit]He was born Svetozar Trlajić to Stevan and Jelisaveta (née Karakašević) in Mol on 18 July 1884. His education included the primary school in his hometown, a grammar school in Novi Sad, and seminary of Sremski Karlovci. He then went on to graduate from the Faculty of Law at the University of Belgrade and passed the qualifying examination for judges at the Faculty of Law at the University of Zagreb.
In 1909, he was ordained a deacon by the Bishop of Timișoara and then presbyter ten days later. As a parish priest, he served at parishes in Peška and Bašaid. Early in 1927, he was appointed to an administrative position, and later principal secretary, of the Holy Synod of Bishops of the Church of Serbia. When his wife died, he took monastic vows on 27 October 1929 in the Krušedol Monastery, being tonsured with the name Sava. Soon afterward he became rector and archimandrite of the Krušedol Monastery.
On 30 September 1930, Sava was elected Auxiliary Bishop of Sremski Karlovci. He was consecrated there by Patriarch Varnava, Bishop Emilijan of Timok, Bishop Jovan of Niš, Bishop Tihon of the Eparchy of Zahumlje and Herzegovina, and Bishop Simeon of Zletovo and Strumica. As Patriarchal Vicar Bishop Sava chaired the diocesan council of the Archbishopric of Belgrade and Karlovci. From early 1937, Bishop Sava chaired the ecclesiastical court. He was appointed Bishop of Gornji Karlovac on 22 June 1938, with his residence in Plaški. After the death of Bishop Miron of Pakrac in 1941, he was also named administrator of the Eparchy of Slavonia.
Martyrdom
[edit]After the Invasion of Yugoslavia and the formation of the Nazi Germany-aligned Independent State of Croatia, Plaški was first occupied by Italian forces and then turned over to the Ustashi Croatians in late 1941. Bishop Sava and nine priests were then taken, hostage. On 23 May 1941, Ustashi occupied the bishop's residence and expelled Bishop Sava. On June 8, the notorious executioner Josip Tomljenović ordered all diocesan money and records to be handed over to the Ustashi. Bp. Sava refused the Ustashi order to leave his diocese and go to Belgrade. Not wanting to abandon his flock, he refused. Bishop Sava was arrested on June 17, 1941, and confined, together with three other Serbian priests and thirteen eminent Serbian laymen, in a stable owned by Josip Tomljenović in Plaški. After experiencing intense torture, Bishop Sava and the priests, Bogoljub Gaković, Đuro Stojanović, and Stanislav Nasadilo, were chained and taken to the Gospić concentration camp on 19 July 1941. There, they were tortured until mid-August. At that time Bishop Sava was taken together with 2,000 Serbs toward the Velebit Mountains. Somewhere on this mountain, he was murdered together with thousands of other Orthodox Serbs. The site is still unknown.[4][5][6][7]
Canonization
[edit]In 1998, at the regular session of the Holy Assembly of Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church, Bishop Sava was glorified and entered into the list of names of the saints of the Serbian Orthodox Church as hieromartyr.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Politika (2016-09-13). "Život dao, ali narod nije ostavio" (in Serbian). Retrieved 2020-05-13.
- ^ "Protodeacon Vladimir Vasilik. The Role of the Roman Catholic Church in the Genocide of Serbs on the Territory of the "Independent State of Croatia"". OrthoChristian.Com. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
- ^ Lees, Michael (1992). The Serbian Genocide 1941-1945. Serbian Orthodox Diocese of Western America.
- ^ Kolarić, Juraj (2005). Ekumenska trilogija: istočni kršćani, pravoslavni, protestanti (in Croatian). Prometej. p. 1024. ISBN 9789536460212.
- ^ Alexander, Stella (1987). The Triple Myth: A Life of Archbishop Alojzije Stepinac. East European Monographs. p. 73. ISBN 9780880331227.
- ^ Colloque (15; 2001), Institut de droit et d'histoire canoniques (Aix-en-Provence, Bouches-du-Rhone) (2002). États, religions et liberté religieuse en Méditerranée: histoire, actualité, prospectives [States, religions and religious freedom in the Mediterranean : history, current events, prospects] (in French). Presses universitaires d'Aix-Marseille. p. 70. ISBN 9782731402896.
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: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link) - ^ Protodeacon Vladimir Vasilik (23 July 2018). "The Role of the Roman Catholic Church in the Genocide of Serbs on the Territory of the "Independent State of Croatia"". OrthoChristian.Com. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
- 1884 births
- 1941 deaths
- People from Ada, Serbia
- Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church
- Serbian saints of the Eastern Orthodox Church
- Persecution of Serbs
- 20th-century Eastern Orthodox martyrs
- 20th-century Christian saints
- New Martyrs
- Hieromartyrs
- University of Belgrade Faculty of Law alumni
- People executed by the Independent State of Croatia
- Serb people who died in the Holocaust
- Serbian torture victims
- Serbian civilians killed in World War II
- Serbs of Vojvodina