Information
Service of the
Serbian Orthodox Church
Belgrade Patriarchate
15 March 2003

(photo:
Metropolitan Amfilohije during his funeral homily)
In the name of the
Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit!
“This world is tyranny
even to a tyrant, let alone to a noble soul!” These are the words, bereaved
brethren gathered here, of the Poet Njegos, which come to mind before
the bier of one such noble soul, Zoran Djindjic, the slain Prime Minister
of Serbia. These words come to mind all the more forcefully because
we find ourselves in the church which grew out of the burned relics
and martyred dust of the greatest enlightener of the Serbian people
— Saint Sava.
In this place, in
this house of worship, before Zoran, reposed only he who left this message
to his people and all the peoples of the earth: “The earthly kingdom
is but for a while; God’s kingdom is for everlasting time.” This was
the beheaded Great Martyr Lazarus of Kosovo. Here today we bid farewell
to Zoran Djindjic, near the once encampment and now monument of the
Leader Karageorge, whose head fell, as Zoran himself has fallen, at
his God brother’s and blood brother’s hands some two hundred years ago,
and stuffed with straw was sent to Istanbul to wither away impaled on
a stake.
According to a folk
adage: “every wound strikes close to the heart”, but Zoran was struck
in his heart of hearts as were his mother Mila, his wife Ruzica, and
his children Luka and Jovana, and the entire Serbian people. It is not,
however, the only grievous wound which we have sustained in these recent
times of tribulation. It is impossible to say which of them is the deepest
cut of all. Is it Zoran’s wound, inflicted by a fratricidal hand? Or
the wound inflicted upon all of us by the death of that little girl,
Milica Rajic, who was killed during the bombing of 1999? Or the wound
inflicted by the rape and butchery of Marica Miric, from Belo Polje,
near Pec, who was buried behind the altar at the Patriarchate of Pec
on the eve of Vidovdan in that same year? Or any one of those countless,
still fresh wounds inflicted in these regions during the mindless period
of the recent civil war and bombing. And more horrible yet is the fact
that all these wounds are kept alive before our eyes by the light and
the heat of flames, which have consumed hundreds of churches and shrines
of Kosovo and Metohija.

(photo:
Zoran Djindjic at a donors' meeting for St. Sava's Cathedral, Frankfurt,
Germany, Feb 22, 2003 )
Zoran Djindjic will
be remembered by future generations because of this wound, but also
because of so much more. He will be remembered above all because, at
the moment of his people’s most abject humiliation, in the manner reminiscent
of the House of Obrenovic, he extended the hand of fraternal peace and
reconciliation to Europe and the world. At a time when hundreds of thousands
of his people were still exiled from their centuries-old hearths, living
in homes they could never call their own, without a country, without
a fatherland; at a time when above the heads of his people the sword
of Pilate’s justice was still suspended, Zoran Djindjic breathed new
life into his people, reanimated his country’s civil and social life,
re-established unity within the state of Serbia and Montenegro, and
reconnected his country to the world. But he was slain, alas, by fratricidal
hatred, which is shortsighted, which is blind, and which speaks of that
eternal truth that: “Whosoever lives by the sword shall perish by the
sword.”
If the murder of
an individual is so great an evil, then how much greater an evil is
the destruction and suffering of so many people in the recent wars in
our country and throughout the world. And of that evil there seems to
be no end. At this very moment, new bloodshed is being prepared for
the people of Iraq. The war is imminent. Let the wound of Zoran Djindjic,
the innocent tears of his children Luka and Jovana, and of all innocent
victims of recent wars here and throughout the world be a warning and
a reminder to all persons and peoples who are still in possession of
understanding and reason, and most of all to Zoran’s people that there
has been enough hatred among brothers, enough fratricide, enough war.
Every murder is fratricide, from that first, committed by Cain, to Zoran’s.
Evil and hatred do not profit anyone. War is brother to none.

(photo:
funeral of Zoran Djindjic, Belgrade)
Another reason for
which our people will remember Zoran Djindjic is, without a doubt, his
care and concern for the completion of this Memorial Church where we
have come to send him on his journey to the shoreless eternity of the
Divine mysteries, where there is neither sorrow nor sighing, but life
everlasting. Zoran Djindjic understood that without a place of worship
as a divino-human measure of human dignity there is not, nor can there
ever be, either real future or all-embracing renewal of life, be it
the life of this nation, or any nation or any individual on this earth.
And that is why, lying here before us, through the very funeral service
sung for him in this Church of Saint Sava, Zoran has woven himself and
his grievous wound — the most precious aspect of his being and his most
precious possession — into the structure of this church itself.
Let us pray, therefore,
to Christ our God, the Lord of life and death, by His all-healing wound
of Golgotha and eternal love to heal Zoran’s wound, to comfort his mother,
wife and children, to encourage and comfort the faith and hope and fraternal
love of his people. I have heard that, on the occasion of his visit
to the Holy City of Jerusalem, Zoran waited for hours so that he could
touch and venerate Christ’s Tomb and through that touch feel precisely
that self-sacrificial of Christ’s Golgotha! Let us pray, once again,
to the All Merciful Lord to save this people from horrific fraternal
hatred, so that this people, as well as all the peoples of the earth
will be encompassed by His eternal peace, truth and love. Amen! May
God forgive his soul!
[OEA Translation:
Washington, DC]
http://www.oea.serbian-church.net/