The South
should follow Serbia’s ensample of love for, and public celebration of, her
ancient culture:
“This
is not just an act of unveiling a monument to our father, the creator of our
state, a saint, and the one from whom it all began. This is an act of taking
care of ourselves, our identity, what we have learned, what we know, and where
we are going. Long live Serbia!” said Serbian President Aleksandar Vučić at the
unveiling of a monument to Grand Prince Stefan Nemanja in Belgrade yesterday.
The
75-ft. high, 76-ton statue stands in the center of Belgrade, outside the old
railroad station, depicting the father of the medieval Nemanji Dynasty with a
sword in his right hand and the charter of the Athonite Hilandar Monastery in
his left, reports N1.
Instead
of a typical pedestal, St. Symeon stands on a cracked Byzantine helmet, which
was installed last May. Four large reliefs depict the lineage of
the saint’s dynasty.
Stefan
Nemanja (c. 1113-1199) was the Grand Prince of the Serbian Grand Principality
from 1166 to 1196 and is remembered for founding what evolved into the Serbian
Empire, as well as the autocephalous Serbian Church. In 1196, he abdicated the
throne and became a monk on Mt. Athos. Together with his son, St. Sava, the
first Archbishop of the Serbian Church, he restored Hilandar monastery, the
Athonite cradle of the Serbian Church. He is venerated as St. Symeon the
Myrrh-Gusher, under the name he took in monasticism.
The
new monument to the great statesman and saint is the work of Russian sculptor
and academician Alexander Rukavishnikov.
It
is “the great story about us (the Serbs), which is big, difficult because the
story about us was often difficult. This monument is as beautiful as the story
about us is beautiful… This monument is big because it’s the story about us,
about who we were, where we were, what we did and what we are today and what we
want to be,” President Vučić said at the opening ceremony.
The
figure of St. Symeon dominates the St. Sava Square on which it stands and
overlooks the massive St. Sava’s Cathedral.
“Standing
here means repentance for all the years during which we forgot it, but also the
awareness that we have finally discovered the root from which the most
beautiful tree called Serbia originated,” the President said.
“Pray
to God for us, Blessed Simeon, that your flock may be preserved inviolable!
Glory to thee! Long live Serbia!” the President concluded his address.
--Image and article from https://orthochristian.com/137008.html; a video of the ceremony is available on the same page.
--
Holy Ælfred
the Great, King of England, South Patron, pray for us sinners at the Souð, unworthy though we are!
Anathema to
the Union!
No comments:
Post a Comment