By Fr. Ignatius Shestakov, translated Fr. Andrew Phillips.
The Gornokarlovatsky Diocese of the
However, Roman Catholic proselytism and the spread of Uniatism down the centuries was a constant danger for the Serbs. On more than one occasion they had to stand up for their privileges and the purity of their faith. The 20th century, during which the Church suffered terrible trials, was no exception to this. During the Second World War, the Gornokarlovatsky Diocese found itself on the territory of the puppet "
During the genocide which took place between 1941 and 1945, 65 Orthodox priests were murdered by the Roman Catholic Ustashi forces, 116 churches were completely destroyed, 39 others seriously damaged and over 160 parish and monastic libraries were completely or partially destroyed.
The sufferings of the clergy and the people were fully shared in by the bishop of Gornji Karlovac, bishop Savvas Trlaich. In 2000, he was glorified by the Council of Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church as a hieromartyr. A true son of his people, he showed himself to be a true pastor, laying down his life for his flock, and his ministry was crowned by martyrdom.
Vladyka Savvas was born on July 6th,
Widowed, in 1929 he took his monastic vows with the name of Savvas and became rector and archimandrite of the Monastery of Krushedol. He served there until 1934, when he was appointed Vicar-Bishop of Sremski. He was consecrated bishop in Sremski Karlovtsy on September 30th, 1930, by Patriarch Barnabas of Serbia. As Patriarchal Vicar, Vladyka Savvas chaired the diocesan council of the Archdiocese of Belgrade-Karlovtsy until November 1936 and from then until early 1937 he chaired the ecclesiastical court. Then, on September 4th, 1938, he was appointed bishop of Gornji Karlovac, with his residence in Plashkom.
The German invasion of
On June 17th, 1941 Vladyka was arrested together with other well-known Serbs and priests who did not wish to leave the place of their ministry. The Ustashi locked their prisoners into a cowshed and set an armed guard. For one month all those arrested, and especially bishop Savvas, were subjected to humiliation and torture on a daily basis. They were then sent to the notorious concentration camp at Gospich. The prisoners were taken from the railway station at Gospich to the local prison and again subjected to further humiliation and torture.
In the first half of August 1941, about 2,000 Serbs were taken from Gospich to Velebita; bishop Savvas among them. It is supposed that he was murdered there, at the same time as about 8,000 other Serbs, in August 1941. The Holy Synod of the Serbian Church constantly, but unsuccessfully, called for the forces of occupation to explain what had happened to bishop Savvas and other Serbian bishops on the territory of the Independent Croatian State and tried to obtain their release.
Unfortunately, we have no exact information about the circumstances of the martyrdom of bishop Savvas. How ever the Serbian historian, Velibor Dzhomich in his book, “ Ustashi crimes against Serbian priests,” quotes a testimony which may throw some light on the question. According to this, a Fr Lovan Silashki wrote the following in an issue of "The Banat Herald" newspaper:
In 1941, the Gornokarlovatsky Diocese was under the control of the dreadful Ustashi regime. The bishop and the priests were told that they were undesirables and that they must abandon their flocks. The Roman Catholic Archbishop of
Soon it became clear that the Catholic Archbishop was not joking. Vladyka Savvas was arrested and horribly tortured. During the tortures and beatings in Plashkom, the Ustashi used a gramophone to play the hymn, As many as have been baptized in Christ, have put on Christ.
When they took Vladyka to his place of execution, his mother stood in front of the church and waited for him. She wanted to see her son for one last time and make her farewells. However, the executioners did not allow her to do this. Vladyka nevertheless blessed his mother, his legs tied, and went to his death.
A few years after this, a stranger walked into the church in Bashaida, where Vladyka had served. He spoke to the postmaster Savvas Saravolets.
"Did you know Vladyka Savvas Trlaich," asked the stranger, "I heard that he was priest here."
"Of course, Vladyka was my teacher. I'm grateful to him for everything I have managed to do in life. How do you know Vladyka?"
"I was an eyewitness of his sufferings," answered the stranger.
"The Ustashi butchers took Vladyka to a clearing and continued to torture him there. They tore his skin off him and then covered him with salt. Then they buried him alive, with just his head protruding, brought an iron harrow and pulled it across his head until he gave up his soul to God. What happened after that, I don't know. Maybe the Ustashi threw him into one of the many precipices there, which they used as graves for the Serbs. So even in death he wasn't separated from his people."
Unfortunately, this is all that we know about bishop Savvas' martyrdom.
As the result of the devastating losses suffered by the Serbians of this regions (which could never be made up for), after the war the Gornokarlovatsky Diocese could not be restored to its former prosperity. The destruction of its holy places and shrines also continued under the Communist regime, so that churches which had been damaged often fell into total ruin.
Dire tribulations hit the diocese again during the 1991-1995 war. Half a century after the first, a second act of spiritual genocide unfolded for the Serbs. On Orthodox Christmas in 1992, the St. Nicholas Cathedral, built in the 18th century, was blown up by the new Ustashi. Subjected to an artillery bombardment, the bishops' residence in Karlovtsy, with its library, records and museum, was looted. The bishops' residence of the Gornokarlovatsky Diocese was destroyed during Catholic Christmas, in 1993. After the Croat attack on the
Notwithstanding the difficulties, the diocese survived and now the situation is returning to normal. Church life is being reborn, ancient churches are being restored and new ones are being built. In 2005, after a long gap, a new bishop was appointed to the Gornokarlovatsky Diocese. He is Gerasim Popovich, a graduate of the
The restoration of Church life in the diocese is faced with many problems, above all the lack of a flock. Twice subjected to ethnic cleansing and expulsion in the 20th century, it is difficult for Serbs to return to where they had lived for centuries. We hope and trust that, despite all the difficulties, through the prayers of Hieromartyr Savvas, the life of this ancient diocese, which has suffered so much, will grow in strength and never be extinguished until the end of time.
ORTHODOX HERITAGE. VOL. 09, ISSUE 07-08
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