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Light From the East
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16765 |
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Section : |
BOOK WORLD
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| Issue
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9 / 1989 |
3,295 Words |
| Author
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Lee Congdon Lee Congdon writes regularly on modern literature. He teaches
eastern European history at James Madison University. |
CONSCIENCE AND CAPTIVITY
Religion in Eastern Europe
Janice Broun, with Grazyna Sikorska
Washington, D.C.: Ethics and Public Policy Center, 1989
376 pp., $19.95
In the summer of 1981, six young communicants at a Catholic parish in Medjugorje, Yugoslavia, revealed that the Blessed Virgin Mary appeared to them daily. Speaking in their native Croatian, she entrusted them with messages that revolve around the interrelated themes of repentance, conversion, reconciliation, and peace. At first their local priest, Fr. Jozo Zovko, expressed a disbelief that turned to resentment as parishioners ignored his admonishments and followed the young people up a nearby hill where the apparitions occurred. When police arrived to investigate the rapturous reports, however, Father Zovko heard a voice directing him to "go and protect the children."
As pilgrims flocked to the village, a shaken but radiant Father Zovko spoke out boldly in defense of the miracle's authenticity. Indeed, so intrepid did he become that in one sermon he made reference to his listeners' "forty year" enslavement. Feeling the sting, the state authorities moved quickly to arrest and sentence him to three and a half (reduced to one and a half) years for maligning Yugoslavia's communist era. To make matters worse, Bishop Pavao Zanic, who took a jaundiced view of the Franciscan order to which Father Zovko belongs, did not attempt to hide his skepticism concerning the children's testimony.
The story of
... (1998 of 19809 Characters)
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