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Greek Orthodox church head dies | Greek Orthodox church head dies |
(about 3 hours later) | |
The head of the Greek Orthodox Church, Archbishop Christodoulos, has died, aged 69, after suffering from cancer. | The head of the Greek Orthodox Church, Archbishop Christodoulos, has died, aged 69, after suffering from cancer. |
An attempted liver transplant in 2007 was unsuccessful, and the archbishop had grown steadily weaker recently. | |
Archbishop Christodoulos was a colourful and controversial figure, the BBC's Malcolm Brabant in Greece says. | |
He defended the church's pre-eminent role in the state and upheld Hellenism - the national character and culture of Greece, our correspondent says. | |
But critics say that under Archbishop Christodoulos, Greece remained a country which discriminates against those who are not Orthodox, including Catholics and worshippers of other branches of Christianity. | |
'Lost will to live' | |
The archbishop of Athens and all Greece died at his Athens home on Monday night, church officials said. | |
They [the government] are trying to take away our society's Christian and Orthodox identity... because they hate God Archbishop Christodoulos | |
They said he had refused hospital treatment in the final weeks of his life. | |
"He lost the will to live", deciding to "give up his soul", Bishop Anthimos of Salonika told Greece's state television NET | |
Archbishop Christodoulos was diagnosed with cancer of the liver and large intestine in 2007. He was then treated in the US for 10 weeks, but a liver transplant operation last October was aborted as the cancer had spread. | |
Senior Greek Orthodox clergy began arriving at the archbishop's home soon after his death was announced. | |
The Holy Synod, the church's top decision-making body, will hold a meeting later on Monday. It has 20 days in which to elect the archbishop's successor. | |
Controversial remarks | |
Elected as church leader in 1998, Archbishop Christodoulos was known as a fierce and outspoken defender of Greece and the role of the Orthodox Church within it, our correspondent says. | |
The archbishop once said that when ancient Greeks were creating the lights of civilisation, Europeans were living in trees. | |
He said Greeks lived in paradise compared to other Europeans because they had a strong faith, built churches, followed traditions and resisted globalisation. | |
Archbishop Christodoulos opposed Turkey's efforts to join the European Union, describing the Turks as barbarians, our correspondent says. | |
The archbishop clashed with the Greek government when the authorities wanted to remove religious status from identity cards. | |
"They are trying to take away our society's Christian and Orthodox identity, using various groundless arguments, because they hate God and want to marginalise the Church," he said. | |
He said it was a part of a plan to separate church and state, dreamed up by neo-intellectuals who wanted to attack Orthodoxy and tear at its flesh. | |
Historic talks | |
In 2001, the archbishop incurred the wrath of ultra Orthodox believers when he met Pope John Paul II during a visit to Greece. | |
In 2006, he met the Pope at the Vatican as part of efforts to bring the two churches together - the first such talks between Greece's most senior cleric and the leader of the world's Roman Catholics. | In 2006, he met the Pope at the Vatican as part of efforts to bring the two churches together - the first such talks between Greece's most senior cleric and the leader of the world's Roman Catholics. |
Their meeting focused on attempts to end the Great Schism that dates from 1054. | Their meeting focused on attempts to end the Great Schism that dates from 1054. |
The Greek Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, branch of the Eastern Orthodox Communion, covering the territory of Greece. | The Greek Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, branch of the Eastern Orthodox Communion, covering the territory of Greece. |