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Franjo Komarica

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Province
  
Sarajevo

Denomination
  
Roman Catholic

Consecration
  
January 6, 1986

Nationality
  
Croatian

Ordination
  
June 29, 1972


Birth name
  
Franjo Komarica

Predecessor
  
Alfred Pichler

See
  
Banja Luka

Name
  
Franjo Komarica

Appointed
  
May 15, 1989



Other posts
  
President of the Bishops' Conference of Bosnia and Herzegovina President of Caritas Bosnia and Herzegovina

Born
  
3 February 1946 (age 78) Novakovici, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Yugoslavia (
1946-02-03
)

Diocese
  
Roman Catholic Diocese of Banja Luka

Books
  
In defence of the rightless

Gost dnevnika tv1 biskup franjo komarica


Dr Franjo Komarica (born 3 February 1946) is a Bosnian Croat Roman Catholic prelate, the Bishop of Banja Luka and president of the Bishops' Conference of Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Contents

Franjo Komarica Mons dr Franjo KOMARICA rezidencijalni biskup od 1989

PRESSJEK - BISKUP FRANJO KOMARICA


Early life

Franjo Komarica Biskupska konferencija Bosne i Hercegovine

One of eleven children, Komarica was born in Novakovići near Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina, to Ivo and Ivka (née Marić) Komarica. He finished elementary school in Banja Luka, then he attended the minor seminary in Zagreb (1961-63) and Đakovo (1963-65). After completing his compulsory military service he began theological studies in Ðakovo (1967-68), and continued studying at the Faculty of Catholic Theology of the University of Innsbruck (1968-72).

Priesthood

Franjo Komarica Poziv biskupa Komarice na molitvu za Papin pohod Bosni i

Komarica was ordained to the priesthood by Alfred Pichler on June 29, 1972 in Mariastern Abbey, near Banja Luka, and then continued special studies in Innsbruck, where he earned master's degree in 1973, and doctorate in liturgy in 1978.

Episcopal ministry

Franjo Komarica kamenjarcomwpcontentuploads201410komaricab

On 28 October 1985, Komarica was appointed Auxiliary Bishop of Banja Luka and Titular Bishop of Satafis in Africa by Pope John Paul II. He received his episcopal consecration from John Paul II, with Agostino Casaroli and Bernardin Gantin serving as co-consecrators on 6 January 1986. Until the retirement of Bishop Alfred Pichler Komarica served as Bishop's Vicar General. On 15 May 1989, he was appointed Bishop of Banja Luka and two months later, officially took the office.

Role during the Bosnian war

Franjo Komarica Biskup Franjo Komarica jednim potezom oduevio itavu regiju

Just a few years after he took the office whole Bosnia and Herzegovina and particular the Diocese of Banja Luka faced with armed aggression. During the Bosnian war, Bishop Komarica's diocese fell under Serbian control. Over 220,000 Roman Catholics were forced to flee the area now known as Republika Srpska, at least 400 were killed, including seven priests and nun. In the Diocese of Banja Luka, 98% of churches and a third of other Church property was destroyed in the war. "It is an ethnocide, or genocide", the bishop said in 1996, "because the presence of a nation, its culture and religion is being wiped out. All the recognisable signs of our existence are being destroyed: churches, monasteries, graveyards, monuments, names, ..."

Franjo Komarica Biskupska konferencija Bosne i Hercegovine

During the war, although under house arrest and could not move around, the Bishop reportedly tried to keep in contact with his diocese, sending out priests to bring him information from the various parishes while endeavouring to make contact with Bosnian Serbian officials. During and after the war, Komarica reportedly gave hospitality in his own residence to displaced Muslim, Orthodox and Catholic families, numbering more than 30 people at a time.

After the war

Franjo Komarica Franjo Komarica Haberba

After the Yugoslav wars, Komarica remained a supporter of preserving Croatian and Roman Catholic traditions in Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Franjo Komarica Kako biskup Franjo Komarica gleda na trei entitet N1 BA

In 2005, at the request of Komarica, the Missionaries of Charity, opened their first monastery in Bosnia and Herzegovina. On 16 November 2005, Komarica founded the European Academy in Banja Luka. Two months later, on 6 February 2006, he established the Center for Life and Family of Caritas Bosnia and Herzegovina.

Awards

  • Robert Schuman Medal (1997)
  • Laureates of the Europe prize (2002)
  • Franz Werfel Human Rights Award (2005)
  • Grand Cross of the Grand Order of King Dmitar Zvonimir (2007) In 2004 he was nominated as a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize.
  • References

    Franjo Komarica Wikipedia