• Archbishop Anastasios of Tirana dies at 95

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    Archbishop Anastasios of Tirana dies at 95

    Anastasios Yannoulatos, Archbishop of Tirana, Durrës, and All Albania,
    died in Athens, Greece, on 25 January 2025 at age 95.

    25 January 2025

    Obituary

    An influential catalyst in the Orthodox world and a giant in the
    ecumenical sphere, Archbishop Anastasios died after a short illness.

    An honorary member of the Academy of Athens and a former World Council
    of Churches (WCC) president, with more than six decades in the
    ecumenical movement, Anastasios was known as a herald of peace and
    wisdom worldwide and a champion of interreligious dialogue.

    “Today we remember and honour not just the intellectual and
    institutional achievements and ecumenical dedication of Archbishop Anastasios,” said WCC general secretary Rev. Prof. Dr Jerry Pillay,
    “but also his wonderful, warm spirit, which enabled him perennially to
    open channels of reconciliation, renewal, and dialogue, even and
    especially in difficult times and venues. He leaves our worldwide
    fellowship an inspiring and enviable legacy as a true Christian
    witness for peace, justice, and reconciliation.”

    Anastasios’s career in ministry spanned more than 60 years, from early ministry in Greece and Africa, to leading the Orthodox church in
    Albania after it endured virulent anti-religious decades as part of
    the Soviet bloc, to building churches and educational institutions in
    post-1989 Albania, to reframing and renewing mission in an Orthodox
    world that sometimes eschewed it, to championing peace and ecological
    justice in this century.

    WCC moderator Bishop Heinrich Bedford-Strohm said: “With the death of Archbishop Anastasios, so many of us have lost a personal friend. As a
    fellow bishop, I have also admired his indefatigable work as a
    bridge-builder and reconciler among the Orthodox churches in Europe
    and beyond, especially in the decades after the Cold War and up to our
    present day. This work has been invaluable in an era when conflicting
    national, economic, and political interests and loyalties threaten our
    unity. We are so grateful to you, Archbishop Anastasios!”

    Mild manner, bold leader

    Anastasios’s personal kindness, mild manner, and openness to learning
    from a variety of traditions and points of view made him a natural
    ecumenist and a progressive force in interreligious and missiological
    circles.

    He served as a member of the WCC Commission on World Mission and
    Evangelism (CWME, 1963-1969) and on its missionary studies committee,
    then as secretary for missionary research and the relations with the
    Orthodox churches in the WCC General Secretariat (1969–71). He then participated in the WCC programme on Dialogue with People of Living
    Faiths and Ideologies (1975–1983) and as moderator of the CWME
    (1984–1991), as a member of the WCC central committee (1998–2006), and
    as a president of the WCC (2006-2013).

    Archbishop Anastasios was an active participant in the planning and
    convening of the autocephalous Orthodox churches in their Holy and
    Great Council in June 2016, capping decades of his inter-Orthodox
    work.

    Under his leadership, the Orthodox church of Albania hosted many interdenominational meetings at the Academy of Saint Vlasios.
    Anastasios also initiated the establishment of the Interreligious
    Council of Albania (KNFSH), aiming to promote dialogue and the
    harmonious coexistence of religious communities.

    Along with dozens of medals and awards, the archbishop was awarded 19
    honorary doctorates.

    A theologian facing the world

    A prolific theologian and author of two dozen books in several
    languages, Anastasios is perhaps best known for tackling
    interreligious issues and dialogue, as in his 2003 volume Facing the
    World: Orthodox Christian Essays on Global Concerns (WCC Publications,
    2003). His early experience in Africa led him to re-envision the
    whole enterprise of mission in his 2007 volume Mission in Christ’s Way
    (WCC Publications).

    In his most recent book, Coexistence (published in six languages in
    2022), he offered reflections on war, poverty, terrorism, corruption, injustice, globalization, and an alternative vision.

    “It is our duty to not surrender to a passive observation and
    description of these consequences, but on the contrary, we should
    strive for a globalization of peace, solidarity, and love,” he said.
    “For many, this seems utopian, nevertheless, it remains the vision,
    desire, and struggle of those who still believe in the vital need for
    a universal harmonious coexistence which does not eliminate the
    uniqueness of peoples but which creatively utilizes their talents.”

    A life beyond borders

    Anastasios Yannoulatos was born in 1929 in Piraeus, Greece. After
    graduating from the National University of Athens in 1952, he carried
    out post-graduate studies in the history of religions, ethnology,
    missions, and Africanology at the Universities of Hamburg and Marburg.
    He was ordained in 1964, earned his doctorate from the National
    University of Athens in 1970 and was consecrated Bishop of Androussa,
    Greece, in 1972.

    He served as professor of the History of Religions at his alma mater
    from 1971 to 1997.

    Anastasios also served as acting archbishop of the Holy Archbishopric
    of Irinoupolis (Kenya, Uganda, Tanzania) from 1981 through 1991 before
    being assigned to the newly independent Albania, where he was
    consecrated Archbishop of Tirana and Primate of the Autocephalous
    Orthodox Church of Albania in 1992.

    As archbishop, he restored and further developed the Orthodox Church
    of Albania, which had been fully dissolved for 23 years. He also led
    innovative programs in the areas of health, social welfare, education, agricultural developments, culture and ecology, making the church a
    significant economic and cultural actor. At the same time, he
    struggled to assist in relieving the many tensions in the Balkans.

    Characteristically, in 2015 he hosted the Global Christian Forum
    consultation in Tirana. There, 150 high-level leaders and
    representatives of various church traditions from more than 60
    countries gathered to listen and learn, and to stand in solidarity
    with churches and Christians experiencing discrimination and
    persecution in the world today .“It’s the fruit of our work together
    in Albania,” said Archbishop Anastasios.

    Source: <https://www.oikoumene.org/news/archbishop-anastasios-of-tirana-dies-at-95>

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