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[[File:420 Conducatorii de partid si de stat.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Nicolae Ceauşescu]] and other Party officials visit [[Neamţ Monastery]] in 1966.]]
[[File:420 Conducatorii de partid si de stat.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Nicolae Ceauşescu]] and other Party officials visit [[Neamţ Monastery]] in 1966.]]
{{main|Orthodox Church in Communist Romania|Religious persecution in Communist Romania}}
{{main|Orthodox Church in Communist Romania|Religious persecution in Communist Romania}}
Restricted access to ecclesiastical and relevant state archives<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.presidency.ro/static/ordine/RAPORT_FINAL_CPADCR.pdf|title=Raport final|author=[[Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania]], pp. 446-447|year=2006|publisher=Romanian Presidency|language=Romanian}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.revista22.ro/despartirea-apelor-biserica-si-securitatea-4069.html|title=Despărțirea apelor: Biserica și Securitatea|author=Mihail Neamțu|publisher=[[Revista 22]]|date=2007-10-17|language=Romanian}}</ref> makes an accurate assessment of the Romanian Orthodox Church's attitude towards the [[Communism in Romania|Communist regime]] a difficult proposition. Nevertheless, the activity of the Orthodox Church as an institution was more or less tolerated by the [[Marxist–Leninist atheism|Marxist–Leninist atheist]] regime, although it was controlled through "special delegates" and its access to the public sphere was severely limited; the regime's attempts at repression generally focused on individual believers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.presidency.ro/static/ordine/RAPORT_FINAL_CPADCR.pdf|title=Raport final|author=[[Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania]], p. 453|year=2006|publisher=Romanian Presidency|language=Romanian}}</ref> The attitudes of the church's members, both laity and clergy, towards the communist regime, range broadly from opposition and [[martyrdom]], to silent consent, collaboration or subservience aimed at ensuring survival. Beyond limited access to the [[Securitate]] and Party archives as well as the short time elapsed since these events unfolded, such an assessment is complicated by the particularities of each individual and situation, the understanding each had about how their own relation with the regime could influence others and how it actually did.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.presidency.ro/static/ordine/RAPORT_FINAL_CPADCR.pdf|title=Raport final|author=[[Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania]], pp. 455-56|year=2006|publisher=Romanian Presidency|language=Romanian}}</ref><ref>See {{cite web|url=http://www.ziua.net/display.php?id=206475&data=2006-09-02|author=George Enache|title=Biserica Ortodoxă Română și Securitatea|publisher=[[Ziua]]|language=[[Romanian language|Romanian]]}}</ref>
Restricted access to ecclesiastical and relevant state archives<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.presidency.ro/static/ordine/RAPORT_FINAL_CPADCR.pdf|title=Raport final|author=[[Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania]], pp. 446-447|year=2006|publisher=Romanian Presidency|language=Romanian}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.revista22.ro/despartirea-apelor-biserica-si-securitatea-4069.html|title=Despărțirea apelor: Biserica și Securitatea|author=Mihail Neamțu|publisher=[[Revista 22]]|date=2007-10-17|language=Romanian}}</ref> makes an accurate assessment of the Romanian Orthodox Church's attitude towards the [[Communism in Romania|Communist regime]] a difficult proposition. Nevertheless, the activity of the Orthodox Church as an institution was more or less tolerated by the [[Marxist–Leninist atheism|Marxist–Leninist atheist]] regime, although it was controlled through "special delegates" and its access to the public sphere was severely limited; the regime's attempts at repression generally focused on individual believers.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.presidency.ro/static/ordine/RAPORT_FINAL_CPADCR.pdf|title=Raport final|author=[[Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania]], p. 453|year=2006|publisher=Romanian Presidency|language=Romanian}}</ref> The attitudes of the church's members, both laity and clergy, towards the communist regime, range broadly from opposition and [[martyrdom]], to silent consent, collaboration or subservience aimed at ensuring survival. Beyond limited access to the [[Securitate]] and Party archives as well as the short time elapsed since these events unfolded, such an assessment is complicated by the particularities of each individual and situation, the understanding each had about how their own relationship with the regime could influence others and how it actually did.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.presidency.ro/static/ordine/RAPORT_FINAL_CPADCR.pdf|title=Raport final|author=[[Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania]], pp. 455-56|year=2006|publisher=Romanian Presidency|language=Romanian}}</ref><ref>See {{cite web|url=http://www.ziua.net/display.php?id=206475&data=2006-09-02|author=George Enache|title=Biserica Ortodoxă Română și Securitatea|publisher=[[Ziua]]|language=[[Romanian language|Romanian]]}}</ref>


The [[Romanian Communist Party]], which assumed political power at the end of 1947, initiated mass purges that resulted in a decimation the Orthodox hierarchy. Three archbishops died suddenly after expressing opposition to government policies, and thirteen more "uncooperative" bishops and archbishops were arrested.<ref name="Ramet19">Ramet, Pedro and Ramet, Sabrina P. ''Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics'', p.19-20. Duke University Press (1989), ISBN 0-8223-0891-6.</ref> A May 1947 decree imposed a mandatory retirement age for clergy, thus providing authorities with a convenient way to pension off old-guard holdouts. The 4 August 1948 Law on Cults institutionalised state control over episcopal elections and packed the Holy Synod with Communist supporters.<ref name="democ">Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, ''Religion and Politics in Post-communist Romania'', Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-19-530853-0.</ref> In exchange for subservience and enthusiastic support for state policies, the property rights over as many as 2,500 church buildings and other assets belonging to the (by then outlawed) [[Romanian Church United with Rome, Greek-Catholic|Romanian Greek-Catholic Church]] were transferred to the Romanian Orthodox Church; the government took charge of providing salaries for bishops and priests, as well as financial subsidies for the publication of religious books, calendars and theological journals.<ref name="Ramet278">Sabrina P. Ramet, "Church and State in Romania before and after 1989", in Carey, Henry F. ''Romania Since 1989: Politics, Economics, and Society'', p.278. 2004, Lexington Books, ISBN 0-7391-0592-2.</ref> By weeding out the anti-communists from among the Orthodox clergy and setting up a pro-regime, secret police-infiltrated Union of Democratic Priests (1945), the party endeavoured to secure the hierarchy's cooperation. By January 1953 some 300-500 Orthodox priests were being held in concentration camps, and following Patriarch [[Nicodim Munteanu|Nicodim]]'s death in May 1948, the party succeeded in having the ostensibly docile [[Justinian Marina]] elected to succeed him.<ref name="Ramet19"/>
The [[Romanian Communist Party]], which assumed political power at the end of 1947, initiated mass purges that resulted in a decimation of the Orthodox hierarchy. Three archbishops died suddenly after expressing opposition to government policies, and thirteen more "uncooperative" bishops and archbishops were arrested.<ref name="Ramet19">Ramet, Pedro and Ramet, Sabrina P. ''Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics'', p.19-20. Duke University Press (1989), ISBN 0-8223-0891-6.</ref> A May 1947 decree imposed a mandatory retirement age for clergy, thus providing authorities with a convenient way to pension off old-guard holdouts. The 4 August 1948 Law on Cults institutionalised state control over episcopal elections and packed the Holy Synod with Communist supporters.<ref name="democ">Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, ''Religion and Politics in Post-communist Romania'', Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-19-530853-0.</ref> In exchange for subservience and enthusiastic support for state policies, the property rights over as many as 2,500 church buildings and other assets belonging to the (by then outlawed) [[Romanian Church United with Rome, Greek-Catholic|Romanian Greek-Catholic Church]] were transferred to the Romanian Orthodox Church; the government took charge of providing salaries for bishops and priests, as well as financial subsidies for the publication of religious books, calendars and theological journals.<ref name="Ramet278">Sabrina P. Ramet, "Church and State in Romania before and after 1989", in Carey, Henry F. ''Romania Since 1989: Politics, Economics, and Society'', p.278. 2004, Lexington Books, ISBN 0-7391-0592-2.</ref> By weeding out the anti-communists from among the Orthodox clergy and setting up a pro-regime, secret police-infiltrated Union of Democratic Priests (1945), the party endeavoured to secure the hierarchy's cooperation. By January 1953 some 300-500 Orthodox priests were being held in concentration camps, and following Patriarch [[Nicodim Munteanu|Nicodim]]'s death in May 1948, the party succeeded in having the ostensibly docile [[Justinian Marina]] elected to succeed him.<ref name="Ramet19"/>


As a result of measures passed in 1947-48, the state took over the 2,300 elementary schools and 24 high schools operated by the Orthodox Church. A new campaign struck the church in 1958-62 when more than half of its remaining monasteries were closed, more than 2,000 monks were forced to take secular jobs, and about 1,500 clergy and lay activists were arrested (out of a total of up to 6,000 in the 1946-64 period<ref name="Ramet278"/>). Throughout this period Patriarch Justinian took great care that his public statements met the regime's standards of political correctness and to avoid giving offence to the government;<ref name="Ramet20">Ramet 1989, p.20.</ref> indeed the hierarchy at the time claimed that the arrests of clergy members were not due religious persecution.<ref name="democ"/>
As a result of measures passed in 1947-48, the state took over the 2,300 elementary schools and 24 high schools operated by the Orthodox Church. A new campaign struck the church in 1958-62 when more than half of its remaining monasteries were closed, more than 2,000 monks were forced to take secular jobs, and about 1,500 clergy and lay activists were arrested (out of a total of up to 6,000 in the 1946-64 period<ref name="Ramet278"/>). Throughout this period Patriarch Justinian took great care that his public statements met the regime's standards of political correctness and to avoid giving offence to the government;<ref name="Ramet20">Ramet 1989, p.20.</ref> indeed the hierarchy at the time claimed that the arrests of clergy members were not due religious persecution.<ref name="democ"/>

Revision as of 20:11, 25 March 2013

Romanian Orthodox Church
File:BOR CoA.png
Coat of arms
LanguageRomanian
HeadquartersDealul Mitropoliei, Bucharest
Territory Romania
 Moldova
Possessions Serbia
 Hungary
Western and Southern Europe;
Germany, Central and Northern Europe;
Americas;
Australia and New Zealand
Founder(as metropolis of Romania)
Nifon, Carol I
(as patriarchy of Romania)
Miron Cristea, Ferdinand I
Independence1872
Recognition25 April 1885
Official websitehttp://www.patriarhia.ro/

The Romanian Orthodox Church (Biserica Ortodoxă Română in Romanian) is an autocephalous Eastern Orthodox church, in full communion with other Eastern Orthodox churches, and ranked seventh in order of precedence. Its Primate has the title of Patriarch. Its jurisdiction covers the territory of Romania, with additional dioceses for Romanians living in nearby Moldova, Serbia and Hungary, as well as for diaspora communities in Central and Western Europe, North America and Oceania.

It is the only Eastern Orthodox church using a Romance language. The majority of Romania's population (16,367,267, or 85.9%, according to the 2011 census data[3]), as well as some 720,000 Moldovans[2] belong to the Romanian Orthodox Church. The Romanian Orthodox Church is the second-largest in size behind the Russian Orthodox Church.

Members of the Romanian Orthodox Church sometimes refer to the Orthodox doctrine as Dreapta credinţă ("right/correct belief" or "true faith"; compare to Greek ὀρθὴ δόξα, "straight/correct belief").

History

Orthodox believers in Transylvania according to the 1850 census
Orthodox believers in Romania according to the 1930 census
Orthodox believers in Romania according to the 2002 census

In the Kingdom of Romania

In 1859, the political union of the Romanian principalities of Moldavia and Wallachia resulted in the formation of the modern state of Romania. Since the territorial organization of the Orthodox churches tends to follow that of the state, in 1872, the Orthodox churches of the former principalities, the Metropolis of Ungro-Wallachia and the Metropolis of Moldavia, merged to form the Romanian Orthodox Church.

The 1866 Constitution of Romania declared the Orthodox Church to be "independent of any foreign hierarchy", and a law passed in 1872 declared the church to be "autocephalous". After a long period of negotiations with the Patriarchate of Constantinople, the latter finally recognized the Metropolis of Romania in 1885, which was eventually raised to the rank of Patriarchy in 1925.[4]

Communist period

Nicolae Ceauşescu and other Party officials visit Neamţ Monastery in 1966.

Restricted access to ecclesiastical and relevant state archives[5][6] makes an accurate assessment of the Romanian Orthodox Church's attitude towards the Communist regime a difficult proposition. Nevertheless, the activity of the Orthodox Church as an institution was more or less tolerated by the Marxist–Leninist atheist regime, although it was controlled through "special delegates" and its access to the public sphere was severely limited; the regime's attempts at repression generally focused on individual believers.[7] The attitudes of the church's members, both laity and clergy, towards the communist regime, range broadly from opposition and martyrdom, to silent consent, collaboration or subservience aimed at ensuring survival. Beyond limited access to the Securitate and Party archives as well as the short time elapsed since these events unfolded, such an assessment is complicated by the particularities of each individual and situation, the understanding each had about how their own relationship with the regime could influence others and how it actually did.[8][9]

The Romanian Communist Party, which assumed political power at the end of 1947, initiated mass purges that resulted in a decimation of the Orthodox hierarchy. Three archbishops died suddenly after expressing opposition to government policies, and thirteen more "uncooperative" bishops and archbishops were arrested.[10] A May 1947 decree imposed a mandatory retirement age for clergy, thus providing authorities with a convenient way to pension off old-guard holdouts. The 4 August 1948 Law on Cults institutionalised state control over episcopal elections and packed the Holy Synod with Communist supporters.[11] In exchange for subservience and enthusiastic support for state policies, the property rights over as many as 2,500 church buildings and other assets belonging to the (by then outlawed) Romanian Greek-Catholic Church were transferred to the Romanian Orthodox Church; the government took charge of providing salaries for bishops and priests, as well as financial subsidies for the publication of religious books, calendars and theological journals.[12] By weeding out the anti-communists from among the Orthodox clergy and setting up a pro-regime, secret police-infiltrated Union of Democratic Priests (1945), the party endeavoured to secure the hierarchy's cooperation. By January 1953 some 300-500 Orthodox priests were being held in concentration camps, and following Patriarch Nicodim's death in May 1948, the party succeeded in having the ostensibly docile Justinian Marina elected to succeed him.[10]

As a result of measures passed in 1947-48, the state took over the 2,300 elementary schools and 24 high schools operated by the Orthodox Church. A new campaign struck the church in 1958-62 when more than half of its remaining monasteries were closed, more than 2,000 monks were forced to take secular jobs, and about 1,500 clergy and lay activists were arrested (out of a total of up to 6,000 in the 1946-64 period[12]). Throughout this period Patriarch Justinian took great care that his public statements met the regime's standards of political correctness and to avoid giving offence to the government;[13] indeed the hierarchy at the time claimed that the arrests of clergy members were not due religious persecution.[11]

The church's situation began to improve in 1962, when relations with the state suddenly thawed, an event that coincided with the beginning of Romania's pursuit of an independent foreign policy course that saw the political élite encourage nationalism as a means to strengthen its position against Soviet pressure. The Romanian Orthodox Church, an intensely national body that had made significant contributions to Romanian culture from the 14th century on, came to be regarded by the regime as a natural partner. As a result of this second co-optation, this time as an ally, the church entered a period of dramatic recovery. By 1975, its diocesan clergy was numbering about 12,000, and the church was already publishing by then eight high-quality theological reviews, including Ortodoxia and Studii Teologice. Orthodox clergymen consistently supported the Ceauşescu régime's foreign policy, refrained from criticizing domestic policy, and upheld the Romanian government's line against the Soviets (over Bessarabia) and the Hungarians (over Transylvania). As of 1989, two metropolitan bishops even sat in the Great National Assembly.[13] The members of the church's hierarchy and clergy remained mostly silent as some two dozen historic Bucharest churches were demolished in the 1980s, and as plans for systematization (including the destruction of village churches) were announced.[14] A notable dissenter was Gheorghe Calciu-Dumitreasa, imprisoned for a number of years and eventually expelled from Romania in June 1985, after signing an open letter criticizing and demanding an end to the regime's violations of human rights.[12]

In an attempt to adapt to the newly created circumstances, the Orthodox Church proposed a new ecclesiology designed to justify its subservience to the state in supposedly theological terms. This so-called "Social Apostolate" doctrine, developed by Patriarch Justinian, asserted that the church owed allegiance to the secular government and should put itself at it's service. This notion inflamed conservatives, who were consequently purged by Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej, Ceauşescu's predecessor and a friend of Justinian's. The Social Apostolate called on clerics to become active in the People's Republic, thus laying the foundation for the church's submission to and collaboration with the state. Fr. Vasilescu, an Orthodox priest, attempted to find grounds in support of the Social Apostolate doctrine in the Christian tradition, citing Augustine of Hippo, John Chrysostom, Maximus the Confessor, Origen and Tertullian. Based on this alleged grounding in tradition, Vasilescu concluded that Christians owed submission to their secular rulers because this were the will of God. Once recalcitrants were removed from office, the remaining bishops adopted a servile attitude, endorsing Ceauşescu's concept of nation, supporting his policies, and applauding his peculiar ideas about peace.[15]

Collaboration with the Securitate

In the wake of the 1989 Romanian Revolution, the Church never admitted to having ever willingly collaborated with the régime, although several Romanian Orthodox priests have publicly admitted after 1989 that they had collaborated with and/or served as informers for the Securitate, the Romanian Communist secret police. A prime example was Bishop Nicolae Corneanu, the Metropolitan of Banat, who admitted to his efforts on behalf of the Communist Party, and denounced activities of clerics in support of the Communists, including his own, as "the Church's [act of] prostitution with the Communist régime".[11]

After 1989

Romanian icon of St. Peter

As Romania made the transition to democracy, the Church was freed from most of the state control, although the State Secretariat for Religious Denominations still maintains control over a number of aspects of the church's management of property, finances and administration. The state provides funding for the church in proportion to the number its members, based on census returns[16] and "the religion's needs" which is considered to be an "ambiguous provision".[17] Currently, the state provides the funds necessary for paying the salaries of priests, deacons and other prelates and the pensions of retired clergy, as well as for expenses related to lay church personnel. The same applies to all state-recognised religions in Romania.

The state also provides support for church construction and structural maintenance, with a preferential treatment of Orthodox parishes.[18] The state funds all the expenses of Orthodox seminaries and colleges, including teachers' and professors' salaries who, for compensation purposes, are regarded as civil servants .

Since the fall of Communism, Greek-Catholic Church leaders have claimed that the Eastern Catholic community is facing a cultural and religious wipe-out: the Greek-Catholic churches are allegedly being destroyed by representatives of the Orthodox Church, whose actions are supported and accepted by the Romanian authorities.[19]

In Moldova

The Romanian Orthodox Church also has jurisdiction over a minority of believers in Moldova, who belong to the Metropolis of Bessarabia, as opposed to the majority, who belong to the Moldovan Orthodox Church, under the Moscow Patriarchate. In 2001 it won a landmark legal victory against the Government of Moldova at the Strasbourg-based European Court of Human Rights.

This means that despite current political issues, the Metropolis of Bessarabia is now recognized as "the rightful successor" to the Metropolitan Church of Bessarabia and Hotin, which existed from 1927 until it's dissolution in 1944, when its canonical territory was put under the jurisdiction of the Russian Orthodox Church's Moscow Patriarchate in 1947.

Organization

Romanian Orthodox Church organization (as established in 2011)

The Romanian Orthodox Church is organized in the form of the Romanian Patriarchate. The highest hierarchical, canonical and dogmatical authority of the Romanian Orthodox Church is the Holy Synod.

There are six Orthodox Metropolitanates and ten archbishoprics in Romania, and more than twelve thousand priests and deacons, servant fathers of ancient altars from parishes, monasteries and social centres. Almost 400 monasteries exist inside the country, staffed by some 3,500 monks and 5,000 nuns. Three Diasporan Metropolitanates and two Diasporan Bishoprics function outside Romania proper. As of 2004, there are, inside Romania, fifteen theological universities where more than ten thousand students (some of them from Bessarabia, Bukovina and Serbia benefiting from a few Romanian fellowships) currently study for a doctoral degree. More than 14,500 churches (traditionally named "lăcaşe de cult", or houses of worship) exist in Romania for the Romanian Orthodox believers. As of 2002, almost 1,000 of those were either in the process of being built or rebuilt.

Relations with other Orthodox jurisdictions

Most Eastern Orthodox autocephalous churches, including the Romanian Orthodox Church, maintain a respectful spiritual link to the Ecumenical Patriarch, currently Bartholomew I.

In December 2007 Russian Duma United Russia’s MP Konstantin Zatulin accused the Romanian Orthodox Church of “proselytism” against the Russian Orthodox Church in Moldova (and Transnistria) with the aim of annexing these territories into Romania.[20]

Notable theologians

Dumitru Stăniloae (1903–1993) is considered one of the greatest Orthodox theologians of the 20th century, having written extensively in all major fields of Eastern Christian systematic theology. One of his other major achievements in theology is the 45-year-long comprehensive series on Orthodox spirituality known as the Romanian Philokalia, a collection of texts written by classical Byzantine writers, that he edited and translated from Greek.

Archimandrite Ilie Cleopa (1912–1998), elder of the Sihǎstria Monastery, is considered one of the most representative fathers of contemporary Romanian Orthodox monastic spirituality.[21]

List of Patriarchs

Current leaders

The patriarchal chair is currently held by Daniel I, Archbishop of Bucharest, Metropolitan of Ungro-Vlachia (Muntenia or Wallachia and Dobrogea or Dobruja) and Patriarch of All of the Romanian Orthodox Church, Locum Tenens of Caesarea in Cappadocia.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ 2011 Romanian census.
  2. ^ a b Template:Ro icon "Biserica Ortodoxă Română, atacată de bisericile 'surori'" ("The Romanian Orthodox Church, Attacked by Its 'Sister' Churches", Ziua, 31 January 2008
  3. ^ 2011 census data on religion
  4. ^ Keith Hitchins, Rumania 1866-1947, Clarendon Press, 1994, p. 92
  5. ^ Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania, pp. 446-447 (2006). "Raport final" (PDF) (in Romanian). Romanian Presidency.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  6. ^ Mihail Neamțu (2007-10-17). "Despărțirea apelor: Biserica și Securitatea" (in Romanian). Revista 22.
  7. ^ Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania, p. 453 (2006). "Raport final" (PDF) (in Romanian). Romanian Presidency.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. ^ Presidential Commission for the Study of the Communist Dictatorship in Romania, pp. 455-56 (2006). "Raport final" (PDF) (in Romanian). Romanian Presidency.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. ^ See George Enache. "Biserica Ortodoxă Română și Securitatea" (in Romanian). Ziua.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unrecognized language (link)
  10. ^ a b Ramet, Pedro and Ramet, Sabrina P. Religion and Nationalism in Soviet and East European Politics, p.19-20. Duke University Press (1989), ISBN 0-8223-0891-6.
  11. ^ a b c Lavinia Stan and Lucian Turcescu, Religion and Politics in Post-communist Romania, Oxford University Press, 2007. ISBN 0-19-530853-0.
  12. ^ a b c Sabrina P. Ramet, "Church and State in Romania before and after 1989", in Carey, Henry F. Romania Since 1989: Politics, Economics, and Society, p.278. 2004, Lexington Books, ISBN 0-7391-0592-2.
  13. ^ a b Ramet 1989, p.20.
  14. ^ Ramet 2004, p. 279.
  15. ^ Ramet 2004, p.280.
  16. ^ A world survey of religion and the state, By Jonathan Fox, pg. 167
  17. ^ 2008 International Religious Freedom report by the US Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights, and Labor
  18. ^ Law and religion in post-communist Europe By Silvio Ferrari, W. Cole Durham, Elizabeth A. Sewell pg.253
  19. ^ The Romanian Greek-Catholic Community is facing a cultural and religious wipe-out – letter to US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
  20. ^ Romanian Patriarchate’s activity aimed at Moldova’s absorption by Romania: Konstantin Zatulin, REGNUM News Agency, December 5, 2007
  21. ^ Electronic version of Dicţionarul teologilor români (Dictionary of Romanian Theologians), Univers Enciclopedic Ed., Bucharest, 1996, retrieved from http://biserica.org/WhosWho/DTR/I/IlieCleopa.html.

Outside Romania

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