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JUST THOUGHTS
February 24 Long time no seeIt has been a while since I updated my space, well i can find 1000 excuses but actually i got bit tired of it all, sometimes it is very useful to make break.
Now I am back and I hope that I will be here more often.
Here is little something that I called:
Just Thoughts
Hallway stood empty covered with yellow leaves, everything was peaceful, dusty stone corridor waited. Pale paintings spoke their story from web covered walls... waiting... sound of rain like drums broke the silence. Scent of fresh wet wood spread through the air. Sound of the feet...everything was still....waiting...
tad am, tad am, knocks banged spreading sound across the hall. Silence…… sound of rain became stronger, nothing moved, the corridor web net started waving in corners, light came... footsteps... 29.03.2006 J.J p.s thanks Forester for pointing out the mistake it is corrected now. December 28 Hello I am back > and one of my storiesHello fellow spacers, It has been long since I updated my space, but as it is end of the year, and as I am working for Strategic Marketing and Media Research Institute I have loads of work that is taking almost every free minute that I have. In January there are ellections here in Serbia and in research center we are working like bees. I wish you all belated Merry Christmas. Cheers!! =============== In need, indeed She was walking along the shore of emerald green lake. Her mind was in turmoil. She felt, she knew, that she does not belong to this world. She never did. One gull hovered over the green lake screaming. She found one tree trunk and sat on it. Small waves touched her bare feet, and gentle breeze caressed her hair. She was sitting like that fighting the windmills in her mind and watching the sun easily setting down. The shadows became longer.
- Is it free? – Suddenly she heard the voice. - Sit – She whispered without even looking at the man who approached.
Silence surrounded them while they were watching the sky changing its colour from bluish purple to dark orange red of the dying sun.
- It is becoming cold, -he said- here, take my jacket, I have a sweater.
His jacket was still full of his body heat which embraced her gently. She tucked in the jacket and let the warmth spread through her body. Pleasant manly scent was on the collar of the jacket. She looked at him with gratitude in her eyes and smiled. He put his hand around her and sat closer embracing her. She did not resist, nor did she speak a word. They were sitting like that for a while till the last sun rays faded away. - Let’s go, it is becoming colder – he said – let’s go home.
“Home” she thought …… where the home...is … I have to thank my dear friend for taking trouble and editing my story. Sometimes I just complicate things to much, and I guess that I am lucky to have someone to count on (though it takes lots of patience ... LOL...). November 24 I Wish You Were HereWish you were here Wish you were here... - Blackmore's Night - November 20 CustomsHere is something i wanted to share with you. Here in Serbia we have certain customs which are unique. We celebrate one day in year, different for different families, that come on certain date in certain month. It is the day of the saint keeper of the house.We call that day Slava ( Krsna slava- full name).Tomorrow is November 21st. that day is celebrated as St. Archangel Michael day, and it is day of my house protector. I wish you all good health and prosperous year. May all live in peace and love.
Slava is the celebration of the Serbian home's Patron Saint and is the greatest characteristic of the national and religious life of the Serbian people. It is a beautiful and unique expression of the Orthodox faith that is deeply implanted in the Serbian Christian soul.
Krsna Slava is an exclusively Serbian custom. It is the most solemn day of the year for all Serbs of the Orthodox faith and has played a role of vital importance in the history of the Serbian people. Krsna Slava is actually the celebration of the spiritual birthday of the Serbian people. Our forefathers accepted Christianity collectively by families and by tribes. In commemoration of their baptisms, each family or tribe began to celebrate in a special way to honor the saint on whose day they received the sacrament of Holy Baptism. The mother church blessed this practice and proclaimed Krsna Slava a Christian institution. According to the words of St. Paul (Phil. 1:2), every Christian family is a small church, and, just as churches are dedicated to one saint, who is celebrated as the protector of the church, so Serbian families place themselves under the protection of the saint on whose holiday they became Christians and to whom they refer to as their intercessor to God Almighty. To that protector of their homes, they pay special homage from generation to generation, from father to son, each and every year.
Slava is a day not only of feasting, but also a day of spiritual revival through which the Serbian national soul is formed and crystallized. To these celebrations, customs, and traditions, the Serbian nation owes its existence, and, therefore, deserves to be appreciated and perpetuated by all grateful Serbian sons and daughters all over the world. The living example of the Patron Saint gives to the celebrant assurance, persistence, and the feeling of protection, support, and the encouragement to do good.
Because Krsna Slava is regarded as the anniversary of the baptism of the family into Christianity, it is an annual reaffirmation of the family to its baptismal vows and the renewal of its ties to the Orthodox faith and church. The commemoration of Krsna Slava was to our ancestors one of the most important expressions of their Orthodox faith. So they always celebrated their Krsna Slava, regardless of how dangerous the situation. In our long suffering history, the state and freedom ceased to exist, but in our homes, the candle of our Patron Saint never was extinguished. The Serbian Krsna Slava links, as a golden string, our past and our present, our ancestors and their descendants. Serbian people should never ignore their Krsna Slava because through it the Orthodox faith was preserved and they were held together through the centuries. Krsna Slava should be kept not only as a sacred custom, but also to attest to the sacred truth that "Where the Serb is, Slava is also." The celebration of Krsna Slava requires the Icon of the family Patron Saint and several items that symbolize Christ and the believer’s faith in his death and resurrection: a lighted candle, Slavsko zhito, Slava's bread (Slavski kolach), and red wine. The lighted candle reminds us that Christ is the Light of world. Without Him we would live in darkness. Christ's light should fill our hearts and minds always, and we should not hide the Light of Christ in our lives. Slavsko zhito represents the death and resurrection of Christ. Christ reminded us that except a grain of wheat die it cannot rise again, even as it was necessary that He die, be buried, and on the third day rise again so that we all can triumph over death. The Slavsko zhito is prepared as an offering to God for all of the blessings we have received from Him; it also is to honor the Patron Saint and to commemorate our ancestors who lived and died in the Orthodox faith. Slava's bread represents Jesus Christ as the Bread of Life. It is also symbolic of our thanks to God for being saved through Its Son. During Slava, the priest cuts a cross in the bread, which reminds us of Christ' s death on the cross for the remission of our sins. The red wine, of course, represents Christ’s precious blood, which was required to wash our sins away. Brief history on Serbian Orthodox church: The Serbian Orthodox Church is an autocephalous, or ecclesiastically independent, member of the Orthodox communion, located primarily in Serbia, Montenegro, Bosnia and Herzegovina and Croatia. Since many Serbs have emigrated to foreign countries, now there are now many Serbian Orthodox communities on all continents.Soon after their arrrival to Balkans the Serbian tribes were successively baptised by Christian missionaries and became Orthodox Christians. The consecration of St. Sava as autocephalous Archbishop of Serbia in 1219, even more strengthened various Serbian principalities in their ecclesia- stical allegiance to Constantinople and Christian East. Later, as the medieval kingdom of Serbia grew in size and prestige and Stefan Dusan, king of Serbia from 1331, assumed the imperial title of tsar in 1346 to 1355, the Archbishopric of Pec was correspondingly raised to the rank of Patriarchate. The period before the arrival of the Turks was the time of the greatest flourishing of the Serbian Church. After the final Turkish conquest of the most influental Serbian principality in 1459, the greater portion of Serbian lands became a Turkish pasalik (province). After the death of Patriarch Arsenios II in 1463 a successor was not elected. The Patriarchate was thus de facto abolished, and the Serbian Church passed under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarchate. The Serbian Patriarchate was restored in 1557 by the Turkish sultan Suleiman the Magnificent. Macarios, brother of the famous Mehmed Pasha Sokolovic was elected Patriarch in Pec. The restoration of the Patriarchate was of great importance for the Serbs because it helped the spiritual unification of all Serbs in the Turkish Empire. After consequent Serbian uprisals against the Turkish occupators in which the Church had a leading role, the Turks abolished the Patriarchate once again in 1766. The Church remained once more under the jurisdiction of the Ecumenical Patriarch of Constantinople. This period of so called "Phanariots" was a period of great spiritual decline because the Greek bishops had very little understanding for their Serbian flock. This was also the period when great number of Christians converted to Islam to avoid severe taxes imposed by the Turks in retaliation for uprisings and continued resistance. Many Serbs with their hierarchs migrated to Southern Hungary where they had been granted the Church autonomy. The seat of the archbishops was moved from Pec to Karlovci. The Serbian Orthodox Church finally regained its independance and became autocephalous in 1879, the year after the recognition by the Great Powers of Serbia as an independent state. After World War I all the Serbs were united under one ecclesiastical authority, and the Patriarchate was reestablished in 1920 with election of Patriarch Dimitry, the Patriarch's full title being "Archbishop of Pec, Metropolitan of Belgrade and Karlovci, and Patriarch of the Serbs." During the Second World War the Serbian Orthodox Church passed through severe trials in which many bishops, priests and about 700.000 lay Orthodox Christians were killed by Croatian and Moslem fascists. Hundreds of churches were completely destroyed or desecrated. After the Second World War the Church experienced new trials under the communists who prohibited teaching of religion in schools, confiscated the property of the Church and using various overt and covert means of persecution in order to diminish the influence the Church had among the people. It was only after 1989 that the position of the Church has became tolerable, although the Church estastes have not yet been returned to their lawful owners. The supreme authority of the Serbian Church, the Holy Synod, is composed of all its bishops, who meet once a year in May. There is also a standing Synod of four members who administer the day-to-day affairs of the church, which is estimated to number some nine million faithful.
November 05 Spirit of the Sea
Blackmore's Night -Minstrels and Ballads album
I can only say it is beautiful.
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