Mysterious Prison Deaths, milosevic, Serb Leaders Found Dead

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Mysterious Prison Deaths, milosevic, Serb Leaders Found Dead

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(The eu-saudi wahabbist-clinton -clark realtionship with al qaeda in the Balkans was probably going to get out.--R)

http://www.breitbart.com/news/2006/03/11/D8G9JCT0B.html

Slobodan Milosevic Dies in Prison Cell
Mar 11 3:43 PM US/Eastern
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By ARTHUR MAX
Associated Press Writer

AMSTERDAM, Netherlands

dce16d984882@news.ap.org Former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic, the so-called "butcher of the Balkans" being tried for war crimes after orchestrating a decade of bloodshed that killed 250,000 people and broke up his country, was found dead Saturday in his prison cell. He was 64.

Milosevic, who suffered chronic heart ailments and high blood pressure, apparently died of natural causes and was found in his bed, the U.N. tribunal said, without giving an exact time of death.

He had been examined following frequent complaints of fatigue or ill health that delayed his trial, but the tribunal could not immediately say when his last medical checkup was. All detainees at the center in Scheveningen are checked by a guard every half hour.

The tribunal said Milosevic's family had been informed of his death, which came nearly five years after he was arrested, then extradited to The Hague.

Chief U.N. war crimes prosecutor Carla Del Ponte said she regretted Milosevic's death because she believed she would have won his conviction.

"I also regret it for the victims, the thousands of victims, who have been waiting for justice," Del Ponte told German-language Swiss Television DRS while visiting her native Switzerland.

His wife, Mirjana Markovic, who was often accused of being the power behind the scenes during her husband's autocratic rule, has been in self-imposed exile in Russia since 2003. His son, Marko, also lives in Russia, and his daughter, Marija, lives in Montenegro.

Borislav Milosevic, who lives in Moscow, blamed the U.N tribunal for causing his younger brother's death by refusing him medical treatment in Russia.

"All responsibility for this lies on the shoulders of the international tribunal. He asked for treatment several months ago, they knew this," he told The Associated Press. "They drove him to this as they didn't want to let him out alive."

Milosevic asked the court in December to let him go to Moscow for treatment. But the tribunal refused, despite assurances from Russia that Milosevic would return to finish his trial.

The White House said it was waiting for more information.

"We have seen the news that Slobodan Milosevic has died in his prison in The Hague," spokesman Blair Jones said. "We do not have all the details yet."

U.S. State Department acting spokesman Tom Casey said "the tribunal will be looking into the circumstances" of Milosevic's death.

The tribunal said it would conduct a full inquiry, including an autopsy on Sunday and toxicological examination. A pathologist from Serbia-Montenegro will observe the autopsy.

But Borislav Milosevic said his family does not trust the U.N. tribunal to conduct that autopsy impartially.

Slobodan Milosevic has been on trial since February 2002, defending himself against 66 counts of crimes, including genocide, in Croatia, Bosnia and Kosovo. He was the first sitting head of state ever to be indicted for such crimes.

He was accused of orchestrating a brutal campaign of ethnic cleansing against non-Serbs during the collapse of the Yugoslav federation _ his attempt to link Serbia with Serb-dominated areas of Croatia and Bosnia to create a new Greater Serbia.

Supporters in Milosevic's homeland declared his death a "huge loss," while citizens of Bosnia, Croatia and Kosovo said his death brought some justice to his victims.

"Finally, we have some reason to smile. God is fair," said Hajra Catic, who heads an association of women that lost their loved ones in the 1995 massacre of 8,000 Muslims in the eastern Srebrenica enclave by Serb troops.

Milosevic spent much of the time granted for his defense fighting allegations of atrocities in Kosovo that took up just one-third of his indictment. He also faced charges of genocide in Bosnia for allegedly overseeing the Srebrenica slaughter _ the worst massacre on European soil since World War II.

The trial was recessed last week to await his next defense witness. Milosevic also was waiting for a court decision on his request to subpoena former President Clinton as a witness. He was due to complete his defense this summer.

The hundreds of witnesses included former U.S. Gen. Wesley Clark, the NATO commander during the Balkan wars. Milosevic also tried to subpoena former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, former German Chancellor Gerhard Shroeder and British Prime Minister Tony Blair.

Steven Kay, a British attorney assigned to represent Milosevic, said Saturday the former Serb leader would not have fled and was not suicidal.

"He said to me: 'I haven't taken on all this work just to walk away from it and not come back. I want to see this case through,'" Kay told the British Broadcasting Corp.

Milosevic's death came less than a week after the star witness in his trial, former Croatian Serb leader Milan Babic, was found dead in the same prison. Babic, who was serving a 13-year prison sentence, committed suicide.

His testimony in 2002 described a political and military command structure headed by Milosevic in Belgrade that operated behind the scenes.

Milosevic's death will be a crushing blow to the tribunal and those looking to establish an authoritative historical record of the Balkan wars.

"Justice was late," said Hashim Thaci, the leader of ethnic Albanian insurgents against Milosevic's forces in 1998-1999 in Kosovo's capital, Pristina. "God took him."

Though the witness testimony is on public record, history will be denied the judgment of a panel of legal experts weighing the evidence of his personal guilt and the story of his regime.

"It is a pity he didn't live to the end of the trial to get the sentence he deserved," Croatian President Stipe Mesic said.

The European Union said Milosevic's death does not absolve Serbia of responsibility to hand over other war crimes suspects.

The death "does not alter in any way the need to come to terms with the legacy of the Balkan wars," Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula Plassnik, whose country holds the rotating EU president, said in Salzburg.

Milosevic, a figure of beguiling charm and cunning ruthlessness, was a master tactician who turned his country's defeats into personal victories and held onto power for 13 years despite losing four wars that shattered his nation and impoverished his people.

Milosevic led Serbia, the dominant Yugoslav republic, into four Balkan wars during the 1990s. The secret of his survival was his uncanny ability to exploit what less adroit figures would consider a fatal blow.

He once described himself as the "Ayatollah Khomeini of Serbia," assuring his prime minister, Milan Panic, that "the Serbs will follow me no matter what." For years, they did _ through wars that dismembered Yugoslavia and plunged what was left of the country into social, political, moral and economic ruin.

But in the end, his people abandoned him: first in October 2000, when he was unable to convince the majority of Yugoslavs that he had staved off electoral defeat by his successor, Vojislav Kostunica, and again on April 1, 2001, when he surrendered after a 26-hour standoff to face criminal charges stemming from his ruinous rule.

Bosnia also has sued Serbia, accusing it of genocide in the first case of a country standing trial for humanity's worst crime.

Milosevic was born Aug. 20, 1941, in Pozarevac, a drab factory town in central Serbia best known as the home of one of the country's most notorious prisons.

His father was a defrocked Orthodox priest and sometime teacher of Russian. His mother also was a teacher. Both committed suicide.

In high school, he met his future wife, the daughter of a wartime communist partisan hero. Markovic also was the niece of Davorjanka Paunovic, private secretary and mistress of Josip Broz Tito, the communist guerrilla leader who seized power in Yugoslavia at the end of World War II.

Milosevic became president of Serbia in 1989 elections widely considered rigged. His rise alarmed the other peoples of former Yugoslavia _ Slovenes, Croats, Macedonians, Albanians and others _ who feared that the hard-line nationalist would allow Serbs to dominate the country.

In 1991, Croatia and Slovenia declared their independence from Yugoslavia. Milosevic sent tanks to Slovenian borders, triggering a brief war that ended in Slovenia's secession.

Serbs in Croatia, encouraged by Milosevic, took up arms. Milosevic sent the Serb-led Yugoslav army to intervene, triggering a conflict that left at least 10,000 people dead and hundreds of Croatian villages and towns devastated before a U.N.-patrolled cease-fire was arranged in January 1992.

Three months later, Bosnia-Herzegovina declared its independence, too. Milosevic bankrolled the Bosnian Serb rebellion, triggering an even bigger war that killed an estimated 200,000 people before a U.S.- brokered peace agreement was reached at Dayton, Ohio, in 1995.

During those conflicts, Yugoslavia was ostracized worldwide, and the United States called Milosevic "the butcher of the Balkans." Strict international sanctions and government mismanagement devastated the economy and left its people impoverished.

At Dayton, Milosevic accepted a deal abandoning Croatia's rebel Serbs, who were driven from their homes when the Croatian army recaptured almost all the land the Serbs had seized there in 1991.

The Dayton agreement also meant giving up the nationalist goal of a Serb state in Bosnia. Nevertheless, it bought Milosevic time and transformed his image from Balkan villain to benign peacemaker.

Milosevic's term as Serbian president ended in 1997 and the constitution prevented him from running again. However, he exploited loopholes to have parliament name him president of Yugoslavia, which then included only the republics of Serbia and Montenegro.

It was the thorny problem of Kosovo, the majority Albanian province that served as his springboard to power, which finally set the stage for his downfall. In February 1998, Milosevic sent troops to crush an ethnic Albanian uprising there.

The United States and its allies responded with sanctions. In 1999, after Milosevic refused to sign a Western-dictated peace agreement at Rambouillet, France, NATO conducted 78 days of punishing airstrikes against Yugoslavia.

Milosevic refused to back down and instead ordered his troops to crack down on Kosovo Albanians even harder. More than 800,000 Albanians fled into neighboring Albania, Montenegro and Macedonia before Milosevic finally accepted a peace plan and handed over the province to the United Nations and NATO in June 1999.

Before the conflict ended, the U.N. tribunal indicted Milosevic and four of his top aides for war crimes and crimes against humanity allegedly committed in Kosovo. Later, they broadened the charges against him to include genocide.

(Why has no one ever asked the question: How there came to be moslem Serbs & Albanians?! How is there a nation of turkey today?!--R)

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Drugs Found In Milosevic's Blood

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(Shameful.--R)

http://apnews.myway.com/article/20060312/D8GA77IO4.html

Report: Milosevic's Blood Had Drug Traces

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Mar 12, 2:17 PM (ET)

THE HAGUE, Netherlands (AP) - Traces of a drug used to treat leprosy and tuberculosis were found in a blood sample taken in recent months from former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic, a Dutch news report said, citing an unidentified "adviser" to the U.N. war crimes tribunal.

The report came hours after Milosevic's legal adviser showed journalists a letter the late Serb leader wrote Friday, one day before his body was discovered in prison, alleging that he was being poisoned.

The report was on the text service of the Dutch state broadcaster, NOS. It did not identify its source further.

Dutch doctors conducted an autopsy Sunday on Milosevic's remains, but the results were not expected to be released until Monday.

The tribunal spokeswoman said she could not comment on the news report. "We don't have any information. We simply have to wait for the results" of the autopsy report, said Alexandra Milenov.

Doctors found traces of the drug when they were searching for an answer to why Milosevic's medication for high blood pressure was not working, the report said.

Milosevic was examined last January, according to his legal aide, Zdenko Tomanovic.

The NOS report did not identify the drug found in Milosevic's blood "in a test done in recent months," but said it could have had a "neutralizing effect" on his other medications.

Earlier, Tomanovic said Milosevic had been "seriously concerned" about being poisoned.

His letter, dated March 10, was addressed to the Russian Embassy asking for help.

Milosevic had appealed to the war crimes tribunal last December to be allowed to go to a heart clinic in Moscow for treatment. The request was denied. He repeated the request as late as last month.

Milosevic underwent frequent medical examinations by doctors and specialists appointed by the tribunal and by Serb doctors brought at his own request. Detailed reports were routinely submitted to the judges.

Tomanovic said he saw the jailed Serb leader on Friday at 4:30 p.m. His body was found the next morning, and by 11 a.m. the letter was delivered to the Russian Embassy.

Last edited by Kollyvas on Wed 15 March 2006 8:21 pm, edited 1 time in total.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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MP Will Pray For SLAIN milosevic If Asked

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http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7270

Russian Orthodox Church may pray for Milosevic if his family makes the request
Itar-Tass

An elderly woman cries by a photo showing late Serbian and Yugoslav president Slobodan Milosevic, in front of his Socialist party headquarters in downtown Belgrade, Monday, March 13 2006. A Dutch toxicologist confirmed Monday he found traces of an unprescribed drug in a blood sample taken from former Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic earlier this year, and a legal aide to Slobodan Milosevic says he will be buried in Belgrade. Milosevic died in his prison prison cell in The Hague, on Saturday, March 11 2006. (AP Photo/Srdjan Ilic)
MOSCOW, March 12 (Itar-Tass) -- The Russian Orthodox Church will pray for former Yugoslav leader Slobodan Milosevic if his family makes the request, Moscow Patriarchate spokesman Rev. Vladimir Vigilyansky told Itar-Tass on Sunday.

He did not comment on the political activity of the ex-president but said, ”The Church cares for human soul.”

“Obviously, Milosevic was christened in his childhood, because his father was an Orthodox priest. We also know that a priest visited him in the Hague prison,” he said. “The request from the family, which prays Lord to forgive sins of their member, is important.”

“The denial of medical treatment to Milosevic is outrageous,” Vigilyansky said. “He was sick and asked for medical treatment. The Moscow Bakulev Institute agreed to admit him, but Milosevic was denied that chance and died a month after. This is an inhumane act of the Hague Tribunal,” he said, adding that this is his personal opinion.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Poignancy From Another Discussion Group

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Date: Tue, 14 Mar 2006 00:19:09 -0500
Reply-To: Orthodox Christianity <[log in to unmask]>
Sender: Orthodox Christianity <[log in to unmask]>
From: Andrew Sabak <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: President Slobodan Milosevic Found Dead
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=koi8-r

Slava Isusu Christu!

Dear Mirjana and Tim,

Seeing with what immense success the Nazi-like Big Lie technique has had in
demonizing the Orthodox Christian Serbs, who are resented by the
materialist forces for relying on little more than their faith in bravely
trying to impede the advance of the anti-Christian movements of the prince
of this world for centuries, I can only pray that more and more people in
years to come will learn about the great betrayal of the Serbs by the West
and then do something about it.

The collusion between the governments, mass propaganda outlets ("media"),
paid PR firms, and others in purposefully promulgating a deliberate set of
lies about what happened before, during, and after the civil wars in
Yugoslavia was reprehensible. Pushing for the disintegration of Yugoslavia,
promising the Muslims military aid if they would reject the 1992-93 peace
agreements, inflating the numbers of victims, claiming that Serbs killed by
Muslims were Muslims killed by Serbs, cropping photos to eliminate crucial
information and putting false captions on pictures, inventing lurid stories
of horrible camps based solely on imaginative Muslims putting the doctrine
of taqqiyah to effective use, making a "massacre" that never happened as
the focal point of the war, and justifying it all with claims that the
Muslims (who had helped kill 1,000,000 Serbs in World War II) were getting
"revenge" when they destroy 150 Orthodox churches in the Serbian heartland
of Kosovo: all this is the result of
evil within the souls of men.

I would rather let the Serbs know that I stand in defense of their good
name than have all the riches and glory of this world. I congratulate them
on having the loathsome Richard Holbrooke as their enemy and would instead
wonder about the principles guiding anyone who thinks Clinton, Albright,
Cohen, Holbrooke, Clark, and their cronies like Soros have anything
whatsoever to do with the better ideals of the American public.

It would be instructive to quote a few words from our fellow Orthodox
Christian, Alexander Solzhznitsyn (and I have done my part to show people
examples of how they have been lied to for so many years):


"LIVE NOT BY LIES

..... So in our timidity, let each of us make a choice: Whether
consciously, to remain a servant of falsehood--of course, it is not out of
inclination, but to feed one's family, that one raises his children in the
spirit of lies--or to shrug off the lies and become an honest man worthy of
respect both by one's children and contemporaries.

And from that day onward he:

Will not henceforth write, sign, or print in any way a single phrase which
in his opinion distorts the truth. Will utter such a phrase neither in
private conversation not in the presence of many people, neither on his own
behalf not at the prompting of someone else, either in the role of
agitator, teacher, educator, not in a theatrical role.

Will not depict, foster or broadcast a single idea which he can only see is
false or a distortion of the truth whether it be in painting, sculpture,
photography, technical science, or music.

Will not cite out of context, either orally or written, a single quotation
so as to please someone, to feather his own nest, to achieve success in his
work, if he does not share completely the idea which is quoted, or if it
does not accurately reflect the matter at issue.

Will not allow himself to be compelled to attend demonstrations or meetings
if they are contrary to his desire or will, will neither take into hand not
raise into the air a poster or slogan which he does not completely accept.

Will not raise his hand to vote for a proposal with which he does not
sincerely sympathize, will vote neither openly nor secretly for a person
whom he considers unworthy or of doubtful abilities. Will not allow himself
to be dragged to a meeting where there can be expected a forced or
distorted discussion of a question.

Will immediately talk out of a meeting, session, lecture, performance or
film showing if he hears a speaker tell lies, or purvey ideological
nonsense or shameless propaganda.

Will not subscribe to or buy a newspaper or magazine in which information
is distorted and primary facts are concealed. ..... "



Mirjana Petrovic wrote:

---------------------- Information from the mail header


Sender: Orthodox Christianity <[log in to unmask]>
Poster: Mirjana Petrovic <[log in to unmask]>
Subject: Re: President Slobodan Milosevic Found Dead


Dear Tim,

this is not from the Orthodox point of view, but at least, it's not on
the main media line.

Regards,

Mirjana

http://www.antiwar.com/blog/comments.php?id=P2683_0_1_0

AntiWar.com

Blog

More Revolting by the Minute

In the aftermath
http://www.balkanalysis.com/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=639
of
Milosevic's death, CNN is wheeling out one arrogant imperial blowhard after
another. Right now is Daniel Serwer, who was preceded by the always
entertaining Richard Holbrooke.

As could be expected, they are pushing the "Milosevic was responsible for
everything that ever went wrong" line to the hilt. And of course, Holbrooke
gravely intoned that Milosevic was right up there with Hitler and Stalin.

All of this media bombast has little to do with Milosevic, and a lot to do
with the Western media and power structures, whose reputations and careers
are at stake. The coming week is going to see a long and drawn-out public
orgy of hatred and slander against everything Serbian. Milosevic's death is
just the catalyst, and anyone who doubts that will have to ponder why
has-been Holbrooke used his time on CNN to not just call for but to ORDER
that Kosovo and Montenegro be made independent; he also said there are "two
more" war criminals who must be apprehended (Karadzic and Mladic),
conveniently ignoring another duo, Haradinaj and Ceku over in Kosovo. That's
because they are on the side of The Good, in other words, the West.

This week we are going to witness the awesome power of the mass media to
shut down any debate or discussion about the facts. It is going to be
sweeping, complete and brutal, and will use a hell of a lot of other
\nadjectives too. Don\'t expect that after Milosevic is buried, wherever and
\nhowever that may be, that the Official Truth will ever be contested again in
\na major way.> \n > \n
\nPosted by: Christopher? http://www.balkanalysis.com/ Deliso on Mar 11, 06
\n| 8:51 am > \n
\n <mailto:[log in to unmask]\u003dMore Revolting by the Minute>

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Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Son Requests milosevic Be Buried In Moscow

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http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7287

Milosevic's son asks Russia for consent to bury father in Moscow
AFP

The son of the late Slobodan Milosevic, Marko, seen here arriving in Rijswijk, has asked Russia if his father could be temporarily buried in Moscow if interment is not possible in Serbia(AFP/ANP/Robin Utrecht)
The son of the late Slobodan Milosevic has asked Russia if his father could be temporarily buried in Moscow if interment is not possible in Serbia, a senior Russian official said.

"In the absence of the necessary conditions for the burial of Milosevic in his country, (he asks) to permit the temporary resting of his father in Moscow under the patronage of Russia and the Russian Orthodox Church," said Sergei Baburin, vice president of the Duma lower house of parliament.

Baburin, speaking on Echo Moscow radio, said the request was made in a letter sent by Marko Milosevic to Russian President Vladimir Putin and the patriarch of Moscow.

Marko Milosevic said Tuesday morning, before leaving Moscow for The Hague, that Belgrade wanted to prevent his father's funeral from taking place in Serbia.

He also said he had asked Russian authorities for permission to temporarily bury his father in Moscow.

The Serbian government has remained silent over the issue of the funeral, for which a date has not yet been set, but the party of Prime Minister Vojislav Kostunica has clearly stated that it would not be against it in the country.

Milosevic's brother, Borislav, told AFP on Tuesday evening that there was not "yet a definitive decision" on the place of burial for the former Yugoslav leader.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Prayer For Milosevic

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http://directionstoorthodoxy.org/mod/ne ... le_id=7316

On the Saturday of the Dead, some Russian Orthodox churches will commemorate Slobodan Milosevic
Interfax

Supporters gather around the gate of former Serbian leader Slobodan Milosevic's house in his native town of Pozarevac, some 80 km (50 miles) southeast of Belgrade, Friday, March 17, 2006. Milosvic died on March 11 in his prison cell in The Hague and will be buried in his home town of Pozarevac on Saturday.
Moscow, March 17, Interfax - Some Russian Orthodox churches, which already commemorated Slobodan Milosevic, will most probably pray again for the rest of his soul, at parishioners’ request, on the coming Saturday when the former president of Yugoslavia is to be buried, Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin, vice-chairman of the Moscow Patriarchate Department for External Church Relations, informed Interfax.

Meanwhile, the Serbian Orthodox Church Representation in Moscow has informed the agency that it would not hold any special service for Milosevic on the day of his burial.

‘Neither relatives nor friends have requested us for a requiem service. No special events are planned to take place in our church, the more so that it is on repairs’, the Representation staff informed Interfax.

At the same time, the agency was told that all those who would like to commemorate Milosevic ‘can do it in any Russian Orthodox church.’

On the second Saturday of Lent, the Church traditionally commemorates all the dead Orthodox Christians.

As Interfax was informed earlier by the Moscow Patriarchate, last Sunday some Russian Orthodox churches commemorated the former Yugoslavian leader. Requiem services for ‘the newly-departed Slobodan’ were also held in some Serbian churches.

Interfax was also told that ‘many people in Russia prayed for Slobodan Milosevic because first of all of their sympathy for the Serbian people.’ But Milosevic himself did not conceal the fact that he was an atheist, and it is not accidental, the agency was told, that the Serbian Church has always considered him to be a godless man.

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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