Contents
September/October 2004
Jerry L. Walls and Joseph R. Dongell explain their differences with Calvinism
Turning your thoughts into prayers
Jan Johnson gives tips on how to pray without ceasing
Riley Case chronicles the evangelical faith gap in seminaries
The story that won’t go away
Alex Wainer explores our fascination with heroes
Matt Daniels discusses the importance of linking men and their children
Alex N. Grigor’ev remembers Boris Trajkovski, the late president of Macedonia
United Methodism’s inconsistency on issues of life
Peter R. McGuire calls for a seamless garment of moral consistency
World Christianity under new management?
David C. Steinmetz reveals how the global church is changing
COLUMNS
Resistance grows to same-sex marriage
The culture of youth ministry
United Nations and the Women’s Division
Muslims and the love of God
Pick a solution
DEPARTMENTS
Letters to the editor
Straight Talk
News
United Methodism elects 21 new bishops
Liberals join scholarly attack on The DaVinci Code
One desire: Aldersgate focuses on worship
Q&A with Martha Williamson, creator of “Touched By An Angel”
Finding the treasure in children—book reviews by Bradshaw Frey
The Scripture marking the grave of Macedonia's late president Boris Trajkovski is Matthew 5:9: "Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God." Mr. Trajkovski died tragically on February 26, 2004, when his government airplane crashed in bad weather in the mountains of southeastern Bosnia and Herzegovina. A verse from a gospel is as unusual for the grave of a Balkan politician as President Trajkovski was himself an unusual leader in the cauldron of Southeastern Europe. He was never considered a great politician, a father of the nation, or a mover and shaker of the universe. He was not even head of a political party. Nevertheless, he will be gravely missed for the rare gifts and qualities of character he possessed.
Mr. Trajkovski was the second president of Macedonia after the country gained its independence from Yugoslavia in 1991. Besides Macedonians, this ethnically divided nation includes Albanians (almost a quarter of the population), Roma (Gypsies), Serbs, Turks, Bosnjaks, and Vlachs. In addition to this complication, Macedonia's neighbors have problematic attitudes toward the country. Greece does not recognize its constitutional name. Bulgaria does not recognize its language as being distinct from Bulgarian. And Serbia's Orthodox Church does not recognize the independence of Macedonia's Orthodox Church.
Calming troubled waters
Boris Trajkovski was born in 1956 in southeast Macedonia.
He graduated from St. Cyril and Methodius University in Skopje in 1980 with a
specialization in commercial and labor law. His relatively short political
career started on the local level in the capital city of Skopje. In 1998, as
the newly-appointed deputy foreign minister, he oversaw Macedonia's handling of
the refugee crisis spilling over from the fighting in the neighboring Serbian
province of Kosovo. A year later, he was elected president after receiving 52
percent of the vote in the second round of the general election. Although in
the past he had been a loyal member of the Internal Macedonian Revolutionary
Organization-Democratic Party of Macedonian National Unity (VMRO-DMPNE), Mr.
Trajkovski refused to follow the party line in 2001 during a short, but bloody
conflict involving an armed Albanian insurgency. The government favored a
hard-line approach, using all possible military means to attack the rebels and
the ethnic Albanian villages in which they hid. The president, however, adopted
a moderate position, preferring a strong police action supported by
negotiations.
Trajkovski was a major architect of the Ohrid Framework Agreement, signed by the leaders of Macedonia's four major political parties. This accord successfully ended the armed conflict and opened the way for positive constitutional and legal reforms that gave more rights to ethnic Albanians and transferred considerable power from the national government to local municipalities. He was also behind efforts to establish the Adriatic Charter, a regional grouping that brought Albania, Croatia, and Macedonia together in their efforts to join NATO. He was a staunch supporter of dialogue in the Balkans, inviting regional leaders to Macedonia and establishing forums for politicians from neighboring countries. In addition, he worked hard to move Macedonia toward membership in the European Union.
If the Ohrid Agreement is fully implemented and the dialogue among the country's ethnic communities is institutionalized as Trajkovski wished, the country has a promising future. Through his promotion of sanity, peace, and reconciliation, Mr. Trajkovski earned great respect abroad, especially in the West. As the leader of Trajkovski's political party shared at the late president's funeral: "It is a tragedy for us, but a satisfaction for you, that today we have understood that you were respected more in the world than in your own country."
Even in his death Trajkovski managed to do something that others were not able to do-unite all Macedonian citizens regardless of their ethnic affiliation. It was a moving sight on the day of his funeral on March 5 to see several hundred thousand people form a living corridor for the president's casket.
Character and faith
But there was more. And that "more" was perhaps the
overriding reason President Trajkovski will be sorely missed by his own people
and by the international community. Boris Trajkovski's character clearly
distinguished him and set him apart. He was truly an unusual man, a quiet and
honest president, respectful of others, open and frank, kind and soft spoken.
In a sea of corruption, he was never tainted by scandal. Nor did Boris
Trajkovski shy away from sharing his faith. On one occasion he commented: "The
key to the transformation of Macedonia can happen only through Jesus Christ, by
encouraging people to know the Lord Jesus, and I know the only way to do this
is through continual prayer."
In a predominantly Orthodox country with a large Muslim minority, Mr. Trajkovski was a Methodist. In fact, he pastored his own church before he became president and was the head of the United Methodist Church in the former Yugoslavia. Besides trying to bring his country's ethnic communities together, he sought to unite Christians as well. At one church gathering he shared, "I know that we come from different denominations, but in Jesus Christ we are the same. Our common denominator is that we can all say that we know the Lord Jesus Christ as our personal Lord and Savior, and I can say myself that He is my Lord and Savior."
I first met President Trajkovski at Macedonia's first National Prayer Dinner, which he organized. At that gathering, with leaders of Macedonia's religious denominations, government, and opposition politicians, as well as foreign diplomats in attendance, he quoted his favorite Psalm (133:1): "How good it is and how pleasant it is when brothers live together." There is another line from the Gospel of Matthew that precedes the one written on President Trajkovski's grave in Skopje: "Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God." This is God's promise to Boris Trajkovski, no doubt fulfilled.
Alex N. Grigor'ev is a senior program officer for the Project on Ethnic Relations, Princeton, New Jersey. This article is reprinted with permission of the East-West Church & Ministry Report.
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