Wincenty (Morari)

Wincenty (Morari) or Vincent (Morari), (Romanian: Vichentie Moraru, Russian: Викентий Морарь, born Victor Aleksandrovich Morari (Moraru) on December 4, 1953, is a bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church. He serves as Metropolitan of Tashkent and Uzbekistan and he is a permanent member of the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Metropolitan Wincenty (Morari)
Born (1953-12-04) December 4, 1953
Citizenship Moldova
 Russia
EducationMoscow Theological Academy
ChurchRussian Orthodox Church

Life

Victor Moraru was born in Sculeni, Moldovan SSR. His father was an orthodox priest. He wanted to become a physician, but because of his family's religiosity, he chose to become a priest.[1] In 1981 he became a monk. In 1982 he graduated from the Moscow Theological Academy.

On July 20, 1990, the Holy Synod of the Russian Orthodox Church elected Vincent Morari as Bishop of Bender (Tighina). The ceremony was held by Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow. Wincenty has been involved in the establishment and development of the Teological Seminary at the Noul Neamț Monastery in Chițcani, which is currently the largest spiritual and educational center of the Chisinau Metropolis. This period also coincided with the Gagauz independencr movement and with the war in Transnistria. He sees the Transnistrian conflict as an incomprehensible war, in which, according to him, they fought "son against father, brother against brother", describing the people who fought on both sides as "our soldiers".[2]

Along with Vladimir Cantarean, he was a strong opponent of the reactivation of the Metropolis of Bessarabia (under the leadership of Petru (Păduraru)) within the Romanian Orthodox Church, even persecuting some of its believers.

Wincenty with the then president of Russia Dmitry Medvedev

In July 1995, he was appointed by the Holy Synod bishop of Abakan and Kyzyl. In February 1999 he was raised to the rank of Archbishop and in July that year he was elected Archbishop of Yekaterinburg and Verhotursk. He also became rector of the Ekaterinburg Theological Seminary.

Wincenty (Morari) in 2013

The local press in Ekaterinburg repeatedly accused him of a tendency toward "luxury", especially because "in the face of poverty in Russia", he sat in a “Tsarist seat”, to which Archbishop Wincenty replied: “the terrible catastrophe in Russia has happened from this imaginary struggle with poverty - the revolution. If we are discussing this, then we should all sit down in misery."[3][4][5]

In 2011 he became Metropolitan of Tashkent and Uzbekistan.

Metropolitan Wincenty in 2019

Although active in Russia and Central Asia, Wincenty continued to visit Moldova and engage in the life of the local Orthodox Church.[6][7][8]

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