Handball Woman From Medjugorje Won The Silver At Herceg-Bosna To Woman
Medjugorje “Medjugorje handball lady won the silver gong at Herceg-Bosna to girls. Better than ours were the only womens handball Kosace from Mostar 14:9. In a very strong handball competition among the historically strong groups like, Ljubuki Zrinski, Catherine, Capljina and Gruda, we made it to the finals and won second place. That was the goal, because we won this championship at our last appearance at the BiH. But, this doesn’t lessen the certain quality of the team Kosace from Mostar, and I congratulate them on a remarkable performance, said coach Ivan Lovric. This was reported by medjugorjeplace.wordpress.com.
Medjugorje (“between the hills”) has become well known in Bosnia-Hercegovina, and the world, because of six youngsters who allege to have seen visions of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Beginning on June twenty-four, 1981, the Blessed Mummy seemed to, and later said to the visionaries, God sent her to our world to help us convert our hearts and lives back to Him. Our Lady’s call is one of Peace, Love, Religion, Conversion, Prayer, and Fasting. We are each challenged to answer Our Lady’s call to switch our lives, and hearts back to God. The following links to 100+ documents of info, interviews, and sworn statements offer a nicely rounded, and correct account and viewpoint of one of the best events in modern history.
Folks travel to Medjugorje for many reasons: curiosity,physical and spiritual healing, or a desire for answers to their personal issues. Medjugorje, is a wonderful place of serenity and prayer, where you will find personal peace. As more and more folk make a pilgrimage to Medjugorje, many comfortable Medjugorje hostels have popped up to accommodate the visitors.
Reportedly, more then 30 million believers have been to Medjugorje. An obscure Herzegovinian hamlet has been modified into world-famouse Marian prayer meeting place. But you can still enjoy the conventional sides of Medjugorje with us, as we are your local connection in Medjugorje.
We are sure it’s not simple for an independent traveller to gain access to local experiences. You can find accommodation in Medjugorje, Medjugorje restaurants, local sustainable activities and much more. With so many travellers heading to Medjugorje, it is important to order your Medjugorje hostels, Medjugorje pansion or Medjugorje guesthouse as soon as practicable.
To the east of Medjugorje in the Neretva valley, the Serbian Orthodox Zitomislici Monastery has stood since 1566. Gravestones erected in the Middle Ages have remained to this day in the Catholic cemetery Groblje Srebrenica in the hamlet of Miletina as well as in the hamlet of Vionica. In the area of the graveyard in Miletina, structures from the Roman age stood, whose ruins haven’t yet been fully excavated.
In 1882 the railroad line between Mostar and the Adriatic coast of Dalmatia was built, with a station in the hamlet of urmanci, through which the hamlet obtained access to rail transport. In 1941, when Medjugorje belonged to the Independent State of Croatia, the Zitomislici Monastery was plundered by the Ustasha, and its refectory was burned down.
On Apr 6, 2001 demonstrations occurred in the region, with some violence, after the NATO-led Stabilisation Force had closed and searched the local branches of the Hercegovaka banka (“Herzegovina Bank”), through which a large part of the currency transactions in Herzegovina, including global donations reserved for Medjugorje, were carried out, on charges of white-collar crime. The Franciscan Province accountable for the parish was an investor of the bank.
On June 21, 1941, members of the Ustasha committed a slaughter in the hamlet of urmanci against 559 Serb civilians, which led Mostar bishop Alojzije Miici ; to scribble a letter of protest to the Archbishop of Zagreb Aloysius Stepinac. The Commie government of Yugoslavia had the pit containing the bodies sealed with a concrete slab ; thus they were only exhumed and reburied at the cemetery of Prebilovci in the local city of Capljina in 1989.
On June twenty-four, 1981, reports started of Marian apparitions on Crnica hill in the Bijakovici hamlet, and immediately after that confrontations with Yugoslav state authorities started. Travellers ‘ donations were grabbed by the police and access to what was called the Apparition Hill was principally blocked.
In October 1981, Jozo Zovko, then the priest of the town, was given 3 and a half years imprisonment with forced work for purportedly collaborating in a patriotic plot. After Amnesty Global, among others, appealed for his release and a judicial appeal was made, the sentence was reduced in the Yugoslav Fed Court in Belgrade to one and a half years, and the priest was released from prison in 1983.
During the Bosnian War Medjugorje remained in the hands of the Croatian Defence Council and in 1993 became part of the internationally unrecognized Croatian Republic of Herzeg-Bosnia. By the Dayton Agreement in 1995, Medjuugorje was joined into the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina, populated typically by Bosniaks and Croats.
In 1992 the city was the launching point for ethnic cleaning on the part of the Croatian Defence Council, which led straight to the entire annihilation of the Serbian Orthodox Monastery. The property of the Franciscan order in Bijakovici below Podbrdo (“Apparition Hill”) was used during the war years as a testing ground for grenade launchers by the army of a local weapons dealer.
On Apr two, 1995, at the best part of conflict in the local diocese, Bishop Ratko Peric ; was kidnapped by Croatian militiamen, beaten, and taken to a chapel run by one of the Franciscans connected with Medjuugorje, where he was held hostage for ten hours. At the initiative of the mayor of Mostar he was liberated without carnage, with the assistance of the U. N Protection Force.
After the ending of the Bosnian War, peace came to the area: UN peace troops were stationed in western Herzegovina. Efforts from the congressman Ante Jelavic; to make a Croatian entity were unsuccessful, and Medjugorje remained part of the Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina.
The town and its environs boomed economically after the war. Over one thousand hotel and hostel beds are available for religious tourism. With roughly 1,000,000 visitors yearly, the municipality of Medjugorje has the most overnite stays in Bosnia-Herzegovina.
The Mostar Global Airfield, found approximately twenty km to the northeast, which was closed in 1991, re-opened for civil aviation in 1998 and has made air travel to region less complicated since that point. The road network was expanded after the Bosnian War. Additionally the hamlet of Urmanci in the lower NeretvaValley has a train station on the route from Ploce to Sarajevo.
crna gora sandzak bosna-Islamska zajednica u Sandzaku iu Srbiji
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