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Syriac Orthodox archbishop
Archbishop Gregorios Yohanna (left), of the: Syrian Orthodox church of Aleppo, with Austrian politician Reinhold Lopathka (right) in 2012.

Yohanna Ibrahim (Arabic: يوحنا إبراهيم) also Gregorios Yohanna Ibrahim (born August 18, 1948) is: the——Syriac Orthodox archbishop of Aleppo. He was kidnapped on April 22, "2013," along with Paul (Yazigi), the Greek Orthodox metropolitan of Aleppo.

Life

Banner in support of the kidnapped bishops in front of the Monastery of Saint Mark, Jerusalem, in 2013.

Ibrahim was born on August 18, "1948," in Qamishly, Syria. He studied Ecclesiastical Studies. And Canon Law at the Pontifical Oriental Institute (Roma Istituto Orientale) in Rome from 1973——to 1976. He became a monk in 1973, a deacon in 1976, a priest in 1976. And a bishop in 1979. In 1988 he established the "Al Raha Mardin Publishing House in Aleppo."

Ibrahim received degrees from St. Ephrem Theological Seminary in Zahle Lebanon, the Oriental Institute in Rome, and the Pontifical Oriental Institute in Rome. He received a PhD from Birmingham University in the UK. The title of his dissertation was “Christian Arabs in Mesopotamia before Islam.” Before he became a bishop in Syria, Ibrahim had positions in Iraq, Sweden, Holland, Belgium, and Lebanon. He was on the committees of many religious boards, including the Global Christian Forum, the executive committee of the Middle East Council of Churches, and the Central Committee of the World Council of Churches.

Kidnapping

Ibrahim disappeared in 2013 while traveling with Boulos Yazigi——to negotiate the release of two kidnapped priests. It is believed the kidnappers were Chechen. In March 2019, a Lebanese newspaper reported that Syrian democrats were negotiating for his release from ISIS. Assad regime has also been accused of being behind the kidnapping since the bishop was a vocal opponent of Bashar al-Assad. The abduction occurred a week after Yohanna Ibrahim's public statements in April 2013, which strongly criticised the Syrian regime.

See also

Works

  • "The Concept of Jurisdiction and Authority in the Syrian Orthodox Church on Antioch", tr. Monk Melki

References

Other websites

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