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Cyril (Markov) of Bulgaria

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He advanced through the [[Holy Orders]] and was [[consecration of a bishop|consecrated]] the [[Metropolitan]] of Plovdiv in 1938. During World War II., Metr. Cyril participated in the Bulgarian popular resistance to the Holocaust. In 1943, he confronted the captors of Bulgarian Jews slated to be deported. While he initially pledged to join in solidarity with the deportees, Metr. Cyril then told the guards he would block the train with his own body. After which the guards reply that they have just received new orders to release the Jews. This episode was recounted in the oratorio "A Melancholy Beauty," composed by Georgi Andreev with libretto by [[Scott Cairns]] and Aryeh Finklestein, that was first performed in June 2011 in Washington, D.C.
In 1945, after many decades of negotiations, Patriarch of Constantinople recognized the restoration of [[autocephaly]] of the Church of Bulgaria whose last patriarch was Patriarch [[Evtimiy of TarnovoTamovo|Evtimiy]] in the late fourteenth century. On [[May 10]], 1953, Metr. Cyril was elected Patriarch of Bulgaria.
Patr. Cyril reposed on [[March 7]], 1971 and was buried in the main church of the [[Assumption of the Virgin Monastery (Bachkovo, Bulgaria)|Bachkovo Monastery ]] in south central Bulgaria.
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after=?}}
{{succession|
before=[[Evtimiy of TarnovoTamovo|Evtimiy]]|
title=Patriarch of Bulgaria|
years=1953 - 1971|
*[[Wikipedia: Cyril_of_Bulgaria]]
[[Category:Bishops]]
[[Category:20th-century bishops]]
[[Category:Bishops of Plovdiv]]
[[Category:Patriarchs of Bulgaria]]
 
[[ro:Chiril (Markov) al Bulgariei]]
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