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Sebastian (Dabovich)

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In 1884, he was assigned to assist at [[Cathedral_of_St._Michael_the_Archangel_(Sitka,_Alaska)|St. Michael's Cathedral in Sitka, Alaska]] before he was sent to Russia to prepare for a life as a [[missionary]] [[priest]]. After three years of study at the [[St. Petersburg Theological Academy|St. Petersburg]] and [[Kiev Theological Academy|Kiev Theological Academies]], John was [[tonsure]]d a [[monk]] in 1887 with the name Sebastian and [[ordination|ordained]] a [[deacon]]. Following his ordination, Dn. Sebastian returned to San Francisco where he served as deacon at the San Francisco [[cathedral]]. He also taught at the pastoral school in San Francisco.
On [[August 16]], 1892, Dn. Sebastian was ordained a [[priest]] by [[Bishop]] [[Nicholas (Ziorov) of Warsaw|Nicholas]]. He was soon sent to Minneapolis, Minnesota to replace Fr. [[Alexis of Wilkes-Barre|Alexis Toth]] as the priest of [[St. Mary Cathedral (Minneapolis, Minnesota)|St. Mary's Church]] there. While there he also taught at the Missionary School. After a year, Fr. Sebastian returned to San Francisco where he organized [[St. Sava Church (Jackson, California)|the first Serbian Orthodox Church, dedicated to St. Sava]], in Jackson, California. Additionally, Fr. Sebastian was also asked by Bishop [[Tikhon of Moscow|Tikhon]] to be a member of the [[Orthodox Church in America|North American Mission]] administration. Additionally, he was a legitimate force in helping organize the Orthodox Christians - particularly in the Pacific Northwest of the United States, though his [[missionary]] work brought him as far south as Arizona - into communities that were capable of supporting churches. Some of the places where he did this include Seattle into a parish (the future [[St. Spiridon Cathedral (Seattle, Washington)|St. Spiridon Cathedral]]), visiting the city, organizing the community, and where he even serving served as a temporary priest before Fr. [[Ambrose Vretta]]'s arrival in November of 1895, Wilkenson, Washington, Portland, Oregon, and Butte, Montana (the future [[Holy Trinity Church (Butte, Montana)|Holy Trinity Church]]). In 1902, he continued his [[missionary ]] activities, returning to Alaska as [[dean]] of the Sitka deanery. While he was in Alaska, he helped establish [[St. Sava Church (Douglas, Alaska)|St. Sava Church in Douglas]].
As more Serbians emigrated to the United States, Abp. Tikhon asked Fr. Sebastian to lead a Serbian Mission in the North American [[diocese]]. With his appointment to head the mission, Abp. Tikhon elevated Fr. Sebastian to [[archimandrite]] on [[August 15]], 1905. For the next five years Archim. Sebastian led the Serbian Mission from its center at the Holy Resurrection Serbian Orthodox Church in Chicago, Illinois, where he was the parish priest.
In 1910, Fr. Sebastian asked for a release from the Serbian mission so that he could return to [[missionary ]] work. Then in 1913, he joined the faculty of the newly opened [[St. Platon's Orthodox Theological Seminary (Tenafly, New Jersey)|St. Platon Seminary]] in Tenafly, New Jersey. Shortly thereafter feeling a call to service the church in his ancestral Serbia, Fr. Sebastian asked for a release from the American Mission. He went on to serve as a [[chaplain]] in the Serbian army in the Balkan Wars and World War I. Other than for brief visits to the United States in 1915 and 1917, Fr. Sebastian spent the rest of his life serving the [[Church of Serbia|Church of Yugoslavia]].
Archim. Sebastian reposed in Yugoslavia on [[November 30]], 1940, and was buried at the Monastery of Zicha. In 2007, his remains were disinterred and brought back to the cemetery at St. Sava Church in Jackson, California for reburial.
*''Orthodox America 1794-1976 Development of the Orthodox Church in America'', C. J. Tarasar, Gen. Ed. 1975, The Orthodox Church in America, Syosett, New York, p96.
*[http://www.orthodoxinfo.com/general/archimandrite-sebastian-dabovich-serbian-apostle-to-america.pdf Archimandrite Sebastian Dabovich: Serbian Orthodox Apostle], by Hieromonk Damascene (Christiansen), ''The Orthodox Word'' 43:1-2, (January-April, 2007)
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20051115162448/http://www.transfigcathedral.org/faith/corner/Dabovich.pdf Archimandrite Sebastian Dabovich: The First Serbian Orthodox Apostle], by Alexander Vallens (2005) *[http://www.saintspiridon.org/?page_id=21 History of St. Spiridon's Cathedral Seattle]
*[http://orthodoxhistory.org/?tag=sebastian-dabovich Articles on Dabovich] at OrthodoxHistory.org
*[http://westsrbdio.org/en/latest-news/diocesan-news/959-holy-missionaries-mardarije-uskokovic-and-sebastian-dabovich-newly-proclaimed-as-saints-of-the-orthodox-church Holy Missionaries MARDARIJE (Uskokovic) and SEBASTIAN (Dabovich) Newly Proclaimed Saints of the Orthodox Church!] Western American Diocese of the [[Church of Serbia]].
*[http://www.eserbia.org/graveyards/143-saint-sava-jackson-ca/747-dabovich-sebastijan Photos of new headstone]
*[http://www.pravoslavie.ru/english/82008.htm Report on a 2015 Symposium in Honor of Newly-Glorified St. Sebastian Dabovich]
*[http://www.stnicholasjuneau.org/history.html Information on St. Sava Church in Douglas, Alaska]
*[http://www.eserbia.org/people/prosopography/143-archimandrite-sebastian-dabovich?showall=&start=2 Archimandrite Sebastian Dabovich - The Beginning of His Apostolic Labor] eSerbia.org site
[[Category:Priests]]
[[Category:Missionaries]]
[[Category:Saints]]
[[Category:American Saints]]
[[Category:Serbian Saints]]
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