Cardinal Kuharic
dies
Led Balkan Church through era of bloodshed
Cardinal Franjo Kuharic, the former Archbishop of Zagreb, died in March at the
age of 82.
Cardinal Kuharic, who was ordained to the priesthood by the legendary Croatian
prelate and national hero, Blessed
Alojzije Stepinac, in 1945, became an
auxiliary bishop in Zagreb in 1964 and archbishop of the Croatian capital in
1970. He led the Croatian Church through the years of bloody civil war in the
1990s, after having been elevated to the College of Cardinals in 1983. His
resignation as archbishop was accepted by the Pontiff in 1997—nearly two years
after he submitted it, upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 75.
In a telegram of condolence,
sent to Archbishop Josip Bozanic of Zagreb, Pope John Paul II spoke of Cardinal
Kuharic’s “generous, wise, and faithful service to Croatia’s Catholics.” The
cardinal, he observed, had lived through both the era of Communist oppression
and the violence of civil war. “He was involved, with all his energy, in the
defense of liberty and the dignity of the Croatian people,” he added.