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Medal of Freedom
 
 

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Archbishop Iakovos

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos

ARCHBISHOP IAKOVOS
Awarded by
President Jimmy Carter
June 9, 1980

Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos has long put into practice what he has preached. As a progressive religious leader concerned with human rights and the ecumenical movement, he has marched with Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and has met with the Pope. As the Primate of the Greek Orthodox Church of North and South America concerned with his congregation, he has given guidance to millions.

U.S. Greek Orthodox Leader Iakovos Dies
  • Passed Away Sunday At Age 93
  • Headed Church From 1959 To 1996
Apr 11, 2005

STAMFORD, Conn. (AP) Archbishop Iakovos, who led the Greek Orthodox Church in the Americas for 37 years, reaching out to other religious groups as a champion of ecumenism, has died. He was 93.

Iakovos died Sunday at Stamford Hospital from a pulmonary ailment, according to the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.

The Turkish-born Iakovos headed the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of North and South America, with an estimated 2 million followers, from 1959 until 1996. He was apparently forced out over his support for the idea of uniting the various Eastern Orthodox branches in a single American church.

He met with Pope John XXIII after his 1959 enthronement, becoming the first Greek Orthodox archbishop in 350 years to meet with a Roman Catholic prelate, and spent nine years as a president of the World Council of Churches.

Iakovos marched with the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. in Selma, Ala., in 1965 and received the Medal of Freedom from President Carter in 1980.

“Ecumenism,” he said in 1960, “is the hope for international understanding, for humanitarian allegiance, for true peace based on justice and dignity, and for God’s continued presence and involvement in modern history.”

During his long tenure as archbishop, Iakovos led the Greek Orthodox church out of immigrant isolation and into the mainstream of American religious life, playing a leading role in bringing English into the liturgy.

Iakovos was instrumental in setting up dialogues between Orthodox churches and Anglicans, Lutherans, Southern Baptists and other denominations. He opposed the Vietnam War, supported Soviet Jews and sought to aid the cause of Middle East peace.

He met every U.S. president from Dwight Eisenhower through Bill Clinton.

He sought to maintain Orthodox traditions such as opposing the ordination of women, while at the same time championing human rights and improved race relations.

Iakovos came into conflict with Ecumenical Patriarch Bartholomew, the titular leader of world Orthodoxy, in 1994 after he convened a meeting of 29 bishops from the 10 North American branches of Eastern Orthodoxy.

In an unprecedented move, the bishops recommended placing all of the churches under one administrative umbrella while maintaining ties to their separate “mother churches” in Greece, Russia and the other countries.

It is widely assumed that Bartholomew forced Iakovos to resign in 1996 because he had endorsed the idea.

Bartholomew then appointed Archbishop Spyridon, who was deemed too imperious and was forced to resign in 1999. Spyridon was replaced by the current archbishop, Demetrios.

In a statement, Demetrios hailed Iakovos as “a superb archbishop who offered to the church an intense, continuous, multifaceted and creative pastoral activity.”

Iakovos was born Demetrios Coucouzis in 1911 on the island of Imvros, Turkey. He earned a master’s degree at the Ecumenical Patriarch’s Theological School in Istanbul in 1934.

Arriving in the United States in 1939, he was ordained to the priesthood in Lowell, Mass., in 1940 and earned a second master’s degree from Harvard Divinity School in 1945. He became a U.S. citizen in 1950.

Iakovos is survived by a niece, Maria Daoussi, of Montreal, and relatives in Greece. AP

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos Gallery Entrance

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos General View from Gallery Entrance

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos, Presidential Medal of Freedom Display

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos, Presidential Medal of Freedom Certificate

Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos

Gallery Entrance General View Presidential Medal of Freedom Display Presidential Medal of Freedom Certificate Presidential Medal of Freedom
Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos with President Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos with President Richard Nixon Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos with President Jimmy Carter Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos with President Ronald Reagan Presidential Medal of Freedom Recipient Greek Orthodox Archbishop Iakovos with President George Bush
Archbishop with President Johnson Archbishop with President Nixon Archbishop with President Carter Archbishop with President Reagan Archbishop with President Bush
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