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Assyrian priest From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Paul Bedjan (27 November 1838 – 9 June 1920) was a Chaldean priest of the Chaldean Catholic Church and a Syriacist and orientalist.
Paul Bedjan | |
---|---|
Church | Chaldean Catholic Church |
Orders | |
Ordination | 25 May 1861 |
Personal details | |
Born | |
Died | June 9, 1920 81) Nippes, Cologne, Germany | (aged
Denomination | Eastern Catholicism |
Occupation | Priest |
Born in Khosrova, Persia, an ethnic Chaldean, he was born into a Chaldean Catholic family, and enrolled as a pupil at the French Lazarist School in Khosrova in 1846. On 27 October 1856, at the age of eighteen, he became a Lazarist novice in Paris. On 25 May 1861, Bedjan was ordained priest there, and, after a few months, returned to Persia/Iran, taking a small reed organ and printing press with him.
Until 1880, he worked as a pastor and organist in his hometown, and in Urmia. He then returned to France to raise funds for the printing of liturgical and theological works in Syriac. From 1885 to 1900, he was active in Ans, Liège, Belgium. He was then appointed pastor to the Daughters of Charity at the Vinzenz-Hospital in the northern Cologne suburb of Nippes, a role that he carried out, alongside his editorial work, until his death. He refused repeated calls that he be made the Chaldean Catholic Church Bishop of Salamas.
Of his works, his seven edited volumes of Syriac lives of saints and martyrs (Acta Martyrum et Sanctorum) and five volumes of verse-homilies of Jacob of Serugh (Homiliae selectae Mar Iacobi Sarugensis) are the most significant. He was able to complete a Neo-Aramaic Bible translation shortly before the end of his life. He died in Cologne, Germany.
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