• Comment: This is not far from being accepted. However, more words do not make a better article. Please remove irrelevancies and unreferenced POV statements and attend to formatting. Deb (talk) 07:57, 24 September 2024 (UTC)
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Pietro Sfair
TitleArchbishop and Ordinarius for the Maronite faithful of Rome
Personal
Born
Pietro Sfeir

February 10, 1888
DiedMay 18, 1974
ReligionMaronite Catholic
Organization
ChurchMaronite Church
Senior posting
ConsecrationMay 24, 1953
OrdinationMarch 8, 1913

Pietro Sfair (10 February 1888 – 18 May 1974 ) was a Lebanese Archbishop and diocesan bishop (Ordinary) for the Syriac-Maronite Church of Antioch Catholic faithful in Rome.[1][2] He is the first cleric to be named the Titular Archbishop of Nisibis (Nusaybin) by the Maronite Catholic Church.[3] The wikipedia article Nusaybin states that "the Maronite titular see was established as Titular Archiepiscopal see of Nisibis (informally Nisibis of the Maronites) in 1960. It is vacant, having had a single incumbent of the (intermediary) archiepiscopal rank: Pietro Sfair (1960.03.11 - 1974.05.18)". On June 8, 2024, the titular see of Nisibis was once again filled with the appointment of Arhbishop Michel Jalakh.[4] A 695-page biography of Sfair authored by Butrus Fahd is in the collection of both the Library of Congress in Washington DC and the New York Public Library, according to such library's research catalogue.[5]

Sfair was a Council Father at all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council.[6]

Life in Rome

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Sfair was born in Kleiat, Keserwan, Mount Lebanon Mutasarrifate, Ottoman Empire. One of jos younger brothers was Emilio Sfeir, a hero of Bolivian counter-intelligence during the Guerra del Chaco (Chaco War) against Paraguay.[7] Nelly Sfeir Gonzalez was his niece, and Mauricio Gonzalez Sfeir is a great nephew.

After ten years of preparation at the Collegio Maronita di Roma, Pietro Sfair was ordained to the priesthood on 8 March 1913. He pursued graduate studies from 1913 to 1916 at the Pontifical Biblical Institute in Rome.[8]

Sfair spoke eight languages (Hebrew, Syriac, Greek, Latin, Arabic, French, Italian & English), and became a professor of Theology, oriental languages (Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic) and Islamic Law at both the University of Rome and Saint John Lateran University in Rome.[2][9] [10] He served as spiritual advisor to the Pontifical Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools (De La Salle Brothers) at the Archbasilica of Saint John Lateran.[11] Sfair worked as an Arabic translator for the Vatican's Society for the Propagation of the Faith and celebrated the Maronite mass twice monthly for Vatican Radio,[2] which began broadcasting (with the technical assistance of Guglielmo Marconi) in 1931 during the papacy of Pope Pius XI.[12] In 1934, Sfair assisted the Italian government in establishing Radio Bari, which broadcasted in Arabic to North Africa and the Middle East.[13] Indeed, Sfair was among the first Roman Catholic churchmen to see the potential of radio for the propagation of the faith. Through his friendship with Italian Admiral and Senator Angelo Ugo Conz [it], Sfair met and befriended Guglielmo Marconi, inventor of the radio and Nobel laureate (both Admiral Conz and Marconi served in the Senate of the Kingdom of Italy). Admiral Conz (Regia Marina) was a decorated veteran of both the Italo-Turkish War of 1911-1912 and World War One.[14] Admiral Conz was instrumental in the adoption by the Italian Navy (Regia Marina) of Marconi's "wireless telegraph" for sightless communication between naval ships, first during the Italo-Turkish War and then during World War One (Marconi was given the rank of Commander in the Italian Navy in recognition of his contribution). Conz and Sfair shared a keen interest in the military history of the Ottoman Empire. Conz most likely nominated Sfair for a knighthood in the Order of the Crown of Italy in 1935 and he most certainly attended the mass to celebrate Sfair's silver jubilee as a priest in 1938.[15] Unfortunately, their mutual friend Marconi had died of a heart attack in 1937 and could not attend.

Sfair's views on theological questions were sought out by Pope John XXIII during the Second Vatican Council. He was instrumental during the drafting of the Second Vatican Council document Nostra Aetate to highlight the House of Mary (in Ephesus, Turkey) and Marian devotion as a matter of shared interest between Christians and Muslims.[16] "Archbishop P. Sfair of the Maronite Rite (Rome) considered the reference which the declaration De non christianis made to the Muslims'adoration of the one and remunerating God as insufficient. Mention should also be made of Mohammed's affirmation of the virginal conception and birth of Christ through Mary, the most exalted among women. The Archbishop recalled the respect with which the earliest Muslims treated the Christians and the Christian beliefs. He insisted that the declaration should give greater consideration to that which the Muslims believed, to the truths which they proposed for belief, than to their less essential cultural factors."[17] He was a strong advocate for good relations with Judaism and Islam.

In the 1960s and 1970s in Rome, Sfair became known for walking all around central Rome without concerning himself with vehicular traffic. He established friendships with Christian Democracy leader and future prime minister Aldo Moro (who as Foreign Minister sought his views on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict) and actress Sylva Koscina, who fondly called him "my grand dad" ('nonno' in Italian).[2]

Family

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Sfair's birth name in Arabic is Butros Javad Sufayr. Sfair's father was Georges Sfeir and his mother was Philoumene Sfeir (for background on the family history, see Sfeir[18]). The names of some of his siblings were Salim, Chaia, Maria, Racquel, Antoun. Emile (Emilio) and Isaie. He received his primary and secondary education in Lebanon, first at St. Gergoes's School in Kleiat, Keserwan District (founded by an illustrious ancestor Abi-Dagher Sfeir) and then at St. Joseph's School in Cornet Chawan, Matn District. Beginning in 1903, when he was 15 years old, he studied in Italy at the Collegio Maronita di Roma. He would reside in Rome for the next 72 years of his life.

Entering into the religious life was a Sfeir family tradition. A great uncle of Sfair was Michel Sfeir (1854-1920), a Maronite priest and scholar who catalogued thousands of ancient Arabic and Syriac manuscripts found in Lebanese monasteries. A cousin was Cardinal Nasrallah Boutros Sfeir, Maronite Catholic Patriarch of Antioch and All the East.[19] Other family members, however, were engaged in worldly pursuits.

Swiss-Lebanese banker Salim Sfeir, who may be the grandson of Sfair's older brother Salim, donated funds to renovate the library at the Maronite College in Rome.[20]

Although Sfair died in Rome, where a funeral mass was celebrated for him at the Maronite College Chapel of St. Anthony in the Piazza San Pietro in Vincoli, his body was shipped to Beirut, where they were received by all the Lebanese bishops and the civil authorities. A second funeral mass was celebrated for him in his home town of Kleiat, at St. George's, the church of the Sfeir family convent (couvent des Sfeir), built in the 17th century by chevalier Nader Sfeir. He was buried in Lebanon in accordance with his Last Will and Testament. At the time of Sfair's death, three siblings remained alive--his brothers Chaia and Isaie, and one of his two sisters.[2]

Religious life

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On 11 March 1953 Pope Pius XII appointed Sfair Titular Bishop of Epiphania in Syria (Hama) and Ordinary for the Maronite faithful of Rome. Prefect of the Sacred Congregation for Divine Worship, Eugène Cardinal Tisserant, consegrated Sfair a Bishop on May 24, 1953; Co-consecrators were Vice Regent for the Diocese of Rome, Luigi Traglia, and the Auxiliary Bishop of the Ostia and Porto und Santa Rufina, Pietro Villa FSCJ. Pope John XXIII appointed Sfair on March 11, 1960 as Titular Archbishop of Nisibis Nisibis dei Maroniti[2]

Pietro Sfair participated in all four sessions of the Second Vatican Council as a Council Father.[21]

In the early 1970s, Sfair served as the Rector of the Maronite College in Rome (Collegio Maronita di Roma-- Pontificio Collegio dei Maroniti) and his Vice Rector was the future Maronite Patriarch Bechara Boutros Al-Rahi. Sfair's assistant in Rome was a young Maronite Catholic seminarian and deacon Faouzi Elia, who went on to become pastor of St. Sharbel Church in Peoria, Illinois and Chorbishop of the Eparchy of Our Lady of Lebanon in Los Angeles, California.[22]

Awards and Honors

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In Rome on May 11, 1935, His Majesty Vittorio Emanuele III, King of Italy, conferred upon Sfair the title of Cavaliere dell'Ordine della Corona d'Italia (Knight of the Order of the Crown of Italy).[2]

Monsignor Sfair was also a Prelate of Honour of His Holiness (Domestic Prelate).[2]

Sfair was the Honorary Rector of the Accademia Universale Guglielmo Marconi in Rome.[23] 1966-1974

Selected Writings

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Sfair was a prolific writer and scholar. In addition to writing about the theology and religious practices of the Maronite Antiochene Rite and the lives of Catholic saints, Sfair occasionally wrote about migrant literature and political satire in Lebanon and Syria. Among his published works are the following:

Popular Songs about Social and Political Satire of Lebanon and Syria (1931)[24]

The Antiochene Maronite Rite (1933)[25]

Emigration and Love of Country in the Poetry of the Lebanese Dialect (1942) [26]

The Syriac-Maronite mass, annotated (1946)[27]

Biography of St. Abraham of Clermont (1962)[28]

Syriac-Maronite traditions regarding the martyrdom of Saint Peter (1969)

References

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  1. ^ "Nelly Sfeir Gonzalez". Champaign-Urbana News Gazette. December 12, 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h Fahd, Butros (1974). Arcivescovo Pietro Sfair grande orientalista e predicatore, vita e opere [Archbishop Pietro Sfair great orientalist and preacher, life and work] (in Italian). Rome: Matabi al-Karim al-Hadithath.
  3. ^ Annuario Pontificio 2013 (Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2013, ISBN 978-88-209-9070-1)
  4. ^ "Father Michel Jalkh the Antonine Promoted to the Episcopal Rank -- The Middle East Council of Churches". March 8, 2024.
  5. ^ "Pietro, Sfair 1974". New York Public Library Research Catalogue. Retrieved July 9, 2024.
  6. ^ Melloni, Alberto (January 27, 2021). Atlante Storico del Concilio Vaticano II [Atlas of the Second Vatican Council] (in Italian). Milan: Editoriale Jaca Book. ISBN 978-88-16-60510-7.
  7. ^ Mejillones-Quispe, Guillermo (March 2017). El Servicio de Inteligencia Entre 1927-1938: El Espionaje, Contraespionaje de Bolivia Durante la Guerra del Chaco [The Intelligence Service Between 1927-1938: Bolivian Espionage and Counterespionage during the Chaco War] (Licenciatura thesis). La Paz, Bolivia: Universidad Mayor de San Andres Facultad de Humanidades y Ciencias de la Educacion Carrera de Historia. pp. 121–128. Retrieved June 8, 2024.
  8. ^ "Pontificium Institutum Biblicum: Vita functus". Biblica. 56. St. Martin's Press: 288. 1975. Retrieved August 7, 2024.
  9. ^ Martinez Sanchez, Santiago (2013). "Conversacion en Pamplona con Jose Luis Illanes" [Conversation in Pamplona with Jose Luis Illanes] (PDF). Anuario de Historia de la Iglesia (in Spanish). 22: 359–402. doi:10.15581/007.22.2230. ISSN 1133-0104. Retrieved August 2, 2024. page 371, footnote 51
  10. ^ Gabrieli, Francesco (1975). "Gli Studi Arabo-Islamici Nella Universita Di Roma" [Arabic-Islamic Studies at the University of Rome]. Oriente Moderno (in Italian). 55 (1/2): 1–7. doi:10.1163/22138617-0550102002. JSTOR 25816239. Retrieved August 17, 2024. page 7
  11. ^ Fahd, Butros (1974). Arcivescovo Pietro Sfair grande orientalista e predicatore, vita e opere [Archbishop Pietro Sfair great orientalist and preacher, life and work] (in Italian). Rome: Matabi al-Karim al-Hadithath. p. 62.
  12. ^ Perin, Raffaella (April 16, 2024). The Popes on Air: The History of Vatican Radio from its Origins to World War II. New York City: Fordham University Press. ISBN 978-1531507152.
  13. ^ Perin, Raffaella (April 16, 2024). The Popes on Air: The History of Vatican Radio from its Origins to World War II. New York City: Fordham University Press. p. 31. ISBN 978-1531507152.
  14. ^ "Admiral Conz in New York--Italian Officer Arrives on Battleship Conte di Cavour". The New York Times. September 15, 1919.
  15. ^ Arcivescovo Pietro Sfair grande orientalista e predicatore, vita e opere [Archbishop Pietro Sfair great orientalist and preacher, life and work] (in Italian). Rome: Matabi al-Karim al-Hadithath. 1974.
  16. ^ George-Tvrtkovic, Rita (Autumn 2017). "Merye Ana Evi, Marian Devotion and the Making of "Nostra aetate" 3". The Catholic Historical Review. 103 (4): 755–781. doi:10.1353/cat.2017.0186. Retrieved June 30, 2024.
  17. ^ Farrugia, Joseph (1990). "The Evolution of the Conciliar Texts Regarding the Muslims" (PDF). Melita Theologica. XLI (2): 115–139. Retrieved September 20, 2024. p. 125-126: Archbishop P. Sfair of the Maronite Rite (Rome) considered the reference which the declaration made to the Muslims'adoration of the one and remunerating God as insufficient. Mention should also be made of Mohammed's affirmation of the virginal conception and birth of Christ through Mary, the most exalted among women. The Archbishop recalled the respect with which the earliest Muslims treated the Christians and the Christian beliefs. He insisted that the declaration should give greater consideration to that which the Muslims believed, to the truths which they proposed for belief, than to their less essential cultural factors.
  18. ^ Crawford, Robert (April 1955). "William of Tyre and the Maronites". Speculum. 30 (2). The University of Chicago Press: 222–228. doi:10.2307/2848470. JSTOR 28448470. Retrieved September 12, 2024.
  19. ^ Roberts, Sam (May 15, 2019). "Cardinal Nasrallah Sfeir, 98, a Voice for Lebanese Christians, Dies". The New York Times.
  20. ^ "Inauguration de la Bibliothèque Salim Sfeir pour le patrimoine maronite a Rome" [Inauguration of the Salim Sfeir Library for the Maronite heritage in Rome] (in French). Beirut, Lebanon: L'Orient-Le Jour newspaper. February 14, 2017.
  21. ^ Melloni, Alberto (January 27, 2021). Atlante Storico del Concilio Vaticano II [Atlas of the Second Vatican Council] (in Italian). Milan: Editoriale Jaca Book. ISBN 978-88-16-60510-7.
  22. ^ Willems, Jennifer (July 27, 2016). "1,700 Maronite Rite Catholics Visit Peoria For Feast of St. Sharbel Celebration". The Catholic Post. Diocese of Peoria, Illinois. Retrieved June 30, 2024.
  23. ^ "Testimonial Letter from Emilio Ambron". www.sannyas.wiki. The Sannyas Wiki. October 3, 2023. Retrieved July 5, 2024. Rettore "Honoris Causa" Mons. Pietro Sfair Primate nel Libano Arciescovo di Nisibi
  24. ^ Sfair, Pietro (April 1931). "Canzoni Popolari di Satira Sociale e Politica del Libano e della Siria" [Popular Songs about Social and Political Satire of Lebanon and Syria]. Oriente Moderno (in Italian). 11 (4). Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino: 196–216. doi:10.1163/22138617-01104002. JSTOR 25808592. Retrieved August 21, 2024.
  25. ^ Sfair, Pietro, ed. (1933). Disciplina Antiochena Maroniti [The Antiochene Maronite Rite] (in Italian). Rome: Tip. poliglotta vaticana. p. 1296.
  26. ^ Sfair, Pietro (December 1942). "Emigrazione e Amor di Patria Nella Poesia Dialettale del Libano" [Emigration and Love of Country in the Poetry of the Lebanese Dialect]. Oriente Moderno (in Italian). 22 (12). Istituto per l'Oriente C. A. Nallino: 518–534. JSTOR 25811249. Retrieved August 21, 2024.
  27. ^ Sfair, Pietro (1946). La Messa Siro-Maronita annotata cenno storico sui maroniti [The Syro-Maronite Mass annotated with historical background of the maronites] (in Italian). Rome: Segretariato generale dell'ottavario.
  28. ^ Sfair, Pietro (1962). "Sant'Abramo di St-Cirgue". Enciclopedia dei Santi - Bibliotheca Sanctorum (in Italian). Vatican City: Edizioni Citta Nuova. 57320. Retrieved August 10, 2024.
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