Bishop Janez N. Stariha was born on May 12th, 1845, in Sodinja vas, Parish of Semič. After finishing elementary school in Semič, he continued his studies at the Novo mesto High School. In the year 1866, he fought at the battle of Custozza: he was honoured with the Silver Medal for bravery. The call for priesthood was increasingly present in him; in 1867, he deserted from the army, boarded a sailing boat and after 57 days landed in New York. Since he was pennyless, he found himself a temporary job at a farm house in Wiscosin. After working for a month, he decided to visit Janez Vertin, his fellow countryman and a former school fellow, who later became the third bishop at Marquette. Stariha entered the St. Francis de Sales Seminary, St. Paul in Milwaukee and was ordained priest by bishop Mrak in 1869. For the first two years, he was active in a parish with mostly French and Irish population; later, he applied for a post at St. Paul diocese in Minnesota.
At first, Stariha became a parish priest in Marystown and afterwards at Red Wings. Besides general care for the parish and development of the Catholic life, he dedicated much attention to his missionary work. His parish duties comprised not only the pastoral care, but due to his ingenuity he also built some churches. In the year 1883, he was transferred as a parish priest to the newly established parish of Saint Francis de Sales in the town of St. Paul. Later, in 1897, Stariha became the vicar general of the St. Paul Diocese. In 1902, he was ordained as the first bishop of the newly established diocese Lead, South Dakota. Due to illness, he retired in 1909 and got the title of the Antipatrida Bishop. Stariha died on November 27th 1915 the year in Ljubljana and is burried at the St. Cross Cemetery (today's Žale Cemetery) in Ljubljana.
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