Institute for Bible Translation

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Institute for Bible Translation, (Russian: Институт перевода Библии) was founded in Stockholm, Sweden in 1973 by Dr. Borislav Arapovic, its main task being to publish Bibles for "non-Slavic peoples in Slavic countries." Today they work on translating the Bible into the non-Slavic languages of the CIS. The current director is Marianne Beerle-Moor.[1]

130 different languages are spoken in the CIS, since 1973 they have worked on Bible translation in more than 80 of these languages. They have printed the Bible or portions of it in over 60 languages, including three whole Bibles, in Georgian, Moldavian and Tajik, and 19 New Testaments.

[edit] References

[edit] External links