Commemorated on September 18
In the 17th century the Persian aggressors razed churches,
monasteries, and fortresses and drove out thousands of Georgian families
to resettle them in remote provinces of Persia. The deserted
territories were settled by Turkic tribes from Central Asia. In the
chronicle The Life of
Kartli it is written: “The
name of Christ was not allowed to be uttered, except in a handful of
mountainous regions: Tusheti, Pshavi, and Khevsureti.”
But the
All-merciful Lord aroused a strong desire in the valiant prince Bidzina
Choloqashvili of Kakheti and, together with Shalva and his uncle
Elizbar, princes of Aragvi and Ksani provinces, he led a struggle to
liberate Kakheti from the Tatars. (The Persian governor of Kakheti,
Salim Khan (1656-1664), had been encouraging the Tatar tribesmen to
profane the Christian churches.)
Fearing that the enemy, who had
already conquered Kakheti, would soon move in and also dominate Kartli,
the princes Bidzina, Shalva, and Elizbar united the forces of those two
regions in preparation for the attack.
After much deliberation,
Bidzina announced his intention to his father-in-law, Prince Zaal of
Aragvi. Zaal’s soul was spiritually pained by the countless misfortunes
and injustices his country had suffered, and he quickly pledged his
support for the effort. He agreed to participate in the insurrection
anonymously, while the Ksani rulers Shalva and Elizbar would command the
armies.
On the moonless night of September 15, 1659, the feast of
the Alaverdi Church (The feast of St. Joseph of Alaverdi) the united
army of all eastern Georgia assembled and crossed over the mountains,
past the village of Akhmeta, and launched a surprise attack on the
Persians from Bakhtrioni Fortress and Alaverdi Church. The invader’s
armies were so utterly crushed that their leader, Salim Khan, the
Persian governor of Kakheti, barely succeeded in escaping from the
avengers, after he had abandoned his family and army.
The
victorious Georgian army offered prayers of thanksgiving to the Lord God
and Great-martyr George, the protector of the Georgian people, who had
appeared visibly to all during the battle, riding his white horse like a
flash of lightning and leading the Georgians to victory.
The joy
was great but short lived. The furious Shah Abbas II (1642-1667)
ordered King Vakhtang V of Kartli (1658-1675) to deliver to him those
who had instigated the insurrection.
Certain that they would
receive no mercy from the shah, Georgia’s heroic liberators nevertheless
set out for Persia without complaint. The shah received them with
respect and generously bestowed gifts upon them, but then demanded that
they renounce the Christian Faith. Neither bribery nor flattery would
break their will, so the shah ordered his servants to arrest and torture
them, strip off their clothing, and cast them, bound, under the blazing
sun. Tormented by thirst and insect stings, the martyrs were
periodically tempted to renounce Christ, but with God’s help they
resisted every temptation.
Finally the enraged Salim Khan, the
vassal of Shah Abbas, ordered the beheading of Elizbar and Shalva,
hoping by this to break Bidzina’s resolve. But his efforts were in vain.
“There is nothing sweeter than death for Christ’s sake!” Bidzina
proclaimed.
The Ksani princes calmly bowed their heads, but the
undersized executioners could not reach the stately princes with their
swords. So the shah’s henchmen hacked each of the princes in two at the
shins, then decapitated them after they had fallen to an accessible
height.
But even the murder of his companions would not cause St.
Bidzina’s will to waver. So the enemies resolved to break his will by
mockery. They draped the bound prince in a chadar (the veil worn by
Muslim women), seated him on a donkey, and paraded him through the
streets. Then they began to butcher him alive. One by one they cut off
his fingers and toes, then they chopped off his hands and feet, then his
arms and legs, until only his head remained unharmed. It was clear from
the movement of his lips that the holy martyr was praying.
Then
one of the persecutors pierced his heart with a spear. This happened in
the year 1661. The mutilated bodies of the holy martyrs remained under
the open sky for one day, and no one was permitted to go near them.
During the night they were illumined by a brilliant light.
Then a
group of Christians secretly buried the saints’ remains. Several years
later St. Shalva’s wife Ketevan and son David sent several of the
faithful to Persia to bring back their relics. Crowds of believers
gathered at the Kartli border to meet the holy relics and accompany them
with hymns of rejoicing to their final resting place at the Ikorta
Church of the Archangels.
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2012(with 2011's link here also and further, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!)
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