Commemorated on August 14
Metropolitan Nazarius of Kutaisi-Gaenati was born in 1872 in the
village of Didi Jikhaishi in Imereti. His forefathers belonged to a long
lineage of clergy, and the future metropolitan was nurtured in the Church from the earliest years of his youth.
Nazarius
(known in the world as Joseph) received his education at Kutaisi
Theological School. In 1892 he graduated with honors from Tbilisi
Seminary and began to serve in the Church, first as a deacon and later
(from February 9, 1893) as a priest. In 1904, after a series of personal
tragedies (first his wife died, then his two daughters), Nazarius was
tonsured a monk. On November 4, 1918, he was enthroned as Metropolitan
of Kutaisi.
The years 1922 to 1923 marked a difficult period in
the history of the Georgian Church. The Bolsheviks razed twelve hundred
churches, destroyed much of the Church’s wealth, burnt many rare
manuscripts, and persecuted spiritual leaders—particularly Georgian
nationalists.
On February 10, 1921, following the Red Army’s
invasion of Georgia, the treasures of the Sioni and Svetitskhoveli
Cathedrals were carried away to Kutaisi for safekeeping. Patriarch
Leonid gave his blessing for four boxes of holy objects to be buried
under the porch at Metropolitan Nazarius’s residence, which was located
on the grounds of the Bagrati Cathedral.
After the Bolsheviks
secured their occupation of Georgia, they discovered where the treasures
had been buried and arrested Metropolitan Nazarius. They accused him of
agitating against the government and concealing the possessions of the
Church. During the court proceedings the metropolitan was asked for whom
he had hidden the treasure, and he answered, “For the Church and the
Georgian people!”
The court sentenced Nazarius to the most severe
punishment—execution by a firing squad—but the sentence was
subsequently rescinded. In the end, the Bolsheviks imprisoned the
hierarch and confiscated his personal belongings.
In April of 1924
Metropolitan Nazarius received amnesty and was released after two years
in prison. He returned to his diocese, which was undergoing many
trials. He was not permitted to return to his own residence, but was
obliged to live with his brother, while his former home was transformed
into a storage facility.
On August 14, 1924, a delegation from
the village of Simoneti came to the metropolitan to request that he
consecrate their local church. At the appointed time, the metropolitan
arrived in Simoneti with his retinue and consecrated the church. That
night, a group of Chekists (Soviet security agents) broke into the house
where Metropolitan Nazarius and his entourage were staying, bound and
beat them, and then dragged them to the village council. Without an
investigation, the Troika (a Soviet extraordinary council of three
judges) sentenced to death Metropolitan Nazarius and four other
clergymen—Priest Herman Jajanidze, Priest Hierotheos Nikoladze, Priest
Simon Mchedlidze, and Archdeacon Besarion Kukhianidze. They were shot to
death in the Sapichkhia Forest.
In 1994, with the blessing of
Catholicos-Patriarch Ilia II, the full Ecclesiastical Council of the
Georgian Church resolved with one accord to canonize Metropolitan
Nazarius and the clergymen who were martyred with him. At the same time,
the council canonized all the Orthodox Christians who, for their Faith
and the independence of their homeland, became victims of the
totalitarian regime. They were proclaimed the “New Martyrs of the
Georgian Church.”
SOURCE:
SAINT OR FEAST POSTED THIS DATE 2013(with 2012's link here also and further, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008 and even 2007!)
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