Showing posts with label Orthodox News-OCA. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Orthodox News-OCA. Show all posts

Thursday, September 18, 2008

Controversial Serbian bishop's woes follow him from US

Nikolai Soraich at a youth seminar in Melbourne. He was removed as bishop of Alaska by the Orthodox Church. Photo: Simon Schluter

A SERBIAN bishop who was forcibly retired in the US after a revolt by his clergy is working in Victoria, where his presence has divided the Serbian Orthodox community.

Bishop Nikolai Soraich was removed as bishop of Alaska by the Orthodox Church in America this year after two investigations upheld a litany of complaints, including that he appointed to the clergy in Alaska a man jailed for sexual abuse of minors.

The bishop was forced to cancel his visit to St Stephan of Dechani church at Carrum Downs 10 days ago after members of the congregation protested before the service. And police were called on Sunday after a confrontation between the congregation and members of other Serbian churches who travelled from Greensborough and Keysborough.

Official church investigations in Alaska into Bishop Nikolai found that he repeatedly abused and intimidated clergy and laypeople, violated the church's rules on sexual misconduct and fostered an atmosphere of fear and mistrust. He was also sued by a missionary he sacked after the missionary complained he was sexually harassed by Bishop Nikolai's chancellor, Father Isidore.

Father Isidore, who often referred to himself at Mrs Soraich, complained when drunk that Bishop Nikolai beat him, but retracted the complaint when sober, according to reports from Alaska. There is no suggestion of sexual relations between Bishop Nikolai and Father Isidore, whom the bishop repeatedly and rapidly promoted, but allegations of psychological abuse are cited in the official church report.

Nevertheless, Serbian community sources say Father Isidore is planning to join the bishop in Australia.

Archpriest Michael Oleksa, who is now administering the Alaskan diocese, told The Age that "the last five years under (Bishop Nikolai's) management were some of the most difficult we have endured in our 210-year history". "He was racist, he attempted to redirect our church so as to significantly change its identity, and he was personally unkind to the point of cruelty. Each of these charges could have several pages of testimony. All were upheld by the investigating committee that came from New York after dozens, if not hundreds, of complaints."

Bishop Nikolai was investigated twice, first by the chancellor of the Orthodox Church in America, then by two bishops. Both investigations upheld the complaints. Rather than be suspended, Bishop Nikolai agreed to take permanent leave of absence.

Father Oleksa said Bishop Nikolai was extremely charming and intelligent, and he was not surprised the bishop had found sanctuary in Australia. Now Bishop Nikolai is based at the St Sava monastery at Elaine, near Ballarat, and is leading church services and visiting parishioners.

Asked by The Age about the strife in Alaska, he said: "I wouldn't comment on such ludicrous statements. Once you comment on something that's foolish you have to comment on everything that's foolish."

But he said he had not been forcibly retired. "In the Orthodox Church a bishop cannot be forcibly retired. He can retire voluntarily or be removed by a church court, and neither has happened."

He said he would love to stay in Australia, "the people have been absolutely wonderful".

Bishop Nikolai is in Australia "under the hospitality" of the Serbian Orthodox Bishop of Australia, Bishop Irinej, who has been overseas. The diocesan office did not return calls.

"Under hospitality" means Bishop Nikolai has no canonical status in Australia and operates as guest of Bishop Irinej. The pair were reportedly friends in the US, and Bishop Irinej notified all Australian parishes that Bishop Nikolai should be welcomed.

The Serbian Orthodox community in Australia is small, but tensions are high after a merger between two branches 15 years ago. Some churches are in dispute with Bishop Irinej and have declared independence.

The parish secretary at Carrum Downs, who did not want to be named, confirmed that Bishop Nikolai's visit had been cancelled after parishioners read about his problems in the US on the internet.

SOURCE:

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Friday, September 12, 2008

9-11 memorial service ministered in Moscow

11 September 2008, 14:21

Moscow, September 11, Interfax - Moscow Church of St. Catherine in-the-Fields, which house representation of the Orthodox Church in America, has conducted a requiem service for victims of terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 in the World Trade Center, New York.

Its Dean Archimandrite Zacchaeus (Wood) conducted a requiem for "all innocent victims of terrorists" in Church Slavonic and English.

The service was attended by US ambassador to Russia John Beyrle, ambassadors of Canada, Greece, Serbia, Columbia, Cuba and other states, vice speaker of the Federation Council Alexander Torshin, chairman of the Central Election Commission Vladimir Churov.

President of the Russian Railways Vladimir Yakunin spoke after the requiem and reminded that the Orthodox Church together with other Christian confessions and Islamic spiritual leaders "condemned all manifestations of terrorism."

"There's no religion justifying terrorism," Yakunin noted.

He reminded that the USA was the USSR were allies in World War II and expressed hope that the world powers would coordinate their anti-terrorist policy in the future.

SOURCE:

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

OCA Holy Synod of Bishops Grants Retirement to Metropolitan Herman

Syosset, NY.- The Holy Synod of Bishops of the Orthodox Church in America, meeting at the OCA Chancery in Oyster Bay Cove, NY, on Thursday, September 4, 2008, issued the following statement.

“On September 4, 2008, The Holy Synod of Bishops received a letter from His Beatitude, Metropolitan HERMAN. In this letter, His Beatitude asks for Retirement, effective immediately, 'in the best interests of The Orthodox Church in America, and taking into consideration the current condition of my health.'

“Effective this date, The Holy Synod of Bishops grants His Beatitudeʼs request to retire from the Office of Metropolitan of All America and Canada of the Orthodox Church in America.

“The Holy Synod of Bishops resolves that, in retirement, the title will be ʽFormer Archbishop of Washington and New York, Metropolitan of All America and Canada.ʼ

“The Holy Synod of Bishops expresses to His Beatitude, Metropolitan HERMAN, their fraternal love and gratitude for his primatial service and archpastoral labors.

“The Holy Synod of Bishops resolves that His Eminence, DMITRI, Archbishop of Dallas and the South, be Locum tenens of The Orthodox Church in America. In liturgical commemorations, in the Litanies, he is to be commemorated in this manner: 'For His Eminence, Archbishop DMITRI, for His Grace, our Bishop [N]...' At the Great Entrance and at 'Among the first...,' he is to be commemorated in this manner: 'His Eminence, DMITRI, Archbishop of Dallas and the South, Locum tenens of the Metropolitan See...'"

SOURCE:

Saturday, September 06, 2008

Orientation of new students focuses on priestly vocation

Fr. John Breck, former faculty member at St. Vladimir’s, and guest speaker at Orientation 2008, greets incoming students (from left) Dustin Lyon of Minnesota, Clive Cabey of Michigan, and Courtney Jones of South Carolina.
“You have come to St. Vladimir’s to discover and develop the foundational call that you have already heard,” noted the Very Rev. John Breck, as he began the first of three talks he delivered to the incoming class of thirty-eight students during Orientation Week, August 21–24, 2008.

Fr. John, Professor of New Testament and Ethics at St. Vladimir’s from 1984–1996, returned to campus as a guest lecturer and focused his remarks on the priestly vocation of Jesus Christ as the model for both ordained and lay ministry. In particular, he defined priestly ministry as offering oneself and others in community to God.

“By coming to the seminary,” he said, “you have renewed an initial commitment to God in a very serious way. And, you have recognized that life is essentially made up of who we are because of what Christ has done for us. Everything changes with this realization.”

In his talks, which were interspersed among a variety of other activities related to orienting the new class to campus, Fr. John concentrated on three, deeply-interconnected themes: “Our Call to Ministry: Self-giving and Others,” “Dysfunctional Family Systems: Personal and Corporate,” and “Spiritual Growth: Life in Prayer.” Throughout, he addressed practical and pastoral concerns taken from his experience as a parish priest and from the classrooms of the three seminaries at which he has taught, St. Vladimir’s, St. Herman Orthodox Theological Seminary in Kodiak, Alaska, and presently, St. Sergius Orthodox Theological Institute, Paris, France.

In particular, Fr. John emphasized that a seminarian’s academic work and success were functions of a spiritual orientation, and he stressed the inner, personal disciplines of prayer, Scripture reading, and the practice of silence as means to proper formation. “Seminary community life has as its goal the transformation of us into authentic priests, who imitate the love and holiness of Jesus,” he said.

Referring to the book Be My Priest, by Monk Lev (Gillet), which was given to incoming students as a gift from the seminary, Fr. John concluded his remarks with a sobering quotation: “Live a life of obscurity and silence; seeking no awards.”

The Very Rev. John Behr, Dean of St. Vladimir’s, welcomed the incoming class by presenting a history of the seminary, including a memorable quotation from one of the seminary’s earliest deans, Metropolitan Leonid Turkevich: “The Orthodox Church in America should be the avant-guard of Orthodoxy, and should be forced to assume a serious theological foundation. To carry out this role, there should be theological scholarship at the highest level. Otherwise, without [our priests] having proper theological answers to questions, we will end up as sectarians.” Fr. John urged the incoming students to continue in that tradition, which, he said, “has dramatically shaped ‘Orthodoxy’ as we know it today.”

The Dean further distinguished theology from other disciplines of study by defining it as “a confession of faith, a contemplation of who God has shown himself to be in the person of Jesus Christ.” He continued his powerful reflection by stating: “ ‘Theology’ is not ‘words about God,’ for God cannot be the subject of any study, such as history, or archeology, or social work. Theology is not abstract speculation, but rather a reflection on God’s revelation in Jesus Christ, and therefore the application of ‘theology’ is service. Christ showed his glory as Lord by death on the Cross, and if we—as broken, sinful, weak human beings—voluntarily ‘die’ to this life, all our brokenness will become our access to grace. Remember, there is ‘lordship’ [only] in ‘service.’ ”

Fr. John concluded by reminding the students that studying theology required an “ascetical struggle” of the mind, and that “renewal of the mind” through the daily cycle of services offered on campus was essential to spiritually shape the class, both individually and also collectively.

The Very Rev. Chad Hatfield, Chancellor of St. Vladimir’s, recognized the sacrifice the students and their families had made by enrolling at the seminary, and reminded them of the seriousness of their decision. “Ahead of you will be three years of intense spiritual warfare, and you will do battle with the Devil, who is not pleased that you have made this sacrifice,” he warned. He then outlined for them the administrative and communal organization of the campus, sharing practical wisdom to help students immerse themselves to the fullest in opportunities offered by St. Vladimir’s, which he termed “a venerable institution with a global reputation for excellence.”

Other activities of Orientation included informative talks by faculty and staff regarding campus procedures and policies; tours of the SVS Library and Bookstore; class registration; preliminary testing in writing competency and voice testing for choral assignments; campus cookouts; an introduction to the Spouses’ Program, directed by Presbytera Kerri Pappas, which took place at a welcoming reception for the wives of new students hosted by the Dean and the Chancellor; and a session with returning students, who number forty-seven.

To introduce them to the rich cultural resources of nearby New York City, the incoming class took a trip to the Metropolitan Museum of Art, with the Rev. Alexander Rentel, Assistant Professor of Canon Law and Byzantine Studies at St. Vladimir’s, acting as their guide in the Byzantine exhibit.

A concluding session regarding spiritual formation, including the practice of the Jesus Prayer and the discipline of confession, was conducted by Dr. Albert S. Rossi, Adjunct Professor of Pastoral Theology, and the Very Rev. Steven Belonick, Associate Dean for Student Affairs and organizer of the Orientation.

The new and returning students represent a multi-jurisdictional, multi-national presence, and statistically break down as follows: Orthodox Church in America, 29; Antiochian Orthodox Christian Archdiocese of North America, 19; Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America, 13; Armenian Apostolic Church, 6; Serbian Orthodox Church, 5; Malankara Orthodox Syrian Church, 3; Malankara Syrian Orthodox Church, 2; Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia, 2; Romanian Orthodox Archdiocese of America and Canada, 2; the Bulgarian Patriarchal Orthodox Church, 1; and the Patriarchate of Moscow, 1. Additionally, three non-Orthodox students, of the Roman Catholic, Lutheran, and Evangelical faiths, attend the seminary.

Fr. Steven Belonick summed up the weeklong experience, by saying, “This very important week not only provides the chance for the seminary to share its goals and aspirations with the new students, but also allows us the delightful opportunity to meet the incoming class outside of the busy academic year. We are so pleased to have them, and we wish the incoming class growth in our Lord as they join us.”

SOURCE(with many pictures):

Tuesday, August 12, 2008

Hundreds of faithful make pilgrimage to honor St. Herman on Spruce Island


Article published on Monday, August 11th, 2008
By JUDY T. FULP
Special to the Mirror

__________________________________________________________________


As the boats arrived at Monk’s Lagoon on Spruce Island Saturday morning, pilgrims described seeing whales breaching on the trip over.


The weather started out sunny, with a bit of mist and a clear rainbow along the journey for those taking part in the 2008 pilgrimage to honor St. Herman, who lived on Spruce Island from 1808 to 1818.


During the liturgy Saturday at Monk’s Lagoon, Bishop Maxim spoke about becoming a person of love and compassion, ready to bear others’ burdens. The Serbian Orthodox bishop of Western America shared the celebration this year with Bishop Benjamin, the Orthodox Church of America bishop of San Francisco and the West, administrator of the Alaska Russian Orthodox Diocese.


OCA head Metropolitan Herman attended the pilgrimage, but was unable to travel to Monk’s Lagoon for the liturgy, which was concelebrated by visiting Orthodox priests, including Fr. Robert Arida, rector and dean of Holy Trinity Orthodox Cathedral in Boston. Arida taught at St. Herman’s Seminary in Kodiak from 1977 to 1980.


Fr. Chad Hatfield, chancellor of St. Vladimir’s Seminary in New York, a recent dean of St. Herman’s Seminary, also traveled back to Kodiak for the pilgrimage.


Fr. Joseph Kreta, founder of St. Herman’s Seminary and long-time pastor of Holy Resurrection Cathedral, and Matushka Marie Kreta, traveled to Kodiak from Mesa, Ariz.


Retired Episcopal priest Fr. Norman Elliott, 89, started serving in Alaska in 1951, “all over the Yukon,” then in Southeast and Anchorage. He found the hike up the spruce-lined trail to the chapel and the divine liturgy inspiring.


In his homily, Bishop Maxim urged pilgrims to see that the essence of life is to have a good relationship with God and love our brethren.


Marilyn Kreta directed the choir for the outdoor service on Spruce Island.


St. Herman’s Sisterhood and women from Ouzinkie and St. Innocent’s Academy provided the food for the picnic lunch on the beach at Monk’s Lagoon following the divine liturgy.


Kodiak boat owners ferried pilgrims to and from Spruce Island for the celebration.


Fr. Innocent Dresdow and the parishioners of Holy Resurrection Cathedral hosted more than 200 pilgrims Thursday through Sunday.


Dresdow said seeing the pilgrims’ anticipation and joy on the pilgrimage reminded him and his parishioners of how peaceful Spruce Island is and “the joy we get to live with each day.”


A soup dinner was held at the Cathedral Hall after the pilgrims returned from Spruce Island on Saturday and a grand banquet at St. Mary’s gym on Sunday.


Saturday, August 09, 2008

Metropolitan Herman sends letter of condolence to widow of Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn







Memorial Litiya served for the newly-reposed Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn at St. Sergius of Radonezh Chapel at the OCA Chancery. Arch Priest Father Eric George Tosi Serving the Panakhida: formerly from my home parish here in Las Vegas


Posted 08/06

SYOSSET, NY [OCA Communications] – On August 5, 2008, His Beatitude, Metropolitan Herman sent a letter of condolence to Natalia Dmitrievna Solzhenitsyna, widow of the recently reposed Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn.

The text of Metropolitan Herman's letter is as follows.

"We were saddened to receive the news of the passing away of your husband, Aleksandr Isaievich. We have offered prayers for his repose at the Chapel of St. Sergius at the Chancery of the Orthodox Church in America. We are also praying that Our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ grant you and your family consolation at this sorrowful time.

"Aleksandr Isaievich was one of the great men of our times. Like the prophets of old, his writings and voice shook the world into recognition of the horrors inherent in a political system that was devoid of Christian morality and spirituality. A giant on the landscape of Russian history, he also played an important role on the world stage. During his twenty year exile from his beloved homeland, he found refuge in the United States where he could continue his research and writing. As a deeply religious man Aleksandr Isaievich also sought spiritual sustenance while living here. We recall that your husband became a close friend with the late Protopresbyter Alexander Schmemann. Another priest of the Orthodox Church in America, Archpriest Andrew Tregubov frequently provided Aleksandr Isaievich and your family with sacramental life and spiritual direction during your years in Vermont.

"On behalf of the Holy Synod of Bishops, the clergy and laity of the Orthodox Church in America, we want to express our heartfelt condolences to you, your children, grandchildren and all of your family. Please be assured of our continued prayers for the repose of Aleksandr Isaievich. May Our Lord grant him rest with the saints and make his memory to be eternal!"

Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn was buried at the Donskoi Monastery in Moscow on August 6, 2008.

SOURCE:

Wednesday, July 16, 2008

Orthodox unity gives worshippers more options

July 15, 2008, 10:56

The decision to unite the two branches of Russia’s Orthodox Church last year has changed the pattern of worshipping for many believers. More churches are now available and bilingual services are held in some places.

"We now are able to welcome guests from the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, so it enables unity among all orthodox Christians, not only the Russian branch of orthodox Christianity," says Father Zacchaeus, the dean of St. Catherine’s parish Church in central Moscow.

Father Zacchaeus grew up in the heaving metropolis of New York City, moving up through the ranks of the Orthodox Church of America before becoming its Representative to the Russian Orthodox Church in Moscow.

Father Zacchaeus has told RT a 16th century orthodox church at the heart of old Moscow is a "sort of church equivalent of an embassy". In 1994, it was transferred to the U.S. Orthodox Church.

Bilingual services - in Church Slavonic and English - have been a tradition from the very start.

Despite the traditional Russian exterior the church fulfils a unique purpose. For English speaking orthodox Christians in Moscow it provides a taste of home. And for Russians, who now make up the majority of the congregation, it provides a window onto a more international brand of orthodoxy.

Though St. Catherine’s church is opened for orthodox Christians and religious services are being celebrated, the building is still being reconstructed to rebuild its past glory after 70 years of neglect during Soviet times.

The old rectory is now occupied by Russia’s federal security service, church wardens say.

SOURCE:

Friday, June 13, 2008

Exhibit celebrates the iconic church’s 200 years

MONICA SOUTHWORTH
June 12, 2008 at 2:23PM AKST

An idea that began two years ago came to life in an exhibit at the Museum of the Aleutians focusing on two centuries of history of the Holy Ascension Church.

There are more than 40 items in the exhibit highlighting different aspects of the church, including a glossary of the items in the exhibit and a chronology of the church’s history.

Among pieces in the exhibit are icons or religious art associated with the Orthodox Church.

A chronology of the church provided by the museum begins in 1727 with Bishop Innocent or Kul’chitsky and the establishment of the Diocese of Irkutsk as an independent see, ending in 2008 with its bicentennial celebration.

Originally the exhibit was going to be a series of images. Zoya Johnson, director of the Museum of the Aleutians, said that because the church has served as an object of inspiration to many artists, the goal was to find different media and genres of their work and create an exhibit.

However, the idea evolved to a complete look at the impact the church has had on the community of Unalaska over the past 200 years.

“We spent a lot of time doing researching over the past four months,” Johnson said.

“We received a lot of support from the parish and the church council.”

When researching the history of the church, records dating back to the early 1800s were used. There is also a display of a series of modern art pieces in various genres and media, and artifacts from the church that are more than 200 years old. A Bible and the blessing cross of Veniaminov are also on display.

The Aleutian Pribilofs Island Restitution Trust supported the project as well. Johnson said the project received a lot of help from historian Ray Hudson, Barbara Smith and Mina Jacobs with the Russian Orthodox Museum in Anchorage. Several items in the exhibit were borrowed from the museum.

Before the public opening, the museum hosted a private opening for the parish.

Johnson said she received positive feedback.

About 70 people attended a public opening on May 17. The exhibit will be continue until the end of September.

“(People in) the parish were very touched to see the way that we honor the church and the role in their lives and everyone’s that the church has played,” Johnson said.

“Every time someone new comes to the town, the first landmark they see is the Church of the Holy Ascension. In a way, it’s not only the symbol of the Unangan identity, it’s a symbol of the whole city and community,” Johnson said. “It’s hard to imagine Unalaska without the church.”

Meetings for the exhibit began in late 2007 with the help of Hudson. The museum worked hard to make sure everything was historically accurate. Johnson worked with Father Jonah of the local church to find out what would be appropriate to publicly display in the museum.

Eventually, a meeting was set up between the museum staff and the council at the church to determine what could be used in the exhibit that would also be historically appropriate.

Sharon Svarny-Livingston was at the private showing when the parish received, as a part of the exhibit, a recording of a choir performing in 1954-55. Members of the choir had requested to be recorded so they could listen to themselves, and the tapes were saved.

The music was originally in the possession of Sam and Gert Svarny. It was rerecorded by the University of Alaska onto a CD from the source tape.

“They were able to view the show with that ambiance in the background. They were thrilled with the show, as well as the new bishop,” Svarny-Livingston said.

June 4 was the holiday of the Holy Ascension, and Bishop Benjamin of San Francisco was able to visit the exhibit at the museum before leaving Unalaska.

“This was a way the museum could partner with the church council and give a gift to the parish. We didn’t want them to work very hard or put any money to the exhibit,” Svarny-Livingston said.

SOURCE:

Monday, June 02, 2008

One last time, ringing out the old

A final peal, then Harvard's no more

By Elizabeth Ross
Globe Correspondent / June 1, 2008


Around the grounds of Lowell House at Harvard University, this year's commencement ceremony will echo with sounds that will soon be lost forever.

For nearly eight decades, the university residence hall has housed 17 Russian church bells whose solemn and mysterious tones have added a touch of gravitas to such occasions. On graduation day this Thursday, the bells will be rung at Harvard for the last time.

After the ceremonies, workers will begin the delicate task of removing the sacred bells, the largest of which weighs about 13 tons, from the bell tower at Lowell House, and preparing the belfry to receive a replacement set cast by a foundry in Russia.

The existing bells were donated to Harvard University in 1930 by American industrialist Charles R. Crane, who purchased them from the Soviet government. The bronze bells were cast in the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, and are among the few to have survived Stalin's campaign against the Russian Orthodox Church.

The bells' original home, the Danilov Monastery in Moscow, was reopened in 1983. Since then, the Danilov monks have been urging Harvard officials to return the bells, and after extensive negotiations and planning, the bells will be returned this summer to the monastery, which is the residence of the patriarch of the Russian Orthodox Church. The project is being financed by a foundation established by Russian businessman Viktor Vekselberg.

(Another Russian bell that hung at the Harvard Business School's Baker Library was returned to Danilov last September.)

On a recent damp and gray Sunday afternoon, guests were invited up to the Lowell House belfry for what was billed as a Russian bell-ringing concert.

As bright orange ear plugs were handed out to the visitors, members of the Lowell House Society of Russian Bell Ringers, also known as Klappermeisters, began to work an intricate web of ropes and large foot pedals in order to strike the bells.

The students first performed a peal, modeled after one rung at the Assumption Cathedral in the Russian town of Rostov in the 1720s. Soon, they were serving up more popular fare with Christmas tunes such as "Jingle Bells" and music from Hanukkah and Purim, albeit with a Russian flavor.

After some American folk songs, and a couple of classical numbers, the students launched into theme music from "Chariots of Fire" and the "Star Wars" and Harry Potter movies.

J.K. Rowling, author of the Harry Potter novels, is scheduled to deliver the keynote address at Harvard University's commencement ceremony this year, and the Lowell House bell-ringers said they hope she will visit the bell tower while she is in town.

According to Jeremy Lin, a Harvard senior and resident bell-ringer at Lowell House, the Klappermeisters have been practicing "Hedwig's Theme," the signature Harry Potter tune, for some time in anticipation of Rowling's visit.

"We do a ring every year for Halloween, and one of the things that started after Halloween is that somebody figured out how to play the Harry Potter theme," Lin said. "That person has since graduated, but we knew that it was possible, so we kind of worked up our own version and we thought that it would be nice to play for her."

The tune is a far cry from the sound typically heard in traditional Russian bell-ringing, which uses a range of rhythmic patterns rather than melodies, and has a deeply religious significance for devout Russian Orthodox believers.

Earlier this year, a small group of bell-ringers from Lowell House gained an appreciation of the spiritual significance of Russian bells when they attended an exhaustive training session in Moscow with bell-ringing masters from the Danilov Monastery and the Kremlin.

Diana Eck, a professor of comparative religion and Indian studies and co-master of Lowell House, said she hopes that Harvard students will continue to be trained by Russian bell-ringers for years to come.

"This is something we're really committed to having in the future, bell-ringers who know how they should be rung in the Russian fashion and continuing this educational relationship with bell schools in Russia," she said.

Lowell House bell-ringers, past and present, will have one more opportunity to enjoy their historic Russian bells before their swan song at Harvard on Thursday.

Eck is hosting a bell festival and symposium today and tomorrow, which will include several guests from Russia and will be a celebratory affair, she said.

Benjamin Rapoport, the head bell-ringer at Lowell House and a resident tutor, agreed. After the recent bell-ringing concert wrapped up, he explained how he and others at Harvard felt about the return of the bells.

"This is the opening of a new chapter in the history of the bells, and I'm quite happy to see them going back to their home, and I'm also quite happy to see a beautiful new set of bells coming to Lowell House," Rapoport said. "So I think that the future of the bells is very bright, and I look forward to seeing what's going to happen."

Visit boston.com/cityweekly to view a slide show and hear the bells play "Hedwig's Theme."

SOURCE:

Wednesday, May 28, 2008

A RENEWAL OF FAITH


BY DAVID FALCHEK
STAFF WRITER
05/27/2008
SOUTH CANAAN TWP. — People from across the region gathered at St. Tikhon’s Monastery and Seminary this weekend for a spiritual reunion, rejoicing and renewal.
Nearly 3,000 people made the pilgrimage commemorating the founding of the monastery in South Canaan and serving as a homecoming of sorts for its sister seminary.
For Maggie and George Zlatkowski, of Cherry Hill, N.J., the weekend has become a time to meet old friends. They have long hosted seminarians in their home, including one who is now a bishop. They also use the pilgrimage as a chance to renew spiritually.
This is part of the life and tradition of our faith,” Mr. Zlatkowski said. “When I leave this beautiful place, I feel satisfied, happy and calm.”
That sense of calm and fulfillment will be more valuable in these trying economic times, said the Rev. John Kowalczyk, pastor of St. Michael’s Russian Orthodox Church in Jermyn. With shaky economic prospects and the skyrocketing price of energy, he thinks more people are finding solace in the stability of faith.
“I see people’s anxiety around the economy, and they are looking for something constant beyond the material world,” he said.
Monday’s festivities began with a procession of clergy and laypeople into a pavilion serving as a makeshift church for services. Later in the day, people lined up to be anointed. A large cemetery nearby allowed visitors the chance to see the burial sites of family and religious leaders, including dozens of Orthodox bishops. Priests were available for short graveside services. A festival with ethnic foods and events for children followed.
As the first Eastern Orthodox monastery North America, St. Tikhon’s holds an important place for Orthodox Christians.
When Orthodox Christians immigrated to the United States a century ago and built churches in their communities, they needed a monastery as a spiritual anchor and place for retreat, said the Rev. Kowalczyk. They selected the rolling hills of Wayne County. St. Tikhon’s was dedicated and consecrated on Memorial Day in 1905. The Rev. Kowalczyk said Memorial Day was probably selected because most people had the day off and could attend.
Three decades after the monastery was founded, the monastery gave birth to the seminary, which today boasts a record enrollment of 101 students — most of them converts from other faiths, the Rev. Kowalczyk noted. The seminary is planning to build housing for the growing number of seminarians with families.
The Rev. Gregory Sagan, a 1995 graduate of the seminary, brought some members of his congregation from Endicott, N.Y. Terry Peet was among them.
“We are looking forward to the Divine Liturgy and meeting old friends coming up from D.C.,” Mr. Peet said.
Mr. Peet’s car had a personalized license plate that caught some attention: “IC NIKA,” a Greek abbreviation of “Jesus Conquers.”
Contact the writer: dfalchek@timesshamrock.com

Monday, May 26, 2008

OCA Donates $20,000 for Myanmar and China disasters to IOCC

The Orthodox Church in America (OCA) has donated $20,000 of designated charity appeal funds to help further the response of IOCC to the devastating cyclone and earthquake that recently struck Myanmar and China.

In Myanmar, according to published news reports, at least 78,000 people were killed and another 56,000 are still missing as a result of tropical cyclone Nargis. Millions of survivors are at risk from disease, starvation and exposure to monsoon rains. While in China, over 55,000 are reported dead, nearly 25,000 still missing and over 5 million people are homeless, according to government sources, in the aftermath of the earthquake that struck the Sichuan province on May 12.

'Our thoughts and prayers at this time go out particularly to the people of Myanmar and China who were recently affected by natural disasters in their countries,' His Beatitude, Metropolitan Herman, Primate of the OCA wrote in a letter to IOCC announcing the donation, 'We hope that our contribution will help in some small way to alleviate some of the suffering caused by these devastating events.'

'We are grateful to His Beatitude and the faithful of the OCA for this Christian outpouring of love and compassion for our brothers and sisters in Myanmar and China who continue to suffer the devastating effects of the tropical cyclone and earthquake,' stated Constantine Triantafilou, Executive Director of IOCC. 'This gift helps us respond in a timely and effective manner through our ecumenical partners who are on the ground in these areas.'

IOCC's initial response has been through its ecumenical partner Action by Churches Together (ACT), International, a global alliances of churches and related agencies working to save lives and support communities in emergencies worldwide.

Contributions to IOCC's Myanmar and China Emergency Appeals can be made online (www.iocc.org), by calling IOCC's donation hotline toll-free at 1-877-803-4622, or by mailing a check or money order payable to 'IOCC' (include 'Myanmar Cyclone' or 'China Earthquake' in memo line) to: IOCC, P.O. Box 630225, Baltimore, Md. 21263-0225.

Media: Contact Ms. Amal Morcos at 410-243-9820 or (cell) 443-823-3489.

SOURCE:

Saturday, May 17, 2008

Seminary dean sees future for American Orthodoxy


The Rev. John Behr, dean of St. Vladimir's Orthodox Seminary in Crestwood, N.Y., says the majority of seminary students today are converts from other traditions, including Southern Baptists, Catholics and Pentecostals.
Posted by David Briggs/Plain Dealer Religion Reporter May 16, 2008 08:29AM
Categories: Faith on the Fly, Religion
Eastern Orthodoxy in the United States has long faced challenges in moving beyond ethnic politics to enter the mainstream of American religious life.

St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in Crestwood, N.Y., which has trained several Northeast Ohio clergy, has been a leading institution working toward an Orthodox Church in the United States that can transcend historic ties to mother churches in Greece, Serbia, Russia and other nations. The Rev. John Behr, the new dean of the seminary, says developing an American Orthodoxy is essential to foster growth and to reach out to younger generations and their non-Orthodox spouses. He discussed issues facing the church in the United States during a recent visit to alumni in Cleveland.
Q. When the average American thinks of Orthodox Christianity, what do you think is the first thing that comes to mind?

A. Probably nothing much. Or, if anything, it's going to be something very exotic, something romantic, Eastern, Oriental -- something you might have heard about or seen glimpses of, "The Deer Hunter," or whatever it might be.

Q. If there was one thing you would like to come to mind, what would it be?

A. I would say what I think is particular about the Orthodox church is its worship. ... We have this worship and this continuity of worship from before there even was a New Testament.

Q. In contrast to some other religious groups, why do many Orthodox churches in the United States continue to emphasize their ethnic backgrounds?
A. What is very particular about the immigration patterns of Eastern Europe is the different waves that happened. Nobody in 1970 ever imagined that there would be another wave of Russian immigration. There have been many waves of immigration with the Slavics, Greeks and people from the Middle East. This immigration has tended to reinforce the connections with the mother country at periodic intervals, and that's kind of kept that going.
But it's also been very, very intrinsic to Orthodoxy from the beginning that it becomes inculturated in the country in which it finds itself. It takes time, and it will take time for a fully, really indigenous Orthodox Church in America to find its full expression gathering together all those from all the different ethnic traditions over generations.

Q. How do you prepare people for change?

A. You've got evangelism within the ethnic church, and that's to get people to think about their religion more than simply in ethnic terms -- this is what we do as Serbian, as Greek, as Russian -- but to actually begin to understand what particular witness to Christianity and the Christian faith the Orthodox Church is to preserve and to proclaim.

Q. Are St. Vladimir seminarians today more open to an American church?

A. Even within my time [15 years], it's changed dramatically. Until 20, 30 years ago, almost all our students were what we would call cradle Orthodox, born in the church, brought up in the church. Now, I would say that well over half ... [maybe] two-thirds of our students, are converts.

Q. Will the presence of more clergy raised outside the ethnic traditions lead to an Orthodox Church more at home in America?

A. Absolutely. Going back to the question of immigration, what is very striking is that the more recent immigrants tend to become Americanized much more quickly than previous immigrants in the 19th and early 20th century. So they're already speaking English, their children are born and brought up here, going to school here. It's already happening very, very quickly. With regard to the students that we are training and forming as priests to go out and serve, it is striking how many of them come from a very strong missionary-minded type of Christianity. So they've got much more concern about going out and spreading the word about Orthodoxy.

Q. Throughout Eastern Europe, but particularly in Russia, there are concerns over religious freedom as governments and Orthodox leaders seek to form alliances. What do you think of these efforts to give the Orthodox Church a privileged position?

A. It's a major issue in Orthodox countries like Greece. In Russia, it's one of the most significant developments in the world religious scene, what will happen between the Russian church and state leadership. ... It seems to me that once you have established the principle of the separation of church and state, there's no going back on it. And I think that is for the good.

Orthodox Church leaders retire Alaska bishop


Bishop Nikolai Soriach of the Russian Orthodox Church at a news conference at the Russian Orthodox Museum in Anchorage. Soriach called his dispute with church leaders "A big mistake."
ebluemink@adn.com
Published: May 14th, 2008 11:26 AM
Last Modified: May 14th, 2008 02:13 PM
Leaders of the Orthodox Church of America said they decided Tuesday night to retire their controversial Alaska bishop.
The bishop, Nikolai Soraich, head of the Russian Orthodox Diocese of Alaska, left Alaska last week, having agreed to take a leave of absence last month after he heard preliminary results of an internal investigation of his leadership.

The Holy Synod of Bishops announced Tuesday on the national church's Web site that they are retiring Soraich from service in Alaska with the title "Former Bishop of Sitka."
The synod appointed the national church's top official, Metropolitan Herman, interim head of the diocese and appointed the Rev. Benjamin, bishop of San Francisco and the West, administrator for the diocese.

The Alaska diocese has been in turmoil since last year, when an Orthodox missionary staying on Kodiak Island accused its second-ranking official, Chancellor Archimandrite Isidore, of sexual misconduct.
In recent months, many Orthodox priests around the state have sent written complaints to national church leaders about Soraich, saying his leadership style was too harsh and that he was disrespectful of Native culture.

Soraich had requested that Isidore and another diocese official, Hierodeacon Panteleimon, be transferred to the Serbian Orthodox Church, according to the synod.
On Tuesday, the bishops said church rules prevented them from approving those transfers and that Isidore and Pateleimon will remain clerics in the diocese.

Find Elizabeth Bluemink online at adn.com/contact/ebluemink or call 257-4317.

Thursday, May 08, 2008

Alaska diocese struggle draws to a close as Bishop Nikolai steps down

Article published on Monday, May 5th, 2008
By Ralph Gibbs
Mirror Writer

_______________________________________________________________

When this week comes to a close, so too will another chapter in the history of the Orthodox Church in America Alaska diocese.

In a May 1 interview with KTUU television in Anchorage last week, Bishop Nikolai Soraich said he would step down as diocese leader by the end of this week.

“I’m going to be leaving Alaska and taking some time to visit family and friends whom I’ve neglected for the last seven years since I’ve been in Alaska,” the bishop said.

The statement confirmed what many said after an April 17 meeting of the Holy Synod of Bishops in which Bishop Nikolai opted for a voluntary leave of absence.

Church leader Metropolitan Herman said Bishop Nikolai agreed to a voluntary leave of absence after hearing testimony from the Right Rev. Tikhon Mollard, bishop of Philadelphia and Eastern Pennsylvania, and the Most Rev. Nathaniel Popp, archbishop of Detroit and the Romanian Orthodox Episcopate of America.

Many, including Mark Stokoe, who runs ocanews.org Web site where much of this battle was revealed, speculated Bishop Nikolai was given a choice, either accept a voluntary leave of absence or be suspended.

OCA chancellor Archpriest Alexander Garklavs agreed with the analysis.

“I would say that is an accurate statement,” Fr. Alexander said.

From savior

Bishop Nikolai wasn’t always controversial.

The North Star, an official publication of the Alaska diocese, said when Bishop Nikolai arrived in Anchorage in 2001, he did so “amidst great fanfare.”

It was hoped by clergy and parishioners that he would turn the diocese around from the mismanagement of the previous diocese leader, Bishop Innocent.

Bishop Nikolai wrote about that mismanagement in the summer of 2006 addition of The North Star.

“Five years ago, the diocese was in a troubled state,” he said. “There was disorganization, factionalism and low morale. The seeds of dissension were everywhere. I saw men who had grown up together, gone to seminary and even married into one another’s families, estranged.”

Bishop Nikolai said he also discovered that Bishop Innocent had petitioned the Russian Orthodox Church outside of Russia to receive him into their jurisdiction.

“The suspended bishop had promised that half the parishes would join immediately and within a year the remainder would follow,” Bishop Nikolai said.

When Bishop Nikolai first arrived, he did so as an interim leader. He formed his opinion on the state of Alaska during his tour and shared that view in the same issue of the The North Star.

“I had been in Alaska for nearly four months … some of those places were dusty, muddy, some had no running water and most had mosquitoes big enough to suck your last drop of blood!” Bishop Nikolai said. “Bishop Tikhon looked at me seriously and said, ‘You know, Alaska is the place that gives dignity to the Orthodox Church in America.’ My first reaction was to laugh.”

Bishop Nikolai said he suddenly realized Bishop Tikhon was talking about history and legacy and not muddy and dusty streets.

Although the reference was meant to relate the importance of the diocese to the rest of the Orthodox Church, it also revealed Bishop Nikolai’s opinion of Alaska.

Bishop Nikolai was coming to clean up the mess — and not just the dirty and dusty streets found in much of his diocese.

In his first two years as official leader, the bishop enjoyed a honeymoon as he set about putting the diocese to right. By most accounts, he did a good job.

The bishop talked about those issues in a February 2008 interview.

The bishop said that when he arrived in Alaska, there were three outstanding issues that needed to be addressed: the clergy, St. Herman Theological Seminary and the financial situation within the diocese.

“When I came here, there was literally no money in the bank for the diocese,” he said. “Everything had been taken and used.”

The bishop said many of the clergy were suspended.

“When I arrived there were only 26 priests,” he said.

In addition, the seminary was in disrepair and under threat of closing.
“We had walls falling down,” he said. “We had floors that you could knock your foot through.”

Bishop Nikolai set about making changes. He began by improving the finances of the diocese, repairing the seminary and increasing the number of clergy in the state.

He eventually opened up a museum in Anchorage.

To pariah

Although he began to set things to right, he did so with a leadership style that began to alienate clergy and parishioners.

Fr. Alexander wrote about that alienation in a confidential report obtained by the Kodiak Daily Mirror.

Fr. Alexander said the bishop’s rule was marked by “years of unrestricted despotism, unmitigated intimidation, capricious disciplinary acts, provocative leadership, ruthless humiliation of clergy and laity, deliberate rudeness, public denunciation of priests and servers, callous disregard of village elders and traditions, demonstrative and vocal insults during the divine services … and allegations of mental and verbal abuse.”

In an interview with the Tundra Drums last week, the Very Rev. Peter Askoar, a village priest, called Bishop Nikolai a racist.

“He has no respect for Elders, no respect for Native people,” he said. “They figured it out long before I did. There’s pretty much 40 Native priests, and they’re all mistreated.”

Even though many OCA members suffered these abuses, both Native and non-Native, they did so in silence, too afraid to come forward.

“Transfers can be abrupt and without explanation,” Fr. Alexander said in his report. “Clergy have been suspended for voicing opinions contrary to the Bishop’s.”

Fr. Alexander said there was a noticeable and consistent quality missing from Bishop Nikolai — a pastoral love for priests, people and the place.

“Bishop Nikolai appears to have neither love nor interest of the Native Alaskan Orthodox people. The continuation of Bishop Nikolai’s staying in Alaska seems impossible under the circumstances.”

Bishop Nikolai disputed that claim in several interviews and said he has nothing but respect for Native Alaskans.

Fr. Isadore gives another explanation for the dissatisfied clergy.

In the Tundra Drums interview last week, Archimandrite Isadore said it ultimately comes down to priests racked by alcoholism and feeling their way of life being threatened.

Bishop Nikolai alluded to the same in several interviews this year.

“When I came to Alaska, it was a pretty loose diocese,” he said. “They pretty much wanted to go where they wanted to go.”

The bishop said that he had to impose strict rules and now the clergy are acting like rebellious teenagers.

Despite his harsh leadership style since coming to Alaska, it wasn’t until this year that Orthodox Alaskans began speaking out against the bishop.

The sudden outspokenness can be attributed to two events: Fr. Isadore’s alleged drunken sexual assault of missionary Paul Sidebottom and the tonsuring of Terenty Dushkin, a convicted sex offender who served more than a year in prison on several charges of sexual abuse of a minor.

In February, Bishop Nikolai said the investigation of Fr. Isadore was over.

“(Fr. Isadore) was cleared of everything – everything,” he said. “I have a copy of the report. (The allegations were) unsubstantiated. They interviewed seven different people.”

While visiting Kodiak, Fr. Alexander said that wasn’t true.

“There were some allegations in the case that have not been corroborated,” Fr. Alexander said. “This has made it possible for some people to assert that the case is closed, but it is not.”

Fr. Alexander said he was one of two bishops who investigated the allegations.

However, the hands of the church were tied.

Even though OCA leaders were concerned with rumors coming from the Alaska diocese, because each OCA diocese is autonomous, there was no official reason for them to begin an investigation, not until the tonsuring of Dushkin, which is a direct violation of church rules, a violation which Bishop Nikolai made no apologies for.

“I believe the message I wanted to send was the fact that there are lots of issues out there, lots of them,” Bishop Nikolai said. “You can be sorry for what you’ve done, you can pay the price, you can reconcile with God and man, and the church receives you. The church is about forgiveness. We teach Christ’s life here. That’s what this is all about.”

The bishop’s critics denounced the tonsuring, saying the tonsuring was the first step to the priesthood.

“The first rung of the ladder doesn’t get you to the top of the building, or the second or the third step or the fourth,” Bishop Nikolai said.

Because of the tonsuring and the press surrounding it, Alaskan clergy began writing letters to OCA headquarters.

The church hesitated to investigate.

The beginning of the end

After several press reports on the tonsuring, OCA leaders began receiving letters from Alaskan clergy — not only protesting the tonsuring, but condemning Bishop Nikolai.

Once the dam burst, there was no stopping the flood of letters to church leaders listing the bishop’s abuses. The bishop tried to stem the flow by calling for a clerical meeting in Anchorage, but letters continued to pour forth.

“We are unhappy about all that has been brought to light, the controversies of last year and the unrest of the church in Alaska,” said one e-mail signed by seven Yup’ik clergy. “To serve in fear, rather than to serve in faith and love is not Orthodox.”

The Rev. Victor Nick of Mountain Village said village Elders are afraid of the bishop.

“The clergy and their wives and children are trembling in fear,” he said.

Bishop Nikolai said that on March 3, he sent a letter to church leaders in Syosset, N.Y., asking for guidance and help regarding the letters.

He said a letter he received a day later asked him to take a voluntary leave of absence while church officials investigated the allegation of abuse.

“We inform you that we have received many letters of serious complaint from deaneries, clergy and faithful of the diocese of Alaska,” Metropolitan Herman said in his response. “Not relying on hear-say, yet acknowledging the seriousness of these letters, at your suggestion, all your brother bishops were contacted and they unanimously agreed that the best course of action for you is that you be placed on temporary leave of absence.”

The bishop didn’t take the letter and he refused to step down voluntarily, calling the request unlawful according to church law.

Over several weeks, church leaders continued to urge the bishop to step down and the bishop refused, saying that procedures had to be followed.

“You have to follow the rules how they’re written,” Bishop Nikolai said. “If I was to comply with something that was not right, then I’m accepting the fact that we’re breaking the rules and that every other rule can be broken, too.”

He eventually won the battle, but lost the war.

Near the end of March, in another special meeting of the Holy Synod of Bishops, the bishops rescinded their order and allowed him to return as the leader of the Alaska diocese.

Close on his heels, however, were two bishops that were sent to Alaska to conduct a second investigation since the result of Fr. Alexander’s investigation was not heard.

In mid-April, in yet another special meeting, Bishop Nikolai heard the results of that investigation and agreed to a temporary leave of absence, which has not unexpectedly, turned into a permanent one.

“When I came here the diocese was divided and that was because of the bishop prior to me,” he said in the interview with KTUU television. “And to divide or to continue to allow that division to be here, I just don’t think it’s the right thing to do, and sometimes you need to go where you can be appreciated for your talents and your efforts.”

The divide continues

Metropolitan Herman officially took control of the Alaska diocese after Bishop Nikolai went on leave.


He appointed the Right Rev. Bishop Benjamin of San Francisco and the West to help run the diocese.

In his first official act, on April 22, Bishop Benjamin called for healing in a letter to Alaska clergy.

“There is pain, hurt and perhaps, even fear among you,” he said. “I can assure you all, the situation will not stay the same, it will either get better or grow worse, depending on the path we choose to take together. All of us that that taken part in the recent drama need to forgive each other. There are not, nor can there ever be ‘sides’ in the church.”

He said that everyone struggles in life and part of that struggle is to learning to forgive and to set aside hurt and move on.

“The Evil One does his work by scattering Christ’s flock,” he said.

That scattering continues.

In last week’s Tundra Drums interview, Fr. Isadore blasted the clergy who helped overthrow Bishop Nikolai calling, them paranoid and alcoholics.

The root of the problem is the bishops “my way or no way” approach, Fr. Askoar said.

“The chancellor, who sparked much of this outcry with his own drunken episode nearly a year ago, speaks with a ‘forked tongue,’” he said.

As Bishop Nikolai steps aside, the question among clerics and parishioners is: Will the next leader of the Alaska diocese be able to heal the rift that is now a part of the diocese as a result of ineffective back-to-back leaders?

Mirror writer Ralph Gibbs can be reached by e-mail at rgibbs@kodiakdailymirror.com.

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Saturday, April 19, 2008

Bishop Nikolai put on leave

Article published on Friday, April 18th, 2008
By RALPH GIBBS
Mirror Writer


A day after memorial services were held in Sitka to honor former Alaska diocese leader Archbishop Gregory Afonsky, Bishop Nikolai Soraich, the current diocese leader, agreed to a leave of absence.

In an official statement posted on the Orthodox Church in America Web site following a special meeting of the Holy Synod of Bishops, church leader Metropolitan Herman said Bishop Nikolai agreed to the voluntary leave of absence after hearing testimony from the Right Rev. Tikhon Mollard, bishop of Philadelphia and Eastern Pennsylvania, and the Most Rev. Nathanial Popp, archbishop of Detroit and the Romanian Orthodox Episcopate of America.

During the bishop’s absence, the metropolitan was placed in charge of the diocese administration and the Right Rev. Benjamin Peterson, Bishop of San Francisco and the West, will assist the church leader.

“(Bishop Benjamin) will probably be coming up shortly after (Orthodox) Easter,” said OCA chancellor Archpriest Alexander Garklavs. “The diocese administration issues will be shifting slowly but surely, if not already, from Bishop Nikolai and his immediate staff.

Orthodox Easter is Sunday.

In the official statement, the metropolitan instructed Alaskan clergy to continue to commemorate Bishop Nikolai at Divine Services and to only commemorate Bishop Benjamin if he is present at services and only after Bishop Nikolai.

In March, when Bishop Nikolai was placed on a mandatory leave of absence, the metropolitan ordered clergy not to commemorate the bishop, an order several clergy refused to follow.

Bishop Nikolai defied the order, which was later rescinded.

Reactions around Kodiak have been cautious and subdued.

“We trust the Synod of Bishops in Syosset (N.Y.) not to back down,” Rosabel Baldwin, a member of the church said. “It would be the greatest betrayal to the Alaska faithful and to all the other Orthodox faithful across the land who have to look to them for leadership.”

Church member Kathleen Carlson said with the passing of Bishop Gregory, it has been an emotional week.

“The feeling I have is cautious relief,” Carlson said. “We will be able to have a joyous Holy Week and (Easter). We hope the leave of absence becomes permanent at the synod meeting next month, so the healing and rebuilding of the Alaska Diocese may commence.”

On the Web site ocanews.org, where much of this battle of words between the bishop and his detractors has played out, there was little reaction to the news.

Comments are guarded because many are not sure what the latest development means.

Church analyst Mark Stokoe predicted this is the end of Bishop Nikolai’s service and that the leave of absence is akin to a CEO being forced to resign or being fired.

Fr. Alexander agreed with the analysis.

Bishop Nikolai’s status will be reviewed again at the regular synod meeting May 13-15, and it is expected the leave will become permanent.

Bishop Nikolai could not be reached for comment.

Mirror writer Ralph Gibbs can be reached via e-mail at rgibbs@kodiakdailymirror.com.

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Wednesday, April 09, 2008

Troubles mount for Russian Orthodox

by Angela Blanchard
Monday, April 7, 2008

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Turmoil continues to brew in the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska and another rural priest has decided to step down.

The Rev. Michael Trefon of Naknek resigned his role as rector of St. Ana church in late March, according to members of the priest's family.

They say Trefon stepped down due to controversy involving Bishop Nikolai, the head of the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska.

National church leaders ordered the bishop to leave Alaska last month over allegations he verbally and emotionally abused clergy and laity.

The bishop was then reinstated after a meeting with national church leaders in late March.

Father Daniel Andrejuk of Anchorage says many priests encouraged Trefon to remain in Naknek but the church's turmoil had apparently taken its toll.

Trefon has declined to comment on his resignation.

National church leaders are holding an emergency meeting next week to address what they call a "crisis" in the Alaska diocese.

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Tuesday, April 08, 2008

Leader's visit gladdens Watervliet congregation

Metropolitan Herman, head of Orthodox Church in North America, helps celebrate Lent


By SCOTT WALDMAN, Staff writer
Click byline for more stories by writer.
First published: Monday, April 7, 2008

WATERVLIET -- There was no police escort or lottery for tickets. But a religious visit of monumental importance to some local worshippers took place Sunday in an unassuming brick building in the middle of a suburban block.

St. Basil's Russian Orthodox Church on Sunday hosted a visit by Metropolitan Herman, the head of the church's 700 parishes, communities and monasteries in the United States, Canada and Mexico.

An enthusiastic crowd of about 100 people gathered to worship with the 76-year-old primate. The brightly colored church interior rang with song and was cloudy with incense smoke.

"This is like, if the Pope were to show up," said parishioner Mark Wolosen, as lines formed to receive communion from the leader.

The primate's visit comes during a time of Lenten fasting for Russian Orthodox Christians, who celebrate their Easter -- called Pascha -- on April 27. He urged the congregation to focus on the spiritual aspect of their fast.

He also attended a Saturday evening service at St. Basil's, while a dinner was held in his honor after the Sunday Mass so congregants could ask for his blessing.

Wolosen said the spiritual leader travels frequently from his Long Island headquarters to member parishes, and last visited the Capital Region two years ago. He said the primate attempts to visit each congregation at least once every other year.

Pope Benedict XVI, spiritual leader of the Roman Catholic Church, makes his first American visit later this month. While on a much smaller scale, the primate's stop Sunday in the Capital Region was no less significant to the faithful who gathered there for the nearly three-hour-long Mass.

William Rentz, the congregation's president, said it was "an awakening" to have such an important figure in the church make a personal connection with local parishioners. He said the visit drew necessary attention to the holiness of this period in the church's spiritual calendar.

"When you hear it from your metropolitan," he said, "you get a deeper understanding of it."

The church's origins in America date to the 18th century, when Orthodox monks first arrived in Alaska. European immigrants helped spread the church and its teachings throughout the country by the 1900s. In 1970, the American orthodoxy was granted self-governing status by the mother church in Russia.

Herman was enthroned as His Beatitude Metropolitan Herman in September 2002. He succeeded Metropolitan Theodosius, who retired after suffering a series of strokes.

Scott Waldman can be reached at 454-5080 or by e-mail at swaldman@timesunion.com.

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Wednesday, April 02, 2008

Russian Orthodoxy Goes Global


April 1, 2008


Russia Profile


The Church is a Key Institution Preserving Russian Identity Around the Globe

Every Sunday morning, several dozen people, most of them Russians, drive from Johannesburg to Pretoria and from Pretoria to Johannesburg. They meet half way in Midrand, where several years ago the five-domed Russian Orthodox Church of St. Sergius was built amid the well-off South African suburbia. On big holidays the crowd grows to several hundred people, some of whom fly in from Cape Town, Durban and neighboring African countries.


According to Father Ioann Lapidus, the rector of St. Sergius, about 60 percent of his parishioners are people who had not been religious until they left the former Soviet Union, mostly in the 1980s and 1990s. “Now the nostalgia for the Motherland has brought them to church,” Lapidus said in a telephone interview. “The Russian Orthodox Church of St. Sergius is not only a place where they can pray in their native language, but also a center of gravitation for the entire Russian diaspora in South Africa, where people can talk in Russian and touch base with their roots.” Hence the parish activities, including a Sunday school with a Russian class and a club for young mothers.
Services at St. Sergius are partly held in English but mainly in Church Slavonic, and Lapidus stressed that they are open to anybody—“blacks or whites, Boers or Afrikaners.” There is a group of Boers who converted to Orthodoxy.

Yet the church complex is meant predominantly as a spiritual home for the broader Russian community in South Africa, which Lapidus estimates to number about 6000 people. Some 20 mostly elderly people belong to the post-revolutionary and World War II waves of Russian emigration. The majority, however, left the Soviet Union after perestroika, and although small compared to Europe or the United States, the community constitutes the biggest Russian diaspora in sub-Saharan Africa at present. There are Russian doctors, physicists, professors, businessmen in trade, transportation, tourism and other fields. In 1998 they organized a parish, bought a land plot in Midrand, and with generous help from the Stroytransgaz pipeline construction giant and support from the Russian Foreign Ministry, built the most impressive new Moscow Patriarchate church outside the former Soviet Union.
Russian Orthodoxy abroad

Russia’s willingness to invest in a church and community center for its former countrymen thousands of miles away illustrates the post-Soviet reality both in Russian state-church relations and in the country’s attitude toward its diaspora. For most of the 20th century, Russia destroyed churches at home and sold them abroad. It persecuted or neglected its émigrés. Yet, in line with the more classic diasporas like Jews, Armenians or Greeks, Russian Orthodox Church communities around the world served as the focal points of émigré community life, and the only enduring institution capable of preserving the Russian identity in foreign environments. Some were in communion with the Moscow Patriarchate and others were bitterly opposed to it; some used magnificent churches built in European capitals and resorts by pre-revolutionary Russian royalty and aristocracy, while others cobbled new ones out of garages and residential buildings, rarely raising enough private funds to build a proper church.

While the Communist regime carried out the policy of eliminating and subjugating the Church, the émigré community, for whom the catastrophe of 1917 and the ensuing exile was a profound conversion experience, saw its mission in preserving and developing the great theological and cultural tradition of Russian Orthodoxy, not just to one day “return” it to Russia, but also to bring it to the far flung corners of the world.
For one part of this community, mainly represented by the conservative and monarchist Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia (ROCOR) which broke away from Moscow ecclesiastical authorities following their declaration of loyalty to the Soviet regime in 1927, it meant temporary self-isolation. Over generations, while integrating into the Western lifestyle, its adherents preserved a very traditionalist and characteristically Russian church life.

Another, more liberal part, found inspiration in the so-called “Paris school” of Russian theology, which formed among émigré church intellectuals in Paris in the 1920s and 1930s. It sought development of Orthodox Christian theology either in a return to the Church Fathers or in a broad adaptation of contemporary Western Christian and secular scholarship. In the decades when hopes for the Soviet regime collapse were dimmed, this tradition also implied a localization of their Orthodoxy, including the translation of the liturgy into English, French and other languages, a shift to the Western calendar, and other synthesis of an Eastern Orthodox tradition with a Western identity. Today, followers of this tradition are mainly found in the Paris-based Exarchate of Parishes of Russian Tradition in Western Europe, under the Ecumenical Patriarchate, and in the Orthodox Church in America (OCA).
With the arrival of a vast number of Russian “displaced persons” in the course of World War II, the émigré churches were reinvigorated. Some pastors and parishes turned out to be successful missionaries, and supplemented their Russian communities with local converts. The predominantly Jewish Soviet emigration of the 1970s and 1980s formed a largely separate community, often at odds with the old-timers. Yet there are groups of Russian Jews who converted to Orthodox Christianity both in the United States and in Israel.

Restoring lost unity

After 1988, the church life in Russia was liberalized, paving way to the revival of church life. Both of the major émigré schools of church thought gained influence in Russia and were accepted, in various degrees, by respectively traditionalist and modernist groups. In terms of organizing parish life with a need to preserve Russian Orthodox identity and bringing up children amidst increasingly diverse secular and consumerist societies, foreign experience with summer camps, charities, conferences and other non-liturgical activities has been in high demand in Russia across the ideological spectrum.

“In our foreign conditions the Church has always been the axis around which our life was built,” Metropolitan Laurus, the First Hierarch of the ROCOR, said in his address to the Moscow Patriarchate-sponsored World Council of the Russian People in late February. During the 10 day Moscow visit, he was awarded the “Compatriot of the Year” award by Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov and the St. Andrew Prize by the influential St. Andrew Foundation, led by one of President Vladimir Putin’s close associates, Russian railways head Vladimir Yakunin. The visit was meant to underscore the newly found unity of the two parts of the Russian Church. “The Church supported Russian charities, cultural, youth, sports and other organizations, created a network of Sunday schools and involved children in an active participation in church life as sacristans, readers and singers. The results of this work are obvious—the youth, which is close to the Church already in the fourth generation, have preserved their faith, their Russianness and their language,” said Metropolitan Laurus.
“The church has always put forward spiritual tasks of guiding people, helping them save their souls, but there is always—as a free supplement—the cultural aspect,” said Archpriest Peter Holodny, the treasurer of the ROCOR and a third-generation Russian raised abroad. “People who preserved their Russianness in the West are just the people who were part of the Church. People who were not part of the Church assimilated very quickly.”

Holodny’s grandfather, Protopresbyter Alexander Kiselev, born in Russia but raised in independent Estonia, was a pastor to the anti-Soviet, Nazi-affiliated army of Gen. Andrei Vlasov. He founded the “Merciful Samaritan” house in post-World War II Munich—a combination of a church, school, clinic and dormitory, where first-wave Russian émigrés were helping desperate Russian DPs. When he moved to New York in the 1950s, Kiselev created the St. Seraphim Foundation, with a church and concert hall becoming a religious and cultural center for many Russian American intellectuals. A champion of unity between ROCOR and the Moscow Patriarchate, he died in Moscow in 2001, when his dream (fulfilled six years later) appeared unreal and his own family was divided along the lines of cooperation or continued opposition to the Moscow Patriarchate. Holodny’s father-in-law, Archpriest George Larin, runs one of the largest foreign Russian parishes and community centers in Nyack, NY. It is at his parish that one of the first conferences bringing together Moscow Patriarchate and ROCOR priests took place in 2004, following President Vladimir Putin’s meeting with ROCOR bishops in Nov. 2003 and the beginning of the rapprochement.
The fate of families like this illustrates the scope of the drama which came to a highly symbolic resolution on June 17th 2007, when Patriarch Alexy II and Metropolitan Laurus signed the Act of Canonical Unity and celebrated together their first Eucharist—the ultimate manifestation of unity in faith for Orthodox Christians. The ceremony, broadcast live on Russian national television, was presented as a symbolic end of the Civil War and a spiritual precondition for the unity of the Russian people at home and abroad, following the cataclysms of the 20th century. Holodny was unable to hold back his tears, watching members of the once bitterly opposed churches taking communion from one chalice.

“The division inside the church emerged as a result of the deepest political schism of Russian society itself,” President Vladimir Putin said at the June ceremony. “Today, after decades of alienation, we can say that there were no winners in the church-political conflict. But everybody lost: both the Church and the believers, who had to live in an atmosphere of mutual distrust. Russian society at large lost. The revival of church unity is the main precondition for restoring the lost unity of the entire Russian realm, one of whose main spiritual foundations has always been the Orthodox faith.”
At a more practical level, the canonical unity has resulted in a closer cooperation between Russian Orthodox parishes and dioceses abroad, as in the case of Germany, where profuse recent immigration from Russia has filled the churches of both the Moscow Patriarchate and ROCOR. The dioceses instituted a series of meetings to coordinate their pastoral work.

Ensuing tensions over Russian identity

Despite the significance of this act, it did not abolish all divisions in the Orthodox Churches of Russian tradition around the world, typical of Russian émigrés who have always been notorious for their infightings. A relatively large part of the ROCOR split from the Church over its unity with Moscow, saying that by signing the act, ROCOR lost is purity, having aligned itself with the Moscow Patriarchate which remains subservient to the state and maintains ecumenical relations with non-Orthodox Christians. The exact size of these groups is hard to establish. While the opponents of unity with Moscow cite the number of as much as 100 parishes, just under one third of all ROCOR parishes prior to June 2007, Holodny estimated the number as under 10 percent. The website of the largest split-away group, Provisional Supreme Church Authority of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, lists about 50 clergy and parishes mainly located in the former Soviet Union where groups had joined ROCOR over the last 20 years primarily out of their opposition to the official church. Holodny also said that some of those who split away are beginning to rethink their position, but refused to elaborate on whether anyone had actually returned.

Ironically enough, the Paris-based Exarchate of Parishes of Russian Tradition, having been closer to the Moscow Patriarchate in the recent decades than ROCOR and remaining in communion with Moscow through the Patriarch of Constantinople, is currently locked in a bitter dispute with the Moscow Patriarchate over what it sees as Moscow’s expansionist policies, including the ongoing legal battle over a landmark Russian church in Nice. Moscow claims that the church should be returned to the Russian state after the 99 year long lease.
In Britain, the split pitted a small community of old émigré Russians and converted Brits against a large number of newly arrived Russians, who have boosted the UK’s Russian community to hundreds of thousands. In 2003, after the death of the much revered pastor, thinker and missionary Metropolitan Anthony (Bloom), his successor, Bishop Basil (Osborne), left the Moscow Patriarchate and joined, with much of his flock, the Paris-based Exarchate under the Patriarchate of Constantinople. Metropolitan Anthony had built his diocese in Britain as a highly autonomous part of the Moscow Patriarchate, which many saw as a prototype of a united Western European Orthodoxy trespassing ethnical boundaries. His personal charisma managed to unite the culturally diverse groups. The new bishop sent from Moscow reformed the remaining, now predominantly “new Russian” church, along the standard lines of a contemporary Russian Church.

Apart from the rivalry between the numerically largest Patriarchate of Moscow and the historically preeminent Patriarchate of Constantinople, both of whom claim jurisdiction over Russian diaspora, the conflict in Britain underscores the Moscow Patriarchate policy of stressing the Russian cultural identity over local integration in its dealings with the emigrants. It also explains why unity with the largely isolationist ROCOR was achieved, while relations with the largely integrationist Paris-based church worsened.
“We are striving for the Russian diaspora to maintain their spirituality and their identity,” said Bishop Mark (Golovkov) of Yegorievsk, Deputy Head of the Moscow Patriarchate’s Department of External Church Relations, who oversees parishes abroad. “That is our main task. The very logic of our moves is to integrate the Russian realm independent of the jurisdictional boundaries.”

Photo: courtesy of St.Sergius Church

Bishop Nikolai returns to pulpit

Bishop Nikolai was ordered to step down in early March after clergymen and church members spoke out, accusing him of verbal and emotional abuse. (Shawn Wilson/KTUU-TV)
The bishop's first Sunday back was what the Russian Orthodox call the day of adoration for the precious cross. (Shawn Wilson/KTUU-TV)
The bishop calls it a communication problem and says he's willing to work through it. (Shawn Wilson/KTUU-TV)

by Leyla Santiago
Sunday, March 30, 2008

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- A bishop asked to step aside after allegations of verbal and emotional abuse has been allowed to return to his church.

Sunday was Bishop Nikolai Soraich's first day leading a service as the reinstated leader of the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska.
Parishioners say it was wonderful to see the embattled leader back in church.

Nikolai was ordered to step down in early March after clergymen and church members spoke out, accusing him of verbal and emotional abuse.
He was reinstated three days ago, three weeks after he was first asked to step aside.

Church leaders say they will continue to investigate allegations the bishop verbally and emotionally abused clergy and parishioners.
He says it has been a trying time for him and his church's followers.

"Even the clergy under these conditions have been very confused and it's very painful," Bishop Nikolai said.
The bishop's first Sunday back was what the Russian Orthodox call the day of adoration for the precious cross.

This time, Nikolai had a deeper understanding.
"Christ was crucified on the cross. They thought that was the end of him. It wasn't," he said. "I felt very much like Christ, going to the cross and being abandoned and pushed aside and no one there for him."

But the bishop says the adversities have only made him stronger and he's ready to move forward.
"There are no hard feelings. Everybody makes a mistake and everybody can come back," he said. "It seems the biggest mistake that I've made is not recognizing that there were some problems there."

The bishop calls it a communication problem and says he's willing to work through it.
He says he can't do it alone.

"Put aside your pride as I have to put mine aside and let's work to the glory of God," Nikolai said.

Contact Leyla Santiago at lsantiago@ktuu.com

Saturday, March 29, 2008

Russian Orthodox bishop's leave reversed by church

Bishop Nikolai (KTUU-TV)
National church leaders say they'll continue their probe into the allegations of abuse against Bishop Nikolai. (KTUU-TV)
Father Isidore (Mike Nederbrock/KTUU-TV)
Father Daniel (Mike Nederbrock/KTUU-TV)

by Angela Blanchard
Thursday, March 27, 2008

ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- Bishop Nikolai has been restored to his perch as head of the Russian Orthodox Church in Alaska three weeks after national church leadership ordered him to vacate the post.

Now, those who initially spoke out against Bishop Nikolai say they are afraid of retaliation.
Nikolai had already refused an order from the Holy Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church of America that he vacate his position as bishop and leave the state during an official investigation.

Thursday, the bishop described it as "excellent news ... absolutely the best possible news."
The bishop's leave of absence was lifted after he met with church officials in New York.

"I suffered for the last three weeks terribly in this process," Nikolai said. "And I'm sure a lot of those other people have, too, but we can't look for an ounce of flesh, we have to look for the love of Christ."
Meanwhile, national church leaders say they'll continue their probe into the allegations of abuse against Bishop Nikolai.

Troubles in the church surfaced during the Lenten period and continue during this holiest time in the Russian Orthodox calendar.
The Holy Synod reportedly received more than 100 letters alleging the bishop abuses his clergy and laity.

The Russian church's second highest-ranking official, Father Isidore, had himself reportedly spoke out against Bishop Nikolai last summer.
Isidore now dismisses those remarks, claiming he was battling alcoholism at the time.

"I don't think he's a very vindictive man," Isidore said. "The truth that people express drunk is much different than what's real. You know, I may have expressed some dissatisfaction with a work situation that I've found often very difficult, not because the bishop puts a lot of pressure on me, but because there's a lot more work in this diocese than the two of us have been able to do."
But others who lodged complaints against the bishop say they fear repercussions -- specifically being suspended or even defrocked for speaking out.

Father Daniel, Parish Priest of the Saint Tikhon of Moscow Mission in Anchorage, says many clergymen now feel they've been betrayed by the national leadership.
"I think that, yes, as a clergy are, were afraid, are afraid, and they will be afraid to be honest, to be truthful," Father Daniel said. "A lot of the clergy have even expressed the idea that they're not even sure what is the point of existence of the Holy Synod?"

The question remains whether Bishop Nikolai will be welcomed back as a loving leader or church tyrant.

Ultimately, clergy and parishioners may have to ask God for that answer, according to Father Daniel.

The Holy Synod said it is sending two bishops to Alaska next week to continue the investigation.
They will report back to the Synod at the next meeting in May.

Contact Angela Blanchard at ablanchard@ktuu.com