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Kollyvas
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The Life Of St. Alexis Of Wilkes Barre

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http://www.midwestdiocese.org/dmw/id27.htm

St. Alexis Toth

St. Alexis of Minneapolis: "Confessor and Defender of Orthodoxy"

Early Years

Our holy father Alexis was born in the Austro-Hungarian Empire on March 18, 1854 into a poor, Carpatho-Russian family. (His family had a strong Hungarian cultural influence- the family name Toth is the Hungarian word for their nationality.) Churchly service ran strong in his family: His father and brother were priests and his uncle was a bishop. Like many whose ancestors were Orthodox Christians in the Austro-Hungarian Empire, the Toth family was Eastern Rite/Uniate Catholic.

The young Alexis benefited from a solid education. In addition to the local languages of Carpatho-Russian and Hungarian, he also mastered Russian, German, Latin, and possessed a reading knowledge of Biblical Greek. He also showed great aptitude and pursued education in Church History and Canon Law.

He married Rosalie Mihalich, whose father, like his, was a priest. After their marriage, on April 18, 1878 he was ordained to the priesthood and assigned the second priest in a Uniate parish. While there, his wife and their only child died. Saint Alexis, trusting in God, persevered and did not waiver in his faith.

Leadership in Prešov

Just a year after ordination and at only 25 years of age, in May of 1879, Fr. Alexis was appointed secretary to Prešov's Bishop, Chancellor of the Diocese, and director of an orphanage. In addition to his administrative duties, Father Alexis also taught Church History and Canon Law at Prešov Seminary. He continued these duties for a decade.

Arrival in America

In October, 1889 Father Alexis became the second priest to be sent to Saint Mary's church, a small Uniate parish in Minneapolis, Minnesota. (St. Mary's had sent the money needed for the Prešov Diocese to pay for a priest's trip. Originally Fr. John Zapototsky was sent, but he stopped at Kingston, Pennsylvania en route to Minneapolis and decided to stay there- effectively stealing the money that St. Mary's sent and bitterly disappointing them.)

On November 15, 1889, Fr. Alexis arrived in America and on November 27, he reached Minneapolis, serving his first Liturgy on Thanksgiving day only to find - as he later reported - "a church, but empty. No vestments, no sacred church vessels and other needed articles." There was not even an iconostas in the church. He immediately embarked on a fund-raising campaign, soliciting money from the nearly 90 parishioners, and from friends of the parish and even strangers.

He was named the head of the Sts. Peter and Paul Brotherhood, which had served as the organizational backbone of the community. This mutual aid society helped raise money for the church and did much to coordinate its development in these delicate early years.

Ireland's Rebuff

Only five weeks after his arrival, on December 19, 1889, Fr. Alexis went with one of the local Polish priests to present his credentials and secure the blessing of the local Latin rite Roman Catholic archbishop, John Ireland. While en route to the meeting, the Polish priest was called away to visit with some sick parishioners and Fr. Alexis was left to see the Archbishop by himself. However, Archbishop Ireland was leader among the Americanist Roman Catholics who favored "Americanizing" their Church. This view did not allow for the use of the Eastern rite in Liturgy by foreign speaking immigrants.

Archbishop Ireland refused to recognize him as a legitimate Catholic priest and withheld permission for him to serve in his diocese. Having been a professor of Canon Law and Church History, Father Toth knew his rights under the terms of the Unia and rejected the Archbishop's stance. Archbishop Ireland wrote to his parish priests that they ostracize Father Alexis and forbid their parishioners from receiving sacraments from him.

Providing for the Church and Self

In spite of the quandary in which they found themselves, Fr. Alexis and the parish persevered in seeing to the material needs of the church. Fr. Alexis continued his fundraising efforts. Within one year of his arrival, he had solicited enough money to purchase five sets of churchly vestments, a Holy Gospel book, chalice, paten and other implements used for preparation and administering of the Holy Gifts to communicants and other sacred vessels, candelabras, a censer, processional banners, a plashchanitsa (Christ's burial shroud for Holy Week), icons, and various other articles and books. All this cost 840 dollars. Also in 1890, he purchased a house to be used as the rectory, for $1,500. He also paid off $1,800 in debt which remained on the church. Thus, in about one year, Fr. Alexis raised $4,140. Leaving the parish with a significant but manageable debt of $1,980. (Roughly speaking, in year 2002 terms, the liturgical items would cost $30,000; the house $55,000; the debt reduction $65,000; the total he raised $150,000; and the debt left over $70,000.)

All the while, they were not paying Fr. Alexis, "but" as he later wrote to Bishop NICHOLAS in 1896, "always I have been calling God's name, and I didn't lose heart and didn't fall into despair."

Not only did Fr. Alexis not lose heart nor fall into despair while overseeing all the money donated for the church's liturgical needs, but he responded to his own situation with entrepreneurial spirit. He opening a small grocery store for which he served as the baker. With this limited income, he fed himself but also provided his poor parishioners with an inexpensive supply of provisions and used profit from business to pay for a caretaker and chanter for the church. (He ran the store until 1891, when he passed the business over to a parishioner.)

Meeting of Uniate Priests

The following year, in October of 1890, the married Uniate priests (all but two in America) were told that they were going to be recalled to Europe. Fr. Alexis convened a meeting at Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania where eight of the ten Uniate priests in America expressed there concerns that American bishops had given them a hard time and had petitioned Rome that the Uniate clergy be recalled to Europe.

In response to this meeting, all the priests in attendance were recalled to Europe.

Leaving the Unia

Fr. Alexis returned to Minneapolis and told his parishioners about his grave situation. He went on to declare that the best thing that he could do for St. Mary's was to leave. The parish, after having faced such difficulties in their struggle to get a resident pastor, was not willing to let Fr. Alexis simply surrender and leave. A number of the parishioners said, "Let us go to the Russian Bishop! Why should we always bow before foreign bishops?"

On December 8, 1890, they wrote to the Russian consul in San Francisco, asking if there was a Bishop and, if so, what his name and address were. Receiving a response ten days later, they decided to send parishioner Ivan Mlinar to San Francisco to meet Bishop VLADIMIR (Sokolovsky) and explain their predicament.

On January 27, 1891, Fr. Alexis convened a special meeting of the church board of trustees and parishioners, wherein they unanimously voted to put themselves under the Bishopric of the Aleutian Islands and Alaska and to send Fr. Alexis and a parishioner to San Francisco to personally invite Bishop VLADIMIR to officially accept the congregation into his diocese.

In February, 1891 Father Alexis and the church warden Paul Podany went to the Russian Consulate and meet with Bishop VLADIMIR. Fr. Alexis repudiated the Unia and announced his desire to serve in his ancestral Church and that of his faith- the Orthodox Church. The Russians, only recently having been surprised by the presence of Uniates in America, were again surprised by their eager desire to return to the Church of their Fathers. Bishop VLADIMIR kindly agreed with their request to enter the Orthodox Church.

An eyewitness to the visit, choir director Paul Zaichenko, wrote

In the Russian Orthodox Cathedral of San Francisco, Bishop VLADIMIR is saying the Divine Liturgy. The choir, under my direction, is singing splendidly. In the center of the church stands a stranger. He is clean shaven, with a short military haircut. He wars a cassock, fastened with a row of buttons, and around his waist is tied a wide purple sash. He has a plump face, but with pleasant, lively features. His broad forehead, his bright eyes, that seem soft yet on fire at the same time, betoken the man's intellectualism. He stands with eyes fixed upon the painting of the Last supper, and with his palms folded in the manner of a Catholic, prays earnestly; and it seems, that he is living through a spiritual turmoil, which reflects itself upon his features. For half an hour he stands motionless, transfixed in spiritual ecstasy. All eyes are on him, but know one knows who the stranger is.

Bishop VLADIMIR, in all his vestments, comes forward from the altar, holding the Bible and the cross. According to Church ritual, the stranger is accepted into the Orthodox faith. In a loud voice, he renounces papism and enters the fold of the Holy Orthodox Church. At that moment his face lights up with an internal light.

This new convert was Father Alexis Toth, young, handsome, and energetic. He had journeyed from far off Minneapolis to enter the Orthodox Church, in the Russian Cathedral of San Francisco.

Coming Home

The next month, Bishop VLADIMIR journeyed to Minneapolis and on March 25, 1891 received Father Alexis and 361 parishioners into the Orthodox Church. The parishioners cried out: "Glory to God for His great mercy!"

Uniates throughout America took note of this event and Saint Alexis, by preaching and writing about the false teachings and deceptions which had misled his people, found Uniate clergy and churches eager to hear him out.

He was again recalled by his now former Uniate bishop in Prešov. When this proved ineffective, he was given the "carrot and the stick" treatment.

On the one hand, it was said that Fr. Alexis had sold the Christian faith to the "Muscovites" for 30,000 rubles, that he was a cheater and a thief who stole orphans' money in Hungary and ran away to America and in secret, Jesuit priests started to visit the parishioners and stir up doubts in their hearts.

On the other hand, the Saint was told that all he needed to do was repent and another parish in America would be given to him. When this failed, he was offered a bishopric if he'd repent of his decision and return to the Unia.

Delayed Salary

Although Bishop VLADIMIR immediately received them into the Church, it took until July, 1892 for the Holy Synod of Russia receive word and formally accept into the Diocese of Alaska and the Aleutians and then, this resolution didn't get back to America until October, 1892, making a total of nineteen months since Bishop VLADIMIR received them into the Orthodox Church.

During these months, since he had given up operation of the store, St. Alexis went without a salary. His only income from the church was the paltry trebe (gratuities for priestly services) that his poor parishioners gave him.

In the meantime, however, Bishop VLADIMIR offered St. Alexis financial support by proposing that, in addition to St. Mary's, he become pastor of a church in Chicago. (St. John Kochurov became the first resident pastor of that church, which would later become Holy Trinity Cathedral.) Knowing the holy priest's trying situation, Bishop VLADIMIR offered to pay not only for travel expenses to and from Chicago, but, as he wrote to St. Alexis on September 12, 1891, "I would help you also privately until the matter is resolved by the Holy Synod."

In spite of the hardships, St. Alexis found time to write for new converts, giving advice on how to live in an Orthodox manner. He stressed education, cleanliness, sobriety, and bringing children to the services on Sundays and Holy Days.

Missionary Witness

Saint Alexis was recognized as a powerful witness in preaching the integrity of the Orthodox Faith and Church especially vis-à-vis the Unia. He was frequently invited to speak at Uniate churches and the bishops under whom he served (VLADIMIR, NICHOLAS, Saint TIKHON, and PLATON) recognized his gift of preaching and his ability to relate to those suffering under the Unia. They often sent him to teach and preach to Slavic communities across the eastern US and even into Canada where he explained the differences between Orthodoxy, Protestantism, Roman Catholicism and Uniatism, stressing that the true way to salvation is in Orthodoxy.

Wilkes-Barre's Hope

In Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, the Carpatho-Rusyn Uniates were growing weary of the poor treatment which they received, much like St. Mary's in Minneapolis had endured. The parish trustees, who knew St. Alexis from his visit to Wilkes-Barre two years before, began to consider doing what St. Alexis and St. Mary's in Minneapolis had done: Join the Russian Orthodox Church. On November 12, 1892, the trustees wrote to St. Alexis, asking him to assume leadership of their parish. St. Alexis feared that the letter was a simplistic joke and wrote back an extremely long letter explaining Orthodoxy, the Unia, and the significance of what the trustees were asking. They sent a simple telegraph response stating, "We know all of that, but some as soon as you can."

Saint Alexis made the 1,200 mile trip from Minneapolis to Wilkes-Barre on December 3, 1892. He was led to the parish house which was filled with parishioners to whom he again explained what it meant to enter the Orthodox Church. The people were satisfied with all of that, but especially, with the prospect of finally having a bishop. The following day, a Sunday, the church was filled. St. Alexis gave a sermon which lasted for more than an hour and a half. He covered the history of the Unia including its origins, how it was enforced - particularly referencing one of its greatest enforcers, the supposed "Hieromartyr-Saint" Josaphat Kuntzevich, whom St. Alexis harshly but accurately referred to as a "jerk and villain," - papal supremacy which the Saint identified as "a human invention;" how the Latin Church spoiled the Nicene Creed (i.e., by altering it to read that the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father and the Son [contrast John 15:26]); Rome's peculiar teaching of immaculate conception of the Virgin Mary; how "indulgences" are false and were invented to raise money, etc., and how all of these issues are opposed to Christ's teaching and the patristic understanding of the Church.

After Liturgy, St. Alexis gave the parish until Tuesday night to think over their decision before they would be able to formally request of him to enter the Russian Orthodox Church. In the meantime, after long discussion with the trustees, he instructed them to go to the homes of parishioners and ask all of them if they desired to enter the Orthodox Church, to accept its faith, to sign over the church properties to the Russian Orthodox bishop in San Francisco, and finally, to renounce what he referred to as "the Uniate-Papist faith." They were strictly forbidden to persuade people; they were only to have the parishioners freely sign the agreement, or put a cross by their name if they were illiterate.

St. Alexis, who had spent the intervening two days in Hazleton and Shenandoah, returned to Wilkes-Barre Tuesday afternoon and by 7:00 parishioners had filled the parish house, the yard, and the church's basement. Saint Alexis gave a brief review of the Orthodox Church vis-à-vis the Unia and then asked if they wanted to enter the Orthodox Church, submit to the Russian Orthodox bishop in San Francisco, and give the properties to the bishop. They responded unanimously in the affirmative. Saint Alexis had the petition to Bishop Nicholas read in Ukrainian and read again in Slovak. He then asked if every one understood , to which they responded positively. He asked again if they freely give the church to the bishop, and they again affirmed their support. Finally, at 8:00, St. Alexis told them that he would give them another 15 minutes in which, if even one person objected, he would peaceably return to Minneapolis without even demanding payment for his travel expenses ($80, or about $2,850 in 2002 dollars) and the issue would be dropped as if it never happened. There was total silence as St. Alexis then left the room for 15 to 20 minutes. When he returned, he asked again if they wanted to enter the Orthodox Church and sign over the church properties. They agreed and the trustees signed the petition, as did the leaders of the parish's two brotherhoods. Then the head trustee handed the key of the church to St. Alexis, saying, "I give to you our church and its property freely, with the agreement of the entire parish!"

Fr. Sebastian Dabovich

Before leaving Wilkes-Barre, St. Alexis saw the need to do follow-up work with them. He wrote to Bishop NICHOLAS requesting an assistant priest to serve St. Mary's to free himself to return to Pennsylvania and complete the work of bringing the Wilkes-Barre community more fully into the Orthodox ethos and mentality. Bishop NICHOLAS assigned the first priest born in the United States: the Russian-educated hieromonk, Fr. Sebastian Dabovich. Father Sebastian was born to Serbian parents in San Francisco in 1863, during the American Civil War. (Saint Jacob Netsvetov was the first priest who was born in the New World. He was born in 1802 to an Aleut mother and a Russian father in what was then Imperial Alaska.)

Having received permission to return to Wilkes-Barre once Fr. Sebastian would arrive, the Saint returned home to Minneapolis on December 12, 1892.

St. Mary's Loses St. Alexis

Fr. Sebastian was a thoughtful and quiet man, a humble and dedicated worker who loved teaching the Bible to students at St. Mary's parish school. He was noted as one who always strove to better himself. However, in the three weeks of St. Alexis' absence, which included Christmas and Theophany, Fr. Sebastian inadvertently causes a scandal when he celebrated a marriage for a parishioner. Since Fr. Sebastian was salaried from the Diocese and did not know the Uniate custom followed at St. Mary's, refused to accept the trebe payment, saying that it was not necessary to pay priests for services. From this, a storm brewed. Saint Alexis, who had supported the parish with his store and endured so many months without receiving any salary from the Diocese or parishioners, was now seen as a money swindler.

When Saint Alexis returned from his three week sojourn, he found a grave problem. He attempted to restore the situation but Professor Zaichenko (who had been sent by the Bishop to run the parish school) and Fr. Sebastian knew themselves to be defending the Orthodox way. They neglected the pastoral hazards involved in what they were doing and opposed the Saint in his own parish.

Recalling these tragic events, Fr. Alexis later wrote to Bishop NICHOLAS that

…those same people, for whom I sacrificed everything and who, during the attacks of the Papists, stood as strong as a wall, and whom I had been protecting and saving, became so ungrateful… It was told to my face that "we do not want the `Hungarian' as a priest anymore- we need a Russian priest!" …So I left Minneapolis and moved to Wilkes-Barre.

Conclusion of Midwest Service

Because of their tragic, ill-considered myopia, the parishioners of St. Mary's rebelled against, and lost their champion. However, reminiscent of Genesis 50:20,( "and you, you purposed evil against me- God meant it for good, in order to make it as it is today, to keep alive many people.") Fr. Alexis' exile proved more fruitful than could have ever been dreamed. From the Wilkes-Barre church which Fr. Alexis had returned to the Orthodox Church while still the pastor of St. Mary's in Minneapolis, he was able to lead many more Unites back to the Orthodox Church.

Brotherhoods

Saint Alexis, having previously worked with numerous local mutual aid societies and brotherhoods, had also seen their fragmented nature leading to redundant efforts and, over-all, a weaker financial situation. He received a blessing from Bishop NICHOLAS to convene a meeting of representatives from every one of the local Orthodox brotherhoods. The meeting, at Wilkes-Barre, convened on April 10, 1895. From this meeting the Russian American Orthodox Mutual Aid Society was born. (It would later be called the Russian Orthodox Church Mutual Aid Society, ROCMAS.)

Initially, membership included brotherhoods from Pittsburgh, Wilkes-Barre, Phillipsburg, Old Forge, Osceola Mills, in addition to Minneapolis, Bridgeport, and Streator. Within the first year, though, membership would increase to 18 brotherhoods. Eventually, almost 10,000 people would be members in 224 local chapters.

These united brotherhoods greatly helped in establishing new churches and missions as well as fostering communication within the American Church through their publication, The Light.

Epilogue

Our Holy Father Alexis' efforts did not go unrecognized in his own lifetime. He received a jeweled miter from the Holy Synod, as well as the Order of St. Vladimir and the Order of St. Anna from Czar Nicholas II for distinguished service and devotion to God and country. In 1907, he was considered as a candidate for episcopal office. He declined this honor, humbly pointing out that this responsibility should be given to a younger, healthier man.

At the end of 1908, St. Alexis' health began to decline due to a complication of illnesses. He went to the seashore in southern New Jersey in an attempt to regain his health, but soon returned to Wilkes-Barre, where he was confined to bed for two months. The righteous one fell asleep in the Lord on Friday, May 7, 1909 (April 24 on the Julian Calendar), the feast of Saints Sabbas and Alexius the Hermit of the Kiev Caves.

By the time of his repose, St. Alexis' legacy had already been well established. He had personally overseen the return to Orthodoxy of up to 20,000 Carpatho-Russian and Galician Uniates and the formation or return of 17 parishes across America. With the assistance of his protégés in America and Europe, the total number of Uniates to make the return is estimated to exceed a quarter of a million.

Father Alexis, having freely taken on poverty so as not to burden his flock and having endured so much hardship and hatred from his same beloved flock, was properly and ceremoniously canonized on May 29, 1994.

An Indication of Holiness

In 1909, seven years after his death, St. Alexis' body was being transferred to a new and more prominently located grave near St. Tikhon's Monastery Church when his remains were discovered to be incorrupt.

An Intercessory Miracle

St. Alexis' love and concern for his spiritual children did not cease with his death. Before closing the account of his life, it would be most appropriate to reveal but one example of his heavenly intercession:

A father had been separated from his son for twenty-eight years. When he was a child, the son had been taken to another state by his mother, where she changed his name, leaving his father was unable to locate him.

In January, 1993 the father prayed to St. Alexis to help him obtain information about his son. Placing his confidence in the boldness before God of the saint who during his earthly life had proven so effective in reuniting the separated, he awaited an answer to his prayer. The very next day, son telephoned his dad.

The young man had been in church when he was suddenly filled with an overwhelming desire to contact his father. Having learned from his mother that his father was an Orthodox Christian, with the help of an Orthodox priest, he was able to obtain his father's phone number in a distant city. As a result of that telephone call, the young man later visited his father, who rejoiced to see what sort of man his son had become. The father gave thanks to God and to St. Alexis for reuniting him with his son.

His holy relics now rest at St. Tikhon's Monastery in South Canaan, Pennsylvania where the faithful may come to venerate them and to entreat St. ALEXIS' intercessions on their behalf.

Hymns
Downloadable sheet music (Troparion and Kontakion).

Troparion (Tone 4)
O righteous Father ALEXIS,
Our heavenly intercessor and teacher,
Divine adornment of the Church of Christ,
Entreat the Master of All
To strengthen the Orthodox Faith in America,
To grant peace to the world
And to our souls great mercy.
Kontakion (Tone 5)
Let us the faithful praise the priest ALEXIS,
A bright beacon of Orthodoxy in America,
A model of patience and humility.
A worthy shepherd of the flock of Christ,
He called back the sheep who had been led astray
And brought them by his preaching
To the heavenly Kingdom.

Archbishop Josaphat Kuntzevich of Polotzk "persecuted the Orthodox people with particular severity. Leo Sapega, chancellor of Lithuania, strongly warned Kuntzevich of the danger of his conduct in his letter of March 12, 1622. '…Your Sanctity assumes that you are permitted to despoil schismatics and cut off their heads; the Gospel teaches the contrary. The 'Unia' has not produced joy, but only discord, quarrel and disturbances. It would have been better if it had never taken place. Now I inform you that, by the King's command, the churches must be opened and restored to the Orthodox, that they may perform divine service. We do not prohibit Jews and Mohammedans from having their places of worship, and yet you are closing up Christian temples.' Kuntezevich did not pay attention to this letter, pursuing his career of oppression until the inhabitants of Vitebsk rose against him and killed him on July 12, 1628 by throwing him into the river Dvina. The Roman Catholic Church canonized him in 1867…" (Toth, Alexis, Archpriest Alexis Toth: Letters, Articles, Papers and Sermons, vol. 1, Ed. & tr. George Soldatow. Chilliwack, British Columbia, Synaxis Press, 1978; p. 71 n84.) [Return to article]

John 15:26, "But when the Helper comes, whom I shall send to you from the Father, the Spirit of truth who proceeds from the Father, He will testify of Me." [Return to article]

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Kollyvas
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"talerhof"

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(Don't miss the pics on the links.--R)

http://www.carpatho-rusyn.org/rich/talerhof.htm

The Talerhof Concentration Camp
On the eve of World War I, the Austro-Hungarian government was suspicious of the Russian Empire. The Orthodox movement was gaining strength in Galicia, especially in the Lemko Region, especially as some Lemko immigrants were returning from the United States where the bulk of them had joined the Orthodox Church. The Austrian government suspected these new Orthodox adherents to be Russian sympathizers.

During the war, Russia came to occupy the Lemko Region by March 1915. The region was the scene of many bloody battles during the winter of 1914-15. The Russians were friendly to the Orthodox and Russophile Lemkos they encountered in the region, but persecuted pro-Ukrainian activists. Meanwhile, the Austrian officials had begun to persecute the Russophiles and others (both Lemkos and other Galicians) who simply declared themselves to be of Rusyn (ruskyj) or Russian (russkij) nationality. Many of these "Russian sympathizers" (mostly peasants or clergy) were rounded up and sent to concentration camps in the western part of the Austrian empire, the most notorious of which was Talerhof, near Graz.12

The Lemkos, although they were only 2% of the Galician population, made up 30% of the prisoners at Talerhof, that is, about 5000.13 It is claimed by Lemko activists that between 1914 and 1917, almost all the Lemko intelligentsia perished or had their health ruined at Talerhof or other such camps.14

After the war, the Lemko Region was being more strongly affected by the Ukrainian movement. Some Lemkos had fought with Ukrainian units of the Austro-Hungarian army and became sympathetic to the Ukrainian cause. Other Lemkos however, especially the survivors of Talerhof, blamed the Galician Ukrainians for delivering the Rusyn/Russophile Lemkos to the Austrian authorities.15

http://www.carpatho-rusyn.org/kr/taler.htm

The Story of Talerhof - We Should Not Forget

Originally published in the Orthodox Herald, republished Karpatska Rus', August 5, 1994, Vol. LXVII, #16


The people who lived on the northern slope of the Carpathian Mountains (Lemkovyna), which is now in Poland and was once part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, have been subjected to severe and much discrimination throughout many centuries. They have been forcibly relocated and efforts have been made to eradicate all elements and traces of their distinctive culture.

Last month we wrote of two parts of a journey during the Holocaust of 1914-1917. After removal from their homes in Lemkovyna, they were taken to a transferal point, put in sealed cattle cars and taken by train to a little village, Abtissendorf, which was located near Graz, Austria on the southern border of Austria.

As they stumbled from the train into the sunlight, they found themselves surrounded by guards riding on horses. They were forced by whips to walk in their weakened condition to Talerhof, a concentration camp which was about a 20 minute walk away. The guards carried whips and did not hesitate to use them on those who lagged or fell behind. Those who tried to escape were shot dead and their bodies were pushed into any convenient ditch to join the bodies of those who had succumbed to the brutal conditions.


They finally arrived at Talerhof. Here families were broken up and assigned to different barracks. They were segregated....men in one and women and children in others. The barracks had bare, dirt floors. The roofs leaked so that when it rained, they were forced to sleep on the floor, which turned to mud. They were not even given straw to sleep on.

Starvation was ever present as they were given only one meal a day, which consisted of a clear soup with some rice added and a piece of bread. The thin watery soup was served in bowls but they were not given any spoons. As time went on, they whittled spoons out of pieces of wood which they found.

People died every day from lack of food coupled wit the unsanitary conditions. They suffered colds from sleeping in the mud or on the cold earth. They started to bleed from the nose, mouth, fingers and toes. The dreaded typhus made its regular rounds. They tried to keep clean but could wash the rags they wore in water only as there was no soap. About ten people died daily from starvation and disease. The women and children were forced to watch the men being hung. Many people lost their minds and others committed suicide.

The bodies of all who died were dumped into a common hole and the ground was leveled so that no evidence remained. It brings to mind the landfills we use for dumping garbage in the United States. No Memorial services, panahidas or prayers were allowed at the grave. In fact no relatives or friends were allowed to accompany the body of their loved one to the grave.

For every person that died, four more were brought from the Lemko/Galician region to replace them. This provoked a mixed reaction on the part of those incarcerated. They were happy to receive news from home but they felt grief for those who were arriving would now have to endure and many times for the bad news that was brought. For example, the shooting of Father Maksym Sandovych, who was recognized as a saint on September 11, 1194 in Gorlice, Poland, affected them very deeply. For many, this was the last straw [his death]. They could not bear much more.

What was the extent of this Holocaust? Talerhof records and diaries show that 30,000 people of both sexes and all ages and from every strata of Lemko society were interned. Among them were 800 priests of the Eastern Church (both Orthodox and Greek Catholic). They were not allowed to bring their robes or anything necessary for services. They were prohibited from serving Divine Liturgy, but as time went on they held Molebens to the Mother of God (many times from memory), and at this time they took the opportunity to give sermons in which they tried to uplift the spirits of their fellow detainees. It is written that as the services would progress, the singing of the congregation would become more and more quiet as "many cried and cried and could not continue singing the responses."

When the camp was finally closed, the knowledge of it having been there festered. It was leveled to the ground and in 1936, the last evidence of it was removed when the place of burial was excavated and the bodies were moved to another village called Feldskirken, Here the bodies of 17,067 men, women and children were reinterred in another common grave far from their homes in Lemkovyna, which they had been forced to leave. A poignant phrase says is so well: "Let them walk over their own hills not on some so far from their home."


http://www.rusyn.org/pop_talerhof.htm

Talerhof (German: Thalerhof) — an internment camp in the Austrian province of Styria (now under the airport in Graz) operated by the Austro-Hungarian imperial government from 1914 to 1917. The camp housed primarily *Russophile-oriented individuals and families from Galicia, among whom were at least 1,915 *Lemkos (some sources place the figure as high as 5,000) from 151 villages. Of those Lemkos incarcerated, 168 died and numerous others had their health destroyed. In September 1914 virtually the entire Russophile-oriented Lemko intelligentsia was arrested by the Austrian authorities. Among them were priests (Havryïl *Hnatyshak, Teofil’ *Kachmarchŷk, Dymytrii *Khŷliak, Vasylii *Kuryllo, Mykolai *Malyniak, Vasylii *Mastsiukh, Tyt *Mŷshkovskii, Ioann *Polianskii, Olympii *Polianskii, Roman *Pryslopskii), lawyers (Iaroslav *Kachmarchŷk, Teofil’ *Kuryllo) and cultural activists (Nikolai *Hromosiak, Dymytrii *Kachor, Simeon *Pysh, Metodii *Trokhanovskii, Dymytrii *Vyslotskii). All were suspected of possible collaboration with the advancing tsarist Russian Army that had invaded Galicia at the outset of World War I.
In May 1917 the Talerhof camp was closed by order of Emperor Charles I (r. 1916-1918). The barracks were not dismantled until 1936, however, at which time 1,767 corpses were exhumed and reburied in a common grave in the nearby Austrian village of Feldkirchen. In 1924 and 1934 Talerhof Memorial Days were held in L’viv. Four volumes of a memorial book were published, Talergofskii al’manakh (1924-32, repr. 1964) and a Talerhof Museum was established (1928) in L’viv under the direction of Adriian *Kopŷstianskii, containing physical artifacts of the camp’s inmates and archival materials (diaries, letters, photographs, memoirs).

Bibliography: Vasilii R. Vavrik, Znachenie Talergofa (L’viv, 1934); G.S. Malets, “Tsiel’ i zadachi Talergofskikh Siezdov,” in Illiustrovannŷi narodnŷi kalendar’ na hod 1935 (L’viv, 1935), pp. 86-160; Voennye prestupleniia Gabsburgskoi monarkhii 1914-1917 gg.: Galitskaia golgofa (Trumbull, Conn., 1964).

Bogdan Horbal

http://www.orthodoxnews.netfirms.com/12 ... storal.htm

Published by the Orthodox Church in America, July 6, 2004

Archpastoral Letter of His Beatitude, Metropolitan HERMAN on the Day of Talerhof Remembrance

July 6, 2004

To the Very Reverend and Reverend Clergy, Venerable Monastics, and Faithful of the Orthodox Church in America

Dearly Beloved in the Lord:

As we look back to the first half of the Twentieth Century, we are reminded of the many cruelties that were inflicted upon innumerable innocent victims as a result of political upheaval around the world. We recall, most especially, those people of all faiths and confessions who suffered unthinkable persecution in concentration camps.

Among those who suffered in the concentration camps that were established during the First World War were the Lemkos. It was because of their Orthodox Faith that many were confined to these concentration camps. The most infamous of the camps was Talherof, which was located in Austria. Although they comprised only a small percentage of the general population, the majority of those imprisoned at Talerhof were Lemkos. It is unclear how many actually lost their lives in Talerhof; however, those who survived also suffered greatly. These included the wife and son of Saint Maxim Sandovich, who was martyred in Gorlice in 1914 and was canonized by the Polish Orthodox Church in 1994.

The first Sunday of August of each year has been designated as a day of special prayer and remembrance for those Orthodox Christians who lost their lives at Talerhof. I once again invite you to participate in this annual commemoration by offering special prayers for the victims of Talerhof—as well as all those who have suffered for the Orthodox Faith—on Sunday, August 1, 2004.

May all those faithful Orthodox Christians who have given witness to Christ throughout the centuries continue to intercede for us. Following their example, may we also remain faithful to Christ and His Holy Church.

With love in Christ,

  • HERMAN
    Archbishop of Washington
    Metropolitan of All America and Canada

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Further Correspondence On "uniate saints"

Post by Kollyvas »

From: webmaster@acrod.org

Dear Mr. Pokrovsky,

Slava Na Viki!

I would very much appreciate hearing from you specifically what you mean by, our diocese would be blasphemously commemorating uniate apostates as "saints." To which saints are you refering and where did you receive such information? Such information would be most helpful in my formulating a response to your inquiry.

Orthodoxy or death is a most noble and true sentiment. However Orthopraxis is equally important - one can and must defend the faith and Orthodoxy, but should do so in a way that demonstrates Christ-like love, a sentiment, that I detect little of in your opening remarks. It is obvious that you know very little about our diocese, our Metropolitan and the "duch" of our faithful and their personal struggles to return to the bosom of Holy Orthodoxy after years of captivity in the Unia - the heartache of families torn apart, and the suffering on both sides of the ecclesiatical "fence" Orthodox and Uniate who suffered mercilessly at the hands of the Communists in our homeland.

I await your response, and extend my hand in love to you, in the true spirit of Orthodox Christianity,

In Christ our Lord,

Fr. Peter Paproski,

Diocesan Webmaster.

RESPONSE:

Evlogeite Pater.

To dispense with any nuances which may seem to not be as open (qv, figuring out "what I know"), I refer you to the following SCOBA statement:

http://www.goarch.org/en/news/NewsDetail.asp?id=1474

...the inclusion of two Greek Catholics in the “Synaxis of the Carpathian Saints” issued by Metropolitan Nicholas of the American Carpatho-Russian Orthodox Diocese of the USA. ..

That's a pretty official site with a pretty official statement. Surely, you were aware of it. Now you did take into account the price paid by Carpatho Russians in the reestablishment of Orthodoxy as presented in the factual account I forward to you, did you not? How is it you're not addressing it? I shall quote your correspondence from henceforth to better address your concerns...

In a message dated 3/24/2006 10:03:09 P.M. US Mountain Standard Time, webmaster@acrod.org writes:
Dear Mr. Pokrovsky,

Slava Na Viki!

I would very much appreciate hearing from you specifically what you mean by, our diocese would be blasphemously commemorating uniate apostates as "saints." To which saints are you refering and where did you receive such information? Such information would be most helpful in my formulating a response to your inquiry.

Orthodoxy or death is a most noble and true sentiment. However Orthopraxis

Me--"Orthopraxis," aside from Fr. Harakas definitions, is a direct translation of "Pravoslavie." It embodies, yes, a proper Orthodox ontology centered in a life of correct worship, observing all that has been transmitted to us by our forebearers, both within and outside of a physical church building. Such a life is referred to as "obrjad" in Russian. It means a life of right worship, a Eucharistic life, offering ourselves and creation unto the greater glory of God. How is it I have somehow transgressed the bounds of Orthopraxia?! Are you aware of my prayer life, how I pray in Church, my personal sins? If you are not, I do presume to ask, on what authority do you judge me for them?

is equally important - one can and must defend the faith and Orthodoxy, but should do so in a way that demonstrates Christ-like love, a sentiment, that I detect little of in your opening remarks.

Me--How is it that I lack Christ-like love?! That I reprove heretics and apostates?! That I inquire as to why you're lapsing into errors to coddle them. Father, really, read this:

On latin "baptism"

...'We have cut the Latins off from us for no other reason than that they
are not only schismatics, but also heretics. For this reason it is wholly
improper to unite with them.' (St. Mark Evengenicos of Ephesus)
'Their second argument to prove that the Papacy is a genuine Church is
always cited by the Papophiles as the greatest proof of their theory.
'Inasmuch as our Church,' they say, 'does not rebaptize Papists who
desire to become Orthodox, this means that their baptism and therefore
their priesthood and their other mysteries are real and valid.' What
great superficiality, however, is revealed by this conclusion! If this
reasoning is true, then we must accept that neither the Arians nor the
Macedonians were heretics, since the Church accepted for a time their
baptism also. But awaay with such blasphemy! The baptism of heretics and
schismatics is not Baaptism. It holds the place of Baptism only when
afterwards by economy the Church validates it. 'One Lord, one Faith, one
Baptism' teaches the Apostle Paul (Eph 4:5). And the Council of Carthage,
approved by the Sixth Ecumenical Council, explains: 'For if the Catholic
Church be one and the true Baptism be one, how can that of the heretics
and schismatics be a true Baptism at a time when they are not in the
Catholic Church but have been cut off from it by heresy? But if the
baptism of heretics and schismatics be true and the Baptism of the
Orthodox Catholic Church also be true, then there is not one Baptism as
Paul proclaims, but two, which is most absurd.'...From the above, it is
cleraly obvious that the Fathers consider the baptism of heretics and
schismatics to be non-existent. When they decide in certain circumstances
not to repeat it, they are not, of course, changing their mind. They are
making an act of economy in which the external and empty baptism of the
schismatic or heretic obtains, upon his entrance into the Church,
content: sanctifying power and grace which he, a man who until then had
been outside of the Church, had never received.'
This was written on November 20, 1583 and signed by Jeremias, of
Constantinople; Sylvester, of Alexandria; Sopohronios, of Jerusalem ( and
the rest of the Bishops of the Synod who were present.) A complete text
is available from St. Nectarios Press: Title, Orthodox and Catholic
Union- The Reply of the Holy Orthodox Church to Roman Catholic Overtures
on Reunion and Ecumenism.

Is that a lack of love or a lapse of Orthopraxia, which I really don't understand your application of. No, Father, I'm being faithful to the Church. Why is it you don't find my fidelity based in the Fathers and Canons as Orthodox and FULLY EXPRESSIVE of love? I am in fidelity to the Patristic Mind, Father. Are uniates apostates? Why is it you would offend an Orthodox brother to please an apostate and a heretic and confirm his error?! Shame on you.

It is obvious that you know very little about our diocese,

Me--My wife was baptized at the ACROD church in Sharon, PA, and her grandfather was the treasurer there and part of the initiative group who returned to Orthodoxy. They knew what they were doing and why, and they also knew what unia was. they also knew what talerhof was and what the magyars and austrians were all about. No, Father, you are out of line.

our Metropolitan and the "duch" of our faithful and their personal struggles to return to the bosom of Holy Orthodoxy after years of captivity in the Unia - the heartache of families torn apart, and the suffering on both sides of the ecclesiatical "fence" Orthodox and Uniate who suffered mercilessly at the hands of the Communists in our homeland.

Me--I'm sure moslems and Buddhists suffered as well, but what part has Orthodoxy with error?! The "Dukh" of the Carpatho Russian faitful was well represented by the piece I sent you, Father. That "Dukh" is HOLY, Father, and is expressed in the witness of such luminaries as St. Maxim Sandovich, who surely doesn't represent spiritual kin to your Metropolitan. That "Dukh" made it clear what the filth of unia is and how it oppressed our people. That you or your Metropolitan would today coddle it is a travesty and unworthy of those people who gave their lives confessing the Orthodox Faith. It is akin to dancing on the graves of the victims of talerhof and spitting in the face of Confessors of Orthodoxy. That is a true breach of Orthopraxia, Father.

I await your response, and extend my hand in love to you, in the true spirit of Orthodox Christianity,

In Christ our Lord,

Fr. Peter Paproski,

Diocesan Webmaster.

Me--As you have seen my response is based in fact and heartache at the languishing of my Orthodox brothers in a place of error. My Cossack ancestors helped rid Ruthenia (The Ukraine) of the scourge of unia and, as such, I am quite sensitive when other groups of our common Russian people are enslaved and/or threatened with a relapse in a land of apostasy which distances one in its pride from the deifying uncreated energies of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ and leaves them dark in sin, slaves to perdition. That, Father, is why the only charity that can be shown to uniates at this stage is akriveia in Canonical observance and expression, definitely not declaring their UNREGENERATE apostate noteables "saints" in the Orthodox Church. Yes, Father, such a black glorification is blasphemy of the Holy Spirit, for such an act maintains that the Holy Spirit unites to Christ those who have rejected Him and His Church and witnesses them to be "holy." That is despicable.

Orthodoxia I Thanatos!
Rostisla Mikhailovich Malleev-Pokrovsky

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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oops, he did it again...

Post by Kollyvas »

From "The Church Messenger," Vol. LXI, 19, MArch, 2006, No. 4, (pp. 1, 5)

Cathedral Hosts Ecumenical Service

Johnstown, Pennsylvania--On Sunday, February 26th, the second of two annual Ecumenical Services in the Greater Johnstown-Altoona area was conducted at Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Johnstown. The first of these services had been celebrated the previous Sunday at Grace Lutheran Church in State College, sponsored by the Allegheny Synod of the Lutheran Church in America.

Rotating among various parishes in the area, the annual services have been conducted for the past twenty years as a co-operative ecumenical effort between the Orthodox, Roman Catholic and Protestant churches of Greater Johnstown-Altoona. The seeds for the ecumenical services were planted when Metropolitan Nicholas and Bishop Joseph Adamec met at a workshop in Alabama. "Of all places for us to meet," laughed Metropolitan Nicholas concerning their meeting in Alabama. He said that, even though we differ in dogma and theology, "we were able to pray together in non-sacramental services and join together in dialogue."

Cathedral Service

Christ the Saviour Cathedral was filled to capacity for the service--the largest such ecumenical gathering in recent years. Joining His Eminence were: Bishop Joseph Adamec of the Catholic Diocese of Altoona-Johnstwon and Bishop Gregory Pile of the Allegheny Synod of the Lutheran Church. A large number of clergy representing all three Churches filled the Cathedral's front pews. Responses to the Ecumenical Service were sung by Christ the Saviour Cathedral Choir, under the direction of Helen Stepanovich. Metropolitan Nicholas offered the following remarks in welcoming everyone to the service:
"Today's service is a co-operative effort of Catholic, Protestant and Orthodox Christians. We gather for public worhip--worship that brings all three traditions together. Both clergy and lay participants are well aware that Christianity has not yet achieved a Eucharistic unity, which is the ultimate unity, and therefore our participation has limitations and involves no sacrament. Nonetheless, even though we differ over dogma and theology, we can still pray together! [Did the Fathers pray together with heretics even though there was no Eucharist?! Why not?! After all differences with arians and nestorians were just a matter of "dogma and doctrine." I wonder if St. Nicholas of Myra would have shared his spiritual namesakes' heretical and demonized, ecclesiological views?! Could it be prayer itself has a Sacramental character?!--R] We can do this because we know that it was the prayer of Christ shortly before His death that all who believe in Him be united. [The demons believed in Him, were they supposed to be united too?! Likewise, those in a spiritual prison to heretical and pridefully blasphemous ideas are called to REPENTANCE AND ORTHODOXY, not confirmed in their error by some inclusion?! This is amnesty for prelest' and apostasy rooted in prelest' and apostasy!!! That is denial of Orthodoxy and is UNWORTHY OF THE MASTER!!! ANAXIOS!!! Christ wills that we BE ONE IN FAITH IN HIM AND THE FATHER AND THE HOLY SPIRIT, not one with Him and those in demonic captivity. St. Paul calls that uniting Christ to a harlot!--R] On this basis, we are confident that in working for Christian unity, [The Church is ONE and Undivided!--R] we are fulfilling the desire and prayer of our Lord. We must remember that any kind of unity is always a power--a positive thing, while disunity is always a negative. [What, was Shirley McClain there too?! Precisely, they are not ONE in the Eucharist and they are disunited by sin and alienated from the Master by demonic pride.--R] The diverse Christian traditions of our area have provided fertile soil for the past 20 years for shared, non-sacramental services. I am grateful for the vision of the bishops present with me today--Bishop Joseph and Bishop Gregory. I am grateful for all of the clergy from so many parishes who have gathered here. We bishops are all especially grateful for the presence and witness of you, the faithful--the "Holy people of God"--who have come together with us to pray, to ask for God's mercy and forgiveness and to seek to know each other better in appreciation of the wealth of rich expression of faith that comes from both the East and the West. The Church has two "lungs"--East and West--but only one "Head": Jesus Christ, Who left His Church in our care. I pray that God grant us the wisdom and discernment as His Christian people to work hard for the "One Faith, One Lord and One Baptism" that Christ speaks of in the Gospel of St. John." [This is blatent branch theory ecclesiology and the most unrefined expression of the heresy of ecumenism available in recent times. This is how they "witness" with "ecumenical dialogue." This hierarch should be suspended and deposed for teaching heresy bareheaded in the Church, a neo-iconoclast of our time.--R]

Homily

Homilist for the Ecumenical Service was the Very Rev. Father Johnathan Tobias, instructor of Ethics and Pastoral Counseling at Christ the Saviour Seminary. "Where two or three are gathered in My Name, there I am in the midst of them," said Father Tobias, reminding the faithful of Christ's promise to the world. "The entire world longs for the presence of Christ. In the midst of sorrow and pain, we all need the presence of Jesus Christ because He brings us peace and beauty." Referring again to the theme of this year's ecumenical gathering, Father Tobias commented that "where two or three are gathered in His Name, He will be there. The Lord didn't say two billion or three billion. "Two or three gathered together" means that Christianity is a faith community and not a private club." [What hubris! Why a need for Orthodoxy at all if it is an "incidental" "private club"?! Every church is "para-church" in an invisible unity of believers, right?! After all, two or three gathered in what they perceive is His name, no matter how lost , constitute the Church by this sectarian betrayal of Orthodox ecclesiology. This is NOT witness but rather apostasy!!!--R]

Following the service, the Cathedral Seniors group provided a social hour for all participants in the Cathedral Auditorium. +

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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A Letter Of Protest To ACROD 04062006

Post by Kollyvas »

To: webmaster@acrod.org

Slava Isusu Khristu!

Evlogeite Pater.

I am including an account from your recent "Church Messenger" with my commentary. I am very disappointed to see the lack of commitment to Orthodoxy of your Metropolia and bring this forward to you in the hopes that you abandon clearly heretical activities and honour the decisions made by Carpatho Russian people to abandon heresies and affirm Holy Orthodoxy as the ONLY TRUE CHURCH. I sincerely doubt the credential and scruples of some in your jurisdiction to offer an alternative to the witness of luminaries such as St. Justin of Chelje or Fr. Georges Florovsky, who expressly condemned the ecclesiological model your Metropolitan espouses as "sectarian." I exhort you to be true to the Faith and renounce this neo-iconoclasm.
Orthodoxia I Thanatos!
Rostislav Mikhailovich Malleev-Pokrovsky

(The account with commentary follows.)

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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Post by joasia »

As a Pole, converted to Orthodoxy...I don't understand why it's so difficult for the Uniates to understand where the Truth is. All they have to do, is look at the history before the Great Schism and see that the Orthodox tradition is the True faith in it's fullness of theology and worship. From the time of Pentecost and onward, the True Church of Christ has been confessed and witnessed. A clear path has been established. It just doesn't make sense to me. Why such blindness?? :ohvey:

Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. (Ps. 50)

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Response

Post by Kollyvas »

(Let us all please pray for everyone suffering under regimes of ecumenism...R)

From: webmaster@acrod.org

Slava Vo Viki!

Dear Mr. Malleev-Pokrovsky

Thank you for your email and sharing your concerns and insights. I ask that you remember our diocese, our Metropolitan Nicholas and me, the unworthy priest of God in your holy prayers. Please be assured of my prayers on your behalf.

Wishing you a blessed and holy celebration of the upcoming Passion Week and a Glorious Pascha,

I remain,

With Love in Christ,

Fr. Peter Paproski

Diocesan Webmaster
...

Love is a holy state of the soul, disposing it to value knowledge of God above all created things. We cannot attain lasting possession of such love while we are attached to anything worldly. —St. Maximos The Confessor

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