April
12,
2013
"One who came to love suffering:" An Article by Archpriest Victor
Potapov on the life of St. Luke of Simferopol
Anyone
who has read A.I Solzhenitsyn’s
Gulag Archipelago or the
works of Shalamov, Solonevitch, and other authors who have written
about horrible pages from the history of Lenin’s and Stalin’s
enslaved Russia can probably call to mind names of gloomy "islands,"
state concentration camp Gulags, such as Turukhansk, Igarka,
Dudinka, and Norilsk...
In 2010, the Lord enabled my matushka and me to spend some time in
those places so permeated with the blood and tears of those who
suffered there. During our four-week long travels down the mighty
Yenisei River, we often called to mind awful pages from the
Gulag Archipelago that
described how hungry, cold, and exhausted people were brought on
barges to the Stalinist camps, while other victims were drowned in
the deep, fast-moving, icy river current.
During that pilgrimage, we collected mementos of the New Martyrs
that had suffered for the Christian Faith. They included several
pebbles from the mass graves in Norilsk, a little barbed wire dating
back to the period, and pieces of the remnants of a wooden bridge
from the town of Dudinka, over which tens of thousands of the
‘repressed’ [i.e. political prisoners] were moved to their places of
incarceration and slave labor.
Among the most famous of the exiles who served terms of
incarceration and exile in the grim area of Karsnoyarsk in the 1920s
and 1930s was Holy Hierarch and surgeon Luke Voino-Yasenetsky.
The pages of Archbishop Luke’s memoirs provide an expressive, almost
pictorial representation of his life in the camps: brutal cold and
hunger were constant companions of the professor-clergyman. But
sufferings did not break this hero of the spirit. On the contrary,
in one of his letters from the time, he wrote that suffering was
something that, not unsurprisingly, cleansed the soul.
Holy Hierarch St. Luke was an unusual person, with an improbable
fate. Everything about his life was extraordinary, and was filled
with paradox.
Archbishop Luke did not perish in a camp, but he passed through
every circle of hell. He was not part of any political opposition;
yet throughout his biography, he was marked as a social outcast. A
physician who wrote scholarly works while incarcerated in a prison
cell, he not only lived to see those works published, but for his
efforts was awarded the Order of Stalin during Stalin's lifetime.
Holy Hierarch St. Luke was a man of boundless faith, unbending will,
and devotion to duty.
The pages of Bishop Luke's memoirs present a very vivid picture of
his life in exile: bitter cold and hunger were the
professor/clergyman's constant companions. Yet, suffering could not
break his noble heart. On the contrary, in one of his letters from
that period, he wrote that he had come to love suffering as
something that, amazingly, cleansed the soul.
Known in the world as Valentin Felixovich Voino-Yasenetsky, he was
born on April 27, 1877 in Kerch, to pharmacist Felix Stanislavovich
and his wife Maria Dmitrievna Voino-Yasenetsky. The future
hierarch’s parents soon moved to Kiev, where in 1896 he graduated
simultaneously from secondary school and from an art school. The
youth manifested artistic talent, and a course permeated and
inspired by religious ideas took shape. Valentin went from church to
church and to the Kiev-Caves Lavra, and made many sketches of people
at prayer, for which he received an award from the art school. He
wanted to enroll in the Art Academy, but a desire to directly help
the people caused him to change his plans.
Valentin Felixovich spent one year studying law, then transferred to
Kiev University's college of medicine, and graduated with honors.
Ignoring his friends' attempts to persuade him to pursue research,
he announced his intention to be a "muzhik" doctor, spending his
life helping the poor.
In January
1904, during the war with Japan, he was sent to the Far East as part
of a Red Cross hospital staff, and worked in the city of Chita, as
director of the hospital’s surgical
division. There he met a nurse named Anna Lansky – whom the wounded
referred to as "the holy sister" – and they married.
From
1905 to 1917, the future hierarch worked
as a local doctor in various district hospitals (in the Simbirsk,
Kursk, Saratov, and Vladimir Administrative Districts) and lived a
happy life. During that period, he performed many surgical
procedures on the brain, eyes, heart, stomach, intestines, bile
ducts, kidneys, spinal vertebrae, joints etc., and introduced many
innovative surgical techniques.
During World War I, religious feelings that had been forgotten in
the great press of scientific work came to the fore, and he began to
regularly attend church.
After the war, the Holy Hierarch was in charge of a hospital in the
Simbirsk Administrative District. There he performed surgery day and
night: ophthalmic surgery, liver and stomach surgery, trepanning of
the skull, and gynecological operations. The remarkable surgeon’s
fame quickly spread. People from other districts would line up
before the hospital gates. On one occasion, he gave sight to a poor
young man who had been born blind. That young man gathered together
blind people from all over the area; holding on to one another’s
sticks, they came in a long line to the hospital.
In
1917, he became the principal physician and surgeon at Tashkent
Hospital, and at the same time taught at
a medical school, which was later reclassified as a college of
medicine.
In October 1919, based on false accusations made against him by a
worker at the hospital morgue, Valentin Felixovich was arrested, and
came very close to being executed. His arrest was a great shock to
his wife, who was sick with tuberculosis; several days later, at the
age of 38, she died, leaving him with four minor children to raise.
After the death of his beloved wife, Valentin found ever greater
consolation in the Faith. He began to attend meetings of the local
Orthodox religious association, studied theology, and established
closer ties with the clergy. As he himself recalled, at a diocesan
meeting he once "...presented a very passionate speech on a certain
important subject." After the meeting, Bishop Innokenty (Pustynsky)
of Tashkent said to him, "Doctor, you need to become a priest."
Vladyka Luke later recollected, "I had not entertained the idea of
[being a priest], but I took the Most-reverend Innokenty’s words as
God’s call, made through the lips of the hierarch, and I did not
spend a minute reflecting on them, but immediately said, "Fine,
Vladyka! I will be a priest if that is pleasing to God!"
Voino-Yasenetsky became a clergyman in 1921, at the very height of
the wave of persecution visited upon the Russian Orthodox Church. He
feared neither impending repression, nor the threats [his
ordination] posed to his quickly and deservedly advancing scientific
career.
On February 7,
1921, he was ordained a deacon. Vladyka Luke recollected:
"Of course this unusual event, the ordination to the diaconate of
someone who had already achieved the high rank of professor, created
an enormous sensation in Tashkent, and a large group of students
from the medical college, along with one of the professors, came to
see me. Of course, they could not understand or evaluate my action,
for they were far estranged from religion. What would have they
understood if I had told them that on my seeing carnivals at which
our Lord Jesus Christ was mocked, my heart loudly cried out, "I
cannot remain silent!" I felt it my duty to preach in defense of our
abused Savior, and to praise His boundless mercy toward humankind."
On the Feast of the Meeting of the Lord, 1921, one week after being
ordained a deacon, Fr. Valentin was ordained to the priesthood.
Soon after the ordination to the priesthood, Tashkent
"people’s prosecutor," a Cheka agent
named Peters, subjected Fr. Valentin Voino-Yasenetsky to a judicial
investigation of a trumped-up matter. Among the questions
posed was the following: "Tell me, pope
[priest] and professor Yasenetsky-Voino, how is it that by night you
pray, and by day, you cut up people? Fr. Valentin replied,
"I cut up people in order to save them;
for what reason do you, citizen people’s prosecutor, cut people?"
… Peters continued: "How is it that you
believe in God, pope and professor Yasenetsky-Voino? Have you
seen Him? Seen your God?" "In truth, I
have not actually seen God, citizen people’s prosecutor," countered
the priest. But I have performed many operations on the brain, and
upon opening the skull, have never seen the mind within it.
Nor have I ever found the conscience there either.
"
In
1923, the wave of renovationism1
reached Tashkent. Diocesan Bishop Innokenty (Pustynsky) left
the city without turning over the episcopal throne to anyone. Then
Fr. Valentin and Archpriest Mikhail Andreev, who was well known in
the city, took upon themselves the task of administering the
diocese. They brought together all of the clergy and church wardens
who had remained faithful to Patriarch Tikhon, and held a
conference. With great determination Voino-Yasenetsky consistently
opposed the Renovationist schism, and resolutely cut off any
attempts by the authorities to turn him into an
"agent within the Church." Thus, he was
of no use to Soviet Russia, and in
1923, his peregrinations through incarcerations and exile began,
continuing with new trials endured in the 1930s and 1940s.
In May
1923, Priest Valentin was tonsured a
monk, and was named after Holy Apostle and Evangelist St. Luke, who,
as is well known, was not only an Apostle, but also a physician and
artist.
On May 12,
1923, Hieromonk Luke was secretly consecrated Bishop of Tashkent and
Turkestan. One month after his
consecration, Bishop Luke was arrested for the first time for his
Faith. In the Tashkent GPU prison he completed his later to be
famous great work, Notes on
Purulent Surgery.
In August 1923, Bishop Luke was sent to the Moscow GPU. In the
Capital, Vladyka was granted the right to live in a private
apartment, and he was able to concelebrate Liturgy with Patriarch
Tikhon.
In Moscow, Bishop Luke was again arrested; soon he was exiled to
Yeniseisk, Siberia. He had to endure the last part of the journey to
Yeniseisk – almost 400 km, in a sled, during the fierce hard frost
of January.
In March 1924, he was once again arrested, and sent into exile in
Turukhansk.
Upon completing his term of exile in 1925, Vladyka returned to
Tashkent, and was once again appointed to the cathedra of Tashkent
and Turkestan.
In
1930, he was again arrested. In 1931, after one year of
incarceration, he was sentenced – without trial – to three years’
exile in Arkhangelsk.
On
December 13,
1937 he was again arrested. In the prison, Vladyka Luke was
subjected to torture for 13 days, with sleep deprivation and demands
that he sign minutes of the interrogations. He declared a hunger
strike that lasted 18 days. Vladyka Luke recollected the following
about his tribulations:
"…The
Yezhov regime was truly horrifying. At the interrogations, those
under arrest were even subjected to torture. They invented something
they called
"conveyor interrogation," which I had to endure twice... The Cheka
interrogators
took turns [working in shifts], and the person being interrogated
was not allowed to sleep, day or night...
…They consistently demanded that I admit to espionage, but in
response I would but ask them to indicate to me the state for which
I was spying. Of course, they could not answer..."
Vladyka Luke’s autobiography records many precious details about his
life in exile The following excerpt from
the Holy Hierarch's recollections will give the reader some idea of
the extremely difficult conditions the exiled hierarch and the other
prisoners had to endure. Vladyka recalled that because of his
resolute adherence to the Faith, one of the servants of the CheKa
came to hate him with such fierce hatred that he succeeded in having
him moved from Turukhansk to the even more remote taiga. In the
village of Plakhino, Vladyka Luke was assigned quarters "...with
two windows; instead of having outer [storm windows], their
exteriors were covered with flat sheets of ice. Cracks in the
windows were left unsealed, and in the corner, the light of day
could be seen through a large gaping crack. There was a snowdrift on
the floor. At the threshold there was a second pile of snow that
never melted. To provide places to sleep at night and to rest during
the day, the peasants had constructed wide sleeping platforms,
covered with deer hides.... It
would be freezing cold when I got up in the morning; there would be
a thick layer of ice in the water bucket. When I sat, warmly
dressed, at the table, I would feel warm above the waist, but would
be cold below the waist."
Under such awful conditions, the bishop-surgeon
continued to treat and perform surgical operations on people.
Upon learning that war with Nazi Germany had begun, Vladyka sent a
telegram to Kalinin, Director of the Presidium of the Supreme Soviet
of the USSR.
"I, Bishop Luke, Professor Voino-Yasenetsky, am serving an exile
under article such-and-such in the settlement of Bolshaya Murta in
the area of Krasnoyarsk. As a specialist in purulent surgery, I
could be of use to the troops at the front or in the rear, wherever
I am entrusted to serve. I ask that my exile be interrupted and I be
sent to a hospital. At the end of the war, I will be ready to return
to exile. Bishop Luke."
His request was granted. During the war, Holy Hierarch St. Luke was
in charge of a hospital surgical division. He personally took on the
most severely ill and most severely wounded, and performed surgery
upon them brilliantly. After the war, he was awarded a medal "For
valiant effort in the Great Patriotic War."
No matter whom he treated, no matter where he treated them, he was
not afraid to sincerely respond to his patients' words of thanks by
saying "It was God Who healed you through my hands. Pray to Him."
The archbishop/surgeon could not tolerate indifference to one’s
medical duty. Vladyka Luke taught his helpers "humane surgery." He
seemed to enter into a personal relationship with each of the
wounded – remembering his face, knowing his name, remembering all of
the details of the operation and post-op recovery period. Vladyka
was widely known for saying, "For a surgeon, there must not be an
’instance,’ but only a living, suffering person. "
Once, upon learning of a sick person’s death, Bishop Luke demanded a
detailed account of everything that had been done for the patient.
The doctor began to recite a list of medications prescribed, but
then with a wave of his hand, stopped himself, saying, "What is
there to talk about here! The patient was doomed in any case…"
Doomed? The stately, always unperturbed Bishop Luke literally
exploded. "You had no right to stop fighting for the sick patient’s
life! You do not even have the right to think about failure! You
just [have to] do everything that is necessary! To do everything, do
you hear?!"
In January 1944, Vladyka was appointed Archbishop of Tambov and
Michurinsk, while also continuing to do his medical work; he was in
charge of 150 hospitals!
In May 1946, Vladyka Luke was appointed to the cathedra
of Simferopol and Crimea. However, Archbishop Luke’s long years
of imprisonment and exile, the rigors and sequel of things he
experienced throughout his difficult life took a toll on his health.
He began to lose his sight, and his heart began to fail more and
more.
As long as he retained his sight, Vladyka
tried to serve the Liturgy every day. He continued to serve even
after he had gone completely blind. Vladyka’s ascetic struggle was
amazing. After all, he was burdened not only by blindness, but by
diabetes and attendant severe weakness, so that all of his vestments
would be wet [with perspiration]; moreover, his legs were afflicted
with thrombophlebitis and gout. Before each service, he had to
re-bandage his legs.
It was during his administration of the Crimea Diocese that Vladyka
Luke delivered most of his homilies. He had begun to preach in
Tashkent, but for many years, because of his arrests and exiles, had
had to remain silent. However, from the Spring of 1943, when a
church was opened in Krasnoyarsk, and until the end of his life,
Archbishop Luke preached tirelessly. He composed instructional
materials, spoke them aloud, made necessary corrections, and
disseminated printed brochures of his instructions in cities
throughout the land. He would say, "I consider it my principal
hierarchical duty to preach Christ everywhere." Over the course of
38 years of priestly service, Vladyka Luke delivered 1,250 homilies.
Vladyka called upon the clergy of his diocese to constantly proclaim
the Word of God:
"If a priest has made it the principal work of his life to fill his
mind and heart with Christ’s teachings,
the overabundance in his heart will cause his lips to speak. And his
homily need not be a work of oratory. The Holy Spirit, living in the
priest’s heart as in Its own temple, will preach through his humble
lips." (From an encyclical issued
in June 1955)
He openly and fearlessly spoke his mind on current issues:
"...In prior days, the Church was in the hands of the government, of
the Tsar, and the Tsar was religious, and built churches. Today,
there is no such government. Our government is atheist, unbelieving.
We are left with a handful of faithful believing Russian people, and
the others tolerate lawlessness... You will say that the government
has done you Christians harm. Well, yes, it has. But remember
days of old, when rivers of Christian
blood were spilled for our Faith. It only strengthened the Christian
Faith. This is all from God."
In a homily delivered on November 9, 1947, Vladyka strove to console
the faithful people suffering at the hands of the atheists, and he
predicted the future easing of their woes:
"If you were to ask me when these deprivations will come to an end
and when life will be good, I would tell you that the past thirty
years are an insignificant span. It will be many decades before our
life is entirely normal."
As is known, under Khrushchev, another campaign against the Church
was announced. There followed a new rush of anti-religious
propaganda. At the onset of the Khrushchev persecutions, Holy
Hierarch St. Luke addressed a homily to his bewildered and
frightened flock:
"Fear not, little flock..." That was the
title of his homily preached on the Feast of the Protection of the
Most-holy Theotokos in 1954. "Everywhere and in all places,
despite the success of atheist propaganda, Christ’s little flock has
endured, and continues to endure. You,
you, all of you who are listening to me, are the little flock. And
know and believe that Christ’s little flock is invincible, that
nothing can be done to it, that it fears nothing, because it knows
and always treasures Christ’s great words, "I will build My
Church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it...”
(Matthew 16:18). So if even the gates of
hell shall not prevail against His Church, why should we be
troubled, why should we worry, why should we be sorrowful?! There is
no cause, no cause! Christ’s little flock, Christ’s true flock, is
unassailable by any kind of propaganda."
What enormous courage, what solid faith and unquestionable hope in
God's help did it take to tell people the truth in the midst of a
torrent of lies, cynicism, and lack of faith!
Toward the end of his life, on February 15, 1954, the 30th
anniversary of his ordination to the diaconate, the holy hierarch
St. Luke said,
"My thirty-year long journey was
difficult and thorny, but at the same time it was also a remarkably
blessed one. God’s grace was with me along the way, and my path was
illumined by the light of Christ. And it is a joy for me, a very
great joy, to have traveled that path. It was a great act of
kindness done by God for me. I consider the difficult years of
priesthood, soon followed by my service as a bishop, not as
burdensome, but as the most blessed, best, happiest, years of my
life."
On
June 11, 1961, the feast day of All Saints in the Russian Land, and
at the age of 84, Archbishop Luke reposed. For three days, an
unending wave of people came to the coffin of their Vladyka and
physician, and at his funeral, the procession stretched out for 3
kilometers. Soon after Holy Hierarch St. Luke's blessed repose,
reports began to surface of many sick people receiving healing after
coming to pray at his grave.
By a decision of the Synod of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church in
November 1995, Archbishop Luke was glorified as a locally-venerated
Saint. On March 20, 1996, Holy Hierarch St. Luke’s relics were
uncovered in Simferopol, and were transferred to the Holy Trinity
Cathedral
In August 2000, the Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox
Church canonized St. Luke for veneration as a Saint throughout the
Church.
The holy hieroconfessor St. Luke Voino-Yasenetsky was a precious
vessel of Divine grace. Like his heavenly patron, the Holy Apostle
St. Luke, he was a physician and a furtherer of Apostolic work. Like
St. Paul, he preached Christ's salvific word not only in church, but
in prison, and in exile, and to both friends and persecutors alike.
He was one of those exceptionally important people who are incapable
of doing something merely for themselves alone, incapable of
limiting themselves to doing what they like. For them, the duty of
serving one's neighbor is not an empty phrase. Accordingly, they do
not make random choices in pursuing their activities, and do not
build on others' foundations, but instead strive to discover what
has to be done here and now, and what will be useful to all society.
These are builders, workers who bravely enter the field of life in
response to the Lord’s call. With the ten talents given them by God,
they produce another ten. And that is a realized Gospel model for
all of us pastors of the Church.
Archpriest Victor Potapov
(Presented on April 2, 2013 at Holy Trinity Monastery, Jordanville,
NY at the annual Pastoral Retreat of the Eastern American Diocese of
the Russian Church Abroad).
1. Renovationism
–
a schismatic movement that officially appeared after
the February Revolution of 1917. Its declared goals were
democratization of the administration and modernizations of Divine
Services. It stood in opposition Patriarch Tikhon’s administration
of the Church.
From 1922 to 1926, the movement was the sole Orthodox Church
organization officially recognized by the government authorities of
the RSFSR. When the Renovationist Movement was at its most
influential – during the mid-1920s - more than half of the Russian
episcopate and parishes were subject to the Renovationist
administrative structure.
2.
In
May
1923,
the exiled Bishop Andrey (Ukhtomsky) of Ufa arrived in Tashkent,
having recently met with Patriarch Tikhon, by whom he was appointed
Bishop of Tomsk and given the right to elect candidates to the
episcopacy and consecrate them in secret.
Soon
after,
Valentin
Felixovich was tonsured a monk in his own bedroom with the name
Luke, and then named Bishop of Barnaul, vicar of the Tomsk Diocese.
Inasmuch as two or three bishops are required for a valid episcopal
consecration, Valentin Felixovitch traveled to the city of
Panjakent, close to Samarkand, where two hierarchs lived in exile –
Daniel (Troitsky), Bishop of Volkhovo, and the Bishop of Suzdal. The
consecration of Archbishop Luke with the title Bishop of Barnaul
took place on May 31, 1923, and, when informed of it, Patriarch
Tikhon declared it valid.
Literary sources:
Popovsky,
Mark.
The Life and Vita of
Voino-Yasenetsky, Archbishop and Surgeon.
–
Paris: YMCA-Press. 1979.
Voino-Yasenetsky, V.F. (Archbishop Luke).
I Came to Love Suffering...
An Autobiography.
–
Moscow: Publication of the Sisterhood of Holy Hierarch St. Ignaty of
Stavropol. 2008.
Lisichkin,
Vladimir.
Luke, Beloved Physician.
–
Moscow: Publications Council of the Russian Orthodox
Church. 2009.
Maruschak, Vasily.
Holy Hierarch and Surgeon. Vita of Archbishop Voino-Yasenetsky.
Moscow: Danilovsky Herald. 1997.
Shevchenko, Priest Georgi.
Greetings from Holy Hierarch
St. Luke, Beloved Physician.
–
St Petersburg: Nauka. 2009.
Gluschenkov, Vladimir.
Holy Hierarch St. Luke – A
Look Into the Future / With the Blessing of Most-holy Patriarch
Alexey II of Moscow and All Russia.
–
Poltava Diocese: Holy Transfiguration Mgara Monastery. 2002.
Lisichkin, V.A.
Holy Hierarch St. Luke’s
Path to the Cross.
–
Moscow: Publication of the Moscow Patriarchate. 2001.
Media Office of the Eastern American Diocese