Difference between revisions of "Benjamin (Kazansky) of Petrograd"

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The Venerable hieromartyr [[Metropolitan]] '''Benjamin (Kazansky) of Petrograd and Gdovsk''' headed the [[Eparchy of St. Petersburg]] as the Bolsheviks assumed power in Russia and was executed by them for his firm defense of the Church against the Renovated (Living Church) Church and for his stand against the requisition of the church valuables by the Bolsheviks.  Benjamin is remembered on [[July 31]] along with his fellow [[martyr]]s [[Archimandrite]] Sergius (Shein), and laymen George Novitsky, and John Kovsharov.  
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The Venerable hieromartyr [[Metropolitan]] '''Benjamin (Kazansky) of Petrograd and Gdov''' headed the [[Eparchy of St. Petersburg]] as the Bolsheviks assumed power in Russia and was executed by them for his firm defense of the Church against the Renovated Church (Living Church) and for his stand against the requisition of the church valuables by the Bolsheviks.  Benjamin is remembered on [[July 31]] along with his fellow [[martyr]]s [[Archimandrite]] Sergius (Shein), and laymen George Novitsky, and John Kovsharov.  
  
 
==Life==
 
==Life==
Vasily Pavlovich Kazansky was born into a family of a rural [[priest]] in the Olonets Gubernia in 1874. He attended the Petrozavodsk Theological [[Seminary]] before graduating from the [[St. Petersburg Theological Academy[[. In 1895, he was [[tonsure]]d a [[monk]] with the name Benjamin.  
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Basil Pavlovich Kazansky (Василий Павлович Казанский) was born into a family of a rural [[priest]] in the Nimensky in the Olonets Province about 1874. He attended the Petrozavodsk Theological [[Seminary]] before entering [[St. Petersburg Theological Academy]] in 1893. In 1895, he was [[tonsure]]d a [[monk]] with the name Benjamin and [[ordination|ordained]] a deacon. In 1896, he was ordained a priest.
  
After graduating in 1897, he began teaching at the Riga Theological Seminary before, first, being appointed Inspector of the Kholmsk Theological Seminary in 1898 and then to the same position at the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary in 1899. In 1902, he was appointed [[Rector]] of the Samara Theological Seminary before he returned to the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary as its Rector in 1905.  
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After graduating in 1897, he began teaching at the Riga Theological Seminary before, first, being appointed Inspector of the Kholm Theological Seminary in 1898 and then to the same position at the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary in 1899. In 1902, he was appointed [[Rector]] of the Samara Theological Seminary with the rank of [[archimandrite]] before he returned to the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary as its Rector in 1905.  
  
On [[January 10]], 1910, he was elected to [[Bishop]] of Gdovsk, [[vicar]] of the Eparchy of St. Petersburg, and became involved in charitable activities in the eparchy including organizing the establishment of the Mother of God for the Care of Abandoned Women. In March 1917, Bp. Benjamin was appointed [[Archbishop]] of Petrograd and Ladoga. In August, he was named Metropolitan of Petrograd and Ladoga and then, in 1918, Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdovsk.   
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On [[January 24]], 1910, he was elected [[Bishop]] of Gdovsk, [[vicar]] of the Diocese of St. Petersburg, and became involved in charitable activities in the diocese including organizing the establishment of the Mother of God for the Care of Abandoned Women. In March 1917, Bp. Benjamin was elected [[Archbishop]] of Petrograd and Ladoga, replacing [[Gregory Efimovich Rasputin |Rasputin’s]] appointee, Metr. Pitirim. In August, he was named Metropolitan of Petrograd and Ladoga and named also to the [[Holy Synod]] by the [[All-Russian Church Council of 1917-1918|Local Church Council]]. Then, on [[January 26]], 1918, he was appointed [[abbot]] of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra and named Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdovsk.   
  
In 1921, when the Bolshevik government began a campaign of confiscating Church valuables for the purported purpose of buying food for the starving population, Metr. Benjamin did not protest as he believed it his duty to save people’s lives, but he wanted this sacrifice to be voluntary and under the control of the Church. While the Communist press in Petrograd at the time praised his position, the Bolshevik hierarchy did not approve and continued to confiscate the valuables. On [[March 24]], 1922, twelve priests, who later became part of the pro-Bolshevik Living Church movement, called for the unconditional surrender of all Church valuables. While his [[clergy]] were outraged at the position of the twelve, Metr. Benjamin tried to calm his priests so as to avoid a confrontation with the Bolshevik authorities. For a time an agreement worked to allow substitution of other property of equal value, but members of the twelve objected and attempted to gain control of the Church from [[Patriarch]] [[Tikhon of Moscow|Tikhon]] and his bishops, a move that Metr. Benjamin refused to allow. Refusing to accept this threat, Metr. Benjamin declared that Vvedensky, their leader, was outside the Church and published this decree in the newspapers.  
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In 1921, when the Bolshevik government began a campaign of confiscating Church valuables for the purported purpose of buying food for the starving population, Metr. Benjamin did not protest as he believed it his duty to save people’s lives, but he wanted this sacrifice to be voluntary and under the control of the Church. While the Communist press in Petrograd at the time praised his position, the Bolshevik hierarchy did not approve and continued to confiscate the valuables. On [[March 24]], 1922, twelve priests, who later became part of the pro-Bolshevik Living Church movement, called for the unconditional surrender of all Church valuables. While his [[clergy]] were outraged at the position of the twelve, Metr. Benjamin tried to calm his priests so as to avoid a confrontation with the Bolshevik authorities. For a time an agreement worked to allow substitution of other property of equal value, but members of the twelve objected and attempted to gain control of the Church from [[Patriarch]] [[Tikhon of Moscow|Tikhon]] and his bishops, a move that Metr. Benjamin refused to allow. Refusing to accept this threat, Metr. Benjamin declared that [[Alexander Ivanovich Vvedensky|Vvedensky]], their leader, was outside the Church and published this decree in the newspapers.  
  
 
Having refused to rescind the decree, Metr. Benjamin was arrested and placed into prison. He, with other clergy and friends, was placed on trial. After a trial of two weeks, during which many witnesses were called both in accusation and defense, the defendants were found guilty. Recognizing that any pleas that he may offer would be useless, the defense attorney addressed the the court declaring, “Political considerations come first with you, and all verdicts must favor your policy.”   
 
Having refused to rescind the decree, Metr. Benjamin was arrested and placed into prison. He, with other clergy and friends, was placed on trial. After a trial of two weeks, during which many witnesses were called both in accusation and defense, the defendants were found guilty. Recognizing that any pleas that he may offer would be useless, the defense attorney addressed the the court declaring, “Political considerations come first with you, and all verdicts must favor your policy.”   
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{{succession|
 
{{succession|
 
before=?|
 
before=?|
title=Bishop of Gdovsk (vicar)|
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title=Bishop of Gdov (vicar)|
 
years=1910–1917|
 
years=1910–1917|
 
after=?}}
 
after=?}}
 
{{succession|
 
{{succession|
before=Pitirim (Oknov)|
+
before=[[Pitirim (Oknov)]]|
 
title=Metropolitan of Petrograd and Ladoga|
 
title=Metropolitan of Petrograd and Ladoga|
 
years=1917–1918|
 
years=1917–1918|
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{{succession|
 
{{succession|
 
before=—|
 
before=—|
title=Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdovsk|
+
title=Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdov|
 
years=1918–1922|
 
years=1918–1922|
after=Joseph (Petrovyh)}}
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after=[[Joseph (Petrovyh)]]}}
 
{{end box}}
 
{{end box}}
  
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*[http://www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804009546  Veniamin (Kazansky), Venerable Martyr, Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdov]
 
*[http://www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804009546  Veniamin (Kazansky), Venerable Martyr, Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdov]
 
*[http://www.holy-trinity.org/feasts/newmartyrs-canonization.html  Proclamation of the Holy Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church]
 
*[http://www.holy-trinity.org/feasts/newmartyrs-canonization.html  Proclamation of the Holy Council of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church]
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*[http://www.monasterypress.com/russiangolgotha.html  A PDF file at: Monastery Press, The Russian Golgotha, Chapter 8, Benjamin, Metropolitan of Petrograd]
  
 
==External link==
 
==External link==
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[[Category:Saints]]
 
[[Category:Saints]]
 
[[Category:Russian Saints]]
 
[[Category:Russian Saints]]
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[[Category:Modern Saints]]
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[[Category:Martyrs]]
 
[[Category:Bishops]]
 
[[Category:Bishops]]
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[[Category:Bishops of Saint Petersburg]]
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[[Category:Bishops of Gdov]]
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[[Category:20th-century bishops]]
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[[Category:20th-century saints]]

Latest revision as of 02:19, December 5, 2012

The Venerable hieromartyr Metropolitan Benjamin (Kazansky) of Petrograd and Gdov headed the Eparchy of St. Petersburg as the Bolsheviks assumed power in Russia and was executed by them for his firm defense of the Church against the Renovated Church (Living Church) and for his stand against the requisition of the church valuables by the Bolsheviks. Benjamin is remembered on July 31 along with his fellow martyrs Archimandrite Sergius (Shein), and laymen George Novitsky, and John Kovsharov.

Life

Basil Pavlovich Kazansky (Василий Павлович Казанский) was born into a family of a rural priest in the Nimensky in the Olonets Province about 1874. He attended the Petrozavodsk Theological Seminary before entering St. Petersburg Theological Academy in 1893. In 1895, he was tonsured a monk with the name Benjamin and ordained a deacon. In 1896, he was ordained a priest.

After graduating in 1897, he began teaching at the Riga Theological Seminary before, first, being appointed Inspector of the Kholm Theological Seminary in 1898 and then to the same position at the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary in 1899. In 1902, he was appointed Rector of the Samara Theological Seminary with the rank of archimandrite before he returned to the St. Petersburg Theological Seminary as its Rector in 1905.

On January 24, 1910, he was elected Bishop of Gdovsk, vicar of the Diocese of St. Petersburg, and became involved in charitable activities in the diocese including organizing the establishment of the Mother of God for the Care of Abandoned Women. In March 1917, Bp. Benjamin was elected Archbishop of Petrograd and Ladoga, replacing Rasputin’s appointee, Metr. Pitirim. In August, he was named Metropolitan of Petrograd and Ladoga and named also to the Holy Synod by the Local Church Council. Then, on January 26, 1918, he was appointed abbot of the Alexander Nevsky Lavra and named Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdovsk.

In 1921, when the Bolshevik government began a campaign of confiscating Church valuables for the purported purpose of buying food for the starving population, Metr. Benjamin did not protest as he believed it his duty to save people’s lives, but he wanted this sacrifice to be voluntary and under the control of the Church. While the Communist press in Petrograd at the time praised his position, the Bolshevik hierarchy did not approve and continued to confiscate the valuables. On March 24, 1922, twelve priests, who later became part of the pro-Bolshevik Living Church movement, called for the unconditional surrender of all Church valuables. While his clergy were outraged at the position of the twelve, Metr. Benjamin tried to calm his priests so as to avoid a confrontation with the Bolshevik authorities. For a time an agreement worked to allow substitution of other property of equal value, but members of the twelve objected and attempted to gain control of the Church from Patriarch Tikhon and his bishops, a move that Metr. Benjamin refused to allow. Refusing to accept this threat, Metr. Benjamin declared that Vvedensky, their leader, was outside the Church and published this decree in the newspapers.

Having refused to rescind the decree, Metr. Benjamin was arrested and placed into prison. He, with other clergy and friends, was placed on trial. After a trial of two weeks, during which many witnesses were called both in accusation and defense, the defendants were found guilty. Recognizing that any pleas that he may offer would be useless, the defense attorney addressed the the court declaring, “Political considerations come first with you, and all verdicts must favor your policy.”

On July 5, the chairman of the Petrograd Provincial Revolutionary Tribunal announced that Metr. Benjamin and nine other defendants would be shot. Having been shaved and dressed in rags so that their identity as clergy was not evident, Metr. Benjamin, Archimandrite Sergius, George Novitsky, and John Kovsharov were summarily murdered on July 31, 1922.

In April 1992, the Holy Council of the Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church recognized that Metr. Benjamin and his companions are numbered among the holy martyrs. The celebration of their feasts is July 31.

Succession box:
Benjamin (Kazansky) of Petrograd
Preceded by:
?
Bishop of Gdov (vicar)
1910–1917
Succeeded by:
?
Preceded by:
Pitirim (Oknov)
Metropolitan of Petrograd and Ladoga
1917–1918
Succeeded by:
Preceded by:
Metropolitan of Petrograd and Gdov
1918–1922
Succeeded by:
Joseph (Petrovyh)
Help with box



Sources

External link