Venerable Herman of
Alaska, Wonderworker of All America
Troparion in Tone 7
O joyful north star of the Church
of Christ,
Guiding all men to the Heavenly Kingdom;
Teacher and apostle of the true faith;
Intercessor and defender of the oppressed.
Adornment of the Orthodox Church in America,
Blessed Father Herman of Alaska,
Pray to our Lord Jesus Christ
For the salvation of our souls!
Troparion in Tone 4
O blessed Father Herman of
Alaska,
North star of Christ's holy Church,
The light of your holy life and great deeds
Guides those who follow the Orthodox way.
Together we lift high the Holy Cross
You planted firmly in America.
Let all behold and glorify Jesus Christ,
Singing his holy Resurrection.
Kontakion in Tone 3
The eternal light of Christ our
Savior,
Guided you, O blessed father Herman,
On your evangelical journey to America,
Proclaiming the Gospel of peace.
Now you stand before the throne of Glory;
Intercede for your land and its people
Peace for the world and salvation for our souls!
In 1793 a spiritual mission was
organized by the monks of the Valaam Monastery. Monks were sent to preach
the Word of God to the native inhabitants of northwestern America, who but
ten years before had begun to come under the sovereignty of Russia. The Monk
Herman was among the members of this Mission.
Herman came from a family of merchants
of Serpukhov, a city of the Moscow Diocese. His name before he was tonsured,
and his family name are not known. (The monastic name is given when a monk
takes his vows). He had a great zeal for piety from youth, and at sixteen he
entered monastic life. (This was in 1772, if we assume that Herman was born
in 1756, although sometimes 1760 is given as the date of his birth.) First
he entered the Trinity-Sergius Hermitage which was located near the Gulf of
Finland on the Peterhof Road, about 15 versts (about 10 miles) from St.
Petersburg.
The Miraculous Healing of Herman
At the St Sergius Hermitage there occurred
the following incident to Father Herman. On the right side of his throat
under his chin there appeared an abscess. The swelling grew rapidly,
disfiguring his face. It became difficult for him to swallow, and the odor
was unbearable. In this critical condition Father Herman awaited death. He
did not appeal to a physician of this world, but locking his cell he fell
before an Icon of the Queen of Heaven. With fervent tears he
prayed, asking of Her that he might be healed. He prayed the whole night.
Then he took a wet towel and with it wiped the face of the Most Holy Mother,
and with this towel he covered the swelling. He continued to pray with tears
until he fell asleep from sheer exhaustion on the floor. In a dream he saw
the Virgin Mary healing him.
When Herman awoke in the morning, he
found to his great surprise that he was fully healed. The swelling had
disappeared, even though the abscess had not broken through, leaving behind
but a small mark as though a reminder of the miracle. Physicians to whom
this healing was described did not believe it, arguing that it was necessary
for the abscess to have either broken through of its own accord or to have
been cut open. But the words of the physicians were the words of human
experience, for where the grace of God operates there the order of nature is
overcome. Such occurrences humble human reason under the strong hand of
God's Mercy.
Herman's Life at Valaam
For five or six years Father Herman
continued to live in the St Sergius Hermitage, and then he transferred to
the Valaam Monastery, which was widely scattered on the large islands in the
waters of the great Lake Ladoga. He came to love the Valaam haven with all
his soul, as he came to love its unforgettable Superior, the pious Elder
Nazary, and all the brethren. He wrote to Father Nazary later from America,
"Your fatherly goodness to me, humble one, will be erased out of my heart
neither by the terrible, unpassable Siberian lands, nor by the dark forests.
Nor will it be wiped out by the swift flow of the great rivers; nor will the
awful ocean quench these feelings. In my mind I imagine my beloved Valaam,
looking to it beyond the great ocean."
He praised the Elder Nazary in his
letters as, "the most reverend, and my beloved father." (Batushka) and the
brethren of Valaam he called, "my beloved and dearest." The place where he
lived in America, deserted Spruce Island, he called "Now Valaam." And as we
can see, he always remained in spiritual contact with his spiritual
homeland', for as late as 1823, that is after thirty years of his life
within the borders of America, he wrote letters to the successor of Father
Nazary, the Igumen Innocent.
Father Varlaam, later igumen of
Valaam, and a contemporary of Father Herman, who accepted his tonsure from
Father Nazary, wrote thus of the life of Father Herman.
"Father Herman went through the
various obediences here, and being ‘well disposed toward every thing’ was in
the course of events sent to Serdobol to oversee there the work of quarrying
marble. The Brothers loved Father Herman, and awaited impatiently his return
to the cloisters from Serdobol. Recognizing the zeal of the young hermit the
wise elder, Father Nazary, released him to take abode in the wilderness.
This wilderness was in the deep forest about a mile from the cloister: to
this day this place has retained the name 'Herman's.' On holy days, Father
Herman returned to the monastery from the wilderness. Then it was that at
Little Vespers he would stand in the choir and sing in his pleasant tenor
the responses with the brethren from the Canon, 'O Sweetest Jesus, save us
sinners. Most Holy Theotokos, Save us,' and tears would fall like hail from
his eyes."
The First Mission to America
In the second half of the 18th century the borders of Holy Russia expanded
to the north. In those years Russian merchants discovered the Aleutian
Islands which formed in the Pacific Ocean a chain from the eastern shares of
Kamchatka to the western shares of North America. With the opening of these
islands there was revealed the sacred necessity to illumine with the light
of the Gospel the native inhabitants. With the blessing of the Holy Synod,
Metropolitan Gabriel gave to the eider Nazary the task of selecting capable
persons from the brethren of Valaam for this holy endeavor. Ten men were
selected, and among them was Father Herman.
The chosen men left Valaam for the
place of their great appointment in 1793. (The members of this historical
mission were: Archimandrite Joseph (Bolotoff), the Hieromonks, Juvenaly,
Makary, Athanasy, Stephan and Nektary, Hierodeacons, Nektary and Stephan,
and the Monks Josaph, and Herman.)
As a result of the holy zeal of the
preachers the light of the evangelic sermon quickly poured out among the
sons of Russia, and several thousand pagans accepted Christianity. A school
for the education of newly-baptized children was organized, and a church was
built at the place where the missionaries lived. But by the inscrutable
providence of God the general progress of the mission was unsatisfactory.
After five years of very productive labor, Archimandrite Josaph, who had
just been elevated to the rank of bishop, was drowned with his party. (This
occurred on the Pacific Ocean been Kamchatka and the Aleutian Islands.
The ship, Phoenix, one of the first
sea-going ships built in Alaska, sailed from Okhotsk carrying the first
Bishop for the American Mission and his party. The Phoenix was caught in one
of the many storms which periodically sweep the northern Pacific, and the
ship and all hands perished together with Bishop Josaph and his party.)
Before this the zealous Hieromonk Juvenaly was granted the martyr's crown.
The others died one after another until in the end only Father Herman
remained. The Lord permitted him to labor longer than any of his brethren in
the apostolic task of enlightening the Aleutians.
The New Valaam - Spruce Island
In America Father Herman chose as his place of habitation Spruce Island,
which he called New Valaam. This island is separted by a strait about a mile
and a quarter wide from Kodiak Island on which had been built a wooden
monastery for the residence of the members of the mission, and a wooden
church dedicated to the Resurrection of the Savior. (New Valaam was named
for Valaam on Lake Ladoga, the monastery from which Father Herman came to
America. It is interesting to note that Valaam is also located on an island,
although, this island is in a fresh water lake, whereas, Spruce Island is on
the Pacific Ocean, although near other islands and the Alaskan mainland.)
Spruce Island is not large, and is
almost completely covered by a forest. Almost through its middle a small
brook flows to the sea. Herman selected this picturesque island for the
location of his hermitage. He dug a cave out of the ground with his own
hands, and in it he lived his first full summer. For winter there was built
for him a cell near the cave, in which he lived until his death. The cave
was converted by him into a place for his burial. A wooden chapel, and a
wooden house to be used as a schoolhouse and a guest house were built not
too distant from his cell. A garden was laid out in front of his cell. For
more than forty years Father Herman lived here.
Father Herman's Way of Life
Father Herman himself spaded the garden, planted potatoes and cabbage and
various vegetables in it. For winter, he preserved mushrooms, salting or
drying them. The salt was obtained by him from ocean water. It is said that
a wicker basket in which the Elder carried seaweed from the shore, was so
large that it was difficult for one person to carry. The seaweed was used
for fertilizing the soil. But to the astonishment of all, Father Herman
carried a basket filled with seaweed for a long distance without any help at
all. By chance his disciple, Gerasim, saw him one winter night carrying a
large log which normally would be carried by four men; and he was bare
footed. Thus worked the Elder, and everything that he acquired as a result
of his immeasurable labors was used for the feeding and clothing of orphans
and also for books for his students.

His clothes were the same for winter as for summer. He did not wear a shirt;
instead he wore a smock of deer skin, which he did not take off for several
years at a time, nor did he change it, so that the fur in it was completely
worn away, and the leather became glossy. Then there were his boots or
shoes, cassock (podrasnik), an ancient and faded out cassock (riasa) full of
patchwork, and his headdress (klobuk). He went everywhere in these clothes,
and at all times; in the rain, in snowstorms, and during the coldest
freezing weather. In this, Father Herman followed the example of many
Eastern Ascetic Fathers and Monks who showed the greatest concern for the
welfare and needs of others. Yet, they themselves wore the oldest possible
clothes to show their great humility before God, and their contempt for
worldly things.
A small bench covered with a time-worn deerskin served as Father Herman's
bed. He used two bricks for a pillow; these were hidden from visitors by a
skin or a shirt. There was no blanket. Instead, he covered himself with a
wooden board which lay on the stove. This board Father Herman, himself
called his blanket, and he willed that it be used to cover his remains; it
was as long as he was tall. "During my stay in the cell of Father Herman,"
writes the creole Constantine Larionov, "I, a sinner, sat on his
'blanket'-and I consider this the acme of my fortune!" ('creole' is the name
by which the Russians referred to the children of mixed marriages of native
Indians of Alaska, Eskimo and Aleuts with Russians.)
On the occasions when Father Herman was the guest of administrators of the
American Company and in the course of their soul-saving talks he sat up with
them until midnight. He never spent the night with them, but regardless of
the weather he always returned to his hermitage. If for some extraordinary
reason it was necessary for him to spend the night away from his cell, then
in the morning the bed which had been prepared for him would be found
untouched; the Elder not having slept at all. The same was true in his
hermitage where having spent the night in talks, he never rested.
The Elder ate very little. As a guest, he scarcely tasted the food, and
remained without dinner. In his call his dinner consisted of a very small
portion of a small fish or some vegetables.
His body, emaciated as a result of his labors, his vigils, and fasting, was
crushed by chains which weighed about sixteen pounds. These chains are kept
to this day in the chapel.
Telling of these deeds of Father Herman, his disciple, the Aleut lgnaty
Aligyaga, added, "Yes, Apa led a very hard life, and no one can imitate his
life!" (Apa, Aleutian word means eider or grandfather, and it is a name
indicative of the great affection in which he was held).
Our writing of the incidents in the life of the Elder deal, so to speak,
with the external aspects of his labor. "His most important works," says the
Bishop Peter, "were his exercises in spiritual endeavor in his isolated cell
where no one saw him, but outside the cell they heard him singing and
celebrating services to God according to the monastic rule." This witness of
the Bishop is supported by the following answers of Father Herman, himself,
"How do you manage to live alone in the forest, Father Herman? Don't you
ever become lonesome?" He answered, "No I am not there alone! God is here,
as God is everywhere. The Holy Angels are there. With whom is it better to
talk, with people, or with Angels? Most certainly with Angels."
FATHER HERMAN AND THE NATIVES
The way in which Father Herman looked upon the natives of America, how he
understood his own relations with them, and how he was concerned for their
needs he expressed himself in one of his letters to the former administrator
of the colony, Simeon Yanovsky.
He wrote, "Our Creator granted to our beloved homeland this land which like
a newly-born babe does not yet have the strength for knowledge or
understanding. It requires not only protection, because of its infantile
weakness and impotence, but also his sustenance. Even for this it does not
yet have the ability to make an appeal on its own behalf. And since the
welfare of this nation by the Providence of God, it is not known for how
long, is dependent on and has been entrusted into the hands of the Russian
government which has now been given into your own power, therefore I, the
most humble servant of these people, and their nurse (nyanka) stand before
you in their behalf, write this petition with tears of blood. Be our Father
and our Protector. Certainly we do not know how to be eloquent, so with an
inarticulate infant's tongue we say:
"Wipe away the
tears of the defenseless orphans, cool the hearts melting away in the fire of sorrow. Help us to
know what consolation means."
The Elder acted the way he felt. He always interceded before the governors
in behalf of those who had transgressed. He defended those who had been
offended. He helped those who were in need with whatever means he had
available. The Aleuts, men, women and children, often visited him. Some
asked for advice, others complained of oppression, others sought out
defense, and still others desired help. Each one received the greatest
possible satisfaction from the Elder. He discussed their mutual
difficulties, and he tried to settle these peacefully. He was especially
concerned about reestablishing understanding in families. If he did not
succeed in reconciling a husband and wife, the Elder prevailed upon them to
separate temporarily. The need for such a procedure he explained thus, "it
is better to let them live apart, or believe me, it can be terrible if they
are not separated. There have been incidents when a husband killed his wife,
or when a wife destroyed her husband."
Father Herman especially loved children. He made large quantities of
biscuits for them, and he baked cookies (krendelki) for them; and the
children were fond of the Elder. Father Herman's love for the Aleuts reached
the point of self-denial.
AN EPIDEMIC STRIKES
A ship from the United States brought to Sitka Island, and from there to
Kodiak Island, a contagious disease, a fatal illness. It began with a fever,
a heavy cold, and difficult respiration, and it ended with chills; in three
days the victim died. On the island there was neither a doctor nor medicine.
The illness spread rapidly through the village, and then throughout the
nearby areas. The disease affected all, even infants. The fatalities were so
great that for three days there was no one to dig graves, and the bodies
remained unburied. An eyewitness said, "I cannot imagine anything more
tragic and horrible than the sight which struck me when I visited an
Aleutian 'Kazhim'. This was a large building, or barracks, with dividing
sections, in which the Aleuts lived with their families; it contained about
100 people. Here some had died, their cold bodies lay near the living;
others were dying; there were groans and weeping which tore at one's soul."
"I saw mothers over whose bodies cold in death crawled a hungry child,
crying and searching in vain for its food...My heart was bursting with
compassion! It seemed that if anyone could paint with a worthy brush the
full horror of this tragic scene, that he would have successfully aroused
fear of death in the most embittered heart." Father Herman, during this
terrible sickness which lasted a whole month, gradually dying out towards
the end, visited the sick, never tiring. He admonished them in their fear,
prayed, brought them to penance, or prepared them for death. He never spared
himself.
FATHER HERMAN AS A SPIRITUAL TEACHER
The Elder was concerned in particular for the moral growth of the Aleuts.
With this end in mind a school was built for children-the orphans of the
Aleuts. He himself taught them the Law of God and church music. For this
same purpose he gathered the Aleuts on Sunday and Holy Days for prayer in
the chapel near his cell. Here his disciple read the Hours and the various
prayers while the Elder himself read the Epistle and Gospel. He also
preached to them. His students sang, and they sang very well. The Aleuts
loved to hear his sermons, gathering around him in large numbers. The
Elder's talks were captivating, and his listeners were moved by their
wonderous power. He himself writes of one example of the beneficial results
of his words.
"Glory to the holy destinies of the Merciful God! He has shown me now
through his unfathomable Providence a new occurence which I, who have lived
here for twenty years had never seen before on Kodiak. Recently after
Easter, a young girl about twenty years of age who knows Russian well, came
to me. Having heard of the Incarnation of the Son of God and of Eternal
Life, she became so inflamed with love for Jesus Christ that she does not
wish to leave me. She pleaded eloquently with me. Contrary to my personal
inclination and love for solitude, and despite all the hindrances and
difficulties which I put forward before accepting her, she has now been
living near the school for a month and is not lonesome."
"I, looking on this with great wonder, remembered the 'words of the Savior:
that which is hidden from the wise and learned is revealed to babes." (Matt.
11:25)
This woman lived at the school until the death of the Elder. She watched for
the good conduct of the children who studied in his school. Father Herman
willed that after his death she was to continue to live on Spruce Island.
Her name was Sophia Vlasova.
Yanovsky writes about the character and the eloquence of the talks of the
Elder thus:
"When I met Father Herman I was thirty years old. I must say that I was
educated in the naval corps school; that I knew many sciences having read
extensively. But to my regret, the Science of sciences, that is the Law of
God, I barely remembered the externals - and these only theoretically, not
applying them to life. I was a Christian in name only, but in my soul and in
reality, I was a freethinker. Furthermore, I did not admit the divinity and
holiness of our religion, for I had read through many atheistic works.
Father Herman recognized this immediately and he desired to reconvert me. To
my great surprise he spoke so convincingly, wisely - and he argued with such
conviction- that it seemed to me that no learning or worldly wisdom could
stand one's ground before his words. We conversed with him daily until
midnight, and even later, of God's love, of eternity, of the salvation of
souls, and of Christian living. From his lips flowed a ceaseless stream of
sweet words! By these continual talks and by the prayers of the holy Elder
the Lord returned me completely to the way of Truth, and I became a real
Christian. I am indebted for all this to Father Herman he is my true
benefactor."
"Several years ago," continues Yanovsky, "Father Herman converted a certain
naval captain G. to Orthodoxy from the Lutheran Faith. This captain was well
educated. Besides many sciences, he was well versed in languages. He knew
Russian, English, German, French, Italian and also some Spanish. But for all
this he could not resist the convictions and proofs of Father Herman. He
changed his faith and was united to the Orthodox Church through Chrismation.
When he was leaving America, the Elder said to him while they were parting,
"Be on guard, if the Lord should take your wife from you then do not marry a
German woman under any circumstance. If you do marry a German woman,
undoubtedly she will damage your Orthodoxy." The Captain gave his word, but
he failed to keep it. The warning of the Elder was prophetic. Indeed, after
several years the Captain's wife did die, and he married a German woman.
There is no doubt that his faith weakened or that he left it; for he died
suddenly without penance."
Further on Yanovsky writes, "Once the Elder was invited aboard a frigate
which came from St. Petersburg. The Captain of the frigate was a highly
educated man, who had been sent to America by order of the Emperor to make
an inspection of all the colonies. There were more than twenty-five officers
with the Captain, and they also were educated men. In the company of this
group sat a monk of a hermitage, small in stature and wearing very old
clothes. All these educated conversationalists were placed in such a
position by his wise talks that they did not know how to answer him. The
Captain himself used to say, 'We were lost for an answer before him.'
"Father Herman gave them all one general question: 'Gentlemen, What do you
love above all, and what will each of you wish for your happiness?' Various
answers were offered ... Some desired wealth, others glory, some a beautiful
wife, and still others a beautiful ship he would captain; and so forth in
the same vein. 'It is not true,' Father Herman said to them concerning this,
'that all your various wishes can bring us to one conclusion - that each of
you desires that which in his own understanding he considers the best, and
which is most worthy of his love?' They all answered, 'Yes, that is so!' He
then continued, 'Would you not say, Is not that which is best, above all,
and surpassing all, and that which by preference is most worthy of love, the
Very Lord, our Jesus Christ, who created us, adorned us with such ideals,
gave life to all, sustains everything, nurtures and loves all, who is
Himself Love and most beautiful of all men? Should we not then love God
above every thing, desire Him more than anything, and search Him out?' "
All said, "Why, yes! That's self-evident!" Then the Elder asked, "But do you
love God?" They all answered, "Certainly, we love God. How can we not love
God?" "And I a sinner have been trying for more than forty years to love
God, I cannot say that I love Him completely," Father Herman protested to
them. He then began to demonstrate to them the way in which we should love
God. "if we love someone," he said, "we always remember them; we try to
please them. Day and night our heart is concerned with the subject. Is that
the way you gentlemen love God? Do you turn to Him often? Do you always
remember Him? Do you always pray to Him and fulfill His holy commandments?"
They had to admit that they had not! "For our own good, and for our own
fortune," concluded the Elder, "let us at least promise ourselves that from
this very minute we will try to love God more than anything and to fulfill
His Holy Will!" Without any doubt this conversation was imprinted in the
hearts of the listeners for the rest of their lives.
"in general, Father Herman liked to talk of eternity, of salvation of the
future life, of our destinies under God. He often talked on the lives of the
Saints, on the Prologue, but he never spoke about anything frivolous. It was
so pleasant to hear him that those who conversed with him, the Aleuts and
their wives, were so captivated by his talks that often they did not leave
him until dawn, and then they left him with reluctance;" thus witnesses the
creole, Constantine Larionov.
A DESCRIPTION OF FATHER HERMAN
Yanovsky writes a detailed description of Father Herman. "I have a vivid
memory," he said, "Of all the features of the Elder's face reflecting
goodness; his pleasant smile, his meek and attractive mien, his humble and
quiet behavior, and his gracious word. He was short of stature. His face was
pale and covered with wrinkles. His eyes were greyish-blue, full of sparkle,
and on his head there were a few gray hairs. His voice was not powerful, but
it was very pleasant." Yanovsky relates two incidents from his conversations
with the Elder. "Once," he writes, "I read to Father Herman the ode, 'God,'
by Derzhavin. The Elder was surprised, and entranced. He asked me to read it
again. I read it once more, "Is it possible that a simple, educated man
wrote this?" he asked. "Yes, a learned poet," I answered. "This has been
written under God's inspiration," said the Elder.
THE MARTYRDOM OF PETER
"On another occasion I was relating to him how the Spanish in California had
imprisoned fourteen Aleuts, and how the Jesuits were forcing all of them to
accept the Catholic Faith. But this Aleut would not agree under any
circumstances, saying, 'We are Christians.' The Jesuits protested, 'That's
not true; you are heretics and schismatics. If you do not agree to accept
our faith then we will torture all of you.' Then the Aleuts were placed in
cells until evening; two to a cell. At night the Jesuits came to the prison
with lanterns and lighted candles. They began to persuade the Aleuts in the
cell once again to accept the Catholic Faith. 'We are Christians,' was the
answer of the Aleuts, 'and we will not change our Faith.' Then the Jesuits
began to torture them, at first the one while his companion was the witness.
They cut the toes off his feet, first one joint and then the other joint.
And then they cut the first joint on the fingers of the hands, and then the
other joint. Afterwards they cut off his feet, and his hands; the blood
flowed. The martyr endured all and steadfastly insisted on one thing: "I am
a Christian.' In such suffering, he bled to death. The Jesuit promised to
torture to death his comrades also on the next day. But that night an order
was received from Monterey stating that the imprisoned Aleuts were to be
released immediately, and sent there under escort. Therefore, in the morning
all were dispatched to Monterey with the exception of the martyred Aleut.
This was related to me by a witness, the same Aleut who was the comrade of
the tortured Aleut. Afterwards he escaped from imprisonment, and I reported
this incident to the supreme authorities in St. Petersburg. When I finished
my story, Father Herman asked, 'And how did they call the martyred Aleut?' I
answered, 'Peter; I do not remember his family name.' The Elder stood up
before an icon reverently, made the sign of the Cross and pronounced, "Holy
newly-martyred Peter, pray to God for usl"
THE SPIRIT OF FATHER HERMAN’S TEACHING
In order to express the spirit of Father Herman's teaching, we present here
a quotation from a letter that was written by his own hand.
"The empty years of these desires separate us from our heavenly homeland,
and our Love for these desires and our habits clothe us, as it were, in an
odious dress; it is called by the Apostle 'the external (earthy) man.' (I
Cor. 15:47). We who are wanderers in the journey of this life call to God
for aid. We must divest ourselves of this repulsiveness, and put on new
desires, and a new love for the coming age. Thus, through this we will know
either an attraction or a repulsion for the heavenly homeland. It is
possible to do this quickly, but we must follow the example of the sick, who
wishing for desired health, do not stop searching for means of curing
themselves. But I am not speaking clearly."
Not desiring anything for himself in life; long ago when he first came to
America having refused, because of his humility, the dignity of hiero-monk
and archimandrite; and deciding to remain forever a common monk, Father
Herman, without the least fear before the, powerful, strove with all
sincerity for God. With gentle love, and disregarding the person, he
criticized many for intemperate living, for unworthy behalvor, and for
oppressing the Aleuts. Evil armed itself against him and gave him all sorts
of trouble and sorrow. But God protected the Elder. The Administrator of the
Colony, Yanovsky, not having yet seen Father Herman, after receiving one of
those complaints, had already written to St. Petersburg of the necessity of
his removal. He explained that it seemed that he was arousing the Aleuts
against the administration. But this accusation turned out to be unjust, and
in the end Yanovsky was numbered among the admirers of Father Herman.
Once an inspector came to Spruce Island with the Administrator of the Colony
N. and with company employees to search through Father Herman's call.
This party expected to find property of great value in Father Herman's call.
But when they found nothing of value, an employee (of the American Company),
Ponomarkhov, began to tear up the floor with an axe, undoubtedly with the
consent of his seniors. Then Father Herman said to him, "My friend, you have
lifted the axe in vain; this weapon shall deprive you of your life." Some
time later people were needed at Fort Nicholas, and for that reason several
Russian employees were sent there from Kodiak; among them was Ponomarkhov;
there the natives of Kenai cut off his head while he slept.
THE TEMPTATIONS OF FATHER HERMAN
Many great sorrows were borne by Father Herman from evil spirits. He himself
revealed this to his disciple, Gerasim. Once when he entered Father Herman's
cell without the usual prayer he received no answer from Father Herman to
any of his questions. The next day Gerasim asked him the reason for his
silence. On that occasion Father Herman said to him, "When I came to this
island and settled in this hermitage the evil spirits approached me
ostensibly to be helpful. They came in the form of a man, and in the form of
animals. I suffered much from them; from various afflictions and
temptations. And that is why I do not speak now to anyone who enters into my
presence without prayer." (It is customary among devout laymen, as well as
clergy, to say out loud a prayer, and upon hearing a response ending with
Amen, to enter and go to the icon in the room to reverence it, and to say a
prayer before greeting the host).
SUPERNATURAL GIFTS FROM GOD
Herman dedicated himself fully for the Lord's service; he strove with zeal
solely for the glorification of His Most Holy Name. Far from his homeland in
the midst of a variety of afflictions and privations Father Herman spent
several decades performing the noblest deeds of self-sacrifice. He was
privileged to receive many supernatural gifts from God.
In the midst of Spruce Island down the hill flows a little stream into the
sea. The mouth of this stream was always swept by surf. In the spring when
the brook fish appeared the Elder raked away some of the sand at its mouth
so that the fish could enter, and at their first appearance they rushed up
the stream'. His disciple, lgnaty, said, "it was so that if 'Apa' would tell
me, I would go and get fish in the streaml" Father Herman fed the birds with
dried fish, and they would gather in great numbers around his call.
Underneath his cell there lived an ermine. This little animal can not be
approached when it has had its young, but the Elder fed it from his own
hand. "Was not this a miracle that we had seen?" said his disciple, lgnaty.
They also saw Father Herman feeding bears. But when Father Herman died the
birds and animals left; even the garden would not give any sort of crops
even though someone had willingly taken care of it, lgnaty insisted.
On Spruce Island there once occurred a flood. The inhabitants came to the
Elder in great fear. Father Herman then took an icon of the Mother of God
from the home where his students lived, and placed it on a "laida" ( a sandy
bank) and began to pray. After his prayer he turned to those present and
said, "Have no fear, the water will not go any higher than the place where
this holy icon stands." The words of the Elder were fullfilled. After this
he promised the same aid from this holy icon in the future through the
intercessions of the Most Immaculate Queen. He entrusted the icon to his
disciple, Sophia; in case of future floods the icon was to be placed on the
"laida."
At the request of the Elder, Baron F. P. Wrangel wrote a letter to a
Metropolitan - his name is not known - which was dictated by Father Herman.
When the letter was completed and read, the Elder congratulated the Baron
upon his attaining the rank of admiral. The Baron was taken aback. This was
news to him. It was confirmed, but only after an elapse of some time and
just before he departed for St. Petersburg.
Father Herman said to the administrator Kashevarov from whom he accepted his
son from the font (during the Sacrament of Baptism), "I am sorry for you my
dear 'kum.' It's a shame, the change will be unpleasant for you!" In two
years during a change of administration Kashevarov was sent to Sitka in
chains.
Once the forest on Spruce Island caught fire. The Elder with his disciple,
Ignaty, in a thicket of the forest made a belt about a yard wide in which
they turned over the moss. They extended it to the foot of the hill. The
Elder said, "Rest assured, the fire will not pass this line." On the next
day according to the testimony of lgnaty there was no hope for salvation
(from the fire) and the fire, pushed by a strong wind, reached the place
where the moss had been turned over by the Elder. The fire ran over the moss
and halted, leaving untouched the thick forest which was beyond the line.
The Elder often said that there would be a bishop for America; this at a
time when no one even thought of it, and there was no hope that there would
be a bishop for America;this was related by the Bishop Peter and his
prophecy was fulfilled in time.
"After my death," said Father Herman, "there will be an epidemic and many
people shall die during it and the Russians shall unite the Aleuts." And so
it happened; it seems that about a half a year after his passing there was a
smallpox epidemic; the death rate in America during the epidemic was
tremendous. In some villages only a few inhabitants remained alive. This led
the administration of the colony to unite the Aleuts; the twelve settlements
were consolidated into seven.
"Although a long time shall elapse after my death, I will not be forgotten,"
said Father Herman to his disciples. "My place of habitation will not remain
empty. A monk like myself who will be escaping from the glory of men, will
come and he will live on Spruce Island, and Spruce Island will not be
without people."
(This prophecy has now been fulfilled in its entirety. Just such a monk as
Father Herman described lived on Spruce Island for many years; his name was
Archimandrite Gerasim, who died on October 13, 1969. This monk took on
himself the responsibility of taking care of the Chapel under which at first
was buried the Elder Herman. Metropolitan Leonty soon after his elevation to
the primacy of the Russian Orthodox Church in America made a pilgrimage to
Spruce Island, and the grave of Herman.)
HERMAN'S PROPHECIES FOR THE FUTURE
The creole Constantine, when he was not more than twelve years old, was
asked by Father Herman, "My beloved one, what do you think; this chapel
which they are now building, will it ever stand empty?" The youngster
answered, "I do not know, 'Apa." "And indeed," said Constantine, "I did not
understand his question at that time, even though that whole conversation
with the Elder remains vivid in my memory." The Elder remained silent for a
short time, and then said, "My child remember, in time in this place there
will be a monastery."
Father Herman said to his disciple the Aleut lgnaty Aiigyaga, "Thirty years
shall pass after my death, and all those living on Spruce Island will have
died, but you alone will remain alive. You will be old and poor when I will
be remembered." And indeed after the death of Father Herman thirty years
passed when they were reminded of him, and they began to gather information
and facts about him; on the basis of which was written his life. "It is
amazing," exclaims lgnaty, "how a man like us could know all this so long
before it happened! However, no, he was no ordinary man! He knew our
thoughts, and involuntarily he led us to the point where we revealed them to
him, and we received counsel from him!"
"When I die," said the Elder to his disciples, "you will bury me alongside
Father Joasaph. You will bury me by yourself, for you will not wait for the
priest! Do not wash my body. Lay it on a board, clasp my hands over my
chest, wrap me in my 'mantia' (the monk's outer cloak), and with its wings
cover my face and place the 'kiobuk' on my head. (The 'klobuk' is the
monastic head-dress.) If anyone wishes to bid farewell to me, let them kiss
the Cross. Do not show my face to anyone . . ."
The Death of Father Herman
"When I die," the Elder would tell
his disciples, "you bury me next to Father Ioasaph. Kill my bullock at
once. He has served me enough. Bury me by yourselves and do not tell of my
death in the harbor The inhabitants of the port (Kodiak) will not see my
face. Do not send for a priest and do not wait for one to come: your
waiting will be in vain! Do not wash my body, place it on the board, fold
the arms on the chest, bind me in my mantle and with its edges cover my
face and my head with my klobuk. If someone should wish to say good-bye to
me, let him kiss the cross (in my hands); do not show anyone my face.
After lowering me into the earth cover me with my blanket." This blanket,
as we have already mentioned, was the board that was always in his cell.
The time of the Elder's passing had come. One day he ordered his disciple,
Gerasim, to light a candle before the icons, and to read the Acts of the
Holy Apostles. After some time his face glowed brightly and he said in a
loud voice, "Glory to Thee, 0 Lord!" He then ordered the reading to be
halted, and he announced that the Lord had willed that his life would now be
spared for another week. A week later again by his orders the candies were
lit, and the Acts of the Holy Apostles were read. Quietly the Elder bowed
his head on the chest of Gerasim; the cell was filled with a pleasant
smelling odor; and his face glowed, and Father Herman was no more! Thus in
blessedness he died, he passed away in the sleep of a righteous man in the
81st year of his life of great labor, the 25th day of December, 1837.
(According to the Julian Calendar, the 13th of December 1837, although there
are some records which state he died on the 28th of November, and was buried
on the 26th of December).
Those sent with the sad news to the harbor returned to announce that the
administrator of the colony Kashevarov had forbidden the burial of the Elder
until his own arrival. He also ordered that a finer coffin be made for
Father Herman, and that he would come as soon as possible and would bring a
priest with him. But then a great wind came up, a rain fell, and a terrible
storm broke. The distance from the Harbor to Spruce Island is not great -
about a two hour journey - but no one would agree to go to sea in such
weather. Thus it continued for a full month and although the body lay in
state for a full month in the warm house of his students, his face did not
undergo any change at all, and not the slightest odor emanated from his
body. Finally through the efforts of Kuzma Uchilischev, a coffin was
obtained. No one arrived from the Harbor, and the inhabitants of Spruce
Island alone buried in the ground the remains of the Elder. Thus the words
which Herman uttered before his death were fulfilled. After this the wind
quieted down, and the surface of the sea became as smooth as a mirror.
One evening from the village Katani (on Afognak) was seen above Spruce
Island an unusual pillar of light which reached up to heaven. Astonished by
the miraculous appearance, experienced elders and the creole Gerasim
Vologdin and his wife, Anna, said, "it seems that Father Herman has left
us," and they began to pray. After a time, they were informed that the Elder
had indeed passed away that very night. This same pillar was seen in various
places by others. The night of his death in another of the settlements on
Afognak was seen a vision; it seemed as though a man was rising from Spruce
Island into the clouds.
The disciples buried their father, and placed above his grave a wooden
memorial marker. The priest on Kodiak, Peter Kashevarov, says, "I saw it
myself, and I can say that today it seems as though it had never been
touched by time; as though it had been cut this day."
Having witnessed the life of Father Herman glorified by his zealous labors,
having seen his miracles, and the fulfillment of his predictions, finally
having observed his blessed falling-asleep, "in general all the local
inhabitants" witnesses Bishop Peter, "have the highest esteem for him, as
though he was a holy ascetic, anti are fully convinced thdt he has found
favor in the presence of God."
In 1842, five years after the passing away of the Elder, Innocent,
Archbishop of Kamchatka and the Aleutians, was near Kodiak on a sailing
vessel which was in great distress. He looked to Spruce Island, and said to
himself, "if you, Father Herman, have found favor in God's presence then may
the wind change!" It seems as though not more than fifteen minutes had
passed, said the Bishop, when the wind became favorable, and he successfully
reached the shore. In thanksgiving for his salvation, Archbishop Innocent
himself conducted a Memorial Service over the grave of the Blessed Elder
Herman.
In 1970, the Orthodox Church in America glorified the monk Herman as the
Venerable Herman of Alaska, Wonderworker of All America.
Glorification of St. Herman of Alaska
St. Herman of Alaska, the first "American" saint, was
the first to bring Orthodoxy to this continent. He came to America as a
young monk in 1794 as part of the original Russian Orthodox mission to
Alaska. He lived there until his repose, and for more than four decades
taught the natives by word and example. With his own severe asceticism a
secret, he ministered to both physical and spiritual needs of the people.
And his memory is preserved, fresh and personal, among their descendents to
this day. Ironically, however, he is unknown to so many other Americans. By
his prayers may we, also, truly receive the Gospel he brought and follow the
way that he taught.
"Although much time will pass after
my death," Father Herman used to say to his disciples, "My memory will not
be forgotten and the place of my dwelling will not be empty. A monk,
similar to me, fleeing the glory of men, will come and will live on Spruce
Island. And Spruce Island will not be without people."
"After my death," Father Herman used
to say, "there will be a plague and many people will die from it, and the
Russians will join with the Aleuts." It is true that about six months
after the death of the Elder, there was a smallpox epidemic in Alaska that
caused such an atrocious number of fatalities that in several villages
only a few people remained alive. This compelled the colonial authorities
consolidate the Aleuts: thus from twenty villages there remained only
seven.
"My little one," Father Herman once
asked Constantine Larionov, when he was no more than twelve years old,
"what do you think? Will the chapel which they are now building be
abandoned?" "I do not know Apa." answered the boy. "And really," said
Constantine, "I did not understand the question then, although the whole
conversation remains lively in my memory." The Elder, being silent for a
while said "My child, remember that in time there will be a monastery
here."
"Thirty years will pass after my
death, all those who live now on Spruce Island will be dead, you alone
will remain alive, and you will be old and poor; then they will remember
me," Father Herman used to say this to his disciple, the Aleut Ignatius
Aliaga. "It is remarkable," explains Ignatius, "how a man similar to us
could know all this these things way ahead of time! He was not a simple
man! He saw our thoughts and he would make us involuntarily open them up
to him and receive instructions."
The time was approaching for the
departure of the Elder. One day he called his disciple Gerasim to his cell
to light candles before the icons and to read the Acts of the Apostles.
After some time his face shone and he loudly pronounced: "Glory to Thee O
Lord! " Then, ordering Gerasim to stop the reading he said that it was
pleasing to the Lord to prolong his life one week more. After a week,
again according to his order, the candles were lit and the Acts of the
Apostles were read. The Elder quietly leaned his head on the chest of
Gerasim, the cell was filled with fragrance, his face was shining - and
then Father Herman was no more! Hence, he reposed with the sleep of the
righteous in the 81st year of his long-suffering life, December 13, 1837.