Herman A Wilderness Saint
From Sarov, Russia to Kodiak, Alaska
By Sergei KorsunTranslated by Daniel Marshallwith Lydia BlackSaint's Lives and Biographies$24.95
28 in stock
Description
How is it that a simple Russian Orthodox monk
traveled thousands of miles across the Eurasian landmass and north Pacific ocean
to settle in Kodiak, Alaska? Why, nearly 200 years later was he cited in a
speech to the 91st United States Congress, delivered by Senator Ted Stevens? It
was expressed in this oration that his canonization will serve to
yield new benevolence and understanding to provide the Aleut and other native
people of Alaska the rewards of their faith in their Church and the rewards of
their faith in America.
The memory of St Herman, canonized in 1970, has spread well beyond
Alaska. This new work brings to light primary sources that illuminate the story
of St Herman and the wider context of the history of Russian colonization in the
Pacific northwest. It reveals new fascinating biographical details such as his
connection to St Seraphim of Sarov. The reader will encounter interesting texts
on the attitude of the Russian Orthodox missionaries to a kind of same sex
marriage practiced by some Alaskan natives, and the story of the legendary
Novgorodians who were believed to have established a colony in Alaska during the
reign of Ivan the Terrible.
Thus the work will be of interest to those who love the saint, and to
students of Russian-American history and the ethnology of the native peoples of
Alaska.
Sergei Korsun, Cand. Sc., is the Chief
Specialist in the Department of America within The Peter the Great Museum of
Anthropology and Ethnography in St Petersburg, Russia.
Dr Lydia Black was a renowned historian
and anthropologist of Russian America, who taught for many years at the
University of Alaska. Her other works include Russian in Alaska, 1732
– 1867 and The Journals of Iakov Netsvetov: The Yukon
Years, 1845 -1863.