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{{short description|Bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church}}
{{short description|Bishop of the Russian Orthodox Church}}

{{Infobox Patriarch
{{Infobox Patriarch
| honorific-prefix =
| honorific-prefix =
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| predecessor = Alexander
| predecessor = Alexander
| successor = [[John Sokolov|John]]
| successor = [[John Sokolov|John]]
| other_post = Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia, [[Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)|Exarch of Ukraine]]<br>[[Russian Orthodox Church in Finland|Govering in Finland]] {{small|(temporarily)}}<br>Metropolitan of Volyn and Lutsk, Exarch in western regions of Ukraine and Belarus<br>Archbishop of Petergof
| other_post = Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia, [[Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)|Exarch of Ukraine]]<br>[[Russian Orthodox Church in Finland|Governing in Finland]] {{small|(temporarily)}}<br>Metropolitan of Volyn and Lutsk, Exarch in western regions of Ukraine and Belarus<br>Archbishop of Petergof
| birth_date={{Birth date|1892|1|12|df=yes}}
| birth_date={{Birth date|1892|1|12|df=yes}}
| birth_place = [[Kaunas|Kovno]], [[Russian Empire]]
| birth_place = [[Kaunas|Kovno]], [[Russian Empire]]
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| signature =
| signature =
}}
}}
'''Metropolitan Nicholas''' ({{lang-ru|Митрополит Николай}}, born as '''Boris Dorofeyevich Yarusevich''', {{lang-ru|Борис Дорофеевич Ярушевич}}; January 13, 1892 (December 31, 1891 [[Old Style and New Style dates|OS]]), [[Kovno]] December 13, 1961, [[Moscow]]), was a bishop of the [[Russian Orthodox Church]].
'''Metropolitan Nicholas''' ({{lang-ru|Митрополит Николай}}, born as '''Boris Dorofeyevich Yarushevich''', {{lang-ru|Борис Дорофеевич Ярушевич}}; 12 January 1892 – 13 December 1961), was the [[Metropolis of Kiev (Patriarchate of Moscow)|Metropolitan of Kiev]] in the [[Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus'|Patriarchate of Moscow]].


== Biography ==
He supported the controversial 1927 declaration of [[Patriarch Sergius I of Moscow|Metropolitan Sergius]], pledging loyalty of the Church to the Soviet authorities without concurrence of the imprisoned Patriarchal ''locum tenens'', [[Peter of Krutitsy]], and Sergius' subsequent collaboration with them.
Metropolitan Nicholas was born in Kovno (now [[Kaunas]], Lithuania), where his father, Archpriest Dorofey Filofeyevich Yarushevich, was rector of Alexander Nevsky Cathedral.<ref name="Orthodox">{{cite web |title=Николай, митрополит (Ярушевич Борис Дорофеевич) |url=http://www.patriarchia.ru/db/text/1585349.html |website=Русская Православная Церковь (The Russian Orthodox Church) |access-date=11 January 2022}}</ref> He was educated at [[Saint Petersburg|St Petersburg]] University, and graduated in 1914 from the [[Saint Petersburg Theological Academy]]. Soon after he was ordained, he was sent to the front during the war with Germany, but was recalled in 1915 after falling seriously ill. In 1918, he was appointed rector of the [[Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral, Saint Petersburg|Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral]] in Petrograd (St Petersburg). On March 25, 1922 he was consecrated Bishop of [[Petergof|Peterhof]], vicar of the Petrograd dioscese,<ref name="Orthodox" /> but he was almost immediately arrested for refusing to recognise the so-called [[Renovationism]].<ref name="Fletcher">{{cite book |last1=Fletcher |first1=William C. |title=Nikolai, Portrait of a Dilemma |date=1968 |publisher=MacMillan |location=New York}}</ref>


He was released in 1927, when he supported the declaration of [[Patriarch Sergius of Moscow|Metropolitan Sergius]], who controversially pledged loyalty of the Church to the Soviet authorities without concurrence of numerous senior members of the Orthodox, including Metropolitan [[Joseph (Petrovykh)]], head of the Leningrad (St Petersburg) diocese, who was deposed and later executed. Nicholas was temporarily in charge of the diocese from September 1927 to February 1928. He was made Archbishop of Peterhof in 1935, and in 1936-1940 was additionally in charge of the [[Novgorod Oblast|Novgorod]] and [[Pskov Oblast|Pskov]] dioceses.<ref name="Orthodox" />
In 1941 he became Metropolitan of [[Volhynia]] and [[Lutsk]] and later, after the [[Operation Barbarossa|German invasion of the Soviet Union]], Metropolitan of [[Kiev]] and [[Galicia (Central Europe)|Galicia]]. Later, as the German troops advanced, he was evacuated to Moscow.


Nicholas was one of just four bishops in the USSR who survived the [[Great Purge]],<ref name="Fletcher" /> and was so trusted by the Soviet authorities that in 1940, after the Red Army had overrun Eastern Poland, under the terms of the [[Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact|Pact]] between [[Joseph Stalin|Stalin]] and [[Adolf Hitler|Hitler]], he was appointed Metropolitan of [[Volhynia]] and [[Lutsk]] and Exarch of the western regions of Ukraine and Belarus. He was elevated to the rank of Metropolitan on 9 March 1941. After the [[Operation Barbarossa|German invasion of the Soviet Union]], he was appointed Metropolitan of [[Kyiv|Kiev]] and [[Galicia (Eastern Europe)|Galicia]]. Later, as the German troops advanced, he was evacuated to Moscow.
In the early hours of September 5, 1943, together with Metropolitan Sergius and Metropolitan [[Patriarch Alexy I of Russia|Alexius]], Nicholas had a meeting with Soviet leader [[Joseph Stalin]], where the latter proposed to reestablish the Moscow Patriarchate and elect the [[Patriarch of Moscow|Patriarch]]. On September 8, 1943, when the Moscow Patriarchate was reestablished, Nicholas became a permanent member of the [[Holy Synod]]. In 1944 he was appointed Metropolitan of [[Krutitsy]]. In 1946, when the External Church Relations Department was established within the Patriarchate, Metropolitan Nicholas became its chairman. In 1947 he became Metropolitan of Krutitsy and [[Kolomna]].


On 2 November 1942, Metropolitan Nicholas became the first Russian priest in more than 20 years to be given an official position, when he was a member of the Extraordinary State Commission for the Establishment and Investigation of the Atrocities of the German Fascist Invaders and their Accomplices. In this capacity, he took part in 'investigating' the [[Katyn massacre]], in which thousands of Polish officers had been murdered on Stalin's orders. He went along with the commission's verdict that it was a German atrocity.<ref name="Fletcher" />
In 1950 he became a member of the [[World Peace Council]], occupying a staunchly pro-Soviet position.<ref name="times">http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,805739,00.html</ref> According to [[Christopher Andrew (historian)|
Christopher Andrew]] and [[Vasili Mitrokhin]], both Patriarch Alexius and Metropolitan Nicholas, "were highly valued by the [[KGB]] as [[agents of influence]]."<ref>Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, ''The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB'', (1999). Page 486.</ref>


In the early hours of September 5, 1943, together with Metropolitan Sergius and Metropolitan [[Patriarch Alexy I of Moscow|Alexius]], Nicholas had a meeting with Joseph Stalin, where the latter proposed to reestablish the Moscow Patriarchate and elect the [[Patriarch of Moscow and all Rus'|Patriarch]]. On September 8, 1943, when the Moscow Patriarchate was reestablished, Nicholas became a permanent member of the [[Holy Synod]]. In 1944 he was appointed Metropolitan of [[Krutitsy]]. In 1946, when the [[Department for External Church Relations of the Moscow Patriarchate|External Church Relations Department]] was established within the Patriarchate, Metropolitan Nicholas became its chairman. He and the Patriarch Alexei were now the two leading personalities in the Russian Orthodox Church. According to the historian Philip Walters:
Nicholas held Joseph Stalin in high esteem. However, his increasingly open opposition to [[atheism]] put him at odds with the Soviet leadership under [[Nikita Khrushchev]]. In 1960 he was dismissed from the position of the Chairman of the External Church Relations Department and later left the position of Metropolitan of Krutitsy and Kolomna.

{{quote|Both men were astute politicians, and both have been criticized for their alleged subservience to the demands of the State; both, however, were men of considerable spiritual integrity.<ref name="Walters">{{cite book |last1=Walters |first1=Philip |title=The Russian Orthodox Church, 1945-59 |date=1965 |publisher=Faber & Faber |location=London |page=219 |url=https://biblicalstudies.org.uk/pdf/rcl/08-3_218.pdf |access-date=13 January 2002}}</ref>|}}

According to [[Christopher Andrew (historian)|Christopher Andrew]] and [[Vasili Mitrokhin]], both Patriarch Alexius and Metropolitan Nicholas, "were highly valued by the [[KGB]] as [[Agent of influence|agents of influence]]."<ref>Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, ''The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB'', (1999). Page 486.</ref>

Metropolitan Nicholas met Stalin again in April 1945. That year he visited Great Britain and France. In August, he persuaded the Orthodox churches in France to recognise the authority of the Moscow Patriarch, though they split with Moscow later. In 1950 he became a member of the [[World Peace Council]], occupying a staunchly pro-Soviet position.<ref name="times">[https://web.archive.org/web/20101123113233/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,805739,00.html Time (magazine)]</ref>

Nicholas held Joseph Stalin in high esteem, but he came into conflict with Stalin's successor [[Nikita Khrushchev]] when Communist Party policy took an anti-religious turn in 1959.{{cn|date=September 2023}} He was dismissed from the position of the Chairman of the External Church Relations Department on June 21, 1960; on September 19, he was relieved of his other posts and vanished from public view. He died on December 13, 1961.{{cn|date=September 2023}}


==References==
==References==
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{{Authority control}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nikolay}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Nicholas (Yarushevich)}}
[[Category:1892 births]]
[[Category:1892 births]]
[[Category:1961 deaths]]
[[Category:1961 deaths]]
[[Category:People from Kaunas]]
[[Category:Clergy from Kaunas]]
[[Category:People from Kovno Governorate]]
[[Category:People from Kovensky Uyezd]]
[[Category:Archbishops and Metropolitans of Novgorod]]
[[Category:First Hierarchs of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)]]
[[Category:Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church]]
[[Category:Eastern Orthodox Christians from Lithuania]]
[[Category:Eastern Orthodox Christians from Lithuania]]
[[Category:Metropolitans of Kiev and all Rus' (Patriarchate of Moscow)]]

{{Primates of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)}}
{{Primates of the Ukrainian Orthodox Church (Moscow Patriarchate)}}
[[Category:Recipients of the Order of the Red Banner of Labour]]

{{russia-reli-bio-stub}}

Latest revision as of 17:07, 24 June 2024

Nicholas
ChurchRussian Orthodox Church
MetropolisMetropolitan of Krutitsy and Kolomna
SeeMoscow
Installed28 January 1944
Term ended19 September 1960
PredecessorAlexander
SuccessorJohn
Other post(s)Metropolitan of Kiev, Galicia, Exarch of Ukraine
Governing in Finland (temporarily)
Metropolitan of Volyn and Lutsk, Exarch in western regions of Ukraine and Belarus
Archbishop of Petergof
Orders
Ordination1914
Consecration7 April 1922
by Benjamin (Kazansky), Aleksiy (Simansky), Artemiy (Ilyinsky), Venedikt (Plotnikov)
Personal details
Born
Boris Dorofeyevich Yarushevich

(1892-01-12)12 January 1892
Died13 December 1961(1961-12-13) (aged 69)
Moscow, Soviet Union

Metropolitan Nicholas (Russian: Митрополит Николай, born as Boris Dorofeyevich Yarushevich, Russian: Борис Дорофеевич Ярушевич; 12 January 1892 – 13 December 1961), was the Metropolitan of Kiev in the Patriarchate of Moscow.

Biography

[edit]

Metropolitan Nicholas was born in Kovno (now Kaunas, Lithuania), where his father, Archpriest Dorofey Filofeyevich Yarushevich, was rector of Alexander Nevsky Cathedral.[1] He was educated at St Petersburg University, and graduated in 1914 from the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy. Soon after he was ordained, he was sent to the front during the war with Germany, but was recalled in 1915 after falling seriously ill. In 1918, he was appointed rector of the Saints Peter and Paul Cathedral in Petrograd (St Petersburg). On March 25, 1922 he was consecrated Bishop of Peterhof, vicar of the Petrograd dioscese,[1] but he was almost immediately arrested for refusing to recognise the so-called Renovationism.[2]

He was released in 1927, when he supported the declaration of Metropolitan Sergius, who controversially pledged loyalty of the Church to the Soviet authorities without concurrence of numerous senior members of the Orthodox, including Metropolitan Joseph (Petrovykh), head of the Leningrad (St Petersburg) diocese, who was deposed and later executed. Nicholas was temporarily in charge of the diocese from September 1927 to February 1928. He was made Archbishop of Peterhof in 1935, and in 1936-1940 was additionally in charge of the Novgorod and Pskov dioceses.[1]

Nicholas was one of just four bishops in the USSR who survived the Great Purge,[2] and was so trusted by the Soviet authorities that in 1940, after the Red Army had overrun Eastern Poland, under the terms of the Pact between Stalin and Hitler, he was appointed Metropolitan of Volhynia and Lutsk and Exarch of the western regions of Ukraine and Belarus. He was elevated to the rank of Metropolitan on 9 March 1941. After the German invasion of the Soviet Union, he was appointed Metropolitan of Kiev and Galicia. Later, as the German troops advanced, he was evacuated to Moscow.

On 2 November 1942, Metropolitan Nicholas became the first Russian priest in more than 20 years to be given an official position, when he was a member of the Extraordinary State Commission for the Establishment and Investigation of the Atrocities of the German Fascist Invaders and their Accomplices. In this capacity, he took part in 'investigating' the Katyn massacre, in which thousands of Polish officers had been murdered on Stalin's orders. He went along with the commission's verdict that it was a German atrocity.[2]

In the early hours of September 5, 1943, together with Metropolitan Sergius and Metropolitan Alexius, Nicholas had a meeting with Joseph Stalin, where the latter proposed to reestablish the Moscow Patriarchate and elect the Patriarch. On September 8, 1943, when the Moscow Patriarchate was reestablished, Nicholas became a permanent member of the Holy Synod. In 1944 he was appointed Metropolitan of Krutitsy. In 1946, when the External Church Relations Department was established within the Patriarchate, Metropolitan Nicholas became its chairman. He and the Patriarch Alexei were now the two leading personalities in the Russian Orthodox Church. According to the historian Philip Walters:

Both men were astute politicians, and both have been criticized for their alleged subservience to the demands of the State; both, however, were men of considerable spiritual integrity.[3]

According to Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, both Patriarch Alexius and Metropolitan Nicholas, "were highly valued by the KGB as agents of influence."[4]

Metropolitan Nicholas met Stalin again in April 1945. That year he visited Great Britain and France. In August, he persuaded the Orthodox churches in France to recognise the authority of the Moscow Patriarch, though they split with Moscow later. In 1950 he became a member of the World Peace Council, occupying a staunchly pro-Soviet position.[5]

Nicholas held Joseph Stalin in high esteem, but he came into conflict with Stalin's successor Nikita Khrushchev when Communist Party policy took an anti-religious turn in 1959.[citation needed] He was dismissed from the position of the Chairman of the External Church Relations Department on June 21, 1960; on September 19, he was relieved of his other posts and vanished from public view. He died on December 13, 1961.[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Николай, митрополит (Ярушевич Борис Дорофеевич)". Русская Православная Церковь (The Russian Orthodox Church). Retrieved 11 January 2022.
  2. ^ a b c Fletcher, William C. (1968). Nikolai, Portrait of a Dilemma. New York: MacMillan.
  3. ^ Walters, Philip (1965). The Russian Orthodox Church, 1945-59 (PDF). London: Faber & Faber. p. 219. Retrieved 13 January 2002.
  4. ^ Christopher Andrew and Vasili Mitrokhin, The Sword and the Shield: The Mitrokhin Archive and the Secret History of the KGB, (1999). Page 486.
  5. ^ Time (magazine)