Celebrating Ten Years
April
13, 2001 marked the tenth anniversary of the reestablishment of the
structures of the Catholic Church in Russia. On that date in 1991, Pope
John Paul II erected both the Apostolic Administration of Novosibirsk,
appointing Bishop Joseph Werth, S.J. as bishop for Asiatic Russia, namely,
Siberia; and the Apostolic Administration of Moscow, appointing Archbishop
Tadeusz Kondrusievich as bishop for European Russia. The Church rejoiced
in this event, but nowhere more than in Russia itself, where seventy
years of persecution had effectively abolished any visible signs of
Catholicism. Join in our celebration by taking a historical and present-day
tour of the Church in Siberia!1600, with the official opening of the
exploration and colonization of Asiatic Russia, the history of the Catholic
Church in Siberia began. Among the explorers, trappers, engineers, and
government workers were Catholics of Lithuanian, Polish, and German
nationality or ancestry. However, it was unlawful for them to organize
Church structures or to erect church buildings at that time.
In
1763, groups of Germans, fleeing starvation in Central Europe, settled
around the lower Volga and the Black Sea. While creating as if “from
nothing” a flourishing new region, they likewise organized their
Catholic life. Whereas formerly, all Catholics in Russia had come under
the jurisdiction of the bishop of Mogilev (who resided there, and later
in St. Petersburg), by 1848 they had their own bishop in Saratov on the
Volga. By 1917 their diocese included 179 priests and a seminary.
The situation changed drastically after the October Revolution of that
year. The Volga-Germans were forced into slave-labor armies and exiled
to Siberia and Kazakstan, where more than half perished from starvation
and exposure to cold. In 1937 their last church was destroyed and the
last priest executed.
Meanwhile, in the mid-nineteenth century, great numbers of Polish and
Lithuanians arrived in Siberia as political exiles, while others came
as workers and engineers for the Trans-Siberian Railroad. Their strenuous
efforts to obtain permission to build churches and organize parishes succeeded,
and they were placed under the jurisdiction of the bishop in faraway Mogilev,
Belarus. In 1921, a diocese was created for Eastern Siberia and the Russian
Far East, with the bishop’s residence in Vladivostok, and for about
twelve years it served the scattered Catholic communities of those areas.
During the seventy years of Soviet repression, when all Churches suffered
persecution, the extinction of the Catholic faith was an admitted goal
of the regime. Nevertheless, groups of believers met for prayer secretly,
at night, in cemeteries and family homes. Often such meetings ended
in all present being arrested. The survivors continued to meet, to instruct
their children, and in the 1960’s, underground priests began making
short visits to small communities of believers. Persecution and arrests
continued, but even rare opportunities to receive the Sacraments strengthened
the faithful and renewed their hope. Divine Providence and exceptional
courage and perseverance enabled the Catholics of both Eastern and Roman
rites to register a parish in Novokuznetsk, and the (Roman) Catholics
in Novosibirsk to build a small church, though the priest serving them,
Father Joseph Svidnitsky, “paid for” the church with his
arrest, imprisonment, and sentence to a penal labor camp, where he served
two-and-a-half years of a three-year sentence.
When Bishop Joseph Werth, S.J. was appointed Apostolic Administrator
of Novosibirsk in 1991, only three priests were present in all Siberia
- at 12.8 million sq. km., the largest diocese in the world. His cathedral
was first located at the small Immaculate Conception church, then moved
to the center of the city, where parishioners built a log church. The
new Cathedral of the Transfiguration of the Lord was dedicated in 1997,
and by that time, 65 priests, 69 Sisters, as well as members of various
secular movements were actively serving the Church throughout all Siberia,
with 18 church buildings, about 30 “prayer houses,” and nearly
200 places of pastoral ministry.
In
1998, Bishop Jezhy Mazur was ordained auxiliary bishop, with residence
in Irkutsk in Eastern Siberia. In 1999 the enormous territory was divided
into the two Apostolic Administrations of Western and Eastern Siberia,
with Novosibirsk remaining the residence of Bishop Werth and Irkutsk
that of Bishop Mazur. Western Siberia, though considerably smaller in
area, has ten times greater general and Catholic population, while Eastern
Siberia spans a vast territory.
Today, as we celebrate the tenth anniversary of the restoration of the
structures of the Church, we rejoice that the Catholic population of Western
Siberia–500,000 Catholics–is served by 42 priests, of whom
5 are Eastern Rite, 52 Sisters, 3 Brothers, 1 permanent deacon, and members
of Secular Institutes and Lay Movements. In our Apostolic Administration
we have 25 parishes; 155 missions, including churches, chapels, and prayer
houses (houses renovated for worship); 3 Catholic schools; and 22 places
of charitable work. Numbers cannot tell the entire story, but they indicate
the amount of sowing and planting that has been done in the Lord’s
vineyard here, and also show some of the first fruits of the potential
harvest.
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