An edition of Christian martyrdom in Russia (1897)

Christian martyrdom in Russia

persecution of the Doukhobors

2nd ed.
Christian martyrdom in Russia
John C. Kenworthy, Лев Толстой ...
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Last edited by TheFreeAgePress
January 21, 2020 | History
An edition of Christian martyrdom in Russia (1897)

Christian martyrdom in Russia

persecution of the Doukhobors

2nd ed.

Microfilm edition made in 1984 of a 1900 book

Publish Date
Publisher
Free Age Press
Language
English
Pages
54

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Edition Availability
Cover of: Christian martyrdom in Russia
Christian martyrdom in Russia: persecution of the Doukhobors
1900, Free Age Press
Microform in English - 2nd ed.
Cover of: Christian martyrdom in Russia
Christian martyrdom in Russia
1897, THE BROTHERHOOD PUBLISHING COMPANY

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Book Details


Table of Contents

PREFACE. By J. C. Kenworthy
Page vii
PREFATORY NOTE FOR RUSSIAN READERS. By Vladimir Tchertkoff
Page ix
CHAPTER I. The Spirit-Wrestlers
Page 1
CHAPTER II. The Spirit-Wrestlers One Hundred Years ago
Page 16
CHAPTER III. The Character and Principles of the Spirit-Wrestlers To-day
Page 36
CHAPTER IV. Military Prisoners Lebedeff and Companions
Page 50
CHAPTER V. The Burning of Arms, June 1895, and "The Execution"
Page 57
CHAPTER VI. Conscription, Arrests, Imprisonments, Exile
Page 65
CHAPTER VII. Present Condition of those who were Banished, etc.
Page 79
CHAPTER VIII. Conclusion by Leo Tolstoy
Page 92
APPENDIX I. Letter from Peter Verigin to the Empress Alexandra Feodorovna
Page 101
APPENDIX II. Letter from Leo Tolstoy to the Commander of the Ekaterinograd Penal Battalion
Page 104
APPENDIX III. Extract from Letter from Vladimir Tchertkoff to the Same
Page 107

Edition Notes

"And the story of the deliverance--the emigration to Cyprus and Canada."

Includes bibliographical references.

Filmed from a copy of the original publication held by the University of British Columbia Library. Ottawa : Canadian Institute for Historical Microreproductions, 1984.

Published in
Maldon [England], London
Series
CIHM/ICMH Microfiche series -- no. 26934

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
289.9

The Physical Object

Format
Microform
Pagination
2 microfiches (54 fr.).
Number of pages
54

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL18903329M
ISBN 10
066526934X

Work Description

I am asked to write some words to English readers, by way of preface to this book.

What feeling would I most wish to awaken in the mind of an English reader, before he reads? Certainly, the feeling that these Russian Doukhobortsi (Spirit-Wrestlers), persecuted and martyred simply because they are too good to be understood by the mass of their fellowmen—are of the reader's own flesh and blood. Their sufferings and their needs ought to call upon each of us, as would the sufferings and the needs of our own brothers and sisters.

It is true the Doukhobortsi are, or until recently have been, quite obscure, an unknown peasant sect of the Caucasus. But why have they been obscure? For the same reason that the present life and past history of all such people is made obscure; because they are men of sincere religion, who esteem ii their duty to live by those Christian principles which the most of us profess with our lips, and entirely violate in our lives. They are a light shining in darkness—in darkness which moves actively to hide and smother the light.

It will seem incredible to many of us that the things here recorded can by any possibility be true, in this the nineteenth Christian century. Men, women and children have been beaten, imprisoned, abused, robbed, exiled, starved to death, by scores and thousands. The perpetrators of these—shall we say "crimes" or "excesses"?—are men who help to form the government of an empire which calls itself "holy"—Holy Russia,—in the Christian sense. The victims are people whose sole fault is the practice of the Cliristian virtues of a pure worship of God, coinniunism of goods, and peace—"non-resistance to evil." All these circumstances are attested in this book, by the direct and indirect evidence of men, whose honesty of purpose and scrupulous exactitude are shown by the very manner of their speaking.

Surely the modern State condemns itself immediately and completely, when it thus brings itself into direct and destructive enmity with people whose beliefs and lives are precisely calculated to promote the ends which the State so hypocritically assumes to serve—the ends of social justice and well-being. This book should be received by us as a record of the deeds and sufferings of people, who, in another country, are casting their lives against that common enemy, the rule of brute force in society. Those who sincerely and intelligently desire the passing away of "the kingdom of this world," and the coming of "the kingdom of heaven," will acknowledge the Doukhobortsi as their brethren, martyrs in the cause.

And such people will not be slow to help. Food, clothing and shelter are needed for the remnant of the suflferers; those who have it in their hearts to give will give.

But let it be remembered that no appeal for help has been, or is, made by the Doukhobortsi themselves. They say that God, Who is their life, will send what they need, and they are content to suffer, if it be His will, in the persuasion that all the persecution in the world cannot take from them the eternal life, which is theirs through obedience to the truth. They say that the best thing a man can do is to give his life to the service of the spirit shown forth by Jesus, who said, "Love one another. Love your enemies."

All those who are concerned in the production of this book, from Leo Tolstoy to the last of the peasants whose letters are quoted, would join in so saying; feeling that the first mission of the book is, to let the world know how the life of truth is growing by suffering in its midst.

JOHN C. KENWORTHY.

⁠London, August 1897.

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Download catalog record: RDF / JSON / OPDS | Wikipedia citation
January 21, 2020 Edited by TheFreeAgePress Edited without comment.
January 21, 2020 Edited by TheFreeAgePress first edition is not 1900 but 1897
January 21, 2020 Edited by TheFreeAgePress added TOC, edited date to 1900, original publication date, 1984 is the date it was digitized from the 1900 edition
March 12, 2019 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
October 20, 2008 Created by ImportBot Imported from University of Toronto MARC record