Early Years
Tsar-Martyr Nicholas was born in St. Petersburg on May 6, 1868, the day
upon which the Holy Church celebrates the memory of St. Job the
Long-Suffering. And how prophetic this turned out to be - for Nicholas was
destined to follow the example of this great Old Testament Saint both in
circumstance and in faith. Just as the Lord allowed the Patriarch Job to
suffer many things, trying him in the fire of calamity to test his faith, so
was Nicholas tried and tempted, but he too never yielded and remained above
all a man of God.
His grandfather was Tsar Alexander II, the liberator of the peasants,
who loved him and called him "sun ray". "When I was small," said Nicholas to
his daughters, "they sent for me every day to visit my grandfather. My
brother George and I had the habit of playing in his study while he was
working. His smile was so pleasant, although his face was usually handsome
and calm. I remember that it made a great impression on me in my early
childhood... Once my parents were away, and I was at the all-night vigil with
my grandfather in the small church in Alexandria. During the service there
was a powerful thunderstorm, streaks of lightning flashed one after the
other, and it seemed as if the peals of thunder would shake even the church
and the whole world to its foundations. Suddenly it became quite dark, a
blast of wind from the open door blew out the flame of the candles which were
lit in front of the iconostasis, there was a long clap of thunder, louder
than before, and I suddenly saw a fiery ball flying from the window straight
towards the head of the Emperor. The ball (it was of lightning) whirled
around the floor, then passed the chandelier and flew out through the door
into the park. My heart froze, I glanced at my grandfather - his face was
completely calm. He crossed himself just as calmly as he had when the fiery
ball had flown near us, and I felt that it was unseemly and not courageous to
be frightened as I was. I felt that one had only to look at what was
happening and believe in the mercy of God, as he, my grandfather, did. After
the ball had passed through the whole church, and suddenly gone out through
the door, I again looked at my grandfather. A faint smile was on his face,
and he nodded his head at me. My panic disappeared, and from that time I had
no more fear of storms."
Dominic Lieven writes: "Aged 10, Nicholas was handed over to a military
governor, General G.G. Danilovich... Danilovich himself invited specialists
to come to the palace to teach the heir a range of subjects including four
modern languages (Russian, French, English and German), mathematics, history,
geography and chemistry. Of the subjects Nicholas was taught, history was
much the closest to his heart. His membership of the Imperial Historical
Society from the age of 16 was more than merely honorary. Many years later,
in the enforced leisure of his Siberian exile, he returned to reading works
of history. He commented to his son's English teacher, Sydney Gibbes, that
'his favourite subject was history' and that he 'had to read a good deal when
he was young, but had no time for it later'. In his youth and adolescence
Nicholas had, however, also read fiction in English, French and Russian.
Someone capable of mastering four languages and coping with Dostoevsky and
the historians Karamzin and Solovyov at this age cannot have been without
brains.
"Of his tutors, Charles Heath seems to have been closest to the heir...
General V.N. Voeykov, the last Commander of the Imperial Palaces in
Nicholas's reign, knew the monarch well. He commented that 'one of the
Emperor's outstanding qualities was his self-control. Being by nature very
quick tempered, he had worked hard on himself from his childhood under the
direction of his tutor, the English Mister Heath, and had achieved a
tremendous degree of self-possession. Mister Heath frequently reminded his
imperial pupil of the English saying that aristocrats are born but gentlemen
are made.'"
Above all the creatures of the earth, Nicholas Alexandrovich loved
birds. When he heard them singing, he would become so absorbed that his
playmates often commented on it. Once, when a young sparrow fell from its
nest, little Nika, as his friends called him, said:
"It is necessary to pray for the little sparrows; may Dearest God not
take it - He has enough sparrows."
On March 13, 1881, the Tsar-Liberator was murdered by a revolutionary
fanatic. On a Petersburg street, in broad daylight, a bomb was thrown which
injured some of the guards but left the Tsar unhurt. With disregard for
personal safety, he left his carriage and was attending to the injured when a
second bomb was thrown, fatally wounding him and many others. He was rushed
to the Winter Palace where he died in the presence of his grief-stricken
family. Later, on the spot of the murder, there was built a magnificent
church, Christ the Saviour "Upon the Blood", which became the stronghold of
the Catacomb Church in Petrograd after the revolution.
Nicholas described the event as follows: "We were having breakfast in
the Anichkov palace, my brother and I, when a frightened servant ran in and
said:
"'An accident has happened to the Emperor! The heir [the future Tsar
Alexander III, Nicholas' father] has given the order that Great Prince
Nicholas Alexandrovich (that is, I) should immediately go to the Winter
palace. One must not lose time.'
"General Danilov and we ran down, got into a carriage and rushed along
Nevsky to the Winter palace. When we were going up the staircase, I saw that
all those who met us had pale faces and that there were big red spots on the
carpet - when they had carried my grandfather up the staircase, blood from
the terrible wounds he had suffered from the explosion had poured out. My
parents were already in the study. My uncle and aunt were standing near the
window. Nobody said a word. My grandfather was lying on the narrow camp bed
on which he always slept. He was covered with the military greatcoat that
served as his dressing-gown. His face was mortally pale, it was covered with
small wounds. My father led me up to the bed:
"'Papa,' he said, raising his voice, 'your sun ray is here.'
"I saw a fluttering of his eyelids. The light blue eyes of my
grandfather opened. He tried to smile. He moved his finger, but could not
raise his hand and say what he wanted, but he undoubtedly recognised me.
Protopresbyter Bazhenov came up to him and gave him Communion for the last
time, we all fell on our knees, and the Emperor quietly died. Thus was it
pleasing to the Lord."
Submission to the will of God was the distinguishing characteristic of
Tsar Nicholas II's character. His faith in the Divine wisdom that directs
events gave him that supernatural calm which never abandoned him. We fear
catastrophes, but, as St. John Chrysostom said, there is only one thing that
is truly fearful - sin. The Lord is in control of everything; everything is
either blessed by Him or allowed by Him.
Nicholas' parents were Tsar Alexander Alexandrovich and Tsaritsa Marie
Fyodorovna. Alexander was a man with a strong man who feared God and became
one of Russia's great Tsars, though his reign was short (1881-1894).
Nicholas' mother, formerly Princess Dagmar of Denmark, was a loving and
supportive wife and mother who accepted her adopted faith, Holy Orthodoxy,
into her soul and along with Alexander transmitted it to her children,
building their house upon a rock. "And when the flood arose, the stream beat
vehemently upon that house, and could not shake it: for it was founded upon a
rock" (Luke 6.48).
The activity of the hateful revolutionaries was to plague Nicholas and
his family throughout their lives. In 1888, while Tsar Alexander III and his
family were travelling towards Kharkov, the imperial train was rocked by two
explosions and derailed. Only the level-headedness and great physical
strength of the Tsar kept the Royal Family from being killed.
Despite such difficult circumstances, Nicholas, now the Tsarevich, was
being formed in all the Christian virtues. During his youth his kindness to
others and selflessness impressed all who met him. While living frugally
himself, he gave freely to those less fortunate. It is known that he often
anonymously gave scholarships and other gifts through the agency of one of
his childhood teachers.
The Tsarevich entered into military service, which formed him in manhood
through discipline and responsibility. It was during this period, on a visit
to Japan, that he was attacked by a Japanese policeman with a sword and
injured. As the heir of the Russian throne, he could have easily had the
policeman punished severely. But he chose instead to ignore the incident,
preferring to turn the other cheek and forgive. This wound, to his head, was
to cause occasional pain throughout the rest of his life.
A.D. Khmelevsky writes about this visit: "In Japan the heir to the
throne visited the cemetery of our sailors, where an old Japanese, who had
for many years been the keeper of the Russian graves, said:
"'The distinguished guest is intending to visit our ancient capital
Kyoto. Near Kyoto there lives our well-known hermit, the monk Terakuto. The
destinies of men are open to the eyes of this ascetic. Time does not exist
for him, and he gives only signs of how long periods last.'
"On arriving in Kyoto the heir set off on foot to see Terakuto. He was
dressed in civilian clothes and accompanied by the Greek Prince George and
the translator, Marquis Ito. Terakuto was living in a grove. He said (these
are extracts from the reminiscences of Marquis Ito, published in English):
"'... Danger is hovering over your head, but death will pass you by and
the shoot will be stronger than the sword and the shoot will shine
brilliantly. Two crowns are destined for you - an earthly and a heavenly.
Gems play on your crown, O master of a mighty realm. But the glory of the
world passes and will dim the gems on your earthly crown, while the
glittering of your heavenly crown will last forever. Great sorrows and
upheavals await you and your country. You will fight for everyone, and
everyone will be against you. Beautiful flowers bloom on the edge of the
abyss, and children rush up to the flowers and fall into the abyss if they do
not listen to the warnings of their father. You will offer a sacrifice for
your whole people, as the redeemer of its recklessnesses. I see fiery tongues
above your head. This is the consecration. I see innumerable fires on altars
in front of you. This is the fulfilment. Here is wisdom and part of the
mystery of the Creator. Death and immortality, a split-second and eternity.
Blessed be the day and hour on which you came to old Terakuto.'
"A few days after this, there was an attempt on the life of the heir. A
Japanese fanatic struck him on the head with a sabre, which gave him a minor
wound since Prince George, who was all the time with the heir, parried the
blow with a bamboo shoot. By command of Alexander III, the shoot which had
played this role was encrusted with diamonds and returned to Prince George.
Thus did the shoot prove stronger than the sword, and the shoot shone. The
records witness that after his visit to the hermit Terakuto the heir was for
a long time thoughtful and sad."
By 1894 the health of Nicholas' father, Tsar Alexander, began to fail,
and on October 20 he reposed under the loving hand of his confessor, St. John
of Kronstadt. By this time Nicholas was already engaged to Princess Alix of
Hesse (Germany); and they were married one month after Alexander's repose.
There had been obstacles to this marriage. Tsar Alexander III had been
opposed to the match, as had been Kaiser Wilhelm. Grand Duchess Elizabeth,
Princess Alix's sister, wrote to Queen Victoria: "The world is so spiteful,
and not knowing how long and deep this affection on both sides has been, the
spiteful tongues will call it ambition, as if to mount this throne is
enviable."
But the major obstacle was the Princess' faith. The Princess had been
born and raised as a Lutheran and was very devoted to her faith, but she
needed to convert to Orthodoxy in order to become Empress of the Russian
nation. Being a highly principled woman, she did not take this as a light
matter and at first resisted. But God in His loving-kindness did not abandon
her; and soon, after a number of meetings with an Orthodox archpriest who
expounded to her the Faith, she gladly accepted baptism. Her conversion was
anything but nominal. The depth of her embrace of Orthodoxy and the strength
which it gave to her family was to be a spiritual reproach to the modern
Russian nobility and to the "intelligentsia" who, listening to the spirit of
antichrist, had gradually become ashamed of their faith, considering it
something "outdated".
Dominic Lieven writes: "Like her mother, Alix was a fervent Christian.
She abandoned Protestantism only after a great struggle. In her bedroom at
Tsarskoe Selo 'was a little door in the wall, leading to a tiny dark chapel
lighted by hanging lamps, where the Empress was wont to pray. When in
Petersburg, the Empress used to go to the Kazan Cathedral, kneeling in the
shadow of a pillar, unrecognized by anyone and attended by a single
lady-in-waiting. For Alix life on earth was in the most literal sense a
trial, in which human beings were tested to see whether they were worthy of
heavenly bliss. The sufferings God inflicted on one were a test of one's
faith and a punishment for one's wrongdoing. The Empress was a deeply serious
person who came to have great interest in Orthodox theology and religious
literature. She loved discussing abstract, and especially religious, issues,
and her later friendship with the Grand Duchess Militza and Anastasia owed
much to their knowledge of Persian, Indian and Chinese religion and
philosophy. Alix 'zealously studied the intricate works of the old Fathers of
the Church. Besides these she read many French and English philosophical
books.'
"As Empress, Alix held to an intensely emotional and mystical Orthodox
faith. The superb ritual and singing of the Orthodox liturgy moved her
deeply, as did her sense that through Orthodoxy she stood in spiritual
brotherhood and communion with her husband's simplest subjects. But alongside
this strain of Christian belief, Alix was a born organizer, an efficient
administrator and a passionate Christian philanthropist. Though her interests
included famine and unemployment relief, and professional training for girls,
her charitable work was above all concerned with help for the sick and the
world of medicine. Typically, even on holiday in the Crimea, Alix toured the
hospitals and sanitoria in the neighbourhood, taking her young daughters with
her because 'they should understand the sadness underneath all this beauty'."
The official coronation took place in May of 1896. The young Tsar and
Tsaritsa spent the majority of their time in seclusion and intense prayer,
preparing themselves for the awesome responsibility of governing, with God's
help, the largest nation in the world, which was the protector of the
Orthodox Faith. The coronation of a tsar is no mere secular affair of state.
As Bishop Nectarius (Kontzevich) has written, "The Tsar was and is anointed
by God. This mystery is performed by the Church during the coronation, and
the Anointed of God enters the Royal Doors into the altar, goes to the altar
table and receives the Holy Mysteries as does the priest, with the Body and
Blood taken separately. Thus the Holy Church emphasises the great spiritual
significance of the podvig (struggle) of ruling as a monarch, equalling this
to the holy sacrament of the priesthood... He (the Tsar) is the sacramental
image, the carrier of the special power of the Grace of the Holy Spirit."
As Tsar Nicholas was crowned, he knelt and prayed aloud:
"O Lord God of our fathers, and King of kings, Who created all things by
Thy word, and by Thy wisdom has made man, that he should walk uprightly and
rule righteously over Thy world; Thou has chosen me as Tsar and judge over
Thy people. I acknowledge Thine unsearchable purpose towards me, and bow in
thankfulness before Thy Majesty. Do Thou, my Lord and Governor, fit me for
the work to which Thou hast sent me; teach me and guide me in this great
service. May there be with me the wisdom which belongs to Thy throne; send it
from Thy Holy Heaven, that I may know what is well-pleasing in Thy sight, and
what is right according to Thy commandment. May my heart be in Thine hand, to
accomplish all that is to the profit of the people committed to my charge,
and to Thy glory, that so in the day of Thy Judgement I may give Thee account
of my stewardship without blame; through the grace and mercy of Thy Son, Who
was once crucified for us, to Whom be all honour and glory with Thee and the
Holy Spirit, the Giver of Life, unto the ages of ages. Amen."
His Most Pious Majesty
The Royal couple settled into their life of responsibility and took the
lead in setting an example of godliness and true pastoral care for their
enormous flock. Nowhere was this more evident than in their love and care for
the Holy Orthodox Church. They gave much money and support to monasteries and
to the building of churches. The Tsar considered it his sacred duty to
restore to Russia her ancient traditional culture, which had been abandoned
by many of the "educated" classes in favour of modern, Western styles. He
encouraged the building of churches in the ancient architectural styles,
rather than in the styles favoured since the disastrous "reforms" of Tsar
Peter I and Empress Catherine II. He commissioned the painting of large
numbers of icons in the Byzantine and Old Russian styles, adorning many
churches with them. In the words of Archpriest Michael Polsky, "In the person
of the Emperor Nicholas II the believers had the best and most worthy
representative of the Church, truly 'The Most Pious' as he was referred to in
church services. He was a true patron of the Church, and a solicitor of all
her blessings."
During the reign of Nicholas II, the Church reached her fullest
development and power. The number of churches increased by more than 10,000.
There were 57,000 churches by the end of the period. The number of
monasteries increased by 250, bringing their total up to 1025. Ancient
churches were renovated. The Emperor himself took part in the laying of the
first cornerstones and the consecration of many churches. He visited churches
and monasteries in all parts of the country, venerating their saints. The
Emperor stressed the importance of educating the peasant children within the
framework of church and parish and, as a result, the number of parish schools
grew to 37,000.
Christian literature flourished at this time. Excellent journals were
published, such as Soul-Profiting Reading, Soul-Profiting Converser, The
Wanderer, The Rudder, The Russian Monk, and the ever-popular The Russian
Pilgrim. The Russian people were surrounded by spiritual nourishment as never
before.
There was no tsar in whose reign more saints were glorified (canonized)
than than of Nicholas. His love of Orthodoxy and the Church's holy ones knew
no bounds; and he himself often pressured the Holy Synod to speedily accord
fitting reverence to many of God's saints. Among those glorified during his
reign were: St. Theodosius of Chernigov (glorified in 1896), St. Isidore of
Yuriev (1897), St. Euphrosyne of Polotsk (1909), St. Anna of Kashin (1910),
St. Joasaph of Belgorod (1911), St. Hermogenes of Moscow (1913), St. Pitirim
of Tambov (1914), St. John (Maximovich) of Tobolsk (1916) and St. Paul of
Tobolsk (1917).
In addition, one of the most revered of Russia's saints, Seraphim of
Sarov, was glorified by the Church during the reign of this pious Tsar in
1903, at his insistence. At this time, Nicholas was made aware of the future
apostasy and downfall of the Russian nation and Church through a prophetic
letter written by St. Seraphim himself. The saint had, shortly before his
death in 1833, written this letter, sealed it with five wax seals and
addressed it "to the Tsar in whose reign I shall be glorified". He then gave
it to Elena Motovilov, the young wife of N.I. Motovilov, who is now
well-known for recording his conversation with the saint about the
acquisition of the Holy Spirit. She kept that letter for seventy years and
gave it to the Tsar at the glorification ceremony. While the exact contents
are today unknown, it is nevertheless certain that St. Seraphim prepared
Nicholas for the coming tribulations. Furthermore, on the return trip from
Sarov, the Royal Family visited St. Seraphim's Diveyevo Convent where Blessed
Pasha (Parasceva) the Fool-for-Christ spoke to them several hours; it is said
that she foretold to them their own martyrdom as well as that of Holy Russia.
It is said that the Empress was near to fainting and said:
"I don't believe you, it cannot be!"
Now this was one year before the birth of the heir to the throne and
they very much wanted an heir. So Blessed Pasha got up from her bed with a
piece of red material and said:
"This is for some little trousers for your son, and when he is born, you
will believe what I have been telling you."
They left her cell pale and shaken but resolute - they would accept with
faith whatever God had prepared for them, esteeming the incorruptible crown
of martyrdom higher than corruptible earthly crowns; electing to accept the
cup of suffering offered to them by God Almighty, that by drinking of it they
might offer themselves up as a sacrifice for their people.
During his reign the Tsar sought the advice of Blessed Pasha on all
serious questions. He used to send the Great Princes to her, and according to
her cell-attendant, Eudocia Ivanovna, one would no sooner depart than another
arrived. After the death of Blessed Pasha's cell-attendant, Matushka
Seraphima (Bulgakova), they would put all their questions to her through
Eudocia Ivanovna, who relates that she once said:
"Your Majesty, come down from the throne yourself!"
Not long before her death in August, 1915, Blessed Pasha was continually
making prostrations to the ground in front of the portrait of the Tsar. When
she was worn out, her cell-attendants lifted her up.
"Mamashenka, why are you praying to the Tsar?"
"Stupid, he will be higher than all the tsars."
There were two portraits of the Tsar: one of him with the Tsaritsa and
the other of him alone. But she kept prostrating to the one of him alone.
Again she said about him:
"I don't know, a monk saint, perhaps a martyr!"
Being a peace-maker by nature, the young tsar made an unprecedented
suggestion to the world early in his reign - that all nations come together
and meet in order to cut their military forces and submit to general
arbitration on international disputes.
The result of his proposal, the Hague Peace Conference, was convened on
May 18, 1899, and served as the precedent for the later League of Nations and
United Nations. In 1921, the American President, Warren Harding, officially
acknowledged the Tsar's noble efforts towards the limitation of armaments by
way of binding agreements among the Powers.
The Tsar was unparalleled in Russian history for his mercifulness. He
pardoned criminals, even revolutionaries, and gave away vast quantities of
his own land and money to alleviate the plight of the peasants. It is
believed that he gave away the last of his personal wealth during the Great
War, to support the war effort. Even as a child he often wore patched
clothing while spending his personal allowance to help poor students to pay
for their tuition.
The Emperor took great interest in the strivings of the people for a
better life. He changed the passport system introduced by Peter I and thus
facilitated the free movement of the people, including travel abroad. The
poll tax was abolished and a voluntary programme of hospitalisation insurance
was introduced, under which, for a payment of one rouble per year, a person
was entitled to free hospitalisation. The parity of the rouble was increased
greatly on the international markets during his reign.
In 1897, a law was enacted to limit work hours; night work was forbidden
for women and minors under seventeen years of age, and this at a time when
the majority of the countries in the West had almost no labour legislation at
all. As William Taft commented in 1913, "the Russian Emperor has enacted
labour legislation which not a single democratic state could boast of".
On January 6, 1903, at the feast of the Blessing of the Water at the
Winter Palace, during the salute of the guns of the Peter and Paul fortress,
one of the guns was loaded with grape-shot, and the grape-shot struck the
windows of the palace. Part fell near the procession where the clergy and the
emperor's and empress' suite was. The calmness of the emperor's reaction was
so striking that it drew the attention of the members of his suite. He didn't
move a hair and only asked:
"Who commanded the battery?"
And when they gave the name, he said with evident sympathy:
"Ach, poor (so-and-so), how sorry I am for him!"
They asked the emperor what effect this incident had had on him. He
replied
"I fear nothing until 1918..."
The emperor forgave the commander of the battery and the officer who
ordered the shooting because by the mercy of God there had been no serious
injuries. Only one policeman had been very slightly wounded. His name was -
Romanov...
Dominic Lieven writes: "Between 1895 and 1901 the Empress had given
birth to four daughters: Olga, Tatiana, Marie and Anastasia. The four little
girls were beautiful, healthy and lively children who were greatly loved by
their parents. Nicholas was a fine father and the family circle was full of
love, warmth and trust. If the Emperor had a favourite it was probably
Tatiana, whose personality came closest to that of her mother. Olga, his
eldest daughter, was the most thoughtful, sensitive and intelligent of the
four. Marie, the third, with huge grey eyes and a warm-hearted, simple,
friendly manner, was always the easiest to get on with at first acquaintance.
Anastasia, born in 1901, was notorious as the family's comedian. Under
Russian law, however, no woman could inherit the crown. Had Nicholas died
before 1904, the throne would have gone to his kind-hearted but weak-willed
younger brother, the Grand Duke Michael. Since Michael was a bachelor in 1904
an subsequently contracted an illegal and morganatic marriage, the Romanov
inheritance would then have passed to a younger brother of Alexander III, the
Grand Duke Vladimir, and his descendants. Tension and mutual dislike between
the 'Vladimir branch' and the imperial couple were never far below the
surface in the twentieth century. Much therefore hung on the life of the
little boy born in August, 1904. All the more horrifying was the discovery
that the child had haemophilia.
"In the Edwardian era there was no treatment for haemophilia and little
way of alleviating the terrible pain it periodically caused. The chances were
against a haemophiliac living into middle age, let alone being able to pursue
a normal life. For any parents who loved their children as intensely as the
imperial couple did, the physical and emotional strain of a haemophiliac son
was bound to be great. In the case of Nicholas and Alexandra, however,
matters were made worse by the fact that it was considered unthinkable to
admit that the future autocrat of all the Russias was incurably ill and quite
possibly doomed to an early death. The natural sympathy and understanding
which might have flowed to the parents had therefore to be foregone.
Moreover, however harrowing one of Aleksei's periodic illnesses might be, a
monarch - let alone a Russian autocrat - had always to keep up appearances.
It says something for Nicholas's extraordinary self-control that, adoring
Aleksei as he did, he nevertheless never let the mask slip. As Alexandra
herself once wrote to him, 'you will always keep a cheery face and carry all
hidden inside.'
"Inevitably, however, it was the mother who bore the greater burden
during her son's illnesses, not to mention the incessant worry even when he
was relatively healthy. Nor could she escape the guilt born of the knowledge
that she was the cause of her son's suffering and of the extra burden of
worry about his dynasty's future which had been placed on her husband's
shoulders. Physically frail and always very highly strung, the Empress poured
her last drop of energy into watching over her son and nursing him during his
attacks... The effort cost the Empress dear. She was often too ill and
exhausted to play the role of a monarch's consort, incurring great odium as a
result. Moreover, the strain of Alexis' illness pushed his mother close to
nervous collapse. As the Grand Duchess Olga commented, 'the birth of a son,
which should have been the happiest event in the lives of Nicky and Alicky,
became their heaviest cross.'"
Shortly after the birth of Alexis, according to the Procurator Lukyanov,
the Tsar went to the metropolitan of St. Petersburg and asked for his
blessing that he abdicate from the throne and become a monk. But the
metropolitan refused to bless this.
The tragedy of Alexis' haemophilia was followed by a succession of other
tragedies, even a small number of which would have broken a lesser man. But
for the Tsar they only served to further refine the nobility of his soul.
First there was the disastrous war with Japan of 1904-05 during which most of
the Russian fleet was lost. At this time also, sensing public disappointment
with the defeat, the nihilistic enemies of Christ seized the moment and
instigated mutinies, strikes, riots and assassinations. Here was a whole
class of society who were, in the words of St. Paul, "... lovers of their own
selves, boasters, proud, blasphemous, disobedient to parents, unthankful,
unholy, without natural affection, trucebreakers, false accusers,
incontinent, fierce, despisers of those who are good, traitors, heady,
highminded..." (II Timothy 3.2-4).
The last great prophet of Holy Russia, St. John of Kronstadt, who
clearly foresaw the approaching catastrophe, repeatedly exhorted his
countrymen to repent and return to their former piety and support the
God-anointed ruler or face untold disaster, both here and in the world to
come.
In 1905 St. John said: "We have a Tsar of righteous and pious life. God
has sent a heavy cross of sufferings to him as to His chosen one and beloved
child, as the seer of the destinies of God said: 'Whom I love, those I
reproach and punish' (Rev. 3.19). If there is no repentance in the Russian
people, the end of the world is near. God will remove from it the pious Tsar
and send a whip in the person of impure, cruel, self-called rulers, who will
drench the whole land in blood and tears."
Although the Russo-Japanese war of 1904-05 was a bloody failure, the
Tsar refused to allow the official record to whitewash anything. He said:
"The work must be based exclusively on the bare facts... We have nothing
to silence, since more blood has been shed than necessary.... Heroism is
worthy to be noted on an equal footing with failures. It is, without
exception, necessary to aim at recording the historic truth inviolably."
The year 1905 was to be a "rehearsal" for the bloody events which took
place twelve years later. Encouraged by Lenin and Trotsky, a campaign of
disorders was begun all over the Empire. Many high government officials were
murdered in the streets, among whom, in 1905 was Nicholas' cousin, the Grand
Duke Sergius, husband of the Empress' sister, Grand Duchess Elizabeth.
The Tsar supported the restoration of canonical order and the
patriarchate in the Russian Church. Once, at the pre-conciliar assembly
convened in 1906, when the bishops were discussing these issues, he asked
them whether they had a candidate for the patriarchate. When they said no, he
offered himself as a candidate. The bishops were shocked and refused his
offer. The Tsar, being a humble man, never brought this subject up again.
On one occasion, the emperor was talking about the sufferings that lay
ahead of him with his prime minister at the time, Peter Arkadyevich Stolypin.
"It was not for nothing," he said, "that I was born on the day of Job
the Much-Suffering."
And on other occasions he said:
"I have more than a presentiment that I am destined for terrible trials,
and that I shall not be rewarded for them on this earth... Nothing that I
have undertaken succeeds for me; I have no successes. Man's will is so
weak... How many times have I applied to myself the words of the holy Job,
'For the thing that I fear comes upon me, and what I dread befalls me.'"
Once, having prayed a little before an important decision, the emperor
said to Stolypin:
"Perhaps an atoning sacrifice is necessary for the salvation of Russia.
I shall be that sacrifice. May the will of God be done!"
Stolypin later recalled: "He made this triumphant declaration to me in
the simplest, calmest and most even voice. There was a strange mixture in his
voice, and especially in his look, of decisiveness and meekness, at the same
time unshakeable and passive, unclear and well-defined; as if he was
expressing, not his own will, but was rather bowing to some external power -
the majesty of Providence."
After the disturbances of 1905-06, Russian entered into a period of
great prosperity. With the wise and dynamic assistance of Stolypin, Tsar
Nicholas led the nation through a time of such growth - agricultural,
economic, educational and industrial - that had the first World War not
occurred, Russia would have undoubtedly become the leading nation of the
world.
But the Tsar never pursued industrial growth at the expense of his
people. In 1908 he was presented with a huge plan for industrialisation which
demanded far more money than was available. The Tsar replied:
"Peter I had little money and so he used forced labour and this cost him
the lives of a million of his subjects... the realisation of this project
would cost between 10 and 15 millions of the premature deaths of my
subjects... I cannot in conscience sacrifice millions of my subjects, and
therefore we must endure (without industrialisation)."
When he was advised that the success of future wars depended upon
industrialisation, he replied:
"We will hope in God. If the war is short, we will win, but if it is
long, then such is our fate."
Again, the head of the police promised the Tsar that there would be no
revolution in Russia for a hundred years if the Tsar would permit 50,000
executions. The Tsar quickly refused this terrible proposal. After the
revolution, however, the Bolsheviks thought nothing of butchering many
millions of people for acts of "civil disobedience".
The Tsar tried to heal the revolutionary illness with mercy and
forgiveness. One student was sentenced to death, but on the eve of the
execution, his fiance petitioned the Tsar for a commutation. The Tsar was
reached by having his personal attendant call him from his bedroom. He
received the petition and sent off a telegram commuting the sentence. He
praised the attendant for his daring and even had the student sent to the
Crimea for treatment of his tuberculosis.
The Tsar was always careful not to be vindictive, saying:
"Irritation solves nothing, and besides, a sharp word from me would
sound more offensive than from anyone else."
In 1911, during the performance of an opera in Kiev, at which the Tsar
was also present, Stolypin was assassinated. Before he fell to the ground, he
turned to his sovereign in the balcony and, blessing him with the sign of the
Cross, said:
"May God save him!"
The Tsar made many pilgrimages, and was a staunch supporter of the
schools operated by the Church. In 1912, there were 1,988,367 children in
these schools, in spite of a campaign by the Duma to close them. He also
opened special industries for the city poor to help them earn their own
living.
In 1914, Russia was forced to enter World War I. As Grand Duchess
Elizabeth testified, the peace-loving Tsar did not want this war, but
aggression against Orthodox Serbia by Germany left him no other honourable
choice.
At the outbreak of the war, the Liturgy was celebrated in the Winter
Palace. The French Ambassador observed that "Nicholas II prayed with a holy
fervour which gave his pale face a movingly mystical expression". The tsar's
devotion to prayer was commented on by many; his private car included a
"veritable chapel", and he never missed a service while in army headquarters.
As soon as the war broke out, the Empress and the four Grand Duchesses
(Olga, Tatiana, Maria and Anastasia) became nurses; and hospitals were opened
at Tsarskoye Selo, near the family's residence, where wounded soldiers were
brought. They worked long hours, diligently and tirelessly following the
commandment of Christ to visit the sick, since "inasmuch as ye have done it
unto the least of these My brethren, ye have done it unto Me" (Matthew
25.30). Anna Vyrubova, the Empress' closest friend, wrote: "I have personally
seen the Empress of Russia in the operating room, assisting in the most
difficult operations, taking from the hands of the busy surgeon amputated
legs and arms, removing bloody and even vermin-ridden field dressings."
Vyrubova says that she was a "born nurse", who "from her earliest accession
took an interest in hospitals, in nursing, quite foreign to native Russian
ideas. She not only visited the sick herself, in hospitals, in homes, but she
enormously increased the efficiency of the hospital system in Russia. Out of
her own private funds the Empress founded and supported two excellent schools
for training nurses, especially in the care of children."
When the war broke out, the Tsar ordered that all the money deposited in
Britain be returned to Russia. The British did not want to comply. The Tsar
then called a conference of bankers and merchants of the highest rank. He put
92 million roubles on the table and asked them voluntarily "to give money for
the military victory of which the Russian people will be proud." The
merchants and bankers refused to give any money. But the Tsar expended the
whole of his fortune on the war effort.
At first the war went well, and the country was united heart, soul and
body in patriotic fervour behind their Tsar. But soon, due to poor
communications, low-level mismanagement and subversive treachery, problems
arose in supplying the armed forces with ammunition and food. The army began
to suffer defeats, and many men were killed. It was at this crucial time that
the Bolsheviks, fuelled by German money, went to work spreading discord among
the troops and at home.
In 1915, tens of thousands of Serbs began to die after their forced
march to the Albanian coast. Their allies looked upon them with indifference
from their ships. The Tsar informed his allies by telegram that they must
immediately evacuate the Serbs, otherwise he would consider the fall of the
Serbs as an act of the greatest immorality and he would withdraw from the
Alliance. This telegram brought prompt action, and dozens of Italian, French
and English ships set about evacuating the dying army to Corfu.
Once, during manoeuvres, the Tsar and his suite were brought breakfast.
However, when he discovered that nothing had been prepared for the soldiers
who were holding his horses, he would not eat until all the soldiers had
received their rations. He also showed great compassion for the wounded.
In 1915, the following event described by Count Sheremetiev took place
when the Tsar and his family arrived in Sebastopol: "His Majesty, who loved
to make long drives in the car in the environs of Sebastopol after breakfast,
... unexpectedly set off with the Empress to the monastery of St. George,
where he had been for short periods in earlier years, but where nobody
expected him this time. The abbot and brotherhood were very surprised and
delighted by the visit of their Majesties...
"We went into the church, and a moleben began. The harmonious voices of
the monks immediately changed in mood: it was as if we had come into a quiet
bay after a storm. Everything was so prayerful, penetrating and quiet...
Suddenly beyond the doors of the church, which were very small, there was an
unusual sound, loud voices and a strange turmoil - in a word, something that
did not correspond to the seriousness of the moment or the usual monastic
order. His Majesty turned his head in surprise, knitted his brows in
displeasure and sent to find out what had happened and from where this
incomprehensible disturbance and whispering to each other was coming from. I
went out of the church and learned the following from the monks who were
standing there: in the rocks of the cliffs to the right and left there lived
two schema-monks whom none of the monks had ever seen, and who were known to
be alive only from the fact that the food which was placed for them on the
narrow path in the rocks would be taken by some invisible hand by morning...
"And then an improbable event took place which shook all the monks of
the monastery: two elders in the clothing of schema-monks were quietly
climbing the steep steps that led upwards from the direction of the sea. They
could have known nothing about the arrival of his Majesty, for neither the
abbot nor the brothers themselves, nobody knew about the visit of his
Majesty, which had been decided on quite suddenly, at the last minute. That
was what caused the disturbance among the brotherhood. I told his Majesty
about this and saw that this event made an impression on him, but he said
nothing and the moleben continued.
"When the moleben had come to an end, his Majesty and the Empress kissed
the Cross, then chatted for a while with the abbot and came out of the church
onto the square...
"There, at the point where the wooden staircase ended, stood the two old
elders. One had a long white beard, while the other had a short beard. When
his Majesty came up to them, they both silently bowed to the earth before
him. His Majesty was clearly embarrassed, but he said nothing and slowly
bowed to them.
"... Now, after all that has happened, I wonder: did the schema-monks
not foresee with their noetic eyes the destinies of Russia and the Royal
Family, and did they not bowed down to the feet of his Majesty the Emperor
Nicholas II as to the great sufferer of the Russian land?
"Living here, as a refuge, many years later, I heard from one reliable
person that his Majesty himself told him that once, as he was standing on the
deck of the Standart, and passing by the monastery of St. George, he saw what
seemed to be the figure of a monk in the rocks, continually blessing his
Majesty as he was standing on the deck of the Standart with a large sign of
the Cross, until the Standart disappeared from view."
In August, 1915, Igumen Seraphim (Putyatin) visited Blessed Pasha of
Sarov. "In my presence the clairvoyant kissed the portraits of the Tsar and
his family several times. She placed them together with the icons and prayed
to them as to holy martyrs. Then she wept bitterly. I understood these
allegorical acts only when there took place the great sorrows experienced by
the Tsar and his Family and linked with the war; for although they were not
torn by grenades or wounded by lead bullets, their loving hearts were torn by
the unprecedented sorrows and flowed with blood. They were truly bloodless
martyrs. In the same way the Mother of God was not wounded by weapons of
torture, but at the sight of the suffering of her Divine Son, as Righteous
Simeon said, a sword pierced her heart. Then the eldress took little icons of
the Mother of God of Loving Tenderness, in front of which St. Seraphim died,
and blessed them from a distance for his Majesty and his Family. Then she
gave them to me and asked me to send them to them. She blessed icons for his
Majesty, her Majesty, the Tsarevich, the Great Princesses Olga, Tatiana,
Maria and Anastasia, Great Princess Elizabeth Fyodorovna and A.A. Vyrubova. I
asked her to bless a little icon for Great Prince Nicholas Nikolayevich. She
blessed one, but not of the Mother of God of Loving Tenderness, but of St.
Seraphim. She blessed icons for nobody else, although I even asked her to
bless some for some people. But my requests had no influence on her, for she
acted independently..."
Once, in December, 1916, the Emperor and Empress went for the day with
two of the Grand-Duchesses to Novgorod, where they visited some hospitals and
monasteries and attended the Liturgy in the cathedral of Saint Sophia. Before
leaving, the Empress visited the Yuriev and Desyatina monasteries. In the
latter there lived the eldress Maria Mikhailovna, who was according to
different accounts 107 or 116 years old and who for many years had been lying
on an iron bed in iron chains.
According to the Empress' own account in a letter to the Tsar: "She
blessed and kissed us. She sends you an apple (perhaps you'll eat it). She
said that the war will soon end - 'tell him that we've had enough.' To me she
said: 'As for you, beauty - a heavy cross - don't fear.' (She repeated this
several times.) 'Because you came to us, two churches will be built in Russia
(she repeated this twice) - don't forget us, come again.'"
According to another account, when the Empress came in, the eldress
stretched out her withered hands to her and said:
"Here comes the martyr - the Tsaritsa Alexandra!"
She embraced her and blessed her. A few days later she died.
It has often been asserted that the Tsar was a weak-willed man who
allowed himself to be ruled by his wife in matters of State, and, through
her, by the evil monk Rasputin. However, General A.I. Spiridonovich, having
mentioned the empress' insistence on not trusting anybody but Rasputin,
Vyrubova and Sablin, comments: "The Emperor understood all this well and very
frequently acted against her advice, guided by his own experience. Sometimes
his decisions coincided with the Empress' wishes. But to claim
indiscriminately that the Emperor acted in state matters only according to
the Empress' wishes is a great mistake. This means ignoring the facts as well
as the character and principles of the Emperor. Emperor Nicholas was far from
being as simple-minded and weak-willed as many thought."
As for Rasputin, Grand Duchess Olga writes: "Knowing Nicky as I did, I
must insist that Rasputin had not a particle of influence over him. It was
Nicky who eventually put a stop to Rasputin's visits to the palace. It was
again Nicky who sent the man back to Siberia and that more than once. And
some of Nicky's letters to Alicky are proof enough of what he really thought
of Rasputin's advice..."
The enemies accused the Empress of pro-German sympathies because of her
German blood. But her letters demonstrate beyond a shadow of doubt that she
was completely devoted to Russia. In any case, as the French ambassador
pointed out, "her education, her intellectual formation and her morals were
entirely English."
In May, 1917, a Sarov archimandrite, who was sorrowing over the fate of
the Royal Family, fell asleep during prayer and saw a vision of the Family
together with St. Seraphim. And the saint told him not to sorrow, that God
would not forsake his chosen ones, and that He had sent him, Seraphim, to
comfort the Royal sufferers in the hour of their trial.
"Do you see the radiant light come from the faces of the Royal
sufferers? This is a sign that they are under the special protection of God,
as being righteous ones... Look at the face of the Empress and you will see
that the light coming from it is brighter than the others. This is a sign
that she will suffer more slander than any from the followers of the world's
slanderer."
There had been even earlier prophecies of the martyrdom of the Tsar and
Holy Russia. Thus A.D. Khmelevsky writes: "[Towards the end of the eighteenth
century] the clairvoyant monk Abel wrote a prophecy entitled 'On the
destinies of the Russian realm' for the Emperor Paul I Petrovich which
referred to his great-grandson, the Emperor Nicholas II. This prophecy was
placed in an envelope and sealed with the personal seal of the Emperor Paul I
and with an inscription in his own hand: 'To be opened by our successor on
the one hundredth anniversary of my death.' The document was kept in a
special room in the Gatchina palace. All the emperors knew about it, but none
dared to oppose the will of their predecessor. On March 11, 1901, when 100
years had passed in accordance with the behest, the Emperor Nicholas II came
to Gatchina palace with the minister of the court and members of his suite
and, after a funeral service for the Emperor Paul, opened the packet and
learned of his thorny destiny. The writer of these lines knew about this
already in 1905.
"The Emperor Alexander I Pavlovich once visited the elder St. Seraphim
of Sarov in his poor cell, and this is what the man of God foretold him:
"'There will a Tsar who will glorify me, after which there will be a
great disturbance in Rus', and much blood will flow because they will rise up
against this Tsar and the autocracy, but God will exalt the Tsar...'"
The Atoning Sacrifice
The enemies of Holy Russia knew well that the greatest unifying factors
in Russia were the love of God and love for the Tsar, the visible symbol of
the Orthodox Empire. By cutting off the head, they hoped to render the body
powerless through fragmentation, thereby making it malleable to their evil
intents. Through infiltration of the press, slanderous stories against the
Royal Family were printed. The foreign press, hungry for scandal, printed
unverified stories, many of which are still believed to this day. Even the
Empress was accused of disloyalty and treason - she who was above reproach in
her heartfelt love for her adopted land. Conspiracies began to take shape
among court officials, the Duma (Parliament), the generals and the nobility,
even including relatives of the Tsar. This, at a time when unity was more
than ever needed.
The Duma deputies and army generals were putting pressure on the Tsar to
abdicate. They kept reassuring him that only such an act would save Russia
from bloodshed. He repeatedly asked:
"Are you confident that my abdication will save Russia from bloodshed?"
Again they reassured him that it would.
But the Tsar knew the quality of the men who were advising him. As he
sadly wrote in his diary on the day of his abdication:
"All around me I see treason, cowardice and deceit."
And again, on the same day, while holding a bundle of telegrams from the
Corps of Generals and even from his own uncle, he said:
"What is left for me to do when everyone has betrayed me?"
On the day of the abdication the enemies had arranged that the Emperor
should not meet his strongest supporter, the Empress. She understood this and
wrote: "My heart is rent with suffering, since you are completely isolated.
It is clear that they do not wish to allow us to see each other before you
sign some sort of paper. If they compel you to make concessions, you are
under no circumstances obliged to fulfil them, because they are obtained by
unworthy means. We are all of good cheer, but pressured by circumstances. We
only suffer for you and endure humiliation for you, holy sufferer..."
And after the abdication, the Empress wrote to the Emperor: "You will be
crowned by God Himself on this earth, in your own country..."
And so, after an entire night spent in prayer, he laid aside the crown
for what he felt was the good of his country. For, as he wrote: "I am ready
to give up both throne and life if I should become a hindrance to the
happiness of the homeland." And again: "There is no sacrifice that I would
not make for the real benefit of Russia and for her salvation."
Metropolitan Anastasius writes that the emperor "was far removed from
the idea of defending his authority only for the sake of the desire to rule.
'Are you sure that this will be to Russia's benefit?' he asked those who,
supposedly in the name of the nation, presented him with the demand that he
renounce his hereditary rights, and when he received a positive answer, he
immediately laid aside the burden of royal government, fearing lest a single
drop of Russian blood might fall on him in case a civil war arose."
Though he no longer had the responsibility of government, his first
thoughts were for his nation, as he said to one of his officers,
"Just to think that, now I am Tsar no longer, they won't even let me
fight for my country."
At the very moment of the Tsar's abdication - 3 o'clock on March 2, 1917
- a miracle took place that attested to God's love for Russia. In the village
of Kolomenskoye, near Moscow, according to a revelation of the Mother of God,
a search had been taking place for several days for her icon "The Reigning
Mother of God". This icon had gone at the head of the Russian army in 1812 as
it drove Napoleon out of Russia. But then this wonder-working icon had been
forgotten and seemingly lost. No one knew about its fate. And only on March
1, 1917, did a pious widow by the name of Eudocia receive a revelation to
look for the icon in the village of Kolomenskoye. She looked through both of
the churches of the village, but did not find the icon. Then she asked
whether they had any old icons. They told her that there were some in the
basement. She asked to go there, and she and a deacon went down into the
basement.
"And truly, there were many old, dust-covered icons there. They began to
wipe them one by one. But they still did not find the icon they were looking
for. But when she came up to the icon "The Reigning Mother of God", Eudocia
cried out:
"That's her!",
although it was still covered with a thick layer of dust which made it
impossible to recognise. But when they cleaned it, it was true: the
wonder-working icon of the Mother of God had been found. It depicted the
Mother of God seated on a throne, her countenance both stern and sorrowful,
an orb and sceptre in her hands and the Christ-child giving a blessing in her
lap, with God the Father looking down from above. This icon soon thereafter
miraculously renewed itself and the robe of the Mother of God was seen to be
blood red, something which had been foretold also in the dream. Services were
written to this icon and many people made the pilgrimage to venerate it.
Healings, both of physical and mental infirmities began to take place before
it.
However, the attention the event deserved was given to it neither by
the provisional government, which was only to be expected, nor by the people,
which was less expected, nor even by the Church herself... Then the servant
of God Eudocia insisted that according to the revelation the icon had to be
taken round the Kremlin seven times. But they managed to take it round only
once during the time of Patriarch Tikhon, that is, after the October
revolution, and to the sound of gunfire. Eudocia said:
"The Mother of God said: if they take it round the Kremlin seven times,
the Bolsheviks will not be able to capture it!"
But this was not done. The Bolsheviks put the icon in a museum under the
title "A counter-revolutionary icon of the Mother of God". Recently, it has
been returned to Kolomenskoye.
After the abdication, on March 9, the Tsar arrived back in Tsarkoye
Selo, where his family were all under house arrest like common criminals, and
found all of his children ill. Alexis, Olga and Maria had the measles and
were bedridden with high fevers; Tatiana and Anastasia both had painful ear
abscesses, which left Tatiana temporarily deaf.
Again the image of Job overshadowed him - all had been taken from him
except his dear ones and his indomitable faith. He did not curse his fate,
accepting all as the will of God, and did not even murmur against his captors
who treated him with disrespect and even contempt. What greater example could
the Russian people have asked for, or what nobler man could have led them as
their king? Thus Christ's lament over the chosen people was fulfilled in Holy
Russia as well: "How often would I have gathered thy children together, even
as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not! Behold,
your house is left unto you desolate" (Matthew 23.37-38).
Not only the Tsar, but the whole of his blessed family, met their fate
with truly Christian patience. Thus on March 13, 1917, the Tsarevich Alexis
wrote to his sister Anastasia:
"I will pray fervently for you and Maria. With God everything will pass.
Be patient and pray."
And shortly after the abdication the Empress said: "Our sufferings are
nothing. Look at the sufferings of the Saviour, how He suffered for us. If
this is necessary for Russia, we are ready to sacrifice our lives and
everything."
And again: "I love my country, with all its faults. It grows dearer and
dearer to me... I feel old, oh, so old, but I am still the mother of this
country, and I suffer its pains as my own child's pains, and I love it in
spite of all its sins and horrors... Since [God] sent us such trials,
evidently He thinks we are sufficiently prepared for it. It is a sort of
examination... One can find in everything something good and useful -
whatever sufferings we go through - let it be. He will give us strength and
patience and will not leave us. He is merciful. It is only necessary to bow
to His will without murmur and wait - there on the other side He is preparing
for all who love Him indescribable joy."
The Royal Family left Tsarksoye Selo on July 31, and on August 6 they
arrived in Tobolsk on the ship "Rus", as the provisional government began to
collapse amidst Bolshevik ravings. Many Russians everywhere behaved as though
in a trance, against their better instincts, or even worse - as though
possessed. The Tsar and his family remained in Tobolsk until the following
April, taking comfort only in prayer and in each other.
Protopriest Vladimir Khlynov, superior of the Tobolsk cathedral,
celebrated services for the Royal Family in the governor's house and was the
spiritual father of their Majesties at this time. Once, when he was
imprisoned on Solovki, he witnessed that the Tsar had said to him:
"I can in no way forgive myself for having given up power. I never
expected that power would fall to the Bolsheviks. I thought that I was giving
up power to the representatives of the people..."
At first the Royal Family went to services in the cathedral. And they
and all the people liked this. But once the cathedral protodeacon on the
Tsar's namesday, at the end of the moleben, pronounced the "Many Years" to
the Tsar with his full title. This annoyed the Tsar. After the service, on
coming home, he said:
"Who needs this? I very well know that the people still love me and are
faithful to me, but now there will be unpleasantnesses, and they won't let us
into the cathedral again."
And so it turned out. But thanks to this, the protopriest was invited to
the house to perform services, and in this way got to know the Family better.
The princesses sang simply and harmoniously. They had good books in which
they followed the services. The Tsar also assisted the priest during the
services.
Once the Tsar sent Bishop Hermogenes of Tobolsk a bow to the earth,
asking him to forgive him that he had been forced to allow his removal from
his see. He could not have done otherwise at the time, but he was glad to
have the opportunity of asking the bishop's forgiveness now. The bishop was
very touched, and sent a bow to the earth to the Tsar together with a
prosphora and asked for his forgiveness.
The late Rev. G.V. Vaughan-James, Anglican chaplain of the Convent of
St. Denys, Warminster, England related the following story. He was on a
British ship that was sent to a port on the Black Sea for the purpose of
rescuing the Tsar and his family and bringing them to England. The crew were
very excited by the mission. When they arrived at this port, Rev.
Vaughan-James was told to leave the ship and get into a train without asking
questions. The train travelled for some time and then stopped at a small
station. A woman of striking beauty and wearing a sable coat entered his
compartment. She told him that she was a lady-in-waiting of the Tsaritsa, and
handed him an icon of St. Nicholas with the words:
"The Tsaritsa has asked me to give this to you. Take it back to England,
and ask the English people to pray for the safety of her children."
The Rev. Vaughan-James was very surprised. The woman left the
compartment, and the train returned to the port. After returning to the ship,
the Rev. Vaughan-James was told that a telephone message had come from
London, ordering the ship to return to England without the Tsar and his
family. The rescue operation had been cancelled. No reason was given. On the
way home all the crew were depressed, and while they were still at sea it was
announced on the radio that the Tsar and his family had been killed.
The Rev. Vaughan-James did not know what to do with the icon, and gave
it to the Admiralty, where, he said, it still hung in one of the rooms.
However, a search recently undertaken at the Admiralty did not reveal the
icon.
A commissar arrived from Moscow and informed the Tsar that the was being
taken away that night. The Tsar feared that he would be forced to sign the
Brest-Litovsk treaty, but the commissar assured him that that was not the
case. The Tsar insisted on allowing someone to accompany him, and the
Tsaritsa suffered much, not knowing whether to follow her husband or to
remain with her sick son. Finally, after much heartbreak, she decided to
entrust her son to his tutor and to follow her spouse.
The parents and children had never been separated, but now they had to
be, and this on the eve of Pascha, which they had always celebrated together.
On April 13/26, the Royal Couple left Tobolsk and covered 285 versts by
wagon, reaching the railhead. On April 17/30, the Tsar, the Tsaritsa and
Grand Duchess Maria Nikolayevna with some members of the servants, arrived in
Ekaterinburg and were imprisoned in the home of the engineer Ipatiev. On May
10, the remaining members of the family arrived.
In Ekaterinburg they spent three hellish months of psychological torture
- and yet they all retained their inward calm and state of prayer, so that
not a small number of their tormentors were softened by these valiant
Christian strugglers. As Pierre Gilliard, the French tutor to the Tsarevich
Alexis recalled:
"The courage of the prisoners was sustained in a remarkable way by
religion. They had kept that wonderful faith which in Tobolsk had been the
admiration of their entourage and which had given them such strength, such
serenity in suffering. They were already almost entirely detached from this
world. The Tsaritsa and Grand Duchesses could often be heard singing
religious airs, which affected their guards in spite of themselves.
"Gradually these guards were humanised by contact with their prisoners.
They were astonished at their simplicity, attracted by their gentleness,
subdued by their serene dignity, and soon found themselves dominated by those
whom they thought they held in their power. The drunken Avdiev found himself
disarmed by such greatness of soul; he grew conscious of his own infamy. The
early ferocity of these men was succeeded by profound piety."
When this would happen, the inhuman Bolsheviks would replace the guards
who had been so touched with crueller and more animalistic ones.
Seldom being allowed to go to church, they nevertheless nourished their
souls with home prayers and greatly rejoiced at every opportunity to receive
the Divine sacraments. Three days before their martyrdom, in the very house
in which they were imprisoned, there took place the last church service of
their suffering lives. As the officiating priest, Fr. John Storozhev,
related: "'It appeared to me that the Emperor, and all his daughters, too,
were very tired. During such a service it is customary to read a prayer for
the deceased. For some reason, the Deacon began to sing it, and I joined
him... As soon as we started to sing, we heard the Imperial Family behind us
drop to their knees' (as is done during funeral services)... Thus they
prepared themselves, without suspecting it, for their own death - in
accepting the funeral viaticum. Contrary to their custom none of the family
sang during the service, and upon leaving the house the clergymen expressed
the opinion that they 'appeared different' - as if something had happened to
them."
The Tsaritsa used to say:
"We are one, and this, alas, is so rare today. We are tightly united
together... a small, tightly knit family..."
Inseparable in life, they were now to remain unseparated in death.
After midnight on July 4/17, 1918, the entire family, with their doctor
and two faithful servants, was brought to the basement of the house of their
confinement under the pretext of moving them once again. There they were
brutally and mercilessly murdered, the children as well as the adults, under
the cover of darkness - for "men loved the darkness rather than light,
because their deeds were evil" (John 3.19). The Tsar was shot as he stood
forward to defend his family. Tsaritsa Alexandra was able to make the sign of
the Cross before she, too, fell. The first bullets did not bring death to the
youngest ones, and they were savagely clubbed, bayoneted and shot at
point-blank range.
Those killed were: the Tsar (born 1868), the Tsaritsa (1872), Olga (both
1895), Tatiana (1897), Maria (born 1899), Anastasia (born 1901), Alexis (born
1904), the Tsar's physician Eugene Botkin, the Tsaritsa's chamber-maid Anna
Demidova, the cook Kharitonov and the servant Trupp. The sailor Clement
Nagorny, who had looked after the Tsarevich since early childhood, and
Sergius Sednev, the servant to the Grand Duchesses, both of whom had defended
the Royal Family from robbery and insults in Ekaterinburg, were taken away to
prison and shot there. Those who were refused permission to stay with the
Royal Family at Ekaterinburg, and who were also shot in prison were General
Elias Tatishchev and Prince Basil Dolgorukov. The maid-of-honour, Countess
Anastasia Hendrikova, and the court teacher, Ekaterina Schneider, were taken
to Perm and shot there.
On August 21, just before Countess Hendrikova was shot, she was asked if
she had voluntarily followed the Romanovs to Tobolsk. She stated that she
had. When asked if she would return and continue to serve them if she were
set free, she said:
"Yes! Up to the last day of my life!"
On the night of July 4/17, Blessed Maria Ivanovna, the fool-for-Christ
of Diveyevo, began to shout and scream:
"The Tsar's with bayonets! Cursed Jews!"
There is evidence that the murders were ritualistic. Thus strange
cabbalistic symbols were found on the walls of the room where the crime took
place which have been deciphered to mean: "Here was wounded in the heart the
head of the Church, the people and the state", or: "Here, by order of the
secret powers, the Tsar was offered as a sacrifice for the destruction of the
state. Let all peoples be informed of this." Again, on the wall of the
death-chamber was found an inscription which fittingly sums up the deed from
the point of view of the Jewish revolution. It was a quotation from the
German Jewish poet Heine, slightly altered to bring out the word "tsar" and
identifying the tsar with Belshazzar:
Belsatzar ward in selbiger Nacht
Von seinen knechten umgebracht. |
On the same night Belshazzar
Was killed by his own slaves. |
But the truth was quite the opposite. Belshazzar hated the people of
God, and his removal opened the way for the rebuilding of the Temple of God
in Zion by the Jewish Prince Zerubbabel. The killing of Tsar Nicholas, on the
other hand, opened the way to the destruction of Orthodox Russia and its
transformation into Babylon.
Thus ended the life of the Christ-like Tsar, as a sacrifice for the
Orthodox Faith and for the Russian people, both of whom he so fervently loved
and believed in.
Martyr-Great-Princess Olga Nikolayevna wrote from Tobolsk: "Father asks
the following message to be given to all those who have remained faithful to
him, and to those on whom they may have an influence, that they should not
take revenge for him, since he has forgiven everyone and prays for everyone,
that they should not take revenge for themselves, and should remember that
the evil which is now in the world will be still stronger, but that it is not
love that will conquer evil, but only love..."
And in the belongings of the same holy martyr were found the following
verses by S. Bekhteyev:
Now as we stand before the gates of death,
Breathe in the lips of us Thy servants
That more than human, supernatural strength
To meekly pray for those that hurt us.
Posthumous Glory
In 1917 Metropolitan Macarius of Moscow, who alone in the Church's
hierarchy had refused to accept the Provisional Government because of his
oath of allegiance to the Tsar, had the following revelation in a series of
dreams: "I saw a field. The Saviour was walking along a path. I went after
Him, crying,
"'Lord, I am following you!'
"Finally we approached an immense arch adorned with stars. At the
threshold of the arch the Saviour turned to me and said again:
"'Follow me!'
And He went into a wondrous garden, and I remained at the threshold and
awoke. Soon I fell asleep again and saw myself standing in the same arch, and
with the Saviour stood Tsar Nicholas. The Saviour said to the Tsar:
"'You see in My hands two cups: one which is bitter for your people and
the other sweet for you.'
"The Tsar fell to his knees and for a long time begged the Lord to allow
him to drink the bitter cup together with his people. The Lord did not agree
for a long time, but the Tsar begged importunately. Then the Saviour drew out
of the bitter cup a large glowing coal and laid it in the palm of the Tsar's
hand. The Tsar began to move the coal from hand to hand and at the same time
his body began to grow light, until it had become completely bright, like
some radiant spirit. At this I again woke up. Falling asleep yet again, I saw
an immense field covered with flowers. In the middle of the field stood the
Tsar, surrounded by a multitude of people, and with his hands he was
distributing manna to them. An invisible voice said at this moment:
"'The Tsar has taken the guilt of the Russian people upon himself, and
the Russian people is forgiven.'"
In the same year Elder Nectarius of Optina said: "Now his Majesty is not
his own man, he is suffering such humiliation for his mistakes. 1918 will be
still worse. His Majesty and all his family will be killed, tortured. One
pious girl had a vision: Jesus Christ was sitting on a throne, while around
Him were the twelve apostles, and terrible torments and groans resounded from
the earth. And the Apostle Peter asked Christ:
"'O Lord, when will these torments cease?'
"And Jesus Christ replied: 'I give them until 1922. If the people do not
repent, do not come to their senses, then they will all perish in this way.'
"Then before the throne of God there stood our Tsar wearing the crown of
a great-martyr. Yes, this tsar will be a great-martyr. Recently, he has
redeemed his life, and if people do not turn to God, then not only Russia,
but the whole of Europe will collapse..."
The sanctity of the Tsar has been revealed in a number of miracles.
Thus in 1947 Protopresbyter Michael Polsky recounted the following story
in which which the intercession of the martyred Royal Family saved about a
company of Cossacks who had lost contact with their transport and army, and
were surrounded by the Reds in the midst of a swamp. The priest Fr. Elijah
summoned everyone to prayer, saying:
"Today is the day of the commemoration of the Tsar-martyr. His son, the
young Tsarevich Alexis was the honoured ataman of the Cossack armies. Let us
beseech them that they intercede before the Lord for the salvation of the
Christ-loving Cossack army."
And Fr. Elijah served a moleben "to the Tsar-martyr, the Emperor of
Russia". And the refrain during the moleben was: "Holy Martyrs of the Royal
House, pray to God for us!"
The whole company sang. At the end of the moleben, Fr. Elijah read the
dismissal: "Through the prayers of the holy Tsar-martyr Nicholas, the Emperor
of Russia, his Heir the young Tsarevich Alexis, ataman of the Christ-loving
Cossack armies, the right-believing Tsaritsa-martyr Alexandra and her
children the Tsarevna-martyrs, may He have mercy and save us, for He is good
and loveth mankind."
To the objection that these holy martyrs had not yet been glorified, and
miracles from them had not yet been revealed, Fr. Elijah replied: "Through
their prayers we shall get out... They have been glorified... You yourselves
have heard how the people has glorified them. The people of God... May the
holy youth Tsarevich Alexis show us. Don't you see the miracle of the wrath
of God on Russia for their innocent blood?... You will see revelations
through the salvation of those who honour their holy memory... There is an
indication for you in the lives of the saints. You will read that Christians
built churches over the bodies of the holy martyrs without any glorification.
They lit oil-lamps and prayed to them as to intercessors and petitioners..."
The company and transport got out of the encirclement in a miraculous
manner.
They were walking up to their knees, even up to their waist in mud.
Sometimes they sank in even up to their necks. The horses got stuck, but then
jumped out and went on... They didn't remember how far they went or how tired
they were... And they got out... 43 women, 14 children, 7 wounded, 11 old men
and invalids, 1 priest and 22 Cossacks - 98 people and 31 horses in all. They
came out on the other side of the swamp, on the corner of land which was
occupied by the Cossacks who were holding back the encircling movement of the
Reds, straight into the middle of their own people. None of the locals could
believe that they had come through by that route. And the enemy had not heard
the noise made by their passage. And the in the morning the Red partisans
could not find any trace of where they had got away. There had been people -
and then there were none!
Again, the nun Barbara (Sukhanova) writes: "In the summer of 1923 a girl
known to me by the name of Irina Meier received a letter from Petrograd from
her friend - also a young girl of gentry family. I am amazed that this letter
got through at that time. The girl from suffering Russia openly wrote that
with the help of God she had decided to choose the monastic path and was
striving for it with all her heart.
"This pure soul described a recent dream she had had. She was walking in
Petrograd when in front of her there rose up a new, beautiful, white church.
She entered it. The house of God was amazingly beautiful. Everything in it
was shining, gleaming and irridiscent. The girl was struck by its majesty and
asked:
"'In whose honour is this church built?'
"And an invisible person replied: 'In the name of the slaughtered
Emperor Nicholas Alexandrovich.'"
Again, Monk Zachariah writes: "The Serbian people loved the Russian Tsar
with all their heart. On March 30, 1930, there was published in the Serbian
newspapers a telegram stating that the Orthodox inhabitants of the city of
Leskovats in Serbia had appealed to the Synod of the Serbian Orthodox Church
with a request to raise the canonization of the late Russian Emperor Nicholas
II, who was not only a most humane and pure-hearted ruler of the Russian
people, but who also died with the glory of a martyr's death.
"Already in 1925 there had appeared in the Serbian press an account of
what happened to an elderly Serbian lady who had lost two sons in the war and
whose third son, who had disappeared without a trace, she considered also to
have been killed. Once, after fervently praying for all who had been killed
in the war, the poor mother fell asleep and saw in a dream the Emperor
Nicholas II, who told her that her son was alive and was in Russia, where he
had fought together with his two dead brothers. 'You will not die' -
said the Russian Tsar - 'until you see your son.' Soon after this dream, the
old woman received news that her son was alive, and within a few months after
this she joyously embraced him alive and well when he returned from Russia.
"On August 11, 1927, in the newspapers of Belgrade, there appeared a
notice under the headline, 'Face of Emperor Nicholas II in the monastery of
St. Naum on Lake Ochrid.' It read as follows: 'The Russian painter S.F.
Kolesnikov was invited to paint the new church in the ancient Serbian
monastery of St. Naum, being given complete creative freedom in adorning the
interior dome and walls. While completing this, the artist thought of
painting on the walls of the church the faces of fifteen saints, to be placed
in fifteen ovals. Fourteen faces were painted immediately, but the place for
the fifteenth long remained empty, since some kind of inexplicable feeling
compelled Kolesnikov to wait for a while. Once at dusk he entered the church.
Below, it was dark, and only the dome was cut through with the rays of the
setting sun. As Kolesnikov himself related later, at this moment there was an
enchanting play of light and shadows in the church, and all around seemed
unearthly and singular. At this moment the artist saw that the empty oval
which he left unfinished had become animated and from it, as from a frame,
looked down the sorrowful face of Emperor Nicholas II. Struck by the
miraculous apparition of the martyred Russian Tsar, the artist stood for a
time as if rooted to the spot, seized by a kind of paralysis. Then, as he
himself describes, under the influence of a prayerful impulse, he leaned the
ladder against the oval, and without marking with charcoal the outline of the
wondrous face, with brushes alone he made the layout. He could not sleep the
whole night, and, hardly had the first daylight appeared than he went to the
church and in the first morning rays of the sun was already sitting high on
the ladder, working with such a fever as he had never known. As he himself
writes: 'I painted without a photograph. In the past I several times saw the
late Emperor close up, while giving him explanations at exhibitions. His
image imprinted itself in my memory."
The following vision was seen in 1971 by a certain Basil, a spiritual
son of Archbishop Leontius of Chile of blessed memory, who had reposed that
same year, at the same time when the Church was discussing the glorification
of the New Martyrs of Russia: "At the beginning of this dream I saw myself in
a huge temple not built by human hands. On the right kliros for quite a
distance was a huge crowd of people dressed in white; I could not make out
their faces. Around me there was a quiet, heartrending singing, although I
couldn't see anyone there. Then both sides of the altar swung open and from
them began to come out holy hierarchs and monks, fully vested in gentle blue
vestments: among them I could recognise only St. Nicholas the Wonderworker of
Myra in Lycia. From the door near me, among the passing bishops, Vladyka
Leontius passed by and stopped near me, saying:
"'You, brother Basil, were called and you did come. You know we have a
great celebration here today!'
"'What kind of celebration, Vladyka?' I asked.
"And he continued: 'The heavenly glorification of the Tsar-Martyr!'
"And having bowed to me slightly, he continued on his way to the
kathedra (in the centre of the church). Finally, the holy doors of the altar
opened, and out of them came the Tsar-Martyr, looking just as he appears on
his official portraits during the first years of his reign - that is, very
young. He was dressed in the Tsar's royal mantle, as during his coronation,
and he wore the emperor's crown on his head. In his hands he held a large
cross, and on his pale face I noticed a slight wound, either from a bullet or
some blow. He passed by me at an even pace, descended the step of the ambo,
and went into the centre of the church. As he neared the kathedra, the
singing increased in volume, and when his foot touched the step of the
kathedra, it became so loud that it seemed that a whole world of people had
gathered and were singing with one breath."
Again, there not a few living witnesses of the miracle that took place
in the Ipatiev house in Ekaterinburg The miracle took place in that same
cellar in which his Majesty, in the likeness of the Divine Redeemer of the
world, voluntarily offered himself in sacrifice for the sins of his people.
The wall riddled with holes from the bullets of the regicides oozed
blood for many years. The authorities plastered up and painted over the wall,
but drops of fresh blood continued to appear through the holes made by the
bullets.
A janitor who worked in the house, and was apparently a believer, used
to say that on the eve of feasts such as the Nativity of Christ, Pascha and
Pentecost, when she had to stay in the house during the night, she heard a
sound as if of angelic chanting coming from the cellar.
The house was destroyed during the time that Boris Yeltsin was head of
the party organization in Ekaterinburg. Now a cross with an icon of the
Tsar-Martyr stands in its place.
Again, in 1988, Claude Lopez, an Orthodox Christian from Switzerland,
wrote that one day he, having great veneration for the New Martyrs, had
placed a commemorative coin of the Tsar in his icon corner, along with an
icon of the Royal Martyr with a halo. One day he noticed moisture on the coin
and discovered that it was exuding a quantity of fragrant myrrh, which had
flowed into the box in which it was kept. This obvious miracle continued
until October of 1988, and resumed briefly during Autumn of 1989.
Finally, there is this testimony of a man from Spain: "I am 48 years
old. I am Spanish-born from Barcelona. My name is Mateo Gratacos Vendrell.
When the things I am going to mention happened, I was not a member of the
Orthodox Church. Now, through God's mercy, I've become a member (August,
1989). During four years I had had a pain in the loins and in the belly on
the right side. I consulted various doctors and went through the usual
routine (x-rays, ecography, etc., and analyses). All the results were
negative. It was deduced that my pain was psychosomatic (psychological). To
calm me down, I was treated through acupuncture and laser, but in vain; my
pain was still there. I was desperate. One night I was experiencing again
acute pain, I started reading. To mark my page I had put a portrait of Tsar
Nicholas (his icon, in fact). I looked at the icon and he (the Tsar) looked
at me. I started asking him to pray to Christ our Lord; for having suffered
during the last days of his life, he would have compassion. I accepted the
pain that I had but I could not accept the fact that I was 'mad', because I
knew that my pains were real. On the next day, after that very night, as I
was on my way to a job, a client who is also a friend of mind asked how I was
and upon knowing that I was still suffering, he asked whether I had consulted
Dr. P. I answered no. He told me to go and see him on his behalf. I went
there on the next day. When he examined me he said that there was nothing
psychosomatic; I had an invisible (on the radio) kidney stone. I underwent a
'natural treatment' and the stone went out naturally after one month. During
this period of time I prayed to the Lord to remember me because of my love
for the Tsar. I promised to Tsar Nicholas that I would distribute and make
known his icon as a 'moleben' for the mercy he showed to the poor man who
suffered for four years and saw his problem solved in less than a month
through his intercession. Thank you, Saint Nicholas II, I am very thankful."
(Sources: Metropolitan Anastasius, "Homily on the Seventh Anniversary of
the Martyric End of Emperor Nicholas II and the Entire Royal Family",
Orthodox Life, vol. 31, no. 4, July-August, 1981; An Orthodox Priest, "The
Sovereign Passion-bearer Nicholas Alexandrovich", Orthodox Life, vol. 31, no.
4, July-August, 1981; Ludmilla Koehler, Saint Elisabeth the New Martyr, New
York: The Orthodox Palestine Society, U.S.A., 1988; R. Monk Zachariah
(Liebmann), "The Life of Tsar-Martyr Nicholas II", The Orthodox Word, vol.
26, no. 4 (153), July-August, 1990; Schema-Monk Epiphany Chernov, Tserkov'
Katakombnaya na Zemlye Rossijskoj (MS); Ogonek, N 22 (3280), May 26 - June 2,
1990; I.M. Kontsevich, Optina Pustyn' e yeyo vremya, Jordanville: Holy
Trinity Monastery, 1970, pp. 498-99; Fr. Nikita Chakirov, Tsarskiye
Koronatsii na Rusi, Russian Orthodox Youth Committee, 1971; Nikolai Kozlov,
Krestnij Put', Moscow, 1993; Enel, "Zhertva", Kolokol', Moscow, 1990, N 5,
pp. 17-37, and Michael Orlov, "Ekaterinburgskaya Golgofa", Kolokol', 1990, N
5, pp. 37-55; A. Shiropayev, "Pobyeda Imperatora Nikolaya II", Kolokol', N 1,
1990, pp. 43-53; "Starets Varnava Gefsimanskij", Pravoslavnij Put', 1990, pp.
130-31; A.D. Khmelevksy, "Tainstvennoye v zhizni gosudarya Imperatora
Nikolaya II-go", Pravoslavnaya Rus', no. 13 (1442), 1/14 July, 1991, p. 9;
"Rasskazy monakhini Varvary (Sukhanovoj)", Pravoslavnaya zhizn', no. 7 (498),
July, 1991, p. 18; Sergius Fomin, Rossiya pered vtorym prishestviyem, Holy
Trinity Monastery, Sergiev Posad, 1993, pp. 129, 132, 143, 155, 157, 158,
160, 169; Dominic Lieven, Nicholas II, London: Pimlico, 1993, pp. 34-35,
47,162-163; Robert Massie, The Romanovs: The Last Chapter, Jonathan Cape,
1995; Protopriest Alexander Shargunov, Chudesa Tsarstvennykh Muchenikov,
Moscow: "Novaya Kniga", St. Petersburg: "Tsarskoye Delo", 1995; Orthodox
America, January, 1997, pp. 11-12; Nikolaj II: Venets zemnoj i nebesnoj,
Moscow, 1997, pp. 116-120).
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