fbpx
Wikipedia

Grigol Peradze

Grigol Peradze (Georgian: გრიგოლ ფერაძე; 13 September 1899 – 6 December 1942) was a prominent Georgian ecclesiastic figure, philologist, theologian, historian, and professor of patristics in the interwar period.

Grigol Peradze
St. Grigol Peradze, c. 1933
Hieromartyr and Archimandrite
BornAugust 31 1899
Bakurtsikhe Village, Signakh uezd, Tiflis Governorate, Caucasus Viceroyalty, Imperial Russia (Bakurtsikhe, Signagi, Kakheti, Georgia)
DiedDecember 6 1942
Auschwitz Concentration Camp, German-occupied Poland
Honored inEastern Orthodox Church
FeastDecember 6

After providing help to Jews in Poland, he was arrested and sent to Auschwitz, where he was ultimately killed. He was canonized by the Eastern Orthodox Church as a martyr in 1995 and is celebrated on December 6.

Life and works edit

 
The interior of the Orthodox chapel of St. Grigol Peradze, part of the Warsaw Icon Museum.
 
Peradze on a 2022 Georgian stamp.

Grigol Peradze was born in the village of Bakurtsikhe, in what is now the Kakheti region, in Eastern Georgia. The second of three sons of Romanoz Peradze, the local Orthodox priest, and the former Mariam Samadalashvili.[1] Young Grigol was named in honor of the 11th-century Georgian Saint Gregory of Khandzta – Grigol being the cognate of Gregory.[2] His father died when he was six, and the family moved to Tiflis (now Tbilisi), then the provincial capital, and later that of independent Georgia. He attended an Orthodox parochial school, and from 1913 Tbilisi Theological Seminary.

In 1918 Peradze graduated near the top of his class, and afterwards studied at the Tbilisi State University until 1921. In the years 1919–21 he also served in the army. He fought against the Bolsheviks in defense of the Democratic Republic of Georgia. Later, for a short time he was a teacher in a small village near Gori.[3]

On 25 February 1921 Georgia was occupied by Soviet Russia. Grigol Peradze went into exile in Germany in November the same year. However, he would retain the fallen government's passport for the rest of his life. Unlike many who left after the Soviet takeover, Peradze had actually secured legal permission to leave the country through the efforts of one of his former professors. Despite this, he was twice refused permission to return to Georgia in 1921 and 1927. Upon the last rejection he wrote "do not know why. I do not belong to political parties. I have not worked against the Soviet government. My goal was always and is the service of our science and culture." Thus, he became effectively a stateless person, traveling on a Nansen passport.[4][5][1] After the annexation of Georgia, he was threatened with imprisonment, so the Georgian Orthodox Church sent Grigoli to the village of Mankhi in Kakheti as a teacher.[6]

In ordinary times Peradze would have studied in Russia; this route was now closed to him, and other talented students; the Church sought to send students to come to Germany. At a local council of the Church held at Gelati in 1921, it was decided to send Peradze to continue further studies abroad. He was encouraged by his mentor, Cornelius Kekelidze, and the head of the Georgian Orthodox Church, Catholicos-Patriarch Ambrose. This was done with the help of German Kartvelologist Arthur Leist and the head of the Oriental mission in Potsdam, Johannes Lepsius, through the German ambassador to Georgia.[4] Grigol was able to study in Berlin and later Bonn. In 1926 he graduated from the University of Bonn (Germany). In December 1927 he received a PhD degree in history (the title of his PhD thesis was History of the Georgian Monasticism from its creation until 1064).[7]

From 1927 to 1932 Peradze was an associate professor at the University of Bonn. From 1933 to 1942 he was a professor of patrology at the Faculty of Orthodox Theology of Warsaw University, in Poland. In the spring of 1927 Peradze spent time researching manuscripts in the British Museum and the Bodleian Library at Oxford.[8]

Around Christmas in 1930 Peradze became seriously ill, and pledged that he would devote himself to God if he recovered.[6] On 18 April 1931 Peradze was tonsured a monk at Holy Wisdom Greek Orthodox Cathedral in London, followed the next day by being named a hierodeacon. Five weeks later, on 24 May, he was ordained a priest at St. Stephen's Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Paris. In 1931 he became the first regular priest of the Georgian St. Nino Orthodox Church in Paris, which had been established by laymen in 1929, where he celebrated his first liturgy on 31 May. In the same year he began to publish a Georgian scientific journal titled Jvari Vazisa ("Cross of Vine"). On 5 January 1934, again at Holy Wisdom, he was raised to the rank of archimandrite in recognition of his pastoral work with the Georgian community.[8][3]

In the 1930s, Peradze discovered numerous important written manuscripts of Georgian Christian culture in Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Italy, Germany, and Austria (Georgian manuscripts of the Typicon of the Georgian Petritsoni Monastery (Bachkovo, Bulgaria), the so-called Tischendorf manuscripts of the Apagae of the Monastery of the Holy Cross at the University Library in the University of Leipzig, Germany, etc.). During this time, Peradze lived in a small apartment in Warsaw's Praga District at Brukowa 22 Street (today Okrzei Street), where he kept his large collection of Georgian antiquities.[9]

The invasion of Poland by German troops in 1939 made Peradze's position precarious. For him, being in solidarity with Jews in peril went without saying; and he helped wherever he could. Nor did he hesitate to visit the imprisoned Polish Metropolitan Dionysius. These activities were viewed with growing suspicion by the Nazi occupiers, and Peradze's fruitful ecclesiastic and scientific activities were brought to an end in 1942 when, on 4 May, he was arrested by the Gestapo.[10] On 6 December 1942 Peradze was killed in the Nazi concentration camp of Auschwitz (Oświęcim) when he took the blame for the murder of a German officer to spare his fellow prisoners, or, according to another report, when he entered a gas chamber in the place of a Jewish prisoner who had a large family.[11]

Peradze is commemorated by his memorial chapel in Warsaw, a museum in his hometown, memorial plaques at the University of Warsaw and on St. George's Church, Bakurtsikhe, where he was baptized.[12]

His main fields of scientific activity were the history of the Georgian Orthodox and Apostolic Church, source studies of the history of Georgia and the Georgian Church, patrology, history of Georgian literature, Rustavelology, etc.

Grigol Peradze was canonized by the Georgian Orthodox Church in September 1995.[13] The feast day for St. Grigol is 6 December (or 23 November, Old Style). In 2013, he was posthumously awarded the title and Order of the National Hero of Georgia.[14]

Works edit

  • Die Anfänge des Mönchtums in Georgien.- "Zeitschrift für Kirchengeschichte", 47, Heft 1, Stuttgart, 1928, pp. 34–75 (in German)
  • L'activité littéraire des moines géorgiens au monastère d'Iviron au mont Athos.- "Revue d'histoire ecclésiastique", 23, Fasc. 3, Paris, 1927, pp. 530–539 (in French)
  • Über das georgische Mönchtum.- "Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift", 34, Heft 3, Bern, 1926, pp. 152–168 (in German)
  • Die Probleme der ältesten Kirchengeschichte Georgiens.- "Oriens Christianus", 29, Bd. 7, Wiesbaden, 1932, pp. 153–171 (in German)
  • Zur vorbyzantinischen Liturgie Georgiens.- "Le Muséon", 42, Fasc. 2, Louvain, 1929, pp. 90–99 (in German)
  • Les Monuments liturgiques prébyzantins en langue géorgienne.- "Le Muséon", 45, Fasc. 4, Louvain, 1932, pp. 255–272 (in French)
  • The Liturgy of Saint Peter.- "Kyrios", 2, Fasc. 3, 1937, pp. 260–262
  • An Account of the Georgian Monks and Monasteries in Palestine as revealed in the Writings of Nongeorgian Pilgrims.- "Georgica", 2, Vol. 4–5, London, 1937, pp. 181–246
  • Über die Georgischen Handschriften in Österreich.- "Wiener Zeitschrift für die Kunde des Morgenlandes", 47, Heft 3–4, Wien, 1940, pp. 219–232 (in German)
  • Im Dienste der Georgischen Kultur.- "Aus der Welt des Ostens", Königsberg, 1940, pp. 30–50 (in German)
  • Irakli Jinjolava: The Ecumenical Vocation of the Orthodox Church According to the Georgian Theologian and Saint Priest-Martyr Grigol Peradze. In: Ostkirchliche Studien 65 (2016) S. 237–270.
  • Irakli Jinjolava: A Portrait of Grigol Peradze Against the Background of the Ecumenical Vocation in the Orthodox Church. In: Pro Georgia, 2019, t. 29, s. 287–291.

References edit

  1. ^ a b "Თამარ ჭუმბურიძე – გრიგოლ ფერაძის ცხოვრების გზა". wordpress. 12 September 2009.
  2. ^ "Nieznany polski święty. Żywot i obywatelstwo Grzegorza Peradze". teologiapolityczna.pl. 14 February 2018.
  3. ^ a b "75 lat temu w Auschwitz zginął prawosławny męczennik św. Grzegorz Peradze".
  4. ^ a b Григорий (Перадзе Григол Раманозович). Saint Tikhon's Orthodox University
  5. ^ Maria Przełomiec (2018). "Gruziński Kolbe". przewodnik-katolicki.pl.
  6. ^ a b "Როგორ შევიდა ტყვედ ჩავარდნილი გრიგოლ ფერაძე გაზის კამერაში ებრაელი მრავალშვილიანი მამის ნაცვლად". tbiliselebi.ge. 22 December 2017.
  7. ^ "ჩემი პატრიარქი – ბექა მინდიაშვილი – მატიანე". Matiane.wordpress.com. 22 October 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  8. ^ a b Jaroslaw Charkiewicz (30 December 2004). "Świadkowie XX wieku – Grzegorz Peradze". Kosciol.pl.
  9. ^ Joanna Kiwilsz (2011). "Święty archimandryta Grzegorz Peradze". Nowa Gazeta Praska.
  10. ^ . geocities.com. Archived from the original on 29 July 2009. Retrieved 11 January 2023.
  11. ^ Archpriest Zakaria Machitadze, Lives of the Georgian Saints, trans. David and Lauren Elizabeth Ninoshvili and ed. Lado Mirianashvili and the St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood (Platina, Cal.: St. Herman of Alaska Brotherhood, 2006), 424–426.
  12. ^ "W Bakurciche upamiętniono św. Grzegorza Peradze i gruzińskich oficerów WP". dzieje.pl. 13 September 2017.
  13. ^ "Father Archimandrite Grigol Peradze" (PDF). Pro-Georgia, Journal of Kartvelological Studies. Centre for East European Studies, Oriental Institute, University of Warsaw. Retrieved 22 June 2012.
  14. ^ . InterPressNews. 26 October 2013. Archived from the original on 20 November 2015. Retrieved 14 January 2015.

Further reading edit

  • Victor Nozadze. "Grigol Peradze".- Georgian journal "Mamuli", Buenos-Aires, No 5, 1952
  • Tamar Dularidze. About the life and death of Grigol Peradze.- "Russkaia Misl", New York, 13–19. VII, 1995 (In Russian)
  • "Artanuji" (The Georgian historical scientific journal), Tbilisi, No 11, 2003 (Special issue: Grigol Peradze), 120 pp (In Georgian)
  • David Kolbaia (editor) "St. Grigol (Peradze) works nr 1, in: Pro Georgia Journal of Kartvelological Studies nr 13, 200.
  • Irakli Jinjolava: The Ecumenical Vocation of the Orthodox Church According to the Georgian Theologian and Saint Priest-Martyr Grigol Peradze. In: Ostkirchliche Studien 65 (2016) S. 237–270.

External links edit

  • Świadkowie XX wieku – Grzegorz Peradze (in Polish)
  • Irakli Jinjolava: The Ecumenical Vocation of the Orthodox Church According to the Georgian Theologian and Saint Priest-Martyr Grigol Peradze (in English)

grigol, peradze, georgian, გრიგოლ, ფერაძე, september, 1899, december, 1942, prominent, georgian, ecclesiastic, figure, philologist, theologian, historian, professor, patristics, interwar, period, 1933hieromartyr, archimandritebornaugust, 1899bakurtsikhe, villa. Grigol Peradze Georgian გრიგოლ ფერაძე 13 September 1899 6 December 1942 was a prominent Georgian ecclesiastic figure philologist theologian historian and professor of patristics in the interwar period Grigol PeradzeSt Grigol Peradze c 1933Hieromartyr and ArchimandriteBornAugust 31 1899Bakurtsikhe Village Signakh uezd Tiflis Governorate Caucasus Viceroyalty Imperial Russia Bakurtsikhe Signagi Kakheti Georgia DiedDecember 6 1942Auschwitz Concentration Camp German occupied PolandHonored inEastern Orthodox ChurchFeastDecember 6 After providing help to Jews in Poland he was arrested and sent to Auschwitz where he was ultimately killed He was canonized by the Eastern Orthodox Church as a martyr in 1995 and is celebrated on December 6 Contents 1 Life and works 2 Works 3 References 4 Further reading 5 External linksLife and works edit nbsp The interior of the Orthodox chapel of St Grigol Peradze part of the Warsaw Icon Museum nbsp Peradze on a 2022 Georgian stamp Grigol Peradze was born in the village of Bakurtsikhe in what is now the Kakheti region in Eastern Georgia The second of three sons of Romanoz Peradze the local Orthodox priest and the former Mariam Samadalashvili 1 Young Grigol was named in honor of the 11th century Georgian Saint Gregory of Khandzta Grigol being the cognate of Gregory 2 His father died when he was six and the family moved to Tiflis now Tbilisi then the provincial capital and later that of independent Georgia He attended an Orthodox parochial school and from 1913 Tbilisi Theological Seminary In 1918 Peradze graduated near the top of his class and afterwards studied at the Tbilisi State University until 1921 In the years 1919 21 he also served in the army He fought against the Bolsheviks in defense of the Democratic Republic of Georgia Later for a short time he was a teacher in a small village near Gori 3 On 25 February 1921 Georgia was occupied by Soviet Russia Grigol Peradze went into exile in Germany in November the same year However he would retain the fallen government s passport for the rest of his life Unlike many who left after the Soviet takeover Peradze had actually secured legal permission to leave the country through the efforts of one of his former professors Despite this he was twice refused permission to return to Georgia in 1921 and 1927 Upon the last rejection he wrote do not know why I do not belong to political parties I have not worked against the Soviet government My goal was always and is the service of our science and culture Thus he became effectively a stateless person traveling on a Nansen passport 4 5 1 After the annexation of Georgia he was threatened with imprisonment so the Georgian Orthodox Church sent Grigoli to the village of Mankhi in Kakheti as a teacher 6 In ordinary times Peradze would have studied in Russia this route was now closed to him and other talented students the Church sought to send students to come to Germany At a local council of the Church held at Gelati in 1921 it was decided to send Peradze to continue further studies abroad He was encouraged by his mentor Cornelius Kekelidze and the head of the Georgian Orthodox Church Catholicos Patriarch Ambrose This was done with the help of German Kartvelologist Arthur Leist and the head of the Oriental mission in Potsdam Johannes Lepsius through the German ambassador to Georgia 4 Grigol was able to study in Berlin and later Bonn In 1926 he graduated from the University of Bonn Germany In December 1927 he received a PhD degree in history the title of his PhD thesis was History of the Georgian Monasticism from its creation until 1064 7 From 1927 to 1932 Peradze was an associate professor at the University of Bonn From 1933 to 1942 he was a professor of patrology at the Faculty of Orthodox Theology of Warsaw University in Poland In the spring of 1927 Peradze spent time researching manuscripts in the British Museum and the Bodleian Library at Oxford 8 Around Christmas in 1930 Peradze became seriously ill and pledged that he would devote himself to God if he recovered 6 On 18 April 1931 Peradze was tonsured a monk at Holy Wisdom Greek Orthodox Cathedral in London followed the next day by being named a hierodeacon Five weeks later on 24 May he was ordained a priest at St Stephen s Greek Orthodox Cathedral in Paris In 1931 he became the first regular priest of the Georgian St Nino Orthodox Church in Paris which had been established by laymen in 1929 where he celebrated his first liturgy on 31 May In the same year he began to publish a Georgian scientific journal titled Jvari Vazisa Cross of Vine On 5 January 1934 again at Holy Wisdom he was raised to the rank of archimandrite in recognition of his pastoral work with the Georgian community 8 3 In the 1930s Peradze discovered numerous important written manuscripts of Georgian Christian culture in Romania Bulgaria Greece Italy Germany and Austria Georgian manuscripts of the Typicon of the Georgian Petritsoni Monastery Bachkovo Bulgaria the so called Tischendorf manuscripts of the Apagae of the Monastery of the Holy Cross at the University Library in the University of Leipzig Germany etc During this time Peradze lived in a small apartment in Warsaw s Praga District at Brukowa 22 Street today Okrzei Street where he kept his large collection of Georgian antiquities 9 The invasion of Poland by German troops in 1939 made Peradze s position precarious For him being in solidarity with Jews in peril went without saying and he helped wherever he could Nor did he hesitate to visit the imprisoned Polish Metropolitan Dionysius These activities were viewed with growing suspicion by the Nazi occupiers and Peradze s fruitful ecclesiastic and scientific activities were brought to an end in 1942 when on 4 May he was arrested by the Gestapo 10 On 6 December 1942 Peradze was killed in the Nazi concentration camp of Auschwitz Oswiecim when he took the blame for the murder of a German officer to spare his fellow prisoners or according to another report when he entered a gas chamber in the place of a Jewish prisoner who had a large family 11 Peradze is commemorated by his memorial chapel in Warsaw a museum in his hometown memorial plaques at the University of Warsaw and on St George s Church Bakurtsikhe where he was baptized 12 His main fields of scientific activity were the history of the Georgian Orthodox and Apostolic Church source studies of the history of Georgia and the Georgian Church patrology history of Georgian literature Rustavelology etc Grigol Peradze was canonized by the Georgian Orthodox Church in September 1995 13 The feast day for St Grigol is 6 December or 23 November Old Style In 2013 he was posthumously awarded the title and Order of the National Hero of Georgia 14 Works editDie Anfange des Monchtums in Georgien Zeitschrift fur Kirchengeschichte 47 Heft 1 Stuttgart 1928 pp 34 75 in German L activite litteraire des moines georgiens au monastere d Iviron au mont Athos Revue d histoire ecclesiastique 23 Fasc 3 Paris 1927 pp 530 539 in French Uber das georgische Monchtum Internationale Kirchliche Zeitschrift 34 Heft 3 Bern 1926 pp 152 168 in German Die Probleme der altesten Kirchengeschichte Georgiens Oriens Christianus 29 Bd 7 Wiesbaden 1932 pp 153 171 in German Zur vorbyzantinischen Liturgie Georgiens Le Museon 42 Fasc 2 Louvain 1929 pp 90 99 in German Les Monuments liturgiques prebyzantins en langue georgienne Le Museon 45 Fasc 4 Louvain 1932 pp 255 272 in French The Liturgy of Saint Peter Kyrios 2 Fasc 3 1937 pp 260 262 An Account of the Georgian Monks and Monasteries in Palestine as revealed in the Writings of Nongeorgian Pilgrims Georgica 2 Vol 4 5 London 1937 pp 181 246 Uber die Georgischen Handschriften in Osterreich Wiener Zeitschrift fur die Kunde des Morgenlandes 47 Heft 3 4 Wien 1940 pp 219 232 in German Im Dienste der Georgischen Kultur Aus der Welt des Ostens Konigsberg 1940 pp 30 50 in German Irakli Jinjolava The Ecumenical Vocation of the Orthodox Church According to the Georgian Theologian and Saint Priest Martyr Grigol Peradze In Ostkirchliche Studien 65 2016 S 237 270 Irakli Jinjolava A Portrait of Grigol Peradze Against the Background of the Ecumenical Vocation in the Orthodox Church In Pro Georgia 2019 t 29 s 287 291 References edit a b Თამარ ჭუმბურიძე გრიგოლ ფერაძის ცხოვრების გზა wordpress 12 September 2009 Nieznany polski swiety Zywot i obywatelstwo Grzegorza Peradze teologiapolityczna pl 14 February 2018 a b 75 lat temu w Auschwitz zginal prawoslawny meczennik sw Grzegorz Peradze a b Grigorij Peradze Grigol Ramanozovich Saint Tikhon s Orthodox University Maria Przelomiec 2018 Gruzinski Kolbe przewodnik katolicki pl a b Როგორ შევიდა ტყვედ ჩავარდნილი გრიგოლ ფერაძე გაზის კამერაში ებრაელი მრავალშვილიანი მამის ნაცვლად tbiliselebi ge 22 December 2017 ჩემი პატრიარქი ბექა მინდიაშვილი მატიანე Matiane wordpress com 22 October 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2023 a b Jaroslaw Charkiewicz 30 December 2004 Swiadkowie XX wieku Grzegorz Peradze Kosciol pl Joanna Kiwilsz 2011 Swiety archimandryta Grzegorz Peradze Nowa Gazeta Praska Lukas Vischer A Georgian Saint Grigol Peradze 1899 1942 geocities com Archived from the original on 29 July 2009 Retrieved 11 January 2023 Archpriest Zakaria Machitadze Lives of the Georgian Saints trans David and Lauren Elizabeth Ninoshvili and ed Lado Mirianashvili and the St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood Platina Cal St Herman of Alaska Brotherhood 2006 424 426 W Bakurciche upamietniono sw Grzegorza Peradze i gruzinskich oficerow WP dzieje pl 13 September 2017 Father Archimandrite Grigol Peradze PDF Pro Georgia Journal of Kartvelological Studies Centre for East European Studies Oriental Institute University of Warsaw Retrieved 22 June 2012 Mikheil Saakashvili Georgia will not kneel or lick the conqueror s boots InterPressNews 26 October 2013 Archived from the original on 20 November 2015 Retrieved 14 January 2015 Further reading editVictor Nozadze Grigol Peradze Georgian journal Mamuli Buenos Aires No 5 1952 Tamar Dularidze About the life and death of Grigol Peradze Russkaia Misl New York 13 19 VII 1995 In Russian Artanuji The Georgian historical scientific journal Tbilisi No 11 2003 Special issue Grigol Peradze 120 pp In Georgian David Kolbaia editor St Grigol Peradze works nr 1 in Pro Georgia Journal of Kartvelological Studies nr 13 200 Irakli Jinjolava The Ecumenical Vocation of the Orthodox Church According to the Georgian Theologian and Saint Priest Martyr Grigol Peradze In Ostkirchliche Studien 65 2016 S 237 270 External links editLukas Vischer A Georgian Saint Grigol Peradze 1899 1942 Swiadkowie XX wieku Grzegorz Peradze in Polish Sviaschennomuchenik Arkhimandrit Grigorii Peradze in Russian Irakli Jinjolava The Ecumenical Vocation of the Orthodox Church According to the Georgian Theologian and Saint Priest Martyr Grigol Peradze in English Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grigol Peradze amp oldid 1221100319, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.