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Τετάρτη 26 Μαρτίου 2014
‘Isle be back!’ Siberian mayor seeks return of ‘Holy island’ from USA
The mayor of Yakutsk claims he has a proof a small
island off the coast of Alaska had been given to the Russian Orthodox Church
and it still has the rights to the territory.
Mayor Aysen Nikolayev and other officials from
Russia’s Far Eastern Federal District have petitioned President Vladimir Putin,
the heads of both chambers of the Russian Parliament, and the Russian Foreign
Minister requesting the return of Spruce Island to the church.
Researchers from Yakutsk went to the Alaskan capital
Juneau to study the archive belonging to the Russian bibliographer Mikhail
Vinokurov who emigrated to the USA in 1917 after the Bolshevik revolution. They
discovered a certificate issued by Russian government commissioner Captain
Second Rank Aleksey Peshchurov, detailing the transfer of Russian territories
in Alaska to the United States. According to this document, Spruce Island has
been granted to the Russian Orthodox Church ‘for eternity’.
Spruce Island was known as the New Valaam after Valaam
Island in North Russia that is home to one of the oldest and most respected
Orthodox monasteries. In early XIX century it was also the home of St Herman of
Alaska- a Russian Orthodox saint and a missionary to the “Russian America” –
the territories in Alaska and California colonized by Russians.
“2014 we will mark the 220th anniversary of the
Russian Orthodox Church mission to North America and this is a perfect time to
pay attention to the Russian America. I stand for the restoration of historical
justice – the return of Spruce Island to its lawful owner – the Russian
Orthodox Church,” Mayor Aysen Nikolayev told the Izvestia daily.
A senior church official in charge of relations with
the society, Archpriest Vsevolod Chaplin only gave a reserved comment, saying
that the discovered papers must be thoroughly studied in order to assess the
perspective of the claims in the modern environment.
In 1867 the Russian Empire sold Alaska and the
surrounding islands to the United States for $7.2 million in gold that the Tsar
needed for financing the reforms caused by the abolition of serfdom. The
46-square-kilometer Spruce Island is a part of the Kodiak Archipelago, South of
Alaska. Currently
about 250 people live on the island.
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