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THE LIVES OF THE SAINTS OF
ALASKA
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The
Martyrdom of the Aleut Peter
In a letter to Abbot Damascene of Valaam, dated November 22, 1865,
Simeon I. Yanovsky, Chief Manager of the Russian Colonies from 1818
to 1820, wrote:
"Once I related to [Fr. (later St.) Herman] how the Spaniards
in California had taken fourteen of our Aleuts prisoner, and how
the Jesuits had tortured one of them, to try and force them all
to take the Catholic faith. But the Aleuts would not submit, saying:
We are Christians, we have been baptized, and they showed them the
crosses they wore. But the Jesuits objected, saying No, you are
heretics and schismatics; if you do not agree to take the Catholic
faith we will torture you. And they left them shut up two to a cell
until the evening to think it over.
In the evening they came back with a lantern and lighted candles,
and began again to try and persuade them to become Catholics. But
the Aleuts were filled with God's grace, and firmly and decisively
answered, We are Christians and we would not betray our faith. Then
the fanatics set about torturing them. First they tortured one singly
while the other one was made to watch. First they cut off one of
the toe joints from one foot, and then from the other, but the Aleut
bore it all and continued to say: I am a Christian and I will not
betray my faith. Then they cut a joint off each finger first from
one hand, then the other; then they hacked off one foot at the instep,
then one hand at the wrist. The blood poured out, but the martyr
bore it all to the end, maintaining his stand, and with this faith
he died, from loss of blood!
On the following day it was planned to torture the others, but
that same night an order was received from Monterey that all the
captured Russian Aleuts were to be sent under guard to Monterey.
And so in the morning those remaining alive were sent away. This
was related to me by an Aleut who was an eyewitness a colleague
of the man put to death and who later escaped from the Spaniards....
When I had finished telling him this, Father [Herman] asked me,
What was the name of this tortured Aleut? Peter, I replied, but
I cannot remember the other name.
Then the elder stood before the Icon, devoutly crossed himself
and said, Holy newly-martyred [Peter], pray to God for us!"
[The above accounts were taken from The Russian Orthodox Religious
Mission in America, 1794-1837, with Materials Concerning the Life
and Works of the Monk German, and Ethnographic Notes by the Hieromonk
Gedeon, St. Petersburg, 1894.]

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