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THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX PRESENCE IN AUSTRALIA: The History of a Church told from recently opened archives and previously unpublished sources. Submitted by MICHAEL ALEX PROTOPOPOV B. Theol., B. Ed., Gr Dip Ed Admin., M. Phil., T.P.T.C. A thesis submitted in total fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Philosophy and Theology Faculty of Arts and Sciences Australian Catholic University Research Services Locked Bag 4115 Fitzroy, Victoria 3065 Australia 31 January 2005 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. ABSTRACT The Russian Orthodox community is a relatively small and little known group in Australian society, however, the history of the Russian presence in Australia goes back to 1809. As the Russian community includes a number of groups, both Christian and non-Christian, it would not be feasible to undertake a complete review of all aspects of the community and consequently, this work limits itself in scope to the Russian Orthodox community. The thesis broadly chronicles the development of the Russian community as it struggles to become a viable partner in Australia’s multicultural society. Many never before published documents have been researched and hitherto closed archives in Russia have been accessed. To facilitate this research the author travelled to Russia, the United States and a number of European centres to study the archives of pre-Soviet Russian communities. Furthermore, the archives and publications of the Australian and New Zealand Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church have been used extensively. The thesis notes the development of Australian-Russian relations as contacts with Imperial Russian naval and scientific ships visiting the colonies increase during the 1800’s and traces this relationship into the twentieth century. With the appearance of a Russian community in the nineteenth century, attempts were made to establish the Russian Orthodox Church on Australian soil. However, this did not eventuate until the arrival of a number of groups of Russian refugees after the Revolution of 1917 and the Civil War (1918-1922). As a consequence of Australia’s “Populate or Perish” policy following the Second World War, the numbers of Russian and other Orthodox Slavic displaced persons arriving in this country grew to such an extent that the Russian Church was able to establish a diocese in Australia, and later in New Zealand. The thesis then divides the history of the Russian Orthodox presence into chapters dealing with the administrative epochs of each of the ruling bishops. This has proven to be a suitable matrix for study as each period has its own distinct personalities and issues. The successes, tribulations and challengers of the Church in Australia are chronicled up to the end of the twentieth century. However, a further chapter deals with the issue of the Church’s prospects in Australia and its relevance to future generations of Russian Orthodox people. As the history of the Russians in this country has received little attention in the past, this work gives a broad spectrum of the issues, people and events associated with the Russian community and society at large, whilst opening up new opportunities for further research. 2 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. DECLARATION This is to certify that (i) the thesis comprises only my original work (ii) due acknowledgement has been made in the text to all other materials used (iii) the material has not been submitted, either in whole or in part for any academic award at this or any other tertiary educational institution (iv) the thesis is less than 200,000 words in length, exclusive of appendicies and bibliographies, as agreed upon with the Research Department. 3 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. CONTENTS THE RUSSIAN ORTHODOX PRESENCE IN AUSTRALIA:............................................................................................1 ABSTRACT...........................................................................................................................................................................2 DECLARATION...................................................................................................................................................................3 CONTENTS...........................................................................................................................................................................4 INTRODUCTION..................................................................................................................................................................5 1 A RUSSIAN PRESENCE (1807)....................................................................................................................................7 2 REVOLUTION: AGITATORS, IMPOSTORS AND REFUGEES (1905 - 1920)..........................................................23 3 SETTLEMENT – BRISBANE (1923)............................................................................................................................38 4 SETTLEMENT – SYDNEY (1924)...............................................................................................................................61 5 SETTLEMENT – MELBOURNE (1900- 1948).............................................................................................................68 6 ECCLESIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES ON THE CHURCH IN THE RUSSIAN MIGRANT EXPERIENCE.......73 7 A DIOCESE IS BORN....................................................................................................................................................85 8 A TIME OF GROWTH.................................................................................................................................................173 9 TURMOIL AND REVOLT..........................................................................................................................................241 10 A NEED FOR HEALING...........................................................................................................................................253 11 SOME THOUGHTS ON THE STATE OF RUSSIAN MONASTICISM IN AUSTRALIA.....................................287 12 CONSOLIDATION AND STABILITY.....................................................................................................................297 13 COARSE AND WICKED TIMES..............................................................................................................................332 14 INTO THE 21ST CENTURY......................................................................................................................................344 15 CONSIDERATIONS FOR THE FUTURE.................................................................................................................356 APPENDIX A....................................................................................................................................................................370 APPENDIX B....................................................................................................................................................................371 BIBLIOGRAPHY..............................................................................................................................................................423 ARCHIVAL MATERIAL..................................................................................................................................................431 4 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. INTRODUCTION The Russian Orthodox Church has been indispensable to the establishment of a visible Russian community in Australia. The very first visits of Imperial Russian naval and scientific ships at the dawn of the nineteenth century were military and scientific endeavours during which religious services were performed on board. These shipboard Orthodox services were noted by the local inhabitants and reported by the newspapers of Sydney, Melbourne and Hobart. The spiritual needs of Russians in Australia were also recognised by the first Imperial Russian Consul to the Australian Colonies at the end of the nineteenth century. Efforts were made to establish a parish in Melbourne until the Russian Revolution overwhelmed the Empire. The Orthodox of Australia were seemingly forgotten. However, the Russian Civil War (1918-1922) and the subsequent dispersal of millions of Russians throughout the world, saw Australia become a haven for, at first a few, followed by thousands more, dispossessed and displaced refugees. These people brought with them their faith. The Russian Orthodox Church became a symbol of the Motherland which they had lost. As the waves of Russian migrants arrived in this country they built or rented churches around which their community grew. Consequently, the local parish has remained the centre of Russian activity in the broader Australian community. Many social and community organisations can trace their genesis to the church and the parish. This is what has made the community a unified organism, retaining a sense of heritage and purpose. While many organisations and parishes have attempted to record the events of their existence, to date there has been no systematised record of the establishment and development of the Russian Orthodox Church in this country. This is the task now at hand. Most of the archival materials used in this work have, in the main, remained unpublished to date. The documents of the Holy Governing Synod from the Russian National Historical Archives in St Petersburg, were not available to scholars until the fall of the Communist regime, nor were the archives of the External Foreign Politics of Imperial Russia, currently housed in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Moscow. Never before published materials from the archives of the Synod of Bishops of the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia in 5 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. New York, and materials from the archives of the Australian and New Zealand Diocese and the German Diocese of the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad have been made available for this work. The biographies of the priests which appear in the appendix have been taken from all the above mentioned archival sources and are a composite of all the available information about these clerics. It seems proper to record not only the acts, but also the living memory, of those people who formed the Russian Church in Australia. Wherever possible, names have been given according to their proper Russian usage, namely, Christian name, patronymic and surname. No disrespect is intended if names of clergy are not always prefixed with an ecclesiastical title. Other valuable sources have been the private letters, documents and face to face interviews, which have given life to the sometimes dull record of places and events. A great debt of gratitude is owed to those who have provided their personal papers and reminiscences. A number of texts have been useful in the researching of people and events. The literature used has been treated in the original languages of publication; principally Russian, German and English. 6 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. 1 A RUSSIAN PRESENCE (1807) Early in the nineteenth century it became evident that Russia was interested in the developing Australian colonies. In 1807, the sloop Neva, under the command of Captain Leonty (Ludwig) von Hagemeister, was the first Russian ship to enter Port Jackson, now Sydney. In the ensuing years, visits by other Russian ships became more and more frequent. In 1814, the Suvorov, under the command of Captain Michael Lazarev, spent 22 days in New South Wales waters. Indeed, it was the Suvorov that brought to the Colony the first news of the defeat of Napoleon,1 And in 1820, the warships Otkryitie and Blagonamerennyi entered into Sydney Cove.2 The place for mooring Russian ships soon became known as Russian Point; a name retained until 1855 when Governor William Denison decided to fortify the Point against any possible Russia,n or French, invasion. That same year it was decided to build an official residence to be called Admiralty House on the high cliffs above the moorings; and it was considered more appropriate to call the area by its aboriginal name “Kirribilli”.3 1820 also saw the arrival of the famous Russian explorer and sea captain Baron Thaddeus von Bellingshausen and his Antarctic research ships Vostok and Mirnyi, under the command of Michael Lazarev.4 Upon his return from Antarctica, von Bellingshausen again visited Sydney where he decided to spend the winter as the guest of Governor Macquarie, collecting information about the emerging colony which he later published in Russia under the title, “Short Notes on the Colony of New South Wales”. Citing this publication, the journal “Commonwealth of Australia and the South-West Pacific 1901-1951” (No 28) notes an interesting fact, namely that “gold was first discovered in Australia in 1819 near the 1 N. Melnikov, “Второй русский корабль в Австралии,” Australiada, No 3, (1995), pp. 2-5. 2 N. Melnikov, “Первые русские в Австралии,” Australiada, No 1, (Oct. 1994), p. 2-3. 3 E. Govor, “На мысу русских,” Australiada, No 5 (1995), pp. 1-6. Kirribilli Point became the location for the official residence of Australia’s Prime Ministers 4 ibid., p.3. 7 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. township of Hartley in the Colony of New South Wales by Schmidt,”5 by a Russian naturalist attached to the expedition of Captain Lazarev. dn the night of 27 March 1820, Sydney residents were intrigued to see the Vostok decorated with lanterns and festoons. The crew appeared on deck in full parade uniform and the ship’s chaplain, a Fr Dionysius, commenced the Paschal services of the Orthodox Church. Easter was greeted in traditional Russian style. After Divine Services a lavish meal was prepared, with Easter kulich bread and painted eggs. Official guests were invited from the colony to join the ship’s company and the merriment continued all day. This is the first recorded occasion of an Orthodox service to be held in any of the Australian Colonies.6 It should be noted that the Anglo, Austro-Hungarian and Russian alliance against Napoleon did much to cement relations between England and Russia during the first two decades of the nineteenth century. However, when Russian troops took Paris in 1813 and occupied it in 1814, England looked on Russia with foreboding. The thought of Russia expanding its influence throughout the world and competing with British imperialistic interests began to take hold. Further visits by Russian ships in 1823, the Rurik and Apollon, and a year later by Ladoga and Kreiser under the command of Captain Andrei Lazarev, caused some concern amongst the colony’s authorities and this was reported to London.7 There is an interesting note in the journal “Australiada” (No 2), which comments that during the visit to Hobart of the warship Ladoga the captain was surprised to meet some people who spoke Russian. It turned out that this was the family of a Russian soldier, John Potasky8, who once served in the army of Catherine the Great. Later, whilst living in London, Potasky was deported to the colonies for some misdemeanour whilst in an English port. After completing his seven year sentence, he decided to remain and settle in Tasmania.9 Another Russian sailor, a bosun’s mate on the Suvorov, by the name of De Silver, also decided to find his fortune in the Australian Colonies. In 1814, he jumped ship in Sydney and is the earliest traceable Russian immigrant to Australia. 5 B. Diakonov “По Австралии,,” Unification, No 22 (78), 30 May 1952, p. 5. 6 N. Melnikov, “Первая русская Пасха у берегов Австралии,” Australiada, No 11, (1997), p. 1. 7 N. Melnikov “Первые русские в Австралии,” Australiada, No 1, (Oct. 1994), p. 2-3. 8 E. Govor “Первые русские в Австралии,” Australiada, No 7, (1996), pp. 3-7. 9 N. Melnikov “Первые эмигранты,” Australiada, No 2, (1995), p. 6. 8 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. Further Russian naval visits to Australia’s shores by the Elena in 1825 and 1829, Krotki in 1829 and Amerika in 1831 and 1835, created some alarm in the Colonies. In 1841, the New South Wales Government decided to establish a fortification at Pinchgut (now Fort Denison) in Port Jackson, to enable the Colony to repel any possible invasion.10 This was soon followed by fortifications at Queenscliff, Portsea and Mud Island in Victoria’s Port Philip Bay. As the paranoia of possible Russian invasion spread, further fortifications were established on the Tamar River near Launceston and along the banks of the Derwent River at Sandy Bay and Hobart. With the discovery of gold in the 1840’s and 1850’s and the hostilities of the Crimean War (1853-1856) between England and Russia, the fear of Russian invasion of the Colonies became an obsession. On 9 December 1858 a Royal Commission on the defence of New South Wales over which Major-General Edward Macarthur presided, went so far in its report as to actually name Russia as a potential aggressor.11 The appearance of any Russian Fleet in the Pacific Ocean caused alarm throughout the Colonies, becoming ridiculous when rumours spread that the Russians had invaded the Port of Melbourne. Melbourne was again put on a war footing when in 1863 the corvette Bogatir visited the city on a friendly visit. The visit went off without incident, except that it was reported that a Russian Orthodox priest, Fr Ieronymus, conducted the ceremony of the blessing of the waters on Epiphany Day (6/18 January) at Port Philip.12 Such hysteria arose because of the delicate balance of power in Europe after the Napoleonic War. Throughout the 19th century Britain was building an empire and Russia was perceived, on a number of occasions, to be standing in its way. In particular, one area of conflict was in the area of the Black Sea where the Russian and Ottoman empires had been struggling to control the lands around the waterway since the time of Catherine the Great. Many sensed that Russia was growing in strength whilst Turkey was in decline, and it was only a matter of time before Russia put her claim to the territory south of the Black Sea and the all- important exit to the west, ancient Constantinople and the Borsphorus... Control of the Balkans and the ‘Turkish Straits’ was one element in the delicate balance of power in Europe. Russia’s attempt to exert control over it threw off that balance and caused violent readjustment.13 10 J. Whitelaw, “Artillery and Australia,” Sabretache, Vol.XLII, (March 2001), p. 6. 11 C. Lack, Russian Ambitions in the Pacific. Brisbane: Royal Historical Society of Queensland, 1968. p. 8. 12 H. L. N. Simmons, Orthodox in Australia. (Boston: Hellenic College Press, 1986), p. 4. 13 A. L. Rhinelander, Prince Michael Vorontsov - Viceroy to the Tsar. London: McGill-Queen’s University Press, 1990. p. 189. 9 A History of the Russian Orthodox Presence in Australia. With the commencement of hostilities between Russia and Turkey along the Danube in November 1853, a strategy designed to liberate Constantinople from the Turks and return it to the Orthodox Greeks, Britain and France brought their fleets into the theatre of war without any declaration of intention. The London papers reported that this was “to prevent the naval forces of the Tsar from attacking those of the Sultan, or making any hostile descent upon Turkish territory.”14 Indeed, the British press instigated a campaign of vilification against Russia as a prelude to sending troops to invade its territory. Under the heading “The War against the Barbarians,” The Illustrated London News declared that public opinion was firmly against Russia’s alleged aggression against Turkey, and spoke of “the black guilt which will enshroud that of [Tsar] Nicholas... He is the most selfish of war-makers that modern times ever saw.”15 The rhetoric of war was followed up by a joint declaration by the British and French on 14 March 1854, and the first troops sailed to invade Russian Crimea on 6 April of the same year. Australia may have been far from the battlefield but the ideals of Empire and Motherland were deeply ingrained in the psyche of the ruling colonial classes. The fact that the Motherland had gone to fight the Russians was evidence in itself that Russia must be bad, and the Britain was defending the right.16 However, there were also voices of dissent: the British public is not unanimous in its opposition to the pretensions of the Emperor of Russia... We have learnt from the columns of the American newspapers, that the Tsar has a few friends in that country. In England, the chief allies of the Tsar appear to be the Society of Friends... The most noted friend of the Tsar is an Irishman named Mitchel [who had lived in both America and Australia] - a convicted traitor and felon - who hates the British Government... and calls upon all Irishmen to fight against England, which he affects to consider the enemy of human liberty.17 During the Crimean War, for the first time, newspaper correspondents were able to provide the public with eyewitness accounts of the scenes of conflict.18 The standards, objects and methods employed by the journalists in this, the first war to be covered in the modern sense, made the newspaper a formidable weapon in the arsenals of the combatants. 14 The Illustrated London News, “Departure of the Russian Ambassador,” 4 Feb. 1854, No. 667, p. 90. 15 The Illustrated London News, “The War against the Barbarians,” 11 Feb. 1854, No. 668, p. 1. 16 The Argus, “Crimea Appeal,” 13 Jun. 1854, p. 4. 17 The Illustrated London News, “The Friends of Russia,” 6 May 1854, No. 681, p. 1. 18 This marks a shift to the contemporary perception of war, where the whole conflict was observed, rather than the subsequent concentration on the heroism, incompetences and romantic fantasies of the "the gentleman's art." The Crimean conflict became truly the "first newspaper war." See Lambert A. The Crimea War, Dover NH: A. Sutton, 1994. p. 2. 10

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Fitzroy, Australia: Australian Catholic University, 2005. – 443 p.A thesis submitted in total fulfillment of the requirements of the degree of Doctor of Philosophy «The Russian Orthodox community is a relatively small and little known group in Australian society, however, the history of the Russi
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