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From :
https://twitter.com/baqlavas/status/1285718600943271938
1. Seraphim Rose was an American hieromonk of the ROCOR and co-founder of the St Herman of Alaska Monastery in Platina, California. A convert to Orthodoxy and a traditionalist, Rose defended the aerial toll houses and creationism. He was very close with St John Maximovitch.
2. Christopher Reuben Spartas was a Ugandan convert to Orthodox Christianity. After being ordained a bishop, he became the first canonical bishop of the Ugandan Orthodox Church. He spread Orthodoxy all throughout East Africa. He also helped found many English-language schools.
3. Olga Michael was a native Alaskan of Yup’ik origin. A priest’s wife, she was known for her empathy and for her care of the poorer, often giving away her own clothes to the needy. Many miracles are attributed to her. In her village of Kwethluk, she is venerated by the faithful.
4. Archbishop Dmitri was a hierarch of the OCA. Known as “Apostle to the South”, he was well known for his missionary efforts among Mexicans and Mexican-Americans. He translated many Orthodox liturgical and theological
works into Spanish. His relics are incorrupt.
5. Elder Ephraim was an abbot of Philotheou Monastery on Mount Athos and a founder of several monasteries throughout the United States. A hiermonk for 71 years, he was a disciple of St Joseph the Hesychast and lived in monastic obedience to him for 12 years.
6. Paul Sawabe was a samurai warrior-priest. Armed with a sword, he confronted St Nicholas of Japan, planning to kill him. However, after talking with Nicholas, he converted to Christianity. He became the first native Japanese priest and spread the faith throughout Japan.
7. Theoclitos Triantafilides was the first Orthodox priest in Texas. His parish was composed of Greeks, Serbs, Russians, Lebanese, and Syrians. He was one of the first Orthodox priests in America to actively proselytize Americans.
8. Nicola Yanney was a Lebanese Orthodox missionary in America and the first priest ordained by St Raphael of Brooklyn. He ministered to Orthodox communities in nineteen US states. He died in 1918 from the Spanish Flu. A book called “Apostle to the Plains” is about his life.
9. Ilia Zotikov was a seminary classmate of the future American missionaries and hieromartyrs Alexander Hotovitsky and John Kochurov. St Alexander referred to Fr Ilia as “my best friend”. After being arrested in 1930 for being Orthodox, he was executed by a firing squad.
10. Jacob Korchinsky was a Russian missionary who converted hundreds of Alaskan natives to Orthodoxy and served as the first resident priest in Canada. He served as a missionary in Australia and Hawaii. After returning to Ukraine, he was executed by the Bolsheviks in 1941.
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https://twitter.com/baqlavas/status/1285718600943271938
1. Seraphim Rose was an American hieromonk of the ROCOR and co-founder of the St Herman of Alaska Monastery in Platina, California. A convert to Orthodoxy and a traditionalist, Rose defended the aerial toll houses and creationism. He was very close with St John Maximovitch.
2. Christopher Reuben Spartas was a Ugandan convert to Orthodox Christianity. After being ordained a bishop, he became the first canonical bishop of the Ugandan Orthodox Church. He spread Orthodoxy all throughout East Africa. He also helped found many English-language schools.
3. Olga Michael was a native Alaskan of Yup’ik origin. A priest’s wife, she was known for her empathy and for her care of the poorer, often giving away her own clothes to the needy. Many miracles are attributed to her. In her village of Kwethluk, she is venerated by the faithful.
4. Archbishop Dmitri was a hierarch of the OCA. Known as “Apostle to the South”, he was well known for his missionary efforts among Mexicans and Mexican-Americans. He translated many Orthodox liturgical and theological
works into Spanish. His relics are incorrupt.
5. Elder Ephraim was an abbot of Philotheou Monastery on Mount Athos and a founder of several monasteries throughout the United States. A hiermonk for 71 years, he was a disciple of St Joseph the Hesychast and lived in monastic obedience to him for 12 years.
6. Paul Sawabe was a samurai warrior-priest. Armed with a sword, he confronted St Nicholas of Japan, planning to kill him. However, after talking with Nicholas, he converted to Christianity. He became the first native Japanese priest and spread the faith throughout Japan.
7. Theoclitos Triantafilides was the first Orthodox priest in Texas. His parish was composed of Greeks, Serbs, Russians, Lebanese, and Syrians. He was one of the first Orthodox priests in America to actively proselytize Americans.
8. Nicola Yanney was a Lebanese Orthodox missionary in America and the first priest ordained by St Raphael of Brooklyn. He ministered to Orthodox communities in nineteen US states. He died in 1918 from the Spanish Flu. A book called “Apostle to the Plains” is about his life.
9. Ilia Zotikov was a seminary classmate of the future American missionaries and hieromartyrs Alexander Hotovitsky and John Kochurov. St Alexander referred to Fr Ilia as “my best friend”. After being arrested in 1930 for being Orthodox, he was executed by a firing squad.
10. Jacob Korchinsky was a Russian missionary who converted hundreds of Alaskan natives to Orthodoxy and served as the first resident priest in Canada. He served as a missionary in Australia and Hawaii. After returning to Ukraine, he was executed by the Bolsheviks in 1941.
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