New Martyr20th century

New Martyrs Basil Peter, Stephen & Alexander (1937)

died 1937

Also known as Basil Yezhov, Peter Lonskov, Stephen Mityushkin, Alexander Blokhin

Four laymen martyred in the Soviet persecution (1937)

Feast Day
September 4
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Martyrs Basil, Peter, Stephen and Alexander

Life

Basil Yezhov, Peter Lonskov, Stephen Mityushkin and Alexander Blokhin were four Orthodox laymen of the village of Pokrov in the Gaginsky district of the Gorky (Nizhny Novgorod) region, executed during the Soviet persecution of the Church in 1937. They are numbered among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia and are commemorated on September 4. All four were peasants, and their names are recorded together as a single commemoration.

By the records of their case, the four laymen were arrested on September 8, 1937, together with several priests of the Gaginsky district. The principal accusation against them was that, on July 6, 1937, they had taken part in organizing a solemn divine service attended by several clergy and a large gathering of the faithful — an act the authorities treated as drawing peasants away from collective-farm labor. None of those arrested admitted the guilt with which they were charged.

On September 17, 1937, the four were sentenced to death and shot. They were glorified among the host of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia by the Bishops' Council of the Russian Orthodox Church in August 2000. Their martyrdom belongs to the wider repression of clergy and laity in the Soviet Union during the late 1930s, in which ordinary parishioners were prosecuted alongside their priests for continuing to attend and support divine services.

Timeline6 momentsReadHide
  1. 1867Birth of Basil YezhovVasily Kireevich Yezhov is born in the village of Pokrov to a peasant family.
  2. 1930Earlier arrest of Basil YezhovYezhov is arrested for non-payment of taxes and sentenced to five years in a labor camp.
  3. Jul 6, 1937Festal service at PokrovA solemn divine service with several priests and many faithful, later cited as the basis of the charges.
  4. Sep 8, 1937ArrestThe four laymen are arrested with clergy of the Gaginsky district.
  5. Sep 17, 1937Sentence and executionCondemned to death by a troika and shot.
  6. Aug 2000GlorificationNumbered among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia by the Bishops' Council of the Russian Orthodox Church.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributionsReadHide

The four laymen

The sources identify the four as peasants of Pokrov village. Vasily (Basil) Kireevich Yezhov, the eldest, was born in 1867 in Pokrov to a peasant family; he had earlier been arrested in 1930 for non-payment of taxes and sentenced to five years in a labor camp. Stefan (Stephen) Semenovich Mityushkin was born in 1874, Alexander Ivanovich Blokhin in 1879, and Peter Vasilievich Lonskov in 1881.

Unlike the clergy arrested in the same case, the four bear the rank of Martyr rather than Hieromartyr, reflecting their status as laymen. Their commemoration preserves them as a group, and the entry for the day lists their four names together without distinguishing individual ecclesiastical titles.

Arrest and martyrdom

The arrests of September 8, 1937, swept up clergy and laity of the Gaginsky district together. The four laymen of Pokrov were charged in connection with the festal service of July 6, 1937, in which several priests and many believers had taken part. Refusing to admit guilt, they were condemned by a troika on September 17, 1937, and put to death by shooting.

Their commemoration alongside the priests martyred in the same persecution preserves the memory that, in these years, the suffering of the Russian Church fell on parishioners as well as on their pastors.

Commemorated withReadHide
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Notes

Among the Synaxis of New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia

Sources: Synaxarion