Message Boards

You are here: Message Boards > Topics > Religions and Religious > Doukhobor > Death Announcement - John J. Verigin Sr. Honorary Chairman of the USCC
Names or Keywords
All Boards   Doukhobor - Family History & Genealogy Message Board

Death Announcement - John J. Verigin Sr. Honorary Chairman of the USCC

  Replies: 8

Vancouver Sun: Doukhobours Arrange Funeral Services for Leader John J. Verigin

Jon_Kalmakoff  (View posts) Posted: 28 Oct 2008 1:53PM GMT
Classification: Query
Surnames: Verigin
Doukhobours arrange funeral services for leader John J. Verigin

Tim Lai, Vancouver Sun
Published: Tuesday, October 28, 2008

John J. Verigin, who is credited with bringing Canadian Doukhobors into the modern era during his decades of leadership, died Sunday at his home in Grand Forks. He was 86.

Born in the village of Orlovka in what is Georgia today, Verigin had been the honorary chairman of the Union of Spiritual Communities of Christ since 1962. However, he had been viewed as the leader of thousands of Canadian and Russian Doukhobors since 1939, when he succeeded his great-grandfather Peter V. Verigin at the age of 17.

"He set a wonderful example for the membership of the organization that he headed and the wider Doukhobor community that he served and advised," said J.J. Verigin, his son and the executive director of the USCC.

"He was a person that contributed to the multicultural fabric of Canada. His impact transcended our nation."

J.J. Verigin said that in line with Doukhobor tradition, the organization will wait six weeks before deciding on the next leader.

Larry Ewashen, curator of the Doukhobor Discovery Centre in Castlegar, said John J. Verigin was a reluctant spiritual leader at first, but knew he wanted to serve the Doukhobors, especially after the B.C. government seized their properties in 1938.

"You can give him a lot of credit for bringing the Doukhobors into modern society," Ewashen said. "He was a very dynamic speaker. He was fluent in English and Russian. He could just go from one language to another with just the most amazing ease."

In 1945, he organized an historic all-Doukhobor convention that created the Union of Doukhobors of Canada, viewed at the time as the most comprehensive unification effort yet made.

While his work in integrating the Doukhobors into Canadian society will be Verigin's main legacy, he will also be celebrated for his efforts to improve Canadian-Russian relations and for fostering a greater understanding between all peoples.

"He had a wisdom about sharing commonalities," said Koozma Tarasoff, an Ottawa-based author who has written 10 books on the Doukhobors. He described Verigin as "a longtime beacon of peace and goodwill."

Tarasoff, who knew Verigin for half a century, said his friend maintained his principles of peace in all his work, especially in the many peace events he organized.

"He insisted on love and forgiveness for anybody who he quarrelled with in the past," said Tarasoff. "These qualities are important for intergroup understanding."

In the early 1980s, Verigin was the regional director of Operation Dismantle, one of Canada's largest peace organizations, which advocated a global vote on disarmament.

Tarasoff said one of Verigin's crowning achievements was organizing the International Doukhobor Intergroup Symposium in Castlegar in 1982, the first gathering of Doukhobors, Molokans, Mennonites, Quakers and Tolstoyans.

Verigin received the Order of Canada in 1976 and the Order of British Columbia in 1996.

In 1989, he received the Order of the Peoples' Friendship from Mikhail Gorbachev for creating cultural exchanges, travel and education opportunities between Canadians and Russians. One initiative involved coordinating a six-week visit to the Kootenays for children suffering from the effects of the Chernobyl nuclear accident. He also worked to collect and distribute supplies to needy communities in the former Soviet Union.

Verigin is survived by his wife Laura, and three children and their families, all residents of Grand Forks.

Traditional Doukhobor funeral services for Verigin will begin Friday at 7 p.m. and continue on Saturday at 10 a.m. at the USCC Community Centre in Grand Forks. A service in Castlegar at the Brilliant Cultural Centre will start at 7 p.m. on Saturday and continue at 10 a.m Sunday.

http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/story.html?id=0a287a...

Find a Board

Page Tools