How a young conscript became a Russian saint
When Yevgeny Rodionov was beheaded by Chechen rebels, he was hailed
as a
contemporary Russian martyr. Andrew Osborn reports
24 November 2004
At a starkly beautiful hilltop cemetery engulfed in a thick winter
snowstorm, pilgrims pray to Russia's most unlikely latter-day saint:
a
young conscript brutally killed in Chechnya eight years ago. Yevgeny
Rodionov was 19 when he was beheaded by Chechen rebels. In life, he
was an
ordinary boy from an unremarkable provincial town who liked to strum
on the
guitar, compose poetry and dreamt of becoming a cook. But in death,
Yevgeny
Rodionov is anything but ordinary.
To thousands of Russian Orthodox churchgoers, the border guard is
already
known as Saint Yevgeny and a vigorous campaign to canonise him is in
full
swing. Unwilling to wait while the Church considers his credentials,
icons
bearing the martyr soldier's likeness are being venerated across
Russia,
and thousands of pilgrims have begun making long, arduous treks to
places
associated with his life.
For his admirers, many of them committed Christians, war veterans
and
Russian nationalists, Yevgeny is a devout symbol of patriotism who,
thousands believe, will instil pride in the younger generation and
give
millions of downtrodden Russians something they lack so sorely: hope.
For them Yevgeny, or Zhenya as he is affectionately known, was a
modern
Christian crusader who made the ultimate sacrifice for his country
in the
face of Russia's number one enemy of the moment: radical Islam, as
personified by Chechnya's most ruthless separatist rebels.
Yevgeny was murdered by Chechen rebels on 23 May, 1996, during
Russia's
first Chechen war. It was his 19th birthday and he had been held
captive
with three other Russian border guards in a damp cellar for 100 days
of
torture, beatings and starvation. He was not a combatant, and had
been
kidnapped with his comrades by one of Chechnya's most feared rebel
field
commanders as they manned a remote border post on the Chechen border.
Thousands of Russians have died at the hands of Chechen fighters
since 1994
when Moscow first sent in the tanks to crush the region's thirst for
independence, but Yevgeny's death was different. His mother, Lyubov
Vassilyevna Rodionova, says Yevgeny was given a chance to live if he
converted to Islam and took up arms against Russian federal forces.
Symbolically, she says all he had to do was to take off a small
silver
cross he had worn around his neck since the age of 11 and embrace
the faith
of his tormentors. Yevgeny refused and chose death instead.
Now the cross, its chain still stained red with his blood, has
become a
religious relic routinely smothered in tiny kisses by devout
pilgrims at
his mother's modest home in the town of Kurilovo, west of Moscow.
Forty pilgrims, some of whom had travelled more than 600 miles and
deprived
themselves of sleep to be there, gathered at Yevgeny's grave last
Saturday
to mark the eighth anniversary of the repatriation of his
decapitated
corpse to Kurilovo. Apparently oblivious to an air temperature of
minus
10C, men with icicled beards clutched icons of the young man as they
traipsed around the cemetery.
One man, who said he was a priest from the region where Yevgeny was
born,
held an enormous icon aloft. In it, Yevgeny's boyish features were
framed
by a golden halo, his border guard's uniform peeked out from a
medieval-looking cloak and he clutched a Russian Orthodox crucifix.
As the
icy snowflakes and chill wind lashed, the pilgrims sang hymns,
chanted
prayers, crossed themselves, exchanged stories about his life and
reminded
themselves why Yevgeny should be canonised.
"He is from our region near the town of Kuznetsk and we have
traveled all
night to be here," said a woman named Galina, in front of his austere
grave.
"We have hung a memorial board in his honour and teachers in our
schools
tell the children about his life. He deserves to become a saint."
Another
elderly woman, Valentina, said: "He could have lived had he
renounced his
faith but he didn't crack under pressure and he wouldn't take off
his
silver cross."
A dozen cadets training to be border guards at a nearby military
academy
tumbled out of a decrepit bus to pay their respects. Dressed in
traditional
Russian greatcoats and shapkas (fur hats), the young men stood
holding
different icons as the blizzard raged around them. "He is an example
for
us," said a serious-looking cadet called Artyom Pavlov. "An example
of
bravery and faith. He didn't know what he was fighting for but he
went
along anyway. He was a team player. There's so much respect for him;
he
refused to betray Russia and fought for the Motherland. He's a real
hero.
"We need heroes right now. Russia needs more soldiers like him;
soldiers
who aren't afraid to die for the Motherland." As the pilgrims
delivered
eulogy after eulogy, the beautiful, whitewashed stone church behind
them, a
church razed by Napoleon's Grande ArmÎe in 1812, appeared to glimmer
in the
morning murk.
Yevgeny's followers say his images are responsible for minor
miracles. The
icons weep myrrh, it is claimed, "enemies forget their differences"
in
front of them and an intercessional prayer offered up to Saint
Yevgeny can
mean the difference between earthly joy and sorrow.
Lyubov Rodionova, 52, brewing tea in her kitchen nearby, does not
look like
the mother of a saint but that is how she is perceived. "I am a
person
without a future, a past or a present," she says, her greyish face
drawn
with fatigue and emotion. "I am no longer known by my own name but
merely
as 'Yevgeny's mum'. I exist for that purpose alone and it is a great
honour." There is no room in her life for anything else. Her kitchen
is
dominated by a gigantic poster of Yevgeny and an icon bearing his
likeness.
As she talks of her son, the doorbell rings twice in an hour, fresh
pilgrims each. On one occasion, three men nervously tiptoe into her
kitchen. They ask for a booklet written in Yevgeny's honour, kiss
the
silver cross which he refused to yield, give his mother a small
statue of
Saint Seraphim and visually suck in the surroundings like men who
have not
eaten for days.
"This is the cross he gave his life for," Lyubov tells them, her
eyes
welling. "They cut his head off but the cross remained in place [on
what
was left of his neck]." "This is Zhenya's dog," she adds, pointing
to a
small, poodle-like creature racing about the kitchen. The three men
who
have driven 200 miles soon dash off to visit the cemetery of Satino
Russkoe
where Yevgeny is buried, their faces stamped with a peculiar look of
satisfaction.
More than 4,000 pilgrims ring the same doorbell every year,
Yevgeny's
mother says. Lyubov Rodionova looks like millions of other Russian
women in
their fifties but her quest to discover the truth about her son took
her to
places most Russians will never visit. Unwilling to accept the
army's
initial claim that Yevgeny was a deserter, she spent nine months in
Chechnya finding his body.
She paid $4,000 (L2,100) to the man she believes killed Yevgeny - a
Chechen
field commander - to discover where her son was buried, meeting him
17
times. She found the body beside a mountain stream in a heavily
mined
region; one Russian soldier was killed helping to make the area
safe.
Lyubov Rodionova then exhumed her son's putrefied body with her
hands at
night and took it back to Kurilovo.
Lyubov says she recognised Yevgeny by his cross and other
things "which
only a mother knows". She says: "Every mother knows how her child
wears
their shoes and he was wearing the socks I had knitted for him, dark-brown
ones." But Yevgeny's head was missing and she had to make another
trip back
for his skull, which had been shattered by the rebels who feared his
soul
would come back to haunt them if they left his head intact.
Lyubov's experiences in Chechnya have changed her. She was abused,
spat on,
and almost murdered by the brother of Chechnya's most-wanted man,
warlord
Shamil Basayev, who beat her so badly he left her for dead. "All my
teeth
were broken," she says. "These are all fake." She taps them. "When I
came
back from Chechnya my hair was all grey. I am not healthy. When you
bury a
child you bury half of yourself. I can't laugh or make merry any
more." She
also lost her husband, Alexander, a few days after Yevgeny's death
was
confirmed. She believes he died of sorrow.
But Lyubov says she does not care whether Yevgeny is formally
canonised or
not. "God chooses a place for everyone. His [Yevgeny's] place will
not
change if he is made a saint. He is already in paradise." She
insists she
is hard-pressed to understand why her dead son inspires such
veneration. "I
really don't know. It's not the best times in Russia right now.
Maybe God
is offering Yevgeny to people as a symbol of purity."
She claims she knows the precise circumstances of Yevgeny's death
because
she confronted his captors and his murderers. "If I'm honest, I was
ready
to kill them," she whispers, her eyes flashing with anger. "But I
didn't
have a weapon."
Many of the pilgrims play down suggestions that Russia is engaged in
a holy
war, but Lyubov is less coy. "Islam and Christianity are at war.
Some of
our boys were crucified and nailed to trees. The Chechens laughed
and said,
'Your Jesus rose from the dead on the third day; let's see if you do
the
same'. Terror has a Muslim face. You can't deny that."
Lyubov believes Russian troops should stay in Chechnya, claiming there would be a bloodbath if they left. She also supports the "liquidation" of Chechen rebel leaders. But she is also deeply critical of the Russian authorities. "What bothers me is their insistence that it is not a war. If people are dying, which they are, it's a war. They [the authorities] betrayed Yevgeny. Why did I have to go and search for him myself? Can you imagine that happening anywhere else? We can buy football teams like Chelsea but what does that really count for?"
As she closes the door to her small flat, her mood swings from sentimentality to an almost soldier-like matter-of-factness. "Remember, there will be many unhappy mothers in Russia this Christmas," she murmurs.
"There is nothing more precious to a mother than their child."
Then comes the change; Lyubov was not a churchgoer before Yevgeny's
death
but she is now a strong believer. "War defines people quickly," she
says
crisply. "If you are a piece of shit you crumple quickly but if you
are
decent, it hones you like a diamond. You need to go through a lot to
get to
that stage."
© 2004 Independent Digital (UK) Ltd
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