New Martyr 20th century

Hieromartyr Alexander Hotovitzky

1872 – 1937

Also known as Priestmartyr Alexander

A priest who served in North America and later suffered in Soviet Russia, glorified as a new martyr.

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

The Holy New Hieromartyr Alexander Hotovitzky, Missionary to America

Come to them for
Missionary Work

Life

Alexander Alexandrovich Hotovitzky was a Russian priest who spent the prime of his ministry as a missionary in North America before returning to Russia, where he died a martyr during the Soviet persecution of the Church. Born on February 11, 1872, in Kremenets in Volhynia, he was the son of an archpriest who served as rector of the Volhynia Theological Seminary. After studies at the Volhynia Seminary, he graduated from the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy in 1895, married Maria Scherbuhina, and was sent to the Diocese of the Aleutians and North America.

Beginning as a reader at the newly established Saint Nicholas Church in New York City, he was ordained to the priesthood on February 25, 1896, by Bishop Nicholas (Ziorov) at the diocesan cathedral in San Francisco. For some eighteen years he served Saint Nicholas as its pastor, becoming one of the central organizers of Orthodox life in the United States. He was instrumental in establishing new parishes in cities such as Philadelphia, Yonkers, and Passaic, edited the diocesan journal the American Orthodox Messenger, and oversaw the construction of the new Saint Nicholas Cathedral in New York, completed early in the 1900s. Much of this work was carried out under Bishop Tikhon (Bellavin), the future Patriarch of Moscow, with whom Hotovitzky's life would remain intertwined.

Recalled to Russia in 1914, Hotovitzky served first as rector of the Orthodox congregation in Helsinki, Finland, and from 1917 at the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour in Moscow, where he again worked alongside the now-Patriarch Tikhon and took part in the All-Russian Church Council of 1917-18. Under the Bolshevik regime he was repeatedly arrested, imprisoned, and exiled for his defense of the Church and its property. Following a final arrest during the Great Purge, he was put to death in 1937. He was glorified as a New Hieromartyr, first by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside Russia in 1981 and later by the Moscow Patriarchate, and is commemorated on December 4.

Timeline 6 moments Read Hide
  1. 1872 Born in Kremenets Born February 11, 1872, in Kremenets in Volhynia, son of an archpriest.
  2. 1895 Graduated from the Theological Academy Completed studies at the Saint Petersburg Theological Academy with a master's degree.
  3. 1896 Ordained priest Ordained to the priesthood on February 25, 1896, by Bishop Nicholas (Ziorov) in San Francisco.
  4. 1914 Recalled to Russia After about eighteen years of American ministry, recalled and appointed to serve in Helsinki.
  5. 1917 Transferred to Moscow Assigned to the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour and took part in the All-Russian Church Council.
  6. 1937 Martyrdom Put to death during the Great Purge, receiving the crown of martyrdom.

Contributions & Legacy

2 contributions Read Hide

Ministry in America

Hotovitzky arrived in the United States as a young missionary and quickly became one of the most active figures in the Russian Orthodox mission. From his base at Saint Nicholas Church in New York, he helped organize parish communities for the growing population of Orthodox immigrants, with sources crediting him with a role in founding parishes in Philadelphia, Yonkers, and Passaic, among other places.

Beyond parish work, he edited the American Orthodox Messenger, the journal of the diocese, and supervised the building of a substantial new Saint Nicholas Cathedral in New York, completed in the first years of the twentieth century. His American ministry coincided with the tenure of Bishop Tikhon (Bellavin), under whose leadership Orthodoxy in North America was significantly consolidated.

Return to Russia and Martyrdom

After his recall in 1914, Hotovitzky served the Orthodox community in Helsinki before being transferred to Moscow in 1917, where he was attached to the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour and participated in the All-Russian Church Council. His return coincided with the upheaval of the Revolution.

Under Soviet rule he was arrested in May 1920 and again in November 1921, and in 1922 he was tried and sentenced to ten years' imprisonment before being amnestied in 1923 and subsequently exiled to the Turukhan region of Siberia. Raised in time to the rank of protopresbyter, he continued his ministry until his final arrest during the Great Purge of 1937, after which he was put to death. He is numbered among the New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia.

Notes

Glorification commemoration; modern martyr.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints