Peter the Aleut

Saint Peter the Aleut

Icon of St. Peter the Aleut
Martyr of San Francisco
Born Circa 1800
Died 1815?
Honored in Eastern Orthodox Church
Canonized 1980
Feast September 24
Attributes portrayed as an Aleut youth, wearing a traditional gut parka[1]

Cungagnaq (date of birth unknown - d. 1815) is venerated as a martyr and saint (as Peter the Aleut) by some jurisdictions of the Eastern Orthodox Church. He was allegedly a native of Kodiak Island (Aleutian Islands), and is said to have received the Christian name of Peter when he was baptized into the Orthodox faith by the monks of St. Herman's missionaries operating in the north.[2] He is purported to have been captured by Spanish soldiers near San Pedro (Pacifica, California) and tortured and killed at the instigation of Roman Catholic priests either there or at Mission Dolores,[3] in San Francisco.[4] At the time identified for his death, California was Spanish territory, and Spain was worried about Russian advances southwards from Alaska.[4] Hubert Howe Bancroft, in his multi-volume History of California, only notes that, in connection with an incident wherein a Russian fur-hunting expedition was taken into custody after declining to leave San Pedro, one Russian source accused "the Spaniards of cruelty to the captives, stating that according to Kuskof’s[5] report one Aleut who refused to become a Catholic died from ill-treatment received from the padre at San Francisco."

Contents

Martyrdom

According to the most fully developed version of the story, in 1815 a group of Russian employees of the Russian American Company and their Aleut seal and otter hunters, including Peter, was captured by Spanish soldiers, while hunting illicitly for seals near San Pedro. According to the original account, the soldiers took them to Misión San Pedro y Pablo for interrogation. One Russian source states that after being taken prisoner near modern Los Angeles, the captives were taken to Mission Dolores—that is, modern San Francisco. With threats of torture, the Roman Catholic priests attempted to force the Aleuts to deny their Orthodox faith and to convert to Roman Catholicism.[2]

When the Aleuts refused, the priest had a toe severed from each of Peter's feet. Peter still refused to renounce his faith and the Spanish priest ordered a group of Native Americans, indigenous to California, to cut off each finger of Peter's hands, one joint at a time, finally removing both his hands.[2] They eventually disemboweled him, making him a martyr to the Eastern Orthodox faith. They were about to torture the next Aleut when orders were received to release them.

Historicity

An account of the martyrdom of Peter the Aleut is contained in a lengthy letter written on Nov. 22, 1865, by Symeon Ivanovich Yanovsky to Damascene, abbot of the Valaam Monastery in Russia.[6][7] Yanovsky (1789–1876), who is also one of the chief sources of information about St. Herman of Alaska, was chief manager of the Russian colonies from 1818-1820. In the letter he was reporting on an incident that he had heard from a supposed eyewitness, and that had taken place in 1815, that is, a half a century earlier. The letter contains the description of Peter being tortured by "Jesuits": the Jesuit order had been suppressed in 1773, and had only been reconstituted in 1814.[8] There were in 1815 no Jesuits within a thousand miles of California.[8] There were Franciscans in California at the time. Yanovsky adds, "At the time I reported all this to the Head Office in St. Petersburg." And indeed, this earlier communication, his official dispatch to the company's main office—dated Feb. 15, 1820, five years after the event—also relates the story of St. Peter's martyrdom, albeit with different details.[9]

Veneration

According to Yanovsky's 1865 letter, upon receiving the report of Peter's death, St. Herman back on Kodiak Island was moved to cry out, "Holy new-martyr Peter, pray to God for us!"[4]

Peter the Aleut was formally glorified as a Saint by the Orthodox Church in America as the "Martyr of San Francisco" in 1980. His feast day is commemorated on September 24.

There are a number of churches dedicated to him in North America, for example at Lake Havasu City, Arizona;[10] Minot, North Dakota;[11] Calgary;[12] and Abita Springs, Louisiana.[13]

Notes

  1. ^ Icon: St. Peter the Aleut, Creighton University
  2. ^ a b c All Saints of North America, an Orthodox Church in Virginia, USA
  3. ^ McNichols Icon: St. Peter the Aleut and St. Andrew Bobola, SJ, Creighton University
  4. ^ a b c Saint Peter the Aleut, Oct 22 1999, University of Michigan
  5. ^ Ivan Kuskof was a sailor and official associated with the Russian-American Company
  6. ^ Text of Yanofsky's account of the martyrdom of Peter the Aleut, contained in his letter to Abbot Damascene (at Orthodox Church in America website)
  7. ^ For a translation of the letter, see The Russian Orthodox Religious Mission in America, 1794-1837, cited below, pp. 80-89.
  8. ^ a b needs reference
  9. ^ See The Russian Orthodox Religious Mission in America, 1794-1837, cited below, p. 177.
  10. ^ St. Peter the Aleut Orthodox Christian Church, Lake Havasu City, Ariz.
  11. ^ St. Peter the Aleut Church, Minot, ND
  12. ^ Holy Martyr Peter the Aleut Church, Calgary, AB
  13. ^ Saint Peter the Aleut Orthodox Mission, Southeast Louisiana

Sources

External links