Social ministry of St.Elisabeth Convent in the community: The land of childhood project
SOCIAL MINISTRY OF ST ELISABETH CONVENT IN THE COMMUNITY
THE LAND OF CHILDHOOD PROJECT
The
land of childhood... Is there anything more bright and pure than a smile of a
child?.. Unfortunately, there are young martyrs - the disabled children - who
are in desperate need of love and motherly care, like no one else in the world.
The
Sisterhood in honour of the Holy Martyr Grand Princess Elisabeth and St.Elisabeth Convent have cared for children who stay in health and social
facilities for many years, namely:
·
Special
boarding school No. 7 (for mentally challenged children)
·
Centre
of social rehabilitation of children
·
Child
unit of the National Psychiatric Clinic
Apart from care and spiritual
help, the Convent carries out a number of projects aimed at the improvement of
the living conditions for the children and at their social and medical
rehabilitation. These projects include supply of medicines and hygiene kits,
establishment of creative workshops, rehabilitation programmes, recreation,
hitch-hiking trips, attending theatres and concerts.
The
boarding home for mentally challenged children is located not far from the
Convent. The children have various diagnoses - Down’s syndrome, cerebral palsy,
birth traumas, congenital physical disabilities and accompanying splanchnopathies.
There are about two hundred children who stay in this boarding home. Many of
them were abandoned by their parents.
The
children are sincere and open, they can wholeheartedly hug a person they see
for the first time and are willing to share their love with everyone. They
easily discern the other person’s mood and begin to comfort him if he is sad
and depressed. There is a number of bedridden children in the boarding home for
whom the time has stopped. Sad though it is to see their suffering, one can still
feel that their souls will be with God forever where there is no pain, no
sorrow and no tears.
The Convent and
the Sisterhood are non-profit organizations, which do not receive financial
support from the government and have to rely solely on donations. Thanks to the
support coming from religious and charity organizations, as well as individual
sponsors and European states, a number of projects have been implemented:
catalog.obitel-minsk.com |
“Joy Theatre”
Thirty mentally challenged
orphans from the boarding home have been engaged in the activity of the
children’s theatre “Ladoshki” organized by the brothers and sisters of the
Convent for twelve years. More than fifteen plays have been staged during that
period. Professional actors from Minsk theatres hold regular classes of
creative movement, drama and dance for
the children.
The children are happy to perform
not only in Belarus but also abroad.
The young actors demonstrate
obvious progress and improvement of their mental and emotional state. Classes
of drama contribute to the development of their creativity, imagination,
sensory movements, and inspire them to study further.
Furthermore, the orphans learn
the skills and habits necessary for their future life in the society. Their
participation in the performances grows their confidence and helps them to live
their dreams and bring joy to those who see them.
Summer camp “Nezabudka”
A summer camp for children from
socially vulnerable backgrounds has been organized annually at the metochion of
the convent in a picturesque place for the last decade. Around twenty young
patients of the boarding home for mentally and physically challenged children
come to the summer camp every year. Fairs and special days are held,
performances are staged and hikes are organized here. Children can learn to
play the guitar, to sing, to make handicrafts and even to tie prayer ropes.
A panel home was
purchased in 2011 thanks to sponsorship of the European Women Association so
that children who suffer from more serious disorders could stay in the camp.
Thus, the orphans
get the opportunity to spend time together with other children of their age, to
participate in sports and artistic events adapted according to their abilities.
This project helps to adapt and integrate mentally and physically challenged
orphans into the society.
Craft Workshops
Two workshops
have opened their doors within the premises of the boarding home so that the
mentally challenged children could develop their creativity. A wood-processing
workshop is aimed at the boys, while the girls have the chance to learn how to
make ceramics. St Elisabeth Convent bought and mounted the equipment and
furniture for these workshops. These workshops contribute to the development of
labour skills of the children who stay in the boarding school and help to find
a solution for the problem of their labour rehabilitation. When their treatment
in the boarding home is over, the graduates will be able to use the skills they
have learned for employment. On the other hand, the opportunity to make a
product and to see the results of their work allows the patients of the
boarding home to feel that they are useful and valuable for the society. The
products that the children make are sold by the sisters during fairs organized
by the Convent and the money they generate buys the children gifts and sweets.
Therapeutic horseback riding
The Convent tries
to employ innovative approaches to medical rehabilitation of the challenged
children. The sisters of the Convent and the Sisterhood took a study course on
therapeutic horseback riding and bought a specially trained horse to hold such
classes with the children. The first groups of challenged children had the
chance to try this method at the metochion in the summer of 2011.
The children who
do therapeutic horseback riding show improvement of their psycho-emotional
state, positive dynamics in the development of their eye and movement
coordination as well as the therapeutic effect of general invigoration.
Christian School in
honor of St Euphrosyne of Polotsk
This
school hosts daily classes not only on Catechism but also on icon painting,
choir singing, classical dance, Cossack martial arts. It is also planned to
include a planetarium and a theatre hall for the performances of the “Ladoshki”
children’s theatre.
An indoor arena
for therapeutic horseback riding is to be built in order to have classes all
year round and in all weather conditions.
We plan to build
an outdoor sports ground for the parishioners’ children and the challenged
children from the adjacent social centres.
BOOKS AS A CONTINUATION OF LITURGY
There are many publications available on the book market nowadays. Each book lover can find what she is looking for on the shelves of a bookshop. Some people swallow pulp novels and light fiction like doughnuts, while others enjoy works by Umberto Eco or Carlos Castaneda like Château Lafite. However, there are some people who are eager to prove that books are an anachronism, that people forget the skill of reading and their interest in books is bound to go extinct. You know, it is unsurprising to hear this opinion in our digital age, and you might be tempted to agree with it to some extent when you observe young people who wear earplugs and fix their looks on tablets and iPhones for entertainment. Nevertheless, sometimes you might see them reading some texts from the glowing screens of their mobile devices. But at that very moment you are likely to think, “He’s a student reading an ebook not for fun but because he needs it for an exam…”
On Form and Content
Printed books are still alive, and they are still being read. They are read to a lesser extent than they would be ideally but they are read! Long established and new publishers compete for the readers, for the chance to share their opinions and texts with them. Anyway, it is not about how the text is presented but what is in it that I would like to talk now. What message does a modern book convey? What does it teach? What does it inspire for? Are there publishers who speak out loud about Christian and humanistic values, about the meaning of life, love, and eternity?
It seems to me that there are not too many publishers and printers who consider their books as a continuation of the liturgy. The majority in the publishing business are more preoccupied with satisfying emotional requirements of their readers, with the propaganda of natural, rather than spiritual, values. Giving people food for the soul and helping them to get closer to God is a difficult task.
What can we do? Can we change anything? What should we read about: the earthly or the heavenly things, the temporary or the eternal? Should we strive for virtue or remain in the emptiness?
Giving people a chance to choose, showing them an alternative, helping them to distinguish between the natural and the spiritual. This has been the purpose of the Publishing House of St Elisabeth Convent, established in 2001. With prayer and the blessing of Archpriest Andrew Lemeshonok, the spiritual father of the Convent, books filled with the light of God’s love and books where one can find answers to any questions have been published here for over a decade.
Made with the Blessing
The first book published in the Convent tells about the elders and the meaning of their guidance, about the necessity to submit one’s will to an experienced teacher whose advice is indispensable for those willing to go on a spiritual journey. This 100-page book was paperback and had the press run of 2,000 copies. It was printed on a risograph – a hybrid of a photocopy machine and an offset printing press. The book was compiled in 2002 by Nun Eupraxia (Shilenkova).
— It wasn’t my own idea, — Nun Eupraxia recalls. — Everything in the Convent is made with a blessing and, hopefully, in accordance with God’s will. Nun Martha (Guskova) who was in charge of the Publishing House at that time, was planning a series of similar publications.
The second book published in the Convent hit the presses in 2002. It was prepared in collaboration with the Publishing House of the Orthodox Fraternity in honor of St Michael the Archangel and printed on newsprint paper in the Belorussian Printing House. This book had 600 pages, a hard cover and a press run of 10,100 copies.
This book was followed by the third, and the fourth, and the fifth. Brochures. Booklets. Calendars. Posters… The scope of our publishing activities widened. The books were decorated with photos and pictures. At the same time, the Publishing House of St Elisabeth Convent explored its audience, developed topics and directions of its activity, established a closely connected team, and become more experienced. Today one can easily say that the Publishing House of St Elisabeth Convent has found its niche, has developed its unique style, by which one can unmistakably distinguish its publications.
“I have been working in the Publishing House since the very beginning,” Maria Mosilevich, the technical editor, recalls. “There are plenty of great releases, I don't even know which one to highlight… I would suggest reading the Word of the Spiritual Father series. This is a book of sermons by Archpriest Andrew Lemeshonok and his answers to the questions of parishioners and visitors of our website. The Happy Ones is another interesting book, which contains life stories of people who learned to love and whom God took to the heaven to dwell with Him.
Last year (2013) the Publishing House of St Elisabeth Convent prepared and published 79 titles, with press runs varying from 1,000 to 30,000 copies. We published not only books for worship (the Holy Gospel, the Book of Hours, prayer books, canons and akathists) but also spiritual and fiction books, Orthodox calendars and books for children. Among the authors of these books were Helena Mikhalenko, Tatiana Dashkevich, Andrei Smetanin, Dmitry Shevarov, et al.
A famous name does not matter
Today the Publishing House has ten members of staff: editors, proofreaders, typesetters, artists, designers. We have permanent full-time authors and part-time or freelance workers. It is not an easy task even for a well-known author to be approved for publication in the Publishing House of St Elisabeth Convent. Dozens of essays or books printed by secular publishers are not enough.
“A 'trendy' name does not matter when we choose which authors to publish,” Nun Antonina (Semenova), the head of the Publishing House, believes. “Apart from good writing skills, the author must have a heart that yearns for God because it is He who endows us with this or that talent. We must bear that in mind and bring the fruit of our labor back to its Rightful Owner.”
Alexander Beganski, the chief editor of the Publishing House, agrees with that opinion. He has been in this position since 2010. For him, like for all other employees of the Publishing House, work in the Convent is more than just a job. It is first of all the common prayer that starts every work day and gives birth to mutual understanding, the feeling of unity, and the books.
“I like the book by Metropolitan Philaret (Vakhromeyev) Learning Love more than everything else we've published,” Alexander says. “This book contains selected sermons of the Patriarchal Exarch of All Belarus from 2009—2013. Love as the primary commandment and God as Love are the main topics of this book.”
This book, incidentally, was awarded a diploma of the 2014 National Book Art Contest in the nomination Spirituality.
For the Sake of the Future
Much attention these days is paid to making children books. This is unsurprising. Our children are our future and tomorrow depends on the books they learn from. Several books from the Loved Kids series were awarded diplomas at the 2014 National Book Art Contest. This year, a Christmas selection of short stories for children entitled The Golden Night received a diploma in the nomination Growing With Books.
Today the Publishing House is busy undertaking several projects for children at the same time. Editor Angelina Mendeleva has been preparing an Easter selection of short stories for children Christ is Risen, My Joy!; a children's book about the life of the Most Holy Mother of God The Heavenly Flower; Lullaby ABC; and a book with 3D illustrations Jonah and the Whale.
“Our project A Gift for the Little Christian deserves special attention,” Angelina told us. “It is a secret box containing a prayer book for kids and a cardboard figurine of an Angel. I think it will make a perfect gift for a newborn. We wanted to accomplish such a project for a long time and, praise the Lord, we did it.”
Editor Helena Kebets is in charge of games for kids' development. Wooden puzzle boxes, coloring books, flashcards, and jigsaw puzzles that teach letters and numbers are already available. These are books, too, even though they do not contain any text. Children read with the help of images.
“The Learning To Count jigsaw puzzle will help children to learn numbers while playing,” Helena believes. “The box with coloring cards contains not only the characters of well-known fairy tales but also many fascinating assignments that will enhance the development of creative abilities of your kid. The cards are very convenient. One can draw on them, then wipe it out, and draw again.
It seems to me that anyone who has ever held a book prepared and published by the Publishing House of St Elisabeth Convent in her hands must have felt the warmth it radiates. If you haven’t yet, why not try it now?
By Demetrius Artiukh
Timeline of St.Elisabeth Convent
The history of the Feast Day of the Icon of the Mother of God of Kazan
The image of Our Lady of Kazan is said to have come to
Russia from Constantinople in the 13th century. After the Tatars besieged Kazan
and made it the capital of their khanate in 1438, the icon disappeared, and it
is not mentioned again until the 16th century, some years after the liberation
of Kazan by Ivan the Terrible in 1552.
After a fire destroyed Kazan in 1579, the Virgin
appeared in a prophetic dream to a 10-year-old girl named Matrona and told her
where to find the precious image again. As instructed, Matrona told the
archbishop about her dream, but he would not take her seriously. After two more
such dreams, on July 8, 1579, the girl and her mother themselves dug up the
image, buried under the ashes of a house, where it had been hidden long before
to save it from the Tatars. The unearthed icon looked as bright and beautiful
as if it were new. The archbishop repented of his unbelief and took the icon to
the Church of St. Nicholas, where a blind man was cured that very day.
Hermogen, the priest at this church, later became Metropolitan of Kazan. He
brought the icon to Kazan's Cathedral of the Annunciation and established July
8 as a feast in honor of the Theotokos of Kazan. It is from Hermogen's
chronicle, written at the request of the tsar in 1595, that we know of these
events.
Preview Icons of the Mother of God of Kazan |
By 1612, when Moscow was occupied by Polish invaders,
Hermogen had become Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia. From prison, he called
for a three-day fast and ordered the icon of Our Lady of Kazan to be brought to
Princes Minin and Pozharsky, who were leading the resistance to the occupation.
This icon—possibly the original, but more likely a copy—was carried before
their regiments as they fought to regain the capital from the Poles. When the
Polish army was finally driven from Moscow on October 22, 1612, the victory was
attributed to the intercession of the Mother of God, and the Kazan icon became
a focal point for Russian national sentiments. Later that year, when Tsar
Mikhail Feodorovich came to the throne, he appointed both July 8 and October 22
as feasts in honor of Our Lady of Kazan.
The victorious Prince Dmitry Pozharsky financed the construction of a small wooden church dedicated to the Virgin of Kazan in the Moscow Kremlin. The icon was kept there until the small church burnt down in 1632. The tsar ordered the construction of a larger brick cathedral to replace it. After its completion in 1638, the icon remained there in Moscow's Kazan Cathedral for nearly two centuries. It was regularly borne in solemn liturgical processions along the city walls as the protectress of Moscow. The intercession of Our Lady of Kazan was successfully invoked against a Swedish invasion in 1709, and again when Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812. To commemorate this latter victory, the Kazan icon was moved to the new Kazan Cathedral in St. Petersburg in 1821.
The victorious Prince Dmitry Pozharsky financed the construction of a small wooden church dedicated to the Virgin of Kazan in the Moscow Kremlin. The icon was kept there until the small church burnt down in 1632. The tsar ordered the construction of a larger brick cathedral to replace it. After its completion in 1638, the icon remained there in Moscow's Kazan Cathedral for nearly two centuries. It was regularly borne in solemn liturgical processions along the city walls as the protectress of Moscow. The intercession of Our Lady of Kazan was successfully invoked against a Swedish invasion in 1709, and again when Napoleon invaded Russia in 1812. To commemorate this latter victory, the Kazan icon was moved to the new Kazan Cathedral in St. Petersburg in 1821.
By this time, the Kazan icon had achieved immense
popularity, and there were nine or ten separate miracle-working copies of the
icon around the country. There is considerable disagreement about which of
these, if any, was the original. Some claim the original remained housed in
Kazan, while others hold that the one moved from Moscow to St. Petersburg was
the original. Many experts, however, believe the original was lost and both of
the venerated Kazan icons were early copies. In any case, both icons
disappeared in the early 20th century. The one in Kazan was stolen in 1904 and
probably destroyed by the thieves, who were more interested in its jeweled gold
covering. The one in St. Petersburg disappeared after the October Revolution of
1917. Some say it was smuggled out of the country to protect it from the
Bolsheviks, while others suggest the Communists themselves hid it and later
sold it abroad. But during World War II, an icon of the Virgin of Kazan surfaced
in Leningrad to lead a procession around the fortifications of the
Nazi-besieged city.
The wonderworking icons Our Lady of Sitka and Our Lady
of Soufanieh are both of the Kazan type.
What is going on this fall at the Women's Rehabilitation Center?
October has
begun. It is a warm day, and the sky clears up by the afternoon. All is quiet
and bright at the Women's Rehabilitation Center of St Elisabeth Convent. The
golden autumn is at its best: wind sets the leaves of the beautiful birch trees
in constant motion; the dahlia, marigold, and aster flowers are in full bloom;
the fruit of this blessed season — the red apples, the deep blue grapes, and
yellow and orange pumpkins — please the eye and the heart.
The almost
ready new bright wooden church in honor of St Sergius stands surrounded by birch
trees, the leaves of which have hardly been touched by the golden color. If you
come closer, it looks like a big and noble knight in a fairytale palace.
There is no
one outdoors. All sisters are having an akathist. I am met by cats who approach
me trustfully, wishing to get to know me. “Pyatnashka” (dotted cat) purrs
loudly and unceremoniously jumps into my car. In a couple of minutes, it is
sitting on my shoulder.
A visit to the rehabilitation center for me is like visiting a sick
person in a hospital. This time, it is easier because we already know each
other. A hospital is not just a place where sick people have to stay: it is
also the place where they are healed. It depends on care, a doctor's skill, and
of course on the hospital itself, for it is said that even walls may help in
healing. We are not going to talk about the social importance of this place and
about the life stories of the women who now stay here. It is no secret for
everyone that social rehabilitation in the center is a "life saver"
for the drowning. Today, on this wonderful day, we are going to ask Nun Barbara
(Atrasievich) how the construction of St Sergius Church is going on, how big
the sisters' harvest this year is, and how they are going to celebrate the patron
saint's day…
The builders
plan to cover the church with a permanent roof by winter. What about the domes?
"God willing, we will mount the domes before winter, too, it's hard to
plan anything specific," Nun Barbara replies. "Right now, we are
about to finish a parish house near the church. I cannot say anything about its
future use — we might use it to provide accommodation for the priests who come
to serve in the center, or we might use it as a guest house."
Currently, a
priest visits the rehabilitation center every Tuesday. The divine services are
held in the basement of the church. We hope that the Liturgy on the patron
saint's day will be celebrated on the ground floor, provided the weather is
fine."
There had been a church here several years
ago — the parish church of v. Nialidavičy — but it had become defunct by the
time our monastic sisters came here. The church was destroyed by fire on the
eve of the Annunciation in 2011, precisely during the negotiations of the
Convent and the authorities with regard to buying this land. The police said
that the most probable reason was arson: someone had been well-informed enough
to take all icons out of the church. Well, what can we say now?.. Let bygones
be bygones. Only broken and besmirched bells remind of that accident now, and
the sisters try not to remember evil. They have their own lives, their own
homework to do. "We read an akathist daily: to St Nicholas the
Wonderworker, St Mary of Egypt, St Pantheleimon, SS Cyril and Maria (parents of
St Sergius of Radonezh), and the Inexhaustible Chalice icon of the Mother of
God. We choose a time for it depending on the season and weather conditions. In
the summer, when it was hot outdoors, we prayed the akathist at lunchtime,
around 1p.m. As it is getting colder outdoors, we will change the timetable to
fit into the rhythm of winter chores."
The simple
farm living teaches to enjoy simple things. For instance, the sisters have
gathered the harvest — that's great news. They've had a good harvest of
tomatoes — amazing! They tried planting the sprouts for the first time, and
everything went fine: the tomatoes grew well both in a greenhouse and in the
open.
At present,
there are twenty-eight women at the Centre. "We have had a hike in the
number of people with mental disorders lately," Nun Barbara says.
"Sometimes they are not even diagnosed yet but their behavior and
condition tells that they need help. They wandered far and wide and at last
they landed here at the Centre.
We have
decided to assign one house, the smaller one, to mothers with children due to
the renovation going on. Unfortunately, it can only accommodate three or four
families. Right now, there are two mothers with their children and one woman
expecting a baby in the center.
See that
house over there? It is for the sisters who do not want to leave us anymore,
who have become permanent residents of our Centre and help us actively. One
room is for the less able: currently, it is home for one old lady who was
discharged from a mental clinic (she cannot talk, and no one knows anything
about her) and a woman who has memory problems. She has been here for about a
year. When they brought her to our center, her daughter was very anxious
because doctors had told her that her mother's condition would deteriorate, that
she is to be treated with extreme caution, to the extent of not even moving
furniture in her room. So another sister stayed with her all the time. Now this
woman can move around the rehabilitation center on her own! We even transferred
her from one house into another due to the renovation, and everything went
fine. It seems to me that her condition has improved noticeably, although
doctors predicted it would get worse. It is with God's help that this place
manages to fulfil its purpose of social rehabilitation. Everything we planned
during the project planning stage is currently being implemented, albeit on a
small scale…"
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About Our Blog
Welcome to the official blog of the Catalogue of St.Elisabeth Convent! The blog includes recent ministry updates of the convent, sermons, icons, personal stories and everything related to Orthodox Christianity. Join our Catalog of Good Deeds and become part of the ministry of St.Elisabeth Convent! #CatalogOfGoodDeeds