Athanasius Sakharov was a Russian Orthodox saint and hymnographer, canonized in 2000, his full title is, “Saint Athanasius Sakharov, Confessor-of-faith, Bishop of Kovrov”.
Saint Athanasius Sakharov, birth name: Sergei Sakharov, was born on 2 July 1887, he was born in the Tsarevka Village in the Tambov Governorship. Throughout his early life Saint Athanasius and his family lived in the Russian city of Vladimir. Athanasius’ father, Gregory Zakharov, was a civil-ranking Court Councillor, whilst Athanasius’ mother, Matrona, was from a peasant family.
Unfortunately when Athanasius was years old, his father, Gregory Zakhorov died. After Athanasius’ father's death, Matrona's piety increased and she took on the monastic lifestyle, which greatly influenced Athanasius’ spiritual life.[1] During this period, the boy was very keen on attending lengthy Church Services and Liturgies. Even though he was young Saint Athanasius considered himself a servant of the church and told all his friends and classmates his dreams to achieve priesthood.[2] Impressively at a young age, Athanasius learned how to sew, which he used his skill to sew many Church vestments and he embroidered many icon coverings.[3]
Athanasius Sakharov found his education difficult, he didn't slacken his efforts, but unexpectedly at the end of the school year he graduated at the top of the class.[4] Impressively, at the age of 12 he wrote his first troparion to the Shuisk-Smolensk icon of the Mother of God.[5] After finishing his Primary Education, Athanasius entered a religious seminary in his hometown Vladimir. As a religious seminary student, Athanasius displayed a talent at ignoring temptations. A clandestine chapter of the seminary ended, when one of its leaders died due to mishandling explosives. In the summer of 1901, revolutionary seminary students held a secret meeting later resulting in a riot amongst the students in December, when they went on strike refusing to attend the seminary. During this period, Athanasius was not interested in boycotting the seminary due to his refusal in taking part in Politics. Eventually after graduating the Vladimir Seminary, he transferred to the Moscow Religious Academy. During his stay at the Moscow Academy, he took on a monastic tonsure taking the name Athanasius after the famous Saint Athanasius of Alexandria.[5] In 1912, Athanasius graduated the Moscow Academy with a degree in theology.
In 1918, Athanasius Sakharov was invited to attend the Local Russian Orthodox Council in the city of Vladimir, Russia and from 1918 to 1920 the Saint was invited to join the Diocesan Vladimir Association.[6] On 20 January 1920 he was raised to the rank of the Archimandrite becoming the Abbot of the Nativity of the Theotokos Monastery in his home town of Vladimir, Russia.
In Pre-Revolutionary Russia the chance of being a Bishop brought many privileges but in the 1920s it was a chance for you to be tortured and persecuted for your beliefs. But despite this Athanasius Sakharov accepted the chance of being Bishop of Vladimir-Suzdal. On the eve of his Ordination, he was bought to the Secret police headquarters where he was threatened and reprimanded for his choice to become a bishop, but he still took on his role. He was determined to “lead his flock” so he was arrested only several months after his ordination.[7]
His first arrest occurred in March 1922, after his refusal to step-down from his title as Bishop of Vladimir-Suzdal. He was supposed to be imprisoned for a year, but he was pardoned and released without him serving his full term. However Bishop Athanasius, was rearrested then sentenced to an exile to Ust-Sysolsk in Eastern Siberia for refusing “renewalist-schism”. After his first imprisonment he was ordained the bishop of Kovrov, because he taught about Orthodoxy in Russia, even in his prison cell. Of his 42 years as Bishop he spent 33 of those years in exile or imprisonment. He served his time in many prison such as: Onega, Kargopol, Mariinsk, Temnikov, Dubravlag and several concentration camps in Siberia. The rest of his 33 years were spent completing hard challenging jobs such as: felling trees, building roads, making "lapti" (bast shoes), cleaning manure and many other mentally challenging jobs. Unlike many people, Sakharov didn't eagerly wait for his trial to end instead he persisted in his faith for Christ. He wrote a letter to his community saying, I am far better of here than at liberty, and I am saying so without the slightest exaggeration. The true Orthodox Church is here".