Relics & Shrines
According to the synaxarion, a rowan (mountain-ash) tree grew at his grave. A heated church dedicated to Saint Nicholas was later built over the burial site, and pilgrims reported healings there.
c. 1371 – 1439
A monk schooled in the strict discipline of the northern monasteries who withdrew to the river Kushta and founded a community in the Vologda wilderness.
Our Venerable Father Alexander, Abbot of Kushta
Alexander of Kushta was a fifteenth-century monastic founder of the Vologda region in northern Rus', remembered as a builder of one of the wilderness communities that spread the Athonite monastic tradition through the Russian North. Born about 1371 and given the name Alexei in the world, he was formed in the strict observance of the Spaso-Kamenny (Savior-Stone) monastery before withdrawing into the forests to seek a more solitary life of prayer.
After successive moves deeper into the wilderness, he settled at the mouth of the River Kushta near Lake Kuben, where a small brotherhood gathered around him and he built a church dedicated to the Dormition of the Theotokos. He reposed on June 9, 1439, and is commemorated on that date; healings were later reported at his grave.
According to the synaxarion, a rowan (mountain-ash) tree grew at his grave. A heated church dedicated to Saint Nicholas was later built over the burial site, and pilgrims reported healings there.
The tradition surrounding the saint relates several miracles: that Tatar raiders were rendered senseless when blessed with his cross, that a thief found a sack of stolen wheat unbearably heavy until the saint blessed it, and that the berries of the rowan tree at his grave were credited with healing power.