New Martyr 20th century

Righteous Martyr Maria Skobtsova of Paris

1891 – 1945

Also known as Mother Maria of Paris · Elizaveta Pilenko

A Russian poet and emigre who became a nun in Paris, opening her house to the hungry and homeless, and who in the war sheltered and rescued Jews, for which she was taken to Ravensbruck and gave her life in the gas chamber in place of another.

Feast Day
July 20
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Righteous New Martyr Maria (Skobtsova) of Paris

Come to them for
Healing

Life

Maria of Paris was a Russian poet and émigrée who became a nun in Paris and devoted her monastic life to sheltering the poor, the homeless, and the destitute. Born Elizaveta Pilenko in Riga in 1891, she passed through a turbulent early life of literary and revolutionary activity in Russia before emigrating and embracing a monasticism lived not in the cloister but in the streets and tenements of the city. During the German occupation of France she and her co-workers sheltered Jews and provided them with baptismal certificates and means of escape, work for which she was arrested and deported. She died in the gas chamber at the Ravensbrück concentration camp on Holy Saturday, 31 March 1945, and is commemorated on July 20.

Her life before her tonsure was marked by upheaval. As a young woman she moved in the socialist and intellectual circles of St. Petersburg, became a published poet, and, by tradition, was among the first women to study at a theological academy in the Russian capital. In the aftermath of the Bolshevik Revolution she held municipal office in the southern town of Anapa before fleeing Russia and arriving in Paris in 1923. She had been married twice and bore three children; the death of her young daughter Anastasia in 1926 is generally recounted as a turning point that deepened her resolve to give herself wholly to the service of others.

In 1932 she was tonsured a nun with the name Maria, taking her vows with the explicit understanding that she would continue to live in the world rather than withdraw to a monastery. She established a house in Paris that became a refuge with an open door for the needy, the lonely, and refugees of the Russian emigration. Alongside her labored a circle of co-workers, among them the priest Demetrius Klepinin, who served the house as its chaplain. When the war came, this ministry of hospitality became a ministry of rescue.

Timeline 5 moments Read Hide
  1. 1891 Born in Riga Born Elizaveta Pilenko in Riga, then in the Russian Empire.
  2. 1923 Emigrates to Paris Flees Russia after the revolution and settles in Paris.
  3. 1932 Tonsured a nun Takes monastic vows with the name Maria, living in the world to serve the poor.
  4. 1945 Martyred at Ravensbrück Dies in the gas chamber on Holy Saturday, 31 March, by tradition in another's place.
  5. 2004 Glorified Canonized by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople; commemorated July 20.

Contributions & Legacy

3 contributions Read Hide

Ministry of the Open Door in Paris

After her tonsure Mother Maria rented a house in Paris that functioned less as a convent than as a hostel, dining hall, and place of shelter for the destitute of the émigré community. Sources describe it as a place with an open door for refugees, the needy, and the lonely. She understood her monasticism as a vocation exercised in the midst of human suffering rather than apart from it, and she combined this practical work with a continued life of writing, having published poetry in her youth and theological essays in her maturity.

Her chaplain, the priest Demetrius Klepinin, shared in the work of the house and in the rescue efforts that followed the occupation. He is venerated as a martyr alongside her.

Resistance, Arrest, and Martyrdom

After the German occupation of Paris, Jews approached the house seeking baptismal certificates and shelter. Father Demetrius provided certificates, and the house sheltered many and helped them to escape. For this work Mother Maria, Father Demetrius, her son Yuri, and others of the household were arrested by the Gestapo and deported to concentration camps.

Mother Maria was sent to the women's camp at Ravensbrück. According to the accounts preserved of her imprisonment, she sustained the spirits of her fellow prisoners over a period of roughly two years. She was taken to the gas chamber on Holy Saturday, 31 March 1945, shortly before the camp was liberated. By tradition it is related that she took the place of another prisoner who had been selected for death, and the anchor account of her life affirms that she gave her life in the gas chamber in place of another.

Glorification

Maria of Paris was canonized by the Ecumenical Patriarchate of Constantinople in 2004, together with several of her co-workers who likewise perished in the German camps, among them the priest Demetrius Klepinin. They are commemorated together on July 20. She is also honored as Righteous among the Nations at Yad Vashem for her work on behalf of Jews during the occupation.

Notes

Modern saint; region of origin (Riga) mapped to Baltics.

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