This holy icon had been brought to Kherson   
     from Transylvania by a Serb at the end of the        sixteenth 
century. Passing down from parent and        child, the icon had come to
 a certain landowner Mrs. Juliana Ionovna Kasperova        of Kherson in 1809.By the time it came into her hands, the icon had decayed significantly.
 One 
night in February of 1840 she was praying with tears, seeking   consolation in her 
many sorrows. Looking at the icon of   the Virgin, she noticed that the 
features of the icon,   darkened by age, had suddenly become bright and was renewed. 
Soon the icon   was glorified by many miracles, and people regarded it 
as   wonderworking. 
The noblewoman Vera Burleeva, who lived in a neighboring village at the same time, could not heal the paralysis of her left hand. In the spring of 1840, in a dream, she heard the voice of the Mother of God, sending her to the village of Kasperova to pray to the icon. Burleeva was brought to the Kasperovs' house, where after prayer she recovered.
In the summer of 1843, there were three more outstanding healings. After prayers in front of the icon of the Mother of God, Ivan Shumyakov, a 13-year-old peasant boy from the city of Kherson, who suffered from epileptic fits, recovered. Maria Smeshnaya, who was brought to Kasperova's house with a paralysis, recovered. Before healing, Smeshnaya was unable to move on her own. After praying in front of the icon of the Theotokos and being anointed with oil from the lamp, the mind of the peasant Paraskovya Semipudova, who had been possessed for a long time, returned to her senses.
Six months later, in the last days of January 1844, the icon was transferred to a village church.
Since then, healings began to flow from the Kasperov icon of the Mother of God, and people recognized it as miraculous. In 1846, the commission assembled on this occasion officially recognized the reality of all the miracles, and pilgrims from Kherson, Ochakov, Odessa, Nikolaev and other places began to flock to the Kasperov icon.
Since 1852, at the request of the inhabitants of Kherson, every year on the feast of the Ascension of the Lord, the Kasperov icon of the Mother of God began to be brought to the city cathedral.
 Since then, healings began to flow from the Kasperov icon of the Mother of God, and people recognized it as miraculous. In 1846, the commission assembled on this occasion officially recognized the reality of all the miracles, and pilgrims from Kherson, Ochakov, Odessa, Nikolaev and other places began to flock to the Kasperov icon.
Since 1852, at the request of the inhabitants of Kherson, every year on the feast of the Ascension of the Lord, the Kasperov icon of the Mother of God began to be brought to the city cathedral.
During the Crimean War (1853-1856), the 
icon was carried   in procession through the city of Odessa, which was  
 besieged by enemy forces. On Great and Holy Friday, the   city was 
spared. Since that time, an Akathist has been   served before the icon 
in the Dormition Cathedral of   Odessa every Friday.  Archbishop Innocent (Borisov) directed “that this event should 
not be forgotten in the teaching of posterity,” and should be 
commemorated on October 1.
 The Kasperov Icon is commemorated on October 1, June 29,   and Bright Wednesday. 


 
 
