Showing posts with label Prison Ministry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Prison Ministry. Show all posts

June 18, 2022

Metropolitan Athanasios of Limassol on the Execution of Frank Atwood - Monk Ephraim


Metropolitan Athanasios of Limassol was the first Orthodox Christian Frank Atwood got in contact with in the mid-1990's while he was prison, and the Metropolitan was at that time not a Metropolitan but an abbot of a monastery in Cyprus and former monk of Mount Athos. It was during his prison studies of the blending of Christianity and Oriental religions that Frank came upon and read the book The Mountain of Silence: A Search for Orthodox Spirituality by Kyriacos Markides. In this book, Metropolitan Athanasios (under the pseudonym Father Maximos) gives a profound account of the true nature of Orthodox spirituality from an Athonite perspective, and this moved Frank to get in contact with him. A few years later, in 2000, Frank was baptized with the name Anthony.

Below is a translation of a transcript from a recent audio recording in which Metropolitan Athanasios was asked about the recent execution of Frank Atwood, and he replied as follows:


June 16, 2022

The Terrible Process of Execution and Its Peaceful Confrontation by Anthony (Frank Atwood - Monk Ephraim)


By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

In previous posts I referred to the issue of Anthony's death sentence and asked for a prayer for Anthony, so that he could deal peacefully with the fact of his execution. His execution took place on June 8th in Arizona.

The well-known story of Frank Atwood, who was sentenced to death for a murder which he himself claimed until the last moment that he did not commit, who while in prison under the highest security was baptized Orthodox with the name Anthony, the patron of the Sacred Monastery of Saint Anthony in Arizona, and shortly before his execution was tonsured a monk with the name Ephraim, after the founder of the Sacred Monastery, Archimandrite Ephraim the Hagiorite and Arizonite.

June 10, 2022

Photos and Videos from the Funeral of the Recently Executed Frank Atwood at Saint Anthony's Monastery in Arizona

Father Paisios, Sarah and Monk Ephraim

The funeral of Frank Atwood, who had been baptized an Orthodox Christian with the name Anthony in 2000 and was made a monk the day before his execution on June 7th with the name Ephraim, took place yesterday, June 10th, at Saint Anthony's Monastery in Arizona. Eternal be his memory!
 

June 8, 2022

And the Two Shall Become One: The Frank J. Atwood & Rachel L. Atwood Story (About Frank Atwood's Autobiography)


For those interested, Frank Atwood, who was executed today as a Great Schema Monk named Ephraim, wrote an autobiography at the recommendation of Metropolitan Athanasios of Limassol, who has known Frank since 1995. It took him and his wife Rachel, who was baptized with the name Sarah, ten years to write about their journey before and after they met each other. You can purchase the book here.

Frank Atwood, Who Was Tonsured a Monk With the Name Ephraim, Has Been Executed


It was confirmed not long ago that Frank Atwood was executed this morning by the State of Arizona through lethal injection. Atwood was sedated at 10:10 a.m. and was pronounced dead at 10:16 a.m., media witnesses said. He was 66 years old, having been sentenced in 1987 for the kidnapping and murder of an 8-year-old girl in Pima County, Vicki Lynne Hoskinson. Frank maintained his innocence till the end.

“Today marks final justice for our daughter Vicki Lynne. Our family has waited 37 years, eight months and 22 days for this day to come,” Debbie Carlson, Vicki Lynne's mother, said while choking back tears during the media briefing following the execution. “Vicki was a vibrant little girl with an infectious laugh and a smile that would melt your heart."

June 7, 2022

A Final Correspondence Between Anthony (Frank) Atwood and Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos Before His Execution


 By Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos and Agiou Vlasiou

In a previous text I announced that Anthony, Frank Atwood, had been scheduled to be executed in Arizona in the United States in early June. His lawyers did some work to turn the death sentence into a life sentence, to postpone the execution, due to a problem with the poisons, but in the end everything was rejected.

For so many years he has been declaring that even though he made many mistakes in his life, he did not commit the murder for which he was sentenced to death. And I personally believe in his innocence.

Thus, Anthony will be executed on Wednesday, June 8, at 10 a.m. in Arizona of America, that is at 8 p.m. in Greece.

June 6, 2022

Some Last Words and More on Frank Atwood Before He Faces the Death Penalty


In September 1984, Frank Atwood, the son of a prominent military man who got involved in gangs and fell into drugs, was arrested for the murder of 8-year-old Vicky Lynn Hoskinson. The evidence for his innocence are many. However, a pink scratch on his vehicle, which matched the color of the little girl's bike, sent him to jail. He was sentenced to death and has been held in Arizona prisons for 34 years. However, he never stopped pleading innocent.

"I tell you from the bottom of my heart, I am innocent of this crime."

Inside the cell for years, Frank studied law and theology, until he accidentally discovered the existence of the Metropolitan of Limassol Athanasios, who was then abbot of the Machairas Monastery in Cyprus.

According to Metropolitan Athanasios:

"A book had been written by a Cypriot University professor, Kyriacos Markides, called The Mountain of Silence. My name and Frank were mentioned in this book. He discovered the Monastery of Panagia Machairas and of course he sent me a letter. And from there began the correspondence between us, which ended in his baptism as an Orthodox Christian."

June 2, 2022

Prayer for an Orthodox Christian Convert on Death Row Soon to be Executed


Frank Atwood, who is convicted of kidnapping and killing an 8-year-old girl named Vicki Lynn Hoskinson in September 1984, has always claimed to have been innocent of the crime. While in maximum security prison, he converted to Orthodoxy and was baptized with the name Anthony through Saint Anthony's Monastery in Arizona. He has studied and prayed and been in correspondence with well-known Orthodox figures in Greece, such as Metropolitan Athanasios of Limassol, who visited him in prison a few years ago but was not allowed to see him, as well as Metropolitan Hierotheos of Nafpaktos, who wrote the piece below. Frank has recently issued the following statement prior to his upcoming execution by lethal injection. Let us all pray for him, at his request, and the request of the Metropolitans.

May 19, 2021

Saint John, Prince of Uglich, in Monasticism Known as Ignatius (+ 1522)

St. John-Ignatius the Prince of Uglich (Feast Day - May 19)
The Holy Prince John was the son of the Christ-loving Prince Andrei Vasilyevich of Uglich, the third son of the Great Prince Vasily the Dark and Princess Helen. He was born around 1477 and received Holy Baptism in Velikiye Luki. From infancy he showed extraordinary restraint, unusual for children of his age. He was meek and lowly in heart, quiet, not given to anger, neither was he inclined to playing games nor seeking the royal comforts. Instead he studied the Divine Scriptures, and soon become familiar with it. His mother, Princess Helen, died in 1483. Having lost his beloved mother at the age of six, the youth found solace in warm prayer. The young Prince John then devoted himself even more to the reading of sacred books, constantly had the memory of death in his mind, attended all church services during the day, and spent the nights in prayer. The highest delight for him was conversations with pious people, his favorite pastime were acts of philanthropy. At such a young age, surrounded by a crowd of courtiers, in the midst of the noise of everyday life, he looked more like a monk than an heir to a reign of wealth and glory. He did not pay any attention to the deeds and honors of the princely rank, in general, instead everything that did not belong to the enlightenment of reason and the salvation of the soul was completely alien to him and, as it were, did not exist. Abstinent in food and drink, he loved to dress modestly and simply, to the extent that his high rank allowed him this simplicity, and he tried more to adorn himself with good manners than wealth and splendor of clothes.

April 7, 2021

Second Homily for the Sunday of the Veneration of the Cross (St. Luke of Simferopol)


 By St. Luke, Archbishop of Simferopol and Crimea

Yesterday in Matins we brought out for veneration the honorable Cross of Christ. We all reverently sang the troparion: "We venerate your Cross, Master, and we glorify your Holy Resurrection," and we venerated the honorable Cross of our Lord. The veneration of the honorable Cross of Christ is very important because it testifies to our faith and the warm love we have for the Son of God who saved us from the power of the devil.

But there is another purpose for which in the middle of Great Lent we place for veneration the honorable Cross of Christ. This purpose is understood when we read the word of the Lord which says: "In your patience you will gain your souls" (Luke 21:19). If, according to this word of Christ, patience is so important that it saves man, then one of the most important goals in our lives is to learn patience. And there is no better teacher who could teach us patience than the Cross of our Christ.

April 25, 2020

Father Petru Focsaneanu, Tortured to Death for Celebrating the Resurrection Service in his Prison Cell (+ 1953)


Hieromartyr Petru Focsaneanu was born on April 18, 1914 in the Podu Turcului commune of Bacau County, Romania. He attended primary school in the village, then the Theological Seminary in Galati, and continued his studies for two years at the School of Theology in Bucharest. He interrupted his studies however due to his precarious financial situation. He was ordained a priest in 1935 and served in the newly-constructed Church of the Dormition of the Theotokos in the village of Tipletesti of the Alexandreni commune in Balti County. The construction of the church was carried out with great difficulty due to the lack of financial means, until 1938. Due to the insistence of the parish priest and the parish council, at the meeting of the Diocesan Council on April 1, 1938, the request to grant aid for the completion of the construction of the church was approved from the diocesan budget. The church was completed in the autumn of the same year.

The Visit of Saint Tikhon of Zadonsk to Prisoners on Pascha

St. Tikhon of Zadonsk visiting prisoners on Pascha.
Illustration from The Russian Pilgrim, 1903.


"At the time when the magistrate's court was located in a part of the Zadonsk Monastery, a prison for criminals was also established there. The Bishop loved to go there at night to visit sick prisoners and give them gifts. On Pascha, as he went through the prison, he exchanged the Paschal Kiss with all the prisoners."

- Ivan Efimov, servant and biographer of St. Tikhon of Zadonsk


May 8, 2019

Holy Martyr Victor of Milan

St. Victor of Milan (Feast Day - May 8)

The Holy Martyr Victor of Milan, also known as Victor the Moor and Victor Maurus, was born in ancient Mauretania, a Roman province on the Mediterranean coast of North Africa. He was a Berber of the Mauri tribe, after which the Moors were named. Born into a Christian family during the latter part of the third century, he nevertheless became a soldier in the Roman army and advanced through the ranks to become a member of the Praetorian Guard that served the Roman emperor Maximian who was the emperor for the Western Roman Empire from 286 to 305.

October 14, 2015

Life and Spiritual Counsels of Saint Pachomios of Chios (+ 1905)

St. Pachomios of Chios (Feast Day - October 14)

St. Pachomios was born in 1840 on the island of Chios in the village of Elaia. His birth name was Panagiotis Arelias, and having been born in the wake of the great massacre by the Turks of the Greek population of Chios in 1822, many residents remained miserable and impoverished, seeking a better life in Constantinople, which was then a center of commerce.

In Constantinople, the young Panagiotis one day found himself held in prison by the Turks for murdering a Turkish rival, although he was on the defensive. During the endless hours of despair and remorse in prison, and in fear of being put to death, terrified Panagiotis found refuge and comfort in his Orthodox faith. There he continuously prayed to the Theotokos to release him from the death penalty and imprisonment to live a life of repentance.

December 15, 2014

The Fort of Intzedin and the Chapel of Saint Eleutherios in Crete


The Fort of Intzedin is the only fort on Crete built by the Turks, located on the hill Kalami, 15km east of Chania and has a panoramic view of the Souda Gulf. The fortress of Intzedin was built in 1872 by Reouf Pasha, on the same location where in 1646 the Turks first built a tower, chasing away the Venetians. It was the main defense construction of the port and was named "Intzedin" to honor the first born son of the Sultan Abdul Aziz Intzedin. In later years, the building was used as a prison for political prisoners, prisoners of common criminal law and for prisoners who received the death penalty.

May 13, 2014

The Orthodox Prison Ministry of Father Igor Pokrovskij


"I'm God's witness, not a public prosecutor" - Orthodox prison chaplain

Orthodox priest Igor Pokrovskij has been involved in prisoners' pastoral care for 16 years. In this time he has baptised almost 400 prisoners.

November 19, 2013

The First Chapel Dedicated to the Holy Thief of Golgotha


November 17, 2013
Thestival.gr

The thief was hanging on the cross, just a few meters away from the Cross of Christ, on Golgotha. Deeply repentant, he said to the God-man: "Lord, remember me when You come into Your Kingdom." Christ responded to his sincere remorse, and said: "Verily I say unto you, today you will be with Me in Paradise."

He was the first Saint who entered Paradise. The Holy Thief of Golgotha is honored by the Orthodox Church, but never has a Sacred Church been dedicated to him. A month ago, the Holy Thief of Golgotha acquired his first chapel in the world. It is located in the "embrace" of the Orthodox Missionary Philoptochos Sisterhood "Hosia Xeni" in Thessaloniki, and he is now the patron saint of the Ministry for the Release of the Poor and Prisoners.

The "soul" of both the Sisterhood and the Ministry is Archimandrite Gervasios Raptopoulos. For 36 years Father Gervasios has been standing beside the prisoners of the world, regardless of sex, race or creed. His Ministry has become known in all corners of the globe and his work has been recognized by everyone. Besides this, he has received numerous awards and his fame reached to the Committee of the Nobel Prize.

But his Ministry was deprived of a patron saint. Many years passed until the Holy Thief of Golgotha was chosen. Father Gervasios did research and was surprised to find that there was no church in the world dedicated to the first Saint of Orthodoxy. "We put an order to erect at the headquarters of the Sisterhood and Ministry a small church in memory of our Saint. So we have a chapel to pray within for all the prisoners of the earth and to light a candle for them. It is also for those who died in prison both within and outside Greece. We can perform in our own chapel, every year on a certain day, a memorial for the repose of their souls", he told the press on Sunday. He told us that it was impossible to erect a Sacred Church. "The cost would have been enormous. So I chose a prefabricated chapel. A prefabricated small church, always with the permission and blessing of Metropolitan Nikodemos of Cassandreia", added Father Gervasios.

With great effort, sacrifice, giving and many gifts from the faithful, the chapel was placed in the courtyard of the Sisterhood in Perea, Thessaloniki. The first Liturgy took place on the feast of the Holy Thief of Golgotha, on October 12th.

Since then the Saint is the patron saint of the Ministry for the Release of the Poor and Prisoners, which has released more than 15,000 prisoners by paying at least four million euros. The restless elder receives faxes every day from police stations and prisons. They inform him of some indigent prisoner who cannot get out and unable to pay bail. Immediately they assess the situation and pay the money. "It's people who are in detention centers for minor offenses. We set a limit of 400 euros for each release. The lowest amount we payed is 8.10 euros and concerned a fellow human being who had to buy two days of the total penalty which had been imposed. Of course, we consider each case separately. So we payed 9,900 euros for one who was convicted who had suffered three strokes and his detention in prison would mean certain death," he told the press.


Who is Father Gervasios

Gervasios (in the world George) Raptopoulos was born in 1931 in Aimiliana, Grevena. In 1950 he graduated the Theological School of Aristotle University. He was ordained a clergyman and then became an Archimandrite. He served in the Metropolises of Sidirokastrou Serres, Thessaloniki, Serres and Nigriti and Cassandreia. In 1966 he founded the Sisterhood "Hosia Xeni" and in 1978 the Ministry for the Release of the Poor and Prisoners. He has visited every Greek in a prison in Albania, Egypt, Israel, Cyprus, Madagascar, Romania, Russia, Australia, Fiji, etc.

Translated by John Sanidopoulos.

March 3, 2013

Polish Prisoners Transformed By Iconography


February 12, 2013

Behind the bars of a prison on Poland's eastern fringe, a dozen women serving time are lost in concentration as they learn the intricate art of icon-writing in the Orthodox Christian tradition.

The centuries' old craft, which typically displays the Virgin with the baby Jesus, saints and Christ in rich strokes of dark red, green and gold is being used for the first time as part of a social reintegration program at a major correctional facility in Bialystok.

"It's my first icon of the Virgin," Malgorzata Zablocka-Jaronczyk, 47, says proudly as she paints a golden halo around the head of an unfinished Madonna to whom she says she prays.

"I never learned to paint. It never really interested me much. And here, I've started to make progress. I can see it for myself. I'm pleased with what I'm doing," says Malgorzata, who has eight years left on a 24-year sentence for financial crimes, reduced by a third for good behavior.

"You can use two colors to create the halo. It creates a very good effect. It was a technique used in the 17-18th centuries in Russia to write icons," iconographer Jan Grigoruk, teaching the art at the Bialystok prison, tells his students.

"It's appropriate to say 'write,' because in the formal terminology we say icons are written, not painted," explains Grigoruk, who teaches the technique as well as the language, history and symbolism of the icons.

The inmates are learning from the best, as Grigoruk works at the Museum of Icons in an Orthodox monastery in the nearby Suprasl, a stone's throw from the Belarussian border.

Opened in the 1960s with a collection of nearly 1,200 icons dating from the 18th through the 20th centuries, the museum is a treasure trove for samples of this Eastern Orthodox art form with origins almost as old as Christianity itself.

A Change of Heart

"At first, the women were coming to the studio to kill time. Some came as a reward for good behavior as prison wardens had to choose from among 70 inmates," Grigoruk told Agence France Presse.

"Everyone who writes an icon undergoes a real spiritual transformation," he said. "Icon-writing is already a form of prayer. It can't be merely a job to earn your living."

For Orthodox Christian believers, when writing an icon, the artist's hand is guided by God.

While painting lessons are common in prisons, in icon-writing art mingles with the spiritual. Inmates also say the lessons bring them inner peace.

Justyna Gierasimiuk, 31, serving a one-year sentence, looks forward to them.

"Oh yes, they do calm me down and God knows I need that! Being aggressive is pretty common inside a prison cell," she told AFP.

A dozen men in this mixed-gender prison holding more than 700 inmates also took their first lessons last year, including several serving life sentences, says Jaroslaw Andrzejuk, a prison educator.

Their icons were blessed by Jakub, the Orthodox archbishop of Bialystok, who called the program "a brilliant idea."

The most beautiful works will go on display in a small prison chapel.

With a population of 38.2 million and the homeland of the late Pope John Paul II, Poland is overwhelmingly Roman Catholic, but counts some half a million Orthodox faithful, located mostly in the eastern Bialystok region.

Last August, a visit to Poland by Russian Orthodox Patriarch Kirill made history as the first-ever of its kind. Kirill and the head of Poland's Catholic Church, Archbishop Jozef Michalik, made an unprecedented appeal for Polish-Russian reconciliation intended to put centuries of bloody history behind them.

Grigoruk, who dreamt up the icon-writing program along with the prison's Orthodox priest, is planning more lessons.

"We would like to sell the icons to raise money for charity. There's considerable demand for them," he said.

For the moment, the inmates have to write their icons on 12-millimeter-thick (half-inch) plywood as linden wood, the traditional material, is too expensive.

Financing for the program comes from a special aid fund for the prisoners, says prison spokesman Wojciech Januszewski.

"We can't put people behind bars and leave them like that. We're hoping that the demanding art of icon-writing will change them, that they will become better people," he said.

October 18, 2012

Five Foreign Prisoners in Greece Baptized Orthodox


By Alexander Kalliopoulos

After about a year of catechism, five foreign prisoners were baptized Orthodox Christian in the Chapel of Saint Eleutherios in the penitentiary in the industrial area of Patras.

Three were Nigerians, one was a Somali, and the other was Albanian. The catechism of the newly-illumined was done by the leading priest of the prison, Fr. George Chronopoulos, who in recent years has been ministering to our suffering brothers there, along with his tasks of the parish of Saint Nicholas in Sichena.

Fr. Gregory Kordas also participated at the Sacrament of Baptism, parish priest of the Church of St. Barbara in Aktaiou in the Municipality of Patras. The new Christian names given to the prisoners are: Angelo, Nicholas, Andrew, Michael, and George.

The Sacrament took place on Monday 8 October 2012, in the presence of the prison warden, the social workers, and the detention assistants.

It should be noted that those who are baptized Orthodox Christian do not enjoy any privileges, as Fr. George assured, and it was their choice. He also mentioned that from the first day the Albanian prisoner was incarcerated (the man named Angelo who was an atheist), he asked those responsible to meet with him. Finally, the three Nigerians were unbaptized Catholics and the Somalian had recognized the religion of his tribe.

Source: Translated by John Sanidopoulos

October 17, 2012

Russia's Orthodox Church Teaching Teenagers Parkour


Lucy Ash
October 16, 2012

The Russian Orthodox Church has come under fire following recent stories about church officials being involved in drink-driving and road rage attacks. But it also provides valuable public services - including helping wayward teenagers get back on track via a risky urban sport.

My stomach lurches. The young man in front of me suddenly plunges down the stairwell and seems to be dangling in mid-air three floors up.

Then silently - without so much as a grunt - he springs over the banister and is standing next to me again.

Evgeny Krynin is one of St Petersburg's most renowned Parkour artists - the urban sport which mixes acrobatics and athletics and is similar to the discipline known as free running.

Parkour may have first taken off in France in the 1990s, but Krynin says the true home of this extreme sport, which requires participants to leap, climb and somersault across buildings, is Russia.

"It suits our national psyche. Our appetite for risk and love of speed - I guess we're crazy," he says.

Like Georges Hebert, the 19th Century French naval officer who was a forerunner of Parkour, Krynin believes that athletic skill and courage must be combined with altruism.

"It has to be about more than glory, fame and showing off a well-toned body," he says.

So for the past three years, he has been giving training sessions in orphanages and prisons - and also in Russia's residential centre for teenagers on probation.

"Most of these kids have been drinking, sniffing glue or using other drugs for years," Krynin says.

"So we start them off with exercises to improve strength and flexibility before we try anything more complicated."

The St Basil the Great Adaptation Centre on St Petersburg's Vasilievsky Island has a team of counsellors and therapists to help the boys deal with their problems - but Krynin says Parkour is itself therapeutic.

"Many of them have been thrown out school. As a result they have few aspirations and a great deal of anger inside them. But you have to be calm and concentrated to perfect a difficult movement," he says.

"When they succeed, of course it gives them a sense of pride. It teaches them that every obstacle can be overcome with enough perseverance."

Krynin, a 26-year-old wearing jeans and a hoodie, can be seen as a poster boy for a side of the Russian Orthodox Church that has not been much on display recently.

When I arrived in St Petersburg, the papers were buzzing with a story about a local deacon who beat up two women in their sixties in a road rage incident.

Valentina Pavlova, a pensioner from the nearby town of Vsevolozhsk, told local press that the man nearly crashed into her. When she banged on his car window to complain about his driving, she says he got out of the car and punched her in face.

Sergei Frunza has since been suspended from his duties as police investigate the incident - but it is not an isolated case.

There is also the father superior from Moscow who drunkenly crashed his BMW sports car and a speeding archdeacon who ran over and killed two workmen mending the road.

When the head of the church Patriarch Kirill himself was photographed wearing a $32,000 (£20,000) Swiss watch, the Church made things worse by airbrushing it out - and forgetting to erase its reflection on a shiny table.


Father Alexander Stepanov, who runs the church's social programmes in St Petersburg, is painfully aware that many have condemned the Church for its unchristian behaviour in the Putin era.

I am curious to know what he thinks about the Church hierarchy in Moscow and its reaction to the feminist punk band Pussy Riot.

The three young women were jailed for two years last month after performing a punk prayer on the altar of the capital's biggest cathedral.

One of the members, Yekaterina Samutsevich has since been released after her lawyers proved she had been thrown out of the cathedral by guards before she could remove her guitar from its case.

But her two bandmates were unsuccessful and sent back to prison to serve the remainder of their sentence.

Father Alexander chooses his words carefully but it is clear that he would have preferred the Patriarchate to distance itself from the Kremlin.

"I think it was a very regrettable mistake. However hurtful this disgusting action was, it should have been made clear that we are about forgiveness and are not seeking revenge. If Putin was insulted, that's a matter for him - let him deal with it."

Hard-liners sometimes criticise the church for "mollycoddling" the teenagers at St Basil's - who they would prefer to see serving long prison sentences than practicing Parkour.

But Juliana Nikitina, a bespectacled woman in a tweed skirt who founded the centre in 2004, rolls her eyes at such comments.

"I tell such people 'Ok, well in that case, let's just poison these kids or lock them up for life! Is that really what you want?' If not, we have to work with these children and reintegrate them into society."

Having visited Denmark and other parts of Europe to look at different juvenile justice policies, she is now convinced that small residential groups produce the best results and cut re-offending rates.

"When the boys arrive, most say Church is just for old grannies or total losers but they usually change their minds," says Nikitina.

"Although only about half of them will regularly go to Church once they leave us."

Every summer she sets off in three cars with the boys on a road trip around the Murmansk region in northern Russia near the Norwegian border.

They sleep under canvas and visit a succession of monasteries.

"The landscape is beautiful but sometimes the kids complain and ask why we can't hang out with normal people instead of monks?

"I say to them: 'Listen guys, apart from the monks nobody is really that keen to see us'."

She adds that when she has asked hostels or hotels if they can stay, the managers looked panic-stricken.

"But actually our children are not that bad," she says.

"Museum staff in St Petersburg have told me they are much better behaved than pupils from some of the elite private schools when they have guided tours."



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