Peter Vasilevich Verigin - Castlegar, BC
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member T0SHEA
N 49° 17.794 W 117° 38.412
11U E 453452 N 5460621
The Peter Vasilevich Verigin plaque is located at the Doukhobor Discovery Centre at 112 Heritage Way, across the road from the Castlegar Airport.
Waymark Code: WMZMHT
Location: British Columbia, Canada
Date Posted: 12/01/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member saopaulo1
Views: 0

Peter Vasilevich Verigin - National Historic Person
Unlike most Park Canada plaques, this one is written in three languages: English, French and Russian.

The text on the plaque reads as follows:
PETER VASILEVICH VERIGIN
(1859-1924)

Known as "Lordly" by his followers, Peter Verigin developed a theory of Christian communalism consistent with core Doukhobor teachings and practices, that played a key role in the community's history. In Russia, he formed what would become the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood and, with the support of Leo Tolstoy, orchestrated Doukhobor immigration to Canada in 1898-1899. He built communal villages on the Prairies and later, organized the mass migration of his followers to British Columbia. Verigin worked for both their economic and spiritual success until his violent and unsolved death in 1924.”
Verigin, Peter Vasilevich
Peter Vasilevich Verigin, also Veregin, religious leader (b at Slavyanka, Russia 29 June 1859; d near Grand Forks, BC 29 Oct 1924). He became leader of the pacifist Russian sect of DOUKHOBORS in 1886 and in 1887 was exiled to Siberia. Influenced by the doctrines of the Christian anarchist novelist, Leo Tolstoi, he clandestinely instructed his followers to abandon meat and alcohol and to resume their historic resistance to military service.

Persecution resulted, many Doukhobors were exiled in inhumane conditions to Georgia, Russia and, in 1898-99, more than 7000 were admitted to Canada. Verigin followed in 1903. He encouraged his people not to take the oath of allegiance required by the government to secure the land granted to them. When Doukhobor farms were seized, he led his followers, the Christian Community of Universal Brotherhood, to the Kootenay area of BC where, on purchased land, he attempted to create a self-supporting, self-governing commune.

An able organizer, he placed the community on a good economic footing, but he struggled with the authorities over such matters as compulsory education. Verigin died in a train explosion of undetermined cause. After his death, the Christian Community fell into financial and organizational disarray. Verigin's powerful and imaginative personality had enabled the Doukhobors to weather their difficult first decades in Canada and to retain their special identity as a sect of Christian pacifist communists.
From The Canadian Encyclopedia
Website with more information on either the memorial or the person(s) it is dedicated to: [Web Link]

Location: Doukhobor Discovery Centre

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