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John Kochurov

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{{orthodoxyinamerica}}
Our righteous father '''John Kochurov''', (also spelled Kochuroff) [[hieromartyr]] of the Soviet revolution, was one of a number of young educated [[priest]]s who came to the United States in the late 1890s as [[missionary|missionaries]] among the émigrés from Carpatho-Russia and Galicia. He was active in establishing [[parish]]es and aiding communities, mainly in the Midwest. After returning to Russia he was assigned to Estonia where he put into action the teaching skills he learned in America before he was assigned in 1916 to Tsarskoe Selo. Here he was [[martyr]]ed during the early days of the Bolshevik revolution. His [[feast day]] is celebrated on [[October 31]]. He is also commemorated on the feast of the [[New Martyrs and Confessors of Russia]], celebrated on the Sunday nearest to [[January 25]], which was the date of the martyrdom of Metropolitan [[Vladimir (Bogoyavlensky) of Kiev and Gallich|Vladimir of Kiev]], the first of the new martyrs.
==Early years and America==
Having expressed the desire to be a missionary priest in the United States, Fr. John was soon transferred and became the first permanent priest at St. Vladimir's Church in Chicago. This parish was later to become the [[Holy Trinity Orthodox Cathedral (Chicago, Illinois)|Holy Trinity Cathedral]]. As St. Vladimir's parish did not yet have their own building, his first major project was construction of the church building. Under the guidance of Bishop Tikhon, later [[Patriarch]] [[Tikhon of Moscow]] and saint, Fr. John enlisted the services of the noted architect Louis Sullivan to design the church. To finance the project, Fr. John sought and obtained donations from Tsar [[Nicholas II of Russia|Nicholas II]] as well as from a few Americans, notably Harold McCormick and Charles R. Crane who was the American ambassador to China. Construction of the church began in April 1902 and was completed the next year for the [[consecration of a church|consecration]] by Bishop Tikhon.
Fr. John devoted much effort to aiding the establishment of other parishes in the Chicago area. He performed the first service for the future Archangel Michael Orthodox Church in southwest Chicago. In the greater Chicago area he was active in the formation of the parishes in Madison, [[Church_of_the_Three_Hierarchs_(Streator,_Illinois)|Streator]], and Joliet (all in Illinois), as well as aiding the parishes in Buffalo, NY, and Hartshorn[[Ss. Cyril and Methodius Church (Hartshorne, Oklahoma)|Hartshorne, OKOklahoma]].
In the social side of parish life, he, with Fr. Alexis Toth, future St. [[Alexis of Wilkes-Barre]], was influential in the establishment of a major Orthodox mutual aid society that provided support for the many newly arrived immigrants. He also translated religious texts into English, looking to the time when church in America would consist of English-speaking members. Before his return to Russia, Fr. John helped to organize the first All-American Council that was held in Mayfield, Pennsylvania, in 1907.
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