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Nikodim (Rotov) of Leningrad

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edit details re death;
Metropolitan '''Nikodim (RotorRotov) of Leningrad and Novgorod''', was a [[hierarch]] of the [[Church of Russia]] during the post World War II era in the Soviet Union. Active in the international arena of church relations, he was considered in the West a political representative of the Soviet regime.
==Life==
In 1955, Nikodim graduated from the Leningrad Theological Academy, receiving his diploma in absentia. In 1956, he was assigned to the Russian Spiritual Mission in Jerusalem, and upon being raised to the dignity of [[archimandrite]] he was made the head of the mission in 1957. After his return to the Soviet Union in 1959, he was placed in charge of the Office of the Moscow Patriarchate. In 1960, he was elevated to the position of [[Bishop]] of Podolsk, a [[vicar]] in the Moscow Eparchy. Through his efforts, Metr. Nikodim improved relations between the Russian Orthodox Church and the communities of [[Old Believers]] and Old Ritualists.
Quickly, Bp. Nikodim was made Bishop of Yaroslavl, and then in 1961, he was made [[archbishop]] and a full member of the [[Holy Synod]]. In early 1963, he was appointed [[Metropolitan]] of Minsk, followed with an appointment later in the year to the position of Metropolitan of Leningrad. In 1967, Metr. Nikodim was placed in charge of the Eparchy of [[Novgorod]]. In 1974, he was named the Exarch of Western Europe for the Patriarchate.
In addition to his ecclesial positions, Metr. Nikodim held a number of administrative positions as well as took part as a delegate to various international religious meetings. Many of these positions placed him in the international religious arena apparently representing a religious face for the Soviet Union. These positions included head of the Department of Foreign Church Relations from 1960 to 1972 and of the Editorial Board of the Patriarchate from 1960 to 1963. The meetings included heading the Russian Orthodox Church delegations to Pan-Orthodox meetings in 1961, 1961, 1964, and 1968. In 1975, he was named President of the World Congress of Churches.
Metr. Nikodim reposed collapsed and died in Rome, Italy on [[September 5]], 1978, where he was representing the Church of Russia in the enthronement of [[Pope]] John Paul I. The new pope, who would himself die a few weeks later, prayed over him in his final moments. Metr. Nikodim was buried in the Nikolskoe Cemetery of the Alexander Nevsky [[Lavra]], in Leningrad, now St. Petersburg.
During his career Metr. Nikodim bore a reputation in the West as an agent of the Soviet regime, presenting for it an agenda of the Soviet images of peace and unity in international meetings he attended. For many, he was considered an agent of the Soviet government, possibly of the KGB.
 
{{start box}}
{{succession|
before=?|
title=Bishop (Vicar) of Podolsk|
years=1960-1960|
after=?}}
{{succession|
before=?|
title=Archbishop of Yaroslavl|
years=1960-1963|
after=?}}
{{succession|
before=?|
title=Metropolitan of Minsk|
years=1963-1963|
after=?}}
{{succession|
before=Pimen (Izvekov)|
title=[[Eparchy of St. Petersburg|Metropolitan of Leningrad and Ladoga]]|
years=1963-1967|
after=—}}
{{succession|
before=—|
title=Metropolitan of Leningrad and Novgorod|
years=1967-1978|
after=Anthony (Melnikov)}}
{{succession|
before=?|
title=Exarch of Western Europe|
years=1974-1978|
after=?}}
{{end box}}
==Sources==
*[http://www.encspb.ru/en/article.php?kod=2804009460 Nikodim (Rotov)]
*[[Wikipedia: Metropolitan_Nikodim_Metropolitan Nikodim (Rotov)_of_Leningradof Leningrad]]
[[Category: Bishops|Nikodim]][[Category:St. Petersburg Academy Graduates]][[Category: Bishops of Saint Petersburg]][[Category:20th-century bishops]]
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