He was born to a pious family in 1910 in the village of Kobylino,
Maloyaroslavetsky Uyezd,
Kaluga Governorate (now
Maloyaroslavetsky District,
Kaluga Oblast). Soon the family moved to the Bogorodsk (now
Noginsk,
Moscow oblast). On December 5, 1925, he tonsured a
novice (similar to
temporary vows) at
Sretensky Monastery in Moscow. However, he stayed in this monastery for only about a month and left it due to the fact that the abbot of the monastery, Bishop
Boris (Rukin), went into schism, retaining the monastery property for himself. On October 4, 1927, at the age of seventeen, he took eternal monastic vows with the name Pimen in honor of St.
Poemen the Great in the Hermitage of the Holy Paraclete, a skete of the Trinity-Sergius Lavra. On July 16, 1930, he was ordained a
hierodeacon by Archbishop
Philip (Gumilevsky) of Zvenigorod, who then ruled the Moscow Diocese; on January 12, 1931, he was ordained a hieromonk at the Epiphany Cathedral in Dorogomilov. In the summer of 1940, he entered the literature department of the Andijan Evening Pedagogical Institute (now
Andijan State University). On October 25, 1940, he was appointed a teacher of Andijan School No. 1. By the beginning of
World War II, he graduated from the first year of the Institute. On August 10, 1941, he was drafted into the
Red Army. From September 1945 to February 1946, he was treated at the Moscow Regional Tuberculosis Institute for spinal tuberculosis; on March 20, 1946, Bishop
Onesimus (Festinatov) of Vladimir and Suzdal appointed him full-time priest of the Annunciation Cathedral of the former Annunciation Monastery in
Murom. In August 1946, he moved to Odessa, becoming first the rector of the bishop's church, and then the treasurer of the St. Eliah Monastery. In Odessa, he was under the command and patronage of Bishop Sergius (Larin), with whom he moved to
Rostov-on-Don in 1947. At the beginning of 1947, for several months, at the request of Bishop
Hieronymus (Zakharov) of Ryazan, he obeyed the sacristan of the Boris and Gleb Cathedral in
Ryazan but was forced to leave due to dissatisfaction with his activities of local authorities. On December 2, 1947, by the decree of Bishop Sergius, Hegumen Pimen was appointed secretary of the Rostov diocesan Administration; on March 9, 1948, he was appointed clerk of the Rostov Cathedral of the Mother of God-Nativity. On August 12, 1949, he was appointed
namestnik (alderman) of the
Pskov-Caves Monastery; on April 13, 1950, he was elevated to the rank of
Archimandrite by Metropolitan
Gregory (Chukov) of Leningrad. In 1954 he was transferred to a similar position in
Trinity Lavra of St. Sergius. On November 17, 1957, in Odessa, he was consecrated bishop of
Balta, vicar of the Diocese of Odessa. Beginning December 26, 1957, he was bishop of
Dmitrov, vicar of the Moscow diocese. From July 1960 to November 14, 1961, he was Chancellor of the Moscow Patriarchate. On November 23, 1960, he was elevated to the rank of
archbishop. On March 16, 1961, he became archbishop of
Tula and Belyov. On November 14, 1961, he was appointed
Metropolitan of
Leningrad and
Ladoga. After the death of
Patriarch Alexius I in 1970, Metropolitan Pimen was chosen Patriarchal Locum Tenens, essentially a temporary replacement. Because 1970 was the centennial of Lenin's birth, Soviet authorities did not want a church council to select a new Patriarch during that year. A
Local Council was opened May 30, 1971. On June 2, 1971, the final day of the Council, Metropolitan Pimen was elected Patriarch of Moscow and All Russia. He was
enthroned on June 3 of that year. (The other important act of the Council was the abolition of the "oath" on the
old rites from the
Great Moscow Synod of 1667.) Pimen's task was to lead a Christian church in a state ruled by an officially
atheist Communist party. In his post, he worked closely with the Communist authorities, participating in numerous "peace movement" conferences sponsored by the government. Pimen was awarded the Soviet Peace Fund Medal (1969, 1971) and, in 1970, the Gold Medal "Борцу за мир" ("Fighter for Peace") by the 'Soviet Committee for the Defence of Peace'. Pimen was a member of the
World Peace Council from 1963 onwards. In 1961, Pimen was awarded the
Order of the Red Banner of Labour (орден Трудового Красного Знамени), one of the highest awards of the time. Near the end of his difficult term as head of the Russian Orthodox Church, he organized the celebration of the
1000th anniversary of the Christianization of Rus' in 1988. This event coincided with political reforms that ended much of the Communist party's anti-religious activity, and the church celebration was seen as marking the end of the persecution of Orthodox Christianity in the Soviet Union. At that time he was seriously ill. When Patriarch Pimen died in 1990, the government made no effort to influence the choice of his successor. ==References==