The future St. Jonah was born in 1888 in
Kaluga,
Russia, with the name Vladimir Pokrovsky. He was orphaned at the age of 8 and was taken in by a
deacon, who ensured he received an education. He went on to attend, graduate, and eventually teach at the
Kazan Theological Academy. While attending as a student, he was
tonsured a
monk of the
Optina Brotherhood and given the name Jonah. He took a teaching position at the academy only out of obedience to the Elder
Gabriel of Optina. In 1918 the Revolution forced the young
hieromonk to leave Kazan. He was arrested by the
communists and suffered beatings to the point of loss of consciousness and imprisonment. Fr. Jonah was freed by the
White Army, was soon raised to the rank of
igumen, and assigned as the senior priest of the southern volunteer troops. Fr. Jonah withdrew to the borders of Western China with the army of
Alexander Dutov, being subjected to many hardships while crossing the
Pamir cliffs, often forced to grab on to the sparse shrubbery and jagged ledges of the ice covered cliffs with wounded hands. After crossing the
Gobi Desert, they finally reached
Beijing, where Fr. Jonah was received into the Ecclesiastical Mission there and soon consecrated
bishop of
Manzhuria. (St. Jonah was officially the bishop of
Hankou, in the
Hubei province, but actually ministered and worked in the town of Manzhuria, the modern day border town of
Manzhouli, not to be confused with the region of Manchuria, of which this town is a part.) During his short time as bishop, St. Jonah transformed the Orthodox community in Manzhuria. He established an orphanage, a school, and a dining hall for the poor. ==Death==