["Conversations with the Elders" HOMEPAGE]
["a letter from SIBERIA" HOMEPAGE]
["a letter from SIBERIA" INDEX]
[ Ethnic, Religious,National Index]
[Location (Address) Index]
[ Map Room]
[ Master IndexPage]
[FEEFHS FrontPage]
[Website Index]
Conversations with the Elders, No. 8
A Conversation with
Helena Weigel Merz (born 1922)
by Sister Alice Ann Pfeifer, C.S.A.
with Sister Mary Elise Leiker, C.S.A.
© Copyright 1997, Congregation of the Sisters of St. Agnes, Fond du Lac,
Wisconsin and FEEFHS, all rights reserved
First Posted: 21 January 1997
The first year of life for Helena Weigel Merz, born in 1922 in a German Catholic village in
the North Caucasus, was also the first year of foreign exile for southern Russia's lone
Catholic Bishop, Joseph A. Kessler. In many parts of the old Empire, practicing Catholics
were a threatened species, yet in Helena's village they were thriving like honeybees in a field
of clover. This, as you will see, is only one of many amazing facts about Helena's life and
times - especially where matters of faith and religion have been concerned.
Helen remembers an active and prayerful Catholic parish in her native village of
Roshdestwenka - one fully benefitting from the regular services of a priest. Yet if Helena
had grown up in one of the Volga villages where her parents had been born, her earliest
memories might have been quite different. The early days of the Russian Revolution, which
happened just before Helena was born, had been harshly felt among German Russians living
along the Volga.
They were among the first to have their private property seized and their parish pastors
removed. In other words, they were among the first to receive the "blessings" of
agricultural collectivization and state-sponsored atheism. However, between untimely
droughts at the hands of Mother Nature and ill-conceived policies from the mind of Vladimir
Lenin, these "blessings" soon meant nothing but widespread hunger and misery, both
physical and spiritual, for the German Russian people of the Volga.
By March of 1921, even Lenin himself was forced to admit that something had gone wrong
with his ideas - although, even then, all he allowed himself to believe was that his ideas,
while basically correct, were being imposed upon the people too swiftly. So, in that month,
his "New Economic Policy" was announced. With what was meant to be a \\temporary
relaxation of communist social and economic aims and policies a certain amount of private
enterprise and ethnic cultural preservation was again allowed among the Volga
Germans.
However, by that time many of them had already fled to other parts of the former Russian
Empire, parts that had not yet been brought under Red dominance. In those places they
continued to practice their trades and follow their religious consciences and their cultural
customs in much the same way as they had before the Revolution. In those places, too, they
held onto a hope that communist expansion would never reach them.
A Place Safe from the Worst of Communism
Adam Giesinger lists Helena's native village, Roshdestwenka, among the North Caucasian
German colonies that were founded along the Kuban River in the 1860s, 1870s, and 1880s.
(See "From Catherine to Krushchev," p. 135.) Helena does not know when,
why, or
how her parents left the Volga to live in the Caucasus. She knows only that her father,
Adam
Weigel, had been born in the Volga village of Pfannenstiel (Marienthal), and her mother,
Katharina Schreiner, in Urbach.
Helena was one of the youngest of nine children born to Adam and Katharina Weigel. Only
five of the nine lived long enough to marry and have children of their own. Today an older
sister, Barbara, may still be alive and residing in the south-central Siberian city of
Krasnoyarsk, but Helena is not sure.
Helena's father was a farmer and a skilled, prosperous one at that. In Roshdestwenka, Adam
Weigel owned chickens, pigs, and cows, plus land that he himself worked with a
horse-drawn
plough. Although the North Caucasus had been brought into the Soviet Union by the end of
1922, the New Economic Policy had not been implemented. So land-owning peasants such
as
Adam Weigel were left undisturbed in their labors and in their general way of life, including
their continued participation in organized religion. The exiled Catholic bishop still was not
permitted to return to the country, but the priests who had escaped death and imprisonment
during the first years of militant communist atheism continued to serve loyal flocks in
various
locations around the former Empire.
Cautiously recognizing a new opportunity in the Soviet government's relaxed policies, in
1926
the Vatican appointed and secretly consecrated four bishops to be Apostolic Administrators in
four different parts of the former Diocese of Tiraspol: Augustin Baumtrog in the Volga
region; Johannes Roth in the North Caucasus; Stephan Demuroff in the republic of Georgia;
and Alexander Frison in the Black Sea region. (See "From Catherine to Krushchev,"
p.
292.)
Seventy years later, Helena still cherishes fond memories of life in her village before the
great changes of 1929. She remembers how beautifully the church bell rang every morning
to
call the people to Mass - first, one solemn ring of the bell and a pause; then, another solemn
ring and a pause; finally, a long and merry jubilation of the bell ringing again and again, as
if
to cheerfully remind people that they must hurry if they want to be on time for Mass. The
church bell also pealed every evening, and when it did, people stopped whatever they were
doing, in their fields and in their houses, to pray the Angelus in honor of Mary, the Mother
of
God.
Although she was seven years old the last time she experienced it as a fully functioning
church, Helena still remembers a great deal about the place where her family had regularly
attended Mass. The church was large enough to have a choir loft in the back, an elevated
preacher's pulpit in the front, and entrances on three sides of the building. Inside were
beautiful statues and an immense crucifix. She remembers how "orderly" the seating was for
Mass. On the left side where the statue of Mary stood, all the women and girls were
seated.
On the right side where the statue of Joseph stood, all the men and boys were seated. People
of both genders were seated according to age, with the youngest in front and the oldest in
back. In her mind's eye as a little girl kneeling in the front of the church, she can still see
the priest saying Mass before the main altar, flanked by two servers on his left and two on
his right. Exposition of the Blessed Sacrament - a special ritual in which Catholics honor the
presence of Jesus in the consecrated host - occurred every day after Mass. For feastdays
there were big processions that made use of a special canopy that was kept in the back of the
church.
How were Catholic holidays celebrated in her home? Easter was an especially joyful time.
About two weeks before Easter, Helena's mother helped each child put some soil into a
basket and plant wheat seed in it. The children waited for the first green sprouts to begin
appearing in their baskets as the final days of Lent approached. By the night before Easter,
in each basket a lush bed of green "grass" would be awaiting the arrival of the Easter bunny.
That night before sending the children to bed, Mother would promise to stay up and wait for
the Easter bunny, so that she could open the door for him when he came!
During the month before Christmas, each evening the children kept vigilant eyes on the
windows of their family home. They knew that the Christkind would be
somewhere
outside, giving the children glimpses of various store-bought toys and gifts that would be
theirs if they remained on their best behavior during Advent. Then on Christmas Eve, the
Christkind, with a long flowing garment on "his" body and an opaque veil on
"his"
face, would knock at their front door and be invited into the house by their parents.
(Usually
the Christkind was a woman - a relative or a family friend trying to disguise her
voice
and keep her identity a secret.)
In one hand he would be carrying a sack of presents and in the other hand, a little whip. As
the Christkind would lay open the presents for the children to see, he would be
quick
to use his whip on any child who reached for a present without permission! For the children
knew that first they were to gather for prayer, and only after saying their prayers with the
Christkind could they claim their gifts.
The Year the Church Music Died
Today a ready smile comes to Helena's face as she shares these simple homespun memories.
Her face darkens, however, when she starts to talk about the year 1929. That was the year
when distant rumblings from Moscow finally reverberated in her little village. Two years
earlier, Stalin had announced that Lenin's New Economic Policy of 1921 needed to be
replaced with a plan for the final and complete collectivization of all property in all the
republics of the Soviet Union.
For a committee to work out the details took a couple of years, but by 1929 the dreadful
liquidation of the kulaks had begun. Helena's father knew that he would be
considered a kulak - a prosperous peasant - and that he was no longer safe in
Roshdestwenka. So he fled to the east, to a village in the present-day republic of Chechnya,
hoping to send for the rest of his family later.
That same year, 1929, was when a new wave of religious persecution began. Priests and
ministers again were killed or exiled. Three years after their appointment, three of the
Catholic Church's four Apostolic Administrators suddenly disappeared, including Bishop
Johannes Roth, who had been serving the Catholics of Helena's area. Only the whereabouts
of Bishop Alexander Frison of the Black Sea region were known - and he was in prison.
The
beautiful church of Roshdestwenka was among the country's thousands of churches that were
seized and either torn down or converted to other uses. In December of that year, a massive
nationwide propaganda campaign attempted to discourage people from celebrating
Christmas.
In the absence of the head of their household, other things besides Christmas were on the
minds of the Weigel family. Grandmother Weigel was suffering the throes of her final
illness, so authorities were allowing the family to care for her before sending them into exile
with the other kulak families. The Weigels had already been dispossessed of
their
home, and they were relying on the kindness of a neighbor woman who at risk of being
branded a collaborator with the \\kulaks, was temporarily providing them with shelter.
Meanwhile, besides keeping a death vigil over their grandmother, they kept waiting for word
from their husband and father. Soon after Adam Weigel contacted them from the land of the
Chechens, they fled Roshdestwenka aboard a train, putting eight hours of rail travel between
their old home in Roshdestwenka and their new home not far from the city of Grozny.
The Search for a New Safe Haven
The next few years provided little stability for the Weigels. In 1933 they returned to their
native village but the homecoming proved disappointing. Because it was not possible to
recover anything of their former life in Roshdestwenka, Adam Weigel decided to journey to
Baku, a city in present-day Azerbaijan, in search of work. Again his plan was to send for
his
family once he met with success in his quest. Meanwhile, the fall session of school was
beginning in Roshdeswenka, and, at age 11, Helena was still without formal schooling of any
kind, so she began her primary education in the village school.
By the end of 1933 the family received word that Adam's search had been cut short by
sickness and death. Soon after that, in January of 1934, Katharina Weigel also fell ill and
died, leaving Helena motherless as well as fatherless. She stayed in Roshdestwenka and
continued her education while living with her married sister Ottilia.
Meanwhile another sister Katya, moved to Tbilisi in present-day Georgia. Many Catholics of
German background poured into that city in those years, Helena explains, because it was a
place where they could find work and enjoy freedom of worship. In Tbilisi a Catholic parish
was still permitted to function, and it was staffed by a priest whom Helena remembers as
"Father Emmanuel."
Helena stayed in school in Roshdestwenka for four years, then quit to work on the \\kolkhoz.
In 1939, when she was 17, she joined the flood of German Catholic migrants to Tbilisi.
There she found employment as a housekeeper and babysitter for a working mother and her
two children.
The Catholic parish life in Tbilisi was vibrant, and Helena became one of its many active
members. There she learned dozens of hymns which even today spring readily to her mind
and her lips. There she met Gertrude Tetzel, a pious woman who was, at that time in
Catholic Russia's history, the rough equivalent of what today would be called a "sister."
Gertrude belonged to no formally established order of religious women, but she did live by
private vows that she had made to God, including a vow never to marry.
In keeping with her vows, she lived a life of simplicity and prayer in a room specially
provided for her at the parish church in Tbilisi. (Although no one could have known it then,
nearly 60 years later another Apostolic Administrator appointed to serve Russia's Catholics,
Bishop Joseph Werth of Novosibirsk, would be so impressed with the story of her life that he
would begin an effort to have her formally recognized as a saint.) Also in Tbilisi, Helena
became acquainted with members of the Merz family who had originated from the Volga
German village of Schoenchen: Alexander, who ardently wanted to become a priest, and his
younger brother Heinrich, who eventually became Helena's husband.
"Where God Is, Nothing is Heavy"
When war with Germany broke out in 1941, the German Russians living in Tbilisi had a
general idea of what was in store for them. By this time Heinrich Merz and Helena Weigel
were engaged, and they knew they needed to hurry if they wanted a Catholic priest to preside
over their marriage. So they planned their wedding in Tbilisi for Oct. 18.
Not long after that, the newlyweds were among the area's countless German Russians who
were rounded up for exile to work camps in Kazakstan. The people's journey consisted of a
train ride to Baku, a boat ride across the Caspian Sea, and then another train ride to their
destination in Kazakstan - a place called Yuzhny, too small to be noted on most modern
maps.
"That must have been a terrible time for you, a time of heaviness and sorrow," commented
Sister Mary Elise when Helena reached this part of her story. "No!" Helena responded
quickly and firmly, almost sharply, startling us with the force of her reply. "Where God is,
nothing is heavy. What did I go through? I had my daily bread. Yes, the work was hard,
but where God is, nothing is really too hard."
Chastened a little, we then asked, "So what do you most remember, after all these years,
about that trip into exile?" Helena's face lit up when we asked that question, in almost the
same way that it had when we asked for her childhood memories of Easter and Christmas.
"If only you could have heard the singing on the boat, how we filled the air with our
singing!" she responded. During the entire trip by rail and over water, members of the
parish
remained together, and they prayed and sang all the way.
Because Helena has a clear memory of the hymns of her youth, as well as a strong and
melodious voice, we produced a tape recorder and asked her to sing some of the hymns they
had sung on their journey. Happy to oblige, she gave us renditions in German of "Mary,
We
Follow in Your Footsteps," "Mother, Most Pure," and "The Golden Rosary."
Once in Kazakstan, members of the parish were split up among various barracks, and all
through the work camp years no group of Catholics as large as the group on the boat ever
again assembled. However, small groups here and there continued to assemble for prayers
and hymns. Among those in the women's barracks where Helena lived were Gertrude Tetzel
and another woman who had consecrated her life to God, Clara Rome. (In former days
Clara's uncle had been a priest, Helena recalls, a man named Riedel.)
Every Sunday Gertrude led a special prayer service which served as the women's Sunday
Mass. Every workday they gathered together to recite their morning prayers before heading
outside for their assigned tasks. Even while under the watchful eye of their work
supervisors,
they openly prayed aloud and sang hymns. Either the supervisors did not understand the
meaning of the women's German songs and recitations, or they understood and did not care,
Helena says. At any rate, their days passed by in a predictable cycle of work, prayer, and
sleep.
The next year, in 1942, all the men were ordered into the trudarmiya, a wartime
heavy
labor corps. They were sent north to Chelyabinsk in the Ural Mountains. The following
year, all the women also were ordered into the trudarmiya, and their new camp
was
located in Guryevsky, another town in Kazakstan. Helena remained with Gertrude and Clara
and other women who continued to openly pray together, but now their work was more
difficult - making bricks, digging ditches, and laying pipes.
In 1945 the war ended, and in 1946 changes came to the women's camp. The new
commandants and supervisors were Bulgars, Greeks - and militant atheists. Helena did not
see the worst of their intolerant new policies, however, because she was permitted to join her
husband in Chelyabinsk. Later she learned that Gertrude had been jailed for religious
activity.
Meanwhile in Chelyabinsk, Helena's brother-in-law Alexander had become one of the chief
Catholic prayer leaders in the city. Although Alexander had never become a priest, this
seems to have been the way in which history had allowed him to live out his priestly
ambitions. (Or, as a person of faith would say, the way in which God had wanted him to
live
them out.) The postwar era was a time, however, when new government efforts at stamping
out religion were meeting with success through the use of spies, infiltrators, and
informers.
In 1949, probably because of a tip provided by a traitor in his own prayer group, the
government learned of Alexander's religious activity and sentenced him to 25 years in
prison.
Ironically, it was while this would-be priest served his sentence that he met his future wife.
She was the daughter of a fellow prisoner, and Alexander made her acquaintance during the
times she came to visit her father and bring him food. When Alexander's sentence was
unexpectedly commuted in 1954, he looked her up and married her.
Continued Work and Constant Prayer
After the war Helena and Heinrich started their family. They remained in Chelyabinsk, first
living near the city's heavy industrial plants and later moving to Stalovarof Street (which
means "steelmakers' street"). Their daughter Maria was born in 1947, their daughter Katya
in
1949, and their son Alexander in 1952.
By 1959 Helena was a widow, her husband having become a victim of cancer. With three
children ages 7 to 12 to support, Helena found work at one of the plants, where she
remained
for the following 19 years.
Helena's oldest daughter grew up to become a bookkeeper and has remained in Chelyabinsk.
She married a Russian man, Victor Nikulen, and they have two daughters, Sveta and Alyona.
Sveta seems to have inherited her grandmother's talent for music and serves as the talented
organist for Immaculate Conception Parish.
Katya also married a Russian man, Valentin Tsipilov, but she now lives in Stavropol in the
Causasus - a city familiar to many Americans as the birthplace of Mikhail Gorbachev. Katya
is the mother of a son, Andrei, and she is a medical technician by occupation.
Alexander married a Russian woman, Zina Perova, and supports his family as a chauffeur.
The couple and their three children - Andrei, Julia, and Katya - live in Chelyabinsk.
Helena's deep contentment with her life shows in the serene expression which never totally
abandons her face. She explained to us that her peace comes from praying constantly. All
day long she keeps up running conversations with God and with the saints, especially with
Mary, the Mother of God, speaking to them as if they were friends and companions at her
side. She added that she knows they are listening because they are always doing her little
favors. Our curiosity piqued, we asked, "Can you give us some examples?"
First that familiar bright expression flashed across Helena's face, then she told us about an
experience she had in 1990. It was during one of the many summers which she has spent on
the family dacha near Chelyabinsk. That summer the garden produced an abundant crop of
fine tomatoes. After getting them all picked, she laid them in a sunny, open spot where they
could get just a little riper. Then while she worked in another part of the garden, a large
gust
of wind suddenly burst from out of nowhere, so strong that it knocked over the pail at her
side.
She glanced at the sky and saw that it was black with threatening clouds. Then hail started
to
pelt the ground. Oh, no! Her tomatoes! There was no time to try to gather them together,
so
she ran into her cabin and started to talk to Mary about the whole situation. "All summer
long I have worked on those tomatoes," she complained, "and now in a matter of a couple of
hours, all that work will go to waste!" She prayed throughout the duration of the storm, and
when it finally had passed, she stepped outside. Her heart sank when she saw the hailstones
scattered far and wide - then it soared when she looked at the place where the tomatoes
lay.
Just as if a protective canopy had been suspended over that one piece of ground covered with
the tomatoes, that spot was completely clear of the hailstones that had fallen all around it.
Not one hailstone had touched one tomato.
[This interview took place in September of 1996.]
[When Bishop Joseph Werth, S.J., the Apostolic Administrator for Asian Russia, visited
Chelyabinsk in that month and heard the Sisters were collecting these stories, his first
reaction
was to make sure they sent copies of them to the United States.
He then encouraged them to interview Helena Merz. He had just met her himself and learned
that she personally knew Gertrude Tetzel. In her later years, "the holy Gertrude," as he
calls
her, lived in Karaganda, Kazakstan, and prepared the future bishop for his first Holy
Communion.
Bishop Werth hopes to begin the process for Gertrude's canonization.]
[[Previous Conversation]]
[[Next Conversation]]
[[Conversations Index]]
[Parish HomePage]
[Parish History]
[Parish Membership]
[Parish Priests]
[Agnesian Sisters]
[New Church Building]
[Parish Activities]
[1996 Arson]
[Parish Environment]
[Diocesan Map]
[How to Help]
0 - 0 - 0
["Conversations with the Elders" HOMEPAGE]
["a letter from SIBERIA" HOMEPAGE]
["a letter from SIBERIA" INDEX]
[ Ethnic, Religious,National Index]
[Location (Address) Index]
[ Map Room]
[ Master IndexPage]
[FEEFHS FrontPage]
[Website Index]