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THE
ASTONISHING
MISSIONARY
JOURNEYS OF
THE APOSTLE
ANDREW
George Alexandrou, international reporter, writer, and political commentator, on his thou-
sand-page book in Greek, He Raised the Cross on the Ice, exploring the sources, traditions,
routes and cultures of St. Andrew’s apostolate. George’s own enthusiasm and love for St.
Andrew made our long months of working together more than an assignment, it became a
shared pilgrimage.

BEGINNINGS
RTE: George, please tell us about your background and how you began this
epic project of reconstructing St. Andrew’s journeys.

GEORGE: Yes, but before I begin, I have to say that at certain times in my life
I’ve been very blind. I can speak about the Taliban, about international pol-
icy, about government leaders, but I’m not righteous enough to speak or
write about St. Andrew. This is how I feel and I must say so at the beginning.
My background is that I went to the university as one of the best students
in Greece, but dropped out to become a hippie and a traveler, a fighter for
the ecological movement, and then just an “easy rider.” When I returned to
Greece, by chance, or perhaps God’s will, I turned to journalism and was

Mosaic of St. Andrew, Cathedral of Holy Apostle Andrew, Patras, Greece.


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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

quite successful. I became the director of an important Greek historical You find Greek faces in strange places all over the world. There are
journal, had a rather flashy career in Cyprus as a TV news director, and descendants of Greek-Chinese in Niya, China’s Sinkiang region, as I said,
traveled around the world for some major journalist associations. I worked and there was a Greek-Chinese kingdom in today’s Uzbekistan. For a time I
freelance in many media, but finally understood that this was not exactly was a scholar of Greco-Buddhism, which has a very strong legacy in central
how I wanted to live my life. Asia, and there you can trace the origins of Buddhism’s transformation from
Since then, I married, had two children, lost my health, and over the past a philosophical practice to a world religion through the descendants of
few years have done a lot of thinking. Now, I’m with the Voice of Greece, Greeks from the time of Alexander the Great in Greco-Indian Gandhara, in
broadcasting a weekly radio news show to Greeks and Greek-speakers northwest India.
world-wide. It’s a very diverse audience including Greeks in the diaspora, I’ve also investigated descendants of the Byzantine Greeks, who, in east-
Greek-speaking Russian Orthodox monks in Siberia, Pakistani immigrants ern lands under the Turks, were called Rum-Orthodox, meaning “Roman”
who learned Greek here and have now returned to Pakistan, scholars of Orthodox, as Constantinople was the New Rome: the Rum-Orthodox of
ancient Greek who want to hear the modern Greek language, and so on. Palestine, Iraq, Jordan, Syria, the Rum-patriarchates of Alexandria, Antioch
Foremost, however, I’m a traveler and I travel still. I like to feel the essence and Jerusalem – and also the Catholic uni-
of people all over the world. ates of the Middle East who claim to be
descendants of Byzantine Greeks who
RTE: I remember that you once told me you have come across many small guarded the Byzantine Emperor and call
unrelated ethnic groups who believed they were descendants of Alexander themselves Greek-Catholics.
the Great. People journeyed over vast areas in antiq-
GEORGE: Yes. In my own way, I’m a specialist in this. I’ve met people all over
uity and we know quite a lot about their
the world who claim to be of Greek ancestry. They may trace their heritage travels. For instance, Claudius Ptolemy
from the ancient Greeks, Byzantines, or modern Greeks, but they all claim drew a map of the ancient world in the sec-
George Alexandrou
to be Greek. It’s very strange, you pick up a stone in any part of the world ond century after Christ (and this is a real
and underneath you’ll find a Greek. map of the world as we know it today). From Ptolemy and other Hellenistic
We have descendants of ancient Greeks in Calabria (southern Italy), the geographers and historians we know that there were extensive trade routes
Crimea, and the whole Black Sea region. This is from the Greco-Roman such as the Silk Road, the Cinnamon Road, the Spice Road, the Golden Road
world. Then, we have the legacy of Alexander the Great in central Asia, in from the Kingdom of Zimbabwe to the Mediterranean Sea, and the Amber
India, in Sudan, in Egypt, in Iraq, in Armenia, even in the Taklimakan Road from the Baltic Sea to Rome, through Denmark and the British Isles. The
Desert in Niya (China). It isn’t we Greeks who claim this; these people Verangian Road (as it was called by the Byzantines) was traveled by Herodotus
themselves have a long tradition that they are Greek. For instance, some 1,400 years ago, and went from the Crimea through Kiev, straight to Valaamo
leaders of the remote Araucan tribes of Chile claim that they are descended and the Baltic Sea. Centuries earlier it was called the Dneper Road.
from the ancient Spartans (and they certainly didn’t learn about the There was another major route connecting the Mediterranean to Cornwall
Spartans from history books). There are even central Africans who claim to in the British Isles, the Tin or Pewter Road. Then we had the famous Silk
be descendants of Alexander the Great’s soldiers or the Ptolemaic Greeks. Route, which united the Chinese Han Empire with Rome. There was also a
Through the Ptolemaic Greeks, we also have a connection with Indonesia. trade route along the Nile between Meroe and Axum, the kingdoms of
During the Ptolemaic period, the Indonesians were very great travelers and Sudan and Ethiopia. The Cinnamon Road connected Shanghai in China
sailed the Indian and Pacific Oceans for distances like that of Cardiff to New with Indonesia and Borneo, through Java to Tanzania. The Spice Road unit-
York. Greeks, Arabs and Indonesians all traveled to Tanzania. ed China through Burma, Sri Lanka and present-day Pakistan to the Red

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the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

Sea. You can imagine, these were all important routes and a simple, unos-
tentatious man like St. Andrew could take any of them easily.

RTE:Were the ancient and classical maps more accurate than later medieval
maps in the West?

GEORGE: Yes, later Christians would say, “Paradise was here, the earth was
flat, etc.,” but if you look at the old Greek maps, they not only knew the earth
was round, but the longitudes and latitudes are the same on their maps as
we know them today. They are not exactly the same because we count ours
from Greenwich and they didn’t, but you can correlate them precisely. You
can even find America and Australia on some maps (i.e. the map of Crates
the Maleot in 150 B.C.). This is why I believe we can accurately locate these
places from the old traditions. When barbaric peoples invaded the older
Christian civilizations and became Christian themselves, this was right spir-
itually, but it was a catastrophe for civilization. Night fell on education and
learning, although spiritually and culturally it was a dawn for the barbar-
ians. It was their time, for the first time in history.

RTE: Although there were dangers from bandits and smugglers, there prob-
ably weren’t the kind of border controls we have now.

GEORGE: Yes, but even now there are dangers. Going to Siberia isn’t any
safer now than it was 2,000 years ago, but there was often another attitude
towards travelers then. Although there were always dangers, in many
ancient cultures a traveler was sacred, he was from far away and people did-
n’t want to despoil him; they wanted to hear about his country and his civi-
lization. You didn’t need visas, documents, you were not even in need of
friends because you were a special person, a traveler. You were coming with
far-off ideas, different beliefs, strange dress. You were more often a person
to admire than someone to fight or to steal from. In the ancient world pass-
ing travelers were laden with gifts – this was Marco Polo’s experience. Those
were different times. With my own decades of traveling to difficult and exot-
ic places, it is easy for me to understand how St. Andrew could have traveled
as extensively as the traditions recount.

RTE: When we first spoke about your research you made the remark that
when the Lord told the apostles to preach the gospel to the ends of the earth,
they did not think this meant their descendants. They took this literally.

Mosaic of St. Andrew from St. Catherine’s Monastery, Sinai.


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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

GEORGE: Yes, we have many written traditions from the second and third cen- but it was possible. In his epistles, St. Paul speaks of being obliged to spread
turies A.D. that the apostles went to Middle Asia, to sub-Saharan Africa, to the gospel or he will be lost. In Greek, these words, “to the ends of the earth”
India, even to old Burma. They went to the land of Sogdiana, which is mod- are very precise, they are in no sense allegorical and the apostles would have
ern Uzbekistan/western China… we had all these memories and traditions of understood this literally. The ancient geographers used this phrase as a pre-
the first years of Christianity, but we thought they were just strange tales. cise geographical definition.
Now, with the help of archeology, we understand that these roads did exist, That the apostles accomplished this to some degree is borne out by the
and that many, many people took them. We know, for example, that the Church historian Tertullian, who wrote in 170 A.D.: “We have deacons, we
Indonesians were traveling from Java to Tanzania across the Indian ocean. have priests and we have churches, to the ends of the earth.”1 Then he
They had large, well-balanced outrigger canoes, and they would load them describes the places: the Sarmatians, Sub-Saharan Africa, the British Isles,
with their families, livestock, food and water, and set out from Java – some- and the Scythians. The territory of the Sarmatians, for instance, stretched
times traveling for a lifetime. This is how they discovered Madagascar. They from the Caspian Sea to Lake Baikal; and from Mongolia to Siberia.
sailed the open oceans without any fear. The Celts also were extensive travel-

THE CROSS OF THE NORTH


ers in the North Atlantic with their leather-covered boats, the curraghs.
Another example of widespread travel is that in 330 B.C., Pithias knew
northern Europe well. He had been to Cornwall, to Scotland, to Thule (some
say that ancient Thule was Iceland, others Greenland, others Northern RTE: How did you begin to write about St. Andrew in particular?
Scandinavia) and from there he traveled to Marseilles in forty-five days.
GEORGE: If you had told me a year ago that I would be writing a book on St.
RTE: In forty-five days! Andrew, I would have said you were crazy. I never imagined that I would do
such a thing. But when I had some serious problems, I went to New Valaamo
GEORGE: Yes. And in Claudius Ptolemy’s (100-170 A.D.) geography we have
Monastery in Finland where I was given the extremely kind hospitality of
Diogenes – a second Diogenes, not the philosopher – who, during the apos-
the monks and Igumen Sergei. It was like entering the doors of paradise.
tolic times, left by ship from Alexandria and went to Azania, present-day
You can imagine; it was cold, quiet, silent, and the only things I had to face
Tanzania, to a place called Rapta. From Tanzania he walked for twenty-five
were God, nature, and myself.
days to the mountains of Ruvenzori between Lake Albert and Lake Edward
At the time I wanted to write a book about the Kalash, the descendants of
in what is now Rwanda, Uganda, Congo-Zaire. You see, it was a small world
Alexander the Great on the northwest border of Pakistan, who are still
at that time, and the Greeks already knew the source of the Nile.
pagan. Their religion is still very connected with ancient Greek paganism,
So, when the Lord told the apostles to go to the ends of the earth, the
and I feel an urgency to preserve their mythology and legends because this
Greco-Roman knowledge of the world at that time was quite specific. They
is an endangered culture and there are only two thousand of them left.
knew where the ends of the earth were. For the ancient Greeks and Romans,
I had planned to begin this work in Finland, but I understood that the
the world ended in an abyss, the “Antipodes,” after the Prasum Promentory
monastery was not exactly a proper place to write about pagans… so instead
in Zimbabwe. However, the ancient Israelites, the Himyarite Arabs,
I began writing about the Karelian Orthodox saints. I was impressed that
Phoenicians, and Nabbataean Arabs knew that this was not the final abyss,
many Greek monks from Mt. Athos had gone to Karelia and that Karelian
but the dzimba dza mabwe, possibly the mines of King Solomon, or the
monks had gone to Mt. Athos and later returned to the Russian north – like
Bantu Empire of Monomotapa (Mwene Muntapa).
St. Arseny of Konevits. One of our Greeks who went to Karelia was Monk
My point is that, geographically, Ptolmey gave us all the known places
Eliezar, and we have had a continual stream of Greek monks, hermits and
and no one can say that this is rubbish. China, Indonesia, Lapland, Britain,
Scandinavia were all known. It was not easy to go to the ends of the earth, Tertullian, An Answer to the Jews, Chapter. 7, Ante-Nicene Fathers, Vol. 3, p. 157-8. T&T Clark, translated
1

by S. Thelwall.

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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19)

ascetics in Karelia. Tradition says of Sts. Sergius and Herman, the founders
of Valaam Monastery in Russia, that one was a Greek from Mt. Athos and
the other a local Karelian. (Others say they were both Greeks from Kiev, and
a third version holds that one was Greek and the other a pagan priest, but
the fact remains that in each variant they had Greek influence and ideas.)
I am fascinated by what I call “The Cross of the North.” This is a geo-
graphical cross that you can trace on a map. The vertical bar links the far
north of Russia to Greek Orthodoxy in the south. The crossbar connects
Finnish, Russian and American Orthodoxy, from Sts. Sergius and Herman
of Valaam, through the deserts of the “Northern Thebaid” to St. Herman of
Alaska on Spruce Island.
I was thrilled to be at Valaamo, receiving the tradition of Valaam
Monastery and writing about the saints. The abbot helped us very much. My
wife is Ukrainian, a Russian national, and we were given access to the
monastery archives and allowed to copy anything we liked. This was a very
great gift of God and of Valaamo. We translated from many books and then
came back to Greece to begin writing. Even then I knew that I must begin
by writing the life of St. Andrew the Apostle.

RTE: The tradition that St. Andrew was in Karelia is still held today?

GEORGE: Yes, by the monks of Old Valaam Monastery in Russia, some


monks of New Valaamo in Finland, and by Finnish and Russian Karelians
as well. St. Andrew is at the center of the icon, “Synaxis of All the Saints of
Valaam” at New Valaamo Monastery.
As I began to write, I found myself coming across more and more scat-
tered information about St. Andrew from all over the world. Finally, my
Greek editor, Sophia Oriphanidou, said, “Wait on the lives of the saints of
Karelia, write first about St. Andrew himself.” I didn’t feel right working on
a book about an apostle, but I told myself, “Yes, I’m a very bad guy, but it
happens that I have to write this book, so I will.” It was an inner obligation
that I knew I couldn’t avoid. I’m not worthy to write about him, but I had
to, and I ask everyone to forgive me.
Once I began, many sources came to me and people came forward to help,
from northern Russia, central Asia, eastern Europe, Ethiopia – texts and
oral traditions, even from the Kalash people of Pakistan, whom I mentioned
earlier. Their texts speak of the presence of a messenger from God by the
name of Indrein, and I cite this tradition in my book in their local language,

Mosaic, St. Andrew with staff and wheat, Patras Cathedral.


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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

because in the old Romanian, St. Andrew is called Indrean. I collected ing. They can fight your interpretation, but not your principle.”
many local traditions, everything I could find. At first it was very difficult, So, I took as a principle the premise that, “I accept all evidence as possible,
but then things began coming. whether it is a writing of the Holy Fathers, an oral tradition from Uzbekistan,
a Coptic text from Ethiopia, a simple dream, or the archeological excavations
RTE: You said earlier that it was as if they were being put in your way. of a Chinese scholar.” It is impossible from our time to absolutely say that a
GEORGE: Yes, but at the beginning it was chaos, just scattered information
certain isolated tradition is true or false. My idea was to work from another
from around the world. Also, I knew that I didn’t want to make traditions direction by putting down all the scattered sources to see if the different tra-
out of legends. I just wanted to follow the sources and see where they led; it ditions of St. Andrew’s journeys fit together geographically and time-wise. I
was like putting a huge puzzle together. wanted to see if they were even possible. Then, once I exposed the contradic-
I have already covered about a thousand pages and I quote almost fifty tions, perhaps I could find the actual routes of St. Andrew’s journeys.
languages and dialects. The book is in Greek, of course, and I’m calling it, The question was if, by setting the various traditions side-by-side, I could
“He Raised the Cross on the Ice.” trace St. Andrew’s travels with any probability. Our strongest evidence,
and what we always hoped for, was early written commentary about the apos-
RTE: What languages did you work in? tle’s visit to an area along with a sepa-
rate, verified oral tradition from the
GEORGE: The oral traditions and texts referring to St Andrew are in ancient
same place that has been passed down
Greek, modern Greek, Pontian and Calabrian Greek, Georgian, Abhazian,
until now. As I went on, I discovered that
Slavonic, Serbian, Russian, Ukrainian, Romanian, Kalasha, Baganda,
in time and geography the Kazakhstani
Kurdish, Ethiopian Geez, Ethiopian Amharic, Coptic, Arabic, Aramaic
tradition fit the Sogdiana tradition
Syrian, Turkish, Turcik of Central Asia, Iranian, Bulgarian, old English,
(modern Uzbekistan), the Sogdiana tra-
English, German, Italian, Latin, Albanian, Finnish, Karelian, Armenian,
dition fit into the Parthian tradition
and many dialects. Entrance to St. Andrew’s cave, Romania.
(Persia) and the Parthian tradition fit
I also had to deal with many languages, scripts and dialects, living and
the Syriac tradition. It was like a train, one car after another, until I had only
extinct, that didn’t deal directly with St. Andrew, because I had to read the
twenty years missing from St. Andrew’s return to the Black Sea from Valaamo
sources concerning the world in which he lived. These were in Hebrew,
until he went to Sinope – and from there to Patras in Achaia, to his martyrdom.
Samaritan, Bantu, Kushitic, Teso, San, Tokharian, Sanskrit, Chinese,
Mongolian, Korean, Amazigh-Berberic, Gothic, Gaelic, Saami-Lappish, RTE: Were you able to resolve those twenty years?
Swedish, Norwegian, Polish, Tadjik, Sogdian, and so on. Of course, I wasn’t
GEORGE: Yes, I found a local Romanian tradition that St. Andrew lived twen-
able to learn all these languages, but I was fortunate enough to find native
speakers and scholars around the world to help me with these sources. And ty years in a cave in Romania, in Dervent, and during this time he traveled
here I have to thank my wife and spiritual sister Olga, because her help with through what is now Romania, Bulgaria and Moldavia. But the most incred-
the Slavic sources was fundamental for my research. ible thing was that, according to the early Romanian traditions, the years he
Megas Farantos, the well-known professor of dogmatic theology in Greece was there was the exact period I was missing from the other traditions.
and Germany, who represents the Ecumenical Patriarchate and the Greek The most important thing is that these puzzle pieces – the separate local
Church in dialogue with the Roman Catholics and other religions, was a great traditions of Bulgaria, Romania, Ethiopia, of the Aramaic people, the
help to me. He trusts my work and academically supports me. He told me, Syrians, the Copts, even the Greek and Roman church traditions all fit
“Don’t critique the traditions, this is not your job. Accept them or don’t accept together, but you have to follow them step by step to recreate his life.
them, but don’t critique them.” Secondly, he said, “Adopt a principle of work- Finally, I had only one piece that I couldn’t fit, even as a possibility: the

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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

Declaration of Arbroath, the fourteenth-century Scottish declaration of was closed to them, they began to use this old Celtic-Lapp route over Norway,
independence from England which says that the Scots were taught the Denmark and Sweden. The ancient Greeks had already mapped this road, and
Christian faith by St. Andrew himself. Historians dismiss this, but I have to Pithias of Marseilles went to these places about 330 B.C., and probably to
point out that his presence there was not physically impossible. Iceland and Greenland as well. I can’t say that St. Andrew traveled with the
Lapps, of course, but this route did exist, and if he did go to Scotland it would
RTE: And who signed this declaration? have to have been after his visit to the Baltic Sea and before Romania.
GEORGE: The nobles of the Scottish nation, in 1320.2 The Arbroath tradition Except for this remote chance, I didn’t see how he could have gotten to
is interesting because there is no other written claim of St. Andrew in any Scotland until I found something else that made it very possible. According to
place in Scotland, although there are a few scattered ancient Greek writers there was an inland route for Greek merchants from the
legends that say he was in Scotland generally. The Baltic Sea. From the Greek Crimea they traveled up the Russian rivers, the
most common tradition says that St. Rule (or Dnepr, Dvina etc. to what is now St. Petersburg (as St. Andrew himself did
Regulus), who was possibly a Greek monk from according to Russian tradition). Then to
Patras, brought some relics of St. Andrew from Patras avoid the hard Russian winter, they didn’t
to St. Andrew’s in Scotland in the fourth century. St. return to Greece the same way but sailed
Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, and that the the Baltic, where they bought amber, and
relics were there is undisputed. They disappeared then to Scotland where they made their way
from the cathedral only during the Calvinist down the coast to Cornwall trading for tin.
Reformation destruction. There is a second tradition From Cornwall, they traveled down the
that says they were brought by an eighth-century Iberian Peninsula to Gibraltar, then past
St. Regulus’ tower
in Scotland. abbot, but according to the nobles of the Scottish the (then) Greek cities of Marseilles, Nice,
nation, St. Andrew was actually there, and I wanted to finish my book by Antibes and the area of Monaco, and then
simply seeing whether this was possible or not. to Rome, Sicily, and Greece.
Declaration of Arbroath.
For a long time, it didn’t seem that there were any traveled routes con- This is why the ancient Slavic sources
necting this place in Scotland to other places St. Andrew is known to have recount that St. Andrew left Russia for Rome. In fact, I don’t believe he ever
been, until I learned of a group of Lapps called “the Seal People.” These got to Rome, because if he had this would surely have been recounted in the
were seal fishermen who lived on the Baltic coast in an area St. Andrew is Latin tradition. For reasons that I go into in my book, I think that he
known to have been. They traded by sea from Scandinavia to the Hebrides, returned to the Germanic lands where the Romans had created a new road
the Orkney and Shetland Islands, and to northern Scotland – a place now connecting the Baltic with the Danube. From the Danube he could have
called St. Andrew’s, where the relics lay for centuries. sailed down to Dobrogea in Romania.
In the first century, Rome had already captured southern Britain, and the RTE: Would it also have been possible that some of the tribes he encountered
Scots and Picts further north were very hard-pressed. When trade in the south in eastern Europe might have migrated to, or traded in, Scotland and that
2
From the Declaration of Arbroath, 1320: “Most Holy Father and Lord, we know and from the chronicles this was the origin of the tradition?
and books of the ancients we find that among other famous nations our own, the Scots, has been graced with
widespread renown...The high qualities and deserts of these people, were they no otherwise manifest, gain GEORGE: Yes, there are some theories that the Scot aristocracy were descen-
glory enough from this: that the King of Kings and Lord of Lords, our Lord Jesus Christ, after His Passion
and Resurrection, called them, even though settled in the uttermost parts of the earth, almost the first to His dants of the Verangian Russ or the Scythians, but I’m doubtful about this. In
most holy faith. Nor would He have them confirmed in that faith by merely anyone but by the first of His the Declaration of Arbroath the nobles are talking about St. Andrew being in
Apostles – by calling, though second or third in rank – the most gentle Saint Andrew, the Blessed Peter’s
brother, and desire him to keep them under his protection as their patron forever.” Scotland. That was their statement.

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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

RTE: How do modern Scottish Christians see this? ited by Greek Philistines. If you compare the Masoretic text to the
Septuagint, the word “Philistine” is translated as “Greek.” This is clear and
GEORGE: They believe that the Arbroath tradition was based on St. Regulus’ it is acknowledged by historians.
bringing the relics from Patras in the fourth century (or an abbot in the After Gaza, he went to Lydda in Palestine, where St. George would later be
eighth), but I’m still open to the possibility that there is something older at martyred, to Antioch, and then to Ankara and Edessa, today’s Urfa in
work. The Declaration of Abroath is very important and from a time when Turkey, which was an important center for the first Christians. Abgar, King
people were careful of oral tradition. I would be surprised if they so quick- of Edessa, became a Christian and this is where the icon of the Lord, “Made-
ly mixed up the tradition of his presence with that of his relics. Without-Hands” is from. According to the sources, this may have been the
Unfortunately, there is no collaborating evidence that he was there, so I first Christian kingdom on earth, perhaps as early as 35 or 36 A.D. just a few
can’t say it was even probable, just possible. years after the Crucifixion. After Edessa, some traditions say that St.
Andrew went to the Greek town of Byzantium (later Constantinople) in 36
RTE: How could he have traveled so freely among these vastly different peoples?
A.D. and appointed the first bishop, St. Stachys,3 who was one of the seven-
GEORGE: He was a humble, simple man, and for a simple man nothing is ty disciples of the Lord. Then he preached in Bythinia, Cappadocia and
impossible. If he had been an arrogant European explorer he would never Galatia, up through Greek Pontus, which today is northern Turkey. Then
have trusted these people, he would have found his own way like Pitheas, traditions say he turned to Georgia, Armenia and the Caucuses. This was the
who made a boat and sailed to Greenland from Marseilles. Although he first trip, after which he returned to Jerusalem.
respected their knowledge, Pitheas didn’t fully trust the locals because he

THE SECOND MISSIONARY JOURNEY:


was a Greek and they were barbarians.
You see, my book is a cultural tapestry. It includes the Scythians, the
ancient Scots, early Africa. It is about St. Andrew, but it is also about the world
he moved in: the Slavs, the Pharisees, Epicureans, Stoics, the North Africans,
Jerusalem to Central Asia
the Lapp nomads, the Han Dynasty in China, the Mongols and the Turks. My The second trip was quite different. He followed the same route from
editor told me, “Don’t just write the life of St. Andrew, describe the places he Jerusalem, but after Antioch he took a ship to Ephesus to meet St. John. On
went and the people he would have met.” When I began writing about these the way he touched on Cyprus for a few days, at the Cape of St. Andrew. I’m
places, I found that I had to depict the whole era – how Siberia and Finnish- not sure if he met any Cypriotes, it was only a stopping point for the ship.
Russian Karelia are connected to central Asia, Africa and Scotland – so that a According to Cypriot tradition, because the crew and passengers needed
reader can understand what the world was like at that time. fresh water and this was a desert place, he went ashore and prayed until
water poured forth from a rock.

THE FIRST MISSIONARY JOURNEY:


After Ephesus, he went to Antioch, then to Nicea where he stayed for some
time. From there he went to Pontus again, and to Georgia. From Georgia,
Judea to Constantinople, Pontus, and the Caucauses several traditions say that he passed down to Parthia (Persia) through
Kurdistan, and then further to the Cynocefaloi in the desert of Gedrozia
(now Balochistan) near the coast and the present Pakistan-Iranian border.
RTE: Can you trace St. Andrew’s routes for us?
RTE: Who were the Cynocefaloi?
GEORGE: Yes, according to local tradition, St. Andrew first preached in
Judea to the Samaritans and in Gaza, which at the time of Christ was inhab- 3
St. Stachys, first bishop of Byzantium (later Constantinople), feast day October 31.

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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

GEORGE: This is an extremely interesting subject as these people are men- the cheeks, filed the teeth, cropped the ears, and reshaped the skulls of their
tioned in many early texts. Cynocefaloi translates literally as “the dog-head babies so that they would grow into a very ferocious aspect. All of this was to
people.” They are also spoken of in the Life of Saint Makarios, which locates protect themselves from the constant invasions of the area.
the tribe in a desert far beyond Syria. Tzetzis, a Byzantine historical com- If you go to some sub-Saharan tribes today along the Nile in Rwanda, or
mentator, refers to them as inhabitants of India, of which modern Pakistan along the Amazon, or in New Guinea, the faces of some tribal peoples can
would have been a part. In the Greek Life of St. Christopher (who some frighten you terribly. They systematically mold their faces into something
speculate came from this area), it is said that that he came to the Roman ferocious – the shape of the head, cheeks, teeth…. These people were fero-
world passing through the Persian desert, and Marco Polo mentions them cious in looks, but not ferocious in their ways. They were simply a primitive
as inhabitants of the Indian Ocean. So they could be the same primitive people who needed to protect themselves
tribes that Alexander the Greek found on his way to the sea coast of the According to the Syriac text, when St. Andrew went to these people they
Gedrosian Desert (modern Makran in Pakistan). were transformed into normal human beings. In my opinion this means that
Our main source for the Cynocefaloi is Ktesias (5th century B.C.), a well- after their baptism they simply stopped doing these things. In Deuteronomy
known ancient geographer, pharmacist and historian from Knidos, whose it is forbidden to scar or mutilate the face, so this would have been part of
writings were taken seriously by Byzantine Church fathers, for example by the apostolic heritage that St. Andrew taught to this people.
Patriarch Photius the Great (see his Myriobiblos). In Ktesias’ book The Syriac sources say that when St. Andrew first saw them he was horri-
“Indica,” which St. Photius himself used, there is a whole text dedicated to fied. He panicked and fled back to the shore to jump into the boat, but as he
the Cynocefaloi, “an Indian tribe.” These ancient folk tales (Ethiopian, reached the shore he smelled incense and realized that the Lord Himself had
Slavic, Persian, Arabic, Armenian, Greek etc.) all refer to the dramatic con- guided the boat there. He even questioned God at first, “Why did you bring
tact of Alexander the Great and the Cynocefaloi. me to this place?” (He is a man you know. St. Andrew is a man like all of us,
but he is special.) But when the people came to him, they were kind, they
RTE: This also explains why I’ve seen many old Greek icons of St. Christopher gave him hospitality. They were just fine primitive people, as are many
with a dog’s head. At first I was shocked, it seemed like blasphemy and I tribes in the Amazon today, even those who fight each other.
wondered what on earth the Greeks were thinking. No one was able to We hear of this nowadays from people who have come into contact with
explain it, except that St. Christopher’s life from the Menaion says that he “barbarian” tribes with strange customs, according to our cultures. Because
was so tremendously ferocious-looking that when Emperor Decius saw him, they accept these people, they in turn are accepted by them. In Papua, New
he fell off his throne from fright. Do you think there was a connection? Guinea, in the Amazon, in the jungles of Africa, these people often embrace
westerners who settle and live with them in a matter we can hardly imagine,
GEORGE: Exactly. The sources say that St. Christopher came across the
with real love and tenderness. This happened to the apostles as well. The
Persian Desert. These people lived on the other side of the desert.
real problem for the apostles was when they were in the “civilized” world,
I have my own theory, although this explanation is not in the old texts that
not amongst primitive peoples.
cite these people, because the sources assume the reader is already familiar
So, from this place some sources say that St. Andrew went back through
with the place names and locations. Several sources say that St. Andrew was
Pakistan and Afghanistan on the Silk Road to Sogdiana, now Samarkand
in this northeast region of Pakistan, and we know that there were peoples in
and Bokhara in Uzbekistan, and not far from the border of western China –
this area who slashed their cheeks from mouth to ear, so that all the teeth
“Soh-Yok” in Chinese, which means “the ancient provinces.”
showed. Marco Polo saw this tribe, whom he called the Cynocefaloi. He said
We ask now how he could have possibly gone to Sogdiana, but since arche-
that they looked like mastiffs; that is, they didn’t have elongated heads like
ologists and historians have found the route of the Silk Road, it is obvious
German shepherds with the long nose, but like mastiffs. You can imagine –
that it was very accessible. All of the ancient biographers of his life say that
a mastiff has a round, flat face shaped more like that of a human. They cut

24 25
Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19)

he was in central Asia, but they don’t speak of any adventures in those
places, so this means that either the texts were destroyed or nothing of note
happened. Usually we only write down the difficult or the very miraculous,
so if his visits were peaceful, perhaps the accounts didn’t survive.

RTE: Is Sogdiana anywhere near the Chinese region where they recently
found first-century Christian inscriptions and tombs?

GEORGE: No, those tombs are at the other end of China, but there was pos-
sibly a Chinese disciple of St. Thaddeus of the Seventy, whose name is St.
Aggai in the Syriac tradition. This Aggai is said to have preached in Parthia,
in Sogdiana, and in central Asia: Uzbekistan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iran
and India. He found the tomb of St. Thomas in southern India, and after
venerating the fragrant relics of St. Thomas, he died. His name in the
Chinese sources may have been Wang-Hai – the important thing here is
that according to the sources he was a silk producer and we know that no
one could be a silk producer at that time unless he was Chinese. So, perhaps
St. Aggai was the first Chinese disciple of an apostle of Christ. These newly-
discovered Christian tombs and monuments date from about 75 A.D., so
these really were apostolic times.
There are also traditions from the Yellow Sea, near Shanghai, of St.
Thomas having been in China. This is not physically impossible because the
area where modern-day Kazakhstan borders Mongolia and China was the
cradle of the Huns, the eastern Scythians, and the Sacas. Gundophorus, the
king of India who met St. Thomas, was a Sacan king, and the Sacan empire
was vast, stretching from Siberia to China and India. People knew these
routes, they were well-traveled.
The Proto-Bulgarians who followed the Huns even had a church dedicat-
ed to St. Andrew, although after later invasions they had to be re-
Christianized. Also we have the Hephtalit Huns, a barbaric Turcik tribe who
were the first Christian nation in central Asia (third-fourth century).
It is very important to understand that there are three separate traditions
of St. Andrew’s missionary journeys to western China, eastern-central Asia,
and Kalbin (Khalbinski Hrebet, a mountainous area on the borders of pres-
ent-day Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and Russia.) One of these traditions is from
Kazakhstan, another is Syriac, and the third is from the Bulgars of the
Russian steppes, who migrated through Greece and eventually settled in
Italy, filling their villages with churches dedicated to St. Andrew.

26 Synaxis of All Saints of Karelia, St. Andrew in front.


the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

According to Epiphanius,4 a ninth-century monk historian of


Constantinople, St. Andrew also went north of China, to the land of the
Scythian Massagetae and Masakas (the cradle of the Bulgarians and Turks
at the junction of present day Mongolia, Kazakhstan and Altai), the Proto-
Bulgarian tribes, the Ungric and Trocharians, and also to the mountains of
Kalbin in Altai, Siberia.
The route from Sogdiana to the land of the Massagetae was a route that
Romans, Jews, and Greeks didn’t use. It was a road that the nomadic tribes
used when they collected payments from the Chinese for protecting the Silk
Road. Regional traditions say that St. Andrew was there, and he seems to
have been accepted by these nomads, who were considered to be some of the
most savage people of that time. I don’t think he was treated badly, because
there are no records of misadventures in these places. This was eastern
Scythia, not western Scythia which was Ukraine and Russia, and the
Chinese were very afraid of the eastern Scythians. The Trocharians who
lived here were Nordic, white people with blue eyes, blond hair and red
beards who were living in China and in Mongolia.

RTE: A decade ago I saw people like that a little further north near the
Mongolian border in Altai, Siberia. Along with the Altai who have obvious
Mongol roots, they are a second native ethnic group. The Russians call them
“Turks,” although they know they aren’t from Turkey, to differentiate them
from the Mongolians and Chinese.

GEORGE: Yes, exactly. These people moved up into Altai through Mongolia.
They were from below Kalbin, in northern Asia.

RTE: I was recently told by a woman from the Urals that there is a wide-
spread Siberian tradition that St. Andrew preached as far north as the pres-
ent-day village of Kazanskoe in the Russian Urals, and prophesied that there
would be widespread Christianity there someday. The village has a church
dedicated to him.

4
Hieromonk Epiphanius: Ninth century historian and priestmonk of Moni Kallistraton in Constantinople, who
wrote a life of Saint Andrew: “Epiphanii Monachi et Presbyteri – de Vita et Actibus et Morte Sancti, et Plane
Laudandi, et Primi Vocati Inter Apostolos Andrae” [in P.G. Migne, vol. 120]. He is also the author of the old-
est extant Life of the Theotokos (P.G. Migne, vol. 120.). Epiphanius deeply venerated St. Andrew and tried to
recreate his journeys based on ancient sources. Traveling extensively in the areas St. Andrew was known to
have been, he gathered many local traditions and texts connected with the apostle’s missionary journeys. It was
a magnificent work for his era. Some of his passages concerning the martyrdom of St. Andrew are identical with
the apocryphal “Acts of Andrew,” and it is very likely that he also used Leucius Charinus’ text.

29
Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

GEORGE: Yes, and there are many other Russian traditions about his visit- posedly took the gold for King Solomon, so possibly the Jews, Phonecians, and
ing Altai, Novgorod, Karelia, and Kiev. Arabs knew this road, but not the Greeks or the Romans.
St. Andrew returned from Altai, and, still following the footsteps of local
RTE: Who were the Anthropofagi?
traditions, he would have taken a different route to the Caspian Sea through
the steppes where, according to many early traditions and texts, he GEORGE: According to the Coptic “Acts of St. Andrew and St. Matthias
preached to the Alans. From there he went to Kurdistan, where he was near- (Matthew),” an extremely colorful and fantastic apocryphal story, on his
ly martyred. He escaped, however, and returned to Jerusalem. third missionary journey St. Andrew was commanded, either from heaven
or by the apostles, to go and help St. Matthew because he had been captured

THE THIRD MISSIONARY JOURNEY:


by the Anthropofagi, who were man-eaters, cannibals.

RTE: These traditions say that St. Matthew was captured by cannibals and
Coptic Ethiopian Traditions St. Andrew was sent to rescue him?!

His third missionary journey, if we accept the traditions, began after the GEORGE: Yes, although some traditions say that it was St. Matthias, the
first apostolic synod in 49 A.D. This is the only point time-wise when he majority of the sources think it was St. Matthew because Matthias went to
possibly could have gone to Africa. The sources for the African stories are Georgia, while St. Matthew went to Alexandria and Ethiopia. The Coptic
Ethiopian Coptic traditions, and an apocryphal Greek source, of which we sources are definite on this.
have a revised, edited Latin version by St. Gregory of Tours. If he did go to Some people have suggested that this “land of the man-eaters” referred to
Africa, it was for a special reason, because this was not the place he origi- in many ancient texts, was really in Pontus, in Sinope (today’s northern
nally had been sent to preach. He was to preach in Bythinia, to the Greeks Turkey), but this is not possible. Sinope and Pontus were classical Greece.
and to the eastern Scythians. The only thing they can base this on is that Pausanias, a second-century A.D.
geographer, came upon some isolated Greek inns where they sold dried or
RTE: By “sent to preach” do you mean the tradition that the apostles picked
preserved bits of human organs as medicinal remedies, but this was never a
lots as to where they would go?
social way of being, even in out of the way places.
GEORGE: Yes, but I think it was not only by picking lots that they decided.
RTE: Yes, but how much credence can we put in these apocryphal texts?
They organized a plan, they didn’t all just set out into the wilderness.
Now these Coptic traditions say that he made a trip to the Berber (meaning GEORGE: As I said, from our vantage we can’t look back in history and deter-
“Barbarian”) lands, but we don’t know exactly where this was because the mine if something apocryphal was literally true, was based on something
Berbers were living from the Siwa Oasis in Egypt to Morocco, Mauritania, true that was elaborated on, or is a complete fantasy. There were different
Mali and Niger, and were the ancestors of the present-day Kabyls (the opinions among the Fathers. I believe St. Andrew could have been in Africa,
Turaregs) in Algeria. Perhaps he simply went to a place in modern-day Egypt. and I substantiate this in my book, but remember, my primary task was to
From there, these sources say that he went to the land of the Anthropofagi, take every tradition, without judging the source, and try to discover if he
a very definite place in the area of the Great Lakes on the borders of Tanzania, could have physically traveled there, and, if so, how it fits time-wise and geo-
Uganda, Rwanda and Congo. Because, according to the ancient text, there was graphically with his other journeys. Admittedly, some of these can seem like
a volcano there, I believe that this was Lake Kioga, but this is my own opinion. wild tales to western readers.
Then, the legends say, he made his way to the abyss near Zimbabwe. According There are many early traditions and texts, and not only Orthodox texts.
to research of the last century, the Himyarite Arabs were travelling at that time Even those from heretical traditions like the monophysites may contain cor-
from Yemen to Mozambique to Zimbabwe, the ancient Ofir, where Hiram sup-

30 31
the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

rect historical details. They include propaganda for their teachings that aren’t
right, but these can be revised or ignored. This is why St. Gregory of Tours,
writing in the sixth century, and Hieromonk Epiphanius a monk-historian in
Moni Kallistraton in Constantinople in the fifth, both use the text of Leucius
Charinus, who was somewhat of a Manichean. St. Gregory recounts the trav-
els of St. Andrew in his “Acts of Andrew,” and Epiphanius in Patrologia
Greca. They only corrected the doctrinal errors, and from this we can see that
many of these early traditions were considered valid even by saints.

RTE: Can you explain how you worked with these texts?

GEORGE: It is difficult, as I spend sixty pages of my book tracing the sources


of the African journey, but I will try to give you a synopsis. There are several
minor sources for this tradition and two major ones: the Greek text I just
mentioned of the “Acts of Andrew,” which may have been by Leucius
Charinus, (later cleansed of heresy by St. Gregory of Tours in a Latin version)
and the “Acts of Andrew and Matthias (Matthew)” by a Coptic source.
The original Greek “Acts of Andrew” was condemned by Pope Gelasius in
the Decretum Gelasianum De Libris Recipiendis Et Non Recipiendis, which
was not a synodal decree, but a local condemnation of some apocryphal texts
as a reaction to the falsification of holy tradition that existed in the third and
fourth century amongst heretics. This was before the Chalcedonian Council.
The Decretum, although respected by Orthodox believers has never been a
dogma per se, but it is a serious and enlightened guide, which everyone
should consider as a valuable protection against heresy.
Although it condemns “the Acts in the name of the Apostle Andrew,” and
“the Gospels in the name of Andrew,” (which were possibly the work of a
Manichean gnostic, Leucius Charinus), it does not condemn the Coptic “Acts
of Andrew and Matthias (or Matthew) in the Land of the Anthropofagi” nor
the “Acts of Peter and Andrew” which were of Coptic origin. One might object
that the Coptic texts are also forbidden under the term, “the Acts in the name
of the apostle Andrew” but this reasoning doesn’t match the other cases in
the Decretum where, when we have condemned texts listed as “the acts” of
two people, they are described by both names (e.g. “the book which is called
the ‘Acts of Thecla and Paul,’” “the book which is called ‘The Repentance of
Jamne and Mambre,’” “the Passion of Cyricus and Julitta”).
The Decretum condemns “all the books which Leucius, the disciple of the
devil, made…” but no one insists that the “Acts of Andrew and Matthias (or

St. Andrew’s Spring, Patras. 33


Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19)

Matthew) in the land of the Anthropofagai” and the “Acts of Peter and
Andrew” are the work of Leucius Charinus. On the contrary, most scholars
accept that these texts are the work of an unknown Coptic monk (with the
national, not the religious meaning of Coptic, because this was the pre-
Chalcedonian period). This author could have been a gnostic heretic or
equally, he could have been an Orthodox ascetic of the desert. We don’t
have enough evidence to support either view.
Both the great church historian Eusebius of Caesarea and St. Epiphanius
of Salamis5 also condemned the “Acts of Andrew,” but not “The Acts of
Andrew and Matthias (Matthew) in the Land of Anthropofagi” and the “Acts
of Peter and Andrew.” As far as we know, they didn’t even refer to these texts.
The reason I am even considering material that was originally from this
condemned text is that in the sixth century St. Gregory of Tours corrected the
heretical points in “The Acts of Andrew” by Charinus, publishing a revised
text with the name “Vita and Patio” (Life and Passion of Saint Andrew,)”
which has been generally approved by the Holy Orthodox Church (parts of it
appearing in hymns and services, and in the Synaxarion) as a basis for the
Life of Saint Andrew. In this revision, St. Gregory of Tours accepts that
Apostle Andrew preached to the Anthropofagai in Africa before his trip to
Achaia-Greece. He obviously believed this. His version has never been con-
demned by the Church, and I use it as one of my possible sources.
Neither have the Catholic or Orthodox Churches condemned the Latin
“Golden Legend” of Voragine or the Anglo-Saxon epic poem “Andreas”
(probably of Cynewolf) in which the old story of “The Acts of Andrew and
Matthias (or Matthew) in the land of Andropofagi” re-appears in both a
pious (Voragine), and folkloric (Andreas) form. This does not mean that
they are accepted as historical fact, it just means that they do not contain
heresy. Western scholars view them as legends.
In the Decretum of Pope Gelasius, there are other texts condemned as
well: “the book which is called ‘The Assumption of Holy Mary,’” “the book
which is called the ‘Lots of the Apostles’,” “The Passion of Cyricus and
Julitta,” and so on. If you read these, you find that in many points they are
almost identical to the holy and sacred tradition of our Orthodox Church
minus the heresies. (Compare these texts and the Orthodox Great
Synaxarion). Even the names “Joachim and Anna,” the holy parents of the
5
St. Epiphanius of Salamis, Cyprus (feast day, May 12): Condemned “The Acts of Andrew” and declared in
his Panarion that, amongst other heretics, the Encratites, the Apostolici, and the Origenists used that text.

34 Icon of St. Andrew, Chapel of St. Andrew, Serbian Palace, Belgrade.


the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

Mother of God, are only found in apocryphal texts which have survived from
this early era. This does not mean that we can consider these sources as
completely true or valuable in themselves. Rather, we accept that some of
what is written in them can also exist in our holy Orthodox tradition. We
cannot declare that everything in them is wrong (such as the dormition of
the Mother of God, when the Lord took her body and soul to heaven, the
martyrdom of Apostle Andrew in Patras, the martyrdoms of Cyricus and
Julitta, the tradition that the apostles “drew lots”). In fact, these condemned
sources may have some true historical facts mixed with legends and fairy-
tales, and poisoned by heretical nonsense. The nonsense is what Pope
Gelasius condemned and what St. Gregory cleaned up. Another example of
this borrowing is that Orthodox writers and church fathers have generally
accepted the texts of Tertullian as a valuable historical source, although his
doctrinal errors were also condemned by the Decretum.
There are other sources of this tradition of St. Andrew in Africa as well:
the hymnograpy of some Pre-Chalcedonian churches (e.g. Ethiopians and
Copts) and the synaxarion of the Armenians which says that “Andrew
preached among the cannibals, or in the land of Barbarians (Enivarvaros),
a place identical to Azania according Claudius Ptolemy. As Orthodox, we
cannot ignore this, because it is very likely that these sources come from the
ancient period of the unity of the Churches. If not heretical, they could be an
Orthodox tradition, although this has not yet been confirmed.
There are also non-Christian historical sources saying the same thing –
Arab Islamic texts that say that the Holy Apostle Andrew preached in “the
land of the cannibals, that was a land of the blacks.” These sources are
important because they are not Christian, they come from the early tradi-
tions and memories of the Arabic peoples.
Finally we have to remember that not every apocryphon is a forgery or a leg-
end. Orthodox theologians and fathers have taught us to classify as an apoc-
ryphon those ancient Christian documents of unknown or unreliable validity.
Some are heretical, some are forgeries, others are fantasies and romances.
Some have interesting information that may even seem familiar as they incor-
porate real pre-existing sources (which we no longer have copies of) that are
the basis of some of our Orthodox tradition, hymnography, and iconography.
Not all apocryphal texts have been condemned by the Church. Of those
that haven’t been condemned, our Christians fathers and theologians were
free to express their own opinions. In Orthodox tradition, no human opin-

Georgian St. Andrew. 37


Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

ion is considered infallible. Only our beloved Jesus Christ is infallible, and native St. Plato was the first bishop of the land of the Anthropofagi.
only the Ecumenical Councils declared unmistakable truths. Strangely enough, today the people of this area call the demonic spirits in
this place Amayebe. Also, as a journalist I know that there is now a very
RTE: Thank you, that was very thorough, and you’ve obviously worked hard
strange sect, part of a guerilla force in Congo-Zaire that teaches “we must
to get to the bottom of these sources. Can we go on now to whether St. eat people to receive power,” and they are eating human flesh. The name of
Andrew could have physically gotten to Africa, and what the traditions say the sect is Amayei-Amayei, almost identical to the old name of the demon.
happened there?
RTE: Is there any living tradition of early Christianity in sub-Saharan Africa?
GEORGE: Yes. These traditions say that when St. Andrew left Ethiopia, he
went to the land of the cannibals, and this is not impossible because, GEORGE: There is no memory of St. Andrew’s presence or of early
according to Ptolemy, the land of the Anthropofagi is some distance after Christianity except in Ethiopia. Until recently, most of sub-Saharan Africa
the Prasum Promontory. Prasum was somewhere in the coastal area had no written traditions, and at first I was shy to write that even a small
between Zimbabwe and Tanzania; African historians locate it on Cape group of Bantu fighters have gone back to cannibalism. I thought, “This is
Delgado in modern Mozambique, an ancient place where the Bantu, going to be an insult for the Bantu,” until I realized that many people dur-
Indonesians, Kushites, Arabs and Greeks met to trade. It was a known and ing their history have been cannibals. One doesn’t have to be embarrassed
used route. The land of Anthropofagi is on Ptolemy’s map, and according to that a few Bantu may have turned back to cannibalism; what is important is
many traditions was a place inhabited by a Bantu tribe. to understand that the devil himself is fighting the Bantu people because
According to ancient Greek sources, the Land of the Anthropofagi is only they have a special grace of God. It is natural that they would be attacked,
in one possible place: in sub-Saharan Africa, between modern Rwanda and that the evil one would corrupt the soul’s longing for the body and blood of
Uganda. The Coptic texts also speak of Prasum, Rapta, and “the land where Christ because he wants to keep them away from God – Africans are coming
the Anthropofagi dwell.” Their description of the land and society of the to Christianity by the millions.
Anthropofagi is exactly like that of the Bantu people in Tororo, Uganda near If you go to Orthodox churches of the Bantu you see a faith that is real and
Mt. Elgon and Lake Victoria today, about 300 miles from southern miraculous. In the Orthodox churches of Africa miracles are part of the every-
Ethiopia. We have the exact placement from the text: “between the day life of the people. They have miracles, but they also readily accept things
Mountains of the Moon and the land of Barbaria,” and according to the we cannot, like death and disease, with great faith in the will of God. They have
Coptic text, St. Andrew left from the land of Barbaria to the land of the miracles but they are not seeking miracles; that is the Protestant way. They
Anthropofagi – we even have the ancient longitudes and latitudes of these can accept the non-miracle as a miracle as well, as God’s Providence.
places. In the early Greek and Coptic texts the Land of Anthropofagi was If he indeed went there, St. Andrew could have returned through Ethiopia,
called Mirmadona, and in the Bantu language today, Emere muntu na then taken the road to Meroe, up the Nile and back to Jerusalem, which was
means, “the place where men are food.” a well-known route for the Greeks and Arabs.
At the end of the chronicles, St. Andrew frees St. Matthew and fights with
RTE: Are there also traditions of St. Andrew preaching in Ethiopia?
Amayel, the demon-god of these people. The accounts say he fought with the
devil and with demons in many places, but this demon of the land of the GEORGE: Yes, we have local traditions of him in Ethiopia from Coptic man-
Anthropofagi was so powerful that St. Andrew couldn’t fight him alone, so he uscripts and some early traditions of the Church that are not easily under-
asked God to send Archangel Michael to help him. Archangel Michael came, stood now. For centuries we thought they were just legends, but if you read
they joined forces and Amayel was destroyed. It was such a huge thing that the geographical notes, they precisely describe the kingdoms of Ethiopia at
the narratives say the people stopped their demonic practices and became that time, the Meroitic Kingdoms. But these texts describe them in a way
Christian. According to the Coptic “Acts of Sts. Andrew and Matthias,” the that only Copts can easily understand that this is Ethiopia. For example, in

38 39
Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

America you won’t always say, “San Francisco.” You may say, “the Golden Finally, he went back to Sebastopol (Crimea) to Sinope, and then to Greece
Gate,” or “the Bay Area,” or in the 1950s you could have said, “Frisco.” In and to his end in Patras.
New York you say, “the City.” It is the same with the term “the sacred moun- We can trace his return route on this fourth journey because we have tra-
tains.” Every Ethiopian understands that this was Gebel Barkal, but only if ditions for him during this time in Poland, Byelorussia, and even in
you are Coptic or Ethiopian do you know this. Germany, although this is doubtful. We also have solid traditions for him in
the lands of the Goths, although before the Goths moved into the Ukraine

THE FOURTH MISSIONARY JOURNEY:


they lived in Poland alongside Germanic tribes. Possibly he returned
through modern-day Poland and the tribes that later moved up into
Germany carried the tradition of St. Andrew’s passing with them, but we
To the North can’t say that he was in Germany itself.
After the dormition of the Mother of God, St. Andrew began his final jour- It was on his return south that he settled in Romania for twenty years.
ney from Jerusalem. The trail of tradition says that he went back to Pontus, During that time he traveled in Moldavia and Bulgaria, on the Danube and
then to Georgia, to the Caucuses, and to the Sea of Azov in southern Russia. along the coast of the Black Sea, but mostly he was in and around his cave
From there he went to Donets, to the Crimea, up the Dnepr River to Kiev in Dervent, Dobrogea, in southern Romania.
and to the Scythians of the Ukraine. In the Crimea, where he stayed with the St. Andrew’s Romanian cave is still kept as a holy place and Romanian
Greeks of Sebastopol and Cherson, we know that there were first-century Orthodox have gone there on pilgrimage for almost two thousand years. We
Christian communities organized by St. Andrew himself. From the Crimea also know the locations of other caves he lived in: in Pontus near the Black
and Kiev in the Ukraine, he would have gone north by river to what is now Sea (now Turkey), in Georgia, in Russia, in Romania, and in Loutraki near
Moscow, to Novgorod and then to Lake Ladoga (Valaam). Early written Corinth. It is all him, the same man.
narratives no longer exist, but this is a very likely route because the river RTE: Why did he stay in Romania for so long?
trade from Crimea to northern Russia and Karelia (Lake Ladoga) was com-
mon and relatively easy. Extensive trade from the south is attested to by the GEORGE: I didn’t understand this myself at first, but it appears that he felt
great number of Roman and Byzantine coins found in Valaam and Karelia. very close to the Romanians because they were monotheists. According to
There is also a local tradition that he went to Solovki, and they’ve found Flavius Josephus, their clerics were like Essenes. They were virgins, strict
some very old coins in the Solovki Islands in the White Sea depicting St. vegetarians who didn’t even eat fleshy vegetables, but only seeds and nuts
Andrew, but we can’t claim he was there solely on the basis of finding coins like ascetics in the desert. Dacian society was very free, the women had a
with his image. We can’t completely exclude this legend, because it might good, equal position there, not like Greco-Roman society, and the Dacians
be true, but we have no historical evidence to support it. Conceivably, he didn’t keep slaves. In fact, they were unique in the world at that time because
could have traveled from Valaam to Solovki with the Lapp reindeer herders they didn’t have slaves. According to Romanian traditions and archeological
who moved between Solovki in the summer and the protected shores of findings, the Dacians became Christian under St. Andrew himself in the first
Ladoga in the winter. century. It is natural that he would have felt at home with the Dacian clergy
Although we don’t have extremely early texts, the accounts from Lake and that they would have readily accepted him and converted.
Ladoga and Valaam are not legends, they are tradition. We have an 11th The Ethiopic tradition also describes St. Andrew as a very strict vegetari-
century Russian text and we also have the tradition of Valaam itself. From an. This is possible because, although most of the other apostles were mar-
Valaam it appears that he went to the Baltic Sea (then possibly to Scotland ried, both he and John the Evangelist were virgins. They had been disciples
and back to the Baltic, although, as I said earlier, this is not certain). Then, of St. John the Baptist and followed his hesychast tradition. They were the
through Poland and Slovakia to Romania, where he settled for twenty years. first monks and ascetics of the Christian world. Even in our Orthodox

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the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

hymnography we remember St Andrew as being closely associated with St.


John the Baptist. In Orthodoxy we have choices: we have vegetarian her-
mits, sometimes very strict, living only on bread and water all their lives,
and we also have saintly kings who ate pork and beef.
He was in Romania for twenty years and I think he loved this land more
than anything after being with Christ. I believe that God allowed it as a con-
solation because he had been on such difficult missionary journeys. We have
descriptions of places where he wasn’t welcome, where he was forced to
leave and his despair over this. Things were often very difficult, particularly
when he was in the Slavic lands where human sacrifice was still practiced.
You can imagine, he was tired of living with this, and when he came to the
Dacians, who had no slaves, where men and women were equal, where Jews
and Greeks were accepted in the same manner, and where there were asce-
tic hermit-priests, you can understand how easily he fit in. He was able to
teach, he was happy there. In fact, they thought that the religion he brought
was not only better than theirs, but was a continuation of their old religion.
They saw their native religion as a foreshadowing of Christianity. Twenty
years is a long time, and you can understand why the Romanians remember
more of him than any other tradition.
From Romania there are traditions that he went to Cherson in the Crimea
and from there to Sinope, to Macedonia, and preached a bit in Epirus
(northern Greece and southern Albania). Although we have references from
early texts that he preached in Epirus, we don’t have any local traditions
there. The rest of the sites I’ve quoted are supported by both written texts
and oral tradition.

ST. ANDREW’S MARTYRDOM


From Epirus he went to Thessaly, to Lamia, then to Loutraki-Corinth. His
cave in Loutraki can still be seen. From Corinth he went to Patras where he
stayed a year or two, preaching in the Peloponnese. We also have local tra-
ditions that he went to the small island of Galaxidi, off of the Peloponnese.
Finally, he was martyred at Patras at an extremely old age.
Something else that I understand from these traditions is that it is impos-
sible that St. Andrew was martyred in the times of Nero. We have two Greek
traditions; one placing his martyrdom under Nero, and the other under

Fresco of St. Andrew’s crucifixion, Serbian Palace, Belgrade.


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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

Domitian or at the beginning of Trajan’s rule in the early second century. I RTE: Do you mean strange or unique?
think this last one is right. The Romanian tradition says this also, and if you
GEORGE: Unique, but strange as well. He had a habit of putting up big stone
follow the sources this is what fits.
or iron crosses everywhere. He carried a huge staff with a cross. He was
In St. Gregory of Tours’ version of the “Acts of Andrew,” it says that before
modest, he didn’t make a lot of disciples – just a few, in a few small circles.
his martyrdom, St. Andrew had a dream in which he saw his brother Peter
He didn’t preach to huge crowds like Peter or Paul. St. Andrew gathered
and John the Evangelist in Paradise. He saw them in Paradise before his
small companies, as would a geronda or a staretz.
martyrdom. So, this could be an indirect reference to the fact that St. Peter
Also, he had a sense of humor. For example, some of the sources say that
and St. John had already passed on. St. Epiphanius also says this, as does
when he first saw the saunas of the Slavs in what is now Novgorod he wrote
Pseudo-Abdia, the bishop of Babylon (or the historian who wrote in his
letters to friends saying, “These Slavs are such strange people; they torture
name). If this is so, it places his repose after St. John’s.
themselves with birch branches.” He was laughing about it. You cannot imag-
According to the scriptures, St. Andrew would have been younger than his
ine him as a master of strictness. He was a humorous man, very humble, very
brother Peter, because in the scriptures the name of St. Peter comes first,
easy. As a Mediterranean person he was surprised by these strange traditions.
then Andrew. In the texts of civilized societies, the elder is always men-
Of course, he was also a man who had seen many things. He traveled with
tioned first, then the younger. But then the question arises, if he was
Lapp reindeer herders, with Huns, spoke to Greek philosophers, Russian
younger, why in icons do we depict St. Andrew as much older than Peter, an
merchants, knew Chinese bureaucrats, visited primitive tribes in northern
old man in fact? Even Da Vinci did so in The Last Supper and he had taken
Pakistan and Berbers in the deserts of the Sahara.
his representation from earlier icons. In Sinai, at St. Catherine’s Monastery,
You can understand from this how much he knew and how great his store
where we have some of the earliest icons in existence, St. Andrew is also
of practical wisdom must have been. Not only grace-filled wisdom from the
depicted as old. This is because in iconography we make the icon of the per-
Lord, but his worldly wisdom. Because he was humble, he could speak to all
son as we last saw him, and they remembered the older Andrew.
these people. He was not an invader, he was not an explorer, he lived as one
Only St. John is not depicted as an old man, because he was blessed by
of them. He fished with them, ate with them, farmed with them, traveled
the Lord to “tarry until I come,” but the other apostles are always portrayed
with them – by any means they had – on foot, by canoes or boats, horses,
at the age of their death, as is the Lord Himself.
camels, reindeer, elephants. You can imagine what he must have seen.
The important thing is that because he was humble he shared their expe-
ST. ANDREW, THE MAN AND APOSTLE rience. If you aren’t humble, you cannot share another person’s experience,
you can only report about them, but he was their equal and he gained their
wisdom, and they gained his.
RTE: Tell us now about St. Andrew himself. What have you learned about him?
Apostle Andrew was so modest that he didn’t step forward with the triad
GEORGE: If you compare the traditions from Kurdistan, Valaamo, Ethiopia of Peter, James, and John, although he was the “first-called.” The first-
and Persia, you see the same man. This is very important. You find exactly called, but he never went first. He only went first when he had something to
the same details about his character. I read these different traditions and ask from God. We have three examples of this from the gospels. One was on
say, “Yes, this is him. This is St. Andrew.” After reading many, many texts Holy Thursday when the Lord went to the temple, “there were certain
from all different parts of the world, I have a feeling for what is really him. Greeks among them that came to worship at the feast.” These Greeks came
I feel now if a text is living authority, passed down from people who knew to Philip and asked if they could see Jesus. Philip didn’t know what to do
him or not. He was not a common man, he was strange. with them so he told Andrew, and Andrew took him and went to the Lord.
He was not afraid to face God, and he knew Christ was God, he was the first

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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19)

to understand and follow him. He was also the first missionary, to his
brother Peter. The second time is the miracle of the five loaves and the two
fish. Andrew was the one who went to the Lord and said, “We have this
problem. Aren’t you going to do something?” He was never in the forefront
for himself, but when it was for other people, he demanded help from God.
The third time was in the Gospel of St. Mark, where, with Peter, James, and
John, Andrew asked the Lord about the signs of the end times.
In these old traditions from the second and third century, Andrew was so
humble that he thought everyone he met was Christ Himself – the captain
of the boat, the peddler on the dock. The apostles didn’t have the arrogance
of the Greco-Romans, or even of the Jews. They were very humble people
and could meet both barbarians and Greek philosophers. We know that the
Apostle Andrew was not against Greek philosophy. He liked to speak to
philosophers and he even had as a disciple the Greek mathematician and
philosopher Stratocles, the first bishop of Patras. Stratocles was probably a
former Pythagorean, because the Pythagoreans had connected mathemat-
ics and philosophy with a unique mysticism. This is the secret, I think, to
understanding St. Andrew’s soul, that he was very modest and that he saw
everyone as an icon of Christ.

RTE: Yes. Where else was St. Andrew persecuted?

GEORGE: Coptic tradition says that he was persecuted in the Land of


Anthropofagi (almost the only “uncivilized” place where we know he was
badly treated). He was also persecuted in Kurdistan and Arab legends say that
he died there. If this story is substantially true, I believe that his persecutors
left him for dead, but that his great physical strength allowed him to recover
and he left secretly, perhaps to protect disciples who remained behind.
He was persecuted again in Sinope of Pontus, in Thessalonica, and later
in Chalandritsa near Patras. In Thessalonica, the Roman rulers put him into
the arena with wild animals, but one thing that is very good for my con-
science as a Greek is that during all of his persecutions the local Greeks
defended him. In Thessalonica, a huge uprising stopped the persecution
and the Romans were forced to take him from the arena.
You can explain this persecution in the Greco-Roman world, you know.
The Christian belief was not an easy belief. We can’t understand today what
it meant to put men, women, slaves, nobles, Jews (even Pharisees), barbar-

48 St. Andrew’s Cathedral, Patras.


Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

ians, the sick, educated scholars, and former pagan priests at the same the Byzantine commander-in-chief, Artemius,6 to be put in the Church
table, and even to allow intermarriage between them. It was against the of the Holy Apostles. St. Andrew’s head was left in Patras. This is the
norms of the whole society. same period in which St. Regulus traditionally took a small portion of the
relics to Scotland.
RTE: How old was St. Andrew when he was martyred in Patras? After the sack of Constantinople, the Crusaders took the relics to Amalfi,
GEORGE: From the Romanian traditions, which I take as the most reliable, Italy, but St. Andrew’s head remained in Patras until the 15th century when
he was more than 85, perhaps even 95. We believe he was martyred it was given to the Roman pope by the last rulers of Patras before the
between 95 A.D. and 105 A.D. Because of the dream he had of St. John the Turkish occupation. The Catholic Church returned it to the Orthodox in
Evangelist in heaven, it was perhaps after St. John’s mysterious repose in Patras in 1964, and it is now in the new Orthodox cathedral dedicated to St.
Ephesus (you remember, the Greek tradition says that he was buried alive Andrew, enshrined in a silver mitre. The old cathedral next to it still has the
to his neck and then his body simply disappeared), which would make it 102 older sepulchre although all the relics were removed from it long ago.
or 103 A.D. under Emperor Trajan, not Domitian as is often thought. In His relics were scattered, but there are still a few small pieces in Amalfi. In
fact, there are still folk songs in Romania that speak of a meeting between 1969, the Pope took some to the new Roman Catholic Cathedral of St. Mary
Emperor Trajan and St. Andrew. in Edinburgh. Also, one foot of St. Andrew is enshrined on the island of
St. Andrew is exceptional, someone unique. He allowed himself to be cru- Cephalonia (off the Peloponnese) in St. Andrew’s Monastery and there is a
cified at a very old age. He easily could have avoided death if he had just told small piece of the front of his skull in the Skete of St. Andrew on Mt. Athos.
Maximillia, the Roman proconsul’s wife, to return to her husband. But he The cross of St. Andrew was taken from Greece during the Crusades by the
wouldn’t violate truth, so Aegeates, the proconsul, had him condemned. Duke of Burgandy, and returned to the Orthodox cathedral in Patras in 1968
After he was crucified, a huge Christian crowd marched on Aegeates’ palace from the Church of St. Victor in Marseilles.
and he was forced to order St. Andrew’s reprieve, but the soldiers couldn’t RTE: Perhaps because they are so geographically close, the Greeks and
touch the apostle because St. Andrew himself wouldn’t allow it. Romans seem to have been tied together throughout history. Aren’t there
St. Andrew was against the sovereignty of this world. He was a disciple of descendants of Byzantine Greeks still living in southern Italy? Could they
St. John the Baptist and he refused to compromise. If he had felt that have known St. Andrew?
Aegeates really regretted what he had done, he would have come down from
the cross, but he didn’t want to do a favor for a man who would use his res- GEORGE: Yes. In southern Italy we have both Greeks and descendants of proto-
cue for his own political benefit. He wasn’t a strange man who wanted to die Bulgars from the Russian steppes who came to Greece. There is also a possibil-
on a cross, but what he wanted more was to love Aegeates and to be loved ity that St. Andrew went to Calabria in southern Italy. There is a very old village
by Aegeates in a Christian manner. there called San Andrea, Apostolo D’Ionio, “St. Andrew, Apostle of the Ionian
It was a confrontation with the evil of the time and St. Andrew was fight- Sea.” We have an unusually large number of churches dedicated to St. Andrew
ing the devil himself through this. He did not love martyrdom, he was fight- in this place and it was only two days by boat to southern Italy over the Ionian.
ing for his Christ and that was the most important thing. It is mentioned twice by St. Gregory of Tours, that Stratocles, the first
bishop of Patras and a disciple of St. Andrew, was from Italy. There is also
RTE: What happened to his relics? Weren’t they eventually taken to an old tradition that St. Andrew resurrected people who died in a shipwreck
Constantinople? coming from Italy to see him in Patras. He prayed and they came back to
GEORGE: Yes, they were in Patras for several centuries and then were taken, life. So, there seems to be a good possibility that Stratocles, if not Andrew
along with St. Luke’s relics in Thiva, to Constantinople in 357 by himself, had connections with Calabria.
6
Byzantine Commander-in-chief Artemius: Later Great-Martyr Artemius, martyred in Antioch.

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the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

RTE: You’ve spent time in these villages in southern Italy, haven’t you?

GEORGE: Yes, and this is part of my own story. A close friend of mine,
Antonio Mauro, is from the Greek-speaking region of southern Italy and for
many years was an atheist and far left-wing fighter for human rights. I lived
with him in Bova Marina and we shared many nice times. He was an athe-
ist and I was Orthodox, but we traveled together very often and even covered
the war in Serbia together, me as a journalist and he as a foreign observer.
Several years ago, long before I started this book, we were on our way to
Athens when he said, “Let’s go to Thessalonica instead.” We went to
Thessalonica and he said, “Georgio, what do you think? Do you want to bap-
tize me? Let’s go to Mount Athos.” So we went to Mount Athos and a lot of
strange things happened, like losing the once-a-day bus from Daphne to
Karyes. There was no one else on the road so we had to walk on a very hot,
difficult day. Finally, a man picked us up who had known me when I was the
director of TV news in Cyprus. He was the brother of the hegumen (abbot)
of Vatopedi, and took us to the monastery. The hegumen welcomed us
warmly and when we said that Antonio wanted to be baptized, he told us
that in this monastery there happens to be a monk, Fr. Dimitrios, who cate-
chizes Italians in Italian.
Many things happened at Vatopedi, small miracles, but the most impor-
tant of them was that after his baptism Antonio went to his room to lay
down. In the meantime, as his godfather, I went downstairs to buy him a
small gift. I wanted to give him an icon of St. Anthony, but the man said,
“We don’t have St. Anthony, take St. Andrew.” So I bought St. Andrew, and
when I came back I saw Antonio looking sick, and I said, “What happened?”
He said, “Nothing.” I gave him the icon and when he saw it he began to cry.
He told me, “I’ve just seen this man in front of me on the wall, alive, and he
told me, ‘Antonio, you must fight,’ and I said to him, ‘My father, I’ve been
fighting all my life.’ Then he said again, ‘You must be strong and fight.’” You
see, Antonio didn’t know if he would do alright after being baptized. He was
feeling very good but he had some doubts. When he saw the figure on the
wall, he thought it was his imagination, but then he saw the icon, exactly the
same image, and he knew that something incredible had happened.
Later, I bought a small piece of land in Bova Marina and once, when
Antonio was working there, he saw St. Andrew with a huge staff. He didn’t
know that St. Andrew carried a staff, but all of the traditions speak of him as

St. Andrew's cross, Patras.


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Road to Emmaus Vol. V, No. 4 (#19) the astonishing missionary journeys of the apostle andrew

carrying a great staff. He only saw him for a few moments, but he was Valaamo to tell him about the dream, the monks told me that he had recent-
shocked because it was the living image of the same person he had seen on ly left for the Skete of St. Andrew on Mt. Athos!
the wall. When I came, he told me the story.
RTE: Wonderful. What do the early sources say St. Andrew looked like?
A little later, by chance, I bought a book about the local history of Bova
Marina. We were amazed when we read there that several centuries ago GEORGE: In all the world traditions, and in the book by Max Bonnet7, who
Catholics had taken small pieces of relics of St. Andrew from the Orthodox did a commentary on the “Acts of Andrew” by St. Gregory of Tours, he is
Church of Bova and thrown them into the fields. (We had no idea that St. described as being very tall, a bit stooped, with bushy eyebrows that meet
Andrew’s relics had ever been there.) The Catholics did this because St. over a large nose, curly hair and a beard that is mixed black and grey and
Andrew is the patron saint of Constantinople and they wanted to cut the ties which separates into two parts at the bottom. In her dream, my relative saw
between Constantinople and this Greek-speaking area of southern Italy so him with blue eyes, short-necked and very, very strong. We know he would
that people would become Catholic. No one knows where they threw the have had to have been strong because he traveled and lived in very
relics. It could have been in any of the fields around the village. difficult places. He went from -40 C. in Valaamo and the Caucuses to +50 C.
in the deserts of the Middle East and Central Asia. You can imagine what
RTE: Perhaps it was even your own field.
kind of a man he was. You can even see this in his martyrdom. He was cru-
GEORGE: Yes, perhaps. Only God knows. cified for three days, but still couldn’t die, although he was very old.

RTE: Do you feel close to St. Andrew? RTE: How has your feeling for St. Andrew changed since you began writing
about his journeys, and how has the book changed you?
GEORGE: Sometimes he is very close. I often have impressions to look up
things I would never have thought of on my own, and almost always find GEORGE: I’m still a sinner. Nothing can change me. I’m just very happy that
missing pieces or new evidence. I’m writing this book and I’m also very shy about it. I want to write it and at
As I was researching this book a very close relative of mine had a dream the same time I want to avoid writing it, because this is a high obligation and
in which she saw a monk we know from Valaamo Monastery in Finland with I’m afraid. It’s something I am obliged to do, and when it’s finished I will
the abbot of Valaamo. My relative was surprised because the abbot of leave it quickly because it’s too much for me.
Valaamo in her dream was a very different man from Igumen Sergei. He
RTE: Like Peter saying, “Lord, let us put up three tents.”
was a big man with a large nose, very tall. I had been working on the book,
but had told her nothing about St. Andrew’s looks, but the man in her GEORGE: Yes, like this. I’ve been thrilled by St. Andrew’s life. He was so
dream fit precisely with the descriptions of the apostle in all the early tradi- humble, so completely unimportant socially, but he was the first man on
tions. The most incredible thing, though, is that in her dream this man was earth called by Christ Himself to be His disciple. What was it that the Divine
the abbot of Valaamo, but she saw him in Sebastopol of the Crimea (the eyes saw in his soul? He had an exceptional soul because God Himself came
ancient Cherson) and she knew (as you know things in dreams) that he was to him. If Mother Mary is for the women, then St. Andrew is for the men.
also the Metropolitan of Thrace. What she had no idea of at the time was
that St. Andrew was the enlightener of Thrace, that he had been in
Sebastopol-Cherson, and you might say that he was the abbot of Valaamo
because he first brought Christianity there.
Of course, all of this could be coincidence, but the thing that makes me
believe this was more than a dream is that when I called our monk-friend in
7
M. Bonnet, Monumenta Germaniac Historica, Greg. Turon. II, pgs. 821-47

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