From the Soviet Army to the
priesthood: faith in the shadow of the regime
Vitor Pogrebnii as an officer in the Soviet Army |
"As a boy I felt the goal of my life was to become a
priest”. This is how the conversation with Victor Pogrebnii begins. He did
become a priest: he was ordained seven years ago, in Kyiv (Ukraine), on 7
January 2012. By that time, he was already 66 years old and a grandfather, and had
spent most of his life as a soldier in the Soviet Army.
By Cesare Lodeserto
Fr Victor's story begins in the village of Slobozia-Rascov,
in the heart of Transnistria, a territory still disputed with the Republic of
Moldova, which claimed jurisdiction following the collapse of the Soviet Union.
This small village has produced many Catholic priests and a
Bishop, thanks to its lively Catholic community, which included the young
Victor. A community that was not afraid to witness to the faith, to the point
of building a church without authorization. It was the 1970’s, and the
communist regime controlled everything.
Choosing the military without losing the Faith
Victor's dream of becoming a priest was shattered the day he
was recruited to serve in the Soviet navy. He felt he was leaving
Slobozia-Rascov forever. After completing his regular period of military
service, Victor continued to rise in the ranks, becoming an officer and later
attending military school in Kaliningrad.
Far from his village, and the seminary that continued to be
his heart’s desire, Victor’s life took a radical turn. This is how he describes
it: "I had not lost my faith and preserved everything my parents taught
me, but now I had embarked on a military career; I was respected and had
responsibilities. My life had changed and I had met a fine girl, who I married
in 1970. I was before the altar, but promising to be a good husband”.
Victor in the Soviet
Navy
Reported for possessing a copy of the Gospels
Fr Victor tells how difficult it was to live his faith under
the suspicious eyes of the communist regime, and within the strict structure of
the military. "There was a bad moment when I was serving at a military
facility at the North Pole and my superiors found a copy of the Gospels on me.
Then again, when the police discovered I was helping to build a church in
Slobozia-Rascov. They reported me to the superiors and interrogated me.
Whenever I could, I attended a Catholic church that stood opposite the KGB offices.
I had to be careful not to be seen. I was a clandestine Catholic, hidden and
afraid. I tried to find out if there were any other Catholics among my
companions, but I couldn’t reveal myself".
A happy family life
"My life was taking shape”, continues Fr Victor. “I
loved my wife. Two children were born to us, then they got married and I became
a grandfather, gifted with three grandchildren. I also had the joy of following
the path of my brother, who became a priest”.
Victor with his wife
and first child
Free to live the Faith
When the communist regime collapsed, Victor's life reached
another turning point: he could practice his beliefs freely, and educate his
children in the Christian faith without fear.
After a successful military career, he eventually went on
pension, living quietly with his family, enjoying his children and
grandchildren. In 2008, his wife died and Victor found himself alone. He
started thinking again about his childhood goal of becoming a priest. It was a
vocation that had never left him. The Bishop of Kyiv welcomed him to the
seminary that same year.
Four years later, on 7 January 2012, Victor was again before
the altar of the Lord, but this time to receive his priestly ordination,
surrounded by family members and his younger brother, who had already been a
priest for several years.
Fr Victor (center)
concelebrating in the Cathedral of Chişinău
"I cannot describe the emotion of that moment”, says Fr
Victor, recalling the connections with his faith when he was young and part of
the community of Slobozia-Rascov.
“At the same time I was thinking of my wife and the fact
that she was certainly happy, up there in heaven, with my new choice”, he
continues. “Before starting my formation at the seminary, I wanted to hear what
my children thought about my choice. I found them wonderfully understanding.
They made me even more convinced of my choice, which did not erase my past as a
husband and father, but made possible a vocation that had to wait for the right
time, and go through the difficult test of a rigid regime".
After ordaining him a priest, the Bishop of Kyiv placed
Victor in a parish, so he returned to being a father, with just a more extended
family, and with responsibilities that saw him dedicate himself to the
communities entrusted to him.
A new community in Crimea
But challenging times were not over yet. The fact he had
been a Soviet soldier and a Russian citizen meant that Victor could not remain
in Ukraine, especially at a time when Russia's relations with Ukraine were
particularly tense. So, Fr Victor left for Crimea and the Bishop of Odessa
placed him in a parish in Sinferopoli, where he could continue to serve in
another community.
Fr Victor Pogrebnii
(3rd from left) with other priests
Returning home
In 2019, Fr Victor turned 73 years of age. He had left his
heart in his native village of Slobozia-Rascov, and longed to return there. He
contacted the Bishop of Chisinau, Anton Cosa, and asked him to evaluate the
possibility of his going back to the land of his family and his origins.
"I was moved by the story of this priest,” says Bishop
Anton Cosa, “and by his desire to return to the village of Slobozia-Rascov, and
his community. I invited him to meet and talk, and to introduce him to the
clergy of my Diocese. I discovered a man tried by his long and painful history,
but happy to give himself, and to bear witness to his experience as a priest.
He arrived with few belongings, with the essential spirit of the military, but
with the great and helpful heart of the priest and the father".
Fr Victor Pogrebnii
with the Bishop of Chişinău, Anton Cosa
Surprised by the Lord
One of the first things Fr Victor did, after arriving in Chişinău,
Moldova, was to visit the grave of his parents in Slobozia-Rascov. It was an
emotional return. It meant putting together the pieces of a life that had begun
in this community, the source of his vocation, and the start of his earthly
pilgrimage – one that had brought him full circle.
Fr Victor glances through a series of photographs of himself
as both a soldier and as a priest. If we are to live a true life of faith, he
concludes, we must allow ourselves to be “surprised by the Lord”. “I would
never have thought I could become a priest,” he says.
“But it's true: God listens to the prayer of the poor man.
My prayer."
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