Journey to Freedom
By (Author) Archpriest Sergei Ovsiannikov
Translated by Richard Pevear
Translated by Larissa Volokhonsky
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Continuum
4th May 2021
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Spirituality and religious experience
Orthodox and Oriental Orthodox Churches
Memoirs
281.9092
Hardback
288
Width 142mm, Height 218mm, Spine 28mm
360g
Whilst serving in the Soviet army in 1973, Sergei Oviannikov was arrested and imprisoned for acts of disobedience under military command. It was while in prison, like Solzhenitsyn and Dostoevsky, that he began to ponder deeper issues and on release trained to be a Russian Orthodox priest. This extraordinary but short book is about his search for true freedom. The issues he wrestles with are profound and, like any confrontation with truth, it caused him great anguish and pain. As Oviannikov wrote: 'It was in my prison cell that I lost fear. I realised that if they sent me to a labour camp with a long sentence, it did not matter because I was free. Of course subsequently I came to realise that Freedom is not given, you have to take responsibility for it.' It was during this time that he discovered Christianity and decided that this was the real meaning of his life. Later, after a spell as head of the Russian Orthodox community in London, Oviannikov lived for the last twenty years of his life in Amsterdam in charge of the Russian Orthodox community. Drawing heavily on Tolstoy, Dostoevsky and Pushkin and now translated from the original Russian with an introduction by Rowan Williams, himself a Russian scholar, this brief spiritual book is a small masterpiece of its kind.
This is an ideal book for our current Covid-19 world where so many of us have been forced to lead lives of solitude. * The Pastoral Review *
Sergei Oviannikov was a priest of the Russian Orthodox Church. He lived for a number of years in London and subsequently in Amsterdam. He died in 2019.