Dmitry Grigorieff

Archpriest Dmitry Grigorieff (May 14, 1919 – December 8, 2007) was the dean emeritus of the Saint Nicholas Russian Orthodox Cathedral of Washington D.C..[1] Grigorieff was also an academic scholar and was a retired Professor of Russian language and literature at Georgetown University.[1]

Early life

Dmitry Grigorieff was born in London in 1919.[1] His father, Dmitry Dmitrievich Grigorieff, was the governor of Sakhalin and also served on the Central Board of the Russian Red Cross.[1] The family had fled Russia in 1918 during the Russian Revolution.[1] They first fled to Riga, Latvia, and then to London, where Grigorieff was born.[1]

The Grigorieffs moved to Japan in the early 1920s.[1] Dmitry Grigorieff was baptized at St. Nicholas Church in Tokyo.[1] The family returned to Riga after the end of the Russian Civil War where Grigorieff began studying at the Orthodox Theological Institute.[1]

Dmitry Grigorieff, who was a British citizen, left Riga and moved to Australia during World War II.[1] He served in the British Merchant Marines in the Pacific from 1943 to 1944.[1] He moved to New York City in 1945, where he worked in the British Office of War Information.[1]

Grigorieff earned a master's degree in linguistics and comparative literature from Yale University in 1948.[1] He later received a doctorate in Slavic studies from the University of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia in 1958[1] and a diploma in theology from St. Vladimir's Orthodox Theological Seminary in New York City.[1]

Academic career

Grigorieff, who was a Fyodor Dostoevsky scholar, taught Russian language and literature at Georgetown University from 1959 until 1989.[1] Additionally, he also taught at the Army Language School in Monterey, California, as a Russian language professor and at Columbia University in Manhattan.[1]

Priesthood

Grigorieff was formally ordained a Russian Orthodox priest at St. Nicholas Cathedral in Washington D.C. in 1969 at the age of 50.[1] He was designated as the cathedral's second priest at the time.[1] He introduced English language services to the cathedral during the 1970s and was appointed dean in 1986.[1] Grigorieff was given the title of dean emeritus in 1998.[1]

He continued to publish books, in both English and Russian, on the topics of linguistics and religion. His most recent work was "Dostoevsky and the Church," which was published in 2002 in Moscow.[1]

Grigorieff was awarded the Order of St. Innocent by Patriarch Aleksy II of the Russian Orthodox Church of Moscow.[1] This marked the first time that the order had been awarded to a priest in the United States.[1]

Death

Father Dmitry Grigorieff died of cardiac arrest on December 8, 2007, at Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington D.C. at the age of 89.[1] His wife, Galina Grigorieff, had died in 1998.[1] Father Grigorieff was a resident of Bethesda, Maryland.[1]

gollark: Now, part of that is probably that you can't really trust whoever is asking to use those resources properly, and that's fair. But there are now things for comparing the effectiveness of different charities and whatnot.
gollark: But if you ask "hey, random person, would you be willing to give up some amount of money/resources/etc to stop people dying of malaria", people will just mostly say no.
gollark: If you *ask* someone "hey, random person, would you like people in Africa to not die of malaria", they will obviously say yes. Abstractly speaking, people don't want people elsewhere to die of malaria.
gollark: Capitalism is why we have a massively effective (okay, mostly, some things are bad and need fixing, like intellectual property) economic engine here which can produce tons of stuff people want. But people *do not care* about diverting that to help faraway people they can't see.
gollark: Helping people elsewhere does mean somewhat fewer resources available here, and broadly speaking people do not actually want to make that tradeoff.

References

  1. Holley, Joe (2007-12-14). "Dmitry Grigorieff, Scholar And Orthodox Priest". Washington Post. Retrieved 2008-01-26.
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