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ENLARGE — Website: SDHM.ru
Location of the 200th
Anniversary
Celebration
of Freedom of Religion for Molokane —
1805-2005
New Center: Union of Spiritual Christians —
Molokans |
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The world-wide Molokan
Center was built near the city of Stavropol', in the
town of Kochubeevskoe. The building was modeled after the 2-story Molokan prayer building in San Francisco, California, from plans drawn by architect Peter Kostrikin, assistant presbyter in SF (who died Aug 2005). |
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View from top of nearby apartment. Workshops are on left, caretaker's home is in front of church. Dotted line in background is the highway bridge railing. |
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Maps: Kochubeevskoe is |
Sign at top of stairs, center entry. |
Looking north-east. |
Looking east at head presbyter Vasili Tim. Schetinkin in main hall. Pipes along the wall are for winter heating. |
Looking south-west, from opposite corner of above. The brown pipes are for natural gas, which are often above ground. |
Open-House Ceremonies — August 1997 | |
Note the camera man at center-left, video-taping the entire event. |
A dozen presbyters lined the head table with the city and province leaders. |
The Kochubeevskoe congregation offers their prayer of thanks. Most in the front row are wearing clothes donated by American Molokane and Dukhizhizniki |
Starting 3rd from left: American Elder Presbyter Fred Kappsof from San Francisco, California; Stavropol' administrator (tallest); then Elder Pete Wm. Loskutoff, San Francisco. |
Head presbyter Schetinkin and family ask for forgiveness and blessings. |
Final prayer with all presbyters. |
Day After Open-House — August 1997 | |
Guest presbyter Fred Kappsof from San Francisco speaking on Sunday after the open house. |
Guests from California at Sunday meal. |
Youth on steps. The older girls, wearing scarfs, were helping cleanup (below). |
Guests who wanted their photo taken for you to see. 3 presbyters are seated in the center row. |
Girls washing mop rags outside. |
Elder presbyter Kharitonov and wife from Melitopol, Zaparozhe province, Ukraine. He helped host the 1992 International Molokan Convention. |
Samovars fired with scraps in front of woodshop. |
Large pot for soup on the "outdoor" stove. |
Decoration wall towels in basement prayer house, also seen above. |
Looking south. Caretaker family lives in this house at the Center to guard prayer house and shops. Brick factory is in back. |
Woodshop interior. Here all the doors, windows, stairs and floor planks were made with table saws, lathes and hand tools. The shop sold finished lumber and wood items to the public, providing a few jobs for Molokan refugees. It is now used as a classroom and dormitory for guests. |
Brick factory interior. Here bricks to build the shops, house and church were made. Cement is mixed, poured into the form (front) and vibrated. The form is pulled outside where the wet bricks are dropped on a slab (below) to cure. The factory sold rough brick to the public, providing a few jobs for Molokan refugees. It was used as a classroom and dormitory for guests, and by 2013 converted into a museum. |
Looking east. Customer picking up bricks on drying slab. Caretaker house on left, factory on right. Many buildings are made with large reinforced concrete slabs called "plates" (behind tractor) which are positioned and welded together. |