Difference between revisions of "Nickel, Abraham D. (1887-1935)"
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In 1923 Nickel became ill with inflammatory rheumatism, which crippled both feet. At first he was able to move about with crutches, but later he had to be carried to church in a chair. In this way he served his church until the end. Deprived of all rights and means of subsistence by the Soviet government, he and his family suffered severe hunger. In 1935 he escaped to the [[Caucasus|Caucasus]] with the aid of some friends and found a place of refuge in the village of Sablya near Dolinovka. There he developed an intestinal cancer and died on 3 June 1935. | In 1923 Nickel became ill with inflammatory rheumatism, which crippled both feet. At first he was able to move about with crutches, but later he had to be carried to church in a chair. In this way he served his church until the end. Deprived of all rights and means of subsistence by the Soviet government, he and his family suffered severe hunger. In 1935 he escaped to the [[Caucasus|Caucasus]] with the aid of some friends and found a place of refuge in the village of Sablya near Dolinovka. There he developed an intestinal cancer and died on 3 June 1935. | ||
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Latest revision as of 18:52, 20 August 2013
Abraham D. Nickel, an elder of the Mennonites of Russia, was born 29 October 1887 in Steinfeld, a village in the Gnadenfeld district of Taurida, South Russia, the fifth child of David D. Nickel and Margaretha Dück of Grossweide. His father was the teacher of the village school in Steinfeld, and was later the elder of the Rudnerweide Mennonite Church. He was educated in the Zentralschule in Gnadenfeld, and the teacher-training courses at Halbstadt, and in his 18th year became a teacher, an office he held for 14 years. On 22 May 1906 he was baptized by his father upon the confession of his faith. In 1912 he married Katherina Käthler of Ebenfeld in South Russia. They had seven children. During World War I he was drafted to serve the state as bookkeeper of a medical corps.
In 1922 Nickel was chosen by his congregation to the ministry and in 1927 to the eldership, and was ordained by his father, whom he succeeded. In 1924 he moved to Grossweide, the neighbor village to Rudnerweide, where the church was located, and from here he served the congregation as its last elder. In 1934 the church was closed and taken over as a clubhouse by the Soviet government. Then all religious services were forbidden and he in consequence had to leave his church work in January 1935. At that time the Rudnerweide congregation ceased to exist. The shepherd was overpowered and the flock scattered.
In 1923 Nickel became ill with inflammatory rheumatism, which crippled both feet. At first he was able to move about with crutches, but later he had to be carried to church in a chair. In this way he served his church until the end. Deprived of all rights and means of subsistence by the Soviet government, he and his family suffered severe hunger. In 1935 he escaped to the Caucasus with the aid of some friends and found a place of refuge in the village of Sablya near Dolinovka. There he developed an intestinal cancer and died on 3 June 1935.
Author(s) | J. D Nickel |
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Date Published | 1957 |
Cite This Article
MLA style
Nickel, J. D. "Nickel, Abraham D. (1887-1935)." Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. 1957. Web. 25 Nov 2024. https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Nickel,_Abraham_D._(1887-1935)&oldid=76300.
APA style
Nickel, J. D. (1957). Nickel, Abraham D. (1887-1935). Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. Retrieved 25 November 2024, from https://gameo.org/index.php?title=Nickel,_Abraham_D._(1887-1935)&oldid=76300.
Adapted by permission of Herald Press, Harrisonburg, Virginia, from Mennonite Encyclopedia, Vol. 3, p. 869. All rights reserved.
©1996-2024 by the Global Anabaptist Mennonite Encyclopedia Online. All rights reserved.