Monasteres
russes et Saints Romanov
Topic: Books
Daniela Asaro Romanoff presents
Monastères russes et Saints Romanov. 400e
anniversaire : 1613 - 2013. Mikhail Romanov
a été élu par une assemblée populaire.
Her new book is filled with religious
references, presenting the reader with a
better understanding of the identity of
Russia. She writes about the importance of
monasteries and the development of
Christianity in Russia, in the early
seventeenth century, and emphasizes the
relationship between Leibniz and Peter the
Great, as well as the Holy Alliance.
Daniela Asaro Romanoff wants to remove many
of the prejudices that exist about Russia to
this day, and bring out the spirituality
that is always present, she says, in this
country. She thinks it is important to
publish this book, even 400 years after the
crowning of Russia’s first tsar, in order
that the history of Russia is not lost to
oblivion.
“I
wrote Monastères russes et Saints
Romanov in order to make people
understand the deep religiosity of the
Romanovs and the good governance of the
Rurik and Romanov dynasties, so vilified by
the Soviet superstructure, but the Soviets
were not Russians .…we are tired of
defamation and suffering,” says Romanoff.
The
132-page book is written in French only, it
contains the essays of Nektarios Serfes,
Archimandrite in Boise, Idaho. He writes
about the sanctity of Nicholas II and his
good ideals, some that many years after his
murder also inspired the creation of the
United Nations.
This
book also contains the honest essays of
Sviatoslav Manoilov, professor of Philosophy
at the University of Sofia in Bulgaria. The
professor helps the reader understand how
the Holy Alliance, designed by Alexander I,
was the best treaty for a united Europe and
for a better world. The cover painting was
made by Nina Romanoff, an elderly Russian
lady, who suffered a lot during the
occupation.
For
more information or to order a copy of this
book, please refer to the publisher's web
site at the following link;
Editions Edilivre
© Daniela
Asaro Romanoff. 22 September, 2013