Veiled in Grace: A Pilgrim’s Transformation at St. Olga’s Glorification

At the glorification of Saint Olga in Kwethluk, a 72-year-old Matushka from Pennsylvania, who once resisted head coverings, felt a gentle prompting to wear a lace scarf, experiencing profound grace and peace. This transformative moment led her to adopt the practice permanently, feeling a deep connection to Saint Olga’s modesty and love.
KWETHLUK, AK — At the glorification of Saint Olga in Kwethluk, a quiet miracle unfolded for a 72-year-old Matushka from Pennsylvania. A lifelong Orthodox Christian, she had long resisted wearing a head covering in worship, shaped by the cultural norms of the 1960s and 70s when the practice faded in many Orthodox Church in America parishes. While she respectfully donned a scarf when visiting sacred sites abroad, it remained a gesture of courtesy, not a personal conviction.
Preparing for her pilgrimage to Alaska, she packed a simple black kerchief to honor local traditions. In Kwethluk’s Church of Saint Nicholas, where Saint Olga’s relics rested, adorned with her traditional qap’ek, church veil, and wedding veil, the Matushka felt a gentle prompting. She chose a lace scarf from a table of devotional items and placed it over her head. “It wasn’t obedience. It was love and awe,” she later wrote to the Archbishop of Alaska, describing the profound peace that enveloped her.
Back home, intending to wear the scarf once to share her experience, she found the same grace return as she entered her parish church. “Something beautiful was awakened in me,” she said, noting a deepened focus in prayer and a newfound kinship with Saint Olga, an icon of modesty and maternal love. Resolved to cover her head in worship, she embraced this change not as obligation, but as a sacred connection to grace.
Read the full story at the Diocese of Alaska's website.
