Life at Betania under Soviet Rule
During the Soviet years the survival of Betania as a working monastery was precarious. The accounts relate that it was shielded by sympathizers within the Soviet administration, who justified its continued existence by designating it a cultural monument. To maintain the community, Ioane oversaw the monastery's agricultural work, and the tradition remembers him for his warmth toward visitors and children, to whom he would distribute sweets on feast days.
His labours at Betania were shared with Father Giorgi-Ioane (Mkheidze), and the closeness of their common life gave rise to the description of the two as 'one soul in two bodies.' The tradition attributes to Ioane gifts of prophecy and healing, and a strict ascetic discipline, including sleeping on a single board and passing whole nights in prayer. Among the accounts is his reception of the young Irakli Ghudushauri, later Catholicos-Patriarch Ilia II, whom he is said to have blessed with tears of joy.