St. Matrona of Moscow (Matrona Dmitrievna Nikonova) was a blind and, from young adulthood, bedridden Russian peasant woman widely venerated for her gifts of spiritual sight, counsel, and healing. Born in the village of Sebino in Tula Province around 1881, she was the fourth child of the impoverished peasants Dmitry Ioannovich and Natalia Nikitichna Nikonov.
She was born completely blind, with her eyelids closed over empty sockets, and bore a cross-shaped raised birthmark on her chest, which her mother understood as a divine sign. By the age of seven or eight she was already reported to display prophetic and healing gifts, and she kept spiritual disciplines such as fasting on Wednesdays and Fridays. At about seventeen she permanently lost the use of her legs and remained immobile for the rest of her life — approximately fifty years.
After the upheavals following the 1917 Revolution she eventually settled in Moscow, where for decades she received and counselled a steady stream of visitors despite Soviet persecution of believers. She is venerated affectionately as 'Matronushka', and her shrine at the Pokrovsky (Intercession) Convent is among the most-visited in Russia.