Saint Heraclius of Bessarabia was a Romanian monastic, hieromonk, and confessor of the twentieth century who endured the persecutions of the Soviet and communist periods. Born Ioan Flocea on May 11, 1893, in Pojorata, in the Campulung Moldovenesc region of Bukovina, he was the eldest of a large family of peasant parents, Ignat and Elisabeta Flocea. By tradition he resolved to enter the monastic life after being severely wounded in the First World War, into which he had been drafted in 1914.
In 1917 he went to Bessarabia and entered the Harbovat Monastery in the Calarasi district. After a period of testing he was tonsured a monk in 1920 and given the name Heraclius; he was later ordained hierodeacon in 1926 and hieromonk in 1928. Sources describe him as one of the most active Romanian missionaries of the interwar period, and remember him as a preacher and spiritual father knowledgeable in several languages and a translator of edifying texts. He was appointed a diocesan vicar in 1940 and served the monasteries of the Archdiocese of Chisinau in the early 1940s before being assigned as a parish priest.
Arrested in 1945, Heraclius was sentenced to eight years of imprisonment in Soviet labour camps, which he endured as a confessor of the faith before his release in 1953. He spent his remaining years in Bessarabian monastic communities and reposed in 1964 in the village of Chitcani. His relics were later reported to be myrrh-streaming. The Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church numbered him among the saints by a synodal decree of 2025, with his commemoration fixed on August 3.