A presentation at the
two-day conference held in Athens on 11-12 December 1999 entitled ‘The
Athoniada Academy: 250 years since its establishment’.
A monk’s ascetic life is experienced in three different ways.
The first has to do with the hesychastic
life like the one Saint Anthony (late 3rd – early 4th c.) pioneered.
According to this way of life, the ascetic lives totally isolated,
practicing fasting, all-night vigils and prayer in order to communicate
with the ‘divine’, intentionally cutting himself off from people.
However, he assists everyone with his prayers, something which verifies
his friendship with the Lord.
The second way is a mild form of the hesychastic life, where three to six people live in an ascetic setting, assisting each other and other people with their prayers; they also have some limited ability to offer hospitality. This is the so-called life in a skete or cells.
The third way of the monastic experience
is the one which takes place in small or large coenobia, numbering
twenty at the Holy Mountain.
One such monastery is the Holy Great
Monastery of Vatopaidi. It is traditionally believed to have been
established by Theodosius the Great and his son, Arcadius. By the end of
the tenth century, manuscripts have been found which are signed by the
first Abbot, Saint Nicholas.
The visitor to the monastery will be
able to follow the traces which ten centuries have left on the byzantine
and post-byzantine architecture, on the frescoes, the sculptures, the
rare icons and the wall paintings, the unique to the Holy Mountain
byzantine mosaics, the brocades, small sculptures as well as on
exquisite manuscripts.
The various everyday activities are
wonderfully depicted in more than 350,000 manuscripts. These are
byzantine and post-byzantine, Modern Greek, Slavonic and Turkish and
refer to emperors, rulers, patriarchs and head priests as well as to
everyday mundane needs.
In the monasteries monks spend a great
deal of time in liturgies; that is, in prayer. They spend less time in
diakonia, namely working. It is traditional that the monasteries offer
hospitality to most visitors/ worshipers who arrive at the Holy
Mountain. The various emperors used to describe Vatopaidi as a
‘populous’ monastery because it had many monks who lived inside the
compound but also in Sketes and cells and in other nearby hesychastic
places.
Many, renowned personalities used to
visit the monastery and offer gifts, as it is manifested in the various
documents, inscriptions and relics. Despite the monastery booming in art
and culture, it managed to preserve its traditional hesychastic way of
life. Even during the 14th century, regarded as the golden age of art,
various personalities live inside and outside the monastery like St
Gregory Palamas, St Filotheos Kokkinos, who was the Elder of St
Nicodemus the Hesychast, and later on became Patriarch of
Constantinople, and St Sava, the ‘dia Christon salos’ (‘full for
Christ’). In those days, orthodox theology has developed enormously
because these monks had acquired the divine illumination and the
experience of deification through their orthodox monastic practice. In
addition, since they were scholars, they also had the skill to convey
their experiences in writing.
Earlier, Emperor St Symeon and his son,
St Savva, who became the first archbishop and the enlightener of Serbia,
were tonsured and lived at Vatopaidi. Similarly many people belonging
to the renowned families of Palaiologos and Kantakouzinos became monks.
As a result, from the time the monastery
was established up to a century before the fall of Constantinople to
the Turks, Emperors offered plenty of gifts to Vatopaidi. The Serb
rulers have also remained benefactors. Pious aristocrats have always
shown a preference for Vatopaidi, e.g. the high ranking militia men
Georghios Astras in 1359, Manassis Tarhaniotis and Alexios Laskaris.
By the turbulent 1420s, ties with high
society continued. At the same time there was a spiritual renaissance.
According to the professor of History, Nikos Economides, when
Thessaloniki was captured by the Turks in 1430 the Great Holy Monastery
of Vatopaidi preserved its principal position among the monastic
communities in Mount Athos. “It continued to receive gifts by the
aristocracy, especially from Serbia and sustained its relationship with
Constantinople. The Emperor was borrowing any books he could not find in
Constantinople and had requested the representation of the monastery at
the Ferrara-Florence Synod (1437-1439). Thereafter, however, life in
the monastery came under a new status, since the Turkish occupation of
Greece took hold and lasted almost five centuries.
During the first years of the Turkish
occupation and the new statehood legalities, the monastery adapted and
grew with some difficulty. The historian Kriton Chrysohoides says:
“Despite the financial difficulties and the reduction in its assets
because of the new state of affairs, Vatopaidi managed to carry on as a
great and important monastic institution with discernible clout compared
to other Athonite monasteries. This became evident by the abundance of
metochia (dependencies) gifted to the monastery and by the great number
of high ranking clerics who were directly dependent on the monastery.
The annexation of various monasteries to Vatopaidi as dependencies by
their owners or their restorers was always motivated by the need to
ensure the survival of the particular institution. This means that in
their minds Vatopaidi was an establishment which could safeguard their
survival and growth”.
From the mid 15-16th Centuries and even
later, an extraordinarily large number of archbishops seems to be
directly associated with the monastery. Distinguished members of the
brotherhood became archbishops and even rose to the Patriarchate throne.
Moreover, in the beginning of the 16th
Century the scholar St Maximus the Greek, chooses Vatopaidi as his base
and from there he launches his ministerial mission throughout Greece
before ending up in Russia. There he carried out such a varied and
remarkable mission in civilizing the Russians that he was described as
“the enlightener of Russia”. In 1527, the scholar metropolitan of
Thessaloniki retired to the monastery. He left his mark on the community
and this is attested by an abundance of brilliant manuscripts which he
gifted to the library and which prove his literary standing.
It is obvious therefore, that during the
Byzantine period, Vatopaidi became famous as the monastery of the
gentile and the emperors. In the post Byzantine era it becomes the
monastery of the scholars and the clergy of the Eastern Orthodox Church.
Since the 16th Century a new era begins
which is defined by a definite economic and spiritual renaissance with
strong national and spiritual implications which led to the revolution
of 1821. To begin with, Russian Emperors strengthened Vatopaidi. Then
Moldovan rulers gifted an impressive number of dependencies. The reason
for these annexations was to assist financially the monasteries which
gave the gifts, or to establish new coenobiums with the Vatopaidi monks,
which numbered between 350 -400 at the time.
Scholar monks with active personalities
became bishops and launched a spiritual and national mission around the
various depndencies. They would later acquire the title of the Bishop of
Vatopaidi and Erinoupoleos. Thus Vatopaidi would assist any spiritual
mission relating to the nation and Orthodoxy.
Under this spiritual and economic
stoutness and the auspices of personalities with great influence in
Russia, Constantinople and Moldova, Vatopaidi decided to take a further
step in helping the nation by preparing scholars who would stir the
Greek conscience by spreading the knowledge and the deep spiritual
experiences which Orthodoxy nurtures.
Therefore, the establishment of the
Athoniada School in 1749 was the highlight of Vatopaidi’s spiritual
presence. The school was established at the instigation of several monks
and especially of Meletios of Vatopaidi and had implications which
transcended the boundaries of Mount Athos.
The policies which the Turks employed to
assimilate the occupied nations are well known. Therefore, the Greeks
were in danger not only of losing their national conscience but also
their religion, Orthodoxy. During the first few years of the Turkish
occupation, the Church tried to establish schools with every available
means. The clergy understood that education and the study of the
scriptures constitute a source of wisdom. This was unfortunately almost
extinguished because Greek schools were persecuted at whim, even though
some managed to survive. e.g. the Evangelical School of Smyrna, the
School of the Cross in Jerusalem, Patmiada School in Patmos, the
Pancyprian Gymnasium in Nicosia, the Maroutsea School in Ioannina and a
few others.
Athoniada was established on a hill
opposite the monastery of Vatopaidi. Soon it became so well known that
as Sergios Makraios says ‘never such a school existed for the
unfortunate Greeks’.
As the official charter issued by the
Patriarchate says: it was ‘an institution teaching Greek and all
subjects in the faculties of science, philosophy and theology’. It was
not just a school of theology as one might gather from the place in
which it was established and from the kind of people who first captured
and materialized the idea, but a small university ‘teaching all
subjects’. The fact that the objective of Meletios and those who first
conceived the idea, was to establish an institution with reputation
exceeding the Greek frontier into the Balkans is established by the
following:
1. The operations launched to establish
and maintain the institution spread throughout the nation, both in the
Turkish occupied areas and among the Greek communities abroad. Such was
the scale of the operation that committees were set up in 150 cities
worldwide with the task to collect money to assist the institution.
2. Renowned personalities throughout
Europe and the Ottoman Empire- scholars from distinguished institutions
gave up their seats to teach at the Athoniada School.
3. The structure was larger than most hagiorite monasteries and there was an equally large aqueduct.
4. The Ecumenical Patriarchate at the request of Vatopaidi became actively and vigorously involved.
Excerpts from the book ″Athonite Word″ by Archim. Ephraim of Vatopedi, Abbot of Holy and Great Monastery of Vatopaidi.
Translated by Olga Konari Kokkinou from the Greek edition: Αρχιμ. Εφραίμ Βατοπαιδινού Καθηγουμένου Ι.Μ.Μ. Βατοπαιδίου, Αθωνικός Λόγος, Ιερά Μεγίστη Μονή Βατοπαιδίου, Άγιον Όρος 2010
Translated by Olga Konari Kokkinou from the Greek edition: Αρχιμ. Εφραίμ Βατοπαιδινού Καθηγουμένου Ι.Μ.Μ. Βατοπαιδίου, Αθωνικός Λόγος, Ιερά Μεγίστη Μονή Βατοπαιδίου, Άγιον Όρος 2010
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