I went back to the hostel to get my backpack before heading for the bus and Antonio's mother stopped me to give me what I thought were two tomatoes. I thanked her, got in the cab to the station and unwrapped the paper towel, ready for some sweet juicy tomato-ey goodness, but lo, my plans were scuppered. They weren't tomatoes at all. They were red eggs.
I got a roll and a cheese burek and found a guy named Ratko to drive me to the path for the monastery for 5 euros. Once there, I began my climb. Wow. It's a one and a half to two hour trek up a very rocky and uneven path winding round and round the mountain. The book puts it at 6km but it felt like a million. I dragged, wheezed, whimpered and stumbled my way up the mountain and was rewarded with some of the most amazing views I have ever seen.
The Treskavec Monastery has been standing there in one form or another since 400 B.C. (proven) and possibly even 2500 B.C. (still under investigation).
He explained to me that he wasn't a monk, but rather a monk-in-training, which was the closest English words could explain his position. Basically, after training as an economist, he heard the calling and entered the Orthodox Church. The novices that enter the church as prospective monks are entrusted to a master who trains them, acts as their father confessor etc. After the master has trained them sufficiently, they are promoted to monks-in-training, where they stay until such a time that the Orthodox Church gives them the choice of leaving the order or taking the vows of obedience, poverty and celibacy that are the requirements of monkhood. If they take the vows and later leave the church or break their vows, they are excommunicated forever. If they choose not to take the vows, they are not punished. The process is similar to a pre-op transsexual being made to dress as a woman for a year or two to make sure it's what they really want before having their outtie turned into an innie. Except involving God. And beards. And robes. And inexplicably red eggs.
Other interesting things I learned about the Orthodox Church:
- Communion is administered with a spoon. Bread is soaked in the wine and fed to parishioners.
- Priests are required to be married before they can be ordained. And their wives have to give them permission.
- The most recent saint in the Orthodox Church was St. John Markovich who stayed at Treskovec for a while and then went on, among other things, to be the Archbishop of Shanghai and the Bishop of San Francisco before his death.
One of the frescoes on the wall was of a naked, malnourished, rather confused looking woman. Kalist explained to me that for monks this saint is considered the most important. Apparently, back in "the day", there was a prostitute named Mary who lived in Alexandria. She decided to make a pilgrimage to Jerusalem and, to get there, sold her body to sailors. Once there, she found that she couldn't get into the church, as if an invisible forcefield was blocking her. She broke down and wept, asking the Virgin Mary why she was being barred. A voice told her "You know why." Mary swore to change her ways and was allowed into the church, where she prayed and confessed. She then went and lived in the Sinai Desert for 17 years without food or water. A priest, crossing the desert to give communion to a far-flung parish, stumbled across her while congratulating himself for his piety in making such a long trip. Shocked by her appearance and devotion, he gave her communion and went on his way convinced that he should be less vain and more like Mary. A year later, returning to give her communion again, he found her body, untouched by sand or decomposition, dead next to the date of her communion the previous year written with her finger in the sand. In the previous year, the inscription hadn't blown away and her body hadn't been touched. She was made a saint and so was the priest who found her. In all Orthodox churches, they are side by side or facing each other, a symbol of the vanity of the priesthood and the desire of the monks to be true to their chosen path. Wild.
Kalist locked up the church and gave me his email address - yes, even a monastery on top of a mountain in the middle of Macedonia has wireless internet. Apparently all of Macedonia has wi-fi, built by the government.
I went to sleep in the dormitory and woke up at 6am the next morning to walk back down the mountain and meet Ratko, who would be picking me up at 8.
1 comment:
they paint the eggs for orthodox easter, G!
-gene
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