FRIENDS OF MOUNT ATHOS

(Registered Charity No. 1047287)

 

Newsletter No. 17: April 2008

 

 

The 2008 AGM: Wednesday 11 June at St AnneÕs College, Oxford

The notice of this yearÕs AGM is enclosed. As usual, the proceedings will be chaired by His Eminence Metropolitan Kallistos of Diokleia. We hope that the programme will prove to be interesting and that it will attract a good turn-out.

            The first speaker is Fr Enzo Bianchi, Prior of Bose Monastery in northern Italy. After studying economics at the University of Turin, Fr Enzo moved to Bose in 1965 with a view to starting a monastic community. In 1968 he was joined by the first brothers and sisters, and forty years later the community numbers eighty members with both men and women coming from six different countries. Since the start of his monastic life Fr Enzo has combined his life of prayer and work in the community with an intensive programme of preaching, study, and research. This activity led him to preach retreats, to publish books, and to give lectures and conference papers in Italy and abroad. Bose itself runs a regular programme of international conferences and also has its own publishing house, Edizioni Qiqajon.

            Bose is a monastic community of men and women belonging to different Christian churches. It is a monastic community seeking God in prayer, poverty, celibacy, and obedience to the Gospel. It is a monastic community living in fellowship with men and women at their service.

            For more than ten years now the monastery at Bose has been a meeting place for Christians from East and West wishing to discuss aspects of Christian spirituality. They are Christians belonging to the Orthodox, Reformed, Roman Catholic, and Anglican churches, and these encounters have been and will continue to be essentially an occasion for listening to each other.

            Over the years Fr Enzo has developed close contacts with many Athonite elders. These contacts form the basis of a his address to the Friends.

            The second speaker is Fr Romilo, a monk of the Hilandar Monastery on Mount Athos. Four years ago Hilandar suffered a devastating fire that destroyed more than 50 per cent of its buildings. The Friends was just one of many organizations to launch an appeal for funds to assist in the rebuilding of this great monastery. With the proceeds of our first tranche of donations the monastery was able to build a new bakery. With the proceeds of our second, launched in spring 2008, it aims to build a new library of printed books.

            Fr Romilo, the librarian of the monastery, will give an illustrated presentation of what has been achieved so far in rebuilding Hilandar and what remains to be done. The determination of the brotherhood to restore the monastery to is former glory is truly inspiring.

            Between the two talks, and after lunch if you choose to take it, we shall conduct the official business of the AGM itself and as usual there will be elections. Four members of the Executive Committee have reached the end of their term of office and will tender their resignation: Metropolitan Kallistos (Chairman), Simon Jennings (Treasurer), John Arnell, and Dimitri Conomos. All for have indicated their willingness to stand again. Any further nominations for these positions should reach the Secretary in writing at least one week before the meeting. The AGM will be followed by a Special General Meeting on which a separate paper is enclosed. Guests are welcome to attend both the AGM and the SGM but may not vote at either.

            After tea there will be an opportunity to join the Orthodox community at 1 Canterbury Road (five minutesÕ walk from St AnneÕs) for a service of Vespers at 5 pm. Both Orthodox and non-Orthodox members and their guests are warmly invited to attend this service which will last for about an hour.

            Attendance at the AGM is free. The charge for attending the rest of the day (including morning coffee and afternoon tea) is £10.00 each (students £5.00); and there will be a buffet lunch costing £15.00. Completed forms and cheques (payable to the Friends of Mount Athos) should be sent as soon as possible to Jeremy Black at Proffitts House, Millers Lane, Hornton, Oxfordshire OX15 6BS.

 

Project for the restoration of footpaths and wayside shrines and fountains

This spring another expedition, the eighth, will be dispatched to the Mountain for a fortnight in May. The list for this year is already full and there is a waiting list, but the project leader, John Arnell, will soon be assembling a team for next year and any members of the society who wish to volunteer their services are encouraged to contact him (John@thearnells.org).

 

Pilgrimage to St CatherineÕs, Sinai, and the Coptic monasteries

This yearÕs pilgrimage will run from 25 October to 2 November and will spend four nights in Sinai, chiefly at St CatherineÕs, and a further four nights in Cairo from where excursions will be made to the Wadi el-Natrun and the Red Sea Mountains. The cost of the tour, which is being led by Metropolitan Kallistos, is approximately £900 per person. Anyone interested in joining the group should contact Dimitri Conomos (dimitri.ec@btinternet.com) as soon as possible.

 

FoMA Travel Bursary

Applications are invited from suitably qualified graduate students working for a higher degree or diploma at institutions of higher learning in the UK for the Friends of Mount Athos Travel Bursary. Applicants may be drawn from any discipline but should be already engaged in or willing to become engaged in a project with a specifically Athonite context. The value of the award is £500. Applications, accompanied by the names and addresses of two referees, should be addressed to the Secretary, Dr Graham Speake, Ironstone Farmhouse, Milton, Banbury OX15 4HH. The attention of applicants is drawn to the fact that women are never admitted to Mount Athos.

 

Electronic mailing

We shall continue to send out mailings by post to those members who prefer to receive them by that means, and of course the Annual Report and Directory of Members will remain as print publications for the foreseeable future, but it would make for a considerable economy of both labour and costs if we could send out notices and other text communications by e-mail. We have no intention of publishing e-mail addresses, but if you would be happy to receive such mailings from the Friends electronically, please indicate this by sending an e-mail to Alasdair Cross (alasdairx@mac.com) or, if you are resident in the Americas, to Robert Allison (rallison@bates.edu).