Illuminants
              UNUSUAL MONK PANTELEIMON FROM CHILANDAR AND HIS TESTIMONY
                A Paradigm that Makes Us Stronger
                German by  origin, son of an industrialist from Schwarzwald, educated and successful  manager, suddenly discovered a call from Mt. Athos in the window of a bookstore  near Frankfurt. He was introduced into the depths of Orthodox Christianity and  monastic path by elder Mitrophan of Chilandar. In Chilandar, Helmut became Panteleimon,  the all-merciful. He made the desolated metochion Jovanica an astonishing  place. After a quarter of a century, he moved from Mt. Athos to Grabovac,  Serbian monastery in Hungary, which he also reformed. There he passed away
              By: Mišo Vujović
              
                 Throughout the  turbulent history of the Serbian nation, gathered around the church and its  temples – the first school and universities in which the spiritual vertical of  the national being was being built, the Chilandar Monastery had an immeasurable  role. As the Serbian imperial lavra, Chilandar Monastery enjoyed great fondness  of Serbian medieval rulers, starting from its founders St. Simeon and St. Sava,  Emperor Dušan, King Milutin and other members of the Nemanjić dynasty, to the  tragic prince of Kosovo Lazar, who got his Chilandar throne by building the  porch on Milutin’s Church in Chilandar, along with his martyr aureole in  Gazimestan. Thanks to such an attitude of the Serbian state towards its ”soul dislocated from the body”, Chilandar Monastery became  the first treasury of written documents, from Chilandar decrees, typicons,  Codes, to the first translated liturgical books, which rightfully makes it the  first Serbian university and atrium for bishops and heads of the Serbian  Church. After the fall of the Serbian medieval state under Ottoman dominion,  Chilandar Monastery, up to then the richest and most influential sanctity in  Mt. Athos, entered a several-century-long period of surviving and difficult  temptations. It lost its estates and metochions, the Serbian monastic community  was reduced, and the Turkish authorities, under Greek influence, didn’t allow  any novices to come from the enslaved homeland. Thus Chilandar Monastery fell  under the influence of the Bulgarians, the majority in the monastic community,  therefore gaining management over the Monastery. One of the most famous  Chilandar monks, Sava of
Throughout the  turbulent history of the Serbian nation, gathered around the church and its  temples – the first school and universities in which the spiritual vertical of  the national being was being built, the Chilandar Monastery had an immeasurable  role. As the Serbian imperial lavra, Chilandar Monastery enjoyed great fondness  of Serbian medieval rulers, starting from its founders St. Simeon and St. Sava,  Emperor Dušan, King Milutin and other members of the Nemanjić dynasty, to the  tragic prince of Kosovo Lazar, who got his Chilandar throne by building the  porch on Milutin’s Church in Chilandar, along with his martyr aureole in  Gazimestan. Thanks to such an attitude of the Serbian state towards its ”soul dislocated from the body”, Chilandar Monastery became  the first treasury of written documents, from Chilandar decrees, typicons,  Codes, to the first translated liturgical books, which rightfully makes it the  first Serbian university and atrium for bishops and heads of the Serbian  Church. After the fall of the Serbian medieval state under Ottoman dominion,  Chilandar Monastery, up to then the richest and most influential sanctity in  Mt. Athos, entered a several-century-long period of surviving and difficult  temptations. It lost its estates and metochions, the Serbian monastic community  was reduced, and the Turkish authorities, under Greek influence, didn’t allow  any novices to come from the enslaved homeland. Thus Chilandar Monastery fell  under the influence of the Bulgarians, the majority in the monastic community,  therefore gaining management over the Monastery. One of the most famous  Chilandar monks, Sava of  Chilandar, wrote about that period and the state the  Monastery was in in the late nineteenth century. He was author of monographs History  of Chilandar Monastery and Typicon Hermitage of St. Sava in Karyes, whose  manuscripts were, unfortunately, displaced in the rich archive and library of  Chilandar Monastery for an entire century. It’s interesting that this  hard-working enthusiast, librarian and treasury keeper wasn’t of Serbian  origin. Only at the end of his life, after the national structure in the  Monastery had changed, his fraternity understood his stand that the treasure he  arranged, a large part of it plundered, was priceless. However, even after the  change of the national structure (upon the departure of Bulgarian monks from  the Monastery), narrow-mindedness and prejudice were still present, but this  hard-working monk and ascetic, who dedicated his entire being to Orthodox  Christianity and Serbian people, didn’t step back.
Chilandar, wrote about that period and the state the  Monastery was in in the late nineteenth century. He was author of monographs History  of Chilandar Monastery and Typicon Hermitage of St. Sava in Karyes, whose  manuscripts were, unfortunately, displaced in the rich archive and library of  Chilandar Monastery for an entire century. It’s interesting that this  hard-working enthusiast, librarian and treasury keeper wasn’t of Serbian  origin. Only at the end of his life, after the national structure in the  Monastery had changed, his fraternity understood his stand that the treasure he  arranged, a large part of it plundered, was priceless. However, even after the  change of the national structure (upon the departure of Bulgarian monks from  the Monastery), narrow-mindedness and prejudice were still present, but this  hard-working monk and ascetic, who dedicated his entire being to Orthodox  Christianity and Serbian people, didn’t step back.
                Sava of  Chilandar, Czech by origin – Slavibor Brayer, was born in 1837 in Kutna Gora in  Czechia, and passed away in Chilandar in 1911. He had an enormous contribution  to arranging the archive and library material and poured part of his experience  into two mentioned books, very significant both for the history of Chilandar  and Serbian Church, and the entire history of the Serbian nation. Patriarch  Gavrilo Dožić wrote an inspiring essay about Sava of Chilandar, emphasizing his  virtues, as well as sufferings and troubles told him by Sava himself, because  of the ”non-brotherlike behavior of other monks”. As Patriarch  Gavrilo states, Sava was mostly struck by the ”belief of  some monks that he was a German spy”.
                This short review  about Sava of Chilandar, whose life and work will be described in some of the  following issues, leads us to the story about another Chilandar monk, almost our  contemporary, monk Panteleimon, dedicated mason of Mt. Athos, who ended his  life and ascetic path on earth last year in the Serbian monastery of Grabovac  in Hungary.
              THE MAN WHO SPOKE  WITH HIS HEART
               Jovanica is the  first dock on the way from Ouranopolis to the monasteries of Mt. Athos. That  metochion of Chilandar was renewed in the late 1980s by father Panteleimon,  born as German Helmut Christian Ratt from Schwarzwald. This exemplary and  devoted monk made the Jovanica dock paradise on earth in about twenty years. He  planted a vineyard, olive orchards, arranged the dock, build magnificent  quarters with a small chapel (paraclys) and garage for boats on the shore. He  was an excellent singer. He came to the monastery every Saturday and served the  entire liturgy, lasting four to five hours, alone at one choir. This humble  ascetic and tireless mason was born in 1947 in a family of a local  industrialist, owner of a factory for manufacturing windows and carpentry, who  planned to pass on his steady business to his son one day. Young Helmut had  other aspirations, wishing to show his abilities outside of the family  business, so not long after completing his studies, he became director of a  clinic in the vicinity of Frankfurt.
Jovanica is the  first dock on the way from Ouranopolis to the monasteries of Mt. Athos. That  metochion of Chilandar was renewed in the late 1980s by father Panteleimon,  born as German Helmut Christian Ratt from Schwarzwald. This exemplary and  devoted monk made the Jovanica dock paradise on earth in about twenty years. He  planted a vineyard, olive orchards, arranged the dock, build magnificent  quarters with a small chapel (paraclys) and garage for boats on the shore. He  was an excellent singer. He came to the monastery every Saturday and served the  entire liturgy, lasting four to five hours, alone at one choir. This humble  ascetic and tireless mason was born in 1947 in a family of a local  industrialist, owner of a factory for manufacturing windows and carpentry, who  planned to pass on his steady business to his son one day. Young Helmut had  other aspirations, wishing to show his abilities outside of the family  business, so not long after completing his studies, he became director of a  clinic in the vicinity of Frankfurt.
                In the moment his  career was in full swing, the young manager unconsciously stopped in front of  the window of a bookstore, attracted by the wondrous power, as he said, of the  cover of a book about Elder Siluan from Mt. Athos. It took only one sleepless  night and meeting with the saint, who testified faith with prayer and his life,  to change his plans completely, and neglect his successful career and the  family business he was supposed to inherit from his father.
                The lessons of  Elder Siluan took him to Mt. Athos and Elder Mitrofan helped him on his road to  salvation, to experience the new faith deeper. He welcomed him and, in fluent  German language, with an illustrative sermon of a humble monk, through many  examples about the feats of Mt. Athos elders and saints, he simply introduced  him to monastic life. Elder Mitrofan spoke with his heart, arousing in Helmut  Ratt even more love towards monastic life, so after a few stays in Mt. Athos he  decided to settle there for good, first in Chilandar, where he lived almost four  years, and then in the desolated metochion and dock Jovanica.
              HEAVENLY MAN AND  EARTHLY ANGEL
               In a short time,  father Panteleimon overpassed the language barrier by learning Serbian, as well  as liturgical Church Slavic language, perfecting his singing to the extent that  even educated singers and theologians admired him.
In a short time,  father Panteleimon overpassed the language barrier by learning Serbian, as well  as liturgical Church Slavic language, perfecting his singing to the extent that  even educated singers and theologians admired him.
                Different  temptations followed late father Panteleimon (Panteleimon – the all-merciful),  former industrialist from Schwarzwald, on his God-seeking path of salvation. As  a German, he wasn’t accepted in Chilandar by a group of novices turned to  Zealotry. That is why he, after four years, left to the desolated metochion –  dock of Jovanica. However, according to those who know the story, father Panteleimon  actually couldn’t find common language with another convert – monk Serafim,  born as Frane Špika, from father Ante, Croatian and German mother. Father  Serafim is today autonomously managing the metochion of Kakovo, arranged and  revived by late Elder Mitrofan, epithrope of Chilandar for many years and twice  manager of Mt. Athos.
                Father Panteleimon  of Chilandar spent more than two and a half decades in Mt. Athos and rarely  left it, but he was often visited by his German friends, who provided financial  support for the architectural plans of this tireless hard-working enthusiast.  Father Panteleimon repaid them with his monastic love and blessing, recuperated  their souls with the peace of Mt. Athos and prayers, gave them fruit from his  vineyards and olive orchards. When he made paradise on earth in this metochion,  where ships with Chilandar pilgrims dock, this tireless enthusiast went to  Hungary in 2010, to the Serbian monastery of Grabovac, with the same intentions  he had when, two decades earlier, he left Chilandar and went to Jovanica.
                After only one  year in Grabovac, father Panteleimon was advanced to the rank of Hieromonk and  not long after appointed prior of the monastery. The new prior-mason dressed  the monastery in new robes. He changed the old roofs of the church and  quarters, raised a winter chapel, arranged the porch, agreed business with the  nearby winery about planting a new vineyard on 35 hectares of land, orchards on  four hectares, which greatly strengthened the monastery economy and provided  constant earnings to the monastery fraternity. When saying goodbye to father Panteleimon,  Bishop Lukijan tried to depict the character of this unusual man and Christ’s ascetic  in a few sentences:
  ”Our father Panteleimon had the strength to be different  from others in this world. It’s not easy, but God, who sees the heart of each  of us and knows our wishes, helped this upright man to separate from his  traditional environment and set off down a new path, a path steep, full of  thorns – the path of Christ. That path led him to Mt. Athos, in which norms and  standards of this world are hardly important, but where the main and basic  measure is the soul, and main objective salvation. Ever since St. Sava,  Chilandar had good spiritual guardians, true steersmen in the storms of life,  and Chilandar became a dock to father Panteleimon”, said Bishop of Budim,  emphasizing that he was a heavenly man and earthly angel, and that this answers  the question how he was able to carry ”the burden loaded  on him by unreasonable people in his environment, where nobody would ever expect  it. His deeds are proof of how God acts through his chosen ones”.
              
              
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Vertical
                ”It’s obvious that times have changed and that the church  must find answers to contemporary challenges, but only those that would be  blessed by St. Sava and St. Simeon – lighthouses of the entire nation, who  rejected all the power they had, sacrificing themselves for the salvation of  their people. ‘Greatest sinner of all, Sava’ was his signature. He was aware  that he was carrying sins of his ancestors and descendants and that He and his  feat will become the foundation of the vertical in the Serbian nation.” This is  what was often emphasized by, often with tears in his eyes, Elder Mitrofan of  Chilandar, lecturer, journalist and editor of Chilandar magazine, which  he published independently for decades, the old man who gave the biggest  support to father Panteleimon in the beginning of his monastic path.
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              With Words and Deeds 
                Father Panteleimon published several  books in German about his journey in the Mt. Athos paths of salvation. The door  to his heart and cell were always open for all those who sought answers beyond  earthly rules and laws.