Gevorg Kazaryan
Saint Eumenios (in the world,
Constantine Saridakis) was born January 1, 1931 in the Cretan village of Efia,
to the family of the pious George and Sofia Saridakis. He was the eighth and
last child in this poor family, which lost its breadwinner early. The difficult
years of Nazi occupation in Greece did not allow little Constantine to receive
an elementary education. Nevertheless, the boy stood out not only for his
intelligence but also for his special piety. A wondrous event had a decisive
influence on the future elder’s choice of path in life. It happened in 1944.
During a festive dinner an extraordinary, blinding radiance appeared, which, as
Fr. Eumenios later related, penetrated deep into his soul. Amazed and shaken by
the divine light, the youth cried out, “I will become a monk!” Constantine’s
path in life was foreordained. As the elder himself said, “If a person has a
calling from God for something good, then God works and helps him.”
In 1951, Constantine Saradakis
entered the monastery of Prophet Elias not far from his village. In that
monastery, besides the abbot there labored two elderly, blind monks, whom the
young novice served with great love. Three years later Constantine received the
monastic tonsure with the name Sophronios.
In 1954, Monk Sophronios was
recruited into the army, as was mandatory according to Greek laws of the time.
Just as in the monastery, in the army the young monk did not disdain to do any
kind of work, showing respect and obedience to his superiors, but at the same
time trying to fulfill his monastic duties as well. But in the army Fr.
Sophronius was hit by a great temptation, accompanied by demonic attacks—he got
a fever that would not go down despite all the doctors’ efforts. The drafted
monk was transferred to Thessalonica in serious condition, and there they found
the terrible cause of this strange illness: leprosy! Thanking the Lord for this
heavy cross, the sick monk was taken to the Athens leprosy hospital, where
fortunately the treatment was successful and he completely recovered. But
having tasted the bitter taste of that terrible illness, he decided to remain
in the leper colony and serve the suffering. And there were over 500 of them in
that hospital! The hospital administration gave the monk a small hut near the hospital
church dedicated to Sts. Cosmos and Damian. It was here that the elder spent
the rest of his life. The monk spent his days in the leper colony in spiritual
ascetic labors, in care for the bed-ridden lepers, and in church services.
It was a great blessing for Fr.
Sophrony to meet St. Nicephoros the Leper, who was infected with leprosy while
still very young and lived for forty-three years in the leper colony on Chios.
In 1957, St. Nicephoros, by then blind and nearly paralyzed, was transferred to
the Athens leprosy hospital. Until his repose in 1964, St. Nicephoros was Fr.
Sophrony’s spiritual guide, and the latter took care of the saint with great
love until the end of the saint’s days.
In 1975, the forty-four-year-old monk
was ordained a priest with the name Eumenios and became the father confessor to
the leprosy hospital, which became a hospital for acute infections.
Having lived more than a half century
in his humble hovel in the hospital yard, the elder ceaselessly served God and
people—hearing confessions, serving at the holy altar, consoling, giving advice
in complicated situations, working miracles and healing both spiritual and
physical illnesses. Despite the serious illnesses that he also suffered, a
smile never left the elder’s face, and boundless love for God and all people
shone in his eyes. According to eye-witnesses, clairvoyance, working miracles,
and seeing the saints were all ordinary business and par for the course for Fr.
Eumenios. Generously endowed with grace-filled gifts of the Holy Spirit, the
elder “hid himself” successfully behind the walls of the hospital. St.
Porphyrios of Kapsokalyvia, who sometimes went to Fr. Eumenios for confession,
called him a “hidden saint of our days”.
After the fall of the communist
regime in the USSR, Fr. Eumenios and his spiritual son, now Bishop Neophytos of
Morphou (Cypriot Orothdox Church), made a pilgrimage trip to Kiev, Moscow, and
St. Petersburg, where with great reverence he venerated the holy tomb of Holy
Righteous John of Kronstadt. After returning to Athens, the elder’s health
problems worsened: diabetes, weak vision, kidney problems and problems with his
legs, which the doctors proposed to amputate. Battling against death over the
next few years, the elder never interrupted his pastoral service of receiving a
never-ending stream of people. In 1992, for his service to the Church, Fr.
Eumenios was awarded the rank of archimandrite. In 1999 the elder was
hospitalized in the “Evangelismos” hospital in Athens, where on May 23 he gave
his soul into the hand of God. The blessed elder’s body was buried in his
native village of Efia. In our days, at the prayers and intercession of the
blessed elder Eumenios, the Lord works a multitude of miracles of healings and
spiritual consolation for the sick and suffering.
Gevorg Kazaryan
Translation by Nun Cornelia (Rees)
Pravoslavie.ru
7/5/2018
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