I know your
time is precious, for this I beg you to
forgive me that I make you spend a
little time reading my letter.
Personally I thank you for the
contribution of your spiritual work at
the New Marmara Metohion. I especially
thank you and all the fathers of the
Monastery, for helping my husband George
to come to Orthodoxy and be baptized at
65 years of age. I truly believe I have
lived a miracle, because in my twenty
years of married life, I had to deal
with a very difficult man, especially in
religious matters.
When after our wedding -
fortunately we married in the Orthodox
Church - I learned from someone
spiritual that it is a heavy
misdemeanour that I had married a
heterodox and even as he called him a
heretic. I was shaken and I started to
feel the weight of my responsibility and
guilt. That Spiritual one suggested to
me that I should help him get to know
Orthodoxy and perhaps if he became
Orthodox, that would settle the matter.
I tried as much as I could but it
proved impossible. Our visit to the
village Church failed and he did not
wish that I talk again on such matters.
I stopped trying and I started
praying for God to enlighten him,
because I could see he was pious, he
would pray and he would read the Bible,
use the prayer rope, he had a spiritual
father in Thessaloniki who used to visit
him often and would receive Holy
Communion.
When our children came to this
world, hope was also born in me that if
we baptized our children Orthodox,
something would have happened in him too.
Unfortunately, he not only did not think
something like what I hoped but in the
contrary he did not wish to baptize the
kids. He insisted that they follow the
Roman Catholic faith and threatened that
he would take one of the kids and
separate. I almost went crazy from
sadness and the calamity he threatened
of scuttling our family. No one knew or
suspected anything. My only refuge was
the Lady Theotokos. I would pray with
fervour and beg her to help us out of
the impasse. I would pray, beg and wait
full of anguish and pain for the Sweet
Mother of our Lord to show her miracle.
And the answer did not tarry. She
enlightened my husband to visit his
spiritual father and be advised. It was
a very difficult day that would remain
unforgettable. The return of my husband
filled me with joy. He had decided to
baptize the children Orthodox.
Everything disappeared as a bad dream
and my heart overflowed with giving
glory and thanks to our All-Holy
Theotokos for her help.
Little by little we began by
visiting the Metohion of your monastery.
My husband's heart had softened. He
would relax and wish to go there more
often. He would visit the neighbouring
monasteries and went often to the Holy
Mountain. He always returned very happy
and he would tell us of everything he
heard from the fathers. He was greatly
impressed by the miraculous icons and
would be tearful when he described
something about them.
I understood that the Divine
Grace started visiting him. He had a
great wish to learn as much as he could.
He struggled greatly. He would seldom
sleep, would pray a lot, fasted and he
would almost eat nothing and at night he
would do the prayer rope.
I begged the Theotokos to give
him patience, to strengthen his faith
and to help him to the end, to his
baptism.
When he decided to be baptized,
our happiness was indescribable. However
the temptations and obstacles would
fight us day and night without ceasing.
Here I must thank warmly the fathers who
at that time were at Metohion, and to
ask their forgiveness because we had
burdened them very much. He felt a great
respect for the Agiorite fathers and the
Orthodox monastics.
He would discover a lot of things
that as a Roman Catholic he never felt.
For this when two young children who
came from France, visited him shortly
after his baptism, he told them: "Don't
ask too much about Orthodoxy. Only hurry
up and get baptized, because I committed
a mistake by waiting so long to do so.
Those youths today dressed in the
monastic schema, serve the Lord
somewhere at the Holy Mountain.
After many obstacles and
continuous postponements it should be
noted during the day set for the baptism,
the weather was foul, it snowed a lot,
and for this it was suggested that it be
postponed - the much awaited day for
George's day when he would finally
become Orthodox Christian, had arrived.
His yierning was so great that when the
Abbess of the Holy Annunciation of the
Theotokos Monastery at Ormylia suggested
that he be baptized on Pascha when the
weather would be warmer George answered:
"I cannot wait any longer. If you refuse
to baptize me I shall remain here until
you will baptize me.
Thus, with the help of God, the
prayers of the fathers and the love of
all his people, George entered the Holy
Mystery, at the dawn of the Sunday of
Orthodoxy. The morning the temperature
was quite a few degrees below zero. The
baptism was outdoors and the water was
icy. We asked him how he felt and he
said wonderful and that the water was
warm. His face shone at that moment. He
would laugh happily and was as happy as
a child. Many of us present had tears in
the eyes at that time being flooded by a
different, heavenly joy. My lips were
heartily glorifying and warmly thanking
God and our beloved Theotokos for their
blessings they bestowed on us and to
this day I have not ceased to glorify
Them.
George changed the following days.
He was happy and peaceful, in good mood,
a total opposite person with whom I had
lived so far, totally renewed. This
greatly impressed me and I would ask him
what he felt after baptism, what changed,
what was the difference. And he would
answer by moving his head and saying: "I
am sad that I cannot explain so that you
could understand. I cannot say it with
words, I cannot describe it. I just wish
to say one thing now: that Christ take
me now. I wish to die, for if I remain I
shall lose what I have inside me, the
Divine Grace will leave me".
The good Lord heard him. After a
few months he became very sick with lung
cancer of the malignant type, and the
doctors gave him about two months to
live. We hurriedly departed for France
and we did not succeed even though we
tried to ask for your blessings Father
George, and Father Gregory who was also
our confessor. My blessed husband had a
great love and respect towards you as
well as the reverend fathers of your
Holy Monastery. The last and precious
supply from Greece was the Holy
Communion which he received at the
Metohion.
Our days in France were bitter
and difficult. Our doctors prepared us
that to the end we should expect more
difficult days.
Soon the cancer
metastasized to the head and George was
paralyzed in half. Despite of his
difficult state, he did not cease to
preach Orthodoxy. When I
would advise him not to speak he would
answer: "They must learn,
because they do not know".
People would surround his bed and would
listen with awe that the icons are
miraculous and how a vigil at the Holy
Mountain could last ten to twelve hours.
And they would ask me to confirm what he
was saying. Strange and newly heard
things for them. They were amazed by the
fact that you were praying for us at the
Monastery. He would calm his sister by
telling her that many pray for him in
Greece and that God is with him.
To one of his doctors, who was
very educated and a great scientist, he
told him that since he did not visit the
Holy Mountain and has not known
Orthodoxy, then he has not accomplished
anything in his life.
They were also greatly impressed
by the visits of Father Elijah, who
would come despite we were about two
hundred kilometers apart, to help us by
confessing and communing him and keep
him company. Father Elijah helped us
very much as did the sisters of the
local Monastery.
With the help of Father Elijah,
we told George's sister that he was
baptized Orthodox and while we expected
a bad reaction from her, she hugged him
and told him he did well. He would then
cry with joy. The same day he confessed
and received communion and after Father
Elijah left, I sat alone in the room,
close to him. George was sleeping
peacefully. Suddenly I felt a great
fragrance begin to fill the room like
censing and while I was wondering where
it came from, I turned and saw the face
of George shine with a sweet smile.
Shortly the fragrance disappeared.
Another day, tired, sad and
perhaps may I dare say feeling hopeless,
I sat on the armchair close to the sick
one to relax. No sooner did I close my
eyelids, I saw a girl opening the door
and entering and coming close to me,
touching me on the shoulder and telling
me not to be sad because she would stay
with us to the end. She was a girl of
medium height, brunette, with an open
dress and a monastic belt. She was very
pretty, and sweet and around eighteen
years old. I woke up and looked for her
and felt that I should not be overcome
by hopelessness. This happened on the 10th
or 11th November (feast day
of Saint Virgin Martyr Anastasia the
Roman in the Holy Monastery of Saint
Gregory, namely, 29 October according to
the old calendar).
George was approaching
his end and was in great pain. The days
flowed martyrically but he did not moan.
He would just say, praying "My Christ I
am tired, only You know how much". His
weight dropped to 35 kilos. On December
25, on the day of Christmas, the Lord
called George close to Him, a day when
66 years before he saw the light for the
first time. I hope and pray that the
Most Good God rest the soul of my
blessed husband and I beg you my
reverend Father George, pray also for
him, for his children and finally for me
the weak one, who used to lose my
patience. Pray for God to have mercy on
me and forgive me.
It is worth noting that on the 40th
day commemoration of my husband repose,
that took place at the Monastery of
Ormylia, where George was baptized, many
nuns saw him between us shining and
smiling.
We thank you one more time, you
and the fathers who put up and shared
with us our problems.
We pray that the Most Good God
strengthen, protect and enlighten you
always.