New Martyr 19th century

New Martyr Avakum the Deacon of Serbia

c. 1794 – 1814

Also known as Habakkuk the Deacon

A Serbian deacon and monk who refused Islam under Ottoman pressure after the collapse of Karageorge's revolt and was martyred in Belgrade.

Feast Day
December 17
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Commemorated as

The Holy New Martyr Avakum the Deacon of Serbia

Life

Avakum the Deacon was a Serbian monk and deacon martyred by the Ottoman authorities in Belgrade in the wake of the suppressed Serbian uprisings of the early nineteenth century. According to his life, he was born in Bosnia around 1794 and named Lepoje by his parents; after the death of his father in his childhood, his mother brought him to the Mostanica monastery, where his uncle served as spiritual father. He was raised in the monastery, took monastic vows under the name Avakum, and at the age of eighteen was ordained a deacon by Metropolitan Joseph (Sakabenta). He is not to be confused with the Old Testament Prophet Habakkuk, whose name he shares.

After an unsuccessful revolt against the Turks in 1809, Avakum and his brethren relocated to the Annunciation monastery in Trnava near Cacak, where Saint Paisius served as igumen. When the First Serbian Uprising under Karageorge collapsed in 1813, the Trnava community became involved in a further rebellion led by Hadji-Prodan Gligorijevic, which broke out around the Feast of the Cross (September 14) but was likewise crushed by Ottoman forces. Avakum, Paisius, and other clergy of Trnava were captured and brought to Suleiman Pasha in Belgrade, where they were imprisoned, according to several accounts, in the Nebojsa Tower.

The captured rebels were offered their lives in exchange for conversion to Islam, and most refused. Avakum rejected the offer despite repeated pressure, including, by tradition, the entreaties of his former spiritual father and of his own mother, who is said to have urged him to recant in order to save his life. The synaxarion relates that, witnessing his fearlessness and faith, his executioners ultimately put him to death by the sword rather than the impalement to which he had been sentenced. He is commemorated together with Saint Paisius on December 17, and the two are numbered among the New Martyrs of Serbia.

Contributions & Legacy

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Monastic Life and the Serbian Uprisings

Avakum's formation belonged wholly to the monastic world: orphaned of his father young, he was raised at Mostanica under the care of an uncle who was its spiritual father, professed as a monk, and ordained deacon while still in his teens. His life thereafter was bound up with the turbulent history of Serbia under Ottoman rule. The monks of his community twice took part in armed resistance — first in a failed revolt in 1809, after which they withdrew to the Annunciation monastery at Trnava, and again in the rebellion of Hadji-Prodan Gligorijevic that followed the fall of Karageorge's uprising in 1813.

Sources name the Trnava clergy among the organizers of the later rising, listing the hegumen Pajsije, the hieromonk Genadije, the deacon Avakum, and the priest Radovan Vujovic. When the rebellion was suppressed, these clergy were among those taken captive and conveyed to Belgrade for judgment.

Martyrdom in Belgrade

In Belgrade the prisoners were pressed to apostatize, and a number were executed when they would not. By tradition, Avakum was led through the streets of the city carrying the stake to which he was to be bound, and was urged along the way to abandon Christ. His refusal is preserved in Serbian memory in the saying attributed to him that a Serb belongs to Christ and meets death with joy. Seeing that neither threats nor the pleading of his kin could move him, his executioners are said to have killed him with a knife to the heart.

His companion Paisius, hegumen of the Trnava community, was martyred at the same time, and the two are commemorated together. Avakum's steadfastness made him one of the best-known of the modern Serbian new martyrs, and his memory is honored locally in the region of his monastic life.

Notes

Not the Old Testament Prophet Habakkuk.

Sources: OCA Synaxarion (oca.org), Lives of the Saints