Venerable (Monastic) 20th century

Saint Nikanor of Hilandar

1903-1990

Also known as Никанор Хиландарски · Nikanor Savić

Hegumen of the Serbian monastery of Hilandar on Mount Athos. He reposed in 1990.

Feast Day
February 19
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Father Nikanor of Hilandar, Elder of the Holy Mountain

Life

Saint Nikanor of Hilandar (born Nikola Savic) was a twentieth-century Serbian monk of the Holy Monastery of Hilandar on Mount Athos, where he spent more than sixty years and served as its abbot. Born in 1903 near Valjevo in Serbia, he entered Hilandar as a young man and rose to lead the monastery and to take a prominent part in the wider life of the Holy Mountain, where he served as its First Administrator.

He is remembered as a reconciler of estranged brethren and as a patron of Serbian church publishing and theological education. In 1990, in his eighty-eighth year, he undertook a final missionary journey to Australia to heal divisions among Serbian Orthodox communities there, dying in Sydney on the Sunday of Orthodoxy. He was glorified by the Serbian Orthodox Church around 2010 and is commemorated on February 19 (March 4 on the civil calendar).

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. 1903 Birth Nikola Savic is born on August 13, 1903, in Divci near Valjevo, Serbia.
  2. 1927 Arrival at Hilandar On August 17, 1927, he enters the Holy Monastery of Hilandar on Mount Athos.
  3. 1929 Monastic tonsure On September 15, 1929, he is tonsured a monk and receives the name Nikanor.
  4. 1941 Elected abbot of Hilandar On December 31, 1941, he is elected abbot of Hilandar Monastery.
  5. 1963 First Administrator of Mount Athos He serves as the First Administrator (Protos) of the Holy Mountain.
  6. 1990 Mission to Australia and repose In January 1990 he travels to Australia to reconcile divided communities; he dies in Sydney on February 19, 1990, the Sunday of Orthodoxy, and is buried at the Monastery of Saint Sava at Elaine.
  7. c. 2010 Glorification He is glorified by the Serbian Orthodox Church around 2010 and commemorated on February 19 (March 4 civil).

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Entry to Hilandar

Nikanor was born Nikola Savic on August 13, 1903, in the village of Divci, near Valjevo in Serbia, into a devout family of modest means. On August 17, 1927, he arrived at the Holy Monastery of Hilandar, the Serbian monastery on Mount Athos, and on September 15, 1929, he was tonsured a monk and received the name Nikanor.

He remained at Hilandar for the rest of his long life, more than sixty years in all. Alongside the monastic offices he would later hold, he is recorded as having labored in the vineyards and chestnut groves of the monastery, and as being devoted to the services of the church, by tradition the first to enter the temple each day and the last to leave.

Abbacy and Service on the Holy Mountain

Nikanor was elected abbot of Hilandar on December 31, 1941. In the decades that followed he became a respected figure across Mount Athos, and in 1963 he served as the First Administrator of the Holy Mountain, the office of Protos, also acting as commissioner and representative for his monastery. Serbian sources record that he served as archimandrite and pro-hegumen of Hilandar through to 1990.

He is credited with renewing several of Hilandar's dependent properties (metochia) and with promoting publishing within Hilandar and the Serbian Church more broadly, as well as with securing scholarships for students, seminarians, and theologians. Within the monastery he was known for receiving and reconciling estranged brethren, a ministry he also carried beyond the Holy Mountain on missionary journeys.

Mission to Australia and Repose

During the period of communist rule in Yugoslavia, Nikanor traveled to his homeland to encourage the faithful and contributed funds toward the repair of his village church. His final journey came in January 1990, when, in his eighty-eighth year and reportedly in poor health, he set out for Australia on a mission to reconcile divided Serbian Orthodox communities there.

He died in Sydney on February 19, 1990, the Sunday of Orthodoxy. According to his wish he was buried at the Monastery of Saint Sava at Elaine, in the church of Saint Alimpije (Alipy) the Stylite. Orthodox sources note that, as of the early 2010s, he was regarded as the first glorified saint connected with Australia.

Glorification and Commemoration

Saint Nikanor was glorified by the Serbian Orthodox Church around 2010; a precise glorification act and date are not established in the available sources. He is commemorated on February 19 according to the Old Calendar, corresponding to March 4 on the civil calendar.

Notes

Born 1903; reposed 1990 at Hilandar, Mount Athos.

Sources: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_saints_of_the_Serbian_Orthodox_Church