St. Archangel Michael Skete is an Eastern Orthodox monastery on Spruce Island, Alaska. It is three miles away from Monk’s Lagoon, where Saint Herman of Alaska lived 200 years ago. He was called a saint by the people long before the church recognized him as such. St. Archangel Michael Skete is under the omophorion of Bishop Maksim Vasiljević of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Western America.[1][2]
Kodiak Island is the place where the first Russian monastery on the North American continent was first erected in 1794 while still part of Imperial Russia. In 1808, Herman of Alaska established his hermitage on Spruce Island. Today, the North American saint's original dwelling is preserved by the monastics of St. Archangel Michael Skete, who are located in Sunny Cove on Spruce Island.[3]
The Orthodox monks on Spruce island are isolated from the mainland, as are the Orthodox nuns on St. Nilus Island Skete, which is half a mile away. The primary means of transportation for the monks living in isolation from the mainland communities (since 1983) is a small aluminum skiff named the "Archangel". The handful of monks use their boat to go off to sea to fish. In the summer, the monks help pilgrims by taking them with their skiff to Monk’s Lagoon and St. Nilus Island Skete.[4]
See also
edit- St. Nilus Island Skete
- St. Sava Serbian Orthodox Monastery, located at the Episcopal headquarters of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Eastern America, Libertyville, Illinois
- New Gračanica Monastery, located at the Episcopal headquarters of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of New Gračanica and Midwestern America, Third Lake, Illinois
- St. Steven's Serbian Orthodox Cathedral, located at the Episcopal headquarters of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Western America, Alhambra, California
- The Holy Transfiguration Monastery, located at the Episcopal headquarters of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Canada, Milton, Ontario, Canada
- Episcopal headquarters of the Serbian Orthodox Eparchy of Buenos Aires and South America, Buenos Aires, Argentina
References
edit- ^ "Directory". www.serborth.org.
- ^ "08252016". serborth.org.
- ^ "Atlas of American Orthodox Christian Churches" (PDF). Retrieved 2019-06-05.
- ^ "Atlas of Orthodox Christian Monasteries" (PDF). www.assemblyofbishops.org. 2016. Retrieved 2019-06-05.