By Archimandrite Mihail Daniliuc
Nuns, monks, priests, and laypeople have carried love and devotion toward the Venerable Mavra of Mount Ceahlău for more than two centuries, after which written testimonies began to be recorded concerning the hermit life and the miracles of the Venerable Mavra in the oldest Romanian Synaxaria and Paterika.
A hermit life on Mount Ceahlău most likely existed from the time Christianity appeared at the foothills of the Carpathians, but it intensified after Romanian monasticism experienced a reorganization and a beautiful flourishing after the 14th century.[1] Countless hermits, monks, and nuns living in cenobitic communities labored here,[2] among them also the Holy Venerable Mavra of Mount Ceahlău,[3] also called Mount Pion.[4]
She lived toward the end of the 17th century[5], being originally from a village in the Bistrița Valley, not far from Ceahlău.[6] Born and raised in a pious family, Maria — as she was named at Baptism — came to know the beauty of our Holy Orthodoxy from early childhood. Her parents, people of good lineage and faithful, zealous for holy things, raised her in faith and love for God, urging her toward prayer and fasting, but also toward the doing of good works. She had a gentle nature and loved the beauty of God’s creation that surrounded her everywhere. She dearly loved the birds of the sky and the animals of the forest, feeding them especially during harsh winters with severe frost and snow. Her love for the Gospel of Christ she learned at home, but she deepened it in the village church and in the monasteries and sketes nearby, where she went on pilgrimage with her parents and family or with many children of her age. Some old records show that near the village of the Venerable Mavra there was the Skete of Silvestru,[7] founded by a hermit named Silvestru, the church of the monastic settlement being built by the ruler Bogdan IV, the son of Alexandru Lăpușneanu.[8]