Hieromartyr Unknown

Hieromartyr Raphael of Sisatovac

1875–1941

Also known as Raphael of Serbia

A Serbian hieromartyr of Sisatovac commemorated by the Church, of whom few details survive.

Feast Day
August 21
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

The Holy Hieromartyr Raphael, Abbot of Šišatovac

Life

Rafailo Momčilović was a Serbian Orthodox monastic, accomplished iconographer, and abbot of Šišatovac Monastery on Fruška Gora who died a martyr's death in 1941. He is commemorated by the Church as Hieromartyr Raphael of Sisatovac (also listed as Hieromartyr Raphael of Serbia).

Born Đorđe (George) Momčilović on April 23, 1875, in the village of Deronje in the Bačka region of Austria-Hungary, he entered monastic life as a youth, took vows at Manasija Monastery in 1896, and trained as a painter in Belgrade, Moscow, and Italy, becoming a sought-after religious artist whose iconostases and icons adorned numerous Serbian churches.

Arrested by the Ustashe in late August 1941 along with three other monastics, he was tortured and perished on September 3, 1941. The Serbian Orthodox Church glorified him as a saint at the turn of the millennium. His feast is kept on September 3 (the date of his death), corresponding to August 21 on the Old Style calendar.

Timeline 8 moments Read Hide
  1. April 23, 1875 Birth in Deronje Đorđe (George) Momčilović was born in the village of Deronje in the Bačka region, then part of Austria-Hungary, to Velimir and Persida Momčilović.
  2. c. 1885 Entry into monastic life Around the age of ten he entered monastic life, studying at the monasteries of Kovilj and Bođani.
  3. October 26, 1896 Monastic tonsure at Manasija He took monastic vows at Manasija Monastery under Igumen Miron, receiving the name Rafailo (Raphael).
  4. November 23, 1896 Ordination as hierodeacon Metropolitan Mihailo ordained him a hierodeacon.
  5. 1902–1926 Career as an iconographer He studied painting in Belgrade, Moscow, and Italy and produced iconostases and icons across Serbia, including at Velika Krsna (1902), Rakovica Monastery (1905–6), Pačir and Gornji Kovilj (1908–10), and the Ružica Church in Belgrade (1925–26).
  6. August 25, 1941 Arrest by the Ustashe While serving as igumen and archimandrite of Šišatovac Monastery, he was arrested by the Ustashe together with three other monastics and transported toward Slavonska Požega.
  7. September 3, 1941 Martyrdom After enduring severe torture, including beatings and the removal of his beard, he perished in captivity. His burial site remains unknown.
  8. 1999–2000 Glorification He was glorified as a saint by the Holy Assembly of Bishops of the Serbian Orthodox Church, with the canonization proclaimed in Belgrade.

Contributions & Legacy

5 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Monasticism

He was born Đorđe (George) Momčilović on April 23, 1875, in Deronje, a village in the Bačka region of Austria-Hungary, the son of Velimir and Persida. After a local primary education he entered monastic life around the age of ten, studying first at Kovilj and Bođani monasteries.

On October 26, 1896, he took monastic vows at Manasija Monastery under Igumen Miron and received the name Rafailo. Metropolitan Mihailo ordained him a hierodeacon on November 23 of the same year.

Iconographer

He pursued formal training in painting in Belgrade, Moscow, and Italy, acquiring his iconographic skills in part from Russian iconographers and becoming an accomplished religious artist.

His work spanned several decades and included iconostases at Velika Krsna (1902), Rakovica Monastery (1905–6), Pačir and Gornji Kovilj (1908–10), and the Ružica Church in Belgrade (1925–26), as well as single icons, clergy portraits, and landscapes. According to one account he directed financial gains from his work toward the construction of the Church of Saint Sava in Belgrade.

Abbacy at Šišatovac and Martyrdom

During World War II he served as igumen (abbot) and archimandrite of Šišatovac Monastery on Fruška Gora in northern Serbia. The monastery, whose foundation is traditionally attributed to refugee monks from Žiča and which is documented from the mid-16th century, was declared a Monument of Culture of Exceptional Importance in 1990; during the war it suffered heavy damage at the hands of the Ustashe in the Independent State of Croatia.

On August 25, 1941, the Ustashe arrested him together with three other monastics and transported them toward Slavonska Požega, where he endured severe torture including beatings and the removal of his beard. He died on September 3, 1941, in captivity, amid the wartime persecution of Serbs. His burial site has never been discovered.

Glorification and Commemoration

The Serbian Orthodox Church glorified him as a hieromartyr at the turn of the millennium; sources place the proclamation in 1999 and the canonization ceremony in Belgrade in May 2000.

His feast is kept on September 3, the date of his death, which corresponds to August 21 on the Old Style calendar. The OCA Synaxarion lists him on August 21 as both 'Hieromartyr Raphael of Sisatovac' and 'Hieromartyr Raphael of Serbia,' in each case noting that no further biographical information is available. OrthodoxWiki's List of Serbian Saints designates him a venerable-martyr (преподобномученик) of Šišatovac, consistent with his monastic rank as archimandrite-abbot.

Legacy

Beyond his role in the Church, his memory is preserved through his surviving artistic output and through an art colony established in his name in Vojvodina.

Notes

OCA also lists him as Hieromartyr Raphael of Serbia; honest stub.

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