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St. Mena the Miracle-Worker
St. Mena is considered the most well know saint in the East and the West, due to the many miracles that are performed through his
prayers for us. That is evident in the numerous little clay bottles on which his name and picture are engraved. These were discovered
by the archeologists in diverse countries around the world, such as Heidelberg in Germany, Milan in Italy, Dalmata in Yugoslavia,
Marseille in France, Dengela in Sudan, and Jerusalem. Visitors from these cities and others would buy these bottles, which usually
contain oil or water for blessing, and take them back to their relatives.
Saint Mena was born in Egypt in the year 285, in the city of Niceous, which lies in the vicinity of Memphis. His parents were real
ascetic Christians, his father's name was Audexios and his mother's was Aufimia. On the feast of St. Mary, the mother who did not
have any children was praying in front of the Icon of the Virgin with tears that God may give her a blessed son. A sound came to
her ears saying "Amen", and thus she called her son Mena.
His father, a ruler of one of the administrative divisions of Egypt died when Mena was fourteen years old. At fifteen he joined
the army, and was given a high rank because of his father's reputation and was appointed in Algeria. Three years later he left
the army longing to devote his whole life for Christ. He headed towards the desert to live a different kind of life.
After he spent five years as a hermit, he saw the angels coronating the martyrs with glamorous crowns, in a revelation and longed
to join them. While he was thinking about it, he heard a voice saying: "Blessed are you Abba Mena because you have been called for
the pious life from your childhood. You shall be granted three immortal crowns; one because of your celibacy, the second because
of your asceticism and the third because of your martyrdom".
Immediately he felt as if the earth under him was vanishing, and he was overwhelmed with great eagerness to be carried away to
heavens. In a mood of valor he hurried to the ruler, declaring his Christian faith. His endless sufferings and the tortures
that he went through, have attracted many of the pagans not only to Christianity, but also to martyrdom.
The saint's assassins tried to burn his relics but they failed, so the believers loaded his body on a camel and headed towards
the western desert. At a certain spot, the camel stopped and the people could not force it to continue its trip by any means.
Right there; near a water well they buried him (that place is his present monastery at the end of Marriute lake not far from
Alexandria).
It happened that while a shepherd was feeding his sheep in that area, a sick lamb fell on the ground. As it struggled to get
on its feet again, its scab was cured. The story was spread quickly and the sick that came to this spot recovered from whatever
illnesses they had just by laying on the ground.
During that time, the daughter of king Zinon, the Christ lover, caught the itch. His advisors suggested that she should try
that place, and she did. At night the Saint appeared to the girl and informed her that his body is buried in that place.
The following morning, she bathed in the well and was healed. She related her vision about St. Mena to her servants and that
he cured her.
Immediately, King Zinon ordered the Saint's body to be dug out, and a church to be built there. Not only that, but he also
ordered to build a large city to be named after the Saint. Sick people from all over the world, used to visit that city and
were healed by the intercession of St. Mena, the miracle-maker.
Mrs. Bucher recorded that destruction started to take place in the city, and its in- habitants were degraded after the Arab
conquest. During the period after Haroun El-Rasheed, the Barbarians attacked the city and burned a large portion of it. At
the time of El-Mamoun he ordered to put the entire city down, and then he used its numerous marble pillars to build his palace
and the mosques. It is only in the twentieth century that international missions began to search for the city and the church.
The remainders of it, no doubt, demonstrates the glory of the Coptic past.
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