ZA-MIKAEL ARAGAWI
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Abba Za-Mikael Aragawi (later 5th-early 6th centuries) is one of the Nine Saints of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church.
Like the eight other Saints – Abba Afsé, Abba Aléf, Abba Garima, Abba Guba, Abba Liqanos, Abba Pantaléwon, Abba Sahma, and Abba Yamata — he is believed to have come from Syria, and to have participated in the translation of the Ge’ez Bible, which was based on the version of the Antioch school, which, unlike the school of Alexandria, emphasised the literal interpretation of the Bible, and Christ’s humanity, rather than his divinity.
An account of Za-Mikael’s life is contained in a Gadl, or book of Acts, which is believed to date from the 15th century, and emphasises the supposedly miraculous side of his life. Born ‘Abd al-Masih, he is reputed to have been a member of the royal house Byzantium, and to have become a monk at the age of 14, when St. Pachomius gave him the name of Zi-Mikael. His fame gradually attracted the other in Abbas, who termed him Aragawi, that is *The Elder.” Subsequently his mother joined him and became a nun.
From Byzantium, Za-Mikael, accompanied by his disciples, is said to have gone to Aksum, which was already Christian. They were welcomed by King Ella Ameda II (who ruled during the 5th century) in the fifth year of his reign and later remained at the court of his successor, Tazena. Altogether, they spent 12 years at Aksum before each went his own way to found monasteries.
Za-Mikael, for his part, went with his mother to eastern Tegré, where he established a monastery on the mountain of Damo, during the reign of Gabra Masqal (ruled from about 550 to about 570). Tradition relates that since the holy man could not climb this mountain, he clung to the tail of a serpent which pulled him to the summit. His Gadl claims that earlier King Kaleb [reigned circa 514-530] consulted him before embarking on his famous expedition to South Arabia.
His death, which occurred in the month of October, is recalled in the Synaxarium (liturgical book containing the lives of the Saints) of the Ethiopian Church.
RICHARD PANKHURST