Introduction: monks, mountains and forests
From antiquity, the landscape of mountains and forests has been associated with the sacred because it provided a natural sanctuary where human beings have felt they could approach the divine. The landscape came to have a symbolic significance favourable to a specific spiritual vocation, and in particular that of hermits.
Christian monasticism began in the deserts of Palestine and Egypt with the hermits (solitary monks) and the organisation of the earliest monastic communities. Although there are desert monasteries in the driest parts of Europe, e.g. Panayia Akrotiriani, Our Lady of the Cape, in Crete, mountains and forests were regarded as equivalent to the desert; indeed, they were sometimes called ‘deserts’, for example in the Cistercian and Carthusian traditions in western Europe and on Mount Athos, the holy mountain of Greece (Rackham, 2002). The same idea is present in other religions, for example Mount Hiei, the monastic mountain in Japan.
The forest, once thought of as a ‘natural’, uncontrollable, inhospitable space
evoking fear of the unknown, came to be seen as the place best suited to an ascetic
vocation because it offered the seclusion and silence that allow for listening, prayer
and meditation. This is the practice that underpins the possibility of a balanced and
ordered existence in harmony with nature and, according to religious tradition,
oriented towards God.