Venerable (Monastic) 21st century

Saint Elizabeth of Pasărea

1970-2014

Also known as Elisabeta Lazăr · Rodica Lazăr

A schema-nun of the Pasărea Monastery who later lived as a solitary ascetic on Mount Giumalău. She reposed in 2014.

Feast Day
June 5
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.
Commemorated as

Our Venerable Mother Elizabeth of Pasărea

Life

Saint Elizabeth of Pasărea (born Rodica Lazăr) was a Romanian schema-nun who, after years in monastic community, withdrew to live as a solitary ascetic on Mount Giumalău in Bucovina. She is counted among the first Orthodox saints to have lived into the twenty-first century, and was glorified by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 2025.

Born in 1970 in the Suceava region of northern Romania, she entered the Pasărea Monastery near Bucharest as a young woman, served for a time at the Romanian establishment in Jerusalem, and eventually received the Great Schema. The closing seventeen years of her life were spent in wilderness solitude until her repose in 2014. Surviving accounts differ on several details of her life, and the sections below note where the record diverges.

Timeline 7 moments Read Hide
  1. 1970 Birth Born as Rodica Lazăr in the Moldova-Sulița commune of Suceava County, Romania; sources differ on whether the date was 7 May or 16 July.
  2. mid-1980s Enters Pasărea Monastery Enters the community of the Pasărea Monastery near Bucharest as a teenager.
  3. 12 December 1990 Rassophore tonsure By the more detailed account, tonsured a rassophore nun, receiving the name Elizabeth.
  4. 1996 Service in Jerusalem Sent to the Romanian establishment in Jerusalem, where she serves as a sacristan and chanter; a grave illness there turns her toward solitude.
  5. 2006/2007 Great Schema Receives the Great Schema, the highest monastic grade, keeping the name Elizabeth.
  6. 2014 Repose Reposes in June 2014 on Mount Giumalău, shortly before completing her forty-fourth year.
  7. 1 July 2025 Glorification Canonized by the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church; commemorated on June 5.

Contributions & Legacy

4 contributions Read Hide

Early Life and Entry into Monasticism

She was born in 1970 in the Moldova-Sulița commune of Suceava County, in the historic region of Bucovina, and was given the baptismal name Rodica. Accounts of her birth date differ, some giving 7 May and others 16 July 1970. She was one of a large family of the Lazăr household, headed by Vasile and Maria Lazăr; sources record eleven children in all, several of whom did not survive infancy.

As a young woman she made pilgrimages to Romanian convents, and she entered the community of the Pasărea Monastery near Bucharest in the mid-1980s, while still in her teens. The accounts of her tonsures do not fully agree: the more detailed record places her rassophore tonsure on 12 December 1990, when she received the monastic name Elizabeth, while other summaries describe an earlier tonsure under the name Theodora. By the more documentary account she was later tonsured to the lesser schema in 1998 as Theodora.

Jerusalem and the Turn to Solitude

In 1996 she was sent to the Romanian establishment in Jerusalem, where she served as a sacristan and chanter. According to her life she fell gravely ill there, and this illness is described as the turning point that drew her toward a withdrawn, eremitic life.

After returning from Jerusalem she withdrew to the mountains of Bucovina, settling on Mount Giumalău. The sources place this withdrawal variously after 1997 or in 2003. There she lived as a solitary, by tradition fashioning a dwelling in the rock, keeping a strict ascetic regime of a single daily meal, little sleep, and a long rule of prayer, and receiving a small number of disciples who sought her counsel.

Great Schema and Repose

She received the Great Schema, the highest grade of the monastic life, retaining the name Elizabeth; sources date this to 2006 or 2007. She continued in wilderness solitude on Mount Giumalău for the remainder of her life, an interval her life describes as some seventeen years.

She reposed in June 2014, shortly before completing her forty-fourth year; accounts give the date as either 5 or 6 June. The synaxarion and her veneration assign her commemoration to June 5.

Glorification

Saint Elizabeth of Pasărea was canonized by the Holy Synod of the Romanian Orthodox Church at its meeting of 1 July 2025, among a number of holy women added to the Church's calendar. Her commemoration is fixed on June 5. She is frequently noted as being, together with others glorified at the same time, among the first canonized Orthodox saints to have lived into the twenty-first century.

Her relics were reported to have been exhumed in January 2026 for veneration at the church of the Pasărea Monastery.

Works & Further Reading Read Hide

Further Reading

Further Reading
  • First Orthodox Saints Who Lived in the 21st Century Are Romanian — Basilica.ro (Romanian Patriarchate news agency)
  • Saint Elizabeth of Pasărea, a Desert-Dweller of Our Own Days — Ortodoxway.com
Notes

Born Rodica Lazăr, 1970, Moldova Sulița; reposed 2014. Among the first Romanian saints to have lived into the 21st century. Glorified by the Romanian Orthodox Church in 2025.

Sources: Basilica.ro; Romanian Orthodox Church canonization (2025)