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10 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 10

 St. Peter Van


Feastday: May 10

Death: 1857

Canonized: Pope John Paul II


Vietnamese martyr. A native catechist, he was arrested by authorities and beheaded. Pope John Paul II canonized him in 1988. 


The Vietnamese Martyrs (Vietnamese: Các Thánh Tử đạo Việt Nam; French: Martyrs du Viêt Nam), also known as the Martyrs of Annam, Martyrs of Tonkin and Cochinchina, Martyrs of Indochina, or Andrew Dung-Lac and Companions (Anrê Dũng-Lạc và các bạn tử đạo), are saints on the General Roman Calendar who were canonized by Pope John Paul II. On June 19, 1988, thousands of overseas Vietnamese worldwide gathered at the Vatican for the Celebration of the Canonization of 117 Vietnamese Martyrs, an event chaired by Monsignor Tran Van Hoai. Their memorial is on November 24 (although several of these saints have another memorial, having been beatified and on the calendar prior to the canonization of the group).



St. Damien of Molokai

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 10)


✠ புனிதர் தமியான் ✠

(St. Damien of Molokai)


மதகுரு, மதபோதகர்:

(Religious Priest and Missionary)


பிறப்பு: ஜனவரி 3, 1840

ட்ரெமெலோ, ப்ரபன்ட், பெல்ஜியம்

(Tremelo, Brabant, Belgium)


இறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 15, 1889 (வயது 49)

கலாவுபப்பா, மொலகாய், ஹவாயி

(Kalaupapa, Molokaʻi, Hawaiʻi)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:  

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கீழைக் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபைகள்

(Eastern Catholic Churches)

அமெரிக்க எப்பிஸ்கோப்பல் திருச்சபை

(Episcopal Church)

ஆங்கிலிக்கத்தின் சில பிரிவுகள்

(Some Churches of Anglican Communion)

லூதரன் தனிச்சபைகள் சில

(Individual Lutheran Churches)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 4, 1995

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல் 

(Pope John Paul II)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 11, 2009

திருத்தந்தை பதினாறாம் பெனடிக்ட்

(Pope Benedict XVI)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:

லுவென், பெல்ஜியம் (உடலின் மிச்சங்கள்)

(Leuven, Belgium (bodily relics)

மோலக்காய், ஹவாய் (அவரது கையின் மிச்சங்கள்)

(Molokaʻi, Hawaii (relics of his hand)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 10


பாதுகாவல்: தொழுநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டோர்.


ஹவாயி இராச்சியத்தின் மோலக்காய் தீவில் தொழுநோயாளருக்குப் பணிபுரிந்து, தாமும் தொழுநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட புனிதர் தமியான், "இயேசு மற்றும் மரியாளின் திருஇருதய சபை" (Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary) என்னும் கத்தோலிக்க துறவற சபையினைச் சார்ந்த துறவியும், குருவும் ஆவார்.


பிறப்பும் துறவறமும்:

தந்தை தமியான், கி.பி 1840ம் ஆண்டு, ஜனவரி மாதம், 3ம் நாளன்று பிறந்தார். அவர் பிறந்த இடம் பெல்ஜியம் நாட்டில் உள்ள “ட்ரெமெலோ” (Tremelo) என்னும் ஊர் ஆகும். அவருடைய இயற்பெயர் "ஜோசெஃப் டி வெய்ஸ்ட்டெர்' (Jozef De Veuster) ஆகும். அவர் "இயேசு மற்றும் மரியாள் ஆகியோரின் திரு இருதயங்களின் சபை" என்னும் துறவற சபையின் உறுப்பினராக இருந்தார். கிறிஸ்தவ சமயத்தைப் பரப்புவதில் ஈடுபட்டிருந்தார்.


புனிதர் தமியான், "தொழுநோயாளரின் திருத்தூதர்" (The Apostle of the Lepers) என்னும் பெயராலும் அறியப்படுகிறார். மேலும் அவருக்கு, "தொழுநோய்த் துறவி" (Leper Priest) என்னும் பெயரும் உண்டு.


தமியானின் இளமைப் பருவம்:

"ஜோசெஃப் டி வேய்ஸ்ட்டர்" (Jozef De Veuster) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட தந்தை தமியான், பெல்ஜியம் நாட்டில் 'ஃப்ளேமிஷ்' (Flemish) மொழி பேசும் மக்கள் குழுவைச் சார்ந்த "ஜோவான்னெஸ் ஃப்ரான்சிஸ்கஸ் டி வெய்ஸ்ட்டர்" (Joannes Franciscus De Veuster) என்பவருக்கும் அவரது மனைவி "ஆனி-காதரின் வூட்டெர்ஸ்" (Anne-Catherine Wouters) என்பவருக்கும் ஏழாவது குழந்தையாகப் பிறந்தவர். அவரது தந்தை சோளம் வியாபாரியாக இருந்தார். அவர் "ப்ரேய்ன்-லெ-கோம்த்" (Braine-le-Comte) என்னும் இடத்தில் உள்ள கல்லூரியில் கல்வி பயின்றார்.


துறவு வாழ்க்கையைத் தழுவுதல்:

இயேசுவை நெருக்கமாகப் பின்செல்ல விரும்பி, துறவற வாழ்க்கையைத் தழுவ எண்ணிய தமியான், "இயேசு மற்றும் மரியா ஆகியோரின் திரு இருதயங்களின் சபை" என்னும் துறவறக் குழுவில் உறுப்பினராகச் சேர முன்வந்து, அச்சபைக்கான புகுமுகப் (Novitiate) பயிற்சி பெற்றார். அப்போது அவர் தேர்ந்துகொண்ட துறவறப் பெயர் "தமியானஸ்"ஆகும்.


அவருடைய குருத்துவப் படிப்புக் காலத்தின் போது அவர் ஒவ்வொரு நாளும் மறைபரப்பாளர்களின் பாதுகாவலராகிய புனித ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சவேரியாரின் படத்தின் முன் அமர்ந்து, தாமும் ஒருநாள் நாடுகடந்து சென்று கிறிஸ்தவ மறைப்பணி புரிய இறைவன் அருளவேண்டும் என்று வேண்டுதல் செய்வது வழக்கம். மூன்று ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பின் அவருடைய வேண்டுதல் கேட்கப்பட்டது. தமியானின் சகோதரர் "அருட்தந்தை பாம்ப்பில்" (Father Pamphile) அவர்கள் நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டதால் ஹவாயி இராச்சியத்துக்கு மறைப்பணியாளராகச் செல்ல இயலாமல் போயிற்று. அவருக்குப் பதிலாக, அவருடைய தம்பி தமியானை ஹவாயிக்கு மறைப்பணியாளராக அனுப்புவது என்று சபை முடிவுசெய்தது. அண்ணனுக்குக் கிடைக்காத பேறு தம்பிக்குக் கிடைத்தது.


ஹவாயிக்கு மறைப்பணியாற்றச் செல்லுதல்:

கி.பி 1864ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 19ம் நாள், தமியான் மறைப்பணியாளராக ஹவாயி நாட்டின் "ஹொனலூலு" (Honolulu Harbor) துறைமுகம் வந்திறங்கினார். அங்கு, இவர் நிறுவிய சபையினர் கட்டியிருந்த "அமைதியின் அன்னை பேராலயத்தில்" (Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace), கி.பி 1864ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 21ம் நாளன்று, தமியான் குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார்.


கி.பி 1865ம் ஆண்டு, தமியானுக்கு ஹவாயியின் "வட கோஹலா" (Catholic Mission in North Kohala) பகுதியில் அமைந்திருந்த இயேசுவின் திரு இருதய ஆலய பொறுப்பு ஒப்படைக்கப்பட்டது.


ஹவாயியில் மருத்துவ நெருக்கடி:

ஹவாயி இராச்சியத்தின் 'ஓவாஹூ' (Oahu) பகுதியில் பல பங்குகளில் மறைப்பணி செய்தார் தந்தை தமியான். அவ்வாறு அவர் பணியாற்றிக் கொண்டிருக்கையில் ஹவாயியின் மருத்துவ சேவை ஒரு பெரிய நெருக்கடியைச் சந்திக்கலாயிற்று. வெளிநாடுகளிலிருந்து வந்த வணிகர்களும் கடற்பயணிகளும் சுமந்துவந்த சில நோய்கள் அவர்கள் ஹவாயியின் ஆதி குடிமக்களோடு கொண்ட தொடர்பின் பயனாக அம்மக்கள் சிலரிடையே பரவின.


இதனால் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான ஹவாயி மக்கள் ஃபுளூ சளிக்காய்ச்சல், பால்வினை நோயாகிய மேகப்புண் (smallpox, cholera, influenza, syphilis, and whooping cough) போன்ற நோய்களுக்கு ஆளாகி இறந்தனர். இந்த நோய்கள் அப்பகுதிகளில் முன்னால் கண்டதில்லை. இவ்வாறு வந்து பரவிய நோய்களுள் ஒன்று "ஹான்சன் நோய்" (Hansen's disease) என்று அழைக்கப்படுகின்ற தொழுநோய்.


அச்சமயத்தில் தொழுநோய் மிகவும் பயங்கரமான தொற்றுநோயாகக் கருதப்பட்டது. ஆனால் 95% மனிதர்கள் அந்நோய்க் கிருமியைத் தடுக்கும் எதிர்ப்புச் சக்தி கொண்டுள்ளனர் என்று அறியப்பட்டது. தொழுநோய் என்பது குணப்படுத்த முடியாத நோய் என்றும் அக்காலத்தில் கருதப்பட்டது.


ஒதுக்கப்பட்டு வாழ்ந்த தொழுநோயாளருக்கு மக்கள் நல வாரியம் உணவும் பிற பொருள்களும் கொடுத்தது. ஆனால் நாள்கள் போகப்போக அம்மக்களின் நலனைக் கவனிக்க போதுமான ஆள்களோ பொருள்களோ அனுப்பப்படவில்லை.


தந்தை தமியான் தொழுநோயாளர் நடுவே பணி செய்ய முதல் ஆளாகப் போய்ச் சேர்ந்தார். ஒதுக்கப்பட்ட இடமாகிய கலாவுபப்பா தொழுநோயாளர் குடியிருப்பில் தமியான், கி.பி 1873ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 10ம் நாள், சென்றடைந்தார். அங்கு வாழ்ந்த 816 தொழுநோயாளர் முன்னிலையில் 'ஆயர் மேக்ரே', தந்தை தமியானை அறிமுகம் செய்தார்.


தொழுநோயாளர் குடியிருப்பில் போய்ச் சேர்ந்த உடனேயே அங்கு வாழ்ந்த மக்களின் வாழ்க்கையை எப்படி முன்னேற்றுவது என்பது குறித்து தமியான் சிந்திக்கலானார். முதல் வேலையாக ஒரு கோவில் கட்டுவது என்று முடிவுசெய்து, கோவிலைக் கட்டி அதைப் புனித ஃபிலோமினாவுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்தார். ஆனால் அவரது பணி மறைசார்ந்த ஒன்றாக மட்டுமே இருக்கவில்லை.


தொழுநோயாளரின் புண்களைக் கட்டுவது, அவர்கள் வசதியாகத் தங்கியிருக்க வீடுகள் கட்டுவது, அவர்களுக்குத் தேவையான மரச்சாமான்களைச் செய்துகொடுப்பது, இறந்தோரை அடக்கம் செய்ய அடக்கப்பெட்டிகள் செய்வது, கல்லறைக் குழிகள் தோண்டுவது என்று பல பணிகளையும் தமியான் செய்யலானார்.


தந்தை தமியானுக்கும் தொழுநோய் தொற்றிவிட்டது. தமக்கும் தொழுநோய் வந்துவிட்டது என்று தெரிந்த பிறகு, தமியான் முன்னைப் போலவே ஊக்கத்தோடு தம் பணிகளில் ஈடுபட்டார்.


கி.பி 1889ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 15ம் தேதியன்று காலை 8 மணிக்குத் தந்தை தமியான் தொழுநோயால் இறந்தார். அப்போது அவருக்கு வயது 49.

Feastday: May 10

Patron: of people with leprosy

Birth: 1840

Death: 1889

Beatified: June 4th, 1995, Basilica of the Sacred Heart (Koekelberg), Brussels, by Pope John Paul II

Canonized: October 11th, 2009, Vatican City, by Pope Benedict XVI


The man who would become St. Damien of Molokai, was born in rural Belgium, on January 3, 1840. His name was Jozef De Veuster, and he was the youngest of seven children. Growing up on the farm, Jozef was prepared to take over for his family, but he did not want the responsibility. Instead, he wanted to follow his older brother and two sisters who took religious vows.


Jozef attended school until the age of 13 when his help was needed on the family farm full-time. He aided his family until he was old enough to enter the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. He took the name Damien, after a sixth century martyr.


In 1864, Damien's brother who was also in the same order of religious, was ordered to Hawaii. But his brother became ill, so Br. Damien offered to go in his place.


The brothers worried that Br. Damien was too uneducated to become a priest, although he was not considered unintelligent. Br. Damien demonstrated his ability by quickly learning Latin from his brother. He was also devoted in prayer, Br. Damien prayed each day before an icon of Saint Francis Xavier to be sent on a mission.


Eventually, his religious brothers agreed to send him and have him ordained.



Br. Damien arrived in Hawaii in March 1864, and was ordained as a priest on the island of Hawaii two months later. For nine years, he worked on the island as a priest, leading an important, yet undistinguished life.


In 1866, Hawaii established a leper colony on the Kalaupapa Peninsula. It was still mistakenly believed that leprosy was highly contagious. This belief resulted in the forced quarantine of leprosy patients.


These people still needed spiritual and medical care, so to Fr. Damien discerned his call to serve them. In 1873, Fr. Damien made the trip to be with these people in their colony.


Upon arrival, he found the colony was poorly maintained. Anarchy reigned among the people living there. Many patients required treatment but had nobody to care for them. Other patients took to drinking and became severe alcoholics. Every kind of immorality and misbehavior was on display in the lawless colony. There was no law or order.


Fr. Damien realized the people needed leadership, so he provided it. He asked people to come together to build houses and schools and eventually the parish church, St. Philomena. The church still stands today.


The sick were cared for and the dead buried. Order and routine made the colony livable. Fr. Damien personally provided much of the care the people needed.


He was supposed to only work in the colony for a time then he would be replaced by one of three other volunteers for the work. But the leper colony was to become his permanent home. After working with the people for a time Fr. Damien grew attached to the people and his work. He asked permission to stay at the colony to serve. His request was granted.


Leprosy is not as contagious as most people of the period assumed, however five percent of the human population is susceptible. The disease can also take several years to show symptoms.


Fr. Daminen became one of those people. He contracted leprosy in 1885, after several years of work. He realized he had the disease when he placed his foot into scalding water by accident, but felt no pain. This was a common way by which people discovered they were infected. Leprosy attacks nerve endings and a victim may hurt themselves but not feel any pain.


Fr. Damien continued his work, despite his illness, which slowly took over his body. He derived strength from prayer and devotion. He often went to the cemetery to pray the Rosary or spent time in the presence of the Eucharist. "It is at the foot of the altar that we find the strength we need in our isolation," he wrote.



By all accounts, Fr. Daminen was courageous, headstrong and resilient. His personal toughness served to inspire others. He was also reportedly very happy, a common phenomenon for those who pray and work hard to serve others and the Lord.


After sixteen years in the colony, Fr. Damien succumbed to leprosy on April 15, 1889. He was first buried nearby, then his remains were transferred to Belgium in 1936. His right hand was returned to Hawaii in 1995 to be reburied in his original grave at Molokai.


He was beatified by Pope John Paul II in Brussels, Belgium on June 4, 1995. His sainthood was confirmed on October 11, 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI. His feast day is May 10.


The day of his passing, April 15, is a minor statewide holiday in Hawaii.


Saint Damien is the patron saint of people suffering from leprosy.


For other people with similar names, see Father Damien (disambiguation), Saint Damien (disambiguation), and Peter Damian.

Father Damien or Saint Damien of Molokai, SS.CC. or Saint Damien De Veuster (Dutch: Pater Damiaan or Heilige Damiaan van Molokai; 3 January 1840 – 15 April 1889),[2] born Jozef De Veuster, was a Roman Catholic priest from Belgium and member of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary,[3] a missionary religious institute. He was recognized for his ministry, which he led from 1873 until his death in 1889, in the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi for people with leprosy (Hansen's disease), who lived in government-mandated medical quarantine in a settlement on the Kalaupapa Peninsula of Molokaʻi.[4]


During this time, he taught the Catholic faith to the people of Hawaii. Father Damien also cared for the patients and established leaders within the community to build houses, schools, roads, hospitals, and churches. He dressed residents' ulcers, built a reservoir, made coffins, dug graves, shared pipes, and ate poi by hand with them, providing both medical and emotional support.


After eleven years caring for the physical, spiritual, and emotional needs of those in the leper colony, Father Damien contracted leprosy. He continued with his work despite the infection but finally succumbed to the disease on 15 April 1889.


Father Damien has been described as a "martyr of charity".[5] Damien De Veuster is venerated as a saint in the Catholic Church. In the Anglican Communion and other Christian denominations, Damien is considered the spiritual patron for leprosy and outcasts. Father Damien Day, 15 April, the day of his death, is also a minor statewide holiday in Hawaii. Father Damien is the patron saint of the Diocese of Honolulu and of Hawaii.


Father Damien was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on 11 October 2009.[6][7] Libert H. Boeynaems, writing in the Catholic Encyclopedia, calls him "the Apostle of the Lepers."[8] Damien De Veuster's feast day is 10 May.






Early life

Father Damien was born Jozef ("Jef") De Veuster, the youngest of seven children and fourth son of the Flemish corn merchant Joannes Franciscus ("Frans") De Veuster and his wife Anne-Catherine ("Cato") Wouters in the village of Tremelo in Flemish Brabant in rural Belgium on 3 January 1840. His older sisters Eugénie and Pauline became nuns, and his older brother Auguste (Father Pamphile) joined the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary (Picpus Fathers). Jozef was forced to quit school at age 13 to work on the family farm.[9] His father sent him to a college at Braine-le-Comte to prepare for a commercial profession, but as a result of a mission given by the Redemptorists in 1858, Joseph decided to become a religious.[8]


Jozef entered the novitiate of the Fathers of the Sacred Heart of Jesus and Mary at Louvain and took in religion the name of Damien, presumably about the first Saint Damian, a fourth-century physician and martyr.[10][11] He was admitted to the religious profession, 7 Oct. 1860.


His superiors thought that he was not a good candidate for the priesthood because he lacked education. However, he was not considered unintelligent. Because he learned Latin well from his brother, his superiors decided to allow him to become a priest. During his religious studies, Damien prayed daily before a picture of St. Francis Xavier, patron of missionaries, to be sent on a mission.[12][13] Three years later when his brother Father Pamphile (Auguste) could not travel to Hawaiʻi as a missionary because of illness, Damien was allowed to take his place.[14]


Mission in Hawaii


Father Damien in 1873 before he sailed for Hawaii

On 19 March 1864, Damien arrived at Honolulu Harbor on Oahu. He was ordained into the priesthood on 21 May 1864, at what is now the Cathedral of Our Lady of Peace.[15]


In 1865 Damien was assigned to the Catholic Mission in North Kohala on the island of Hawaiʻi. While he was serving in several parishes on Oʻahu, the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi was struggling with a labor shortage and a public health crisis.[16] Many of the Native Hawaiian parishioners had high mortality rates due to infectious diseases such as smallpox, cholera, influenza, syphilis, and whooping cough, brought to the Hawaiian Islands by foreign traders, sailors and immigrants. Thousands of Hawaiians died of such diseases, to which they had no acquired immunity.[17]


It is believed that Chinese workers carried leprosy (later known as Hansen's disease) to the islands in the 1830s and 1840s. At that time, leprosy was thought to be highly contagious and was incurable. In 1865, out of fear of this contagious disease, Hawaiian King Kamehameha V and the Hawaiian Legislature passed the "Act to Prevent the Spread of Leprosy." This law quarantined the lepers of Hawaii, requiring the most serious cases to be moved to a settlement colony of Kalawao on the eastern end of the Kalaupapa peninsula on the island of Molokaʻi. Later the settlement of Kalaupapa was developed. Kalawao County, where the two villages are located, is separated from the rest of Molokaʻi by a steep mountain ridge. From 1866 through 1969, about 8,000 Hawaiians were sent to the Kalaupapa peninsula for medical quarantine.[18]


The Royal Board of Health initially provided the quarantined people with food and other supplies, but it did not have the workforce and resources to offer proper health care.[8] According to documents of that time, the Kingdom of Hawaiʻi did not intend for the settlements to be penal colonies. Still, the Kingdom did not provide enough resources to support them.[4] The Kingdom of Hawaii had planned for the lepers to be able to care for themselves and grow their crops. Still, due to the effects of leprosy and the peninsula's local environmental conditions, this was impractical.


By 1868, according to the Catholic Encyclopedia (1911), "Drunken and lewd conduct prevailed. The easy-going, good-natured people seemed wholly changed."[19][20]


Mission on Molokai

While Bishop Louis Désiré Maigret, the vicar apostolic of the Honolulu diocese, believed that the lepers needed a Catholic priest to assist them, he realized that this assignment had high risk. He did not want to send any one person "in the name of obedience." After much prayer, four priests volunteered to go, among them Father Damien. The bishop planned for the volunteers to take turns in rotation assisting the inhabitants.


On 10 May 1873, the first volunteer, Father Damien, arrived at the isolated settlement at Kalaupapa, where there were then 600 lepers,[8] and was presented by Bishop Louis Maigret. At his arrival, he spoke to the assembled lepers as "one who will be a father to you, and who loves you so much that he does not hesitate to become one of you; to live and die with you."[citation needed]


Damien worked with them to build a church and establish the Parish of Saint Philomena. In addition to serving as a priest, he dressed residents' ulcers, built a reservoir, built homes and furniture, made coffins, and dug graves.[10] Six months after his arrival at Kalawao, he wrote to his brother, Pamphile, in Europe: "...I make myself a leper with the lepers to gain all to Jesus Christ."[citation needed]


During this time, Father Damien had cared for the lepers and established leaders within the community to improve the state of living. Father Damien aided the colony by teaching, painting houses, organizing farms, organizing the construction of chapels, roads, hospitals, and churches. He also dressed residents, dug graves, built coffins, ate food by hand with lepers, shared pipes with them, and lived with the lepers as equals. Father Damien also served as a priest during this time and spread the Catholic faith to the lepers; it is said that Father Damien told the lepers that despite what the outside world thought of them, they were always precious in the eyes of God.



Father Damien, seen here with the Kalawao Girls Choir during the 1870s.

Some historians believed that Father Damien was a catalyst for a turning point for the community. Under his leadership, basic laws were enforced, shacks were upgraded and improved as painted houses, working farms were organized, and schools were established. At his request and of the lepers, Father Damien remained on Molokaʻi.[4] Many such accounts, however, overlook the roles of superintendents who were Hawaiian or part-Hawaiian. Pennie Moblo states that until the late 20th century, most historical reports of Damien's ministry revealed biases of Europeans and Americans, and nearly completely discounted the roles of the native residents on Molokaʻi.[20]


William P. Ragsdale was a highly popular and effective attorney and politician who was part Hawaiian; he had served as an interpreter and in other government posts. After finding that he had contracted leprosy, he "gave himself up to the law" and was appointed to serve as superintendent at Kalaupapa in 1873. He led it until his death in 1877. His popularity led to his being called "Governor." Father Damien succeeded him briefly as superintendent, but he gave that up after three months in February 1878 in favor of another appointee. His superiors did not want priests serving in government posts.[21]


Recognition during his lifetime

King David Kalākaua bestowed on Damien the honor of "Knight Commander of the Royal Order of Kalākaua."[22] When Crown Princess Lydia Liliʻuokalani visited the settlement to present the medal, she was reported as having been too distraught and heartbroken at the sight of the residents to read her speech. The princess shared her experience, acclaiming Damien's efforts.[23] Consequently, Damien became internationally known in the United States and Europe. American Protestants raised large sums of money for the missionary's work. The Church of England sent food, medicine, clothing, and supplies to the settlement. It is believed that Damien never wore the royal medal, although it was placed by his side at his funeral.


Illness and death


Father Damien on his deathbed


St. Marianne Cope standing beside Father Damien's funeral bier (image reversed)


The leprosy patients of Molokaʻi gathered around Father Damien's grave in mourning

Father Damien worked for 16 years in Hawaii, providing comfort for the lepers of Kalaupapa. He gave the people not only faith but also homes and his medical expertise. He would pray at the cemetery of the deceased and comfort the dying at their bedsides.


In December 1884, while preparing to bathe, Damien inadvertently put his foot into scalding water, causing his skin to blister. He felt nothing and realized he had contracted leprosy after 11 years of working in the colony.[4] This was a common way for people to discover that they had been infected with leprosy. Despite his illness, Damien worked even harder.[24]


In 1885, Masanao Goto, a Japanese leprologist, came to Honolulu and treated Damien. He believed that leprosy was caused by a diminution of the blood. His treatment consisted of nourishing food, moderate exercise, frequent friction to the benumbed parts, special ointments, and medical baths. The treatments did relieve some of the symptoms and were very popular with the Hawaiian patients. Damien had faith in the treatments and said he wanted to be treated by no one but Goto,[25][26][27] who eventually became good friends with Father Damien.[28]


Despite the illness slowing his body, Damien engaged in a flurry of activity in his last years. He tried to complete and advance as many projects as possible with his remaining time. While continuing to spread the Catholic Faith and aid the lepers in their treatments, Damien completed several building projects and improved orphanages. Four volunteers arrived at Kalaupapa to help the ailing missionary: a Belgian priest, Louis Lambert Conrardy; a soldier, Joseph Dutton (an American Civil War veteran who left behind a marriage broken by alcoholism); a male nurse, James Sinnett from Chicago; and Mother (now also Saint) Marianne Cope, who had been the head of the Franciscan-run St Joseph's Hospital in Syracuse, New York.[29] Conrardy took up pastoral duties. Cope organized a working hospital. Dutton attended to the construction and maintenance of the community's buildings. Sinnett nursed Damien in the last phases of illness.


With an arm in a sling, a foot in bandages, and his leg dragging, Damien knew death was near. He was bedridden on 23 March 1889, and on 30 March, he made a general confession.[30] Damien died of leprosy at 8:00 a.m. on 15 April 1889, aged 49.[31] The next day, after Mass said by Father Moellers at St. Philomena's, the whole settlement followed the funeral cortège to the cemetery. Damien was laid to rest under the same pandanus tree where he first slept upon his arrival on Molokaʻi.[32]


In January 1936, at the request of King Leopold III of Belgium and the Belgian government, Damien's body was returned to his native land in Belgium. It was transported aboard the Belgian ship Mercator. Damien was buried in Leuven, the historic university city close to the village where he was born. After Damien's beatification in June 1995, the remains of his right hand were returned to Hawaii and re-interred in his original grave on Molokaʻi.[33][34]


Commentary after his death

Father Damien had become internationally known before his death, seen as a symbolic Christian figure caring for the afflicted natives. His superiors thought Damien lacked education and finesse but knew him as "an earnest peasant hard at work in his own way for God."[35] News of his death on 15 April was quickly carried across the globe by the modern communications of the time, by steamship to Honolulu and California, telegraph to the East Coast of the United States, and cable to England, reaching London on 11 May.[36] Following an outpouring of praise for his work, other voices began to be heard in Hawaiʻi.


Representatives of the Congregational and Presbyterian churches in Hawaii criticized his approach. Reverend Charles McEwen Hyde, a Presbyterian minister in Honolulu, wrote in August to fellow pastor Reverend H. B. Gage of San Francisco. Hyde referred to Father Damien as "a coarse, dirty man," who contracted leprosy due to "carelessness."[37][38] Hyde said that Damien was mistakenly being given credit for reforms made by the Board of Health. Without consulting with Hyde, Gage had the letter published in a San Francisco newspaper, generating comment and controversy in the US and Hawaiʻi. People of the period consistently overlooked the role of Hawaiians themselves, among whom several had prominent leadership roles on the island.[39]


Later in 1889 Scottish author Robert Louis Stevenson and his family arrived in Hawaii for an extended stay. He had tuberculosis, then also incurable, and was seeking some relief. Moved by Damien's story, he became interested in the priest's controversy and went to Molokaʻi for eight days and seven nights.[37] Stevenson wanted to learn more about Damien at the place where he had worked. He spoke with residents of varying religious backgrounds to learn more about Damien's work. Based on his conversations and observations, he wrote an open letter to Hyde that addressed the minister's criticisms and had it printed at his own expense. This became the most famous account of Damien, featuring him in the role of a European aiding a benighted native people.[37][40]


In his "6,000-word polemic,"[40] Stevenson praised Damien extensively, writing to Hyde:


If that world at all remember you, on the day when Damien of Molokai shall be named a Saint, it will be in virtue of one work: your letter to the Reverend H. B. Gage.[37]


Stevenson referred to his journal entries in his letter:


...I have set down these private passages, as you perceive, without correction; thanks to you, the public has them in their bluntness. They are almost a list of the man's faults, for it is rather these that I was seeking: with his virtues, with the heroic profile of his life, I and the world were already sufficiently acquainted. I was besides a little suspicious of Catholic testimony, in no ill sense, but merely because Damien's admirers and disciples were the least likely to be critical. I know you will be more suspicious still, and the facts set down above were one and all collected from the lips of Protestants who had opposed the father in his life. Yet I am strangely deceived, or they build up the image of a man, with all his weakness, essentially heroic, and alive with rugged honesty, generosity, and mirth.[37]


Since then, historians and ethnologists have also studied Damien's work and residents' lives on Molokaʻi. For example, Pennie Moblo assesses the myth and controversy about the priest in the context not of religious conflict between Protestants and Catholics, but changes in relations in Hawaiʻi between the royal house, European-American planters, and missionaries, and native residents, in the years of the overthrow of the government and assumption of power by Americans.[16] Among the facts left out of early accounts praising Father Damien was that the residents of the leper colony wanted a native priest, that lay volunteers were rejected, and that residents asked in 1878 that the priest be replaced. As Hawai'ians were literate, they spoke for themselves. In this period, Damien had patient J.K. Kahuila, a Hawaiian Protestant minister, put in irons and deported to Oahu because he believed the man was too rebellious. Kahuila got a lawyer and demanded an investigation of Damien.[16] Moblo concludes that in most 19th- and 20th-century accounts, "the focus on Damien eclipses the active role played by Hawaiians and preserves a colonially biased history."[16]


Mahatma Gandhi said that Father Damien's work had inspired his social campaigns in India, leading to independence for his people and securing aid for those who needed it. Gandhi was quoted in T.N. Jagadisan's 1965 publication, Mahatma Gandhi Answers the Challenge of Leprosy, as saying,


The political and journalistic world can boast of very few heroes who compare with Father Damien of Molokai. The Catholic Church, on the contrary, counts by the thousands those who, after the example of Fr. Damien, have devoted themselves to the victims of leprosy. It is worthwhile to look for the sources of such heroism.[41]


Canonization


Original grave of Father Damien next to the St. Philomena Roman Catholic Church in Kalawao, Kalaupapa Peninsula, Molokaʻi, Hawaii (21°10′37″N 156°56′53.3″W)


Grave of Saint Damien in the crypt of the church of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts in Leuven, Belgium (50°52′33.4″N 004°41′54.1″E)

In 1977, Pope Paul VI declared Father Damien to be venerable. On 4 June 1995, Pope John Paul II beatified him and gave him his official spiritual title of Blessed. On 20 December 1999, Jorge Medina Estévez, Prefect of the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, confirmed the November 1999 decision of the United States Conference of Catholic Bishops to place Blessed Damien on the liturgical calendar with the rank of an optional memorial. Father Damien was canonized on 11 October 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI. His feast day is celebrated on 10 May. In Hawaii, it is celebrated on the day of his death, 15 April.


Two miracles have been attributed to Father Damien's posthumous intercession. On 13 June 1992, Pope John Paul II approved the cure of a nun in France in 1895 as a miracle attributed to Venerable Damien's intercession. In that case, Sister Simplicia Hue began a novena to Father Damien as she lay dying of a lingering intestinal illness. It is stated that the pain and symptoms of the illness disappeared overnight.[42]


In the second case, Audrey Toguchi, a Hawaiian woman who suffered from a rare form of cancer, had remission after having prayed at the grave of Father Damien on Molokaʻi. There was no medical explanation, as her prognosis was terminal.[43][44] In 1997, Toguchi was diagnosed with liposarcoma, a cancer that arises in fat cells. She underwent surgery a year later and a tumor was removed, but the cancer metastasized to her lungs. Her physician, Dr. Walter Chang, told her, "Nobody has ever survived this cancer. It's going to take you."[43] Toguchi was surviving in 2016.[45]


In April 2008, the Holy See accepted the two cures as evidence of Father Damien's sanctity. On 2 June 2008, the Congregation for the Causes of Saints at the Vatican voted to recommend raising Father Damien of Molokaʻi to sainthood. The decree that officially notes and verifies the miracle needed for canonization was promulgated by Pope Benedict XVI and Cardinal José Saraiva Martins on 3 July 2008, with the ceremony taking place in Rome and celebrations in Belgium and Hawaii.[46] On 21 February 2009, the Vatican announced that Father Damien would be canonized.[6] The ceremony took place in Rome on Rosary Sunday, 11 October 2009, in the presence of King Albert II of the Belgians and Queen Paola as well as the Belgian Prime Minister, Herman Van Rompuy, and several cabinet ministers,[7][47] completing the process of canonization. In Washington, D.C., President Barack Obama affirmed his deep admiration for St. Damien, saying that he gave voice to the voiceless and dignity to the sick.[48] Four other individuals were canonized with Father Damien at the same ceremony: Zygmunt Szczęsny Feliński, Sister Jeanne Jugan, Father Francisco Coll Guitart and Rafael Arnáiz Barón.[49]


Damien is honored, together with Marianne Cope, with a feast day on the liturgical calendar of the Episcopal Church (USA) on 15 April.




Saint John of Avila

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 9)


✠ அவிலா நகர புனிதர் யோவான் ✠

(St. John of Avila)


மதகுரு, மறைவல்லுநர், அண்டலூசியாவின் திருத்தூதர்:

(Priest, Doctor of the Church and Apostle of Andalusia)


பிறப்பு: ஜனவரி 6, 1499

அல்மொடோவார் தெல் காம்போ, சியுடட் ரியல், ஸ்பெயின்

(Almodóvar del Campo, Ciudad Real, Spain) 


இறப்பு: மே 10, 1569 (வயது 69)

மொன்டீல்லா, கொர்டோபா, ஸ்பெயின்

(Montilla, Córdoba, Spain)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church) 


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: நவம்பர் 12, 1893

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ

(Pope Leo XIII) 


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 31, 1970

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல்

(Pope Paul VI)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

இன்கார்னேஷன் ஆலயம், மொண்டில்லா, கொர்டோபா, ஸ்பெயின்

(Church of the Incarnation, Montilla, Córdoba, Spain) 


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 9


பாதுகாவல்: அண்டலூசியா, ஸ்பெயின், ஸ்பானிஷ் மதச்சார்பற்ற குருமார்கள் (Spanish Secular Clergy)


அவிலா நகர புனிதர் யோவான், ஸ்பேனிஷ் கத்தோலிக்க குருவும், எழுத்தாளரும், இறைக்காட்சியாளரும், புனிதரும் ஆவார். திருத்தந்தை பதினாறாம் பெனடிக்ட், இவரை திருச்சபையின் மறைவல்லுநர் என 2012ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 7ம் நாளன்று, அறிவித்தார்.


இளமை:

அவிலா நகரின் யோவான், ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டின் ஒரு பக்தி உள்ள செல்வந்தக் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். 14 வயதில் இவர் கல்வி கற்க சலமான்கா பல்கலைக்கழகத்திற்கு (University of Salamanca) அனுப்பப்பட்டார். ஒருவருடம் கழித்து பட்டங்கள் ஏதும் பெறாமலேயே வீடு திரும்பினார்.


ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையினரால் ஈர்க்கப்பட்ட இவர், அவர்களின் அறிவுரைப்படி இறையியலும், தத்துவமும் படித்தார். படித்துக்கொண்டிருக்கும்போதே இவரின் பெற்றோர் இறந்தனர். இவர் படித்து குருவான பின்பு, இவரின் பெற்றோர் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டிருந்த இடத்தில் இருந்த ஆலயத்தில் தனது முதல் திருப்பலியை நிறைவேற்றினார். பின்னர் தனது சொத்துக்கள் அனைத்தையும் விற்று ஏழைகளுக்குக் கொடுத்தார். பின்னர் மெக்சிக்கோவுக்கு சென்று மறைப்பணியாற்ற தன்னையே தயாரித்து வந்தார். கி.பி 1527ம் ஆண்டு, இவர் நிகழ்த்திய திருப்பலியின்போது துலங்கிய பக்தியைக் கண்ட ஆயர் இவரை அண்டலூசியாவிற்குச் சென்று அங்கு மழுங்கிப்போன பக்தியைப் புதுப்பிக்க இவரைக் கட்டாயப்படுத்தி அனுப்பி வைத்தார். 


அண்டலூசியாவில்:

அவர் தனது முதல் பிரசங்கத்தை அண்டலூசியாவில் கி.பி 1529ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூலை மாதம், 22ம் தேதி, நிகழ்த்தியதும், உடனடியாக இவரது புகழ் அங்கு பரவியது. அவர் அண்டலூசியாவில் பணியாற்றிய ஒன்பது ஆண்டுகளில், அவரது போதனைகளைக் கேட்க தேவாலயங்கள் மக்களால் நிரம்பி வழிந்தது. மக்களும் திருச்சபையும் சீர்திருத்தம் பெறவேண்டும் என்று அவர் வலியுறுத்தினார். மேலும், உயர் சமூகத்தின் நடத்தையையும் அவர் கண்டனம் செய்தார். இதனால் யோவான் செவீயா நகருக்குக் கொண்டுவரப்பட்டு, அங்கு சமய விசாரணை மன்றத்தின் முன் நிறுத்தப்பட்டார். இவர் செல்வத்தால் வரும் ஆபத்துக்களை மிகைப்படுத்திக் கூறினார் என்றும், செல்வந்தர்கள் விண்ணரசில் நுழைய முடியாது என்று போதித்தார் என்றும் குற்றம் சாட்டப்பட்டார். ஆனால் யோவான் மீது சாட்டப்பட்ட குற்றங்கள் ஆதாரமற்றவை என்று விரைவிலேயே தெரிந்துபோனது. இறுதியாக, அவர் குற்றம் யாதும் புரியவில்லை என்று கி.பி 1533ம் ஆண்டு, அறிவிக்கப்பட்டது.


ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டில்:

குருக்கள் மற்றும் துறவியரின் வாழ்க்கைமுறையில் சீர்திருத்தம் கொண்டுவந்த சிறப்பும் இவருக்கு உண்டு. ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டில் இவர் நிறுவிய பல கல்லூரிகளில் இவரது சீடர்கள், இளைஞர்களுக்குக் கற்பிப்பதில் தங்களை அர்ப்பணித்துக்கொண்டனர்.


இவரது வாழ்க்கை மற்றும் போதனையால் ஈர்க்கப்பட்டோருள் அவிலாவின் புனித தெரேசா, கடவுளின் யோவான், பிரான்சிஸ் போர்ஜியா மற்றும் கிரனாடா நகரின் லூயிஸ் ஆகியோர் உள்ளடங்குவர். 


திருத்தந்தை மூன்றாம் பவுல், கி.பி 1538ல் பயேசா நகரில் ஒரு பல்கலைக்கழகத்துக்கு அடித்தளம் இட்டார். அந்த நிறுவனத்தின் முதல் அதிபராக அவிலாவின் யோவான் நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். குருத்துவக் கல்லூரிகளுக்கும் பிற கல்வி நிறுவனங்களுக்கும் ஒரு சிறந்த முன்மாதிரியாக அப்பல்கலைக்கழகம் அமைந்தது. இயேசு சபையினர் கல்விக்கூடங்களுக்கும் அது முன்னுதாரணமாயிற்று.


அவிலாவின் யோவான் இயேசு சபையினரால் பெரிதும் மதிக்கப்படுகிறார். இயேசு சபை எசுப்பானியாவில் கண்ட பெரு வளர்ச்சிக்கு இவர் எண்பித்த நட்பும் ஆதரவுமே காரணம் என்று கருதப்படுகிறது. 


இறப்பு:

தமது முப்பதாம் வயதில் அவிலாவின் யோவான் அண்டலூசியாவில் போதகம் நிகழ்த்தச் சென்றார். ஒன்பது ஆண்டுகள் மறைப்பணி ஆற்றிய பின்னர் அவர் செவீயா நகருக்குத் திரும்பினார். தொடர்ந்து, ஸ்பெயினிலேயே கோர்தொபா, கிரனாடா, பயேசா, மொன்டீயா மற்றும் சாஃப்ரா ஆகிய இடங்களில் மறைப்பணி ஆற்றினார். 


நாற்பது ஆண்டுகளாக ஈடுபட்டிருந்த கடின உழைப்புக் காரணமாக அவரது வாழ்க்கையின் இறுதி பதினெட்டு ஆண்டுகளும் அவர் நோயுற்றிருந்தார். அவர் மொன்டீயா நகரில், கி.பி 1569ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 10ம் நாளன்று, தமது 69ம் வயதில் உயிர்துறந்தார்.

Also known as

• Apostle of Andalusia

• Juan de Ávila Jijón



Profile

Born to a wealthy Castilian family with Jewish ancestry. Studied law at the University of Salamanca from age 14, and felt a call to religious life. Studied theology and philosophy at Alcala, Spain at age 17. Lawyer. Following the death of his parents, he liquidated most of his large fortune, and gave it to the poor. Ordained in 1525. He wanted to be a missionary in the West Indies and Mexico, but became a travelling preacher in Andalusia for 40 years, re-evangelizing a region previously ruled by the Moors. He spoke boldly against the sins of the ruling classes, made powerful enemies, and at one point was imprisoned in Seville, Spain by the Inquisition, accused of false teachings; the charges were dismissed, John was released, and his preaching became more popular than ever. Spiritual director of Saint Teresa of Avila, Saint Francis Borgia, Saint John of God, Saint John of the Cross, Saint Peter of Alcántara, and Saint Louis of Granada. Writer whose works continue their influence today. Declared a Doctor of the Church by Pope Benedict XVI on 7 October 2012.


Born

6 January 1499 at Almodovar del Campo (Ciudad Real), Toledo, New Castile, Spain


Died

• 10 May 1569 at Montilla, Provincia de Córdoba, Andalucia, Spain of natural causes

interred in the Basílica de San Juan de Ávila in Montilla


Canonized

31 May 1970 by Pope Paul VI


Patronage

• Andalusia, Spain

• Spain

• Spanish secular clergy

• World Youth Day 2011




Saint Joseph de Veuster


Also known as

• Apostle to the Lepers

• Damian de Veuster

• Father Damien



Additional Memorial

15 April (Father Damien Day in Hawaii)


Profile

Son of a small farmer. Studied at the college at Braine-le-Comte, Belgium. Joined the Picpus Fathers on 7 October 1860, taking the name Damien. Seminarian in Paris, France. Volunteered for missionary work while still in seminary, and was sent to Hawaii. Ordained in Honolulu on 24 May 1864. Missionary on islands where his single parish was the size of all of his native Belgium. Resident priest in the leper colony on Molokai where for years he worked alone to minister to the patients' spiritual and medical needs. His work turned a wretched dump for the unwanted into a real community with the best treatment of the day, and patients who lived strong spiritual lives. He contracted leprosy in 1885, and though severely crippled by the disease, Father Damien worked until the end.


Born

3 January 1840 on the family farm at Tremeloo, Belgium as Joseph de Veuster


Died

• 15 April 1889 at Molokai, Hawaii from leprosy

• buried next to Saint Philomena Church, Molokai, Hawaii

• interred in a basement chapel in the church of Saint Antonius, Leuven, Belgium in 1936


Canonized

11 October 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI


Patronage

• against leprosy

• lepers



Blessed Vasile Aftenie


Profile

Drafted into the army in 1917, Vasile fought in the front in Galacia and Italy in World War I. In 1918 he began studying law in Bucharest, Romania, but in 1919 gave into a call to the priesthood and began studying theology at the Pontifical Greek College of Saint Athanasius. Ordained a priest in the Romanian Greek-Catholic rite in Fagaras si Alba Iulia, Romania on 1 January 1926. Taught at the Theological Academy in Blaj, Romania from 1926 to 1934. Dean of the seminary in Bucharest in 1934. Cathedral canon in Blaj in 1937. Rector of the Theological Academy in 1939. Chosen auxiliary bishop of Fagaras si Alba Iulia, Romania and Titular Bishop of Ulpiana by Pope Pius XII on 12 April 1940. Apostolic administrator of Fagaras si Alba Iulia on 15 June 1941. Arrested on 28 October 1948 in the Communist persecutions, he was imprisoned first in the Dragoslavele work camp, and then in February 1949 placed in solitary confinement in the Caldarusani monastery outside Bucharest. Beginning on 10 May 1949, he was subjected to a year of repeated torture which left him mutilated and crippled, broken in his physical and mental health; his faith never flagged. Martyr.



Born

14 June 1899 in Lodroman, Valea Lungã, Alba, Romania


Died

• 10 May 1950 in the prison hospital in Vacaresti, Bucharest, Romania from the abuse from repeated torture sessions, possibly after being shot

• body burned by order of the Communist authorities, and the remains were buried in the Bellu Cemetery in Bucharest

• a white marble grave stone was erected on his grave in 1990; it has become the site of pilgrimage


Beatified

2 June 2019 by Pope Francis




Blessed Ivan Merz


Also known as

John Merz



Profile

Educated in Banja Luka, briefly in a military academy, and in Vienna, Austria. Fought on the Italian front of World War I. After the war he studied again in Vienna, in Paris, France, and then taught French language and literature at the University of Zagreb, from which he received his Ph.D. in philosophy.


Though he decided to remain a layman in the world, Ivan took a vow of celibacy, and devoted his free time to the Church. He taught young Croatians, and spoke and wrote to evangelize all Croats. He worked for liturgical revival, and helped institute Catholic Action in Croatia.


Born

16 December 1896 in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina


Died

• 10 May 1928 in Zagreb, Croatia of natural causes

• relics transferred to the Shrine of the Holy Heart in Zagreb on 16 December 1977


Beatified

22 June 2003 by Pope John Paul II in Bosnia and Herzegovina


Readings

Catholic faith is my life vocation. - Blessed Ivan


Why do I love the Church and the Holy Father? Because in the Church I see the clear picture of my beloved Saviour and God Jesus in all His perfection, and in the Holy Father I see the human image of my God and my Lord. - Blessed Ivan


Died in the peace of the Catholic faith. My life had been Christ, and death was my gain. I am expecting the mercy of the Lord and undivided, complete, eternal possession of the most Holy Heart of Jesus. Happy in peace and joy. My soul is reaching the goal for which it had been created. - Blessed Ivan in a testament he wrote just before his death; today it serves as the epitaph on his tomb



Blessed Enrico Rebuschini


Profile

Second of five children born to an upper class family in the Lombard region of modern Italy. A pious young man and good student, he had a mystical outlook on things, and was subject to bouts of depression. At age 18 Enrico felt a call to the priesthood, but his family, especially his father strongly objected. However, they finally relented, and at 24 Enrico began his studies at the seminary in Como, Italy. He studied at the Lombard College and Gregorian University in Rome, Italy, and proved an able student, but a crushing bout of depression sent him back to his family home and finally to a nursing home for recovery.



When he was back on his feet and ready to return to his studies, Enrico re-examined his call to religious life, and, with the help of his confessor, decided to work with the Camillians, a congregation dedicated to the sick; he began his novitiate at age 27. With special dispensation from his bishop, the future Pope Saint Pius X, he was ordained a priest on 14 April 1889. He ministered to the sick in Verona, Italy from 1889 to 1899, making his solemn Camillian vows in 1891, and then served at the San Camillo di Cremona nursing home the rest of his life – almost 40 years. He served as treasurer of his community for 34 years, and superior for 11. Father Enrico’s life was one of prayer and service in the day to day needs of other people.


Born

28 April 1860 at Gravedona, Como, Italy


Died

10 May 1938 in Cremona, Italy of pneumonia


Beatified

4 May 1997 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Comgall of Bangor


Additional Memorial

6 January as one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland



Profile

Son of Sedna. Soldier. Spiritual student of Saint Fintan of Clonenagh and Saint Kieran at Clonmacnoise. Friend of Saint Brendan, Saint Cormac, Saint Kevin of Glendalough and Finbarr of Moville. Ordained by Saint Lughaedh of Conmacnoise. Spiritual teacher of Saint Cronan Mochua. He and a few brother monks lived a very strict and austere life on an island on Lough Erne. Among other houses, he founded the monastery at Bangor, County Down, Ireland in 552 and served as its first abbot; at one point it housed 8,000 monks. Life there was harsh and adherence to the Rule strict, but the brothers were very close, and were encouraged to help and support each other. Spiritual teacher of Saint Blane, Saint Cainnech, Saint Columbanus, Saint Deicola, Saint Fintan of Doon, Saint Gall, Saint Lactali, Saint Lua of Limerick and Saint Mochoemoc. Missionary to Scotland and the Picts. A reported miracle worker, Comgall is said to have blinded a band of thieves as they approached the monastery, but restored eye sight to a penitent man. Received Holy Communion on his death bed from Saint Fiacra.


Born

c.510 Dalaradia, near Magheramorne, County Antrim, Ireland


Died

601 at Bangor Abbey, Ireland of natural causes


Canonized

1903 (cultus confirmed)




Saint Solange of Bourges


Also known as

• Solange of Berry

• Solange of Bourges of Genevieve du Berry

• Solangia...



Profile

Born to a family of poor vine dressers. Young virgin shepherdess who took a personal vow of chastity, devoting herself to God alone. When she said her prayers in the field, a star shone over her head. Reported to have the gift of healing, especially of animals. She was murdered by her landlord, Bernard, son of the Count of Poitiers, for resisting his sexual advances. Considered a martyr as she died insisting on her fidelity to Christ. Some of the early versions of her story include her carrying her severed head into a nearby village, and the head preaching to the people.


Born

863 at Villemont near Bourges, France


Died

stabbed with a hunting knife c.880 at Champ de Sainte Solange


Patronage

• Berry, France

• Bourges, France

• children

• drought relief

• for rain

• rape victims

• shepherdesses

• shepherds




Saint Catald of Taranto


Also known as

• Catald of Tarentum

• Catald of Rachau

• Cataldus, Cathal, Cattaldo, Cathaluds, Cathaldus, Cataldo



Profile

Student at the monastic school of Lismore, Waterford under Saint Carthage. Later a teacher there, and then headmaster. Pilgrim to the Holy Land. On his way home a storm shipwrecked him in Taranto, Italy. As he recovered, his holiness was such that he was chosen by the people to be their bishop. He lived the rest of his life in the region, teaching and caring for his parishioners. There are towns in Sicily and southern Italy named for him.


Born

7th century Munster, Ireland


Died

• c.685 in Taranto, Italy of natural causes

• relics discovered centuries after his death during a renovation of the cathedral following its damage by Saracens in 927

• relics translated on 10 May 1017

• remarkable cures reported almost immediately at his new tomb


Patronage

• against blindness

• against drought

• against epilepsy

• against hernias

• against paralysis

• against plague

• against storms

• blind people

• drought relief

• epileptics

• paralyzed people

• Massa Lubrense, Italy

• Taranto, Italy



Blessed Amalarius of Metz


Also known as

• Amalarius of Trier

• Fortunatus, Symphosius


Additional Memorials

• 29 April (Martyrologium Hieronymianum)

• 10 June (Trier, Germany)


Profile

Ninth-century liturgical writer. A pupil of Alcuin at Aix-la-Chapelle, Germany, he was bishop of Trier, Germany from 811 to 813, and later ambassador to Constantinople. He lived at a time when the liturgy was changing, when fusion of the Roman and Gallican uses was taking place, and he exercised a remarkable influence in introducing the present composite liturgy which has supplanted the ancient Roman Rite. The chief merit of his works is that they have preserved much accurate and valuable information on the state of the liturgy at the beginning of the ninth century and are therefore useful sources for the history of Latin rites.


Born

775 in Metz, Kingdom of the Franks (in modern France)


Died

c.853



Blessed Beatrix of Este the Elder


Profile

Born to the dynastic house of Este. Aunt of Blessed Beatrix of Este the Younger. Nun in the convent of Santa Margherita at Solarolo, Italy. Feeling a need for more seclusion, she took over a deserted monastery at Gemmola, Italy, and founded a new convent where she apparently spent the rest of her life.


Born

between 1200 and 1206 in the castle of d'Este, Italy


Died

• 10 May 1226 of natural causes at Gemmola, Italy

• interred in the church of Saint John the Baptist

• relics translated to the church of Saint Sophia in Padua, Italy in 1578

• tradition says that when anything important was about to befall the family of Este, Beatrix would turn in her grave, and the noise could be heard throughout the church


Beatified

19 November 1763 by Pope Clement XIII



Saint Gordian the Judge


Also known as

• Gordian of Rome

• Gordianus...



Profile

Roman judge. Adult convert to Christianity. Tortured and martyred by order of the Roman prefect Apronianus during the persecutions of Julian the Apostate.


Died

• beheaded in 362 on the Latin Road outside Rome, Italy

• buried with Saint Epimachus in a crypt near Rome

• relics at the Basilica of Saint John Lateran, Rome, Italy, and at Kempten Abbey,Bavaria, Germany



Saint Calepodius of Rome


Profile

Priest. Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Alexander Severus. One of the Roman catacombs is named for him.


Died

• stabbed with a sword c.232 in Rome, Italy

• his body was dragged through the streets of Rome and then thrown into the River Tiber

• body later recovered and given proper burial by Pope Callistus I

• relics enshrined in the church of Santa Maria in Trastevere, Rome in the 10th century

• some relics enshrined in the church of Notre-Dame de Reims, Rheims, France



Saint Alphius of Lentini


Also known as

Alfio



Profile

Brother of Saint Cyrinus and Saint Philadelphus. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Born

Sicily, Italy


Died

251 in Lentini, Sicily, Italy


Patronage

• Lentini, Sicily, Italy

• Trecastagni, Sicily, Italy



Saint Cyrinus of Lentini


Also known as

Cirino


Profile

Brother of Saint Alphius and Saint Philadelphus. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Born

Sicily


Died

251 in Lentini, Sicily, Italy


Patronage

• Lentini, Sicily, Italy

• Trecastagni, Sicily, Italy



Saint Philadelphus of Lentini


Profile

Brother of Saint Alphius and Saint Cyrinus. Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.


Born

Sicily, Italy


Died

251 in Lentini, Sicily, Italy


Patronage

• Lentini, Sicily, Italy

• Trecastagni, Sicily, Italy



Blessed Giusto Santgelp


Profile

Born to the nobility. Secular Mercedarian knight. Ransomed 200 Christian slaves from the Saracens in Muslim occupied Granada, Spain in 1284.



Born

France


Died

Mercedarian convent of Saint Anthony the Abbot, Tarragona, Spain



Saint Palmatius of Rome


Profile

Roman imperial consul. Martyred with his wife, children and 42 members of his household, whose names have not come down to us, in the persecutions of Emperor Alexander Severus.


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

• heads of all the martyrs were placed over the gates of Rome as a warning to other Christians



Saint Simplicius of Rome

Profile

Roman imperial senator. Martyred with 68 members of his household, whose names have not come down to us, in the persecutions of Emperor Alexander Severus.


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

• heads of all the martyrs were placed over the gates of Rome as a warning to other Christians



Job


Profile

Old Testament Patriarch. The man "simple and upright and fearing God and avoiding evil" who figures in the canonical Old Testament Book of Job.



Patronage

• against abscesses

• against depression

• against ulcers

• ulcer sufferers



Saint Epimachus of Rome


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.



Died

• burned at the stake c.250 in Alexandria, Egypt

• relics transferred to a crypt near Rome, Italy



Saint Felix of Rome


Profile

Married to Saint Blanda of Rome. Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Alexander Severus.


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

• head placed over a gate into Rome as a warning to other Christians



Saint Blanda of Rome


Profile

Married to Saint Felix of Rome. Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Alexander Severus.


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

• head placed over a gate into Rome as a warning to other Christians



Saint Aurelian of Limoges


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Martial of Limoges. Bishop of Limoges, France.


Died

relics enshrined at the Chapelle Saint-Aurelian, Limoges, France



Blessed William of Pontoise


Profile

May have been a Benedictine monk. Priest. Hermit at Pontoise, France.


Born

England


Died

c.1195 of natural causes



Saint Quartus of Capua


Profile

Martyr.


Born

Capua, Italy


Died

• martyred at Rome, Italy, date unknown

• relics enshrined at Capua, Italy



Saint Quintus of Capua


Profile

Martyr.


Born

Capua, Italy


Died

• martyred at Rome, Italy, date unknown

• relics enshrined at Capua, Italy



Blessed Antonio of Norcia


Profile

Lay Franciscan.


Died

c.1310 in Norcia, Italy of natural causes



Saint Dioscorides of Smyrna


Profile

Martyr.


Died

at Smyrna, Asia Minor



Saint Thecla


Profile

Martyr.



Blessed Nicholas Albergati



Profile

Studied law. Carthusian monk in 1394. Prior of several Carthusian houses. Ordained in June 1404. Chosen as reluctant bishop of Bologna, Italy on 5 January 1417. Papal diplomat with missions to France and Lombardy, Italy. Archbishop of Bologna in 1418 against his will. Elevated to cardinal-priest of Santa Croce in Gerusalemme on 24 May 1426. Known as a peacemaker. Mediated between the emperor and Pope Martin V, and the French king and Pope Eugene IV. Prominent in the Council of Basel and Council of Ferrara-Florence. Active in the negotiations that brought reunion of the Greek Church with Rome at Ferrara-Florence. Generous patron of learned men. Wrote several theological treatises, and encouraged academics. Chief penitentiary to Pope Eugene IV. Archpriest of the Basilica of Saint Mary Major in 1440.


Born

1373 at Bologna, Italy


Died

• 9 May 1443 at Siena, Italy of natural causes

• buried at the Carthusian monastery in Florence, Italy


Beatified

25 September 1744 by Pope Benedict XIV (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

learning



09 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 9

 Bl. Theresa of Jesus Gerhardinger

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 9)


✠ அருளாளர் கரோலின் கெரார்டிங்கர் ✠

(Blessed Karoline Gerhardinger)


மறை பணியாளர்:

(Religious)


பிறப்பு: ஜூன் 20, 1797

ஸ்டட்டமோஃப், பவரியா, தூய ரோம பேரரசு

(Stadtamhof, Bavaria, Holy Roman Empire)


இறப்பு: மே 9, 1879 (வயது 81)

மூன்சேன், பவரியா, ஜெர்மன் பேரரசு

(München, Bavaria, German Empire)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: நவம்பர் 17, 1985

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல்

(Pope John Paul II)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 9


பாதுகாவல்:

நோட்ரேடாம் பள்ளி சகோதரியர், கல்வியாளர்கள்

(School Sisters of Notre Dame, Educators)


அருளாளர் கரோலின் கெரார்டிங்கர் ஒரு ஜெர்மன் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க மறைபணியாளரும், "இயேசுவின் மரிய தேரேசியா" (Maria Theresia of Jesus) என அழைக்கப்பட்ட " நோட்ரேடாம் பள்ளி சகோதரியர்" (School Sisters of Notre Dame) அமைப்பின் நிறுவனரும் ஆவார். சிறந்த கல்வியாளராகிய இவர், தாம் நிறுவிய சபை ஐரோப்பா முழுதும் பரவ ஆரம்பிக்கும்வரை "பவரியாவில்" பணியாற்றினார்.


கி.பி 1797ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூன் மாதம், இருபதாம் நாளன்று, பவரியாவில் பிறந்த இவரது தந்தையார் "வில்லிபார்ட்" (Willibard) ஆவார். தாயாரின் பெயர் "ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கா கெரார்டிங்கர்" (Franziska Gerhardinger) ஆகும். இவர் தமது பெற்றோரின் ஒரே குழந்தை ஆவார்.


கெரார்டிங்கரின் பங்குத்தந்தை இவரை ஒரு ஆசிரியையாக ஊக்குவித்தார். கி.பி 1809ம் ஆண்டு, தமது ஆசிரிய பயிற்சியை தொடங்கிய இவர், கி.பி 1812ம் ஆண்டுமுதல் "ரேகன்ஸ்பர்க்" (Regensburg) நகரில் ஒரு பெண்கள் பள்ளியில் ஆசிரியை பணியாற்ற தொடங்கினார்.


அவர் "ரேகன்ஸ்பர்க்" ஆயரான (Bishop of Regensburg) "ஜார்ஜ் மைக்கேல் விட்மன்" (Georg Michael Wittmann) அவர்களிடம் தாம் துறவு வாழ்வில் நுழைய வழிகாட்டுமாறு வேண்டினார். கி.பி 1816ம் ஆண்டு முதல் 1833ம் ஆண்டு வரை அவர் அதற்காக கற்றார்.


கி.பி 1833ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 24ம் தேதி முதல் தமது இரு சக அருட்சகோதரியருடன் இணைந்து துறவு வாழ்வினை தொடங்கினார். அதுவே " நோட்ரேடாம் பள்ளி சகோதரியர்" (School Sisters of Notre Dame) அமைப்பு நிறுவப்பட்டதன் முறையான நடைமுறையாக இருந்தது. அதிகாரப்பூர்வ அங்கீகாரத்துக்கான ஆரம்ப சிக்கல்கள் இருந்தாலும், பவரியா அரசனான "முதலாம் லுட்விக்" (Ludwig I), கி.பி 1834ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், அவரது கன்னியர் மடத்திற்கு அங்கீகாரம் அளித்தார். ரேகன்ஸ்பர்கிலுள்ள "புனித கல்லஸ்" (Saint Gallus chapel in Regensburg) தேவாலயத்தில் தமது ஆன்மீக உறுதிப்பாடுகளை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். அத்துடன், "இயேசுவின் மரிய தேரேசியா" (Maria Theresia of Jesus) என்ற பெயரை தமது ஆன்மீக பெயராக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்.


கி.பி 1847ம் ஆண்டு, தமது இணை அருட்சகோதரியருடன் இணைந்து, தமது சபையினை விரிவாக்கம் செய்வதற்காகவும், ஜெர்மனிலிருந்து புலம்பெயர்ந்து வரும் மக்களின் நலன்களுக்காகவும் 'ஐக்கிய அமெரிக்க நாடுகள்' (United States of America) சென்றார். கி.பி 1850ம் ஆண்டு முதல், இவரது சபை இங்கிலாந்து (England) மற்றும் பிற ஐரோப்பிய நாடுகளிலும் பரவ தொடங்கியது. கி.பி 1865ம் ஆண்டு, இவரது சபைக்கு திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius IX) அங்கீகாரமளித்தார்.


கி.பி 1877ம் ஆண்டு, நோயில் வீழ்ந்த கரோலின் கெரார்டிங்கர் 1879ம் ஆண்டு, தமது 81 வயதில் மரித்தார்.

Feastday: May 9

Birth: 1797

Death: 1879

Beatified: Pope John Paul II



Blessed Mary Theresa was born Caroline Gerhardinger in Bavaria in 1797. Encouraged by her parish priest to become a teacher, she believed strongly that a child's need for love, safety and food were as important as formal education. "Let us never forget the love of Jesus for children, whom he took upon his lap and blessed," she said.


Caroline gradually recognized God's call to found a religious community which would remedy the social situation through education. Her life work, helping women and children grow to their greatest potential, was a founding principle of the School Sisters of Notre Dame. She brought the order and the mission of educating girls to America, following the wave of German immigration. Within a year, they established a presence in seven cities.


Mother Theresa died in 1879. At that time, her congregation numbered more than 2500. They met the needs of their time by educating girls in elementary schools, orphanages, industrial schools and day nurseries and pioneered in the development of the Kindergarten. For girls working in factories, they provided homes and night schools where they could receive a basic education.


While most religious orders of her time were governed by men, she was convinced that a woman could better understand, direct and motivate her sisters. The Constitution of the School Sisters of Notre Dame, approved by Pope Pius IX in 1865, allowed Mother Theresa and her successors, rather than local bishops, to govern the congregation.



Mary Theresa of Jesus was beatified in 1985, and is now known as Blessed Theresa.




St. George Preca


Feastday: May 9

Patron: of Malta, Society of Christian Doctrine

Birth: 1880

Death: 1962

Beatified: 9 May 2001, Floriana, Malta by Pope John Paul II

Canonized: 3 June 2007, Vatican City by Pope Benedict XVI


George Preca (in Maltese: ?or? Preca) (12 February 1880 - 26 July 1962) was a Maltese Roman Catholic priest who founded the Society of Christian Doctrine,[a] a society of lay catechists. In Malta, he is affectionately known as "Dun ?or?" and is popularly referred to as the "Second Apostle of Malta", after Saint Paul of Tarsus. He was canonized on 3 June 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI.


George Preca (in Maltese: Ġorġ Preca) (12 February 1880 – 26 July 1962) was a Maltese Catholic priest and the founder of the Society of Christian Doctrine as well as a Third Order Carmelite. He is known as "Dun Ġorġ" in Maltese and Pope John Paul II dubbed him "Malta’s second father in faith".[1] He assumed the religious name of "Franco" after becoming a Secular Carmelite. He was a popular figure among some groups, and his pastoral care and religious teaching earned recognition. However, his activities raised suspicions of heresy from senior clergy. He was ordered to close down his teaching centres for a time while they could be investigated; they were subsequently re-opened.[2]


His activism earned him praise and in 1952, Pope Pius XII nominated him as a Papal Privy Chamberlain and awarded the rank of Monsignor.[2]


In 1957 he composed five new mysteries for the Rosary for his followers which he had referred to as the "Mysteries of Light".[3] He was canonized as a saint by the Catholic Church in 2007.



Life

George Preca was born in Valletta on 12 February 1880[4] as the seventh of nine children of Vincent and Nathalie Ceravolo Preca.[5] His father was both a merchant and a health inspector.[6] He received his baptism on 17 February 1880 in the Church of Our Lady of Porto Salvo.[7] Preca was a frail child due to a range of illnesses he had and in 1885 almost drowned in the harbour though boatmen rescued him.[8]


In 1886, the family relocated to Ħamrun. He received both his First Communion at some stage in his childhood and then his Confirmation on 2 August 1888 in the parish church of Saint Cajetan from Bishop Anton Maria Buhagiar[citation needed].


In 1897, while walking along the Maglio Gardens in Floriana, Ġorġ Preca met one of his professors, Father Ercole Mompalao, who encouraged his religious vocation. Preca first studied at the state-owned school on the island before he commenced his studies for the priesthood; he had studied Latin and English but also studied Italian and received a prize in handwriting.[6] Shortly before his ordination, Preca was diagnosed with acute pulmonary tuberculosis and given a poor prognosis. He attributed his recovery to the intercession of Saint Joseph, patron of the dying, however the illness left him with a damaged left lung.[9]


On 8 April 1905 his confessor Aloysius Galea died and Preca would often recount that not long after Galea seemingly appeared to him and encouraged his call to the priesthood. In his studies he began to write a rule in Latin for use in a planned religious movement for permanent deacons that he wished to establish but this desire subsided over time. The idea remained much on Preca's mind but he altered the idea after being ordained. Preca received his ordination to the priesthood alongside thirteen others on 22 December 1906 from Bishop Pietro Pace and he celebrated his first Mass on 25 December – Christmas – at the Saint Cajetan parish church in Ħamrun.[4] He was appointed assistant priest at St. Gaetano, and immediately devoted himself to teaching the youth.[8]


M.U.S.E.U.M.

Main article: Society of Christian Doctrine

He began to teach the Catholic catechism along the waterfront to people, including labourers, and to gather male catechists including Ewgenju Borg around him.[7] In February 1907 he arranged a spiritual conference at the Ta' Nuzzo church; later meetings were held at 6 Fra Diegu Street. This led to the founding of a new religious movement on 7 March 1907 at Ħamrun at the first meeting of the Society of Christian Doctrine (known locally as M.U.S.E.U.M.).[10]


Senior clergy began to suspect that the rapid growth and popularity of Preca's movement could have heretical implications, especially as it involved so many of the low skilled and uneducated. The Vicar General, Mgr Salvatore Grech, issued an order in 1909 that all the "MUSEUM centres" should be closed. A protest by other parish priests led to the order being rescinded. Nevertheless, the new society continued to receive criticism in the press, and in 1916 Bishop Maurus Caruana opened a formal enquiry. This cleared the movement of any negative behaviour and paved the way in due course for ecclesiastical recognition of the Society of Christian Doctrine on 12 April 1932.


It was at the height of the crisis that Preca claimed to have received a powerful religious experience in 1910 one morning as he passed the Marsa Cross – triggered by a child aged twelve pushing a cart with a bag of manure who had shouted: "Lend me a hand!". Preca helped him and as he placed his hands on the cart he felt profound spiritual calmness and understood that he had experienced a revelation as the boy symbolized Christ and the wagon, the work of evangelizing.[8]



Preca became a Third Order Carmelite after being admitted on 21 July 1918, and made his profession on 26 September 1919 with the new religious name of "Franco". In the parishes, Preca established Nativity plays at Christmas time; a custom maintained to this day in almost all the parishes of Malta.[8]


In the 1950s Fr Preca himself sent six members of the Society to Australia to serve the Maltese who had emigrated to Melbourne.[10] As of 2016, there were 1,200 members serving in six countries.


Despite his ability in Italian and English, Preca taught and wrote in Maltese, the language of the common people, so that everyone could understand. He wrote about 150 booklets, pamphlets and leaflets.[10] To publish and spread his works, he obtained a printing press and founded in the 1920s what would become “Veritas Press”, one of the main Catholic publishing companies in Malta.


Throughout his pastoral mission he was a popular preacher and sought-after confessor.[6] Preca was named as a Monsignor after Pope Pius XII – on 2 October 1952 – named him a Privy Chamberlain, much to his mortification, and he held this title until the pope died in 1958. He never wore the vestments that the title entailed, nor did he ever claim the official document from the archbishop's office.[2]


Preca died in the evening of 26 July 1962. His funeral on 28 July was one of the largest funerals ever held in Malta and Bishop Emanuel Galea presided over it at the Saint Cajetan church.





Blessed Maria del Carmen Rendiles Martinez


Also known as

• Carmen Elena Rendiles Martínez

• María Carmen







Profile

Third of eight children born to a wealthy and respected family, the daughter of Ramiro Antonio Rendiles and Ana Antonia Martínez; she was born without a left arm and lived with prosthetic. She was baptized on 24 September 1903, confirmed on 28 October 1905, and made her first Communion on 11 March 1911. At age 15 she began serving as a catechist in her parish, and would travel to other towns to teach at parish missions. Feeling a call to the religious life, she joined the Servants of the Blessed Sacrament on 25 February 1927. After studying in Toulouse, France, she received her habit on 8 September 1927, her first vows on 8 September 1929, and her solemn profession on 8 September 1932. She then returned to Caracas, Venezuela where she worked for the next ten years, serving in a variety of positions. Chosen Provincial Superior of the Order in 1951, she started convents and schools in Venezuela and Columbia including a school for poor children in her family home when she inherited it. For practical reasons, including the distance from the motherhouse in France to the sisters in South America, the congregation split on 25 March 1965, and Blessed Carmen is considered the founder of the Servants of Jesus of Caracas (Servant Congregation of Jesus of Venezuela); she served the rest of her life as its superior. By 2015 there were 94 religious in 19 communities.


Born

11 August 1903 in Caracas, Venezuela


Died

9 May 1977 in Caracas, Venezuela of influenza


Beatified

• 16 June 2018 by Pope Francis

• the beatification miracle involved the healing of Trinette Durán de Branger on 18 July 2003

• beatification recognition celebrated in Caracas, Venezuela, Cardinal Angelo Amato chief celebrant


Patronage

Servants of Jesus of Caracas



Blessed Karolina Gerhardinger


Also known as

• Caroline Gerhardinger

• Maria Teresa Gerhardinger

• Maria Theresia of Jesus

• Theresa of Jesus Gerhardinger





Profile

Born to a working class family. Educated by the Augustinian canonesses until 1809 when religious orders were closed by decree of the Bavarian government in Germany. Caroline decided to start a new religious order devoted to God and Christian education. In 1828 the Vatican got concessions from the Bavarian government, and many religious communities re-opened. Caroline and other sisters moved into a refurbished convent, and started the order that was to become the School Sisters of Notre Dame. Caroline took the name Theresa in religious life but was soon called Theresa of Jesus because of her devotion to the True Presence of Christ in the Blessed Sacrament. The sister's Rule and Constitutions were approved by the Vatican on 23 January 1854 and the Order began to quickly spread. Teresa spent the rest of her life devoted to the work.


Born

20 June 1797 at Stadtamhof, Bavaria, Germany as Caroline Gerhardinger


Died

9 May 1879 in München, Bavaria, Germany of natural causes


Beatified

17 November 1985 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Stefan Grelewski


Also known as

• prisoner 10444 (Auschwitz)

• prisoner 25581 (Dachau)





Profile

Older brother of Blessed Kazimierz Grelewski. Studied at the Progimnazjum in Sandomierz and Lubartów in Poland. Ordained in October 1921 as a priest in the archdiocese of Radom, Poland. Graduated with a doctorate in canon law in Strasbourg, France in 1924. General secretary of the Christian Workers Union in Radom in 1925. Writer, journalist, and translated works from French and German to Polish. Founded the magazine Catholic Truth in 1930. Worked with the people of Catholic Action and the Association of Polish Intelligence. Helped organize the first diocesan Eucharistic Congress in Radom in 1933. Prefect of a boy‘s elementary school from 1928 through 1931; prefect of the Jan Kochanowski state boy‘s grammar school from 1932 until the outbreak of World War II in 1939. During the Nazi occupation of Poland, he covertly continued teaching religion. Arrested with his brother on 24 January 1941 as part of the Nazi persecutions, he was deported, imprisoned and tortured in the concentration camps of Auschwitz and then Dachau. Martyr.


Born

3 July 1899 in Dwikozy, Swietokrzyskie, Poland


Died

starved to death on 9 May 1941 in the camp hospital of Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Pachomius of Tabenna


Also known as

• Pachomius the Elder

• Pachomius the Great

• Pachome, Pakhomius



Profile

Soldier in the imperial Roman army. Convert in 313. He left the army in 314 and became a spiritual student of Saint Palaemon. Lived as a hermit from 316. During a retreat into the deep desert, he received a vision telling him to build a monastery on the spot and leave the life of a hermit for that of a monk in community. He did in 320, and devised a Rule that let fellow hermits ease from solitary to communal living; legend says that the Rule was dictated to him by an angel. Abbot. His first house expanded to eleven monasteries and convents with over 7,000 monks and nuns in religous life by the time of Pachomius's death. Spiritual teacher of Saint Abraham the Poor and Saint Theodore of Tabennísi. Considered the founder of Christian cenobitic (communal) monasticism, whose rule for monks is the earliest extant.


Born

c.290 at Upper Thebaid, Egypt


Died

• c.346 of natural causes

• buried in an unknown location by Saint Theodore of Tabennísi




Blessed Alexandru Rusu


Profile

One of twelve children of a priest in the Saulia Commune, Mures, Romania. Ordained a priest in the Romanian Greek-Catholic Rite on 20 July 1910. Chosen the first bishop of Maramures, Romania on 17 October 1930. Chosen the archbishop of Fagaras and Alba Iulia, Romania in 1946, a move opposed by the Communist government. For defying the anti–Christian authorities, Bishop Alexandru was arrested in October 1948. Confined first in monasteries, he was eventually sent to Sighet prison. He was finally “tried” by a military tribunal in 1957 who found him guilty of treason for remaining faithful to the Catholic church, sentenced him to 25 years, and sent him to Gherla prison where he died. Martyr.



Born

22 November 1884 in Saulia de Câmpie, Mures, Romania


Died

9 May 1963 in Gherla, Cluj, Romania


Beatified

2 June 2019 by Pope Francis



Saint Beatus of Lungern


Also known as

• Apostle of Switzerland

• Beatus of Beatenberg

• Beatus of Thun



Profile

Convert, baptized in England by Saint Barnabas the Apostle. Priest, ordained in Rome, Italy by Saint Peter the Apostle. Missionary to Switzerland. Lived in a cave above the Lake of Thun, which tradition says is where he fought a dragon (often used as a metaphor for chasing the devil out of a region by bringing in Christianty); it became known as Mount Beatenburg in his honor, and became a place of pilgrimage in later years. Confessor of the faith.


Died

c.112 on Mount Beatenburg, Lake of Thun, Switzerland of natural causes


Patronage

Beatenberg, Switzerland


Representation

• old man in a cave, usually reading

• monk fighting or chasing a dragon

• monk with a book and a weapon



Blessed Thomas Pickering


Profile

Benedictine lay brother at the Saint Gregory Monastery in Douai, France in 1660. Sent to London, England in 1665 to serve as steward to the Benedictines in the queen's royal chapel. He came to know Queen Catherine of Braganza and King Charles II, and in 1675 when the all other Benedictines were exiled from England, Thomas was allowed to stay. Falsely accused in 1678 of being part of the Titus Oates Plot to murder the king, he was found guilty and executed. Martyr.



Born

c.1621 in Westmorland, England


Died

• hanged, drawn and quartered On 9 May 1679 in Tyburn, London, England

• some relics persevered at Downside Abbey


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Blessed Benincasa of Montepulciano


Also known as

• Benincasa of Montepulciano

• Benincosa of...

• John Benincasa

• Giovanni Benincasa



Profile

Joined the Servites as a teenager. At age 25 he became a prayerful hermit in a cell on Monte Amiata near Siena, Italy. Around age 50 he was ordered by the Servites to move to their community at Monticchiello, Italy where he lived his final months.


Born

1375 at Montepulciano, Siena, Italy


Died

9 May 1426 at Monticchiello, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

23 December 1829 by Pope Pius VIII (cultus confirmation)



Saint Gregory of Ostia


Also known as

• Gregorius IV

• Gregorio Ostiense

• Gregorio di Ostia

• Gregorio de la Berrueza



Profile

Benedictine monk. Priest. Abbot of the monastery of Saints Cosma e Damiano ad Micam auream, Rome, Italy. Chosen Cardinal–Bishop of Ostia, Italy and Vatican librarian c.1034 by Pope Benedict IX. Papal legate to the kingdoms of Spanish Navarre and Old Castile. Reported miracle worker, especially concerned with saving crops from pests, he is venerated throughout Navarre and Rioja.


Died

9 May 1048 at Logroño, Spain of natural causes


Patronage

protection of crops



Isaiah the Prophet


Profile

Eighth century BC Old Testament prophet. Killed at the order of King Manasses of Juda.



Died

• sawn in two

• buried under an oak tree



Saint Giuse Hiên


Also known as

• Giuseppe Dô Quang Hiên

• Joseph Hiên

• José Dô Quang Hiên



Profile

Dominican priest. Martyred in the persecutions of Emperor Thieu Tri.


Born

c.1769 in Quân Anh Ha, Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Died

beheaded on 9 May 1840 at Nam Ðinh, Vietnam


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Banban the Wise


Also known as

• Banban Sapiens

• Mabran Barbarus

• Mauranum cognomento Barbanum

• Banbanum, Banbanus, Banbhanus, Banuanus, Barbanum, Mauran, Methbrain, Methbruin, Nia Brain, Niabrain, Nie Brain, Niethbrain, Seannan


Profile

5th century priest who worked with Saint Patrick who installed him as pastor of the Domnach Mór church at Magh Slécht, Templeport, County Cavan, Ireland.


Born

Ireland



Blessed Pedro of Alcobaça


Profile

Cistercian monk in the monastery of Alcobaça, Portugal. His piety and his connection to this monastery, which was founded in 1153 by King Afonso Henriques, let to many outlandish tales about him, his royal connections, etc. But all we really know was that he was a pious Cistercian.


Died

• c.1160

• relics translated in 1293

• relics translated in 1351



Blessed Fortis Gabrielli


Profile

Hermit in the mountains near Scheggia, Italy. Spiritual student of Blessed Ludolph. Benedictine monk–hermit at the monastery of Fontavellana.


Born

Gubbio, Umbria, Italy


Died

9 May 1040 of natural causes


Beatified

17 March 1756 by Pope Benedict XIV (cultus confirmed)



Saint Tudwg


Also known as

Tudinus


Profile

A church was dedicated to him in Llandudwg (modern Tythegston, Glamorganshire, Wales). Some records say he was the son of Saint Tydodwg, and a monk at the monastery of Saint Cenydd on the Gower peninsula of Wales, but nothing certain is recorded about him.


Born

Wales



Saint Gerontius of Cervia


Also known as

Geronzio



Profile

Bishop of Cervia, Italy. Martyr.


Died

c.501 on the Flaminian Way at Cagli, Italy


Patronage

Cagli, Italy



Saint Beatus of Laon


Also known as

Beatus of Vendome



Profile

Third-century cave-living hermit and missionary in the area of Laon, France.


Born

Italy



Saint Sanctan of Kill-da-Les


Also known as

Sanctain


Profile

Son of King Sawyl Penuchel. Sixth-century bishop of Kill-da-Les (Kill-na-Sanctan) in Ireland.


Born

northern Britain



Saint Brynoth of Scara


Profile

Bishop of Scara West Gothland, Sweden for 38 years.


Born

Sweden


Died

6 February 1317 of natural causes


Canonized

1498



Saint John of Châlon


Profile

Bishop of Châlon-sur-Saône, France consecrated by Saint Patiens of Lyons.


Died

c.475 of natural causes



Saint Vincent of Montes


Profile

Monk. Spiritual student of Saint Gennadius. Abbot of San Pedro de Montes Abbey in Spain.


Died

c.950



Saint Gorfor of Llanover


Profile

No information has survived.


Born

Welsh


Patronage

Llanover, Gwent, Wales



Saint Hermas of Rome


Profile

First century Roman mentioned in Saint Paul's Epistle to the Romans. Bishop of Philippi. Martyr.


.

Saint Dionysius of Vienne


Also known as

Denis


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France.


Died

c.193



Martyrs of Persia


Profile

310 Christians murdered together for their faith in Persia. No details about them have survived.



20 Mercedarian Martyrs of Riscala


Profile

20 Mercedarian friars who were murdered by Huguenot heretics for refusing to denounce their faith.



Died

16th century at the Santa Maria convent at Riscala, France



08 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 8

 Apparition of Saint Michael the Archangel


It is recorded that Saint Michael, in a vision, admonished the bishop of Siponto to build a church in his honour on Mount Gargano, now called Monte-de-Sant-Angelo, in the Capitanate, near Manfredonia, in the kingdom of Naples. This history is confirmed by Sigebert in his chronicle, and by the ancient tradition of the churches of that country, and is approved authentic by the judicious critic Mabillon, who visited those places, and examined the records and monuments. This church was erected in the fifth century, and is a place of great devotion.



When the Emperor Otho III had, contrary to his word, put to death, for rebellion, Crescentius, a Roman senator; being touched with remorse, he cast himself at the feet of Saint Romuald, who, in satisfaction for his crime, enjoined him to walk barefoot, on a penitential pilgrimage, to Saint Michael's on Mount Gargano: which penance he performed in 1002, as Saint Peter Damian relates. In France, Aubert, bishop of Avranches, moved, it is said, by certain visions, built, in 708, a church in honour of Saint Michael, on a barren rock which hangs over the sea, between Normandy and Brittany. In the tenth age, this collegiate church was changed into a great Benedictin abbey. In imitation of this was the famous church of Saint Michael refounded in Cornwall, in the reign of William the Conqueror, by William earl of Moreton, on a mountain which the tide encompasses. It is said by Borlace, the learned and accurate antiquarian of Cornwall, that this church of Saint Michael was first built in the fifth century.


The Greeks mention, in their Menaea, a famous apparition of Saint Michael at Chone, the ancient Colossae in Phrygia. Many apparitions of good angels in favour of men are recorded, both in the Old and New Testament. It is mentioned in particular of this special guardian and protector of the church, that, in the persecution of Antichrist, he will powerfully stand up in her defence: At that time shall Michael rise up, the great prince, who standeth for the children of thy people. He is not only the protector of the church, but of every faithful soul. He defeated the devil by humility; we are enlisted in the same warfare. His arms were humility and ardent love of God; the same must be our weapons. We ought to regard this archangel as our leader under God: and, courageously resisting the devil in all his assaults, to cry out: Who can be compared to God?



Blessed Ulrika Fransiska Nisch


Also known as

Fransiska Dettenrieder



Profile

Oldest of eleven children born to Ulrich Nisch, who cleaned stables, and Klothilde Dettenrieder, a servant in a village inn. The couple was so poor that their families and the local authorities refused to allow their marriage; they forced the issue with the birth of Fransiska. The baby was baptized at the age of one day. Only four Fransiska's siblings reached adulthood.


Fransiska spent her early childhood in Oberdorf, Germany, raised by her grandmother and maternal aunt, Gertrud Dettenrieder. When she was returned to her parents at age seven, she had so much trouble fitting in that she eventually returned to Oberdorf to live with her aunt and finish school. Known as a pious child, Fransiska early felt a call to religious life, but beginning in 1894 she worked as a maid in serveral homes to support her family. She made her First Communion on 21 April 1895, and was confirmed later that year. In 1898 she worked at a general store and cheese factory in Sauggart, Germany. Worked at a combination bakery, brewer and tavern in Biberach, Germany in 1899. Servant in the house of a teacher in Rorschach, Switzerland in 1901.


In 1903 she began suffering from a severe form of erysipelas in 1903; in hospital she was treated by the Sisters of Charity of Holy Cross, and was so impressed by them that she followed her call to religious vocation by joining the Sisters on 17 October 1904 at the Hegne monastery in Konstanz, Germany, taking the name Ulrika in honour of her father. She spent her few remaining years working in the kitchens of several houses in her Order amd dealing with a series of deep mystical experiences.


Born

18 September 1882 in Oberdorg-Mittelbiberach, Germany as Fransiska Dettenrieder, named for a great-grandmother


Died

8 May 1913 at the Saint Elizabeth hospital in the House of Hegne, Baden-Baden, Germany of tuberculosis


Beatified

• 1 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II

• beatification celebrated at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy by Pope John Paul II

• the beatification miracle involved the healing of incurable liver disease of Hildis Burchard Gerhards in Cologne, Germany by the intercession of Blessed Ulrika



Blessed Clara Fey

இன்றைய புனிதர் :

(08-05-2021)


புனித.கிளாரா ஃபாய் (St.Klara Foy)                                                                     துறவி, சபை நிறுவுனர்                                                                                       


பிறப்பு 11 ஏப்ரல் 1815 ஆஹன்(Aachen), ஜெர்மனி                                   


இறப்பு 8 மே 1848 சிம்பல்பெல்டு(Simpelfeld), ஹாலந்து


இவர் தனது கல்வியை முடித்தபின் துறவற சபைகளை பற்றி தெரிந்து கொள்ள பல புத்தகங்களை படித்தார். ஆஹனில் பிற ந்த இவர், தனது பங்குதந்தை பவுல் உதவியுடன், பல சமூக பணி களில் தன்னை ஈடுபடுத்தினார். சிறப்பாக இளைஞர்களிடத்தில் அதிக அன்பு காட்டினார். 1837 ஆம் ஆண்டு தனது 22 ஆம் வயதில் ஆஹனில் இளைஞர்களுக்கென்று ஓர் பள்ளியை நிறுவினார். இப்பள்ளிக்கு தேவையான உதவிகளை செய்வதற்கு, இவரின் சமூக சேவை பணிக்குழுவில் இருந்தவர்கள் முன் வந்தனர். இவ ர்கள் அனைவரும் ஒன்றாக சேர்ந்து சமூக சேவையோடு, 1844 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறைவனின் பணிகளிலும் தங்களை ஈடுபடுத்திகொ ண்டனர். இதன் விளைவாக 1848 ஆம் ஆண்டு கிளாரா ஃபாய் அவ ர்கள் "குழந்தை இயேசுவின் ஏழைகள்" என்ற சபையை நிறுவி னார். ஏராளமான ஏழை குழந்தைகளை ஒன்று சேர்த்து அவர் களை பராமரித்தார்கள் இச்சபை கன்னியர்கள். அதோடு கல்வி கற்றுக் கொடுத்து, வாழ்விற்கு வழிகாட்டி, தாய்க்குத் தாயாக இருந்து பராமரித்தார்கள். நாளடைவில் குழந்தைகளின் எண் ணிக்கை பெருகவே மீண்டும் ஓர் துறவற இல்லத்தை நிறுவி னார். இதில் பல கைவிடப்பட்ட பெண்களும், விதவைகளும் வந்து சேர்ந்தனர். கிளாரா இச்சபையை தொடங்கிய 15 ஆம் ஆண்டுகளில் ஜெர்மனி முழுவதும் 19 துறவற மடங்களை துவ ங்கினார். சில கலாச்சார வேறுபாடுகளின் அடிப்படையில் இவ ரது சபை ஹாலந்து நாட்டிலும் தொடங்கப்படவேண்டியதாக இருந்தது. இதனால் ஹாலந்து நாட்டில் ஓர் துறவற மடம் தொடங் கப்பட்டு, அந்த மடமே பிற்காலத்தில் இச்சபையின் தலைமை இல்லமாகவும் அமைந்தது. இச்சபையின் முதல் சபைத்தலைவி யாக கிளாரா ஃபாய் அவர்களே பொறுப்பேற்றார். பல ஏழை குழ ந்தைகளுக்கும், கைவிடப்பட்ட பெண்களுக்கும், விதவைகளுக் கும் தாயான இவர் இறந்தபிறகு ஹாலந்து நாட்டிலுள்ள சிம்பல் பெல்டு என்ற ஊரில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டு, இவரை முன் மாதி ரியாக கொண்டு இன்றுவரை இச்சபைத்துறவிகள் பணியா ற்றிவருகிறார்கள்


செபம்:


ஏழைகளே நீங்கள் பேறுபெற்றவர்கள் என்று மொழிந்த இயேசுவே! பெண்களின் மேல் அக்கறை கொண்டு, ஓர் சபையை நிறுவி இன்று வரை பணியாற்றிகொண்டிருக்கும் இச்சபையை நீர் நிறைவாக ஆசிர்வதியும். பெண்களின் முன்னேற்றத்தி ற்காக உழைக்கின்ற ஒவ்வொருவருக்கும் நல்ல உடல், உள்ள, ஆன்ம நலன்களை தந்து, எல்லா இடையூறுகளையும் எதிர் கொள்ள உமது சக்தியை தந்து, ஆசீர்வதித்து வழிநடத்தி யருள வேண்டுமென்று தந்தையாம் இயேசுவே உம்மை வேண்டு கிறோம்.

Also known as

Klara



Profile

Fourth of five children born to Louis and Katherine Fey; her father was a wealthy textile industrialist who died of a stroke in 1820 when Clara was five years old. The girl grew up well off, but became acutely concerned about the plight of the poor in her city. Her family was active in the Church; Clara's brother became a priest, and she was acquainted with Blessed Pauline von Mallinckrodt and Blessed Franziska Schervier. In 1835 she began reading the work of Saint Teresa of Ávila, and was drawn to Carmelite spirituality. In 1837 she and some like-minded friends she set up a school for poor children in Aachen, Germany. In 1841, following the recommendation of her spiritual director, she began studying the work of Saint Francis de Sales. Founded the Sisters of the Poor Child Jesus on 2 February 1844 in Aachen with a Rule based on the teaching of Saint Augustine, and with a mission to educate children in religion and in secular matters in a religious environment; Mother Clara served the rest of her life as their first superior. She received diocesan approval on 28 January 1848 and made her profession in 1850. The Sisters received a papal decree of praise on 11 July 1862 from Pope Pius IX; in 1875, during the anti–Catholic German Kulturkampf, the Sisters moved to Simpelveld, Netherlands, though there are plans to move back to Aachen in the near future; they received full papal approval from Pope Leo XIII on 15 June 1888, and continue their good work today with over 500 sisters in 12 nations of Europe, South America, and Asia.


Born

11 April 1815 in Aachen, North Rhein-Westphalia, Germany


Died

8 May 1894 in Simpelveld, Limburg, Netherlands of natural causes


Beatified

• 5 May 2018 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at the cathedral of Aachen, North Rhein-Westphalia, Germany


Patronage

Sisters of the Poor Child Jesus




Blessed Teresa Demjanovich


Also known as

Sister Miriam Teresa



Profile

One of five children born to Alexander and Johanna Demjanovich, emmigrants to the United States from an area of the Austro-Hungarian empire that is in modern Slovakia. Raised in the Byzantine-Ruthenian rite. Valedictorian of her high school class. Teacher at the Saint Aloysius Academy in Jersey City, New Jersey, and then in the city's public high school. Entered the Congregation of the Sisters of Charity of Saint Elizabeth in 1925 and died there two years later. In 1928, Sister Miriam's spiritual conferences, Greater Perfection and paved the way for her Cause as they showed the pilgrimage to God of a woman living in modern America.


Born

26 March 1901 in Bayonne, New Jersey


Died

8 May 1927 in Convent Station, New Jersey of complications follwing appendicitis


Beatified

• 4 October 2014 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart, Newark, New Jersey, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato




Blessed Henri Vergès


Also known as

Enric Vergés



Profile

Educated from age 12 by the Marist Brothers of the Schools, he studied in Espirá de l'Aglí and Saint-Paul-Trois-Châteaux in France. Enric joined the Marists himself in 1945, and made his perpetual vows on 26 August 1952. Elementary school teacher in Nimes, France in 1947. The combination of work, study and Marist frugality led to health problems, and in 1950 Henri had to spend time in hospital in Osséja, France. Teacher in Le Cheylard, France in 1952. Novice instructor in Aubenas and Bordeaux in France. Sub-master of the novices at Notre-Dame de Lacabane, Corrèze, France from 1958 to 1966. Marist superior in Bourg-de-Péage and Ganges in France. Delegate to the Marist general chapter in 1967. Received a degree in philosophy in Montpellier, France in 1968. After studying Arabic, he was appointed director of the Saint-Bonaventure school in Algiers from 1969 till 1976 when the school was nationalized by the Algerian government. Professor of mathematics at the school of Sour-El-Ghozlane from 1976 to 1988. Director of the library of the Archdiocese of Algiers on Ben Cheneb Street in the casbah from 1988 until his death. Murdered by Muslim fundamentalists. Martyr.


Born

15 July 1930 in Matemale, Pyrénées-Orientales, France


Died

• shot twice in the head on 8 May 1994 in the Archdiocese library in Algiers, Algeria

• buried in Algiers on 12 May 1994


Beatified

8 December 2018 by Pope Francis



Pope Saint Boniface IV


Profile

Son of a physician named John. Student under Saint Gregory the Great. Benedictine monk at the Saint Sebastian Abbey in Rome, Italy. Served as deacon under Saint Gregory the Great; dispenser of alms and patrimonies. Chosen 67th Pope in 608.



Converted the Roman temple of the old gods, the Pantheon, to a Christian church dedicated to Our Lady and all the Martyrs in 609, the first such conversion of a temple from pagan to Christian use in Rome. Supported the expansion of the faith into England, and met with the first bishop of London. Encouraged reforms among the clergy, and balanced it with improvements in their living and working conditions. Corresponded with Saint Columba. Worked to alleviate the sufferings in Rome due to famine and the disease that follows it. Late in life he converted his own house into a monastery and lived there, dividing his time between his papal work and life as a prayerful monk.


Born

c.550 at Valeria, Abruzzi, Italy


Papal Ascension

25 August 608


Died

• 615 at Rome, Italy of natural causes

• relics moved c.1100

• relics moved in the late 13th century by order of Pope Boniface VIII

• relics re-interred in Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy on 21 October 1603



Blessed Paul-Hélène Saint Raymond


Also known as

Madame Encyclopédie



Profile

Eighth of ten children born into a pious family. Paul-Hélène studied engineering at the Sorbonne in Paris, France, but felt a call to religious life, and joined the Little Sisters of the Assumption in 1952, making her final vows in 1960. Family social worker in Creil, France from 1954 until 1957 when she began studying to be a nurse. She worked as a nurse in poor, working class neigbbourhoods in Rouen, France. Assigned to work as a nurse and social worker in Algeria in 1964 where she served for 30 years. She is remembered as intelligent, educated, helpful, generous, prayerful, and honest to the point of sometimes being blunt and tactless. Retiring from medical and social work, she assisted Blessed Henri Vergès at the archdiocese library where she was known for welcoming children and teenagers. Murdered by Muslim fundamentalists who entered the library disguised as police officers. Martyr.


Born

24 January 1927 in Paris, France


Died

• shot in the neck on 8 May 1994 in the Archdiocese library on Ben Cheneb Street in the Kasbah in Algiers, Algeria

• funeral Mass celebrated at the Basilica of Our Lady of Africa


Beatified

8 December 2018 by Pope Francis



Our Lady of Luján


Profile

The Virgin is a two feet tall terracotta statue of Our Lady. It was made in Brazil and sent to Argentina in May 1630. Its original appearance seemed inspired by Murillo's Immaculates. In 1887, to preserve and protect it, the image was given a solid silver covering. It is usually clothed with a white robe and sky blue cloak, the colors of the Argentinian flag. Only the dark oval face with big blue eyes and the hands folded in prayer are now visible.



Tradition says that an ox-drawn wagon was taking the statue from Buenos Aires to Santiago del Estero. The animals stopped at the Luján River and refused to cross. Through trial and error the teamsters discovered that it the box with the Virgin was in the wagon, the oxen would not move; if it was removed, then away they went. After testing this several times, the people realized that Our Lady wanted to stay in Luján, and so she is there today.


The image was first taken to the nearby home of Don Rosendo. He built a primitive chapel for it which lasted 40 years. A bigger shrine was completed in 1685. A new sanctuary was built in the 19th century. The image was crowned canonically in 1887. In 1930 Pope Pius XII gave the sanctuary the title of Basilica.


Patronage

• Agentina (proclaimed on 8 September 1930 Pope Pius XI)

• Argentinian military chaplains

• Paraguay

• Uruguay



Saint Acacius of Byzantium


Also known as

• Acacius of Constantinople

• Acato of Avila

• Acathius

• Achatius of Byzantium

• Agathius of Byzantium

• Agathus of Byzantium

• Agazio (in Calabria)

• Cuenca (in Spain)



Additional Memorial

• 16 January (translation of relics)

• 17 April (Orthodox calendar)


Profile

Christian centurian in the imperial Roman army stationed in Thrace. Tortured and executed in the persecutions of Diocletian. Several churches in Constantinople dedicated to him, including one dedicated by Constantine the Great. One of the Fourteen Holy Helpers.


Born

Cappadocian


Died

tortured, scourged, and beheaded c.303 in Constantinople


Patronage

• against headaches

• soldiers




Saint Victor Maurus


Also known as

• Victor the Moor

• Viktor; Vittore; Vittorio



Profile

Soldier in the Roman Praetorian Guard. A Christian from his youth, Victor lived in quiet praise of God. Around 303, the elderly Victor was arrested in Milan, Italy in the persecutions of Maximian. He was tortured for his faith, basted in molten lead, and killed. Martyr. Saint Gregory of Tours wrote of miracles that occurred at Victor's grave.


Born

3rd century in Mauretania, Africa


Died

• beheaded c.303

• buried outside Milan, Italy

• a church was later erected over the grave

• relics translated in 1576 to an Olivetan church dedicated to him in Milan


Patronage

• Asigliano, Italy

• Balangero, Italy

• Borghetto, Italy

• Canale, Italy

• Caselle Torinese, Italy

• Feletto, Italy

• Odolengo, Italy

• Quagliuzzo, Italy

• Rho, Italy

• San Vittore Olona, Italy

• Varese, Italy

• Verbania, Italy




Saint Amatus Ronconi


Also known as

Amato



Profile

Born to a wealthy family, Amatus was orphaned when very young and grew up in the home of his older brother Giacomo. Feeling a call to live according to the gospel, he devoted himself to caring for the poor and helping pilgrims. Franciscan tertiary. Constructed combination chapel and shelters for pilgrims including the Beato Amato Ronconi Nursing Home which still exists. Made four pilgrimages to Santiago de Compostela in Spain. Benedictine lay brother.


Born

c.1225 in Saludécio, Rimini, Italy


Died

• 8 May 1292 in Saludécio, Rimini, Italy of natural causes

• interred in the chapel shelters he had built

• relics transferred to the Pieve di San Biagio in May 1330 after the chapel shelters were destroyed by fire


Beatified

• 17 April 1776 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmation)

• 9 October 2013 by Pope Francis (decree of heroic virtues)


Canonized

23 November 2014 by Pope Francis


Patronage

Saludécio, Italy




Blessed Aloysius Luis Rabata


Profile

Carmelite priest. Prior of the reformed convent in Randazzo, Italy.



Born

c.1430 at Erice, Sicily


Died

• murdered in 1490 in Trapani, Italy by a head wound

• before he died he forgave his attacker, and refused to say who it was for fear the person would be punished

• buried under the main altar at the church at the Carmelite convent in Trapani

• some relics transferred to Sicily in 1617

• relics transferred to an urn under the altar of the Assumption in the basilica of Santa Maria on 13 August 1913


Beatified

10 December 1841 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmed)



Saint Ida of Nivelles


Also known as

• Ida of Metz

• Iduberga; Ita; Itta; Itte



Profile

Daughter of Bishop Arnoald of Metz. Sister of Saint Modoald of Trier and Saint Severa. Married to Saint Pepin of Landen. Mother of Saint Gertrude of Nivelles, Saint Begga of Ardenne, and Grimoald, mayor of the palace. Grandmother of Pepin of Herstal. Friend of Saint Amand of Maastricht. Widowed, she built a Benedictine double monastery at Nivelles, Belgium under the leadership of her daughter, Saint Gertrude; Ida spent the rest of her life there as a nun.


Born

592


Died

8 May 652 in Nivelles, Belgium of natural causes


Patronage

• against erysipelas; erysipelas patients

• against toothache; toothache sufferers



Pope Saint Benedict II


Profile

Son of John. Studied at the schola cantorum, and was early known as a Bible scholar; noted singer, too. Priest, known for his care for the poor. Pope; the delay in his ascension was caused by waiting for imperial confirmation.


Obtained the decree that abolished imperial confirmation of popes. Adopted Constantine's two sons. Fought Monothelitism, and worked with Spanish bishops to restore orthodoxy in their dioceses. Restored many churches in Rome, and endowed deaconries to care for the poor.



Born

at Rome, Italy


Papal Ascension

• elected in 683

• ascended on 26 June 684


Died

• 8 May 685

• buried at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy



Blessed Angelo of Massaccio


Also known as

• Angelo of Cupramontana

• Angel...


Profile

Camaldolese monk at the Santa Maria della Serra monastery near Cupramontana, Italy. Prior of his house. Priest. Martyr by Berlotani heretic wood cutters when he chastised them for ignoring the Sabbath.


Born

late 14 century in Massaccio (modern Cupramontana), Italy


Died

• hit with an axe c.1458 near the monastery of Santa Maria della Serra near Cupramontana, Italy

• by 1492 he was interred under the altar in the church at Santa Maria della Serra, now known as the church of Sant Angelo


Beatified

27 September 1842 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

Cupramontana, Italy



Saint Desideratus of Bourges


Also known as

Desire, Dezydery, Desiderato


Profile

His was a pious family; his parents turned their home into a hospital, and his brothers, Deodato and Didier, died as a martyrs. Desideratus was a courtier and advisor to king Clotaire. Fought simony and heresy. He wished to retire to life as a monk, but was chosen to serve as bishop of Bourges, France in 541. Attended the 5th Council of Orleans in 549, and the 2nd Council of Auvergne. Fought against Nestorianism.


Born

Soissons, France


Died

• 8 May 550 of natural causes

• buried in the basilica of Sant'Ursino, Bourges, France, the building of which he began



Saint Metrone of Verona


Also known as

Metro, Metron, Metronius



Profile

8th-century penitent who chained himself to a stone in front of the cathedral of Verona, Italy, threw the key into Adige River, and lived there on the street for seven years in penance. The key to his chains was found in the belly of a fish by two fishermen who took the key to the local bishop. The bishop took the return to the key as a sign, freed Metrone from his chains, and welcomed him to active Communion in the Church.


Died

• miracles reported at his grave

• relics enshrined in Verona, Italy



Saint Otger of Utrecht


Also known as

Odger; Odgero; Oteger


Profile

Worked with Saint Wiro of Utrecht to found a monastery at Odilienburg, Netherlands.


Born

England


Died

• c.746 of natural causes

• relics in Odilienberg, France

• relics taken to Roermond, Netherlands in 1361

• relics disappeared during the time of the Protestant Reformation

• relics re-discovered in 1594

• relics re-enshrined in 1881




Saint Wiro of Utrecht


Also known as

Wirone


Profile

Bishop of Utrecht, Netherlands. One of the Apostles of Frisia. He and his two companions founded a monastery at Odiliënberg, Netherlands.


Born

British Isles (location varies from source to source)


Died

• c.753 of natural causes

• buried in Roermond, Netherlands

• tomb re-discovered in August 1881



Blessed Raymond of Toulouse



Profile

Son of the Count de Montfort. Cousin of Blessed George of Lauria. While on pilgrimage to the Marian shrine of Montserrat, Raymond decided to join the Mercedarians, and took the habit at the convent of Santa Eulalia in Barcelona, Spain. Zealous preacher. Created cardinal-priest in 1335 by Pope Benedict XII.



Saint Gibrian


Also known as

Abran, Gybrian, Gobrian, Gibriano


Profile

Brother of Saint Tressan, Saint Helan, Saint Germanus, Saint Abran, Saint Petran, Saint Franca, Saint Promptia, and Saint Possenna. Hermit in Brittany in northern France. Priest. Worked with Saint Remigius.


Born

Ireland


Died

c.515



Blessed Domenico di San Pietro




Profile

Mercedarian. Helped ransom 187 Christians held in slavery by North African Moors.



Blessed Pietro de Alos



Profile

Mercedarian. Helped ransom 187 Christians held in slavery by North African Moors.



Saint Helladius of Auxerre


Profile

Bishop of Auxerre, France for 30 years. Converted Saint Amator, his successor as bishop, to the faith.


Died

387 of natural causes



Saint Arsenio of Scetis



Profile

Deacon. Hermit at Mount Scetis, Egypt.


Born

4th century


Died

5th century



Saint Martin of Saujon


Profile

Sixth century priest, monk and abbot in Saujon, Saintes, France.



Saint Peter of Besançon


Profile

Bishop of Besançon, France.



St. Victor the Moor


Feastday: May 8

Patron: of Varese, Italy

Death: 303



Martyr executed at Nicomedia, with a group, including Zoticus,Antoninus, Theonas, Chrysophorus, Severian, Acyndius, Zeno, and Caesareus. They were mentioned in the apocryphal Acts of St. George.


Victor the Moor (in Latin: Victor Maurus) (born 3rd century in Mauretania; died ca. 303 in Milan) was a native of Mauretania and a Christian martyr, according to tradition, and is venerated as a saint. Victor, born into a Christian family, was a soldier in the Roman Praetorian Guard. After he had destroyed some pagan altars, he was arrested, tortured, and killed around 303.


Veneration


Statue of St Victor in Museo del Duomo, Milan. Unknown Milanese sculptor, last decade of 15th century

Gregory of Tours claimed miracles occurred above his grave; a church was built above the supposed site. His cause was promoted by Saint Ambrose, fourth-century bishop of Milan and numerous churches have been dedicated to him in the city itself and throughout the Diocese of Milan and its neighbours.


His memorial day is May 8 in the Roman Catholic Church and the Evangelical Lutheran Church in America.




St. Odrian


Feastday: May 8

Death: 5th century


 

One of the first bishops of Waterford, Ireland. Waterford was part of an ancient deanery system at the time, ruled by abbot bishops. Odrian was a prelate.




Bl. Miriam Teresa Demjanovich


Feastday: May 8

Patron:

Birth: 1901

Death: 1927

Beatified: Pope Francis on October 4, 2014, in Newark, New Jersey


Miriam Teresa Demjanovich was born March 26, 1901 in Bayonne, New Jersey. She was the youngest of seven children and received her baptism, confirmation and her first Holy Communion in the Byzantine Ruthenian rite of her immigrant parents.


By the time she graduated from Bayonne High School in January 1917, she felt a calling to become a Carmelite, but remained home to care for her ailing mother.


When her mother died the following November, her family encouraged Miriam to attend the College of Saint Elizabeth at Convent Station, New Jersey. She decided to attend and graduated with the highest honors in 1923 with a literature degree.


Miriam continued to long for a religious life, but was unsure of which community to enter. While she decided, she accepting a teaching position at the Academy of Saint Aloysius in Jersey City. Several noted her humility and genuine piety, as she was often discovered kneeling in the college chapel. Her devotion to praying the rosary was also observed by many.


In her first year teaching, Miriam joined the Saint Vincent de Paul Parish choir, the Blessed Virgin Sodality, and was a member of a parish community associated with the National Catholic Welfare Conference.


All summer and fall of 1924, Miriam prayed for discernment and asked God for direction. She attempted to join the Discalced Carmelite nuns in the Bronx, New York, but was told to wait a few years due to various health issues she suffered.




During that year's Feast of the Immaculate Conception, she made a novena. On December 8, she believed she was being called to enter the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth and planned to enter the convent February 2, 1925.


Unfortunately, Miriam's father passed away after catching a cold. Even if he had been well, Miriam's entrance was delayed nearly two weeks - February 11, 1925, the Feast of Our Lady of Lourdes.


When Miriam was ready to enter the convent, her brother, Charles Demjanovich, who was a priest, and two of her sisters accompanied her.


She was admitted to the novitiate of the religious congregation and received the religious habit on May 17, 1925.


As she never received an official transfer of rite, she remained a Byzantine Rite Catholic during her time as a Religious Sister in a Roman Rite congregation.


The following year, her spiritual leader, Father Benedict Bradley, asked her to write the conferences for the novitiate. She wrote twenty-six conferences, which were published following her death in a collection called Greater Perfection.


In 1926, Miriam became very ill and was forced to undergo a tonsillectomy. She was severely weak and required help to return to the convent. A few days later, she volunteered to help in the infirmary, but was told to "pull [herself] together."


Father Bradley worried over her health and called her brother, who then called his sister who was a nurse.


Miriam's sister took one look at Miriam and took her straight to a hospital, where she was diagnosed with "physical and nervous exhaustion, with myocarditis and acute appendicitis."


Miriam was quite weak and the doctors feared she would not survive an operation so they waited.


Unfortunately, her condition worsened.


It was not until May 6, 1927 than Miriam had an operation for the appendicitis. Unfortunately, she passed away two days later on May 8.


Miriam's funeral was held May 11, 1927 at Holy Family Chapel in Convent Station, New Jersey and she was buried at Holy Family Cemetery on the motherhouse of the Sisters of Charity of St. Elizabeth grounds.


Years later, Miriam was beatified by Pope Francis on October 4, 2014. Her beatification was celebrated at the Cathedral Basilica of the Sacred Heart, Newark, New Jersey and was presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato.


Miracles attributed to Miriam include the healing of a blind boy's eyes in 1963. The Vatican approved of his restored sight as a miracle accomplished through the intercession of Miriam in 2013.


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Miriam Teresa Demjanovich (March 26, 1901 – May 8, 1927) was an American Ruthenian Catholic Sister of Charity who has been beatified by the Catholic Church. The beatification ceremony was the first to take place in the United States.





St. Maria Magdalen of Canossa


Feastday: May 8

Birth: 1774

Death: 1835

Canonized: Pope John Paul II



Foundress of the Daughters of Charity at Verona, Italy. Born in 1774, she was the daughter of the Marquis of Canossa, who died when Maria Magdalen was three. Her mother abandoned the family, and Maria Magdalen managed her father's estate until she was thirty-three, then founding her institute. When she died, her Daughters of Charity were widespread. She was canonized in 1988 by Pope John Paul II.



St. Indract


Feastday: May 8

Death: 710


Irish chieftain and martyr, also called Indractus. He was possibly murdered with his sister, St. Dominica, while returning home from a pilgrimage from Rome. Another tradition states that they were slain by Saxons near Glastonbury where their relics were thereafter preserved.


Indract or Indracht was an Irish saint who, along with his companions, was venerated at Glastonbury Abbey, a monastery in the county of Somerset in south-western England. In the High Middle Ages Glastonbury tradition held that he had been an Irish pilgrim — a king's son – on his way back from Rome who was molested and killed by a local thegn after he had stopped off to visit the shrine of St Patrick. This tradition synchronised his life with that of King Ine (688–726), though historian Michael Lapidge has argued that he is most likely to represent a 9th-century abbot of Iona named Indrechtach ua Fínnachta.


The cult seems to date from the late 10th or early 11th century, though this is uncertain. There is one main extant account, the anonymous 12th century Passio sancti Indracti. An earlier text written in Old English is said to have existed and been used by the writer of the Passio. There is also evidence that the 12th-century historian William of Malmesbury wrote his own saint's life, and although now lost it may also have used the Old English text. In the 14th century a St Alban's monk added significant new material of probable Cornish origin, mentioning a sister named Dominica and some miracles.




St. Dionysius


Feastday: May 8

Death: 193


Bishop of Vienne, in Dauphine, France, successor of St. Justus. He was one of the ten missionaries sent with St. Peregrinus to Gaul, by Pope St. Sixtus I.



St. Abran


Feastday: May 8

Death: 515


Hermit also called Gibrian. From Ireland, Abran, the eldest of five brothers and three sisters, sailed to Brittany with his siblings. There all of them continued their hermitages and greatly influenced the people of the area. Abran and his brothers and sisters were all declared saints.


Saint Abran (Breton for 'Abraham'), also known as Gibrian, was a 6th-century Irish hermit in Brittany.


He was born in Ireland and with eight of his siblings travelled to Brittany. St. Abran and his siblings chose a life of devotion to the God in the consecrated religious life. He lived in a hermitage on the Marne River, which had been given to him by Saint Remigius.


Abran and his siblings are all considered saints for their positive Christian influence upon the Breton people.


Saint Abran's feast day is 8 May on the Western Rite Orthodox and Roman Catholic Church calendars.




† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 8)


✠ டரென்டைஸ் நகர் புனிதர் பீட்டர் ✠

(St. Peter of Tarentaise)


டரென்டைஸ் பேராயர்:

(Archbishop of Tarentaise) 


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1102

புனித மௌரிஸ்-இ'எக்ஸில், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Saint-Maurice-l'Exil, France)


இறப்பு: செப்டம்பர் 14, 1174 (வயது 72)

பெல்லேவாக்ஸ் துறவுமடம், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Bellevaux Abbey, France)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 10, 1191

திருத்தந்தை மூன்றாம் செலேஸ்டின்

(Pope Celestine III)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 8


பாதுகாவல்:

டரென்டைஸ் (Tarentaise)


புனிதர் பீட்டர் (Saint Peter of Tarentaise) ஒரு ஃபிரெஞ்ச் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க துறவு மடாதிபதியும் (French Roman Catholic abbot), கி.பி. 1141ம் ஆண்டு முதல், தமது மரணம் வரை “டரென்டைஸ்” (Tarentaise) உயர்மறைமாவட்ட பேராயராக பணியாற்றியவருமாவார்.


அவரது குழந்தை பருவத்திலும், இளமை பருவத்திலும் அவர் பிறருக்கு முன்மாதிரியாக வாழ்ந்தார். அவரது பெற்றோர் மற்றும் உடன்பிறந்தவர்கள் அனைவருமே மத வாழ்க்கையில் அவரைப் பின்பற்றினர். அவர் ஒரு புதிய துறவு மடத்தின் மடாதிபதியாக பணியாற்றினார். புனிதர் பெர்னார்ட் (Saint Bernard of Clairvaux) உள்ளிட்ட உயர் பொருப்பிலிருந்தவர்கள் இவரை உயர் பதவிகளை ஏற்குமாறு வற்புறுத்தினர். ஆனால் இவர் அவற்றையெல்லாம் மறுத்தார். ஆனால் அவரது இதயம், அவரது எளிய மற்றும் பக்தியான வாழ்க்கைக்காக, ஒரு துறவி என்ற இழப்புக்காக துபுற்றது. அவர் ஒருமுறை கான்வென்ட் வரை ஓடி வந்து, மறைந்து வாழ முயற்சித்தார். அவர் ஊழல் மற்றும் ஒழுக்கங்கெட்ட குருக்கள் அனைவரையும் அகற்றினார். ஏழைகளுக்கும், வீடற்றவர்களுக்கும் உதவும் நல்லெண்ணத்தில், அவர் கடுமையான வானிலைகளின்போது, தனது சொந்த வாழ்க்கையை ஆபத்திற்குள்ளாக்கி இருந்துள்ளார்.


பியர்ரே (Pierre) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட பீட்டர், கி.பி. 1102ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபிரான்ஸ் நாட்டின் "ரோன்-ஆல்ப்ஸ்" மலைகளின் (Rhône-Alpes mountains) நகர்ப் பகுதியொன்றில் பிறந்தார். "சிஸ்டர்சியன் துறவியர் சபையில்" (Cistercian monastic order) இணைந்த இவர், கி.பி. 1132ம் ஆண்டு, "டமீ" (Tamié) என்னுமிடத்திலுள்ள துறவு மடத்தின் மடாதிபதியானார்.


1142ம் ஆண்டு, "டரென்டைஸ்" உயர் மறை மாவட்டத்தின் (Archbishop of Tarentaise) பேராயர் பதவியை தயக்கத்துடன் ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். ஒரு துறவு மடாதிபதியாக தாம் கற்றுக்கொண்ட "சிஸ்டர்சியன் கொள்கைகளை" (Cistercian principles) சிதைந்து கொண்டிருந்த தமது மறை மாவட்டத்தில் நடைமுறைப்படுத்தினார். அதில் வெற்றியும் கண்டார்.


இவர் ஸ்விட்சர்லாந்து (Switzerland) மற்றும் இத்தாலி (Italy) நாடுகளினிடையே பயணம் செய்பவர்களின் நலன்களிலும் அக்கறை காட்டினார். பொதுவாகவே, பீட்டர் தமது ஆயர் பதவியினால் மகிழ்ச்சியுடன் காணப்படவில்லை. அவர் அடிக்கடி காணாமலும் போனார். இடையில் ஒரு வருடம் (1155) அவர் காணாமல் போய் ஸ்விட்சர்லாந்தின் ஒரு தொலைதூர துறவியர் மடத்தில் காணப்பட்டார் என்பர்.


ஃபிரான்ஸ் நாட்டின் அரசன் ஏழாம் லூயிஸ் (King Louis VII of France) மற்றும் இங்கிலாந்தின் அரசன் இரண்டாம் ஹென்றி (King Henry II of England) ஆகியோரிடையே நடந்த பேச்சுவார்த்தைகளில் திருத்தந்தை மூன்றாம் அலெக்சாண்டரின் (Pope Alexander III) சார்பில் பீட்டர் கலந்துகொண்டார். ஒருமுறை அதேபோன்றதொரு பேச்சுவார்த்தையில் கலந்துகொண்டு திரும்புகையில், ஃபிரான்ஸின் "பெல்லேவாக்ஸ்" (Monastery at Bellevaux) துறவு மடத்தில் மரித்தார்.


Saint of the Day 


(May 08) 


✠ St. Peter of Tarentaise ✠ 


Archbishop of Tarentaise: 


Born: 1102 AD

Saint-Maurice-l 'Exil, Kingdom of France 


Died: September 14, 1174 (Aged 72)

Bellevaux Abbey, Cirey, Franche-Comté, Kingdom of France 


Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church 


Canonized: May 10, 1191

Pope Celestine III 


Feast Day: May 08 


Patronage: Tarentaise 


Saint Pierre de Tarentaise was a French Roman Catholic Cistercian who served as the Archbishop of Tarentaise from 1141 until his death. 


St. Peter of Tarentaise was born in 1102 near Vienne, France. When he was 20, he entered the Cistercian Order, convincing his family to join him. Two brothers and his father entered the religious community of Bonnevaux with him, and his sister became religious. 


Ten years after his entry, Peter was sent to found a new house in Switzerland, in the Tarentaise mountains. He also opened a hospital, which served as a guest house for travellers through the mountains. 


In 1442, Peter was appointed as Archbishop of Tarentaise. Although he was the happiest living the simple life of a monk, he accepted at the urging of St. Bernard and other monks in his order. As bishop, Peter reformed the diocese and began programs to provide education and food to the poor. His tradition of donating food, called “My Bread,” lasted until the French Revolution in 1789. 


Peter performed many miraculous healings as a bishop, but after 13 years, he fled his diocese disguised as a lay brother and went to a Cistercian abbey in Switzerland. He hid there for about a year until he was discovered and his superiors forced him to return to Tarentaise. 


When the anti-pope Victor and the true Pope Alexander III were at strife, Peter was one of the only major Church voices to support Alexander’s claim, even going against the emperor Frederick Barbarossa. Pope Alexander III recognized Peter’s loyalty and holiness and sent him to reconcile King Louis VII of France and Henry II of England. Shortly after an unsuccessful reconciliation attempt, St. Peter died of an illness in 1175. He was canonized in 1191. 


St. Peter of Tarentaise, you tried to run away from your duties as a bishop, but became known as a man of great peace—pray for us!