புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெயர்கள் நமது youtube சேனலில் ஒலிவடிவில்

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெயர்கள் நமது youtube சேனலில் ஒலிவடிவில்
இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெயர்கள் ஒலிவடிவில் நமது youtube சேனலில்

06 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 6

 St. Dominic Savio

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 6)


✠ புனிதர் டோமினிக் சாவியோ ✠

(St. Dominic Savio)


ஒப்புரவாளர்:

(Confessor)


பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 2, 1842

சான் ஜியோவன்னி, ரிவா ப்ரெஸோ சியரி, 

பைட்மான்ட், இத்தாலி

(San Giovanni, Riva presso Chieri, Piedmont, Italy)


இறப்பு: மார்ச் 9, 1857 (வயது 14)

மொன்டொனியோ, பைட்மான்ட், இத்தாலி

(Mondonio, Piedmont, Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

எபிஸ்கோபல் திருச்சபை

(Episcopal Church)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: மார்ச் 5, 1950

திருத்தந்தை 12ம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 12, 1954

திருத்தந்தை 12ம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்: 

கிறிஸ்தவர்களின் சகாய அன்னை பேராலயம், 

தூரின், இத்தாலி

(The Basilica of Mary Help of Christians in Turin)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 6


பாதுகாவல்: 

பீடச்சிறார், பாடகர் குழுச் சிறார், இளம் குற்றவாளிகள்,

தவறுதலாக குற்றம் சுமத்தப்பட்டோர்


புனிதர் டோமினிக் சாவியோ, இத்தாலியைச் சார்ந்த புனித ஜான் போஸ்கோவின் வளரிளம் பருவ மாணவர்களில் ஒருவர் ஆவார். இவர் குருவாகும் ஆசையில் படித்துக் கொண்டிருந்தபோது தமது 14ம் வயதில் “நுரையீரல் அழற்சி” (Pleurisy) நோய் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு இறந்தார்.


பதினான்கு வயதே நிரம்பிய டோமினிக் சாவியோவின், தீரம் நிறைந்த அன்றாடப் புண்ணிய வாழ்வே இவரைப் புனிதர் நிலைக்கு உயர்த்தியது. கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையில் மறைசாட்சியாக இறக்காத புனிதர்களில் இவரே மிகவும் இளையவர்.


தொடக்க காலம்:

வீட்டு வாழ்வு:

டோமினிக் சாவியோ, 1842ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 2ம் தேதியன்று, வட இத்தாலியின் “பியெட்மோன்ட்” (Piedmont) பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள “சியரி” (Chieri) நகரின் அருகேயுள்ள “ரிவா” (Riva) எனும் கிராமத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவர் சிறுவயதில் இருந்தே இயேசுவிடமும், அன்னை மரியாளிடமும் மிகுந்த பக்தி கொண்டிருந்தார். இவரது குடும்பமும் சூழ்நிலையும் இவரை புனிதத்தில் வளர்த்தன. இவரது பெற்றோர் இவரை கிறிஸ்தவ மதிப்பீடுகளில் வளர்ப்பதில் அதிக ஆர்வம் காட்டினர். 


நான்கு வயதிலேயே தனியாக செபிக்கும் திறமை பெற்றிருந்த சாவியோ, தான் முதல் நற்கருணை பெற்ற நாளைப் பற்றிக் குறிப்பிடும்போது, "என் வாழ்வின் மிகவும் மகிழ்ச்சியானதும் அற்புதமானதுமான நாள் அது" என்கிறார். இவர் ஆலயத்தின் பீடச் சிறுவர்கள் குழுவில் இணைந்து திருப்பலியில் குருக்களுக்கு உதவி செய்தார்; அதிகாலை 5 மணிக்கே ஆலயம் சென்றுவிடும் வழக்கத்தைக் கொண்டிருந்தார். மழையிலும், குளிரிலும் இவர் ஆலயத்திற்கு தவறாமல் சென்றார்.


ஆரட்டரியில்:

12 வயதில் கடவுளின் அழைப்பை உணர்ந்து, புனிதர் ஜான் போஸ்கோ (Saint John Bosco) நடத்திய ஆரட்டரியில் சாவியோ சேர்ந்தார். 1854ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், முதல் திங்கட் கிழமை, தனது தந்தையுடன் புனிதர் ஜான் போஸ்கோவை சந்தித்த இவர், “நான் தைக்கப்படாத துணியாக இருக்கிறேன், என்னை இயேசுவுக்கு உகந்த நல்ல சட்டையாகத் தைப்பது உங்கள் பணி” என்று அவரிடம் கூறினார்.


கெட்ட வார்த்தைகள் பேசிய சிறுவர்களை சாவியோ கண்டித்து திருத்தினார்; சண்டையிட்டுக் கொண்ட சிறார்களுக்கிடையே சமாதானம் செய்துவைத்தார். தீய வழிகளில் இருந்து விலகி, களங்கமற்ற தூய்மையான புண்ணிய வாழ்வு வாழ்ந்தார். தனது செயல்கள் அனைத்தையும் இறைவனின் புகழ்ச்சிக்காகவே செய்து வந்தார்.


குருத்துவ படிப்பு:

இறுதியில் சாவியோ குரு மடத்தில் சேர்ந்தார். ‘பாவம் செய்வதை விட சாவதே மேல்’ என்பது இவரது விருதுவாக்கு ஆகும். 14ம் வயதில் இவருக்கு உடல் நலம் பாதிக்கப்பட்டதால் மிகவும் பலவீனம் அடைந்தார். 1857ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 9ம் தேதி, விண்ணகக் காட்சியால் பரவசம் அடைந்து, “ஆகா, எவ்வளவு இன்பம் நிறைந்த அற்புத காட்சி!” என்று கூறியவாறே டோமினிக் சாவியோ உயிர் துறந்தார்.


டோமினிக் சாவியோ மரித்ததும் புனிதர் ஜான் போஸ்கோ இவரது வாழ்க்கை வரலாற்றை புத்தகமாக எழுதினார். அது இவரது புனிதர் பட்டமளிப்பு நடவடிக்கைகளில் முக்கிய ஆதாரமாக விளங்கியது.


புனிதர் பட்டம்:

சாவியோவின் புனிதர் பட்டத்திற்கான நடவடிக்கைகளைத் தொடங்கிவைத்த திருத்தந்தை 10ம் பயஸ் (Pope Saint Pius X), “தோமினிக் என்னும் இளைஞர், திருமுழுக்கில் பெற்ற புனிதத்தைப் பழுதின்றி காப்பாற்றிக் கொண்டவர்" என்று இவரைப் புகழ்கின்றார்.


1933ல் இவருக்கு வணக்கத்திற்குரியவர் பட்டம் வழங்கிய திருத்தந்தை 11ம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius XI), “தூய்மை, பக்தி, ஆன்மீகத் தாகம் ஆகியவற்றின் ஆற்றலால் சாவியோவின் கிறிஸ்தவ வாழ்வு நமக்கு முன்மாதிரியாக உள்ளது” என்று கூறுகிறார்.


திருத்தந்தை 12ம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius XII), டோமினிக் சாவியோவுக்கு 1950ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 5ம் நாளன்று, அருளாளர் பட்டமும், 1954ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூன் மாதம், 12ம் தேதியன்று, புனிதர் பட்டமும் வழங்கி உரை நிகழ்த்தியபோது, “இளைஞர்கள் சாவியோவின் வழிகளைப் பின்பற்ற வேண்டும். தீய சக்திகளின் தாக்கங்களைப் புறக்கணித்து, தூய்மையில் நிலைத்து நின்ற சாவியோவின் புனித வாழ்க்கை இளைஞர்களுக்கு சிறந்த எடுத்துக்காட்டு” என்று கூறினார்.

Feastday: May 6

Patron: of choirboys, the falsely accused, and juvenile delinquents

Birth: April 2, 1842

Death: March 9, 1857

Beatified: March 5, 1950 by Pope Pius XII

Canonized: June 12, 1954 by Pope Pius XII

Author and Publisher - Catholic Online

 Printable Catholic Saints PDFs

 Shop St. Dominic Savio

Image of St. Dominic Savio

Dominic Savio was born on April 2, 1842 in the village of Riva in northern Italy. His father was a blacksmith and his mother a seamstress. He had nine brothers and sisters. His family was poor but hardworking. They were devout and pious Catholics.


When he was just two years old, Dominic's family returned to their native village of Castlenuovo d'Asti, (Today, Castlenuovo Don Bosco) near the birthplace of John Bosco. Bosco would himself later be canonized as a Saint by the Church and became a major influence on the life of Dominic.


As a small child, Dominic loved the Lord and His Church. He was very devout in practicing his Catholic faith. For example, he said grace before every meal and refused to eat with those who did not. He was always quick to encourage others to pray.


Dominic attended Church regularly with his mother and was often seen kneeling before the Tabernacle in prayer. He even prayed outside the Church building. It did not matter to Dominic if the ground was covered with mud or snow, he knelt and prayed anyway.


Dominic was quickly recognized as an exceptional student who studied hard and performed well in school. He became an altar server. He also attended daily Mass and went to confession regularly. He asked to receive his first communion at the age of seven. This was not the practice in the Church of Italy at the time. Normally, children received their first holy communion at the age of twelve. Dominic's priest was so impressed with his intelligence concerning the faith, his love for the Lord and his piety that he made an exception. Dominic said that the day of his First Communion was the happiest day of his life.



On the Day he received his first communion, Dominic wrote four promises in a little book. Those promises were:


I will go to Confession often, and as frequently to Holy Communion as my confessor allows.

I wish to sanctify the Sundays and festivals in a special manner.

My friends shall be Jesus and Mary.

Death rather than sin.


The young Dominic graduated to secondary school and walked three miles to school each day. He undertook this chore gladly. While walking to school on a hot day a farmer asked why he wasn't yet tired. Dominic cheerfully replied, "Nothing seems tiresome or painful when you are working for a master who pays well."


Although he was young, Dominic was clearly different than his peers. When two boys stuffed a school heating stove with snow and rubbish. The boys were known troublemakers and were likely to face expulsion if caught, so they blamed Dominic for the misdeed. Dominic did not deny the accusation and he was scolded before the class. However, a day later the teacher learned the truth. He asked Dominic why he did not defend himself while being scolded for something he did not do. Dominic mentioned he was imitating Jesus who remained silent when unjustly accused.


Dominic's teacher spoke well of him and brought him to the attention of Fr. John Bosco, who was renowned for looking after hundreds of boys, many of them orphaned and poor. In October 1854, Dominic was personally introduced to Fr. Bosco - along with his father.


At the meeting, Bosco wanted to test Dominic's intelligence and understanding of the Catholic faith. He gave Dominic a copy of The Catholic Readings, which was a pamphlet that dealt with apologetics. He expected Dominic to provide a report the next day, but just ten minutes later Dominic recited the text and provided a full explanation of its significance. This solidified Bosco's high opinion of Dominic.


Dominic expressed an interest in becoming a priest and asked to go to Turin to attend the Oratory of St. Francis de Sales. Fr. Bosco agreed to take him.


At the Oratory, Dominic studied directly under Fr. Bosco. He worked diligently and always asked questions when he did not understand something. He renewed his First Communion promises that he wrote in his little book at the age of seven. After six months at the Oratory, Dominic delivered a speech on the path to sainthood. In his speech, he made three outstanding points; it is God's will that we ALL become saints, it is easy to become a saint, and there are great rewards in heaven for saints.


To all our readers, Please don't scroll past this.

Deacon Keith FournierToday, we humbly ask you to defend Catholic Online's independence. 98% of our readers don't give; they simply look the other way. If you donate just $5.00, or whatever you can, Catholic Online could keep thriving for years. Most people donate because Catholic Online is useful. If Catholic Online has given you $5.00 worth of knowledge this year, take a minute to donate. Show the volunteers who bring you reliable, Catholic information that their work matters. If you are one of our rare donors, you have our gratitude and we warmly thank you. Help us do more >

Dominic's desire to become a saint troubled him however. He wondered to himself how someone as young as he was could become a saint? In his zeal, he tried voluntary mortification and other voluntary penances, hoping that they would help him to grow closer to Jesus and help him to be less concerned with his own needs. He even made his bed uncomfortable and wore thin clothes in winter. When Fr. Bosco observed these practices, he corrected Dominic. He explained that as a child, what he should do instead was to devote himself to his studies and to be cheerful. He discouraged Dominic from any more physical penances. Dominic's happy demeanor quickly returned.


At the same time Dominic was developing his reputation as a fantastic student, his health began to fail. He started to lose his appetite and Fr. Bosco became concerned. Dominic was taken to the doctor who recommended that he be sent home to his family to recover. Dominic wanted to stay at the oratory, but Fr. Bosco insisted he go home. Everybody expected Dominic to recover, except for Dominic himself who insisted he was dying.


Before he departed, Dominic made the Exercise of a Happy Death and predicted this would be his final devotion.


After four days at home, Dominic's health worsened. The doctor ordered him to bed to rest. He then performed bloodletting, which was still performed at that time. Over the next four days, Dominic was bled ten times before the doctor was satisfied he would recover.


But Dominic was sure of his impending death. He implored his parents to bring the parish priest so he could make a last confession. They obliged him and Dominic made a confession and was given the Anointing of the Sick. He asked his father to read him the prayers for the Exercise of a Happy Death. Then he fell asleep. Hours later he awoke and said to his father: "Goodbye, Dad, goodbye ... Oh what wonderful things I see!" Dominic fell asleep and died within minutes. It was March 9, 1857 and Dominic was merely 14 year of age.


His father wrote to Fr. Bocso to report the sad news.


Fr. Bosco was powerfully touched by Dominic and he wrote a biography, "The Life of Dominic Savio." The biography quickly became popular and would eventually be read in schools across Italy. As people learned about Dominic, they called for his canonization.


Detractors argued that Dominic was too young to be canonized and pointed out that he was not a martyr. However, Pope Pius X disagreed and opened his cause for canonization.


Free Online Catholic Classes for Anyone, Anywhere - Click Here

Dominic Savio was declared venerable in 1933 by Pope Pius XI, beatified in 1950, then canonized in 1954 by Pope Pius XII.


Saint Dominic is the patron saint of choirboys, the falsely accused, and juvenile delinquents. His feast day is May 6, moved from March 9. Many schools and institutions dedicated to boys are dedicated to him.


Dominic Savio (Italian: Domenico Savio; 2 April 1842 – 9 March 1857) was an Italian adolescent student of Saint John Bosco. He was studying to be a priest when he became ill and died at the age of 14, possibly from pleurisy.[5] He is the only person of his age group who was declared a saint not on the basis of his having been a martyr, but on the basis of having lived what was seen as a holy life. He was noted for his piety and devotion to the Catholic faith, and was eventually canonized.


Bosco regarded Savio very highly, and wrote a biography of his young student, The Life of Dominic Savio. This volume, along with other accounts of him, were critical factors in his cause for sainthood. Despite the fact that many people considered him to have died at too young an age – fourteen – to be considered for sainthood, he was considered eligible for such singular honour on the basis of his having displayed "heroic virtue" in his everyday life.[6] Savio was canonised a saint on 12 June 1954, by Pope Pius XII, making him the youngest non-martyr to be canonised in the Catholic Church[7] until the canonisations of Francisco and Jacinta Marto, the pious visionaries of Fatima, in 2017.



Biography

The major part of the biographical information known about Dominic Savio comes from his biography written by John Bosco, in addition to the testimonies given by Savio's family and friends.[8]



Early life

On 2 April 1842 in the village of Riva, 2 miles (3 km) from the town of Chieri, in Piedmont, northern Italy[8] a son was born to Carlo and Brigitta Savio. He was given the name Domenico at baptism. The name Domenico means "of the Lord"[9] and the surname Savio means "wise".[10] His parents had ten children in all. His father was a blacksmith and his mother, a seamstress. They were poor, hardworking and pious.[11]


When he was two years old, his parents returned to their native place at Murialdo on the outskirts of Castelnuovo d'Asti and from where they had gone to Riva in 1841. His parents took great care to give him a Christian upbringing. By the age of four, Dominic was able to pray by himself and was occasionally found in solitude, praying.[12] John Bosco records that Savio's parents recollect how he used to help his mother around the house, welcome his father home, say his prayers without being reminded, (even reminding others when they forgot) and say Grace at mealtimes unfailingly.[11]


At the village school


San Domenico Savio

Fr. Giovanni Zucca from Murialdo, who was then the chaplain at Murialdo when Dominic was five years old,[13] notes in a statement to John Bosco that he came to notice Dominic due to his regular church attendance with his mother, and his habit of kneeling down outside the church to pray (even in the mud or snow) if he happened to come to Church before it had been unlocked in the morning. The chaplain also notes that Savio made good progress at the village school not merely due to his cleverness, but also by working hard. He would not join the other boys in doing something that he believed to be morally wrong and would explain why he thought a particular deed was wrong.[13]


At the age of five, he learned to serve Mass, and would try to participate at Mass every day as well as go regularly to Confession. Having been permitted to make his First Communion at an early age, he had much reverence for the Eucharist.[14]


First Communion

At that time, it was customary for children to receive their First Communion at the age of twelve.[15] (Pope Pius X would later lower this age to seven)[16] After initial hesitation, and subsequent consultation with other priests, the parish priest agreed to permit Dominic to receive his First Communion at the age of seven, since he knew the catechism and understood something of the Eucharist.[15] He spent much time praying and reading in preparation,[17] asking his mother's forgiveness for anything he might have done to displease her and then went to Church. In his biography of Dominic Savio, John Bosco devotes a chapter to tell of Dominic's First Communion. He says that several years later, whenever Dominic talked of the day of his First Communion, he said with joy: "That was the happiest and most wonderful day of my life."[15] John Bosco records that on the day of his First Communion, Dominic made some promises which he wrote in a "little book", and re-read them many times. John Bosco once looked through Dominic's book, and he quotes from it the promises that he made:[17]


Resolutions made by me, Dominic Savio, in the year 1849, on the day of my First Communion, at the age of seven.

1. I will go to Confession often, and as frequently to Holy Communion as my confessor allows.

2. I wish to sanctify the Sundays and festivals in a special manner.

3. My friends shall be Jesus and Mary.

4. Death rather than sin.[18]


At the county school

For secondary education, Dominic had to go to another school and it was decided that he would go to the County School at Castelnuovo, three miles (5 km) from his home.[19] (Castelnuovo d' Asti, now Castelnuovo John Bosco, was the birthplace of another contemporary of John Bosco, Joseph Cafasso, also a saint. He was four years the senior of John Bosco, and was Bosco's mentor and advisor.[20])


Now ten years old, Dominic walked daily to and from school. In his biography of Dominic Savio, John Bosco records how a local farmer once asked Dominic, on a hot sunny day, if he was not tired from walking, and received the reply: "Nothing seems tiresome or painful when you are working for a master who pays well."[21] Don Bosco also notes that Dominic refused to go swimming[22] with his friends since Dominic considered that in such a situation, it would be "also easy to offend God",[19] he believed that on a previous occasion his friends behaved in, what was to him, a vulgar manner.[23] In his biography Bosco records that Fr. Allora, the head of this school, had this to say about Dominic: "...Hence it may very well be said that he was Savio (wise), not only in name, but in fact, viz., in his studies, in piety, in conversation and his dealing with others, and in all his actions. ..."[21]


Under John Bosco's mentorship

Meeting with John Bosco


St. John Bosco (Don Bosco), the spiritual mentor of St. Dominic Savio

It was Fr. Giuseppe Cugliero,[19] Dominic's teacher at school, who gave a high account of him to John Bosco and recommended that Bosco meet him during the Feast of the Rosary, when he would take his boys to Murialdo. Accordingly, accompanied by his father, Dominic met John Bosco on the first Monday in the month of October 1854.[24] John Bosco records this conversation in some detail. He notes that Dominic was eager to go to Turin with John Bosco, and that he wished to become a priest after completing his studies in that town.[25]


To test Dominic's intelligence, Don Bosco gave him a copy of The Catholic Readings (pamphlets on the subject of Catholic Apologetics),[26] asking him to recite a particular page by heart and explain its meaning the next day, and then spoke for a while with Dominic's father. Ten minutes later, he found Dominic was beside him reciting the page and explaining its meaning satisfactorily.[25] This meeting was the beginning of their relationship, the result of which was that John Bosco agreed to take Dominic to Turin with him.[24]


At the Oratory of St. Francis de Sales

John Bosco records that when Dominic arrived at the Oratory, he at once placed himself under his guidance.[27] He also notes that Dominic worked diligently and followed the school rules. He would happily listen to talks and sermons (even if they tended to be lengthy at times), and would, without hesitation, ask for clarification on points that were not clear to him. John Bosco also notes how Dominic was obedient to his teachers and chose his companions carefully.[28]


This happened in 1854, when, in Rome, the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary was being defined. Preparations for the observation of this feast were thus going on at the Oratory. Don Bosco records that, at the advice of his confessor, Dominic renewed his First Communion promises at the altar of Mary at the Oratory. Bosco says that, from this point the result of Dominic's attempts towards holy life were so apparent, that he (John Bosco) took to recording the various incidents that occurred for future reference.[27]


John Bosco's mother, who was called "Mamma Margaret" remarked to him of Dominic, "You have many good boys, but none can match the good heart and soul of Dominic Savio. I see him so often at prayer, staying in church after the others; every day he slips out of the playground to make a visit to the Blessed Sacrament. When he is in church he is like an angel living in Paradise."[29]


Resolve to become a saint

Around six months after Dominic had come to the Oratory, he had the occasion to listen to a talk on sainthood. John Bosco records that the talk had three main points that impressed Dominic:[30]


That it is God's will that each one should become a saint.

That it is easy to become a saint.

That there is a great reward waiting in heaven for those who try to become saints.

This inspired Dominic to take a conscious decision to become a saint. The immediate result of this was that, not being sure how to live a saintly life, and worried about it, he was quiet and worried for the next few days. Noticing this, John Bosco spoke to Dominic and advised him to resume his customary cheerfulness, persevere in his regular life of study and religious practices, and especially not neglect being with his companions in games and recreation.[31] On learning that his first name meant "belonging to God", his desire to be a saint intensified.[30] Dominic's spiritual growth progressed under the guidance of Don Bosco. Clifford Stevens says in his biography of Savio, "In other circumstances, Dominic might have become a little self-righteous snob, but Don Bosco showed him the heroism of the ordinary and the sanctity of common sense."[32]


Attempts to do penances

In his desire to become a saint, Dominic attempted to perform physical penances, like making his bed uncomfortable with small stones and pieces of wood, sleeping with a thin covering in winter, wearing a hair shirt, and fasting on bread and water. When his superiors (i.e., John Bosco, or his Rector, or his confessor) came to know this, they forbade him from doing bodily mortification, as it would affect his health.[33]


John Bosco told Dominic that as a schoolboy, the best penance would be to perform all his duties with perfection and humility, and that obedience was the greatest sacrifice.[34] Thus, Dominic formed an important aspect of his philosophy of life, which was, in his words, "I can't do big things but I want everything to be for the glory of God."[35] Don Bosco notes that from that time on, Dominic did not complain about the food or the weather, unlike some other boys at the Oratory, bore all suffering cheerfully, and practised custody of his eyes and tongue.[36] Eugenio Ceria, a Salesian commentator on the autobiography of John Bosco, (Memoirs of the Oratory of Saint Francis de Sales) notes that by this time, owing to his experience as an educator, John Bosco's ideas on several pedagogical and spiritual principles were well developed and linked and this led him to associate the fulfillment of daily duties with holiness in his advice to Savio.[37]


The Immaculate Conception Sodality


An iconic painting depicting Mary as the Immaculate Conception. The definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception had a profound effect on the spirituality of Dominic Savio.

The definition of the dogma of the Immaculate Conception of Mary influenced Dominic and he was anxious to create at the school a lasting reminder of this event.[38] He now felt that he had not long to live. With the help of his friends, he started a group called the Sodality of Mary Immaculate, the main aim of which was to be to obtain the special protection of Mary during life and at the time of death. The means Dominic proposed to this end were: (1) to honour, and to bring others to honour, Mary by different means, and (2) to encourage frequent Communion. On 8 June, he and his friends read out together before the altar of Mary at the Oratory, the set of rules they had drawn up. There were twenty-one articles (which were recorded by John Bosco in his biography), ending with an appeal to Mary for her assistance. These were submitted to the rector, and, after careful perusal, he gave his approval, under certain conditions.[39] One of the members of this Sodality, Giuseppe Bongioanni,[39] (who was later ordained a priest) was later to found the Sodality of the Blessed Sacrament, which became a traditional sodality in Catholic schools.[38]


Preparation for a holy death

All the pupils under John Bosco observed a monthly event called The Exercise of a Happy Death; this practice continues under the name The Monthly Day of Recollection.[8] This practice was encouraged by Pope Pius IX.[40] Part of this was to make a Confession and Communion as though they were the last ones to be made before death. Bosco notes that Dominic observed this practice devoutly, and that one day, Dominic said that he would be the first amongst the group to die.[40] During the month of May, before his death, the intensity of his spiritual practices increased. John Bosco notes that he said, "Let me do what I can this year; if I am here next year I'll let you know what my plans are."[41]


Failing health

Dominic's health was steadily deteriorating, but he spent most of his time with his friends, talking with them, and encouraging those who were experiencing troubles.[42] He also helped at the school infirmary whenever his companions were admitted. On the recommendation of doctors, Dominic was sent home to recover from his ill health, but a few days later Bosco found him back at the Oratory. Despite his affection for Dominic, and his wish to allow Dominic to remain at the Oratory, John Bosco decided to follow the recommendation of the doctors, especially since Dominic had developed a severe cough and he wrote to Dominic's father, fixing the date of his departure on 1 March 1857. Though Dominic said that he wanted to spend his last days at the Oratory, he accepted this decision and spent the evening before his departure at John Bosco's side, discussing spiritual matters. (Bosco recorded a part of this conversation in his biography of Dominic).[42] On the morning of his departure, Don Bosco notes that Dominic made the Exercise of a Happy Death with great zeal, even saying that this would be his final such devotion. He said his farewell to John Bosco, asking as a keepsake that Bosco add his name to the list of those who would participate in the Plenary Indulgence that John Bosco had received from the Pope, to which John Bosco readily agreed.[42] He then took leave of his friends with great affection, which surprised them, for his illness was not considered by many of his companions to be serious.[43]


Death


The altar of St. Dominic Savio in Basilica of Our Lady Help of Christians, Turin, under which holds the relic of the saint

In his first four days at home his appetite decreased and his cough worsened; this prompted his parents to send him to the doctor, who, at once, ordered bed rest.[44] Inflammation was diagnosed, and as was the custom at that time, the doctor decided to perform bloodletting. The doctor cut Dominic's arm ten times in the space of four days and it is now considered that this probably hastened his death.[45] In his biography, John Bosco records that Dominic was calm throughout the procedure. The doctor assured his parents that the danger had passed and now it only remained for him to recuperate. Dominic, however, was sure that his death was approaching, and asked that he be allowed to make his Confession and receive Communion. Though they thought it unnecessary, his parents sent for the parish priest who heard Dominic's confession and administered the Eucharist.[46]


After four days, despite the conviction of the doctor and his parents that he would get better, Dominic asked that he be given the Anointing of the Sick in preparation for death. Again, his parents agreed, to please him. On 9 March, he was given the papal blessing and he said the Confiteor. Don Bosco records that throughout these days, he stayed serene and calm.[47] On the evening of 9 March 1857, after being visited by his parish priest, he asked his father to read him the prayers for the Exercise of a Happy Death from his book of devotions. Then he slept a while, and shortly awakened and said in a clear voice, "Goodbye, Dad, goodbye ... what was it the parish priest suggested to me ... I don't seem to remember ... Oh, what wonderful things I see ...".[47] With these words, Dominic died, though, at first, it appeared to his father that he was asleep.[48] Dominic's father wrote in a letter to John Bosco, conveying the news of the death of his son,


With my heart full of grief I send you this sad news. Dominic, my dear son and your child in God, like a white lily, like Aloysius Gonzaga, gave his soul to God on 9 March after having received with the greatest devotion the Last Sacraments and the Papal Blessing.[48]


Notable incidents in the life of Dominic Savio


Pope Pius XI described Dominic Savio as "small in size, but a towering giant in spirit."

In order to give the reader a well rounded picture of Dominic's personality Don Bosco recorded several incidents from Dominic's life in his biography.[28]


Before he joined the Oratory

At the school at Mondonio

Don Bosco records this from the testimony of Fr Giuseppe Cugliero.[49] One day, in the absence of his teacher, two of Dominic's classmates stuffed the room-heating iron stove with snow and rubbish as a prank. Fearing expulsion, they blamed Dominic. Fr. Cugliero soundly berated Dominic in front of the class and Dominic bore this silently.[50] The following day, the true culprits were discovered. On being asked why he had remained silent, Dominic replied that he had thought that he would be let off with a scolding whereas the other boys might have been expelled. Dominic added that Jesus had remained silent when blamed unjustly and that he was trying to imitate him.[45] Mary Reed Newland, in her book, suggests that, since Dominic was yet to meet John Bosco, this incident is indicative of the upbringing his parents had given him.[34]


At the Oratory

Resolves a conflict

At the Oratory, two of his friends had a disagreement and decided to fight each other by throwing stones. As they were older and stronger than Dominic (he had been promoted from first form to second form [51]) physical intervention was not possible. He tried to reason with them but with no positive result. Thus, on the day of the fight, he went with them to the site where the fight was to take place, and just before they could start, he placed himself between them, and holding up his crucifix, requested that they throw their first stones at him. Ashamed, the two boys gave up their fight. Dominic then persuaded them to go to Confession.[52]


Custody of the eyes

John Bosco records that once a boy who was visiting had brought with him a "magazine with bad pictures", and a group of fascinated boys were looking. On finding out, Dominic snatched the magazine and tore it up, saying, "You know well enough that one look is enough to stain your souls, and yet you go feasting your eyes on this."[36]


Influence over his friends

John Bosco records that Dominic spent a lot of time with his friends, encouraging them in their devotions, discouraging those with a habit of swearing,[53] and teaching Catechism at Sunday School.[54] Bosco also records that he would encourage his friends to make frequent use of the sacrament of confession and take Communion regularly, even giving them encouragement and advice in spiritual practices during games.[55] John Bosco makes particular mention of two of Dominic's friends, Camillo Gavio of Tortona,[56] and John Massaglia of Marmorito.[57] (These two friends were dead by the time John Bosco wrote the biography, as he thought it best not to write about the friends of Dominic who were still alive.)


Devotions practised by Dominic

Don Bosco narrates that before he came to the Oratory, Dominic made his Confession and took Communion once a month. After hearing a homily on the Sacraments, he chose a priest as his regular Confessor, (to whom Dominic made his Confessions until the end of his stay at the Oratory). The regularity with which Dominic approached the sacraments increased and, at the end of that year, as per the advice of his confessor, Dominic was taking Communion daily.[58] He had a special intention for the Eucharist each day of the week. John Bosco notes that, whenever permitted, Dominic eagerly accompanied the priest when he took the Viaticum, and that he also kept the habit of kneeling down in the street if he encountered the Eucharist being carried by a priest, as was the custom in Catholic countries.[59]


Incidents with special spiritual significance

"Distractions"

John Bosco records that Dominic occasionally had intense experiences during prayer, which Dominic described as such: "It is silly of me; I get a distraction and lose the thread of my prayers and then I see such wonderful things that the hours pass by like minutes”.[60] On one occasion, he was missing from breakfast and the rector finally found him in the chapel, standing motionless and gazing at the tabernacle. He was not aware that the morning Mass had ended.[61] On another occasion, John Bosco records that he saw Dominic in the chapel, speaking to God, and then waiting, as though listening to a reply.[60]


Special knowledge

John Bosco narrates how Dominic came to his room one day and urged him to accompany him. He led Bosco through many streets to a block of flats, rang the doorbell, and at once, went away. When the door opened, John Bosco found that within, there was a dying man who was desperately asking for a priest to make his last confession.[61] Later, John Bosco asked Dominic how he had known about that man. However, since the question made Dominic uncomfortable, John Bosco did not press the matter.[60]



Pope Pius IX formally defined the dogma of the Immaculate Conception and figured in a vision that occurred to Dominic Savio.

The vision of England

John Bosco records that Dominic once recounted to him a vision he had:[60]


"... . One morning as I was making my thanksgiving after Communion, a very strong distraction took hold of me. I thought I saw a great plain full of people enveloped in thick fog. They were walking about like people who had lost their way and did not know which way to turn. Someone near me said: 'This is England'. I was just going to ask some questions, when I saw Pope Pius IX just like I have seen him in pictures. He was robed magnificently and carried in his hand a torch alive with flames. As he walked slowly towards that immense gathering of people, the leaping flames from the torch dispelled the fog, and the people stood in the splendour of the noonday sun. 'That torch', said the one beside me, 'is the Catholic Faith, which is going to light up England'".

At his last goodbyes, Dominic requested John Bosco to tell the pope of his vision, which he did in 1858. The pope felt that this confirmed the plans he had already made concerning England.[61]


His mother's pregnancy

On 12 September 1856, Dominic asked John Bosco permission to go home, saying that his mother was ill, though he had received no communication. Dominic's mother was then expecting a baby and was in great pain,[62] and when Dominic reached the house, he hugged and kissed his mother, and then left. His mother felt her pain leave her and Dominic's baby sister, Catherine, was born. The women assisting at the birth found that Dominic had left a green scapular around his mother's neck. His sister Theresa later wore this same scapular when she was in labour. She testified that it had been passed around to several other pregnant women and was later lost.[63]


Charles Savio's vision of Dominic after his death

The veneration of Dominic Savio grew with an event narrated by his father:[64]


"I was in the greatest affliction at the loss of my son, and was consumed by a desire to know what was his position in the other world. God deigned to comfort me. About a month after his death, during a very restless night, I saw, as it were, the ceiling opened, and Dominic appeared in the midst of dazzling light. I was beside myself at this sight, and cried out: "O Dominic, my son, are you already in Paradise?" "Yes," he replied, "I am in Heaven." Then pray for your brothers and sisters, and your mother and father, that we may all come to join you one day in Heaven." "Yes, yes, I will pray," was the answer. "Then he disappeared, and the room became as before."

The Life of Dominic Savio


Don Bosco's biography of Dominic Savio contributed to his canonisation.

Soon after the death of Dominic, John Bosco wrote his biography, The Life of Dominic Savio, which contributed to his canonisation.[4] The original Italian edition was considered so well written during the time of Don Bosco that, along with his History of Italy and Ecclesiastical History, it was used in many public schools as part of the course materials on the Italian language.[65] Among the other writings of John Bosco[66] are the Biography of Fr. Joseph Cafasso,[20] The Life of Francis Besucco and The Life of Michael Magone.[67]



Pope Pius X set in motion the canonisation process for Dominic Savio.

Veneration

Though some were of an opinion that Dominic was too young to be canonised, Pope Pius X insisted that this was not so, and started the process of his canonisation.[68] Dominic Savio was declared Venerable in 1933 by Pope Pius XI, was beatified in 1950 by Pope Pius XII, and declared a saint in 1954.[35] Pope Pius XI described him as "small in size, but a towering giant in spirit."[29]


Memorials

Schools and other

United States

In the saint's honour, there are several schools with his namesake. These include Dominic Savio High School in Austin, Texas, a middle school in Niagara Falls, New York, and in East Boston, Massachusetts, a college preparatory school, Savio Preparatory High School, which closed in 2008. In Tempe, Arizona, St. Dominic Savio Academy[69] is a school for children with autism and related disorders. In Bellflower, CA, St. Dominic Savio School[70] is a Salesian elementary school. In St. Louis, MO, the St. Dominic Savio campus of Holy Cross Academy[71] serves Pre-K through 5th Grade.


United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, there is a primary school named after him, in Woodley, Berkshire, a secondary school, Savio Salesian College, in Bootle, Merseyside, and Savio House Retreat Centre in Bollington, Cheshire, there is also a special educational needs school in Hambledon, Surrey that is named after Dominic Savio. A former Catholic church in Farnborough, Hampshire (registered between 1967 and 2003) was dedicated to him.[72][73]


Hong Kong

In Hong Kong, there is a kindergarten on Hong Kong Island named Dominic Savio Kindergarten.


Ireland

In Ireland there is a school called Saint Dominics in Kenagh, Co. Longford


India

In India, there are high schools named after the saint – St. Dominic Savio's High School (http://stdominicsavios.com), in Patna and St. Dominic Savio High School (http://www.stdominicsavio.com) in Mumbai. In Lucknow there in an Intermediate College named after the saint – St. Dominic Savio College. In Chennai TN, there is St. Dominic Savio Matriculation Higher Secondary School and in West Bengal, St. Dominic Savio School, a coeducational school in Howrah. In Kerala, there is Savio English School in Kozhencherry. In the district of Matunga, Mumbai, Savio Kindergarten is attached to Don Bosco High School.[74]


Malta

In Malta, the presence of the Salesians is felt strongly. In Dingli, Savio College (a secondary boys school for pupils aged 11–15) is dedicated to the saint. Furthermore, a Youth Centre or "Oratorju" (oratory) dedicated to the same saint is found in Birkirkara.


Belgium

In Belgium, there is a ‘dienstencentrum Gid(t)s’, commonly known as Dominiek Savio Instituut.[75]


Thailand

There is a school named after him – Saint Dominic School – in Bangkok.[76]


Indonesia

In Indonesia, there is a junior high school named Domenico Savio Junior High School,[77] in Semarang.


Philippines

In the Philippines, there is St. Dominic Savio School of Lapu Lapu City in Lapu Lapu City, Cebu, St. Dominic Savio School Of Kalookan City in Caloocan, St. Dominic School of Kalibo in Aklan, and St. Dominic Savio Learning Center in Parañaque. There is also a St. Dominic Savio Parish in Mandaluyong. There is a Dominic Savio St. In Barangay Don Bosco, Better Living Subd, Parañaque. There is a brass tribute memorial statue together with St. John Bosco and Blessed Laura Vicuña were located in St. John Bosco Parish Church in Makati, and also a colored tribute memorial statue located in Barangay Don Bosco beside PNCC Skyway Bldg. and near SM Bicutan in Parañaque, Metro Manila.


Australia

Dominic College is situated in Glenorchy, Tasmania.[78]


Dominic College is the result of the amalgamation of Savio College, Holy Name Secondary School for girls, Savio Primary and St. John's Primary Schools.


The school was formed in 1973 and was the first Co-educational Catholic College in the State of Tasmania. The school has classes from Kindergarten to Year Ten and the Senior Campus amalgamated with other Catholic Secondary Colleges in 1995 to form Guilford Young College.


St. Dominic's College, Penrith, near Sydney, New South Wales, was established as a Christian Brothers college in 1959. Still administered by Edmund Rice Education Australia it is still an independent Catholic all boys school years 7–12.


Savio is a house at Salesian College Chadstone, a year 7–12 boys' school.


Slovakia

In Slovakia, there are a few elementary schools named after the saint: the Elementary school of Dominic Savio in Zvolen founded in 1992,[79] the Elementary School of Dominic Savio in Dubnica nad Váhom founded in 1991 [80] and the Church Elementary School and Nursery of Dominic Savio in Vranov nad Topľou founded in 1992.[81]


Canada

There are five St. Dominic Savio Catholic Elementary Schools. One is located in Sainte-Catherine-de-Hatley, Quebec, one is located in Edmonton, Alberta,[82] the other in Regina, Saskatchewan,[83] one in Scarborough, Ontario.[84] and the other in the Waterloo Catholic District School Board in Kitchener, Ontario.





Saint John Before the Latin Gate



About the Feast

Commemorates the attempted martyrdom of Saint John the Apostle in 95. John was bound and brought to Rome, Italy from Ephesus by the order of Domitian; the Senate condemned him to be taken to the Latin Gate and thrown in a cauldron of boiling oil. John stepped out of the cauldron without injury, and instead was exiled to Patmos.



Blessed Anna Rosa Gattorno


Also known as

Rose Maria Benedetta



Profile

One of six children born to the wealthy, pious family of Francesco Benedetta and Adelaide Campanella Benedetta. Baptized the day after her birth, and confirmed at age 12. Educated at home, she was familiar with the politics and anti-clerical arguments of her day.


Married to Gerolamo Custo on 5 November 1852. The couple first moved to Marseilles, France, but financial difficulties forced them to return to Genoa, Italy. Their oldest child was rendered deaf and mute by illness. Gerolamo died of natural causes on 9 March 1858, leaving Rose Maria a widow with three children; the youngest died a few months later of natural causes.


While these miseries may have caused some to become angry with God, Rose Maria instead took them as a lesson, and an indication of vocation - she knew pain, poverty and trial, and was thus qualified to work with others experiencing them. Though she continued to provide for her children, she took private vows of chastity and obedience in 1858, a vow of poverty in 1861, and became a Franciscan tertiary. In 1862 she received the hidden stigmata.


Though she preferred silence and solitude, Catholic associations in Genoa began soliciting her help. President of the Pious Union of the New Ursuline Daughters of Holy Mary Immaculate, and revised its Rule. While working on it, she received a call to form her own congregation. Though she was encouraged by everyone, including the archbishop of Genoa, but she hesitated, fearing it would take her away from her children. She approached Pope Pius IX about it on 3 January 1866, hoping he would discourage the idea; he told her to begin work on it immediately.


With Father Giovannio Battista Tornatore, she co-founded the Institute of the Daughters of Saint Anne, Mother of Mary Immaculate in Piacenza, Italy on 8 December 1866 with a mandate to work with the poor and sick. She took the habit of the Institute on 26 July 1867, and on 8 April 1870 she and twelve sisters made their solemn profession, during which she took the name Anna Rosa. The Institute received official approval in 1879, and its rule was approved in 1892. She worked with Blessed John Baptist Scalabrini. By Anna Rosa's death there were 368 houses in Italy, Bolivia, Brazil, Chile, Peru, and Eritrea, they had built hostels, schools and kindergartens, had 3,500 sisters, and worked in a ministry to the deaf and mute. Today they are associated with the Movement of Hope, the Contemplative Order of the Daughters of Saint Anne, and the Sons of Saint Anne.


Born

14 October 1831 at Genoa, Italy as Rose Maria Benedetta


Died

9am on 6 May 1900 at Rome, Italy of influenza


Beatified

9 April 2000 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Francis de Montmorency Laval

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 6)


✠ புனிதர் ஃபிரான்காய்ஸ் டி லாவல் ✠

(St. François de Laval)


கியூபெக் ஆயர் மற்றும் மறைப்பணியாளர்:

(Bishop of Québec, and Missionary)


பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 30, 1623

மொண்டிக்னி-சுர்-அவ்ர், பேர்ச், ஃபிரான்ஸ் அரசு

(Montigny-sur-Avre, Perche, Kingdom of France)


இறப்பு: மே 6, 1708 (வயது 85)

கியூபெக், புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸ் வைசிராயல்டி, ஃபிரெஞ்ச் காலனி பேரரசு

(Quebec, Viceroyalty of New France, French colonial empire)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: ஜூன் 22, 1980

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல்

(Pope John Paul II)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: ஏப்ரல் 3, 2014

திருத்தந்தை ஃபிரான்சிஸ்

(Pope Francis)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

நோட்ரே-டேம் டி கியூபெக் ஆலயம், கியூபெக் நகரம்

(Notre-Dame de Québec Cathedral, Quebec City,  Quebec, Canada)


பொதுவாக "ஃபிரான்காய்ஸ் டி லாவல்" (François de Laval) என்று அழைக்கப்படும், "புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ்-சேவியர் டி மான்ட்மோரென்சி-லாவல்" (Saint Francis-Xavier de Montmorency-Laval), தமது 36 வயதில், திருத்தந்தை ஏழாம் அலெக்சாண்டர் (Pope Alexander VII) அவர்களால், "கனடா" (Canada) நாட்டின் கிழக்குப் பிராந்தியத்தின் "கியூபெக்" (Quebec) மாகாணத்தின், முதல் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க ஆயராக நியமிக்கப்பட்டவர் ஆவார்.


லாவல், ஃபிரான்ஸ் (France) நாட்டின் மிகப் பழமையான உன்னதமான குடும்பங்களில் ஒன்றான "மோன்ட்மோரென்சி" (Montmorency) குடும்ப உறுப்பினராக இருந்தார். மேலும், அவரது காலத்தில் மிகவும் செல்வாக்கு மிக்க மனிதர்களில் ஒருவராகவும் இருந்தார்.


லாவல், கி.பி. 1623ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 30ம் நாளன்று, பண்டைய மாகாணமான "பெர்ச்சில்" (Perche) உள்ள "மோன்டிக்னி-சுர்-அவ்ரே" (Montigny-Sur-Avre) நகரில் பிறந்தார். இவரது தந்தை பெயர் "ஹியூஜெஸ் டி லாவல்" (Hugues de Laval) ஆகும். அவரது தாயார், "மிச்சேல் டி பெரிகார்ட்" (Michelle de Péricard), "நார்மண்டியில்" (Normandy) உள்ள அரச பரம்பரை அதிகாரிகளின் குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்தவர் ஆவார். அவரது உன்னத வம்சாவளியாக இருந்தபோதிலும், அவரது பெற்றோர் செல்வந்தர்களாக கருதப்படவில்லை. லாவலுக்கு மேலும் ஐந்து சகோதரர்களும் இரண்டு சகோதரிகளும் இருந்தனர். அவரது இளைய சகோதரர் "ஹென்றி" (Henri), "பெனடிக்டைன்" (Benedictine Order) சபையில் இணைந்தார். அவரது சகோதரி "அன்னி சார்லோட்" (Anne Charlotte), :ஆசீர்வதிக்கப்பட்ட அருட்சாதன சகோதரியர்" (Congregation of Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament) சபையில் இணைந்தார்.


அவரது வாழ்நாள் முழுவதும், லாவலின் தாய் தொடர்ந்து பக்திக்கு ஒரு முன்மாதிரியாக பணியாற்றினார். மேலும், அதிர்ஷ்டமற்ற ஏழை எளிய மக்களுக்கு தொண்டு செய்யும்படி அவரை ஊக்குவித்து வந்தார். ஒரு திருச்சபை வாழ்க்கை முறைக்கு விதிக்கப்பட்டதாக பெரும்பாலும் விவரிக்கப்படும் லாவல், ஒரு தெளிவான பார்வை மற்றும் புத்திசாலித்தனமான சிறுவனாக விரைவில் அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்டார்.


இதன் விளைவாக, அவர் விஷேட பதவிகளை உள்ளடக்கியவர்களின் குழுக்களைக் கொண்ட "பரிசுத்த கன்னி மரியாள் சபையில்" அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார். இது, இளைஞர்களை ஆன்மீக வாழ்க்கை முறைகளை பின்பற்ற ஊக்குவிப்பதை நோக்கமாகக் கொண்டிருந்த, மேலும் வழக்கமான ஜெபத்தையும் ஆன்மீக நடைமுறைகளையும் ஊக்குவித்த இயேசுசபையினரால் நிறுவப்பட்ட ஒரு சமூகமாகும். எட்டு வயதில், லாவல் "டான்சரை" (Tonsure) (சமயச் சடங்குக்காக தலையை முழுவதுமோ (அ) பகுதியாகவோ மழித்தல்) ஏற்றார். பின்னர் கி.பி. 1631ம் ஆண்டு, "லா ஃப்லெச் கல்லூரியில்" (College of La Flèche) சேர அவர் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார்.


மேலும், இந்த காலகட்டத்தில்தான், கனடாவில் "ஹூரான்" (Huron) இன மக்கள் மத்தியில் இயேசுசபையினரின் பணிகள் பற்றிய தகவல்களுடன் லாவல் தொடர்பு கொண்டார். இது அவரது பாதுகாவலர், புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சேவியரைப் (St. Francis Xavier) போலவே மிஷனரியாக வேண்டும் என்ற அவரது விருப்பத்தையும் ஆர்வத்தையும் அதிகரித்தது.


கி.பி. 1637ம் ஆண்டு, இவர் "எவ்ரியக்ஸ் பேராலய நியதியாக" (Canon of Cathedral of Évreux) ஆயரால் நியமிக்கப்பட்டார். கி.பி. 1636ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதம், லாவலின் தந்தை இறந்த பின்னர் இவர் வகித்த இந்த நிலைப்பாடு முக்கிய முக்கியத்துவம் வாய்ந்தது என்பதை நிரூபித்தது. தந்தையின் மரணம், அவரது குடும்பத்தை ஒரு ஆபத்தான நிதி சூழ்நிலையில் விட்டுச் சென்றது. அந்த பதவியில் இணைக்கப்பட்ட (Prebend) எனப்படும் கிறிஸ்தவக் கோயிலின் உறுப்பினருக்கு அளிக்கப்படும் மானியப் பகுதியிலிருந்து வருவாயைப் பெற இது அவரை அனுமதித்தது. அது இல்லாவிடில், அவர் தனது கல்வியைத் தொடர முடியாமல் போயிருக்கும். தமது பத்தொன்பது வயதில் தனது பண்டைய கிரேக்க இலத்தீன் கலைக்குரிய கல்வியை (Classical education) முடித்தவுடன், "லா ஃப்ளூச்" (La Flèche) நகரிலிருந்து கிளம்பி, பாரிஸில் (Paris) உள்ள "கிளெர்மான்ட்" (College de Clermont) கல்லூரியில் தத்துவம் மற்றும் இறையியலில் தனது கல்வியைத் தொடர்ந்தார்.


அவரது இரண்டு மூத்த சகோதரர்களின் மரணம் காரணமாக லாவலின் திட்டங்கள் நிறுத்தப்பட்டன. இது அவரை குடும்பத்தின் தலைவராக மாற்றியது. இந்த கட்டத்தில், லாவல் தனது தந்தையின் தோட்டத்தை பொறுப்பேற்றுக்கொள்வதற்காக தனது ஆன்மீக, திருச்சபை வாழ்க்கையை கைவிடுவதற்கான முடிவை எதிர்கொண்டார். உண்மையில், அவரது தாயார், எவ்ரூக்ஸ் ஆயர், மற்றும் அவரது உறவினர் அனைவரும் அவரை பாரிஸ் நகரை விட்டு வெளியேறி வீடு திரும்பும்படி சமாதானப்படுத்த முயன்றனர். ஆயினும்கூட, லாவல் தனது குடும்பத்தின் அழுத்தத்திற்கு அடிபணிய மறுத்தார். தனது தாய்க்கு குடும்ப விவகாரங்களை ஒழுங்காக அமைக்க உதவியதுடன், தனது முதன்மையான பொறுப்புக்களை முழுமையாக கைவிட ஏற்பாடு செய்தார். பின்னர் அவரது சகோதரர் ஜீன் லூயிஸுக்கு (Jean-Louis) தமது பொறுப்புக்களை மாற்றித் தந்தார்.


கி.பி. 1647ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், முதல் தேதி, தமது இருபத்துநான்கு வயதில்,லாவல் குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு பெற்றார். இதற்குப் பிறகு, எவ்ரெக்ஸின் ஆயர், லாவலை தனது திருச்சபை பாதையை கைவிடுமாறு சமாதானப்படுத்த முயற்சித்ததற்கு வருத்தப்படத் தொடங்கினார். எனவே, கி.பி. 1647ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், அவரை தனது மறைமாவட்டத்தின் தலைமை திருத்தொண்டராக (Archdeacon) நியமிக்க முடிவு செய்தார். 155 பங்குகள் மற்றும் நான்கு சிற்றாலயங்களின் விவகாரங்களை மேற்பார்வையிட லாவலுக்கு இப்பதவி அவசியப்பட்டது. லாவல் இந்த பணியை உணர்ச்சிபூர்வமாகவும், தீவிர ஆர்வத்தோடும் அணுகுவதாகக் கூறப்பட்டது. அடுத்தடுத்த ஆண்டுகளில், பங்குகளில் ஒழுங்கை நிறுவுவதற்கும், ஏழைகளுக்கு நிவாரணம் வழங்குவதற்கும், நோயுற்றவர்களை கவனித்துக்கொள்வதற்கும், பல்வேறு வகையான தொண்டு நடவடிக்கைகளில் ஈடுபடுவதற்கும் அவர் தன்னை அர்ப்பணித்தார். அவரது இதே நடத்தை பின்னர், அவரது வாழ்க்கையில் முற்றிலும் மாறுபட்ட கண்டத்தில் தொடர்ந்தது.


நற்செய்தியைப் பிரசங்கிக்கவும், பயணிக்கவும் ஒரு மறைப்பணி மிஷனரியாக மாற வேண்டும் என்று லாவல் கனவு கண்டார். மிஷனரியாக பணியாற்றுவதற்கான சாத்தியம் அவருக்கு வழங்கப்பட்டபோது, அவர் 1654ம் ஆண்டு, தனது பங்கில் இருந்து தமது தலைமை திருத்தொண்டர் பதவியை ராஜினாமா செய்தார்.


லாவல் இப்போது தமது எல்லாப் பொறுப்பிலிருந்தும் விடுவிக்கப்பட்டார். இதனால் ஜெபத்தின் மூலம், கடவுள் அவருக்காகக் கொண்டிருக்கும் வடிவமைப்புகளுக்காக தன்னைத் தயார்படுத்திக் கொள்ள முடிவு செய்தார். ஃபிரான்ஸ் நாட்டின் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் சீர்திருத்தத்தில் ஒரு தலைவராக இருந்த பொதுநிலையினரான "ஜீன் டி பெர்னியர்ஸ் டி லூவிக்னி" (Jean de Bernières de Louvigny) என்பவரால் இயக்கப்படும் துறவுமடம் (Hermitage) என்று அழைக்கப்படும் ஆன்மீக தியான இல்லங்களில் தங்குவதற்காக அவர் வடமேற்கு ஃபிரான்ஸிலுள்ள "கெய்ன்" (Caen) நகருக்குச் பயணித்தார்.


மூன்று வருடங்கள் அங்கேயே இருந்த லாவல், பிரார்த்தனை மற்றும் தொண்டு நடவடிக்கைகளில் தன்னை ஈடுபடுத்திக் கொண்டார். இந்த சமயத்தில்தான், மிகவும் தளர்வான ஒழுக்கநெறிகள் கொண்டது என்று கருதப்பட்ட  ஒரு மடத்தை சீர்திருத்துவதற்கான பொறுப்பை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்.  அதே போல் கன்னியாஸ்திரிகளின் இரண்டு மடங்களின் நிர்வாகியாகவும் ஆனார். இந்த திட்டங்களுக்கான அவரது அர்ப்பணிப்பு அவருக்கு "பேயக்ஸ் ஆயர்" (Bishop of Bayeux) ஃபிரான்காய்ஸ் டி செர்வியன்" (François de Servien) என்பவரது பாராட்டுக்களைப் பெற்றது. அவர் லாவலை மிகுந்த பக்தியான, விவேகமுள்ள மற்றும் வணிக விஷயங்களில் வழக்கத்திற்கு மாறாக சிறந்த திறமையான, நல்லொழுக்கத்தின் சிறந்த எடுத்துக்காட்டுகள் நிறைந்தவர் என்று ஆயர் வர்ணித்தார். லாவல் இப்போது ஆத்மீக சமூகத்தில் நன்கு அறியப்பட்டவர் ஆனார். மற்றும் அவரது வாழ்க்கையில் அடுத்த கட்டத்தை நோக்கி நகர தயாராக இருந்தார்.


கனடிய திருச்சபை தந்தை:

புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸ் காலனிக்கான ஆயராக லாவல் பரிந்துரைக்கப்பட்டதன் விளைவாக காலனியின் திருச்சபை நிலை தொடர்பான பதட்டங்களை அதிகரித்தன. புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸ் காலனி குடியேற்ற காலம் முதல் 50 ஆண்டுகள் வரை, ஒரு ஆயர் இல்லாமல் இருந்தது. இந்த நேரத்தில், ஆன்மீக விஷயங்கள் பெரும்பாலும் காலனியின் ஆன்மீக அதிகாரிகளால் ஒழுங்குபடுத்தப்பட்டன. அதிகாரம் நினைவுகூரல்களிலிருந்து இயேசுசபை குருக்களுக்கு நகர்ந்தது. கி.பி. 1646ம் ஆண்டில், ரோமில் இருந்து வந்த அழுத்தங்கள் காரணமாக, ரூயன் பேராயர் (Archbishop of Rouen) புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸில் உள்ள திருச்சபையின் உடனடி அதிகாரியாக அதிகாரப்பூர்வமாக அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்டார். இந்த அங்கீகாரத்துடன் கூட, பேராயரின் அதிகாரம் காலனிக்கு பயணிக்கும் மதகுருக்களுக்கு ஆசிரியர்களை வழங்குவது வரை மட்டுமே நீட்டிக்கப்பட்டது. இந்த நேரத்தில், புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸ் காலனிக்கு இன்னும் உடனடி ஆயர்கள் தேவை என்பது ஏற்கனவே தெளிவானது.


ஒரு புதிய ஆயரை நியமிப்பது என்பது, இயேசுசபையினருக்கும், புதிதாய் வந்த சல்பீசியன் (Sulpicians) குருக்களுக்குமிடையே கடினமானதும், ஒரு சர்ச்சைக்குரிய பிரச்சினையாகவும் இருந்து வந்தது. இந்த நேரத்தில் சுயாதீனமாக பணியாற்றுவதில் மிகவும் பழக்கமாக இருந்த இயேசுசபையினர், ஒரு சல்பிசியன் ஆயரிடம் தாம் கட்டுப்படுத்தப்படுவோம் என்று அஞ்சினர். ஒரு சல்பீசியன் ஆயர், தங்களது கட்டுப்பாட்டைக் குறைமதிப்பிற்கு உட்படுத்துவார் என்றும், இறுதியில் திருச்சபையை ஆட்சியாளர்களுக்கு அடிபணியச் செய்வார் என்ற நம்பிக்கை அவர்களின் அசௌகரியமாக அவர்களுக்கு தோன்றியது. சல்பீசியர்கள், தங்களது "கேப்ரியல் துபியர்ஸ் டி லெவி டி கியூலஸ்" (Gabriel Thubières de Levy de Queylus) என்பவரை முன்மொழிய முனைப்பாக இருந்தபோது, இயேசுசபையினர் லாவலுக்கு தங்கள் ஆதரவைத் திருப்பினர். அரசியின் தாயாரான "ஆஸ்திரியாவின் அன்னி" (Anne of Austria) உதவியுடன் அரச அங்கீகாரத்தைப் பெறுவது சிறிய சவாலை அளித்தது.


திருத்தந்தையின் உறுதிப்படுத்துதல் கிடைப்பதில் இருந்த தாமதம், இயேசுசபையினருக்கும் லாவலுக்கும் தடையாக இருந்தது. ஒரு ஆயர் தேவை என்று அவர்கள் இயேசுசபையினருடன் உடன்பட்டனர். இருப்பினும்,  லாவல் ஆயரானால், இயேசுசபையினருக்கு மீண்டும் காலனியின் மீது ஏகபோக உரிமையை வழங்க முடியும் என்று அவர்கள் அஞ்சினர். இயேசுசபையினருக்கும் ரோம் தலைமைக்கும் இடையிலான சமரசத்தில், லாவல் புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸ் காலனியின் அப்போஸ்தலிக் விகாராக (Apostolic Vicar of New France) நியமிக்கப்பட்டார்.


அப்போஸ்தலிக் விகாராக நியமிக்கப்படுவதோடு, கனடாவில் திருச்சபையை கட்டியெழுப்ப அவருக்கு தேவையான சக்தியை வழங்குவதற்காகவும், "பார்ட்டிபஸ்" (Partibus) நகர ஆயராக அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்ட லாவல், கி.பி. 1658ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 8ம் தேதி, கியூபெக்கின் விகார் அப்போஸ்தலிக் (Vicar Apostolic of Quebec) ஆக, பாரிஸ் நகரிலுள்ள தேவாலயத்தில் அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார். அரச விசுவாச சத்திய பிரமாணம் செய்த லா, "லா ரோச்" (La Rochelle) நகரிலிருந்து புதிய ஃபிரான்ஸ் காலனிக்கு கி.பி. 1659ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 13ம் தேதி, பயணப்பட்டார். அதே ஆண்டின் ஜூன் மாதம், 16ம் நாளன்று, அவர் கியூபெக்கிற்கு வந்தார். வந்தவுடனேயே லாவல் தனது பணிகளைத் தொடங்கினார். அவரது கப்பல் வந்த அதே நாளில், அவர் ஒரு இளம் ஹூரோன் வாசிக்கு திருமுழுக்கு அளித்தார். இறக்கும் தருவாயில் இருந்த மனிதன் ஒருவருக்கு தனது கடைசி அருட்சாதனங்களை வழங்கினார்.


பல்வேறு சீர்திருத்தப் பணிகளை மேற்கொண்ட லாவல், கைவினைஞர்களுக்கும், விவசாயிகளுக்கும், நடைமுறைக் கல்வி கற்பிப்பதில் ஆர்வம் காட்டினார். "செயிண்ட்-ஜோச்சிம்" (Saint-Joachim) நகரில் கலை மற்றும் கைவினைப் பள்ளியை நிறுவினார்.


பிற்பகுதியில் ஆண்டுகள்:

நியூ ஃபிரான்ஸ் காலனியில் அவர் வந்ததிலிருந்து, காலனியில் குருக்களை பயிற்றுவிப்பதற்கு மேல், ஒரு சிறிய அமைப்பை நிறுவவும் ஒழுங்கமைக்கவும் லாவல் வலியுறுத்தி வந்தார். 1678ம் ஆண்டில், காலனியில் நிரந்தர அமைப்புகள் அமைக்கப்படும் என்று கூறி அரசரிடமிருந்து ஒரு அரசாணையைப் பெற்றார். சில ஆண்டுகளுக்குப் பிறகு, 1681ம் ஆண்டில், திருச்சபையின் நிலைப்பாட்டை நிரந்தரமாக உறுதிப்படுத்தும் முயற்சியில் லாவல் திருச்சபைகளின் எல்லைகளை வரைந்தார். ஒவ்வொரு பங்கினையும் அடிக்கடி பார்வையிட்ட லாவல், அவரது உடல்நிலை குறைந்து வருவதையும், இனி அகாடியா (Acadia) முதல், மிச்சிகன் ஏரி (Lake Michigan) வரை விரிவாக்கம் பெற்ற தனது பெரிய மறைமாவட்டத்தை இயக்க முடியாது என்பதையும் உணர்ந்தார். இதன் விளைவாக, 1688ம் ஆண்டு, ஜீன்-பாப்டிஸ்ட் டி லா குரோயிக்ஸ் டி செவ்ரியர்ஸ் டி செயிண்ட்-வள்ளியர் (Jean-Baptiste de La Croix de Chevrières de Saint-Vallier) என்பவருக்கு தனது ஆயர் பொறுப்புகளை வழங்கினார்.


லாவல் தனது கடைசி நாட்கள் வரை காலனியின் உயர் ஆன்மீக அதிகாரிகளுடன் தொடர்ந்து ஒத்துழைத்தார். அவர் தம்மிடமுள்ள இருப்பு மற்றும் தர்மமாக கிடைத்த பரிசுகளை ஏழைகளுக்கு கொடுத்து உதவினார். உடல்நலம் குறைந்து கொண்டிருந்த போதிலும், அவர் ஒரு திருப்பலியையோ, அல்லது ஒரு நாள் உண்ணாவிரதத்தையோ தவறவிட்டதில்லை. கி.பி. 1707ம் ஆண்டு வாக்கில், புற்றுநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட அவர், இறுதியில் கி.பி. 1708ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 6ம் தேதியன்று, மரித்தார்.

Also known as

François de Montmorency Laval



Profile

Third son of Hughes de Laval, an aristocrat soldier, and Michelle de Péricard. His was an old, distinguished and religious family, and Francis early felt a call to the priesthood. Educated by Jesuits at La Fleche from ages eight to fourteen. His father died when the boy was thirteen, and as clerical positions were often as much politics as religion, Francis was made a parish canon so that his salary could help support the family. Studied for the priesthood at the Jesuit Clermont College in Paris, France at age nineteen, but withdrew for a while in 1645 when his two older brothers died and he was forced to manage the family estates. Ordained on 1 May 1647. Archdeacon of Evreux. Member of the Paris Foreign Mission Society at age thirty. Vicar apostolic of Tongkin, Indochina (modern Vietnam) in 1653, but family obligations and the turmoil of the region prevented him moving there. Resigned his position in 1654 to spend four years in a hermitage in Caen. Titular bishop of Petraea.


Appointed vicar apostolic of New France (modern Canada) by Pope Alexander VII in 1658. Consecrated as bishop on 8 December 1658. Arrived in Quebec City, population 500, to take up his new duties on 16 June 1659. His territory covered all of Canada and the central section of what would become the United States. It was an enormous frontier diocese in need of administration, stability, and evangelization, and Francis approached it as spiritual work. He promoted missionary work, and supported missionaries from the Jesuits and Recollect Franciscans. Restored the shrine of Saint Anne de Beaupré, and built the cathedral of the Immaculate Conception. Founded the seminary of Quebec in 1663, and started the Catholic school system throughout Canada. Quebec was established as a diocese in 1674, and Laval consecrated its first bishop. Fought the alcohol trade to the Indian tribes, had it outlawed within his territory, and excommunicated those who dealt in it. His work slowed the trade and improved the lives of the natives, but made him many enemies within the liquor trade.


In 1684 he went into retirement, becoming a hermit at the seminary in Quebec, hoping to live out his life in prayer. However, disastrous fires in November 1701 and October 1705 brought him out of retirement to oversee needed re-construction, he was ever involved in charitable work for the poor, and available to consult with his successor. Laval University in Quebec is named for him.


Born

30 April 1623 in Montigny-sur-Avre, Normandy, France


Died

6 May 1708 in Quebec, Canada of natural causes


Canonized

3 April 2014 by Pope Francis (equipollent canonization)


Patronage

patrons of the bishops of Canada




Blessed Maria Catalina Troiani


Also known as

Maria Caterina of Saint Rose



Profile

Third of four children born to Tommaso Troiani and Teresa Panici, her mother died when the Maria was six. Franciscan tertiary, dedicated to the teachings of Saint Francis, and to the care and education of girls. Franciscan nun, taking the habit on 8 December 1829, and taking the name Sister Maria Teresa of Saint Rose in honour of Saint Rose of Viterbo. Missionary to north Africa. In 1852 the Apostolic Vicar of Egypt requested a Franciscan school for poor girls be established in Cairo; Maria and four other sisters met with Pope Pius IX on 4 September 1859 to offer their service, and he gave them his blessing. The sisters and Father Giuseppe Moden arrived in Cairo on 14 September 1859 to begin their work. On 5 July 1868, the group received approval as a formal congregation under the name Third Order Franciscan Sisters of Cairo; they were later renamed the Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Egypt, and in 1950 were renamed the Franciscan Missionaries of the Immaculate Heart of Mary. From the day of their founding until the day of her death, Sister Maria served as Mother Superior to the group. Pope Leo XIII always held her in high regard.


Born

19 January 1813 in Giuliano di Roma, Italy


Died

• 6 May 1887 in Cairo, Egypt of natural causes

• buried in the Latin cemetery in Cairo

• re-interred in the chapel of Clot-Bey, church of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Franciscan Missionaries of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, Rome, Italy on 3 November 1967


Beatified

14 April 1985 by Pope John Paul II


Patronage

Franciscan Missionaries of the Immaculate Heart of Mary



Blessed Bartolomeo Pucci-Franceschi


Profile

Born to the wealthy Tuscan nobility. Married and the father of four. Noted for his charity to the poor, especially in times of famine. In 1290, when his children were grown, Bartolomeo left his wealth and family to become a Franciscan friar at the convent of San Francisco in Montepulciano, Italy. Many of the locals considered him insane to give up the one social position for the other, but he was a model of religious devotion. Priest. Received visions of Mary and the angels, and was known as a miracle worker.



Born

latter 13th century in Montepulciano, Tuscany, Italy


Died

• 6 May 1330 in Montepulciano, Tuscany, Italy of natural causes

• buried in the church of his monastery

• relics later enshrined in two urns in the church

• relics transferred to the church of San Agostino in 1930


Beatified

24 June 1880 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)



Blessed Anthony Middleton


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Son of Ambrose Middleton of Barnard Castle, Durham, England, and Cecil, daughter of Anthony Crackenthorpe of Howgill Castle, Westmoreland, England. Entered the English College at Rheims, France on 9 January 1582. Ordained on 30 May 1586. Returned to England to minister to covert Catholics in the area of London. Arrested for the crime of priesthood; captured in a residence in Clerkenwell, London by a priest-catcher who claimed to be a Catholic who needed a priest. Martyr.


Born

Middleton Tyas, North Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 6 May 1590 in London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI


Readings

I call God to witness I die merely for the Catholic Faith, and for being a priest of the true Religion. - Blessed Anthony's last words, spoken from the scaffold as he was about to be hanged



Blessed Edward Jones


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Raised as an Anglican, he converted to Catholicism and was received into the Church at the English College in Rheims, France in 1587. Ordained in 1588. Returned to England to minister to covert Catholics. Arrested in 1590 in a grocer's in Fleet Street in London, England by a priest-catcher who pretended to be a Catholic in need of a priest. Imprisoned and tortured in the Tower of London, he admitted to being a priest. At his trial for the crime of priesthood, he argued that his confession was obtained by torture and thus not legally sufficient to condemn him. The court complimented him on his arguments and his court-room demeanor, then condemned to death and had him immediately executed. Martyr.


Born

Diocese of Saint Asaph, Wales


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 6 May 1590 on Fleet Street in London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Edbert of Lindisfarne


Also known as

Eadbert, Eadbeorht, Eadberht


Profile

Monk of Lindisfarne Abbey. Noted for his personal sanctity, his extensive Bible knowledge, and his charity to the poor; he annually gave away a tenth of his goods and property. Bishop of Lindisfarne, England for eleven years; successor to Saint Cuthbert. Even as bishop he would make two 40-day retreats each year to live as a hermit in meditation. Built several churches in the region, and improved the structures at Lindisfarne. Bede wrote about him.


Born

7th century England


Died

• 6 May 698 of natural causes

• buried in the grave that had held Cuthbert's remains before they were translated to chapel

• Edbert's relics were translated to Durham, England in 875



Blessed Ponzio of Barellis


Profile

Ponzio received a doctorate in civil law before joining the Mercedarians. Appointed Master-General of the Mercedarians by Pope Clement VI in 1348. He was an active leader and administrator, rebuilding the Order following the losses members and houses caused by plague. He led to the redeeming of 1,600 Christians who had been enslaved by Muslims. Known by those close to him for his piety, and as a miracle worker.


Born

Toulouse, France


Died

• 17 October 1364 in Toulouse, France

• buried at the convent of Perpignan, France



Saint Petronax of Monte Cassino



Also known as

• Petronax of Brescia

• Second Founder of Monte Cassino


Profile

Benedictine monk at Brescia, Italy. Abbot. On assignment from Pope Gregory II in 717, he re-built, re-staffed and re-invigorated the monastery at Monte Cassino, Italy following the Lombard invasions that had left the place damaged and deserted. He served as abbot there, and by the time of his death, the abandoned structure was a center for learning and holiness again. Spiritual teacher of Saint Willibald and Saint Sturmius of Fulda.


Born

c.670 at Brescia, Lombardy, northern Italy


Died

c.747 of natural causes



Blessed Henryk Kaczorowski


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Martyrs of World War Two



Profile

Priest. Rector of the major seminary of Wloclawek, Poland. Arrested in 1939 during the Nazi persecutions, he kept his faith and ministered to other prisoners in the camps.


Born

10 July 1888 in Bierzwiennej, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

gassed on 6 May 1942 in the concentration camp at Dachau, Bavaria, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II at Warsaw, Poland



Saint James of Numidia


Also known as

• James of Lambesa

• James of Lambaesis

• James of Lambese


Profile

Deacon in the same church as Saint Marianus, and imprisoned with him at Cirta (modern Constantine, Algeria) in the persecutions of Valerian. Tortured over several days to force him from his faith. During this torment he had a dream that showed him final triumph. Martyred with hundreds of others. His story was recorded by a fellow prisoner who was not killed.


Died

tortured and beheaded 6 May 259 at Lambesa, Numidia (Algeria)



Saint Venerius of Milan


Profile

Friend of Saint Paulinus of Nola, Saint Delphinus of Bordeaux, and Saint Chromatius of Aquileia. Ordained as a deacon by Saint Ambrose of Milan. Second bishop of Milan c.400. Supported the Council of Carthage in 401. Supported Saint John Chrysostom in his disputes.



Died

• 409 of natural causes

• relics translated to the cathedral of Milan, Italy in 1579 by Saint Charles Borromeo



Blessed Kazimierz Gostynski


Also known as

Casimir Gostynski


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Martyrs of World War Two


Profile

Priest. Arrested in 1939 during the Nazi persecutions, he kept his faith and ministered to other prisoners in the camps.


Born

8 April 1884 in Warsaw, Poland


Died

gassed on 6 May 1942 in the concentration camp at Dachau, Bavaria, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II at Warsaw, Poland



Saint Evodius of Antioch


Profile

Traditionally one of the 72 disciples commissioned by Jesus. Priest. Bishop of Antioch, probably ordained by Saint Peter the Apostle. The first person known to use the word Christian in his writings. Worked with Saint Ignatius of Antioch. Martyr.


Died

c.69



Saint Colman Mac Ui Cluasigh of Cork


Profile

7th-century professor and prayerful poet in Cork, Ireland. Led his students on a pilgrimage to a small island to save them from plague that ravaged Ireland in 664.


Died

7th century



Saint Benedicta of Rome


Also known as

Benedikta


Profile

Nun in 6th century Rome, Italy. Friend of Saint Galla who had founded their monastery. She received a vision of Saint Peter the Apostle warning her of her death.


Died

c.546 of natural causes



Blessed Peter de Tornamira


Profile

Mercedarian friar at the convent of San Michele del Monte in Zaragoza, Spain. Worked with Blessed William Tani to free 212 Christians enslaved by Muslim invaders in Granada, Spain. Missionary preacher in Granada.



Blessed William Tandi

Profile

Mercedarian friar at the convent of San Michele del Monte in Zaragoza, Spain. Worked with Blessed Peter de Tornamira to free 212 Christians enslaved by Muslim invaders in Granada, Spain. Missionary preacher in Granada.



Blessed Prudence Castori


Profile

Augustinian nun in Milan, Italy. Founded an Augustinian convent in Como, Italy, and served as its abbess.


Born

Milan, Italy


Died

1492 of natural causes



Saint Lucius of Cyrene


Also known as

• Lukius

• Lukios


Profile

First bishop of Cyrene, Libya. He is mentioned by Saint Luke the Apostle in the Acts of the Apostles.



Saint Venustus of Africa


Profile

Martyred with 75 other Christians in the perscutions of Diocletian.


Died

late 3rd century in Africa



Saint Protogenes of Syria


Profile

Fourth century priest. Exiled by the Arian Emperor Valens, he was recalled under Emperor Theodosius. Bishop of Carrhae, Syria.



Saint Theodotus of Kyrenia


Profile

Bishop of Kyrenia, Cyprus. Imprisoned, tortured and executed in the persecutions of Licinius. Martyr.



Saint Colman of Loch Echin


Profile

Listed in the Martyrologies of Tallagh and Donegal, but no details of his life have survived.



Saint Heliodorus


Profile

Martyred with 75 other Christians in the perscutions of Diocletian.


Died

late 3rd century in Africa



Saint Marianus of Lambesa


Profile

Lector. Martyr.


Died

beheaded in 259 at Lambesa, North Africa



Saint Justus of Vienne


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France.


Died

168 of natural causes



Saint Venustus of Milan


Profile

Martyr in Milan, Italy in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Saint Acuta


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Milan, Italy

05 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 5

 Bl. John Haile


Feastday: May 5

Death: 1535


Martyr of England, a companion in death of St. John Houghton at Tyburn. He was an elderly secular priest, the vicar of Isleworth, Middlesex, when he was arrested by King Henry VIII's men. John was executed at Tyburn. He was beatified in 1886.




Bl. Edmund Ignatius Rice


Feastday: May 5

Birth: 1762

Death: 1844

Beatified: Pope John Paul II


The founder of the Congregation of the Brothers of the Christian Schools, often called the Irish Christian Brothers. Edmund was born in Wescourt, Ireland, in June, 1762, the fourth of seven sons in a fanning family At seventeen he began working at his uncle's import-export business in Waterford. He later inherited the business. Married at twenty-five, Edmund lost his wife two years later and was left with a sickly infant daughter. A devout man, Edmund dedicated himself to charitable works. Though he saw how the economic and political storms of the day were impacting Ireland, he desired a religious vocation in the contemplative life. However, the Bishop of Waterford drew Edmund's attention to the bands of ragged youth in the streets, asking Edmund if he, too, planned to abandon them. Encouraged by Pope Pius VII and Bishop Hussey, Edmund sold his business, arranged for his daughter's care, and opened his first school in 1802. He had three other schools in operation by 1806, and took the name Ignatius as a religious with companions in 1808 in a pontifical institute. Edmund established the Catholic Model School and saw the founding of eleven communities in Ireland, eleven in England, and one in Australia, with requests coming from the United States and Canada. He resigned as Superior General in 1838 and died at Mt. Sion, site of his first school, on August 29, 1844. Pope John Paul II beatified him on October 6, 1996.



For other people named Edmund Rice, see Edmund Rice (disambiguation).

Edmund Ignatius Rice, (Irish: Éamonn Iognáid Rís; 1 June 1762 – 29 August 1844), was a Catholic missionary and educationalist. He was the founder of two religious institutes of religious brothers: the Congregation of Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers.


Rice was born in Ireland at a time when Catholics faced oppression under Penal Laws enforced by the British authorities, though reforms began in 1778 when he was a teenager. He forged a successful career in business and, after an accident which killed his wife and left his daughter disabled and with learning difficulties, thereafter devoted his life to education of the poor.


Christian Brothers and Presentation Brothers schools around the world continue to follow the traditions established by Edmund Rice (see List of Christian Brothers schools).



Early life and career



Rice's childhood home at Callan

Edmund Rice was born to Robert Rice and Margaret Rice (née Tierney) on the farming property of "Westcourt", in Callan, County Kilkenny.[1] Edmund Rice was the fourth of seven sons, although he also had two half sisters, Joan and Jane Murphy, the offspring of his mother's first marriage.


Rice's education, like that of every other Irish Catholic of the day, was greatly compromised by the 1709 amendment to the Popery Act, which decreed that any public or private instruction in the Catholic faith would render teachers liable to prosecution, a measure that was not reformed until 1782. In this environment, hedge schools proliferated. The boys of the Rice family obtained an education at home through Patrick Grace, a member of the small community of Augustinian friars in Callan.[2] As a young man, Rice spent two years at a school which, despite the provisions of the penal laws, the authorities suffered to exist in the City of Kilkenny.[3]


His uncle Michael owned a merchant business in the nearby port town of Waterford. In 1779 Edmund was apprenticed to him, moving into a house in the market parish of Ballybricken, entering the business of trading livestock and other supplies, and the supervising of loading of victuals onto ships bound for the British colonies. Michael Rice died in 1785, and this business passed to Edmund.[4] He was an active member of a society established in the city for the relief of the poor.[3] His favourite charity was the Sick and Indigent Roomkeepers’ Association whose members visited the sick poor in their homes.[1]


In about 1785 he married a young woman (perhaps Mary Elliott, the daughter of a Waterford tanner).[5] Little is known about their married life, and Mary died in January 1789 following an accident, possibly by a fever that set in afterwards. The circumstances surrounding this accident are unclear, but she may have fallen off a horse that she was riding, or thrown out of a carriage by panicking horses. Pregnant at the time, a daughter was born on Mary's deathbed.[6] The daughter (also named Mary) was born handicapped. Edmund Rice was left a widower, with an infant daughter in delicate health.


Vocation and beginnings

Following his wife's death, he began discerning a vocation to join a monastery, perhaps in France. One day, while discussing his vocation with the sister of Thomas Hussey, the Bishop of Waterford, a band of ragged boys passed by. She pointed to them, and cried:


"What! Would you bury yourself in a cell on the continent rather than devote your wealth and your life to the spiritual and material interest of these poor youths?"


After settling his business affairs in 1802, Rice devoted his life to prayer and charitable work, particularly with the poor and marginalised of Waterford. In 1802, when he established a makeshift school in a converted stable in New Street, Waterford, he found the children were so difficult to manage that the teachers resigned. This prompted him to sell his thriving business to another prominent Catholic merchant, a Mr. Quan, and devote himself to training teachers who would dedicate their lives to prayers and to teaching the children free of charge. Despite the difficulties involved, Edmund's classes were so popular that another temporary school had to be set up on another of his properties, this time in nearby Stephen Street.[7]


The turning point of Rice's ministry was the arrival of two young men, Thomas Grosvenor and Patrick Finn, from his hometown of Callan. They came to him with the desire of joining a congregation, but had not decided which they would join. As it turned out, they remained to teach at Edmund Rice's school, and formed their own. The subsequent success of the New Street school led to a more permanent building, named "Mount Sion", where construction began on 1 June 1802. The Mount Sion monastery was officially blessed by Bishop Thomas Hussey on 7 June 1803. Since the schoolhouse was not yet completed, Rice, Finn, and Grosvenor took up residence but walked each day from Mt Sion to their schools on New Street and Stephen Street. On 1 May 1804, the adjoining school was opened and blessed by Hussey's successor, Bishop John Power, and their pupils transferred to the new building.[8]


A request made to the local Church of Ireland bishop for a school licence was eventually granted, thanks to the appeals of some of Rice's more influential friends.[9] By 1806 Christian schools were established in Waterford, Carrick-on-Suir, and Dungarvan.[3]


Foundation of the Christian Brothers and Presentation Brothers

In 1808, seven of the staff including Edmund Rice, took religious vows under the authority of Bishop Power of Waterford. Following the example of Nano Nagle's Presentation Sisters, they were called Presentation Brothers.[1] This was the first congregation of men to be founded in Ireland and one of the few ever founded by a layman. Gradually a transformation had taken place amongst the "quay kids" of Waterford, largely attributed to the work of Edmund and his Brothers, who educated, clothed and fed the boys. Other bishops in Ireland supplied Edmund Rice with men, and these he prepared for the religious life and for a life of teaching. In this way the Presentation Brothers spread throughout Ireland.


However, the communities were under the control of the bishop in each diocese rather than Edmund Rice, and this created problems when Brothers were needed to be transferred from one school to another. Rice sought approval from Pope Pius VII for the community to be made into a pontifical congregation with a Superior General. He obtained this in 1820. The pope's brief specified that the members were to be bound by vows of obedience, chastity, poverty and perseverance, and to give themselves to the free instruction, religious and literary, of male children, especially the poor. The heads of houses were to elect a Superior General; Rice held this office from 1822 to 1838, and he was then able to move brothers across diocesan boundaries to wherever they were most needed. During this time the institution extended to several English towns (especially in Lancashire), and the course of instruction grew out of the primary stage.[10]


In the 1820s further difficulties emerged owing to the expansion of the society and its becoming two distinct congregations. From this time on they were called Christian Brothers and the Presentation Brothers. The motto of the Christian Brothers was: "The Lord has given, and the Lord has taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord forever" (Job 1: 21).


In 1828, the North Richmond Street house and schools in Dublin were established by Rice, the foundation stone being laid by the politician Daniel O'Connell. The building housed the Brothers' headquarters for many years and the present residence incorporates the original house built by Rice, who lived here for several years beginning in 1831.


Retirement and death

In February 1838, Edmund Rice left the North Richmond Street community and returned to Mount Sion in Waterford. Aged seventy-six, and by now in poor health, he wrote to the different communities calling for a General Chapter to elect a new Superior General. The Chapter, which opened on 24 July 1838, resulted in the election of Brother Michael Paul Riordan as Rice's successor.[11]


From this time on, Edmund Rice spent an increasing proportion of his time at Mount Sion and the adjoining school, showing a continued interest in the pupils and their teachers. He would also take a short walk each day on the slope of Mount Sion, but his increasingly painful arthritis led the community superior, Brother Joseph Murphy, to purchase a wheelchair for his benefit.[12] At Christmas time, 1841, Rice's health took a turn for the worse, and even though expectations of his imminent death did not turn out to be justified, he was increasingly confined to his room.[13]


After living in a near-comatose state for more than two years (in the constant care of a nurse since May 1842), Rice died at 11 a.m. on 29 August 1844 at Mount Sion, Waterford, where his remains lie in a casket to this day. Large crowds filled the streets around his house in Dublin to honour him.


Beatification and legacy


Memorial erected in Callan on Green Street (also known as Edmund Ignatius Rice Street), unveiled and blessed in July 1951

The first attempt to introduce Rice's cause to sainthood was in 1911 by Brother Mark Hill who travelled Waterford and other parts of Ireland collecting statements from people as to why they thought Rice should be made a saint, but very little progress was made. The cause was taken up by Pius Noonan, who was the superior general at the time. With the help of Monsignor Giovanni Battista Montini (the future Pope Paul VI), the cause was officially opened in Dublin in 1957.


In 1976 the Historical Commission of the Dublin Archdiocese recommended that Rice's cause be brought to Rome, and the Holy See agreed to look into it. Three brothers had the burden of investigating archives and collecting evidence as to why Rice should be declared a saint: Mark Hill, David Fitzpatrick and Columba Normoyle.


As a result of these investigations and the examination in Rome of the results, on 2 April 1993, Pope John Paul II approved the pursual of the Roman phase of the cause, declaring Edmund Rice to be venerable. Two years later, the same Pope approved a miracle attributed to Edmund Rice's intercession. The miracle occurred in 1976, when Kevin Ellison of Newry, had been given only 48 hours to live due to complications from a gangrenous colon, and an apparent lack of viable colon tissue (a conclusion reached by five doctors after hours in surgery). A family friend, Christian Brother Laserian O'Donnell, gave Ellison's parents a relic of Edmund Rice. Many friends prayed for a miracle through the intercession of Rice and a special Mass was offered for Ellison's recovery. Only the relic of Edmund Rice was placed at the bedside of the dying man. The latter survived the 48-hour period during which he was supposed to die, and more besides. Upon investigation, surgeons discovered a considerable length of previously undetected colon. Ellison fully recovered after a few weeks.


These events paved the way for Rice's beatification on 6 October 1996 by Pope John Paul II.[14] His official feast day is 5 May.


A segment of his kneecap (in a reliquary) is on display in the new sports hall at St. Joseph's College in Stoke-on-Trent, "part of the Edmund Rice family of schools, founded by the Christian Brothers and following the charism of Blessed Edmund Rice.




Conversion of Saint Augustine of Hippo


Also known as

• Aurelius Augustinus

• Doctor of Grace



Additional Memorial

28 August (feast)


Profile

Son of a pagan father who converted on his death bed, and of Saint Monica, a devout Christian. Raised a Christian, he lost his faith in youth and led a wild life. Lived with a Carthaginian woman from the age of 15 through 30. Fathered a son whom he named Adeotadus, which means the gift of God. Taught rhetoric at Carthage and Milan, Italy. After investigating and experimenting with several philosophies, he became a Manichaean for several years; it taught of a great struggle between good and evil, and featured a lax moral code. A summation of his thinking at the time comes from his Confessions: "God, give me chastity and continence - but not just now."


Augustine finally broke with the Manichaeans and was converted by the prayers of his mother and the help of Saint Ambrose of Milan, who baptized him. On the death of his mother he returned to Africa, sold his property, gave the proceeds to the poor, and founded a monastery. Monk. Priest. Preacher. Bishop of Hippo in 396. Founded religious communities. Fought Manichaeism, Donatism, Pelagianism and other heresies. Oversaw his church and his see during the fall of the Roman Empire to the Vandals. Doctor of the Church. His later thinking can also be summed up in a line from his writings: Our hearts were made for You, O Lord, and they are restless until they rest in you.


Born

13 November 354 at Tagaste, Numidia, North Africa (Souk-Ahras, Algeria) as Aurelius Augustinus


Died

28 August 430 at Hippo, North Africa


Patronage

• against sore eyes

• against vermin

• brewers

• printers

• theologians

• 7 dioceses

• 7 cities




Blessed Caterina Cittadini


Also known as

Katarina Cittadini



Profile

Daughter of Giovanni Battista and Magherita Lanzani. Her mother died when Caterina was seven, and her father abandoned the girl and her younger sister Giuditta. They were accepted and grew up at the orphanage of the Conventino of Bergamo. There she developed a strong faith, a big sister's sense of responsibility, and a devotion to Our Lady and Saint Jerome Emiliani.


The sisters left the orphanage in 1823 to live with their cousins Giovanni and Antonio Cittadini, both parish priests at Calolzio, Italy. Caterina became a teacher at a girl's public school in Somasca in 1824. The sisters felt a call to the religious life; their spiritual director recommended that they should stay in Somasca, and become the basis of a new congregation.


In 1826 the sisters rented a house in Somasca, bought and furnished a building, and in October opened a boarding school for girls. Caterina taught religion, managed the school, and instituted the oratory style of education for her girls. Word of her success spread, attracting more students. The sisters established another "Cittadini" private school in 1832, and another in 1836.


Giuditta directed these new school until her sudden death in 1840. Caterini's cousin, Father Antonio Cittadini, died in 1841, followed quickly by her spiritual director from the orphanage. The rapid succession of tragedy ruined Caterina's health, and she fell gravely ill, but was cured through the intercession of Saint Jerome Emilani.


Caterina quit her public teaching position in 1845 to manage the schools, care for the orphans, and guide the three companions who help her. To help organize the work and lives of her companions, she wrote the beginnings of a new rule similar to that of religious orders. In 1850 she obtained permission to build a private oratory to keep the Blessed Sacrament at her boarding school. In 1851 she applied for approval of her new religious family.


In 1854 her bishop encouraged her work, and told her to write the rules of the new order; her first attempt, based on the Constitution of the Ursulines of Milano was rejected. A second attempt was accepted on 17 September 1854 under the title Orsoline Gerolimiane (Ursuline Sisters of Somasca). On 14 December 1857, six months after her death, the bishop of Bergamo gave his approval; the order achieved papal recognition on 8 July 1927. The order's mandate is to teach, and to care for the abandoned; today they work in Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, Brazil, Bolivia, India, and the Philippines.


Born

28 September 1801 in Bergamo, Italy


Died

5 May 1857 in Somasca, Bergamo, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

29 April 2001 by Pope John Paul II at Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City




Blessed Nuntius Sulprizio

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 5)


✠ புனிதர் நன்ஸியோ சல்ப்ரிஸியோ ✠

(St. Nunzio Sulprizio)


பொதுநிலையாளர்:


பிறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 13, 1817

பெஸ்கோஸ்சென்ஸோனெஸ்கோ, பெஸ்கரா, இரண்டு சிசிலிய இராச்சியம்

(Pescosansonesco, Pescara, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies)


இறப்பு: மே 5, 1836 (வயது 19)

நேபிள்ஸ், இரண்டு சிசிலிய இராச்சியம்

(Naples, Kingdom of the Two Sicilies)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: டிசம்பர் 1, 1963

திருத்தந்தை நான்காம் பவுல்

(Pope Paul VI)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 14, 2018

திருத்தந்தை பிரான்சிஸ்

(Pope Francis)


நினவுத் திருநாள்: மே 5


பாதுகாவல் : ஊனமுற்றோர், கொல்லர்கள், தொழிலாளர்கள், "பெஸ்கோஸ்சென்ஸோனெஸ்கோ நகரம்" (Pescosansonesco)


புனிதர் நன்ஸியோ சல்ப்ரிஸியோ, இத்தாலி நாட்டின் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையைச் சேர்ந்த ஒரு பொதுநிலையாளர் ஆவார். கொல்லர் பனியின் பயிற்சியாளராக இருந்த இவர், தமது சுருக்கமான வாழ்க்கையில்  மோசமாக உடல்நிலை பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தார். அவரை அறிந்தவர்களுக்கு, அவர் ஒரு மென்மையான மற்றும் பக்தியான நபராக கருத்தில் கொள்ளப்பட்டிருந்தார்.


இவரது மரணத்தின் பின்னர், தீராத நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்த இருவர், நலம் வேண்டி இவரை வேண்டிக்கொண்டதால், இவரது பரிந்துரையால் அவர்கள் அதிசயமாக குணமானதாக நிரூபணமான காரணத்தால், இவருக்கு கி.பி. 1963ம் ஆண்டின் இறுதியில் அருளாளராக முக்திப்பேறு பட்டமளிக்கப்பட்டார். இரண்டாவது அதிசயத்தை உறுதிப்படுத்திய பின்னர், 2018ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூன் மாதம், 14ம் தேதி, திருத்தந்தை ஃபிரான்சிஸ், புனிதர் படத்துக்கான தனது ஒப்புதலை உறுதிப்படுத்தினார். அதே ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 14ம் தேதியன்று, இவருக்கு புனிதர் பட்டமளித்தார்.


கி.பி. 1817ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 13ம் தேதி, உயிர்த்த ஞாயிறு பெருநாளின் சில நாட்களின் பின்னர் பிறந்த இவரது தந்தையின் பெயர், "டொமெனிக்கோ சல்ப்ரிஸியோ" (Domenico Sulprizio) ஆகும். இவரது தாயார், "ரோசா லூசியானி" (Rosa Luciani) ஆவார். இவர் பிறந்த காலத்தில் கடுமையான பஞ்சம் தலை விரித்தாடியது. பிறந்த அன்றே திருமுழுக்கு பெற்ற இவர், 1820ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 16ம் நாள், உறுதிப்பூசுதல் அருட்சாதனம் பெற்றார்.


1820ம் ஆண்டின் ஜூலை மாதம், இவருக்கு மூன்று வயதாகையில், இவரது தந்தை மரித்துப் போனார். அதன் பிறகு, நான்கு மாதங்களின் பின்னர், இவரது சின்னஞ்சிறு தங்கை "டோமேனிக்கா" (Domenica) மரித்துப்போனார். இவரது தாயார் வாழ்க்கையை ஓட்டுவதற்காக, 1822ம் ஆண்டு வயதான ஒருவரை மறுமணம் செய்துகொண்டார். வளர்ப்புத் தந்தை இவருடன் எப்போதும் கடுமையாகவே நடந்துகொண்டதால், இவர் தமது தாயாருடனும் பாட்டியுடனும் ஒண்டிக்கொண்டார். இதற்கிடையே கத்தோலிக்க குருவானவர் "டி ஃபேபிஸ்" (De Fabiis) என்பவர் நடத்திவந்த பள்ளியில் சேர்ந்து கல்வி கற்றார். அவரது குழந்தை பருவத்தில் அவர் திருப்பலிகளில் கலந்துகொள்ளவும், இயேசு கிறிஸ்துவை அறிந்து கொள்ளவும் நேரம் எடுத்துக்கொண்டார். ஆனால் அவரது முன்மாதிரியையும் புனிதர்களையும் பின்பற்றினார்.


கி.பி. 1823ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 5ம் தேதி, அவரது தாயார் மரித்துப்போகவே, இவர் தமது தாய்வழி பாட்டியான "அன்னா ரொசாரியா லூசியானி டெல் ரோஸ்சி" (Anna Rosaria Luciani del Rossi) என்பவருடன் வசிக்க சென்றார். கல்வியறிவற்ற அவரது பாட்டி, கிறிஸ்தவ விசுவாசத்தில் தீவிரமானவர். அடிக்கடி கால்நடையாகவே நடந்து  போகும் வழக்கமுள்ள இருவரும், தவறாது உள்ளூர் ஆலயத்தில் திருப்பலிகளில் பங்குகொண்டனர். அருட்தந்தை பேண்டாக்ஸி என்பவர் நிர்வகித்த ஏழை மாணவர்க்கான பள்ளியில் சேர்ந்து கல்வி கற்க தொடங்கினார். அவருடைய பாட்டி பின்னர் 1826ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 4ம் தேதியன்று இறந்தார். அதன்பின்னர், அவரது தாய்மாமன் அவரை கொல்லர் பணி கற்க சேர்த்துவிட்டார். அவரது மாமன் அவரை மிகவும் கடுமையாக நடத்தினார். ஒழுக்கமாக வாழுவதற்கு பட்டினி கிடக்க வேண்டும் என்று நினைத்த அவர், சல்ப்ரிஸியோவுக்கு சரியான உணவளிக்காமல் பட்டினி போட்டார். அவர் செய்யும் சின்னஞ்சிறு தவறுகளுக்காக அவரை அடித்து உதைத்து துன்புறுத்தினார். அவரது வயதுக்கு மீறிய வேலைகளை செய்த அவருக்கு 1837ம் ஆண்டு, ஒரு நோய்த்தொற்று ஏற்பட்டது. ஒரு குளிர்கால காலை வேளையில், அவரது மாமா அவரை "ரொக்கா டாக்லியாட்டாவின்" (Rocca Tagliata) சரிவுகளுக்கு பொருட்களை விநியோகம் செய்ய  அனுப்பியபோது அவருக்கு நோய்த்தொற்று  ஏற்பட்டது. அன்று மாலை, உழைப்பின் களைப்பால் அவர் சோர்வாகிப்போனார். ஒரு கால்  வீங்கிப் போனது. மற்றும் எரியும் காய்ச்சல் அவரை படுக்கையில் கட்டாயப்படுத்தி தள்ளியது. இதனை அவர் தமது ராமனிடம் தெரிவிக்கவில்லை. இருப்பினும் அவரால் காலையில் படுக்கையிலிருந்து எழுந்திருக்க இயலவில்லை. அவரது மாமாவுக்கு அவரது துன்பம் அலட்சியமாக இருந்தது. அவரது நிலை பின்னர் ஒரு கால் (Gangrene) செயலற்றுப்போனது.  முதலில், தென் இத்தாலியின் "லாஅகுய்லா" (L'Aquila) நகரிலுள்ள மறுத்தவமனையிலும், பின்னர், "நேப்பிள்ஸ்" (Naples) நகரிலுள்ள மறுத்தவமனையிலும் சிகிச்சை பெற்றார். ஆனால் அவரது வேதனைகள் கூடியதேயொழிய, குறையவில்லை. இருப்பினும் வேதனைகளை தாங்கிக்கொண்ட அவர், அவற்றை ஆண்டவரிடம் ஒப்புக்கொடுத்தார்.


தமது நோயின்போது, வீட்டிலிருக்கையில், அவருடைய புண் சீல் வைத்ததால், அவற்றை நிலையான அடிப்படையில் சுத்தம் செய்ய வேண்டியிருந்தது. அவர் தனது காயத்தை சுத்தப்படுத்த வீட்டிற்கு அருகே ஒரு ஓடைக்கு சென்றார். ஆனால் துணி துவைக்க வந்த ஒரு பெண், அவர் தண்ணீரை மாசுபடுத்துவதாக கூறி, அவரைத் துரத்திவிட்டார். அதற்கு பதிலாக அவர் மற்றொரு ஓடையில் தமது புண்ணை சுத்தம் செய்ய அனுமதிக்க பலமுறை ஜெபமாலை ஜெபித்துவந்தார்.


1835ம் ஆண்டு, டாக்டர்கள் அவரது ஒரு காலை தங்கள் ஒரே விருப்பமாக வெட்ட முடிவெடுத்தனர். ஆனால் அவரது வலி தொடர்ந்து இருந்தது. 1836ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், அவருடைய நிலைமை மோசமடைந்தது. அவருக்கு காய்ச்சல் அதிகரித்தபோதெல்லாம் அவருடைய அவரது துன்பங்களும் அதிகரித்தன. கடவுள்மீது அவர் வைத்திருந்த நம்பிக்கையை அவர் தொடர்ந்தார். தமது முடிவு நெருங்கிவிட்டது என்ற உண்மையை நன்கு அறிந்திருந்தார். இரண்டு மாதங்கள் கழித்து, அவர் மரித்த நாளன்று, அவர் சிலுவையாண்டவரின் திருச்சொரூபத்தை வரவழைத்தார். மற்றும் கடைசி நேரத்தில் தமது ஒப்புரவாளரை அழைத்து, அவரிடம் இறுதி அருட்சாதனங்களைப் பெற்றுக்கொண்டார். 1836ம் ஆண்டு, அவர் தமக்கு ஏற்பட்ட நோயின்காரணமாக மரித்தார். அவரது எஞ்சியுள்ள மிச்சங்கள் இப்போது நேபிள்ஸில் (Naples) நகரிலுள்ள "சான் டோமினிகோ சொரியானோ" (Church of San Domenico Soriano) தேவாலயத்தில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளன. அவரது மரணத்தின் பல தசாப்தங்களுக்கு பிறகு திருத்தந்தை "பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ" அவரை தொழிலாளர்களின் முன்மாதிரியாக முன்மொழிந்தார்.

Also known as

• Nunzio Sulperio

• Nunzio Sulprizio



Profile

Son of Domenico Sulprizio and Rosa Luciani, Nunzio was named after his grandfather and baptized when only a few hours old. Nunzio’s father died on 16 May 1820 when the boy was only three years old, his little sister died in 1822, and his new step-father treated the boy as a contemptible burden. Young Nunzio received his basic education at a school run by a priest, and became a pious child, attending Mass as often as possible, and using the saints as a guide to life. When he was old enough, his uncle Domenico Luciani took Nunzio as an apprentice blacksmith, and then neglected him, abused him, overworked him, beat him, and after bringing home supplies on a winter morning in 1831, the boy collapsed with a fever and found he could no longer stand; an untreated injury to his leg had become gangrenous. He was hospitalized in L’Aquila and Naples in Italy; when he was at home, and could find a place where people would not run him off due to his open sores, he would sit in a stream to let the flowing water clean his wound, and pray his rosary. Through his paternal uncle, Francesco Sulprizio, a career soldier, Nunzio became friends with Colonel Felice Wochinger in 1832; the colonel became a surrogate father and paid for Nunzio’s medical care. The boy met and impressed Saint Gaetano Errico, who said he would be welcome in the Missionaries of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary when he was old enough. Nunzio went through several periods of improvement and several of setbacks before his injuries finally ended his life. He was known as a gentle, chaste, patient, and pious youth in a place and time when such a man was rare.


Born

13 April 1817 at Pescosansonesco, Pescara, Abruzzi, Italy


Died

• 5 May 1836 in Naples, Italy

• interred at the church of San Domenico Soriano in Naples


Canonized

• 14 October 2018 by Pope Francis at Saint Peter's Square, Rome, Italy

• the canonization miracle involved the healing of a young man who had been injured in a motorcycle accident and went into a coma which was expected to leave him in a vegetative state; a relic of Blessed Nuntius was placed in the patient’s room, and after a week of prayers by family, he woke from the coma


Patronage

workers (proposed by Pope Leo XIII)




Saint Angelus of Jerusalem


Also known as

• Angelus of Sicily

• Angelus the Carmelite

• Angelo of...



Profile

Angelus' parents were 12th century Jewish converts. At age 18, Angelus and his twin brother joined a group of hermits who formed the first Carmelite house. He was sent to evangelize in Sicily, met with great success in converting some Sicilian Jews, and great hatred from others, especially around Palermo and Leocata. Murdered by thugs in the employ of Count Berengarius, a man whose incestuous relationship Angelus had denounced.


Born

1145 at Jerusalem


Died

• stabbed to death in 1220 at Licata, Sicily, Italy

• relics transferred in to the Carmelite church at Licata


Patronage

Licata, Italy




Saint Godehard of Hildesheim

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 5)


✠ புனிதர் கொத்தார்ட் ✠

(St. Gotthard of Hildesheim)


ஹில்டஷீம் ஆயர்:

(Bishop of Hildesheim) 


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 960

ரைச்சர்டோர்ஃப், பவேரியா

(Reicherdorf, Bavaria)


இறப்பு: மே 5, 1038


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1131

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் இன்னொசென்ட்

(Pope Innocent II)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 05


பாதுகாவல்: 

பயணம் செய்யும் வியாபாரிகள், காய்ச்சல், வீக்கம், குழந்தைப் பருவ நோய்கள், பெருங்கல் மழை, பிரசவ வேதனை, கீல்வாதம், கடல் ஆபத்துகள்.


புனிதர் கொத்தார்ட், ஓர் "ஆங்கிலோ-ஜெர்மன் ஆயர்" (Anglo-German Bishop) ஆவார்.


இவரது தந்தை "ராட்மன்ட்" (Ratmund) ஒரு ஏழை பண்ணைத் தொழிலாளி ஆவார். இவர் மனிதநேயம் மற்றும் இறையியல் கற்றார்.


"சல்ஸ்பர்க்" (Salzburg) உயர்மறை மாவட்ட இல்லத்திலேயே தங்கிய கொத்தார்ட், திருச்சபை நிர்வாகியாக பணியாற்றினார். இத்தாலி உள்ளிட்ட பல்வேறு நாடுகளுக்கு பயணித்த பின்னர், "பஸ்ஸாவு" (Passau) எனும் இடத்திலுள்ள பேராலய பள்ளியில் தமது மேல்படிப்பை நிறைவு செய்தார்.


மத கூட்டங்கள் மற்றும் சந்திப்புகளுக்காக உபயோகப்படுத்தப்பட்ட கட்டிடங்களை பவரியா அரசன் இரண்டாம் ஹென்றி (Henry II of Bavaria) பெனடிக்டைன் மடமாக (Benedictine monastery) மாற்றியபோது, கொத்தார்ட் அங்கே புகுநிலை துறவியாக இருந்தார். கி.பி. 993ம் ஆண்டு, குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு செய்விக்கப்பட்டார். கி.பி. 996ம் ஆண்டு, மடாதிபதியாக தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்ட கொத்தார்ட், "குளுனியா சீர்திருத்தம்" (Cluniac reform) எனும் சீர்திருத்தத்தை தமது மடத்தில் அறிமுகப்படுத்தினார்.


1022ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், இரண்டாம் நாளன்று, "ஹில்டஷீம்" மறைமாவட்ட ஆயராக (Bishop of Hildesheim) "மெய்ன்ஸ்" (Mainz) உயர்மறைமாவட்ட பேராயர் (Archbishop) "அரிபோவால்" (Aribo) திருநிலைபடுத்தப்பட்டார். ஆயராக தமது பதினைந்து வருட கால ஆட்சியில், முப்பதுக்கும் மேற்பட்ட ஆலயங்களை கட்டினார். தீவிர நோய்களால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட இவர் தமது 78 வயதில், 1038ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், நான்காம் நாளன்று, மரித்தார்.

Also known as

• Godehard the Bishop

• Godard, Gothard, Gottardo, Gotthard, Godehardus



Additional Memorial

2nd Sunday in May (Bene Vagienna, Italy)


Profile

Raised around Churchman, Godehard's father worked for the canons of Niederaltaich. Godehard joined the canons, and became their provost. Helped reintroduce the Benedictine Rule at Niederaltaich, which then sent abbots to Tegernsee, Hersfeld and Kremsmunster to revive the Benedictine Rule. Bishop of Hildesheim, Germany in 1022.


Born

c.960 in Bavaria (in modern Germany)


Died

• 4 May 1038 of natural causes

• relics translated in 1132


Canonized

1131 by Pope Innocent II


Patronage

• against birth pains

• against childhood sicknesses

• against danger at sea

• against dropsy

• against fever

• against gout

• against hailstorms

• travelling merchants

• Bene Vagienna, Italy

• diocese of Hildesheim, Germany




Saint Hilary of Arles

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 5)


✠ புனிதர் ஹிலாரி ✠

(St. Hilary of Arles)


ஆர்ல்ஸ் ஆயர்:

(Bishop of Arles)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 403


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 449


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 5


புனிதர் ஹிலாரி, தென் ஃபிரான்ஸ் (Southern France) நாட்டின் ஆர்ல்ஸ் (Arles) மறைமாவட்ட ஆயரும், ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்கம் மற்றும் கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபைகளால் புனிதராக அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்டவருமாவார். இவரது நினைவுத் திருநாள் மே மாதம் ஐந்தாம் நாளன்று நினைவுகூறப்படுகின்றது.


ஹிலாரி, தமது பதினேழு வயதில், “செயின்ட் ஹோனரட்” (Island of Saint-Honorat) தீவிலுள்ள “சிஸ்டேர்சியன்” துறவறமான (Cistercian monastery) “லெரின்ஸ்” (Lérins Abbey) மடத்தில் சேர்ந்தார். அக்காலத்தில், அவரது உறவினரான “புனிதர் ஹோனரடஸ்” (Saint Honoratus of Arles) “லெரின்ஸ்” மடத்தின் மடாதிபதியாக இருந்தார். அவரே ஆர்ல்ஸ் மறைமாவட்டத்தின் ஆதிகால ஆயராகவும் இருந்தார். ஹிலாரி இதற்கு முன்னதாக “டிஜோனில்” (Dijon) வாழ்ந்து கொண்டிருக்கிறார். மற்ற அதிகாரிகள், அவர் “பெல்கிக்கா” (Belgica) அல்லது “ப்ரோவென்ஸ்” (Provence) நகரிலிருந்து வந்ததாக நம்புகின்றனர்.


இவர், மேற்கத்திய ரோமப் பேரரசின் அரசியல்வாதியான “ஹிலாரியஸ்” (Hilarius) என்பவரது மகன் அல்லது உறவினர் என்று நம்பப்படுகின்றார். ஹிலாரியஸ், கி.பி. 396ம் ஆண்டில் “கௌல்” (Gaul) நகரிலும், கி.பி. 408ம் ஆண்டில் ரோம் நகரிலும் தலைமை அதிகாரியாக (Prefect) இருந்துள்ளார்.


ஹிலாரி, தமது உறவினரான ஆர்ல்ஸ் ஆயர், “புனிதர் ஹோனரடஸ்” என்பவருக்குப் பின்னர் 429ம் ஆண்டு, ஆர்ல்ஸ் ஆயராக பதவியேற்றார். இவர், புனிதர் அகுஸ்தினாரை (St Augustine) முன்னுதாரணமாக ஏற்று, அவரது சபைக் குருமார்களை ஒரு "சபைக்குள்" ஏற்பாடு செய்ததாக கூறப்படுகிறது; அவர்கள் கடுமையான சுய ஒழுக்கம் மற்றும் சமூகப் பயிற்சிகளுக்கு தங்கள் நேரத்தை அர்ப்பணித்தனர். ஹிலாரி, தமது உழைப்பு முழுவதையும் ஏழை மக்களுக்கே பகிர்ந்தளித்தார்.


கைதிகளை மீட்கும் பொருட்டு, இவர் ஆலயங்களின் பரிசுத்த பாத்திரங்களை (Sacred vessels) விற்றார். அவர் ஒரு அற்புதமான பேச்சாளர் (Orator) ஆனார். அவர் பயணம் செய்த எல்லா இடங்களுக்கும் நடை பயணமாகவே பயணித்தார். எப்போதும் எளிய ஆடை அணிவதையே வழக்கமாகக் கொண்டிருந்தார்.


அது பிரகாசமான பக்கமாகும். ஹிலாரி பிற பிஷப்புகளுடன் தனது உறவுகளில் சிக்கலை எதிர்கொண்டார். அவரிடம் சில அதிகார வரம்பு இருந்தது. அவர், பாரபட்சம் பாராது, ஒரு ஆயரை பதவியை விட்டு விலக்கினார். நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டிருந்த ஆயர் ஒருவருக்குப் பதிலாக, வேறு ஒருவரை ஆயராக தேர்வு செய்தார். ஆனால், விடயம் சிக்கலானது. நோய்வாய்ப்பட்ட ஆயர் மரிக்கவில்லை. திருத்தந்தை புனிதர் பெரிய லியோ (Pope Saint Leo the Great), ஹிலாரியை ஒரு ஆயராகவே வைத்திருந்தார். ஆனால் அவருடைய சில அதிகாரங்களைக் கைப்பற்றினார்.


ஹிலாரி, கி.பி. 449ம் ஆண்டு மரித்தார். மிகவும் சரியான நேரத்தில், ஒரு ஆயர் எப்படி இருக்கவேண்டும் என்பதை கற்றுக்கொண்ட திறமைசாலியாகவும் பக்திமானாகவும் ஹிலாரி இருந்தார்.

Also known as

• Hilarius

• Ilario



Profile

Born and raised a pagan; relative of Saint Honoratus of Arles. Highly placed civil authority. Honoratus invited Hilary to the recently completed abbey of Lerins, and brought him to the faith; Hilary was baptised at Lerins, and joined the community as a monk. When Honoratus became bishop of Arles (in modern France) Hilary served as his secretary. Bishop of Arles. Hilary was an exuberant bishop, working so hard to spread the faith that he caused problems with the people and the civil authorities, and twice had to be reproved by the Vatican - his zealousness was causing more trouble than converts. But though some questioned his methods, none questions his sanctity or his true belief.


Born

c.400 at Lorraine, France


Died

449 of natural causes


Video

YouTube PlayList




Blessed Benvenuto Mareni


Also known as

• Benventuto of Recanati

• Benevenutus, Benvenutus


Profile

13th-century Franciscan Conventual lay brother in Recanati, Italy. Worked at his monastery as a cook, and spent his free time in prayer. During prayer and Mass he would lapse into ecstacies and receive visions; during one vision he was allowed to hold the Infant Christ. Legend says that once when a trance lasted so long that he was late to his work in the kitchen, he found an angel there already cooking.


Born

Recanati, Italy


Died

• 5 May 1269 in Recanati, Italy of natural causes

• interred at the church of San Franceso in Recanati


Beatified

17 September 1796 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmation)




Saint Judith of Prussia


Also known as

• Judith of Kulmsee

• Judith of Sangerhausen

• Judith of Thuringia

• Jutta, Giuditta



Profile

Born to the nobility. Lay woman. Married with children. Widowed when her husband died on a Crusade to the Holy Land. Judith then made financial provision for her children, sold off her property, and spent her remaining years as a hermitess in the territory of the Teutonic Knights, whose grand-master was a relative.


Born

at Sangerhausen, Thuringia (in modern Germany)


Died

12 May 1260 at Kulmsee, Prussia (in modern Germany) of natural causes


Patronage

Prussia



Saint Avertinus of Tours


Also known as

• Avertinus the Deacon

• Avertin, Avertino



Profile

Deacon who travelled into exile in France with Saint Thomas Becket. Participated in the synod of Tours, France in 1163. After the death of Saint Thomas, Avertinus dedicated himself to the service of the poor and strangers at Vinzai, Touraine, France, and spent his final years as a hermit.


Died

• 1189 at Vençay, France of natural causes

• buried at the church in Vençay which became a site of miracles and pilgrimage



Saint Britto of Trier


Also known as

Brito, Britonius, Brittone


Profile

Bishop of Trier, Belgic Gaul (modern Germany) in 374, and a leader of the Church in Gaul. Attended the 382 synod of bishops called by Pope Saint Damasus I. Friend of co-worker with Saint Ambrose of Milan and Saint Martin of Tours. When a group of pagans sought sanctuary with the Church; Britto tried to convert them, failed, but still refused to surrender them since he believed that the State has no authority over Church affairs.


Born

4th century


Died

c.385 in Trier, Germany



Blessed Grzegorz Boleslaw Frackowiak


Also known as

• Boleslaw Frackowiak

• Gregory Frackowiak

• Gregorio Frackowiak


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Martyrs of World War II


Profile

Friar in the Society of the Divine Word. Martyred by Nazis.


Born

18 July 1911 in Lowecice, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Died

guillotined on 5 May 1943 in Dresden, Saxony, Germany


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Maurontius of Douai


Also known as

Maurand, Mauront, Maurontus, Mauronto


Profile

Eldest son of Saint Adalbald of Ostrevant and Saint Rictrudis of Marchiennes; brother of Saint Clotsindis of Marchiennes, Saint Eusebia of Hamage, and Saint Adalsindis. Monk at Marchiennes, France. Founded a monastery at Breuil-sur-lys near Douai, France.


Born

634


Died

702 in Marchiennes, France of natural causes


Patronage

Douai, France



Saint Maximus of Jerusalem


Profile

For publicly declaring his Christianity, Maximus was branded on the foot, blinded in one eye, and sentenced to forced labour in the mines during the persecutions of Maximian Galerius. He was crippled, but survived and was released during the reign of Constantine. Bishop of Jerusalem.


Died

c.350 in Jerusalem of natural causes



Saint Eulogius of Edessa


Profile

Priest in Edessa, Syria. When a Arian bishop was imposed on the area by Emperor Valens, Eulogius refused to renouce orthodox Christianity and was exiled to Thebaid, Egypt where he worked for the conversion of local pagans. When Valens died in 375 Eulogius returned to Edessa to serve as their bishop. Attended the Council of Constantinople in 381.



Saint Geruntius of Milan


Also known as

Gerontius



Profile

Bishop of Milan, Italy c.465 to c.470.


Died

• c.470

• relics enshrined in the church of Saint Symphorian in Milan, Italy by Saint Charles Borromeo



Blessed John Haile


Also known as

John Hale


Profile

Priest. Fellow of King's Hall, Cambridge. Vicar of Isleworth, Middlesex, England. Martyred with Saint John Houghton and three others.


Died

hanged on 4 May 1535 at Tyburn, London, England


Beatified

29 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmation)



Saint Sacerdos of Limoges


Also known as

• Sacerdos of Calviac

• Sardot, Sadroc, Sardou, Serdon, Serdot, Sacerdote


Profile

Monk. Founded Calabre Abbey and served as its first abbot. Bishop of Limoges, France.


Born

670 in Sarlat, Périgord, France


Died

c.720



Saint Leo of Africo


Profile

Twelfth century hermit in Calabria, Italy who divided his time between contemplation of God and good works for the poor. Founded a monastery in Africo, Reggio, Italy, and lived out his later years there.


Died

Africo, Italy


Patronage

Africo Nuovo, Italy



Saint Jovinian of Auxerre


Also known as

Gioviniano, Giovine


Profile

Missionary. Lector of the church at Auxerre, France. Worked with Saint Peregrinus of Auxerre. Martyr.


Died

martyred c.300



Saint Peregrinus of Thessalonica


Profile

Martyred in the persecution of Diocletian


Died

burned at the stake c.303 at Thessalonica



Saint Sacerdos of Saguntum


Profile

Bishop of Saguntum (now Murviedro), Spain.


Died

c.560 of natural causes


Patronage

Saguntum, Spain



Saint Irenaeus of Thessalonica


Profile

Martyred in the persecution of Diocletian.


Died

burned at the stake c.303 at Thessalonica



Saint Irenes of Thessalonica


Profile

Martyred in the persecution of Diocletian.


Died

burned at the stake c.303 at Thessalonica



Saint Euthymius of Alexandria


Profile

Deacon in Alexandria, Egypt. Imprisoned for his faith, he eventually died of mistreatment. Martyr.



Saint Echa of Crayke


Also known as

Etha of Crayke


Profile

Priest. Lived as a hermit in Crayke, Yorkshire, England.


Died

767



Saint Nicetus of Vienne


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France. Supported the expansion of monastic life in his diocese.


Died

c.449



Saint Waldrada of Metz


Profile

First Abbess of Saint-Pierre-aux-Nonnais Abbey in Metz, France.


Died

c.620



Saint Silvanus of Rome


Also known as

Sylvanus


Profile

Martyr.


Died

in Rome, Italy



Saint Theodore of Bologna


Profile

Bishop of Bologna, Italy for 20 years.


Died

c.550



Saint Hydroc


Also known as

Hydoc


Profile

Lived in the 5th century.


Patronage

Lanhydroc, Cornwall, England



Saint Nectarius of Vienne


Profile

Bishop of Vienne, France.


Died

c.445



Saint Crescentiana


Profile

Martyr.


Died

5th century Rome, Italy