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10 April 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஏப்ரல் 11

 St. Marguerite d'Youville


Feastday: October 16

Patron: of widows, difficult marriages, death of young children

Birth: October 15, 1701

Death: December 23, 1771

Beatified: 1959 by Pope John XXIII

Canonized: December 9, 1990, Vatican Basilica, by Pope John Paul II

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Foundress of the Sisters of Charity, the Grey Nuns of Canada. St. Marguerite D'Youville was born at Varennes, Quebec, on October 15, Marie Marguerite Dufrost de La Jemmerais. She studied under the Ursulines, married Francois D'Youville in 1722, and became a widow in 1730. She worked to support herself and her three children, devoted much of her time to the Confraternity of the Holy Family in charitable activities.


In 1737, with three companions, she founded the Grey Nuns when they took their initial vows; a formal declaration took place in 1745. Two years later she was appointed Directress of the General Hospital in Montreal, which was taken over by the Grey Nuns, and had the rule of the Grey Nuns, with Marguerite as Superior, confirmed by Bishop of Pontbriand of Quebec in 1755.


She died in Montreal on December 23, and since her death, the Grey Nuns have established schools, hospitals, and orphanages throughout Canada, the United States, Africa, and South America, and are especially known for their work among the Eskimos. She was beatified by Pope John XXIII in 1959 and canonized in 1990 by Pope John Paul II.


Marguerite d'Youville (French pronunciation: ​[maʁɡʁit djuvil]; October 15, 1701 – December 23, 1771) was a French Canadian widow who founded the Order of Sisters of Charity of Montreal, commonly known as the Grey Nuns of Montreal. She was canonized by Pope John Paul II of the Roman Catholic Church in 1990, the first native-born Canadian to be declared a saint.



Early life and marriage

She was born Marie-Marguerite Dufrost de Lajemmerais in 1701 at Varennes, Quebec, oldest daughter of Christophe du Frost, Sieur de la Gesmerays (1661–1708) and Marie-Renée Gaultier de Varennes. (According to Quebec naming conventions, she would have always been known as Marguerite, not Marie.) Her father died when she was a young girl. Despite her family's poverty, at age 11 she was able to attend the Ursuline convent in Quebec City for two years before returning home to teach her younger brothers and sisters.[1] Marguerite's impending marriage to a scion of Varennes society was foiled by her mother's marriage below her class to Timothy Sullivan, an Irish doctor who was seen by the townspeople as a disreputable foreigner.[2] On August 12, 1722, at Notre-Dame Basilica in Montreal, she married François d'Youville, a bootlegger who sold liquor illegally to Indigenous Peoples in exchange for furs and who frequently left home for long periods for parts unknown. Despite this, the couple eventually had six children before François died in 1730. By age 30 she had suffered the loss of her father, husband and four of her six children, who died in infancy. Marguerite experienced a religious renewal during her marriage. "In all these sufferings Marguerite grew in her belief of God's presence in her life and His tender love for every human person. She, in turn, wanted to make known His compassionate love to all. She undertook many charitable works with complete trust in God, whom she loved as a Father."[1]




Grey Nuns of Montreal


Marguerite d'Youville Sanctuary in Varennes

Marguerite and three other women founded in 1737 a religious association to provide a home for the poor in Montreal. At first, the home only housed four or five members, but it grew as the women raised funds. As their actions went against the social conventions of the day, d'Youville and her colleagues were mocked by their friends and relatives and even by the poor they helped. Some called them "les grises", which can mean "the grey women" but which also means "the drunken women",[3] about d'Youville's late husband. By 1744 the association had become a Catholic religious order with a rule and a formal community. In 1747 they were granted a charter to operate the General Hospital of Montreal, which by that time was in ruins and heavily in debt. d'Youville and her fellow workers brought the hospital back into financial security,[4] but the hospital was destroyed by fire in 1765.[1] The order rebuilt the hospital soon after. By this time, the order was commonly known as the "Grey Nuns of Montreal" after the nickname given to the nuns in ridicule years earlier. Years later, as the order expanded to other cities, the order became known simply as the "Grey Nuns".


Slave owner

d'Youville has been described as "one of Montreal's more prominent slaveholders".[5][6] d'Youville and the Grey Nuns used enslaved laborers in their hospital and purchased and sold both Indian slaves and British prisoners, including an English slave which she purchased from the Indians. The vast majority of the 'slaves' in the hospital were English soldiers and would be better described as prisoners of war. As described in 'The Captors' Narrative: Catholic Women and Their Puritan Men on the Early American Frontier': "These 21 men were not captive freeholders, resentful of their captors' religion and longing to reestablish themselves at home. They were for the most part young soldiers, many of them conscripts, simply wishing to survive their captivity. However strange they may have found the community that held them and the woman who supervised them, they were probably relieved to find themselves in a situation that offered a strong possibility of survival. They knew their fellow soldiers to be dying in nearby prisons -- places notorious for their exposure to the heat and cold and unchecked pestilence. As hard as they must have worked at Pointe-Saint-Charles, the men could easily have regarded their captivity at least as a partial blessing." [7]


Legacy

Marguerite d'Youville died in 1771 at the General Hospital. In 1959, she was beatified by Pope John XXIII, who called her "Mother of Universal Charity", and was canonized in 1990 by Pope John Paul II. She is the first native-born Canadian to be elevated to sainthood by the Roman Catholic Church. Her feast day is October 16. In 1961, a shrine was built in her birthplace of Varennes. Today, it is the site of a permanent exhibit about the life and works of Marguerite.[8] The review process included a medically inexplicable cure of acute myeloid leukemia after relapse. The woman is the only known long-term survivor in the world, having lived more than 40 years from a condition that typically kills people in 18 months.[9]


A large number of Roman Catholic churches, schools, women's shelters, charity shops, and other institutions in Canada and worldwide are named after St. Marguerite d'Youville. Most notably, the renowned academic institution of higher learning, D'Youville College in Buffalo, NY, is named after her.[10] The D'Youville Academy at Plattsburgh, New York was founded in 1860.[11]


Sir Louis-Amable Jetté’s wife, Lady Jetté, wrote a biography of Marie-Marguerite d'Youville.[12]


Final resting place

In 2010, Mother Marie-Marguerite d'Youville's remains were removed from Grey Nuns Motherhouse and relocated to her birthplace of Varennes.[13]


Recognition

On September 21, 1978, Canada Post issued 'Marguerite d'Youville' based on a design by Antoine Dumas. The 14¢ stamps are perforated 13.5 and were printed by Canadian Bank Note Company, Limited





St. Stanislaus of Krakow

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஏப்ரல் 11)


✠ புனிதர் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸ் ✠

(St. Stanislaus of Szczepanów)


ஆயர், மறைசாட்சி:

(Bishop and Martyr)


பிறப்பு: ஜூலை 26, 1030

செபனோவ், போலந்து 

(Szcepanow, Poland)


இறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 11, 1079 (வயது 48)

க்ரகோவ், போலந்து

(Kraków, Poland)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: செப்டம்பர் 17, 1253

திருத்தந்தை நான்காம் இன்னோசென்ட்

(Pope Innocent IV)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:

"வாவெல்" பேராலயம்

(Wawel Cathedral) 


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஏப்ரல் 11


பாதுகாவல்:

க்ரகோவ், போலந்து

(Kraków, Poland)


புனிதர் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸ், "க்ரகோவ்" (Bishop of Kraków) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் ஆயரும், போலந்து நாட்டு அரசன் "இரண்டாம் போலேஸ்லாவ்" (Polish king Bolesław II the Bold) என்பவனால் துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்ட மறைசாட்சியுமாவார்.


பாரம்பரியப்படி, புனிதர் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸ் போலந்து நாட்டில் செபனோவ்'விலுள்ள (Szcepanow), போச்சினா (Bochina) என்ற ஊரில் 1030ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூலை மாதம், 26ம் நாள், ஓர் பிரபுக்களின் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தார். "வியெலிஸ்லா" (Wielisław) மற்றும் "போக்னா" (Bogna) ஆகியோர் இவரது பெற்றோர் ஆவர். இவரின் பெற்றோருக்கு பல வருடங்கள் குழந்தைப்பேறு இல்லாமலிருந்தபோது, பல ஜெப, தவ முயற்சிகளை மேற்கொண்டு, இறைவனின் அருளால் இவர் பிறந்தார். இவர் பெற்றோர் இவரை அறிவிலும், ஞானத்திலும், பக்தியிலும் சிறந்த குழந்தையாக வளர்த்தார்கள். அந்நாளைய போலந்து நாட்டின் தலைநகராக இருந்த "க்னியெஸ்னோ" (Gniezno) எனும் நகரின் பேராலய பள்ளியில் கல்வி கற்றார்.


அதன்பின், போலந்து நாட்டிற்கு திரும்பிய அவர், குருத்துவம் பெற்றார். "க்ரகோவ்" (Bishop of Kraków) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் ஆயர் "இரண்டாம் லம்பேர்ட் சுலாவ்" அவருக்கு குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு செய்வித்தார்.


பின்பு கி.பி. 1072ம் ஆண்டு க்ரகோவ் (Kraków) மறைமாவட்ட ஆயர் மரித்த பின் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸ் ஆயராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். இருப்பினும் திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் அலெக்சாண்டரின் (Pope Alexander II) வெளிப்படையான கட்டளை வந்ததன் பின்னரே அவர் ஆயராக பொறுப்பேற்றார். ஆயர் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸ் அந்நாளைய போலிஷ் குடியுரிமை கொண்ட ஆயர்களுள் ஒருவராவார். இவர் போலந்து நாட்டின் அரசியலிலும் செல்வாக்கு கொண்டவராகவும் அரசுக்கு ஆலோசனைகள் கூறுபவராகவும் இருந்தார். திருத்தந்தையின் பிரதிநிதித்துவத்தை போலந்து நாட்டில் கொண்டுவருவது அவரது முக்கிய சாதனையாக இருந்தது.


கி.பி. 1076ல் போலந்தின் அரசனாக "இரண்டாம் போலேஸ்லாவ்" (Polish king Bolesław II the Bold) முடிசூடினான். போலந்து நாட்டை கிறிஸ்தவமயமாக்குவதில் உதவி புரியும் பொருட்டு, "பெனடிக்டைன்" துறவு மடங்களை (Benedictine monasteries) நிறுவ ஆயர் அரசனை ஊக்குவித்தார்


ஒரு நிலத்தின் மேலுள்ள சர்ச்சையே ஆயருக்கும் அரசனுக்கும் இடையே பிரச்சினைகளும் பூசல்களும் தொடங்க காரணமானது. ஒருமுறை, "விஸ்டுலா" (Vistula river) நதியின் படுக்கையருகே ஒரு துண்டு நிலத்தை மறை மாவட்டத்திற்காக "ப்யோட்ர்" (Piotr) என்பவரிடமிருந்து வாங்கியிருந்தார். ஆனால், "ப்யோட்ர்" (Piotr) இறந்ததும் அவரது குடும்பத்தினர் அந்த நிலத்திற்கு உரிமை கோரினர். அரசனும் அந்த குடும்பத்தினருக்கு சாதகமாக தீர்ப்பளித்தான். தமது தரப்பு நியாயத்தை நிரூபிப்பதற்காக, ஆயர் இறந்துபோன "ப்யோட்ர்" (Piotr) என்பவரை உயிருடன் எழுப்பினார். உயிர்த்தெழுந்த "ப்யோட்ர்" (Piotr) உண்மையாகவே தாமும் தமது மூன்று மகன்களும் சர்ச்சைக்குரிய நிலத்தை ஆயருக்கு விற்று பணம் பெற்றதாக அரசவையில் ஒப்புக்கொண்டார். வேறு வழியற்ற அரசன், ஆயருக்கேதிரான வழக்கை ரத்து செய்தான். உயிர்த்தெழுந்த "ப்யோட்ர்" (Piotr) மீண்டும் கல்லறையில் புதைக்கப்பட்டார்.


இதனால் அரசன் கோபம் கொண்டு திருச்சபைக்கு எதிராகச் செயல்பட்டான். ஆயர் திருப்பலியாற்றிக் கொண்டிருந்த போது, அவரைக் கொல்ல தமது வீரர்களை அனுப்பினான். ஆனால் ஆயரிடமிருந்து பேரொளி ஒன்று வெளிப்பட்டதால், படையாட்கள் அவரைக் கொல்லாமல் விட்டுச் சென்றார்கள். இதனால் அரசன் தாமே நேரடியாக வந்து ஆயரை வெட்டிக் கொன்றான். இப்பெரும் பாவத்தை செய்ததால் அரசன் அரசாட்சியிழந்து போலந்து நாட்டை விட்டு விரட்டப்பட்டான். பின்னர் ஹங்கேரி நாடு சென்று, தஞ்சமடைந்தான்.


ஆயர் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸ் ஓர் நல்ல ஆயராக இருந்து திருச்சபையை வழிநடத்தினார். ஏழைகளுக்கு உதவிகள் பல செய்தார். தம் மறைமாவட்டதிலிருந்த மறைபரப்பு பணியாளர்களை ஆண்டுதோறும் சந்தித்து இறைப்பணியை திறம்பட செய்ய ஊக்கமூட்டினார்.


† ஜெபம்:

மறைசாட்சியாய் மரித்த ஆயர் ஸ்தனிஸ்லாஸே! ஏழைகளுக்கு உதவிகள் புரிந்த நல் ஆயரே! இறை நற்செய்தி பரவ மறைபரப்பு பணியாளர்களை ஊக்கமூட்டியவரே! சர்ச்சைக்குரிய நிலம் சம்பந்தமான தமது திருச்சபையின் நியாயத்தை நிருபிக்க அரவையில் இறந்தவரை உயிருடன் எழுப்பி அவர் மூலம் உண்மையை உலகறியச் செய்தவரே! இன்று திருச்சபைக்கு எதிரான அனைத்து வழக்குகளிலும் உண்மையான நீதி கிடைக்கவும், அவற்றில் சம்பந்தப்பட்ட அனைத்து அருட்தந்தைகள் மற்றும்அருட் கன்னியர்களுக்கும் நல்ல ஞானத்தையும், பரிசுத்த ஆவியின் வல்லமையும் கிடைத்தருள இறைவனிடம் பரிந்து பேசுவீராக! ஆமென்! †

Feastday: April 11

Patron: of Poland, Krakow, moral order

Birth: July 26, 1030

Death: April 11, 1079

Canonized: September 17, 1253, Assisi, Italy by Pope Innocent IV



Stanislaus was born of noble parents on July 26th at Szczepanow near Cracow, Poland. He was educated at Gnesen and was ordained there. He was given a canonry by Bishop Lampert Zula of Cracow, who made him his preacher, and soon he became noted for his preaching. He became a much sought after spiritual adviser. He was successful in his reforming efforts, and in 1072 was named Bishop of Cracow. He incurred the enmity of King Boleslaus the Bold when he denounced the King's cruelties and injustices and especially his kidnapping of the beautiful wife of a nobleman. When Stanislaus excommunicated the King and stopped services at the Cathedral when Boleslaus entered, Boleslaus himself killed Stanislaus while the Bishop was saying Mass in a chapel outside the city on April 11. Stanislaus has long been the symbol of Polish nationhood. He was canonized by Pope Innocent IV in 1253 and is the principle patron of Cracow. His feast day is April 11th.


Stanislaus of Szczepanów, or Stanisław Szczepanowski, (July 26, 1030 – April 11, 1079) was a Bishop of Kraków known chiefly for having been martyred by the Polish king Bolesław II the Generous. Stanislaus is venerated in the Roman Catholic Church as Saint Stanislaus the Martyr (as distinct from the 16th-century Jesuit Stanislaus Kostka).




Life

According to tradition, Stanisław was born at Szczepanów, a village in Lesser Poland, the only son of the noble and pious Wielisław and Bogna. He was educated at a cathedral school in Gniezno (then the capital of Poland) and later, according to different sources, in Paris or Liège.[1] On his return to Poland, Stanisław was ordained a priest by Lambert II Suła, Bishop of Kraków. He was subsequently made pastor of Czembocz near Cracow, canon and preacher at the cathedral, and later, vicar-general.


After the Bishop's death (1072), Stanisław was elected his successor[1][2] but accepted the office only at the explicit command of Pope Alexander II. Stanisław was one of the earliest native Polish bishops. He also became a ducal advisor and had some influence on Polish politics.


Stanisław's major accomplishments included bringing papal legates to Poland, and reestablishment of a metropolitan see in Gniezno. The latter was a precondition for Duke Bolesław's coronation as king, which took place in 1076. Stanisław then encouraged King Bolesław to establish Benedictine monasteries to aid in the Christianization of Poland.


Property dispute


Saint Stanisław leads Piotr before the royal tribunal

Stanisław's initial conflict with King Bolesław was over a land dispute. The Bishop had purchased for the diocese a piece of land on the banks of the Vistula river near Lublin from a certain Peter (Piotr), but after Piotr's death the land had been claimed by his family. The King ruled for the claimants, but – according to legend – Stanisław resurrected Piotr so that he could confirm that he had sold the land to the Bishop.


According to Augustin Calmet, an 18th-century Bible scholar, Stanisław asked the King for three days to produce his witness, Piotr. The King and court were said to have laughed at the absurd request, but the King granted Stanisław the three days. Stanisław spent them in ceaseless prayer, then, dressed in full bishop's regalia, went with a procession to the cemetery where Piotr had been buried three years earlier. He had Piotr's grave dug up until his remains were discovered. Then, before a multitude of witnesses, Stanisław bade Piotr rise, and Piotr did so.


Piotr was then dressed in a cloak and brought before King Bolesław to testify on Stanisław's behalf. The dumbfounded court heard Piotr reprimand his three sons and testify that Stanisław had indeed paid for the land. Unable to give any other verdict, the King dismissed the suit against the Bishop. Stanisław asked Piotr whether he would remain alive but Piotr declined, and so was laid to rest once more in his grave and was reburied.


Bishop's chastisement of King Bolesław

A more substantial conflict with King Bolesław arose after a prolonged war in Ruthenia, when weary warriors deserted and went home, alarmed at tidings that their overseers were taking over their estates and wives. According to Kadłubek, the King punished the soldiers' faithless wives very cruelly and was criticized for it by Bishop Stanisław. Jan Długosz, however, writes that the Bishop had in fact criticized the King for his own sexual immorality. Gallus Anonymus in his laconic account only condemned both "traitor bishop" and violent king.



13th century effigy of Saint Stanislaus

Whatever the actual cause of the conflict between them, the result was that the Bishop excommunicated King Bolesław, which included forbidding the saying of the Divine Office by the canons of Krakow Cathedral in case Bolesław attended.[3] The excommunication aided the King's political opponents, and the King accused Bishop Stanisław of treason.


Martyrdom



1- Saint Stanislaus being ordained as bishop. 2- Saint Stanislaus resurrects Peter. 3-King Bolesław murders Saint Stanislaus. 4-Stanislaus' body is cut in pieces. Image from the Hungarian Kings' Anjou Legendarium of the 14th century.

King Bolesław sent his men to execute Bishop Stanisław without trial but when they didn't dare to touch the Bishop, the King decided to kill the bishop himself.[1] He is said to have slain Stanisław while he was celebrating Mass in the Skałka outside the walls of Kraków.[2] According to Paweł Jasienica: Polska Piastów, it was actually in the Wawel castle. The guards then cut the Bishop's body into pieces and scattered them to be devoured by wild beasts.[2] According to the legend, his members miraculously reintegrated while the pool was guarded by four eagles. The exact date of Stanisław's death is uncertain. According to different sources, it was either April 11 or May 8, 1079.


The murder stirred outrage through the land and led to the dethronement of King Bolesław II the Bold, who had to seek refuge in Hungary and was succeeded by his brother, Władysław I Herman.


Whether Stanisław should be regarded as a traitor or a hero, remains one of the classic unresolved questions of Polish history. Stanisław's story has a parallel in the murder of Thomas Becket in 1170 by henchmen of England's King Henry II.


Original sources

There is little information about Stanisław's life. The only near-contemporary source was a chronicle of Gallus Anonymus, but the author evaded writing details about a conflict with the king. Later sources are the chronicles of Wincenty Kadłubek, and two hagiographies by Wincenty of Kielcza. All contain hagiographic matter.


Veneration as a saint

The cult of Saint Stanisław the martyr began immediately upon his death. In 1245 his relics were translated (i.e., moved) to Kraków's Wawel Cathedral. In the early 13th century, Bishop Iwo Odrowąż initiated preparations for Stanisław's canonization and ordered Wincenty of Kielce to write the martyr's vita. On September 17, 1253, at Assisi, Stanisław was canonized by Pope Innocent IV.[4]


Pope Pius V did not include the Saint's feast day in the Tridentine Calendar for use throughout the Roman Catholic Church. Subsequently, Pope Clement VIII inserted it, setting it for May 7, but Kraków observes it on May 8, a supposed date of the Saint's death, having done so since May 8, 1254, when it was attended by many Polish bishops and princes. In 1969, the Church moved the feast to April 11, considered to be the date of his death in 1079.[5]



Silver sarcophagus of St. Stanislaus in the Wawel Cathedral

As the first native Polish saint, Stanisław is the patron of Poland and Kraków, and of some Polish dioceses. He shares the patronage of Poland with Saint Adalbert of Prague, Florian, and Our Lady the Queen of Poland.


Wawel Cathedral, which holds the Saint's relics, became a principal national shrine. Almost all the Polish kings beginning with Władysław I the Elbow-high were crowned while kneeling before Stanisław's sarcophagus, which stands in the middle of the cathedral. In the 17th century, King Władysław IV Vasa commissioned an ornate silver coffin to hold the Saint's relics. It was destroyed by Swedish troops during the Deluge, but was replaced with a new one ca. 1670.


Saint Stanisław's veneration has had great patriotic importance. In the period of Poland's feudal fragmentation, it was believed that Poland would one day reintegrate as had the members of Saint Stanisław's body. Half a millennium after Poland had indeed reintegrated, and while yet another dismemberment of the polity was underway in the Partitions of the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth, the framers of the Polish Constitution of May 3, 1791, would dedicate this progressive political document to Saint Stanisław Szczepanowski, whose feast day fell close to the date of the Constitution's adoption.


Each year on the first Sunday following May 8, a procession, led by the Bishop of Kraków, goes out from Wawel to the Church on the Rock.[4] The procession, once a local event, was popularized in the 20th century by Polish Primate Stefan Wyszyński and Archbishop of Kraków, Karol Wojtyła. Wojtyla, as Pope John Paul II, called Saint Stanisław the patron saint of moral order and wanted his first papal return to Poland to occur in April 1979 in observance of the 900th anniversary to the day of his martyrdom, but the Communist rulers of that time blocked this, causing the visit to be delayed until June of that year.


Roman Catholic churches belonging to Polish communities outside Poland are often dedicated to Saint Stanisław.


In iconography, Saint Stanisław is usually depicted as a bishop holding a sword, the instrument of his martyrdom, and sometimes with Piotr rising from the dead at his feet.




Saint Gemma Galgani

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஏப்ரல் 11)


✠ புனிதர் கெம்மா கல்கனி✠

(St. Gemma Galgani)


லூக்காவின் மலர் (The Flower of Lucca):

லூக்காவின் கன்னி (The Virgin of Lucca):


பிறப்பு:

மரியா கெம்மா உம்பர்ட்டா கல்கனி

(Maria Gemma Umberta Galgani)

மார்ச் 12, 1878

காமிக்லியானோ, கபன்னோரி, இத்தாலி

(Camigliano, Capannori, Italy)


இறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 11, 1903 (வயது 25)

லூக்கா, இத்தாலி

(Lucca, Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திப்பேறு பட்டம்: மே 14, 1933

திருத்தந்தை பதினோராம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XI)


நியமனம்: மே 2, 1940

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

இத்தாலியின் லூக்காவில் உள்ள சிலுவைப்பாடுகளின் அருட்சகோதரியர் மடாலயம்

(Passionist Monastery in Lucca, Italy)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஏப்ரல் 11


பாதுகாவல்:

மாணவர்கள், மருந்தாளுநர்கள், பாராட்ரூப்பர்கள் (Paratroopers) மற்றும் பாராசூட்டிஸ்டுகள் (Parachutists), பெற்றோரின் இழப்பு, முதுகில் காயம் அல்லது முதுகுவலியால் பாதிக்கப்படுபவர்கள், தலைவலி / ஒற்றைத் தலைவலி நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள், தூய்மையற்றவர்களால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டோர் மற்றும் இதய தூய்மையை நாடுபவர்கள்.


மரியா கெம்மா உம்பெர்டா கல்கானி ஒரு இத்தாலிய ஆன்ம பலம் கொண்டவர் ஆவார். கி.பி. 1940ம் ஆண்டு முதல் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையில் ஒரு புனிதராக வணங்கப்படுகிறார். கிறிஸ்துவின் சிலுவைப்பாடுகளை ஆழமாக பின்பற்றியதால் அவர் "சிலுவைப்பாடுகளின் மகள்" (Daughter of the Passion) என்று அழைக்கப்படுகிறார். அவர் குறிப்பாக "சிலுவைப்பாடுகளின் அருட்சகோதரியர் சபையில்" (Passionists) வணங்கப்படுகிறார்.


கெம்மா உம்பெர்டா மரியா கல்கானி, கி.பி. 1878ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், 12ம் தேதி, மாகாண நகரமான "கபன்னோரியில்" (Capannori) உள்ள "கேமிக்லியானோவின்" (Camigliano) குக்கிராமத்தில் பிறந்தார். கெம்மா, தமது பெற்றோரின் எட்டு குழந்தைகளில் ஐந்தாவது குழந்தை ஆவார். அவரது தந்தை "என்ரிகோ கல்கானி" (Enrico Galgani) ஒரு வளமான மருந்தாளர் ஆவார்.


கல்கானி பிறந்த உடனேயே, குடும்பம் காமிக்லியானோவிலிருந்து (Camigliano) வடக்கே "டஸ்கன்" (Tuscan) நகரமான லூக்காவில் (Lucca) ஒரு பெரிய புதிய வீட்டிற்கு இடம் பெயர்ந்தது, இது குழந்தைகளின் கல்வியில் முன்னேற்றத்தை ஏற்படுத்துவதற்காக மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்டது. கெம்மாவின் தாயார் "அரேலியா கல்கானி" (Aurelia Galgani) காசநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டார். இந்த கஷ்டத்தின் காரணமாக, கெம்மாவுக்கு இரண்டரை வயதாக இருந்தபோது எலெனா (Elena) மற்றும் எர்சிலியா வல்லினி (Ersilia Vallin) நடத்தும் ஒரு தனியார் நர்சரி பள்ளியில் அவர் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார்.


இந்த காலகட்டத்தில் கல்கனி குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த பலர் இறந்தனர். அவர்களின் முதல் குழந்தை கார்லோ (Carlo) மற்றும் ஜெம்மாவின் சிறிய சகோதரி கியுலியா (Giulia) ஆகியோர் சிறு வயதிலேயே இறந்தனர். கி.பி. 1885ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதம், 17ம் தேதி, ஆரேலியா கல்கானி (Aurelia Galgani) காசநோயால் இறந்தார். அவர் ஐந்து ஆண்டுகளாக நோயால் அவதிப்பட்டார். கெம்மாவின் அன்பு சகோதரர் ஜினோ (Gino), குருத்துவம் படித்துக் கொண்டிருந்த காலத்தில், அதே நோயால் இறந்தார்.


கல்கானி, "புனிதர் ஸிட்டா சகோதரிகளால்" (Sisters of St. Zita) நடத்தப்படும் லூக்காவில் (Lucca) உள்ள ஒரு கத்தோலிக்க அரை உறைவிடப் பள்ளிக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டார். அவர் பிரஞ்சு, எண்கணிதம் மற்றும் இசையில் சிறந்து விளங்கினார். ஒன்பது வயதில், கல்கனி தனது முதல் நற்கருணை (First Holy Communion) பெற அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார்.


தமது பதினாறு வயதில் முதுகெழும்பு நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட இவர், அந்நோயிலிருந்து குணம் பெற்றார். தாம் அற்புதமான வகையில் குணமாவதற்கு, பின்னாளில் புனிதராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்ட "வணக்கத்திற்குரிய வியாகுல அன்னையின் கேப்ரியேல்" (Venerable Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows) மற்றும் புனிதர் "மார்கரீட் மேரி அலக்கோக்" (Saint Marguerite Marie Alacoque) ஆகியோர் தமக்காக இயேசுவின் திருஇருதயத்திடம் (Sacred Heart of Jesus) வேண்டி பரிந்துரைத்ததே காரணம் என்றார்.


தமது 18 வயதை எட்டிய சிறிது காலத்திலேயே கல்கனி அனாதையானார். அதன்பிறகு தனது இளைய உடன்பிறப்புகளின் வளர்ப்பிற்கு அவர் பொறுப்பேற்றார். தனது அத்தை கரோலினாவுடன் (Carolina) இணைந்து, அவர் தமது இளைய சகோதரர்களை வளர்த்தார். இரண்டு தடவை தமக்காக செய்யப்பட்ட திருமண திட்டங்களை மறுத்த அவர், கியானினி (Giannini) குடும்பத்தின் வீட்டு வேலைக்காரியாக ஆனார்.


அவரது ஆன்மீக இயக்குனரான (Spiritual Director) ஜெர்மானஸ் ருப்போலோ (Germanus Ruoppolo) எழுதிய ஒரு சுயசரிதைபடி, கல்கனி கி.பி. 1899ம் ஆண்டு, ஜூன் மாதம், 8ம் தேதி, தனது இருபத்தியொரு வயதில், தமது உடலில் களங்கத்தின் அறிகுறிகளைக் காண்பிக்கத் தொடங்கினார். அவர் தனது பாதுகாவல் சம்மனசு, இயேசு, கன்னி மரியாள் மற்றும் பிற புனிதர்களுடன், குறிப்பாக எங்கள் புனிதர் வியாகுல அன்னையின் கேப்ரியல் (Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows) உடன் பேசியதாக அவர் கூறினார். அவரது சாட்சியங்களின்படி, நடப்பு அல்லது எதிர்கால நிகழ்வுகள் குறித்து சில சமயங்களில் அவர்களிடமிருந்து சிறப்பு செய்திகளையும் அவர் பெற்றார். அவரது உடல்நிலை மோசமடைந்து வருவதாலும், தனது உடலிலுள்ள களங்க அறிகுறிகள் காணாமல் போக வேண்டி பிரார்த்தனை செய்யும்படி அவரது ஒப்புரவாளரான “கெர்மானோ ருப்போலோ” (Germano Ruoppolo) அவளை வழிநடத்தினார். அவரும் அவ்வாறு செய்ததால், அவரது உடலிலுள்ள களங்க அறிகுறிகள் மறைந்தன. பிசாசின் தாக்குதல்களை அடிக்கடி எதிர்ப்பதாகவும் அவர் சொன்னார்.


அடிக்கடி, தரையிலிருந்து சற்றே உயரத்தில் நிற்கும் நிலையில் இருக்கும் சக்தி கொண்டவராக புகழ் பெற்ற இவர், அடிக்கடி பரவச நிலையையும் அடைந்தார். ஒருமுறை, தமது சாப்பாட்டு அறையில், சிலுவைப்பாடு கிறிஸ்துவின் திருச்சொரூபத்தின் காயத்தை முத்தி செய்த வேளையில் இவர் தரையிலிருந்து உயர்ந்து நின்றார்.


கல்கனி இறப்பதற்கு முன்பு, லூக்கா நகரின் அருகிலேயே - குறிப்பாக வறுமையில் இருந்தவர்களுக்கு நன்கு அறியப்பட்டார்.


1903ன் முற்பகுதியில், கல்கானிக்கு காசநோய் இருப்பது கண்டறியப்பட்டது. மேலும் பல மாய நிகழ்வுகளுடன் நீண்ட மற்றும் பெரும்பாலும் வலிமிகுந்த சரிவுக்கு அவரது உடல்நிலை சென்றது. அவரை கவனித்துக்கொண்ட அருட்சகோதரியான செவிலியர் ஒருவர், "நாங்கள் பல நல்ல நோயுற்றவர்களை இதுவரை கவனித்து வருகிறோம், ஆனால் இதுபோன்ற எவரையும் இதுவரை நாங்கள் பார்த்ததில்லை" என்றார். 1903ம் ஆண்டு புனித வாரத்தின் தொடக்கத்தில், அவரது உடல்நிலை விரைவில் மோசமடைந்தது. புனித வெள்ளிக்கிழமையன்று அவர் பெரிதும் அவதிப்பட்டு வந்தார். 1903ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் மாதம், 11ம் தேதி, புனித சனிக்கிழமையன்று கியானினி வீட்டிலிருந்த ஒரு சிறிய அறையில் இறந்தார்.

Also known as

• Flower of Lucca

• Gemma Galani

• Maria Gemma Umberta Pia Galgani

• Virgin of Lucca



Profile

Eldest daughter of a poor pharmacist; her mother died when Gemma was seven, her father when the girl was eighteen, and she took over the care of her seven brothers and sisters. Her health was always poor, and between that and her home life she never finished school. Cured in her 20's of spinal meningitis by prayers to the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Saint Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, and Saint Marguerite Marie Alacoque. Rejected by the religious orders to which she applied as they were concerned about her health, would not believe her cure, and were suspicious of the claims of a miracle. She became a Passionist tertiary. Stigmatist, receiving the wounds on her hands and feet each Thursday evening through Friday afternoon starting in June 1899 and continuing into 1901. Visionary; she saw her guardian angel daily, and had visits from Jesus, Mary, Saint Gabriel of Our Lady of Sorrows, and the devil who tempted her to spit on the cross and break a rosary. Venerable Germanus Ruoppolo was her spiritual director and wrote her biography.


Born

12 March 1878 at Borgo Nuovo di Camigliano, Lucca, Tuscany, Italy


Died

• Holy Saturday, 11 April 1903 at Borgo Nuovo di Camigliano, Lucca, Italy of tuberculosis

• relics interred in the Passionist monastery, Lucca


Canonized

• 2 May 1940 by Pope Pius XII

• her canonization faced stiff opposition by those who either disbelieved or wished to avoid attention to her visions and stigmata

• recognition celebrated at Saint Peter's Basilica, Rome, Italy


Patronage

• against temptations

• against the death of parents

• against tuberculosis

• apothecaries

• druggists

• pharmacists

• paratroopers

• students, school children








Saint Guthlac of Croyland


Also known as

• Guthlac of Crowland

• Guthlacus, Guthlake



Additional Memorial

30 August (translation of relics)


Profile

Born to the Mercian nobility, the son of Penwald; brother of Saint Pega of Peakirk. Soldier for nine years in the army of King Ethelred of Mercia; the freedom to loot led to him amassing a large forture. However, in 697 he had a conversion experience and gave up the violent life to become a Benedictine monk at Repton under abbess Elfrida. Known for his ascetic and strict habits. Hermit in the Lincolnshire fens, living like the Desert Fathers in an inhospitable swamp area rumoured to be the haunt of monsters and devils; the abbey of Croyland was built on the site of his hermit's cell. Had visions of angels, demons and Saint Batholomew, to whom he had special devotion. Became friends with wild animals, had the gift of prophecy, and his reputation for holines attracted many would-be students including Saint Bettelin. Ordained by Bishop Hedda of Winchester who consecrated Guthlac's cell as a chapel so he could celebrate Mass there.


Born

• 673 in Mercia, England

• legend says that when he was born, a shining hand surrounded by reddish-yellow light came down from heaven and blessed the house


Died

• 11 April 714 in Croyland, England of natural causes

• initially buried, Saint Pega had the body interred in a tomb

• body found incorrupt after a year

• relics translated to the re-built Croyland Abbey in 1136

• relics translated again in 1196

• relics destroyed in the 16th century during the dissolution of the English monasteries




Saint Barsanuphius of Gaza


Also known as

Barsanofio



Profile

Hermit for 50 years in absolute seclusion near the monastery of Saint Seridon of Gaza, Palestine. Wrote against Origenists. Greatly venerated by the Greeks. Extensive correspondent whose letters have survived 15 centuries.


Died

• c.540

• relics taken to Oria, Italy c.850 by an unnamed Palestinian monk

• the basilica where they lay was destroyed by the Saracens between 924 and 979 and the relics lost

• relics re-discovered in 1170 after Father Mark, who rebuilt the church, had a vision of their location

• relics interred in the crypt of San Francesco da Paola Church in Oria, Italy

• some relics in a village near Sipontum in southern Italy


Patronage

Oria, Italy




Blessed Elena Guerra


Also known as

Helen, Hélène


Profile

Born to wealthy, pious, aristocratic family, one of six children; only three survived to adulthood. From an early age Helen was devoted to the Holy Spirit. She worked with the Vincentians, caring for the poor and the sick, studying Latin and the writings of the Church Fathers. At age 22 she fell victim to an illness that kept her bed-ridden for eight years, during which time she continued her studies. In 1866 she founded the Society of Mary, Daughters of Saint Agnes in Lucca, Italy and became its first member; the community later became the Oblate Sisters of the Holy Spirit (Sisters of Saint Zita; Zitine Sisters) which cared for and saw to the religious education of girls. Saint Gemma Galgani was one of her students, and the Oblates continue their work today with houses in Italy, Brazil, Canada, Philippines, Lebanon and Iran.



Born

23 June 1835 in Lucca, Italy


Died

11 April 1914 in Lucca, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

• 26 April 1959 by Pope Blessed John XXIII

• 5,000 of her Congregation attended the beatification recognition



Blessed Angelo Carletti


Also known as

• Angelus Carletti

• Antonio Carletti



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility, Antonio studied law at Bologna, Italy, and practised in the Monferrato region of Italy. Elected senator, he abandoned the office and his practice to become a Franciscan monk at Santa Maria del Monte in Genoa, Italy, taking the name Brother Angelo, selling his inheritance and gaving the proceeds to the poor. Noted theologian. Papal nuncio for Pope Sixtus IV and Pope Innocent VIII. Preached a Crusade against invading Turks. Preached against Waldensianism and usurious money lenders. Wrote Cases of Conscience, a dictionary of moral theology. Friend, confessor and spiritual director of Blessed Paula Gambara Costa; her husband received a miraculous cure at the grave site and through the intervention of Father Angelo.


Born

1411 at Chivasso, Diocese of Ivrea, Italy as Antonio Carletti


Died

11 April 1495 at the San Antonio monastery in Cuneo, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

24 April 1753 by Pope Benedict XIV (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

Chivasso, Italy




Blessed Symforian Ducki


Also known as

• Felix Ducki

• Antonio Ducki

• prisoner 20364



Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Son of Julian and Marianna Lenardt; his father was a locksmith. Franciscan Capuchin friar, entering the community on 3 January 1918, taking the name Antonio; his religious name is later changed to Symforian and makes his final vows on 22 May 1925. He served his community as cook. Arrested for his faith in the Nazi persecutions on 3 September 1941, and sentenced to forced labour at the Auschwitz concentration camp. Martyr.


Born

10 May 1888 in Warsaw, Poland as Felix Ducki


Died

11 April 1942 at Auschwitz concentration camp (in modern Poland)


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Antipas of Pergamon


Also known as

• Antipas of Pergamum

• Antipas of Pérgamo

• Antipas of Pergamus

• Antipa...



Profile

Spiritual student of Saint John the Apostle. Bishop of Pergamum during the persecutions of emperor Domitian. Martyr. Mentioned in the canonical Book of Revelations.


Died

• roasted to death in a bronze bull in c.92 at Pergamum, Greece (an area in modern Turkey)

• his tomb became a site of miracles


Patronage

against toothaches


Readings

I know that you live where Satan's throne is, and yet you hold fast to my name and have not denied your faith in me, not even in the days of Antipas, my faithful witness, who was martyred among you, where Satan lives. - Revelations 2:13




Saint Godeberta of Noyon


Also known as

Godebertha, Godberta



Profile

Though her parents wanted to arrange a suitable marriage for her, Godeberta was drawn to the religious life. In 657 she became a nun in Noyon, France, receiving the veil from Saint Eligius, to whom she was an advisor. Was given a king's house at Noyon to convert into a convent. Abbess of the nuns in an area surrounded by pagans. Legend says she extinguished a blazing fire by making the Sign of the Cross at it. An outbreak of plague was averted when she led all the churches in the area on a three-day fast.


Born

7th century near Amiens, France


Died

c.700 at Noyon, France of natural causes


Patronage

• against plague

• drought relief

• Noyon, France




Saint Sancha of Portugal


Also known as

• Sancha of Alenquer

• Sanchia, Sancia, Sanctia



Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of King Sancho I of Portugal; sister of Blessed Mafilda and Saint Theresa of Portugal. She devoted herself to charity, supported the Franciscans and Dominicans in Portugal including helping Franciscan missionaries en route to Morocco. Founded a Cistercian monastery in Coimbra, Portugal where she spent the rest of her life in a cell there.


Born

c.1180 in Portugal


Died

• 11 April 1229 in her cell in Coimbra, Portugal

• buried in the abbey at Lorvão, Portugal


Canonized

10 May 1705 by Pope Clement XI (cultus confirmation)




Blessed Lanunio


Profile

Hermit at Santa Maria della Torre, diocese of Squillace, Calabria, Italy. When Saint Bruno began what became the Carthusians at the Grand Cartreuse in France, Lanunio travelled there to join them. There he became the friend and travelling companion of Saint Bruno, and took over took over leadership of the Order when Bruno died in 1101. Founded several monasteries, and organized the leadership and religious life of their monks. Supported and held in high regard by Pope Paschal II for whom he performed a number of tasks and missions in the region of Calabria. Apostolic Visitor to all monasteries in Calabria.



Born

France


Died

11 April 1116 in Calabria, Italy of natural causes




Blessed George Gervase


Also known as

George Jervise


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

George spent an adventurous youth, travelling to the West Indies with the explorer Sir Francis Drake. He entered the seminary at Douai, France, and was ordained in 1603. Benedictine. From France he returned to England to work with covert Catholics during a suppression of the Church. Martyred for the crime of being a priest.


Born

at Bosham, Sussex, England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 11 April 1608 at Tyburn, London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI




Saint Raynerius Inclusus


Also known as

• Raynerius of Osnabruck

• Rainer, Rainerius, Rayner, Reiner


Profile

Hermit in a cell near the cathedral of Osnabruck, Germany c.1210. Lived 22 years in his cell wearing a coat of mail and heavy chains next to his skin, praying and counseling those who sought his spiritual guidance.


Born

late 12th century in Friesland (in the modern Netherlands


Died

1237 in his cell at the cathedral in Osnabruck, Germany of natural causes




Saint Isaac of Monteluco


Also known as

Isaac of Spoleto



Profile

Monk. Fleeing Monophysite persecution, he settled at Monteluco, Umbria where he helped restore the eremitical life to 6th century Italy. Pope Saint Gregory the Great wrote about Isaac's miracle working and his gift of prophecy.


Born

Syrian


Died

• c.550 of natural causes

• relics enshrine at Spoleto, Italy




Saint Domnio of Salona


Also known as

Domnione, Donnione


Profile

One of the 72 disciples sent by Christ in His early ministry. Travelled to Rome, Italy with Saint Peter the Apostle. Missionary to Dalmatia. First bishop of Salona. Martyr with eight soldiers he had brought to the Faith.


Born

Syrian


Died

• beheaded at Salona, Dalmatia (near modern Solin, Croatia)

• relics at Solin and in Saint John Lateran in Rome, Italy




Blessed John of Cupramontana


Also known as

John of Massaccio



Profile

Benedictine Camaldolese monk-hermit who lived in a cave at Cupramontana, Ancona, Italy on Mount Massaccio.


Died

1303 of natural causes




Blessed James of Africa


Profile

Adult convert, brought to Christianity by witnessing the faith of Blessed Thomas Vives during his martyrdom. Mercedarian friar.


Born

north Africa



Blessed Paul of Africa



Profile

Adult convert, brought to Christianity by witnessing the faith of Blessed Thomas Vives during his martyrdom. Mercedarian friar.


Born

north Africa



Saint Machai


Also known as

Maccai, Macceus, Mahew


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Patrick. Founded a monastery on the isle of Bute, Ireland, served as its first abbot, and led evangelical missions that were based from it.


Died

5th century of natural causes



Blessed Mechthild of Lappion


Also known as

Matilda


Profile

Anchoress in Lappion, Diocese of Laon, France.


Born

Scotland


Died

1299 in Lappion, France of natural causes




Saint Agericus of Tours


Also known as

Acry, Agery, Aguy, Airy, Algéric


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Eligius. Abbot of Saint Martin's in Tours, France.


Died

c.680




Saint Aid of Achard-Finglas


Also known as

Aed


Profile

Abbot at Achard-Finglas, County Carlow, Ireland. Titular saint for a church, a monastery, and several chapels.




Saint Philip of Gortyna


Also known as

Philip of Crete


Profile

Early bishop of Gortyna, Crete. Wrote and worked against Marcion and Gnosticism.


Died

c.180




Saint Hildebrand of Saint-Gilles


Profile

Cistercian abbot. Martyred by Albigensians.


Died

1209 at Saint-Gilles, Languedoc, France




Saint Eustorgius of Nicomedia


Profile

Priest in Nicomedia, Asia Minor. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

martyred c.300




Saint Stephen of Saint-Gilles


Profile

Cistercian monk. Martyred by Albigensians.


Died

1209 at Saint-Gilles, Languedoc, France




Saint Maedhog of Clonmore


Also known as

Aedhan, Mogue, Aed, Moguer, Macdhog-Aedhan


Profile

Sixth century abbot of Clonmore, Ireland.


இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் ஏப்ரல் 10

 St. Terence


Feastday: April 10

Death: 250


With Africanus, Pompeius, and companions, a group of fifty martyrs who were cruelly martyred during the persecutions of Emperor Trajanus Decius. According to tradition, they were forced into a pit filled with serpents and stinging rep tiles; those who survived this ordeal were beheaded.


Saint Terence (Terentius, Terentianus) is any of several Christian figures:


Terence (Terentianus) was, according to his legend, an officer in the Roman Army during the 1st century. He witnessed the death sentencing of Saints Peter and Paul. He became a convert, and was martyred himself, possibly also with his son. His feast day is June 26.[1]

Terence was a 1st-century bishop of Iconium. He may have been the Tertius mentioned by Saint Paul the Apostle in Romans 16.22 [2] (although the Wiki article has different feast days), He was martyred. His feast day is June 21.[3]

Terentian (d. 118), Bishop of Todi and saint

Terence, martyred at Carthage during the time of Decius, along with Africanus, Maximus, Pompeius, Zeno, Alexander, and Theodore. Theodosius I transferred their relics to Constantinople.[4]

Terence of Pesaro (d. ca. 251 AD), patron saint of Pesaro.

Fidentius and Terence, martyrs c. 305

Terence of Imola[5]

Bishop-Martyr Terence Albert O'Brien (1600-1651)




Blessed Pedro María Ramírez Ramos


Profile

The son of Ramón Ramírez Flórez and Isabel Ramos, he was baptized at the age of one day. Feeling a call to the priesthood, Pedro began his studies on 4 October 1915 in the diocese of Garzón, Colombia, but in 1920 he began to have doubts about his vocation, and left the seminary. For the next few years he lived as a single man, worked as a choir director in several places, suffered from severe headaches, and never stopping his discernment of a vocation. By 1928, with the help of a pious female friend, Pedro decided that he was, indeed, called to the priesthood, and returned to his studies. Ordained a priest on 21 June 1930.



Parish priest in the Chaparral region, then in Cunday, Colombia in 1934, in El Fresno, Colombia in 1943, and then in Armero, Colombia in 1948. When the the Colombian civil war, known as La Violencia, broke out, his parishioners tried to smuggle him out of the area – the Socialist Colombian Liberal Party blamed Father Pedro for the killing of their leader, which triggered the conflict. Pedro refused to leave, saying that his parishioners would need him during the conflict. On the afternoon of 10 April 1948, some members of the Colombian Liberal Party broke into his church, found Father Pedro putting the finishing touches on his will, accused him of a number of offenses, dragged him to the town square, and murdered him. Martyr.


Born

23 October 1899 in La Plata, Huila, Colombia


Died

• hanged and beaten with a machete at about 4:00pm on 10 April 1948 in the town square of Armero, Tolima, Colombia

• his body was mutilated, left to hang for a while as a warning to others, then thrown in a ditch near the local cemetery

• on 21 April 1948, government officials took the remains to perform an autopsy

• in May 1948, Pedro's parents were able to get the body released to them

• buried in the family cemetery plot in La Plata, Huila, Colombia


Beatified

• 8 September 2017 by Pope Francis

• the beatification recognition was celebrated at the Parque Temático Las Malocas, Villavicencio, Meta, Colombia with Pope Francis as chief celebrant




Saint Fulbert of Chartres

இன்றைய புனிதர் :

(10-04-2021)


தூய ஃபுல்பர்ட் ( ஏப்ரல் 10)


இயேசு ஞானத்திலும் உடல்வளர்ச்சியிலும் மிகுந்து கடவுளுக்கும் மனிதருக்கும் உகந்தவராய் வாழ்ந்து வந்தார்.


வாழ்க்கை வரலாறு


ஃபுல்பர்ட், பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டில் உள்ள பிகார்டி என்னும் இடத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவர் எந்த ஆண்டு பிறந்தார், இவருடைய குழந்தைப் பருவம் எப்படி இருந்தது என்பது போன்ற தகவல்கள் சரியாகக் கிடைக்கவில்லை.


தன்னுடைய தொடக்ககால கல்வியை ஃபுல்பர்ட், ஹெர்பர்ட் என்பவரிடம் கற்றார். இந்த ஹெர்பர்ட்தான் பின்னாளில் திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் சில்வெஸ்டராக உயர்ந்தார். படிக்கும்போதே திறமையானவராக விளங்கிய ஃபுல்பர்ட் வளர்ந்து, பெரியவரான பிறகு மிகச் சிறந்த கல்வியாளராக மாறினார். எந்தளவுக்கு என்றால், அவரிடம் பாடம் கற்ற மாணவர்கள் அனைவரும் அவரை அன்போடு ‘வணக்கத்திற்குரிய சாக்ரடீஸ்’ என்றே அழைத்து வந்தார்கள்.


ஃபுல்பர்ட்டிடம் இருந்த திறமையைப் பார்த்துவிட்டு ஆயர் பேரவை இவரை சார்ட்ரஸ் என்ற இடத்திற்கு ஆயராக உயர்த்தினார்கள். ஆயராக உயர்ந்தபின்பு ஃபுல்பர்ட் மிகச் சிறப்பான பணிகளைச் செய்து வந்தார். குறிப்பாக திருச்சபையின் சொத்துகளை ஒருசில பொதுநிலையினர் நன்றாக அனுபவித்து வாழ்ந்தபோது, அதனைக் கடுமையாக விமர்சித்தார். அது மட்டுமல்லாமல், தவறு செய்த ஒருசில குருக்களையும் ஏன் ஒருசில ஆயர்களைக் கடுமையாக விமர்சித்தார். இதனால் அவருக்கு கடுமையான எதிர்ப்புகள் கிளம்பின. ஃபுல்பர்ட் அதைக் கண்டு பயப்படாமல், துணிவோடு உண்மையை எடுத்துரைத்தார். இவ்வாறு அவர் ஆண்டவருக்குச் சான்று பகர்ந்தார்.


ஃபுல்பர்ட் மிகச் சிறந்த கவிஞராகவும் விளங்கினார். அதனால் அவர் மரியாவைக் குறித்து அதிகமான கவிதைகளைப் புனைந்தார். இவரைக் குறித்து இன்னொன்றை நாம் சொல்லியாக வேண்டும். அதுதான் மரியன்னையின் பிறப்பு விழாவை முதன்முறையாகக் கொண்டாடியது இவரே ஆகும். இப்படி பல்வேறு பணிகளைச் செய்து வந்த ஃபுல்பர்ட் 1029 ஆம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் 10 ஆம் நாள் இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவருடைய உடல் சாட்ரஸ் பேராலயத்தில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது.

Also known as

Fulbertus of Chartres



Profile

Grew up around Rome, Italy, and known as a promising student. Studied the Benedictine abbey in Rheims, France. A favourite student of the future Pope Sylvester II, he was brought to Rome as an advisor to Sylvester. Upon the pope's death, Fulbert returned to France where he served as canon and chancellor of the diocese of Chartres, and ran the cathedral school there, which became known as a leading center of learning in France. Bishop of Chartres in 1007. Advisor to French clergy and secular leaders, including the king of France. Noted preacher and travelling bishop who went from parish to parish ensuring there was proper Christian education of his flock. Re-built the Chartres cathedral after it burned. Wrote a number of poems and hymns, many of them about the Virgin Mary, to whom he was greatly devoted. Fought simony, assigning ecclesiastical benefices to laymen, opposed bishops who acted as generals. Friend of Saint Odilo of Cluny.


Born

c.960 in Italy


Died

10 April 1029 in Chartres, France of natural causes




Blessed Antoine Neyrot


Also known as

Anthony Neyrot



Profile

Joined the Dominicans at the convent of San Marco in Florence, Italy as a young man. While travelling to preach in Naples, Italy, he was captured by Moorish pirates, he was taken to Tunis, Tunisia. He was initially treated pretty well, but his captors perceived him as arrogant for being sure of his faith and imprisoned him and gave him only bread and water. To escape, he renounced Christianity, began to study Islam, worked on a translation of the Koran, and even married. However, he apparently never completely lost his faith, was overcome with remorse, and after a few months he resumed his Dominican habit, found a priest, came back to the Church and publicly proclaimed himself a Christian. Martyr.


Born

c.1425 at Rivoli, diocese of Turin, Italy


Died

• stoned to death on 10 April 1460 in Tunis, Tunisia

• body returned to Rivoli, Italy by merchants travelling through the region


Beatified

22 February 1767 by Pope Clement XIII (cultus confirmation)




Blessed Boniface Zukowski


Also known as

• Bonifacy Zukowski

• Piotr Zukowski

• prisoner #25447



Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Son of Andrzej Zukowski and Albina Walkiewicz and raised on a farm. Entered the Order of Friars Minor Conventual in Niepokalanów in Teresin, Poland at age 16, taking the name Bonifacy and making his solemn profession on 2 August 1935. Worked at the house's printing presses, publishing The Knight of the Immaculate, helping in the work of Saint Maximilian Kolbe. Priest. Arrested by the Gestapo on 14 October 1941 for his publishing work and for trying to protect the printing presses, and imprisoned in Warsaw, Poland. He spent his time there ministering to other prisoners. Shipped to the Dachau concentration camp, he was put to forced labour in bad weather, beaten for lack of work, and finally died from the mistreatment. Martyr.


Born

13 January 1913 in Rapa-Baran, Nemencine, Vilniaus rajonas, Lithuania as Piotr Zukowski


Died

10 April 1942 of pneumonia in the camp infirmary of Dachau, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

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




Saint Miguel de Sanctis

#புனித_மைக்கேல்_தெ_சேங்டிஸ் (1591-1625)


ஏப்ரல் 10


இவர் (#StMichaelDeSantis) ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டைச் சார்ந்தவர். தனது பெற்றோரின் முன்மாதிரியான வாழ்க்கையை பார்த்து வளர்ந்த இவர், 6 வயதிலேயே துறவியாக வேண்டும் என்று எண்ணம் கொண்டார். 


இந்நிலையில் இவரது பெற்றோர் இறந்து விட, இவர் ஒரு வணிகரிடம் பணியாளராகச் சேர்ந்து வேலை செய்து வந்தார்.


இவருக்குப் பன்னிரண்டு வயது நடக்கும்போது பார்சிலோனாவில் இருந்த ஒரு துறவு மடத்தில் சேர்ந்து துறவியானார்; பதினைந்தாவது வயதில் இறுதி வார்த்தைபாட்டை எடுத்துக் கொண்டார். 


இறைவேண்டலுக்கும் ஒறுத்தல் முயற்சிகளுக்கும் மிகுந்த முக்கியத்துவம் கொடுத்து வந்த இவர், 1607 ஆம் ஆண்டு மேட்ரிட் என்ற இடத்திலிருந்த வேறொரு துறவுமடத்தில் போய்ச் சேர்ந்தார். பின்னர் செவிலி என்ற இடத்திற்குச் சென்று, கல்வி கற்று, குருவாக அருள்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார்.


இதன்பிறகு இவர் நற்கருணை ஆண்டவர் முன்பாக மிகுதியான நேரத்தை செலவழித்தார்; திருப்பலி நிறைவேற்றும்போது மெய்ம்மறந்து நின்றார்.


இப்படி நற்கருணை ஆண்டவர்மீது மிகுதியான பற்றுக்கொண்டு வாழ்ந்த இவர், 1625 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவருக்குத் திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ் 1862 ஆம் ஆண்டு புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுத்தார்.

Also known as

• Michael de Sanctis

• Michael of the Saints

• Michael the Ecstatic



Profile

Michael decided at age six that he wanted to be a monk, and imposed such austerities on himself as a child that he had to be restrained. Orphaned, he became the apprentice of a merchant. Tried to join the Trinitarian monastery in Barcelona, Spain at age 12. Took his vows at age 15 at the monastery of Saint Lambert at Zaragoza, Spain on 5 September 1607. Later felt drawn to the more austere Discalced Trinitarians; began his novitiate at Madrid, Spain, studied in Seville, Spain and Salamanca, Spain, and took vows at Alcalá, Spain. Priest. Twice elected superior of the monastery at Valladolid, Spain. Lived a life of prayer and great mortification; especially devoted to the Holy Eucharist, and is said to have been rapt in ecstasy several times during Consecration. He was considered by his brothers to be a saint in life.


Born

29 September 1591 at Vich, Catalonia, Spain


Died

10 April 1625 at Valladolid, Spain of natural causes


Canonized

8 June 1862 by Pope Pius IX




Blessed Mark Fantucci


Also known as

• Marcus Fantuzzi

• Marco Fantucci

• Marcus of Bologna

• Pace, Pasotto



Profile

Born wealthy and known as an excellent student. Lawyer. In his mid-20's he felt a call to religious life and gave up his career to enter the Franciscan in 1430, taking the name Marcus. Priests. Guardian of the monastery of Monte Colombo. Noted preacher in Italy, Istria, and Dalmatia. Provincial and then Vicar General of the Franciscans. A reformer who worked to take the Order back to the spirituality and observance of their roots. Worked with Saint Catherine of Bologna to set up a Poor Clare monastery in Bologna, Italy. When Pope Paul II said he wanted to elevate Marcus to Cardinal, he fled to Sicily to avoid it. Helped to set up the Monti di Pietà, charitable pawn shops to help the poor escape greedy money lenders. Helped defeat the plan of Pope Sixtus IV to unite all branches of the Franciscans.


Born

c.1405 at Bologna, Italy as Pace or Pasotto


Died

10 April 1479 at Piacenza, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

5 March 1868 by Pope Pius IX (cultus confirmed)



Saint Maddalena of Canossa

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(ஏப்ரல் 10)


✠ புனிதர் மகதலின் கனொஸ்ஸா ✠

(St. Magdalene of Canossa)


அருட்கன்னி மற்றும் சபை நிறுவனர்:

(Virgin and Foundress)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


பிறப்பு: மார்ச் 2, 1774

வெரோனா, வெனிஸ் குடியரசு

(Verona, Republic of Venice)


இறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 10, 1835

வெரோனா, லொம்பார்டி-வெனிஷியா அரசு, ஆஸ்திரிய பேரரசு

(Verona, Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, Austrian Empire)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: டிசம்பர் 7, 1941 

திருத்தந்தை 12ம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 2, 1988 

திருத்தந்தை 2ம் ஜான் பால்

(Pope John Paul II)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஏப்ரல் 10


புனிதர் மகதலின் கனொஸ்ஸா ஒரு இத்தாலிய அருட்சகோதரியும், சபை நிறுவனரும் ஆவார். இவர் தமது பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள ஏழை மக்களின் வழக்குரைஞராக பணியாற்றியவர் ஆவார்.


வெனிஸ் குடியரசிலுள்ள வெரோனா (Verona) எனும் இடத்தில் பிறந்த இவரது தந்தை பெயர் “மார்க்கிஸ் ஒக்டோவியோ டி கனோஸ்ஸா” (Marquis Ottavio di Canossa) ஆகும். இவரது தாயார் பெயர் “தெரேசா ஸ்லூஹா” (Teresa Szluha) ஆகும். இவர் பிறந்த மறுதினமே திருமுழுக்கு பெற்றார்.


மகதலின் ஐந்து வயதாக இருக்கும்போது அவரின் தந்தை ஒரு விபத்தில் இறந்துவிட்டார். இரண்டு வருடங்களின் பிறகு, இவரது தாய் மறுமணம் செய்துகொள்வதற்காக தமது ஐந்து குழந்தைகளையும் விட்டு பிரிந்து 'மான்ட்டுவா' (Mantua) எனும் இடத்திற்கு சென்றார். இதன் காரணமாக, குழந்தைகள் அனைவரும் அவர்களது மாமனது பாதுகாப்பில் வளர்ந்தனர்.


தாழ்ச்சியிலும், பக்தியிலும் சிறந்து விளங்கிய மகதலின் குழந்தையாக இருந்த போதே துறவியாக வேண்டுமென்று ஆசைப்பட்டார். 1791ம் ஆண்டு, மகதலின் தன் ஊரிலிருந்த கார்மேல் மடத்திற்கு சென்று அவ்வப்போது ஜெபித்து வந்தார். கார்மேல் மடத்திற்கு சென்று தஞ்சம் அடைந்தார். அங்கு மகதலின் கார்மேல் மட கன்னியர்களால் வளர்க்கப்பட்டார். மகதலின் கார்மேல் துறவியர் இல்லத்தில் தமது நேரத்தை செலவிட ஆரம்பித்தார். 


பள்ளிப்படிப்பை முடித்தபின், தம் பதினைந்தாம் வயதில் கார்மேல் மடத்தில் துறவற பயிற்சியில் சேர்ந்தார். எட்டு மாதங்கள் கழித்து, தன் சொந்த ஊரிலிருந்து, ட்ரேவிசோ (Treviso) என்ற ஊரிலிருந்த கார்மேல் மடத்திற்கு பயிற்சிக்காக அனுப்பிவைக்கப்பட்டார். ஆனால் அங்கிருந்து சில மாதங்களிலிலேயே விரைவில் வெரொனா திரும்பினார். பின்னர், தமது குடும்ப சொத்தான பெரும் தோட்டங்களை நிர்வகிக்க தொடங்கினார். 


வெரோனாவில் உள்ள ஏழைகள் மகதலின் கவனத்தை ஈர்த்தனர். அவர்கள் ஃபிரெஞ்ச் புரட்சி இராணுவ படையெடுப்பால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தனர். இந்நிலை, மகதலினாவை அவர்களுக்காக சேவை செய்யும் மனதை தந்தது.


கி.பி. 1808ம் ஆண்டு, கைவிடப்பட்ட குழந்தைகளை தொடர்ந்து பராமரிக்க வேண்டி, உதவிக்காக ஜெனோவா மாவட்டத்திலிருந்த ஓர் அதிகாரியிடம் பேச்சுவார்த்தை நடத்தினார். இதன் பயனாக 1808ம் ஆண்டு, “கருணையின் மகள்கள்”, "ஏழைகளின் சேவகர்கள்" (Congregation of the Daughters of Charity, Servants of the Poor) என்ற சபையை நிறுவினார். 


பிறகு கி.பி. 1810 மற்றும் கி.பி. 1812ம் ஆண்டுகளில் வெனிஸ் நகரிலிருந்த தெருக் குழந்தைகளுக்கு, வெனிஸில் 2 சபையையும், கி.பி. 1816ம் ஆண்டு மிலானிலுள்ள பெர்கமோவிலும் (Bergamo) சபைகளை நிறுவினார்.


கி.பி. 1828ம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் லியோ அவர்களால், இச்சபை திருத்தந்தையின் அதிகாரத்திற்குட்பட்ட சபையாக அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்டது. அதன்பிறகு இச்சபை இத்தாலி, இந்தியா, இந்தோனிசியா, ஆப்பிரிக்கா, தென் அமெரிக்கா என பல நாடுகளில் பரவியது.


மகதலின் கி.பி. 1835ம் ஆண்டு, ஏப்ரல் 10ம் நாள் வெரோனாவில் மரித்தார். 


கி.பி. 1941ம் ஆண்டு, திருத்தந்தை 12ம் பயஸ் அவர்களால் முக்திபேறு பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.


திருத்தந்தை 2ம் ஜான் பால் அவர்களால், கி.பி. 1988ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம் இரண்டாம் நாள், புனிதராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்விக்கப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

• Magdalena Gabriela Canossa

• Magdalen Canossa



Additional Memorial

8 May (Canossians)


Profile

One of five children born to a wealthy and famous family, her father died and mother abandoned them all to a governess when Maddalen was five years old. Nun, studying in the Carmel of Trent, Italy and then Conegliano, Italy. Developed a ministery to the poor in Verona, Italy based in the Canossa Castle of her family. Founder of the Canossian Daughters of Charity and the Canossian Sons of Charity with a mission of providing free education to poor children. By the end of the 20th century there were more than 2,600 Canossians working around the world.


Born

1 March 1774 in Verona, Italy


Died

10 April 1835 in Verona, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

2 October 1988 by Pope John Paul II




Saint Macarius of Antioch


Also known as

• Macarius of Ghent

• Macarius of Armenia

• Macaire, Macario


Profile

Bishop of Antioch, Pisidia. Archbishop of Constantinople. Captured by Saracens, but escaped. He then resigned his see to become a pilgrim through Palestine, Epirus, Dalmatia, Bavaria, and other western areas, finally settling with the Benedictine monks of Saint Bavo Abbey in Ghent, Belgium. Miracle worker.


Born

at Antioch, Pisidia


Died

1012 at monastery of Saint Bavo, Ghent, Belgium of the plague


Patronage

• against plague

• Andorra

• Ghent, Belgium




Saint Bademus


Profile

Wealthy Persian noble. Founded and led a monastery in Bethlapeta, Persia. He and seven of his monks were imprisoned for their faith during the lengthy persecution by King Sapor. Chained and regularly beaten for four months, he was murdered by Nersan, an apostate Persian prince who hacked him to death to prove his renunciation of Christianity.



Died

• clumsily beheaded 10 April 376

• body thrown to the dogs but recovered and secretly buried by Christians




Blessed Paternus the Scot


Also known as

• Paternus Scotus

• Paternus of Abdinghof

• Paternus of Paderborn

• Padarn...


Profile

Hermit. Monk. Joined a group of brothers who emigrated to Westphalia (in modern Germany, and was one of the first monks at Abdinghof Abbey under the leadership of Blessed Meinwerk of Paderborn. Much admired by Saint Peter Damian and Blessed Marianus Scotus.


Born

Ireland or Scotland (the term "the Scot" was used to refer to both places at that time)


Died

burned to death when the Abdinghof Abbey, Westphalia, Germany caught fire in 1058



Saint Bede the Younger


Also known as

Beda


Profile

Courtier to King Charles the Bald of France. After 40 years of service, he gave up the worldly life to become a monk at the monastery of Gavello, Italy. He declined to become a bishop, citing his inadequacy.


Died

• 10 April 883

• buried in the monastery graveyard in Gavello, Italy

• relics translated to church of San Benigno monastery, Genoa, Italy in 1233 as the original monastery had declined



Blessed Eberwin of Helfenstein


Profile

Augustinian canon. In 1121 he and several companions took over the abandoned Benedictine monastery of Springiersbach in Steinfeld, Germany. In 1130 they joined the Premonstratensians, and Eberwin served as provost. Fought heretical teaching throughout the region. Friend of Saint Bernard of Clairvaux.


Died

10 April 1152 in Steinfeld, Germany



Blessed Antonio Vallesio


Profile

Mercedarian missionary to Tunisia. Arrested by Muslim authorities for preaching Christianity, sentenced to forced labour, but simply dragged outside of town and murdered. Martyr.



Born

Liguria, Italy


Died

stoned to death in 1293 outside Tunis, Tunisia



Blessed Marco Mattia


Profile

Joined the Mercedarians at the convent at Maleville, France. Missionary to Tunisia in 1293. Grabbed by a Muslim mob and murdered for preaching Christianity. Martyr.



Born

near Toulouse, France


Died

hacked to pieces on a hill outside Tunis, Tunisia in 1293



Saint Malchus of Waterford


Profile

Benedictine monk at Winchester, England. First bishop of Waterford, Ireland consecrated by Saint Anselm of Canterbury in 1096. Preceptor of Saint Malachy O'More.


Born

Ireland



Saint Ethor of Chertsey


Also known as

Hethor


Profile

Benedictine monk and priest at Chertsey Abbey. Martyred with 90 of his brothers by pagan Danish raiders.


Died

martyred in 869 at Chertsey, England



Saint Hedda of Peterborough


Profile

Benedictine abbot of Peterborough Abbey. Martyred with many of his brother monks by pagan Danish raiders.


Died

martyred in 869 at Peterborough, England



Saint Palladius of Auxerre


Also known as

Palladium


Profile

Abbot of Saint Germanus in Auxerre, France. Bishop of Auxerre; founded several monasteries.


Died

661



Saint Apollonius of Alexandria


Profile

Priest in Alexandria, Egypt. Martyred with five companions in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

c.250 in Alexandria, Egypt



Saint Beocca of Chertsey


Profile

Benedictine abbot at Chertsey Abbey. Martyred with 90 of his brothers by pagan Danish raiders.


Died

869 at Chertsey, England



Saint Gajan


Profile

Fourth century deacon. Martyr.


Died

martyred in Dacia (an area of modern Romania)



Martyrs of Carthage


Profile

A group of 50 Christians who were imprisoned in a pen of snakes and scorpions, and then martyred, all during the persecutions of Decius. Only six of their names have come down to us - Africanus, Alessandro, Massimo, Pompeius, Terence and Teodoro.


Died

beheaded in 250 at Carthage



Martyrs of Georgia


Profile

Approximately 6,000 Christian monks and lay people martyred in Georgia in 1616 for their faith by a Muslim army led by Shah Abbas I of Persia.



Martyrs of Ostia


Profile

A group of criminals who were brought to the faith by Pope Saint Alexander I while he was in prison with them. Martyrs.


Died

drowned by being taken off shore from Ostia, Italy, in a boat which was then scuttled, c.115