புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

11 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 11

 Bl. Peter the Venerable

Feastday: May 11

Birth: 1092

Death: 1156

 


Abbot of Cluny, also known as Peter of Montboissier and called "the Venerable" owing to his holiness and wisdom. Born into a French noble family, he entered the Congregation of Cluny and held a number of posts in several houses until his election in 1122 as eighth abbot of Cluny. Peter brought a variety of reforms to the educational system of the order and to its finances, using two general chapters to win approval of his constitution. His support of education caused a controversy with his friend St. Bernard of Clairvaux, who desired the monastic life to be one of prayer and labor: On behalf of his order, Peter traveled extensively, going six times to Rome and to England and Spain. In between these journeys, Peter retired to a hermitage to pray and study. To assist the conversions of Muslims, Peter made the then unprecedented suggestion that the Koran be translated into Latin. He also authored treatises against the heretical priest Peter de Bruys and the Jews, as well as poems and sermons; his writings reveal a deep knowledge of Scripture. Peter also gave sanctuary to Peter Ahelard after his condemnation by the Council of Sens in 1140. While never formally canonized, he has long been venerated as a blessed.



Peter the Venerable (c. 1092 – 25 December 1156), also known as Peter of Montboissier, was the abbot of the Benedictine abbey of Cluny. He has been honored as a saint but has never been formally canonized. The Catholic Church's Martyrologium Romanum, issued by the Holy See in 2004, regards him as a Blessed.



Life

Born to Blessed Raingarde in Auvergne, Peter was "Dedicated to God" at birth and given to the monastery at Sauxillanges of the Congregation of Cluny where he took his vows at age seventeen. By the age of twenty he gained a professorship and was appointed prior of the monastery of Vézelay, before he moved to the monastery at Domène. Success at Vézelay and Domène led to his election as general of the order, aged thirty. After his predecessor, the abbot Pontius, had been deposed by the pope, Peter became a tireless reformer of the Cluniac order, in the face of criticism from other orders and prominent monks and theologians, including St. Bernard of Clairvaux, a Cistercian monk. His defence of his order against critics and his introduction of radical reforms, earned him the appellation of "venerable".[1]


Peter, as an associate of national and religious leaders, attended many of the international religious councils. At the Council of Pisa in 1134 he supported the cause of Pope Innocent II, and the Council of Reims in 1147 and helped avert a Church schism. He defended the rationalistic Trinitarianism of the French theologian Peter Abelard against the sentence of the Council of Sens, granting Abelard hospitality at Cluny[1] and working towards the eventual reconciliation of Abelard and his principal accuser, Bernard of Clairvaux. Peter granted Abelard a posthumous absolution at the request of Heloise.[citation needed]


Peter collected sources on, and writings about, Islam (see below) and spent a long sabbatical in Spain with Islamic scholars of all ranks. His vast correspondence reflects an almost encyclopedic theological knowledge. He produced some of the most important documents of the 12th century, and published the first Latin translation of the Qu'ran which became the standard Benedictine text used by preachers of the Crusades. His Talmudic contributions are tenuous and still under scrutiny.[2] His friendship and corresponce with Bishop Henry of Blois of Winchester and Glastonbury, between 1138 and 1142, together with his debating skills, brought wider recognition of his scholarship. The internecine truce between Peter and Bernard of Clairvaux must be seen as superficial in light of recent scholarship detailing the repressivness of Bernard's Cistercians toward the Cluniac orders.[3]


Peter the Venerable died at Cluny on 25 December 1156.[1] His works are edited in Patrologia Latina vol. 189.


Contribution to Muslim–Christian relations

Despite his active life and important role in European history, Peter's greatest achievement is his contribution to the reappraisal of the Church's relations with the religion of Islam. A proponent of studying Islam based upon its own sources, he commissioned a comprehensive translation of Islamic source material, and in 1142 he traveled to Spain where he met his translators. One scholar has described this as a "momentous event in the intellectual history of Europe."[4]


The Arabic manuscripts which Peter had translated may have been obtained in Toledo, which was an important centre for translation from the Arabic. However, Peter appears to have met his team of translators further north, possibly in La Rioja, where he is known to have visited the Cluniac monastery of Santa María la Real of Nájera. The project translated a number of texts relating to Islam (known collectively as the "corpus toletanum"). They include the Apology of al-Kindi; and most importantly the first-ever translation into Latin of the Arabic Qur'an (the "Lex Mahumet pseudoprophete") for which Robert of Ketton was the main translator. Peter of Toledo is credited for planning and annotating the collection, and Peter of Poitiers (Peter the Venerable's secretary) helped to polish the final Latin version. The team also included Robert of Ketton's friend Herman of Carinthia and a Muslim called Mohammed. The translation was completed in either June or July 1143, in what has been described as "a landmark in Islamic Studies. With this translation, the West had for the first time an instrument for the serious study of Islam."[5]


Peter used the newly translated material in his own writings on Islam, of which the most important are the Summa totius heresis Saracenorum (The Summary of the Entire Heresy of the Saracens) and the Liber contra sectam sive heresim Saracenorum (The Refutation of the Sect or Heresy of the Saracens). In these works Peter portrays Islam as a Christian heresy that approaches paganism, and he explains to St. Bernard that his goal is "ut morem illum patrum sequerer, quo nullam unquam suorum temporum vel levissimam (ut sic dicam) haeresim silendo praeterirent, quin ei totis fidei viribus resisterent et scriptis ac disputationibus esse detestandam ac damnabilem demonstrarent."[6] That is, "that I may follow the custom of those Fathers, who passed over no heresy in silence ever, even the lightest (as I will thus call it), but rather resisted it with all the strength of their faith, and showed it, through writings and arguments, to be detestable and damnable."[citation needed]


While his interpretation of Islam was basically negative, it did manage in "setting out a more reasoned approach to Islam…through using its own sources rather than those produced by the hyperactive imagination of some earlier Western Christian writers."[7] Although this alternative approach was not widely accepted or emulated by other Christian scholars of the Middle Ages, it did achieve some influence among a limited number of Church figures, including Roger Bacon.[citation needed]


At his weekly general audience in Saint Peter's Square on 14 October 2009, Pope Benedict XVI used Peter as an example of compassion and understanding, citing Peter's governance of Cluny, diplomacy, and study of Islam




St. Odilo of Cluny


Feastday: May 11

Birth: 962

Death: 1049


Abbot A member of a noble family in Auvergne, France, he entered the Benedictine monastery of Cluny about 990 and received election as abbot in 994. He was beloved and respected throughout Europe for his deep austerities and his concem for the poor. In 1006, he even sold treasures of the Church to feed the poor during a famine. Through his efforts, the monasteries belonging to Cluny increased from thirty seven to sixty five. He also helped bring about the Truce of God and the feast of All Soul's Day, and was a trusted advisor to popes and kings. He was devoted to the Blessed Virgin Mary and to the Incarnation. Fulbert of Chartres called him Archangelus Monachorum, Archangel of Monks. Odilo died on January 1 while touring his monasteries.


Saint Odilo of Cluny (c. 962 – 1 January 1049) was the fifth[1] Benedictine Abbot of Cluny, holding the post for around 54 years. During his tenure Cluny became the most important monastery in western Europe. Odilo actively worked to reform the monastic practices not only at Cluny, but at other Benedictine houses. He also promoted the Truce of God whereby military hostilities were temporarily suspended at certain times for ostensibly religious reasons. Odilo encouraged the formal practice of personal consecration to Mary. He established All Souls' Day (on 2 November) in Cluny and its monasteries as the annual commemoration to pray for all the faithful departed. The practice was soon adopted throughout the whole Western church.




Odilo was descended from an illustrious noble family of Auvergne (central France). The son of Berald de Mercoeur and Gerberga, his widowed mother became a nun at the convent of St. John in Autun after his father's death. Odilo had eight brothers and two sisters. One of his sisters married and the other became an abbess.[2]


When he was a child, he was partially paralyzed and had to be carried by the family servants on a stretcher. One day while the family was travelling, they came to a church and Odilo was left with the luggage at the church door. The door was open, and little Odilo felt God was calling him to crawl to the altar. He got to the altar and tried to stand up, but failed. He tried again and finally succeeded: he was able to walk around the altar.[2] It was believed that he had been cured of the unnamed malady by the intervention of Our Lady.


As a child, he developed a great devotion to the Virgin Mary. While still quite young, he entered the seminary of St. Julien in Brioude,[3] where he became a specialist in canon law. William of Dijon persuaded him to enter the monastery of Cluny. In 991, at the age of twenty-nine, he entered Cluny and before the end of his year of probation was made coadjutor to Abbot Mayeul, and shortly before the latter's death (994) was made abbot and received Holy orders.[3]


Odilo’s abbacy

His fifty years as Abbot were distinguished for the exceeding gentleness of his rule.[4] It was usual with him to say, that of two extremes he chose rather to offend by tenderness, than a too rigid severity.[5] He was known for showing mercy indiscriminately even to those who people said did not deserve it. He would say in response, ‘I would rather be mercifully judged for having shown mercy, than be cruelly damned for having shown cruelty."[6]


Of small stature and insignificant appearance, Odilo was a man of immense force of character. He was a man of prayer and penance, with a great devotion to the Incarnation and to the Blessed Mother. Odilo encouraged the formal practice of personal consecration to Mary.[7] He also encouraged learning in his monasteries, and had the monk Radolphus Glaber write a history of the time. He erected a magnificent monastery building, and furthered the reform of the Benedictine monasteries. It was during his abbacy that Cluny became the most important monastery in western Europe.[8] During a great famine in 1006, his liberality to the poor was by many censured as profuse; for he melted down the sacred vessels and ornaments to raise funds.[5]


Pope John XIX offered Odilo the archbishopric of Lyons, but Odilo refused and the pope then chided Odilo for disobedience. John XIX died shortly after and his successor (Benedict IX) did not press the matter any further.[9]


He is also said to have influenced the course of the famous pilgrimage route to Santiago, which runs near the monasteries.[10]


Monastic autonomy

During this period it was very common for secular lords and local rulers to try to either take control of monasteries or to seize their property. Not only this, but local bishops often also tried to impose their own authority on monasteries or to seize monastery property. It was precisely for this reason that from the earliest days of Cluny's history, Cluny did not affiliate itself with the authority of any diocese except Rome and received its charter directly from the Pope. Several Popes decreed an automatic excommunication to any bishop or secular ruler who tried to interfere or seize Cluniac property (including both the monastery and all the monasteries and properties that were owned by Cluny). However, many times the monks needed this order of excommunication renewed and repeated by the Popes because each new generation would bring a new round of figures who would go after Cluniac property. All of the abbots of Cluny in this period had to deal with this problem, and Odilo was no exception.


He attended the Synod of Ansa in 994 for this reason and successfully got the bishops present at the synod to make a statement excommunicating anyone who attacked Cluniac property. In 997 he went to Rome to make secure the status of Cluny. In 998 he obtained from Pope Gregory V. Cluny complete freedom by the diocesan Bishop and 1024 the extension of this privilege on all dependent Cluny abbeys and priories.[11]


In 1025 Gauzlin, bishop of Mâcon, claimed that the archbishop of Vienne needed his approval to give ordination to monks in Cluny. In answer to this Odilo produced the papal documents granting Cluny freedom from local diocesan control. A council at Ansa in southern Gaul nevertheless condemned Odilo's position because it claimed that the Council of Chalcedon (in 451) had decreed that the ordination of monks had to occur with diocesan consent. In answer to this, the Pope then wrote letters to various parties involved with the dispute and condemned Gauzlin's position. The Pope further decreed that any bishop who tried to enter a Cluniac monastery to even celebrate a mass would suffer automatic excommunication, unless he had been invited by the abbot. The dispute when on for years.[12]


In Germany the Cluny policy had no permanent success, as the monks there were more inclined to individualism. Odilo visited Henry II on several occasions and because of his closeness to him, he was able to intercede on several occasions for people who had disputes with him. When Henry II was crowned King of Italy in 1004, Odilo attended the ceremony. The following day there was a revolt against Henry in Pavia which was quickly crushed and the defeated party went to find Odilo so that he could ask Henry on their behalf for mercy. Odilo agreed and was able to persuade Henry, who respected his holiness so greatly, to hold back his hand and give mercy to the rebels.[13] When Henry was crowned as Holy Roman Emperor in Rome in 1014, Odilo also was present. He arrived in Rome before Christmas and spent several months together with Henry up to his coronation in February 1014. The Pope presented Henry with the gift of a golden apple ('orb') with a cross on it, representing his empire. Henry later sent this gift to Cluny.[13] When Henry died in 1024, Cluny's houses said many prayers and masses for him. During the famine of 1006, Odilo sold the gold crown the Holy Roman Emperor Henry II had presented to the abbey, in order to relieve the hunger,[5] thereby saving thousands from starvation.


He also attended the coronation of Conrad II who succeeded Henry and had a similarly good relationship with him, and thus got the Emperor to give favour to Cluny. When there was a failed revolt against Conrad in Pavia in 1026, Odilo again interceded for mercy from the Emperor for the defeated rebels.[13] In 1046 Odilo was present at the coronation of Henry III in Rome.


Reform

The rule of St. Benedict was substituted in Cluny for the domestic rule of Isidore. Under Odilo's rule not only Cluny made rapid progress but Benedictine monasteries in general were reformed and many new foundations made. Odilo threw the full Cluniac influence into the fight against simony, concubinage and the uncanonical marriage of the laity.[14] The abbots of Cluny were constantly called to reform other monasteries; however, many reformed communities soon slipped back into their old ways. Odilo sought to prevent this by making them subject to Cluny: he appointed every prior of every Cluniac house, and the profession of every monk in the remotest monastery was made in his name and subject to his sanction.[15] During his tenure thirty abbeys accepted Cluny as their mother house, and its practices were adopted by many more which did not affiliate. King Robert II of France allied himself with the Reform party. and the Cluniac reform spread through Burgundy, Provence, Auvergne, Poitou, and much of Italy and Spain. The English monastic reform undertaken by saints Dunstan, Æthelwold of Winchester and Oswald of Worcester under Cluniac influence is a conspicuous instance of Cluny's success by example. On account of his services in the reform Odilo was called by Fulbert of Chartres the "Archangel of the Monks".


Truce of God

Further information: Peace and Truce of God

The Truce of God arose in the eleventh century amid the anarchy of feudalism as a remedy for the powerlessness of lay authorities to enforce respect for the public peace. There was then an epidemic of private wars, which made Europe a battlefield bristling with fortified castles and overrun by armed bands who respected nothing, not even sanctuaries, clergy, or consecrated days. Massacres and plunders were common in that age, by the right which every petty lord pretended of revenging his own injuries and quarrels by private wars. Odilo actively promoted the Truce of God whereby military hostilities were suspended at certain times for ostensibly religious reasons. The Truce had great economic importance as it allowed commerce to continue so that people could survive; it also guaranteed sanctuary to those who sought refuge in a church. The penalty for violating the ban was excommunication.[16]


While the Truce of God was a temporary suspension of hostilities, its jurisdiction was broader that the Peace of God. It confirmed permanent peace for all churches and their grounds, the monks, clerks and chattels; all women, pilgrims, merchants and their servants, cattle and horses; and men at work in the fields. For all others peace was required throughout Advent, the season of Lent, and from the beginning of the Rogation days until eight days after Pentecost.[17] This prohibition was subsequently extended to specific days of the week, viz., Thursday, in memory of the Ascension, Friday, the day of the Passion, and Saturday, the day of the Resurrection (council 1041). By the middle of the twelfth century the number of proscribed days was extended until there was left some eighty days for fighting.


All Souls’ Day

According to one tale, a pilgrim was thrown during a storm on an island. There he had a vision of the souls in purgatory enduring the purification pain of flames as punishment for their sins. At home he went to Father Odilo of Cluny to ask whether there is not one day in the year in a special way prayer could be for the souls of the deceased.[10]


Odilo instituted the annual commemoration of all the faithful departed, to be observed by the members of his community with alms, prayers, and sacrifices, for the relief of the suffering souls in purgatory.[5] Odilo decreed that those requesting a Mass be offered for the departed should make a monetary offering for the poor, thus linking almsgiving with fasting and prayer for the dead.


He established All Souls' Day (on 2 November) in Cluny and its monasteries (probably not in 998 but after 1030,[3] and it was soon adopted in the whole Western church.


Miracles and anecdotes

Many miracles were attributed to him by the tradition, such as increases in food or wine, empty bottles of wine filled up again, a fish that he divided to feed more than it could normally feed; he walked on water and ordered his servants to follow him, which they did without falling in. He, finally, healed the sick with touch and making the sign of the cross.[2]


Pope Benedict VIII, whom had been a close friend of Cluny, supposedly some time after dying appeared to John, bishop of Porto, along with two of his friends. The Pope claimed that he remained in purgatory, and asked that Odilo be informed so that he could pray for him. A message was given to Odilo, who then proceeded to call on all Cluniac houses to offer up prayers, masses and alms for the soul of the dead Pope. Not long after this, there was said to be a figure of light followed by a host of others in white garments that entered the cloister and knelt to Odilo; the figure informed him that he was the Pope and that he had now been freed from purgatory.


Death

Many times in his life he visited Rome. In his last visit around the time of a papal election and an imperial coronation, he spent all of his time praying in different churches and in giving alms to the poor. He wished he could die there in Rome, but he then started on his journey back to Cluny. Along the way back, and not far from Rome, he had an accident with his horse that injured him. He had to be taken back to the city where so much grief was poured out for his sake that masses were offered for his recovery and the Pope visited his bedside. He stayed in the city until Easter and then left again to go back to Cluny. He continued to do his fasts and ascetic practices despite his old age and weakness. He decided to visit all the houses that Cluny had reformed, but when he visited Souvigny Priory he had to stop and remain there. At Christmas he had become so weak that he needed to be carried around the monastery. He was in St Mary's chapel when he died; he was praying for the souls in purgatory when he died.[13]


He died during the night of the New Year 1049,[4] at the age of eighty-seven. After his death, miracles were also reported from his tomb, including healings.


On the night of Odilo's funeral, a monk named Gregorinius saw him. This monk had come a long distance to come to Odilo's funeral. When the monk saw the dead abbot's spirit, he said to him, ‘how goes it with thee, master?‘ to which the spirit of Odilo replied, ‘Very well, oh brother, Christ Himself deigned to come and meet His servant. In the hour of my death He pointed out to me a fierce and terrible figure which, standing in a corner, would have terrified me by its huge monstrosity had not its malignancy been annulled by His presence.





Bl. Antonio de Sant'Anna Galvao


Feastday: May 11

Birth: 1739

Death: 1822

Beatified: Pope John Paul II


Saint Anthony of Saint Ann Galvăo was a Brazilian friar of the Franciscan Order. One of the best-known religious figures in Brazil, renowned for his healing powers, Galvăo was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on May 11, 2007, becoming the first Brazilian-born saint. Overall, he is the second Brazilian saint, after Italian-born Saint Paulina, canonized in 2002.



Anthony of St. Ann Galvão, O.F.M. (Portuguese: Antônio de Sant'Anna Galvão, IPA: [ˈsɐ̃tw ɐ̃ˈtõn̠ʲʊ dʒɪ sɐ̃ˈtɐ̃nɐ ɡaʊ̯ˈvɐ̃w]), commonly known in Brazil as Frei (Friar) Galvão (IPA: [ˈfɾej ɡawˈvɐ̃w]; May 13, 1739 – December 23, 1822), was a Brazilian friar of the Franciscan Order.[2] One of the best-known religious figures in colonial Brazil, renowned for his healing powers,[3] Galvão was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on May 11, 2007, becoming the first Brazilian-born saint.[4][5] He was the second Brazilian to be proclaimed a saint by the Catholic Church, after Austro-Hungarian-born Pauline of the Agonizing Heart of Jesus' was canonized in 2002.[6]



Early life

Galvão was born in the freguesia of Santo Antonio of Guaratinguetá, in the State of São Paulo. He was the fourth of ten children in a deeply religious family of high social and political status.[3][2][7] His father, Antônio Galvão de França, was the Captain of the village. Although he was active in the world of politics and commerce, Antônio the father also belonged to the Third Order of Saint Francis and was known for his generosity.[2] His mother, Isabel Leite de Barros, was from a farming family, and was a great-granddaughter of the famous bandeirante explorer Fernão Dias Pais, known as the "Emerald Hunter". She gave birth to eleven children before her premature death in 1755, at age 38.[2] Equally known for her generosity, Isabel was found to have given away all of her clothes to the poor at the time of her death.[2]


At age 13, Galvão was sent to the Jesuit-run seminary Colégio de Belém[2][7] in Cachoeira, Bahia by his father, which wished to provide Humanities and cultural training to his son. He followed his brother José, who was already studying there. At Colégio de Belém, which he attended from 1752 to 1756, Galvão made great progress in social studies and Christian practice. He aspired to become a Jesuit priest, but the anti-Jesuit persecution led by Sebastião José de Carvalho e Melo, the Marquis of Pombal, led him to enter the Franciscan Order instead.[7] in Taubaté, following the advice of his father.[3][2]



Monument to Frei Galvão in his native town of Guaratinguetá.

Franciscan friar

At age 16, Galvão gave up a promising future and his family's social influence, becoming a novice at the St. Bonaventure Friary in Vila de Macacu, Rio de Janeiro.[2][7][8] There, he adopted the religious name of Anthony of Saint Ann, in honor of his family's devotion to Saint Ann. During his novitiate year, he was known for his piety, zeal and exemplary virtues.[2] Galvão made his profession of solemn vows on 16 April 1761, taking the additional vow to defend the Blessed Virgin Mary's title of the "Immaculate Conception", which was still a controversial doctrine at that time.[2]


On 11 July 1762, Galvão was ordained a priest and transferred to St. Francis Friary in the city of São Paulo, where he continued his studies in theology and philosophy.[2] In early 1766, around the completion of his studies, Galvão made a spiritual submission of himself as a "servant and slave" of the Blessed Mother, signing a document to this effect, dated 9 March, which he signed in his own blood.[9] In 1768 he was appointed preacher, confessor and porter of the friary, an important post.[2][7]


From 1769 to 1770 Galvão served as confessor to the Recollection of St. Teresa (Portuguese: Recolhimento de Santa Teresa) in the city of São Paulo, which was a hermitage of women Recollects (recluses living in common but not under religious vows), dedicated to Teresa of Ávila.[2][7] There, he met the nun Helena Maria of the Holy Spirit, a recluse who claimed to have had visions in which Jesus was asking her to found a new Recollect house.[2][7] Galvão, her confessor, studied these messages and consulted with others who recognized them as valid and supernatural.[2]


Galvão collaborated in the foundation of the new Recollect house, named Our Lady of the Conception of Divine Providence, which was established on 2 February 1774[2][7] in the same city. It was modeled after the Conceptionist nuns,[2] and became the home for girls who wished to live a religious life but without taking vows.[3][7] With Helena's sudden death on 23 February 1775, Galvão became the new superior of the community,[2] serving as the Recollects' new spiritual leader.[7]



Frei Galvão in the Cathedral of St. Anthony in Guaratinguetá.

Around that time, a change in São Paulo's provincial government brought an inflexible leader who ordered the closing of the hermitage.[2] Galvão accepted the decision, but the recluses refused to leave the premises, and due to popular pressure and the efforts of the Bishop of São Paulo, the hermitage was soon re-opened.[2] Subsequently, with the increasing number of new recluses, more living space was required.[2][7] It took Galvão 28 years to build the hermitage and church, with the latter being inaugurated on 15 August 1802.[2] In addition to the construction work and duties within and outside his Order, Galvão committed himself to the Recollect's formation.[2] The Statutes he wrote for them was a guide for the interior life and religious discipline.[2]


When things seemed more quiet, another government intervention brought Galvão a further trial.[2] The Captain General sentenced a soldier to death for having slightly offended his son, and the friar was sent into exile for coming to the soldier's defence.[2] Again, popular demand succeeded in having the order revoked.[2]


In 1781, Galvão was appointed novice master in Cachoeiras de Macacu.[2][7] However, the Recollects and the Bishop of São Paulo appealed to the Minister Provincial, writing that "none of the inhabitants of this city will be able to bear the absence of this Religious for a single moment".[2] As a result, he returned.[2] He was later named Guardian of St. Francis Friary in São Paulo in 1798, being re-appointed in 1801.[2][7]


In 1811 Galvão founded St. Clare Friary in Sorocaba.[2][7] Eleven months later, he returned to São Paulo.[2] In his old age, he obtained permission from the bishop and the Guardian to stay at the Recollect house.[2] He died there on 23 December 1822.[3][2] Galvão was laid to rest in the Recollection Church, and his tomb continues to be a destination for pilgrimages of the faithful, who obtain graces through his intercession.[2]


In 1929, the Convent of Our Lady of the Conception of Divine Providence became a monastery, incorporated into the Order of the Immaculate Conception.[2] The building, now called the "Monastery of Light", has been declared a world cultural heritage site by UNESCO.[10] The complex now serves as the Museum of the Sacred Arts of São Paulo.


Mysticism

Galvão was a man of great and intense prayer, and mystic phenomena attributed to him include telepathy, premonition and levitation.[10] He was reportedly in two different places at the same time in order to take care of sick or dying people who had asked for his help.[10]



Pope Benedict XVI celebrates Holy Mass at the canonization of Frei Galvão in São Paulo, Brazil on 11 May 2007

Many sought Galvão for his reputed healing powers, particularly when medical resources were expensive or unavailable. Galvão became known for his "paper pills": he wrote a Latin phrase from the Little Office of Our Lady ("After childbirth thou didst remain a Virgin: O Mother of God, intercede for us") in a piece of paper, rolled it like a pill, and gave it to [11][12] Once he gave the paper pill to a young woman in excruciating pain from kidney stones: the pain ceased immediately after she consumed it, and she expelled a large amount of renal calculus. On other occasions, he gave it to women suffering during difficult childbirths. After Galvão gave a paper pill to a man with such a suffering wife, the child was quickly born without further complications.[10][11] The story of the miracle pill spread, and Galvão had to teach the Recollect Sisters to make them, which they still do nowadays. They are handed out for free to some 300 faithful who request them daily.[10]



Pope Benedict XVI at the canonization of Frei Galvão (in the picture).

On October 25, 1998, Galvão became the first Brazilian-born person to be beatified by the Vatican, having been declared Venerable a year earlier, on March 8, 1997.[7] On May 11, 2007, he became the first Brazilian-born person canonized by the Roman Catholic Church, during Pope Benedict XVI's five-day visit to Brazil.[5] The open-air ceremony, which lasted over two hours in the Campo de Marte Military Airport, near downtown São Paulo, drew 800,000 people, according to official estimates.[6][13] Galvão was the first saint canonized by Pope Benedict XVI in a ceremony held outside the Vatican City.[12] His proclamation as a saint came after the Catholic Church accepted that two miracles had taken place.[3]


According to the Catholic Church, the cases of Sandra Grossi de Almeida and Daniella Cristina da Silva are miracles effected through the prayers of Galvão.[5] After taking one of the paper pills, Almeida, who had a uterine malformation that should have made it impossible for her to carry a child for more than four months, gave birth to baby boy Enzo.[5] Galvão's pills are also certified by the church with the healing, in 1990, of Daniella Cristina da Silva, a four-year-old girl suffering from what doctors considered incurable hepatitis.[6][14] Doctors, and some Catholic clergy, have dismissed the pills as placebos.[3][12] The church recommends that only terminally ill patients take the pills





St. Ansfrid


Feastday: May 11

Death: 1010


Bishop and founder, the Count of Brabant. Ansfrid was a courtier and friend of Emperor Otto III of the Holy Roman Empire. In 994, the emperor named him the bishop of Utrecht, although his appointment drew some local opposition. Ansfrid founded a monastery at Heiligensberg, Germany, and a convent at Thorn. He was stricken with blindness late in his life, a fate that brought about his retirement to this abbey. He is also listed as Ansfridus.


Saint Ansfried (Ansfrid, Ansfridus) of Utrecht (died 3 May 1010 near Leusden) was Count of Huy and the sword-bearer for Otto I, Holy Roman Emperor. He became Bishop of Utrecht in 995. He appears to have been the son or grandson of Lambert, a nobleman of the Maasgau, the area where he later founded the Abbey of Thorn, and to have been related to various important contemporaries including the royal family.



Life

The principal source of information regarding Ansfried is the De diversitatem temporum by the Benedictine Albert of Metz, written around 1022.[1]


Ansfried had the same name as a paternal uncle (patruus), Ansfried the elder, a count who supposedly held 15 counties.[2] The young Ansfried studied secular and clerical subjects under another paternal uncle, Robert, Archbishop of Trier, before attending the cathedral school at Cologne.


In 961, Otto I took Ansfried into his personal service and made him his swordbearer. When Otto was in Rome the following year to be crowned Holy Roman Emperor, he directed Ansfried to keep close at hand with the sword as a precaution against any unforeseen eventualities.[3] Karl Leyser describes this as a valuable lesson in practicality.



Because of his Christian commitment, he was highly respected and an important knight of the emperor's circle, holding rich possessions along the Meuse, in Brabant and Gelderland. Possibly all or some of his counties were inherited from his paternal uncle of the same name. As Count, he had considerable success in suppressing piracy and armed robbery.[1] In 985, Otto III granted Ansfried the right to mint coins at Medemblik,[4] on the north-south shipping route through the Vlie, as well as, the income from tolls and tax collecting.[5]



Ansfridus and Hilsondis. Stained glass windows in the abbey of Thorn, 1956.

He was married to Heresuint or Hilsondis. They had one child, Benedicta. He founded a Romanesque abbey church on his wife's estate at Thorn under the patronage of St. Michael. The abbey itself had a double cloister that housed both man and women. Ansfried planned it as a place of retirement for him and his family after he left public service. Under his control, the abbey and lands, of about 1.5 kilometers square, was reichsunmittel, making it subject only to the Emperor. Hereswitha was to be the first abbess but died on her way there; and Benedicta took her place.[6]


After his wife's death, Ansfried wanted to become a monk. However, in 995, Emperor Otto III and Bishop Notker of Liège persuaded the reluctant Ansfried to assume the then vacant see of Utrecht. Ansfried objected that as he had borne weapons as a knight, he was unworthy of the office; but the emperor prevailed. The elderly count laid down his sword on the altar of St. Mary in Aachen and was ordained priest and consecrated eighteenth Bishop of Utrecht in the same ceremony.[6] Bishop Ansfried never took a commission in the royal army, in contrast to Notger and the Bishop of Cologne.[7]


In 1006 Bishop Ansfried founded the abbey of Heiligenberg, also under the patronage of St. Michael.[8] Toward the end of his life he became increasingly weakened through fasting, and retired there as a monk,[6] caring for the sick, although almost blind himself.


Upon his death, townsfolk from Heiligenberg took possession of his body, while the people of Utrecht were extinguishing a not coincidental fire. The abbess of Thorn mediated and Ansfried was buried in the Cathedral of Saint Martin in Utrecht.[1]


Veneration

His feast day was 3 May but was later moved to 11 May.


Patronage

St. Ansfried is the patron saint of Amersfoort.


Iconography

Ansfried is portrayed holding a small church building (as a founder); as a knight with weapons at his feet, because he renounced the knighthood; with a bishop's miter and staff; or as a Benedictine monk.


The stained glass windows in St. John's Cathedral in Den Bosch depicting the seven sacraments. The sacrament of Holy Orders portrays St. Ansfried.




Bl. Albert of Bergamo


Feastday: May 11

Death: 1279



Dominican tertiary and miracle worker. Albert was a farmer living near Bergamo, Italy, where he became a Dominican Third Order member. Married, he was a champion of the poor in his hometown of Ogna. Sometime in his adult life, Albert went on a pilgrimage to the famous shrine at Santiago de Compostela in Spain. He also visited Rome and Jerusalem, perilous journeys in his era. After his pilgrimages, Albert settled in Cremona, Italy, where he became known for his piety and for his many miraculous works to benefit others.





St. Anastasius VII


Feastday: May 11

Death: 251


Martyr and convert to Christ. He was a tribune in the Roman army in the reign of Decius. Forced to torture Christians as part of the imperial persecution of the faithful, Anastasius was impressed by their courage and loyalty. He became a convert, and when his Christian faith was discovered he and his family, as well as all of his servants, were beheaded.




St. Anastasius VI


Feastday: May 11


 Shop St. Anastasius VI

Patron saint of Lerida, Spain, a martyr. Anastasius' life is not documented, though he could have been any one of the martyred men of that name venerated by the Church. Leridans, however, believe that their patron was born in the city.




Saint Ignatius of Laconi


Also known as

Vincenzo Peis

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 11)


✠ லாக்கோனி நகர் புனிதர் இக்னேஷியஸ் ✠

(St. Ignatius of Laconi)


கப்புச்சின் சபை துறவி:

(Capuchin Monk)


பிறப்பு: டிசம்பர் 10, 1701

லாக்கோனி, சார்டினியா 

(Laconi, Kingdom of Sardinia)


இறப்பு: மே 11, 1781 (வயது 79)

கக்ளியரி, சார்டினியா அரசு

(Cagliari, Kingdom of Sardinia)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 16, 1940 

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 21, 1951

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


பாதுகாவல்:

ஒரிஸ்டானோ (Oristano)

மாணவர்கள்

யாசகர்கள்


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 11


புனிதர் இக்னேஷியஸ், ஒரு சார்டினியன் கப்புச்சின் சபை துறவியும் கத்தோலிக்க புனிதரும் ஆவார். தமக்கு நேர்ந்த ஒரு தீவிர நோயின் காரணமாக தமது வாழ்க்கையை கடவுளுக்கு அர்ப்பணித்த இவர், சார்டினியாவிலுள்ள கப்புசின் துறவு மடத்தில் இணைந்து, குருத்துவம் பெறாத ஒரு துறவியானார். ஏழ்மை நிலையில் உள்ளவர்களிடம் அக்கறை காட்டியதாலும், அவரது எளிய மனப்பான்மையாலும், அவர் சார்டினியாவில் நன்கு அறியப்பட்டார். தாம் சந்தித்த எல்லா மக்களோடும் கலந்து, நோயுற்றவர்களிடம் தாராள மனப்பான்மையுடன் இருந்தார். ஆனால் அவர் தனது வாழ்நாளில், ஒரு வியக்கத்தக்க அற்புதங்கள் செய்பவர் என அறியப்பட்டார். மற்றும் அவர் தனது வாழ்நாள் முழுதும், 121 அற்புதங்களை நிகழ்த்தியதாக கூறப்பட்டது.


“வின்சென்ஸோ பெய்ஸ்” (Vincenzo Peis) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட புனிதர் இக்னேஷியஸ், கி.பி 1701ம் வருடம், டிசம்பர் மாதம், பத்தாம் நாளன்று, சார்டினியா (Sardinia) அரசிலுள்ள “லக்கோனி” (Laconi) நகரில் உள்ள ஒரு ஏழை விவசாயி குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தார். இவரது தந்தையார் பெயர், “மட்டியா பெய்ஸ் கடெல்லோ” (Mattia Peis Cadello) ஆகும். தாயாரின் பெயர், “அன்னா மரியா சன்னா கஸு” (Anna Maria Sanna Casu) ஆகும். இவரது திருமுழுக்குப் பெயர், “ஃபிரான்செஸ்கோ இக்னேஸியோ வின்சென்ஸோ” (Francesco Ignazio Vincenzo) ஆகும்.


தமது பெற்றோருக்கு உதவுவதற்காக வயல்வெளிகளில் உழைத்த வின்சென்ஸோ, தமது இள வயதில் தீவிர நோயால் தாக்குண்டு, மிகவும் வேதனை அடைந்தார். தமது நோய் குணமானதும் "கப்புச்சின் இளம் துறவியர் சபையில் சேர்ந்து (Order of Friars Minor Capuchin) தமது வாழ்வை இறைவனுக்கு அர்ப்பணிப்பதாக வேண்டிக்கொண்டார். இவரின் மன்றாட்டை இறைவன் கேட்டதால் இவர் பூரண குணமடைந்தார். நலமடைந்த இவர், தமது பெற்றோர் "ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன்" (Franciscans) சபையில் சேர்வதற்கு ஆட்சேபனை தெரிவித்ததால் தாம் இறைவனிடம் செய்த சத்தியத்தை மறந்துபோனார்.


அதன்பிறகு ஒருநாள் தனது 20ம் வயதில் குதிரை சவாரி செய்கையில் குதிரையின் மீதிருந்து கீழே விழுந்ததில் பலமாக அடிபட்டார். அப்போதுதான் அவர் இறைவனிடம் செய்த சத்தியத்தை மீண்டும் நினைவு கூர்ந்தார். மீண்டும் இறைவனிடம் இறைவேண்டல் செய்தார். இம்முறை, புனிதர் அசிசியின் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் (Saint Francis of Assisi) அவர்களை உதவிக்கு வேண்டி செபித்தார். ஆனால் தன் நோயை கண்டிப்பாக குணமாக்க வேண்டுமென்று செபிக்காமல், இறைவன் விரும்பினால் குணமாக்கட்டும் என்று செபித்தார். இம்முறை அவரது பெற்றோர் "ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன்" (Franciscans) சபையில் சேர்வதற்கு ஆட்சேபனை ஏதும் தெரிவிக்கவில்லை. இவர், “புனிதர் லாரன்சை” (St. Lawrence of Brindisi) தனது தனிப்பட்ட முன்மாதிரியாக எடுத்துக் கொண்டார்.


இக்னேஷியஸ் "கக்ளியரி" (Cagliari) என்னுமிடத்திலிருந்த கப்புச்சின் துறவற மடத்தில் இணைய அனுமதி வேண்டினார். ஆனால், இவரது பலவீனமான உடல்நிலை கண்ட துறவு மடத்தின் தலைமைப் பொருப்பிலிருந்தவர்கள் தயங்கினார்கள். செல்வாக்குடைய நண்பர் ஒருவரின் தலையீட்டால் இவருக்கு மடத்தில் அனுமதி கிட்டியது.


இக்னேஷியஸ் நாற்பது வருடங்களுக்கும் மேலாக தமது மடத்திலிருந்த துறவியருடன் நட்புடனும், சுமூகமான உறவுடனும், அனைவரையும் மகிழ்ச்சிப்படுத்தியும், உதவி செய்தும் வாழ்ந்தார். பிறருக்கு பணிவிடை செய்து வாழ்ந்தார். ஆனால் அவர் பிறரைப்பற்றி ஒரு சிறிய அளவில் கூட குறை கூறவில்லை. அவரின் உதடு கடுமையான சொற்களை ஒரு நாளும் உச்சரிக்கவில்லை. அவருக்கு வேலை பளு அதிகமானபோதும் பிறரிடம் அதை ஒப்படைக்காமல், புன்முறுவலுடன் செய்து முடிப்பார். 


தனது வாழ் நாட்களில் தனது உடலில் ஏற்பட்ட ஒவ்வொரு நோய்களையும் இறைவனிடம் இறைவேண்டுதல் செய்தே குணம் பெற்றார். தமது வாழ்வின் இறுதி இரண்டு வருட காலம் கண் பார்வையில்லாது வாழ்ந்தாலும் தமது அன்றாட பணிகளை செய்வதை தவிர்க்கவில்லை. இக்னேஷியஸ், கி.பி 1781ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 11ம் நாளன்று, மாலை சுமார் மூன்று மணியளவில், “கக்ளியாரி” (Cagliari) நகரில் மரணமடைந்தார். www.stjck.blogspot.com

Profile

Son of a poor farmer with seven children, Ignatius grew up in hard rural poverty, working the fields. At age 17, he became very ill, and promised to become a Franciscan if he was spared. When he was cured, his father convinced him to wait. At age 20 Ignatius was almost killed when he lost control of his horse; suddenly the horse stopped, and trotted on quietly. Ignatius was convinced God had saved his life again, and he decided to follow his religious vocation at once. He joined the Capuchin monastery of Saint Benedict at Buoncammino, Italy as a lay brother, taking his vows in 1722.



Worked fifteen years in his house's weaving shed, then spent forty years as part of a team who went house to house asking food and donations for the friars. People soon realized they received a gift in return from Brother Ignatius as he consoled the sick and the lonely, and cheered children of the street. He made peace between enemies, converted sinners, advised people in trouble.


People noticed Igantius would skip the house of a rich money-lender, a man who never forgave a debt, and who felt slighted because Ignatius passed his house. He complained to Brother Ignatius' superior, who knew nothing about the money-lender, and so sent Ignatius to the house. The saint returned with a large sack of food, but when the sack was emptied, blood dripped out. "This is the blood of the poor," Ignatius softly explained. "That is why I never ask for anything at that house."


Born

17 December 1701 at Laconi, Nuoro, Italy as Vincenzo Peis


Died

11 May 1781 in Cagliari, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

21 October 1951 by Pope Pius XII



Saint Matthêô Lê Van Gam


Addtional Memorial

24 November as one of the Martyrs of Vietnam



Profile

Eldest son in a pious Christian family. Matthew briefly studied at the seminary at Lai Thieu in the apostolic vicariate of Cochinchina (modern Vietnam), but being the first-born, family obligations caused him to return home. He married to a local girl, and was the father of four, two of whom were later murdered for being Christians. At one point he cheated on his wife; he repented, she forgave him, and he used the incident to re-examine his approach to his life and faith. He decided that the best thing would be become closer to the Church, to serve in his diocese, and to help the missionaries.


During the persecutions of emperor Thiêu Tri in 1846, Mattheo, a skilled sailor, smuggled a group of threatened seminarians out of the county to Malaysia. The authorities suspected him of smuggling contraband into the country, and increased their surveillance of him when he was at sea. Stopped on another run in July to saved some diocesan clergy, he managed to bribe some of the soldiers, but was arrested, beaten, whipped, and ordered to desecrate a cross to prove his renunciation of Christianity. When he refused, he was imprisoned for 10 months, regularly tortured, and eventually executed for the crime of helping the missionaries. Martyr.


Born

c.1813 in Gò Công, Biên Hòa, Vietnam


Died

beheaded on 11 May 1847 in Cho Ðui, Dong Nai, Vietnam; it took three blows to kill him


Canonized

19 June 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Francis of Girolamo

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 11)


✠ புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டி கிரோலமோ ✠

(St. Francis de Girolamo)


குரு:

(Priest)


பிறப்பு: டிசம்பர் 17, 1642

குரோட்டக்லி, அபுலியா, நேப்பிள்ஸ் அரசு

(Grottaglie, Apulia, Kingdom of Naples)


இறப்பு: மே 11, 1716 (வயது 73)

நேப்பிள்ஸ், நேப்பிள்ஸ் அரசு

(Naples, Kingdom of Naples)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: மே 2, 1806

திருத்தந்தை ஏழாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius VII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 26, 1839

திருத்தந்தை பதினாறாம் கிரகோரி

(Pope Gregory XVI)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மே 11


பாதுகாவல்:

நேப்பிள்ஸ் (இணை பாதுகாவலர்)

Naples (co-patron)


புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டி கிரோலமோ, இயேசு சபையைச் சேர்ந்த இத்தாலி நாட்டின் ஒரு ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க குரு ஆவார்.


புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிஸ் டி கிரோலமோ, பாவிகளை மனமாற்றுவதற்காகவும், ஏழைகளைச் சென்றடைவதற்கும் அயராது உழைத்தார். அநேக மக்களின் மனதை அதிக நம்பிக்கையுடன் வென்றார். தமது பெரும்பான்மையான காலத்தையும் சக்தியையும் நேபிள்ஸ் நாட்டிலேயே செலவிட்டதால், நேபிள்ஸ் () நாட்டின் அப்போஸ்தலர் என்று அழைக்கப்படுகிறார்.


அவர் கி.பி. 1642ம் ஆண்டு, டிசம்பர் மாதம், 17ம் தேதியன்று, நேபிள்ஸ் (Kingdom of Naples) இராச்சியத்தின், "க்ரோட்டாக்லி" (Grottaglie) நகரில் வாழ்ந்திருந்த "ஜியோவானி லியோனார்டோ டி ஜெரோனிமோ" (Giovanni Leonardo di Geronimo) எனும் தந்தைக்கும், "ஜென்டிலெஸ்கா கிராவினா" (Gentilesca Gravina) எனும் தாயாருக்கும் பிறந்த பதினொரு குழந்தைகளில் மூத்தவராக பிறந்தார்.


தனது 12 வயதில் புதுநன்மை வாங்கிய பின்னர், அவர் தனது ஊரில் உள்ள "தியேட்டினைன்" சபை (House of the Theatines) குருக்களின் சமூகத்துடன் வாழச் சென்றார். அவர், சிறப்புமிக்க திறன்களை பெற்றவர் என்பதனை குருக்கள் தெளிவாகக் கண்டுகொண்டனர். மேலும் சபையில், மறைக்கல்வி கற்பித்தல் உள்ளிட்ட அநேக பொறுப்புக்களை அவரிடம் ஒப்படைக்கத் தொடங்கினர்.


சிவில் மற்றும் நியதிச் சட்டங்களை கற்பதற்காக நேபிள்ஸ் நகர் சென்ற ஃபிரான்சிஸ், கி.பி. 1666ம் ஆண்டில் அங்கேயே குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவு பெற்றார். (24 வயதுகூட நிரம்பாத இளைஞராக இருந்த காரணத்தால், குருத்துவ அருட்பொழிவிற்கு அவருக்கு சிறப்பு அனுமதி கிடைக்க வேண்டியிருந்தது). அவர் நேபிள்ஸில் உள்ள இயேசுசபையின் (Jesuit Order) ஒரு பல்கலைக்கழகத்தில் ஐந்து ஆண்டுகள் கற்பிக்கும் பணியாற்றினார். அங்குள்ள மாணவர்கள் அவரை "தூய குரு" (The Holy Priest) என்று குறிப்பிட்டு அழைக்கத் தொடங்கினர்.


இயேசுசபையில் (Jesuit Order) சேர முடிவு செய்த ஃபிரான்சிஸ், அவரது மேலுள்ள உயர் குருக்களால் பல சிரமமான சோதனைகளுக்குள்ளானார். எவ்வாறாயினும், அவர் குருக்கள் அனைவரது மனதையும் கவர்ந்தார். மேலும் ஒரு பிரபலமான போதகருடன் மறைப்பணிகளுக்காக அனுப்பப்பட்டார். பின்னர் அவர் நேபிள்ஸ் நகருக்குத் திரும்பி, தமது கல்வியை முடித்து அங்குள்ள ஒரு தேவாலயத்தில் பணி நியமனம் மேற்றார்.


ஒரு மறைப்பணியாளராக ஜப்பான் நாட்டுக்குச் செல்ல ஃபிரான்சிஸ் தீவிரமாக விரும்பினார். அங்கு சென்று இறங்கிய ஒவ்வொரு மிஷனரியும் கொல்லப்பட்டதாக அங்கிருந்து வந்த அறிக்கைகள் தெரிவித்தன. அவர் நேபிள்ஸ் நகரிலேயே இருக்க வேண்டும் என்று முடிவு செய்யப்பட்டது. எனவே அவர் மற்ற மறைப்பணியாளர்களுக்கு பயிற்சி அளிக்கத் தொடங்கினார்.


அவருடைய மறையுரைகளைக் கேட்க ஏராளமான மக்கள் கூடினர். மேலும் பலர் அவரை ஒப்புரவு அருட்சாதனத்திற்காக நாடினர். அவரது பரிந்துரை காரணமாக, அநேக அற்புதங்களும் அதிசயங்களும் நிகழ்ந்ததாக தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டன. ஒவ்வொரு ஆண்டும் அவர் 400க்கும் மேற்பட்ட பாவிகளை மனம் மாற்றினார் என்று மதிப்பிடுகின்றனர். மருத்துவமனைகளில் உள்ள நோயாளிகளையும், சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டிருந்த மரணதண்டனைக்கு காத்திருப்பவர்கள் உள்ளிட்ட கைதிகளையும் அவர் தவறாமல் பார்வையிடச் சென்றார். குற்றச் செயல்களுக்கு மோசமாக பெயர்பெற்ற பல இடங்களுக்கு - அவர்களுடைய சொந்த பிரதேசத்தில் கூட பாவிகளையும் குற்றவாளிகளையும் சந்திப்பதில் அவர் அச்சமின்றி இருந்தார். அவரது இம்முயற்சிகளுக்காக அவர் பல முறை தாக்கப்பட்டார்.


சில நேரங்களில் அவர் தெருவின் நடுவில் பிரசங்கிக்கத் தொடங்குவதற்கான தன்னிச்சையான வேட்கையை உணருவார். ஒரு இரவு, ஒரு புயல் காற்றின் நடுவில், இருண்ட சந்து ஒன்றில், யாருமற்ற  இடத்தில் பிரசங்கிக்க ஆரம்பிக்கும்படி  அழைக்கப்பட்டதாக அவர் உணர்ந்தார். மறுநாள், ஒரு திறந்த ஜன்னல் வழியாக அவரிடம் ஒப்புரவு பெறுவதற்காக ஒருவர் வந்தார்.


அவர் மாற்றிய மாற்றிய குற்றவாளிகளுள் மிகவும் பிரபலமானவர், ஒரு ஃபிரெஞ்சு பெண் ஆவார். தனது தந்தையை கொலை செய்துவிட்டு ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டுக்கு தப்பி ஓடினார். அங்கு அவர் ஒரு ஆணாக உடை அணிந்து இராணுவத்தில் சேர்ந்தார். அவர் ஃபிரான்சிஸிடமிருந்து ஆன்ம வழிநடத்துதலைத் வேண்டினார். மேலும் அவள் செய்த பாவங்களிலிருந்து மனந்திரும்பியது மட்டுமல்லாமல், ஒரு புனிதப் பெண்ணாகவும் பின்னர் அறியப்பட்டார்.


"ப்ளூரிடிஸ்" (Pleuritis) எனும் நோயால் தாக்குண்ட புனித பிரான்சிஸ் டி ஜிரோலாமோ, தனது 74 வயதில் மரித்தார். அவரது நினைவுச் சின்னங்கள் (மிச்சங்கள்) பேராலயத்தில் உள்ள நினைவுச் சின்னங்களை வைக்கும் பேழையில் வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

Also known as

• Francis di Girolamo

• Francis de Geronimo

• Francis de Hieronymo

• Franciscus de Hieronymo

• Francis Jerome

• Francis of Jerome



Profile

Studied humanities and philosophy at the Jesuit college of Taranto, Italy at age 16; studied theology and canon law at the college of Gesu Vecchio. Ordained on 18 March 1666 at Naples, Italy, and served as a parish priest. Joined the Jesuits at age 28 on 1 July 1670. Rural missioner in and around Naples for 40 years.


Successful and effective preacher. Ministered in prisons, brothels, and galleys. Converted Moor and Turkish prisoners of war. Rescued chidren from dangerous and degrading situations. Opened a charity pawn shop. Organized laymen into a group called Oratio della Missione to help fellow Jesuit missioners. Numerous miraculous cures were attributed to him in and after his life. His coffin was thronged by the people of Naples during his funeral procession. A few of his letters have survived, but no sermons.


Born

17 December 1642 at Grottaglie, Apulia, near Taranto, Italy


Died

11 May 1716 at Naples, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

2 May 1806 by Pope Pius VII


Canonized

26 May 1839 by Pope Gregory XVI


Patronage

Grottaglie, Italy



Saint Gengulphus of Burgundy


Also known as

Gandoul, Gangloff, Gangolf, Gangolfo, Gangulf, Gangulfus, Gangulphus, Genf, Gengolfo, Gengou, Gengoul, Gengoux, Gengulf, Gigou, Gingolph, Golf, Gongolf



Profile

Born to wealthy Burgundian nobility, he became knight and courtier. Married a noble woman who proved frequently unfaithful. Ashamed of her actions, but not wishing her harm, Gengulphus became a hermit in his castle at Avallon, France, leaving his staff of servants to care for his wife. Murdered in his bed by his wife's lover. Especially admired in the Netherlands, Belgium, and the Savoy.


Born

Burgundy, France


Died

760



Saint Mamertus of Vienne


Also known as

Mamertius, Mammertus



Profile

Well-educated, and probably born to the Gallic nobility. May have been married at one point. Archbishop of Vienne, France in 461. Known for his secular and theological learning, and for bringing back the faith to an indifferent region. Involved in a dispute with Pope Saint Hilarius in 463 about the privileges of the diocese of Arles, France. Brought back the tradition of rogation processions which soon gained papal approval and were used throughout Europe. Built a church in honor of Saint Ferreolus whose relics were discovered in his diocese. A miracle worker, he is reported to have ended an urban disaster - through prayer he stopped a fire that was destroying the city of Vienne one Easter night.


Born

near Lyons, France


Died

• c.477 at Vienne, France of natural causes

• interred in the cathedral of Orleans, France

• relics burned by Huguenots in the 16th century



Blessed Gjon Koda


Also known as

Brother Serafin



Profile

Franciscan Friar Minor. Priest, celebrating his first Mass on 30 July 1925. Vicar in Lezhë, Albania where he was arrested and tortured by Communist authorities; they tried to get him to say that his brother Franciscans gathered for political reasons and were plotting against the state. It was a lie, and Father Serafin refused to “confess” to save himself. Martyr.


Born

25 April 1893 in Janjevë (Janjevo), Lypjan, Serbia


Died

• nails driven through his throat on 11 May 1947 in Lezhë, Albania

• secretly buried nearby, his grave was re-discovered on 16 September 1994

• relics re-interred in the walls of the Franciscan church of in Lezhë


Beatified

• 5 November 2016 by Pope Francis

• beatification celebrated at the Square of the Cathedral of Shën Shtjefnit, Shkodër, Albania, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato



Blessed Gregory Celli of Verucchio


Also known as

• Gregory Celli

• Gregory of Verucchio



Profile

Augustinian monk in the monastery founded by his mother in Verucchio, Italy. For unknown (and apparently unjust) reasons that have not come down to us, he was dismissed by the Augustinians from the Order, but was immediately taken in by the Franciscans at Monte Carnerio.


Born

c.1225 at Verucchio, diocese of Rimini, Italy


Died

1343 at Franciscan monastery at Monte Carnerio, Rieti, Italy


Beatified

1769 (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

against drought




Blessed John Rochester


Additional Memorial

4 May (as one of the Carthusian Martyrs)



Profile

Son of John Rochester of Terling and Grisold of Bobbingworth. Carthusian choir monk at the London Charterhouse. Priest. Exiled by the government to the Charterhouse of Saint Michael at Hull, Yorkshire. Martyred with Blessed James Walworth for refusing to accept King Henry VIII as head of the Church.


Born

c.1498 at Tealing, Essex, England


Died

hanged in chains from the battlements of York, England on 11 May 1537


Beatified

20 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII



Saint Criotan of Macreddin


Also known as

• Criotan of Aghavannagh

• Criotan of Aghamanagh

• Criotan Mac Iolladon

• Chritoc, Chritocus, Credan, Credanus, Credin, Credus, Cridanus, Critanus, Mochritocus


Profile

Son of Illudion (Iladon, Lolladon). After inadvertently killing his father, Criotan withdrew from the world to live as a swineherd. Spiritual student of Saint Petroc. Monk. Travelled to Ireland to study with holy men in Ireland for 20 years, and then returned to Cornwall. Founded the church in Sancreed, Cornwall.


Born

6th century Cornwall, England


Died

7th century of natural causes



Blessed Gautier di Esterp


Also known as

• Gautier de Limousin

• Gualterio, Gualtiero, Walter


Profile

Born to the French nobility. Educated by the Augustinians at Dorat, France. Joined the Augustinians in Dorat. Priest. Abbot of the monastery of l'Esterp, Limousin, France where he served for 38 years. Known for love and support of his brother canons, and his charity to the poor.


Born

990 at Conflans Castle, Aquitaine (in modern France)


Died

• 11 May 1070 at the monastery of l'Esterp near Limoges in modern France

• interred in the church at the l'Esterp monastery



Blessed James Walworth


Additional Memorial

4 May (as one of the Carthusian Martyrs)



Profile

Carthusian priest and choir monk at the London Charterhouse. Exiled by the government to the Charterhouse of Saint Michael at Hull, Yorkshire. Martyred with Blessed John Rochester.


Born

English


Died

hanged in chains on 11 May 1537 from the battlements of York, England


Beatified

20 December 1886 by Pope Leo XIII



Saint Anthimus of Rome


Profile

Parish priest in Rome, Italy, noted for his conversions, including that of a Roman prefect. The official's change of faith brought Anthimus to the attention of Roman officials who condemned him to drown in the Tiber for his religion. Thrown in, he was rescued by an angel. Continuing his work, Anthimus was later recaptured and martyred.



Died

beheaded in 303 on the Via Salaria outside Rome, Italy


Representation

man being pulled from a river by an angel



Saint Mozio of Constantinople


Also known as

Mocio



Profile

Born to a wealthy imperial Roman family. Priest. Ordered by governor Laodicio to make a sacrifice to the god Bacchus, Mozio refused; he was tortured by was not harmed by it and still refused to make the sacrifice. Martyr.


Born

Amphipolis, Macedonia


Died

• beheaded in 295 in Constantinople (modern Istanbul, Turkey)

• by 402 there was a church was built over his grave



Saint Mayeul


Also known as

Maiolus



Profile

Archdeacon of Macon, France. When he saw he was to be made bishop, he became a monk at Cluny Abbey. Chosen assistant abbot in 954, and then abbot in 965 much against his will. Mayeul was devoted to learning, and led his brothers by good example. Counselor to Emperor Otto I and Emperor Otto II. Otto II wanted to put him forth as papabile, but Mayeul would have none of it.


Born

c.906 at Avignon, France


Died

994 at Souvigny, France en route to Paris



Saint Anastasius of Lérida


Also known as

• Anastasius of Badalona

• Anastasi of...


Profile

Son of Lleida. Imperial Roman soldier. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Born

Lérida, Catalonia, Spain


Died

303 in Catalonia, Spain


Patronage

• Badalona, Spain

• Lérida, Spain




Blessed Vincent L'Hénoret


Profile

Member of the Missionary Oblates of Mary Immaculate. Priest. Martyr.


Born

12 March 1921 in Pont-l'Abbé, Finistère, France


Died

11 May 1961 in Ban Ban, Xieng Khouang, Laos


Beatified

• 11 December 2016 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated in Vientiane, Laos, presided by Cardinal Angelo Amato



Blessed Diego of Saldaña


Profile

Mercedarian. Founded the monastery of Conxo at Santiago de Compostela, Spain, and the convent of Monterrey in Verin, Spain. Auxiliary Bishop of Santiago de Compostela, Spain. Devoted to the Blessed Virgin Mary.



Died

1493 in Avila, Spain of natural causes



Saint Majolus of Cluny


Also known as

Maieul, Majodus, Mayeul



Profile

Priest. Monk at Cluny Abbey in France, taking the cowl partly to avoid becoming a bishop. Abbot of Cluny. Advisor to popes and emperors.


Born

c.906 in Avignon, France


Died

994 of natural causes



Saint Tudy


Also known as

Tegwin, Thetgo, Tudec, Tudinus, Tudi


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Brioc. Monk, hermit and missionary in Brittany. Abbot at Landevennec, Brittany. Founded monasteries. Missionary to Cornwall.



Born

at Brittany, France



Blessed Vivaldus

Also known as

Gualdo, Ubaldo


Profile

Franciscan tertiary. A close friend of Blessed Bartholomew Buonpedoni, he tended to Bartholomew and assisted in his twenty-year ministry to lepers.


Died

1300 of natural causes


Beatified

1909 by Pope Pius X (cultus confirmed)



Saint Evellius of Pisa

Profile

Imperial advisor to emperor Nero. Converted to Christianity after witnessing the courage and faith of martyrs. He left the imperial court and fled Rome, but was captured and executed. Martyr.


Born

Pisa, Italy


Died

beheaded c.66 in Pisa, Italy



Saint Walbert of Hainault


Also known as

Vaubert


Profile

Born to the nobility. Married to Saint Bertilia of Thuringia. Father of Saint Waltrude and Saint Aldegundis.


Born

Hainault (in modern Belgium)


Died

c.678



Saint Illuminatus of San Severino


Profile

Benedictine monk at San Mariano Abbey, San Severino, Marches of Ancona, Italy.


Born

at San Severino, Marches of Ancona, Italy


Died

c.1000



Saint Possessor of Verdun


Profile

Magistrate in Verdun, France. Bishop of Verdun in 470. Led his diocese during a period of constant invasion by and trouble with Franks, Vandals and Goths.


Died

c.485



Saint Fremund of Dunstable


Profile

Hermit. Martyred by pagan Danish invaders.


Died

• 866

• relics enshrined in Dunstable, England



Saint Maiulo of Hadrumetum


Also known as

Maiolo


Profile

Martyr.


Died

mauled by wild animals in 3rd century Hadrumetum, Libya



Saint Diocletius of Osimo


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

stoned to death in 303 in Osimo, Italy



Saint Florentius of Osimo


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

stoned to death in 303 in Osimo, Italy



Saint Maximus of Sabina


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

in 304 on the Via Salaria outside Rome, Italy



Saint Bassus of Sabina


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

in 304 on the Via Salaria outside Rome, Italy



Saint Fabius of Sabina


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

in 304 on the Via Salaria outside Rome, Italy



Saint Sisinius of Osimo


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

stoned to death in 303 in Osimo, Italy



Blessed Illuminatus


Profile

Franciscan monk; spiritual student of Saint Francis of Assisi.


Died

c.1230 of natural causes



Saint Principia of Rome


Profile

Nun in Rome, Italy. Spiritual student of Saint Marcella.


Died

c.420



Saint Gualberto


Profile

Born to the early 7th century Frankish nobility. Married to Saint Bertilla.



Saint Bertilla


Profile

Born to the early 7th century Frankish nobility. Married to Saint Gualberto.



Martyrs of Camerino


Profile

An imperial Roman official, his wife, their children and servants, all of whom were converts and martyrs: Anastasius, Aradius, Callisto, Eufemia, Evodius, Felice, Primitiva, Theopista.



Died

• beheaded in 251 on the Via Lata, outside the east gate of Camerino, Italy

• relics in Camerino

10 May 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மே 10

 St. Peter Van


Feastday: May 10

Death: 1857

Canonized: Pope John Paul II


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


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



St. Damien of Molokai

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 10)


✠ புனிதர் தமியான் ✠

(St. Damien of Molokai)


மதகுரு, மதபோதகர்:

(Religious Priest and Missionary)


பிறப்பு: ஜனவரி 3, 1840

ட்ரெமெலோ, ப்ரபன்ட், பெல்ஜியம்

(Tremelo, Brabant, Belgium)


இறப்பு: ஏப்ரல் 15, 1889 (வயது 49)

கலாவுபப்பா, மொலகாய், ஹவாயி

(Kalaupapa, Molokaʻi, Hawaiʻi)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:  

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கீழைக் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபைகள்

(Eastern Catholic Churches)

அமெரிக்க எப்பிஸ்கோப்பல் திருச்சபை

(Episcopal Church)

ஆங்கிலிக்கத்தின் சில பிரிவுகள்

(Some Churches of Anglican Communion)

லூதரன் தனிச்சபைகள் சில

(Individual Lutheran Churches)


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: ஜூன் 4, 1995

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல் 

(Pope John Paul II)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: அக்டோபர் 11, 2009

திருத்தந்தை பதினாறாம் பெனடிக்ட்

(Pope Benedict XVI)


முக்கிய திருத்தலங்கள்:

லுவென், பெல்ஜியம் (உடலின் மிச்சங்கள்)

(Leuven, Belgium (bodily relics)

மோலக்காய், ஹவாய் (அவரது கையின் மிச்சங்கள்)

(Molokaʻi, Hawaii (relics of his hand)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 10


பாதுகாவல்: தொழுநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டோர்.


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


பிறப்பும் துறவறமும்:

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


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


தமியானின் இளமைப் பருவம்:

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


துறவு வாழ்க்கையைத் தழுவுதல்:

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


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


ஹவாயிக்கு மறைப்பணியாற்றச் செல்லுதல்:

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


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


ஹவாயியில் மருத்துவ நெருக்கடி:

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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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

Feastday: May 10

Patron: of people with leprosy

Birth: 1840

Death: 1889

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

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


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


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


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


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


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



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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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


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



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


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


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


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


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


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

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


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


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


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


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






Early life

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


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


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


Mission in Hawaii


Father Damien in 1873 before he sailed for Hawaii

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


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


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


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


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


Mission on Molokai

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


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


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


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



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

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


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


Recognition during his lifetime

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


Illness and death


Father Damien on his deathbed


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


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

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


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


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


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


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


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


Commentary after his death

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


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


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


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


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


Stevenson referred to his journal entries in his letter:


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


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


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


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


Canonization


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


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

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


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


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


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


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




Saint John of Avila

† இன்றைய புனிதர் †

(மே 9)


✠ அவிலா நகர புனிதர் யோவான் ✠

(St. John of Avila)


மதகுரு, மறைவல்லுநர், அண்டலூசியாவின் திருத்தூதர்:

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


பிறப்பு: ஜனவரி 6, 1499

அல்மொடோவார் தெல் காம்போ, சியுடட் ரியல், ஸ்பெயின்

(Almodóvar del Campo, Ciudad Real, Spain) 


இறப்பு: மே 10, 1569 (வயது 69)

மொன்டீல்லா, கொர்டோபா, ஸ்பெயின்

(Montilla, Córdoba, Spain)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்: 

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church) 


அருளாளர் பட்டம்: நவம்பர் 12, 1893

திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ

(Pope Leo XIII) 


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 31, 1970

திருத்தந்தை ஆறாம் பவுல்

(Pope Paul VI)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

இன்கார்னேஷன் ஆலயம், மொண்டில்லா, கொர்டோபா, ஸ்பெயின்

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


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: மே 9


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


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


இளமை:

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


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


அண்டலூசியாவில்:

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


ஸ்பெயின் நாட்டில்:

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


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


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


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


இறப்பு:

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


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

Also known as

• Apostle of Andalusia

• Juan de Ávila Jijón



Profile

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


Born

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


Died

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

interred in the Basílica de San Juan de Ávila in Montilla


Canonized

31 May 1970 by Pope Paul VI


Patronage

• Andalusia, Spain

• Spain

• Spanish secular clergy

• World Youth Day 2011




Saint Joseph de Veuster


Also known as

• Apostle to the Lepers

• Damian de Veuster

• Father Damien



Additional Memorial

15 April (Father Damien Day in Hawaii)


Profile

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


Born

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


Died

• 15 April 1889 at Molokai, Hawaii from leprosy

• buried next to Saint Philomena Church, Molokai, Hawaii

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


Canonized

11 October 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI


Patronage

• against leprosy

• lepers



Blessed Vasile Aftenie


Profile

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



Born

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


Died

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

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

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


Beatified

2 June 2019 by Pope Francis




Blessed Ivan Merz


Also known as

John Merz



Profile

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


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


Born

16 December 1896 in Banja Luka, Bosnia and Herzegovina


Died

• 10 May 1928 in Zagreb, Croatia of natural causes

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


Beatified

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


Readings

Catholic faith is my life vocation. - Blessed Ivan


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


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



Blessed Enrico Rebuschini


Profile

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



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


Born

28 April 1860 at Gravedona, Como, Italy


Died

10 May 1938 in Cremona, Italy of pneumonia


Beatified

4 May 1997 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Comgall of Bangor


Additional Memorial

6 January as one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland



Profile

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


Born

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


Died

601 at Bangor Abbey, Ireland of natural causes


Canonized

1903 (cultus confirmed)




Saint Solange of Bourges


Also known as

• Solange of Berry

• Solange of Bourges of Genevieve du Berry

• Solangia...



Profile

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


Born

863 at Villemont near Bourges, France


Died

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


Patronage

• Berry, France

• Bourges, France

• children

• drought relief

• for rain

• rape victims

• shepherdesses

• shepherds




Saint Catald of Taranto


Also known as

• Catald of Tarentum

• Catald of Rachau

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



Profile

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


Born

7th century Munster, Ireland


Died

• c.685 in Taranto, Italy of natural causes

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

• relics translated on 10 May 1017

• remarkable cures reported almost immediately at his new tomb


Patronage

• against blindness

• against drought

• against epilepsy

• against hernias

• against paralysis

• against plague

• against storms

• blind people

• drought relief

• epileptics

• paralyzed people

• Massa Lubrense, Italy

• Taranto, Italy



Blessed Amalarius of Metz


Also known as

• Amalarius of Trier

• Fortunatus, Symphosius


Additional Memorials

• 29 April (Martyrologium Hieronymianum)

• 10 June (Trier, Germany)


Profile

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


Born

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


Died

c.853



Blessed Beatrix of Este the Elder


Profile

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


Born

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


Died

• 10 May 1226 of natural causes at Gemmola, Italy

• interred in the church of Saint John the Baptist

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

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


Beatified

19 November 1763 by Pope Clement XIII



Saint Gordian the Judge


Also known as

• Gordian of Rome

• Gordianus...



Profile

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


Died

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

• buried with Saint Epimachus in a crypt near Rome

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



Saint Calepodius of Rome


Profile

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


Died

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

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

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

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

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



Saint Alphius of Lentini


Also known as

Alfio



Profile

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


Born

Sicily, Italy


Died

251 in Lentini, Sicily, Italy


Patronage

• Lentini, Sicily, Italy

• Trecastagni, Sicily, Italy



Saint Cyrinus of Lentini


Also known as

Cirino


Profile

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


Born

Sicily


Died

251 in Lentini, Sicily, Italy


Patronage

• Lentini, Sicily, Italy

• Trecastagni, Sicily, Italy



Saint Philadelphus of Lentini


Profile

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


Born

Sicily, Italy


Died

251 in Lentini, Sicily, Italy


Patronage

• Lentini, Sicily, Italy

• Trecastagni, Sicily, Italy



Blessed Giusto Santgelp


Profile

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



Born

France


Died

Mercedarian convent of Saint Anthony the Abbot, Tarragona, Spain



Saint Palmatius of Rome


Profile

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


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

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



Saint Simplicius of Rome

Profile

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


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

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



Job


Profile

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



Patronage

• against abscesses

• against depression

• against ulcers

• ulcer sufferers



Saint Epimachus of Rome


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of Decius.



Died

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

• relics transferred to a crypt near Rome, Italy



Saint Felix of Rome


Profile

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


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

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



Saint Blanda of Rome


Profile

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


Died

• beheaded c.232 in Rome, Italy

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



Saint Aurelian of Limoges


Profile

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


Died

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



Blessed William of Pontoise


Profile

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


Born

England


Died

c.1195 of natural causes



Saint Quartus of Capua


Profile

Martyr.


Born

Capua, Italy


Died

• martyred at Rome, Italy, date unknown

• relics enshrined at Capua, Italy



Saint Quintus of Capua


Profile

Martyr.


Born

Capua, Italy


Died

• martyred at Rome, Italy, date unknown

• relics enshrined at Capua, Italy



Blessed Antonio of Norcia


Profile

Lay Franciscan.


Died

c.1310 in Norcia, Italy of natural causes



Saint Dioscorides of Smyrna


Profile

Martyr.


Died

at Smyrna, Asia Minor



Saint Thecla


Profile

Martyr.



Blessed Nicholas Albergati



Profile

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


Born

1373 at Bologna, Italy


Died

• 9 May 1443 at Siena, Italy of natural causes

• buried at the Carthusian monastery in Florence, Italy


Beatified

25 September 1744 by Pope Benedict XIV (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

learning