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20 October 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் அக்டோபர் 21

 Bl. Nicolas Barre


Feastday: October 21

Birth: 1621

Death: 1686

Beatified: Pope John Paul II



Nicolas Barré (October 21, 1621 - May 31, 1686) was a priest and founder of the Community of the Sisters of the Child Jesus, was beatified in 1999.


Nicolas was born October 21, 1621 in Amiens, his parents were wealthy merchants, who had five children he was the eldest. Nicolas was baptized at Saint-Germain December 17, 1621.


He was educated by the Jesuits, but at 19, he joined the Minims, founded by St. Francis of Paola. He took his vows in 1641 and was ordained priest in 1645.


From 1645 to 1655, he assumed the office of professor of theology and librarian at the convent in the Place Royale in Paris (now Place des Vosges).


But in 1655, his health deteriorating, Nicolas Barré was sent to Amiens, where he recovered, before leaving for Rouen.


There, from 1659 to 1675, he worked for the education of poor children, with a few girls who are organizing to be fully available to their educational mission. In 1662 opened a school in Sotteville-lčs-Rouen, and the Father Barre establishes a first community gathering women who had helped him in his efforts. These are the first Sisters of Providence of Rouen.


In 1675, he returned to Paris where he continued his foundation for popular schools and communities, such as Charitable Mistresses of the Holy Child Jesus, also known as the Ladies of Saint-Maur. He was the adviser of St. John Baptist de La Salle, to whom he enjoined to give up his property and live with poor school teachers to be successful as the first master charitable successful with girls. "



He died May 31, 1686 in Paris.



St. Maichus


Feastday: October 21


A Syrian hermit, captured by the Saracens and sold as a slave. Malchus told St. Jerome that he was born in Nisibia. He was one of the recluses at Khalkis, near Antioch. and set out with a caravan to return home. The caravan was captured by marauding Bedouins, and he was taken prisoner. While a captive, Malchus was forcibly married to a young woman who was already married. They lived as brother and sister until fleeing into the region of caves. While hunting them, their master was killed by a lioness. Malchus went back to Khalkis, and the woman, unable to find her true husband, became a hermitess. Malchus later went to Maronia where he was honored by St. Jerome.


 

Bl. Josephine Leroux


Feastday: October 21

Birth: 1747

Death: 1794


Ursuline martyr of the French Revolution. She was born Ann-Joseph Leroux at Cambral, France. After becoming an Ursuline at Valenciennes, she was driven from the convent but returned in 1793. Josephine was guillotined with her Ursuline companions. She was beatified in 1920.



St. John of Bridlington


Feastday: October 21

Patron: women in difficult labour; fishermen

Birth: 1319

Death: 1379


Augustinian prior and patron of women who face difficult labors. He was born John Thwing in Bridlington, Yorkshire, England, in 1319, and became a student at Oxford. Joining the Augustinians at Bridlington, he served as prior for seventeen years until his death. He was canonized in 1401.


John Twenge (Saint John of Bridlington, John Thwing, John of Thwing, John Thwing of Bridlington) (1320–1379) is an English saint of the 14th century. In his lifetime he enjoyed a reputation for great holiness and for miraculous powers. St John of Bridlington was commended for the integrity of his life, his scholarship, and his quiet generosity. He was the last English saint to be canonised before the English Reformation.




Life

Born in 1320 in the village of Thwing on the Yorkshire Wolds, about nine miles west of Bridlington,[1] he was of the Yorkshire family Twenge, which during the English Reformation would supply two Roman Catholic priest-martyrs, and was also instrumental in establishing the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary at Bar Convent, York.


John was educated at a school in the village from the age of five, completing his studies at Oxford University. He then entered the Augustinian Canons Regular community of Bridlington Priory. He carried out his duties with humility and diligence, and was in turn novice master, almsgiver, preacher and sub-prior. He became Canon of the Priory in 1346 and was eventually elected Prior in 1356. John initially declined out of humility, but after being re-elected, probably in 1361, he took on the duties of Prior in January 1362.[1] He served as Prior for 17 years before his death on 10 October 1379.


Miracles attributed to him

In his lifetime he enjoyed a reputation for great holiness and for miraculous powers. Reputedly on one occasion he changed water into wine. On another, five seamen from Hartlepool in danger of shipwreck called upon God in the name of His servant, John of Bridlington, whereupon the prior himself appeared to them in his canonical habit and brought them safely to shore. The men left their vessel at the harbour and walked to the Monastery where they thanked John in person for saving their lives.[1]


The Vision of William Staunton (British Library Manuscripts, Royal 17.B.xliii and Additional 34,193) recounts William's visit to St Patrick's Purgatory where he sees both purgatory and the earthly paradise and is conducted through the otherworld by St John of Bridlington and St Ive (of Quitike).[2]


Death and canonisation

After his death from natural causes, the fame of the supposed miracles brought by his intercession spread rapidly through the land. Alexander Neville, Archbishop of York, charged his suffragans and others to take evidence with a view to his canonisation, 26 July 1386. Richard le Scrope, Archbishop of York 1398–1405, assisted by the bishops of Durham and Carlisle, officiated at a solemn translation of his body, 11 March 1404, de mandato Domini Papae.[3] This pope, Boniface IX, shortly afterwards canonised him. The canonisation had been doubted and disputed; but the original Bull was unearthed in the Vatican archives by T. A. Twemlow, who was engaged in research work there for the British government.


At the English Reformation, Henry VIII was asked to spare the magnificent shrine of the saint, but it was destroyed in 1537. The nave of the church, restored in 1857, is all that now remains of Bridlington Priory. The saint's feast is observed by the canons regular on 9 October.[3]


Veneration


Window at All Saints, Thwing (1950s)

St John of Bridlington was commended for the integrity of his life, his scholarship, and his quiet generosity. He was the last English saint to be canonised before the English Reformation. King Henry V attributed his victory at Agincourt to the intercession in heaven of this Saint John and of Saint John of Beverley. Women in difficult labour may pray to St John of Bridlington as their patron saint[4] and he is also associated with the local fishing industry.


At All Saints Church, Thwing, there is a window showing St John of Bridlington and St Cecilia. There is a St John Street in Bridlington named after him, an old thoroughfare linking the "Old Town" that grew up around Bridlington Priory with the quayside community of fishermen and traders. At St Andrew's Church, Hempstead, Norfolk, a wooden panel showing John of Bridlington depicts him holding a fish and in episcopal robes, though he never served as bishop



St. Gaspar


Feastday: October 21

Birth: 1786

Death: 1837



Gaspar, who was born in Rome, the son of a chef, in 1786, received his education as a Collegio Romano and was ordained priest in 1808. Shortly after this, Rome was taken by Napoleon's army, and he, with most of the clergy, was exiled for refusing to deny his allegiance to the Holy See. He returned after the fall of Napoleon to find a wide scope for work, as Rome had for nearly five years, been almost entirely without priests and sacraments. In 1815, Gaspar founded the Congregation of the most Precious Blood with the approval of Pope Pius VII. His wish was to have a house in every diocese, and he chose the most neglected and wicked town or district. The kingdom of Naples was in those days a nest of crime of every kind; no one's life or property was safe, and in 1821 the pope asked Gaspar to found six houses there. He was very happy to do this, but he had many difficulties to overcome before it was accomplished. In 1824, the houses of the congregation were opened to young clergy who wished to be trained specially as missionaries. In his lifetime, their work covered the whole of Italy. Journeying from town to town, enduring endless hardships, threatened often even with death, Gaspar always taking the hardest work himself, they preached their message. One of his principles was that everybody should be made to work. He therefore founded works of charity in Rome for young and old, rich and poor of both sexes. He opened the night oratory, where our Lord is worshipped all night by men, many coming to Him, like Nicodemus, by night who would not have the courage to go to confession by day. His last mission was preached in Rome during the cholera outbreak of 1836. Feeling his strength failing, he returned at once to Albano, and made every preparation for death. After the feast of St. Francis Xavier he went to Rome to die. He received the last sacraments on December 28, and he died the same day. Various miracles had been worked by St. Gaspar during his lifetime, and after his death many graces were obtained by his intercession. He was canonized in 1954.



Gaspar Melchior Balthazar del Bufalo (January 6, 1786 – December 28, 1837), also known as Gaspare del Bufalo, was a Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Missionaries of the Precious Blood. Canonised in 1954 he is liturgically commemorated the 21 October.



Life

Gaspar del Bufalo was born in Rome on the Feast of the Epiphany, January 6, 1786.[2] He was baptized that same day and given the name Gaspar Melchior Balthazar, the traditional names of the magi who visited the child Jesus. The son of Annunziata and Antonio del Bufalo, he grew up in the city of Rome, in the servants' quarters of a noble family, where his father worked as chef.[3]


His father was a failed entrepreneur who had dabbled in the theater and in professional soccer[4] before taking a position as a cook in the household of the Altieri family, whose palace was across from the Church of the Gesù in Rome.


Because of his delicate health, his pious mother had him confirmed at the age of one and a half years. As he was suffering from an incurable malady of the eyes, which threatened to leave him blind, prayers were offered to St. Francis Xavier for his recovery. Through the influence of his mother he became greatly devoted to St. Francis Xavier, whose relic is prominently displayed on an altar of the Gesù. In 1787, he was recovered and cherished in later life a special devotion to the Apostle of India, and selected him as the special patron of the congregation which he later founded.[5]


St. Gaspar was also active in several ministries. He visited the sick and the poor often and founded a young persons’ religious organization whose members prayed and did charitable work together.[4] He was ordained to the Catholic priesthood in the diocese of Rome in 1808.[3] Soon after Gaspar formed an evening society for the laborers and farm workers who came into Rome from the countryside to sell their wares. He provided catechism for orphans and children of the poor and set up a night shelter for the homeless.


Along with other clergy who refused to take the oath of allegiance to Napoleon Bonaparte in 1809 after the deportation of Pope Pius VII, he was sent into exile to northern Italy and imprisoned for four years. Upon his return to Rome in 1814, he considered joining the Jesuits, who had recently been reestablished. However, in view of the needs of the time and at the request of Pius VII, he engaged in the ministry of preaching missions to the people in order to reestablish some order in the midst of the chaos of the time.[3]


Missionaries of the Precious Blood


Despite facing considerable difficulties, in 1815 he founded a society of priests, the Missionaries of the Precious Blood, at the abbey of San Felice in Giano, Umbria.[6] With the help of local people, Gaspar worked to repair the abandoned 10th century monastery.[4]


The year 1821 was a time of great lawlessness in the Papal States and many towns were out of the control of the civil authorities. Bandits controlled many of the towns in the coastal provinces. Cardinal Cristaldi, papal treasurer and advisor to Pope Pius VII, suggested that Gaspar and his new band of missionaries go into the towns and provinces where the bandits lived and establish mission houses. There they were to preach the Word, establish churches and chapels, and see to the continued instruction of the people. Between 1821 and 1823 six new mission houses were opened. Gaspar and his companions went out and preached the merits of the Precious Blood. They called the people to repentance and to return to faithfulness. They would preach on the street corners at night. They instructed the children. Armed with only the crucifix, they went into the hills,[7] where Gaspar negotiated a peace with the banditi.[4]



Although Gaspar was very popular in his native city, he was not without enemies. His activity in converting the "briganti", who came in crowds and laid their guns at his feet after he had preached to them in their mountain hiding-places, excited the ire of the officials who profited from brigandage through bribes and in other ways. These enemies almost induced Leo XII to suspend del Bufalo.[5]


He also faced ecclesiastical opposition. One major objection to the new society was that its name, The Society of the Precious Blood, was considered unecclesiastical. Gaspar was accused of disregarding canon law and the mission cross and chain that the members wore was completely untraditional. This opposition began under the reign of Pope Pius VII (around 1820) who had been a strong support of the society at its founding in 1815.[6] This opposition became so strong that the successor to Pius VII, Leo XII, was positively adverse to the community. It is noted that this was at a time when Gaspar was being more and more open in his criticism of abuses in the Church and the government of the Papal States. St. Gaspar felt that this opposition was more of a personal attack on himself and so he offered to step down as moderator of the community so that things could be smoothed over. Fortunately, this was not needed as the situation with Leo XII was resolved after a meeting between the two of them.[7]


His missionary efforts were extremely dramatic. One contemporary, the Passionist priest and bishop St. Vincent Strambi, described his preaching as being "like a spiritual earthquake." He was also a friend of St. Vincent Pallotti, founder of the Pallotines, who assisted at Gaspar's deathbed. He is particularly known for his devotion to the Precious Blood of Christ and for spreading this devotion during his lifetime.


Until his death on December 28, 1837, he worked tirelessly to re-evangelize central Italy, especially the Papal States. He was well known for his eloquence in preaching, his devotion to the poor (especially the Santa Galla Hospice in Rome), and his work with the brigands of southern Lazio.


In 1836, his strength began to fail. He had given his last mission in Rome at the Chiesa Nuova in 1837. Although fatally ill, he hastened to Rome, where the cholera was raging, to administer to the spiritual wants of the plague-stricken. He returned to Albano but went again to Rome at the suggestion of Cardinal Franzoni, the cardinal protector of the Congregation, in December 1837. It proved too much for him, and he succumbed in the midst of his labours on December 28, 1837.[5]


His funeral was held in Rome at the church of Sant'Angelo in Pescheria, near the Teatro di Marcello, and he was buried in Albano. Later, his body was transferred to the house of the Missionaries on the Via dei Crociferi in Rome (Santa Maria in Trivio), where it remains today.


The titles accorded to him by his contemporaries:"II Santo", "Apostle of Rome", "Il martello dei Carbonari" (Hammer of Italian Freemasonry).[5]


Veneration



Saint Gaspar del Bufalo was beatified by Pope Pius X in 1904,[6] and canonized by Pope Pius XII on June 12, 1954. His feast day, as indicated in the Roman Martyrology, is on the day of his death, December 28, but has not been included in the General Roman Calendar. Currently Saint Gaspar del Bufalo's feast day is celebrated on October 21.[clarification needed]


Legacy

He had a significant influence on St. Maria De Mattias, foundress of the Adorers of the Blood of Christ (A.S.C.),[8] although it was Venerable Giovanni Merlini C.PP.S. who was most directly associated with St. Maria in establishing her congregation.



St. Dasius



Feastday: October 21

Death: 303


Martyr with Gaius, Zoticus, and companions at Nicomedia.There were fifteen soldiers in this group




Saint Ursula

மறைசாட்சி ஊர்சுலா 

St.Ursula


நினைவுத்திருநாள் : அக்டோபர் 21



பிறப்பு : இங்கிலாந்து (?)


இறப்பு : 3 அல்லது 4 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, கொலோன்


பாதுகாவல்: கொலோன் மறைமாவட்டம், இளைஞர்கள், ஆசிரியர்கள், அமைதியான மரணம்


ஊர்சுலா ஆங்கிலேயர் அரசர் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். சிறுபிள்ளையாக இருக்கும்போதே, துறவிகளுக்குரிய வார்த்தைப்பாடுகளை எடுத்தார். ஆனால் இவரின் தந்தை, செல்வந்தர் ஒருவருக்கு திருமணம் செய்து வைக்க நிச்சயம் செய்தார். ஆனால் ஊர்சுலாவின் இதயம் இறைவனையே நாடியது.

இவர் ஒருமுறை கடலில் பயணம் செய்யும்போது, பலத்த காற்று ஏற்பட்டது. அப்போது தான் சென்ற கப்பலை, கொலோன் நகரை நோக்கி செல்ல ஊர்சுலா கூறவே கப்பலானது கொலோன் நகரை வந்தடைந்தது. அப்போது அழகு வாய்ந்த ஊர்சுலா ஹீனன்கொனிஷ் (Hunnenkönig) என்பவரால் கவரப்பட்டார்.

ஆனால் அவ்வரசனின் விருப்பத்திற்கிணங்க ஊர்சுலா மறுத்தார். இதனால் அவனால் கொலை செய்யப்பட்டதாக வரலாறு கூறுகின்றது. 1106 ஆம் ஆண்டில் இவரின் புனிதப்பொருட்கள் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டு, இவரின் பெயரில் உள்ள ஆலயத்தில் வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாகவும் கூறப்படுகின்றது.



செபம்:

நல்ல ஆயனாம் இறைவா! ஊர்சுலா என்ற பெயரை தாங்கியுள்ள அனைவரையும் ஆசீர்வதியும். நல்ல உடல் உள்ள நலன்களை கொடுத்து, வாழ்வை ஆசீர்வதித்து இப்புனிதரின் வழியாக உம் ஆசீர்வாதங்களை நீர் பொழிந்து வழிநடத்த வேண்டுமென்று இறைவா உம்மை மன்றாடுகின்றோம்


Profile

Legendary princess, the daughter of a Christian British king and Saint Daria. She travelled Europe in company of either 11 or 11,000 fellow maidens; the 11,000 number probably resulted from a misreading of the term "11M" which indicated 11 Martyrs, but which a copyist took for a Roman numeral. Ursula and her company were tortured to death to get them to renounce their faith, and old paintings of them show many of the women being killed in various painful ways. Namesake for the Ursuline Order, founded for the education of young Catholic girls and women.



There are other saints closely associated with Ursula and her story –


travelling companions who were martyred with her




• Agnes of Cologne

• Antonia of Cologne

• Calamanda of Calaf

• Cesarius of Cologne

• Cordula

• Cunigunde of Rapperswil

• Cyriacus of Cologne

• Fiolanus of Lucca

• Ignatius of Cologne

• James of Antioch

• Mauritius of Cologne

• Martha of Cologne

• Odilia

• Pontius of Cologne

• Sulpitius of Ravenna

• Vincent of Cologne


travelling companion, but escaped the massacre


• Cunera


led by a dove to the lost tomb of Ursula


• Cunibert of Cologne


her mother


• Daria


Died

21 October 238 in Cologne, Germany


Patronage

• British Virgin Islands

• Catholic education (especially of girls)

• Cologne, Germany

• holy death

• students, school children

• teachers, educators

• University of Paris




Blessed Charles of Austria


Also known as

• Charles of Habsburg

• Carlo d'Austria

• Karl I von Österreich

• Karl IV von Österreich



Profile

Son of Archduke Otto and Princess Maria Josephine of Saxony; great-nephew of Emperor Francis Joseph I. A stigmatic nun prophesied that he would be the victim of attacks and great suffering. A group of people were specifically assigned to pray for him at all times; after his death this group formed the League of Prayer of the Emperor Charles for the Peace of the Peoples (Gebetsliga Kaiser Karl für den Völkerfrieden), which became an ecclesiastically recognized prayer group in 1963. He received a strong Catholic education, and developed a strong devotion to the Holy Eucharist and the Sacred Heart of Jesus. Married Princess Zita of Bourbon and Parma on 21 October 1911. They had eight children over the next ten years.


With the assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand on 28 June 1914, the trigger for World War I, Charles became heir presumptive to the throne of the Austro-Hungarian Empire. On the death of Emperor Francis Joseph on 21 November 1916, Charles became Emperor of Austria; crowned apostolic king of Hungary on 30 December 1916. He saw his crown as a way to implement Christian charity and social reform. He worked for peace, for an end to the war, and was the only leader to support Pope Benedict XV's peace effort. After the war, Charles was exiled to Switzerland in March 1919. Trying to prevent the rise of Communism in Central Europe, he tried twice in 1921 to return to power, but since he refused to be the cause of civil war, he finally gave up. Since he considered his office a mandate from God, he never abdicated his throne or title, but he was exiled to the island of Madeira, Portugal and spent his remaining days in prayerful poverty. His widow, princess Zita, dressed in black and lived in mourning her remaining 67 years.


Born

17 August 1887 in Persenbeug Castle, Melk, Lower Austria


Died

1 April 1922 at Funchal, Madeira, Portugal of pneumonia


Beatified

• 3 October 2004 by Pope John Paul II

• his beatification miracle involved the cure of metastatic breast cancer in a Baptist women from Kissimmee, Florida



Blessed Giuseppe Puglisi


Also known as

Pino Puglisi



Profile

Son of Carmelo and Giuseppa Fana Puglisi, a cobbler and a seamstress. Ordained on 2 July 1960 as a priest in the archdiocese of Palermo, Italy. Parish priest in the areas of Settacannoli, Romagnolo, Vadessi, Godrano and Brancaccio in Italy. Confessor of the Basilian sisters Figlie di Santa Macrina. Taught at a number of schools from 1962 to 1993. Worked with youth in the poorest areas of his assignments, and helped teach anyone who would listen about the reforms of Vatican II that were designed to revilatize the involvement of the laity. Worked in Godrano to end bloody vendettas, and reconciled families broken by violence. Member of the Presenza del Vangelo. Vice-rector of the seminary in Palermo on 9 August 1978; director of diocesan vocations on 24 November 1979 and of the region on 5 February 1986. The work he did in schools, with vocations and in the neighborhoods proved a model for later teachers who work from the Christian point of view. Worked with groups of nuns, priests and lay people to improve living conditions and to denouce crime and the collusion of elected officials with organized crime. He received a series of threats, and was murdered at home by the mafia for his work. Martyr.


Born

15 September 1937 in Brancaccio, Palermo, Italy


Died

• 15 September 1993 at piazzale Anita Garibaldi 3, Palermo, Italy

• buried in the chapel


Beatified

• 25 May 2013 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated at the Stadio Renzo Barbera, Palermo, Italy by Cardinal Salvatore De Giorgi



Saint Wendelin

புனித_வென்டலின் (554-617)


அக்டோபர் 21


இவர் ஸ்காட்லாந்து நாட்டின் இளவரசர். இவரது தந்தை ஸ்காட்லாந்தை ஆண்டு வந்த ஃபோர்சதோ, தாய் அயர்லினா என்பவர் ஆவர்.



தனக்கு மறைக்கல்வி கற்றுக்கொடுத்த ஆயர் வழியாக இறைவன்மீது மிகுந்த பற்றுக்கொண்டு வாழ்ந்த இவர், ஒருநாள் எல்லாவற்றையும் துறந்துவிட்டு, கால்நடையாகவே புனித நாடுகளுக்குச் சென்றார்‌. 


574 ஆம் ஆண்டு உரோமைக்கு வந்த இவர், அங்கிருந்த திருத்தந்தை முதலாம் பெனடிக்டைச் சந்தித்து அவரிடம் ஆலோசனை கேட்டார். அவர் சொன்ன ஆலோசனை பேரில் இவர் ஒரு துறவியாக வாழத் தொடங்கினார்.


இதற்குப் பிறகு இவர் மக்கள் கொடுத்த உணவை உண்டு, அவர்கள் நடுவில் போதித்தும், இறைவேண்டல் செய்தும் வந்தார். இப்படிப்பட்ட நேரத்தில் ஒருவர் இவரிடம், "கையும் காலும் நன்றாகத்தானே இருக்கின்றன, பிறகு எதற்கு அடுத்தவரிடம் இரந்து உண்கிறாய்?" என்று கேட்டார். இதனால் இவர் ஒரு பெரிய பணக்காரரின் தோட்டத்தில் தோட்ட வேலைகளைச் செய்து, அதிலிருந்து கிடைத்த ஊதியத்தில் உண்டு வந்தார்.


நாள்கள் மெல்ல நகர்கையில் தோட்ட வேலையிலேயே முழு நாளும் கழிந்ததால், இவரால் இறைவனிடம் வேண்டுவதற்கு நேரம் ஒதுக்க முடியாமல் போனது. இதனால் இவர் தோட்ட வேலையை விட்டுவிட்டு, ஒருவருடைய ஆடுகளை மேய்க்கத் தொடங்கினார். இப்பொழுது இவருக்கு இறைவனிடம் வேண்டுவதற்கு மிகுதியான நேரம் கிடைத்தது.



இவ்வாறு இவர் தான் செய்த இறைவேண்டலின் மூலம் இறைவனோடு ஒன்றித்திருக்க முடிந்ததால், இறைவார்த்தையை மக்களுக்கு நல்ல முறையில் எடுத்துரைக்க முடிந்தது. பலரும் இவருடைய போதனையைக் கேட்க ஆவலோடு வந்தார்.


இப்படி இறைவேண்டலுக்கும் இறைவார்த்தையை எடுத்துரைப்பதற்கும் சிறந்ததோர் எடுத்துக்காட்டாக விளங்கிய இவர் 617 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Wendel, Wendolinus, Wendelinus



Profile

Prince of Scotland, the son of King Forchado and Queen Irelina. Educated by the local bishop, Wendelin decided to abandon life in the royal family, and devote himself to God. Dressed as a pilgrim, Wendelin left his castle home in the middle of the night, and left the worldly life behind.


Pilgrim to many holy sites, reaching Rome, Italy in 574. During an audience with Pope Benedict I, the pope told him to follow his desire for a life with God. Lived for a while in Einsidel, Germany. Hermit in the forest wilderness of Westerich.


During a trip to the shrines in Trier, Germany, he reportedly met a wealthy highwayman. The thief admonished Wendelin for begging when he was so obviously capable of earning his living. He then worked for the thief as a swineherd until he found there was no time for his prayers. He transferred to work tending cattle, Wendelin again had time for prayer. However, the herd he tended grew so fast that he soon found himself again over-worked. This time he was transferred to tending sheep, traditionally a job for children or older men as it was less physically demanding. Even when his flock grew large, he still had time for prayer. Legend says that God transferred Wendelin and his flocks back to the old hermitage many times, and then brought them back in the evening.


Hermit near Trier in 590. Abbot in Tholey, Germany in 597.


Born

554 in Scotland


Died

617 at Tholey, Germany of natural causes



Saint Laura of Saint Catherine of Siena

✠ புனிதர் லாரா ✠

(St. Laura of Saint Catherine of Siena)


மறைப்பணியாளர்/ நிறுவனர்:

(Religious and Founder)



பிறப்பு: மே 26, 1874

ஜெரிகோ, அன்டியோகுயியா, ஐக்கிய கொலம்பியாவின் மாகாணங்கள்

(Jericó, Antioquía, United States of Colombia)


இறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 21, 1949 (வயது 75)

பெலென்சிடோ, மெடெல்லின், அன்டியோகுயியா, கொலம்பியா

(Belencito, Medellín, Antioquía, Colombia)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: ஏப்ரல் 25, 2004

திருத்தந்தை ஜான் பவுல்

(Pope John Paul II)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 12, 2013

திருத்தந்தை ஃபிரான்சிஸ்

(Pope Francis)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 21


பாதுகாவல்:

இன பாகுபாடு காரணமாக பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்கள்

அனாதைகள்

மரியாவின் மாசற்ற இருதயம் சபை (Congregation of Missionary Sisters of Immaculate Mary)

புனித சியன்னா நகர கேதரீனாவின் மறைபணியாளர் சகோதரிகள் சபை (Congregation of  Saint Catherine of Siena)


புனிதர் சியன்னா நகர கத்ரீனாவின் லாரா, ஒரு கத்தோலிக்க அருட்சகோதரி ஆவார். 1914ம் ஆண்டு, இவர் மரியாவின் மாசற்ற இதயம் (Congregation of Missionary Sisters of Immaculate Mary), மற்றும் புனித சியன்னா நகர கேதரீனாவின் மறைபணியாளர் சகோதரிகள் (Congregation of  Saint Catherine of Siena) என்னும் துறவற சபைகளை நிறுவினார். இவர் பழங்குடி இனத்தவர்களின் உரிமைக்காக பாடுபட்டார். தென் அமெரிக்க பெண்களுக்கு இவர் ஒரு சிறந்த எடுத்துக்காட்டாக கருதப்படுகின்றார். 


“மரிய லாரா டி ஜீசஸ் மொன்டோயா யி உபெகுயி” (María Laura de Jesús Montoya Upegui) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட இவர், கொலொம்பியாவின் (Colombia) “ஜெரிகோ” (Jericó) நகரில் பிறந்தார். இவரது தந்தையாரின் பெயர், "ஜுவான் டி லா க்ரூஸ் மோன்டோயா" (Juan de la Cruz Montoya) ஆகும். தாயாரின் பெயர், "டோலோரெஸ் ஊபேகுய்" (Dolores Upegui) ஆகும். இவரது பெற்றோருக்குப் பிறந்த மூன்று குழந்தைகளில் இவர் இரண்டாம் குழந்தை ஆவார்.


கி.பி. 1876ம் ஆண்டு நடந்த கொலம்பிய உள்நாட்டுப் (Colombian Civil War) போரின்போது, அவரது தந்தை கொல்லப்பட்டார். அதன் விளைவாக குடும்பத்தினர் ஏழ்மை நிலைக்குத் தள்ளப்பட்டனர். இதன் காரணமாக அவர் தாய்வழி தாத்தா பாட்டியுடன் வாழ அனுப்பப்பட்டார். கி.பி. 1881ம் ஆண்டு, நிலையற்ற பொருளாதார நிலை காரணமாக, அருட்சகோதரியான அவருடைய சித்தி "மரியா டி ஜீஸஸ் உபேகுய்" (María de Jesús Upegui) நிர்வகித்து வந்த அனாதை இல்லத்திற்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டார்.


கி.பி. 1890ம் ஆண்டு, தமது பதினாறு வயதில், ஆசிரியர் பயிற்சி பள்ளியில் சேர்த்து விடப்பட்டார். "அமால்ஃபி" (Amalfi) மற்றும் "மெடேல்லின்" (Medellín) ஆகிய நகரங்களில் கல்வி கற்றார். கி.பி. 1886ம் ஆண்டு, நோயுற்ற அத்தை ஒருவரைப் பராமரிப்பதற்காக அவரது பண்ணையொன்றில் வந்து வசிக்க ஆரம்பித்தார். அங்கேதான், தாம் ஒரு மறைப்பணியாளராக வேண்டிய விருப்பம் இவருக்கு தோன்ற ஆரம்பித்தது. கி.பி. 1893ம் ஆண்டு, மொண்டோயோ, ஆசிரியர் பயிற்சி பட்டம் பெற்றார்.


கி.பி. 1908ம் ஆண்டு, அவர் “உராபா” (Uraba) மற்றும் “சரார்” (Sarare) பிராந்தியங்களில் உள்ள மக்களுடன் இணைந்து பணியாற்றினார், அங்கே, "இந்தியர்களின் படைப்புகள்" (Works of the Indians) எனும் அமைப்பு நிறுவப்பட்டது. மொண்டோயோ, கார்மேல் சபை கன்னியாஸ்திரியாக ஆக விரும்பினார். ஆனால், கிறிஸ்துவின் அன்பை இதுவரை சந்தித்திராத மக்களுக்கு கிறிஸ்துவின் நற்செய்தியை அறிவிக்கும் ஆசையும் ஆர்வமும் அவருள் எழுந்ததை உணர்ந்தார். மொண்டோயோ, தற்போதுள்ள இனப் பாகுபாடுகளை நீக்கி, கிறிஸ்துவின் அன்பையும் போதனைகளையும் அவர்களிடம் கொண்டு வர தம்மையே அர்ப்பணிக்க விரும்பினார்.


கி.பி. 1917ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 14ம் நாளன்று, “மரியாளின் மாசற்ற இருதயம் சபை” (Congregation of Missionary Sisters of Immaculate Mary) மற்றும் “புனித சியன்னா நகர கேதரீனாவின் மறைபணியாளர் சகோதரிகள் சபை” (Congregation of  Saint Catherine of Siena) ஆகிய இரண்டு சபைகளை நிறுவினார். நான்கு சக பெண்களுடன் “மெடல்லின்” (Medellín) நகரை விட்டு கிளம்பி, “டபெய்பா” (Dabeiba) நகரில் ஆதிவாசி இந்தியர்களுடன் வாழ சென்றார்.


இவர்களது புதிய சபைகளுக்கு “சாண்டா ஃபே டி அன்டோனியா” (Bishop of Santa Fe de Antioquia) மறைமாவட்ட ஆயரின் ஆதரவு இருந்தபோதிலும் பிற கிறிஸ்தவ குழுக்களின் விமர்சனங்களுக்கு உள்ளானது.


நீண்டகாலம் நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்த மோண்டோயா, 1949ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம், 21ம் தேதியன்று, கொலம்பியாவில் உள்ள “மெடல்லின்” (Medellín) நகரில் இறந்தார். நோய் காரணமாக, இவரது வாழ்க்கையின் கடைசி பத்து வருடங்கள், சக்கர நாற்காலியிலேயே கழிந்தது. தற்போது அவரது சபைகள், மொத்தம் பத்தொன்பது அமெரிக்கா, ஆப்பிரிக்கா, ஐரோப்பிய நாடுகளில் செயல்படுகிறது.


திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல் 2004ம் ஆண்டு, இவருக்கு அருளாளர் பட்டம் அளித்தார். 2013ம் ஆண்டு, மே மாதம், 12ம் நாளன்று, திருத்தந்தை ஃபிரான்சிஸ் இவருக்கு புனிதர் பட்டம் அளித்தார்.

Also known as

• Laura Montoya y Upegui

• María Laura de Jesus Montoya Upegui



Profile

Educated at the Holy Spirit School in Amalfi, Colombia, and in Medellín, Colombia. Teacher. Beginning in 1908, she worked as missionary to the natives in the Uraba and Sarare regions. Founded the Works of the Indians and the Congregation of Missionary Sisters of Immaculate Mary and of Saint Catherine of Siena who minister to the poor throughout South America. Known for her defense of Indian rights, and as a strong role model for South American girls.


Born

26 May 1874 in Jerico, Antioquía, Colombia as Laura Montoya y Upegui


Died

21 October 1949 in Medellín, Colombia of natural causes


Beatified

• 25 April 2004 by Pope John Paul II

• the beatification miracle involved the 1994 cure of an 86 year old woman with uterine cancer


Canonized

Sunday 12 May 2013 by Pope Francis



Saint Malchus of Syria


Also known as

• Malchus of Chalcis

• Malchus of Maronia



Profile

Only child of a farming family. Worked as a shepherd, spending his time in the field in prayer. His family hoped he would marry, but Malchus felt a call to the religious life and slipped away from home and became a monk; he lived as a vegetarian, eating only dates, cheese and milk. When Malchus' father died, he left the monastery against his abbot's orders to return home and help his family. On the road he and a group of pilgrims were kidnapped by Saracen raiders and sold into slavery. He was forced to marry another slave, but converted her to Christianity, and the two lived as brother and sister. They eventually escaped, returning to Malchus' old monastery where they lived the religious life; Malchus was often called on to tell his story as a lesson about disobeying your abbot. Legend says that while they were on the road to the monastery, the escaped slaves were protected by a lion.


Born

near 4th century Antioch, Syria


Died

c.390



Saint Finian Munnu


Also known as

• Finian of Taghmon

• Finian Mundus

• Finian of Tech Munnu

• Fintan, Finton, Munnin


Profile

Member of the noble Ui Neill clan. Monk and spiritual student of Saint Columba and Saint Seenell at Cluain Inis, Ireland for 18 years. He moved to Iona Abbey in Scotland, but found Saint Columba had left a prophecy that Finian was to be turned away as he was destined to found another house. Founded Taghmon (Tech Munnu) monastery, County Wexford, Ireland, and served as its first abbot. Attended the Magh Lene Synod in 630 where he defended Celtic liturgical practices against the Latin. In his later years he was afflicted with a terrible skin disease, possibly a form of leprosy, and was known for the patient, uncomplaining way he bore it. There are several churches in Scotland that have his name, possibly because of the evangelization work by the monks his house who thought so highly of him.


Born

Ireland


Died

c.635 of natural causes



Blessed Peter of Città di Castello


Also known as

• Peter Capucci

• Preacher of Death



Profile

Joined the reformed Dominican priory of Cortona, Italy at age 15. Ordained in Cortona. Known for his deep life of prayer, penance and contemplation. Noted preacher, often on the theme of contemplating your own death, preaching with a skull in his hand.


Born

1390 at Città di Castello, Italy


Died

21 October 1445 of natural causes


Beatified

by Pope Pius VII (cultus confirmed)



Saint Hilarion of Gaza

✠ புனிதர் ஹிலாரியன் ✠

(St. Hilarion)


மடாதிபதி/ துறவி:

(Abbot/ Anchorite)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 291

தபத்தா, சிரியாவின் தென் காஸா, பாலஸ்தீனம்

(Thabatha, South of Gaza in Syria, Palaestina)


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 371

சைப்ரஸ்

(Cyprus)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கீழ் ஆர்த்தோடாக்ஸ் திருச்சபைகள்

(Eastern Orthodox Churches)

காப்டிக் திருச்சபை

(Coptic Church)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 21


புனித ஹிலாரியன், தமது வாழ்வின் பெரும்பகுதியை பாலைவனங்களில் கழித்த துறவி ஆவார். இவர், புனித வனத்து அந்தோனியாரை (St. Anthony the Great) முன்னுதாரணமாகக் கொண்டு அவரை பின்பற்றியவர் ஆவார்.


இவரைப் பற்றின தகவல்களின் மூல ஆதாரம் “புனித ஜெரோம்” (St. Jerome) அவர்களின் எழுத்துக்களே ஆகும். சுமார் 390ல், பெத்தலகேமில் ஜெரோம் அவர்களால் ஹிலாரியனின் சரிதம் எழுதப்பட்டது. அதன் பொருளானது, ஹிலாரியன் எங்ஙனம் தமது துறவு வாழ்வினை அர்ப்பணித்தார் என்பதேயாகும்.


ஹிலாரியன், “சிரிய பாலஸ்தீனத்திலுள்ள” (Syria Palaestina) “காஸாவின்” தென் பகுதியிலுள்ள (South of Gaza) “தபத்தா” (Thabatha) எனுமிடத்தில் “பேகன்” (Pagan) இன பெற்றோருக்குப் பிறந்தவர் ஆவார்.


சிறுவன் ஹிலாரியனின் பெற்றோர், தங்களின் மகனைக் கல்வியில் சிறந்தவனாக்க விரும்பி, அக்காலத்தில் கல்விக்குச் சிறந்து விளங்கிய எகிப்து நாட்டின் அலெக்சாந்திரியாவிலுள்ள (Alexandria) இலக்கணகர்த்தா ஒருவரிடம் அணியிலக்கணம் கற்க அனுப்பினர். அங்குச் சென்ற ஹிலாரியனுக்கு அந்நகரின் திரையரங்குகளும், கேளிக்கை விளையாட்டுகளும், ஆடம்பரமான நண்பர்களும் கவர்ச்சியளிக்கவில்லை. ஆனால் அந்நகரின் கிறிஸ்தவர்களின் வாழ்க்கைமுறை அச்சிறுவனை ஈர்த்தது. இவர், அலெக்சான்றியாவிலுள்ள ஒரு இலக்கணவாதியிடம் "அணியிலக்கணம் மற்றும் வாக்கு வன்மை" சம்பந்தமான பாடங்களை வெற்றிகரமாக கற்றுத் தேர்ந்தார். இவர், அலெக்சான்றியாவில் மனம் மாறி, கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்தினை தழுவியதாக தெரிகிறது. பின்னர் ஆலயங்களுக்கு தொடர்ந்து செல்ல ஆரம்பித்தார். புனித ஜெரோம் அவர்களின்படி, இவர் மிகவும் ஒல்லியான, ஆரோக்கியமற்ற உடல்வாகினை கொண்டிருந்தார்.


துறவு வாழ்வின் தொடக்கம்:

புனித ஜெரோம் அவர்கள் எழுதிய சரித்திரத்தின்படி, புனித வனத்து அந்தோனியார், "அவர்களுடைய பெயர் எகிப்தின் எல்லா இன மக்களின் நாவில் இருக்கும்" என்று சொன்னதைக் கேட்டறிந்த ஹிலாரியன், தமது பதினைந்தாம் வயதில் எகிப்தியப் பாலைநிலத்தில் கடும் தவ வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்த தூய வனத்து அந்தோணியார் பற்றி எல்லாரும் வியந்து பேசுவதைக் கேட்டார். எனவே புனித வனத்து அந்தோனியாருடன் சேர்ந்து இரண்டு மாதங்கள் வாழ முடிவெடுத்து பாலைநிலம் சென்றார் ஹிலாரியன். ஆனால், புனித வனத்து அந்தோனியாரின் ஆசிரமமானது, நோய்கள் தீர வேண்டியும், பேய் பசாசுகளை ஓட்ட வேண்டியும் வரும் மக்களால் பரபரப்பாகவே இயங்கியது. இதனால், ஹிலாரியன் சில துறவியர்களுடன் தமது ஊரான "தபத்தா" திரும்பினார். அதே சமயம், அவரது பெற்றோர் மரித்துப் போகவே, அவர் தமக்கு சேர வேண்டிய சொத்துக்களை தமது சகோதரர்களுக்கும் ஏழைகளுக்கும் பகிர்ந்தளித்துவிட்டு துறவு வாழ்வினைத் தொடர வேண்டி பாலைவனம் திரும்பினார்.


"மஜோமா"வின் (Majoma) தென்மேற்குப் பகுதியிலுள்ள “காஸா” நகரின் துறைமுக (Gaza) பகுதிக்கு சென்றார். ஒரு பக்கம் கடலும், மறுபக்கம் சதுப்பு நிலத்தையும் கொண்ட அவ்விடம் வழிப்பறிக் கொள்ளையர்கள் நிறைந்தது. இது குறித்து அவரது நண்பர்கள் அவரை எச்சரித்தனர். ஆயினும் அங்கு குச்சிகளால் ஒரு சிறு குடிசை அமைத்து புனித வனத்து அந்தோணியார் போல் கடும் தவ வாழ்வு வாழத் தொடங்கினார் ஹிலாரியன். அடிக்கடி இடத்தை மாற்றினார். இவரிடம் ஒரேயொரு மயிராடையும், புனித வனத்து அந்தோணியார் கொடுத்த தோலாலான ஒரு மேலங்கியுமே இருந்தன.


தினமும் கதிரவன் மறைந்த பின்னர் 15 காய்ந்த அத்திப்பழங்களை மட்டுமே சாப்பிட்டார். சாத்தானின் பிடியிலிருந்து பலரை விடுவித்தார். மேலும் பல புதுமைகளையும் செய்தார். மக்களும் கூட்டம் கூட்டமாய் அவரிடம் வரத் தொடங்கினர். இதனால் தனிமையை நாடி கி.பி. 360ல் மீண்டும் எகிப்து சென்றார். அங்கு புனித வனத்து அந்தோணியார் வாழ்ந்த இடங்களைத் தரிசித்தார். பின்னர் அலெக்சாந்திரியாவுக்கு அருகிலுள்ள “ப்ரூச்சியம்” (Bruchium) சென்றார். ஆனால் ஜூலியன் என்பவர், கிறிஸ்தவத்துக்கு எதிராகக் கிளம்பி இவரைக் கைது செய்ய முயற்சித்தான். இதனால் லிபியப் பாலைநிலம் சென்றார். பின்னர் சிசிலி சென்று, “பச்சினம்” (Pachinum) என்ற இடத்திற்கு அருகில் நீண்ட காலம் கடும் தவ வாழ்வு வாழ்ந்தார். இதற்கிடையே, இவரின் முந்தைய சீடரான “ஹெஸிச்சியஸ்” (Hesychius) இவரைத் தேடி அங்கு வந்தார்.


துறவி ஹிலாரியன் அவர்களைத் தேடி மீண்டும் மக்கள் வரத் தொடங்கினர். இதனால் தனிமையை நாடி குரோவேஷியா நாட்டின் “டல்மாஷியா” (Dalmatia) எனுமிடத்திலுள்ள “எபிடாரஸ்” (Epidaurus) சென்றார். இறுதியில் “சைப்ரஸ்” (Cyprus) சென்று தனிமையான குகை ஒன்றில் வாழ்ந்து கி.பி. 371ம் ஆண்டில் இறந்தார் ஹிலாரியன். இத்தூயவரின் நினைவுத் திருவிழா அக்டோபர் மாதம், 21ம் தேதி ஆகும்.

Profile

Raised in a pagan family. Converted to Christianity while studying at Alexandria, Egypt as a teenager. Studied with Saint Anthony the Great in the Egyptian desert in 306. He then gave away his wealth, and introduced the eremitical life in the Gaza region of Palestine. Supported himself by weaving baskets. Founded several monasteries in Palestine. Noted for his ascetic life; for years he ate but 15 figs a day. Miracle worker whose fame attracted unwanted crowds; to escape the people, including his most dedicated student Saint Hesychius, the notoriety, and the persecutions of Julian the Apsotate, he lived on Mount Sinai, in Egypt, in Sicily, in Dalmatia, on Paphos, and Cyprus.



Born

c.291 at Gaza, Palestine


Died

• 371 at Cyprus of natural causes

• relics at Majuma, Palestine



Saint Celina of Meaux


Profile

Born to the nobility, she was drawn to religious life; this desire was intensified when she met Saint Genevieve. Her fiance opposed the choice. Celina fled to the local cathedral with Saint Genevieve; its doors opened to admit them, closed behind them, and could not be opened again until the fiance and Celina's family agreed to her choice. She spent the rest of her life as a prayerful nun devoted to works of charity.


Died

• c.480 of natural causes

• buried in Meaux, France

• relics hidden during the anti-Christian persecutions of the French Revolution

• relics re-enshrined in the cathedral of Meaux



Saint Petrus Yu Tae-Ch'ol


Also known as

• Peteuro Yu Dae-Jeol

• Peter Yu Tae-Ch'ol


Additional Memorial

20 September as one of the Martyrs of Korea



Profile

Imprisoned, tortured and martyred at the age of 13 for his faith.


Born

1826 in Ipjeong, South Korea


Died

strangled on 21 October 1839 in Seoul, South Korea


Canonized

6 May 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Hilarion of Moglena


Profile

Monk. Bishop of the Moglena region of western Macedonia. Fought the heresies Manichaeism and Messalianism.



Died

• 21 October 1164 of natural causes

• re-interred in Trnovo, Bulgaria c.1205

• relics enshrined at the Church of the Forty Martyrs in 1230

• the church was later converted to a mosque, and the location of the relics is unknown



Blessed Sancho of Aragon


Profile

Born a prince, the fourth son of Blessed James I, King of Aragon. Turning from worldly ways, he joined the Mercedarians, receiving the habit from Saint Peter Nolasco. Archbishop of Toledo, Spain. Saracens cut off his hand with the ring of his office, and then martyred him for not losing his faith.



Born

1238


Died

stabbed through the neck in 1275



Saint Viator of Lyons


Additional Memorial

2 September (translation of relics)


Profile

Lector and catechist at the cathedral of Lyons, France. Spiritual student of and assistant to Saint Justus of Lyons. Hermit in the deserts near Alexandria, Egypt from 381 until his death.


Born

4th century France


Died

• c.390 at Skete, Egypt

• relics enshrined in the church of the Machabees in Lyons, France


Patronage

Viatorians



Saint Berthold of Parma


Also known as

Bertoldo


Profile

Born to Anglo-Saxon parents who had fled England at the Norman Conquest of 1066. Saintly lay brother at the monastery of Saint Alexander.



Born

Parma, Italy


Died

^• c.1101

• relics at the Saint Alexander monastery



Blessed Iulianus Nakaura


Also known as

Giuliano, Julian



Profile

Jesuit priest. Martyr.


Born

c.1567 in Nakaura, Nagasaki, Japan


Died

21 October 1633 in Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

24 November 2008 by Pope Benedict XVI



Saint Asterius


Also known as

Astericus


Profile

Priest under Pope Callistus, whom he secretly buried, and for which act he was killed by order of Emperor Alexander Severus. Martyr.


Died

• drowned in the Tiber River at Ostia, Italy

• body recovered and buried in Ostia

• relics enshrined in the cathedral in Ostia



Saint Zoticus of Nicomedia


Also known as

Zotico


Profile

One of a group of 15 Christian soldiers who were tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

thrown from a boat to drown at sea c.303 at the imperial residence at Nicomedia on the Black Sea



Saint Dasius of Nicomedia


Also known as

Dasio


Profile

One of a group of 15 Christian soldiers who were tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

thrown from a boat to drown at sea c.303 at the imperial residence at Nicomedia on the Black Sea



Saint Caius of Nicomedia


Also known as

Gaius


Profile

One of a group of 15 Christian soldiers who were tortured and martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

thrown from a boat to drown at sea c.303 at the imperial residence at Nicomedia on the Black Sea



Saint Condedus


Also known as

Condé, Condède


Profile

Hermit at Fontaine-de-Saint-Valéry, France. Monk at Fontenelle Abbey. Evangelist who worked from an island in the Seine near Caudebec.


Born

in England


Died

c.690



Saint Gebizo


Profile

Benedictine monk at Monte Cassino in 1076. Spiritual student of Saint Desiderius who was later Pope Victor III. Sent to Croatia by Pope Saint Gregory VII to crown King Zwoinimir.


Born

at Cologne, Germany


Died

c.1087 of natural causes



Blessed Gundisalvus of Lagos


Profile

Augustinian monk. Renowned preacher.


Born

at Lagos, Portugal


Died

1422 of natural causes


Beatified

1778 by Pope Clement XIV (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Imana of Loss


Also known as

Himmanna, Imaina, Imaine


Profile

Cistercian Benedictine nun. Abbess at Salzinnes, Namur, France. Abbess at Flines, diocese of Cambrai, France.


Died

1270 of natural causes



Saint Agatho the Hermit


Also known as

• Agatho of Egypt

• Agathon...


Profile

Fourth-century hermit, monk and abbot in the Egyptian desert. He was one of the leaders in the early monastic movement.



Saint Letizia


Also known as

Laetitia, Leticia, Letycie



Profile

No details have survived.


Died

relics enshrined in Ayerbe, Spain



Saint Cilinia


Also known as

Celina, Céline


Profile

Blind. Mother of Saint Principius of Soissons and Saint Remigius of Rheims.


Died

c.458 in Laon, France of natural causes



Saint Hugh of Ambronay


Profile

Benedictine monk. Abbot of Ambronay Abbey, diocese of Belley, France.


Born

9th century


Died

10th century



Saint Maurontus of Marseilles


Profile

Abbot of Saint Victor Abbey at Marseilles, France. Bishop of Marseilles c.767.


Died

c.804



Saint Severinus of Bordeaux


Also known as

Seurin, Severino


Profile

Bishop of Bordeaux, France c.405.


Died

c.420



Saint Tuda of Lindisfarne


Profile

Monk in Ireland. Bishop of Lindisfarne, England.


Died

664 of plague



Saint Zaira


Profile

Martyred by Moors.


Died

10th century Spain


19 October 2021

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் அக்டோபர் 20

 Bl. Oleksa Zaryckyj


Feastday: October 20

Birth: 1912

Death: 1963

Beatified: Pope John Paul II


Oleksa Zaryckyj was born October 17, 1912 in the village of Bilco, region of Ukraine in Lviv (Lvov). In 1931 he entered the seminary in Lviv and five years after he was ordained to the priesthood by Metropolitan Sheptytsky as a diocesan priest of the Archeparchy of Lviv of the Ukrainians. In 1948 he was captured by the Bolsheviks and was sentenced to ten years in prison and deported to Karaganda in Kazakhstan. Released early in 1957, Oleksa Zaryckyj was appointed Apostolic Administrator of Kazakhstan and Siberia, but did not have time to receive episcopal consecration. Shortly after he was re-interned in concentration camp Dolinka near Karaganda, where he died a martyr of the faith October 30, 1963. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II June 27, 2001, along with 24 other victims of the Soviet regime of Ukrainian nationality.


Athanasius Schneider (born Anton Schneider on 7 April 1961) is a Kazakh Roman Catholic bishop, the auxiliary bishop of Astana, Kazakhstan. He is a member of the Canons Regular of the Holy Cross of Coimbra. He is known for championing the pre-Vatican II liturgical traditions and practices of the church and for protesting certain current policies, including some associated with Pope Francis.



Family and early life

Anton Schneider was born in Tokmok, Kirghiz SSR, in the Soviet Union. His parents were Black Sea Germans from Odessa in Ukraine.[1] After the Second World War they were sent by Stalin to a gulag in Krasnokamsk in the Ural Mountains, where the family was closely involved with the underground church. Schneider's mother Maria was one of several women to shelter the Blessed Oleksa Zaryckyj, a Ukrainian priest later imprisoned at the infamous Karlag and in 1963 martyred by the Soviet regime for his ministry. The family traveled to the Kirghiz SSR after being released from the camps,[2] then left Central Asia for Estonia.[3] As a boy, Schneider and his three siblings would attend clandestine Masses with their parents, often traveling sixty miles from the family's home in Valga to Tartu, taking the first train in the morning under the cover of darkness and returning with the last train at night. Due to the great distance, infrequent visits by the clergy, and crackdowns by the Soviet authorities, they were able to make the trip only once a month.[1] In 1973, shortly after making his first Holy Communion in secret, Schneider emigrated with his family to Rottweil in West Germany.[4]


Training and priesthood

In 1982 in Austria, Schneider joined the Canons Regular of the Holy Cross of Coimbra, a Roman Catholic religious order within the Opus Sanctorum Angelorum, and took the religious name Athanasius. He was ordained a priest by Bishop Manuel Pestana Filho of Anápolis on 25 March 1990, and spent several years as a priest in Brazil before returning to Central Asia.[5] Starting in 1999, he taught Patristics at Mary, Mother of the Church Seminary in Karaganda. On 2 June 2006 he was consecrated a bishop at the Altar of the Chair of Saint Peter in the Vatican by Cardinal Angelo Sodano. In 2011 he was transferred to the position of auxiliary bishop in the Archdiocese of Astana.[6] He is the General Secretary of the Bishops' Conference of Kazakhstan.[7]


Schneider speaks German, Russian, Portuguese, Spanish, English, French and Italian, and he reads Latin and Ancient Greek.[8]


Views

Schneider is known for his traditionalism. He has criticized clergy members who he believes do not fully adhere to the faith and instead surrender to what he calls a "cruel pagan world." In 2014, he compared them to "members of the clergy and even bishops who put grains of incense in front of the statue of the emperor or of a pagan idol or who delivered the books of the Holy Scripture to be burned." He alleged that the present Catholic Church is beset by "traitors of the Faith."[9]


Schneider has frequently travelled to conferences hosted by conservative and traditional Catholics. In 2018, he was warned by the Holy See to limit his travel outside his diocese, as canon law only allows a bishop to be absent for no more than a month unless on official duty. This led to him increasingly appearing at conferences via video.[10]


Holy Communion

Schneider passionately supports the liturgical tradition of receiving Holy Communion on the tongue while kneeling, as a sign of love for the body and blood of Jesus.[11] This is the theme of his 2008 book Dominus Est,[12][13] published in Italian, and since translated into English, German, Estonian, Lithuanian, Polish, Hungarian and Chinese. The book contains a foreword written by Malcolm Ranjith, then the Secretary of the Congregation for Divine Worship, currently Archbishop of Colombo and Metropolitan head of the church in Sri Lanka.[14] In the book, Schneider writes that receiving Holy Communion in this way had become standard practice in the church by the 5th century, and that Pope Gregory I strongly chastised priests who refused to follow this tradition.[11] He wrote in 2009: "The awareness of the greatness of the eucharistic mystery is demonstrated in a special way by the manner in which the body of the Lord is distributed and received."[15]




Schneider offering Mass in 2009

Schneider has vigorously upheld the traditional teaching of the Catholic Church that divorce and remarriage outside of it constitutes the mortal sin of adultery, and thus makes one ineligible to receive Holy Communion.[9][16] In a 2014 interview, Schneider said that calls to change this practice came from "anti-Christian media." He suggested this was "a false concept of mercy," saying: "It is comparable to a doctor who gives a [diabetic] patient sugar, although he knows it will kill him."[9] In 2016, Pope Francis released the apostolic exhortation Amoris laetitia which seemed to allow divorced and civilly remarried persons to take the Eucharist under some circumstances, and this was put into practice by some bishops, arousing intense controversy. Schneider strongly criticized this, asserting that the perennial teaching is "more powerful and surer than the discordant voice and practice of admitting unrepentant adulterers to Holy Communion, even if this practice is promoted by a single Pope or the diocesan bishops."[16] On April 7, 2018, Schneider, along with conservative cardinals Raymond Leo Burke and Walter Brandmüller, participated in a conference rejecting the outline proposed by German bishops to allow divorced and civilly remarried Catholics to receive the Eucharist. Schneider spoke of the duty of popes to be "custodians" of authority.[17]


Clergy sex abuse

On August 25, 2018, Archbishop Carlo Maria Viganò, former apostolic nuncio to the United States, released an 11-page letter describing a series of warnings to the Vatican regarding sexual misconduct by Theodore McCarrick, accusing Francis of failing to act on these reports and calling on him to resign.[18] Schneider said that there was "no reasonable and plausible cause to doubt the truth content of the document." He demanded "ruthlessness and transparency" in cleansing the church of evils, particularly "homosexual cliques and networks" in the curia that he and some others have blamed for helping to cause the abuse epidemic. Schneider called on all "cardinals, bishops and priests to renounce any compromise and any flirtation with the world."[19]


Interreligious relations

Schneider stated in a January 2013 interview that proselytizing by "false religions and sects" should be restricted in majority-Catholic counties. "When there is (a Catholic majority) then false religions and sects have not the right to make propaganda there," he said. Schneider added that this does not mean that governments can "suppress them, they can live, but (governments) cannot give them the same right to make propaganda to the detriment of Catholics."[20]


Schneider has spoken out against Muslim immigration into Europe. He stated in a 2018 interview that heavy Muslim immigration during the 2010s was orchestrated by "international powerful political organizations...to take away from Europe its Christian and its national identity. It is meant to dilute the Christian and the national character of Europe." Schneider alleged that the Syrian Civil War was orchestrated by international powers with a view to stirring up a migrant crisis to de-Christianize Europe, and that mass immigration into Europe from Northern Africa was likewise "artificially created."[21]


Liturgy

Schneider is a strong promoter of the Tridentine Mass.[22] He has rebuked priests for using "a careless and superficial–almost an entertainment style" of liturgy, adding that liturgy must be conducted with "beauty and reverence." According to Schneider, "You cannot change the liturgy by the tastes of the time. The liturgy is timeless." Schneider has offered Mass in the Byzantine Rite numerous times, praising it as "permeated with respect, with reverence, with a supernatural spirit and adoration."[21]


Schneider criticized the closing of churches during the COVID-19 pandemic, remarking that numerous other establishments remained open, and proposing that churches could safely remain open if sanitary procedures were followed and additional Masses were offered to limit crowding.[23]


Declaration of Truths

At a theological conference in Rome in December 2010, Schneider proposed the need for "a new Syllabus" (recalling the Syllabus of Errors of 1864), in which papal teaching authority would correct erroneous interpretations of the documents of the Second Vatican Council.[24][25][26]


On June 10, 2019, Schneider, along with cardinals Burke and Jānis Pujats, as well as Kazakh archbishops Tomasz Peta of Astana and Jan Paul Lenga, published a 40-point "Declaration of Truths" claiming to reaffirm traditional church teaching. The bishops wrote that such a declaration was necessary in a time of "almost universal doctrinal confusion and disorientation." Specific passages in the declaration implicitly reply to writings of Pope Francis. The declaration states that "the religion born of faith in Jesus Christ" is the "only religion positively willed by God," seemingly alluding to the Document on Human Fraternity signed by Pope Francis which stated that the "diversity of religions" is "willed by God." Following recent changes to the Catechism to oppose capital punishment, the declaration states that the church "did not err" in teaching that civil authorities may "lawfully exercise capital punishment" when it is "truly necessary" and to preserve the "just order of societies."[27]


Amazon Synod

In September 2019, Schneider and Burke published an 8-page letter denouncing six alleged theological errors in the working document for the Synod of Bishops for the Pan-Amazon region, and asking that Pope Francis "confirm his brethren in the faith by an unambiguous rejection of the errors." Burke and Schneider criticized the Synod document for its "implicit pantheism," support for married clergy, a greater role for women in the liturgy, and excessive openness to Amazonian pagan rituals and practices. They asked the laity and clergy to pray at least one decade of the Rosary and to fast weekly for the rejection of such ideas over a 40-day period from September 17 to October 26.[28]


Second Vatican Council

In an article dated May 31, 2020 Schneider publicly affirmed the opinion of many traditional Catholics regarding the Second Vatican Council. He argued the Council introduced erroneous statements never before taught by the magisterium of the church. He also states the novelties of the Council are directly responsible for the crisis of faith experienced in the Catholic Church in the second half of the 20th century and in the 21st century.




St. Bertilla Boscardin


✠ புனிதர் மரியா பெர்டில்லா போஸ்கார்டின் ✠

(St. Maria Bertilla Boscardin)


அருட்சகோதரி மற்றும் செவிலியர்:

(Nun and Nurse)



பிறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 6, 1888

பிரெண்டோலா, வெனேடோ, இத்தாலி

(Brendola, Veneto, Italy)


இறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 20, 1922 (வயது 34)

ட்ரெவிஸோ, இத்தாலி

(Treviso, Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


முக்திபேறு பட்டம்: ஜூன் 8, 1952

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ்

(Pope Pius XII)


புனிதர் பட்டம்: மே 11, 1961

திருத்தந்தை இருபத்துமூன்றாம் ஜான்

(Pope John XXIII)


முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

விசென்ஸா, வெனடொ, இத்தாலி

(Vicenza, Veneto, Italy)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 20


புனிதர் மரியா பெர்டில்லா போஸ்கார்டின், முதலாம் உலகப் போரின்போது, விமானப்படை தாக்குதல்களினால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டவர்களுக்கும், நோயுற்ற சிறார்களுக்கும் தன்னலமற்ற சேவையாற்றுவதில் உன்னத முத்திரை பொறித்த இத்தாலி நாட்டு கத்தோலிக்க அருட்சகோதரியும் செவிலியருமாவார். பின்னாளில், இவர் ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையினால் புனிதராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்விக்கப்பட்டு, கௌரவிக்கப்பட்டார்.


ஆரம்ப வாழ்க்கை:

“அன்னா ஃபிரான்செஸ்கா போஸ்கார்டின்” (Anna Francesca Boscardin) எனும் இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட இவர், இத்தாலி நாட்டின் “வெனேடோ” (Veneto) பிராந்தியத்தின் “பிரெண்டோலா” (Brendola) எனும் நகரில் பிறந்தவர். இவரது பெற்றோர் விவசாய குடும்பத்தினைச் சேர்ந்தவர்கள் ஆவர். இவரது தந்தையான “ஆன்ஜெலோ போஸ்கார்டின்” (Angelo Boscardin), பின்னாளில் தமது மகள் மரியா பெர்டில்லா’வின் முக்திபேறு பட்டமளிக்கும் முன்னேற்பாட்டு செயல்முறை நடவடிக்கைகளின்போது, தாம் ஒரு பொறாமை குணமுள்ளவரென்றும், அடிக்கடி மது அருந்திவிட்டு, மகளை அடிக்கும் வன்முறையாளரென்றும் சாட்சியமளித்தார்.


குழந்தைப் பருவத்திலேயே குடும்பத்திற்காக வயல்வெளிகளில் வேலை செய்ய வேண்டியிருந்த காரணத்தால், தொடர்ந்து பள்ளிக்கு செல்ல இயலாதவராய் இருந்தார். பள்ளிக்கு சென்ற காலத்தில் கூட, அருகாமையிலுள்ள ஒரு வீட்டின் பணிப்பெண்ணாக பணி புரிந்தார். அவரால் குறிப்பிட்ட அளவு திறமைகளை காட்ட இயலவில்லை. குறிப்பாக, அவர் ஒரு புத்திசாலி பெண் இல்லை என்று கருதப்பட்டார். மேலும், பெரும்பாலும் அவர் பிறரின் நகைச்சுவையின் இலக்காக இருந்தார். இவையுள்ளிட்ட இவரது மந்தமான தன்மைக்காக, உள்ளூர் மதகுரு, இவரை வாத்து என்று கிண்டல் வார்த்தைகளால் அழைப்பார்.


அக்காலத்தில், பொதுவாக புதுநன்மை அருட்சாதனம் வாங்குவதற்கான வயது பன்னிரெண்டாகும். ஆனா இவர் தமது எட்டு வயதிலேயே புதுநன்மை அருட்சாதனம் வாங்க அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டார். இவர் தமது பங்கு மக்களின் “மரியாளின் குழந்தைகள் சங்கம்” என்னும் அமைப்பில் ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளப்பட்டிருந்தார். மரியா பெர்டில்லாவின் பங்குத்தந்தை இவருக்கு மறைக்கல்வி புத்தகமொன்றினை (Catechism) பரிசாக இவருக்கு அளித்திருந்தார். இவர் மரித்தபோது, அவர் அணிந்திருந்த துறவற சீருடைப் பையில் அப்புத்தகம் இருந்தது.


விசென்ஸா (Vicenza):

இவரது வழக்கமான மந்தத் தன்மை காரணமாக இவர் சேருவதற்காக விண்ணப்பித்திருந்த துறவற சபை ஒன்று இவரை நிராகரித்தது. பின்னர், 1904ம் ஆண்டு, விசென்ஸா நகரின் “தூய இருதயத்தின் மகள்கள்” (Daughters of the Sacred Heart) அமைப்பின் “புனித டோரதி’யின் ஆசிரியைகளின்” (Teachers of Saint Dorothy) உறுப்பினராக மரியா பெர்டில்லா ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளப்பட்டார். அங்கே வைத்துதான் “மரியா பெர்டில்லா” எனும் பெயரை ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார்.


தம்மைப்பற்றிய முந்தைய விமர்சனங்களை ஏற்கனவே மனதிற்குள் உள்வாங்கியிருந்த பெர்டில்லா, “புகுநிலை துறவியரின் தலைவியிடம்” (Novice-mistress), “என்னால் எதையும் செய்ய முடியாது; நான் எதற்கும் லாயக்கில்லாத பெண்; நான் ஒரு வாத்து; எனக்கு கற்பியுங்கள்; நான் ஒரு புனிதையாக வேண்டும்.” என்று அடிக்கடி சொல்வார். பெர்டில்லா, அந்த துறவு மடத்தில், ஒரு சமையலறை பணிப்பெண்ணாகவும், துணி துவைக்கும் பணிப்பெண்ணாகவும் மூன்று வருடங்கள் பணியாற்றினார்.


ட்ரெவிஸோ (Treviso) :

பின்னர், ட்ரெவிஸோ நகரிலுள்ள, அவர்களது சபையின் கீழுள்ள நகரசபை மருத்துவமனையில் செவிலியர் கல்வி கற்பதற்காக பெர்டில்லா அனுப்பப்பட்டார். பயிற்சிக் காலத்திலேயே ஒருமுறை இவர் சமையலறை பணிக்கு அனுப்பப்பட்டார். எப்படியும் பயிற்சியை முடித்த பெர்டில்லா, மருத்துவமனையின் சிறுவர்கள் வார்டில், “டிப்தீரியா” (Diphtheria) எனப்படும் தொண்டை அழற்சி நோய் பாதித்த நோயாளிகளுக்கு சேவை செய்ய அனுப்பப்பட்டார். “கேபர்ட்டோ” போரின் (Battle of Caporetto) பேரழிவினைத் தொடர்ந்து, ட்ரெவிஸோ (Treviso) நகரம் விமான தாக்குதலுக்கு உள்ளானபோது, அம்மருத்துவமனை இராணுவத்தின் கட்டுப்பாட்டின் கீழே வந்தது. மிகவும் மோசமாக பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்த நோயாளிகளுக்கு பெர்டில்லா ஆற்றிய நிகரற்ற சேவை இராணுவத்தால் கவனிக்கப்பட்டு வந்தது.



பெர்டில்லாவின் இத்தகைய அர்ப்பணிப்புமிக்க சேவைகள், உள்ளூரிலுள்ள ஒரு இராணுவ மருத்துவமனை நிர்வாகத்தின் கவனத்தை ஈர்த்தது. எப்படியும் அருட்சகோதரி பெர்டில்லாவின் சேவையை பாராட்ட மனமில்லாத அவருக்கு மேலுள்ள அருட்சகோதரியர், அவரை மீண்டும் சலவைப் பணிக்கு அனுப்பினார்கள். தொடர்ந்து நான்கு மாதங்கள் அதே சலவைப் பணியில் இருந்த பெர்டில்லா, அவரது தலைமை சகோதரியால் அங்கிருந்து மாற்றப்பட்டு, மருத்துவமனையின் குழந்தைகள் தனிமை வார்டுக்கு மாற்றப்பட்டார். அதன்பின்னர், விரைவிலேயே அவரது ஏற்கனவே நலிவடைந்திருந்த உடல் நலம், மேலும் மோசமானது. ஏற்கனவே பல ஆண்டுகளாக அவரது உடலிலிருந்த ஒரு கட்டியானது, மேலும் முற்றி, அறுவை சிகிச்சை வரை கொண்டுபோனது. நடந்த அறுவை சிகிச்சையில் அவர் பிழைக்கவில்லை. 1922ம் ஆண்டு, அக்டோபர் மாதம் இருபதாம் தேதி, 34 வயதான அருட்சகோதரி மரியா பெர்டில்லா போஸ்கார்டின் மரித்தார்.

Feastday: October 20

Birth: 1888

Death: 1922



Virgin, also called Mary Bertilla. She was born in Brendola, in northern Italy. A member of the Congregation of Teachers of St. Dorothy, Daughters of the Sacred hearts, she spent her life caring for children and the sick. She was canonized in 1961.


Maria Bertilla Boscardin (6 October 1888 – 20 October 1922) was an Italian nun and nurse who displayed a pronounced devotion to duty in working with sick children and victims of the air raids of World War I. She was later canonised a saint by the Roman Catholic Church.



Life

Early life

She was born Anna Francesca Boscardin at Brendola, Veneto. In her family and town she was known as Annette.[1] She was a member of a peasant family. Her father, Angelo Boscardin, would testify during her beatification process that he was jealous, violent, and frequently drunk. As a child she could only attend school irregularly, as she was needed to help at home and in the fields. When she did attend school she also worked as a servant in a nearby home. She did not display any particular talents, was thought to be not particularly intelligent, and was often the target of insulting jokes. These included being referred to as a "goose" for her slowness by a local clergyman.[2]


She was allowed to make her First Holy Communion at eight and a half years old, when the authorized age in those years was eleven. At twelve years old, she was accepted into the parish association of the “Children of Mary” association.[1] The parish priest gave her a catechism as a gift. They found it in the pocket of her habit, when she died, at 34 years old.[1]


Vicenza

After being rejected for admission to one order because of her slowness, she was accepted as a member of the Teachers of Saint Dorothy, Daughters of the Sacred Heart at Vicenza in 1904, taking the name "Maria Bertilla". She herself internalized some of her earlier criticism, telling the novice-mistress of the order, "I can't do anything. I'm a poor thing, a goose. Teach me. I want to be a saint."[2] She worked there as a kitchen maid and laundress for three years.


Treviso

She was then sent to Treviso to learn nursing at the municipal hospital there, which was under the direction of her order. During her training period, she was once placed to work in the kitchen. However, upon completing her training, she was promoted to working with victims of diphtheria in the hospital's children's ward. During the air raids of Treviso following the disastrous Battle of Caporetto, the hospital fell under the control of the military. Sister Bertilla was noted for her unwavering care of her patients, particularly those who were too ill to be moved to safety.[3]


This devotion to duty attracted the attention of the authorities of a local military hospital. However, her superioress did not appreciate Sister Bertilla's work and reassigned her to work in the laundry, a position she remained in for four months until being reassigned by a higher superior, who put Sister Bertilla in charge of the children's isolation ward at the hospital. Shortly thereafter, Sister Bertilla's already poor health got worse. A painful tumor which she had had for several years had progressed to the point of requiring an operation, which she did not survive. She died in 1922.[3]


Veneration

Her reputation for simplicity and devoted, caring hard work had left a deep impression on those who knew her. A memorial plaque placed on her tomb refers to her as "a chosen soul of heroic goodness ... an angelic alleviator of human suffering in this place."[2] Crowds flocked to her first grave at Treviso. After a tomb was erected for her at Vicenza, it became a pilgrimage site where several miracles of healing were said to have taken place.


In 1961, 39 years after her death, she was canonised as a saint. The crowd in attendance included members of her family as well as some of her patients.[3] Her feast day is October 20.





Bl. Francis Serrano


Feastday: October 20

Death: 1748


Dominican martyr of China. A Spaniard, Francis entered the Dominicans and was sent to Fukien, China. Arrested with Blessed Peter Sanze in 1746, Francis was elected titular bishop of Tipasa while in prison. He and his Dominican companions, including Francis Diaz, were strangled. He was beatified in 1893.


This article is about the Catholic martyrs of the 17th to 20th centuries. For other Christian martyrs in China, see Chinese Martyrs.

The Martyr Saints of China (traditional Chinese: 中華殉道聖人; simplified Chinese: 中华殉道圣人; pinyin: Zhōnghuá xùndào shèngrén), or Augustine Zhao Rong and his Companions, are 120 saints of the Catholic Church. The 87 Chinese Catholics and 33 Western missionaries[1] from the mid-17th century to 1930 were martyred because of their ministry and, in some cases, for their refusal to apostatize.


Many died in the Boxer Rebellion, in which anti-colonial peasant rebels slaughtered 30,000 Chinese converts to Christianity along with missionaries and other foreigners.


In the ordinary form of the Latin Rite, they are remembered with an optional memorial on July 9.



Saint Cornelius the Centurion


Profile

Centurion of the Roman cohort stationed at Caesarea, Palestine in the early 1st century. A Roman pagan, he received the Holy Spirit while listening to the preaching of Saint Peter the Apostle; he sent for Peter who baptized the entire family. He was the first known Gentile convert to Christianity, and the baptism of his whole household points to the first century use of infant baptism. First bishop of Caesarea.



Readings

Now in Caesarea there was a man named Cornelius, a centurion of the Cohort called the Italica, devout and God-fearing along with his whole household, who used to give alms generously to the Jewish people and pray to God constantly. One afternoon about three o'clock, he saw plainly in a vision an angel of God come in to him and say to him, "Cornelius." He looked intently at him and, seized with fear, said, "What is it, sir?" He said to him, "Your prayers and almsgiving have ascended as a memorial offering before God. Now send some men to Joppa and summon one Simon who is called Peter. He is staying with another Simon, a tanner, who has a house by the sea." When the angel who spoke to him had left, he called two of his servants and a devout soldier from his staff, explained everything to them, and sent them to Joppa.


The next day, while they were on their way and nearing the city, Peter went up to the roof terrace to pray at about noontime. He was hungry and wished to eat, and while they were making preparations he fell into a trance. He saw heaven opened and something resembling a large sheet coming down, lowered to the ground by its four corners. In it were all the earth's four-legged animals and reptiles and the birds of the sky. A voice said to him, "Get up, Peter. Slaughter and eat." But Peter said, "Certainly not, sir. For never have I eaten anything profane and unclean." The voice spoke to him again, a second time, "What God has made clean, you are not to call profane."e This happened three times, and then the object was taken up into the sky.


While Peter was in doubt about the meaning of the vision he had seen, the men sent by Cornelius asked for Simon's house and arrived at the entrance. They called out inquiring whether Simon, who is called Peter, was staying there. As Peter was pondering the vision, the Spirit said [to him], "There are three men here looking for you. So get up, go downstairs, and accompany them without hesitation, because I have sent them." Then Peter went down to the men and said, "I am the one you are looking for. What is the reason for your being here?" They answered, "Cornelius, a centurion, an upright and God-fearing man, respected by the whole Jewish nation, was directed by a holy angel to summon you to his house and to hear what you have to say."g So he invited them in and showed them hospitality. The next day he got up and went with them, and some of the brothers from Joppa went with him.


On the following day he entered Caesarea. Cornelius was expecting them and had called together his relatives and close friends. When Peter entered, Cornelius met him and, falling at his feet, paid him homage. Peter, however, raised him up, saying, "Get up. I myself am also a human being." While he conversed with him, he went in and found many people gathered together and said to them, "You know that it is unlawful for a Jewish man to associate with, or visit, a Gentile, but God has shown me that I should not call any person profane or unclean. And that is why I came without objection when sent for. May I ask, then, why you summoned me?" Cornelius replied, "Four days ago at this hour, three o'clock in the afternoon, I was at prayer in my house when suddenly a man in dazzling robes stood before me and said, 'Cornelius, your prayer has been heard and your almsgiving remembered before God. Send therefore to Joppa and summon Simon, who is called Peter. He is a guest in the house of Simon, a tanner, by the sea.' So I sent for you immediately, and you were kind enough to come. Now therefore we are all here in the presence of God to listen to all that you have been commanded by the Lord."


Then Peter proceeded to speak and said, "In truth, I see that God shows no partiality. Rather, in every nation whoever fears him and acts uprightly is acceptable to him. You know the word [that] he sent to the Israelites as he proclaimed peace through Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all,k what has happened all over Judea, beginning in Galilee after the baptism that John preached, how God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the holy Spirit and power. He went about doing good and healing all those oppressed by the devil, for God was with him.m We are witnesses of all that he did both in the country of the Jews and (in) Jerusalem. They put him to death by hanging him on a tree. This man God raised (on) the third day and granted that he be visible, not to all the people, but to us, the witnesses chosen by God in advance, who ate and drank with him after he rose from the dead.n He commissioned uso to preach to the people and testify that he is the one appointed by God as judge of the living and the dead. To him all the prophets bear witness, that everyone who believes in him will receive forgiveness of sins through his name."


While Peter was still speaking these things, the holy Spirit fell upon all who were listening to the word. The circumcised believers who had accompanied Peter were astounded that the gift of the holy Spirit should have been poured out on the Gentiles also, for they could hear them speaking in tongues and glorifying God. Then Peter responded, "Can anyone withhold the water for baptizing these people, who have received the holy Spirit even as we have?"q He ordered them to be baptized in the name of Jesus Christ. Then they invited him to stay for a few days. - Acts 10:1-49



Saint Maria Bertilla Boscardin


Also known as

• Ann Francis Boscardin

• Anna Francesca Boscardin

• Maria Bertilla



Profile

Born to a poor peasant family headed by Angelo Boscardin who, by his own account, was a violently abusive drunk. Anna had little education, was simple and innocent, and was considered mentally slow; referred to as the goose (as in, "silly as a..."). Worked as a house servant in her youth. Joined the Sisters of Saint Dorothy, Daughters of the Sacred Heart at Vincenza, Italy in 1904, taking the name Bertilla. After working in the convent's kitchen and laundry, she trained as a nurse in 1907.


Assigned to the hospital in Treviso, Italy, a facility managed by the Sisters of Saint Dorothy. Sister Maria worked in the children's ward, becoming a great favorite for her simple, gentle way with the young patients. She cared for wounded Italian soldiers during World War I, and was noted by local authorities for staying with patients in 1917 while the area was being bombed. A supervisor, angry at Bertilla's growing reputation, reassigned her to the hospital laundry. Her congregation's mother-general heard of this vindictive treatment, and transferred Bertilla back to nursing, making her the supervisor of the children's ward in 1919.


Born

6 October 1888 at Brendola, Italy as Anna Francesca Boscardin


Died

• 20 October 1922 of cancer at Treviso, Italy

• many healing miracles reported at her tomb


Canonized

• 11 May 1961 by Pope John XXIII

• the crowds gathered for the recognition included family members and an unknown number of her patients




Saint Acca of Hexham


Additional Memorial

19 February (translation of relics)


Profile

Grew up in the household of Saint Bosa of York, and became his spiritual student, aide, and travelling companion. Benedictine monk. Close friend of and chaplain to Saint Wilfrid, and accompanied him on trips to the continent. Friend of the Venerable Bede, who dedicated some of his writings to Acca. Abbot of Saint Andrews at Hexham, England in 709, nominated by Saint Wilfrid just before that holy man died. Bishop of Hexham.



Built churches, and re-outfitted the principal church at Hexham. Had a beautiful singing voice, and encouraged the revival of vocal music in British liturgy. First English prelate to appeal to Vatican in a dispute. Believed the Church in England needed to be more like Rome in liturgical form. Bible scholar with a large theological library who supplied information for Bede's Ecclesiastical History.


Political intrigues led to king Ceolwulf of Northumbria being kidnapped in 731, and forced to enter a monastery. Ceolwulf's supporters later restored him to the throne, and Acca was exiled, which probably indicates his involvement in the coup. Some records imply that he fled west, and was appointed bishop of Whithorn.


Born

c.660 in Northumbria, England


Died

• 20 October 742 at Whithorn, Galloway, Scotland of natural causes

• buried beside the east wall of Hexham Cathedral between two huge stone crosses decorated with vines and tendrils, which survive to today and can be seen in the abbey church

• relics translated in the late 10th century, in 1154, and in 1240


Patronage

learning




Blessed James of Strepar



Profile

Born to the Polish nobility. Franciscan. Guardian of the Franciscan friary in Lviv, Poland. Defended mendicant friars from attacks by secular clergy. Was especially close to the Orthodox community in the area, and worked to reduce tensions between them and Catholic Christians. Vicar-general of Franciscan missions in western Russia, he worked and preacher to revitalize the faithful, and promoted devotion to Mary. Helped organized the Travellers for Christ c.1360, a group of Franciscan and Dominican friars who lived and traveller together to conduct parish missions. Archbishop of Halicz, Galacia in 1392; he served for 19 years, all the while continuing to wear his Franciscan habit, travel on foot, and live as a friar. He built religious houses, schools, hospitals and churches, and brought Polish priests to his diocese to staff his new institutes. Worked with the Polish parliment on practical, secular matters to improve the lot of the people.



Born

c.1350 in Galacia, Poland


Died

• 1 June 1411 at Lviv, Poland (in modern Ukraine) of natural causes

• buried in the Franciscan church in Lviv


Beatified

1791 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmed)



Saint Artemius Megalomartyr


Also known as

• Artemios of Antioch

• Artemois the Greatmartyr

• Challita, Shallita


Profile

Noted soldier and military leader under Emperor Constantine the Great. Imperial prefect (viceroy) of Egypt and Duke of Alexandria, appointed by Emperor Constantius; he used his position to spread the faith. During the reign of Julian the Apostate, Artemius became a fanatical Arian heretic, hunting and persecuting monks, nuns and bishops, including Saint Athanasius. However, through prayer and the horror of the persecutions, Artemius converted to orthodox Christianity, supported the faith, and turned on pagans, including Julian. He was accused by heathens of destroying idols, arrested, taken to Antioch, tortured and martyred.



Died

• beheaded in 363 in Antioch

• buried by local Christians in Antioch

• relics later transferred to Constantinople




Saint Maximus of Aquila


Also known as

• Maximus of Aveia

• Massimo...



Profile

Raised in a pious family, Maximus became a zealous deacon at Aveia, Italy. He aspired to the priesthood, but his open and unapologetic Christianity led to him being imprisoned, tortured and executed during the persecutions of Decius. Martyr.


Born

c.228 in Aveia, Italy


Died

• thrown off a cliff in Aveia, Italy c.250

• relics transferred to Civitas Sancti Maximi (modern Forcona, Italy), date unknown; know to have been there in 10 June 956

• relics enshrined in the cathedral in Aquila, Italy in 1256

• relics destroyed by an earthquake in 1703


Patronage

Aquila, Italy



Saint Andrew of Crete


Also known as

Andrea il Calibita


Profile

Eighth-century hermit on Crete. When the Byzantine Emperor Constantine Copronymus published his edict against venerating icons, Andrew went to Constantinople and denounced the iconoclast heresy so forcefully that he was taken before the emperor himself. Martyr.


Born

Crete


Died

• tortured and flogged to death c.763 in Constantinople

• body thrown off the city walls into the garbage dump



Saint Caprasius of Agen

✠ புனிதர் காப்ரஸியஸ் ✠

(St. Caprasius of Agen)


கிறிஸ்தவ மறைசாட்சி:

(Christian martyr)


பிறப்பு: ---


இறப்பு: கி.பி. 303

அகென்

(Agen)



ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: அக்டோபர் 20


புனிதர் காப்ரஸியஸ், ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவ மறைசாட்சியாகவும் நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் புனிதராகவும் அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டவர் ஆவார். அவருடன் தொடர்புடைய மிகுதிகள் ஐந்தாம் நூற்றாண்டில் “அகென்” (Agen) என்னும் இடத்தில் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டன.


பதினான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் இலக்கியவியலாளர் “அல்பன் பட்லர்” (Alban Butler) என்பவர், அவரை “அகென்” (Agen) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் முதல் ஆயர் என எழுதியிருக்கின்றார். அவருடைய எழுத்துக்களே புனிதர் காப்ரஸியஸ் பற்றிய ஒரே நிரூபணம் ஆகும்.


புனிதர் காப்ரஸியஸி'ன் வழிபாடு ஒன்பதாம் நூற்றாண்டில் “புனிதர் ஃபெய்த்” (Saint Faith) எனும் புனிதருடனும், “அகென்” மறை மாவட்டத்துடன் தொடர்புடைய “அல்பெர்ட்டா” (Alberta of Agen) என்பவருடனும் தொடர்புடையதாக இருந்தது. “புனிதர் ஃபெய்த்” (Saint Faith), புனிதர் காப்ரஸியஸி'ன் தாய் மாமனாக அறியப்படுகின்றார். காப்ரஸியஸி'ன் வழிபாடு, அவரது சகோதரர்கள் எனப்பட்ட “பிரைமஸ்” மற்றும் “ஃபெலிகன்” (Primus and Felician) ஆகியோருடனும் தொடர்புடையதாக இருந்தது.


“பிரேஃபெக்ட் டாசியன்” (Prefect Dacian) என்பவனால் கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் துன்புறுத்தப்பட்ட போது, காப்ரஸியஸ் “அகென்” மறை மாவட்டத்தின் அருகாமையிலுள்ள “மாண்ட்-செயின்ட்-வின்சன்ட்” (Mont-Saint-Vincent) எனும் இடத்திற்கு தப்பித்து ஓடிப்போனார். அங்கே, “புனிதர் ஃபெய்த்” (Saint Faith), “அடால்ப் மலையில்” (Atop the hill) துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டு கொல்லப்பட்டதை கண்டார்.


அல்பெர்ட்டா (Alberta), காப்ரஸியஸ், அவருடைய தாயார் (புனித காப்ரஸியஸி'ன் சகோதரி), காப்ரஷியஸி'ன் சகோதரர்கள் எனப்படும் “பிரைமஸ்” மற்றும் “ஃபெலிக்கன்” (Primus and Felician) ஆகிய அனைவருக்கும் மரண தண்டனை அளிக்கப்பட்டது. அனைவரும் தலை துண்டிக்கப்பட்டு மரித்தனர்.

Also known as

Caprasio



Profile

Tried to hide out in the hills near his home during the persecutions of Diocletian, but the courage shown by Saint Faith led Caprasius to openly proclaim his own Christianity. Martyr.


Born

Agen, France


Died

beheaded in 303



Saint Lucas Alonso Gorda



Also known as

Father Lucas of the Holy Spirit


Profile

Dominican priest. Martyr.


Born

18 October 1594 in Carracedo de Vidriales, Zamora, Spain


Died

20 October 1633 in Nishizaka, Nagasaki, Japan


Canonized

18 October 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Aderald


Profile

Archdeacon. Pilgrim to Palestine where he was imprisoned by Saracens for his faith. He returned to France with a number of relics of the saints. Built the Holy Sepulchre Abbey at Samblières, France.


Born

Troyes, France


Died

1004 in Troyes, France of natural causes



Saint Bernard of Bagnorea


Also known as

• Bernard of Castro

• Bernard of Vulcia


Profile

Bishop of Vulcia, Italy. Moved the diocese to Ischia de Castro.


Born

Bagnorea, Italy


Died

c.800



Saint Adelina


Also known as

Adeline


Profile

Grand-daughter of William the Conqueror. Sister of Saint Vitalis. Benedictine nun. Abbess of the convent of La Blanche, Moriton, Normandy, a house her brother had founded.


Died

1125 of natural causes



Saint Barsabias


Also known as

Barsabas


Profile

Monk. Abbot. Martyred with eleven of his monks in the persecutions of King Shapur II.


Born

Persian


Died

342 near the ruins of Persepolis (in modern Iran)



Blessed Gundisalvus of Silos


Also known as

Gonzalo


Profile

Benedictine monk at Silos, Old Castile (Spain) under Saint Dominic of Silos.


Died

c.1073 of natural causes



Saint Vitalis of Salzburg


புனித விட்டாலிஸ் 

( St. Vitalis of Salzburg )



நினைவுத்திருநாள்; அக்டோபர் 20


சால்ஸ்பூர்க் நகர் ஆயர் :


பிறப்பு : 7ம் நூற்றாண்டு


இறப்பு : 20 அக்டோபர் 730 சால்ஸ்பூர்க் Salzburg, ஆஸ்திரியா



பாதுகாவல் : குழந்தைகள், கர்ப்பிணி பெண்கள்

புனித விட்டாலிஸ், தனது இளம் வயதிலிருந்தே மறைப்பணியாளராக வேண்டுமென்று ஆசைக்கொண்டார். இவர் சால்ஸ்பூர்க் ஆயர் ரூபர்ட் (Rubert) என்பவரிடம் கல்வி கற்றார். பிறகு ஆயர் ரூபர்ட் 27ம் நாள் மார்ச் 718ம் ஆண்டு இறந்துவிடவே, அவருக்கு பிறகு, அவரின் ஆசிரியர் பதவியை விட்டாலிஸ் (Vitalis) ஏற்றார்.

12 ஆண்டுகள் தொடர்ந்து அப்பணியை செய்தார். அதன்பிறகு விட்டாலிஸ் சால்ஸ்பூர்க்கில் ஆயர் பதவியை ஏற்றார். ஆயர் ரூபர்ட் பெரிய மறைபரப்பு பணியாளராக வேண்டுமென்று ஆசைக்கொண்டார். ஆனால் விட்டாலிஸ் அவ்விருப்பத்தை தன் பணியின் வழியாக நிறைவேற்றினார். இவர் சால்ஸ்பூர்க்கில் புகழ் வாய்ந்த மறைபரப்பு பணியாளராக திகழ்ந்தார்.


செபம் :

ஆற்றல் மிக்க இறைவா! 

குழந்தை பருவத்திலிருந்தே உம்மீது ஆர்வம் கொண்டு வாழ புனித விட்டாலிசை தூண்டினீர். உமது இறைத்திட்டத்தை அவரில் நிறைவேற்றினீர். இன்று எம்மை நீர் தயையுடன் கண்ணோக்கியருளும். உமது அன்பால் நாங்கள் தூண்டப்பட்டு என்றும் உம்பணியில் ஆர்வம் கொண்டு செயல்பட நீர் அருள்புரிய வேண்டுமென்று இறைவா உம்மை மன்றாடுகின்றோம்.


ஆமென்


Profile

Monk. Spiritual student of Saint Rupert of Salzburg. Abbot of Saint Peter's Abbey in Salzburg, Austria. Archbishop of Salzburg from 717 to 745.


Died

745



Saint Leopardo of Osimo


Also known as

Leopardus


Profile

First bishop of Osimo, Italy, serving in the 5th century.


Patronage

archdiocese of Ancona-Osimo, Italy



Saint Usthazanes


Profile

Monk. Abbot in Persia. Tortured and executed with twelve of his brother monks during the persecutions of Sapor. Martyr.


Died

beheaded in 341 at Ishtar, Persia



Saint Sindulf of Rheims


Also known as

Sindulphus


Profile

Hermit in Aussonce, France.


Born

Gascony, France


Died

660



Saint Irene


Profile

Nun in Portugal, possibly at Santarem where her memory is especially revered. Died fighting off a rape attempt.


Died

c.653



Saint Martha of Cologne


Profile

Martyr. May have been part of the group that travelled with Saint Ursula.


Died

Cologne, Germany



Saint Aidan of Mayo


Profile

Eighth-century bishop of Mayo, Ireland.


Died

768



Saint Saula of Cologne



Profile

Martyr.


Died

Cologne, Germany



Saint Bradan


Also known as

Bradano


Profile

Saint venerated on the Isle of Man.



Saint Orora


Also known as

Crora


Profile

Saint venerated on the Isle of Man.