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03 March 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மார்ச் 04

 St. Basil and Companions


Feastday: March 4

Death: 4th century


Martyred bishop, with Agathodorus, Elpidius, Ephraem, lftherius, Eugene, Arcadius, Capito, and Nestor. These prelates served as bishops. Nestor and Arcadius were rnartyred on Cyprus. The others died in the Crimean area and elsewhere in southern Russia.



St. Felix of Rhuys


Feastday: March 4

Death: 1038


Benedictine abbot and hermit. Born in Brittany, France, he was a recluse on Quessant Island and then entered the Benedictines at Flery, Saint Benoit sur Loire. He restored Rhuys Abbey.


For other people named Felix, see Felix (name).

Saint Felix of Rhuys (died 1038) was a Breton Benedictine hermit and abbot, who re-founded Saint-Gildas-de-Rhuys Abbey.


Life

Felix was born of wealthy parents in Quimper around 970.[1] He had a great regard for Saint Paul Aurelian who had built a monastery at Lampoul on Ushant, and whose relics, around 960, had been translated to Fleury Abbey. Felix became a recluse on Ushant. He left his hermitage during the Norman invasions to take refuge at Fleury in Saint-Benoît-sur-Loire, where he was welcomed by Abbo of Fleury.


Geoffrey I, Duke of Brittany asked the Abbot of Fleury to re-establish Rhuys Abbey,[2] which had been founded by Saint Gildas in the 6th century on the Gulf of Morbihan, and had been destroyed by the Normans. Father Abbot entrusted Felix with the task of rebuilding. The original abbey had been built in wood on the remains of a Roman oppidum; Felix built in stone. Begun in 1008, the reconstruction ended in 1032 with the consecration of the church by Judicaël, bishop of Vannes and brother of the Duke. Félix died on March 4, 1038.[3]


His feast day is 4 March.



St. Lucius I


Feastday: March 4


Lucius I, a Roman, was elected Pope to succeed Pope St. Cornelius on June 25, 253, and ruled only eighteen months. He was exiled briefly during the persecution of Emperor Gallus, but was allowed to return to Rome. A letter of St. Cyprian praises him for condemning the Novatians for their refusal of the sacraments to those who had fallen but were penitent. He did not suffer martyrdom, as a erroneously stated in the Liber Pontificalis, but died probably on March 4 in Rome and was buried in St. Callistus' catacomb. The remains after an early translation were transferred to the church of St. Cecilia, where they now lie, by order of Clement VIII. His feast day is March 4th.



Pope Lucius I was the bishop of Rome from 25 June 253 to his death on 5 March 254. He was banished soon after his consecration, but gained permission to return. He was mistakenly classified as a martyr in the persecution by Emperor Valerian, which did not begin until after Lucius' death.



Life

Lucius was born in Rome. Nothing is known about his family except his father's name, Porphyrianus. He was elected probably on 25 June 253. His election took place during the persecution which caused the banishment of his predecessor, Cornelius, and he also was banished soon after his consecration, but succeeded in gaining permission to return.[1]


Lucius is praised in several letters of Cyprian (see Epist. lxviii. 5) for condemning the Novationists for their refusal to readmit to communion Christians who repented for having lapsed under persecution.


Veneration

Lucius I's feast day is 5 March, on which date he is commemorated in the Roman Martyrology in the following terms: "In the cemetery of Callistus on the Via Appia, Rome, burial of Saint Lucius, Pope, successor of Saint Cornelius. For his faith in Christ he suffered exile and acted as an outstanding confessor of the faith, with moderation and prudence, in the difficult times that were his."[2]


His feast did not appear in the Tridentine Calendar of Pope Pius V. In 1602, it was inserted under the date of 4 March, into the General Roman Calendar. With the insertion in 1621 on the same date of the feast of Saint Casimir, the celebration of Pope Lucius was reduced to a commemoration within Saint Casimir's Mass. In the 1969 revision Pope Lucius's feast was omitted from the General Roman Calendar, partly because of the baselessness of the title of "martyr" with which he had previously been honoured,[3] and was moved in the Roman Martyrology to the day of his death.


In spite of what is mistakenly stated in the Liber Pontificalis, he did not in fact suffer martyrdom.[4] The persecution of Valerian in which he was said to have been martyred is known to have started later than March 254, when Pope Lucius died.


Tomb

Lucius I's tombstone is still extant in the catacomb of Callixtus. His relics were later brought to the church of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere, along with the relics of Cecilia and others. His head is preserved in a reliquary in St. Ansgar's Cathedral in Copenhagen, Denmark. This relic was brought to Roskilde around the year 1100, after Lucius had been declared patron saint of the Danish region Zealand. According to tradition, there had been demons at large at the Isefjord at Roskilde city,[5] and as they declared that they feared nothing but Lucius' skull, this had to be brought to Denmark, whereupon peace took reign of the fjord again.[6] After the Reformation, the skull was taken to the exhibition rooms of king Frederik III in Copenhagen, where it was on exhibit along with the petrified embryo a woman had carried inside her for 28 years, as well as other monstrosities the king had collected. The skull remained in Roskilde Cathedral until 1908, when it was moved to Saint Ansgar's Cathedral while the property of Copenhagen's National museum.


Pope Lucius' head is among the few relics to have survived the Reformation in Denmark. However the Norwegian researcher Øystein Morten[7] started wondering if Lucius' skull might have been mixed up with the skull of the Norwegian king Sigurd the Crusader (1090–1130). This skull had also been kept in the Danish National Museum collection in the 1800s until it was donated to Oslo University in 1867. Danish experts from the National Museum then studied the skull, using carbon dating which concluded that the skull belonged to a man who lived between AD 340 and 431, nearly 100 years after the death of Lucius in 254. So the skull in question never belonged to Lucius, who died around AD 254. The results also rule out that it may have belonged to the King Sigurd.



Saint Casimir of Poland

 போலந்து நாட்டு புனிதர் கசிமீர் 

(St. Casimir of Poland)

போலந்து இளவரசர், ஒப்புரவாளர்:

(Prince of the Kingdom of Poland and Confessor)

பிறப்பு: அக்டோபர் 3, 1458

வாவெல், க்ரகோவ், போலந்து அரசு

(Wawel, Kraków, Kingdom of Poland)

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 4, 1484 (வயது 25)

க்ரோட்னோ, லித்துவானிய பிரபுக்கள் மாளிகை

(Grodno, Grand Duchy of Lithuania)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

புனிதர் பட்டம்: கி.பி. 1602

திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் கிளமென்ட்

(Pope Clement VIII)

பாதுகாவல்: லித்துவானியா (Lithuania), போலந்து (Poland), ரஷியா (Russia)

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 4

"கசிமீர் ஜகியல்லோன்" (Casimir Jagiellon) என்ற முழுப்பெயர் கொண்ட போலந்து நாட்டு புனிதர் கசிமீர், போலந்து நாட்டின் இளவரசரும் (Prince of the Kingdom of Poland), லித்துவானிய பிரபுவும் (Grand Duchy of Lithuania) ஆவார்.

இவர், போலந்து அரசரும், லித்துவானியா கோமகனுமான (King of Poland and Grand Duke of Lithuania) "நான்காம் கசிமீரி'ன்" (Casimir IV) குழந்தை ஆவார். இவருடைய தாயார், ஹங்கேரியின் அரசியான “எலிசபெத் ஹப்ஸ்பர்க்” (Queen Elisabeth Habsburg of Hungary) ஆவார். இவருடைய பெற்றோரின் மூன்று குழந்தைகளில், இவர் இரண்டாவது குழந்தையாக பிறந்தார். அரசி எலிசபெத், பிள்ளைகளின் வளர்ப்பில் ஆர்வம் காட்டிய ஒரு அன்பான தாயாக இருந்தார்.

தமது ஒன்பது வயதிலிருந்தே, கசிமீரும் அவரது சகோதரரான “விளாடிஸ்லாஸ்” (Vladislaus) இருவரும் போலிஷ் மத குருவான "ஜான் ட்ளுகோஸ்" (John Dlugosz) என்பவரிடம் கல்வி கற்றனர். இவரும் இவரது சகோதரர்களும் இலத்தீன், ஜெர்மன், சட்டம், சரித்திரம், அணியிலக்கணம் மற்றும் பண்டைய இலக்கியம் ஆகியன கற்றனர். அவர் நெறிமுறைகள், அறநெறி மற்றும் சமய பக்தி ஆகியவற்றை வலியுறுத்தும் ஒரு கடுமையும் கண்டிப்புமான, மற்றும் பழமைவாத ஆசிரியராக இருந்தார். இளவரசர்கள் இருவரும், தங்கள் தந்தையால் அங்கீகரிக்கப்பட்ட உடல் ரீதியான தண்டனைக்கும் உட்பட்டனர். கி.பி. 1469ம் ஆண்டு, போலந்துக்குத் திரும்பும் தன் தந்தைக்கு வாழ்த்துக்களை வழங்குவதற்கு கசிமீர் ஆற்றிய உரையிலிருந்து அவரது நாவன்மையை கண்டு, "ஜான் ட்ளுகோஸ்" (John Dlugosz) வியந்தார். கசிமீர், பெரும் கல்வியாளரும் ராஜதந்திரியுமான "ஜோஹன்னாஸ்" (Johannes Longinus) என்பவரிடமும் கல்வி கற்றார்.


கி.பி. 1471ம் ஆண்டு, இவரது மூத்த சகோதரர் "விளாடிஸ்லாஸ்" (Vladislaus) "போஹெமியா" அரசராக (King of Bohemia) தேர்வு செய்யப்பட்டார். ஆகவே, தமது பதின்மூன்று வயதில் கசிமிர், விளாடிஸ்லாஸின் வெளிப்படையான வாரிசானார். ஆனால், பொஹேமிய பிரபுக்கள் சிலர் விளாடிஸ்லாஸுக்கு எதிராக "மத்தியாஸ் கொர்வினஸ்" (Matthias Corvinus) என்பவரை ஆதரித்தனர். இதற்கு மாறாக வேறு சில பொஹேமிய பிரபுக்கள் இரகசியமாக அவரை எதிர்த்தனர். இதனால் அரசர் 4ம் கசிமீர் விளாடிஸ்லாஸுக்கு பதிலாக கசிமீரை ஹங்கேரி நாட்டுக்கு அரசனாக முடிசூட்ட முடிவு செய்தார்.

இவரது மூத்த சகோதரர் இரண்டாம் விளாடிஸ்லாஸ் பொஹேமியா நாட்டை ஆள, கசிமிர் போலந்து மற்றும் லித்துவானியா நாடுகளின் வெளிப்படையான வாரிசானார்.


இதனால் இவருக்கு எதிராக மத்தியாஸ் கோர்வினஸ் (Matthias Corvinus) செயல்பட்டான். ஏனென்றால், தானும் அரசராக வேண்டுமென்று மத்தியாஸ் ஆசை கொண்டான். இவன் கசிமீர் அரசராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்ட நாளிலிருந்தே மிகவும் தொல்லை கொடுத்துக்கொண்டே இருந்தான். அவர் செய்த அனைத்துப் பணிகளுக்கும் தடைவிதித்துக் கொண்டே எதையும் செய்யவிடாமல் தடுத்தான். இதனால் ஒரு பக்கம் கசிமீர் மிகவும் மகிழ்ச்சியடைந்தார்.

வரும் தடைகள் அனைத்திற்கும் கடவுளுக்கு நன்றி கூறிக்கொண்டே இருந்தார். அரசர் பதவியிலிருந்து விலகிச் சென்று, இறைவனை பிடித்துகொள்ள கடவுள் செய்யும் உதவிகளை நினைத்து, இடைவிடாது இறைவேண்டல் செய்து நன்றி கூறினார்.

கி.பி. 1481ம் ஆண்டு, இவர் பேரரசர் மூன்றாம் ஃபிரடெரிக்கின் (Emperor Frederick III) மகளான “குனிகுண்டை” (Kunigunde of Austria) இளவரசர் கசிமீருக்கு திருமணம் செய்துவைக்க இவரது தந்தையார் முயன்றார். திருமண வாழ்க்கையையும் பாலியல் உறவுகளையும் வெறுத்துவந்த இளவரசர் கசிமீர், அடிக்கடி நடந்த இதுபோன்ற திருமண ஏற்பாடுகளை நிராகரித்தார். திருமணத்திற்கு பதிலாக கற்பு என்னும் வார்த்தைப்ப்பாட்டை எடுத்துகொண்டார். தாம் தமது மரணத்தை நெருங்குவதை இவர் உணர்ந்திருந்தார். இவர் லிட்டவுனிலிருந்த வில்னா (Wilna) என்ற ஊரிலிருந்த கல்லூரியில் அமைந்திருந்த பேராலயத்தில் தனது இறுதி நாட்களைக் கழித்தார்.

இவர் இறந்த பிறகு அங்கேதான் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டார். சில ஆண்டுகள் கழித்து இவரின் உடல் வில்னாவில் உள்ள செயிண்ட் பீட்டர் பவுல் பேராலயத்திற்கு மாற்றப்பட்டது.

இவர், தான் இறக்கும் வரை கிறிஸ்தவப் புண்ணியங்களில் சிறப்பாக, கற்பு நெறியிலும், ஏழை எளியவர்க்கு இரங்கி அன்பு செய்வதிலும் சிறந்து விளங்கினார். திருமறையைப் பரப்புவதில் ஆர்வமிக்கவராய் திகழ்ந்தார். தூய நற்கருணைமீது பக்தியும், கன்னிமரியின்மீது பற்றுதலும் கொண்டு வாழ்ந்தார்.

Also known as

• Casimir of Cracow

• Kazimieras, Kazimierz, Kazimir



Profile

Fifteenth century Polish prince, the younger son of King Casimir IV of Poland and Elizabeth of Austria. Grand Duke of Lithuania in 1471; third in line for the throne. Lived a highly disciplined, even severe life, sleeping on the ground, spending a great part of the night in prayer, dedicating himself to lifelong celibacy. He had a great devotion to Mary, supported the poor, and lived a virtuous life amid the dissolute court.


Hungarian nobles prevailed upon Casimir's father to send his 15-year-old son to be their king; Casimir obeyed, taking the crown, but refusing to exercise power. His army was outnumbered, his troops deserting because they were not paid. Casimir returned home, and was a conscientious objector from that time on.


He returned to prayer and study, maintained his decision to remain celibate even under pressure to marry the emperor's daughter. Reigned briefly as king during his father's absence.


Born

3 October 1458 in Wawel, Kraków, Poland


Died

• 4 March 1484 at Grondo, Grand Duchy of Lithuania (in modern Belarus) of tuberculosis

• buried in the Chapel of Saint Casimir, cathedral of Vilnius, Lithuania


Canonized

• 1522 by Pope Adrian VI

• 1602 by Pope Clement VIII



Blessed Giovanni Fausti


Also known as

Gjon Fausti



Profile

Eldest of twelve brothers in his family. Studied at the Inter-Brescia seminary where he became friends with the future Pope Paul VI. Graduated from the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Italy in 1922, and was ordained as a priest on 9 July 1922. Taught philosophy at the Inter-Brescia seminary in 1923. Joined the Jesuits in Gorizia, Italy in 1924. Chair of the philosophy department in Scutari, Albania from 1929 to 1932. Chair of the department of philosophy in Mantua, Italy and leader of the Jesuits there in 1932. Father Gjon suffered from lengthy health problems which required regular treatment and reduction in his work schedule from 1932 to 1936, but on 2 February 1936 he made his solemn profession in the Jesuits and returned to full-time adminstration, teaching and ministry. Rector of the Pontifical Seminary of Scutari and its adjoining Xaverian college in July 1942. Worked to start a Christian-Muslim dialogue in Albania. Transferred to Tirana, Albania in 1943 where he worked to help and protect all Albanians in the privations and persecutions of World War II. Vice-provincial of the Jesuits in Albania in 1945. Arrested by the Communist regime on 31 December 1945, and in a show trial, was sentenced to death for being a spy for the Vatican and a traitor to Albania. Martyr.


Born

19 October 1899 in Brozzo, Marcheno, Val Trompia, Brescia, Italy


Died

• shot by a machine-gun squad at 6am on 4 March 1946 at the cemetery in Shkodrë, Albania

• the body was left laying outside for a day to show the locals what would happen to those who opposed the Communists

• buried with other martyrs in a mass grave near the nearby river bed on the night of 5 March; rubbish bins were stacked on the grave to conceal it


Beatified

• 5 November 2016 by Pope Francis

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



Blessed Kolé Shllaku


Also known as

Brother Gjon



Profile

Son of Loros and Maré Ashtés. Studied at Franciscan schools, and became a Franciscan Friar Minor novice on 4 October 1922, making his perpetual vows on 13 September 1928 and taking the name Gjon. Studied theology in the Netherlands. Ordained a priest on 15 March 1931. Studied science, history and philosophy in Louvain, Belgium. Received a doctorate in philosophy from the Sorbonne University in Paris, France in 1937. Back in Albania he taught philosophy and French at a number of levels, and served as a spiritual director to many of his students. An open anti-Fascist, he was forced to flee to Yugoslavia when the Italians invaded Albania. Returning home, he ministered to those suffering in the privations of World War II, and continued to speak against Fascism and Communism. Helped found the Christian Democrats in Albania which led to his arrest by the Communist regime that took power after World War II; he was arrested in a class room in the middle of a lecture. He spent several months being tortured in prison, was finally given a show trial, found guilty of treason against the Communist government, and on 22 February 1946 he was sentenced to death. Martyr.


Born

27 July 1907 in Shkodré, Albania


Died

• shot by a machine-gun squad at 6am on 4 March 1946 at the cemetery in Shkodrë, Albania

• the body was left laying outside for a day to show the locals what would happen to those who opposed the Communists

• buried with other martyrs in a mass grave near the nearby river bed on the night of 5 March; rubbish bins were stacked on the grave to conceal it


Beatified

• 5 November 2016 by Pope Francis

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



Blessed Qerim Sadiku


Profile

Qerim served in the Albanian gendarmerie in the reign of Zog I, rising to the rank of lieutenant. During World War II, he ran a shop and avoided politics. He married Marije Vata in September 1944. After the war, when the Communists took over Albania, Querim was known to be anti–Communist, pro-Albanian nationalist, and a very pious Catholic, spending much time in prayer and none in violence. He was arrested on 3 December 1945 for opposing the mandatory, one-party-only vote, and for being a member of the Albanian Union, which the Communists considered violent fascists. After a show trial, Qerim was sentenced to death. Martyr. His only child was born six months after his death.



Born

18 February 1919 in Vudanje, Yugoslavia (modern Vuthaj, Shkodrë, Albania)


Died

• shot by a machine-gun squad at 6am on 4 March 1946 at the Varrezat e Rrmajit cemetery on the Rruga Hile Mosi in Shkodrë, Albania

• the body was left laying outside for a day to show the locals what would happen to those who opposed the Communists

• buried with other martyrs in a mass grave near the nearby river bed on the night of 5 March; rubbish bins were stacked on the grave to conceal it


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




Saint Adrian of Nicomedia


Also known as

Hadrian


Additional Memorial

8 September (translation of relics)



Profile

Pagan officer and body guard at the imperial court of Nicomedia. Adrian was so impressed by the strength and faith shown by persecuted Christians that he declared himself a Christian, though he had not even been baptized. He was immediately arrested and tortured. He and fellow prisoners were tended by his wife, Saint Natalia until they were executed.


Died

• thrown to a lion, which refused to touch him

• legs broken with an anvil, and then hacked to pieces with a sword on 4 March 304

• body burned, but when a storm extinguished the fire his wife salvaged his dismembered hand as a relic, and took it to Argyropolis near Constantinople

• other relics at Grammont (Geertsbergen), Belgium


Patronage

• against epilepsy

• against plague

• arms dealers

• butchers

• epileptics

• prison guards

• soldiers

• Flanders, Belgium

• Germany



Blessed Daniel Dajani


Profile

Feeling an early call to the priesthood, Daniel entered the Pontifical Seminary in Scutari, Albania at age 12. He joined the Jesuits in Gorizia, Albania on 8 July 1926, and made his final profession on 2 February 1942. He studied philosophy in Chieri, Italy from 1931 to 1933, and then returned to Albania in 1935 to teach Latin in the seminary. Ordained a priest on 15 July 1938. In 1940 he resumed teaching at the Scutari seminary, worked parish missions and conducted religious education in mountain parishes. Rector of Saverjane College and the Pontifical Seminary in 1944. Arrested by Communist authorities on 31 December 1945, accused of being part of the leadership of the anti–Communist Albanian Union. Father Daniel had nothing to do with the group, but following a show trial, he was executed. Martyr.



Born

2 December 1906 in Blinisht, Zadrima, Lezhë, Albania


Died

• shot by a machine-gun squad at 6am on 4 March 1946 at the cemetery in Shkodrë, Albania

• the body was left laying outside for a day to show the locals what would happen to those who opposed the Communists

• buried with other martyrs in a mass grave near the nearby river bed on the night of 5 March; rubbish bins were stacked on the grave to conceal it


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 Zoltán Lajos Meszlényi


Profile

Second of five children in a devoutly Catholic family; his father was a school teacher and principal. Graduated from a Benedictine high school in Esztergom, Hungary in 1909. With the support of Cardinal Kolos Vaszary, Zoltán then a studied in Rome, Italy at the Collegium Germanico-Hungaricum and Pontifical Gregorian University where he earned a doctorates in philosophy in 1912, theology in 1913 and a degree in canon law. Forced to leave Italy at the start of World War II, he finished his studies in Innsbruck, Austria, and was ordained there on on 28 October 1915.



Chaplain of Komárom, Hungary. Assigned several administrative tasks and positions at the archdiocese office Esztergom from 1917 to 1937. Auxiliary Bishop of Esztergom, Hungary and Titular Bishop of Sinope on 22 September 1937. Worked to keep the see functioning as the archbishop and other officers were imprisoned in the anti–Christian persecutions of the Hungaian Communists. On 29 June 1950 it was Zoltán’s turn; he was imprisoned, isolated, tortured, starved, abused, and set to forced labour until his health was finally destroyed. Martyr.


Born

2 January 1892 in Hatvan, Heves, Hungary


Died

4 March 1951 in Kistarcsa, Gödölloi, Hungary


Beatified

• 1 November 2009 by Pope Benedict XVI

• recognition Mass celebrated in the cathedral of Esztergom, Hungary



Saint Peter of Pappacarbone


Also known as

• Peter of Cava

• Peter of La Cava

• Peter I of Cava



Profile

Born to the Salerno nobility; relative of Saint Alferius of La Cava. Benedictine monk at Cava, Italy while still a young man; his abbot was Saint Leo of La Cava. Lived for a while as a hermit, and then was assigned to Cluny Abbey from 1062 to 1068. Bishop of Policastro, Italy in 1079; after two years of service, he resigned the see and returned to Cava where he served as co-adjutor abbot with Saint Leo. He was chosen abbot and tried to introduce the Cluniac reform, but was so strict that he caused strife in the house. He withdrew from office for a while, and even formed a house in the Cilento region of Italy. However, he was later recalled to La Cava and served decades as abbot with a much more fatherly attitude. During his time he brought in over 3,000 monks who then went out to found other houses and spread the Faith.


Born

in Salerno, Italy


Died

1123 of natural causes


Canonized

1893 by Pope Leo XIII (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

Policastro, Italy



Blessed Placide Viel


Also known as

• Eulalie Victoire Jacqueline Viel

• Eulalie-Victoire Viel

• Placida Viel



Profile

One of eight children of a farm family. Niece of Saint Marie Madeleine Postel. Joined the Sisters of the Christian Schools at age 18, taking the name Placide. She had little education, and studied for a while at Argentan, France. Worked in school administration, founded new convents, and served as novice mistress. Assistant-general of the Sisters at 26, an appointment that caused great resentment among her sisters. Mother-general of the order at age 31 on the death of her aunt. Directed the institute, orphanages, nursery and elementary schools for the next 30 years, opening 36 schools for the poor in Normandy. Obtained papal authority for the order in 1859 from Pope Pius IX. Worked herself to death organizing relief during the Franco-Prussian War in 1877.


Born

26 September 1815 at Quettehou, Normandy, France as Eulalie Victoire Jacqueline Viel


Died

4 March 1877 at Saint-Sauveur-le-Vicomte, France of natural causes


Beatified

6 May 1951 by Pope Pius XII



Blessed Gjelosh Lulashi


Profile

A lifelong layman in the archdiocese of Shkodrë-Pult, Albania, Gjelosh was educated by Franciscans, and studied at the Shkodër Seminary. He was a soldier, worked as a secretary, and was a member of the anti–Communist group, Albanian Union. Gjelosh was arrested on 3 December 1945 accused of treason for not supporting Communism, and of being a Vatican spy for remaining a devout Catholic. He was given a show trial on 22 February 1946, convicted, and sentenced to death. Martyr.



Born

2 September 1925 in Shosh, Shkodré, Albania


Died

• shot by a machine-gun squad at 6am on 4 March 1946 at the cemetery in Shkodrë, Albania

• the body was left laying outside for a day to show the locals what would happen to those who opposed the Communists

• buried with other martyrs in a mass grave near the nearby river bed on the night of 5 March; rubbish bins were stacked on the grave to conceal it


Beatified

• 5 November 2016 by Pope Francis

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



Blessed Wladyslaw Mackowiak


Also known as

Ladislao Mackowiak



Profile

Priest in the diocese of Vilnius, Lithuania, serving as a parish priest in Ikazni, working with Blessed Stanislaw Pyrtek. For his faith and zealous preaching of the faith during the Nazi occupation of World War II, he was sentenced to death by the Gestapo. Warned of the danger, Father Wladyslaw insisted in staying to serve his parishioners. Martyr.


Born

14 November 1910 in Sytki, Podlaskie, Poland


Died

shot on 4 March 1942 in Berezovichi (Berezwecz), Hrodzyenskaya voblasts', Belarus


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Mark Çuni


Profile

Mark was a 3rd year seminarian at the Albanian Pontifical Seminary in the archdiocese of Shkodër-Pult, Albania. For his adherence to his faith, he was arrested by Communist authorities on 7 December 1945, imprisoned in Shkodër for several months, sentenced to death on 22 February 1946, and then executed. Martyr.



Born

30 September 1919 in Ranza Bushat, Shkodër, Albania


Died

• shot by a machine-gun squad at 6am on 4 March 1946 at the Varrezat e Rrmajit cemetery on the Rruga Hile Mosi in Shkodrë, Albania

• the body was left laying outside for a day to show the locals what would happen to those who opposed the Communists

• buried with other martyrs in a mass grave near the nearby river bed on the night of 5 March; rubbish bins were stacked on the grave to conceal it


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 Stanislaw Pyrtek


Also known as

Stanislao Pyrtek



Profile

Priest in the diocese of Vilnius, Lithuania, ordained in 1940. He served in the Ikazni parish, working with Blessed Wladyslaw Mackowiak. Imprisoned and executed by the Gestapo in the Nazi occupation for the offense of being a priest.


Born

21 March 1913 in Bystra Podhalanska, Malopolskie, Poland


Died

4 March 1942 in Berezovichi (Berezwecz), Hrodzyenskaya voblasts', Belarus


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Giovanni Antonio Farina

புனித_ஜோகன்னஸ்_அன்டனியூஸ்_ஃபரினா (1803-1888)

மார்ச் 04

இவர் (#JohannesAntoniusFarina) இத்தாலியைச் சார்ந்தவர்; இவரது பெற்றோர் பேத்ரோ, பிரான்சிஸ்கா என்பவராவர்.

வளரும்போதே கடவுள்மீது ஆழமான பற்றுக்கொண்டிருந்த இவர் பின்னாளில் குருமடத்தில் சேர்ந்து குருவாக அருள்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார். 

பலருக்குத் தாம் படித்த இடத்திலேயே பணிபுரியும் வாய்ப்புக் கிடைக்காது; ஆனால் இவருக்குத் தான் படித்த குருமடத்திலேயே பேராசிரியராகப் பணிபுரியும் வாய்ப்புக் கிடைத்தது. தனக்குக் கிடைத்த இவ்வரிய வாய்ப்பினை இவர் நல்லமுறையில் பயன்படுத்தி, மிகச் சிறப்பான முறையில் பணிசெய்தார். 

இந்நிலையில் இவர் 1850 ஆம் ஆண்டு திரிவிசோ நகரின் ஆயராகத் திருப்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார். ஏழைகள் மீது மிகுந்த கரிசனையும் அன்பும் கொண்டிருந்த இவர், கல்வியின் இன்றியாமையாமை மக்கள் நடுவில் தொடர்ந்து வலியுறுத்தி வந்தார்.


இவர்தான் பிற்காலத்தில் திருத்தந்தையான பத்தாம் பயஸை 1858 ஆம் ஆண்டு குருவாக அருள்பொழிவு செய்தார் என்பது குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது.


1860 ஆம் ஆண்டு இவர் வின்சென்சா நகரின் ஆயராகத் திருப்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்டார். அங்கேயும் இவர் மிகச் சிறந்த முறையில் பணி செய்து 1888 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவருக்கு 2014 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை பிரான்சிஸ் அவர்களால் புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

Also known as

Johannes Antonius Farina



Profile

Son of Pedro and Francisca Bellame. Studied at the seminary in Vicenza, Italy, and taught there while still a student. Ordained on 15 January 1827. Founder of the Institute of the Sisters Teachers of Saint Dorothy, Daughters of the Sacred Heart in 1836; they are dedicated to teaching the poor. Bishop of Treviso, Italy on 20 September 1850. Ordained the future Pope Saint Pius X on 18 September 1858. Bishop of Vicenza on 28 September 1860, a seat he held until his death.


Born

11 January 1803 in Gambellara, Vincenza province, Italy


Died

4 March 1888 from a stroke at Vicenza, Italy


Canonized

23 November 2014 by Pope Francis




Blessed Nicholas Horner

Additional Memorial

22 November as one of the Martyrs of England, Scotland, and Wales


Profile

Lifelong layman; tailor by trade. An informal but enthusiastic evangelist for Catholicism. While in London, England seeking treatment for a leg wound, he was imprisoned in Newgate for the crime of harbouring priests; the chains and lack of medical care led to amputation of the injured leg. His friends petitioned for his release, which was granted, and Nicholas resumed work as a tailor at Smithfield, London. Arrested again for harbouring priests, he was thrown into Bridewell prison, tried for the crime of making clothes for a priest, and sentenced to death. Martyr.


Born

Grantley, Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 4 March 1590 in front of his home on Fetter Lane, Smithfield, London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Blessed Fran Mirakaj


Profile

A lifelong layman of the diocese of Sapës, Albania, Fran married Prenda Alija Kamerin in October 1934. He was a farmer, salesman and livestock merchant. Arrested by Communist authorities in Iballë, he was imprisoned in Shkodër on 24 December 1945. On 22 February 1946, after a show trial, he was sentenced to death for adhering to his faith. Martyr.



Born

13 August 1916 in Kodër Qurk in Iballë of Pukës, Shkodër, Albania


Died

shot at 5am on 4 March 1946 in Tiranë, Albania


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 Mieczyslaw Bohatkiewicz


Also known as

Miecislao Bohatkiewicz



Profile

Priest in the diocese of Pinsk, Belarus known as an inspiring preacher with a ministry to the poor. Murdered in the Nazi persecution of Christians. Martyr.


Born

1 January 1904 in Kriukai (Krykaly), Marijampole rajonas, Lithuania


Died

• shot on 4 March 1942 in the forest outside Berezovichi (Berezwecz), Hrodzyenskaya voblasts', Belarus

• his body was dumped in a communal grave near the place of execution


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Marie-Louise-élisabeth de Lamoignon de Dolé de Champlâtreux


Also known as

• Mère Saint-Louis

• Mother Saint Louis



Profile

Married. Widow. On 25 May 1803 she founded the Sisters of Charity of Saint Louis in Vannes, France for the education of poor and abandoned girls.


Born

3 October 1763 in Paris, France


Died

4 March 1825 in Vannes, Morbihan, France


Beatification

27 November 2011 by Pope Benedict XVI



Blessed Pere Roca Toscas


Profile

Drawn to religious life in his early teens. Had a great love of literature, especially Catalan, and wrote poetry. Professed cleric in the Sons of the Holy Family. Entered the seminary in Barcelona, Spain, but it was closed at the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. Captured, tortured and executed for trying to protect a church's icons. Martyr of the Spanish Civil War.


Born

7 October 1916 in Mura, Barcelona, Spain


Died

• shot on 4 March 1937 in Montcada, Barcelona, Spain

• body dumped into a mass grave and remains never identified


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Humbert III of Savoy


Profile

Son of Count Amadeus III of Savoy and Matilda of Vienna. Educated by Blessed Amadeus of Lausanne. Count of Savoy from age 13 when his father died. Married several times; widower several times. Joined the Carthusian monastery at Haute-Combe, but was obliged to resume political charge of the Savoy. Eventually assumed a Cistercian habit.



Born

1136 at Avigliana, Italy


Died

1189 at Chambéry, France


Beatified

1838 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Christopher Bales


Also known as

• Christopher Bayles

• Christopher Evers


Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Educated at Rome, Italy and Rheims, France. Ordained at Douai, France in 1587. Returned to England in 1588 to minister to covert Catholics, using the name Christopher Evers. Arrested and martyred for the crime of priesthood.


Born

Coniscliffe, Durham, England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 4 March 1590 in Fleet Street, London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Appian of Comacchio


Also known as

Apianus, Appianus


Profile

Benedictine monk at the abbey of Saint Peter of Ciel d'Oro, Pavia, Italy. Steward of his house's goods. Hermit at Comacchio, Italy where he evangelized the area.


Born

8th century in Liguria, Italy


Died

• c.800 at Comacchio, Italy of natural causes

• following miracles at his grave, his relics were translated to the church of San Appian in Comacchio

• during an attempted theft of the relics, their transport would not go past the church of San Maurus, so the relics were re-enshrined there



Saint Paolo of Brescia



Also known as

Paul, Paolino


Profile

Brother of Saint Gaudenzio of Brescia. Priest. Tenth bishop of the diocese of Brescia, Italy, serving in the early 5th century.



Died

• 5th century of natural causes

• relics re-interred in the basilica of Sant'Eusebio al Goletto

• relics re-interred in the church of San Pietro in Oliveto, Italy on 3 March 1498

• relics re-interred in the church of Sant'Agata in 1798



Blessed Pedro Ruiz Ortega


Profile

Professed cleric in the Sons of the Holy Family. Seminarian. When the persecutions of the Spanish Civil War began, he tried to flee to Rome, Italy to continue his studies. However, he was imprisoned and executed for his faith. Martyr.


Born

14 January 1912 in Vilviestre de Muñó, Burgos, Spain


Died

• 4 March 1937 in Montcada, Barcelona, Spain

• body has not been located


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Rupert of Ottobeuren


Profile

Benedictine monk. Abbot of the run down abbey of Ottobeuren. Under his leadership, the house had a resurgence, and both the place and Rupert became known for their piety.


Born

latter 12th century



Died

• 13th century of natural causes

• relics enshrined a chapel devoted to him at the Ottobeuren monastery



Saint Adrian of May


Also known as

Odhren


Profile

May have been a member of the Hungarian royal family. Missionary bishop on the isle of May in the Firth of Forth off the western coast of Britain. Martyred with fellow missionaries by Danish invaders. May have evangelized in Ireland. May have been bishop of Saint Andrews; records are unclear. Leader of a group of martyrs killed by pagan Dane.


Born

at Pannonia, Hungary


Died

c.875



Saint Felix of Rhuys


Profile

Hermit on Ouessant Island, France. Benedictine monk at Saint Benoit sur Loire monastery, Fleury-sur-Loire, France. Assigned to restore the great Rhuys abbey which had been founded by Saint Gildas the Wise and later destroyed by the Normans.


Born

near Quimper, Brittany (part of modern France)


Died

1038 of natural causes



Blessed Alexander Blake


Additional Memorial

4 May as one of the Martyrs of England, Scotland and Wales


Profile

Layman. Condemned for harboring priests. Martyr.


Born

England


Died

hanged, drawn and quartered on 4 March 1590 in Gray's Inn Lane, London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Basinus of Trier


Also known as

Basino, Basinos


Profile

Seventh-century benedictine monk. Abbot of Saint Maximinus monastery in Trier, Germany. Bishop of Trier. Assisted English missionaries in the area, including Saint Willibrord of Echternach.


Born

in Lorraine, France


Died

c.705 of natural causes



Saint Leonard of Avranches


Profile

Known initially for his powerful build, fiery temper, and bullying demeanor. In later life he reformed, took his religion seriously, spent 30 years as bishop of Avranches, France, and was proclaimed a saint by the parishioners in his see.


Died

c.614 of natural causes



Saint Philip of Cluain-Bainbh


Also known as

• Philip of Clocharbainni

• Philip of Clogher

• Moggrudo, Moggrudonis, Mogrado, Mogrudo


Profile

Bishop of Cluain-Bainbh, Ireland.



Saint Gaius of Nicomedia


Also known as

Caius


Profile

Officer in the Roman emperor's palace. Martyred with 27 companions.


Died

drowned c.254 at Nicomedia (modern Izmit, Turkey)



Saint Owen


Also known as

Ouini, Owin


Profile

Steward in the household of Saint Etheldreda. Monk at Lastingham, England, and then near Lichfield, England. Spiritual student of Saint Chad.


Died

c.680 of natural causes



Saint Arcadius of Cyprus


Profile

Fourth century missionary bishop who evangelized in Cyprus. Martyr.



Saint Nestor the Martyr


Profile

Fourth century missionary bishop who evangelized in Cyprus. Martyr.



Martyrs on the Appian Way


Profile

Group of 900 martyrs buried in the catacombs of Saint Callistus on the Appian Way, Rome, Italy.


Died

c.260



Martyrs of Nicomedia


Profile

A group of 20 Christians murdered together for their faith. The only details about them to survive are three of their names - Archelaus, Cyrillos and Photius.


Died

Nicomedia, Bithynia (in modern Turkey)



Martyrs of the Crimea


Profile

A group of 4th century missionary bishops who evangelized in the Crimea and southern Russia, and we martyred for their work. We know little else beyond the names - Aetherius, Agathodorus, Basil, Elpidius, Ephrem, Eugene and Gapito.


 அசிசியின் புனிதர் சில்வெஸ்டர் 

(St. Sylvester of Assisi)

கடவுளின் ஊழியர்/ ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் முதல் குரு:

(The Servant of God/ First Priest in the Franciscan Order)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1175

அசிசி

(Assisi)

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 6, 1240

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: மார்ச் 4

கடவுளின் ஊழியர் (The Servant of God) என்றழைக்கப்படும் அசிசியின் புனிதர் சில்வெஸ்டர், பன்னிரெண்டாம் நூற்றாண்டின் இறுதியில், பெருஜியா மாகாணத்திலுள்ள (Province of Perugia) ஊம்ப்ரியா (Umbria region) பிராந்தியத்தின் அசிசி (Assisi) நகரில் பிறந்தவர் ஆவார்.

சில்வெஸ்டர், நகரின் பிரபுக்கள் குடும்பங்களின் சந்ததியைச் சேர்ந்தவர் ஆவார். புனிதர் கிளாராவின் (St. Clare of Assisi) தந்தையான “ஃபேவரோன் டி மொநேல்டோ’வின்” (Favarone di Monaldo) சகோதரரான, “ரோசன் டி மொநேல்டோ” (Rosone di Monaldo), சில்வெஸ்டரின் தந்தையார் ஆவார்.

புனிதர் ஃ பிரான்சிஸின் (St. Francis of Assisi) முதல் 12 சீடர்களில் சில்வெஸ்டர் ஒருவர் ஆவார். இவரே ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் சபையின் முதல் குருவும் ஆவார். குருத்துவம் பெற்ற சில்வெஸ்டர், அசிசி நகரின் “சேன் ரூஃபினோ” (Cathedral of San Rufino) தேவாலயத்தில் பொறுப்பேற்றார்.

அவருடைய வாழ்க்கையின் மாற்றம் கி.பி. 1209ம் ஆண்டில் தொடங்கியது. சில்வெஸ்டர் ஒருமுறை, தேவாலயம் ஒன்றினை மறுசீரமைப்பு செய்யும் பணிகளுக்காக, ஃபிரான்சிஸுக்கு செங்கற்களை விற்றதாக கூறப்படுகிறது. ஃபிரான்சிஸ், தமது குடும்பத்தின் வியத்தகு மறுமலர்ச்சிக்கு பின்னர், அசிசி நகரின் புறநகர்ப் பகுதிகளிலுள்ள சீர்கேடுற்ற நிலையிலிருந்த தேவாலயங்கள் மற்றும் சிற்றாலயங்களை சீரமைக்கும் சீரிய பணிகளில் ஈடுபட்டிருந்தார். சிறிது காலம் கழித்து, உள்ளூர் பிரபுவான “பெர்னார்ட்” (Bernard of Quintavalle), ஃபிரான்சிசையும் அவரது வாழ்க்கை முறையையும் பின்பற்ற தீர்மானித்து ஃபிரான்சிஸின் பின்சென்றதைக் கண்டார். மற்றும் “பெர்னார்ட்” ஃபிரான்சிஸுடன் சேர்ந்து, பெர்னார்டின் செல்வத்தை ஏழைகளுக்கு விநியோகித்ததைக் கண்டார். பேராசைக்கு இரையாக விழுந்த சில்வெஸ்டர், தாம் முன்னர் விற்ற தமது செங்கற்களுக்கு மிகவும் குறைந்த அளவு பணமே தரப்பட்டதாக புகார் கூறினார். தமக்கு நஷ்ட ஈடாக இன்னும் அதிக பணம் வேண்டுமென்று கேட்டார்.

ஃபிரான்சிஸ் கடமைப்பட்டிருந்தாலும், அவர் கை நிறைய கொடுத்த பணம், பின்னர் சில்வெஸ்டரை குற்ற உணர்வுகளால் நிரப்பியது. அவர் தம்முள் இருந்த பேராசை குணங்களைக் கண்டுணர்ந்து, வருத்தப்பட்டார். தமது சொத்துக்களை விற்ற சில்வெஸ்டர், ஃபிரான்சிஸ் மற்றும் அவரது துணைவர்களுடன் இணைந்து, ஒரு தவ வாழ்க்கையை தொடங்கினார். பழமையான சகோதரத்துவ ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் இயக்கத்தின் முதல் குருவான சில்வெஸ்டர், ஒரு புனிதமான மற்றும் பிரார்த்தனை செய்யும் மனிதராகவும், ஃபிரான்சிஸின் விருப்பமானவராகவும் ஆனார். எளிமை மற்றும் தியானம் ஆகியவற்றை கடுமையாக கடைபிடித்தார். சில்வெஸ்டர், ஃபிரான்சிஸின் பயணங்களில் ஒரு துணைவராக ஆனார். ஃபிரான்சிஸ், ஆலோசனைகளுக்கும் சில்வெஸ்டரையே நாடினார்.

பிரார்த்தனைக்குத் தம்மை அர்ப்பணிப்பதைவிட, மறைபிரசங்கிப்பதற்காக வெளியே செல்வதன்மூலம் கடவுளுக்குச் சேவை செய்ய வேண்டும் என்ற பதிலையே சில்வெஸ்டரும், புனிதர் கிளாராவும் (St. Clare of Assisi) ஃபிரான்சிஸின் வினவலுக்கு பதிலாக ஆனார்கள். இருவரும் கடவுளின் சித்தத்தை அறிந்துகொள்வதற்காக தொடர் பிரார்த்தனைகளை செய்தனர்.

ஒருமுறை, நகரில் சிவில் யுத்தம் வெடித்துச் சிதறிப்போயிருந்த சமயத்தில், பிசாசுகளை நகரை விட்டு வெளியேற்றுமாறு ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சில்வெஸ்டருக்கு கட்டளையிட்டார். சில்வெஸ்டர், நகர நுழைவாயிலில் நின்றுகொண்டு, "சர்வ வல்லமையுள்ள கடவுளின் பெயரால், அவருடைய ஊழியரான ஃபிரான்சிஸின் கட்டளையின்பேரில் அனைத்து தீய பிசாசுகளையும் இங்கிருந்து துரத்துகிறேன்” என்றார். பிசாசுகள் நகரைவிட்டு புறப்பட்டுச் சென்றன. நகரத்திற்கு சமாதானம் திரும்பியது.



புனிதர் “பொனவேன்சுர்” (St. Bonaventure), ஒரு சிறப்பான வழியில், சில்வெஸ்டர் பிரான்சிஸைக் குறித்த தரிசனங்களைக் குறிப்பிடுகிறார்.

ஃபிரான்சிஸ் மரித்ததன் பின்னர், பதினாலு வருடங்கள் வாழ்ந்திருந்த சில்வெஸ்டர், கி.பி. 1240ம் ஆண்டு, அசிசி நகரில் மரித்தார். அவருடைய உடல், “ஃபிரான்சிஸ் பேராலயத்தில்” (Basilica of St. Francis) அவருக்கு அருகாமையிலேயே அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது.

02 March 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் மார்ச் 03

 St. Hemiterius and Cheledonius


Feastday: March 3

Death: 4th century


Spanish martyrs who died in Calahorra, Old Castile, Spain, their martyrdom was recorded by St. Gregory of Tour, France, and Prudentius.



St. Felix


Feastday: March 3

Death: unknown


Martyr of North Africa with Fortunatus, Luciolus, Marcia, and thirty-six compan­ions. 



Saint Katharine Drexel

புனிதர் கேதரின் ட்ரெக்ஸல் (St. Katharine Drexel)

*அருட்சகோதரி, கல்வியாளர், நிறுவனர் :

*பிறப்பு : நவம்பர் 26, 1858

ஃபிலடெல்ஃபியா, பென்ஸில்வேனியா, ஐக்கிய அமெரிக்க நாடுகள்

*இறப்பு : மார்ச் 3, 1955 (வயது 96)

பென்சலேம், பென்ஸில்வேனியா, ஐக்கிய அமெரிக்க நாடுகள்

(Bensalem, Pennsylvania, U.S.)

*முக்திபேறு பட்டம் : நவம்பர் 20, 1988

திருத்தந்தை 2ம் ஜான் பால்

(Pope John Paul II)

*புனிதர் பட்டம் : அக்டோபர் 1, 2000

திருத்தந்தை 2ம் ஜான் பால்

(Pope John Paul II)

*பாதுகாவல் :

மனித நேயம், இன நீதி

(Philanthropy, Racial Justice)

புனிதர் கேதரின் ட்ரெக்ஸல், ஒரு மனித நேயமிக்க அமெரிக்க பெண் வாரிசு ஆவார். இவர் ஒரு அருட்சகோதரியும், கல்வியாளரும், நிறுவனரும் ஆவார். ஐக்கிய அமெரிக்க நாடுகளில் பிறந்து, புனிதராக அருட்பொழிவு செய்யப்பட்ட ஒரே புனிதர் இவரேயாவார்.

"கேதரின் மேரி ட்ரெக்ஸல்" (Catherine Mary Drexel) என்ற இயற்பெயர் கொண்ட இவர், முதலீட்டு வங்கியாளரான "ஃபிரான்சிஸ் ஆன்டனி ட்ரெக்ஸல்" (Francis Anthony Drexel) என்பவரது மகளாவார். இவரது தாயாரின் பெயர் "ஹன்னா" (Hannah Langstroth) ஆகும். கேதரின் இவர்களது இரண்டாவது மகளாவார். இவர் பிறந்து ஐந்து வாரங்களில் இவர்களது தாயாரான ஹன்னா மரித்துப் போனார். கேதரினும் அவரது மூத்த சகோதரியும் இரண்டு வருடங்கள் வரை அவர்களது மாமன் வீட்டில் வளர்ந்தனர். பின்னர், அவர்களது தந்தை 1860ம் ஆண்டு, "எம்மா" (Emma Bouvier) என்ற பெண்ணை மறுமணம் செய்துகொண்டார். தமது இரண்டு மகள்களையும் வீட்டுக்கு அழைத்து வந்தார். அவர்களுக்கு 1863ம் ஆண்டு, மூன்றாவதாக "லூய்ஸா" (Louisa) என்றொரு பெண் குழந்தையும் பிறந்தது.

தனிப்பட்ட முறையில் வீட்டிலேயே கல்வி கற்ற மூன்று சிறுமிகளும் சொகுசு வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்தனர். அமெரிக்க நாடுகள் மற்றும் ஐரோப்பிய நாடுகளில் குடும்பத்துடன் சுற்றுப்பயணங்கள் மேற்கொண்டனர். வாரத்தில் மூன்று நாட்கள் தமது வீட்டில் ஏழை எளிய மக்களுக்கு உணவு ஆடைகள் கொடுத்தனர்.

அதிக வசதிகள் கொண்ட உலக அளவிலான முதலீட்டு வங்கியாளர் ஒருவரின் மகளான, குடும்பப்பெண் ஒருவர், ஒருக்காலும் தன்னைத்தானே வறுமை வாழ்க்கைக்கு இழுத்துக்கொள்ள மாட்டார்.

ஆனால், புற்றுநோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டு படுக்கையில் இருந்த தமது வளர்ப்புத் தாயாருக்கு மூன்று வருட காலம் சிசுருக்ஷை செய்த கேதரின், தமது தந்தையின் குடும்ப சொத்துக்களாலோ, மொத்தமிருந்த பணத்தாலோ, மரணத்திலிருந்தும், வேதனையிலிருந்தும் பாதுகாப்பினை வாங்கிவிட முடியாது என்பதனை புரிந்துகொண்டார். இது அவரது வாழ்க்கையின் ஆழ்ந்த திருப்புமுனையாக அமைந்தது.


இந்தியர்களின் அவல நிலை கண்டு அவர்கள்பால் பற்றுதல் கொண்டிருந்த கேதரின், "ஹெலன் ஹன்ட் ஜாக்சன்" (Helen Hunt Jackson) என்பவர் எழுதிய புத்தகமான "அவமதிப்பின் ஒரு நூற்றாண்டு" (A Century of Dishonor) எனும் புத்தகத்தைப் படித்து அதிர்ச்சியடைந்திருந்தார். ஒருமுறை, ஐரோப்பிய சுற்றுப்பயணம் மேற்கொண்டிருந்தபோது, திருத்தந்தை பதின்மூன்றாம் லியோ" (Pope Leo XIII) அவர்களைச் சந்திக்கும் சந்தர்ப்பம் கிட்டியது. அவர் திருத்தந்தையிடம், அதிக மறைப்பணியாளர்களை "வயோமிங்" (Wyoming) நகருக்கு தமது நண்பரும் ஆயருமான "ஜேம்ஸ் ஓகானரிடம்" (Bishop James OConnor) அனுப்பிவைக்குமாறு வேண்டினார். ஆனால் திருத்தந்தையோ, "நீயே ஏன் ஒரு மறைப்பணியாளராகக் கூடாது" என்று கேட்டார். திருத்தந்தை அவர்களின் இந்த பதிலால் அதிர்ச்சியடைந்த கேதரின், அதன் சாத்தியக்கூறுகளைப்பற்றி சிந்திக்க ஆரம்பித்தார்.

வீடு திரும்பிய கேதரின், "ரெட் க்லௌட்" (Red Cloud) என்றழைக்கப்படும் "ஸியோக்ஸ்" (Sioux) இன மக்களின் தலைவரை "டகோடாஸ்" (Dakotas) சென்று சந்தித்தார். பின்னர், இந்திய இன மக்களுக்கான தமது முறையான உதவிகளை ஆரம்பித்தார்.

(19ம் நூற்றாண்டின் பிற்பகுதியில் வட அமெரிக்காவின் மாநிலங்களாகிய "வட டகோடா" (North Dakota) மற்றும் "தென் டகோடா" (South Dakota) ஆகிய மாநிலங்களின் பிராந்தியங்கள் "டகோடாஸ்" (Dakotas) என்று அழைக்கப்பட்டன. அங்கே வாழ்ந்த "ஓக்லாலா ஸியோக்ஸ் இந்தியர்" (Oglala Sioux Indians) இன மக்களின் தலைவர் "ரெட் க்லௌட்" (Red Cloud) என்று அழைக்கப்பட்டார்).


கேதரின் ட்ரெக்ஸல் விருப்பப்பட்டிருந்தால் இலகுவாக திருமணம் முடித்திருக்கலாம். ஆனால் அவர், ஆயர் "ஜேம்ஸ் ஓகானருடன்" (Bishop James OConnor) மேற்கொண்ட விவாதங்களின் பின்னர், "எஞ்சிய என் வாழ்நாட்களை இந்திய மற்றும் கருப்பு இன மக்களுக்குக் கொடுக்கும் கருணையை புனித சூசையப்பரின் திருவிழா என்னில் கொண்டுவந்தது" ("The feast of St. Joseph brought me the grace to give the remainder of my life to the Indians and the Colored") என்று 1889ல் எழுதினர். பத்திரிகைகள் தலையங்கங்களில் அலறின.

மூன்றரை வருட தமது பயிற்சியின் பின்னர் அன்னை ட்ரெக்ஸலு'ம் அவரது "நற்கருணையின் அருட்சகோதரிகளின்" (Nuns-Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament) முதல் குழுவினரும் இந்திய மற்றும் கருப்பு இன மக்களுக்கான முதல் உறைவிட பள்ளியை

"சான்டா ஃபே" (Santa Fe) என்னுமிடத்தில் தொடங்கினர். அவரது பணிகளின் அடித்தளங்கள் சங்கிலித்தொடராக தொடங்கின.

1942ல் பதின்மூன்று அமெரிக்க மாநிலங்களில் கருப்பு இன மக்களின் குழந்தைகளுக்கான கத்தோலிக்க பள்ளிகளின் அமைப்புகள் தொடங்கப்பட்டிருந்தன. நாற்பது பணி மையங்களும் 23 கிராமப்புற பள்ளிகளும் இருந்தன. பிரிவினையாளர்கள் கடுமையாக தொந்தரவு செய்தனர். "பென்ஸில்வானியா" (Pennsylvania) நகரிலிருந்த ஒரு பள்ளியை எரிக்கவும் செய்தனர். அனைத்திற்கும் மேலாக, அவர் பதினாறு மாநிலங்களில் இந்தியர்களுக்காக 50 பணி மையங்களை தொடங்கினார்.

"அன்னை கேப்ரினி" (Mother Cabrini), அன்னை ட்ரெக்ஸல் நிறுவியிருந்த கல்வி அமைப்புகளுக்கான ஒப்புதலை ரோமிலிருந்து பெறுவதற்கான வழிமுறைகளையும் அதிலுள்ள சிக்கல்களையும் ஆலோசனையாக எடுத்துக் கூறினார். "நியூ ஓர்லியன்ஸ்" (New Orleans) மாநிலத்தில் அவர் கட்டி நிறுவிய "சேவியர் பல்கலைக்கழகம்" (Xavier University), ஐக்கிய அமெரிக்க நாடுகளிலுள்ள கருப்பு இன மக்களுக்கான முதல் கத்தோலிக்க பல்கலைக்கழகம் என்பது அன்னை ட்ரெக்ஸலுக்கு சிகரமாக அமைந்தது.

77 வயதில் அன்னை மாரடைப்பினால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டார். ஓய்வெடுக்கும்படி வற்புறுத்தப்பட்டார். வெளிப்படையான அவரது வாழ்க்கை முடிவுக்கு வந்துவிட்டது. அமெரிக்க, ஐரோப்பிய நாடுகளைச் சுற்றிவந்த சுறுசுறுப்பான மேல்தட்டு வர்க்க பெண்மணியின் மீதமிருந்த இருபது வருட வாழ்க்கை ஒரு சிறு அறைக்குள் முடங்கிப்போனது. அமைதியான, தீவிர செபங்களில் மூழ்கிப்போனார். வெவ்வேறான செபங்களுள்ள சிறு தாள்களும், சிறு குறிப்புப் புத்தகங்களும், முடிவற்ற அபிலாஷைகளும், தியானங்களுமாகவே வாழ்க்கை ஓடியது.

அன்னை ட்ரெக்ஸல் தமது 96 வயதில் மரணமடைந்தார்




Also known as

Catherine Marie Drexel



Profile

Daughter of the extremely wealthy railroad entrepreneurs and philanthropists Francis Anthony and Emma (Bouvier) Drexel. She was taught from an early age to use her wealth for the benefit of others; her parents even opened their home to the poor several days each week. Katharine's older sister Elizabeth founded a Pennsylvania trade school for orphans; her younger sister founded a liberal arts and vocational school for poor blacks in Virginia. Katharine nursed her mother through a fatal three-year illness before setting out on her own; Emma died in 1883.


Interested in the condition of Native Americans, during an audience in 1887, Katharine asked Pope Leo XIII to send more missionaries to Wyoming for her friend, Bishop James O'Connor. The pope replied, "Why don't you become a missionary?"


She visited the Dakotas, met the Sioux chief, and began her systematic aid to Indian missions, eventually spending millions of the family fortune. Entered the novitiate of the Sisters of Mercy. Founded the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament for Indians and Colored, now known simply as the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament in Santa Fe, New Mexico, USA in 1891. Advised by Mother Frances Cabrini on getting the Order's rule approved in Rome. She received the approval in 1913.


By 1942 she had a system of black Catholic schools in 13 states, 40 mission centers, 23 rural schools, 50 Indian missions, and Xavier University in New Orleans, Louisiana, the first United States university for blacks. Segregationists harassed her work. Following a heart attack, she spent her last twenty years in prayer and meditation. Her shrine at the mother-house was declared a National Shrine in 2008.


Born

26 November 1858 at Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA


Died

3 March 1955 of natural causes at the mother-house of the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament, 1663 Bristol Pike, Bensalem, Pennsylvania, USA 19020-8502


Canonized

1 October 2000 at Rome, Italy by Pope John Paul II




Oh, how far I am at 84 years of age from being an image of Jesus in his sacred life on earth! - Mother Katharine Drexel



Saint Teresa Eustochio Verzeri

  புனித தெரசா யூஸ்டோச்சியோ 

(Saint Teresa Eustochio Verzeri) 


அருட்சகோதரி/ நிறுவனர் : (Nun and Foundress) 


பிறப்பு : ஜூலை 31, 1801

பெர்கமோ, கிஸால்பைன் குடியரசு

(Bergamo, Cisalpine Republic) 


இறப்பு : மார்ச் 3, 1852 (வயது 50)

பிரேஸியா, லொம்பார்ட-வெநீஷியா அரசு

(Brescia, Kingdom of Lombardy-Venetia) 


ஏற்கும் சமயம் :

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை (Roman Catholic Church) 


முக்திபேறு பட்டம் : அக்டோபர் 27, 1946

திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரெண்டாம் பயஸ் (Pope Pius XII) 


புனிதர் பட்டம் : ஜூன் 10, 2001

திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் ஜான் பவுல் (Pope John Paul II)



பாதுகாவல் :

இயேசுவின் திருஇருதயத்தின் மகள்கள்

(Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus)

கல்வியாளர்கள் (Educators) 


புனிதர் இக்னேஸியா வெர்செரி, ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் இத்தாலிய பெனடிக்டைன் சபையின் (Benedictine Nun) அருட்சகோதரியும், "இயேசுவின் திருஇருதயத்தின் மகள்கள்" (Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) எனும் கத்தோலிக்க நிறுவனத்தின் நிறுவனருமாவார். இதன் உறுப்பினர்கள், கற்பு, எளிமை, கீழ்ப்படிதல் ஆகியவற்றிற்காக பொது உறுதிப்பாடுகளை எடுத்துக்கொண்டவர்கள் ஆவர். இளைஞர்களின் கல்வி, நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டவர்களை கவனித்தல் மற்றும் மறைப்பனிகள் ஆகியவையும் அவர்களது அர்ப்பணிக்கப்பட்ட பணிகளாகும். பெண்களின் தேவைகளுக்காக தம்மை அர்ப்பணித்துக்கொண்ட இவர், அவர்களது கல்விக்கும் முன்னுரிமை தந்தார். அனாதை இல்லங்களை நிறுவிய அவர், முதியோர் மற்றும் நோய்வாய்ப்பட்டவர்களுக்கும் உதவியளித்தார். அவர், பெனடிக்டைன் துறவியானதன் பிறகு, "தெரேசா யூஸ்டோச்சியோ" (Teresa Eustochio) என்ற பெயரை தமது ஆன்மீக பெயராக ஏற்றுக்கொண்டார். 


1801ம் ஆண்டு, வட இத்தாலியின் லொம்பார்டி (Lombardy) பிராந்தியத்தின் "பெர்கமோ" (Bergamo) நகரில் பிறந்த இக்னேஸியா வெர்செரி�யின் தந்தை "அன்டோனியோ வெர்செரி" (Antonio Verzeri) ஆவார். இவரது தாயார், "எலெனா பெட்ரொக்கா-க்ருமெல்லி" (Elena Pedrocca-Grumelli) ஆவார். இக்னேஸியா வெர்செரி, தமது பெற்றோருக்குப் பிறந்த ஏழு குழந்தைகளில் மூத்த குழந்தை ஆவார். 


ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் எளிய கிளாரா" (Franciscan Poor Clare) சபையின் அருட்சகோதரியான இவரது அத்தை, "அன்டோனியா க்ருமெல்லி" (Antonia Grumelli), இக்னேஸியா மத சேவைகளில் ஈடுபடுவார் என்றும், எதிர்காலத்தில், பரிசுத்த பிள்ளைகளின் தாயாக கடவுளே விதித்திருக்கிறார் என்றும் தீர்க்கதரிசனமாக முன்மொழிந்தார். இக்னேஸியாவின் சகோதரரான "கிரலமோ வெர்செரி" (Girolamo Verzeri), 1850ம் ஆண்டு, செப்டம்பர் மாதம், 30ம் நாளன்று, "பிரேசியா" (Bishop of Brescia) ஆயரானார். 


"பெர்கமோ" மறைமாவட்டத்தின் தலைமை குருவான (Vicar General of Bergamo) "கேனன் ஜியோசெப் பெனக்லியோ" (Canon Giuseppe Benaglio) அவர்களின் மேற்பார்வையில் கல்வி கற்ற இக்னேஸியா, பின்னர் பெர்கமோவிலுள்ள "தூய க்ராடா" (Santa Grata) துறவு மடத்தின் பெனடிக்டைன் பெண் துறவியருடன் கல்வி கற்றார். 


ஒரு பக்தியுள்ள, மற்றும் அறிவார்ந்த குழந்தையான இக்னேஸியா, கடவுளுக்கு அடிமையாக வாழ்வதைத் தவிர வேறு ஒன்றுமில்லை என்று நினைத்தார். வாழ்க்கையின் பணிகளைப் பற்றின அச்சம் தொடக்கத்தில் இருந்தாலும், தமது வாழ்க்கையை ஆன்மீக பாதையில் இட்டுச் சென்றார். 


1831ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம், 8ம் நாளன்று, பெனக்லியோ�வின் உதவியுடன், "இயேசுவின் திருஇருதயத்தின் மகள்கள்" (Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus) எனும் கத்தோலிக்க நிறுவனத்தை நிறுவினார். இச்சபை, பெண்களின் வாழ்க்கையில், குறிப்பாக அவர்களது கல்வியில் கவனம் செலுத்தும் குழுவாகும் குறிக்கோளுடன் நடத்தினார். 


சபையை தனியாக நடத்தும் பொறுப்புகளை இக்னேஸியாவிடம் விட்டுவிட்டு, பெனக்லியோ 1836ம் ஆண்டு, மரித்துப் போனார். அயராது உழைத்த இக்னேஸியா, பல்வேறு அநாதை இல்லங்களை நிறுவினார். முதியோர் மற்றும் நோயுற்ற மக்களுக்கு பல வழிகளில் உதவி புரிந்தார். 


இக்னேஸியா வெர்செரி, 1852ம் ஆண்டு, மார்ச் மாதம், மூன்றாம் நாளன்று, வட இத்தாலியின் "லொம்பார்டி" (Lombardy) பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள "பிரேசியா" (Brescia) நகரில் மரித்தார்.

Also known as

Ignazia Verzeri



Profile

Teresa's mother, Countess Elena Pedrocca-Grumelli, had felt drawn to the religious life, but her aunt, a Poor Clare nun, prophesied that Elena would be the mother of holy children. Teresa was the oldest of the seven children; her brother became bishop of Brescia, Italy. Ingazia was educated at home, and the canon Giuseppe Benaglio, Vicar General of the diocese of Bergamo, Italy was her spiritual teacher.


Benedictine nun at Bergamo. Dedicated to the education of young girls. Founder of the Institute of the Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus on 8 February 1831. Built orphanages, retreat centers, and provided help to the old, sick and infirm; noted spiritual guide and teacher. An extensive correspondent, in addition to the Constitutions and Book of Duties for the congregation, she left over 3,500 letters. The Daughters continue their mission in Italy, Brazil, Argentina, Bolivia, the Central African Republic, Cameroon, India, and Albania.


Born

31 July 1801 at Bergamo, Lombardy, Italy as Ignazia Verzeri


Died

• 3 March 1852 at Brescia, Italy of natural causes

• her relics are in the chapel of the Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, Bergamo, Italy


Canonized

10 June 2001 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Peter de Geremia


Also known as

Pietro Geremia



Profile

Educated at the University of Bologna, Italy; brilliant law student. One night while he meditated on the worldly success he would have, he was visited by the spirit of a deceased relative, a man who had also been a lawyer, whose pride and perjury had lost him his chance at paradise. Shaken, Peter devoted himself to prayer, asking for his vocation. Soon he received a word that he should become a Dominican. In a rage, his father came to Bologna to stop him, but when he saw completely happy Peter was in religious life, the older man gave him his blessing. Peter became one of the finest preachers in Sicily, always preaching in the open air because no church was large enough to hold the crowds. Visited by Saint Vincent Ferrer. Abbey prior.


One day when there was no food for the community, Peter asked a fisherman for a donation; he was rudely refused. Getting into a boat, Peter rowed from the shore and made a sign to the fish; the creatures broke the nets and followed Peter. The fisherman apologized, Peter made another sign to the fish, and they returned to the nets. The monastery was ever afterwards supplied with fish.


Sent to establish regular observance in Sicilian monasteries. Called to Florence, Italy by the Pope to help heal the Greek schism; he managed a brief union. He was offered a bishopric, but refused.


Once when Peter was preaching at Catania, Mount Etna erupted and lava flowed toward the city. The people begged Peter to save them. He preached a brief sermon on repentance, went to the nearby shrine of Saint Agatha, removed the saint's veil, and held it towards the lava flow. The eruption ceased and the town was saved.


Peter was known as a miracle worker, raising the dead to life, healing the crippled and the blind, and converting sinners.


Born

1381 at Palermo, Sicily


Died

3 March 1452 in the convent of Santa Zita, Palermo, Sicily of natural causes


Beatified

12 May 1784 by Pope Pius VI (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

Palermo, Italy



Blessed Concepcion Cabrera de Armida


Also known as

• Conchita

• María Concepción Cabrera Arias de Armida


Profile

Born during the Mexican Civil War, she grew up during the Revolution and the religious persecutions that were a part of it. Lay woman, married 22 years to the same man. Mother of nine children. Widowed at age 39. Grandmother. Founder of the Obra de la Cruz (Work of the Cross) which includes -


• the Apostolate of the Cross founded on 3 May 1895,

• the Congregation of Sisters of the Cross of the Sacred Heart of Jesus founded in 1897,

• the Alliance of Love with the Heart of Jesus founded in 1909,

• the Apostolic League founded in 1912, and

• the Congregation of Missionaries of the Holy Spirit founded in 1914.



Though her children claim they rarely saw her take the time to write, she left 65,000 hand-written pages of mystical meditations.


Born

8 December 1862 at San Luis Potosí, Mexico


Died

3 March 1937 at Mexico City, Mexico of natural causes


Beatified

• 4 May 2019 by Pope Francis

• beatification recognition celebrated in Mexico City, Mexico, presided by Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu


Works

I Am: Euchararistic Meditations on the Gospel





Blessed Benedetto Sinigardi da Arezzo


Also known as

• Benedetto Sinigardi

• Benedict of Arezzo



Additional Memorial

13 August on some calendars


Profile

Born to a wealthy and influential noble family, the son of Thomas de Sinigardo ‘Sinigardi and Countess Elizabeth Tarlati Pietramala, Benedetto received a good education, grew up in a Christian home, and was early drawn to religious life. After hearing Saint Francis of Assisi preach in the Grande Piazza in Arezzo, Italy in 1211, Benedetto became the saint‘s spiritual student, then left the wealthy and worldly life, and joined the Franciscans, receiving the habit from Saint Francis himself. Chosen Franciscan Provincial of the Marches of Ancona, Italy in 1217 at age 27. Feeling a call to work as a missionary, he became a travelling preacher in Romania, Greece, Turkey, Syria and Palestine for 20 years. Assigned by Pope Innocent IV to work in the Latin Patriarchate of Constantinople. Custos of the Holy Land and Franciscan Provincial in 1221. Built the first Franciscan monastery in Constantinople. He returned to Arezzo in 1241 where he retired to live as a prayerful monk at the convent of Poggio del Sole; he spent another 40 years there. Benedetto introduced the singing of a Marian antiphony at the convent; he would ring a bell to announce it was time to do so. The tradition spread throughout the area, and was the basis for the modern Angelus bells and prayer. He wrote on spiritual matters, including the Passion and the Blessed Virgin Mary, but none of this work has survived. Known to the local laity as a miracle worker, popular devotion to him began immediately upon his death.


Born

c.1190 in Arezzo, Italy


Died

• 1282 in the Franciscan Poggio del Sole convent in Arezzo, Italy of natural causes

• buried at the convent

• re-interred in the Basilica of San Francesco in Arezzo when the convent was demolished



Saint Winwallus


Also known as

Bennoc, Guengalaenus, Guengaloeus, Guénolé, Guingaloëus, Guingalois, Gunnolo, Gwenndo, Gweno, Gwinocus, Gwnawg, Gwnnog, Gwynauc, Gwynawc, Gwyngawr, Gwynno, Gwynnoc, Gwynnocus, Gwynog, Ouignoualey, Valois, Vennole, Vinguavally, Waloway, Wingaloeus, Winnol, Winocus, Winwalde, Winwalloc, Winwalloe, Winwaloe, Winwaloëus, Wonnow, Wynnog, Wynolatus and Wynwallow



Additional Memorial

28 February (translation of his relics)


Profile

His father was Fragan, a Welsh noble who had recently emigrated to Brittany to escape a Saxon invasion. Ward and spiritual student of Saint Budoc on Lauren Island. Monk. Following a pilgrimage at age 20 to key Saint Patrick related sites in Ireland, Winwallus founded Landevennec monastery with eleven fellow monks at Brest, France. Abbot. The initial monastery site had to be abandoned due to poor soil and harsh weather, but Winwallus spent the rest of his days at the second site.


Legend says he lived on rye bread and ashes, water, and prayer, that he slept on sand or piles of tree bark, and that these privations led to his performing many miracles. Several churches in Cornwall, including Anglican parishes, are dedicated to him, which may indicate that his relics were moved there after the Viking invasions of 914.


Born

c.462 at Plou-Fragan, Brittany, France


Died

3 March 530 of natural causes at Tibidi, Brittany, France


Patronage

Y Vaenor, Brecknockshire, Wales





Saint Cunegundes


Also known as

Chunigundis, Cunnegunda, Cunigunde, Cunegonda, Kinga, Kunegunda, Kunigunde



Profile

Daughter of Sigfrid, Count of Luxembourg. Received a religious education, and took a private vow of virginity. Married Saint Henry II, Duke of Bavaria, who agreed to honour her vow. On the death of Emperor Otho III, Henry was chosen King of the Romans, and Cunegundes was crowned queen at Paderborn, Germany in 1002. Holy Roman Empress in 1014, receiving the crown from Pope Benedict VIII.


At one point, gossips accused her of adultery, but she proved her innocence by asking for God's help, then walking over pieces of flaming iron without injury.


During his time as emperor, Henry gave away the bulk of his wealth in charity; when he died in 1024, Cunegundes was left relatively poor. On the 1025 anniversary of Henry's death, which coincided with the dedication of a monastery she had built for Benedictine nuns at Kaffungen, Cunegundes took the veil, and entered that monastery, spending her remaining 15 years praying, reading, and working beside her sisters.


Died

• 1040 of natural causes

• interred in the Bamberg Cathedral, Bavaria near Saint Henry II in 1201


Canonized

1200 by Pope Innocent III


Patronage

• Bamberg, Germany, archdiocese of

• Lithuania

• Luxembourg

• Poland





Blessed Frederick of Hallum


Profile

Son of a poor widow. Had a special devotion to the Blessed Virgin Mary, to Saint John the Baptist, and to Saint Cecilia. Teacher in his home town. Priest. Vicar of his native Hallum. Premonstratensian monk. Founded the monastery of Mariengarten, Netherlands. Simultaneously abbot of Mariengarten, Groingen, and Dockum.



Born

Hallum, Frisia (in modern Netherlands)


Died

• 3 March 1175 in Frisia (modern Netherlands) of natural causes

• so many miracles were reported at his grave that it became a pilgrimage site

• relics transferred to the abbey church in Bonne-Espereance in 1616 due to Calvinist rule in Frisia; they were in the habit of destroying relics

• relics transferred to Vellereille during the French Revolution to prevent their destruction

• relics transferred to Leffe, Dinant, Belgium in 1938


Beatified

8 March 1728 by Pope Benedict XIII (cultus confirmation)



Saint Anselm of Nonantola


Also known as

Anselm of Friuli



Profile

Duke of Friuli, Italy. Brother-in-law of the Lombard King Aistulph. Career soldier. Cleric. Founded the abbeys in Fanano, Modena, Italy, and of Nonantola, Italy. Both included hospitals and hostels. Anselm became a Benedictine monk in Rome, Italy in 753. Abbot of the house at Nonantola, which grew to a thousand brothers under his leadership. Received permission from Pope Stephen III to transfer the body of Pope Saint Sylvester I to the house. Banished to Monte Cassino by King Desiderius, but restored by Charlemagne after seven years in exile.


Born

at Forum Juhi, (modern Friuli), Italy


Died

803 of natural causes


Patronage

Nonantola, Italy



Blessed Innocent of Berzo


Also known as

• Giovanni Scalvinoni

• Innocenzo de Berzo



Additional Memorial

28 September (Capuchins)


Profile

Capuchin priest. Having a special gift working with those seeking the Franciscan life, he was made assistant novice master, then director of candidates for the Order. Died on a preaching tour. His beatification miracles involved cures of terminally ill children.


Born

19 March 1844 at Niardo, Brescia, Italy as Giovanni Scalvinoni


Died

3 March 1890 at Begamo, Italy from influenza


Beatified

12 November 1961 by Pope John XXIII


Patronage

Berzo Inferiore, Italy



Saint Marinus of Caesarea

Also known as

Marino


Profile

Soldier in the Roman army, and a closet Christian. When a centurian's post fell open, he and another soldier applied. Marinus was the first choice, but his rival cited an ancient law that required a centurian to offer sacrifice to the emperor. Marinus confessed his Christianity, and claimed he could not offer the sacrifice. He was given three hours to change his mind, and spent the time in church with the bishop Theotecnus, meditating on a sword and scroll of the gospels. And the end of his three hours he again refused to make the sacrifice, and was executed for his faith.


Died

• beheaded c.262 at Caesarea, Palestine

• buried by the Senator Saint Asterius of Caesarea



Blessed Antonio Francesco Marzorati


Also known as

Samuele Marzorati


Additional Memorial

4 March (Franciscans)



Profile

Franciscan, joining on 5 March 1792 at Lugano, Switzerland, and taking the name Samuele. priest Missionary to Ethiopia. In 1716 the emperor declared a persecution of Christians. Father Samuele was arrested and ordered to renounce his faith; he refused. Martyr.


Born

10 September 1670 in Biumo Inferiore, Varese, Italy


Died

stoned to death by a mob on 3 March 1716 in Gondar, Ethiopia


Beatified

20 November 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Ísleifur Gissurarson of Skálholt

Profile

The son of Gissur Teitsson, one of the first Christians in Iceland, and Þórdís Þóroddsdóttir. Married to Dalla Þorvaldsdóttir, they had three sons, including the future Bishop Gissur Ísleifsson. Following studies in Herford, Germany, he was ordained a priest. First bishop in Iceland, consecrated in 1056, and serving the remaining 24 years of his life. He built the cathedral of Skálholt, founded the first religious school, and got the Church establish in Iceland.


Born

c.1006 in Iceland


Died

5 July 1080 in Iceland of natural causes



Saint Arthelais of Benevento

Also known as

Artelais, Artellais, Arthellais


Profile

Daughter of Roman imperial proconsul Lucius and Aithuesa. The emperor Justinian desired her, but she had taken vows of holy chastity and so fled to Benevento, Italy where she stayed with her uncle Narses Patricius. En route she was kidnapped by highway men, but was miraculously freed after three days.


Born

544 at Constantinople


Died

• 560 in Benevento, Italy of fever

• relics moved to the Benevento cathedral


Patronage

• against bodily ills, illness or sickness

• exiled people

• kidnap victims

• sick people

• Benevento, Italy



Blessed Johannes Laurentius Weiss

மறைசாட்சி லிபெராட் வைஸ் Liberat Weiß OFM

பிறப்பு 

4 ஜனவரி 1675, 

கோனெர்ஸ்ராய்த் Konnersreuth, பவேரியா

இறப்பு 

3 மார்ச் 1716, 

கொண்டர் Gondar, எத்தியோப்பியா

முத்திபேறுபட்டம்: 20 நவம்பர் 1988 திருத்தந்தை 2 ஆம் ஜான் பால்

இவர் பிறந்த ஊர் மக்களால், அப்போஸ்தலர் என்று அழைக்கப்பட்டார். சிறுவயதிலிருந்தே மறைப்பணியாற்றுவதில் அக்கறை காட்டி வந்தார். இவர் குருவான பிறகு 3 அருட்தந்தையர்களுடன் இணைந்து மறைப்பணியாற்றினார். மறைப்பணியாற்றும்போது பல இன்னல்களை எதிர்கொண்டார். இவர் அரசர் ஒருவர் சிறைப்பிடித்து செல்லப்பட்டார். அப்போது அவ்வரசன் இவரை கற்களால் அடித்துக் கொல்லும்படி ஆணையிட்டான். 


அச்சமயத்தில் இவர் இறைவனின் அருளால் எத்தியோப்பிய நாட்டில் ஒருநாள் நடந்த திருப்பலியில் பங்கெடுக்க வாய்ப்பு கிடைத்தது. அப்போது இவர் திருப்பலி நிறைவேற்றும்போது அரசரின் படைவீரர்களால் பிடிக்கப்பட்டு, அந்நாட்டு மக்கள் அனைவரும் ஒன்றாக கூடியிருந்த சமயத்தில் அனைவராலும் கற்களால் அடிக்கப்பட்டு கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார்.

Also known as

Liberat Weiss



Additional Memorial

4 March (Franciscans)


Profile

Franciscan, taking the name Liberat. Priest Missionary to Ethiopia. In 1716 the emperor declared a persecution of Christians. Father Liberat was arrested and ordered to renounce his faith; he refused. Martyr.


Born

4 January 1675 in Konnersreuth, Bavaria, Germany


Died

stoned to death by a mob on 3 March 1716 in Gondar, Ethiopia


Beatified

20 November 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Jacobinus de Canepaci


Also known as

• Jacobino de Canepacis

• Jacopino of Canepaci



Profile

Born poor. Carmelite lay-brother at Vercelli, Italy. Alms-beggar for his house. Noted for his great piety and devotion to the Blessed Virgin.


Born

1438 at Vercelli, Piedmont, Italy


Died

3 March 1508 of natural causes


Beatified

5 March 1845 by Pope Gregory XVI (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Pierre-René Rogue


Also known as

Pietro Renato Rogue



Profile

Priest. Member of the Congregation of the Mission (Vincentians). Ordered to take an oath of allegiance to the anti-Catholic government of the French Revolution; he refused. Martyr.


Born

11 June 1758 in Vannes, Morbihan, France


Died

3 March 1796 in Vannes, Morbihan, France


Beatified

10 May 1934 by Pope Pius XI



Blessed Michele Pío Fasoli

Also known as

Michael Pío da Zerbo


Additional Memorial

4 March (Franciscans)


Profile

Franciscan priest Missionary to Ethiopia. In 1716 the emperor declared a persecution of Christians. Father Michele was arrested and ordered to renounce his faith; he refused. Martyr.


Born

3 May 1676 in Zerbo, Pavia, Italy


Died

stoned to death by a mob on 3 March 1716 in Gondar, Ethiopia


Beatified

20 November 1988 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Emeterius of Calahorra


Also known as

Emeterio, Emiterius, Hemeterius, Hemiterius, Madir



Profile

Soldier in Imperial Roman army in Spain. Martyr.


Born

Spanish


Died

4th century Calahorra, Old Castile, Spain



Saint Non


Also known as

Nonna, Nonnita



Profile

Nobility, possibly of a royal house. Widow. Legend says she was the unwed mother of Saint David of Wales. Lived in convents in Wales, Cornwall, and Brittany.


Died

• in Brittany, France of natural causes

• relics initially enshrined in Cornwall, England

• relics destroyed during the Reformation



Saint Cheledonius of Calahorra


Profile

Soldier in Imperial Roman army in Spain. Martyr.



Born

Spanish


Died

4th century Calahorra, Old Castile, Spain



Saint Calupan


Also known as

Caluppano



Profile

Monk at Meallot, Auvergne, France. He spent his later years as a hermit in a cave near the monastery.


Born

c.526


Died

3 March 576 at Auvergne, France of natural causes



Saint Gervinus

Profile

Educated at episcopal school at Rheims, France. Benedictine. Canon of Rheims. Abbot. Friend of Saint Edward the Confessor. Great preacher, and very devoted to the Divine Office. Collected ancient Greek and Latin manuscripts. Leper.


Born

at Rheims, France


Died

1075 of natural causes



Saint Asterius of Caesarea

Also known as

Asterus, Asturius


Profile

Roman senator. Martyred for giving a Christian burial to Saint Marinus of Caesarea.


Died

beheaded c.262 at Caesarea, Palestine



Saint Sacer

Also known as

Mo-Sacra


Profile

Descendant of Roderic, king of Ireland. Founded the monastery of Saggard, Dublin, Ireland, and served as its first abbot.


Born

Irish


Died

7th century of natural causes



Saint Foila

Also known as

Faile, Fallena, Follenna


Profile

Sister of Saint Colgan. Co-patroness with him of the parishes of Kil-Faile and KilGolgan, County Galway, Ireland.



Saint Camilla

Profile

Converted by and spiritual student of Saint Germain of Auxerre. Hermit.


Born

at Civitavecchia, Italy


Died

c.437 at Ecoulives, France of natural causes



Saint Lamalisse

Profile

Hermit in Scotland. The small island of Lamlash near Arran, Scotland is named for him.


Born

Scottish


Died

7th century of natural causes



Saint Titian of Brescia

Profile

Evangelizing bishop of Brescia, Italy.


Born

in Germany


Died

c.536 of natural causes



Saint Cele-Christ

Also known as

Christicola


Profile

Hermit. Reluctant bishop of Leinster, Ireland.


Died

c.728 of natural causes



40 Martyrs in North Africa

Profile

A group of Christians martyred together in North Africa, date unknown. No details have survived, but we know these names - Antonius, Artilaus, Asclipius, Astexius, Basil, Bosimus, Carissimus, Castus, Celedonius, Claudianus, Cyricus, Donata, Emeritus, Emeterius, Euticus, Felix, Fortunatus, Frunumius, Gajola, Georgius, Gorgonius, Hemeterus, Isicus, Janula, Julius, Luciola, Luciolus, Marcia, Marinus, Meterus, Nicephorus, Papias, Photius, Risinnius, Sabianus, Savinianus and Solus



Martyrs of Pontus

Profile

A large group of Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Emperor Maximian Galerius and governor Ascleopiodato. We have some details on three of them - Basiliscus, Cleonicus and Eutropius.


Died

308 in Pontus (in modern Turkey)



Martyrs of Rome


Profile

A group of 19 Christians in the early Church who were martyred, date and location unknown. We know nothing else about them but the names – Antigonus, Donatus, Felix, Fortunus, Gabianus, Gagus, Gajosa, Gallosa, Gallus, Helbianus, Hieroles, Januarius, Marcian, Marinus, Martia, Paul, Quiriulus, Tupicinus and Tutella.



Martyrs of Africa

Profile

A group of Christians martyred together in Africa, exact location unknown, date unknown, and the only other details we know are the names - Antonius, Artilaus, Asclipius, Astexius, Basilius, Bosimus, Carissimus, Castus (2 of this name), Celedonius, Claudianus, Cyricus, Donata, Emeritus, Emeterius, Euticus, Felix (5 of this name), Florian, Fortunatus, Fotius, Frunumius, Gajola, Georgius, Gorgonius, Hemeterus, Isicus, Janula, Julius, Justus, Luciola, Luciolus, Marinus, Meterus, Nicephorus, Papias, Risinnius, Sabian, Savinianus and Solus.