புனிதர்களை பெயர் வரிசையில் தேட

Translate

08 September 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் செப்டம்பர் 09

 Bl. Frederic Ozanam

அருளாளரான பிரெடரிக் ஓசானாம்



பிரெடரிக் ஓசானாம், பிரான்ஸ் நாட்டில் உள்ள லயோன்ஸ் நகரில் இருந்த ஒரு செல்வச் செழிப்பான குடும்பத்தில், 1815 ஆம் ஆண்டு பிறந்தார். இவருடைய குடும்பம் மிகவும் பக்தியான குடும்பம். அதனால் இவர் சிறுவயதிலிருந்தே பக்தி நெறியில் வளர்ந்துவந்தார்.


இவருடைய காலத்தில் பிரஞ்சுப் புரட்சியின் தாக்கம் அதிகமாகவே இருந்தது. பலர் திருச்சபைக்கு எதிராகச் செயல்படுவதை இவர் கண்கூடாகப் பார்த்தார். அப்படிப்பட்ட சூழ்நிலையில்தான் இவர் பாரிசுக்குச் சென்று, அங்கு சட்டத்தில் முனைவர் பட்டம் பெற்றார். ஒருசமயம் இவருக்கு அறிமுகமான ஒருவர் இவரிடத்தில் வந்து, “கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் வெறுமனே இறைவனிடத்தில் ஜெபிப்பதும் வழிபடுவதுமாகவே இருக்கிறார்கள், அவர்கள் நற்செயலில் இறங்கமாட்டார்களா?” என்று கேட்டார். இக்கேள்வி பிரெடரிக் ஓசானாமை வெகுவாகப் பாதித்தது. அன்றே முடிவெடுத்தார். தன்னுடைய வாழ்க்கையையும் ஒவ்வொரு கிறிஸ்தவவருடைய வாழ்க்கையையும் எப்படி அர்த்தமுள்ளதாக மாற்றுவது என்று தீவிரமாக யோசித்தார். அவருடைய தீவிரமான யோசனைப் பின், முதலில் பாரிஸ் நகரில் இருக்கக்கூடிய சேரிவாழ் மக்களுக்கு உதவி செய்யலாம் என்று முடிவெடுத்தார்.


தான் மேற்கொண்ட தீர்க்கமான முடிவுக்கு ஏற்றாற்போல், அவர் சேரிவாழ் மக்களிடத்தில் சென்று பணியாற்றினார். அவருடைய இந்த சேவைக்கு மக்களிடத்தில் நல்ல வரவேற்புக் கிடைத்தது. பலரும் அவர் ஆற்றிவந்த பணியில் தங்களையும் சேர்த்துக்கொண்டார்கள். அப்படி உருவானதுதான் வின்சென்ட் தே பவுல் சபையாகும். இன்றைக்கு இந்த சபையானது உலகின் பல்வேறு நாடுகளுக்கும் பரவி அற்புதமான ஒரு சேவையைச் செய்துகொண்டிருக்கின்றது.



பிரெடரிக் ஓசானாம் தன்னோடு இருப்பவர்களிடம் அடிக்கடி சொல்லக்கூடிய வார்த்தைகள், “கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் யாவரும் தங்களுடைய இதயக் கதவை மட்டுமல்லாமல், பணப்பையையும் திறந்து மக்களுக்கு சேவை செய்யவேண்டும்”. இவருடைய வார்தைகளைக் கேட்டு, பலரும் ஏழை எளிய மக்களுக்கு தாராளமாக உதவி செய்ய முன்வந்தார்கள்.


பிரெடரிக் ஓசானாம் மக்கள் பணியை இறைப்பணியோடு செய்து வந்தாலும் தன்னுடைய மனைவிக்கு ஒரு நல்ல கணவராக, முன் மாதிரியான கணவராக இருந்து வந்தார்.


இவருடைய அயராத மக்கள் பணி இவருடைய உடல் நலனைக் குன்றச் செய்தது. அதனால் இவர் 1853 ஆம் ஆண்டு, அதாவது தன்னுடைய 38 வயதில் இறையடி சேர்ந்தார். இவருக்கு 1997 ஆம் ஆண்டு தூய திருத்தந்தை இரண்டாம் யோவான் பவுலால் அருளாளர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது

Feastday: September 9

Birth: 1813

Death: 1853

Beatified: August 22, 1997, Notre Dame de Paris by Pope John Paul II


Antoine-Frédéric Ozanam (Milan, April 23, 1813 - Marseille, September 8, 1853) was a French scholar. He founded with fellow students the Conference of Charity, later known as the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul. He was beatified by Pope John Paul II in the cathedral church Notre Dame de Paris in 1997.



Antoine-Frédéric Ozanam (pronounced [ɑ̃twan fʁedeʁik ozanam]; 23 April 1813 – 8 September 1853) was a French literary scholar, lawyer, journalist and equal rights advocate. He founded with fellow students the Conference of Charity, later known as the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul.[1] He was beatified by Pope John Paul II in the Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris in 1997, hence he may be properly called Blessed Frederic by Catholics. His feast day is 9 September.



Life

Frédéric Ozanam was born on Friday, 23 April 1813, to Jean and Marie Ozanam.[2] He was the fifth of Jean and Marie Ozanam’s 14 children, one of only three to reach adulthood.[3] His family, which was of Jewish origin,[4] had been settled in the region around Lyon, France, for many centuries. An ancestor of Frédéric, Jacques Ozanam (1640–1717), was a noted mathematician. Jean Ozanam, Frédéric's father, had served in the armies of the First French Republic, but with the rise to power of Napoleon Bonaparte, and the founding of the First French Empire, he turned to trade, to teaching, and finally to medicine.


Ozanam was born in Milan, but brought up in Lyon. In his youth he experienced a period of doubt regarding the Catholic faith, during which he was strongly influenced by one of his teachers at the Collège de Lyon, the priest Abbé Noirot. His religious instincts showed themselves early, and in 1831 he published Réflexions sur la Doctrine de Saint-Simon, a pamphlet against Saint-Simonianism,[5] which attracted the attention of the French poet and politician Alphonse de Lamartine who was born in the area. Ozanam also found time to help organize and write for the Association for the Propagation of the Faith, a lay Catholic organization founded in the city with the aim of supporting Catholic missionaries, many of which came from the area. That autumn he went to study law in Paris, where he suffered a great deal from homesickness. Ozanam fell in with the Ampère family (living for a time with the mathematician André-Marie Ampère), and through them with other prominent liberal Catholics of the time, such as Count François-René de Chateaubriand, Jean-Baptiste Henri Lacordaire, and Charles Forbes René de Montalembert.[6]


While still a student, Ozanam took up journalism and contributed considerably to Bailly's Tribune catholique, which became L'Univers, a French Catholic daily newspaper that adopted a strongly ultramontane position. Ozanam and his friends revived a discussion group called a "Society of Good Studies" and formed it into a "Conference of History" which quickly became a forum for large and lively discussions among students. Their attentions turned frequently to the social teachings of the Gospel. At one meeting during a heated debate in which Ozanam and his friends were trying to prove from historical evidence alone the truth of the Catholic Church as the one founded by Christ, their adversaries declared that, though at one time the Church was a source of good, it no longer was. One voice issued the challenge, "What is your church doing now? What is She doing for the poor of Paris? Show us your works and we will believe you!"[7]


As a consequence, in May 1833 Ozanam and a group of other young men founded the charitable Society of Saint Vincent de Paul,[5] which already by the time of his death numbered upwards of 2,000 members. The founding members developed their method of service under the guidance of Sister Rosalie Rendu, a member of the Congregation of Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul, who was prominent in serving the poor in the slums of Paris. The members of the conferences collaborated with Rendu during the time of the cholera epidemic. When fear had gripped the population, she organized the conferences in all the neighborhoods of Paris to care for the cholera victims, becoming well known in the city for her work, especially in the 12th arrondissement.[8] Frederic's first act of charity was to take his supply of winter firewood and bring it to a widow whose husband had died of cholera.


Ozanam received the degrees of Bachelor of Laws in 1834, Bachelor of Arts in 1835 and Doctor of Laws in 1836. His father, who had wanted him to study law, died on 12 May 1837. Although he preferred literature, Ozanam worked in the legal profession in order to support his mother, and was admitted to the Bar in Lyon in 1837.[8] Still, he also pursued his personal interest, and in 1839 he obtained the degree of Doctor of Letters with a thesis on Dante that then formed the basis of Ozanam's best-known books. A year later he was appointed to a professorship of commercial law at Lyon, and in 1840, at the age of twenty-seven, assistant professor of foreign literature at the Sorbonne.[5] He decided to give a course of lectures on German Literature in the Middle Ages and in preparation for it went on a short tour of Germany. His lectures proved highly successful despite the fact that he attached fundamental importance to Christianity as the primary factor in the growth of European civilization, unlike his predecessors and most of his colleagues, who shared in the predominantly anti-Christian climate of the Sorbonne at that time.[9]


In June 1841, he married Amélie Soulacroix, daughter of the rector of the University of Lyon,[10] and the couple travelled to Italy for their honeymoon. They had a daughter, Marie.


Candelas describes Ozanam as " ... a man of great faith. He valued friendships and defended his friends no matter what the cost. He was attentive to details, perhaps to the extreme. ... [H]e showed a great tenderness when dealing with his family. ...He had a great reverence for his parents, and revealed his ability to sacrifice his career and his profession in order to please them.[8]


Upon the death in 1844 of Claude Charles Fauriel, Ozanam succeeded to the full professorship of foreign literature at the Sorbonne.[5] The remainder of his short life was extremely busy, attending to his duties as a professor, his extensive literary activities, and the work of district-visiting as a member of the society of St. Vincent de Paul.


During the French Revolution of 1848, of which he took a sanguine view, he once more turned journalist by writing, for a short time, in various papers, including the Ère nouvelle ("New Era"), which he had founded. He traveled extensively, and visited England at the time of the Exhibition of 1851.


Death

His naturally weak constitution fell prey to consumption, which he hoped to cure by visiting Italy, but on his return to France he died in Marseille on Thursday, 8 September 1853, at the age of 40. He was buried in the crypt of the church of St. Joseph des Carmes at the Institut Catholique in Paris.[5]


Works


Bust of Frédéric Ozanam.

Ozanam "is recognized as a precursor of the Catholic Church's social doctrine, whose cultural and religious origins he wanted to know and on which he wrote books which are still in great demand."[11] He was more learned, more sincere, and more logical than Chateaubriand; and less of a political partisan and literary sentimentalist than Montalembert.[citation needed] In contemporary movements, he was an earnest and conscientious advocate of Catholic democracy and of the view that the Church should adapt itself to the changed political conditions consequent to the French Revolution.[12] He denounced the old alliance of "Throne and Altar" and pleaded with the Pope to adopt more liberal positions.[13] He advocated the separation of church and state as conducive to liberty, and he was frequently impugned by reactionaries who accused him of deserting the Church.[6]


In his writings he dwelt upon important contributions of historical Christianity, and maintained especially that, in continuing the work of the Caesars, the Catholic Church had been the most potent factor in civilizing the invading barbarians and in organizing the life of the Middle Ages. He confessed that his object was to prove the contrary thesis to Edward Gibbon, and, although the aim of proving theses is perhaps not the ideal approach for a historian, Ozanam no doubt administered a healthful antidote to the prevalent notion, particularly amongst English-speaking peoples, that the Catholic Church had done far more to enslave than to elevate the human mind. His knowledge of medieval literature and his appreciative sympathy with medieval life admirably qualified him for his work, and his scholarly attainments are still highly esteemed.




St. Isaac the Great


Feastday: September 9



Isaac the Great whose feast day is September 9 became a monk. He was the son of Catholicos  St. Nerses I of Armenia. He studied at Constantinople, married, and on the early death of his wife became a monk. He was appointed Catholicos of Armenia in 390 and secured from Constantinople recognition of the metropolitan rights of the Armenian Church, thus terminating its long dependence on the Church of Caesarea in Cappodocia. He at once began to reform the Armenian Church. He ended the practice of married bishops, enforced Byzantine canon law, encouraged monasticism, built churches and schools, and fought Persian paganism. He supported St. Mesrop in his creation of an rmenian alphabet, helped to promote the translation of the Bible and the works of the Greek and Syrian doctors into Armenian, and was responsible for establishing a national liturgy and the beginnings of Armenian literature. He was driven into retirement in 428 when the Persians conquered part of his territory but returned at an advanced age to rule again from his See at Ashtishat, where he died in the year 439. He was the founder of the Armenian Church and is sometimes called Sahak in Armenia.


Not to be confused with the Exarch of Ravenna Isaac the Armenian, who was also of Armenian extraction.

Isaac or Sahak of Armenia (354–439) was Catholicos (or Patriarch) of the Armenian Apostolic Church. He is sometimes known as "Isaac the Great," and as "Sahak the Parthian" (Armenian: Սահակ Պարթև, Sahak Parthew", Parthian: Sahak-i Parthaw) owing to his Parthian origin.



Family

Isaac was son of the Christian St. Nerses I and a Mamikonian princess called Sanducht. Through his father he was a Gregorid and was descended from the family of St. Gregory I the Enlightener. He was the fifth Catholicos of the Arsacid dynasty of Armenia after St. Gregory I the Enlightener (301–325), St. Aristaces I (325–333), St. Vrtanes I (333–341) and St. Husik I (341–347). His paternal grandmother was the Arsacid Princess Bambish, the sister of King Tigranes VII (Tiran)[2] and a daughter of King Khosrov III.[citation needed]


Life



Left an orphan at a very early age, Isaac received an excellent literary education in Constantinople, particularly in the Eastern languages. After his election as patriarch he devoted himself to the religious and scientific training of his people. Armenia was then passing through a grave crisis. In 387 it had lost its independence and been divided between the Byzantine Empire and Persia; each division had at its head an Armenian but feudatory king. In the Byzantine territory, however, the Armenians were forbidden the use of the Syriac language, until then exclusively used in divine worship: for this the Greek language was to be substituted, and the country gradually Hellenized; in the Persian districts, on the contrary, Greek was absolutely prohibited, while Syriac was greatly favoured. In this way the ancient culture of the Armenians was in danger of disappearing and national unity was seriously compromised.


To save both Isaac helped Mesrop to invent the Armenian alphabet and began to translate the Christian Bible; their translation from the Syriac Peshitta was revised by means of the Septuagint, and even, it seems, from the Hebrew text (between 410 and 430). The liturgy also, hitherto Syrian was translated into Armenian, drawing at the same time on the liturgy of Saint Basil of Caesarea, so as to obtain for the new service a national color. Isaac had already established schools for higher education with the aid of disciples whom he had sent to study at Edessa, Melitene, Constantinople, and elsewhere. Through them he now had the principal masterpieces of Greek and Syrian Christian literature translated, e.g. the writings of Athanasius of Alexandria, Cyril of Jerusalem, Basil, the two Gregorys (Gregory of Nazianzus and Gregory of Nyssa), John Chrysostom, Ephrem the Syrian, etc. Armenian literature in its golden age was, therefore, mainly a borrowed literature.


Through Isaac's efforts the churches and monasteries destroyed by the Persians were rebuilt, education was cared for in a generous way, Zoroastrianism which Shah Yazdegerd I tried to set up was cast out, and three councils held to re-establish ecclesiastical discipline. Isaac is said to have been the author of liturgical hymns.


Two letters, written by Isaac to Theodosius II and to Archbishop Atticus of Constantinople, have been preserved. A third letter addressed to Saint Proclus of Constantinople was not written by him, but dates from the tenth century. Neither did he have any share, as was wrongly ascribed to him, in the First Council of Ephesus of 431, though, in consequence of disputes which arose in Armenia between the followers of Nestorius and the disciples of Acathius of Melitene and Rabbula, Isaac and his church did appeal to Constantinople and through Saint Proclus obtained the desired explanations.


A man of enlightened piety and of very austere life, Isaac owed his deposition by the king in 426 to his great independence of character. In 430, he was allowed to resume his patriarchal throne. In his extreme old age he seems to have withdrawn into solitude, dying at the age of 110. The precise date of his death is not known, but it seems to have occurred between 439 and 441. Hovhannes Draskhanakerttsi says his body was taken to Taron and buried in the village of Ashtishat. Several days are consecrated to his memory in the Armenian Apostolic Church. Isaac married an unnamed woman by whom he had a daughter called Sahakanoush who married Hamazasp Mamikonian, a wealthy and influential Armenian nobleman.





St. Peter Claver

புனித பீட்டர் கிளேவர், St. Peter Claver குரு



பிறப்பு

26 ஜூன் 1580,

ஸ்பெயின்

இறப்பு

8 செப்டம்பர் 1654

முத்திப்பேறுபட்டம்: 16 ஜூலை 1851 திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் பயஸ்

புனிதர்பட்டம்: 15 ஜனவரி 1888 திருத்தந்தை 13 ஆம் லியோ

பாதுகாவல்: அடிமைகள் மற்றும் கொலம்பியா நாட்டின் பாதுகாவலர்


கிளேவர் சிறு வயதிலிருந்தே அன்னைமரியாளின் மீது பக்தியை வளர்த்து வந்தார். பள்ளியில் சேர்ந்து படிக்கத் தொடங்கிய நாளிலிருந்து பல புத்தகங்களைப் படித்தார். தனது இளம் வயது படிப்பை முடித்தபின் 1596 ஆம் ஆண்டு பார்சலோனா என்ற நகரிலிருந்த புகழ் வாய்ந்த கல்லூரியில் படிக்க சென்றார். கல்லூரி படிப்பை முடித்ததும் 1802 ஆம் ஆண்டு குருவாக ஆசைக்கொண்டு இயேசு சபையில் சேர்ந்தார்.


இவர் மயோர்க்கா நகரில் மீண்டும் தனது படிப்பை தொடர்ந்தார். அங்கு கல்லூரி படிப்பை முடித்தபின் 1616 ஆம் ஆண்டு குருப்பட்டம் பெற்றார். புதிய குருவான இவர் நீக்ரோ அடிமை மக்களிடம் பணியை தொடர அனுப்பப்பட்டார். அம்மக்களிடையே சிறப்பாக பணியாற்றி , சில நாட்கள் கழித்து, அவர்களில் ஒருவராகவே மாறினார். அப்போது அம்மக்களிடையே அடிமை வாணிகம் பெருகியது. அவற்றை ஒடுக்க இவர் பெரிதும் பாடுபட்டார். அச்சமயத்தில் ஆப்ரிக்கா நாட்டிலிருந்து மக்கள் அடிமைகளாக கொண்டுவரப்பட்டனர். அவர்களோடு சேர்த்து இறக்குமதியும் செய்யப்பட்டது. கிளேவர் அம்மருந்துகளை பெற்று, நீக்ரோ மக்களுக்கு மருத்துவப் பணியையும் ஆற்றினார். அடிமை மக்களிடையே மிகவும் அன்பாக பணியாற்றினார். தனது மறைப்பணியால் அம்மக்களின் கடுமையான மனதை மாற்றினார். அனைவரையும் இறைவன்பால் ஈர்த்து, இறையுறவில் வளர்த்தெடுத்தார். அடிமைகளின் மேல் கொண்ட அக்கறையாலும், அன்பாலும் இவர் அம்மக்களின் தந்தை என்றழைக்கப்பட்டார்.

Feastday: September 9

Patron: Saint of Negro Missions

Birth: 1580

Death: 1654



St. Peter Claver was born at Verdu, Catalonia, Spain, in 1580, of impoverished parents descended from ancient and distinguished families. He studied at the Jesuit college of Barcelona, entered the Jesuit novitiate at Tarragona in 1602 and took his final vows on August 8th, 1604. While studying philosophy at Majorca, the young religious was influenced by St. Alphonsus Rodriguez to go to the Indies and save "millions of perishing souls."


In 1610, he landed at Cartagena (modern Colombia), the principle slave market of the New World, where a thousand slaves were landed every month. After his ordination in 1616, he dedicated himself by special vow to the service of the Negro slaves-a work that was to last for thirty-three years. He labored unceasingly for the salvation of the African slaves and the abolition of the Negro slave trade, and the love he lavished on them was something that transcended the natural order.


Boarding the slave ships as they entered the harbor, he would hurry to the revolting inferno of the hold, and offer whatever poor refreshments he could afford; he would care for the sick and dying, and instruct the slaves through Negro catechists before administering the Sacraments. Through his efforts three hundred thousand souls entered the Church. Furthermore, he did not lose sight of his converts when they left the ships, but followed them to the plantations to which they were sent, encouraged them to live as Christians, and prevailed on their masters to treat them humanely. He died in 1654.



Peter Claver (Spanish: Pedro Claver y Corberó; Catalan: Pere Claver i Corberó; 26 June 1580 – 8 September 1654) was a Spanish Jesuit priest and missionary born in Verdú (Catalonia, Spain) who, due to his life and work, became the patron saint of slaves, the Republic of Colombia, and ministry to African Americans. During the 40 years of his ministry in the New Kingdom of Granada, it is estimated he personally baptized around 300,000 people (in groups of 10) and heard the confessions of over 5,000 slaves per year. He is also patron saint for seafarers. He is considered a heroic example of what should be the Christian praxis of love and of the exercise of human rights.[2] The Congress of the Republic of Colombia declared September 9 as the Human Rights national Day in his honor.



Early life

Claver was born in 1580 into a devoutly Catholic and prosperous farming family in the Catalan village of Verdú,[3] Urgell, located in the Province of Lleida, about 54 miles (87 km) from Barcelona. He was born 70 years after King Ferdinand of Spain set the colonial slavery culture into motion by authorizing the purchase of 250 African slaves in Lisbon for his territories in New Spain.


Later, as a student at the University of Barcelona,[3] Claver was noted for his intelligence and piety. After two years of study there, Claver wrote these words in the notebook he kept throughout his life: "I must dedicate myself to the service of God until death, on the understanding that I am like a slave."[4]


In the New World

After he had completed his studies, Claver entered the Society of Jesus in Tarragona at the age of 20. When he had completed the novitiate, he was sent to study philosophy at Palma, Mallorca. While there, he came to know the porter of the college, St. Alphonsus Rodriguez, a laybrother known for his holiness and gift of prophecy.[5] Rodriguez felt that he had been told by God that Claver was to spend his life in service in the colonies of New Spain, and he frequently urged the young student to accept that calling.[3]



Portrait of St. Peter Claver in the museum Palace of Inquisition, Cartagena, Colombia

Claver volunteered for the Spanish colonies and was sent to the New Kingdom of Granada, where he arrived in the port city of Cartagena in 1610.[6] Required to spend six years studying theology before being ordained a priest, he lived in Jesuit houses at Tunja and Bogotá. During those preparatory years, he was deeply disturbed by the harsh treatment and living conditions of the black slaves who were brought from Africa.


By this time, the slave trade had been established in the Americas for about a century. Local natives were considered physically ill-suited to work in the gold and silver mines. Mine owners met their labor requirements by importing blacks from Angola and Congo, whom they purchased in West Africa for four crowns a head or bartered for goods and sold in America for an average two hundred crowns apiece. Others were captured at random, especially able-bodied males and females deemed suitable for labor.[7]


Cartagena was a slave-trading hub and 10,000 slaves poured into the port yearly, crossing the Atlantic from West Africa under conditions so foul that an estimated one-third died in transit. Although the slave trade was condemned by Pope Paul III and Urban VIII had issued a papal decree prohibiting slavery,[7] (later called "supreme villainy" by Pope Pius IX), it was a lucrative business and continued to flourish.[6]


Claver's predecessor in his eventual lifelong mission, Alonso de Sandoval, was his mentor and inspiration.[6] Sandoval devoted himself to serving the slaves for 40 years before Claver arrived to continue his work. Sandoval attempted to learn about their customs and languages; he was so successful that, when he returned to Seville, he wrote a book in 1627 about the nature, customs, rites and beliefs of the Africans. Sandoval found Claver an apt pupil. When he was solemnly professed in 1622, Claver signed his final profession document in Latin as: Petrus Claver, aethiopum semper servus (Peter Claver, servant of the Ethiopians [i.e. Africans] forever).


Ministry to the slaves


Church of St. Peter Claver in Cartagena, Colombia, where Claver lived and ministered

Whereas Sandoval had visited the slaves where they worked, Claver preferred to head for the wharf as soon as a slave ship entered the port. Boarding the ship, he entered the filthy and diseased holds to treat and minister to their badly treated, terrified human cargo, who had survived a voyage of several months under horrible conditions. It was difficult to move around on the ships, because the slave traffickers filled them to capacity. The slaves were often told they were being taken to a land where they would be eaten. Claver wore a cloak, which he would lend to anyone in need. A legend arose that whoever wore the cloak received lifetime health and was cured of all disease. After the slaves were herded from the ship and penned in nearby yards to be scrutinized by crowds of buyers, Claver joined them with medicine, food, bread, lemons. With the help of interpreters and pictures which he carried with him, he gave basic instructions.[8]


Claver saw the slaves as fellow Christians, encouraging others to do so as well. During the season when slavers were not accustomed to arrive, he traversed the country, visiting plantation after plantation, to give spiritual consolation to the slaves.[9] During his 40 years of ministry it is estimated that he personally catechized and baptized 300,000 slaves. He would then follow up on them to ensure that as Christians they received their Christian and civil rights. His mission extended beyond caring for slaves, however. He preached in the city square, to sailors and traders and conducted country missions, returning every spring to visit those he had baptized, ensuring that they were treated humanely. During these missions, whenever possible he avoided the hospitality of planters and overseers; instead, he would lodge in the slave quarters.[4]


Claver's work on behalf of slaves did not prevent him from ministering to the souls of well-to-do members of society, traders and visitors to Cartagena (including Muslims and English Protestants) and condemned criminals, many of whom he spiritually prepared for death; he was also a frequent visitor at the city's hospitals. Through years of unremitting toil and the force of his own unique personality, the slaves' situation slowly improved. In time he became a moral force, the Apostle of Cartagena.[4]


Illness, and death


The bones of Claver under an altar at the Church of St. Peter Claver in Cartagena

In the last years of his life Peter was too ill to leave his room. He lingered for four years, largely forgotten and neglected, physically abused and starved by an ex-slave who had been hired by the Superior of the house to care for him. He never complained about his treatment, accepting it as a just punishment for his sins.[1] He died on 8 September 1654.


When the people of the city heard of his death, many forced their way into his room to pay their last respects. Such was his reputation for holiness that they stripped away anything to serve as a relic.[1]


The city magistrates, who had previously considered him a nuisance for his persistent advocacy on behalf of the slaves, ordered a public funeral and he was buried with pomp and ceremony. The extent of Claver's ministry, which was prodigious even before considering the astronomical number of people he baptized, came to be realized only after his death.


He was canonized in 1888 by Pope Leo XIII, along with the holy Jesuit porter, Alphonsus Rodriguez. In 1896 Pope Leo also declared Claver the patron of missionary work among all African peoples.[3] His body is preserved and venerated in the church of the Jesuit residence, now renamed in his honor.[10]


Legacy

"No life, except the life of Christ, has moved me so deeply as that of Peter Claver".


Pope Leo XIII, on the occasion of the canonization of Peter Claver

Many organizations, missions, parishes, religious congregations, schools and hospitals bear the name of St. Peter Claver and also claim to continue the Mission of Claver as the following:


The Knights of Peter Claver, Inc., is the largest African-American Catholic fraternal organization in the United States. In 2006, a unit was established in San Andres, Colombia. The Order was founded in Mobile, Alabama, and is presently headquartered in New Orleans.[7]

Claver's mission continues today in the work of the Apostleship of the Sea (AoS)[12] and his inspiration remains among port chaplains and those who visit ships in the name of the church, through the AoS.

The Missionary Sisters of St. Peter Claver are a religious congregation of women dedicated to serving the spiritual and social needs of the poor around the world, particularly in Africa. They were founded in Austria by the Blessed Mary Theresa Ledóchowska in 1894.[14]

Among the many parishes dedicated to St. Peter Claver are those in Lexington, Kentucky,[15] West Hartford, Connecticut,[16] Macon, Georgia, New Orleans, Louisiana,[18] Simi Valley, California,[19] St. Paul, Minnesota,[20] Sheboygan, Wisconsin,[21] Montclair, New Jersey,[22] Baltimore, Maryland,[23] Huntington, West Virginia, and Nairobi, Kenya.

Among the many schools dedicated to St. Peter Claver are those in Decatur, Georgia,[26] and Pimville, South Africa.The oldest African American school in the Diocese of St. Petersburg, and the oldest African American school still functioning in the State of Florida, is the St. Peter Claver Catholic School.

The Congress of the Republic of Colombia declared September 9 as the Human Rights national Day in his honor.


Controversy

His canonization has caused controversy among some groups due to his own slaveholding and treatment of slaves (including physical punishment), and it is said by some that these matters initially stalled the sainthood process. Dr. Katie Grimes of Villanova has emphasized this point in various scholarly articles and in her book "Fugitive Saints", released in 2017. She has gone so far as to call St Claver a "White Supremacist" and has accused the Catholic Church of the same for championing him.[


That said, the sources used for this criticism also note that St Claver allowed uncommon freedom for the slaves he purchased (intending to use them for ministry rather than hard labor), and used physical punishment not to enforce labor but to prevent what he viewed as immoral behavior.



Blessed Francisco Gárate Aranguren


Also known as

Brother Kindness



Profile

Second of seven boys born to Francisco and Maria Aranguren, a pious farm family in the Basque region of northern Spain; three of them grew up to become Jesuit brothers. Francisco left home at age 14 to work as a domestic servant at the newly opened Jesuit College of Nuestra Señora de la Antigua in Orduña, Spain. By age 17, he had felt a call to join the Jesuits himself, and travelled on foot to Poyanne in southern France to enter the initiate, the Jesuits having been expelled from Spain following the revolution of 1868; he made his initial vows as a Jesuit lay brother on 2 February 1876, his final vows on 15 August 1877. Beginning in early 1877, he served as a sacristan and infirmarian at the La Guadia college where he was in charge of the medical care for 200 young men. Assigned to the Jesuit Duesto college as doorkeeper, sacristan and infirmarian in March 1888; he served there for the next 40 years. Francisco became known for his prayer life and simple living, his kind care and charity for the students, and as a source of wisdom and advice for all; he prayed constantly, carried a rosary everywhere, and was a beloved example of living a ordinary life with piety.


Born

3 February 1857 in Azpeitia, Guipúzcoa, Spain


Died

• at 7:00am on 9 September 1929 in Deusto, Bilbao, Vizcaya, Spain of complications involving a block urethra

• at his funeral, former students placed rosaries and crucifixes on his coffin, asking for his posthumous blessing on them

• re-interred in August 1946

• re-interred in 1964


Beatified

6 October 1985 by Pope John Paul II in Rome, Italy



Blessed Jacques Désiré Laval


Also known as

• Apostle of Mauritius

• Jacob Désiré Laval



Profile

Son of a prosperous farmer, Jacques grew up in a pious household with examples set by his mother and an uncle who was a priest. Jacques' mother died when the boy was seven years old. Intially torn between the priesthood and medicine, Jacques was educated at local schools, Evraux, and Stanlislaus College in Paris, France, and received his medical degree in 1830. Jacques established his medical practice in Saint André and Saint Ivry-la-Bataille in his native Normandy, France and became more worldly, ignoring spiritual things.


However, a near-fatal fall from a horse led him to re-examine his life. A few months later he closed his practice and entered the seminary of Saint Sulpice. Ordained four years later in 1838. Parish priest in Normandy for two years. But Jacques felt a call to more active ministry, and he finally gave all his possessions to the Society of the Holy Heart of Mary (which later became the Congregation of the Holy Spirit and Immaculate Heart of Mary), and was sent as a missionary to Mauritius on 14 September 1841; he never saw France again.


Slavery had only recently been outlawed in Mauritius, and many of Jacques' potential parishioners were freed slaves, poor, uneducated, often unemployed, and always treated as second class citizens. Jacques lived with them, learned their language, fasted when supplies were short, slept in a packing crate, used his medical training to heal them, and explained that to God there were no unimportant people, that no one was second class. He instituted reforms in agriculture, sanitation, medicine, science, and teacher education. He placed responsibilities on people, checked their performance, and as so often happens, the people rose to the occasion. The faith spread throughout the region, and Jacques is believed to have made 67,000 converts in his parish.


He knew, respected, worked with, and received help from leaders of local Muslims, Buddhists and Hindus on the island. There were 40,000 mourners of all faiths at his funeral. The date of his death has become a national holiday in Mauritius with an average of 100,000 Christians, Animists, Buddhists, Shintoists, Hindus and Muslims making pilgrimage to his tomb that day.


Born

18 September 1803 in Croth, Normandy, France


Died

• 9 September 1864 in Port Louis, Mauritius of natural causes

• buried at the Church of Saint Croix, Port Louis, Mauritius

• his tomb receives about 8,000 pilgims a week, and is known as a site of miracles


Beatified

• 29 April 1979 by Pope John Paul II

• first beati of the Congregation of the Holy Spirit and Immaculate Heart of Mary




Blessed Maria Euthymia Üffing

துறவி மரியா எத்திமியா Maria Euthymia



பிறப்பு

8 ஏப்ரல் 1914,

ஹால்வேர்தா, நார்ட்ரைன்

வெஸ்ட்ஃபாலன், ஜெர்மனி


இறப்பு

9 செப்டம்பர் 1955,

மியூண்டர், நார்ட்ரைன்

வெஸ்ட்ஃபாலன், ஜெர்மனி


இவர் 1934 ஆம் ஆண்டு இரக்கத்தின்அருள்சகோதரர்கள் Barmherzigen Schwestern என்ற துறவற சபையில் சேர்ந்து 1940 ல் துறவியானார்.இவர் தனது வார்த்தைப்பாடுகளை பெற்ற பின்னர்,இரண்டாம் உலகப் போரில் அடிப்பட்ட மக்களுக்காக

பணியாற்றினார். நோயாளிகளை அன்புடன்பராமரித்தார். போரினால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டிருந்த மக்களின் மனதில், மகிழ்ச்சியை வளர்க்க பெரிதும் உழைத்தார். இவர் தன்னுடைய அன்பான பேச்சாலும், அரவணைக்கும் இதயத்தாலும், பாதித்த மக்களின் வாழ்வை மாற்றினார். சோக வாழ்விலிருந்து விடுபட்டு, சுமுகமான வாழ்வுக்கு வழிகாட்டினார்.


இவர் மக்களால் "அன்பின் வானதூதர்" என்றழைக்கப்பட்டார். தன்னுடைய அன்பான புன்முறுவலுடன் வாழ்வில் எதுவுமே இல்லை என்று வாழ்ந்த மக்களுக்கு மகிழ்ச்சியை வழங்கினார். அனைவருக்கும் தன் முழு அன்பை வழங்கினார். ஏராளமான மக்களின் வாழ்வில் நம்பிக்கையை வளர்த்து நல்வாழ்வை அமைத்துக்கொடுத்தார்

Also known as

• Emma Uffing

• Maria Eutimia



Profile

One of eleven children of August Üffing and Maria Schmidt, Emma grew up in a pious family in a small town. At 18 months, she developed a form of rickets that stunted her growth and left her in poor health the rest of her life. Made her First Communion on 27 April 1924, and was Confirmed on 3 September 1924. Emma worked on her parents' farm as a child, and by her early teens began to feel a call to religious life. She worked as an apprentice in house keeping management at the hospital in Hopsten, Germany, completing her studies in May 1933. Entered the Sister of the Congregation of Compassion (Klemensschwestern) on 23 July 1933, taking the name Euthymia; she made her simple vows on 11 October 1936, and her final profession on 15 September 1940. Assigned to work at Saint Vincent's Hosptial in Dinslaken, Germany in October 1936. Graduated with distinction from the nursing program on 3 September 1939. Worked as nurse through World War II, and in 1943 she was assigned to nurse prisoners of war and foreign workers with infectious diseases. She worked tirelessly for her charges, caring for them, praying for them, and insuring they received the sacraments. After the war she was given supervision of the huge laundry rooms of the Dinslaken hospital, her order's mother-house, and the Saint Raphael Clinic in MÜnster, Germany; what little spare time she had was spent in prayer before the Eucharist.


Born

8 April 1914 in Halverde, Germany as Emma Uffing


Died

morning of 9 September 1955 at MÜnster, Germany of cancer


Beatified

7 October 2001 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Pierre Bonhomme


Profile

Pierre was known as a pious and studious child who early felt a call to the priesthood. He entered seminary at Montfaucon, France in November 1818 at age 15. While a deacon he opened a school for boys. Ordained on 23 December 1827 at age 24, and served in the diocese of Cahors, France.



He opened a seminary preparatory school in 1831. Founded the Children of Mary to help provide for the spiritual and mundane needs of girls in Gramat, France. He urged the young people in his groups and schools to visit and help the poor elderly who were effectively abandoned. He established a home for the indigent, and to staff it he founded the Congregation of Sisters of Our Lady of Calvary dedicating to teaching children, helping the poor, sick, elderly, and disabled.


As part of his parish work, Pierre preached missions in the region, and became known as a excellent preacher, converting many. He had a special devotion to Our Lady of Rocamadour. Once while preaching a retreat, he completely lost his voice; through prayer to Our Lady of Rocamadour he was miraculously healed and finished the retreat. Father Pierre felt a desire to become a Carmelite, but his bishop insisted that he continue his work as a missioner, and gave him a new group of missioners to work with. Pierre obeyed, preaching until 1848 when larynx disease forced him to stop.


His mission vocation over, Pierre turned his attention to the Congregation, expanding their work into care for the deaf and mute in 1854, and the mentally ill in 1856. His last years were spent in spiritual guidance of the Sisters, writing their Rule, and expanding the areas of their good works. Today the Congregation has sisters working in France, Brazil, Argentina, Guinea, Ivory Coast and the Philippines.


Born

4 July 1803 in Gramat, Lot, France


Died

9 September 1861 at Gramat, Lot, France


Beatified

23 March 2003 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Kieran the Younger


Also known as

• Kieran of Clonmacnoise

• Ceran, Ciaran, Kyaranus, Kyran, Kyrian, Queran, Queranus, Ciarano, Querano, Kiriano

• one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland



Profile

Son of Beoit, a carpenter and chariot builder. Spiritual student of Saint Finian of Clonard and Saint Dermot. Considered the most learned monk at Clonard. Tutor to the daughter of the king of Cuala. Lived seven years as a hermit at Inishmore with Saint Enda. Monk at the abbey of Isel in central Ireland, but was run off by his brother monks - his charity to the local poor was so great that it threatened to bankrupt the abbey. He lived for a while with eight other hermits on Inish Aingin. Founder of the Clonmacnoise abbey in West Meath, and served as its first abbot. Spiritual teacher of Saint Comgall of Bangor. He placed that house under a singularly austere rule, referred to as the Law of Kieran to draw those monks who felt a need to ignore the physical world completely. The house was known for centuries as a center of Irish learning and thought. Reported miracle worker.


Born

c.516 at Connacht, County Roscommon, Ireland


Died

c.556 of natural causes


Patronage

diocese of Clonmacnois, Ireland



Saint Joseph of Volokolamsk


Also known as

• Ivan Sanin

• Joseph of Volotsk

• Joseph Sanin

• Svyatoy Iosef Volokolamsky


Profile

Monk. Abbot at the monastery of Borovsk, Russia in 1477, but his strict discipline did not sit well with his brothers. Founded the monastery at Volokolamsk, Russia in 1479, and served as its abbot. Reformer in his houses, stressing discipline, fasting, obedience, devotion to the liturgy, learning, and works of charity; his vision of a monastery included support of social services to local laity. Met Saint Nilus of Sora at a Council at Moscow, Russia in 1503 to discuss the church reforms each had put forth; Joseph's ideas won out, and helped changed the direction of the Church activities in his land.


Born

1440 in Lithuania


Died

9 September 1515 at Volokolamsk, Russia of natural causes


Canonized

1578 by Pope Gregory XIII




Blessed Maria de la Cabeza


Also known as

• Maria of the Head

• Maria Toribia



Additional Memorial

15 May with Saint Isidore the Farmer


Profile

In Torrelaguna, Spain she met and married to Saint Isidore the Farmer. She spent her life working on the farm, cleaning local chapels and shrines, helping the poor. The title of the Head is due to her head being a relic venerated for centuries, and the need to distiguish her from so many other Saints Mary.


Born

at Uceda, Guadalajara, Spain


Died

• c.1175

• relics long displayed in a Franciscan convent in Torrelaguna, Spain

• relics moved to Saint Andrew's Church in Madrid, Spain in 1645 and interred beside Saint Isidore


Beatified

• by Pope Leo X (cultus confirmed)

• 11 August 1697 by Pope Innocent XII (cultus confirmed)


Patronage

• Sabana Grande, Puerto Rico

• World Youth Day 2011



Saint Bettelin


Also known as

Bertram, Bertellin, Bethlin, Bethelm


Profile

Spritual student of Saint Guthlac of Croyland. One of several hermits around Croyland in Lincolnshire, England who were subject to the monastery there.


Some stories claim Bettelin was a Mercian nobleman married to an Irish princess. While the two were travelling through a forest, the princess went into labour. Bettelin went for help, and while he was gone the princess delivered the baby; the two were eaten by wolves. This traumatic event reputedly sent Bettelin to the hermitage. The reliability of the story is, well, questionable.


Died

• 8th century of natural causes

• the remains of his shrine are found in Staffordshire, England


Patronage

Stafford, England



Saint Omer


Also known as

Audomarus



Profile

In 617, following the death of his parents, Omer became a Benedictine monk at Luxeuil, France under the direction of Saint Eustace. Bishop of Therouanne in 637. He reformed the administration of his diocese, and supported ministry to the sick and poor; his brother monks from Luxeuil played a large role in this work. Founded the monastery of Sithiu; it became a great religious center, and the town that developed around it became known as Saint Omer. Reputed miracle worker.


Born

595 near Constance, France


Died

• 670 of natural causes

• interred in the church that has since been named the cathedral of Saint Omer



Saint Gorgonius of Nicomedia


Additional Memorial

28 December as one of the 20,000 Martyrs of Nicomedia



Profile

Favourite and trusted servant in the court of Emperor Diocletian. Convert to Christianity. Tortured and martyred with a group of other Christians during the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

• strangled to death in 303 in Nicomedia, Bithynia (modern Izmit, Turkey)

• relics moved to Rome, Italy by order of Pope Saint Gregory IV



Blessed George Douglas


Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Studied in Paris, France. Priest. Ministered to covert Catholics in England. Arrested in York and martyred for the crime of being a priest. One of the Martyrs of England, Scotland, and Wales.


Born

Edinburgh, Scotland


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 9 September 1587 in York, North Yorkshire, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Dorotheus of Nicomedia


Additional Memorial

28 December as one of the 20,000 Martyrs of Nicomedia


Profile

Favourite and trusted servant in the court of Emperor Diocletian. Convert to Christianity. Tortured and martyred with a group of other Christians during the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

strangled to death in 303 in Nicomedia, Bithynia (modern Izmit, Turkey)



Saint Valentinian of Chur


Profile

Bishop of Chur, Switzerland. Known for his charity to the poor, his ministry to prisoners, and his support of people of Rhaetia who were displaced by invading Franks.


Died

• 12 January 548 of natural causes

• interred in the tomb of the church of San Stefano

• relics moved to the church of San Lucio in the 8th century



Saint Osmanna


Also known as

Argariarga, Osanna


Profile

Born to an illustrious family. Benedictine nun. Anchoress near Brieuc, Brittany (in modern France).


Born

Ireland


Died

• c.650 at Saint Brieuc, Brittany, France of natural causes

• some relics were destroyed by Calvinists in 1567

• remaining relics are at church of Saint Denys near Paris, France



Saint Wilfrida


Also known as

Wilfreda, Wuifritha, Wulfritha


Profile

Mother of Saint Edith of Wilton, the result of adultery with King Edgar the Peaceable. Benedictine nun at Wilton, England, hoping that a life in the convent would make up for her sins. Spiritual student of Saint Ethelwald. Abbess of Wilton.


Died

988 at the convent at Wilton, England of natural causes



Saint Wulfhilda


Profile

May have been a member of the Anglo-Saxon nobility. While a novice at Wilton abbey, King Edgar the Peaceful sought her hand in marriage. She declined, and eventually took her vows as a Benedictine nun. Abbess of convents in Barking and Ilorton in 993.


Born

England


Died

c.1000 in England of natural causes



Saint Severian


Profile

Roman imperial senator during the persecutions of Licinius. He witnessed the martyrdom of the Forty Martyrs of Sebaste and was moved to proclaim his own faith. Martyr.


Born

Armenian


Died

flesh torn off his body with iron rakes in 320



Blessed Gaufridus


Profile

Benedictine monk. Spiritual student of Blessed Vitalis. Abbot at Savigny from 1122 to 1139 during which the congregation increased to 29 houses in Normandy, France, in England and in Ireland.


Died

1139 of natural causes



Saint Gorgonio of Rome


Also known as

Gorgonius



Profile

Martyr.


Died

Two Laurels cemetery, Via Labicana, Rome, Italy



Saint Alexander of Sabine


Profile

Martyr.


Died

martyred in 690 in the Sabine region of Italy



Saint Hyacinth


புனித ஹியாசிந்த் (1185-1257)

இவர் போலந்து நாட்டைச் சார்ந்த ஒரு செல்வச் செழிப்பான குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர்.

தனது பள்ளிக் கல்வியை கிராகோ (Krakowk) என்ற இடத்தில் இருந்த தனது மாமாவின் வீட்டில் தங்கிப் படித்த இவர், 1220 ஆம் ஆண்டு உரோமை நகருக்குச் சென்றார். அப்பொழுதுதான் இவர் புனித தோமினிக்கைச் சந்தித்தார். அவர் இவரைத் தனது சபையில் சேர்த்துக்கொண்டு, இவரைத் தன் சொந்த நாட்டிற்கே அனுப்பி வைத்து, நற்செய்தி அறிவிக்கச் செய்தார்.

இதன்பிறகு இவர் போலந்து நாட்டிற்கு வந்து நற்செய்தி அறிவிக்கத் தொடங்கினார். நற்செய்தி அறிவிப்பில் மிகுந்த ஈடுபாடு கொண்டிருந்த இவர், போலந்து, ஆஸ்திரியா,இரஷ்யா, சீனா போன்ற பல நாடுகளுக்குச் சென்று நற்செய்தி அறிவித்து, பலரையும் கிறிஸ்துவின் மீது நம்பிக்கை கொள்ளச் செய்தார்.




நற்கருணை ஆண்டவரிடமும் புனித கன்னி மரியாவிடமும் தனிப்பட்ட அன்பு கொண்டிருந்த இவர், இருவருடைய துணையால் பல ஆபத்துகளிலிருந்தும் தன்னைக் காத்துக் கொண்டார்.

இப்படி ஆர்வத்தோடு நற்செய்திப் பணி செய்த இவர், மூப்பெய்தியதும், எந்த இடத்தில் தனது பணியைத் தொடங்கினாரோ, அந்த இடத்திற்கே வந்து, தன் இறுதி நாள்களை இறைவேண்டலில் செலவழித்து, தனது ஆவியை ஆண்டவரிடம் ஒப்படைத்தார். இவருக்கு 1594 ஆம் ஆண்டு திருத்தந்தை எட்டாம் கிளமெண்டால் புனிதர் பட்டம் கொடுக்கப்பட்டது.

இவரது விழா ஆகஸ்ட் 17 அன்றும் கொண்டாடப்படுகிறது.

Profile

Martyr.


Died

690 in the Sabine region of Italy



Saint Basura of Masil


Profile

Bishop of Masil. Martyred in the persecutions of Diocletian.



Saint Engelram of Metz


Profile


8th–9th century bishop of Metz, France.



Saint Tiburtius



Profile


Martyr.


Died

690 in the Sabine region of Italy



Blessed Mary of Colonna


Blessed Mary of the Resurrection

Blessed Clemenzia of the Holy Trinity



Profile

Three blood sisters who became Mercedarian nun at the monastery of the Assumption in Seville, Spain.


Died

1615 of natural causes




Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Teódulo González Fernández

07 September 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் செப்டம்பர் 08

 Our Lady of Charity of El Cobre


Also known as

Cachita



Profile

A statue of Our Lady with a miraculous origin. It stands about 16 inches high, the head is made of baked clay covered with a polished coat of fine white powder, possibly rice paste, and until recently was covered with several layers of paint. She stands on a moon that has silver clouds at either end and three golden-winged cherubs beneath it. She cradles the Christ Child in her left arm, and holds a gold crucifix in her right. The Child raises one hand in blessing, and in the other hand he holds a golden globe. The image's original robes were white, but as usual, the figure is covered by a heavy ornate cloak with gold and silver embroidery, including the Cuban national shield. It hides the body and gives the statue a triangular shape.


Around 1608 two brothers, Rodrigo and Juan de Hoyos, and a ten-year-old slave boy named Juan Moreno, left Santiago del Prado (modern El Cobre, named after the copper mines), Cuba in search of salt to preserve meat for the copper miners. Halfway across the Bay of Nipe they put in for the night to wait out a strong storm. The next morning a small white bundle floated across the water toward them. It turned out to be the statue of Our Lady. It was attached to a board, was completely dry, and bore the inscription I am the Virgin of Charity. A shrine was built immediately, and instantly became a pilgrimage destination.


At the request of the veterans of the War of Independence, Our Lady of Charity was declared the patroness of Cuba by Pope Benedict XV in 1916. Then image was solemnly crowned in the Eucharistic Congress at Santiago de Cuba in 1936. Pope Paul VI raised her sanctuary to a basilica in 1977. Pope John Paul II solemnly crowned her again in 1998.


Patronage

• Cuba

• Miami, Florida, archdiocese of

• Thunder Bay, Ontario, Canada, diocese of




Saint Thomas of Villanova


Also known as

• Father of the Poor

• Model of Bishops

• Thomas of Villanueva

• Thomas the Almsgiver

• Tomas of Villanova



Profile

Son of Aloazo Tomas Garcia, a miller, and Lucia Martinez. He grew up in Villanova, Spain, and was educated at the University of Alcala. Professor of arts, logic and philosophy at the university from 1514. Joined the Augustinian friars at Salamanca, Spain in 1516. Ordained in 1518, celebrating his first Mass on Christmas Day that year. Suffered from absentmindedness and poor memory. Preacher. Prior. Provincial of the friars. Sent the first Augustinians to the New World. Nominated by the emperor to the archbishopric of Granada, Spain; he refused the first time, but agreed the second time it was offered, after being ordered to do so by the Pope; he took over on 1 January 1545.


His cathedral gave Thomas money to furnish his house; he donated it to a hospital, saying, "What does a poor friar like myself want with furniture?" Every day he wore the same habit he had received as a novitiate, mending it himself. The canons and domestics were ashamed of him, but could not change him. Several hundred poor came to Thomas' door each morning, and were given meals, wine and money. Criticized for being exploited, he replied, "If there are people who refuse to work, that is for the authorities to deal with. My duty is to assist and relieve those who come to my door." He took in orphans, and paid his servants for every deserted child they brought to him. He encouraged the wealthy to imitate his example. Criticized for being gentle with sinners, he said, "Let them ask if Augustine or John Chrysostom used anathemas and excommunication to stop drunkenness and blasphemy."


As he lay dying, Thomas commanded that all his money be distributed to the poor. Mass was said in his presence, and after Communion he breathed his last, reciting: "Into your hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit." Left a number of theological writings.


Born

1488 at Fuentellana, Castile, Spain


Died

8 September 1555 at Valencia, Spain of angina pectoris


Canonized

1 November 1658 by Pope Alexander VII


Patronage

Genzano di Roma, Italy




Saint Corbinian


Also known as

Korbinian, Waldegiso


Additional Memorial

20 November (translation of relics)



Profile

Son of Waldegiso, who may have died when Corbinian was an infant. Nothing else is known of his youth. Hermit for fourteen years in a cell near the church of Saint-Germain in Châtres, France. His reputation for holiness, as a miracle worker, and as a spiritual director soon spread. Students were attracted to him, and he formed a community for them, but directing them took him away from his life of prayer. He wanted to return to the live of a hermit, and since he had a personal devotion to Saint Peter the Apostle, he moved to Rome, Italy. There he asked for the blessing of Pope Saint Gregory II. Gregory realized that Corbinian should not hide his talents, and ordained him as a missionary bishop to Bavaria (in modern Germany) where he would be supported by Duke Grimoald. He established his base in Freising, and made many converts throughout the region. Spiritual teacher of Saint Arbeo of Freising. When Corbinian denounced the incestuous marriage of Duke Grimoald to Biltrudis, the nobility turned against him, and Biltrudis even conspired to have him killed. Corbinian fled to Meran, Italy until Grimoald was killed in battle and Biltrudis carried off by the Franks; he then returned to Bavaria and resumed the mission that occupied the rest of his life.


Born

• 670 at Châtres, France as Waldegiso

• his mother soon changed it to Corbinian


Died

• 730 of natural causes

• buried at the monastery at Meran, Italy

• relics translated to Freising, Germany in 765 by bishop Aribo, biographer of Corbinian


Patronage

• Freising, Germany

• Munich, Germany, archdiocese of


Representation

• bear

• bishop making a bear carry his luggage because it has eaten his mule

• bishop with a bear and mule in the background

• bishop with a bear

• bishop with Duke Grimoald at his feet



Pope Saint Sergius I


Profile

Son of Syrian immigrants. Educated at Palermo, Italy. Ordained in Rome, Italy. Canon regular of Saint John Lateran. First named cardinal-priest of Saint Susanna by Pope Leo II. Elected pope on 15 December 687, chosen over the priest Theodore and the archdeacon Paschal who was later found to be dabbling in magic and stripped of his position.



Emperor Justinian II felt that his authority extended to all matters, including the Church. Sergius refused to lend papal approval to edicts issued by Justinian and the Synod of Trullan in 692, which Justinian had convened. The emperor ordered the arrest of the pope, but the citizens of Rome arose to defend him. When additional troops arrived, fighting broke out. Zachary, leader of the Emperor's troops, was forced to seek sanctuary and the protection of Sergius, was eventually reduced to hiding under the Pope's bed. Sergius ordered a complete halt to the violence; many of the troops sent to arrest him sided with the pope, and Zachary and his remaining soldiers were permitted to withdraw.


Islam made large advances in North Africa during Serius's reign, including capturing Carthage and ending Roman power in the region after 850 years. Sergius reconciled the Church of Aquileia to Rome. Ordered processions in Rome on the days of the Annunciation, Nativity, Assumption of the Blessed Virgin, and Purification. Sent missionaries to Friesland and Germany. Defended Saint Wilfrid of York. Baptized Caedwalla as king of the West Saxons in 689. Ordained Saint Willibrand as bishop of the Frisans in 695. Introduced the Agnus Dei to the Latin eucharistic rites. Ordained ninety-six bishops, eighteen priests, and four deacons.


Born

at Palermo, Sicily


Papal Ascension

15 December 687


Died

• 7 September 701 of natural causes in Rome, Italy

• interred at the Vatican



Blessed Antoine-Frédéric Ozanam


Profile

Born to Jean and Marie Ozanam, the fifth of 14 children; only three of them survived to adulthood. Married layman scholar, teacher and author in the archdioceses of Paris and Marseilles, France. Studied law in Paris. Worked in the judicial service in Lyons, France. Obtained a doctorate based on his work on Dante. Taught in Lyons, Paris and the Sorbonne. His writing and teaching always revolved around the benefits to individuals and society of Christianity. One of the founders of the Conference of Charity which became the modern Society of Saint Vincent de Paul.



Born

23 April 1813 in Milan, Italy


Died

8 September 1853 in Marseilles, Bouches-du-Rhône, France of natural causes


Beatified

• 22 August 1997 by Pope John Paul II

• beatification recognition celebrated at Notre Dame de Paris cathedral




Saint Isaac the Great


Also known as

Sahak



Profile

Son of Saint Nerses the Great, Catholicos of Armenia. Studied at Constantinople. Married layman for several years. Widower. Monk. Catholicos of Armenia in 390, succeeding his father to the office. He secured recognition from Constantinople of the status, rights and independence of the Armenian Church. From his position he worked to reform the Armenian Church, evangelize the Armenian people, and establish an Armenian identity. He enforced Byzantine canon law, insisted on celibacy for bishops, built churches, schools and monasteries, and fought Persian paganism. Isaac worked with Saint Mesrop the Teacher to evangelize Armenia, and to develop and alphabet of the Armenian language. He supported the translation the Bible and the Greek and Syrian Doctors of the Church into Armenian Isaac served as both civil and religious ruler of his people, established a national liturgy, and was responsible for the beginnings of Armenian literature. He was driven into retirement in 428 when the Persians conquered part of his territory, but later returned as Catholicos at Ashtishat from where he worked until he death. Considered the founder of the Armenian Church.


Born

350


Died

440 at Ashtishat of natural causes



Blessed Seraphina Sforza


Also known as

Sueva Sforza


Profile

Daughter of Cattarina Colonna amd Count Guido Antonio of Montefeltro of Urbino. Orphaned as a child, she grew up in the Roman villa of her uncle, Prince Colonna. Married to Duke Alexander Sforza, Lord of Pesaro, Italy at age 16 in 1448. After several happy years together, Alexander began to lead a dissolute life. He fell for a woman named Pacifica, had an affair, tried to poison Sueva, and finally kicked her out of the house in 1457. She joined the Poor Clares at Pesaro, taking the name Seraphina, and spending much of her time praying for Alexander's conversion. He eventually came to his senses and wanted Sueva back, but by then she had taken her vows. Twenty years a nun, she was elected abbess of her convent in 1475.



Born

c.1432 at Urbino, Italy as Sueva


Died

• 8 September 1478 at Pesaro, Italy of natural causes

• exhumed several years later, and found to be incorrupt

• entombed in the cathedral at Pesaro


Beatified

17 July 1754 by Pope Benedict XIV (cultus confirmed)



Blessed Apolonia Lizárraga Ochoa de Zabalegui


Also known as

Sister Apolonia of the Blessed Sacrament



Profile

One of eleven children in a pious family. Joined the Carmelite Sisters of Charity on 16 July 1886. Studied at the college in Madrid, Spain. Taught at the college of Trujillo. Superior of the community of Villafranca de los Barros, Badajoz, and in Seville, Spain. Elected Superior-General of her Order in 1923; she served for 13 years during which the Order founded 20 new communities, and Apolonia worked for the beatification of their founder, Saint Joaquina Vedruna Vidal de Mas. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

18 April 1867 in Lezáun, Pamplona, Spain


Died

• 8 September 1936 in Barcelona, Spain

• her body was dismembered and thrown to pigs

• recovered relics interred in the crypt of the parish of Santa Inés


Beatified

28 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI



Saint Disibod of Disenberg


Also known as

Disibode, Disen



Additional Memorial

8 July (translation of relics)


Profile

Priest. May have been a bishop in Ireland. A would-be reformer who, when he received little help from his brother clerics, migrated c.653 with several friends from Ireland to the Nahe Valley near Bingen, Germany. Founded the monastery of Mount Disibod; the nearby city of Disenberg (Disibodenberg) is named for this house. Bishop of Disenberg, Germany, governing in the Irish way, as abbot-bishop, living as an anchorite in a bee-hive cell. He won many converts in the region. Reported miracle worker. Saint Hildegard of Bingen wrote of biography of him based on visions she received.


Born

c.619 in Ireland


Died

• 8 July or 8 September (records vary) 700 of natural causes

• relics translated in 8 July or 8 September 754


Patronage

• Disenberg, Germany

• Disibodenberg, Germany


Representation

• reading in a cell with a rosary and cross, his episcopal insignia at his feet

• with Saint Hildegard of Bingen



Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary

தூய கன்னி மரியாவின் பிறப்பு (ஆரோக்கிய அன்னை)

மரியாவின் பிறப்பைக் குறித்து 170 ஆம் ஆண்டு எழுதப்பட்ட – திருச்சபையால் அங்கீகரிக்கப்படாத – தூய யாக்கோபு நற்செய்தியில் இடம்பெறும் நிகழ்வு.

மரியாவின் பெற்றோரான ஜோக்கினும் அன்னாவும் திருமணம் செய்து இருபது ஆண்டுகள் ஆகியும் அவர்களுக்குக் குழந்தை பாக்கியம் இல்லை. இருந்தாலும் அவர்கள் இறைவனிடத்தில் இடைவிடாது ஜெபித்துக்கொண்டிருந்தார்கள். இந்த நேரத்தில் ஜோக்கின் எருசலேம் திருக்கோவிலுக்கு பலி ஒப்புக்கொடுக்கச் சென்றார். அப்போது அங்கிருந்த தலைமைக்குரு ரூபன் என்பவர் ஜோக்கினிடம், “உனக்குத்தான் குழந்தை இல்லையே. பிறகு எதற்கு இங்கு வந்து பலி செலுத்துகிறீர். உம்முடைய பலியை எல்லாம் கடவுள் ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளமாட்டார். அதனால் தயவுசெய்து இங்கிருந்து போய்விடும்” என்று கடினமான வார்த்தைகளால் திட்டி அனுப்பி விட்டார். இதனால் மனம் உடைந்துபோன ஜோக்கின் தனிமையான இடத்திற்குச் சென்று ஜெபிக்கத் தொடங்கினார்.

இதற்கிடையில் எருசலேம் திருக்கோவிலுக்குச் சென்று, நீண்ட நாட்கள் ஆகியும் தன்னுடைய கணவர் திரும்பி வராததைக் கண்ட அன்னா, தன்னுடைய கணவர் உண்மையிலே இறந்துவிட்டார் என நினைத்து, விதவைக்கோலம் பூண்டு நின்றார். அப்போதுதான் ஆண்டவரின் தூதர் அவருக்குத் தோன்றி, “அன்னா! உன்னுடைய ஜெபம் கேட்கப்பட்டது. நீர் கருவுற்று ஒரு மகளைப் பெற்றெடுப்பீர். அவருக்கு மரியா எனப் பெயரிடுவீர்” என்று சொல்லிவிட்டுச் சென்றார். பின்னர் வானதூதர் ஜோக்கினுகுத் தோன்றி, அதே செய்தியை அவரிடத்திலும் சொன்னார். இச்செய்தியைக் கேட்ட ஜோக்கின் மிகவும் மகிழ்ந்தார். வானதூதர் அவர்களுக்குச் சொன்னது போன்றே மரியா அவர்களுக்கு மகளாகப் பிறந்தார்.

மரியாவின் பிறப்பு உண்மையிலே இறை வல்லமையால்தான் நிகழ்ந்திருக்கவேண்டும் என்று சொன்னால் அது மிகையாகாது. எப்படியென்றால், விவிலியத்தில் நிகழ்ந்த ஒருசில முக்கியமான நபர்களின் பிறப்பு இறைவல்லமையால் நிகழ்ந்திருக்கின்றது. ஈசாக்கு (தொநூ 21: 1-3) சிம்சோன்      (நீதி 13: 2-7), சாமுவேல் (1சாமு 1: 9-19), திருமுழுக்கு யோவான் (லூக் 1:5-24), இயேசு கிறிஸ்து (லூக்1:26-38) இவர்களுடைய பிறப்பு எல்லாம் சாதாரணமாக நிகழ்ந்துவிடவில்லை. இறை வல்லமை அங்கே அதிகதிகமாக செயல்பட்டிருக்கிறது. மரியாவும் மீட்பின் வரலாற்றில் சாதாரணமான ஒரு நபர் இல்லை. இந்த உலகத்தை உய்விக்க வந்த ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவையே பெற்றெடுத்தவள். எனவே, அவருடைய பிறப்பிலும் இறை வல்லமை அதிகமாகச் செயல்பட்டிருக்கும் என நாம் புரிந்துகொள்ளவேண்டும்.

பாவக்கறை சிறுதும் இல்லாது பிறந்தவர் இயேசு. எனவே, இயேசு மாசற்றவராக இருப்பதனால், அவரைப் பெற்றெடுக்கும் தாய் மரியாவும் மாசற்றவராக இருக்கவேண்டும் என்பதற்காக அவரைக் கருவிலே பாவக்கறையில்லாமல் தோன்றச் செய்கிறார் கடவுள். ஆகவே, மரியா கடவுளின் படைப்பில் தனிச் சிறப்பு வாய்ந்தவராக விளங்குகின்றார்.


இத்தகைய பல்வேறு சிறப்புகளைக் கொண்ட மரியாவின் பிறப்பு விழா நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டிலிருந்தே கொண்டாடப்பட்டு வருகின்றது. கி.பி.330 ஆம் ஆண்டு புனித ஹெலன் என்பவர் மரியன்னைக்கு ஓர் ஆலயம் கட்டி, மரியாவின் பிறப்பு விழாவைக் கொண்டாடியதற்கான வரலாற்றுக் குறிப்புகள் இருக்கின்றன. ஐந்தாம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்த  எபிபெனஸ், கிறிசோஸ்டம் போன்றோர் மரியன்னையின் பிறப்பு விழாவைக் கொண்டாடியதாக அறிகின்றோம். கி.பி. ஏழாம் நூற்றாண்டில்  மரியாவின் பிறப்பு விழா உலகின் பல பகுதிகளிலும் கொண்டாடப்பட்டது. திருத்தந்தை பதினான்காம் பெனடிக்ட் என்பவர்தான் இவ்விழாவை ஒவ்வொரு ஆண்டும் செப்டம்பர் 8 ஆம் நாள் கொண்டாடப் பணித்தார். அன்றிலிருந்து இன்றுவரை மரியன்னையின் பிறப்பு விழா அவ்வாறே கொண்டாடப்பட்டு வருகின்றது.

Also known as

  Natività di Maria Vergine

  Nativité di Maria Vergine



About the Feast

This feast probably originated after the Council of Ephesus in 431, which established her right to the title of "Mother of God." It was first mentioned in a hymn composed by Saint Romanus, an ecclesiastical lyrist of the Greek Church; adopted by the Roman Church in the 17th century.


Patronage

• chefs, cooks and restauranteurs

• coffee house owners or keepers

• distillers

• drapers

• fish dealers or fishmongers

• gold workers or goldsmiths

• needle and pin makers

• potters

• silk workers

• silver workers or silversmiths

• tile makers

• 14 cities




Blessed Pascual Fortuño Almela


Profile

Born to a pious, hard-working family, Pascual was baptized at the age of one day. Joined the Franciscan Friar Minor novitiate at age 12, making his solemn profession on 24 January 1909. Studied theology at the Franciscan school in Onteniente, Spain, and was ordained on 15 August 1913 in Teruel, Spain. Teacher. Spent four years as a parish priest in Argentina. Returning to Spain he taught novices. Vicar of novices at Vest-Valencia in 1931. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.



Born

3 March 1886 in Villareal, Castellón, Spain


Died

• shot and stabbed in the chest with a bayonet on 8 September 1936 on the road outside Castellón, Spain

• buried in the cemetery of Castellón

• re-interred in Villareal, Spain on 3 November 1938

• relics enshrined in the Franciscan church on 12 June 1967


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Plácido García Gilabert

Profile

Raised in a pious family, and always known as an excellent student. Began studying at the Franciscan minor seminary in Benisa, Spain at age 12. Became a Franciscan Friar Minor on 3 October 1910, taking the name Plácido and making his solemn profession on 10 November 1914. He continued his studies in Valencia, Spain, and was ordained on 21 September 1918. Studied at the Faculty of Law of the Antonianum in Rome, Italy. Taught theology at the Franciscan school in Onteniente, Spain. Served as superior of his house and rector of the college. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

1 January 1895 in Benitachell, diocese of Valencia, Alicante, Spain as Miguel


Died

• at dawn on 8 September 1936 in Castellón, Spain

• buried in the cemetery at Benitachell, diocese of Valencia, Alicante, Spain

• relics transferred to the parish church in Benitachell in 1967


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Marino Blanes Giner


Profile

Baptized on the day of his birth and confirmed on 8 August 1902, all in his parish church of Santa Maria in the archdiocese of Valencia, Spain. A lifelong layman, he worked at a bank, served as a catechist, and was married to Julia Jordá Llovet on 26 September 1913. Father of five. Member of Catholic Action, the Society of Saint Vincent de Paul, the Apostleship of Prayer; Franciscan tertiary, he spent his Sunday afternoons helping the sisters care for the sick at the local hospital. During the Spanish Civil War he prevented the fire-bombing of his parish church which led to his imprisonment and execution by the anti-Christian forces. Martyr.



Born

19 September 1888 in Alcoi, Alicante, Spain


Died

• shot soon after 9am on 8 September 1936 in Alcoi, Alicante, Spain

• his remains have not been located


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Alfredo Pellicer Muñoz


Profile

Franciscan Friar Minor, making his solemn profession on 5 July 1936, just days before the outbreak of the Spanish Civil War. He had been studying theology; his family urged him to give it up and become a teacher, in hopes of avoiding the persecutions of the anti-Catholic Republican forces. He refused and was soon arrested, told to deny God, and then killed when he refused to do so. Martyr.



Born

10 April 1914 in Bellreguard, Valencia, Spain


Died

• shot by firing squad at approximately 3pm on Sunday 8 September 1936 in Castellón, Spain

• buried in the nearby cemetery of Gandia, Spain

• re-buried in Bellreguard, Valencia, Spain on 3 June 1939

• relics enshrined in the parish church of Bellreguard just prior to his beatification


Beatified

11 March 2001 by Pope John Paul II



Our Lady of Meritxell


Profile

One 6 January in the late 12th century, villagers from Meritxell, Andorra were going to Mass in Canillo. Though it was winter, they found a wild rose in bloom by the roadside. At its base was a statue of the Virgin and Child. They placed the statue in a chapel in the church in Canillo. The next day the statue was found sitting under the wild rose again. Villagers from Encamp took the statue to their church, but the next day the statue had returned to the rose bush. Though it was snowing, an area the size of a chapel was completely bare, and the villagers of Meritxell took this to mean that they should build a chapel to house the statue, and so they did. On 8-9 September 1972 the chapel burned down and the statue was destroyed; a copy now sits in the new Meritxell Chapel.



Patronage

Andorra (proclaimed by the General Council in 1873)



Blessed Adam Bargielski


Additional Memorial

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



Profile

Priest and assistant pastor of the Myszyniec parish. On 9 April 1940, the Gestapo arrested his 83 year old senior priest as part of their persecutions of Christians; Father Adam went to the Gestapo and asked to replace the elderly priest; the Gestapo agreed. Father Adam was sent to the Dzialdowo, Gusen and Dachau concentration camps; in each place he worked to minister to fellow prisoners. Martyr.


Born

7 January 1903 in Kalinowo, Poland


Died

murdered by a guard 8 September 1942 at the Dachau concentration camp, Oberbayern, Germany


Beatified

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



Blessed Alanus de Rupe


Also known as

• Alain de la Roche

• Alan de Rupe

• Alano de la Roca

• Alanus Rupe



Profile

Joined the Dominicans c.1440. Noted theologian, philosophers, scholar, and writer. Studied in Paris, France. Taught at Paris; Lille, France; Douay, France; Ghent, Belgium; and Rostock, Germany from 1459 to 1475. By his preaching he restored the devotion of the Rosary throughout northern France and the Low Countries, and he established many Rosary confraternities. His writings were published posthumously.


Born

c.1428 in Sizun, Brittany, France


Died

8 September 1475 in Zwolle, Netherlands of natural causes


Beatified

never formally confirmed or beatified



Blessed Wladyslaw Bladzinski


Also known as

Ladislao



Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Priest. Member of the Congregation of Saint Michael the Archangel. During the Nazi persecutions of World War II he was imprisoned in a concentration camp, set to forced labour in a stone quarry, and eventually murdered. Martyr.


Born

January 1908 in Myslatycze, Podkarpackie, Poland


Died

8 September 1944 in Gross-Rosen, Goczalków, Dolnoslaskie, occupied Poland


Beatified

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

• beatification recognition celebrated in Warsaw, Poland



Blessed Thomas Palaser


Also known as

• Thomas Palasor

• Thomas Palaster

• Thomas Pallicer


Additional Memorials

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

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Seminarian at Rheims, France, and at Valladolid, Spain. Ordained in 1596. Returned to England to minister to covert Catholics in the north. Arrested almost immediately, but managed to escape. Arrested again, he was condemned for the crime of priesthood. Marytr.


Born

c.1570 in Ellerton-upon-Swale, North Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 9 August 1600 at Durham, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Ethelburgh of Kent


Also known as

• Ethelburgh of Lyminge

• Aeoelburh, Aeoilburh, Aeoelburh, Aeoilburh, Aethelburg, Aethelburg, Aethelburga, Aethelburga, Aethelburh, Aethelburh, AeÞelburh, Etelburga, Ethelburga, Tata, Tate


Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of King Saint Ethelbert of Kent (part of modern England). Married to King Edwin of Northumbria (also part of modern England). Friend of Saint Paulinus of York. Widow. After Edwin's death, Ethelburgh returned to Kent, founded the convent in Lyminge, entered it as a nun, and then served as abbess.


Died

c.647 of natural causes



Saint István Pongrácz


Also known as

Stefan Pongrác



Profile

Jesuit priest. Missionary near Kosice, Hungary (in modern Slovakia). Arrested by Calvinist troops in 1619, tortured and executed for loyalty to Catholicism. Martyr.


Born

c.1583 in Vintu de Jos, Alba, Hungary (now in Romania)


Died

8 September 1619 in Kosice, Kosický kraj, Hungary (now in Slovakia)


Canonized

2 July 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Adela of Messines

Also known as

Adelais, Adelaide


Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of King Robert the Pious of France. Sister of Henry I. Married to Count Baldwin IV of Flanders. Mother of Baldwin VI. Mother-in-law of William the Conqueror. Widowed in 1036. Benedictine nun, receiving the veil from Pope Alexander II. She retired to a quiet, prayerful life at Messines convent near Ypres, Belgium.


Died

1071 in Ypres, Flanders, Belgium



Blessed John Talbot


Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Married layman in the apostolic vicariate of England during a period of government persecution of Catholics. Martyr.


Born

in Thornton-le-Street, North Yorkshire, England


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 9 August 1600 at Durham, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed John Norton

Additional Memorial

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


Profile

Married layman in the apostolic vicariate of England during a period of government persecution of Catholics. Martyr.


Born

in Lamesley, Tyne and Wear, England


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 9 August 1600 at Durham, England


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Peter of Chavanon


Profile

Priest in the Haute Loire region of France. Founded a monastery for Augustinian canons at Pebrac, Auvergne, France. Assigned to reform several Augustinian cathedral chapeters.


Born

1003 in Langeac, Haute Loire, France


Died

• 1080 of natural causes

• cures from fevers reported by people who would sleep on his tomb



Saint Kingsmark


Also known as

Cynfarch


Profile

Scottish chieftain. Lived in Wales. Several churches dedicated to him.


Readings

Seeing that many were brought to Christ by the radiant example of thy virtuous life and thy missionary labours, O holy Cynfarch, pray that we too may follow thee in the service of our Saviour, that our souls may be saved. - troparion of Saint Cynfarch



Saint Faustus of Antioch


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Antioch (in modern Turkey)



Saint Timothy of Antioch


Profile

Martyr.


Died

Antioch (in modern Turkey)



Martyrs of Alexandria


Profile

A group of Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian - Ammon, Dio, Faustus, Neoterius and Theophilus.


Born

Egypt


Died

Alexandria, Egypt



Martyrs of Japan


Profile

A group of 21 missionaries and converts who were executed together for their faith.

• Antonio of Saint Bonaventure

• Antonio of Saint Dominic

• Dominicus Nihachi

• Dominicus of Saint Francis

• Dominicus Tomachi

• Francisco Castellet Vinale

• Franciscus Nihachi

• Ioannes Imamura

• Ioannes Tomachi

• Laurentius Yamada

• Leo Aibara

• Lucia Ludovica

• Ludovicus Nihachi

• Matthaeus Alvarez Anjin

• Michaël Tomachi

• Michaël Yamada Kasahashi

• Paulus Aibara Sandayu

• Paulus Tomachi

• Romanus Aibara

• Thomas of Saint Hyacinth

• Thomas Tomachi

Died

8 September 1628 in Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Pius IX



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Adrián Saiz y Saiz

• Blessed Apolonia Lizárraga Ochoa de Zabalegui

• Blessed Bonifacio Rodríguez González

• Blessed Dolores Puig Bonany

• Blessed Eusebio Alonso Uyarra

• Blessed Ismael Escrihuela Esteve

• Blessed Josefa Ruano García

• Blessed Josep Padrell Navarro

• Blessed Mamerto Carchano y Carchano

• Blessed Marino Blanes Giner

• Blessed Miguel Beato Sánchez

• Blessed Pascual Fortuño Almela

• Blessed Segimon Sagalés Vilá

• Blessed Tomàs Capdevila Miquel


 புனிதர்கள் அட்ரியான் மற்றும் நடாலியா 


பிறப்பு: ----

இறப்பு: மார்ச் 4, 306

நிகொமேடியா

(Nicomedia)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

கான்ஸ்டன்டினோபில் அருகேயுள்ள அர்கிரோபொலிஸ்

(Argyropolis near Constantinople)

ஜெரார்ட்ஸ்பெர்கன், பெல்ஜியம்

(Geraardsbergen, Belgium)

தூய அட்ரியானோ அல் ஃபோரோ, ரோம்

(Church of St Adriano al Foro, Rome)

நினைவுத் திருநாள் : செப்டம்பர் 8/டிசம்பர் 01

பாதுகாவல்:

பிளேக் நோய், வலிப்பு நோய், ஆயுத விற்பனையாளர்கள், கறி வெட்டுபவர்கள், காவலர்கள், வீரர்கள்.

புனிதர் அட்ரியான், ரோம பேரரசர் (Roman Emperor) “கலேரியஸ் மேக்ஸிமியனின்” (Galerius Maximian) அரச பாதுகாவலராகப் (Herculian Guard) பணியாற்றியவராவார். இவரும், இவரது மனைவு “நடாலியாவும்” (Natalia) கிறிஸ்தவ மதத்திற்கு மனம் மாறிய காரணத்தால் “நிகொமேடியா” (Nicomedia) நகரில், மறைசாட்சியாக துன்புறுத்தப்பட்டுக் கொல்லப்பட்டனர்.

அட்ரியானும், நடாலியாவும், பேரரசன் “மேக்ஸிமியனின்” காலத்தில், கி.பி. நான்காம் நூற்றாண்டின் ஆரம்பத்தில், நிகொமேடியா நகரில் வாழ்ந்தவர்கள் ஆவர். இருபத்தெட்டு வயது அட்ரியான், ரோம அரச மாளிகையின் தலைமை காவலனாக இருந்தார்.

ஒருமுறை, ஒரு கிறிஸ்தவ இசைக்குழுவை துன்புறுத்தும் பணியை தலைமை தாங்கியபோது அவர் அவர்களிடம், “நீங்கள் உங்கள் கடவுளிடம் என்ன பரிசினை எதிர்பார்க்கிறீர்கள்” என்று கேட்டார். அதற்கு அவர்கள், 1 கொரிந்தியர் 2:9ல் எழுதியிருந்ததைப் போல, “தம்மிடம் அன்பு கொள்ளுகிறவர்களுக்கென்று கடவுள் ஏற்பாடு செய்தவை கண்ணுக்குப் புலப்படாமலும், செவிக்கு எட்டாமலும், மனித உள்ளமும் அதை அறியாமலும் இருக்கவேண்டும்“ என்று கேட்டார்கள். அவர்களது தைரியத்தைக் கண்டு ஆச்சரியப்பட்ட அவர், அனைவரின் முன்னிலையில் தமது விசுவாசத்தை ஒப்புக்கொண்டார். ஆனால், அவர் இதுவரை திருமுழுக்கு பெற்றிருக்கவில்லை.

அட்ரியான் தம்மைத்தாமே சிறையில் அடைத்துக்கொண்டார். தம்மைக் காண வருபவர்களை காண மறுத்தார். நடாலியா மட்டும் ஒரு ஆணின் ஆடை அணிந்து, அவர் பரலோகத்தில் நுழைந்தபோது அவரது ஜெபங்களை கேட்க வந்தார். 


கொலையாளிகள், இறந்துபோனவர்களின் உடல்களை எரித்துவிட விரும்பினர். ஆனால், ஒரு பெரும் காற்று எழுந்து, எரிந்த தீயை அணைத்தது. நடாலியா, அட்ரியானின் கை ஒன்றினை தேடி கண்டெடுத்தார்.

வரலாற்று உண்மைகள்:

“நிகொமேடியா” (Nicomedia) நகரில் இரண்டு அட்ரியான்கள் இருந்ததாகவும், இருவருமே மறைசாட்சிகளாக கொல்லப்பட்டதாகவும், ஒருவர் பேரரசன் “டயக்லேஷியன்” (Diocletian) காலத்தில் இருந்ததாகவும், இன்னொருவர் பேரரசன் “லிஸினியஸ்” (Licinius) காலத்தில் இருந்ததாகவும் கூறப்படுகிறது.

Also celebrated but no entry yet

• Madonna della Libera

• Our Lady of Covadonga

• Our Lady of Health of Vailankanni

• Our Lady of Ripalta

• Our Lady of Valldeflors

06 September 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் செப்டம்பர் 07

 St. Anastasius the Fuller

Feastday: September 7

Death: 304

Martyr from Aquileia, near modern Venice, Italy. A fuller or cloth merchant, Anastasius moved to Salona in Dalmatia, Yugoslavia. There he painted a cross on the door of his shop and was speedily arrested and drowned.

Saint Anastasius the Fuller (died 304) is a Christian saint of the pre-schism Christian Church. Anastasius was a fuller of Aquileia who subsequently moved his business to Salona, although other sources say he went to Spalatum.

He was martyred by being drowned after he had proclaimed his Christian faith openly by painting a cross on his door.

Anastasius is the patron saint of fullers and weavers and his feast day is September 7 (formerly August 26)



Blessed Giovanni Battista Mazzucconi


Also known as

• John Mazzucconi

• Johannes Baptiste Mazzucconi

• John Baptist Mazzucconi







Profile

Priest. Member of the Pontifical Institute for Foreign Missions. Missionary to Papua New Guinea. Martyr.


Born

1 March 1826 in Rancio di Lecco, Italy


Died

7 September 1855 in Woodlark Island, Milne Bay, Papua New Guinea


Beatified

19 February 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Eugenia Picco


Also known as

• Anna Eugenia Picco

• Maria Angela Picco



Profile

Daughter of Giuseppe Picco, a famous touring musician, and Adelaide del Corno. Because her parents lived on the road, Eugenia was raised for years by her grandparents; however, at one point Adalaide returned alone, Eugenia moved in with her, and from that point grew up in a morally corrupt environment. To escape her mother's house, Eugenia spent part of every day praying at the nearby Basilica of Saint Ambrose. Around the age of 20, Eugenia felt a call to religious life and joined the Congregation of the Little Daughters of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary in Milan, Italy under the direction of its founder, Venerable Agostino Chieppi; she began her novitiate in Parma, Italy on 26 August 1888, and made her final vows in 1894. Eugenia served as novice mistress, archivist, general secretary, member of the council, and then as Superior General of the Congregation from 1911 until her death in 1921. She suffered throughout her adult life with a degenerative bone disease, and in 1919 it led to the amputation of her right leg. A courageous woman, she enriched the spiritual and cultural formation of the sisters, and was known for her devotion to the Eucharist and her work with the poor, especially children.


Born

8 November 1867 at Cresenzago, Milan, Italy


Died

7 September 1921 at Parma, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

7 October 2001 by Pope John Paul II




Blessed Félix Gómez-Pinto Piñero


Profile

One of four children born to pious farm family; his mother was a Franciscan tertiary, and two of his sisters became Capuchin nuns. Félix joined the Franciscan Friar Minor on 12 May 1886 at the at Pastrana, Spain, making his solemn profession on 16 May 1890. Priest, ordained on 19 May 1894 in Avila, Spain. Missionary to the Philippines where he was imprisoned from 1898 into 1899 during the Philippine fight for independence from Spain. Missionary on the Philippine island of Samar from 1903 to 1913. Served for a few months at the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, and then returned to Spain. Worked with and set an example to Franciscan novices at Pastrana from 1914 to 1917. Missionary to the Philippines from 1919 to 1933, but as his health began to fail, he was forced to return to the convent in Pastrana. During the persecutions of Spanish Civil War, he continued to minister to covert Catholics in the area. Siezed by anti-Christian militiamen, he was ordered to blaspheme against God, Mary and the Church; he refused. His convent hospital was converted by the militia into a prisons; Father Felix was kept their for several days while other priests and brothers were rounded up, and then they were executed. Martyr.



Born

18 May 1870 in La Torre de Esteban Hambrán, Toledo, Spain


Died

• shot with a shotgun on 7 September 1936 on the road near Hueva, Guadalajara, Spain

• body dumped on the side of the road


Beatified

28 October 2007 by Pope Benedict XVI



Blessed Ignatius Klopotowski


Also known as

Ignacy Klopotowski



Profile

Born to a pious and patriotic family. He entered the Lublin seminary in 1883, and was ordained on 5 July 1891. Parochial vicar of the Conversion of Saint Paul parish. Chaplain of Saint Vincent's hospital in 1892. Taught sacred scripture, catechetics, homiletics, moral theology and canon law at the Saint Vincent seminary for fourteen years. Vicar of the Lublin Cathedral from 1892 to 1894. Rector of the Greek Catholic Church of Saint Stanislaus in 1894. Founded an employment center in Lublin. Founded a professional school. Founded a home to help girls and women escape prostitution. Founded orphanages, and homes for the elderly. With the Congregation of the Handmaids of the Immaculate he founded a series of rural schools, which brought him persecution by the Russian authorities. Published several weekly and monthly newspapers, and in 1905 the magazine Polak-Katolik (Polish-Catholic). Moved to Warsaw in 1908 to increase the publications' reach, and start new ones. With the help of the future Pope Pius XI, he founded the Congregation of the Sisters of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Loreto in Warsaw on 31 July 1920 to help with the publication work.


Born

20 July 1866 in Korzeniówka, Poland


Died

• 7 September 1931 of natural causes

• buried at the Powazki Cemetery, Warsaw, Poland


Beatified

• 19 June 2005 by Pope Benedict XVI

• recognization celebrated by Cardinal Jozef Glemp in Pilsudski Square, Warsaw, Poland



Blessed John Duckett

Additional Memorial

29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Relative of Blessed James Duckett, possibly his grandson. Educated at Douai, France. Ordained in 1639. Studied at the College of Arras in Paris, France for three years. Ministered to covert Catholics in Durham, England from 1642. Arrested by Roundhead soldiers at Redgate Head (formerly Pickering Hill) near Wolsingham, England on 2 July 1644 while en route to baptize two children. Charged with with the crime of being a Catholic priest, he was martyred with Blessed Ralph Corby; the two were advised that a single reprieve had been obtained for them; they each refused it, insisting that the other be freed; neither was.


Born

1603 at Sedbergh parish, Underwinder, Yorkshire, England


Died

• hanged, drawn, and quartered on 7 September 1644 at Tyburn, London, England

• his hand and clothing were recovered as relics, but as they had to be hidden, their location has been long lost


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Cloud

 புனிதர் கிளவுட் 

(St. Cloud)

மடாதிபதி/ ஒப்புரவாளர்:

(Abbot and Confessor)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 522

வெசைலஸ், ஃபிரான்சு

(Versailles, France)

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 560

நோஜென்ட்-சுர்-செய்ன், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Nogent-sur-Seine, France)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)

கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை

(Eastern Orthodox Church)

முக்கிய திருத்தலம்:

தூய கிளவுட் தேவாலயம், ஃபிரான்ஸ்

(Saint-Cloud, France)

பாதுகாவல்: 

மின்னசோட்டா மற்றும் தூய கிளவுட் மறைமாவட்டம்

உடலில் தோன்றும் ஒருவித கட்டிகளுக்கெதிராக (Carbuncles)

ஆணி தயாரிப்போர்

நினைவுத் திருநாள்: செப்டம்பர் 7

புனிதர் கிளவுட், ஒரு சிறந்த ஒப்புரவாளரும், துறவியும், மடாதிபதியுமாவார். 

இவரது தந்தை, “ஓர்லியன்ஸ்” (Orléans) நாட்டு அரசர் “க்ளோடோமெர்” (King Chlodomer) ஆவார். தாயாரின் பெயர், “குன்தெயுக்” (Guntheuc) ஆகும். இவர், பாரிஸ் நகரில் தமது பாட்டியார் புனிதர் “க்லோட்டில்ட்” (Saint Clotilde) அவர்களால் வளர்க்கப்பட்டார். இவருக்கு இரண்டு சகோதரர்கள் இருந்தனர். இவர்களது மாமன் “முதலாம் க்லோட்டேய்ர்” (Clotaire I) இவர்கள் மூவரையும் அரசியல் படுகொலை செய்ய சதித் திட்டம் தீட்டி காத்திருந்தார்.

ஒன்பது மற்றும் பத்தே வயதான இவரின் சகோதரர்களான “தியோடொல்ட்” (Theodoald) மற்றும் “குந்தர்” (Gunther) இருவரும் மாமனின் சதிக்கு இரையாகி இறந்தனர். ஆனால், கிளவுட் மாமனின் சதியிலிருந்து தப்பி, ஃபிரான்ஸின் பண்டைய தென்கிழக்கு பிராந்தியமான “ப்ரோவேன்ஸ்” (Provence) சென்றார்.

அரியணை சுகத்தை வெறுத்த கிளவுட், புனிதர் “செவெரினஸ்” (Saint Severinus of Noricum) என்பவரின் சீடராகவும் தபசியாகவும் சிரத்தையுடன் கற்றார். இவருடைய சிகிச்சை முறை மற்றும் ஆலோசனைகளைப் பெறுவதற்காக அநேகர் இவரை நாடி வந்தனர். பின்னர் பாரிஸ் நகர் திரும்பிய கிளவுடை மக்கள் மகிழ்ச்சியுடன் வரவேற்றனர்.

பெரும்பாலான மக்களின் கோரிக்கைகளை ஏற்று, பாரிஸ் நகர ஆயர் “யூசிபியஸ்” (Bishop Eusebius of Paris) கி.பி. 551ம் ஆண்டு, கிளவுடை கத்தோலிக்க குருவாக அருட்பொழிவு செய்தார். அதன்பிறகு இவர் சில காலம் திருச்சபைக்கு சேவை செய்தார்.

இவர், “வெர்செய்ல்ஸ்” (Versailles) பிராந்தியத்தில், “செய்ன்” (Seine) நதிக்கரையோரம், “நோவிஜென்டம்” (Novigentum) எனும் கிராமத்தில் ஒரு துறவு மடத்தினை கட்டினார். தமது அரச சொத்துக்கள் அனைத்தையும் விற்று, நாட்டிலிருந்த ஏழைகளுக்கு பகிர்ந்தளித்தார். தமது அண்டை நாட்டிற்கும் உதவி செய்தார். பலரின் வாழ்வில் ஒளியேற்றிய கிளவுட், ஒன்றுமில்லாதவராய் இறைவனை மட்டுமே சொத்தாகக் கொண்டார். பின்னர் இறைவனை இதயத்தில் ஏற்றவராய் தனது 38வது வயதில் இறைவனடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Clodoald, Clodoaldus, Claud, Clodoaldo



Profile

Born to French royalty, son of King Clodomir and Clotilde, and grandson of King Clovis and Saint Clotilda. His father died in battle when his children were still quite young. The king's sons were raised in Paris, France by their grandmother, Saint Clotilda, until an ambitious uncle murdered two of them in a power grab. Clodoaldus escaped, renounced all claims to the throne, and lived as a studious hermit.



Spiritual student of Saint Severinus the Hermit. Young Cloud withdrew to Provence to live as a prayerful hermit, but when his identity became known, his hermitage became a destination point for pilgrims, and he returned to Paris. Priest. Built a monastery near Paris, a house later known as Saint Cloud, retired there, and led a community of holy brothers by his example. The town of Saint Cloud grew up around the monastery.


Born

522 in Gaul (modern France)


Died

560 in France of natural causes


Name Meaning

out of the mist [middle english]


Patronage

• nail makers

• Saint Cloud, Minnesota, diocese of



Blessed Thomas Tsuji 


Also known as

• Thomas Tsugi

• Thomas Tsughi

• Thomas Tzugi



Profile

Born to the Japanese nobility. Educated by Jesuits at Arima, he joined the Society in 1587. Thomas traveled Japan and became known for his eloquent, persuasive preaching. His vocation was cut short when he was arrested and exiled to Macao because of his religion. Thomas returned to Japan in disguise and resumed his missionary work. He was soon recaptured and imprisoned for a year. Sentenced to death for his faith, he refused to use his family connections to gain his freedom. Martyr.


Born

c.1571 in Sonogi, Nagasaki, Japan


Died

burned at the stake on 7 September 1627 at Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 July 1867 by Pope Pius IX




Saint Chiaffredo of Saluzzo


Also known as

Chaffre, Chiaffredus, Ciafrè, Ciafré, Eufredus, Gaufrid, Geoffrey, Geoffroy, Geofroi, Gioffredo, Godefrid, Godefridus, Godefroi, Godfred, Godfrey, Goffredo, Goffrey, Gofrido, Gotfrid, Gottfried, Jafredo, Jafredus, Jeffrey, Jofredus, Sinfredus, Teofredo, Teofredus, Theofredus, Theofrid, Zaffredus



Profile

Soldier. Member of the Theban Legion who escaped from Agaunum to Piedmont in modern Italy only to be killed there for his faith. Martyr.


Died

• near Crissolo, Italy c.270

• relics discovered near Crissolo, Italy c.522 and enshrined there

• relics translated to Revello, Italy in 1593

• relics translated to the cathedral of Saluzzo, Italy in 1642


Patronage

• Crissolo, Italy

• Saluzzo, Italy, city of

• Saluzzo, Italy, diocese of (declared by Bishop Tornabuoni in 1516)



Saint Gratus of Aosta


Profile

Priest. Bishop of Aosta, Italy some time after 451. He evangelized his people, established charities, and was known as a miracle worker.


Died

• c.470 in Aosta, Italy of natural causes

• some relics in the collegiate church of Sant'Orso, Aosta



Patronage

• against animal attacks

• insectophobics; against fear of insects

• against fire

• against hail

• against lightning

• against rain

• against storms

• vineyards

• Albertville, France

• Aosta, Italy, city of

• Aosta, Italy, diocese of


Representation

• bishop carrying the head of Saint John the Baptist and a bunch of grapes (refers to a legend about a vision he received)

• bishop with lightning flashing near him



Blessed Ralph Corby


Also known as

Ralph Corbington



Profile

Raised in a pious family; all of the family, his parents included, eventually took religious vows. Educated at the College of Saint Omer in France, the seminary of Saint Gregory at Seville, Spain, and the Royal College of Saint Alban in Valladolid, Spain. Joined the Jesuits in 1631. Ordained in 1631. He returned to England in 1632 to minister to covert Catholics in the area of Durham. Arrested with Blessed John Duckett, and condemned to death for the crime of priesthood. Martyr.


Born

25 March 1598 in Maynooth, Ireland


Died

hanged, drawn, and quartered on 7 September 1644 at Tyburn, London, England


Beatified

15 December 1929 by Pope Pius XI



Saint Regina


Also known as

Regnia, Reine



Profile

Daughter of a pagan named Clement. A convert to Christianity, she was driven from her family's home because of her faith, and lived as a poor, prayerful shepherdess. Imprisoned, tortured and martyred when she refused an arranged marriage to the Roman proconsul Olybrius.


Died

throat cut c.286 at Autun, (in modern France)


Patronage

• poor people

• shepherdesses

• torture victims



Saint Grimonia of Picardy

Also known as

Germana


Profile

Daughter of a pagan chieftain. Converted to Christianity around age twelve, and dedicated herself to God. When ordered by her father to marry, she refused. Her father was enraged, and imprisoned her. She managed to escape, fled to Laon, Picardy in France, and lived as an anchoress in the forest. Her father dispatched agents to find her. They did, and when she refused to return and marry, she was beheaded. Locals built a chapel over her grave; it soon became known as a site of miracles, and the town of LaChapelle grew up around the site.


Born

4th century Irish


Died

• beheaded at Picardy, France

• relics translated to LesQuielles on 7 September 1231



Saint Marko Krizevcanin


Also known as

Marek Krizin, Mark Crisin, Marko Krizevcanin, Marko Krizin



Profile

Studied at the Germanicum in Rome, Italy. Priest and canon in the archdiocese of Esztergom, Hungary. Missionary near Kosice, Hungary (in modern Slovakia). Arrested by Calvinist troops in 1619, tortured and executed for loyalty to Catholicism. Martyr.


Born

c.1589 in Krizevci, Koprivnicko-Krizevacka, Croatia


Died

7 September 1619 in Kosice, Kosický kraj, Hungary (now in Slovakia)


Canonized

2 July 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Melichar Grodecký


Also known as

Melchior Grodziecki



Profile

Jesuit priest. Missionary near Kosice, Hungary (in modern Slovakia). Arrested by Calvinist troops in 1619, tortured and executed for loyalty to Catholicism. Martyr.


Born

c.1584 in Ceský Tesín, Karviná, Czech Republic


Died

7 September 1619 in Kosice, Kosický kraj, Hungary (now in Slovakia)


Canonized

2 July 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed François d'Oudinot de la Boissière


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Limoges, France. Martyred in the French Revolution.



Born

3 September 1746 in Saint-Germain, Haute-Vienne, France


Died

7 September 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France of starvation and general privation


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Claude-Barnabé Laurent de Mascloux


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Limoges, France. Martyred in the French Revolution.



Born

11 June 1735 in Dorat, Haute-Vienne, France


Died

7 September 1794 aboard the prison ship Deux-Associés, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France of starvation and general privation


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Alcmund of Hexham

Also known as

Alchmund


Profile

Bishop of Hexham in 767. He was renowned for his piety, but no other certain information about him has survived.


Died

• 781 of natural causes

• the location of the cemetery where he was buried was lost over time

• in 1032 he appeared in a vision to a man in Hexham, and told him where to find the grave

• his relics were re-interred in the cathedral at Hexham

• his shrine was destroyed by the Scots in 1296



Blessed Ludovicus Maki Soetsu


Also known as

Louis Maki


Profile

Married layman in the archdiocese of Nagasaki, Japan. Member of the Secular Franciscans. Adoptive father of Blessed John Maki. Allowed Blessed Thomas Tsughi to celebrate Mass in his home, for which he was arrested and executed. Martyr.


Born

Nagasaki, Japan


Died

burned alive on 7 September 1627 in Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Pius IX



Saint Dinooth


Also known as

Dinothus, Dunawd, Dunod


Profile

Sixth century northern British chieftain who was driven into Wales by military opponents. There he entered religious life. Monk. Abbot. Founder of Bangor abbey, Flintshire, Wales, on the Dee river, which eventually grew to about 2,400 monks, and was destroyed c.603. Assisted at the second synod of Welsh bishops convened by Saint Augustine of Canterbury in 602.



Saint John of Lodi


Profile

Hermit. Benedictine monk at Fontavellana c.1065. Spiritual student of Saint Peter Damian about whom he wrote a biography. Prior of the abbey in 1072. Bishop of Gubbio, Italy in 1105.



Born

at Lodi Vecchio, Lombardy, Italy


Died

1106 at Gubbio, Italy of natural causes



Blessed John Maki


Also known as

Ioannes Maki Jizaemon


Profile

Layman in the diocese of Funai, Japan. Adopted son of Blessed Ludovicus Maki Soetsu, and martyred with him.


Born

in Nagasaki, Japanese


Died

burned alive on 7 September 1627 at Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Saint Eustace of Beauvais


Profile

Parish priest in Beauvais, France. Joined the Benedictine Cistercians at the abbey in Saint-Germer-de-Fly, France. Monk. Abbot of the house. Apostolic legate to England for Pope Innocent III. Apostolic legate to fight Albigensianism in southern France.


Born

Beauvais, France



Saint Memorius of Troyes


Also known as

Mesmin, Nemorius, Memorio, Nemorio


Profile

Deacon in Troyes, France. Along with five companions, he was sent by Saint Lupus to ask for mercy from Attila the Hun. In answer, Attila had them all beheaded. Martyr.


Died

beheaded in 451 outside Troyes, France



Blessed Alexander of Milan


Profile

Zealous and pious Franciscan Friar Minor Observant at the convent of Santa Maria delle Grazie in Chieri, Italy.


Born

Milan, Italy


Died

• 7 September 1505 in Chieri, Italy

• relics enshrined at the church of San Giogio



Blessed Berengario Bertrandi


Profile

Franciscan friar and priest. He taught theology in Montpellier, France, and Franciscan records list him as a confessor.


Died

• 14th-century France of natural causes (dates vary by record)

• buried in Arles, France



Saint Balin


Also known as

Balanus, Balloin


Profile

Born to the 7th century English nobility. Brother of Saint Gerald. Worked with Saint Colman of Lindisfarne, and travelled with him to Iona, Scotland. With his brothers, he later settled to live as a monk at Tecksaxon ("The House of the Saxons") near Tuam, Ireland.



Saint Madalberta


Profile

Daughter of Saint Vincent Madelgarus and Saint Waltrude; sister of Saint Aldetrudis; grand-daughter of Saint Bertille. Spiritual student of her aunt Saint Aldegund. Benedictine nun at the abbey of Maubeuge, France. Abbess in 697.


Died

706 of natural causes



Saint Evortius of Orléans


Also known as

Euvert, Evurtius


Profile

Bishop of Orleans, France. Spiritual teacher of Saint Aignan of Orléans. The monastery of Saint-Euvert was founded to enshrine his relics.


Died

c.340



Saint Sozonte


Profile

Christian who smashed up a silver idol and gave the pieces to the poor to buy food. Martyr.



Died

burned at the stake in Pompeiopoli, Cilicia (modern Soli, Turkey)



Saint Goscelinus of Toul


Also known as

Gauzlino


Profile

Bishop of Toul, Lotharingia (in modern France). Promoted monastic institutions in his diocese, and monastic discipline on those houses.


Died

962 of natural causes



Saint John of Nicomedia


Profile

When an edict of Christian persecution was posted in Nicomedia, John ripped it down and tore it to pieces. Martyr.


Died

burned alive in 303 at Nicomedia



Blessed Maria of Bourbon


Profile

Related to the French royalty. Poor Clare nun at the monastery of Saint George and Santa Chiara in Amiens, France.


Died

c.1445 of natural causes



Saint Carissima of Albi


Profile

Fifth century anchoress who lived for years in a forest near Albi, France, and in later years moved to the convent of Viants.


Born

Albi, France



Saint Hiduard


Also known as

Hilduard, Hilward, Garibald, Hilduardo


Profile

Benedictine monk. Missionary in Flanders. Founded Saint Peter's abbey at Dickelvenne, Belgium.


Died

c.750



Saint Pamphilus of Capua


Profile

Bishop of Capua, Italy.


Born

Greece


Died

• c.400

• relics enshrined in Benevento, Italy



Saint Eupsychius of Caesarea


Profile

Martyred in the persecutions of the Roman emperor Hadrian.


Died

c.130 at Caesarea, Cappadocia



Saint Tilbert of Hexham


Also known as

Gilbert of Hexham


Profile

Bishop of Hexham, England from 781 to 789.


Died

789



Saint Desiderio of Benevento


Profile

Lector. Martyr.


Died

Benevento, Campania, Italy



Saint Augustalis


Also known as

Augustalus, Autal


Profile

Bishop in Gaul, possibly in Arles.


Died

c.450



Saint Faciolus


Profile

Benedictine monk of Saint Cyprian abbey, Poitiers, France.


Died

c.950 of natural causes



Saint Festo of Benevento


Profile

Deacon. Martyr.


Died

Benevento, Campania, Italy



Martyrs of Noli


Profile

Four Christians who became soldiers and were martyred together for their faith. A late legend makes them member of the Theban Legend who escaped their mass martyrdom, but that's doubtful - Paragorius, Partenopeus, Parteus and Severinus.



Born

Noli, Italy


Died

Corsica, France


Representation

soldier with the banner of Noli, Italy



Martyred in the Spanish Civil War


Thousands of people were murdered in the anti-Catholic persecutions of the Spanish Civil War from 1934 to 1939. I have pages on each of them, but in most cases I have only found very minimal information. They are available on the CatholicSaints.Info site through these links:


• Blessed Antoni Bonet Sero

• Blessed Ascensión Lloret Marcos

• Blessed Gregorio Sánchez Sancho


Also celebrated but no entry yet

• Albino of Chalons

• Chalcedony

• Leonardo

• Stefano di Chatillon

• Ventura of Città di Castello