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22 February 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 23

 St. Martha


Feastday: February 23


Virgin martyr of Spain. She was beheaded at Astorga, Spain, and her relics were enshrined in the abbey of Ribas de Sil and at Ters.




St. Zebinus


Feastday: February 23

Death: 5th century


A hermit who lived in Syria.




St. Cerneuf


Feastday: February 23



Serenus, the Gardener, also known as Cerneuf, according to his probably fictious legend, was born in Greece. He imigrated to Sirmium (Metrovica, Yugoslavia), and was known for his gardening. He went into hiding for a time to escape a persecution of Christians that had just begun, and on his return, rebuked a lady for walking in his garden at an unseemly time. She reported to her husband that he had insulted her, and the husband, a member of the imperial guards, reported the matter to Emperor Maximian. Upon orders from the Emperor the governor investigated the matter, found Serenus innocent of insulting the woman, but while examining him, found that he was a Christian. When Serenus refused to sacrifice to pagan gods, he was beheaded. His feast day is February 23rd.


Serenus the Gardener, also known as "Serenus of Billom", "Sirenatus", and, in French, French: Cerneuf is a 4th-century martyr who is venerated by the Roman Catholic and Eastern Orthodox Churches.



Biography

According to pious legend, he was born in Greece;[3] quit his life there and decided to live a celibate life of penance and prayer; emigrated to Sirmium, Pannonia in the Roman Empire (presently Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia); purchased, cultivated, and lived off of a garden there; and was known for his horticultural skill. He rebuked the wife of a Roman imperial guard for walking in his garden with her daughters, this purportedly being contrary to the mores of the time without male accompaniment. Her pride wounded, the wife informed her husband of the affair in writing, and he reported Serenus to Emperor Maximian, who gave the husband a letter to deliver to the governor of Pannonia that permitted the governor to remedy the supposed injustice. On the testimony of Serenus to the governor, the husband retracted his accusation and the governor judged Serenus innocent of insulting the wife. However, the governor suspected from the words of Serenus' testimony that he might be a Christian, and inquired of his religion. When Serenus testified to being one and refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods, the governor had him decapitated on 23 February 307.[1][2]


Parts of this narrative are probably fictitious,[4] however according to Butler there may possibly be some historical basis to the story.[5]


A tradition centered in Clermont-Ferrand, France maintains that Austremonius sent Serenus to evangelize Thiers, also in Auvergne.[6]


Veneration


The Church of Saint-Cerneuf à Billom

The commune of Billom, Auvergne, France claimed a portion of Serenus' relics.[5] Serenus became known as "Saint Cerneuf" in France, and "L'église Saint-Cerneuf" (the Church of Saint Serenus" in Billom is dedicated to him)



St. Jurmin


Feastday: February 23

Death: 7th century


Prince of East Anglia, England, and a relative of King Anna . He is honored as a confessor, and his relics were enshrined at Bury St. Edmunds.


Anna (or Onna; killed 653 or 654) was king of East Anglia from the early 640s until his death.


He was a member of the Wuffingas family, the ruling dynasty of the East Angles, and one of the three sons of Eni who ruled the kingdom of East Anglia, succeeding some time after Ecgric was killed in battle by Penda of Mercia. Anna was praised by Bede for his devotion to Christianity and was renowned for the saintliness of his family: his son Jurmin and all his daughters – Seaxburh, Æthelthryth, Æthelburh and possibly a fourth, Wihtburh – were canonised.


Little is known of Anna's life or his reign, as few records have survived from this period. In 631 he may have been at Exning, close to the Devil's Dyke. In 645 Cenwalh of Wessex was driven from his kingdom by Penda and, due to Anna's influence, he was converted to Christianity while living as an exile at the East Anglian court. Upon his return from exile, Cenwalh re-established Christianity in his own kingdom and the people of Wessex then remained firmly Christian.


Around 651 the land around Ely was absorbed into East Anglia, following the marriage of Anna's daughter Æthelthryth. Anna richly endowed the coastal monastery at Cnobheresburg. In 651, in the aftermath of an attack by Penda on Cnobheresburg, Anna was forced to flee into exile, perhaps to the western kingdom of the Magonsæte. He returned to East Anglia in about 653, but soon afterwards the kingdom was attacked again by Penda and at the Battle of Bulcamp the East Anglian army, led by Anna, was defeated by the Mercians, and both Anna and his son Jurmin were killed. Anna was succeeded by his brother, Æthelhere. Botolph's monastery at Iken may have been built in commemoration of the king. After Anna's reign, East Anglia seems to have been eclipsed by its more powerful neighbour, Mercia.




Bl. Daniel Brottier


Feastday: February 23

Birth: 1876

Death: 1936

Beatified: November 25, 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Daniel Jules Alexis Brottier, C.S.Sp. (September 7, 1876 - February 28, 1936) was a French Roman Catholic priest in the Congregation of the Holy Ghost. He was awarded the Croix de guerre and the Légion d'honneur for his services as a chaplain during World War I, did missionary work in Senegal, and administered an orphanage in Auteuil, a suburb of Paris. He was declared venerable in 1983, and beatified on November 25, 1984, by Pope John Paul II.


Daniel Jules Alexis Brottier, C.S.Sp. (7 September 1876 – 28 February 1936), was a French Roman Catholic priest in the Congregation of the Holy Spirit (who currently refer to themselves as Spiritans). He was awarded the Croix de guerre and the Légion d'honneur for his services as a chaplain during World War I, did missionary work in Senegal, and administered an orphanage in Auteuil, a suburb of Paris. He was declared venerable in 1983, and then beatified on the 25 November 1984, by Pope John Paul II.


Early life

Brottier was born in La Ferté-Saint-Cyr, a commune in the Loir-et-Cher Department of France on 7 September 1876, the second son of Jean-Baptiste Brottier, coachman for the Marquis Durfort, and his wife Herminie (née Bouthe).[1] A story from his childhood recounts that his mother asked him what he would like to be when he grew up. Daniel's answer was, "I won't be either a general or a pastry chef—I will be the Pope!" His mother reminded him that to be the pope, he would first have to become a priest. Little Daniel piped up, "Well, then I'll become a priest!" [a] At the age of 10, Brottier made his First Communion, and enrolled a year later in the minor seminary at Blois. In 1896, at the age of 20, he did one year of military service at Blois.[2] He was ordained on 22 October 1899, after which he was assigned to teach for three years at a secondary school in Pontlevoy, France.[1]


Missionary work in Africa


A young Father Brottier in 1903, ready to set out for Senegal, posed for a picture with his parents, Jean-Baptiste and Herminie

Restless in his life as a teacher and determined to be a missionary, the young Abbé Brottier joined the Congregation of the Holy Spirit at Orly in 1902. After completing his novitiate, Brottier was sent by the congregation to serve as a vicar in a mission parish in Saint-Louis, Senegal in 1903. He was disappointed that he had been assigned to a city rather than the more difficult interior.[3]


Nevertheless, Brottier immediately set to work. He gave weekly instructions to secondary school students, founded a center for child welfare, and published a parish bulletin, The Echo of St. Louis.[3] His health suffered from the climate, however, and he spent a six-month period of convalescence in France in 1906.[1] In 1911 his poor health would force him to return to France for good.[4]


After his final departure from Senegal, Brottier spent a brief, but personally significant, stay at the Trappist monastery at Lérins—the same island monastery associated with Saint Patrick's preparation for evangelization in Ireland. Brottier had felt called to a more contemplative life than he had been living as a missionary in Africa, but the stay at Lérins rid him of that idea. As Brottier wrote to his sisters, "I lived unforgettable hours in the recollection of the cloister in an atmosphere of sacrifice and immolation. But the lack of sleep, and especially of food, wore me down, and after a few days I had to yield to the evidence: I was not made for this kind of life".[3]


Even after he had left Senegal, Brottier was asked by Bishop Hyacinthe Jalabert, the Apostolic Vicar of Senegal, to conduct a fund-raising campaign to build a cathedral in Dakar.[1] To this end, Brottier was appointed the Vicar General of Dakar, even though he was residing in Paris.[3] Brottier focused on this project for seven years over two periods (i.e., 1911–1914 and 1919–1923), the interlude being a result of the First World War.[3] The so-called "African Memorial Cathedral" was consecrated on February 2, 1936, just a few weeks before Brottier's death.


My secret is this: help yourself and heaven will help you. ... I have no other secret. If the good God worked miracles [at Auteuil], through Thérèse's intercession, I think I can say in all justice that we did everything, humanly speaking, to be deserving, and that they were the divine reward of our work, prayers and trust in providence.


—Daniel Brottier[3]

Service during World War I

At the outbreak of the First World War, Brottier became a volunteer chaplain for France's 121st Infantry Regiment. He was cited six times for bravery, and awarded the Croix de guerre and the Légion d'honneur. He attributed his survival on the front lines to the intercession of St. Thérèse of Lisieux, and built a chapel for her at Auteuil when she was canonized: the first church dedicated to the saint.[5] After the war, Brottier founded the National Union of Servicemen (L'Union Nationale des Combattants), an organization of French veterans of various conflicts.[1]


Work with the orphans of Auteuil

In November 1923, the Cardinal Archbishop of Paris, Louis-Ernest Dubois, asked the Congregation of the Holy Spirit to assume charge of an orphanage in an arrondissement of Paris, the Orphan Apprentices of Auteuil. Brottier, with his associate chaplain Yves Pichon, labored for 13 years to expand the facilities and worked for the welfare of the orphans. He dedicated his work to two aims: to save the most poor and unfortunate, and to dedicate those efforts to the intercession of Saint Thérèse.[1] In 1933, Brottier pioneered a program that placed the children in the households of Catholic paysans associated with the Orphan Apprentices. The fruit of his labors at Auteuil included the construction of workshops, opening a printing house and a cinema, and launching magazines. At the time of his arrival, the facility was in charge of 140 orphans; when Brottier died, there were more than 1,400.[1]


Particularly notable of Brottier's work with the orphans of Auteuil, and perhaps of his work in general, was his eagerness to expand to previously unexplored means of seeking financial support. An example of this is that he mastered the art of the camera and offered instruction on film making to the children. He even produced a popular film on the life of his personal patron, Saint Thérèse.[3]


Brottier died on 28 February 1936 in the Hospital of St. Joseph in Paris.[1] Fifteen thousand Parisians attended his funeral Mass.[2] He was buried in the Chapel of St. Thérèse in Auteuil on 5 April 1936.[1]


Veneration

Brottier was declared venerable on 13 January 1983 with a decree of heroic virtue by Pope John Paul II. He was beatified by John Paul II in Paris on 25 November 1984.[4] The cause for his canonization was greatly advanced by the claim, in 1962, that his body was as intact as on the day of his burial.[2] In addition, many miracles have been attributed to his intercession.[3] His feast day is celebrated by the Spiritan Fathers on 28 February



Saint Polycarp of Smyrna

புனிதர் பொலிகார்ப் 


(St. Polycarp)

மறைசாட்சி, திருச்சபை தந்தையர், ஆயர்:

(Martyr, Church Father and Bishop)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 69

இறப்பு: கி.பி. 156

ஸ்மைரனா, ஆசியா, ரோமப் பேரரசு

(Smyrna, Asia, Roman Empire)

ஏற்கும் சமயம்:


கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை


(Roman Catholic Church)


கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை


(Eastern Orthodox Church)


ஆங்கிலிக்கன் ஒன்றியம்


(Anglican Communion)


லூதரனியம்


(Lutheran Church)


ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை


(Oriental Orthodox Church)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஃபெப்ரவரி 23


சித்தரிக்கப்படும் வகை :

பாலியம் அணிந்தவாறு, ஒரு நூலினை ஏந்தியவாறு

பாதுகாவல்:

காது வலியால் அவதியுறுவோர், இரத்தக்கழிசல்


குறிப்பிடத்தக்க படைப்புகள்:


பொலிகார்ப் பிலிப்பியர்களுக்கு எழுதிய திருமுகம்


புனிதர் பொலிகார்ப், கி.பி. 2ம் நூற்றாண்டில் வாழ்ந்த, “ஸ்மைரனா” (Smyrna) நகரின் ஆயராவார். “பொலிகார்ப்பின் மறைசாட்சியம்” (Martyrdom of Polycarp) என்னும் நூலின்படி, அடுக்கப்பட்ட விரகுகளின்மீது இவரை வைத்து உயிருடன் தீயிட்டு கொளுத்த முயன்றபோது, தீ இவரை தொட தவறியதால், இவர் கத்தியால் குத்திக் கொலை செய்யப்பட்டார். கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை, கிழக்கு மரபுவழி திருச்சபை, ஓரியண்டல் மரபுவழி திருச்சபை, ஆங்கிலிக்கன் மற்றும் லூதரனியம் இவரை புனிதர் என ஏற்கின்றன.


இவரை “திருத்தூதர் யோவானின்” (John the Apostle) சீடர் என “இரனேயுஸ்” (Irenaeus) மற்றும் “டேர்டுல்லியன்” (Tertullian) ஆகியோர் குறிக்கின்றனர். பொலிகார்ப், யோவானின் சீடர் என்றும், யோவானே இவரை ஸ்மைர்னா நகரின் ஆயராக திருப்பொழிவு செய்தார் எனவும் புனிதர் ஜெரோம் (Saint Jerome) கூறியுள்ளார்.


“ரோமின் கிளமெண்ட்” (Clement of Rome) மற்றும் “அந்தியோக்குவின் இஞ்ஞாசியார்” (Ignatius of Antioch) ஆகியோரோடு புனித பொலிகார்ப்பும், அப்போஸ்தலிக்க தந்தையர்களுல் (Apostolic Fathers) மிக முக்கியமானவராகக் கருதப்படுகின்றார்.


இவரால் எழுதப்பட்டதாக தற்போது உள்ள ஒரே ஆவணம், பொலிகார்ப் பிலிப்பியர்களுக்கு எழுதிய திருமுகம் (Letter to the Philippians) ஆகும். இதனை முதன் முதலில் பதிவு செய்தவர் இரனேயு (Irenaeus of Lyons) ஆவார்.


பொலிகார்ப், ஆரம்பகால கிறிஸ்தவ திருச்சபை வரலாற்றில் ஒரு முக்கியமான இடத்தை ஆக்கிரமித்துள்ளார். ஆரம்பகால கிறிஸ்தவர்கள் பலருள் இவரது எழுத்துக்கள் இன்னமும் இருக்கின்றன. இவர், கிறிஸ்தவ திருச்சபைகளை நிறுவுவதில், பெரும் பங்களிப்பாக இருந்த ஒரு முக்கிய சபையின் மூப்பராவார். முக்கிய மரபுகளைக் கொண்டிருந்த இவருடைய சகாப்தம் அனைத்து திருச்சபைகளாலும் பரவலாக ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளப்பட்டன. விவிலிய அறிஞரான “டேவிட் ட்ரோபிக்” (David Trobisch) என்பவரின் கூற்றுப்படி, பொலிகார்ப் புதிய ஏற்பாட்டினை தொகுத்து, திருத்தி, வெளியிட்டவர்களுள் ஒருவராக இருந்திருக்கலாம். இவையனைத்தும், இவரது எழுத்துக்களை பெரும் ஆர்வம் கொண்டவைகளாக ஆக்கின

Profile

Associate of, converted by, and disciple of Saint John the Apostle. Friend of Saint Ignatius of Antioch and Saint Papias; spiritual teacher of Saint Irenaeus of Lyon. Fought Gnosticism. Bishop of Smyrna (modern Izmir, Turkey). Revered Christian leader during the first half of the second century. The Asia Minor churches recognized Polycarp's leadership and chose him representative to Pope Anicetus on the question the date of the Easter celebration. Only one of the many letters written by Polycarp has survived, the one he wrote to the Church of Philippi, Macedonia. At 86, Polycarp was to be burned alive in a stadium in Smyrna; the flames did not harm him and he was finally killed by a dagger, and his body burned. The Acts of Polycarp's martyrdom are the earliest preserved reliable account of a Christian martyr's death. Apostolic Father.



Born

c.69


Died

• stabbed to death c.155 at Smyrna

• body burned


Patronage

• against dysentery

• against earache




Saint Serenus the Gardener


Also known as

• Serenus of Billom

• Cerneuf, Serenusa, Sireno, Sinero, Sirenatus



Additional Memorial

10 May (in Billum, France)


Profile

Serenus abandoned his home and people to live as a hermit in Sirmiun, Pannonia (modern Hungary) where he directed his thought to prayer, his labour to working a garden of fruit and herbs.


One day he found a woman and her daughters walking in the garden around noon. He recommended they withdraw, and return in the cool of the evening, but the way he said it led her to believe he was simply chasing them out. The woman's husband was an imperial guard, and he convinced Emperor Maximian to avenge this imagined insult. Serenus was arrested and brought to trial, but simply repeated what he had said, and was immediately acquitted. However, his demeanor led the judge to suspect that Serenus was a Christian, which was illegal. When questioned about it, Serenus admitted his faith. He was ordered to sacrifice to pagan gods; he refused, and was sentenced to death.


His story was very popular in times past due to his being a simple man brought to ruin not through any fault of his own, but as a result of the arrogance of the ruling class, a theme which has resonated in many an age, and because many writers and preachers liked to use the metaphor of the garden as an example of a proper Christian life.


Born

Greece


Died

beheaded 23 February 303 at Sirmiun, Pannonia (modern Hungary)


Patronage

• bachelors

• falsely accused people

• gardeners



Saint Willigis of Mainz

மைன்ஸ் பேராயர் வில்லிஜிஸ் Willigis von Mainz

பிறப்பு 

10 ஆம் நூற்றாண்டு, 

நீடர்சாக்சன், ஜெர்மனி

இறப்பு 

23 பிப்ரவரி 1011, 

மைன்ஸ் Mainz, ஜெர்மனி

இவர் ஓர் ஏழைக் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். இவரது இளம் பருவத்தைப் பற்றி குறிப்புகள் ஏதும் வழங்கப்படவில்லை. 970 ஆம் ஆண்டு அரசர் 2 ஆம் ஓட்டோ என்பவர் இவரை மைசன் Meißen நகருக்கு ஆயராகத் தேர்ந்தெடுத்தார். அதன்பிறகு ஆயர் அரசரின் ஆலோசகராகவும் இருந்தார். பிறகு 975 ஆம் ஆண்டு மைன்ஸ் நகரின் பேராயராக தேர்ந்தெடுக்கப்பட்டார். முதல் ஜெர்மனி ஆயர் என்றழைத்த திருத்தந்தை 5 ஆம் கிரகோர் வில்லிஜிஸை உரோமிற்கு மாற்றினார். 


வில்லிஜிஸ் உரோமையில் 1002 ஆம் ஆண்டு அரசர் 2 ஆம் ஹென்றிக்கு அரசராக முடிசூட்டும் பட்டத்தை முன்னின்று வழிநடத்தினார். அதன்பிறகு அரசர் ஜெர்மனியிலுள்ள பாம்பெர்க்கிற்கு தன் இருப்பிடத்தை மாற்ற தேவையான உதவிகளை வில்லிஜிஸ் செய்துக் கொடுத்தார். பின்னர் ஏழை மக்களின் நல்வாழ்வுக்காக அரசரிடம் பெரிதும் பரிந்து பேசினார். ஒவ்வொரு நாளும் ஏறக்குறைய 30 ஏழைகள் தேவையான அளவு உணவு உட்கொள்ள ஏற்பாடு செய்து உதவினார். இவர் ஏழைகளின் தந்தை என்றழைக்கப்பட்டார். 

இவர் இறந்தபிறகு, மைன்சில் உள்ள புனித ஸ்டீபன் பேராலயத்தில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டு வணக்கம் செலுத்தப்பட்டது. செயின் ஸ்டீபன் ஆலயமானது வில்லிஜிஸ் அவர்கள்தான் ஆயராக இருக்கும் எழுப்பினார் என்று கூறப்படுகின்றது.

Profile

Son of a wheelwright. Well educated. Priest. Canon at Hildesheim, Germany. Noted speaker. Chaplain to Emperor Otto II. Chancellor of Germany in 971. Archbishop of Mainz, Germany in 973. Archchancellor of the Holy Roman Empire in 975. Vicar apostolic to Germany in 975, ordained by Pope Benedict VII. He crowned the infant Otto III as Holy Roman Emperor in 983, and served in the regencies of Empress Theophano and Empress Adelaide. Assisted at the consecration of Pope Gregory V in 996. Participated in the synod in 996, and spoke for the return of Saint Adalbert of Prague, whom he had consecrated as bishop, to his diocese. Worked to insure the choice of Emperor Henry II in 1002, and consecrated the the emperor. Presided at the Synod of Frankfort in 1007. He sent missionaries to Scandinavia, founded churches, built roads and bridges, supported artists and monasteries, and rebuilt the cathedral of Mainz. Though he was known as a brilliant statesman and politician, he was a Church man first, and was also known for the care he took in educating priests, and choosing them for their assignments.



Born

at Schoningen, Germany


Died

• 23 February 1011 of natural causes

• interred in the Church of Saint Stephen




Blessed Josephine Vannini


Also known as

• Giuditta Vannini

• Giuseppina Vannini



Profile

Orphaned as a small child. Raised in the Torlonia Conservatory on Via Sant' Onofrio, under the guidance of the Daughters of Charity of Saint Vincent de Paul. Entered the Daughters' novitiate in Siena, Italy, but was forced to leave due to poor health.


On retreat in 1891 she met Blessed Louis Tezza, procurator general of the Camillians. He had been thinking of founding a women's community for the care of the sick. He invited Josephine to help establish the new community, she prayed over it, and decided "yes." In 1892 she and two companions received the scapular of Camillian tertiaries, and a year later professed private vows, adding service to the sick, even at risk of their lives. They took their perpetual vows in 1895, and Josephine was elected Superior General. Blessed Louis was sent to Lima, Peru in 1900, responsibility for the new congregation rested with Mother Vannini, and under her leadership the congregation spread to France, Belgium and Argentina.


Born

7 July 1859 at Rome, Italy


Died

23 February 1911 in Rome, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

16 October 1994 by Pope John Paul II


Canonized

on 13 May 2019 Pope Francis promulgated a decree of a miracle received through the intercession of Blessed Josephine



Blessed Ludwik Mzyk


Also known as

• Ludivico Mzyk

• Ludvig Mzyk


Additional Memorial

12 June as one of the 108 Polish Martyrs



Profile

The fifth of ten children born in the family of a pious coal miner. Early feeling a call to the priesthood, Ludwyk entered the seminary in Heiligenkreuz in his teens; when there was a break in the classes, he would go home to work in the mines to help support his family. Joined the Society of the Divine Word. He continued his theological studies at the Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome, Italy. Ordained a priest on 30 October 1932. Served three years as director of novices at the Chludowie monastery near Poznan, Poland where he taught theology, and became rector of the house. When the German army invaded Poland in 1939, Father Ludwyk came into immediate conflict with the Gestapo for trying to defend his novices against Nazi demands and propaganda. He was arrested on 25 January 1940, and assigned to barracks 7 at the Poznan death camp. Between bouts of torture, Ludwyk ministered to other prisoners until the Nazis finally gave up trying to break him and simply killed him. Martyr.


Born

22 April 1905 in Chorzów, Slaskie, Poland


Died

23 February 1942 in Poznan, Wielkopolskie, Poland


Beatified

13 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Giovanni Theristi


Additional Memorial

24 February (monastery of Bivongi, Italy)


Also known as

• Giovanni Terestes

• Giovanni Theristus

• John the Reaper



Profile

When his mother was pregnant with Giovanni, she was enslaved and taken to Palermo, Sicily by Saracen raiders; his father was killed in the same attack. At age 14, Giovanni returned to his parent’s home town of Stilo, Italy and was baptized by his bishop, Giovanni, at one of the old monasteries around the town. The area Christians, including the bishop, were surprised and suspicious that a young man dressed as an Arab wanted to become a Christian. As an adult, Giovanni was drawn to religious life, and became an Eastern style monk. He would help reapers in the field and then give all he had earned to the poor. A miracle worker, he once prayed for help to save a harvest that was about to be destroyed by a storm; an angel appeared and instantly harvested the crop, saving the peasants from starving. Founded the monastery at Bivongi, Italy; the house was later re-named in his hounour.


Born

c.995 in Palermo, Italy


Died

• c.1050 in Stilo, Calabria, Italy of natural causes

• relics in the church of San Giovanni Theristi in Stilo, Italy


Patronage

Stilo, Italy



Blessed Alerinus de Rambaldis


Also known as

Alerino Rembaudi



Profile

Born to the Italian nobility, from his youth Alerinus was drawn to religious life. He became a canon of the cathedral of Alba, Italy, and was chosen bishop of Alba by Pope Martin V on 10 September 1419; he led the diocese for over 36 years.


Following a vision, Bishop Alerino rediscovered the lost burial site and relics of Blessed Theobald Roggeri on 31 January 1429; legend says that all the bells of the local churches rang out on their own the next morning. Alerino conducted the Synod of Alba in 1434. He invited the Augustinians to work in his diocese, supported the vocation and work of Blessed Margaret of Savoy, and in 1446 he laid the first stone of her Dominican monastery. On 27 April 1455, he translated the relics of Saint Frontiniano and others to the cathedral in Alba, and proclaimed 27 April to be the feast of the patrons of the city of Alba.


Born

late 14th century in Alba, Cuneo, Italy


Died

21 July 1456 of natural causes



Blessed Rafaela Ybarra Arambarri de Villalonga


Profile

Born to a wealthy and pious family, the daughter of Gutiérrez de Cabiedes and Rosaria de Arambarri y Mancebo. Rafeala was a pious girl, made her first Communion at age 11, and was given to long meditations on the suffering of Christ. In 1861, at age 18, she married the wealthy and pious Giuseppe Vilallonga of Catalonia. The couple had seven children of their own, and took in many relatives who were poor, sick, frail or neglected. In her mid-thirties, and with Giuseppe’s approval, Rafaela took personal vows of poverty, obedience and chastity. Widowed, she spent her life and fortune caring for others. She founded the Institute of the Sisters of Guardian Angels to work with abandoned and neglected children.



Born

16 January 1843 in Bilbao, Vizcaya, Spain


Died

23 February 1900 in Bilbao, Vizcaya, Spain


Beatified

30 September 1984 by Pope John Paul II



Saint Alexander Akimetes


Also known as

Alexandros


Profile

Born to the nobility. Studied in Constantinople. Soldier and officer in the imperial army for four years. Adult convert to Christianity who read himself into the faith, and took his example from the words of Christ to the young rich man - he sold all his goods and became a hermit in Syria for several years. At one point he came back to the city; there he burned a pagan temple, and was imprisoned; he spent his time there bringing his jailers to Christianity. Released, he returned to the life of a hermit for several years, but felt called missionary work, and worked in Antioch, but with no success. Founded monasteries in Mesopotamia, Constantinople and Gomon, and at one point led 400 monks. Converted Rabulas, bishop of Edessa. Alexander began the liturgical service in which his monks sang the Divine Office continuously day and night.


Born

4th century on one of the Aegean Islands of Greece


Died

403 in Gomon of natural causes



Saint Romana


Profile

Daughter of an imperial Roman official, Romana was drawn to Christianity. Around age 16, to avoid marriage, she fled her family home. With the help of an angel, she made it to the cave on Mount Soracte where Pope Saint Sylvester was hiding from the persecutions of Diocletian. She explained to him her desire for Christian religious life; he baptized her and left, leaving her the cave as a home. Her reputation for holiness soon spread, and she attracted so many students that they founded a community around her cave.


While such a saint may well have lived in the cave, and such people certainly attracted would-be students and followers, the tales that grew up around her are likely pious fiction that was later mistaken for history.


Born

c.308


Died

• c.324 in her cave on Mount Soracte near Rome, Italy of natural causes

• her parents were brought to the cave, and buried her there



Saint Milburga

புனித_மில்பர்கா (-715)

பிப்ரவரி 23





இவர் (#StMilburga) இங்கிலாந்தில் உள்ள மெர்சியாவை ஆண்ட ஒரு குறுநில மன்னரின் மகள்.

இவர் சிறு வயது முதலே கடவுள்மீது ஆழமான பற்றுறுதி கொண்டிருந்தவர். அதனால் இவர் வளர்ந்து பெரியவரானதும் புனித பெனடிக்ட் துறவற சபையில் சேர்ந்து, துறவியானார்.

சோபிஷேர் என்ற இடத்தில் துறவுமடத்தைத் தொடங்கிய இவர், அம்மடத்தின் தலைவியாக உயர்ந்தார்.

இவரது பகுதியில் இருந்த விளைநிலங்களில் பறவைகள் புகுந்து, கதிர்களையெல்லாம் நாசம் செய்தன. அப்பொழுது இவர் அதற்காக வேண்ட, பறவைகளின் தொந்தரவு  முற்றிலுமாகக் குறைந்தது.

இப்படிப் பல வல்ல செயல்களைச் செய்த 715 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Milburg, Milburge, Mildburg, Mildburga, Milburgh


Additional Memorial

25 June (translation of relics)


Profile

Daughter of Merewalh, King of Mercia, and Saint Ermenburga. Sister of Saint Mildred and Saint Mildgytha. Took the veil from archbishop Saint Theodore. Benedictine nun. Founded Much Wenlock abbey in Shropshire, England, and was abbess there. Miracle worker. Had a mysterious power over birds; they would avoid damaging the local crops when she asked them to.


Born

7th century England


Died

• 715 at the Much Wenlock Abbey, Shropshire, England of natural causes

• relics re-discovered in 1101 and enshrined in the nearby priory church


Patronage

birds



Blessed Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski


Profile

Ordained on 13 March 1937. Arrested by the Gestapo in 1939, Stefan was shuttled through the concentration camps Fort Seven, Stutthof, Grenzdorf, Oranienburg-Sachsenhausen and finally Dachau. Spiritual leader of other prisoners wherever he was imprisoned. He contracted typhus while working with fellow prisoners dying of the disease, and is thus considered a martyr of charity.



Born

22 January 1913 in Chelmza, Poland


Died

23 February 1945 of typhus at the Dachau concentration camp, Germany


Beatified

7 June 1999 by Pope John Paul II at Torun, Poland



Blessed Nicolas Tabouillot


Profile

Priest in the diocese of Verdun, France. Imprisoned on a ship in the harbor of Rochefort, France and left to die during the anti-Catholic persecutions of the French Revolution. One of the Martyrs of the Hulks of Rochefort.



Born

16 February 1745 in Bar-le-Duc, Meuse, France


Died

23 February 1795 of unspecified disease aboard the prison ship Washington, in Rochefort, Charente-Maritime, France


Beatified

1 October 1995 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Milo of Benevento


Also known as

• Milo of Auvergne

• Milone...


Profile

Studied for the priesthood in Paris, France. Priest in Auvergne, France. Canon of the cathedral of Auvergne. He was the teacher of the young Saint Stephen of Muret. Milo’s reputation for piety led to the people of Benevento, Italy to choose him as their bishop where he served the remaining two years of his life.


Born

Auvergne, France


Died

c.1073 in Benevento, Italy of natural causes



Blessed Giovannina Franchi


Profile

Born to a wealthy family, she grew up wanting and working to help the poor. Nun in the diocese of Como, Italy. Founded the Nursing Sisters of Our Lady of Sorrows.


Born

24 June 1807 in Como, Italy


Died

23 February 1872 in Como, Italy of smallpox


Beatified

20 September 2014 by Pope Francis



Saint Boswell


Also known as

Boisil


Profile

Spiritual student of Saint Aidan of Lindisfarne. Monk. Abbot at the abbey of Melrose, Scotland. Teacher and spiritual director of Saint Cuthbert of Lindisfarne and Saint Eghert. Bible scholar. Had the gift of prophecy. Noted preacher.


Born

Northumbrian (in modern England)


Died

• 661 of the yellow plague

• relics at Durham, England



Blessed Juan Lucas Manzanares


Also known as

Braulio Carlos


Profile

Professed religious in the Brothers of the Christian Schools (De La Salle Brothers). Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

10 December 1913 in Cortiji-Lorca, Murcia, Spain


Died

23 February 1937 in Madrid, Spain


Beatified

13 October 2013 by Pope Francis



Blessed Anselm of Milan


Profile

15th century Franciscan friar. His body is enshrined in the church of Santa Maria della Pace in Milan, Italy, but all records about him have been lost, and we know nothing about him.


Died

1481



Saint Martha of Astorga


Profile

Virgin martyr in the persecutions of Decius.


Died

• beheaded in 250 at Astorga, Spain

• relics enshrined in the abbey of Ribas de Sil and at Ters



Saint Zebinus of Syria


Profile

Hermit in Syria. Spiritual teacher of many monks, including Saint Maro and Saint Polychronius.


Died

5th century of natural causes



Saint Medrald


Also known as

Merald, Merault, Meraut


Profile

Benedictine monk at Saint-Evroult, Ouche, France. Abbot of Vendome, France.


Died

850 of natural causes



Saint Felix of Brescia


Profile

Bishop of Brescia, Italy for 40 years. Fierce opponent of Arianism.


Born

6th century


Died

650



Saint Polycarp of Rome


Profile

Priest in Rome, Italy who was known for his ministry to people imprisoned for their faith.


Died

c.300



Saint Dositheus of Egypt


Profile

Sixth-century desert hermit whose deep prayer life led to deep personal holiness.


Born

Egypt



Blessed John of Hungary


Profile

Born

French


Died

1287 of natural causes



Saint Ordonius


Profile

Benedictine monk in Sahagun, Leon, Spain. Bishop of Astorga, Spain in 1062.


Died

1066 of natural causes



Saint Florentius of Seville


Profile

Martyr.


Died

c.485 in Seville, Spain



Martyrs of Syrmium 


Profile

73 Christians who were martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian. We know no details about them, and only six of their names - Antigonus, Libius, Rogatianus, Rutilus, Senerotas and Syncrotas.


Died

c.303 at Syrmium, Pannonia (modern Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia)


21 February 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 22

 Bl. Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski


Feastday: February 22

Patron: of Polish Scouts

Birth: 1913

Death: 1945

Beatified: Pope John Paul II


Blessed Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski (b. January 22, 1913 - February 23, 1945 in Dachau) was a Polish priest, scout and is patron of Polish Scouts



Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski (22 January 1913 – 23 February 1945) was a Polish Roman Catholic priest.[1] He was part of the scouts and was affiliated with several other groups during the course of his ecclesial education though maintained strong links to these groups after his ordination to the priesthood. He was arrested not long after World War II began and the Gestapo moved him to several concentration camps before sending him to Dachau where he died from disease.[2][3]


Frelichowski was beatified in Poland in 1998.


Life

Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski was born on 22 January 1913 in Chełmża as the third of seven children to the baker Ludwika Frelichowski and Marta Olszewska.[1] His siblings were: Czesław, Leonard (then himself after), Vincent, Eleanor, Stefania and Marcjanna Marta.


In 1923 he began his high school studies at Pelpin where on 26 May 1927 he was admitted into the Sodality of the Blessed Virgin. He joined the scouts on 21 March 1927 and he later Frelichowski served as its patrol leader and later as the troop leader; on 26 June 1927 he was promoted to a different scout rank. In June 1931 he graduated from high school and then went on to commence his studies to become a priest. He was an active member of the Scout Club while he underwent his ecclesial studies.[1] Furthermore, he was an active member of the Christian Life group in Chełmża. Since he was nine he had been an Altar server. During his education for the priesthood in Pelpin he was active in the temperance movement and collaborated with Caritas.[2][3]


On 14 March 1937 he received his ordination to the priesthood in the Pelpin Cathedral from Bishop Stanisław Wojciech Okoniewski. He first served the bishop as an aide and then served as a priest in Pelpin and in Toruń before continuing his studies at the Lwów college. In Toruń he was responsible for the parish press and from 1 July 1938 was the vicar of the Assumption parish church. In 1938 he became the leader of the Old Scouts and the chaplain of the scout district of Pomerania.[3]



Registration card of Stefan Wincenty Frelichowski as a prisoner at Dachau Nazi Concentration Camp

The Gestapo arrested him on 11 September 1939 along with all parish priests in his area and released most of them save for him on 12 September. On 18 October 1939 and he was imprisoned in the Fort VII camp on a temporary basis before being sent on 8 January 1940 with around 200 prisoners to another camp. On 10 January 1940 he was sent to the concentration camp at Stutthof and then later on 6 April to Grenzdorf and Sachsenhausen before being sent to Dachau as his final destination on 13 December 1940.


Frelichowski contracted typhus while tending to prisoners who had the disease and he also contracted pneumonia. He died on 23 February 1945 and his remains were lined in a white sheet decorated with flowers before he was cremated. But before that the prisoner Stanisław Bieniek made a death mask and a cast of the late priest's right hand.[2]


Beatification

The beatification cause started in a diocesan process spanning from 1964 until closure on 18 February 1995 at which point the Congregation for the Causes of Saints validated it in Rome on 12 May 1995. The formal introduction came on 12 November 1993 and he was title as a Servant of God. The postulation sent the Positio to the C.C.S. in 1998 and theologians approved it later on 15 December 1998 as did the C.C.S. on 16 February 1999. Pope John Paul II approved his beatification on 26 March 1999 after confirming that Frelichowski died "in odium fidei" ("with odor of the faith") and so beatified him later while in Poland on 7 June 1999.


On 22 March 2002 he was made the patron for Polish scouts after the Congregation for Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments approved the request that had been lodged in 1999



Chair of Peter

திருத்தூதர் பேதுருவின் தலைமைப் பீடம்

விழா (22-02-2021) 

புனித பேதுருவின் தலைமைப் பீடம்

தலைமை திருத்தூதரான பேதுரு, அந்தியோக்கு நகரில் நற்செய்திப் பணியாற்றிக்கொண்டிந்தபோது அந்நகரின் ஆளுநராக இருந்த தியோப்பிலிஸ் என்பவன் பேதுருவைக் கைதுசெய்து சிறையில் அடைத்தான். சிறையில் இருந்த பேதுருவுக்கு அவன் சரியாக தண்ணீர், உணவு கூடக் கொடுக்கவில்லை. இதனால் அவர் மிகவும் கஷ்டப்பட்டார். அப்போது அவர் வானத்தை அண்ணார்ந்து பார்த்து வேண்டினார், “இயேசுவே! என் தலைவரே! எனக்கு எதற்கு இத்தகைய கொடிய தண்டனை?” .அதற்கு ஆண்டவர் இயேசு அவருக்கு இவ்வாறு பதிலுரைத்தார். “பேதுரு! நான் உன்னை ஒருபோதும் கைவிட்டுவிடமாட்டேன் என்று உனக்குத் தெரியாதா?, சிறுது பொறுத்திருந்து பார். எல்லாமே நல்லதாகவே நடக்கும்”.

இந்நேரத்தில் பேதுரு கைது செய்யப்பட்டு சிறையில் அடைக்கப்பட்டிருக்கிறார் என்ற செய்தியைக் கேள்விப்பட்ட பவுல் அந்தியோக்கியா நகர் ஆளுநரைச் சந்தித்து, “நீங்கள் சிறை பிடித்து வைத்திருக்கும் மனிதர் சாதாரண மனிதர் கிடையாது. அவர் இறை மனிதர். அவரால் இறந்துபோன உங்களது மகனை உயிர்த்தெழ வைக்க முடியும்” என்றார். இதைக் கேட்டு ஆச்சரியப்பட்ட ஆளுநன் தியோப்பிலிஸ், “ஒருவேளை நீ சொல்வது உண்மையானால், நான் அவரை விடுதலை செய்து அனுப்புவேன்” என்றான். பின்னர் பவுல் ஆளுநனோடு சிறைகூடத்திற்கு வந்து, பேதுருவை இறந்த ஆளுநனின் மகனை உயிர்பெற்றழச் செய்யும்படி கேட்டுக்கொண்டார். அதற்கு பேதுரு, “அது எப்படி என்னால் முடியும்?” என்று சொல்ல, “இறைவனை வேண்டிவிட்டு காரியத்தில் இறங்கு, எல்லாம் உன்னால் முடியும்” என்றார். பவுல்.


உடனே பேதுரு இறைவனிடம் உருக்கமாக வேண்டிவிட்டு, பதினான்கு ஆண்டுகளுக்கு முன்பாக இறந்துபோன ஆளுநனின் மகனை உயிர்த்தெழச் செய்தார். இதைக் கண்டு பிரமித்துப் போன ஆளுநன், பேதுருவை விடுதலைசெய்ததோடு மட்டுமல்லாமல், அந்தியோக்கு நகரில் இருந்த மக்கள் அனைவரையும் ஆண்டவரில் நம்பிக்கை கொள்ளச் செய்தான். மேலும் நகரின் மையத்தில் ஒரு பெரிய ஆலயம் கட்டி, அதன் நடுவே ஓர் அரியணையை நிறுவி, அதில் பேதுருவை அமரச் செய்தான். இவ்வாறு அந்தியோக்கு நகரில் இருந்த மக்கள் அனைவரும் பேதுரு பேசுவதை கேட்கக்கூடிய அளவில் அந்த அரியணையை நிறுவினான். அங்கே பேதுரு ஏழு ஆண்டுகள் நற்செய்திப் பணியாற்றினார். பின்னர் அவர் உரோமைக்குச் சென்று நற்செய்தி அறிவித்து மறைசாட்சியாக கிறிஸ்துவுக்காக தன்னுடைய இன்னுயிரைத் துறந்தார். ( பேதுருவின் தலைமைப்பீடம் தொடர்பாக சொல்லப்படும் ஒரு தொன்மம்)


வரலாற்றுப் பின்னணி


இன்று நாம் பேதுருவின் தலைமைப் பீட விழாவைக் கொண்டாடுகின்றோம். இந்த நாளில் ஆண்டவர் இயேசு பேதுருவுக்குக் கொடுத்த ஆட்சியுரிமையை, அதிகாரத்தை சிறப்பாக நினைவுகூர்ந்து பார்க்கின்றோம்.

நற்செய்தியில் ஆண்டவர் இயேசு பேதுருவிடம், “உன் பெயர் பேதுரு. இந்தப் பாறையின் மேல் என் திருச்சபையைக் கட்டுவேன். பாதாளத்தின் வாயில்கள் அதன்மேல் வெற்றிகொள்ளா. விண்ணரசின் திறவுகோல்களை நான் உன்னிடம் தருவேன். மண்ணுலகில் நீ தடை செய்வது விண்ணுலகிலும் தடை செய்யப்படும். மண்ணுலகில் நீ அனுமதிப்பது விண்ணுலகிலும் அனுமதிக்கப்படும்” என்கிறார் (மத் 16: 18 -19). இவ்வார்த்தைகளைக் கொண்டு, இயேசு கிறிஸ்து பேதுருவை திருச்சபையின் தலைவராக ஏற்படுத்தி அதனைக் கட்டிக்காக்கின்ற எல்லாப் பொறுப்புகளையும் கொடுத்துவிட்டார் என நாம் புரிந்துகொள்ளலாம்.


நற்செய்தியின் இன்னும் ஒருசில இடங்களிலும் இயேசு, பேதுருவின் தலைமைப் பொறுப்பை வலியுறுத்திக் கூறுகின்றார். “சீமோனே! சீமோனே! நான் உனது நம்பிக்கை தளராதிருக்க உனக்காக மன்றாடினேன். நீ மனந்திரும்பியபின் உன் சகோதரர்களை உறுதிபடுத்து” என்று வார்த்தைகளிலும் (லூக் 22:32), “என் ஆடுகளை பேணி வளர்” என்ற வார்த்தைகளிலும் இது மிகத் தெளிவாக வெளிப்படுகிறது. ஆகவே, பேதுருவை ஆண்டவர் இயேசு திருச்சபையின் தலைவராக ஏற்படுத்தி, அதனை கட்டிகாட்டும் எல்லாப் பொறுப்புகளையும் அவருக்கும் அவர் வழிவரும் திருத்தந்தையர், மற்றும் ஆயர்களுக்கும் கொடுத்திருக்கிறார் என நாம் புரிந்துகொள்ளலாம்.


பேதுரு தனக்குக் கொடுக்கப்பட்ட அதிகாரத்தை சிறப்பாக செயல்படுத்தினார் என்பதையும் நாம் விவிலியத்தின் பல பகுதிகளிலிருந்தும் வாசிக்கின்றோம். மக்கள் அனைவரும் கூடியிருந்தபோது பேதுருதான் எல்லார் சார்பாகவும் பேசுகின்றார் (திப 2). அதேபோன்று பேதுரு ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவிடமிருந்து வல்லமையையும் அதிகாரத்தையும் பெற்றிருக்கிறார் என்பதை அவரால் ஆகும் வல்ல செயல்கள் வழியாகக் காண முடிகின்றது. இயேசு எப்படி இறந்தவர்களை உயிர்பித்தாரோ அது போன்று பேதுருவும் இறந்த தபித்தா என்ற பெண்மணியை உயிர்பிக்கின்றார். இயேசுவின் நிழல்பட்ட நோயாளிகள் எப்படி குணமடைந்தார்களோ அதுபோன்று பேதுருவின் நிழல் பட்ட நோயாளிகள் குணமடைந்தார்கள். இவ்வாறு பேதுரு, தான் ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவிடமிருந்து அதிகாரத்தை வல்லமையைப் பெற்றுகொண்டவர் என்பதை வெளிபடுத்தினார்.


பேதுருவின் தலைமைப்பீடத்திற்குக் அல்லது அவரது அதிகாரத்திற்கு மரியாதை செலுத்தக்கூடிய மரபு தொடக்கக் காலத்திலிருந்தே இருந்திருந்திருக்கிறது என்பதை அந்தியோக்கு நகர இஞ்ஞாசியாரின் எழுத்துக்களிலிருந்து நாம் கண்டுகொள்ளலாம். அவர் பேதுருவுக்கும் அவருக்குப் பின்னால் வந்த திருத்தந்தையர்களுக்கும் தகுந்த மரியாதை செலுத்தினார். அதேபோன்று லியோன்ஸ் நகர எரேனியுசும் இதற்கு தகுந்த மரியாதை செலுத்தினார் என நாம் அறிகின்றோம்.


சுருக்கமாகச் சொல்லவேண்டுமானால் பேதுருவின் தலைமை என்பது குருத்துவத்திற்கும் குருமரபினருக்கும் நாம் எந்தளவுக்கு மரியாதை செலுத்துகிறோம் என்பதைக் குறித்துக் காட்டுவதாக இருக்கின்றது.

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The feast of the Chair of Saint Peter in general about the formation of the Church when Christ said, “You are Peter and on this rock I will build my Church.” It has been celebrated at Rome, Italy from the early days of the Christian era on 18 January, in commemoration of the day when Saint Peter held his first service in Rome. The feast of the Chair of Saint Peter at Antioch, commemorating his foundation of the See of Antioch, has also been long celebrated at Rome, on 22 February. At each place a chair (cathedra) was venerated which the Apostle had used while presiding at Mass. One of the chairs is referred to about 600 by an Abbot Johannes who had been commissioned by Pope Gregory the Great to collect in oil from the lamps which burned at the graves of the Roman martyrs. One of these phials, preserved in the cathedral treasury of Monza, Italy, had a label reading, "oleo de sede ubi prius sedit sanctus Petrus" (oils from the chair where Saint Peter first sat). The Mass for both feast days is the same; the Collect is as follows:



"Oh, God, who, together with the power of the keys of the kingdom of heaven, didst bestow on blessed Peter Thy Apostle the pontificate of binding and loosing, grant that by the aid of his intercession we may be released from the yoke of our sins."


The image is a portable chair preserved at the Vatican and believed to be a chair used by Saint Peter, the extant testimony referring to it dating from the 2nd century.




Saint Margaret of Cortona

 கார்ட்டோனா நகர் புனிதர் மார்கரெட் 

(St. Margaret of Cortona)

நோயாளிகளின்பால் இரக்கம் கொண்டவர், நிறுவனர்:

(Tender of Sick and Foundress)

பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1247

டுஸ்கனி, இத்தாலி

(Tuscany, Italy)

இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 22, 1297

கொர்டோனா, இத்தாலி

(Cortona, Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

மூன்றாம் நிலை புனித ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சபை, ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Third Order of St. Francis, Roman Catholic Church)


புனிதர்பட்டம்: மே 16, 1728

திருத்தந்தை 13ம் பெனடிக்ட்

(Pope Benedict XIII)

பாதுகாவல்:

மயக்குதலுக்கெதிராக (Against Temptations), பொய்யாக குற்றம் சாட்டப்பட்டவர்கள் (Falsely Accused People), வீடற்றவர்கள் (Homeless People),


பித்துப்பிடித்த நிலை (Insanity), பெற்றோரை இழப்பு (Loss of Parents), மன நோய் (Mental Illness), மன நோயாளிகள் (Mentally Ill People), தாதிகள் (Midwives),

செய்த பிழைக்கு மனம் வருந்தும் பெண்கள் (Penitent Women), தனியாகவுள்ள தாய்மார்கள் (Single Mothers), தமது பக்திக்காக பரிகாசம் செய்யப்பட்டவர்கள் (People Ridiculed for their Piety), திருந்திய விபச்சாரிகள் (Reformed Prostitutes), பாலியல் மயக்குதல் (Sexual Temptation), பொதுநிலைப் பெண்கள் (Single Laywomen), மூன்றாம் குழந்தைகள் (Third Children)


நினைவுத் திருநாள்: ஃபெப்ரவரி 22


புனிதர் மார்கரெட், இத்தாலி நாட்டைச் சேர்ந்த “மூன்றாம் நிலை புனித ஃபிரான்சிஸ் சபையைச்” (Third Order of St. Francis) சேர்ந்த துறவி ஆவார்.

இவர், "ச்சியுசி" (Diocese of Chiusi) மறை மாவட்டத்தின் அருகேயுள்ள "லாவியானோ" (Laviano) என்ற சிறிய நகரிலே விவசாய குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர் ஆவார். இவருக்கு ஏழு வயதாகையில் இவரது தாயார் மரித்துப் போனார். தந்தை மறுமணம் செய்துகொண்டார். வளர்ப்புத் தாயாரின் சிறு அன்பிலே அடங்காத, தன்னிச்சையான, பொறுப்பற்ற பெண்ணாக மார்கரெட் வளர்ந்தார்.

இவருக்கு பதினேழு வயதாகையில், "வாலியானோ" (Valiano) நகரின் பிரபுவான "கூக்ளியேமோ" (Gugliemo di Pecora) என்பவரின் மகனான இளைஞனை சந்தித்தார். அந்த இளைஞனுடன் வீட்டை விட்டு ஓடிப் போனார். விரைவிலேயே தாம் "மான்டேபல்சியானோ" (Montepulciano) என்ற இடத்தினருகேயுள்ள ஒரு கோட்டை அரண்மனையில் குடியிருத்தப்பட்டிருப்பதை உணர்த்த மார்கரெட், தாம் அங்கே அவ்விளைஞனின் மனைவியாக வாழவில்லை என்பதை உணர்ந்தார். பிறர் எவரையும் சந்திக்கவோ பேச அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டிருக்கவில்லை. இருந்தாலும் அவனது மனைவி என்ற நினைப்பே அவரை இதற்காகவெல்லாம் பொறுத்துக்கொள்ள வைத்தது. பல சமயங்களில், விரைவில் அவரை திருமணம் செய்துகொள்வதாக வாக்களித்திருந்தான். ஆனால், அப்படி ஒரு நாள் வரவேயில்லை. இருந்தும், சுமார் பத்து வருடங்கள் இவ்வாறு அவனுடன் வாழ்ந்த மார்கரெட் அவனுக்கு ஒரு ஆண் குழந்தையை ஈன்று கொடுத்தார்.

ஒருநாள், வெளியே சென்றிருந்த மார்கரெட்டின் காதலன் திரும்பி வரவில்லை. அவனுடன் சென்றிருந்த அவனுடைய பிரியமான வேட்டை நாய் மட்டும் அவனில்லாமலேயே திரும்பி வந்தது. எச்சரிக்கை அடைந்த மார்கரெட்டை அவனுடைய வேட்டை நாய் காட்டுக்குள் அழைத்துச் சென்றது. அங்கே, அவனுடைய உயிரற்ற உடலையே காணக் கிடைத்தது.


இந்த அதிர்ச்சி மார்கரெட்டை செப மற்றும் தப வாழ்வில் ஈடுபட வைத்தது. தமது காதலன் தமக்கு தந்திருந்த பரிசுப்பொருட்களை அங்கேயே விட்டு விட்டு, தமது மகனை மட்டும் அழைத்துக்கொண்டு அவர் தமது தந்தையின் இல்லம் சென்றார். ஆனால், அவரது வளர்ப்புத் தாயார் அவரை ஏற்றுக்கொள்ளவில்லை. மனம் வெறுத்துப்போன மார்கரெட், தமது மகனுடன் "கார்ட்டோனா" (Cortona) எனும் இடத்திலுள்ள ஃபிரான்சிஸ்கன் (Franciscan Friars) துறவு மடம் சென்று தஞ்சமடைந்தார். அங்கே, அவரது மகன் ஒரு துறவியானார். மார்கரெட் புலால் உணவு வகைகளைத் தவிர்த்து, காய்கறி மற்றும் ரொட்டி போன்றவற்றையே உண்டு வாழ்ந்தார்.


மூன்று வருட சோதனை காலத்தின் (Probation) பின்னர், கி.பி. 1277ம் ஆண்டு, புனித ஃபிரான்ஸிசின் மூன்றாம் நிலை துறவு சபையில் (Third Order of Saint Francis) இணைந்தார். புனிதர் ஃபிரான்சிசை முன்மாதிரியாகக் கொண்ட மார்கரெட், அன்றாட உணவுக்கும் வாழ்வாதாரத்துக்கும் பிச்சை எடுத்து உண்டார்.


"கார்ட்டோனா'வில்" (Cortona) செப தப வாழ்க்கையை மேற்கொண்ட மார்கரெட் நோயுற்ற, வீடற்ற மற்றும் ஏழைகளுக்காக அங்கேயே ஒரு மருத்துவமனையை உருவாக்கினார். அம்மருத்துவமனையின் செவிலியர்க்காக "மூன்றாம் நிலை சகோதரிகள் சபை" (Congregation of Tertiary Sisters) என்றொரு அமைப்பினை நிறுவினார். அவர், "இரக்கத்தின் அன்னை" (Our Lady of Mercy) என்றொரு சபையையும் நிறுவினார். அதன் உறுப்பினர்களும் மருத்துவமனையின் நோயாளிகளுக்கு சேவை செய்வதிலேயே ஈடுபடுத்தப்பட்டனர்.


ஒருநாள், செபம் செய்துகொண்டிருந்த மார்கரெட்டின் காதுகளில், "நீ என்ன விரும்புகிறாய் எளிய சிறு பெண்ணே?" (What is your wish, poverella ("little poor one?”) என்றொரு கேள்வி அசரீரியாகக் கேட்டது. அதற்கு பதிலாக, "ஆண்டவர் இயேசுவே, நீரன்றி வேறெதுவும் எனக்கு வேண்டாம்" என்று பதிலளித்தார்.

பல சந்தர்ப்பங்களில், மார்கரெட் பொது விவகாரங்களில் பங்கேற்றார். இரண்டு முறை தெய்வீக கட்டளைகளைப் பின்பற்றி, ஒரு இளவரசனைப் போல சொகுசு வாழ்க்கை வாழ்ந்த “அரேஸோவின் ஆயர்” (Bishop of Arezzo) “குகிலியேமோ உபெர்டினி பஸ்ஸி” (Guglielmo Ubertini Pazzi) என்பவருக்கேதிராக சவால் விட்டார்.


சில காலத்தின் பின்னர் பாழ்பட்டுப்போன அன்றைய "புனித பாசில்" (Church of St Basil) தேவாலயத்திற்குச் (தற்போது – தூய மார்கரிட்டா தேவாலயம் - Santa Margherita) சென்ற மார்கரெட், மீதமுள்ள தமது காலத்தை அங்கேயே செலவிட்டார். பின்னர், கி.பி. 1297ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம், 22ம் நாள், மரணமடைந்தார்.

Profile

Farmer's daughter. Her mother died when Margaret was seven years old, and her step-mother considered the girl a nuisance. Margaret eloped with a young nobleman from Montepulciano, bore him a son, and lived as his mistress for nine years. In 1274 he was murdered by brigands, and his body dumped in a shallow grave.


Margaret saw the incident as a sign from God. She publicly confessed to the affair, and tried to return to her father's house; he would not accept her. She and her son took shelter with the Friars Minor at Cortona. Still young and attractive, Margaret sometimes had trouble resisting temptation, but each incident was followed by periods of deep self-loathing. To make herself unappealing to local young men, she once tried to mutilate herself, but was stopped by a friar named Giunta.



She earned her keep by tending to sick women. She later began caring for the sick poor, living on alms, asking nothing for her services. She became a Franciscan tertiary in 1277. Margaret developed an deep and intense prayer life, and was given to ecstacies during which she received messages from heaven.


In 1286 Margaret received a charter to work with the sick poor. She gathered others of like mind, and formed them into a community of tertiaries. They were later given the status of a congregation, and called the Poverelle (Poor Ones). With them she founded a hospital at Cortona. Margaret preached against vice of all sorts to any who would listen. She developed a great devotion to the Eucharist and Passion, and prophesied the date of her own death.


Though she worked for those in need, and though the poor sought her help and advice, the calumny of her earlier life followed her the rest of her days, and she was forever the target of local gossips.


Born

1247 at Loviano, Tuscany, Italy


Died

22 February 1297 at Cortona, Italy of natural causes


Canonized

16 May 1728 by Pope Benedict XIII


Patronage

• against insanity or mental illness

• against sexual temptation

• against temptations

• falsely accused people

• hoboes, tramps

• homeless people

• against the death of parents

• mentally ill people

• midwives

• penitent women

• people ridiculed for their piety

• reformed prostitutes

• single laywomen

• tertiaries

• Arezzo-Cortona-Sansepolcro, Italy, diocese of

• Cortona, Italy, diocese of

• Cortona, Italy



Blessed Richard Henkes


Profile

One of eight children in the family of a stone mason. His mother taught the children religion, and would sprinkle them with holy water each night before bed. Attracted to the idea of mission work, Richard joined the Pallotines in 1919. Spiritual student of the Servant of God Joseph Kentenich. Ordained to the priesthood on 6 June 1925 in the diocese of Limburg, Germany. Teacher in several Pallottine and Schoenstatt schools beginning in 1926. In 1927 he diagnosed with tuburculosis, and collapsed from exhaustion; there was thought to transfer him to South Africa for his health, but he was considered too sick to surive such a trip. By 1928 he was somewhat recovered, and insisted on resuming teaching. In 1931 he was assigned to schools in Upper Silesia.



A skilled and popular preacher and retreat leader, Richard was known for condemning the ideology and actions of the Nazis, especially the murder of disabled people and others considered an unproductive burden on society. He was arrested for this on 7 March 1937 in Roppach, Germany, but was warned and released. Father Richard became an indirect collaborator with the Resistance, and spoke so forcefully and so often against the Nazis that his superiors began to worry that the Nazis would retaliate against the school where Richard taught. He was arrested again on 8 April 1943 in Branitz, Germany for making political statements, and was imprisoned first at Ratibor, Germany, and then in the Dachau concentration camp where he was forced to do manual labour for the SS, and where he would remain the rest of his life. He became friends with fellow prisoner and future Cardinal, Josef Beran, who taught Father Richard the Czech language so he could help minister to imprisoned Czechs. When typhoid broke out in the camp, Father Richard volunteer to minister to the sick until he contracted the illness himself. Martyr.


Born

26 May 1900 in Ruppach, diocese of Limburg, Westerwald, Germany


Died

• 22 February 1945 in cell block 17 of the Dachau concentration camp, Germany of typhoid he had contracted while caring for fellow prisoners

• body cremated

• ashes smuggled out of the camp and given Christian burial in Limburg, Germany on 7 June 1945

• ashes re-interred in Limburg in 1990


Venerated

21 December 2018 by Pope Francis (decree of martyrdom)


Beatified

• 15 September 2019 by Pope Francis

• the beatification recognition was celebrated at the Cathedral of Sankt–Georg in Limburg, Germany with Cardinal Kurt Koch as chief celebrant



Blessed Émilie d'Oultremont d'Hoogvorst


Also known as

• Émilie d'Oultremont van der Linden d'Hooghvorst

• Marie of Jesus

• Mary of Jesus


Profile

Born to the nobility, the daughter of Count d'Emile Oultremont de Wégimont a de Warfusée, a diplomat who represented King Leopold I to the Vatican. From childhood émilie had a great devotion to the Eucharist and the Sacred Heart of Jesus; she later developed a great admiration of Saint Ignatius of Loyola. Married to Victor van der Linden, Baron d'Hooghvorst in 1837. Mother of two boys and two girls. She sought out Jesuits for spiritual guidance. Widowed in 1847. When her sons entered college in France, she decided to move, too.


On 8 December 1854, the day the dogma of Mary's Immaculate Conception was proclaimed, émilie experienced a profound spiritual experience and announced she was going into religious life. With a small group of young women, she founded the Institutum a Maria Reparatrice (Sisters of Mary Reparatrix) on 1 May 1857 in Strasbourg, France. On 2 May 1858 Emilie made her vows, taking the name Mary of Jesus. Soon after her daughters joined the Sisters, which caused even more turmoil in her family; few had supported her entering religious life, and many complained that the girls had followed only for her mother's sake.


In 1859 Mother Marie received a request for help from Jesuit missionaries in Madras, India. The Sisters expanded to India in 1860, England in 1862, Belgium in 1863, Mauritius in 1866, France, Italy, Ireland, Spain, and then Jerusalem in 1888. The mother house was relocated from Strasbourg to Rome, Italy.


Born

11 October 1818 in Wegimont near Liège, Belgium


Died

• 22 February 1878 at the home of her son Adrien in Florence, Italy of natural causes

• buried in the church of Saint Bonaventure in Rome, Italy


Beatified

12 October 1997 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Isabella of France


Also known as

Isabel of France



Additional Memorial

• 31 August (Franciscans)

• 8 November as one of the Saints of the Diocese of Evry


Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of King Louis VIII of France and Blanche of Castile; sister of Saint Louis IX; aunt of Saint Louis of Tolouse. Declined a marriage offer from the German emperor in order to found a Poor Clare convent at Longchamps near Paris, France where she lived as a nun, though without taking vows. Circa 1259, Pope Alexander IV approved a Rule Isabella had written for what became the Order of the Humble Handmaidens of the Blessed Virgin Mary.


Born

March 1225


Died

• 22 February 1270 at the abbey of Longchamp, France of natural causes

• buried at the abbey in Longchamp

• exhumed after nine days and found incorrupt

• exhumed in 4 June 1637


Beatified

1521 by Pope Leo X (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

sick people




Saint Maximian of Ravenna


Also known as

Maximianus



Profile

Bishop of Ravenna, Italy in 546 by Pope Vigilius with the support of Emperor Justinian; the choice was initially so unpopular that the Maximian had to live outside the city walls for a while. Built the basilica of Saint Vitalis, and either built or renovated many other churches. Commissioned a number of illuminated manuscripts, and made sure that the text were updated with the most authoritative versions. May have been the first Latin bishop to use the title archbishop.


Born

499 in Pola, Istria (modern Pula, Croatia


Died

556 of natural causes




Saint Limnaeus


Profile

Fifth-century cave hermit near Cyrrhus (in modern Syria). Spiritual student of Saint Thalassius. Spiritual student of Saint Maro. Lived in a small stone hut on a hill top, and talked to would-be students through a small hole; they came so frequently that he built a house on the hill top for them to stay. A noted healer, he built two houses for the blind, and induced any would-be spiritual students to contribute to care for the poor and lame.



Saint John the Saxon


Profile

Monk in France. Invited by King Alfred of England to restore faith and learning to the English abbeys ravaged by the Danes. Abbot of Athelingay. Murdered in a church at night by two French monks who were under his guidance, but rebelled against it. Considered a martyr as his death was caused by working for the Faith.


Born

in Saxony (part of modern Germany)


Died

895



Saint Papias of Hierapolis


Profile

Second century Apostolic Father. Friend of Saint Polycarp of Smyrna. Bishop of Hierapolis, Phrygia (in modern Turkey). Author of lengthy commentaries on the life, teaching, and works of Jesus; they survive only in fragments.



Died

early 2nd century



Saint Athanasius of Nicomedia


Profile

Born wealthy but preferred the life of a poor hermit. Monk and then abbot at the monastery of Saints Peter and Paul near Nicomedia, Bithynia (modern Izmit, Turkey). Flogged, imprisoned and exiled during the iconoclastic persecutions of Emperor Leo V. Supported Saint Theodore Studites.


Born

Constantinople


Died

c.818



Blessed Diego Carvalho


Also known as

Didacus, James


Profile

Jesuit priest. Missionary to Japan. Martyred with 60 companions by being exposed to the cold for days.


Born

c.1578 in Coimbra, Portugal


Died

martyred by exposure on 22 February 1624 at Sendai, Miyagi, Japan


Beatified

7 May 1867 by Pope Blessed Pius IX



Saint Baradates of Cyrrhus


Also known as

Baradatas, Baradatus


Profile

Hermit in a tiny shack in Cyrrhus, Syria; he wore animal skins, lived on whatever came to hand, and spent every possible moment in prayer. Emperor Leo I of Constantinople wrote to Baradates for his thoughts on the Council of Chalcedon in 451.


Died

c.460



Blessed Miguel Facerías Garcés


Profile

Member of the Claretians. Martyred in the Spanish Civil War.


Born

22 February 1861 in Perarrua, Huesca, Spain


Died

22 February 1937 in at Caseta de Alboquers, Barcelona, Spain


Venerated

21 December 2016 by Pope Francis



Blessed Mohammed Abdalla


Profile

Mercedarian friar at the convent of San Lazzaro in Zaragoza, Spain. Known for his personal piety and outlook that saw the hand of God in all things.



Born

African



Blessed Angelus Portasole


Also known as

Angelo Portasole


Profile

Dominican. Bishop of Iglesias, Sardinia, Italy in 1330.


Born

c.1296 in Perugia, Italy


Died

1334 on Ischia, Naples, Italy



Saint Raynerius of Beaulieu


Also known as

Raynier of Beaulieu


Profile

Monk at Beaulieu Abbey near Limoges, France.


Died

c.967



Saint Aristion of SalamisProfile


One of Jesus's 72 disciples. Preached in Cyprus. Martyr.


Died

martyred in the Battle of Salamis in Cyprus




Saint Paschasius of Vienne


Also known as

Paschase


Profile

Bishop of early 4th-century Vienne, France.


Died

312



Saint Gurnin


Also known as

Gurmin, Gurminn


Profile

Irish nun. She is mentioned in the Tallagh and Donegal martyrologies, but no details of her life have survived.



Saint Thalassius


Profile

Fifth-century cave hermit near Cyrrhus (in modern Syria). Spiritual teacher of Saint limnaeus. Known for his personal piety and holiness.



Saint Elwin


Also known as

Allan, Alleyn, Elwyn


Profile

Missionary who worked with Saint Breaca in Cornwall.


Born

Ireland



Saint Abilius of Alexandria


Profile

Third bishop of Alexandria, Egypt c.84.


Died

c.98



Martyrs of Arabia


Profile

A memorial for all the unnamed Christians martyred in the desert and mountainous areas south of the Dead Sea during the persecutions of Emperor Valerius Maximianus Galerius.


19 February 2022

இன்றைய புனிதர்கள் பெப்ரவரி 21

 Saint Peter Damian

புனிதர் பீட்டர் டமியான் 


(St. Peter Damian)

கர்தினால்-ஆயர், மறைவல்லுநர்:

(Cardinal, Doctor of the Church)


பிறப்பு: கி.பி. 1007

ரவேன்னா, வடக்கு இத்தாலியின் எமிலியா-ரொமாக்னா பிராந்தியம்

(Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna region of Northern Italy)


இறப்பு: ஃபெப்ரவரி 22, 1072

ஃபயேன்சா, ரவேன்னா, வடக்கு இத்தாலியின் எமிலியா-ரொமாக்னா பிராந்தியம்


(Faenza, Province of Ravenna, Emilia-Romagna region of Northern Italy)


ஏற்கும் சமயம்:

ரோமன் கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபை

(Roman Catholic Church)


நினைவுத் திருவிழா: ஃபெப்ரவரி 21


புனிதர் பீட்டர் டமியான், ஒரு சீர்திருத்த டொமினிக்கன் துறவியும், திருத்தந்தை ஒன்பதாம் லியோ (Pope Leo IX) காலத்தில் ரோமின் புறநகரின் “ஓஸ்தி” (Ostia) மறைமாவட்ட கர்தினால்-ஆயருமாவார். “டான்டே” (Dante) எனும் பிரபல இத்தாலிய கவிஞர், இவரை “புனிதர் அசிசியின் பிரான்சிஸு’க்கு” (Saint Francis of Assisi) முன்னோடியாகக் கருதி தனது புனைவு நூலில் இவர் விண்ணகத்தில் மிக உயரிய இடத்தில் இருப்பதாக கவிதை புனைந்துள்ளார். இவர், 1823ம் ஆண்டு, திருச்சபையின் மறைவல்லுநர் என அறிவிக்கப்பட்டார்.


கி.பி. சுமார் 1007ம் ஆண்டு, வடக்கு இத்தாலியின் எமிலியா-ரொமாக்னா பிராந்தியத்திலுள்ள ரவென்னா நகரிலுள்ள பிரபல ஆனால் ஏழைக் குடும்பத்தில் கடைக்குட்டியாக பிறந்த இவர், சிறுவயதிலேயே அனாதரவானார். ஆரம்பத்தில் இவரை தத்தெடுத்த சகோதரர்களில் ஒருவரால் மிகவும் கொடுமைப் படுத்தப்பட்டார்.


சொந்த சகோதரர் புறக்கணித்ததால், ஏழ்மையிலிருந்து தப்பி, ரவென்னா (Archpriest of Ravenna) மறைமாவட்டத்தின் குருவாக இருந்த தமது இன்னொரு சகோதரரான “டமியானஸ்” (Damianus) என்பவரிடம் அடைக்கலம் புகுந்தார். அவர் பீட்டர் டமியானை நல்ல கல்விக் கூடங்களுக்கு அனுப்பி கல்வி கற்க செய்தார். அதன் காரணமாக, பீட்டர் ஒரு பேராசிரியராக உயர்ந்தார். அவர் மிகவும் ஒழுக்க சீலராக இருந்தார். கடுமையான உழைப்புடன், ஜெபிப்பதற்கென்று பல மணிநேரம் செலவிட்டார்.


விரைவிலேயே அவர் பேராசிரியர் பணியை விட முடிவு செய்ததுடன், அவேல்லானா'விலுள்ள ஃபோன்டே எனும் இடத்திலுள்ள புனித ரோமுவால்டின் வின் ஆசீர்வாதப்பர் சீர்திருத்த சபையில் (Benedictines of the reform of St. Romuald at Fonte Avellana) சேர்ந்து முழுநேர ஜெப வாழ்வில் இணைய முடிவு செய்தார். அங்கே இரண்டு துறவியர் இருந்தனர். பீட்டர் உறக்கத்தை குறைத்துக் கொண்டு, அதிக நேரம் ஜெபிப்பதில் மிகவும் ஆர்வமாயிருந்தார். அதன் காரணமாக, அவர் தூக்கமின்மை (Insomnia) நோயால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டார். அவர், தமது ஆரோக்கியத்திற்காக, ஜெபிக்காத வேளைகளில் திருவிவிலியம் படிப்பதில் செலவிட்டார்.


ஆசீர்வாதப்பர் சீர்திருத்த சபையின் மடாதிபதி தமது மரணத்தின்போது, பீட்டரை தமது மடத்துக்கு தலைவராக நியமித்தார். பீட்டர், மேலும் ஐந்து துறவியரை அங்கு சேர்த்தார். அவர், தமது சகோதரர்களையும் தனிமை மற்றும் ஜெப வாழ்வுக்கு ஊக்கப்படுத்தினார்.


ரோமிலுள்ள இரண்டு ஆசிரமங்களுக்கும் அரசு அலுவகங்களுக்குமிடையே இருந்த பிரச்சனைகளை தீர்த்து வைத்தார்.


அவர் கடுமையாக உழைத்து, "தன் சுய நலனுக்காக கிறிஸ்தவ ஆலயங்களின் புனிதப் பொருள்களைப் பயன்படுத்தும்" (Simony) முறையை ஒழித்தார். தமது கத்தோலிக்க குருக்கள் கடின பிரம்மச்சரியத்தைக் கடைபிடிக்க ஊக்குவித்தார். மறைமாவட்ட குருமார்கள் ஒன்றாக வசிக்கவும், ஜெபம் மற்றும் மத காரியங்களில் ஈடுபடவும் வற்புறுத்தினார். பழமையான ஒழுக்கத்தை மீட்டார். வறுமை மீறல், தேவையற்ற பயணங்கள், மற்றும் சொகுசு வாழ்க்கை முறையைக் கண்டித்தார்.


அவர், 'பெசான்கான் ஆயரு'க்கு (Bishop of Besancon) எழுதிய ஒரு கடிதத்தில், அங்குள்ள தேவாலய அலுவலகத்தில் இறை பாடல் பாடுபவர்கள், பாடல் பாடுகையில் அமர்ந்திருந்ததாக குறை கூறினார்.


அவர், பல கடிதங்கள் எழுதியுள்ளார். அவற்றில் சுமார் 170 கடிதங்கள் நடப்பிலுள்ளன. நம்மிடையே இன்றும் அவர் எழுதிய சுமார் 53 மத சொற்பொழிவுகள், ஏழு உயிர்ப்புகள் மற்றும் சுயசரிதங்கள் உள்ளன.

அவர் தமது எழுத்துக்களில் கோட்பாடுகளைவிட, கதைகள் மற்றும் மேற்கோள்களுக்கு அதிக முக்கியத்துவம் தந்தார். அவர் எழுதிய வழிப்பாட்டு அலுவலக சந்தங்கள் லத்தீன் மொழியில் அவரது திறமைக்கு சான்றாகும்.

டான்டே அலிகியேரி, இவரை புனித அசிசியின் ஃபிரான்சிசுக்கு முன்னோடியாகக் கருதி, தனது புனைவு நூலில் இவர் விண்ணகத்தில் மிக உயரிய இடத்தில் இருப்பதாக கவிதை புனைந்துள்ளார்.

அவர், தம்மை ஒஸ்டியா மாகான கர்தினால்-ஆயர் (Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia) பதவிலிருந்து விடுவிக்குமாறு அடிக்கடி கேட்டுகொண்டார். இறுதியாக, இரண்டாம் அலெக்சாண்டர் (Alexander II) அவரை விடுவித்தார். பீட்டர் தமியான் மீண்டும் ஒரு துறவியாகியதில் பெரும் மகிழ்ச்சியடைந்தார். ஆனால், அவர் திருத்தந்தையின் தூதராக பணிபுரிய இப்போதும் அழைக்கப்பட்டார்.

ஒருமுறை, தனக்களிக்கப்பட்ட ஒரு பணியை முடித்துவிட்டு 'ரவேன்னா'விலிருந்து (Ravenna) திரும்புகையில் ஜூரத்தால் பாதிக்கப்பட்டார். துறவிகள் சூழ்ந்திருக்க, கி.பி. 1072ம் ஆண்டு, ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம் 22ம் நாளன்று, அவர் உயிர் துறந்தார்.

புனிதர் பட்டம்:


இவரை கத்தோலிக்க திருச்சபையின் மறைவல்லுநர் என திருத்தந்தை பன்னிரண்டாம் லியோ (Pope Leo XII) கி.பி. 1823ம் ஆண்டில் அறிவித்தார். இவரின் நினைவுத் திருவிழா நாள் ஃபெப்ரவரி மாதம், 21ம் நாளாகும்.

இவருக்கு முறைப்படி புனிதர் பட்டமளிப்பு நிகழவில்லை என்பது குறிக்கத்தக்கது. இவரின் இறப்பு முதலே இவருக்கு மக்கள் வணக்கம் செலுத்தி வந்துள்ளனர். இவரது உடல் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்ட இடத்திலிருந்து ஆறு வெவ்வேறு இடங்களுக்கு மாற்றப்பட்டு தற்போது ஃபயேன்ஸா (Cathedral of Faenza) மறைமாவட்ட முதன்மைப் பேராலயத்தில் உள்ளது.

Also known as

Peter Damiani



Profile

Youngest child in a large but impoverished family of local nobility. Orphaned young, Peter was sent to live with a brother who mistreated him and forced him to work as a swine-herd. A pious boy, Peter was eventually sent to live with another brother, Damian, a priest in Ravenna, Italy; Peter was so grateful that he took the name Damian. Well educated in Ravenna, in Faenza and in Parma Italy. Professor. He was known for his life of strict austerity.


Around 1035, Peter gave up teaching to retire from the world and become a Benedictine monk. His health suffered, especially when he tried to replace sleep with prayer. He was forced to spend time in recovery; he used it to study Scripture, and when he was healthy, he was assigned to teach his brother monks and then the public. Economus of Fonte-Avellana; prior of the house in 1043, a post in which he served for the rest of his life. He expanded the monastery, greatly improved its library, and founded sister hermitages in San Severino, Gamugno, Acerata, Murciana, San Salvatore, Sitria, and Ocri. Friend of the future Pope Saint Gregory VII.


Attended a synod in Rome in 1047, and encouraged Pope Gregory VI to support a revitalization of Church zeal and clerical discipline. Wrote Liber Gomorrhianus, which described the vices of priests, mainly in their concern with worldly matters, with money, and the evil of simony. Created cardinal-bishop of Ostia on 30 November 1057. Fought simony. Tried to restore primitive discipline among priests and religious who were becoming more and more worldly. Strongly opposed anti-pope Benedict X. Legate to Milan for Pope Nicholas II in 1059; worked there with Saint Ariald the Deacon and Saint Anselm of Lucca. Supported Pope Alexander II.


A prolific correspondent, he also wrote dozens of sermons, seven biographies (including a one of Saint Romuald), and poetry, including some of the best Latin of the time. He tried to retire to live as a simple monk, but was routinely recalled as papal legate, called upon to make peace between arguing monastic houses, clergymen, and government officials, etc. Declared a Doctor of the Church in 1828.


Born

1007 at Ravenna, Italy


Died

• 22 February 1072 of fever at Ravenna, Italy while surrounded by brother monks reciting the Divine Office

• immediately buried in the in the monastery church; there were concerns that others would try to obtain his relics

• cultus developed almost immediately after his death

• relics moved several times, and since 1898 has been in the Chapel of Saint Peter Damian in the catherdral of Faenza, Italy


Canonized

1823 by Pope Leo XII (cultus confirmation)


Patronage

Faenza, Italy



Saint Robert Southwell


Additional Memorials

• 25 October as one of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai



Profile

Raised in a piously Catholic family. Educated at Douai and at Paris, France. Joined the Jesuits in 1580. Prefect of studies in the English College at Rome, Italy. Ordained in 1584. Returned to England in 1586 to minister to covert Catholics, working with Henry Garnett. Chaplain to Ann Howard, wife of Saint Philip Howard, in 1589. Wrote a number of pamphlets on living a pious life. Arrested in 1595 for the crime of being a priest. Repeatedly tortured in hopes of learning the location of other priests. He was so badly treated in prison that his family petitioned for a quick trial, knowing that his certain death would be better than the conditions in which he was housed. He spent three years imprisoned in the Tower of London, and was tortured on the rack ten times; between abuses he studied the Bible and wrote poetry. He was finally tried and convicted for treason, having admitted that he administered the Sacraments. Martyr.


Born

1561 in Horsham Saint Faith, Norfolk, England


Died

• hanged, drawn and quartered on 21 February 1595 in Tyburn, London, England

• while hanging, he repeatedly made the sign of the cross

• onlookers tugged at his legs to help him die quicker


Canonized

25 October 1970 by Pope Paul VI



Blessed Noël Pinot


Also known as

Natalis, Natale



Profile

Ordained in 1771, he served for several years as assistant pastor at different parishes. Parish priest at Saint Aubin, Louroux-Beconnais, France in 1788, with a special ministry with the sick.


In the French Revolution, he was required to take an oath of loyalty to the new government, an oath that was opposed to Church principles. Noel refused, and was ordered to abandon his parish, to come no closer to it than eight miles for at least two years. He left, then returned in secret, and ministered clandestinely to his flock. Some of his brother priests took the civil oath, but Noel convinced several of them to renouce it, and return their loyalty to the Church.


In 1793, a counter-revolution began in western France; when these forces won some victories, Pinot returned to openly ministering to his flock. However, the forces of the Revolution began to win again, and Pinot became a wanted man. Captured by government soldiers while preparing for Mass, he was imprisoned for twelve days; sentenced to death for refusing to take the oath, and encouraging others to do so.


Born

19 December 1747 at Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France


Died

• guillotined on 21 February 1794 at Angers, Maine-et-Loire, France

• he wore his Mass vestments to execution, and died reciting the opening words of the Mass


Beatified

21 October 1926 by Pope Pius XI



Blessed Thomas Pormort

Also known as

Thomas Whitgift


Additional Memorial

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

• 29 October as one of the Martyrs of Douai


Profile

Educated at Cambridge University. Studied at the seminary in Rheims, France in 1581, and then, beginning in 1582, in Rome, Italy. Ordained in 1587. Worked with Bishop Owen Lewis in the diocese of Cassano, Italy. Prefect of studies at the Swiss college in Milan, Italy on 25 April 1590. He returned to England, travelling under the name Whitgift, and was arrested on 25 July 1591 in London for the crime of being a priest, but he escaped. Arrested again a couple of months later, he was imprisoned, racked and tortured for months. Convicted on 8 February 1592 of the crime of treason for being a priest and conferring reconciliation to an Englishman. Martyr.


Born

c.1560 in Little Limber, Lincolnshire, England


Died

hanged on 20 February 1592 at Saint Paul's Churchyard, London, England on a gibbet erected next to the shop of the man who's confession he was accused of hearing


Beatified

22 November 1987 by Pope John Paul II



Blessed Caterina Dominici


Also known as

• Anna Caterina

• Maria Enrichetta

• Maria Henrich Dominici

• Mother Maria Enrica Dominici



Profile

Member of the Sisters of Saint Anne for 44 years, entering in November 1850 and taking the name Sister Mary Henrietta. Worked tirelessly with cholera people during and outbreak in 1854. Novice mistress for several years. Served 33 years as Superior General of her congregation. Friend and advisor to Saint John Bosco.


Born

10 October 1829 in Borgo Salsasio, Carmagnola, Turin, Italy


Died

21 February 1894 in Turin, Italy of natural causes


Beatified

7 May 1978 by Pope Paul VI



Saint Eustathius of Antioch


Also known as

• Eustathius the Great

• Eustacius, Eustatius



Profile

Noted for his learning and personal piety, and his eloquence in the defense of Christianity. Bishop of Beroea, Syria. Bishop of Antioch (modern Antakya, Turkey) c.324. Fought Arianism. Assisted at the General Council of Nice. Exiled by Emperor Constantine the Great for his opposition to Arianism. His De Engastrimytho contra Origenem, an essay on the Witch of Endor, has survived.


Born

c.270 at Sida, Pamphylia (in modern Turkey)


Died

• c.337 at Philippi, Macedonia of natural causes

• relics transferred to Antioch in 482



Blessed Eleanora


Also known as

Eleonora


Profile

Daughter of Count Raymond IV of Provence. Married King Henry III of England on 14 January 1236 at the age of ten. Queen of England. Widowed in 1273 after 37 years of marriage. Benedictine nun abbey of Amesbury, England on 3 July 1276. Known throughout her life as a pious and prayerful woman.



Born

1222 in Provence, France


Died

25 June 1291 at the Benedictine abbey of Amesbury, England of natural causes


Beatified

no formal beatification; popular devotion began at her death and continues



Blessed Claudio di Portaceli



Profile

Mercedarian friar. Commander of the house of Carcassonne, France. In 1318 he went on the road as a pilgrim to collect alms to ransom Christians held in slavery in Muslim controlled territories. His pilgrim's staff had a flag with the image of Our Lady of Mercy, a slave kneeling at her feet, and the words "Haec est coeli door" ("this is heaven’s door"). He travelled to north Africa in 1330 to redeem those Christians. Cardinal of Santa Pudenziana. Miracle worker.


Born

France



Saint Germanus of Granfield


ஜெர்மானுஸ் Germanus von Münster OSB

பிறப்பு 

610,

டிரியர் Trier, ஜெர்மனி

இறப்பு 

21 பிப்ரவரி 675

இவர் ஓர் செல்வந்தர் குடும்பத்தில் பிறந்தவர். ஆயர் மோடால்டூஸ் Modaldus என்பவரால் வளர்க்கப்பட்டார். இவரின் பெற்றோர் இறந்தபிறகு அனைத்து குடும்ப பொறுப்புகளை ஏற்க வேண்டிய சூழல் ஏற்பட்டது. அப்போது இவரின் வயது 17. இருப்பினும் இவர் தனது சொத்துக்கள், உடைமைகள் அனைத்தையும் ஏழைக்களுக்கு பகிர்ந்தளித்துவிட்டு அவ்வூரிலிருந்து புனித ஆசீர்வாதப்பார் சபையில் சேர்ந்தார். 

பின்னர் இவர் தான் பிறந்த ஊரிலிருந்து லுக்சேயுல் Luxsuil என்ற இடத்திற்கு மாற்றப்பட்டார். அங்குதான் இவர் தனது குருத்துவ பட்டத்தைப் பெற்றார். இவர் 640 ஆம் ஆண்டு முன்ஸ்டரிலும், சுவிட்சர்லாந்திற்கு அருகிலும் துறவற இல்லங்களைத் தொடங்கினார். 35 வருடங்களுக்கும் மேலாக இவரே அவ்வில்லங்களை வழிநடத்தினார். இவர் தன்னுடனிருந்த ராண்டோவால்டு Randoald என்றழைக்கப்பட்ட சகோதரருடன் இணைந்து, மிக அமைதியான வழியில் பல பணிகளை ஆற்றினார். இதையறிந்த அரசர் ஒருவன் இவர்களை பழிவாங்க திட்டமிட்டான். அவ்வரசனின் கொடூரச் செயலால் இருவரையும் கொலைச் செய்தான். இவர்களின் உடல் அங்கிருந்த பங்கு ஆலயம் ஒன்றில் அடக்கம் செய்யப்பட்டது.



Also known as

German


Profile

Born to a wealthy senatorial family; educated by Saint Modoald of Trier. Spiritual student of Saint Arnulf of Metz. Monk of Münster-Granfel Abbey. Monk of Remiremont Abbey. Monk of Luxeuil Abbey. Spiritual student of Saint Waldebert. Priest. Abbot of Granfield Abbey, Val Moutier, Switzerland where he worked with Saint Randoald. Martyred for interceding with local authorities on behalf of the poor.


Born

Trier, Germany


Died

c.677



Martyrs Uchibori

Profile

Three Japanese laymen, all brothers, all sons of Paulus Uchibori Sakuemon, one a teenager, one only five years old, and all martyred for their faith in the persecutions in Japan. We know little more about them but the names Antonius, Balthasar and Ignatius.


Died

21 February 1627 in Shimabara, Nagasaki, Japan


Beatified

24 November 2008 by Pope Benedict XVI


Saint Pepin of Landen

புனித_பெபின் (575-646)

பிப்ரவரி 21

இவர் (#StPepinOfLanden) பெல்ஜியத்தைச் சார்ந்தவர்.


இவரது குடும்பமே 'புனிதர்களின் குடும்பம்' என்றால் அது மிகையல்லை. ஏனெனில், இவரது மனைவி ஜடா, இவரது பிள்ளைகள் கெர்ட்ரூத், பெக்கா என யாவருமே பின்னாளில் புனிதர்களாக உயர்ந்தவர்கள். 


ப்ராபன்ட் (Brabant) என்ற இடத்தின் மன்னரான இவர் மக்கள் நடுவில் அமைதியையும் உண்மையையும் நேர்மையையும் நிலைநாட்டினார்.

இவர் திருஅவையின் வளர்ச்சிக்குப் பெரிதும் பாடுபட்டார். நற்செய்தி அறிவிப்புப் பணிக்குத் தன்னால் இயன்ற உதவிகளைச் செய்தார்.

இப்படிப்பட்டவர் 646 ஆம் ஆண்டு இறையடி சேர்ந்தார்.

Also known as

Pippin



Profile

Duke of Brabant. Married to Saint Ida of Nivelles. Father of Saint Gertrude of Nivelles and Saint Begga of Ardenne. Described as "a lover of peace and the constant defender of truth and justice".


Born

575


Died

c.646 at Landen, Brabant, Belgium of natural causes



Saint Severian of Scythopolis


Also known as

Severianus



Profile

Bishop of Scythopolis (in modern north-east Israel). Murdered by a band of soldiers led by a heretical Eutychian monk. Martyr.


Died

452 or 453 (records vary)



Saint Paterius of Brescia


Profile

Monk. Friend and spiritual student of Pope Saint Gregory the Great. Bishop of Brescia, Italy. Prolific writer.



Died

606



Saint Gundebert of Sens

Also known as

Gondelbert, Gumbert, Gumbertus, Gundelbert, Gundelbertus


Profile

Bishop of Sens, France. Around 660 he retired from the office, lived as a hermit in the Vosges region of France, and founded the Benedictine monastery of Saint Peter in Senones.


Died

c.676



Saint Peter Mavimenus

Profile

Martyred by Muslims for supporting Christianity and denigrating Islam.


Died

c.737 in Damascus (in modern Syria)


Readings

Whoever does not embrace the Christian and Catholic faith is lost, like your false prophet Mahomet. – Saint Peter



Saint George of Amastris

Profile

Hermit on Mount Sirik; monk at Bonyssa; bishop of Amastris (modern Amasra, Turkey). Successfully defended Amastris city during Saracen attacks.


Born

at Kromna near Amastris on the Black Sea


Died

c.825 of natural causes



Saint Valerius of San Pedro de Montes


Profile

Benedictine monk and then abbot of the monastery San Pedro de Montes in Galicia, Spain. He left several ascetic writings.


Born

7th-century Astorga, Spain


Died

695



Saint Ercongotha


Also known as

Ercongota


Profile

Born a princess, the daughter of King Erconbert of Kent (part of modern England) and Saint Saxburgh of Ely. Nun at Faremoutiers-en-Brie where her aunt, Saint Ethelburgh, was abbess.


Died

660



Saint Randoald of Granfield


Profile

Monk. Prior of Granfield Abbey, Val Moutier, Switzerland. Martyred for interceding with local authorities on behalf of the poor.


Died

c.677



Saint Severus of Syrmium


Profile

The only one of a group of 62 martyrs whose name has come down to us.


Died

mid-3rd century in Syrmium, Pannonia (modern Sremska Mitrovica, Serbia)



Saint Avitus II of Clermont

Profile

Bishop of Clermont, Auvergne, France from 676 until his death.


Died

689



Saint Daniel of Persia


Profile

Persian Christian martyred in the persecutions of King Shapur II.


Died

344



Saint Verda of Persia


Profile

Persian Christian martyred in the persecutions of King Shapur II.


Died

344



Saint Felix of Metz


Profile

Third bishop of Metz, France; served for over 40 years in the 2nd century.



Martyrs of Sicily


Profile

Seventy-nine Christians martyred together in the persecutions of Diocletian.


Died

c.303 on Sicily



Martyrs of Hadrumetum


Profile

A group of 26 Christians martyred together by Vandals. We know little more than eight of their names - Alexander, Felix, Fortunatus, Saturninus, Secundinus, Servulus, Siricius and Verulus.


Died

c.434 at Hadrumetum (modern Sousse, Tunisia)