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Sts. Kateri & Marianne: pray for us!

October 22, 2012 by

St. Kateri Tekakwitha

Born in 1656 in that part of the American Continent which is today the State of New York, her parents were native Indians.  Her father, an Iroquois, was pagan; her mother, an Algonquin, was a devote Christian.  When she was four years old, Catherine lost her parents and her only brother to an epidemic of smallpox.  She too contracted the disease and, although she survived, her face was left severely pockmarked.

Finding a home in the family of her uncle, a chief of the tribe of Agniers, more commonly known as the Mohawks, she was brought up in that tribe.  While living among the Mohawks, she received instruction in the faith and was baptized in 1676 by Father Jacques de Lamberville, one of the devoted Jesuit missionaries committed to the evangelization of the Indians.  After becoming a Christian, Catherine soon became a model of youthful piety.

Unfortunately, she was a target of harassment and persecution at home because of her faith and her determination to live in virginity.  On the advice of the missionaries, who thought she should move to friendlier surroundings, she came to live among the fervent Christian Indians of the settlement known as the Mission of St. Francis Xavier, near present-day Montreal.  Here she made great progress in a short time along the road of holiness.  And here she died on 17 April 1680, widely known and esteemed by all as a saint.  Her last words: “Jesus, I love you”.

This young Iroquois woman, whose life was sustained by her Christian faith and by an ardent love of Jesus present in the Eucharist, found in Jesus Christ the strength to withstand the hostile pressure of the non-Christian culture in which she lived and to keep with heroic fidelity the vow of virginity which she pronounced on 25 March 1679.

(excerpted from the liturgical libretto of the canonization liturgy of 21 October 2012)

St. Marianne Cope

In 1862, Barbara Cope entered the Franciscan Sisters of Syracuse and took the name Marianne.  Apart from engaging in teaching, she founded and administered two hospitals in Utica and Syracuse.  In 1877, she was elected superior general.  In that position, she bravely heeded the plea of the king of the Sandwich Islands (now Hawaii), already turned down by several congregations, to send sisters who would care for his suffering people.

Initially, Mother Marianne only intended to help the six volunteer sisters to settle down in the mission.  Deeply touched by the plight of those with Hansen’s Disease (then known as leprosy), she chose instead to remain with them.  She first ministered to the residents of “Leper Hospital” in Honolulu for five years and then at the isolated Kalaupapa Peninsula for thrity years.  In her freely chosen exile, Mo. Marianne provided a safe, loving home for the social outcasts.  She collaborated in the work of St. Damian De Veuster and continued his ministry after he died in 1889.

With deep maternal concern, Mo. Marianne promised her sisters that none of them would contract leprosy from their patients and none have to this day.

Mo. Marianne died in Kalaupapa on 9 August 1918 and was buried among the people she so loved.  In 2004, her remains were moved to the Motherhouse chapel in Syracuse.  The “Mother of Outcasts” was beatified on 14 May 2005.

(excerpted from the liturgical libretto of the canonization liturgy of 21 October 2012)

 

Filed Under: Fr. David's Blog

Project H2O

Imagine what your life would be like if you awoke tomorrow morning and found that there was no water coming into your home. What would you do? Probably you'd get a few gallons of bottled water, and feel a bit grungy and inconvenienced until the water came back on. Other than that, things would really be OK. But what if the water never came back on? And what if the stores ran out of bottled water? What if the nearest drainage ditch became the only place we could get any water at all? … Help The Thirsty

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