island life- in a monastery
Friday, September 12, 2025
Monday, September 8, 2025
THE FATHER OF EUROPE
Catholic veneration of the saints is rooted in this loving reverence we accord to those who have allowed themselves to be transformed by Christ’s love. The saints are the embodiments of grace triumphing over the forces of mediocrity and evil within the spirit of man. They show the possibility of holiness, becoming models to imitate in our own lives, and inspirations to light up the darkness which surrounds us all. When we study their lives, we take courage in the knowledge that other human beings succeeded in loving even though they had to face external difficulties and internal obstacles similar to our own. Ronda Chervin
Since I have missed almost a month doing this Blog, I want to consider holy people who made a difference in the world order, during their lifetime. The first of these, and perhaps the most well known, more for his politics than his holiness is, SERVANT of GOD ALCIDE DE GASPERI.After the Second World War Alcide De Gasperi was one of the
promoters of the project for a united Europe along with the former French
minister of foreign affairs, Robert Schuman, (already declared venerable
by Pope Francis- see Blog 5/18/21), and the German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer. They were inspired
by the values of Christian humanism. Alcide De Gaspari was a man who acted in the interests of the patria, not
for self-serving reasons, or from personal egoism.
Alcide De Gasperi was arrested in March 1927 and sentenced to four
years in prison. The Vatican negotiated his release. A year and a half in
prison nearly broke his health. After his release in July 1928, he was
unemployed and in serious financial hardship, until in 1929 his ecclesiastical
contacts secured him a job as a cataloguer in the Vatican Library, where he
spent the next fourteen years until the collapse of Fascism in July 1943.
During
the reconstruction years, De Gasperi was the undisputed head of the Christian
Democrats, the party that dominated Parliament for decades. From 1945 to 1953,
he was the prime minister of eight successive Christian Democratic governments.
The Holy See actively supported Christian Democracy, declaring that it would be a mortal sin for a Catholic to vote for the Communist Party and excommunicating all its supporters. In practice, however, many Communists remained religious.
In
August 1953, the seventh government led by De Gasperi was forced to resign by
Parliament. He consequently retired from active politics and gave his last year
to the European cause.
Alcide De Gasperi used to speak of “Our homeland Europe”. He wrote: “At the origin of our European civilization, as stated by Toynbee, there is Christianity. I only want to mention our common heritage, that moral vision which enhances the responsibility of the human person, with its ferment of Christian fraternity, with its cult for beauty inherited from our forefathers, with its will for justice sharpened by the experience of two thousand years.”
Alcide De Gasperi certainly knew how to embody the Christian faith into the complex socio-political realities of his time. He was passionately fond of the Church’s Social Doctrine with its ideals of putting into society the salt and yeast of the Bible’s integral humanism and the centrality of the human person so that the “City of Man” might be the vanguard of the “City of God”.
Politics was for him the highest form of charity in as much as it was the translation of the parable of the Good Samaritan in institutionalized reforms that respond to the needs of the poorest. For Alcide De Gasperi politics and spirituality were inextricably intertwined so that the former was offering reasons to the latter.
(Photos: with Winston Churchhill, Konrad Adenauer, and daughter Maria Romana)
Sunday, September 7, 2025
NEW SAINTS FOR THE WORLD
In honor of today's canonization of Pier Giorgio Frassati and Carlo Acutis, The Vatican City State, the Republic of San Marino, and the Sovereign Military Order of Malta announced they have issued stamps to commemorate this wonderous occasion.
"The
new saints “are an invitation to all of us, especially young people, not to
squander our lives, but to direct them upwards and make them masterpieces,” Pope Leo said at the conclusion of his homily. “They encourage us with their words:
‘Not I, but God,’ as Carlo used to say. And Pier Giorgio: ‘If you have God at
the center of all your actions, then you will reach the end.’ This is the
simple but winning formula of their holiness. It is also the type of witness we
are called to follow, in order to enjoy life to the full and meet the Lord in
the feast of heaven.”
Sunday, August 24, 2025
PRAYER ON UKRAINE'S NATIONAL FEAST DAY
“Today we join our
Ukrainian brothers and sisters who, with the spiritual initiative ‘World Prayer
for Ukraine’, ask the Lord to give peace to their martyred country,” Leo said
while speaking to St. Peter’s Square in the Vatican.
With a heart wounded by the violence that ravages your land, I address you on this day of your national feast.
I wish to assure of my prayer for the people of Ukraine who suffer from war – especially for all those wounded in body, for those bereaved by the death of a loved one, and for those deprived of their homes.
May God Himself console them; may He strengthen the injured and grant eternal rest to the departed. I implore the Lord to move the hearts of people of good will, that the clamor of arms may fall silent and give way to dialogue, opening the path to peace for the good of all.”.
Ukraine’s
Independence Day, celebrated annually on Aug. 24, commemorates the country’s
1991 declaration of independence from the Soviet Union.
PROBLEMS IN PARADISE!
DUE TO CIRUMSTANCE BEYOND MY CONTROL (IE. TECHNOLOGY PROBLEM) THERE WILL BE LIMITED BLOGS. THANKS TO ALL MY READERS.
Art by my Australian friend Tricia Reust
Friday, August 8, 2025
HOLY DOCTOR
He went to two primary schools at nearby villages and then attended a junior high school in Milan. He completed his high school studies as a boarder at Augustine's College, Pavia, where after graduation, he enrolled in the Medical Faculty of Pavia University. |
Between the years 1915 and 1920, he was in the fighting zone of World War I. He served firstly as a sergeant and later went into training as an officer in the Medical Corps. In 1921, he graduated top of his class in Medicine and Surgery at Pavia. While living in the midst of the world, he openly and consistently professed the Gospel message and practised works of charity with generosity and devotion. He loved prayer and kept himself constantly in close union with God, even when he was kept very busy. He had a great devotion to the Euchrist and would spend long periods before the tabernacle. He also had a devotion to the Blessed Mother and prayed the Rosary often more than once a day. He was an active member
of Pavia University's Severino Boezio Club for Catholic Action. He also
belonged to the St. Vincent de Paul Society and the Third Order of St.
Francis. He organised regular retreats for the
Youth Club, farm laborers and local workers, at the Jesuit Fathers'
"Villa del Sacro Cuore" at Triuggio, generally paying their
expenses. He used to invite his colleagues and friends to come along as well. He was generous, charitable and very
concerned for his patients, visiting them both by
day and night, never sparing himself. Since most of his patients were poor, he gave them
medicines, money, food, clothing, and blankets. His charity extended to the
poor rural workers and needy folk in and around Morimondo and even going
further afield to other towns and districts. When eventually he was to leave his
practice in six years time, to become a religious, the grief at having lost
the "holy doctor" was so greatly felt everywhere, that even the
daily press took up the story. Dr. Pampuri joined the Hospitaller Order of St. John of God so as to follow the way of evangelical holiness more closely and at the same time to be able to carry on his medical profession so as to alleviate the suffering of his neighbor. He joined the St. John of God Brothers at Milan on 22 June 1927. He did his novitiate year at Brescia and when it was over, made his profession of religious vows on 24 October 1928. He was then appointed Director of the
dental clinic attached to the St. John of God Brothers' Hospital at Brescia.
This was mostly frequented by working people and the poor. Brother Richard
untiringly gave himself fully to serving them with such wonderful charity
that he was admired by all. Throughout his life as a religious,
Brother Richard was, as he had always been before he became a St. John of God
Brother, a model of virtue and charity: to his Brothers in the Order, the
patients, the doctors, the paramedics, the nurses, and all who came into
contact with him. Everybody agreed upon his sanctity. He suffered a fresh outbreak of
pleurisy, which he first contracted during his military service, and this turned into broncal pneumonia. On 18 April 1930 he was taken
from Brescia to Milan, where he died on 1 May at the age of 33
years: "leaving behind, the memory of a doctor who knew how to transform
his own profession into a mission of charity; and a religious brother who
reproduced within himself, the charism of a true son of St. John of God"
(Decree of heroic virtue, 12 June 1978). After his death, his reputation of sanctity which he demonstrated throughout his life, greatly expanded throughout Italy, Europe and the entire world. Many of the faithful received significant graces from God, even miraculous ones, through his intercession. The two required miracles were
accepted and he was beatified by St. John Paul II on 4 October 1981. Later on, a miraculous healing through
the intercession of Blessed Richard Pampuri, took place on 5 January 1982 at
Alcadozo (Albacete, Spain). This was approved as a miracle and so, on the
feast of All Saints, 1 November 1989, he was solemnly canonized. "The brief, but intense life, of
Brother Richard Pampuri is a stimulus for the entire People of God, but
especially so for youth, doctors and religious brothers and sisters. He invites the youth of today, to live
joyfully and courageously in the Christian faith; to always listen to the
Word of God, generously follow the teachings of Christ's message and give
themselves to the service of others. He appeals to his colleagues, the
doctors, to responsibly carry out their delicate art of healing; vivifying it
with Christian, human and professional ideals, because theirs is a real
mission of service to others, of fraternal charity and a real promotion of
human life. Brother Richard recommends to religious brothers and sisters, especially those who quietly and humbly go about their consecrated work in hospital wards and other centres, to hold fast to the original charism of their Institute in their lives, loving both God and their neighbour who is in need" (Homily, 4 October 1981). St. Richard Pampuri's body is in the Parish Church of Trivolzio (Pavia, Italy). His
feastday is celebrated on 1 May. |
Wednesday, July 30, 2025
MOTHER TERESA OF PUERTO RICO
In Ponce, she also founded Trinity College of Puerto Rico, an educational institution that prepares low-income youth for short-term careers; and the ArtesanÃas Tabaiba cultural center, also located in the Tabaiba district of Ponce Beach, where artists gather to create works about the island, which are sold to raise funds.
For her humanitarian work, Sister Isolina Ferré has received numerous honors and awards. More than ten educational institutions have awarded her honorary doctorates, including the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico, the Interamerican University of Puerto Rico in San Germán, Saint Francis College in Brooklyn, NY, the Universidad del Sagrado Corazón in Santurce, Yale University in Connecticut, St. Joseph's College in Brooklyn, and Loyola University in New Orleans.In the 1980s, he won the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Puerto Rican National Coalition, the Alonso Manso Cross from the Pontifical Catholic University of Puerto Rico, the Alexis Tocqueville Award from Fondos Unidos, the Albert Schweitzer Humanitarian Award from Johns Hopkins University, and the Presidential Medal of Freedom from President Bill Clinton.
Sister Isolina Ferré passed away on August 3, 2000. Currently, the Centers operate forty community programs and provide assistance to more than 12,000 people annually
Sister
Isolina, with the help of nuns from her congregation, missionaries from other
churches, and private donations, created counseling and educational programs in
Ponce and Cabo Rojo, including an industrial sewing school, childcare,
sports-related activities, and photography workshops, among others. She created
an official community publication called "El Playero."