One of the reasons I like to explore the lives of modern holy people is, due to our information technology of the past 30 + years, we have so much that is documented. When dealing with the lives of saints that lived centuries ago, one is never certain what is fact and what may be myth. One such saint I recently found is a BENEDICTINE nun, BLESSED GIOVANNA MARIA BONOMO.
She was born in 1606 in Asiago, Italy, of a wealthy and noble family at her family’s country estate, the first of four children born to John, a wealthy merchant, and Virginia Ceschi di Santa Croce, who hailed from the nobility.
Her mother, Virgina, died from a malignant fever when Giovanna was six. Knowing she was to soon die, she urged her husband to give their daughter “every convenience so she can consecrate herself to God.”
When she was 10 months old, it is said that she could already talk. At age five, she could speak Latin without ever studying it and was able to understand the Eucharistic mystery and predict future events.
It
was no surprise, then, that at age 12 she informed her father, Giovanni, of her desire to become a nun.
Three years after Virginia’s death, her father, unable to give Giovanna a suitable education, took her to the Poor Clare monastery of Santa Chiara in Trent. The Sisters provided her with a fitting education due her rank, according to customs of the time. She studied religion, literature, music, embroidery works, and dancing.
Because of her piety, her confessor discerned she should receive her First Holy Communion, despite her being only nine, an age that was exceptionally young at the time for reception of the sacrament. On that occasion, Bl. Giovanna Maria later recalled, she felt like she was in heaven, and pronounced a vow of virginity to Our Lady .
When Giovanna told her father of her desire to enter religious life, he did everything he could to thwart her intentions. When he saw that Giovanna was determined to enter the religious life, he gave in. Finally, at age 15, on June 21, 1621, she entered the Benedictine monastery of San Girolamo in Bassano del Grappa (in the region of Veneto, in northern Italy). Her father chose this place because the family had several relatives who were already here.During
her profession, she was so immersed in God that she fell into ecstasy for the
first time. There, she intensified her prayers and mortifications, fasting and
whipping herself with a knotted rope.
She was beatified by Pope Pius VI in 1783. Her feast is celebrated March 1. Amazingly, during the First World War, when, despite the furious bombardment that destroyed all of Asiago, the statue dedicated to her in 1908 and which stood in front of her birthplace, inexplicably remained intact.
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