One of our
nuns here is Mother Dilecta. Many years ago we had a young man from the Czech Republic
come and spend summers with us while he was at school in the USA .
When I was
able to go to Prague
a few years later he was my guide, taking me to many of the wonderful monuments
of his homeland. He had always been fascinated by Mother Dilecta’s name and
wondered if it was related to a nun from Prague
who lived in the 17th century named Elekta.
He took me to her convent where I was able to meet her as well as one of
the nuns.
One of them
sits in a chair in the Church of St. Benedict at Hradčanské Square in Prague and exalts sacred respect not only
among the faithful, but also among experts. The body of the VENERABLE ABBESS MARIE ELECTA (1605-1663) is miraculously preserved even 350 years after
death!
Mother Marie
Elekta died in 1663, seven years after establishing a new order of Carmelites in Prague . This Italian-born nun, Caterina
Tramazzoli, was greatly respected as a superior by the other nuns for her devotional and
humble nature. After her death the nuns often went to her grave
in St. Elijah's Chapel to pray, and then things started to happen.
One of the
sisters always smelled violets, and another would see a heavenly glow. Others,
when touching their heads on the gravestone were relieved of headaches. In 1666 the grave was opened and according to
the original reports, the cavity of the tomb and the coffin itself were flooded
with black, smelly water. The body of Mother Marie Electa remained intact,
which those present considered a miracle. When they washed it with vinegar
and a mixture of herbs (which is why her body is dark today), they found it still
flexible. So they tried to sit her down in a chair. At first it did
not work, but then she began to bend. Her neck had been broken when they
stuffed her into a too small coffin, but she raised her head in obedience
to her nuns.
Inside the Church |
A similar
conclusion was reached by a panel of leading experts from the same faculty more
than 300 years later when they wrote in their 2003 report: "The
Commission regards the survival of the intact body as remarkable and extremely rare.”
Venerable Marie Electa miraculously survived during the period of Communism, when the
nuns had to leave their monastery in 1950, being sent to either factories or internment camps. At
first they did not want to leave without the abbess, but
the the Archbishop of Prague told them: "Leave her here if she is
holy, she will take care of herself and her monastery."
And so she stayed all through the years the Communist
regime, while the monastery was converted into a hotel, sitting in her niche waiting
the return of the Carmelites in 1992. When I saw her in 1998 she was behind the
glass and grate in the niche to the right of the altar of the church. She has
slightly open eyes and she looks as if like she is still smiling, letting us
know she has seen things we can only dream of.
A miracle! Thank you for sharing a wonderful story from my country.
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