Today came
news that several of our favorite “saints-to-be” will soon be canonized and beatified.
BL. CHARLES de FOUCAULD, a French missionary killed in Algeria in 1916
will be declared a saint. The blessed, also known as Brother Charles of Jesus,
was a soldier, explorer, Catholic revert, priest, hermit, and religious
brother, who served among the nomadic Tuareg people in the Sahara desert in Algeria . Bl.
Charles wanted to live among “the furthest removed, the most abandoned.”
He was
assassinated by a band of men at his hermitage in the Sahara
on Dec. 1, 1916. (See Blog: 3/20/13)
Ven. McGivney
died amid a 19th-century pandemic which may have been caused by a
coronavirus. Biologists using gene-sequencing methods have attributed the
pandemic to a type of coronavirus. This virus, which first appeared in Russia , killed a total of 1 million people
worldwide, including 13,000 in the United States .
French
laywoman VENERABLE PAULINE MARIE JARICOT,
who lived from 1799 to 1862 in Lyon , will also now be beatified.
She founded
the Living Rosary Association and the Society of the Propagation of the Faith,
which later became the first of the four pontifical mission societies.
Pauline Jaricot, a
member of the lay Dominicans, was devoted to promoting support of the
Church’s missionary efforts around the world.
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