Tuesday, June 17, 2025

MORE SAINTS FOR USA


Ever wonder why there so many Italian saints? Could it be because they lived so close to the heart of the Church- the Vatican?  But now our own young country may have more saints added to the long list. We certainly have many being considered.

The nation’s first-of-its-kind Center for Sainthood Studies is being established at St. Patrick’s Seminary & University in Menlo Park, California. This groundbreaking initiative aims to provide a roadmap for advancing candidates for canonization and increasing the chances of American candidates achieving sainthood.

San Francisco Archbishop Salvatore J. Cordileone officially approved the initiative in an April 14 decree, emphasizing the key goal as “fostering a deeper understanding of the processes involved in recognizing the holiness of individuals and their potential for sainthood.”

The Center will offer a range of resources, including relics and archival materials, networking opportunities, and a critical six-day course. The first course, will be held from February 16-21, 2026, at the Vallombrosa Retreat Center in Menlo Park.

It will be led by postulators and canon law experts Dr. Emanuele Spedicato, Doctor in Canon Law, Rotal Advocate, Associate Professor at Pontifical Gregorian University in Rome and Consultant at the Dicastery for the Doctrine of the Faith, Postulator for Causes of Canonization.  

 Dr. Waldery Hilgeman from Rome, Doctor in Canon and Civil Law, is Judge at the Utrecht Tribunal and Postulator for Causes of Canonization. He is a Consultant for religious institutes and ecclesial movements and regularly conducts academic seminars and workshops on canon law.

Participants in the course will earn an official certificate upon completion. The program is open to clergy, religious, and laity interested in understanding the theological and historical context behind the sainthood process, as well as gaining practical skills in navigating the diocesan canonical procedures.

The certificate program will enable one to effectively begin a cause for canonization leading through the Diocesan phase of the canonization process. The official certificate from the Center for Sainthood Studies is endorsed by the Archdiocese of San Francisco, providing participants with networking opportunities to connect with scholars, postulators, and other experienced professionals in Sainthood Causes.

 

Thursday, June 12, 2025

NEW SAINT OF PAPUA NEW GUINEA

 

Among the Blesseds to be canonized this year is the martyr, PETER TO ROT, who is the first saint of Papua New Guinea. He served as catechist in his village and was entrusted with the local parish during World War II when Imperial Japanese forces occupied the region.

He stood up for religious values in the face of Japanese oppression and continued to hold secret services when the Japanese restricted him from active pastoral service. Bl.To Rot was an outspoken critic of  the Japanese. 

 Bl. Peter To Rot was born  in 1912 on the New Pomerania island in the then-German New Guinea. He was the third of six children of the well-respected village chief, Angelo Tu Puia,  and Maria Ia Tumul who had both converted to Catholicism in 1898.

 His father taught him the basics of catechism and sent him to the local mission school in 1919 despite the fact that education was not an obligation at the time. He was quite agile in climbing coconut trees and he was more than willing to do this to acquire coconuts for older villagers.

 In 1930 Father Laufer, the parish priest of Rakunai, asked Bl. Peter’s father if he would allow the young man to start his studies for the priesthood. His father said that the time was not right for that but it would be more than appropriate if his son studied to become a catechist. He began his studies at Saint Paul's College of the Missionaries of the Sacred Heart in Taliligap after which he was commissioned as a catechist for the parish of Rakunai in 1933 when the local bishop gave him the catechist's cross. He then returned to his village where he would go on to aid Father Laufer. He was an excellent teacher and an organizer of classes for all. It was noted tha he had a Bible on his person at all times.

 In 1936 he married Paula Ia Varpit and the couple went on to have three children, one  who died as an infant and another dying soon after the war. His final child, a girl, Rufina La Mama, was born after Bl. To Rot's death and is still alive. 

Once the Japanese forces occupied the nation in March 1942 their soldiers interned all of the foreign missionaries though remained indifferent to religion on the whole. The parish priest left Bl. Peter in charge of his parish and he became its active leader. He cared for those who were ill and poor while also aiming to better educate converts.

Towards late 1943 the Japanese authorities restricted religious services and a few months later forbade them in full. But  Bl.for his own life despite the fear of those around him. The destruction of the church a short while later saw him build a "bush church" outside the village to hold secret services; he kept records of baptisms and weddings there.

 He was planting vegetables to give to the Japanese when he was arrested on Christmas 1944.

 According to accounts, his questioning by the official was a  farce as well as an expression of the crudest violence. He was sentenced to two  months' imprisonment. Later, referring to his imprisonment, Bl. Peter said: "I  am here because of those who broke their marriage vows and because of those who  do not want the growth of God's kingdom".

He was held in a  concentration camp which had been set up in a cave. Various accusations were leveled at him, including: religious gatherings, undue interference in the Japanese plan for polygamy, and persistence in his catechetical activities.

 On one occasion his wife and two children came to visit him and she begged him to give up being a catechist so he would remain safe. But Bl. Peter was adamant he would not relinquish his responsibilities to the people. On the date of his death he said to his mother: "the police told me that, this evening, a Japanese doctor will come to give me some medicine. Surprising since I'm not sick. I suspect this is a trick. He told his wife to bring his cross and good clothes so he could go to God dressed in proper attire.

He was given a lethal injection and then given something to drink. But the guards seeing that the poison was slow to act so made him lie down while the doctor covered his mouth. He was stricken with convulsions and was held down as he died while being struck on the back of his neck with a beam. Upon his death a policeman went to the chief of the village, Rakunai and said: "Your catechist is dead".

The incredulous chief demanded to know what the officers did to Bl.To Rot but the officer said: "He fell ill and died". His uncle Taura was sent to the prison to view the body and to take him for burial. His remains were found warm and still curled up with cotton stuffed in his ears and nose with blood and a red scarf wrapped around his neck. The back of his neck was swollen and bore wounds and a clear needle mark was present on his right arm. He was given a chief's funeral in the Catholic cemetery, but the funeral was held in silence because people feared the Japanese.

The government of Papua New Guinea is so thrilled to have this native being honored by the Church, that they issued a series of postage stamps depicting his life.  May his devotion to the Lord be an example to his people today.



Monday, June 9, 2025

MADRECITA OF THE ANDES- A NEW SAINT

One of the blesseds to soon be canonized by the Holy Father is one of my favorites. Her biography reads like Indiana Jones in the jungle and I reprint it from my original Blog November  2012.


BL. MARIA TRONCATTI was born at Corteno Golgi (Brescia) on 16 February 1883. She grew up in a large family happily working in the fields and caring for her younger brothers and sisters. She regularly attended catechism in her parish, where she developed a deep Christian spirit and found her calling to religious life.  In obedience to her father and parish priest, however, she waited until she reached adulthood before asking to be admitted to the Institute of the Salesian Sisters. She made her first profession in 1908.

During the First World War Bl. Maria took a course in health care and worked as a Red Cross nurse in the military hospital. This experience was to prove very valuable in the course of her long missionary life in the Amazon forests of Ecuador.

Susan Cohen Thompson


She left for Ecuador in 1922, her first assignment being in Chunchi, a small town on the Cordillera.

After three years she was sent to work among the Shuar people where, together with two other Sisters, she began the difficult work of evangelization. Madre Maria was in her mid 40s when she headed for the Amazon on horseback to begin her work among these peoples. They faced dangers of every kind: the wild beasts of the forest; the fast flowing rivers that had to be waded through or crossed on fragile "bridges" made from creepers, in canoe, or on the shoulders of the Indians.

The indomitable Shuar of the Amazon, reputed to be the only tribe in the Americas that has never been conquered, have lived as warriors, hunters, cultivators, and healers for generations. Even in today's acquisitive, often wasteful world they defend their rainforests and sustainable ways of life and offer their philosophy of love, joy, and hope. Their area is on the rivers between Ecuador and Peru.


Madre Maria
Bl. Maria's first encounter with these people was life-threatening and terrifying.When they reached Mendez, a tribal chief's young daughter lay mortally wounded by a bullet when she was caught in the crossfire of two warring tribes. The witch doctor had been unable to cure her, so the chief demanded that the missionaries do it or die. Madre Maria operated immediately and after three days the girl's fever left and she was saved. Soon after this the tribal drums beat across the jungle about this "doctor" greater than all their witch doctors. The passage way for the missionaries was secured among the people.

Madre Maria in the middle
To her people she was nurse, surgeon, orthopedist, dentist, anaesthetist. But, above all, she was catechist and evangelizer, rich in the wonderful resources of her faith, patience and fraternal love and she worked effectively for the emancipation of the Shuar women.

A young woman taught them the language, and soon a home for young women was started as well one for babies who were born illegitimate or with defects. Up to the time of the missionaries, by law such infants were killed.

"A glance at the Crucifix gives me the strength and the courage to work” she often used to say.

Bl. Maria lived in the jungle 43 years and died in a tragic air crash at Sucúa on August 25, 1969. Along with two other sisters (who survived) they were on their way to Quito for their annual retreat.

All the surrounding villages came to mourn their loss of this saintly nun who offered her life for reconciliation between the colonizers and the Indians. Her remains lie at Macas, in the Province of Morona (Ecuador).

Madre Maria with some of her children
Josefa Yolanda Solorzano Pisco, from Ecuador, married with five children, was struck down in 2002 by one of the most dangerous forms of malaria,  which in a short time led to an irreversible degenerative process and a diagnosis of only a few days or even a few hours to live.

The collective trusting invocation of  Bl. Maria Troncatti, through a novena of prayers proposed by the Salesian Fr. Edgar Ivan Segarra  had the effect of obtaining for the sick woman the beginning of an unexpected recovery and soon a complete cure.

Her beatification took place November 24, 2012 in  Macas.



PERSONAL NOTE: The year before my trip to Peru I "drew" her name as patron  saint for the year. Who was this woman?  I was fascinated by her and her work. The following year I was offered a trip to Peru by wonderful friends. It was in the north of Peru, away from tourist areas.  I prayed to Madrecita
to keep me safe, especially in my hunt for birds in the mountains.

Looking at Ecuador

Since we were on the border of  Ecuador I had hoped we could cross over, but it was not a good time politically for border crossings. My Irish guide and friend took me to Ayabaca (10,000 ft) for birding where we spent three wonderful, magical days.  Each day as we walked we were able to peer over into Ecuador, praying to this wonderful woman who gave so much to her people.




Saturday, June 7, 2025

ANOTHER TOWN FOR THE NEW POPE

 

Not often mentioned,  our new Holy Father, Pope Leo has also left his mark on another smaller  Peruvian city called CHULUCANAS, in the northern province of Piura, about 30 miles east of the regional capital of Piura (where I was to live for several months), where the desert coast begins to rise up into the Andes. Pope Leo arrived at the Augustinian mission in Chulucanas, in 1985, at the age of 30. 

Chulucanas is a town in Morropón Province, Piura Region, Peru.*  It lies in the Piura Valley just north of the confluence of the Charanal River with the Piura River. Chulucanas is the administrative seat for both Chulucanas District and Morropón Province. The town is famous for its pottery. (Our monastery Christmas card featured a Mother & Child with birds and llamas I brought back from here). Photo below: polishing my Madonna.)

Chulucanas is a city of 40,000 inhabitants, whose origins date back to Inca times. In 1532  the Spanish conqueror Francisco Pizarro is said to have reorganized his troops in the area around Chulucanas before launching his attack against the Inca Empire.

 In 1985, the North American  Robert Francis Prevost arrived as a young jeans-wearing missionary from Chicago with broken Spanish, landing in Chulucanas, Peru at a time when the country was being torn apart by internal conflict.

Chuculanas was not directly affected by the war because it was located far from the Sendero Luminoso's main areas of operation. But everyone living in Peru at the time felt the consequences of the violence. This was especially true for the young priest. Essentially, he had the same "clientele" in mind as the founder and leader of  Shining Path, Abimael Guzmán : the outcasts, the disadvantaged, and the humiliated. The former incited the peasants to violence against the "white" upper class, while Father Prevost tried to help them lead lives of dignity and peace. 

Guillermo Cornejo, Bishop of Lima, said of him: "Whenever there were natural disasters, he took a pick and shovel and went to work alongside those affected. He rode his horse into the mountains and learned Quechua, the language of the indigenous population. He wanted to show: I am here, I can understand you."

 People remember Father Prevost traveling to the adobe mud-brick churches that dot the region, sometimes walking on foot, sometimes on horseback, carrying crucifixes and ceremonial wine, asking altar boys for help with words in Spanish. He would take them on trips to beaches, and hiring karate, swimming and basketball coaches to keep the area’s youth away from crime.

Fidel Alvarado, a priest in the Chulucanas diocese, was a 20-year-old student in the seminary when he met Father Prevost. He recalled a bomb destroying the church door, and threats made to the priests, with the future pope and the other North American priests being told to leave in 24 hours or they would be killed. But they stayed.

 "What convinced them to stay was the people, they had traveled around and felt the love of the people," he said.

*Chulucanas is in the Region of Piura but the Province of Morropon. (See previous Blog for political division of country.)  It is about 1 ½ hour drive by car from the city of Piura where I stayed. The short distance of 38 miles took long due to the poor roads. Roads in this Bog typical, but the main part of the town does have paved roads. One can also see the mud huts people live in.

Thursday, June 5, 2025

WHO EVER HEARD OF CHICLAYO?

 

By now everyone knows as much about the new Holy Father, Pope Leo XIV, as they think they can, and one of the new pieces of the puzzle of his most active life, was his long stint in Peru.

  “Greetings … to all of you, and in particular, to my beloved diocese of Chiclayo in Peru, where a faithful people have accompanied their bishop, shared their faith,” he said in Spanish, standing on the balcony of St. Peter’s Basilica for his first speech as the leader of the Catholic Church.

 Those who have followed this Blog over the years know what this country means to mean, most importantly the people. 

In past Blogs (June 2013) I briefly mention CHICLAYO, where the future pope was Bishop. Not only do I know Chiclayo, but I have stayed there on two occasions, with the mother of our friend, Elaina in Piura.  I could do many blogs on the wonderful and sometimes funny things that happened when in that most friendly city and surrounding area from sea to mountains.

(Photo of Elaina's family.  She is in blue, her mother seated to her right and her brother and his wife and their two daughters)

Chiclayo, with more than 800,000 people, is the main commercial hub of Peru’s northern Pacific coast, with highways linking it to the Andes mountains and Amazon region. The city is located a little less than 9 miles from the Pacific Ocean and is the capital of the Department of Lambayeque*. Its surrounding lands are agriculturally productive, but despite its economic impact, Chiclayo faces social problems, with roughly 20% of its population living in poverty. (Photo below shows fishermen still using reed boats to catch fish).

After a year, the future Pope left to finish his doctoral degree and serve briefly in Illinois. But he soon returned to Peru, serving as a missionary in the northern city of Trujillo. He stayed there through the remainder of the 1980s and 1990s, amid civil war between the government and various militant groups – primarily the Maoist guerrillas of Sendero Luminoso, or “Shining Path,” who aimed to install a communist state, devastating the whole country.

 The violence hit other regions more severely, but Trujillo and the surrounding area were home to car bombs, sabotaged electrical grids and brutal military dragnet operations. Father Prevost accompanied Peruvians through some of the darkest days of the country’s history.

As the country transitioned away from the civil war period, which ultimately left nearly 70,000 dead, Father Prevost remained in Peru. During the 1990s, President Alberto Fujimori’s government built a polarizing legacy by undermining democracy and citizenship rights. The future pope lived in Chiclayo for nearly 10 years when he served as bishop from 2015 to 2023, after obtaining Peruvian citizenship.

 The new Pope thought so much of his time in Chiclayo, that he has made a young man from Chiclayo, Edgard Rimaycuna, his new secretary.

*Peru is divided into both geographic and political divisions. Geographically, it's split into three main regions: the Costa (coast), Sierra (highlands), and Selva (jungle). Politically, Peru is divided into 25 regions and one province (Lima). These regions are further subdivided into 196 provinces, which are then divided into 1,891districts. 

This can be confusing and maybe more info than you need or want: Piura is the northernmost department (with its capital the city of Piura) Lambayeque is the second-smallest department in Peru, but it is also its most densely populated department. It has three provinces and 38 districts.  Its capital is Chiclayo. 

In top photo  we are eating a meal of cuy, which is guinea pig. Before you turn your noses up, let me tell you it is better than chicken, a lot like rabbit, which I love. Whenever I ate it, it was fried, but it can also be broiled, roasted or even made into a fricassee. 

Guinea pigs originated in the Andes and are an important culinary staple in the peoples of Peru and Bolivia. Peruvians consume an estimated 65 million guinea pigs each year. The animal is so entrenched in the culture that one famous painting of the Last Supper in the main cathedral in Cusco shows Christ  and His disciples dining on cuy. 

One must remember that much of western Peru is desert (or mountainous) so there is not the land for large livestock, and in many cases the people are too poor to raise such stock. Cuy require much less room than traditional livestock and reproduce extremely quickly and they can be raised in an urban environment. Both rural and urban families raise guinea pigs for supplementary income, and the animals are commonly bought and sold at local markets and large-scale municipal fairs. Guinea pig meat is high in protein and low in fat and cholesterol.