Gaetana Tolomeo | |
---|---|
Born | Catanzaro, Kingdom of Italy | 10 April 1936
Died | 24 January 1997 60) Catanzaro, Italy | (aged
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 3 October 2021, Basilica di Maria Santissima Immacolata, Catanzaro, Italy by Cardinal Marcello Semeraro |
Feast | 19 April |
Gaetana Tolomeo (10 April 1936 - 24 January 1997) - also known as Nuccia - was an Italian Roman Catholic. [1] [2] Tolomeo went through her entire life either confined to her bed or in a chair due to a progressive paralysis that rendered her disabled (she had suffered from this since her childhood to which no doctor could help alleviate). [3] Throughout her life she gained a reputation for her piousness and the messages of the Gospel she sought to spread to others while a guest on a local radio station from 1994 until her death. Her time on the radio station marked her interest in reaching out for the conversion of sinners with an emphasis on reaching out to prostitutes or families in need. [2]
Her beatification process opened just over a decade following her death and she became titled as a Servant of God; it was a decade following that in which Pope Francis titled her as Venerable upon confirming her life of heroic virtue. [2] [1] [3] The Pope later confirmed her beatification in 2020 upon the confirmation of a miracle attributed to her intercession; Tolomeo was beatified in Catanzaro on 3 October 2021.
Gaetana Tolomeo - known also as Nuccia - was born in Catanzaro - on 10 April 1936 [3] (on Good Friday) to Salvatore Tolomeo and Carmela Palermo (who both married on 29 November 1933). Her birth was not registered until 19 April which on the official documents was considered her official date of birth. [2] Teodoro Diaco baptized her on 12 July 1936 in the Chiesa della Madonna del Rosario. Her maternal aunt was Elvira Palermo. Her brother Giuliano was born on 30 October 1940 but died around 1944.
In her childhood she suffered from a progressive and deforming paralysis that stunted her growth and left her disabled. Her parents sought out treatment for her and so sent her to an aunt in Cuneo where she could be treated. The doctors in Cuneo were unable to help alleviate her condition and so she was forced to return to her hometown. [2] Her condition progressed as she grew older which left her confined either to her bed or to a chair. But despite her condition she saw this as God using her suffering to reach the hearts of others in an effort to convert them from their sins. This was something that Tolomeo was adamant about for her entire life and which was also manifested in some of her writings. [1] But Tolomeo also saw her condition as a participation in the Passion of Christ and also alluded to this in her spiritual writings. Tolomeo also for a time was a member of Catholic Action.
Those who came to visit her all noticed the fact that at all times she held clasped in her hands a rosary and Tolomeo herself was a frequent attendee for Eucharistic adoration. People from her town and surrounding areas knew of her and came to her seeking advice which also included priests and small families. In 1994 she began to collaborate with the local radio station "Radio Maria" in order to spread the message of the gospel to the suffering (with whom she identified) but also to drug addicts and prostitutes while also extending her outreach to families in need facing difficulties. Tolomeo often made appearances on the "Il Fratello" program in which the host Federico Quaglini would interview her and discuss spiritual matters with her. [2] [1] Tolomeo also had a strong devotion to Saint Pio of Pietrelcina.
Tolomeo suffered a pulmonary edema and was admitted to hospital where she received a blood transfusion. Her health continued to decline until her death on 24 January 1997; her death was announced on "Radio Maria" the following morning. [2] [3]
Her remains were exhumed and transferred in a white casket to the Chiesa del Monte dei Morti e della Misericordia in Catanzaro. [2] Tolomeo's remains were relocated on 1 November 2010 following a Mass that the Archbishop of Catanzaro-Squillace Antonio Ciliberti presided over; this came after her remains were exhumed on 17 September (in the presence of Ciliberti and the Tolomeo's cause's vice-postulator Pasquale Pitari) for inspection. The local council approved of the exhumation on 15 June 2010 while the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued their approval on 21 June while issuing a set of instructions for performing it.
Her cousin Ida Chiefari wrote the first official biographical account of her life following her death. [1]
The beatification process opened in the Catanzaro-Squillace archdiocese in a diocesan investigation into her life and reputation for holiness that spanned from 31 July 2009 until it was concluded some months later on 24 January 2010. This occurred despite the fact that the formal introduction of the cause did not come until 25 September 2009 when the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" (no objections to the cause being introduced) edict and titling Tolomeo as a Servant of God. The C.C.S. later received the documentation collected during the investigation and validated the process on 9 April 2011 as having complied with their regulations for conducing causes. The postulation (the officials in charge of the cause) submitted the Positio dossier to the C.C.S. on 10 October 2012 for further assessment. [4]
The nine theologians approved her cause at their meeting while the C.C.S. also confirmed their approval to the cause on 26 March 2019 after both bodies had assessed the dossier. [4] Tolomeo became titled as Venerable on 6 April 2019 after Pope Francis signed a decree that recognized that Tolomeo had led a life of heroic virtue. The Pope later confirmed a miracle attributed to her on 29 September 2020 that enabled for her beatification to be celebrated in Catanzaro on 3 October 2021.[ citation needed ]
The current postulator for this cause is the Capuchin priest Carlo Calloni while the current vice-postulator for the cause is the Capuchin priest Pasquale Pitari.
Celine Chludzińska Borzęcka was a Roman Catholic professed religious and the co-foundress - along with her daughter Jadwiga Borzęcka - of the Sisters of the Resurrection. Borzęcka desired the religious life but married in obedience to her parents and bore four children; two died as infants. After her husband's death, she chose to follow the spiritual path with her daughter at her side and began a life in community in Rome.
Cecilia Eusepi was an Italian Roman Catholic and a professed member from the Secular Servites. Eusepi died of tuberculosis at 18 years of age, but only after her confessor advised her to keep a journal of her own life, which she titled Storia di un Pagliaccio, for she considered herself to be a "little clown" and "a half-stupid clown good for nothing"; she wrote that it must be her extreme weakness that appealed to God.
Rachelina Ambrosini was an Italian Catholic laywoman. Her childhood was marked with great devotion to the Blessed Mother and she was known for her intelligent and gentle disposition to those she came into contact with. But in the 1930s she had a dream in which she was told she would die before she turned sixteen. This came to pass after she died from severe meningitis in 1941.
Giuseppina Gabriela Bonino, also known by her religious name Giuseppina Gabriella of Jesus, was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Suore della Sacra Famiglia di Savigliano. Bonino dedicated her life to the ill and to orphans and did this in drawing upon her own experience in tending to her ailing father and to orphans in her hometown - all this prior to and after the establishment of her religious congregation.
Eusebia Palomino Yenes was a Spanish Roman Catholic professed religious and a professed member from the Salesian Sisters of Don Bosco. Palomino worked as a domestic in her adolescence having withdrawn from her education in order to support her parents though she later worked with the Salesian Sisters before she began the process of becoming a religious of that order in the 1920s; she afterwards continued most of the same duties and became known for her devotion to the five wounds of Jesus Christ and to the Via Crucis.
Gaetana Sterni was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Sisters of Divine Will. Sterni's life became marred due to the deaths of close relations including her husband and sole child which prompted her to look towards an apostolate to aid others and to ease others' sufferings. The order she founded was dedicated to total consecration to Jesus Christ and to an active apostolate of evangelic zeal.
Blessed María Pilar López de Maturana Ortiz de Zárate, also known by her religious name Margarita María, was a Spanish Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Mercedarian Missionaries of Bérriz. The religious made several international trips in order to serve in the missions as her order often dabbled in and undertook these trips despite a serious ulcer that transcended into stomach cancer but nevertheless she continued to promote the charism of the missions.
Blessed Bruna Pellesi, known as Maria Rosa of Jesus, was an Italian nun who was a member of the Franciscan Missionary Sisters of Christ. Pellesi served as an educator in places such as Sassuolo until she contracted tuberculosis and was moved to various sanatoriums for recuperation until the end of her life when she died in her convent.
María Guadalupe García Zavala – born Anastasia Guadalupe García Zavala – was a Mexican Roman Catholic religious sister and the co-founder of the Handmaids of Santa Margherita and the Poor. She is also known as "Mother Lupita". At one time, she was engaged to be married but she decided her religious call was too strong for that and she broke off her engagement in order to pursue this call. She dedicated herself to the care of ill people and was noted for her compassion and faith.
Blessed Maria Teresa of Saint Joseph, DCJ, was a German religious sister and the founder of the Carmelite Daughters of the Divine Heart of Jesus. Tauscher worked in Cologne and was removed from her position after she converted to Roman Catholicism in 1888 so founded a congregation in the Netherlands upon choosing the Carmelite charism for her life.
Assunta Marchetti, SS was an Italian Catholic who cofounded of the Missionary Sisters of Saint Charles Borromeo. She worked in Brazil from 1895 until her death.
Giuditta Vannini – also known as Giuseppina – was an Italian Roman Catholic nun who became a Camillian. Together with Luigi Tezza she established the religious congregation known as the Daughters of Saint Camillus. She and her two siblings were orphaned as children and were placed in different homes; she was raised and educated in Rome under nuns where her vocation to the religious life was strengthened. Vannini later tried joining a religious order but was forced to leave during her novitiate period after suffering from ill health. She and Tezza met in 1891 and founded a religious congregation of which Vannini served as Superior General until her death while Tezza was exiled to Peru around 1900.
María Josefa Segovia Morón was a Spanish Roman Catholic and the co-founder of the Teresian Institute that she established alongside Father Pedro Castroverde. Morón devoted her life to the functioning of the institute in Spain and served as its first director until her death.
Enrichetta Alfieri, born Maria Angela Domenica Alfieri, was an Italian Roman Catholic religious sister and a member of the Sisters of Divine Charity.
Janina Szymkowiak - in religious Sancja - was a Polish Roman Catholic professed religious from the Daughters of the Sorrowful Mother of God. The nun studied foreign languages and literature before the outbreak that turned into World War II in which her convent was turned into a field hospital for prisoners of war as well as a place to do forced labor for the Nazi soldiers.
María del Carmen González-Ramos García-Prieto de Muñoz, also known by her religious name María del Carmen of the Child Jesus, was a Spanish Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Franciscan Sisters of the Sacred Hearts. She married in mid-1857 – against her parents' advice – to a brash and dissolute husband and secured his repentance not too long before his death.
Saturnina Rodríguez de Zavalía, also known by her religious name Catalina de María, was an Argentine Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Handmaids of the Heart of Jesus. Zavalía was married for just over a decade before she followed her religious calling and founded an order that spread across Argentina; she collaborated with José Gabriel del Rosario Brochero before her death.
Carmen Elena Rendiles Martínez - in religion María Carmen - was a Venezuelan Roman Catholic professed religious from the Servants of the Eucharist and the founder of the Servants of Jesus of Caracas. Rendiles served in a leadership position for her order in France where she spent her time of religious formation and returned to Venezuela to found her order in 1965 and assume control as Superior-General of her new order.
Sílvia Cardoso Ferreira da Silva was a Portuguese Roman Catholic. During her lifetime she led a tireless apostolate dedicated to serving the poor in Brazil and in her native land where she founded retreat centers and soup kitchens. In addition to these initiatives with her own resources she funded a boarding school for girls but divested most of her time and effort in a hospital that she sought to improve on following its inauguration.
María Emilia Riquelme y Zayas was a Spanish Roman Catholic religious sister and the founder of the Misioneras del Santísimo Sacramento y María Inmaculada. In her childhood she moved from place to place, since her father was an officer and was moved to different barracks across the nation. All the while she studied in boarding schools to perfect her knowledge in French and art. After her schooling she felt drawn to the religious life and set herself on entering a convent after her father died. But ill health forced her to give up this idea and she instead founded a congregation of her own alongside several like-minded women who made the poor the focus of their apostolate. This congregation would spread within Spain and later across to other countries such as Portugal and Bolivia.