Luigi Tezza

Last updated

Luigi Tezza

Priest
Born(1841-11-01)1 November 1841
Conegliano, Treviso, Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia
Died26 September 1923(1923-09-26) (aged 81)
Lima, Peru
Venerated in Roman Catholic Church
Beatified 4 November 2001, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II
Feast
  • 26 September
Attributes
  • Cassock
  • Cross
Patronage

Luigi Tezza (1 November 1841 - 26 September 1923) was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and a professed member of the Camillians. He established the Daughters of St. Camillus and is known as the Apostle of Lima. He was ordained in 1864 and went on to serve the sick and the poor in Peru where he administered. Tezza's new religious congregation was established with the sole aim of sick relief who followed the example of the Camillian order as a branch of it.

Contents

On 4 November 2001 he was beatified as confirmation of his popular status as a Peruvian figure and as well as for his reputation for holiness. [1] [2]

Life

Luigi Tezza was born on 1 November 1841 in Treviso as the sole child of Augustine Tezza (d. 1850) and Catherine Nedwiedt (d. 1880). After the death of his father in 1850 both he and his mother moved to Verona. At the age of 15 he entered as a postulant in the Camillian order in Verona. His mother later became a nun.

Under the guidance of Father Luigi Artini he made his first religious profession on 8 December 1858. He was ordained to the priesthood on 21 May 1864 under the Bishop of Verona Luigi Di Canossa and travelled to Rome as a novice master. Tezza desired to join those in the missions in Africa but this was denied to him. He later spent over three decades in France after being sent there on 10 August 1871 where he became the superior of a small home where he worked to establish other homes and centers for the poor and the ill. Tezza - to that end - also formed a Camillian province in France. Due to the conflict between the state and the church in 1880 he was expelled due to his clerical status and that of being a foreigner. Despite this he returned to France in disguise to continue his work with the sick. [3] [4]

In 1889 in Rome he was chosen as both the Vicar and Procurator General of his order where he commenced a project for a female branch of the Camillian order. He laid the foundation for such an establishment with Giuseppina Vannini - future Blessed - whom he met on 17 December 1891. With her aid Tezza founded on 2 February 1892 the Daughters of St. Camillus and he himself drew up the statutes for the new order. It began with about 50 women and it expanded at a rapid pace. The order was to receive the papal approval of Pope Pius XI in 1931. [5]

The Camilian order soon faced crisis in Peru and Tezza embarked for Peru on 3 May 1900; he arrived there in June 1900 with Father Angelo Ferroni in order to cater to the situation. However prior to departure the Archbishop of Lima Manuel Tovar y Chamorro requested that he remain a little bit longer - he would remain in Peru for the remainder of his life. Tezza devoted himself to an intense apostolate of caring for the sick as well as the poor in hospitals and homes as well as prisons. He served as the confessor and spiritual director in various religious congregations. [6] He also helped Teresa Candamo Álvarez-Calderon - future Venerable - overcome her initial difficulties with her new order.

Tezza died in Lima on 26 September 1923 and was mourned across Peru; he soon became known as the "Apostle of Lima". He was interred in the Generalate of his order in Rome. [7] [8] Cardinal Lorenzo Lauri described Tezza as "the holiest priest in the Diocese of Lima". [9]

Beatification

The beatification process commenced on two fronts in Rome and in Lima. The first process commenced on 21 November 1959 under Pope John XXIII - where he was accorded the title Servant of God - and concluded its work on 13 January 1964. This occurred despite the fact that the cause did not receive a formal introduction at the behest of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints until 15 January 1999. Nevertheless a second process was held that spanned from 16 April 1999 until 13 July 1999. Both processes were ratified on 8 October 1999 in order for the cause to proceed; the Positio was then sent to Rome for evaluation in 2000.

Pope John Paul II proclaimed Tezza to be Venerable on 24 April 2001 after he had recognized that he had lived a model Christian life of heroic virtue.

The miracle attributed to his intercession was investigated over a week from 15 May 1997 until 23 May 1997; it saw the accumulation of documentation and testimonies to attest to a miraculous healing. The process was ratified on 8 October 1999 and was forwarded to Rome for investigation. John Paul II approved it on 7 June 2001 and beatified Tezza on 4 November 2001.

Related Research Articles

Camillus de Lellis Italian Roman Catholic saint

Camillus de Lellis, M.I., was a Roman Catholic priest from Italy who founded the Camillians, a religious order dedicated to the care of the sick. He was beatified by Pope Benedict XIV in the year 1742, and canonized by him four years later in 1746. De Lellis is the patron saint of the sick, hospitals, nurses and physicians. His assistance is also invoked against gambling.

Narcisa de Jesús Ecuadoran laywoman and santa (1832–1869)

Narcisa de Jesús Martillo Morán was an Ecuadorian Catholic saint. Martillo was known for her charitable giving and strict devotion to Jesus Christ while becoming somewhat of a hermit dedicated to discerning his will. The death of her parents prompted her to relocate in order to work as a seamstress while doubling as a catechist and educator to some of her siblings who needed caring. But her devotion to God was strong and it led her to live amongst the Dominican religious in Peru where she spent time before her death.

Giovanni Calabria

Giovanni Calabria was an Italian Roman Catholic priest who dedicated his life to the plight of the poor and the ill. He established two congregations, the Poor Servants of Divine Providence and the Poor Sisters Servants of Divine Providence. to take better care of poor people in various Italian cities and later abroad while underpinning the need to promote the message of the Gospel to the poor.

Luigi Maria Monti

Luigi Maria Monti was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Sons of the Immaculate Conception. He was referred to as "Father" despite not being an ordained priest. Monti served as a nurse for most of his life and aided the ill in the Santo Spirito hospital in Rome while he was there and also worked to tend to ill people during the Brescia cholera epidemic in 1855. Monti also considered entering the religious life and joined the order of Lodovico Pavoni for a brief period of time though became a religious of his own order later on.

Mateo Elías Nieves Castillo

Mateo Elías Nieves Castillo was a Mexican Roman Catholic priest who was also a member of the Order of Saint Augustine who assumed the name of Elias del Socorro when he became a member of the order.

Ludwika Szczęsna

Ludwika Szczęsna was a Polish Roman Catholic nun and was also the co-founder of the Sister Servants of the Most Sacred Heart of Jesus which she established with Józef Sebastian Pelczar. She took the name of "Klara" when she became a nun.

Luigia Poloni

Luigia Poloni was an Italian Roman Catholic nun and was also the co-founder of the Sisters of Mercy of Verona which she established with Charles Steeb. She took the name of "Maria Vincenza" when she became a nun.

Francesco Paleari was an Italian priest and a member of the Society of the Priests of Saint Giuseppe Benedetto Cottolengo. He was a noted preacher and was involved in the work of social services to the poor.

Giuseppe Nascimbeni

Giuseppe Nascimbeni was an Italian Roman Catholic priest who exercised his pastoral mission in his home of Verona and who also established the Little Sisters of the Holy Family.

Pierre Bonhomme

Pierre Bonhomme was a French Roman Catholic priest who exercised his pastoral mission in Cahors. He went on to establish the new religious congregation known as the Sisters of Our Lady of Calvary of Gramat.

Luigi Biraghi

Luigi Biraghi was an Italian Roman Catholic priest who served in his home of Milan. Biraghi later went on to establish his own religious congregation known as the Sisters of Saint Marcellina.

Florentino Asensio Barroso

Florentino Asensio Barroso was a Spanish Roman Catholic who served as the Apostolic Administrator of the Diocese of Barbastro. He served as a chaplain of both the Little Sisters of the Poor and the Servants of Jesus as a priest. He was elevated into the episcopate in 1935 and was killed in 1936 during the onslaught of the Spanish Civil War.

Federico Albert

Federico Albert was an Italian Roman Catholic priest. He established the Vincentian Sisters of Mary Immaculate - also known as the Albertines - and he established this order in order to work with the poor of Turin.

Giuditta Vannini

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.

Zefirino Agostini

Zefirino Agostini was an Italian Roman Catholic priest that served in his hometown of Verona to perform his pastoral duties. He established two religious congregations in his lifetime being the Pious Union of Sisters Devoted to Saint Angela Merici and the Ursuline Sisters of the Daughters of Mary Immaculate.

Luigi Monza

Blessed Luigi Monza was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and the founder of the Secular Institute of the Little Apostles of Charity. Monza's pastoral mission was defined with catering to the needs of the poor and the sick and used his new congregation as a means of spreading this mission.

Juana María Condesa Lluch

Juana María Condesa Lluch was a Spanish Roman Catholic professed religious who established the Handmaids of Mary Immaculate in her hometown of Valencia. She was professed into her own order as a nun in 1911.

Giuseppe Baldo was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and the founder of both the Little Daughters of Saint Joseph (1894) and the Sisters of Charity of Saint Mary (1882). Baldo served as a simple parish priest in the Diocese of Verona and tended to the old and the poor.

Maria Domenica Brun Barbantini was an Italian Roman Catholic professed religious and the founder of the Camillian Sisters Ministers of the Sick. Barbantini served the ill throughout her entire life and she dedicated her life to God following the premature deaths of her husband and son.

Enrico Rebuschini

Enrico Rebuschini was an Italian Roman Catholic priest and professed member from the Camillians. Rebuschini was marked since his childhood as one who had an innate desire to tend to the poor and marginalized and felt the need to hand out his possessions to those less fortunate than himself. But his father opposed his vocation to the priesthood and directed him to studies which he threw himself into in obedience to him. But he felt dissatisfied upon working with his brother-in-law in the silk business and made a final plea to his father to become a priest. His father relented and he commenced his ecclesial studies though in his life afterwards experienced several profound episodes of nervous depression that caused him to grow ill each time.

References

  1. "Blessed Luigi Tezza". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  2. "Blessed Louis Tezza". Saints SQPN. 14 April 2015. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  3. "Blessed Luigi Tezza". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  4. "Blessed Father Louis Tezza". Order of St. Camillus. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  5. "Blessed Luigi Tezza". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  6. "Blessed Luigi Tezza". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  7. "Blessed Louis Tezza". Saints SQPN. 14 April 2015. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  8. "Louis Tezza (1841-1923)". Holy See. Retrieved 22 September 2015.
  9. "Bl. Luigi Tezza". All Saints & Martyrs. Retrieved 22 September 2015.