- Maria Crocifissa di Rosa
-
Saint Maria di Rosa Foundress Born November 6, 1813
Brescia, ItalyDied 1855
Brescia, ItalyHonored in Roman Catholic Church Beatified 26 May 1940 by Pope Pius XII Canonized 12 June 1954 by Pope Pius XII Feast December 15 Maria Crocifissa Di Rosa (1813–55) was the founder of the Handmaids of Charity in Brescia, Italy, in 1839.[1] She was both beatified and canonized by Pope Pius XII.
She was born as Paolina Francesca di Rosa on November 6, 1813, in the city of Brescia, Italy.[1] First educated in a convent by the Visitation Sisters, she left school after the death of her mother when she was seventeen years old to take care of her father, who ran a saw mill with numerous employees. She helped the women and girls working there. During the cholera epidemic in 1836 she worked in the hospital in Brescia. She founded a school for the hearing impaired and created programs to assist women in poverty.[2] - Her dedication led to her nomination as mother superior. Her spirituality was grounded in the imitation of Christ’s suffering on the Cross. This was the basis of her teaching and contemplation. In her love of the crucified Christ, she translated her dedication to him towards the suffering members of his Mystical Body.[3] In 1840, at age 30, taking the name of Maria Crocifissa di Rosa, she founded a new religious congregation, the Handmaids of Charity, whose chief apostolate was the care of the poor, the sick and the suffering.[3] Papal approval was granted in 1850. Mary died at Brescia in 1855. She was beatified and canonized by Pope Pius XII in 1954.[4]
Sources
- LE ANCELLE DELLA CARITÀ DI BRESCIA.: Per la Beatificazione della loro Madre Fondatrice Maria Crocifissa di-Rosa nel I° Centenario della Congregazione 1840-1940.
- FOSSATI, LUIGI.: Beata Maria Crocifissa Di-Rosa [Di Rosa] - Fondatrice delle Ancelle della Carità in Brescia 1940
Quotes
Categories:- 1813 births
- 1855 deaths
- Italian saints
- Female saints
- Roman Catholic saints
- Beatifications of Pope Pius XII
- People from Brescia
- 19th-century Christian saints
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.