An Italian-American Roman Catholic nun, the founder of the female religious congregation Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, and the first US citizen to be canonized by the Roman Catholic Church.
Born as Maria Francesca Cabrini in Sant’Angelo Lodigiano, Italy, to a family of cherry tree farmers, the youngest of the thirteen children, and one of the four to survive past adolescence. She was born two months premature and was a small and weak child who remained fragile as an adult. At 13, she started attending the Daughters of the Sacred Heart, from which, five years later, she graduated with high honors and a teaching certificate.
Cabrini applied for admission to the same congregation that runs the school she just graduated from but was turned down due to her health issues. Instead, she was offered a position as a teacher and the headmistress of an orphanage in Codogno. While teaching at the orphanage, Cabrini encouraged other young women to help her, and they established a women’s religious community.
At age 27, Cabrini took religious vows and became “mother Cabrini”. She added Xavier to her name to honor Francis Xavier, the patron saint of missionary service. Cabrini and six other women founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, where she served as the superior general of the institute until her death.
The sisters of the congregation took in orphans, and to pay expenses, they opened a day school, taught needlework lessons, and sold their own embroidery. In its first five years, the institute established seven homes, a nursery, and a free school.
Frances Xavier Cabrini wanted to establish a mission in China, but when seeking the approval of Pope Leo XIII, he suggested her to go to the US to help the increasing population of Italian immigrants. And so, at the age of 39, Cabrini, along with six other sisters arrived in NYC. At first, they encountered difficulties from the local Archbishop, but they obtained permission to found an orphanage. Cabrini organized catechism and offered classes for the Italian immigrants, and afterward, she opened a school, a hospital, and more orphanages. During the 35 years of living in the US, she founded 67 missionary institutions throughout the country, as well as in Europe, South America, and South Africa. At 59, she was naturalized as a United States citizen.
Cabrini died at the age of 67 due to complications of dysentery. Her body was buried at an orphanage she founded in West Park, Ulster County, NY, but it was exhumed as part of the canonization process – her head was removed and is preserved in Rome, her arm is at the national shrine in Chicago, while the rest of the body is at a shrine in New York. 21 years after she passed away, Pope Pius XI beatified her, and on July 7th, 1946, she was canonized by the Roman Catholic Church and became the first US citizen to be canonized and to be declared as a saint. St. Frances Xavier Cabrini is the patron saint of immigrants, religious institute, Servants of the Lord and the Virgin of Matará. Read more...
A missionary, philanthropist, Patron of racial justice, and the second US-born citizen to be canonized a Saint.
Born in Philadelphia to a wealthy family. Her mother died five weeks after she was born, and her father remarried a few years later. She and her two sisters were homeschooled. They lived catholic life and were well known for their philanthropic work, regularly distributing food and clothing as well as rent assistance. The family used to travel throughout the US and Europe, where Kathrine became aware of the difficulties of the Native Americans and African-Americans in the country.
After the death of her stepmother and her father very soon after, she was seeking for missionaries in Europe, to mission the Indian-Americans, and was offered by Pope Leo XIII to become one herself. At the age of 29, Drexel decided to become a nun, devoting herself as well as her inheritance to serve God and help the Indian-Americans and African-Americans in the US. She joined the Sisters of Mercy Convent in Pittsburgh, and at the age of 33, professed her vows, took the name ‘Mother Katharine’, and established a religious congregation called the Sisters of the Blessed Sacrament for Indians and Colored.
By the time she died, Mother Katharine had established 145 missions, 62 schools for African-Americans and Native-Americans, and assisted in establishing the Xavier University of Louisiana – the only historically black Catholic college in the US. In 1988, 33 years after she passed away, Pope John Paul II beatified Katharine Drexel, and on October 1, 2000, she was canonized, one of the few US-born saints and the second natural-born US citizen Saint. Read more...
A Christian martyr who was a female teenage warrior in the Hundred Years' War between France and England.
Born to a family of peasants in 15th-century Domrémy, France, Joan listened to the voices of saints guiding her to drive the English out of French territories. She followed the calling, an unusual act to her age and gender at these old times, and with determination, she made her way into the French army.
At only 17 years old, Joan of Arc led the forces towards victory in the battle for Orleans, followed by more victories. Sadly, after several months on the battlefields, she got captured. She was found guilty of heresy in her trial, and burnt alive in front of thousands of people at the marketplace of Rouen. She was only 19 years old.
In 16th century France, she was announced as innocent and became a national heroine. About 500 years later, she was declared and canonized a Roman Catholic Saint by the Pope. Joan d’Arc became a symbol of persistence, determination, fearlessness, and leadership, and due to her gender, she is also a contradiction to the notion of inequality. Read more...