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Saints of the Hl. Land
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Thursday, 24 April 2008 |
Abuna Yaaqub El-Haddad was born on February, 1, 1875 in Lebanon. While in Egypt working as a teacher, he felt God's call to become a priest. He entered in Saint Anthony's convent of the Capuchin Friars in Khashbau in 1893. He took perpetual vows in 1898 and became a priest in 1901. Abuna Yaaqub lived at the Bab Idriss monastery in Beirut where he worked with zeal. One of his many activities was to build schools for village children. He established the Third Order for men and women. After World Was I, he bought the Jall-Eddib hill where to build a church and erect a Cross, for which he had great veneration. The hill soon became the meeting point of those poor and ill, who were welcomed and taken care of by abuna Yaaqub and his Tertiary lay people. Abuna Yaaqub felt the need to establish an institute that would take care of those sick. He founded the Franciscan Nuns of "Lons le Saunier". They would later become the Congregation of the Lebanese Franciscan Sisters of the Cross. After a life full of continuous struggle, Abuna Yaaqub passed away on June 26, 1954, holding the Cross of the Lord. Many people participated at his funeral, and his fame of being a saint spread fast in the country. He will be beatified by Cardinal José Saraiva Martins, Prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, on June 22 in Beirut. |
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Tuesday, 08 April 2008 |
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Father Joseph was born in Nazareth in 1838. He was among the first seminarians sent to Ghazir, Lebanon, in 1849, for his studies. Back in Jerusalem, he finished his theological courses there and he was ordained in 1863. Up to 1866, he taught in the seminary, he was later sent to Beirut as Secretary of the Apostolic Delegation. In 1889 he was called back to become the Chancellor of the Patriarchate and went to the Vatican Council I as the theologian of the Patriarch. In 1871 he was nominated Canon of the Holy Sepulchre. From 1879, father Joseph worked with sister Marie Alphonsine Ghattas to open the new institute of the Sisters of the Holy Rosary. He died in Nazareth on September 30th, 1892. |
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Wednesday, 19 March 2008 |
Marie-Alphonsine Danil Ghattas was born on October 1843 in Jerusalem. Since her childhood she desired to consecrate her life to God. She asked to enter the institute of the Sisters of Saint Joseph of the Apparition when she was only 14. Later, she had visions of Her Lady, who asked her to found a new institute dedicated to the Holy Rosary. In 1880, with seven other young ladies, she opened the new community. She worked much to open new communities throughout the Holy Land, working hand in hand with father Joseph Tannous, co-founder of the institute and her spiritual director. Sister Marie Alphonsine died on March 25th, 1927.
If you want to know more: prieresetdevotions.blogspot.com/2006/04/mre-marie-alphonsine-danil-ghattas.html |
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Wednesday, 19 March 2008 |
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Simone Sruji was born on June 27 1877, the last of ten children. When he was only 3, he lost both parents in a matter of a few months and his grand mother had to care for him. Simon was later sent to the Farming School of Beit Gemál where he studied and later entered the institute of the Salesians as coadjutor. He would remain in Beit Gemál the whole of his life. He taught many small Muslim children, who called him Mu'allem Sruji. He worked also as a miller and nurse. Since there was no doctor available to the poor, the poor came to him. In his work, Simon was able to make the Gospel alive with action and prayer. People trusted his prayer and asked him to bless the sick and the children. Little by little, people came to trust his judgment also, and so he was called to pacify fighting neighbours. Whenever he could, he would spend his time before the Eucharist. When Fr. Rua, successor of Don Bosco, visited the Holy Land in 1908, he asked his confreres to follow Simon and record his words and deeds, because “he is a saint”. He died of malaria on November 1943. All the people of Beit Gemál and surrounding villages came to give him the last greeting. He was laid to peace near the tomb of Saint Stephen in Beit Gemál. For more information: www.sdb.org/ITA/Pagine/_1_12_19_19_.htm |
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Wednesday, 19 March 2008 |
Maria (Abellin in Galilee, Israel, January 5, 1846 – Bethlehem, August 26, 1878) joined the Carmelites in Pau, France, in 1867 and professed in Mangalore, India, where she had been sent in 1870 as co-founder of that monastery. Back in France in 1872, she was transferred to the Holy Land in 1875 to join the new community in Bethlehem. She was also instrumental to open a new community in Nazareth. Maria was known for her humility, devotion to the Holy Spirit and love for the Church and the Pope. She was beatified by Pope John Paul II the 13th November 1983.
For more information: www.carmelitaniroma.it/Objects/Pagina.asp?ID=356 |
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