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Saint of the month
St. Rita of Cascia
Also known as:
Margarita of Cascia
Rita La Abogada de Imposibles
Memorial
22 May
Profile
Daughter of Antonio
and Amata Lotti; known as Peacemakers of
Jesus, they had Rita late in life. From
her early youth, Rita visited the
Augustinian
nuns at Cascia, and showed interest
in a religious life. However, when she
was twelve, her parents
betrothed her to Paolo Mancini, an
ill-tempered, abusive individual who
worked as town watchman, and was dragged
into the political disputes of the
Guelphs and Ghibellines.
Disappointed but obedient, Rita
married him when she was 18, and was
the
mother of twin sons.
She put up with Paolo's abuses for
eighteen years before he was ambushed
and stabbed to death. Her sons swore
vengeance on their
father's killers, but through Rita's
prayers and interventions, they forgave
the offenders.
Upon the deaths of her sons, Rita again
felt the call to religious life.
However, some of the sisters at the
Augustinian
monastery were relatives of her
husband's assassins, and she was denied
entry for fear of causing dissension.
Asking for the intervention of Saint
John the Baptist, Saint
Augustine of Hippo, and Saint
Nicholas of Tolentino, she managed
to bring the warring factions together,
not completely, but sufficiently that
there was peace, and she was admitted to
the
monastery of Saint
Mary Magdalen at age 36.
Rita lived 40 years in the
convent, spending her time in prayer
and charity, and working for peace in
the region. She was devoted to the
Passion, and in response to a prayer to
suffer as Christ, she received a chronic
head wound that appeared to have been
caused by a
crown of thorns, and which bled for
15 years.
Confined to her bed the last four years
of her life, eating little more than the
Eucharist,
teaching and directing the younger
sisters. Near the end she had a visitor
from her home town who asked if she'd
like anything; Rita's only request was a
rose from her family's estate. The
visitor went to the home, but it being
January, knew there was no hope of
finding a flower; there, sprouted on an
otherwise bare bush, was a single
rose blossom.
Among the other areas, Rita is
well-known as a
patron of desperate, seemingly
impossible causes and situations. This
is because she has been involved in so
many stages of life -
wife,
mother,
widow, and
nun, she buried her family, helped
bring peace to her city, saw her dreams
denied and fulfilled - and never lost
her faith in God, or her desire to be
with Him.
Born
1386 at Roccaparena,
Umbria,
Italy
Died
22 May
1457 at the
Augustinian
convent at Cascia of
tuberculosis
Beatified
1 October
1627 by
Pope
Urban VIII
Canonized
24 May
1900
Patronage
abuse victims
againts infertility
against loneliness
against sickness
against sterility
against wounds
bodily ills
Dalayap,
Philippines
desperate causes
difficult marriages
forgotten causes
Igbaras, Iloilo,
Philippines
impossible causes
lost causes
parenthood
sick people
sterile people
victims of physical spouse abuse
widows
wounded people
Prayers
Prayer I to...
Prayer II to...
Hymn to...
Representation
nun holding a
crown of thorns
nun holding
roses
nun holding
roses and figs
nun with a
wound on her forehead
Additional Information
A Life of Heroic Humility and Obedience,
by
Pope
John Paul II
Google Directory
The
Book of
Saints, by the
Monks of Ramsgate
Our Sunday Visitor's Encyclopedia of
Saints, by Matthew Brunson
Source:
http://www.usccb.org |
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