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Name | Saint Rose Venerini |
---|---|
Birth date | February 2, 1656 |
Death date | May 7, 1728 |
Feast day | May 7 |
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Imagesize | 200px |
Birth place | Viterbo, Italy |
Death place | Rome, Italy |
Beatified date | May 4, 1952 |
Canonized date | 3 June 2007 |
Canonized by | Pope Benedict XVI |
Saint Rosa Venerini (February 9, 1656 – May 7, 1728) was the founder of a Roman Catholic religious congregation of women, often called the Venerini Sisters. Rosa Venerini died a saintly death in the community of St. Mark's in Rome on the evening of May 7, 1728.
She was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on 15 October 2006.
According to her first biographer, Father Girolamo Andreucci, S.I., she made a vow to consecrate her life to God at the age of seven. At age twenty, Rosa raised questions about her own future. In the autumn of 1676, on the advice of her father, Rosa entered the Dominican Monastery of St. Catherine, with the prospect of fulfilling her vow. With her Aunt Anna Cecilia beside her, she learned to listen to God in silence and in meditation. She remained in the monastery for only a few months because the sudden death of her father forced her to return to her mother. Her brother Domenico then died at only 27 years of age; a few months later her mother died.
In the meantime, Maria Maddalena married. There remained at home only Orazio and Rosa, by now twenty-four years old. Rosa began to gather the girls and women of the area in her own home to recite the rosary. The way in which the girls and women prayed, and above all, their conversation before and after the prayer, opened the mind and heart of Rosa to a sad reality: the woman of the common people was a slave of cultural, moral and spiritual poverty. She then understood a higher mission which she gradually identified, in the urgent need to dedicate herself to the instruction and Christian formation of young women, not with sporadic encounters, but with a school, understood in the real and true sense of the word.
On August 30, 1685, with the approval of the Bishop of Viterbo, Cardinal Urbano Sacchetti and the collaboration of two friends, Gerolama Coluzzelli and Porzia Bacci, Rosa left her father’s home to begin her first school, according to an innovative plan that had matured in prayer and her search for the will of God. The first objective of this foundress was to give the girls of the common people a complete Christian formation and prepare them for life in society. Without great pretense, Rosa opened the first “Public School for Girls in Italy”. The origins were humble but the significance was prophetic: the human promotion and spiritual uplifting of women was a reality that did not take long to receive the recognition of the religious and civil authorities.
The validity of this initiative was acknowledged and its fame went beyond the confines of the Diocese. Mark Antonio Cardinal Barbarigo, Bishop of Montefiascone, understood the Viterbo project and he called Rosa to his diocese. From 1692 to 1694, she opened ten schools in Montefiascone and the villages surrounding Lake Bolsena. The cardinal provided the material means and Rosa made the families aware, trained the teachers, and organized the schools. When she had to return to Viterbo to attend to her first school, Rosa entrusted the schools and the teachers to the direction of a young woman, Lucia Filippini, in whom she has seen particular gifts of mind, heart and spirit.
After the openings in Viterbo and Montefiascone, other schools were started in Lazio. Rosa reached Rome in 1706, but the first experience in Rome was a failure, which caused her to wait six long years before regaining the trust of the authorities. On December 8, 1713, with the help of Abate Degli Atti, a friend of the Venerini family, Rosa was able to open one of her schools in the center of Rome at the foot of the Campidoglio.
On October 24, 1716, they received a visit from Pope Clement XI, accompanied by eight Cardinals, who wanted to attend the lessons. At the end of the morning he addressed these words to rosa: “Signora Rosa, you are doing that which we cannot do. We thank you very much because with these schools you will sanctify Rome ”.
From that moment on, Governors and Cardinals asked for schools for their areas. The duties of the Foundress became intense, consisting of travels and hard work interwoven with joys and sacrifices for the formation of new communities. Wherever a new school sprang up, in a short time a moral improvement could be noted in the youth.
Rosa Venerini died a saintly death in the community of St. Mark's in Rome on the evening of May 7, 1728. She had opened more than forty schools. Her remains were entombed in the nearby Church of the Gesù, so loved by her. In 1952, on the occasion of her beatification, they were transferred to the chapel of the Generalate in Rome.
After her first contacts with the Dominican Fathers at the Sanctuary of Our Lady of the Oak Tree, near Viterbo, she followed the austere spirituality of Ignatius of Loyola under the direction of the Jesuits, especially Father Ignatius Martinelli.
After having made its contribution to the Italian immigrants to the USA from 1909 and in Switzerland from 1971 to 1985, the Congregation extended its apostolic activity to other lands: India, Brazil, Cameroon, Romania, Albania, Chile, Venezuela and Nigeria.
She was canonized by Pope Benedict XVI on 15 October 2006.
Category:Italian saints Category:Italian Roman Catholic nuns Category:1656 births Category:1728 deaths Category:Beatifications of Pope Pius XII Category:People from the Province of Viterbo Category:Female saints Category:18th-century Christian saints
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