Giuditta Vannini
Giuditta Vannini | |
---|---|
Religious | |
Born | Giuditta Adelaide Agata Vannini 7 July 1859 Rome, Papal States |
Died | 23 February 1911 Rome, Kingdom of Italy | (aged 51)
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 16 October 1994, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II |
Canonized | 13 October 2019, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope Francis |
Feast | 23 February |
Attributes | Religious habit |
Patronage | Daughters of Saint Camillus |
Giuditta Vannini (7 July 1859 – 23 February 1911)[1] – also known as Giuseppina – was an Italian Roman Catholic nun who became a Camillian. Together with Luigi Tezza she established the religious congregation known as the Daughters of Saint Camillus.[2][3] She and her two siblings were orphaned as children and were placed in different homes; she was raised and educated in Rome under nuns where her vocation to the religious life was strengthened. Vannini later tried joining a religious order but was forced to leave during her novitiate period after suffering from ill health. She and Tezza met in 1891 and founded a religious congregation of which Vannini served as Superior General until her death while Tezza was exiled to Peru around 1900.[4][5]
Her beatification process opened in the 1950s, though its formal introduction came in the late 1970s at which point she became titled as a Servant of God; she became titled as Venerable in 1992 upon papal confirmation of her heroic virtue.[2] Pope John Paul II presided over Vannini's beatification on 16 October 1994. Pope Francis confirmed her canonization in mid-2019 and canonized her as a saint in Saint Peter's Square on 13 October 2019.[6][7][8]
Life
[edit]Giuditta Vannini was the second of three children to the cook Angelo Vannini and Annunziata Papi; her two siblings were Giulia and Augusto. Her baptism was celebrated on 8 July in the Basilica di Sant'Andrea delle Fratte and she was given the baptismal names "Giuditta Adelaide Agata".[4] The children were orphaned after her father died on 18 August 1863 when she was four (from a sudden and severe intestinal blockage in Ariccia) and her mother when she was seven (her mother remarried on 11 May 1865 but died on 6 November 1866); she was also separated from her siblings when she was sent to the Torlonia orphanage at Via Sant'Onofrio in Rome under the guidance of the Vincentian Sisters until 1883.[2][4] Her brother was sent to live with their maternal uncle Gioacchino Papi while her sister was sent to the Sisters of Saint Joseph. Both her First Communion and Confirmation were celebrated on 19 March 1873. Vannini obtained a diploma as a kindergarten teacher but settled instead on the religious life.[5]
Vannini entered the Vincentian Sisters on 3 March 1883 to become a professed religious and commenced her novitiate period in Siena; she was forced to leave due to ill health in 1887. Vannini had returned to Rome to recuperate and then in 1888 decided to resume her religious formation. But after she returned to Siena the order rejected her because she had been deemed unsuitable for formation.[5][4] It was sometime later that she would meet Luigi Tezza (in a confessional when she sought his advice) on 17 December 1891 at the end of a spiritual retreat she was attending; Tezza desired the establishment of an all-female religious congregation dedicated to caring for the sick and dying, and asked if Vannini would be interested in joining him.[5] Vannini accepted Tezza's offer after discerning and reflecting on her vocation on 2 February 1892 and the two began to form a group of other women to serve as the basis for their congregation. The decisive moment came on 19 March 1892 when she and two companions received the scapular and the religious habit of the Camillian tertiaries and on 19 March 1893 professed her private vows as "Giuseppina". Her perpetual religious profession was made sometime later on 8 December 1895 after she established with Tezza the Daughters of Saint Camillus and she was made its Superior General.[2] Her profession was made in private since her initial application for ecclesiastical approval of the order had been rejected.[4]
But she and Tezza faced difficulties soon after when Pope Leo XIII decided not to allow for the opening of new religious congregations around 1900 added with the unjust slander directed at Tezza which led to the Cardinal Vicar of Rome Pietro Respighi sending him to Lima in Peru in 1900 to exercise his pastoral mission there. This new development prompted for the leadership of the order to fall to Vannini alone and she would maintain correspondence with Tezza until her death.[5][3] The congregation received formal approval from Respighi on 21 June 1909 as an order of diocesan right.
In 1910 she visited the order's Italian houses and those in France before suffering from heart disease. Vannini died during the evening on 23 February 1911 in her bed in Rome from heart disease; her remains were interred in Rome but later relocated to the order's motherhouse in Grottaferrata.[4][5] The congregation received the decree of praise on 25 February 1922 from Pope Pius XI and received papal approval from Pius XI a decade later on 17 June 1931.[3] In late 2005 there are 823 religious in a total of 97 houses in places in Europe such as Poland and Portugal. The congregation also operates in Latin America in countries such as Argentina and Mexico and also operates in Africa in Benin and Burkina Faso.
Canonization
[edit]The diocesan process for the beatification process commenced on 8 June 1955 and ended on 20 December 1956. Her spiritual writings were all collected and investigated while forming an essential part of the beatification process as being a vital component to investigating her virtues and her religious life; the decree on her writings was signed on 22 March 1961. The formal introduction of the cause – which titled Vannini as a Servant of God – came on 15 December 1977. The Positio dossier – containing biographical details and championing her cause – was submitted to the C.C.S. officials in Rome in 1988. Theologians approved the cause on 26 October 1991, as did the C.C.S. cardinal and bishop members on 7 January 1992. Pope John Paul II declared Vannini to be Venerable on 7 March 1992 on the account of her model life of heroic virtue which she practiced throughout her life.[2]
Her beatification depended upon papal confirmation of a miraculous healing attributed to her intercession that neither science or medicine could explain. The miracle required was investigated in the diocese that it originated in and the C.C.S. validated that process on 20 December 1985. The panel of medical experts (not all of them Catholic) met and approved the healing as having no scientific or medical explanation on 16 March 1993; theologians approved it as well, on 4 June 1993, as having occurred due to Vannini's intercession. The C.C.S. itself also approved the healing as a legitimate miracle on 5 October 1993 and passed it onto the pope, who approved it on 23 December 1993. John Paul II celebrated her beatification on 16 October 1994 (it was celebrated during the Ninth General Assembly of the Synod of Bishops on the theme of consecrated life in the world).[2][5]
The second and final miracle required for her to be canonized was investigated in the Sinop diocese in Brazil from 1 to 4 December 2015 before the information collected was transmitted to the C.C.S. in Rome for evaluation later that month; it involved the cure of a construction worker. Medical experts approved the miracle on 27 September 2018 as did theologians on 19 February 2019 and the C.C.S. members just a couple of months later on 7 May. Pope Francis signed the decree recognizing the healing in question as a miracle on 13 May 2019 that enabled for Vannini to be canonized. The pope convened a gathering of cardinals on 1 July 2019 to schedule the date for the canonization. The Pope canonized her in Saint Peter's Square on 13 October 2019.[8][7][6]
The postulator for the cause is Bernadette Rosoni; the postulator before that was Gabriella Marzio.
References
[edit]- ^ "Giuseppina Vannini: From being an orphan to caring for the sick - Vatican News". vaticannews.va. 12 October 2019. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
- ^ a b c d e f "Blessed Josephine Vannini". Saints SQPN. 12 April 2015. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
- ^ a b c "Biographies of New Blesseds – 1994". EWTN. Retrieved 24 February 2016.
- ^ a b c d e f "Vannini, Giuseppina, Bl". encyclopedia.com. New Catholic Encyclopedia. 2003. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Beata Giuseppina Vannini". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
- ^ a b "Pope advances sainthood causes, including Brazil's 'Mother Teresa'". Catholic Philly. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
- ^ a b "Pope advances sainthood causes, including Brazil's 'Mother Teresa'". catholicnews.com. Archived from the original on 14 May 2019. Retrieved 14 May 2019.
- ^ a b Linda Bordoni (1 July 2019). "Pope to canonize Newman and four others on 13 October". Vatican News. Retrieved 5 July 2019.
External links
[edit]- 1859 births
- 1911 deaths
- 19th-century venerated Christians
- 20th-century Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- 20th-century venerated Christians
- Beatifications by Pope John Paul II
- Camillians
- Canonizations by Pope Francis
- Founders of Catholic religious communities
- Italian beatified people
- 19th-century Italian Roman Catholic religious sisters and nuns
- People from Rome
- Superiors general
- Venerated Catholics by Pope John Paul II