Ø Italian
virgin and foundress of the Sacramentine Sisters of Bergamo
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Born
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On 18th
January 1847 in Biennio, Brescia, Italy
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Died
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On 18th February 1903 in
Bergamo, Italy of natural causes
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Beatified
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On 1st
October 1989 by Pope John Paul II
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Canonized
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On 26th April 2009 by Pope
Benedict XVI
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Feast
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18th February
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Geltrude
Comensoli was born in Bienno in Val Camonica, Brescia, on January 18, 1847,
the fifth of ten children. On the same day of her birth, her parents, Carlo
and Anna Maria Milesi, took her to the parish Church to be baptized and she
was given the name of Caterina.
At the
age of seven, unable to resist any longer the pressing invitation of Jesus,
one day, in the very early morning, she wrapped herself in her mother’s black
shawl and went to the nearby Saint Mary’s Church. Standing at the balustrade,
she secretely made her First Communion. Caterina experienced a “heavenly”
feeling and swore eternal love to Jesus. The child became more serious,
meditative and more absorbed in the thought of Jesus present in the Eucharist
who, she realized, was often left alone for many days. While still young, she
became an Apostle of the Eucharist: she would have liked to take Jesus
present in the Holy Sacrament onto the top of a high mountain so that
everyone could see and adore Him.
In 1862
she left her family and entered the Institute of the Daughters of Charity,
founded by St. Bartolomea Capitanio, in Lovere. On the Feast of Corpus
Christi of 1878, with the permission of her confessor, she made the vow of
chastity, which she had made on the morning of her secret Comunion,
perpetual. Without neglecting her duties as a domestic servant, Caterina
decided to educate the children of San Gervasio, Bergamo, guiding them
towards an honest life of christian and social virtues.
In 1880,
while in Rome with the Fé-Vitali’s, she succeeded in speaking with Pope Leo
XIII about her plans to establish a religious institute devoted to the
adoration of the Eucharist. The Pope changed them by inviting her to include
the education of young female factory workers as well.
Supported
by the new Bishop of Bergamo, Mgr Guindani, and by her “Father and Superior”,
Rev. F. Spinelli, on December 15, 1882, Caterina, together with two of her
friends began the Congregation of the Sacramentine Sisters of Bergamo with
the first adoration hour of the Blessed Sacrament. On December 15, 1884 she
took the name of Sister Geltrude of the Blessed Sacrament.
The new
Congregation revealed itself to be God’s work. In fact, like all God’s work,
it endured many adversities which sorely tried the “tender little plant”.
However, this plant had already spread its deep roots into the rich soil of
prayer, mortification and humility. It mattered little that Sister Geltrude
and her Sisters, advised by the Bishop of Bergamo, Mgr Camillo Guindani,
successor to Mgr Speranza, had to abandon their first “nest” in order to take
refuge in Lodi. Mgr Rota, Bishop of Lodi, welcomed them and generously gave
them a house in Lavagna di Comazzo, which temporarily became the Mother House
of the Institute.
When
innumerable difficulties had been overcome, Mgr Rota, with the Decree of
September 8, 1891, gave canonical recognition to the Institute. On March 28,
1892, Mother Geltrude returned to Bergamo, the birthplace of the
Congregation. There she gave it decisive and strong direction. God’s work was
fulfilled!
On
February 18, 1903, at midday, Mother Geltrude, bowing her head towards the
Church of Adoration, began her eternal adoration. The news of her death
quickly spread. Those who had known her, especially the poor and the humble,
who were her favourite people, declared her a saint. On August 9, 1926, her
venerable remains were taken from the cemetery of Bergamo to the Mother House
of the Institute which she had established. There she lies in a special
chapel next to the Church of Adoration.
On April
26, 1961, declared as venerable the
by Pope John XXIII .On October 1,
1989, Pope John Paul II declared her a Blessed Soul and On April 26, 2009 Canonized by Pope Benedict XVI .
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