Pope Francis has canonized six new saints on Sunday, two Indians and four Italians in a mass at Saint Peter’s Square, Rome.
Holy Father Names 6 New Saints
About 5,000 Indians were in Rome to witness the Pope name Kuriakose Elias Chavara and Euphrasia Eluvathingal as saints
About 5,000 Indians were in Rome to witness the Pope name Kuriakose Elias Chavara (1805-1871) and Euphrasia Eluvathingal (1877-1952), as saints.
Both were from Kerala and members of the ancient Syro-Malabar Catholic Church in southern India.
According to reports, Chavara was founder of the Church’s first men’s congregation and helped start the first women’s congregation. Eluvathingal, also known as Rose, was part of the women’s congregation.
Pope Francis spoke of taking inspiration from their “example of harmony and reconciliation.”
“… Let the Lord give new missionary impetus to the Church in India so that, inspired by their example of harmony and reconciliation, Indian Christians continue on the path of solidarity and fraternal co-existence,” he said.
The Indian Church, which according to tradition dates back to the arrival in southern India of St. Thomas, one of the 12 apostles, accounts for only about two percent of the population.
Reports confirm the the pope also canonized four Italians. They included Amato Ronconi, an early follower of the Franciscan order in the 13th century, and Nicola da Longobardi, a Franciscan from the 17th century.
The other two were Giovanni Antonio Farina, known in Italy in the 19th century as the “bishop of the poor,” and Ludovico da Casoria, who worked to free African children from slavery.
Francis said all six had devoted themselves to the poor, sick and elderly.
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