SAINT OF THE DAY -- Oct. 20 - St. Maria Bertilla Boscardin
October 20
Saint Maria Bertilla Boscardin
(1888 - 1922)
Virgin
There have been many healing miracles reported at her tomb.She spent her life caring for children and the sick.
If anyone knew rejection, ridicule and disappointment, it was today’s
saint. But such trials only brought Maria Bertilla Boscardin closer to
God and more determined to serve him.
Born in Italy in 1888, the young girl lived in fear of her father, a violent
man prone to jealousy and drunkenness. Her schooling was limited so that she
could spend more time helping at home and working in the fields. She showed
few talents and was often the butt of jokes.
In 1904 she joined the Sisters of St. Dorothy and was assigned
to work in the kitchen, bakery and laundry. After some time Maria
received nurses’ training and began working in a hospital with children
suffering from diphtheria. There the young nun seemed to find her true
vocation: nursing very ill and disturbed children. Later, when the
hospital was taken over by the military in World War I, Sister Maria
Bertilla fearlessly cared for patients amidst the threat of constant
air raids and bombings.
She died in 1922 after suffering for many years from a painful
tumor. Some of the patients she had nursed many years before were
present at her canonization in 1961.
Comment:
Born Anna Francesca Boscardin at Brendola, Veneto, St. Maria
Bertilla was a member of a peasant family. Her father, Angelo
Boscardin, would testify during her beatification process that he was
jealous, violent, and frequently drunk. As a child she could only
attend school irregularly, as she was needed to help at home and in the
fields. When she did attend school she also worked as a servant in a
nearby home. She did not display any particular talents, was thought to
be not particularly intelligent, and was often the target of insulting
jokes. These included being referred to as a "goose" for her slowness
by a local clergyman.
After being rejected for admission to one order because of her slowness, she was accepted as a member of the Teachers of Saint Dorothy, Daughters of the Sacred Heart
at Vicenza in 1904, taking the name "Maria Bertilla". She herself
internalized some of her earlier criticism, telling the novice-mistress
of the order, "I can't do anything. I'm a poor thing, a goose. Teach
me. I want to be a saint." She worked there as a kitchen maid and
laundress for three years.
She was then sent to Treviso to learn
nursing at the municipal hospital there, which was under the direction
of her order. During her training period, she was once placed to work
in the kitchen. However, upon completing her training, she was promoted
to working with victims of diphtheria in the hospital's children's
ward. During the air raids of Treviso following the disastrous Battle
of Caporetto, the hospital fell under the control of the military.
Sister Bertilla was noted for her unwavering care of the her patients,
particularly those who were too ill to be moved to safety.
This
devotion to duty attracted the attention of the authorities of a local
military hospital. However, her superioress did not appreciate Sister
Bertilla's work and reassigned her to work in the laundry, a position
she remained in for four months until being reassigned by a more
perceptive, higher superior, who put Sister Bertilla in charge of the
children's isolation ward at the hospital. Shortly thereafter, Sister
Bertilla's already poor health got worse. A painful tumor which she had
had for several years had progressed to the point of requiring an
operation, which she did not survive.
Her reputation for
simplicity and devoted, caring hard work had left a deep impression on
those who knew her. A memorial plaque placed on her tomb refers to her
as "a chosen soul of heroic goodness ... an angelic alleviator of human
suffering in this place." Crowds
flocked to her first grave at Treviso. After a tomb was erected for her
at Vicenza, it became a pilgrimage site where several miracles of
healing were said to have taken place.
In 1961, 42 years after
her death, she was canonized as a saint. The crowd in attendance
included members of her family as well as some of her patients.
Prayer:
Eternal Father, I wish to honour St. Maria Bertilla Boscardin, and I give You thanks for all the graces You have bestowed on her. I ask You to please increase grace in my soul through the merits of this saint, and I commit the end of my life to her by this special prayer, so that by virtue of Your goodness and promise St. Maria Bertilla Boscardin might be my advocate and provide whatever is needed at that hour. Amen.
Source: American Catholic Organization
Many great miracles have been associated with
the Rosary throughout history. The tremendous power of the Rosary can
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Miracles continue to the present day.

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SIGNS OF AN ABUSIVE RELATIONSHIP
Do you:
feel afraid of your partner much of the time?
avoid certain topics fear of angering your partner?
feel that you can’t do anything right for your partner?
believe that you deserve to be hurt or mistreated?
wonder if you’re the one who is crazy?
feel emotionally numb or helpless?
Does your partner:
- humiliate, criticize, or yell at you?
- treat you so badly that you’re embarrassed for your friends or family to see?
- ignore or put down your opinions or accomplishments?
- blame you for his own abusive behavior?
- see you as property or a sex object, rather than as a person?
Does your partner:
have a bad and unpredictable temper?
hurt you, or threaten to hurt or kill you?
threaten to take your children away or harm them?
threaten to commit suicide if you leave?
force you to have sex?
destroy your belongings?
Does your partner:
- act excessively jealous and possessive?
- control where you go or what you do?
- keep you from seeing your friends or family?
- limit your access to money, the phone, or the car?
- constantly check up on you?