A Catholic
priest and a nun from the state - Father Kuriakose Chavara and Sister
Euphrasia - were conferred sainthood by Pope Francis at Vatican on
Sunday Nov 23,2014
Reformist
Catholic priest Chavara and reclusive nun Euphrasia were declared
saints during the mass in St Peter’s Square in the Vatican, along with
four other beatified Italians.
The mass was attended by a large number of devotees, two Cardinals, bishops, clergy, and nuns from Kerala.
The Kerala
government also deputed two ministers for the occasion. Rajya Sabha
Deputy Chairman P.J. Kurien led the Indian delegation.
The four other saints from Italy are -
- Giovanni Antonio Farina
- Ludovico da Casoria
- Nicola da Longobardi, and
- Amato Ronconi.
With
Father Kuriakose Chavara and Sister Euphrasia's canonisation, as the finale of the long process
is known in Catholic parlance, the centuries-old Syro Malabar Catholic
Church in Kerala now has three saints. The first, Sister Alphonsa, was
raised to the revered rank in 2008.
Kuriakose Chavara,
the founder of the congregation Carmalites of Mary Immaculate (CMI), was
born in a family of modest means in Kuttanad in Alappuzha district in
1805, and died in 1871. But he was more than a spiritual leader of the
Syro Malabar Catholic community.
Chavara
entered the seminary for training as a priest at a young age. After his
ordination in 1829, he formed the CMI in 1831, the first congregation
for men in the Syro Malabar Church.
The
Canonisation procedures in his case began long back, and he was
declared a Venerable in 1984 and beatified by Pope John Paul II, during
his visit to Kerala in 1986.
The
CMI has - over the decades - set up a large number of educational and
charity organisations within and outside Kerala, drawing inspiration
from the work and vision of its founder Chavara
Historians
and church chroniclers consider him a social reformer who gave thrust
to the secular education of not only Catholics but also children of
other communities, especially the depressed classes.
Incidentally,
one of the first institutions he founded was a Sanskrit school. As the
Prior General of the congregation, Chavara also took the initiative to
set up a printing press, and encouraged the community leaders to launch
their own publications.
Sister
Euphrasia, who was born in 1877 in Arnattukara Thrissur and died in
1952, on the other hand, was more meditatively inclined. She chose to
live in the confines of a convent in Thrissur helping people through
prayers and wise counsel.
Evuprasiamma,
as she is known to the members of the local community around her
convent in Ollur, brought spiritual solace to the people who approached
her through prayers and wise counsel
Sister Euphrasia was significantly a
member of the Congregation of Mother of Carmel (CMC), founded by Chavara
for women. She was declared a Servant of God in 1987 and beatified in
2006 after the approval of a miracle attributed through her intercession
by the Vatican panel set up to consider her case for sainthood.
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