VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis advanced the sainthood causes of
three women and recognized the martyrdom of 14 religious sisters who were
killed during the Spanish Civil War.
The pope formally recognized a miracle needed for the
canonization of Blessed Marguerite Bays, a laywoman from Switzerland known for
her spirituality in the face of great physical suffering and for bearing the
stigmata of Christ.
Born in 1815, she grew up helping the peasant farmers in her
small village and became a professed member of the Secular Franciscan Order.
She was particularly devoted to Our Lady and discovered she was
cured of colon cancer on Dec. 8, 1854, when Pope Pius IX proclaimed the dogma
of the Immaculate Conception. The same year, she started to show signs of the
stigmata on her hands, feet and chest.
She died in 1879 and St. John Paul II beatified her in 1995.
In other decrees signed at the Vatican Jan. 15, the pope:
— Recognized the martyrdom of Sister Isabella Lacaba Andia, who
was known as Mother Mary del Carmen — the mother superior of a community of
Franciscan Conceptionist nuns — and 13 of her companions. They were murdered
"in hatred of the faith" in Spain in 1936. The move clears the way
for their beatification.
— Recognized the heroic virtues of Mother Soledad Sanjurjo Santos
of the Servants of Mary. Born in Arecibo, Puerto Rico, in 1892, she was known
as the "Pearl of the Antilles" as she served as provincial superior
of the Antilles and extended the congregation's work in caring for the sick
throughout Cuba, the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico. She died in 1973.
— Recognized the heroic virtues of Polish Sister Anna Kaworek,
who lived 1872-1936, and co-founded the Congregation of the Sisters of St.
Michael the Archangel.