Saint Mary di Rosa

Profile

Mary is one of the nine children born to the industrialist Clement di Rosa and Countess Camilla Albani. Her father owned a large spinning mill, and Mary grew up in a happy and pious family. She was educated by Visitandine nuns.

Mary’s mother died when she was seventeen, and she left school to help manage her father‘s estate. Her heart set on a religious life, she turned down many suitors. She worked with young girls in her community, those who worked in her father‘s mills, and the sick in local hospital. She also work tirelessly during the cholera epidemic of 1836.

Mary founded a home dedicated to the spiritual needs of young girls, and a school for deaf children. In 1840, she became the superior of the Handmaids of Charity, nuns who cared for the sick, and she took the name Mary Crucifixa. The community received their bishop‘s approval in 1843 and papal approval in 1850. Mary led them until her death.

Born

6 November 1813 in Brescia, Italy as Paula Frances Mary di Rosa

Died

15 December 1855 in Brescia, Italy of natural causes

Venerated

10 July 1932 by Pope Pius XI (decree of heroic virtues)

Beatified

26 May 1940 by Pope Pius XII

Canonized

12 June 1954 by Pope Pius XII

 

Source: https://catholicsaints.info/saint-mary-di-rosa/