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| ST. JOSEPHINE
BAKHITA, OUR UNIVERSAL SISTER |
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born free in the little Sudanese village of Olgossa
c. 1869, then captured and sold as a slave when she
was about seven years old.
sold and resold until finally, she left her beloved
Africa for Italy and a new life began.
awakening to the knowledge and love of God, her "Master"
above all masters and her response in faith, love and
gratitude.
left this world on 8 February 1947. She was declared
"Blessed" on 17 May 1992 and proclaimed
a
"Saint" on 1 October 2000 in Rome.
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| Blessed are
the poor in spirit ... |
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A
child of the Daju tribe of south-western Sudan, Bakhita came
from a well-to-do family. Her father was the brother of the
village Chief. He owned much land, with "plantations
and cattle", and had hired servants working for him.
Home was a simple hut, mud-walled
and millet stalk-thatched, but happy and loving, with parents,
three brothers and four sisters, one of whom was Bakhita's
own twin.
All was lost to her when the slave
traders kidnapped her when she was seven years old.
Stripped
of the most fundamental human right - personal freedom and
dignity - Bakhita endured physical, emotional and spiritual
deprivation. There were long forced marches in slave caravans
from Olgossa, her village, to El Obied and the slave markets
there, then on to Khartoum, changing hands four times over
a period of ten years. |
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Blessed
are those who mourn ... |
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The
little one, mockingly re-named Bakhita, "The Lucky One",
suffered loneliness and torture ...
Yet, even reduced to conditions inhuman,
Bakhita always knew a certain sense of hope ... in what or
whom she could not say ... then. But somewhere, she knew not
how then, she found the strength to live each fearful, miserable,
terror-filled day with courage.
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Blessed
are the gentle ... |
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Not
even slavery, however, could destroy her natural sensitivity
and gentleness, that quality of heart that knows compassion.
In the midst of her own pain and suffering, and impotent as
she was, she could still care about others, commiserate with
them, be with them.
This trait she carried with her
even when her path led her out of Africa to Italy, where
by Divine
Providence, she was baptized into the Catholic faith and
later took her vows as a Canossian Daughter of Charity.
Whether it was simply offering a
drink to a sister in community or a bowl of hot soup to the
poor, watching over kindergarten children or tending the wounded
during the war, every action was done with love, serenity
and gentleness.
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| Blessed are
those who hunger and thirst for righteousness ... |
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The one who considered herself
"a slave, and an object owned by her masters",
never took advantage of her masters' property, even under
the worst
circumstances and the greatest need. Slave duties were
executed with responsibility and an innate sense of justice.
Even before she came to know "the good of God",
she also sensed that there was a higher Power who was in
control
of every matter under heaven. Because she lived continually
in the search of events unfolding around so as to find
the key to encountering this Power, her heart was open and
ready when God revealed Himself to her. |
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| Blessed are the merciful
... |
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One would expect that with all
that she had undergone, Bakhita would have suffered severe
emotional or psychological scarring. But the Madre Moreta,
the "Brunette Mother" as she was affectionately
called, was able to see in each painful wound, each traumatic
memory, stepping stones in the path that led to God - hidden
blessings every one. Hers was the gift of a "purified
memory", transformed and transfigured, experienced as
a blessing.
This is why she was able to forgive her kidnappers and those
who tortured her. She bore no resentment towards them
and prayed with great passion for their well-being. |
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Blessed
are the pure in heart ... |
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As her relationship with the unseen
God grew, so too did her capacity to enter into communion
with
God. She was able to see the hand of God in all the events
of daily life and neither illness.
Even as
her physical health failed, her
spirit grew brighter and stronger. Prayer was spent in the
company
of
One "who had waited so long for me". A characteristic
topic of her meditation was "Jesus: to know Him better,
so as to love Him more and more". |
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Blessed
are the peacemakers ... |
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At the Canossian Convent in Schio,
she was engaged in simple tasks in the kitchen, the needlework
classroom, sacristy and as portress at the door. Enclosed,
though she was, Bakhita's ready availability and her welcoming
ways to all endeared her to the people.
She was ready to interpret actions of others in the beat
of light possible and took reproaches of others respectfully.
Above all, she had made peace with her past. |
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| Blessed
are those who have been persecuted ... |
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For
all who have been tried by conflict, war and oppression,
Bakhita
left us the legacy of comfort and hope in a providential
Father. She joins those who, from generation to generation,
have followed Christ through trial and tribulation, and who
now take their place in the Kingdom of God. |
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Bakhita's
Sisters and Brothers |
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Bakhita was admitted into full membership
in the Institute of Daughters of Charity on 8 December 1896,
after having complied with the various entry requirements.
The Institute was founded by St Magdalene
of Canossa, a noblewoman, who begun her works of charity with
a few companions on 8 May 1808 in Verona, Italy.
On 23 December 1828, she obtained official
approval from the Institute of the Daughters of Charity,
which was already establised in Verona, Venice, Milan, Bergamo
and Trent. Three years later, on 23 May 1831, the Institute
of
the Sons of Charity began in Venice.
Magdalene died on 10 April 1835 in Verona.
She was beatified in Rome on 8 December 1941 and proclaimed
a Saint on 2 October 1988. |
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| Extracted
from St. Anthony's Canossian Primary School's History Webpage |
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