Pope recalls nuns’ witness to
charity in preface to new book
Pope Francis has recalled childhood memories of the care
given by the “silent angels” of the Little Sisters of the Assumption in a
forward to a biography of the order’s founder
By Richard Marsden
Pope Francis has recounted a childhood story in which his
father’s anti-clerical work colleague “met the maternal face of the Church”
when being cared for by a mother superior, which led him to become a defender
of her religious order.
Writing a preface of a new book in the Italian language, the
Pope explains how the man “punched” a friend who dared to criticise two nuns
after the worker was healed from a serious infection thanks to the help of a
Little Sister of the Assumption.
A novice held the infant pope in her arms
The striking story forms part of Pope Francis’s forward to a
biography of the order’s founder, Father Stefano Pernet, by Italian journalist
Paola Bergamini. In it, the pontiff also describes how he was held in the arms
of a young novice from the Congregation who came to visit the family in Buenos
Aires hours after his birth. Pope Francis has been in contact with the nun
throughout his life, up “until she went to heaven a few years ago.”
In his opening remarks to the book entitled “Il Vangelo
guancia a guancia" (The Cheek to Cheek Gospel), the Pope writes: “I have
many memories tied to these religious women who, as silent angels enter the
homes of those in need, work patiently, look after, help, and then silently
return to their convent. They follow their rule, pray and then go out to reach
the homes of those in difficulty, becoming nurses and governesses, they
accompany children to school and prepare meals for them.”
The humble care to an atheist
Describing the dramatic story of his father’s atheistic
workmate, Pope Francis says the man was one of several workers who had come
into Argentina after the Spanish Civil War and was a “rabid anticlerical”. When
he became ill after an infection, his body covered with wounds, the mother
superior looked after the man for more than a month, despite his animosity
towards the Church. The Little Sister “was quiet, she did her job, looked after
the wounds, brought the children to school, prepared lunch, cleaned the house.”
Days after the man returned to work, he and three or four
companions saw some of the nuns in the street. The Pope recounts: “One of the
friends said some bad words against them. So, my dad's working companion first
punched him and then told him, ‘You can say whatever you want against the
priests and God, but nothing against Our Lady and against the sisters!’ Can you
imagine? He was an atheist, a priest-eater, yet he defended the nuns.”
The man’s change of attitude, the Pope explained, came
because he “had seen Our Lady's smile in the face of that superior, that
patient nun who went to heal him despite his imprecations.”
Fr Pernet’s witness
Pope Francis also writes about the charism of Fr Pernet, a
French priest who dedicated his life to supporting the poorest families in
Paris and who was declared venerable in 1983. The Pope praises the founder’s
“deeds of charity” which remind us that evangelisation “leads us to place our
cheek onto the cheek of those who suffer, in body and spirit.”
The Pope continues: “By serving with patience and trusting
only in the Lord, it can happen that even the hearts of the most distant people
are touched. As Our Mother Mary teaches us, the only power capable of
conquering the hearts of men and women is the tenderness of God.”
The Little Sisters of the Assumption, established in France
by Fr Pernet in 1865, have communities in more than 25 countries across the
world.
Bergamini’s 192 page book will hit bookshops from March 6
and will receive an official launch in Milan on March 8.

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