Saint of the Day 30th August
St. Jeanne Jugan
Born in northern France during the French Revolution—a time when
congregations of women and men religious were being suppressed by the national
government, Jeanne would eventually be highly praised in the French academy for
her community's compassionate care of elderly poor people.
When Jeanne was three and a half years old,
her father, a fisherman, was lost at sea. Her widowed mother was hard pressed
to raise her eight children (four died young) alone. At the age of 15 or 16,
Jeanne became a kitchen maid for a family that not only cared for its own
members, but also served poor, elderly people nearby. Ten years later, Jeanne
became a nurse at the hospital in Le Rosais. Soon thereafter she joined a third
order group founded by St. John Eudes (August 19).
After six years she became a servant and friend of a woman she met through
the third order. They prayed, visited the poor and taught catechism to
children. After her friend's death, Jeanne and two other women continued a
similar life in the city of Saint-Sevran. In 1839, they brought in their first
permanent guest. They began an association, received more members and more
guests. Mother Marie of the Cross, as Jeanne was now known, founded six more
houses for the elderly by the end of 1849, all staffed by members of her
association—the Little Sisters of the Poor. By 1853 the association numbered
500 and had houses as far away as England.
Abbé Le Pailleur, a chaplain, had prevented Jeanne's reelection as superior
in 1843; nine year later, he had her assigned to duties within the
congregation, but would not allow her to be recognized as its founder. He was
removed from office by the Holy See in 1890.
By the time Pope Leo XIII gave her final
approval to the community's constitutions in 1879, there were 2,400 Little
Sisters of the Poor. Jeanne died later that same year, on August 30. Her cause
was introduced in Rome in 1970, and she was beatified in 1982 and canonized in
2009
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