A PORTRAIT OF LUCIA DOS SANTOS, A FATIMA VISIONARY

I first went to Fatima in the 1990s when I was working at the Vatican Information Service and took advantage of the six days vacation Roman Curia employees traditionally receive during Holy Week and Easter to travel to Portugal, my first time there.

I travelled with my VIS colleague Grazia and, upon our arrival at Lisbon’s airport, a car and driver provided by the travel agency that had arranged our trip, was there to greet us. Upon arrival at the hotel, he gave us his card, “just in case,” he said. Grazia and I had hoped to do a tour with a group but when we saw the per person price, we called Joaquim and, for the same cost, he offered to drive us to Fatima and other sites for 8 hours. We said an enthusiastic ‘si’.”

He picked us up the following morning, Good Friday, and we began our trek to Fatima, the first stop on our itinerary.   It seems that every living Portuguese had decided to drive to Fatima on the same day and same hour as we had and, after over an hour of travelling only a few miles, Joaquim suggested that we reverse our itinerary and put Fatima as our last stop.

We spent the next delightful hours visiting Nazaré, a beautiful seaside town, and then a stupendous monastery whose name evades me as I write. I have photos – real paper photos, not digital ones, as digital cameras were either very rare or nom yet even on the market.   I’m now curious to go through my albums and see if I can find those pictures.

The day was glorious, the scenery stunning, and the towns we travelled through were picturesque and colorful and historic, and our eyes began to glaze over with the magnificent tiles for which Portugal is so well known, tiles that seemed to cover every building we saw, every roadside fountain, every terrace of private homes.

We had a wonderful lunch stop and Joaquim was a nonstop story teller. How I wish I’d had a recorder! I didn’t have a cell phone and there was no Facebook so I could not do FB Live! Do I love much of modern technology and wish I’d grown up with it? Yes, indeed! Guess I just have to go back!

The upshot of Joaquim’s decision to end our daylong excursion at Fatima was brilliant! We got there sometime after 6 pm and there were very few people at this magnificent shrine. It was like having a private visit with Our Lady. We had time to explore, to light candles, to kneel in prayer, just meters from the statue of Our Lady of the Holy Rosary of Fatima before which Pope Francis will kneel and present a bouquet of flowers “of which,” he told the faithful Wednesday at the general audience, “you are the flowers.”

I will be in Fatima in spirit tomorrow and Saturday. In fact, just writing these lines, I have been reliving those wonderful days of Holy Week in Fatima, Lisbon and other beautiful spots of wonderful, hospitable Portugal, seeing so many people and places in my mind’s eye.

And now I’ll have to find those photos!

By the way, the very day my colleague Grazie was married, May 13, 2000, there was another Fatima connection. I had accompanied members of both her Italian family and the American family of her spouse to the site of the reception and was acting as a hostess and translator. For the longest time we wondered why our VIS colleagues had not arrived at the reception and, just as we sat down to eat, they came running into the dining room, with Piers waving a sheet of paper and shouting, “The Third Secret of Fatima has just been revealed!” Our colleagues had been told after the actual wedding ceremony about the Third Secret and were asked to return to the office and translate the news bulletin into four languages!

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The following piece was done by CNA/EWTN’s Elise Harris, She leaves tomorrow on the papal plane for Fatima, joining most of the Rome CNA/EWTN office in Fatima for Pope Francis’ 19th international apostolic trip. You will find coverage of the papal trip on EWTN television and can follow on our Facebook page and YouTube as well as the FB and Youtube sites of CAN

A PORTRAIT OF LUCIA DOS SANTOS, A FATIMA VISIONARY

Fatima, Portugal, May 10, 2017 / 12:01 am (CNA/EWTN News).- Fatima visionary Lucia dos Santos was saintly woman – not because she saw visions of Mary, but because of her raw humanity, simplicity, and even her sense of humor, says the cardinal who opened her cause for canonization.

When asked about the most “saintly” quality Lucia had, Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins said it was “her humanity. She was a person that was human.”

“The saints are all human, they are like any other person. Very intelligent, very concrete, very pleasant and welcoming,” he said.

As for Sister Lucia, “she was a very smart, concrete woman.” This can be seen in the way she documented what she saw during the Fatima apparitions, he said, noting that since her cousins had passed away, all of it was done by her alone.“If Lucia weren’t a concrete, intelligent person, not all of the documentation that’s there would have been done, through which we know the whole story of Fatima,” he said.

But despite to her intelligence and her humanity, the cardinal said the visionary was “very simple,” but was also “a jokester” with a healthy sense of humor.

Cardinal Martins, 85 and the Prefect Emeritus of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, knew Lucia personally during the last few years of her life. He spoke to CNA about his relationship with visionary, sharing memories of Lucia and some of the light-hearted jokes the two of them exchanged.

Who was Lucia?

Lucia dos Santos was the youngest in a family of seven. However, at 10-years-old, she was the oldest of the three shepherd children who witnessed apparitions of the Blessed Virgin Mary from May-October 1917. The other two were her cousins Francisco and Jacinta Marto, who were just 9 and 7, respectively.

While the Marto siblings died shortly after the apparitions, as Mary had predicted, Lucia outlived her cousins by many years, and was the one to write down accounts of everything they had seen.

Shortly after the deaths of her cousins, at age 14 Lucia was sent to attend school with the Dorothean Sisters of Villar, and in 1928 became a sister of St. Dorothy. In 1946, she transferred to the convent of the Carmelite Sisters of Coimbra, Portugal and took the name Sister Maria Lucia of the Immaculate Heart.

She received visions and messages from both Mary and Jesus on several more occasions throughout her life, including the visions in 1925 that led to the Five First Saturday devotions, which include saying the rosary, receiving communion and confession, and meditation during the first Saturday of five consecutive months.

Sr. Lucia died in 2005 at the age of 97, at the Carmelite convent of Santa Teresa in Coimbra, where she had lived since 1948.

Memories

Cardinal Martins, who himself is Portuguese, said he had “many interactions” with Sr. Lucia, particularly during his tenure at the Congregation for Saints. He headed the dicastery from 1998-2008, during which he brought forward some 1,320 blesseds, though many were part of large groups done together.

Having lived in Rome for at least three decades, serving in various capacities, the cardinal said he, like the rest of the city, typically takes his vacation in mid-August.

It was during one of these vacations that he accepted an invitation to go to Coimbra and celebrate Mass for the Carmelite sisters on the Aug. 15 Feast of the Assumption. After Mass, the cardinal sat with the community and talked with them for a while, even answering some questions.

“We spoke about everything, they asked whatever questions they wanted, without limits, and I responded,” he said, noting Sr. Lucia was also present, and he was also able to speak with her for the first time.

Lucia “was a very humble person, simple, very intelligent, and very confident,” he said, explaining during another visit, he was again sitting with the community after celebrating Mass for them.

He recalled that there was an empty seat by him, so he motioned for Lucia to come sit next to him.

Martins recalled that once she sat down, she leaned over and told him, “Eminence, you’ve made me your secretary, eh?” After a laugh, the cardinal jested, saying in return, “Sister Lucia, please, don’t say this, I am not worthy of having you as a secretary!”Martins said Lucia was always full of little quips, and at one point jokingly threatened to stop sending rosaries to the Pope if he didn’t allow the beatification of her cousins – Francisco and Jacinta Marto – to take place in Fatima, rather than in Rome.

At the time, as a rule of thumb both canonization and beatification Masses were held Rome. However, it was Cardinal Martins who later changed this, requesting that beatifications take place in the local diocese instead. His request was approved by Benedict XVI, and the change was made in September 2005.

The cause of Francisco and Jacinta was officially opened in 1946, and although the change hadn’t officially been made yet, they were beatified by St. John Paul II May 13, 2000, the 83rd anniversary of the first apparition, during his third visit to the Fatima shrine.

But a year before the beatification, while plans were still in the works, Lucia had jokingly told Martins to relay to the Pope “if the beatification is not done in Fatima, but in Rome, I, Lucia, won’t send him rosaries anymore.”

The jest was in reference to the fact that in her final years Lucia made rosaries and sent large numbers of them to the Pope, who would distribute them to pilgrims and people he met.

“Clearly, I didn’t say it,” the cardinal said, recalling that on the day of the beatification, both he and Lucia had a brief conversation in the sacristy before the celebration began.

He told Lucia she could be now grateful to the Pope for having approved celebrating the beatification Mass in Fatima. However, Lucia again jested, saying “I’m not grateful to the Pope, absolutely no. I am grateful to God who inspired the Pope for the beatification.”

“This is how it was. With Lucia, we were like siblings,” the cardinal said, adding that Lucia’s humor wasn’t the only thing that stood out about her.

“She was also very intelligent,” he said. People often perceived her as someone “in another world,” who was perhaps a bit disconnected, but in reality, the opposite was true: “she was very concrete, and very intelligent.”

As an example, he recalled that at one point the Carmelite sisters had to build another convent when they exceeded the maximum number of sisters who can live in one of their monasteries.

When it came time to start construction on the convent after plans had been laid, Lucia was the one sent to oversee the project, making sure the architect built new monastery according to the specifics of how Carmelite convents are organized.

“Lucia went in car to tell the architects concretely how they had to do the cloister. This is a very concrete person, no?” the cardinal said. “She wasn’t an abstract person like many thought, no.”

Cause for Canonization

After Lucia passed away in 2005, the diocese had to wait five years before opening the beatification cause, as is custom in any potential saint.

However, after just two years, Cardinal Martins asked Benedict XVI to grant a dispensation for the three remaining years, allowing them to open the cause immediately.

I began the process of beatification. Certainly she knows, that to begin the beatification process for a person, five years need to pass after their death. Five years. To research the person, talk to people, etc.

Martins said he asked for the dispensation because “it’s a very big grace for the Church in Portugal and for the universal Church.” In response, Benedict granted it, saying “you know the situation better than me, so let’s do whatever you say.”

A few days later, the cardinal traveled to Coimbra with the official decree in hand. However, since the news hadn’t yet been made official, he was not allowed to say anything, not even to the sisters in Lucia’s convent.

“Everything was secret,” he said, explaining that he simply told the sisters he was passing through and requested to say Mass. “The sisters thought I was passing through Coimbra for another reason, they didn’t know anything about the reason I was there.”

“It was my duty to keep it a secret,” Martins said, recounting how at the end of Mass, before giving the final blessing, he read aloud the decree, signed by himself and the Pope, stating that the beatification process for Lucia would officially begin early.

Immediately “the sisters began to cry,” he said, and were amazed that he hadn’t let on anything of his real intention for coming beforehand.

The local Church in February 2017 finished collecting documents to examine Lucia’s heroic virtue, concluding the diocesan phase of the investigation.

“Now it’s up to the congregation for the Roman phase. They must study the documents gathered on Lucia,” he said, noting that this will be a hefty task given the fact that there are some 300-400,000 letters written by Lucia during her lifetime, including letters written by her and her responses to letters she received from other people.

Although many have speculated that the speed with which Lucia’s cause moves forward could go into turbo-mode with the aim of having a beatification during the centenary year of the apparitions, Cardinal Martins said that given the vast amount of content to study, it will likely still be a while.

http://www.fatima.org/essentials/facts/popeapprov.asp