Wednesday, July 30, 2008

Ten interesting facts about Bl. Damien of Molokai

1. The lepers were confined to the northern shore of Molokai, separated from the rest of the island and its inhabitants by a sheer cliff.

2. It was not unusual for Bl. Damien to celebrate more than one funeral a day.

3. Bl. Damien was quite handy: he built a church, clinics, an orphanage and huts and he even built the coffins for the deceased lepers himself.

4. April 15, 2009 will be the 120th anniversary of his death.

5. There's a Catholic high school in Hawaii named after Bl. Damien.

6. Bl. Damien served the lepers for over 12 years.

7. He is buried in Belgium, but his right hand has been kept in his grave at Molokai.

8. Bl. Damien was born and raised in Belgium.

9. Bl. Damien wasn't originally chosen to minister to the lepers, but was sent when his older brother, Pamphile, was too sick to go.

10. Bl. Damien was a member of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.
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Monday, July 28, 2008

Mother Marianne Cope (1838-1916)

For centuries Hansen’s disease, or leprosy, was a frightening illness, both for its victims and those who treated them. Although it was known to be contagious, no one knew exactly how it was contracted. For that reason, many physicians and other health care providers refused to treat or even touch those patients diagnosed with the disease. In the late 1800’s Mother Marianne Cope and other Sisters of St. Francis journeyed from the United States to the far-away Kingdom of Hawai`i to care for these outcasts of society when others would or could not. Their story is not as well known as Father Damien’s, but it is just as full of love and sacrifice. It was in June 1883, in Syracuse, New York, that Mother Marianne Cope received an intriguing letter from a Catholic priest asking for help in managing hospitals and schools in the Hawaiian Islands. At that time, she was 45 years old and had been a Sister in the Order of St. Francis for 21 years. There were reasons Mother Marianne might have ignored the letter. Growing up in Utica, New York, Mother Marianne had not had an easy life. She was born Barbara Koob to a family of modest means in the village of Heppenheim in the German grand duchy of Hesse-Darmstadt. The family immigrated to Utica, New York, in 1840 when Barbara was a child of two. As a young adult she was a factory worker in Utica. At her acceptance into the community of Franciscan Sisters she took the name of Marianne. By 1883 she had reason be proud as she had achieved the position as supervisor of St. Joseph’s Hospital in Syracuse. The letter that arrived from Hawai`i offered her a different path. Mother Marianne decided to accept the less prestigious position with the Hawaiian mission. She responded to the letter enthusiastically: “I am hungry for the work and I wish with all my heart to be one of the chosen Ones, whose privilege it will be, to sacrifice themselves for the salvation of the souls of the poor Islanders…. I am not afraid of any disease, hence it would be my greatest delight even to minister to the abandoned ‘lepers.’”

She and six other Sisters of St. Francis arrived in Honolulu in November 1883. With Mother Marianne as supervisor, their task was to manage Kaka`ako Branch Hospital on Oahu, which served as a receiving station for Hansen’s disease patients gathered from all over the islands. Here the more severe cases were processed and shipped to the island of Molokai for confinement at the settlement at Kalawao, and then later at Kalaupapa.The sisters set quickly to work. They began the process of cleaning the hospital and tending to the 200 patients. By 1885, the sisters had made major improvements to the living conditions and treatment of patients at Kaka`ako. In November of that year, they also initiated the founding of Kapiolani Home inside the hospital compound. The home was established to care for the non-patient daughters of Hansen’s disease patients at Kaka`ako and Kalawao.

The Call to Kalaupapa
Mother Marianne expanded the efforts of the Sisters of St. Francis to include managing a hospital and school at Wailuku on Maui. She also responded to a call for assistance on Moloka`i. In April 1888, wealthy Honolulu banker Charles Bishop had presented the Hawaiian government with a donation of $5,000 to establish a home for girls in Kalaupapa. The government approached Mother Marianne with supervising the new home. The resident priest, Fr. Damien, who by 1888 had already been diagnosed with Hansen’s disease and knew his death was imminent, was eager for the sisters to come. Mother Marianne consulted with all the sisters and, to her credit, they felt free to voice their concerns. Responded one: “I am very honest with you. I am afraid. I have heard too much about these poor people. I heard also that there are no rules and regulations. That everyone does as he pleases.” Another stated: “If it is not a suitable place for any woman how can it be for the Sisters.” But Mother Marianne, along with Sister Leopoldina Burns and Sister Vincentia McCormick, accepted the challenge and in November 1888 they arrived at Kalaupapa. They ran the Bishop Home, and until 1895 they managed the Home for Boys at Kalawao, founded by Father Damien for boys and young men.

The workload was extremely heavy in that Bishop Home alone provided shelter for 103 girls in 1893. There were times when the burden seemed overwhelming. In a moment of despair, Sister Leopoldina reflected, “How long Oh Lord must I see only those that are sick and covered with leprosy?” Mother Marianne’s example—her never-failing optimism, her serenity, her caring nature, and her considerable abilities—gave strength to the other sisters. Together, through devotion and self-sacrifice, the Sisters of St. Francis rendered a remarkable service to humanity in the islands of Hawaii. Mother Marianne never returned to Syracuse. She spent the remainder of her life at Kalaupapa. She died in 1918 at the age of 80 and is buried on the grounds of Bishop Home.
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Sunday, July 27, 2008

Another Molokai Collaborator of Damien

Brother Joseph Dutton
Zenit: July 26th. 2008: - Catholicism on the Hawaiian island of Molokai owes much to the pioneering efforts of Blessed Damien de Veuster and Mother Marianne Cope. Soon their names will be listed among the saints.

But there is another collaborator of theirs who also deserves mention for the increase of the faith. His name is Joseph Dutton (1843-1931), a Vermont-born convert who labored first with Father Damien and then with Mother Marianne and her successors for 44 years.

His own dedication to God was marked by the fact that he gave himself completely in service of those with Hansen's Disease, only leaving their side to enter St. Francis Hospital, Honolulu, where he died while recovering from surgery at age 87.

Perhaps one day this great layman will join his colleagues on the rolls of the saints.

Patrick Hayes, Ph.D.

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Wednesday, July 9, 2008

The Facts behind the 2nd Miracle attributed to Damien

NEWS KHON2 TV Hawaii - Audrey Toguchi talks of her miracle. Click Here >>>>>>
It is a first for Hawaii -- an elevation to sainthood. Father Damien received the pope's approval today. The final hurdle was cleared today when Pope Benedict the 16th approved a second miracle attributed to the Molokai missionary -- the 1998 cure of an Aiea woman's cancer. Science says Audrey Toguchi wouldn't be here today. Cancer gave her a death sentence in 1997. "He told me straight out, he said this cancer is going to take your life," said the retired school teacher who just made 80 last month. Her husband of more than 50 years remembers the feeling as if it were yesterday. "Five to 6 months only the doctor gave,” said Yukio Toguchi. “Five to 6 months, can you imagine that?"

Audrey's doctor wanted to try chemotherapy to battle back the tumors taking over her lungs. Retired surgeon Dr. Walter Chang recalls: "She said to me very quietly and very calmly, ‘No, I'm going to pray to Father Damien.’ I said, well that's very nice and good. Prayers are important but you still need chemotherapy, she said no." Instead, she went to Molokai, to the grave of Father Damien, the missionary she had studied since her youngest days in Catholic school. "And right there I said, dear lord, please, you created my body please take care to make it well, and Father Damien can you please pray for me because I need you, your intercession to help me to get well," Audrey said. The tumors began to shrink and were gone altogether within 5 months. "I put everything in his hands, I trusted him and I figured from here on I am not going to worry about it," Audrey said. "There has never been another one described, so we call it in medicine a complete spontaneous regression of her liposarcoma,” Chang said. “It's very remarkable, very unusual, never previously described."

The Vatican carefully vetted the case, a process that took years. "They want to make sure that this is not a hoax, that this is not some kind of a scam," Chang said. It was almost in jeopardy when the hospital lost track of some original evidence -- in somewhat of a clerical miracle, the doctor had set more biopsy slides aside, key proof to the pope for approving the case as miracle. "That's how I look at a miracle, you can't explain it," Audrey said. She says Damien has always been a saint to her, but she's thrilled the world will know, too. "I think the greatest thing that's happening is to the villagers in Kalaupapa," she said. “He offers hope to everybody and he's kind of like a hero to all of us."

Still to come from Rome -- a date for canonization, the formal ceremony to grant sainthood. When cardinals hold their consistory in February, they could set the date for sometime later in 2009. Some Kalaupapa residents, like uncle Boogie Kahilihiwa, were overcome with emotion upon hearing the news. "Some guys broke down in tears and said its about time, he should have been a saint a long time ago. You gotta be here to really feel it. All our prayers been answered already...Father Damien is going to be a saint officially. As far as I am concerned he is here with us." The story of father Damien's life begins on January third, 1840.

He was born Joseph de Veuster in Belgium. He chose the name Damien upon entering the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts in 1859 and was ordained to priesthood 5 years later. In 1873, Father Damien arrived on Molokai and devoted the remaining 16 years of his life to Hansen's disease patients at Kalaupapa. After learning that he had contracted leprosy in 1884, Father Damien wrote "My eyebrows are beginning to fall out. Soon i will be disfigured entirely. Having no doubts about the true nature of my disease, I am calm, resigned, and very happy in the midst of my people." Father Damien died on April 15, 1889. In 1955, 106 years after his death, the cause of Father Damien was formally introduced for the purpose of Sainthood. In 1977, Pope Paul the sixth declared Father Damien, venerable Damien. And in 1995, he was declared Blessed Damien by Pope John Paul II.

Plans are moving forward to honor Father Damien with a church bearing his name on Molokai. A model was approved by parishioners in the spring. The project is estimated to cost $3,000,000. A gala dinner event is scheduled to take place August 16th on Oahu at the Koolau Golf Club. Tickets are $125. All proceeds benefit the Blessed Damien Church Building Fund.
By Gina Mangieri
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KGMB TV Hawaii - Father Damien to Become Catholic Saint

NEWS KGMB TV Hawaii - Announcement of Damien's canonisation click here >>>>>>

July 3rd. Hawaii: - Rev. Damien de Veuster, better known at Father Damien, will be recognized by the Catholic Church as a saint. Thursday Pope Benedict XVI declared Father Damien has performed a second miracle, a prerequisite for sainthood. Father Damien came to the then Sandwich Islands in 1864. He dedicated his life to serving people who had been banished to Kalaupapa on Molokai with leprosy. He eventually contracted the disease and died in 1889 at the age of 49.

Catholics in Hawaii are celebrating the honor being bestowed upon Father Damien. "It is with a great sigh of relief that finally our prayers are being answered and that recognition will be given to this holy man ... this wonderful priest who worked so hard for the cause of those that were the least of our brothers. The outcasts of society," said Rev. Christopher Keahi, the Provincial Superior of the Sacred Hearts Fathers in Hawaii, the same order Father Damien belonged to.

According to the Catholic Diocese of Honolulu Father Damien's second miracle happened in 1999. An Oahu woman named Audrey Toguchi was dying of lung cancer when she went to Father Damien's grave on Molokai and prayed to him. Although her condition was terminal, the cancer vanished and she is still alive today.

The first miracle was recognized by the Vatican in 1992. It involved a French woman who, in 1895, was dying of intestinal disease. She too prayed to Father Damien, recovered and lived for another 32 years. Catholics all over Hawaii are celebrating, including people at Honolulu's Damien Memorial School. If you look at a young man who is from Belgium coming to Hawaii and giving up his life knowing the consequences of his work but doing it for religious purposes, it is very inspiring," said Bernard Ho, President and C.E.O. of Damien School. "The Catholic community and the Damien community have been waiting for this for a while. We've been praying for it for a while and it's finally answered our prayers."

There is no official word on when Father Damien will be canonized to sainthood, but sources within the church said it probably will not happen before February of 2009 at the very earliest. The ceremony will happen at the Vatican in Rome with people from Hawaii and Belgium in attendance.
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Saturday, July 5, 2008

Background to Molokai Becoming a Colony for Lepers

Padre Damián de Molokai - Espanol

Le Pere Damien Sera Canonise

Juli 3 RTBF Belgique: - Le pape Benoît XVI a signé le document permettant la canonisation du Père Damien. Avec cette décision, il deviendra sans doute bientôt "Saint Damien de Molokaï". Le Père Damien, missionnaire belge ayant oeuvré dans la deuxième moitié du XIXe siècle auprès des lépreux sur l'île de Molokai (Hawaii), a été béatifié en 1995 par le pape Jean Paul II.

Le pape Benoît XVI a signé le document permettant la canonisation du Père Damien, a déclaré le porte-parole du cardinal Godfried Danneels, Hans Geybels. Le cardinal a tenu à remercier le pape pour cette décision. "Le pape a consenti à la publication du décret reconnaissant le miracle attribué à l'intercession du bienheureux Père Damien, l'apôtre des lépreux", annonce le cardinal Danneels dans un communiqué. "Avec cette décision, s'ouvre la voie d'une future canonisation de celui qui deviendra sans doute bientôt 'Saint Damien de Molokaï'".

Le Père Damien, missionnaire belge ayant oeuvré dans la deuxième moitié du XIXe siècle auprès des lépreux sur l'île de Molokai (Hawaii), a été béatifié en 1995 par le pape Jean Paul II. Le miracle attribué par la commission vaticane concerne une habitante d'Honolulu, Audrey Toguchi, qui souffrait fin des années '90 d'une forme rare de cancer des poumons. Son mal aurait disparu "de manière inexpliquée" alors qu'elle invoquait chaque jour le Père Damien. La commission de théologiens du Vatican y a vu une guérison miraculeuse. Celle-ci a été approuvée par les cardinaux et évêques de la Congrégation pour la cause des saints avant d'être approuvée par le pape. La date de la canonisation n'a pas été fixée mais celle-ci devrait se dérouler à Rome.

Dans un communiqué, le cardinal Danneels a tenu à remercier le Pape. "Merci, Saint Père, de faire un tel cadeau à l'Eglise", dit-il. "L'apôtre des lépreux est tout le contraire d'un saint de porcelaine. C'était un prêtre bien de son époque, qui a puisé dans sa confiance en Dieu la force de partager jusqu'au bout la vie des intouchables de son temps", poursuit le cardinal. De son côté, le ministre flamand Geert Bourgeois (N-VA) a annoncé son intention d'inviter le pape Benoît XVI à organiser la canonisation du Père Damien à Tremelo, son lieu de naissance, a-t-il indiqué jeudi à l'Agence Belga.
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Friday, July 4, 2008

Belgian Priest who treated Leprosy Patients in Hawaii Moves Closer to Sainthood

(Left Fr. Ed Popish, sscc Right Bishop Larry Silva of Honolulu)
HONOLULU, Hawaii: July 3rd. (International Herald Tribune) - The question of whether Father Damien, a Belgian priest who dedicated his life in the 19th century to serving leprosy patients in Hawaii, will become a saint is now in the hands of Pope Benedict XVI. The pope on Thursday will be presented a document attributing a modern miracle to the priest, who helped leprosy patients exiled to a remote peninsula on Molokai, one of the Hawaiian islands. "At that point we will have to wait, with patience and prudence," the Rev. Ed Popish, treasurer of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts in Rome, said in an e-mail Wednesday.

Under the Vatican's saint-making procedures, two miracles must to attributed to the candidate's intercession in order for the person to be made a saint. If the first miracle is approved, the person is beatified, and if the second miracle is approved, the person can be made a saint, or canonized. In 1995, Pope John Paul II beatified Damien after church authorities determined he had been responsible for a miracle in 1895. The second miracle has to do with a Honolulu woman, Audrey Toguchi, who recovered from terminal lung cancer in 1999 after she made a pilgrimage to Kalaupapa, where Damien had cared for banished and quarantined leprosy patients. She prayed to the priest, and attributed the healing to the intercession of Damien. The case was written up in the Hawaii Medical Journal in 2000 in an article about complete spontaneous regression of cancer. Her doctor also encouraged her to report her recovery to the church.

The Congregation for the Causes of Saints, comprised of bishops and cardinals, recently agreed that Toguchi's recovery defied medical explanation. "It's such an exciting time in our lives that one of our men, one of us here in Hawaii, has attained the highest rank of sanctity and will soon be declared a saint in the church," said the Rev. Christopher Keahi, head of the Sacred Hearts order of Hawaii. Honolulu Bishop Larry Silva said canonization is important, "not simply as a recognition of the saintly heroism of Father Damien, but so that, following his example, we may all be renewed in holiness and in our dedication to those brothers and sisters who are most in need." More than 8,000 people were banished to the remote Molokai peninsula after leprosy, also known as Hansen's disease, became epidemic in Hawaii in the 1850s. Forced quarantine did not end until 1969 after drugs were developed to control the disease. Born Joseph de Veuster in 1840, Damien came to Hawaii in 1864, joining other missionaries of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. He went to Kalaupapa nine years later, ministering to patients until he contracted Hansen's disease himself and died in 1889 at the age of 49.
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Pope Clears Way for Belgian Priest to become Saint

VATICAN CITY: July 3rd. (Chichago Tribune) - Pope Benedict on Thursday approved a miracle attributed to the intercession of a 19th century Belgian priest who ministered to leprosy patients in Hawaii -- opening the way for him to be declared a saint. Benedict declared that a Honolulu woman's recovery in 1999 from terminal lung cancer was the miracle needed for canonization of the Rev. Damien de Veuster. The miracle was attributed to the intercession of the late priest, to whom the woman, Audrey Toguchi, had prayed. The approval means that Father Damien, beatified by Pope John Paul II in 1995, will be canonized at a date still to be set. "It's such an exciting time in our lives that one of our men, one of us here in Hawaii, has attained the highest rank of sanctity and will soon be declared a saint in the church," said the Rev. Christopher Keahi, head of the Sacred Hearts order of Hawaii.

Born Joseph de Veuster in 1840, Damien went to Hawaii in 1864 and joined other missionaries of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary. Nine years later he began ministering to leprosy patients on the remote Kalaupapa peninsula of Molokai island, where some 8,000 people had been banished amid an epidemic in Hawaii in the 1850s. The priest eventually contracted the disease, also known as Hansen's disease, and died in 1889 at 49. Honolulu Bishop Larry Silva said canonization is important, "not simply as a recognition of the saintly heroism of Father Damien, but so that, following his example, we may all be renewed in holiness and in our dedication to those brothers and sisters who are most in need."

The Vatican's saint-making procedures require that a miracle attributed to the candidate's intercession be confirmed in order to be beatified. Damien was beatified after the Vatican declared that the 1987 recovery of a Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary nun was a miracle. The nun recovered from an illness after praying to Damien. After beatification, a second miracle is needed for sainthood. A date for canonization was not expected to be set until February. Damien's body was exhumed from his Molokai grave in 1936 and his remains sent back to Belgium for reburial. In 1995, a relic of his right hand was given back to the Hawaii diocese and returned to the Molokai grave. The decree for Father Damien was one of 13 approved by the pope for people in various stages of the sainthood process.
|Associated Press Writer
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Kalaupapa Patients Look Forward to Sainthood Celebration

WAILUKU, Hawaii: July 3rd. (Honolulu Advertiser) — A final recommendation for canonization of the Blessed Damien of Kalaupapa will be in the hands of Pope Benedict XVI today, the last step toward the famed priest's journey to sainthood. "Everyone prays to Father Damien to make life easier and is looking forward to the celebration," said Gloria Marks, who with her husband, Richard, owns Damien Tours. Both are leprosy patients at Kalaupapa. "We have been waiting for this for a long time. "What's sad is that a lot of them that were waiting passed away and didn't get a chance to see him become a saint."

The recommendation for sainthood for the Belgium-born Joseph de Veuster, who took on the name Father Damien on his ordination to the priesthood, was approved earlier this week by the Vatican's Congregation for the Causes of the Saints. "At that point we will have to wait, with patience and prudence for the Vatican's communication about the Holy Father's action with regard to this document," according to an e-mail sent yesterday from Rome by the Rev. Ed Popish of Damien's international order, the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts. Representatives of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Honolulu and the order said they do not expect Damien's official canonization ceremony in Vatican City, called a consistory, to occur until mid to late 2009. Typically, two or three people are canonized each year by the pope.

The ceremony will likely be scheduled when the Congregation for the Causes of Saints sets the date in February, said diocesan spokesman Patrick Downes. "In light of the fact that the canonization seems imminent, I have already been working with the Diocesan Father Damien/Mother Marianne Commission, which I founded to promote their causes for sainthood, in planning for both local celebrations and pilgrimages and for a pilgrimage to Rome and Belgium," wrote Bishop Larry Silva of the diocese in an e-mail Wednesday. Blessed Mother Marianne Cope, a Franciscan nun who served patients at Kalaupapa, also awaits canonization. Despite the additional wait, Hawaii Catholics were buoyed by the news of the man who gave his life to care for the once-ostracized Hansen's disease, or leprosy, patients and serves as an inspiration for compassion to people across the globe. "It's an exciting thought that finally Father Damien will be given praise for giving comfort to those who were treated as the dreck of society," said the Very Rev. Christopher Keahi, who is the superior of the Hawaii province of Damien's order. Keahi said the recognition is a tremendous step for the faithful of Hawai'i. Now that Damien will be raised to the rank of sainthood, Keahi said, Catholics will understand that it is not impossible and all can aspire to holiness. Damien's order and admirers have pushed for his sainthood since he died in 1889 at age 49. He had contracted leprosy while serving the sick and exiled people of the colony on the remote north coast peninsula on Molokai.

Kalaupapa remains home to 14 leprosy patients, all cured but scarred by the disease, and is a National Historic Park. It is also home to the church that the former carpenter helped build, St. Philomena, which stands next to Damien's lei-draped grave. His remains were exhumed for reburial in Belgium, but a relic, his right hand, was returned to the remote site to be buried next to the church in 1995. "It's been a long time coming that he will be recognized by the universal church," Downes said. "Now, there will be a St. Damien Day put on the church calendar. . . . It's a great honor, not only for the Catholic Church in Hawaii but for the people of Hawai'i and particularly for the Hansen's patients who still live in Kalaupapa and are a living legacy to the charity of Blessed Damien." While known through his life and death as Father Damien, his Catholic title was raised to Blessed Damien when he was beatified with the first determination of a miracle attributed to his intervention. Although the people of Kalaupapa suffered, it was a place that has always inspired hope as well, said state Sen. J. Kalani English in a statement. English, whose 6th District includes Kalawao County and the Kalaupapa settlement, is among those working to get the state to issue a formal apology to the 8,000 patients who were forced to live and die on Kalaupapa and create a monument to them. "To think that a saint walked among the humble residents of Kalaupapa and eased their burdens is deeply moving and a reminder that we never know who among us will have the power to change the world," English said.

Damien may have been born in Europe as Joseph de Veuster, but it was here that he became a hero, Downes said. He lived with Native Hawaiians, learned the language, ate the food, cared for the sick and injured, and built homes. Damien fought to improve conditions at Kalaupapa through his order and patronage and was diagnosed with leprosy five years before his death. Pope John Paul II beatified Damien in Brussels in 1995. Gloria Marks, 70, attended the ceremony and received communion from the pope. She said this time she will only make a trip to Honolulu for a planned celebration there. The road to sainthood has been very complicated and demanded that two miracles be attributed to Damien. Church authorities first determined that Damien had been responsible for a miracle dating to 1895, leading to his beatification a century later. In that case, a French nun dying of a gastrointestinal illness reportedly experienced a miraculous recovery after beginning a novena to Damien before slipping into unconsciousness. Then, this summer, the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, composed of bishops and cardinals, approved the second miracle that was previously supported by a panel of theologians and a five-doctor Vatican commission. The church determined that a Honolulu woman's healing of terminal lung cancer defied medical explanation. Audrey Toguchi was cured in 1999 after she made a pilgrimage to Kalaupapa and prayed to the priest. She attributed the healing to the intercession of Damien. The case was written up by her doctor, Walter Chang, in the Hawaii Medical Journal in 2000 in an article about complete spontaneous regression of cancer. Chang also encouraged her to report her recovery to the church.

Interest in Damien has steadily grown since his beatification, Molokai residents said. Molokai Mule Ride brings tour groups six days a week down the 1,600-foot cliff to visit Kalaupapa. Noah John Horner, operations manager for the company, said mounting interest in Damien can also be attributed to recent books and movies produced about his life. "We're sold out for the next seven days," Horner said. "A lot of Catholics are trying to come out here." Federal law limits the number of visitors to the park to 100 per day, a limit based on patients' preferences to maintain their quiet, private lives. "It's a big deal," Downes said. "Hawai'i has its own saint now. I don't think Montana has its saint yet."

Steps to Sainthood

According to the Roman Catholic Church, steps to sainthood were finalized in 1588. Pope John Paul II in 1983 promulgated the canon norms:

  • Initiation of an investigation of Christian virtues by the bishop of the diocese requesting canonization.
  • On determination of a life of heroic theological virtues, reception of the title of servant of God. The diocesan investigation and further investigations are reviewed by the Congregation for the Causes of Saints.
  • Being credited with a miracle, leading to beatification and being recognized as blessed.
  • Being credited with a second miracle subsequent to being recognized as blessed. The pope has the authority to waive the requirements.
  • A final recommendation from the Congregation for the Causes of Saints is presented to the pope.
  • A celebration, called a consistory, advances the blessed to sainthood.

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    Kalaupapa exults ‘Saint’ Damien

    The priest who devoted his life to leprosy patients on Molokai will be canonized
    Honolulu, Hawaii: July 3rd. (Honolulu Star Bulletin) - People across Hawaii rejoiced at the news that Father Damien De Veuster was closer to being declared a saint by the Roman Catholic Church. Sister Frances said people at the Kalaupapa convent "have been waiting forever, it seems," for the canonization of Father Damien, who ministered to leprosy patients at Kalaupapa in the 1800s. "He deserves it, and it's a long-awaited process for him," she said. "He gave his life for it, for the disease. People say you lay down your life for your friend. He literally did that, so I say he deserves it."

    In Rome today, Pope Benedict XVI approved the canonization documents for Father Damien, which had been approved and signed by cardinals and bishops in the Vatican's Congregation for the Causes of Saints, according to church officials. It was the final approval on the part of that body. Father Felix Vandebroek of Kalaupapa said he got a call yesterday morning from Belgian Catholic Church officials that "the canonization of Father Damien would be most probably in 2009." The canonization would most likely take place in Rome, though the last one was in Brazil, Patrick Downes, a local spokesman for the Catholic Church said yesterday. It is unlikely the pope would come to Hawaii for canonization due to the cost and distance, he said. Damien, however, was beatified in his homeland of Belgium in 1995 on account of a miracle cure of a French nun in 1895.

    Damien was considered for sainthood after a requisite second miracle was reported by Aiea resident Audrey Toguchi, who prayed at Damien's grave in Kalaupapa after being diagnosed with a rare form of cancer. She wrote to the late Pope John Paul II that after four months without treatment she was cured in 1997. Residents in Kalaupapa have heard the news and "everybody is happy about it," Vandebroek said, but added that it may not have sunk in yet. "To realize what it really means, it takes a little while," he said. "They all are enthused, Catholics and non-Catholics, but not exactly jumping high from joy. You can tell it in the feelings. They feel that Damien is their hero." Vandebroek, also a Belgian expressed his own feelings: "You feel proud. You feel happy. You feel grateful for what he did." Bishop Larry Silva said plans are being made for local celebrations and pilgrimages and for a pilgrimage to Rome and Belgium. Parishioner Maria Sullivan, a former Seattle resident, said she moved to Molokai because "it was the Hawaii I was longing for, and Father Damien called me. Father Damien had a very challenging life, and he deserves this recognition," she said. "Many of us believe he's a saint in heaven and he deserves this recognition because he was such a wonderful steward and he extended everyday kindnesses to people. ... He built a community of love where there was none."
    By Leila Fujimori
    lfujimori@starbulletin.com
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    Thursday, July 3, 2008

    DECREES OF THE CONGREGATION FOR THE CAUSES OF SAINTS

    Pope Benedict XVI arrives in the Paul VI hall to attend the weekly general audience at the Vatican Wednesday, July 2, 2008.

    VATICAN CITY, 3 JUL 2008 (VIS) - The Holy Father today received in private audience Cardinal Jose Saraiva Martins C.M.F., prefect of the Congregation for the Causes of Saints, and authorised the promulgation of decrees concerning the following causes:


    MIRACLES

    - Blessed, Fr. Damian de Veuster, Belgian professed priest of the Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary (1840-1889).

    - Blessed Bernardo Tolomei, Italian founder of the Olivetan Benedictine Congregation (1272-1348).

    - Blessed Nuno di Santa Maria Alvares Pereira (ne: Nuno), Portuguese professed layman of the Order of Friars of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel (1360-1431).

    - Servant of God Ludovico Martin, French lay man (1823-1894) and Servant of God Maria Zelia Guerin Martin, French lay woman (1831-1877).


    MARTYRDOM

    - Servant of God Francesco Giovanni Bonifacio, Italian, killed in hatred of the faith at Villa Gardossi , Italy (1912-1946).


    HEROIC VIRTUES

    - Blessed Nuno di Santa Maria Alvares Pereira (ne: Nuno), Portuguese professed layman of the Order of Friars of the Blessed Virgin Mary of Mount Carmel (1360-1431).

    - Servant of God Stephen Douayhy, Lebanese patriarch of Antioch of the Maronites (1630-1704).

    - Servant of God Bernardino Dal Vago da Portogruaro (ne: Giuseppe), Italian archbishop of the Order of Friars Minor (1822-1895).

    - Servant of God Giuseppe Di Donna, Italian bishop of Andria , of the Order of the Blessed Trinity (1901-1952).

    - Servant of God Maria Barbara of the Blessed Trinity Maix (nee: Barbara), Austrian foundress of the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary (1818-1873).

    - Servant of God Pius Keller (ne: Hans), German professed priest of the Order of St. Augustine (1825-1904).

    - Servant of God Andres Hibernon Garmendia (ne: Francisco Andres), Spanish professed brother of the Institute of Brothers of Christian Schools (1880-1969).

    - Servant of God Chiara Badano, young Italian lay woman (1971-1990).
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    Damien de Veuster to be Named a Saint

    Hawaiian NEWS ABC KITV



    Hawaiian NEWS ABC KITV Announcement of Damien's canonisation click here >>>>>>


    Vatican Votes To Elevate Father Damien To Sainthood

    Celebrations Expected For Belgium, Hawaii

    POSTED: 12:38 pm HST July 1, 2008
    The Congregation of the Causes of Saints at the Vatican has voted to canonize Father Damien of Molokai to sainthood.
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    Hawaii's Fr. Damien is Now a Saint

    Growing up in Hawaii Fr. Damien was mentioned in our public school textbooks as a helper of lepers. The state of Hawaii has always been proud of his work among the lepers of Molokai. The state of Hawaii also has a high school (it's a Catholic parochial school) named after him. Now I'm sure they wouldn't mind renaming their school St. Damien now! The picture (right) is Fr. Damien showing him with the advanced stages of leprosy.
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    Wednesday, July 2, 2008

    Vatican Votes To Elevate Father Damien To Sainthood

    July 2nd: - The Congregation of the Causes of Saints at the Vatican has voted to canonize Father Damien of Molokai to sainthood. After the verification of two medical miracles, after decades of investigation into the life and works of Damien De Veuster, the Consisterie at the Vatican has at long last voted to elevate the Martyr of Molokai to its Pantheon of Saints. The measure now awaits the signature of Pope Benedict XVI. "People are very excited because they know he was a great person and role model, and that is the most important thing of the sanctification, he finally can be the role model we need," Damien historian Hilde Eynikel told KITV from Belgium.

    The search is now on for a relic of Father Damien, which will be presented to the pope at the sanctification. A relic can be something touched by the saint, worn by the saint, or an actual body part of the saint. The diocese in Brussels is now looking into the retrieval of such a relic from Damien's tomb in Leuven, Belgium.

    Damien's grave in Kalaupapa contains only his right hand, which was re-interred following his beatification in 1995. The canonization will take place in Rome, possibly at the end of next year, with celebrations in Belgium and Hawaii. The pope will probably not travel to Hawaii. Cardinal Daneels of Belgium may be in attendance. Supporters of the sainthood effort are overjoyed that now the world will know what Hawaii has known for 100 years -- that Father Damien of Molokai is a saint.

    He was born Joseph De Veuster in Tremeloo, Belgium, in 1840. De Veuster's older brother, Pamphile, was set to travel to the "Sandwich Islands," but was too sick to go. Instead, De Veuster traveled to Hawaii in his brother's place. The Roman Catholic priest arrived in Hawaii in 1864 and took the name Damien. He served the leprosy patients at the Molokai colony at Kalaupapa for 12 years before he succumbed to Hansen's disease at age 49. His body was exhumed from his Molokai grave in 1936 when his remains were sent to Belgium, for reburial. In 1995, a relic of his right hand was given back to the Hawaii Diocese and returned to his Molokai grave.
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