Mont Saint-Gregoire, Que. - When Gilles Bessette attends the Montreal celebration of Brother AndréƵapp sainthood later this month he’ll bring along a family keepsake — a rosary that belonged to CanadaƵapp new saint.
“What I usually do with it, when I have friends who are very ill, I lend it to them. I don’t pretend that it will procure a miracle, but I find that itƵapp a way of honouring Brother André and of showing a sign of affection to my friends,” said Bessette, a relative of Brother AndréƵapp.
Healing hands opened up devotion to Brother André
By Carolyn Girard, Catholic Register SpecialMontreal - Why he was spared death and received two miracles as a child, Brother Jacques Berthiaume will probably never know until he meets his maker. But heƵapp certain of one thing: Brother André, the Quebec miracle worker, really is a saint.
“I am very proud because I can say I knew a real living saint — not some foreign saint that I’d only heard about,” said Berthiaume, 84, who, according to doctors, was going to die as a child.
Berthiaume was born in Saint-Césaire, a small town 60 km east of Montreal. It was also Brother AndréƵapp home town for a brief period before the local pastor, Fr. André Provençal, wrote a letter recommending him to the seminary.
Canonization brings renewal to St. JosephƵapp Oratory
By Carolyn Girard, Catholic Register SpecialMONTREAL - Two million people visit St. JosephƵapp Oratory in Montreal every year but, since founder Brother AndréƵapp canonization was announced, shrine administrators say the numbers have visibly increased. Fr. Claude Grou, the OratoryƵapp rector, hopes this is a sign of renewal.
“I think it is just the beginning,” Grou said. “I think the celebration we will have in the month of October in Rome and in Montreal will generate more interest and I believe after that, people who have seen the celebration on television or come here, will feel the importance of coming back to this place as a place they will go pray, where they will grow closer to God, where their faith is strengthened.”
‘A tool in the hands of Providence’
By Fr. Thomas Rosica, CSB, Catholic Register SpecialAll of us at rejoice with the Church in Canada, the Church in Quebec and especially the archdiocese of Montreal over the upcoming canonization of Blessed Brother André.
I have had a personal devotion to Brother André ever since my first visit to the Oratory in 1976 as a high school student. Brother André taught me back then: “Ite ad Joseph” (Go to Joseph) and entrust to the Holy One of Nazareth your projects and dreams, that he may protect you and give success to the work of your hands. Over the past 34 years, I have been a regular visitor to the house that Brother André built for Joseph on Mount Royal. In May 1999, on the day I was named National Director and CEO of World Youth Day 2002, I took the train to Montreal and spent the night at the Oratory. I placed World Youth Day 2002 in the hands of Blessed Brother André, asking him to bless our humble efforts in allowing Christ to touch the hearts and minds of young people of Canada and the world.
Postulator challenged with so many Brother André miracles
By Michael Swan, The Catholic RegisterThousands of people during Brother AndréƵapp lifetime and more since his death in 1937 have claimed the humble brotherƵapp prayers healed them, cured them, made them whole. There are racks of abandoned crutches, canes and wheelchairs on display in St. JosephƵapp Oratory.
The problem for the postulator of Brother AndréƵapp cause was how to decide on just one miracle to present to medical and theological experts. When Andrea Ambrosi became postulator of Brother AndréƵapp cause in 2002, he had to find the right miracle to move the cause forward.
Brother André: A saintly life
By Catholic Register StaffCanadaƵapp next saint has always simply been known as Brother André, nothing more. But when Pope Benedict XVI declares him a saint in Rome Oct. 17, what title will he be given?
“We don’t know,” said Danielle Decelles, a spokesperson for St. JosephƵapp Oratory. “For us in Montreal, he is St. Brother André.”
Rome has not revealed to the archdiocese of Montreal or St. JosephƵapp Oratory what title Brother André will be given in the document proclaiming his sainthood. That will be revealed Oct. 17, said Decelles.
Brother AndréƵapp compassionate spirit changed thousands of lives
By Michael Swan, The Catholic RegisterIt is probable that Brother André would not approve of being made a saint. Or perhaps not even comprehend it.
Once on a tour of the exile Quebecois towns of New England, the already famous Brother André arrived in a place where the priest and the whole French-speaking community anxiously waited. He was already known as the “Miracle Man of Montreal.” The Connecticut pastor had organized a procession and the people greeted Brother André with a great feast. The whole community turned out to pray the rosary.
A lens in the labyrinth of the refugee slums
By Michael Swan, The Catholic RegisterTake a look at Za Aytiryya, the neighbourhood where Iraqi Christian refugees live in Beirut. Or take a tour the Umayyad Mosque in Damascus for a glimpse of a Muslim world. Or meet the child refugees whose lives are also on hold, waiting for resettlement.
These three slide shows give another view of the shrinking world of Iraqi refugees.
Iraqi refugees prisoners in their Christian locales
By Michael Swan, The Catholic RegisterThe 10,000-plus Iraqis in Lebanon have no legal status. Lebanon never signed the United Nations Convention on Refugees. The country has no legal or administrative mechanism to deal with a person seeking asylum of any kind. While it does recognize Palestinian refugees, they are an exception.
The police are not actively trying to round up refugees and put them in jail or send them out of the country. As long as they don’t wander out of the Christian neighbourhoods of Beirut or otherwise draw attention, authorities are willing to pretend they’re not there.
Deborah Amos no longer recognizes Middle East she has known since 1983
By Michael Swan, The Catholic RegisterThe biggest and best story of Deborah AmosƵapp 28-year career as a Middle East correspondent comes in the form of an eminently readable, fast-paced book about the Iraqi refugee crisis —
Amos spent five years among IraqƵapp two million exiles, sipping tea with them in tiny, crumbling, empty apartments in the poor Geramana neighbourhood of Damascus, retracing their journeys from Baghdad by taxi, tracking them down after they resettled in the United States. Out of the whirlwind of “shock and awe” attacks on Baghdad in 2003, and the confusing rhetoric about weapons of mass destruction and regime change and democratizing the Middle East, Amos discovered that the key to understanding what was happening in Iraq was in the people streaming out of Iraq.
Mississauga parish helps families adjust to a new life
By Sheila Dabu Nonato, The Catholic RegisterFatohiƵapp family was sponsored last year by St. DominicƵapp parish in Mississauga, Ont. They had been living as refugees in Syria after fleeing Iraq.
St. DominicƵapp parishioners say helping refugee families come to Canada is just part of who they are as a faith community. The experience, from both sides, has been rewarding.