Utica’s Blessed Marianne Cope recommended for sainthood
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CLINTON —
A woman who grew up in Utica and dedicated her life to caring for exiled leprosy patients is a step closer to sainthood.
The Vatican’s Congregation for the Causes of Saints Tuesday recommended to the pope that Blessed Marianne Cope be canonized, confirming previous rulings that a second miracle was due to her intercession.
In 1888, Cope succeeded Father Damien in caring for leprosy patients banished to the Kalaupapa settlement on Molokai. She died of natural causes in 1918 and was buried there. She could become the second saint with Hawaii ties; Damien gained sainthood in 2009.
“This is like the green light,” said Sister Patricia Burkard of Tuesday’s action. Burkard, a member of the Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities in Syracuse.
Blessed Marianne was born Barbara Koob in 1838 in Germany. In 1840, her family immigrated to Utica, where she lived on Schuyler Street and attended St. Joseph’s Church.
In 1862, she entered the Sisters of St. Francis in Syracuse. Eventually, she volunteered to work at Hawaii's Kalaupapa settlement on Molokai with leprosy patients alongside the Belgian missionary, Father Damien DeVeuster.
She was beatified by the Vatican in 2005.
Blessed Marianne is only of five so-called Blesseds in the country. She was only one of 50 religious leaders to respond positively to an emissary from Hawaii who requested for nuns to help care for Hansen’s disease patients on Kalaupapa, the religious order said, earning her the title of “beloved mother of the outcasts.”
In 2004, Pope John Paul II declared Mother Marianne “venerable,” the first step toward canonization after the Vatican recognized her intercession for the unexplained cure of a New York girl dying of multiple organ failure. The Vatican must authenticate the second miracle for her to be declared a saint, which is expected to happen next year.
The Sisters of St. Francis won’t reveal details of the second miracle until after the pope’s proclamation, Burkard said.
The Vatican Medical Board ruled unanimously the second miracle is an “inexplicable medical recovery” and theologians ruled the miracle was due to her intercession. Reaction among the Sisters of St. Francis in Syracuse to news that the group of cardinals and bishops confirmed those approvals was joy, though tinged with sadness over the weekend death of Sister Mary Laurence Hanley, who had been researching Cope since the 1970s and was instrumental in communicating with the Vatican during the process.
“We have seen her life’s work fulfilled and we will celebrate that at her funeral,” scheduled for Wednesday, Burkard said. “She literally brought us to this moment.”
The Vatican’s Congregation for the Causes of Saints Tuesday recommended to the pope that Blessed Marianne Cope be canonized, confirming previous rulings that a second miracle was due to her intercession.
In 1888, Cope succeeded Father Damien in caring for leprosy patients banished to the Kalaupapa settlement on Molokai. She died of natural causes in 1918 and was buried there. She could become the second saint with Hawaii ties; Damien gained sainthood in 2009.
“This is like the green light,” said Sister Patricia Burkard of Tuesday’s action. Burkard, a member of the Sisters of St. Francis of the Neumann Communities in Syracuse.
Blessed Marianne was born Barbara Koob in 1838 in Germany. In 1840, her family immigrated to Utica, where she lived on Schuyler Street and attended St. Joseph’s Church.
In 1862, she entered the Sisters of St. Francis in Syracuse. Eventually, she volunteered to work at Hawaii's Kalaupapa settlement on Molokai with leprosy patients alongside the Belgian missionary, Father Damien DeVeuster.
She was beatified by the Vatican in 2005.
Blessed Marianne is only of five so-called Blesseds in the country. She was only one of 50 religious leaders to respond positively to an emissary from Hawaii who requested for nuns to help care for Hansen’s disease patients on Kalaupapa, the religious order said, earning her the title of “beloved mother of the outcasts.”
In 2004, Pope John Paul II declared Mother Marianne “venerable,” the first step toward canonization after the Vatican recognized her intercession for the unexplained cure of a New York girl dying of multiple organ failure. The Vatican must authenticate the second miracle for her to be declared a saint, which is expected to happen next year.
The Sisters of St. Francis won’t reveal details of the second miracle until after the pope’s proclamation, Burkard said.
The Vatican Medical Board ruled unanimously the second miracle is an “inexplicable medical recovery” and theologians ruled the miracle was due to her intercession. Reaction among the Sisters of St. Francis in Syracuse to news that the group of cardinals and bishops confirmed those approvals was joy, though tinged with sadness over the weekend death of Sister Mary Laurence Hanley, who had been researching Cope since the 1970s and was instrumental in communicating with the Vatican during the process.
“We have seen her life’s work fulfilled and we will celebrate that at her funeral,” scheduled for Wednesday, Burkard said. “She literally brought us to this moment.”
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