By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service
January 25, 2024
VATICAN CITY -- Pope Francis signed a decree clearing the way for the canonization of Canada-born Blessed Marie-Léonie Paradis, founder of the Little Sisters of the Holy Family.
He also recognized the martyrdom of Polish Father Michal Rapacz, who had been kidnapped and killed by a group of armed men in 1946 during the communist government's anti-religious campaign. He can now be beatified.
After Pope Francis met Jan. 24 with Cardinal Marcello Semeraro, prefect of the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, the Vatican published a list of decrees the pope approved regarding six sainthood causes.
The miracle the pope recognized in the cause of Blessed Paradis, according to the dicastery's website, involved the healing of a newborn baby girl who suffered from "prolonged perinatal asphyxia with multi-organ failure and encephalopathy" during her birth in 1986 at a hospital in Saint-Jean-sur-Richelieu. Today the young woman is a language teacher.
Born Virginie Alodie Paradis in L'Acadie, Quebec, in 1840, the future saint entered the convent of the Marianites of Holy Cross, the female branch of the Congregation of Holy Cross, in Saint-Laurent and was named Sister Marie-de-Sainte-Léonie.
She taught in and around Montreal until 1862, then went to St. Vincent de Paul's Orphanage in New York City for eight years and then moved to the community of the Holy Cross Sisters in Indiana in 1870.
After 12 years in the United States, she went to Memramcook, New Brunswick, where she eventually founded the Little Sisters of the Holy Family in 1880 to collaborate with and support the religious of Holy Cross in educational work.
Today the sisters work in more than 200 institutions of education and evangelization in Canada, the United States, Italy, Brazil, Haiti, Chile, Honduras and Guatemala.
The other decrees approved by Pope Francis Jan. 24 recognized: