Contents:
-
Blessed Eufrasia of the Sacred
Heart
-
The Carmelites in India
-
Vocation centres in Italy
-
The next OCD address book
-
The biography of Bl. Elizabeth
of the Trinity
-
Christmas greetings from the Editors
Bl.
EUFRASIA OF THE SACRED HEART
1877 – India – 1952
The
beatification was celebrated in the place where she died,
India; following the disposition of the present Pope. For
this reason the news could have gone unnoticed. But it is
right to recall that as from 3rd December, the
feast of St. Francis Xavier, Carmel has another Blessed.
Rosa Eluvathingal
Cherpukaram was born 17th
October 1877 in Kattoor, diocese
of Trichur (India). She died
there on 29th August 1952. Sister
Eufrasia of the Sacred Heart
belonged to the Congregation of the Sisters of the Mother of
Carmel (CMS), the first female religious family of the
Syro-Malabar rite in
Kerala, founded by
Bl.
Kuriakos Elias Chavara
and Fr. Leopold Beccaro,
ocd, in 1866. It was an
institute of the Syro-Malabar
rite from the beginning and an institute of pontifical
standing from 1967, aggregated to the Order on 5th
April 1920. With its Generalate
in Alwaye,
Kerala (India), it can count today more than 6,000
religious, and is present in 20 Provinces and 610 houses in
Asia, Africa, Europe and America.
The
new Blessed took the habit of this Carmelite Congregation on
10th May 1897, overcoming the opposition of her
father. She became local superior and mistress of novices.
The local people, always seeing her with a rosary in hand,
called her “the praying nun”. Her sisters gave her the name
“mother tabernacle”. She enjoyed the highest mystical
prayer. She was not afraid to dedicate herself totally to
the people during a cholera epidemic in the region. Her tomb
became a place of pilgrimage. The cause of her beatification
was introduced in 1987. The miracle that was examined for
the beatification in 1997 concerned a man, Thomas
Tharakan, 54 years old, who
suffered from bone cancer. The Postulator for the Cause is
the priest George Nedungatt.
The
beatification ceremony took place in
Ollur, and was presided by Cardinal
Varkey
Vithayathil, Archbishop of
Erakulam-Angamaly; the homily was given by the
Apostolic Nuncio, Peter Lopez Quintana, with another 31
archbishops and bishops concelebrating, and more than 150
priests. Eufrasia of the Sacred
Heart is the fifth Blessed from Kerala
and the sixth in India. The Vatican newspaper “L’Osservatore
Romano” on 3rd December dedicated an entire page
to the event.
THE CARMELITES IN INDIA
India is the subcontinent with the greatest growth in the
Order. To the five Provinces (Malabar,
Manjummel, Karnataka-Goa,
Tamilnadu, and South
Kerala), can be added the
Commissariates of Andhra Pradesh
and New Delhi. To the missionary regions of
Orissa,
Ranchi and West Bengal can be added the new
missionary territory of Chattisgarh,
belonging to the Tamilnadu
Province. Outside of India there are Missions in Indonesia
and East Timor (Manjummel), in
South Africa and Tanzania (Karnataka-Goa),
and in the Ukraine (Malabar),… Within their own Provinces
there are a variety of missionary endeavours. We should be
happy that Carmel in India has become very missionary
orientated.
Each
Province has a considerable number in formation. For
example, 11 novices from the South
Kerala Province, made profession on 8th
December. Each Province has its own particular “Ratio
Studiorum”, which is the basis
of its formation programme. The academic level is high.
Because of the high numbers of brothers in formation it is
not convenient to have one house of formation for the whole
of India. It is better for each Province to maintain its own
house of formation. An exception could be in northern India,
due to the strong cultural differences with respect to the
other Carmelite places. The rich cultural inheritance of
India is integrated into Carmelite formation, with its own
themes in philosophy and theology, as well as social
programmes linked to each particular area. During the year
studies are interrupted to allow the young students to leave
their houses of formation and experience life in community
and in missionary or pastoral activities. Inter provincial
collaboration is fermented by meetings for students in
theology, by a second common novitiate before solemn
profession, and by meetings for the
formators. In this way the risk of regionalism and
differences over rites is overcome.
Carmel
in India also has several centres of spirituality, where
academic grades for religious and clerics can be obtained.
They are working actively to translate our spiritual
patrimony into the many different languages in India.
Particular
initiatives that we can mention are: the first regional
congress on formation in Mysore
(2005) with 35 participants; in 2006 they celebrated a
regional congress of the secular Order in India and Sri
Lanka (Kollam,
Kerala, 22-27 August); in 2007
they will celebrate a regional congress on liturgy and
Carmelite prayer, and there was a missionary congress for
the Orient and Extreme Orient (Sept 2006, Mangalore); for
2008 a regional congress is planned for the directors of our
houses of spirituality.
VOCATIONAL COMMUNITIES IN ITALY
Fr.
General has been behind an initiative to create a place to
welcome, accompany and discern vocations to Carmelite life.
With this in mind Fr. Luis Arostegui
contacted Fr. Antony
Sangalli, of the Lombardy
Province, and Fr. Joseph Pozzobon,
of the Venice Province. From the first meeting people saw a
need to create two different communities in two different
places. The first, that of Montechiaro
in the Naples Province, was inaugurated on 25th
March. The community includes Fr. Rudolf
Girardello, of the Venice
Province, Fr. Antony
Sangalli, of the Lombardy
Province, Fr. Mario Ferrante and
Fr. Joseph Iaquinto, both from
the Naples Province. The house will serve as a place for
postulants.
The
second community will be based in
Canale Monterano, in the
historic desert house of Montevirginio,
some 60 kms., from Rome. In this
community will be Fr. Joseph Pozzobon,
Fr. Michael Masella, Fr. Romano
Zaffina, both from the Roman
Province, Fr. Frederick Trinchero,
from the Genoa Province and Fr. Joseph
Caramia, of the Sicilian Commissariat. The priory has
a novice, and several others are being formed in their
respective provinces; for example, there are six
lombardian novices in
Concesa.
The
Canale
Monterano and Montevirginio
communities began this path on 9th November with
a concelebrated Mass presided by Fr.
Arnaldo Pigna, Provincial
of Rome. They will be dependent upon the Conference of
Italian provincials, and at least for the first three years
their point of reference will be the
Generalate. The Roman Province will maintain the
property of the house. Putting these places at the service
of Carmel in Italy, it is hoped that they will be places of
welcome and reference for those who are preparing for solemn
profession, for vocation directors, for directors and
brothers in formation.
The
two houses are open to all Carmelites and to whoever feels
the need to rest.
THE NEW ADDRESS BOOK OF THE ORDER
We
repeat the request to send us corrections and additions so
that we can complete and correct the postal and email
addresses of our priories and convents. In 2007 we want to
publish again the address book of all the houses of the
Order. We want it to be the most complete and correct
possible. Could you please send any changes and
observations:
-
of the postal address
-
of the telephone number
-
of the fax number
-
of the email address
All this data can be sent to the Secretary at the
Generalate (Corso
d’Italia 38, 00198 Rome, ITALY),
to our fax number (+ 39 06-8535.0206), to our email
ocdinfo@pcn.net Could you please do this before 31st
December 2006.
A BIOGRAPHY OF BL. ELIZABETH OF THE TRINITY
This
has been a long awaited book of the centenary and, together
with the Concordance, the most important. Its author, the
Flemish Carmelite Conrad De Meester,
wrote it and called it: “Elisabeth de la
Trinité.
Biographie”. It contains 742 pages, and was
published by “Presses de la Renaissance”, Paris. There are
30 chapters plus an appendix.
We
will not judge it critically, nor even give our personal
opinion. We resign ourselves to announcing its publication.
With the collection of documents, with the handling of the
writings of the Blessed, the book which Fr. De
Meester offers us is a complete
work, the most detailed, the most researched, the best
interpreted. It is a dignified contribution to the
centenary, a fruit that will endure. It is truly certain to
help you know the person, the life and the mind of Elizabeth
of the Trinity better. It is being sold through Carmelite
publications and in religious bookshops. We do not know if
anyone intends immediately to translate it into other
languages. But in the original French it remains a
documental resource, which can be completed by the volume
containing the statements of those who knew her (“Elizabeth
de la Trinité les
témoins”. Toulouse 2007).

CHRISTMAS GREETINGS FROM THE EDITORIAL TEAM
Fr.
General has sent his Christmas greetings to all the priories
and convents of the Order. The COMMUNICATIONES team now
presents its own greetings to all our readers, wishing you a
holy, joyful and happy Christmas. We recall the words of
Pope Benedict XVI:
“In the night at Bethlehem, the Redeemer
made himself one like us, in order to be
our companion along the treacherous
paths of history. We take the hand
He offers us: a hand that does
not want to take, only
to give…”
Message “urbi et
orbi” - 25th December
2005
We
are sure that the communication of the Order, which
encourages communion, will proceed assiduously and
attentively in 2007, the New Year of grace. It is the time
to remember the Teresian
principle: “Increase charity while it is being shared” (Life
7, 22).
HAPPY CHRISTMAS
BLESSED NEW YEAR