The ANNOTICO Report
Mother Cabrini — the first American citizen to be named
a Roman Catholic
saint — is being honored this weekend in Los Angeles,
where the tiny
Italian-born woman arrived a century ago in July 1905,
She said it reminded
her of the Italian Riviera.
Canonized in 1946, St. Frances Xavier Cabrini built more
than 65 hospitals,
schools and orphanages in the United States and elsewhere.
She is the
patron saint of immigrants.
Mother Cabrini came to LA at the invitation of Bishop
Thomas Conaty who
hoped the indefatigable nun would put the city's Italian
immigrants back in
the pews of local Roman Catholic churches.
The Italian immigrants were not much taken with the Irish-dominated
clergy
in the United States, that looked down them. Many stopped
going to church.
The church they had known back home was a much more relaxed
and more
celebratory experience than the more legalisticAmerican
one.
Los Angeles Times
By Patricia Ward Biederman,
Times Staff Writer
July 30, 2005
Mother Cabrini — the first American citizen to be named
a Roman Catholic
saint — is being honored this weekend in Los Angeles,
where the tiny
Italian-born woman once walked the downtown streets,
shaded by a straw hat,
seeking alms for her immigrant flock.
Canonized in 1946, St. Frances Xavier Cabrini built more
than 65 hospitals,
schools and orphanages in the United States and elsewhere.
The patron saint
of immigrants, she was especially fond of Southern California,
which
reminded her of the Italian Riviera.
Born in the Lombardy region of Italy in 1850, she arrived
in Los Angeles a
century ago, in July 1905, at the invitation of Bishop
Thomas Conaty.
According to historian Gloria Ricci Lothrop, the bishop
hoped the
indefatigable nun would put the city's Italian immigrants
back in the pews
of local Roman Catholic churches.
"The Italian immigrants were not much taken with the Irish-dominated
clergy
in the United States, so many stopped going to church,"
said Lothrop,
professor emerita of history at Cal State Northridge.
The immigrants hadn't lost their faith, Lothrop said:
"The Italians felt
the church was theirs." But the church they had known
back home "was a much
more relaxed and more celebratory experience" than the
more legalistic
American one, she said.
At 10 a.m. today, Cardinal Roger M. Mahony is scheduled
to preside at a
Jubilee Mass at the Cathedral of Our Lady of the Angels,
marking the
centennial of Mother Cabrini's arrival in the city and
the 125th
anniversary of the order she founded in Italy, the Missionary
Sisters of
the Sacred Heart.
She had wanted to go to China, but Pope Leo XIII had other
plans: "Not to
the East, but to the West," he said.
She came to the United States in 1889 and became a naturalized
citizen in
1909.
In her journal, she wrote that she knew she was in California
when she saw,
from the train bringing her west, "orange groves, hedges
of eucalyptus, and
the most beautiful green meadows of flowers." Los Angeles,
she observed,
"is widespread and seems to grow recklessly. Property
is very expensive."
Mother Cabrini drew Italian Americans to her hospitals
by naming them after
Columbus. But in Los Angeles she immediately recognized
the plight of
Mexican immigrants as well.
She built Regina Coeli Orphanage downtown. When in the
city, she lived in
the orphanage complex, praying in the grotto she had
built on the grounds
from thousands of stones.
When the grotto was being demolished in 1997, Lothrop
helped save the
stones, hoping to recreate the grotto elsewhere. That
plan was dropped
because of seismic considerations. Now the hope is to
use the stones for a
rock garden in the saint's honor on the grounds of the
Villa Scalabrini
Retirement Center in Sunland, Lothrop said.
When Mother Cabrini arrived in New York City, the church
hierarchy there
told her to go back to Italy. But she was warmly received
in Los Angeles.
Bishop Conaty soon surprised her with a gala celebration
and special Mass
at St. Vibiana's to mark the 25th anniversary of her
order. She thought
this was a turning point. "We were always hidden until
now," she wrote.
"Now everyone is interested in us."
Angelenos took to the tiny nun who hitched up her horse
and buggy and
hauled scrap wood from a defunct amusement park to build
her orphanage.
"She was wined and dined," Lothrop said. Mother Cabrini
took the Red Car to
Venice and a glass-bottom boat to Catalina.
"I was always proud of the fact that she was an American
saint of Italian
descent who worked here in Los Angeles," Lothrop said.
According to Lothrop, Mother Cabrini acquired land for
her charities after
scrutinizing maps with the eye of a general going into
battle. A prodigious
fundraiser, she bought hundreds of undeveloped acres
in and around Burbank,
where she built the state's first "preventorium" to save
children from the
plague of tuberculosis.
In 1937, the site became Villa Cabrini Academy, a private
school for girls.
It closed in 1970, and Woodbury University bought the
property in 1986 and
renovated the Villa Cabrini chapel to serve as its library.
Nancy Costantino of Costa Mesa was a boarding student
who graduated from
Villa Cabrini in 1949. She remembers when the campus
stood among vineyards
and olive orchards planted at the saint's direction:
"When we were young,
we would go out and pick the olives in our uniforms."
Costantino said she admires Mother Cabrini for "her work
with the
disenfranchised and the poor and people who had no other
avenue of help …
her total, selfless devotion."
A 1962 graduate, Roa Brand of La Crescenta is vice president
of the Villa
Cabrini Alumnae Assn., which will hold a gala dinner
tonight and brunch
Sunday at Woodbury. The alumnae plan to donate the money
they raise to the
Missionary Sisters and to Woodbury, which has preserved
elements of their
chapel and other academy artifacts.
A manager at Kaiser Permanente in Pasadena, Brand said
she now appreciates
what a good businesswoman Mother Cabrini was: "I look
up to her for that."
Coming to Los Angeles from New York for the event is Sister
Lucille Souza,
the head of the Missionary Sisters' Stella Maris Province,
which includes
the United States, Australia, the Philippines and Swaziland.
Souza
graduated from Villa Cabrini in 1962 and joined the Missionary
Sisters the
same year.
Souza noted that Mother Cabrini always addressed the mundane
needs of the
poor before bringing up religion. Discrimination and
battered self-esteem
were routinely part of the immigrant experience. And,
Souza said, Mother
Cabrini, an immigrant herself, "saw her people losing
all sense of who they
were, losing their dignity … and she said: 'Don't forget
who you are. You
have something to offer this country.' "
In 1916, the year before Mother Cabrini died at age 67,
the Knights of
Columbus built a one-room chapel for her high in the
Verdugo Hills. She
often prayed in the cozy little chapel.
In the 1970s, the chapel was moved to the grounds of Burbank's
St. Francis
Xavier Church and school at 3801 Scott Road. The Italian
Catholic
Federation added a small museum and library, whose treasures
include one of
the saint's white nightgowns. (On Sunday, the shrine
will be open to the
public from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.)
For Lothrop, Mother Cabrini is a model of service to others,
all the more
compelling because Los Angeles was her town too.
"She was here. We can walk the streets that she walked,"
Lothrop said. "It
makes you feel that sanctity is something that's really
attainable, not
just something you read about in a book of saints.
"Somebody who bought property in Burbank can achieve sanctity
at the same
time."
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