To start the New Year, we have some young lay people who are being considered for sainthood, from around the world.
Servant of God Jean-Thierry Ebogo (1982-2006) was a Cameroonian seminarian who suffered from a terribly painful cancer but said, “I only want to be healed so that I can become a priest.” Shortly after he entered the Discalced Carmelites, a soccer injury led to the discovery of a malignant tumor that forced the amputation of his right leg. By the next year, the cancer had spread throughout his body. Brother Jean-Thierry was taken to
Servants of God Basman Yousef Daud (1982-2007) and Gassan Isam Bidawed (1984-2007) were subdeacons in the Chaldean Catholic Church of Mosul, Iraq.They were traveling with Servant of God Ragheed Aziz Ganni (a Chaldean priest) and Servant of God Wahid Hanna Isho and his wife. The group was returning after Fr. Ganni had celebrated Sunday Mass, in defiance of terrorist threats. The car was pulled over and the group was ordered to convert to Islam. When they refused, the four men were murdered, leaving Isho’s wife to tell the story.
Servant of God Anne-Gabrielle Caron (2002-2010) was a shy but passionate little French girl, the daughter of a naval officer and a classics professor. At 7 she was diagnosed with
Servant of God Giulia Gabrieli (1997-2011) was a cheerful and exuberant Italian girl who loved shopping, traveling, and listening to pop music. She had a devotion to Blessed Chiara Luce Badano, which gave her great consolation when she was diagnosed with cancer. At first, Giulia was understandably angry and depressed about her diagnosis, spending whole days crying. But soon she was given great joy in the knowledge that God was with her; her joyful suffering inspired many in the two years before her death.
Servant of God
Servant of God Chiara Corbella Petrillo (1984-2012) was a young Italian wife and mother. After a tumultuous courtship, she and her husband found great peace through the sacrament of marriage. Early in their marriage, though, they lost two children, both within an hour of birth. Still they rejoiced to discover they were pregnant with a third child, and were even more delighted to discover that he was healthy. But while pregnant, Chiara was diagnosed with a cancer that soon spread throughout her body. Dressed in her wedding gown, she died two weeks after giving birth to her son.