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YOUNG PATRON OF DIABETICS

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On 19 August 1989, at the World Youth Day in Santiago de Compostela, Pope (St.) John Paul II proposed  ST. RAFAEL AMAIZ BARON as a model for young people today, and beatified him on 27 September 1992, in Rome. In his Homily at the beatification Mass, the Holy Father said that he set an example, especially for young people, "of a loving and unconditional response to the divine call.”

St. Rafael was born in Burgos, Spain, in1911 into a well-to-do Christian family, the eldest of four. As a boy he attended several schools run by Jesuits and his sensitivity to spiritual topics and to art was very apparent. He displayed an open, joyful attitude to the world, combined with exuberant good humor, respect and humility.

 Bouts of fever and pleurisy interrupted his education. When he had recovered his father took him to Zaragoza to consecrate him to Our Lady of the Pillar and his family moved to Oviedowhere he completed his secondary schooling.

 

In 1930 Rafael embarked on architectural studies in Madrid. It was in this year that his deeper commitment to Christ began. After completing his secondary schooling, that summer he had spent a holiday near Avila at the home of his uncle and aunt, the Duke and Duchess of Maqueda. It was they who introduced him to the Trappist Monastery of San Isidoro de Dueñas whose beauty and prayerful atmosphere attracted him.

He said upon entering that this decision had not been prompted by suffering or disappointments but rather by God who, "in his infinite goodness" had given him far more in life than he deserved. Rafael felt deeply suited to the monastic rhythm of Gregorian chant and the Liturgy of the Hours. He wrote many letters to his mother, who after his death collected them in a book, and to his uncle and aunt with whom he had a close friendship.

Four months after entering the monastery, after an austere Lent, he was smitten by a serious form of diabetes mellitus which forced him to go home for treatment. Indeed, he was obliged to go back and forth between his home and the monastery again and again between 1935 and 1937. It was at the height of the Spanish Civil War.

 

He was called up but declared unfit for active duty. He decided to abandon his architectural studies in Madrid and seek the mystery of the "Absolute" in this Cistercian Monastery of the Strict Observance, which he entered on 16 January 1934 and joyfully received the white habit.

 On his final return to the monastery, he was made an oblate, taking the last place and living on the fringes of the community. Canon law at the time did not permit a person in his condition of poor health to take monastic vows.

 He died in the monastery's infirmary on 26 April 1938 after a final attack of the disease. He was only 27 years old. He was buried in the monastery cemetery and his remains were later translated to the AbbeyChurch.

 Despite his brief life, he embodies the Cistercian grace in a remarkably pure way. From beginning to end he let himself be led through a series of bewildering contradictions and perplexities illness, war, the inability to pronounce his vows, abnormal community relations until he totally renounced himself. Humiliation was his constant companion.

 His one desire was to live in order to love: to love Jesus, Mary, the Cross, and his Trappist monastery. His reputation for holiness spread rapidly throughout Spain and his grave at San Isidro became a place of pilgrimage where many favors were received.

 He is the patron of people who suffer from diabetes.


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