St. Bernadette
St. Bernadette was born at Lourdes, France. Born into a humble family which little by little fell into extreme poverty, Bernadette had always been a frail child. Quite young, she had already suffered from digestive trouble, then after having just escaped being a victim of the cholera epidemic of 1855, she experienced painful attacks of asthma, and her ill health almost caused her to be cut off for ever from the religious life. One Thursday, February 11, 1858, when she was sent with her younger sister and a friend to gather firewood, a very beautiful Lady appeared to her above a rose bush in a grotto called Massabielle. The lovely Lady was dressed in blue and white. She smiled at Bernadette and then made the sign of the cross with a rosary of ivory and gold. Bernadette fell on her knees, took out her own rosary and began to pray the rosary. The beautiful Lady was God's Mother, the Blessed Virgin Mary. She appeared to Bernadette seventeen other times and spoke with her. She told Bernadette that she should pray sinners, do penance and have a chapel built there in her honor. Many people did not believe Bernadette when she spoke of her vision. She had to suffer much. But one day Our Lady told Bernadette to dig in the mud. As she did, a spring of water began to flow. The next day it continued to grow larger and larger. Many miracles happened when people began to use this water.
When Bernadette was
older, she became a nun. When asked by
Monsignor Forcade to
take Bernadette, Louise Ferrand, the Mother
Superior of the
Sisters of Nevers, replied: "Monsignor, she
will be a pillar of
the infirmary". She was always very humble. More than anything else, she desired
not to be praised. Once a nun asked her if she had temptations of
pride because she was
favored by the Blessed Mother. "How can I?" she answered quickly. "The Blessed
Virgin chose me only because I was the most ignorant." At least three times
during her short life-time, she received the last Sacraments. She was gradually
struck by other illnesses as well as asthma: among them, tuberculosis of the
lung and a tubercular tumor on her
right knee. On April
16, 1879, Bernadette -- or Sister Marie-Bernard, as she was known within her
order -- died in the Sainte Croix (Holy Cross) Infirmary of the
Convent of Saint-Gildard.
She was thirty-five. Her
feast day is April
16th.
The civil authorities permitted her body to remain on view to be
venerated by the public until Saturday, April 19. Then it was "placed in a
double coffin of lead and oak which was sealed in the presence of witnesses who
signed a record of the events". Among the witnesses were "inspector of the
peace, Devraine, and constables Saget and Moyen".
The
nuns of Saint-Gildard,
with the support of the
bishop of Nevers,
applied to the civil authorities for permission to bury Bernadette's body in a
small
chapel dedicated to
Saint
Joseph which was
within the confines of the convent. The permission was granted on April 25,
1879, and on April 30, the local Prefect pronounced his approval of the choice
of the site for burial. Immediately they set to work on preparing the vault. On
May 30, 1879, Bernadette's coffin was finally transferred to the
crypt of the
chapel of Saint
Joseph. A very simple
ceremony was held to
commemorate the event.