Saint
Agostina Pietrantoni
SAINT OF SILENCE AND CHARITY
Based on the account of her life by Ann Ball in
MODERN SAINTS, BOOK ONE, Tan Books,
with Nihil Obstat and Imprimatur
Livia Pietrantoni, V.
1864-1894
Italy
The life of Saint Agostina is an example of the virtue of silence that is found
in one's duties, charity, of quietness in one's approach rather than the absence
of speech.
Sister Agostina died a violent death, at the hands of one of the patients in the
hospital where she labored for God. When she was beatified this was noted, but
it was her peaceful way of helping the poor who were sick that is most
remembered. She is not a Martyr in the usual sense, because she was not killed
for her Faith.
She was one of ten children --- the second born --- in a family of moderate
means and rich in the practice of the Faith, including the daily Rosary. She
attended school as best as she could but had to be absent frequently in order to
help her mother because her father was very ill, almost crippled with arthritis.
She was learned and bright and was nicknamed "the professor". At the age of
seven she had to work to help the family's income. Not only did she tend the
cattle and help with her younger brothers and sisters, she made shoes, worked on
olive harvests and for four years salved away helping to build a road for little
pay, all with a cheerful disposition, without complaint. Livia was modest,
retiring, very quiet, but popular and often asked for advice. The budding Saint
was pretty and had suitors who had no hope. One of the young men, who attempted
to propose to her was met with Livia's enthusiasm for Jesus. She took out a holy
card with His image and said: "Here is the One I will marry."
In 1866 she entered the novitiate of the Sisters of Charity of St. Joan Antida,
the Rome convent. There she found that the hardest task was that all she did for
Jesus was too little in her estimation; there was never anything she would
refuse her Spouse. She took the name of Sister Agostina and was assigned to the
Hospital of Santo Spirito, which had become far too secularized over the years.
Crucifixes had been removed from the wards; one of the rules imposed on the
sisters was the ban on mentioning so much as the name of God to their patients!
This did not deter her because she did not need words to tell others about God;
her actions were so imbued with the love of God and neighbor that her patients
grasped everything she was teaching them.
She had as yet to make her final profession, having come down with tuberculosis,
she received Viaticum and then recovered. It was then that she requested to work
with tubercular patients since she was already infected. This ward held a number
of unruly men, some of them convicts. They blasphemed and sputtered vulgarities.
She never failed to be patient and cheerful. Her consolation and inspiration
during this time was Our Lady. She had a great devotion to the Mother of God,
her favorite prayer was the Rosary. In her charming, silent way, she would write
letters to the Saint Virgin and place them behind a picture by way of a mailbox.
One of these contained the following: "Most Holy Lady, convert that wretched man
whose obstinate heart I am not able to change and I promise to do two or three
extra night duties in your honor."
Sister Agostina, given the chance, chose work over rest. The night before she
died, she said: "We will lie down for such a long time after death that it is
worthwhile to keep standing while we are alive. Let us work now; one day we will
rest."
In September of 1893 Sister Agostino professed her final vows and went back to
the same ward to nurse. One of the men who had been sent from a prison, a
Giuseppe Romanelli, had a mother and sister who visited him. Our Saint was very
kind to them. He was so troublesome in the ward that he was sent away;
thereafter he wrote threatening notes. On November 13, 1894, Sister Agostino and
another patient were going down the stairs of the ward, only to find themselves
face to face with this four times condemned man. Romanelli wielded a knife and
stabbed her several times. The patient hollered for help, but by the time it
came St. Agostina was on the floor dying and saying, "Blessed Mother, help me."
She was taken to a bed, no longer able to speak. Her superior asked her if she
forgave the murderer, who had escaped. She nodded, Yes. She was smiling. A few
moments later she had died. Two days later her funeral was held, the same day
that her killer was arrested. He was sentenced for life although the Saint's
family asked for mercy. He repented, received the Last Sacraments, then died in
prison a year later.
The process for Sister's cause begun in 1936, the first decree was in 1945 and
she was beatified in 1972 and canonized in 1998. Her Feast Day is November 13.