Blacks in Catholic History Month Moments

Blacks in Catholic History Month Moments

BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY MONTH MOMENTS ARCHDIOCESE OF WASHINGTON COMPILED BY THE OFFICE OF BLACK CATHOLICS BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY INTRODUCTION Blacks in Catholic Christianity have a long and vibrant history. Much of that history is generally unknown to Black Catholics as well as to the rest of the faithful. On July 24, 1990, the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus of the United States designated November as Black Catholic History Month to celebrate this long history and proud heritage of Black Catholics. During this month, we celebrate the presence of our ancestors who kept the faith and are models of living the Gospel life. This booklet presents a glimpse of some of the Black Catholic Christians of our past and present. It celebrates the accomplishments of Black Catholics throughout the history of the Church with daily Blacks in Catholic History ‘Moments.’ You may use this material in your parish bulletin or as a study guide for Black Catholic History Month activities. (All information was compiled from websites of the Archdioceses of Washington, Baltimore, Chicago & Newark, the Diocese of Raleigh, the Newsletter of the National Black Catholic Congress, and the following books: African Saints by Frederick Quinn, The Saints Go Marching in by Robert Fulton Holtzclaw, Blacks Who Died for Jesus by Mark Hyman and The Anacostia Story: 1608-1930 by Louise Daniel Hutchinson.) ADW –OCDO / February 2018 Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY DID YOU KNOW...? … The National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus (NBCCC) of the United States voted on Tuesday, July 24, 1990 while meeting in convention at Fordham University in New York, to establish November as BLACK CATHOLIC HISTORY MONTH. The reason behind the selection of the month of November was the number of important dates to Catholics of African descent that fell within this month. Nov. 1 All Saints Day. This is an opportunity to review the lives of the hundreds of Saints of African descent in the first 300 years of the Church. Nov. 2 All Souls Day. This is a time to remember all those African souls lost to cruel treatment in the Middle Passage crossing of the Atlantic Ocean. Nov. 3 Feast of Saint Martín de Porres. Saint Martin is the only saint of African descent from the Western Hemisphere. Nov. 13 The birth of Saint Augustine in 354 A.D. He is the first Doctor of the Church from North Africa. Nov. 20 The death of Zumbi of Palmares in Brazil. A South American, founder of a free state for Blacks. The first celebration of Black Catholic History Month began in November of 1990 in various cities in the United States with the celebration of St. Martin de Porres Feast day. The liturgy celebrated the 350th anniversary of St. Martin's transition from this life to eternal life. Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 1st DID YOU KNOW...? …that married lay couples can become saints? Saints Julian and Basilissa, though married, lived in chastity by mutual consent about 304, in Antioch during the reign Diocletian. They used all their money in relieving the sick and converted their home into a hospital that sometimes housed thousands. Saint Basilissa tended the sick women in one part of the house while Saint Julian ministered to the men in another part, and became known as the hospitalarian. Saint Basilissa died before Saint Julian after several persecutions; Saint Julian lived many years longer. Although they both died in peace, the Church calls them martyrs. Saints Julian and Basilissa Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 2nd DID YOU KNOW... …that among the 265 popes of the Catholic Church, between Saint Peter and the current pope Benedict the XVI, are three popes known to be of African descent? Saint Victor was a deacon when he became the first black and the 14th pope in 189 A.D. He established a set date for the yearly celebration of Easter. Saint Victor died a martyr for the faith in 199. Saint Melchiades (mel-KY-uh-des) reigned as the Church’s second black and 32nd pope, from 311 to 314. He signed the Emperor Constantine’s laws that ended persecutions and made Christianity the established religion of the Roman Empire. Saint Gelasius the First was the Church’s third black and 49th pope from 492 to 496. He is known for having saved Rome from famine, composing a book of hymns, and clarifying Church teachings on the Eucharist. Saint Victor Saint Gelasius I Saint Melchiades Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 3rd DID YOU KNOW... …that the only saint, of African origin, in the Western Hemisphere to date, is Saint Martín de Porres of Lima, Perú (South America)? He was born in 1579, as the unwanted son of a Spanish knight and a freed African slave woman. Saint Martín showed signs of the virtues of modesty, humility, and charity for the poor, early in his life. Saint Martín, as a Dominican Brother founded an orphanage and a hospital. He also ministered to hundreds of unhappy people from Africa enslaved in the new western world. Saint Martín is the Patron saint of Perú and of the poor. His feast day is November 3. Saint Martin de Porres Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 4th DID YOU KNOW... …that perhaps no mother, other than the Virgin Mary herself, is considered to have had as much influence on the early Catholic Christian Church, as Saint Monica of Tagaste, Africa? Why so? Because Saint Monica spent most of her lifetime praying for the Christian conversion of a wayward and worldly son, who eventually became one of the Church’s greatest theologians, Saint Augustine. Some observers considered her an interfering, in-your-face kind of mom. Others saw her as a shrewd woman of faith and spiritual anchor for a son whose talents she felt belonged to the Church. A crowning moment for Saint Monica was when she saw Augustine finally baptized in the Church. She died in the year 387. Saint Monica of Tagaste Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 5th DID YOU KNOW... …that the founder of the Sisters of the Holy Family, based in New Orleans, Louisiana, is among three African American candidates for sainthood in the Catholic Church? Mother Henriette Delille (duh-LEEL) was born in 1812 as a “free person of color”. At the tender age of 17, she and two companions began to evangelize the large slave and free-people-of-color populations in New Orleans. Their efforts led to the formation of the nation’s second religious order for women of color in 1842. Their mission: to care for the aged; to instruct the unlearned; and to care for the poor. Mother Henriette Delille Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 6th DID YOU KNOW... …. that the New Testament of the Bible speaks of “Simon from Cyrene,” which is in Africa, carrying the cross of Jesus, in the Gospel according to Luke? Moreover, did you know that in the Book of Acts, Apostle and Deacon, Phillip, helped convert an official from the African kingdom of Ethiopia to follow Jesus, even before the conversion of St. Paul? Some scholars say this event marked the very moment when the Church changed from a primarily Hebrew and Greek community to the truly universal and Catholic Church. Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 7th DID YOU KNOW... …that the patron saint of southern Germany and parts of France, Spain, Italy, and Switzerland, is a man of African origin? He is Saint Maurice of Aganaum, born less than 250 years after Jesus Christ. He became a General in the Roman Army, stationed in what is now France. Saint Maurice and his six thousand African soldiers received orders to put down a rebellion against the empire. When Saint Maurice discovered they all were Christians, he and his men refused to fight them. They also refused to sacrifice to the Roman gods. For this, the emperor had Saint Maurice and nearly all his Theban Legion executed. A basilica in Aganaum, Switzerland enshrines their relic remains today. Saint Maurice of Aganaum Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 8th DID YOU KNOW...? …that two young African Christian women and three companions were thrown to wild animals and killed for their faith, at Carthage in the year 203? Saint Perpetua, a new mother, and her pregnant maidservant, Saint Felicity, were first arrested during the Roman persecution of Christians. Both women had to leave their families because they refused to worship Roman gods. Saint Perpetua’s account of their harsh treatment in prison is considered one of the earliest and most dramatic documents of Christian martyrdom. Saint Felicity gave birth to a daughter just three days before she and Saint Perpetua were beheaded for their faith. Saints Perpetua and Felicity Compiled by the Office of Black Catholics, Archdiocese of Washington BLACKS IN CATHOLIC HISTORY November 9th DID YOU KNOW... …that the first African woman to be canonized as a saint by the Church in the 21st century, lived her entire childhood as a slave? When Saint Josephine Bakhita (Bah-KEE-tah) was just a little girl, was kidnapped from her loving family home in the Sudan and sold into brutal slavery.

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