Rafael Guizar Valencia
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Saint Rafael Guizar Valencia | |
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Rafael Guizar Valencia The image above is a candidate for speedy deletion. It will be deleted on 2007-03-22. |
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Born | April 26, 1878, Cotija Michoacan |
Died | June 6, 1938, Mexico City |
Venerated in | Roman Catholicism |
Beatified | January 29, 1995 by John Paul II |
Canonized | October 15, 2006., Vatican City by Pope Benedict XVI |
Feast | June 6 |
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Bishop Rafael Guizar Valencia, born April 26, 1878 and died on June 6, 1938, was a Catholic bishop who cared for the wounded and dying in Mexico's 1910-17 revolution. Named bishop of Veracruz, he was driven out of his home diocese and forced to live the remainder of his life in hiding in Mexico City. He was also a Knight of Columbus.
His body was exhumed in 1950, twelve years after his death, and witnesses have said it had not decayed, except for the left eye, which he was said to have offered up for a sinner during his lifetime.
Pope Benedict XVI canonized Bishop Guizar Valencia as a saint on October 15, 2006.
Six other Knights, all of whom were martyred in Mexico during the persecutions of the 1920s and 1930s, were declared saints of the Catholic Church by Pope John Paul II in 2000.
“We welcome the canonization of our brother Knight, Bishop Guizar Valencia, and know that his life of courage and legacy of evangelization will be an inspiration to each of our 1.7 million members around the world,” said Supreme Knight Carl A. Anderson, who attended Bishop Guizar Valencia’s canonization in Rome.
Rafael Guizar Valencia was born in Cotija de la Paz, Michoacan, Mexico, on April 16, 1878. He was ordained a priest in 1901. With the start of the Mexican revolution in 1910, persecution of the Catholic Church became severe, and Guizar became a special target because of his outspoken defense of the Church.
He went underground – disguised as a junk dealer – to continue his work as a priest. In 1915, when the Mexican government ordered that he be shot on sight, he escaped to the United States, and then went on to serve the Church in Guatemala and Cuba.
While in Cuba, he was consecrated as bishop of Veracruz, Mexico. The end of the revolution enabled him to return to Mexico in January 1920, and he joined Knights of Columbus Council 2311 in Jalapa, Veracruz, on Aug. 16, 1923.
As bishop, he founded a clandestine seminary to train future priests, noting that “A bishop can do without a mitre, a crosier, and even a cathedral, but never without a seminary, because the future of his diocese depends on the seminary.”
Bishop Guizar Valencia was forced to flee Mexico once again in 1927 during the persecution of the Church under Mexican President Plutarco Calles. He returned in 1929, the year the Church reached an accord with the Mexican government, in part because of successful lobbying by the Knights of Columbus to get the U.S. government to take an active role in solving the crisis.
After his return to Mexico, Bishop Guizar Valencia continued his ministry, and became known as “the bishop of the poor.” He died of natural causes on June 6, 1938, and was beatified by Pope John Paul II on Jan. 29, 1995.
The first Knights of Columbus council in Mexico was established in 1905.
[edit] External Links
- Knights of Columbus
- Patron Saint Index
- Official Web Site of his cause
- Extended Biography by the Vatican