Veronica Antal

Summary

Veronica Antal (7 December 1935 - 24 August 1958) was a Romanian Roman Catholic professed member from the Secular Franciscan Order and member of the Militia Immaculatae.[1][2] Antal was known for her strong faith and her love for the Mother of God; she had long desired to enter the religious life as a nun but settled on the Secular Franciscans after the communist regime suppressed convents and monasteries in Romania. She been titled as the "Maria Goretti of Romania" due to the manner of her death similar to that of Maria Goretti.[3][4][2]


Veronica Antal

Virgin and martyr
Born(1935-12-07)7 December 1935
Nisiporeşti, Boteşti, Neamț, Romania
Died24 August 1958(1958-08-24) (aged 22)
Hălăuceşti, Iaşi, Romania
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified22 September 2018, Nisiporeşti, Romania by Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu
Feast24 August

Life edit

Veronica Antal was born on 7 December 1935 in Botești as the first of four children to George and Eva; she received baptism on 8 December in her local parish from Father Felix Rafaelli. Her parents named her in honor of her paternal aunt who died at a tender age.[1][2] Her parents spent so much time at work in the fields that her grandmother Zarafina raised her and instructed her in the faith; it was in her childhood her devotion to the Blessed Virgin manifested.[3][4]

Her schooling was spent in her hometown from age seven where she earned good grades before leaving to join her parents to work in the fields.[1] But it was when she was sixteen that she began manifesting a desire to enter a convent. Antal wanted also to help children.[4] This never materialized because the communist regime had suppressed all convents and monasteries in Romania.[3] Antal instead joined the Secular Franciscan Order (which her spiritual director Alois Donea advised her to) and then made a private vow of perpetual virginity.[2]

Antal walked five miles to the nearest church just so that she could receive the Holy Communion. Antal also joined the Militia Immaculatae that Maximilian Kolbe founded. Not long before her death she began reading about Maria Goretti and confided later to two friends that she wished to act much like Goretti.[1]

On the evening of 24 August 1958 she returned from her local parish after having just received the Confirmation from Petru Pleșca when Pavel Mocanu began to harass her en route home.[2] He made indecent proposals to her and then attacked her in a vain effort to rape her. But Antal fended him off to the point he stabbed her to death with a knife 42 times.[3] Her parents grew alarmed that she had not returned home so searched for her. Labourers en route to work discovered her corpse in the middle of a field on 26 August and discovered one of her rosaries clasped in her hands.[2] Her face was downwards covered in blood with a cross of corn pods on her back. Her funeral was celebrated on 27 August.[1] One friend present with Antal during the Confirmation said that "Veronica seemed pale and downcast" and later had a meal with one friend before the friends left and Antal travelled home.

Beatification edit

The beatification process opened under Pope John Paul II on 10 July 2003 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" (nothing against) edict and titled Antal as a Servant of God; the diocesan process was held in Iași from 25 November 2003 until 12 November 2006.[4]

Pope Francis confirmed Veronica Antal's beatification on 26 January 2018 after determining that she died "in defensum castitatis". Her beatification was celebrated in Romania on 22 September 2018 with Cardinal Giovanni Angelo Becciu presiding on the pope's behalf.

The postulator for this cause is the Franciscan friar Damian-Gheorghe Pătrașcu.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e "The Process of Canonization of the Servant of God Veronica Antal" (PDF). Order of Friars Minor Conventual Romania. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 January 2018. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  2. ^ a b c d e f "Servant of God Veronica Antal". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 28 January 2018.
  3. ^ a b c d "Two 20th-century martyrs move toward beatification". 27 January 2018. Retrieved 27 January 2018.
  4. ^ a b c d Chuck Todaro (18 January 2004). "In Moldavia, Romania, an Ancient Faith Struggle With Modern Changes". National Catholic Register. Retrieved 27 January 2018.

External links edit

  • Hagiography Circle