† Saint of the Day †
(October 21)
✠ St. Laura of Saint Catherine of Siena ✠
Religious and Founder:
Born: May 26, 1874
Jericó, Antioquía, United States of
Colombia
Died: October 21, 1949 (Aged 75)
Belencito, Medellín, Antioquía,
Colombia
Venerated in: Roman Catholic Church
Beatified: April 25, 2004
Pope John Paul II
Canonized: May 12, 2013
Pope Francis
Feast: October 21
Patronage:
People suffering from racial
discrimination
Orphans
Congregation of Missionary Sisters
of Immaculate Mary and Saint Catherine of Siena
Saint Laura of Saint Catherine of
Siena born María Laura de Jesús Montoya Upegui - was a Colombian Roman Catholic
professed religious and the founder of the Congregation of the Missionary
Sisters of the Immaculate Virgin Mary and Saint Catherine of Siena (1914). She was well known for her work with Indigenous peoples
and for acting as a strong role model for South American girls.
Laura Montoya Upegui was born on 26
May 1874 in Jericó, Antioquia, Colombia, the second of three children to Juan
de la Crux Montoya and Dolores Upegui.
When Laura was only 2 years old, her
father was killed defending his Country, and the family was left in extreme
poverty after all their goods were confiscated. At such a time of deep misery
and loss, Laura's mother gave an example of Christian forgiveness and fortitude
that would remain impressed in her young daughter's mind and heart forever.
Childhood suffering, divine help:
Following her father's death, Laura
was sent to live with her grandmother. She suffered greatly from
misunderstandings and the lack of affection, feeling she had been left
"orphaned". However, she accepted with love the sacrifices and
loneliness she experienced and sought refuge in God.
As she grew older, she was
especially sustained by meditation on Sacred Scripture and the strength she
received from the Eucharist.
When Laura was 16, her mother
decided that her daughter needed to help the family in its financial
difficulties and told her to apply to become a teacher. Although Laura was
culturally and academically "ignorant", having grown up without a
formal education, she asked to enter the "Normale de Institutoras" of
Medellín to receive training to become an elementary school teacher. She was
accepted and stood out for her high marks among the students.
Called to "teach Christ':
Laura began teaching in different
parts of Antioquia. She did not limit herself to educating the students simply
in academic knowledge but sought to diffuse Gospel teaching and values. She
also felt called to the religious life, her heart set on God alone, and dreamed
of one day becoming a cloistered Carmelite nun; at the same time, though, she
felt growing within her the desire to spread the Gospel to the farthest corners
of the earth, to those who had never met Jesus Christ. She was ready to
renounce her own "dream" of Carmel to be open to God's project if his
will was otherwise.
"An Indian with the Indians':
At one time during her teaching
career, Laura felt decidedly drawn to helping the Indian population in South
America and wished to insert herself into their culture, to "become an
Indian with the Indians to win them all for Christ". Recognizing their
dignity as human beings in an epoch when they were considered by many as
"wild beasts", Laura wanted to destroy this racial discrimination and
to personally sacrifice herself in order to bring them Christ's love and
teaching.
On 14 May 1914, she left Medellín
together with four other young women and headed to Dabeiba to live among the
native Indians. This new religious family, assisted by the Bishop of Santa Fe
de Antioquia and known as the "Missionaries of Mary Immaculate and St
Catherine of Siena", was thought by some to be nothing more than a family
of "religious goats", who were heading off into the wilderness to
give the "beasts" a living Gospel catechism.
Laura, however, cared little for
public opinion, even if some of the comments made came right from within the
Christian community itself.
Pedagogy of love:
Mother Laura composed for her
"daughters" a directory and other writings (her Autobiography among
them) to help them understand better their call to serve God among the Indians
and to live a balance between apostolic and contemplative life. She taught by
example the "pedagogy of love" as the only way to teach the Indians,
the way which allowed access into their heart and culture to bring them, Jesus
Christ.
Mother Laura died on 21 October 1949
in Medellín, after a long and painful illness. The last nine years of her life
were lived in a wheelchair, where she continued to teach by example, word and
writing.
Today her Missionary Sisters work in
19 countries throughout America, Africa and Europe.
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