Thursday, August 25, 2011

Naomh An Lae - Saint Of The Day




josephcalasanzSt Joseph Calasanz (1556-1648) patron of Catholic schools




Joseph
of Calasanz was a Spanish priest who went to Rome at the end of the
sixteenth century and started schools for homeless children. He also
started a congregation to service these schools which is today spread
over the whole world.  




Early life




Joseph of Calasanz, was from Aragon,
Spain. He was well educated in philosophy, law and theology. His father
wanted him to marry and continue the family, but on recovery from an
illness which brought him close to death, he decided to become a priest.
For ten years after he was ordained he held various posts as a
secretary, administrator and theologian in the diocese of Albarracín in
Spain.




To Rome




In 1592 Joseph went to Rome, where he
became a theologian in the service of Cardinal Marcoantonio Colonna and a
tutor to his nephew. He worked alongside St. Camillus de Lellis during
the plague that hit Rome at the time and helped carry the bodies of the
dead on his own shoulders to burial.




The Congregation of the Pious Schools




Joseph worked
with the Confraternity of Christian Doctrine and soon he opened a
school for homeless children himself. Within ten years he had rented a
house at Sant'Andrea della Valle and started a community for teaching
poor children, which later were called the Piarists. Popes Clement VIII
(Aldobrandini 1592-1605) and Paul V (Borghese 1605-21) both gave him
financial help and soon he had a thousand children in his charge. 





In
1612, the school moved to San Pantaleo, near Piazza Navona, and
this became the motherhouse of what came to be called the Pious Schools.
In September 1616 the first public and free school in Frascati was
started up on his initiative. A year later, Pope Paul V approved the
"Congregation of the Pious Schools," the first religious institute
dedicated to teaching. 





During the following years Joseph was able to set
up Pious Schools in various parts of Europe.




Great moral courage




Joseph was a man of great
moral courage. He accepted Jewish children into his schools and made
sure they were treated equally. Although Latin was the accepted language
of the time, he defended and had textbooks in vernacular languages. He
advanced the study of mathematics and science. He was a friend of the
scientist Galileo Galilei, and sent some of his Piarists to study with
him. He shared and defended Galileo's heliocentric view of the cosmos
and even after Galileo was condemned and became blind, he stood by him.
This caused opposition towards him and his congregation in influential
quarters and he was removed from his post as superior general of the
Piarists, but he remained patient and humble in the face of these
trials.




Death and influence




Joseph died in 1648, at the
age of 90 and was buried in the church of San Pantaleo. Eight years
after his death, Pope Alexander VII (Fabio Chigi 1655-67) cleared his
name and that of the Pious Schools so the Piarist congregation continued
to spread throughout Europe. It had considerable success in education
of physically and mentally disabled persons.




Famous pupils of the Piarist schools




Among those
taught in Piarist schools were: Francisco Goya, Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart,
Franz Schubert, Gregor Mendel, and Victor Hugo. A beautiful painting of
him by Francisco de Goya entitled The Last Communion of Saint Jose de Calasanz (1819) hangs in the Church of the Escuelas Pias de San Antón, Madrid, Spain.




The congregation today

 


Joseph of Calasanz was
beatified in 1748 by Pope Benedict XIV and canonised by Pope Clement
XIII in 1767. In 1948, Pope Pius XII declared Joseph the patron
of Christian popular schools. Today the congregation has 1421 members
in 32 countries on four continents (Europe, Asia, Africa and America).


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