
A relic of St. Jacinta Marto is seen in Rome. The young
saint died a century ago. (2016 photo, AM113/Shutterstock.com)
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the death of Fatima
seer St. Jacinta Marto. The 9-year-old died on Feb. 20, 1920, weeks short of her
10th birthday, which would have been on March 11.
This year also marks the 20th anniversary of her
beatification and third anniversary of her being canonized, together with her
brother Francisco, as the youngest non-martyr saints to be canonized.
What characterized the holiness of this young girl?
After she died, scores of mourners testified that her cheeks
exhibited “live pinkness,” and a “beautiful aroma of flowers” came from her —
Jacinta died in the saintly odour of sanctity. In 1935 her body was exhumed for
reburial and found to be incorrupt.
‘Truly a Mystic’
What stands out in the message of Fatima about Jacinta was
that she was truly a mystic,” John Preiss, president of Fatima Family
Apostolate International, told the Register. “She would receive visions” beyond
those apparitions of our Blessed Mother at the Cova da Iria that the Fatima
seers received. Preiss pointed out the time Jacinta saw a pope in a big house,
burying his head in his hands while a mob was about to storm the house.
Jacinta’s cousin, now Servant of God Lucia dos Santos,
revealed, “For the rest of her life she would suffer after seeing what the Holy
Father was enduring and urge prayers for him.”
Another time, as the three seers prayed, Jacinta asked,
“Can’t you see all those highways and roads and fields full of people, who are
crying with hunger and have nothing to eat? And the Holy Father is in a church
praying before the Immaculate Heart of Mary? And so many people praying with
him?” (Jacinta’s quotes from Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 129, Archive.org).
Jacinta also became distressed by visions of a terrible war
to come — obviously World War II — if people did not heed what Our Lady said,
resulting in “all the people who are going to die and go to hell! How dreadful!
If they would only stop offending God, then there wouldn’t be any war, and they
wouldn’t go to hell!”
And her insights reflect proper Christian living.
In The True Story of Fatima, Father John de Marchi listed
several mystical insights Jacinta received, among them: “The sins which cause
most souls to go to hell are the sins of the flesh. Fashions will much offend
Our Lord; people who serve God should not follow the fashions. The Church has
no fashions. Our Lord is always the same. Many marriages are not of God and do
not please Our Lord. Penance is necessary; if people amend their lives, Our
Lord will even yet save the world, but if not, punishment will come. Fly from
riches and luxury. Do not speak evil of people, and fly from evil speakers.
Confession is a sacrament of mercy, and we must confess with joy and trust.
There can be no salvation without confession.”
Sacrificing for Souls
For someone so young, Jacinta focused on the salvation of
souls. David Carollo, executive director of World Apostolate of Fatima/Blue
Army, said Jacinta, upon thinking of that horrible vision of hell, couldn’t
imagine “how anyone would want to go there. That’s profound for a little girl.
She acknowledged it was a choice and prayed for them.”
Carollo noted the time Jacinta was ill and Our Lady asked
her if she wanted to convert more sinners. Jacinta said that she did. Her
cousin Lucia wrote what Jacinta revealed: “She told me I would be going to a
hospital where I would suffer a great deal and that I am to suffer for the
conversion of sinners, in reparation for the sins committed against the
Immaculate Heart of Mary and for love of Jesus.” She did so willingly and
fervently (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 60, Archive.org).
Jacinta would say, “O my Jesus! I love you, and I want to
suffer very much for love of you.” While she was suffering, she would pray, “O
Jesus! Now you can convert many sinners because this is really a big
sacrifice!” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 62, Archive.org).
Carollo emphasized, “She was so focused on saving souls; she
did everything with that in mind.”
Preiss concurred that the young saint exhibited a profound
“understanding of suffering and offering up everything she encountered.”
St. John Paul II also highlighted this quality while
beatifying Jacinta in 2000. In his
homily he said, “Little Jacinta felt and personally experienced Our Lady’s
anguish, offering herself heroically as a victim for sinners.” He recalled when
she told her brother Francisco, who was dying after contracting influenza, to
give her “greetings to Our Lord and to Our Lady and tell them that I am
enduring everything they want for the conversion of sinners.”
The Holy Father explained that Jacinta “had been so deeply
moved by the vision of hell” during Fatima’s July apparition “that no
mortification or penance seemed too great to save sinners. … She could well
exclaim with St. Paul: ‘I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my
flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his
body, that is, the Church’ (Colossians 1:24).”
Some were healed through her prayers, and Jacinta also
became a fearless evangelist, unafraid to admonish sinners, telling them,
“Don’t do that, for you are offending the Lord our God, and he is already so
much offended.”
When Jacinta was ill, she refused the milk her mother wanted
her to drink because she strongly disliked the dairy beverage. Lucia, who was
visiting, asked her why she would not offer up drinking milk as a sacrifice to
the Lord.
Immediately, Jacinta expressed sorrow, cried, called her
mother and asked for forgiveness, and said she would drink the disliked
beverage. Lucia witnessed how her cousin “drank it down without the slightest
sign of repugnance” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 59, Archive.org).
Jacinta practiced what she preached to a heroic degree and
prompted Francisco and Lucia to pray for sinners with her: “We must pray very
much, to save souls from hell!” she would repeat. “So many go there!” She would
tell Lucia, “I want to suffer for love of Our Lord and for sinners” (Fatima in
Lucia’s Own Words, p. 59, Archive.org).
Carollo reflected upon Jacinta’s simplicity and her humility
and what she accomplished through those virtues. “How many souls she helped
save because of the adherence to the request of Our Lady — and to offer her
life in reparation for the conversion of sinners. That’s the essence of her
life. How profound for a girl not even 10 years old. She was a window to Our
Lady.”
Above all, Jacinta learned, lived and gave to everyone the
heart of the Fatima message. As she said, “God wishes to establish in the world
devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. … Tell everybody that God grants us
graces through the Immaculate Heart of Mary; that people are to ask her for
them; and that the Heart of Jesus wants the Immaculate Heart of Mary to be
venerated at his side” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 132, Archive.org).
“Tell them also to pray to the Immaculate Heart of Mary for peace, since God
has entrusted it to her. If I could only put into the hearts of all the fire
that is burning within my own heart and that makes me love the Hearts of Jesus
and Mary so very much!”
A relic of St. Jacinta Marto is seen in Rome. The young
saint died a century ago. (2016 photo, AM113/Shutterstock.com)
This year marks the 100th anniversary of the death of Fatima
seer St. Jacinta Marto. The 9-year-old died on Feb. 20, 1920, weeks short of her
10th birthday, which would have been on March 11.
This year also marks the 20th anniversary of her
beatification and third anniversary of her being canonized, together with her
brother Francisco, as the youngest non-martyr saints to be canonized.
What characterized the holiness of this young girl?
After she died, scores of mourners testified that her cheeks
exhibited “live pinkness,” and a “beautiful aroma of flowers” came from her —
Jacinta died in the saintly odour of sanctity. In 1935 her body was exhumed for
reburial and found to be incorrupt.
‘Truly a Mystic’
What stands out in the message of Fatima about Jacinta was
that she was truly a mystic,” John Preiss, president of Fatima Family
Apostolate International, told the Register. “She would receive visions” beyond
those apparitions of our Blessed Mother at the Cova da Iria that the Fatima
seers received. Preiss pointed out the time Jacinta saw a pope in a big house,
burying his head in his hands while a mob was about to storm the house.
Jacinta’s cousin, now Servant of God Lucia dos Santos,
revealed, “For the rest of her life she would suffer after seeing what the Holy
Father was enduring and urge prayers for him.”
Another time, as the three seers prayed, Jacinta asked,
“Can’t you see all those highways and roads and fields full of people, who are
crying with hunger and have nothing to eat? And the Holy Father is in a church
praying before the Immaculate Heart of Mary? And so many people praying with
him?” (Jacinta’s quotes from Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 129, Archive.org).
Jacinta also became distressed by visions of a terrible war
to come — obviously World War II — if people did not heed what Our Lady said,
resulting in “all the people who are going to die and go to hell! How dreadful!
If they would only stop offending God, then there wouldn’t be any war, and they
wouldn’t go to hell!”
And her insights reflect proper Christian living.
In The True Story of Fatima, Father John de Marchi listed
several mystical insights Jacinta received, among them: “The sins which cause
most souls to go to hell are the sins of the flesh. Fashions will much offend
Our Lord; people who serve God should not follow the fashions. The Church has
no fashions. Our Lord is always the same. Many marriages are not of God and do
not please Our Lord. Penance is necessary; if people amend their lives, Our
Lord will even yet save the world, but if not, punishment will come. Fly from
riches and luxury. Do not speak evil of people, and fly from evil speakers.
Confession is a sacrament of mercy, and we must confess with joy and trust.
There can be no salvation without confession.”
Sacrificing for Souls
For someone so young, Jacinta focused on the salvation of
souls. David Carollo, executive director of World Apostolate of Fatima/Blue
Army, said Jacinta, upon thinking of that horrible vision of hell, couldn’t
imagine “how anyone would want to go there. That’s profound for a little girl.
She acknowledged it was a choice and prayed for them.”
Carollo noted the time Jacinta was ill and Our Lady asked
her if she wanted to convert more sinners. Jacinta said that she did. Her
cousin Lucia wrote what Jacinta revealed: “She told me I would be going to a
hospital where I would suffer a great deal and that I am to suffer for the
conversion of sinners, in reparation for the sins committed against the
Immaculate Heart of Mary and for love of Jesus.” She did so willingly and
fervently (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 60, Archive.org).
Jacinta would say, “O my Jesus! I love you, and I want to
suffer very much for love of you.” While she was suffering, she would pray, “O
Jesus! Now you can convert many sinners because this is really a big
sacrifice!” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 62, Archive.org).
Carollo emphasized, “She was so focused on saving souls; she
did everything with that in mind.”
Preiss concurred that the young saint exhibited a profound
“understanding of suffering and offering up everything she encountered.”
St. John Paul II also highlighted this quality while
beatifying Jacinta in 2000. In his
homily he said, “Little Jacinta felt and personally experienced Our Lady’s
anguish, offering herself heroically as a victim for sinners.” He recalled when
she told her brother Francisco, who was dying after contracting influenza, to
give her “greetings to Our Lord and to Our Lady and tell them that I am
enduring everything they want for the conversion of sinners.”
The Holy Father explained that Jacinta “had been so deeply
moved by the vision of hell” during Fatima’s July apparition “that no
mortification or penance seemed too great to save sinners. … She could well
exclaim with St. Paul: ‘I rejoice in my sufferings for your sake, and in my
flesh I complete what is lacking in Christ’s afflictions for the sake of his
body, that is, the Church’ (Colossians 1:24).”
Some were healed through her prayers, and Jacinta also
became a fearless evangelist, unafraid to admonish sinners, telling them,
“Don’t do that, for you are offending the Lord our God, and he is already so
much offended.”
When Jacinta was ill, she refused the milk her mother wanted
her to drink because she strongly disliked the dairy beverage. Lucia, who was
visiting, asked her why she would not offer up drinking milk as a sacrifice to
the Lord.
Immediately, Jacinta expressed sorrow, cried, called her
mother and asked for forgiveness, and said she would drink the disliked
beverage. Lucia witnessed how her cousin “drank it down without the slightest
sign of repugnance” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 59, Archive.org).
Jacinta practiced what she preached to a heroic degree and
prompted Francisco and Lucia to pray for sinners with her: “We must pray very
much, to save souls from hell!” she would repeat. “So many go there!” She would
tell Lucia, “I want to suffer for love of Our Lord and for sinners” (Fatima in
Lucia’s Own Words, p. 59, Archive.org).
Carollo reflected upon Jacinta’s simplicity and her humility
and what she accomplished through those virtues. “How many souls she helped
save because of the adherence to the request of Our Lady — and to offer her
life in reparation for the conversion of sinners. That’s the essence of her
life. How profound for a girl not even 10 years old. She was a window to Our
Lady.”
Above all, Jacinta learned, lived and gave to everyone the
heart of the Fatima message. As she said, “God wishes to establish in the world
devotion to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. … Tell everybody that God grants us
graces through the Immaculate Heart of Mary; that people are to ask her for
them; and that the Heart of Jesus wants the Immaculate Heart of Mary to be
venerated at his side” (Fatima in Lucia’s Own Words, p. 132, Archive.org).
“Tell them also to pray to the Immaculate Heart of Mary for peace, since God
has entrusted it to her. If I could only put into the hearts of all the fire
that is burning within my own heart and that makes me love the Hearts of Jesus
and Mary so very much!”
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