
| An employee of the Philippine Postal Corp. shows envelopes and stamps bearingthe image of Blessed Pedro Calungsod, who will be canonized by Pope Benedict XVI tomorrow. PHOTO BY RENE H. DILAN |
MILLIONS of Catholics in the Philippines are gearing up to celebrate the canonization of the country’s second saint, a missionary killed 340 years ago who is being promoted as a hero for the youth.
The nation’s major television networks will broadcast live Sunday’s ceremony at the Vatican City, during which Pedro Calungsod, who was hacked to death while trying to convert locals on the Pacific island of Guam, will be made a saint.
About 5,000 Filipino pilgrims are expected to accompany the Philippines’ Roman Catholic Church leaders to the Vatican for the ceremony.
At home, devotees have begun flocking to a small farming town that claims Calungsod as its own, while saint souvenirs have become popular items across the nation of nearly 100 million people.
“There is something about him that touches the heart of the Filipino Catholics,” Fr. Francis Lucas, a media officer of the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines, told Agence France-Presse.
Calungsod will be made a patron saint for young people, partly in recognition of his age—believed to be just 17—at the time of his martyrdom in 1672.
According to the official account of his short life, hostile tribesmen hacked Calungsod and a Spanish Jesuit, he was assisting, to death in Guam, where they were trying to convert locals to the Catholic faith.
He qualified for sainthood last year after the Vatican officially recognized a 2002 “miracle” in which a woman in the Philippines, already declared dead from a heart attack, was revived after a doctor prayed to Calungsod for help.
The Philippines is regarded as Asia’s Catholic bastion, with 80 percent of the population adhering to the faith, thanks to more than three centuries of Spanish rule that began in the 1500s.
Calungsod will become only the second Filipino to be canonized after Saint Lorenzo Ruiz, another missionary, who was killed in Japan in 1637 and made a saint in 1987. This alone would have been cause for major celebrations in the Philippines.
Resonance
However, Lucas said that Calungsod’s youthfulness and travel to a foreign land held special resonance in the Philippines, where the average age is 24 and 10 percent of the population have gone abroad to work.
“We consider him to be a saint of migrant workers because he went abroad to represent the Philippines,” Lucas said.
In today’s Philippines, the roughly 10 million Filipinos who have gone abroad to secure higher-paying jobs are regarded as heroes for toiling in foreign lands and sending money back to their homeland.
Vice President Jejomar Binay, who will represent the Philippines at the canonization, has also called for Calungsod to be made patron saint of the country’s “overseas Filipino workers,” who are known locally as “OFWs.”
The Church has sought to maximize Calungsod’s appeal to young people with an Internet campaign that includes a website showcasing his life and featuring music videos, as well as a social media drive.
One Facebook site on Calungsod has more than 8,000 “likes” and streams of positive comments, as well as appeals to him for help.
“Dear Saint Pedro, please take care of my good friend Julie, who is fighting cancer,” one comment on the page said.
Calungsod’s canonization has been especially welcomed in the town of Ginatilan on the central island-province of Cebu, where its 15,000 residents have claimed him as a native son.
Although Calungsod’s birthplace is unknown, he is listed as coming from the central Philippines and Ginatilan residents point to the many people surnamed “Calungsod” who have lived in the town over the centuries.
“We have death records, marriage records and birth records . . . so we believe, 80 percent, that he is from our town,” Mayor Antonio Singco of Ginatilan told Agence France-Presse.
As his sainthood approached, pilgrims began flocking to Ginatilan, filling up its hotels and small restaurants and snapping up souvenirs, the mayor said.
Parish worker Salvi Cadungo, 56, said that the link to Calungsod was a major source of pride, comfort and hope to residents who largely make their living growing coconut, bananas and corn.
“We are all so happy here. We are a small town in a corner of the Philippines, but now everyone knows we produced a saint,” she said.
Published : Thursday January 17, 2013 | Category : headlines | Hits:743
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