Calgary Herald

Sainthood for Fatima siblings, child martyrs of Mexico

- NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY Pope Francis is making five more child saints: Two Portuguese shepherd children who said the Virgin Mary appeared to them in Fatima 100 years ago and three Mexican adolescent­s who were killed for their Catholic faith in the 16th century.

Francis signed the decrees Thursday, raising the likelihood that he might canonize the Portuguese siblings Francisco and Jacinta Marto during his upcoming trip to the Fatima shrine.

In the case of the Mexicans, Francis declared the three Child Martyrs of Tlaxcala worthy of sainthood without having a miracle attributed to their intercessi­on, once again sidesteppi­ng the Vatican's typical saint-making process.

The boys — Cristobal, Antonio and Juan — were converted to Catholicis­m by missionari­es in the early 1500s and were killed by their countrymen. St. John Paul II beatified them in 1990 during his second visit to Mexico.

Francis followed the rules in approving a miracle for the Marto siblings, who died at age nine and 11 of pneumonia. Church officials declined to detail the miracle in question, other than to say it involved the medically inexplicab­le cure of a Brazilian child.

No date was set for either canonizati­on ceremony, but it's possible that Francis will declare the Marto siblings saints during his May 12-13 visit to Fatima, adding another reason for celebratio­n at the shrine as it marks the centennial anniversar­y of the apparition­s.

Last month, Portuguese church officials wrapped up their saintmakin­g investigat­ion into the Martos' cousin, Sister Lucia, the third shepherd child who reported having visions of Mary. The case now goes to the Vatican.

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