Windsor Star

‘Faithful’ Detroit priest one step closer to Catholic sainthood

- ED WHITE .

DETROIT A priest known for his steadfast devotion to the needy cleared a threshold on the way to possible sainthood Saturday as the Roman Catholic Church beatified Solanus Casey, who is credited with the miraculous cure of a woman with a chronic skin disease.

More than 60,000 people attended a Mass in Detroit where Father Solanus, as he was known, has an extraordin­ary following, decades after his death in 1957. Many insist their prayers to him have led to remarkable changes in their lives. Some of their stories were told on the scoreboard screens at Ford Field. Pope Francis said Father Solanus met the requiremen­ts to earn the rank of “blessed,” especially after Paula Medina Zarate of Panama was instantly cured while she prayed at his tomb in 2012.

Zarate had a formal role at the Mass, placing a cross in front of a portrait of Father Solanus near the altar. Italian Cardinal Angelo Amato read a decree by the pope, who described the priest as a “humble and faithful disciple of Christ, tireless in serving the poor.”

Father Solanus can be made a saint in the years ahead if a second miracle is attributed to him. He’s only the second U.S.-born man to be beatified by the church, joining the Rev. Stanley Rother, a priest killed in Guatemala’s civil war, who was beatified in Oklahoma in September. One U.S.-born woman has been beatified and two others have been declared saints.

“It’s a great event,” Detroit Archbishop Allen Vigneron said ahead of the Mass. “It’s hard to communicat­e how vivid and real the presence of Father is to our community.”

Even 60 years after his death, “people don’t say, ‘I’m going to Father’s tomb,’” Vigneron told The Associated Press. “They say, ‘I’m going to talk to Father.’”

Father Solanus, a native of Oak Grove, Wis., joined the Capuchin Franciscan religious order in Detroit in 1897 and was ordained a priest seven years later. But there were conditions: Because of academic struggles, he was prohibited from giving homilies at Mass and couldn’t hear confession­s.

“He accepted it,” said the Rev. Martin Pable, 86, a fellow Capuchin. “He believed whatever God wants, that’s what he would do.”

He served for 20 years in New York City and nearby Yonkers before the Capuchins transferre­d him back to the St. Bonaventur­e Monastery in Detroit in 1924. Wearing a traditiona­l brown hooded robe and sandals, Father Solanus worked as a porter or doorkeeper for the next two decades, but his reputation for holiness far exceeded his modest title.

The unemployed shared their anxieties with Father Solanus, the parents of wayward kids sought his advice, and the ill and addicted asked him to urge God to heal them. As he listened, he took notes that were later turned into typewritte­n volumes of his work.

Later in life, when Father Solanus was stationed at a seminary in Huntington, Ind., Detroiters boarded buses for a four-hour ride just to see the man with a wispy white beard. Mail piled up from across the country.

“He had a gentle presence. He left people with a wonderful feeling of peace inside their hearts,” Pable said. “He would say, ‘Let’s just pray about this and see what God wants to do.’ Some people were not healed. He told them to bear their problems with God’s help.”

In 1929, Father Solanus cofounded the Capuchin Soup Kitchen, which serves up to 2,000 meals a day in Detroit.

The Capuchins built a centre that bears his name. The public is invited to pray and leave handwritte­n pleas atop his tomb.

Shirley Wilson, 78, said she regularly prayed to Father Solanus to help her nephew get a kidney. He got one a few weeks ago. “It was a perfect match,” she said. “I believe in miracles.”

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