Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Waterbury native beatified

Catholic Church celebrates beatificat­ion of Connecticu­t priest Michael McGivney

- By Alex Putterman

Michael McGivney, who founded the Knights of Columbus while an assistant pastor at St. Mary’s Church in New Haven in 1882, is beatified as part of a Mass on Saturday at the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Hartford.

Waterbury native and Knights of Columbus founder Michael McGivney was beatified Saturday, as authorized by Pope Francis, making him the first Connecticu­t resident and one of only a handful of Americans to be recognized as “Blessed.”

McGivney, who died in 1890, is now one step short of sainthood.

The beatificat­ion took place Saturday as part of a Mass at the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Hartford. The ceremony included the reading of a letter from Pope Francis, in which he praised McGivney for his “zeal for the proclamati­on of the Gospel and generous concern for his brothers and sisters.” A tapestry featuring McGivney’s portrait was then unveiled in the sanctuary.

After the ceremony, Hartford Archbishop Leonard P. Blair said he hoped McGivney’s beatificat­ion could inspire others, particular­ly in the Hartford area.

“When you have someone locally who lived and walked our streets and towns and who lived a life of charity and faith and hope to such a degree,” Blair said, “that’s certainly an inspiratio­n for all of our priests but also for everyone, that we can rub shoulders with holiness and that we’re called to be holy as well.”

McGivney was born in Waterbury in 1852 and was ordained a priest of the Archdioces­e of Hartford in 1877. He then served as parochial vicar of St. Mary’s Church in New Haven and then pastor of St. Thomas church in Thomaston.

In 1882, McGivney founded the Knights of Columbus, which today has 15,900 councils and 1.9 million members worldwide, according to the organizati­on’s website.

Carl Anderson, Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus, noted Saturday that McGivney was only 29 years old when he founded the organizati­on.

“He took on this great task really just a few years out of seminary, a few years after being ordained,” Anderson said. “So I think there’s a message there that people of his age have a tremendous contributi­on they can make.”

McGivney died at age 38 after falling ill with tuberculos­is and pneumonia. More than a century later, he was declared “Venerable Servant of God” by Pope Benedict XVI. This past May, he was approved for beatificat­ion by Pope Francis, after the confirmati­on of a miracle McGivney is said to have performed five years ago.

The act designated as a miracle involved the healing of an unborn baby who had been diagnosed with fetal hydrops. The baby was born healthy and named Michael in honor

of McGivney, and he lives today with his family in Dickson, Tennessee.

The family attended Saturday’s ceremony, which the child’s father, Daniel Schachle, called “absolutely surreal.”

“I thought about bringing a relic back to our house, but ever since Michael has been born we’ve felt like he was our own little relic,” Schachle said.

Blair said before the

pandemic local church leaders had hoped to hold the beatificat­ion ceremony on the New Haven Green or at a large venue on Yale’s campus. They decided instead to proceed with a small crowd at the Cathedral of St. Joseph, with the event also televised and streamed online.

Blair said he thinks even those who couldn’t attend “feel a spiritual closeness to what has happened here today.”

In addition, the Knights of Columbus announced Saturday that their museum in New Haven will be turned into the Blessed Michael McGivney Pilgrimage Center, “to serve pilgrims who travel to New Haven to learn about Father McGivney and pray at St. Mary’s Church,” according to a press release.

 ?? KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS ?? Michael McGivney was a Roman Catholic priest and the son of Irish immigrants to the United States. On March 29, 1882, while an assistant pastor at St. Mary’s Church in New Haven, McGivney founded the Knights of Columbus with a small group of parishione­rs.
KNIGHTS OF COLUMBUS Michael McGivney was a Roman Catholic priest and the son of Irish immigrants to the United States. On March 29, 1882, while an assistant pastor at St. Mary’s Church in New Haven, McGivney founded the Knights of Columbus with a small group of parishione­rs.
 ??  ?? Michael McGivney, a Waterbury native and Knights of Columbus founder, was beatified Saturday at a ceremony at the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Hartford. A tapestry featuring McGivney’s portrait, top right, was unveiled in the sanctuary.
Michael McGivney, a Waterbury native and Knights of Columbus founder, was beatified Saturday at a ceremony at the Cathedral of St. Joseph in Hartford. A tapestry featuring McGivney’s portrait, top right, was unveiled in the sanctuary.
 ?? ARCHDIOCES­E OF HARTFORD ?? Michael Schachle, the miracle child, participat­ed in the beatificat­ion ceremony Saturday in Hartford. Schachle is said to have been healed from fetal hydrops before birth, a miracle attributed to Michael McGivney and confirmed by Pope Francis.
ARCHDIOCES­E OF HARTFORD Michael Schachle, the miracle child, participat­ed in the beatificat­ion ceremony Saturday in Hartford. Schachle is said to have been healed from fetal hydrops before birth, a miracle attributed to Michael McGivney and confirmed by Pope Francis.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States