New York Daily News

Pope canonizes Cardinal Newman, 4 women

Kids find ma stabbed to death in Bx.

- BY NICOLE WINFIELD

VATICAN CITY — With Prince Charles looking on, Pope Francis on Sunday canonized Cardinal John Henry Newman, praising the 19th century Anglican convert who became an influentia­l, unifying figure in both the Anglican and Catholic churches.

Francis quoted from one of Newman’s most famous hymns, “Lead, Kindly Lights,” as he presided over Mass on Sunday before an estimated 50,000 people in a sun-drenched St. Peter’s Square to declare Newman and four women saints.

Among the luminaries on hand was Charles, heir to the British throne, who penned a remarkable ode to Newman that was published in the Vatican newspaper, L’Osservator­e Romano. The Prince of Wales, whose mother is the head of the Church of England, praised Newman for bridging divisions and showing the courage of following his conviction­s.

Newman, a theologian and poet, is admired by Catholics and Anglicans alike because he followed his conscience at great personal cost. When he defected from the Church of England to the Catholic Church in 1845, he lost friends, work and even family ties, believing the truth he was searching for could only be found in the Catholic faith.

In his homily, Francis recalled that the Christian “journey of faith” sometimes is an uphill, uncomforta­ble battle.

“Faith calls for journey, a ‘going out’ from ourselves, and it can work wonders if we abandon our comforting certaintie­s, if we leave our safe harbors and our cozy nests,” he said.

Newman was canonized along with four women, including three nuns from the 19th and 20th centuries: Sisters Giuseppina Vannini of Italy, Mariam Thresia Chiramel Mankidiyan of India and Brazilian Dulce Lopes Pontes, as well as Swiss laywoman Margherita Bays. Two terrified young children banged on the window of their Bronx apartment and cried desperatel­y for help after discoverin­g their mom stabbed to death in her bed Sunday morning, police sources said.

Investigat­ors believe an attacker repeatedly plunged a screwdrive­r, or a similar object, into Luz Perez, 40, leaving her bloody and lifeless in the bedroom of her E. 187th St. home near Bathgate Ave. in Belmont, sources said.

Perez’s 5-year-old son and 2-year-old daughter found her body, rushed to the window of their apartment and started banging, sources said.

A passerby saw them and called 911. Police took down Perez’s door at about 8 a.m. and found her dead inside, sources said. The city medical examiner’s office will determine the exact cause of Perez’s death, police said.

Medics took the children, who were not injured, to St. Barnabas Hospital for evaluation. Police have not yet made an arrest in the case.

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 ?? AFP/GETTY ?? Pope Francis celebrated canonizati­on of John Henry Newman, who left the Church of England to become a Catholic in 1845. Prince Charles attended the event, in which four women also became saints.
AFP/GETTY Pope Francis celebrated canonizati­on of John Henry Newman, who left the Church of England to become a Catholic in 1845. Prince Charles attended the event, in which four women also became saints.

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