The Columbus Dispatch

A step closer to sainthood

Black nun who founded first African-american religious congregati­on nearer to beatificat­ion

- Luis Andres Henao

Mother Mary Elizabeth Lange – a Black Catholic nun who founded the United States’ first African-american religious congregati­on in Baltimore in 1829 – has advanced another step toward sainthood.

Under a decree signed by Pope Francis recently, Lange was recognized for her heroic virtue, and advanced in the cause of her beatificat­ion from being considered a servant of God to a “venerable servant.” The Catholic Church must now approve a miracle that is attributed to her, so she can be beatified.

Lange grew up in a wealthy family of African origin, but she left Cuba in the early 1800s for the U.S. due to racial discrimina­tion, according to the Vatican’s saint-making office. After encounteri­ng more discrimina­tion in the southern U.S., she moved with her family to Baltimore. Recognizin­g a need to provide education for Black children in the city, she started a school in 1828, decades before the Civil War and the abolition of slavery.

In 1829, she founded the Oblate Sisters of Providence – the country’s first African-american religious congregati­on. They were trailblaze­rs for generation­s of Black Catholic nuns who persevered despite being overlooked or suppressed by those who resented or disrespect­ed them.

The Oblate Sisters continue to operate Baltimore’s Saint Frances Academy, which Lange founded.

The coed school is the country’s oldest continuall­y operating Black Catholic educationa­l facility, with a mission prioritizi­ng help for “the poor and the neglected.”

“She lived her virtuous existence in a hostile social and ecclesial context, in which the preeminent opinion was in favor of slavery, personally suffering the situation of marginaliz­ation and poverty in which the African- American population found itself,” the Vatican’s saintmakin­g office wrote.

Lange is among three Black nuns from the U.S. designated by Catholic officials as worthy of considerat­ion for sainthood. The others include Henriette Delille, who founded the New Orleansbas­ed Sisters of the Holy Family in 1842 because white sisterhood­s in Louisiana refused to accept African Americans, and Sister Thea Bowman, a beloved educator, evangelist and singer active for many decades before her death in 1990.

Pope Francis’s advancemen­t of Lange’s sainthood cause “is a monumental step forward in the long fight for Black Catholic saints in the United States and for recognitio­n for the nation’s long embattled African American Catholic community, especially nuns,” said Shannen Dee Williams, a history professor at the University of Dayton and author of “Subversive Habits: Black Catholic Nuns in the Long African American Freedom Struggle.”

Currently there are no recognized African-american saints. Williams said Lange joins three other African-american sainthood candidates who have been declared “venerable – Delille, Father Augustus Tolton and Pierre Toussaint.

Williams said only one Black woman has been declared a saint in the modern era – St. Josephine Bakhita, a formerly enslaved Sudanese nun who made “the extraordin­ary journey from slavery under Islamic auspices to freedom in an Italian Catholic convent in the late 19th century.”

“This is why Lange’s cause is so important and revolution­ary,” Williams said via email. “There is absolutely no way to tell Lange’s story or the story of her order accurately or honestly without confrontin­g the Catholic Church’s mostly unreconcil­ed histories of colonialis­m, slavery, and segregatio­n.”

Williams said that unlike most of their counterpar­ts in religious life, Lange and the Oblate Sisters of Providence were not segregatio­nists and never barred anyone from their ranks or institutio­ns based on color or race. Instead, Williams said, Lange’s multiethni­c and multilingu­al order preserved the vocations of hundreds of Black Catholic women and girls denied admission into white congregati­ons in the United States, Canada, Latin America and the Caribbean.

“Lange and her Oblate Sisters of Providence’s very existence embody the fundamenta­l truth that Black history always has been Catholic history in the land area that became the United States.” Williams said,

Their story “upends the enduring myth that slaveholdi­ng and segregatio­nist Catholic priests and nuns were simply people ‘of their times.’ ” Williams said. “Mother Lange and the Oblate Sisters of Providence were also people of those times.”

 ?? FILE/JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP ?? Students at Baltimore’s Mother Mary Lange Catholic School walk past the chapel decorated with a portrait of Mother Mary Lange, the founder of the order of the Oblate Sisters of Providence.
FILE/JACQUELYN MARTIN/AP Students at Baltimore’s Mother Mary Lange Catholic School walk past the chapel decorated with a portrait of Mother Mary Lange, the founder of the order of the Oblate Sisters of Providence.

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