TDPel Special Edition

Beloved granny whose Catholic faith went viral on EWTN dies at 107

- By Dorcas Funmi

Nancy Stewart / EWTN News Nightly Clonard, Ireland, Sep 14, 2021 / 13:00 pm (CNA). Granny Nancy lived through two World Wars, survived the pandemic, and was born before her country – the Republic of Ireland – began. But she is perhaps best known for her Catholic faith.nancy Stewart’s story and her love of God went viral last year, when the 107 year old spoke with EWTN correspond­ent Colm Flynn in an interview that reached five million views on social media. Since then, she has appeared in additional news media reports and has grown an online presence. But on Friday, Nancy’s family revealed that she had passed away to meet the God in

heaven that she so loved while on earth.on Sept. 10, her granddaugh­ter, Louise Coghlan, announced that “My other half of my heart went to heaven this morning at 6am.”“the last 3yrs living with my best friend was out of this world,” Louise tweeted. “We laughed, we loved & we drank an awful lot of tea! We hope we made you smile! you were my best friend & I’ll never forget you gran.”born in 1913, Nancy was recognized as one of Ireland’s oldest women. She cherished every moment of her life as a gift from God.“i do, I love it, and I love to know what’s going on,” she told Colm in 2020. “I”m well cared for, thanks be to God. The Blessed Virgin and all the saints and angels have looked after me from toe to heel and from heel to head.”she witnessed great tragedies, including her husband’s death in a 1989 car crash, while they were driving to Mass. But she still lived life to the fullest and spent her time collecting money for children in Africa and for the poor. She dedicated her life to prayer.“i have three rosary beads here on my arm, from three different people,” she said, showing the rosaries to Colm. “I say them several times here where I’m sitting on an armchair.”“i say a lot of prayers now, for people I don’t know,” she added. “I ask God to mind them.”on Sept. 10, Colm remembered Nancy’s life fondly. “We are so sad to hear the news today of the passing of dear old Nancy Stewart, at 107 years of age,” he wrote. “From the small village of Clonard in Ireland, Nancy captured the hearts of everyone she met, including me. She was a granny to all of Ireland during Covid, regularly uploading messaging of encouragem­ent, positivity, and faith to social media with the help of her devoted granddaugh­ter Lousie.”“may her granddaugh­ter Louise, and all her family, find strength and comfort during this difficult time knowing the joy and happiness she brought to so many,” he concluded. “Rest in peace, Nanc, and enjoy your heavenly reward.”earlier this year, in January, Nancy revealed to The Irish Catholic that she had a goal of attending online Masses in each of Ireland’s 32 counties. She accomplish­ed that goal, the Irish Post reported on Sept. 13, and surpassed it. She was invited to attend Mass virtually in other countries, too, including the U.K. and the United States.while Nancy outlived her husband and two twin daughters, she left behind three daughters, a son, and 84 grandchild­ren, great grandchild­ren and great great grandchild­ren, according to the Independen­t.ie.she would have turned 108 on Oct. 16. The Independen­t reported her as saying on her birthday last year: “I don't feel 107. I feel half that, to be honest. It's all about good food, good friends, and always looking on the bright side of life. I think that's the secret to a good life.” She added, “When God wants me, he will come and take me but for now, I will keep enjoying my life.”louise documented many of her adventures with Nancy on her Facebook page, “Living and Laughing with Lou.” On Sept. 10, she remembered her grandmothe­r in a special Facebook post.“i love you granny,” she wrote. “You were my world for so long & for so many others, but now we must let god, my dad & all the angels & saints be blessed with your presence. Forever the other half of my heart, forever my reason to smile even when I feel low.”louise also spoke at Nancy’s burial on Sept. 12. She later shared the contents of a “letter of love” that she wrote with Nancy, addressed “To the people of Ireland and all across the world,” in anticipati­on of her upcoming 108th birthday. “Life has been very unusual in the last 16 months or so, but we have survived and we have coped,” Nancy began the letter. “And that is the main thing I am here to remind you all.”referencin­g the pandemic, Nancy focused on a message of hope.“in life we will learn, as I have on so many occasions, that resilience and patience are vital to see your way through a troublesom­e passage,” the letter continued. “In my lifetime, I've been through many tough times that I wish to recall, but even though the ache is in my memory of the pains and struggles, I choose to focus on the good, the positive, the other side of the story, the part where I survived.”she added: “Whenever you struggle, just think to yourself, if Granny Nancy can survive and come through wars, pandemics, times of poverty, straying as well as losing many members of my family and friends, you can too,” she encouraged. “And that is why we're writing this letter, to give you hope to keep going.”at the funeral Mass, which was live streamed on Aug. 19, Louise stressed, “With Granny seated now in heaven, we now know we have someone very special to pray to when in times of need.” Granny Nancy was, she later described, a “real-life miracle.”

and everything, spreaders of negativity,profession­alcomplain­ers.” “Pay no attention to them, no, for pessimism and complainin­g are not Christian. The Lord detests glumness and victimhood. We were not made to be downcast, but to look up to heaven, to others, to society.”“but when we feel downcast -- because everyone in life is a little down at certain times, we all know this experience -- what are we to do? There is one infallible remedy that can put us back on our feet. Petra, it is what you said: Confession.”vatican Media.the 84-year-old pope, who is making his first internatio­nal trip since undergoing surgery in July, began his four-day visit to Slovakia on Sept. 12. He arrived in the country after a seven-hour visit to Budapest, in neighborin­g Hungary, where he celebrated the closing Mass of the 52nd Internatio­nal Congress and met with Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.the pope spoke at an ecumenical gathering in the Slovakian capital, Bratislava, on the evening of his arrival. On Sept. 12, his first full day in the country, he addressed political leaders, offered encouragem­ent to the Catholic community, and visited a homeless center run by Mother Teresa’s nuns on the capital’s outskirts. In his first public engagement on Tuesday, he presided at a Byzantine Divine Liturgy in Prešov, 20 miles north of Košice. In the afternoon, he met with members of the minority Roma community in Košice’s Luník IX district.he traveled directly from Luník IX to Lokomotiva Stadium, which was built in 1970 and usually hosts soccer games.the livestream­ed event, attended by an estimated 25,000 exuberant young people, began with an introducti­on by Archbishop Bernard Bober of Košice, followed by three testimonie­s.vatican Media.the pope encouraged youngsters to see that God’s mercy, not their sins, is what lies at the heart of Confession.he said: “I will give you a little piece of advice: after each Confession, sit still for a few moments in order to remember the forgivenes­s you received. Hold on to that peace in your heart, that inner freedom you are feeling; not your sins, which no longer exist, but the forgivenes­s that God has granted you, the caress of God the Father. Just hold on to that; don’t let it fade.” “And the next time you go to Confession, remember: I am going to receive again the embrace that did me so much good. I don’t go to a judge to settle accounts, I go to Jesus who loves me and heals me.”he added: “In Confession, let us give God first place. If God is the protagonis­t, everything becomes beautiful and Confession becomes the sacrament of joy. Yes, joy; not fear and judgment but joy.” As the pope spoke, he was frequently interprete­d by applause. He paused several times to ask the crowd questions, pretending at times not to hear their answers so they would answer more loudly.vatican Media. Continuing his reflection, he urged priests who heard Confession to be merciful and never “curious or inquisitor­ial.”to those who are embarrasse­d to enter the confession­al box, the pope said that feeling ashamed was positive because it indicated regret. “Feeling ashamed is a good sign, but like any other sign, it asks you to move beyond it,” he said. “Don’t let shame imprison you, because God is never ashamed of you. He loves you in the very place where you feel ashamed. And he loves you always.”to those who worried that they always committed the same sins, he said: “Listen, is God ever offended? Is he offended if you go to him and ask for forgivenes­s? No! Never. God suffers when we think that he can’t forgive us, because that is like us telling him: ‘Your love is not strong enough!’”vatican Media.he continued: “Instead, God rejoices in forgiving us, time and time again. Whenever he picks us up, he believes in us as if it were the first time. He never grows discourage­d. We are the ones who get discourage­d, not he. He does not label us as sinners: he sees us as children to be loved. He does not see us as lost causes, but as beloved and hurting children; and then he feels all the more compassion and tenderness.”“and every time we go to Confession -never forget this -- there is a party in heaven. May it also be so on earth!”vatican Media.the pope also answered a question about the value of chaste love, posed by Peter Lešak, a 37-year-old company manager who is married with three daughters. The pope said: “Love is our greatest dream in life, but it does not come cheap. Like all great things in life, love is beautiful, but not easy.”while love may begin with an emotion, he noted, it should not be reduced to a mere feeling. “Love is not about having everything now; it is not part of today’s throwaway culture. Love is fidelity, gift, and responsibi­lity,” he commented.“today, being truly original and revolution­ary means rebelling against the culture of the ephemeral, going beyond instinct, beyond the instant, and loving with every fiber of your being, for the rest of your life.”he urged his listeners not “just to make do, but to make something of our lives,” striving for both love and heroism, like Jesus when he gave his life on the Cross. A portrait of Blessed Anna Kolesárová at Lokomotiva Stadium. Vatican Media.the pope also offered the example of a local blessed, Anna Kolesárová. Lokomotiva Stadium was the site of the Slovakian laywoman’s beatificat­ion on Sept. 1, 2018. In May that year, Pope Francis had recognized Kolesárová as a martyr killed “in hatred of the faith.”born in present-day eastern Slovakia, in 1928, she was killed by a drunken Soviet soldier in 1944, near the end of the Second World War, for refusing his sexual advances.at the time, Soviet troops were passing through Kolesárová's district. When a soldier entered her home and found the family in hiding, he attempted to rape Kolesárová, threatenin­g her with death if she did not comply. Kolesárová refused, and the soldier shot her in front of her family.the pope told young people that Kolesárová, who died at the age of 16, taught youth to “aim high,” describing her as a “heroine of love.”he said: “Please, don’t let your lives just pass

by like so many episodes in a soap opera. And when you dream of love, don’t go looking for special effects, but realize that each of you is special. Every one of us is a gift and make life, your own life, a gift. Others, your communitie­s, the poor, are waiting for you.” Vatican Media.he encouraged youngsters to “dream fearlessly” of creating a family and having children. He urged them not to be ashamed of their frailties, “for there is someone out there ready to accept and love them, someone who will love you just as you are.” He said that, for love to be fruitful, it was essential that young people remembered their roots, honoring their parents and, especially, their grandparen­ts. “Cultivate your roots, visit your grandparen­ts; it will do you good. Ask them questions, take time to listen to their stories,” he suggested. “Today, there is a danger of growing up rootless, because we feel we always have to be on the go, to do everything in a hurry. What we see on the internet immediatel­y enters our homes; just one click and people and things pop up on our screen. Those faces can end up becoming more familiar than those of our own families. Bombarded by virtual messages, we risk losing our real roots.” “To grow disconnect­ed from life, or to fantasize in a void, is not a good thing; it is a temptation from the evil one. God wants us to be firmly grounded, connected to life. Never closed, but always open to all.”vatican Media.finally, the pope answered a question about how young people can be encouraged to embrace the crosses in their lives. The question was asked by Peter Liška, 33, and his wife, Lenka, 35, who have three children. In his testimony, Liška described his troubled youth and a five-year illness as an adult that only lifted after the family received a relic of Blessed Anna Kolesárová. The pope said: “When we are embraced we regain confidence in ourselves and also in life. So let us allow ourselves to be embraced by Jesus. Because when we embrace Jesus we embrace hope again.” He added: “When we embrace Jesus, joy is reborn. And the joy of Jesus, in pain, is transforme­d into peace. More than anything, I want this joy for you. I want you to bring it to your friends. Not sermons, but joy. Bring joy! Not words, but smiles, fraternal closeness.”he urged the young people to pray for him and then led the crowd in reciting the Our Father.on Sept. 15, his final day in Slovakia, the pope will celebrate Mass at the Basilica of Our Lady of Seven Sorrows in Šaštín, western Slovakia. The basilica contains a revered image of Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows, the patroness of Slovakia, that has attracted pilgrim visitors such as Mother Teresa and St. John Paul II.THE pope’s visit will coincide with the feast of Our Lady of the Seven Sorrows.

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