SAINT GERMAINE COUSIN
Virgin
(1579-1601)

Saint Germaine Cousin was born in 1579 in Pibrac, a small village not 
far from Toulouse, France. From her earliest years she was a frail, 
sickly child, and throughout her life was afflicted with scrofula, a 
tubercular condition affecting particularly the glands of the neck. 
In addition, her right arm and hand were deformed and partially 
paralyzed. In spite of her many afflictions, the emaciated child 
possessed a charming, sweet disposition.

Germaine endured not only bodily sufferings, but harsh, cruel 
treatment from her stepmother, who had a deep aversion for the little 
girl. The child was almost starved to death and obliged to sleep in 
the barn on a pile of leaves and twigs under the stairway. At break 
of day, summer and winter, she would drive the sheep into the fields 
to graze, then watch them until evening. She had to spin during this 
time, and if the allotted wool was not spun, she was severely punished.

The village children, not sharing the hostility of the adults toward 
this forlorn child, loved to listen to her speak about the goodness 
and love of God while she guarded her flock. The only instruction 
Germaine ever received was the catechism taught after Sunday Mass in 
the village church, which she attended with joy.

During the long hours of solitude she spent in the fields and in the 
stable at night, she remained in sweet communion with God, and never 
complained of her hard life.

Every morning she was at Mass, and afterwards went to kneel before 
Our Lady's shrine. To reach the church she had to cross what was 
ordinarily a small stream; but after a heavy rain it would become a 
raging torrent. Several times at those moments, the villagers were 
amazed to see the rushing waters separate when Germaine approached, 
and then to watch her cross on dry land. When she left her sheep to 
go to church, she would place her staff upright in the ground, and 
the sheep never went far from it.

One day the stepmother was seen pursuing Germaine as she drove the 
sheep down the road. She was accusing the girl of having stolen some 
bread and concealing it in her apron. When Germaine unfolded her 
apron, fragrant flowers, foreign to that region, fell to the ground.

Germaine died one night in the year 1601, at the age of twenty-one, 
and was buried as was the custom in those days, in the village church.

Forty-three years later, when a relative was to be buried near her 
and the stones were removed, the grave-digger found to his amazement, 
the body of a beautiful young girl in a state of perfect 
preservation. His pick had struck her nose, and the wound was 
bleeding. Some of the older residents identified the girl as Germaine 
Cousin. Miracle after miracle occurred, and in 1867 the neglected 
little waif of Pibrac was inscribed in the list of Saints by Pope 
Pius IX. Annually thousands of pilgrims visit the church of Pibrac, 
where the relics of Saint Germaine are enshrined.



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Lord, may everything we do begin with Your inspiration and continue 
with Your help,
so that all our prayers and works may begin in You and by You be happily ended.
We ask this through Christ our Lord.
Amen.

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