Bl. Anne of Saint Bartholomew

http://www.irondequoitcatholic.org/index.php/Bl/AnneOfSaintBartholomew

Celebrating 100 over years in Irondequoit

(Died 1626)

When the great St. Teresa of Avila, renewer of the Discalced 
Carmelite nuns, went about on her foundations and Inspections, she 
often took as her special companion the Carmelite lay sister, Anne of 
St. Bartholomew. Anne was the daughter of a peasant couple from near 
Avila. Teresa cane to admire her competence, and more than once 
suggested that she apply to become a choir sister, rather than remain 
a lay nun engaged in more menial work; but Anne preferred to retain 
the humbler status.

As the foundress was dying. Sister Anne did her every possible 
service. On the day of death, knowing how much Teresa loved neatness, 
Anne carefully changed her linen, headdress and sleeves. The saint 
was unable to speak, but smiled her thanks. When the last moments 
came, it was Sister Anne who held the dying mystic in her arms.

Six years later, some French Catholic leaders, anxious to introduce 
the Teresian nuns into their country, asked St. Teresa's successor, 
Anne-of-Jesus, to send some Spanish nuns to Paris to help with the 
foundation. Anne-of-Jesus included our Sister Anne in the group of 
religious selected for the mission.

When they arrived, the other five nuns were greeted by the Princess 
de Longueville and other women of the court; but Blessed Anne slipped 
away Into the kitchen to prepare dinner. Now her superiors made up 
for lost time by advancing her, willy-nilly, to the rank of choir 
sister. When, in the midst of difficulties with the foundation, the 
other Spanish nuns went off to the Netherlands, Anne remained in 
France and was appointed prioress, first at Pontoise and then at 
Tours. Doubting her own competence to rule. Blessed Anne, in her 
prayers to our Lord, called herself a "weak straw". Jesus answered, 
reassuring her, "It is with straws I light my fire."

 From France Carmelite foundations spread into the Netherlands 
(Belgium & Holland). Blessed Anne was sent to the one at Mons, 
remaining there a year. In 1612 she established a monastery at Antwerp.

Daughters of some of the noblest families of the Low Countries 
flocked to join this new monastic community. Anne herself was a 
drawing card. Her reputation for holiness, prophecy and miracle 
working had gone before her. Indeed, she came to be considered the 
protector of Antwerp. When the city was under siege by the Protestant 
Prince of Orange, Anne prayed all night and Antwerp was spared capture.

At the death of Blessed Anne in 1626, all Antwerp grieved; and as her 
body lay in state, 20 thousand mourners made a point of touching it 
with their rosaries or other Items for the sake of having a "relic" 
of this holy Spanish nun. Pope Benedict XV declared Anne "blessed" In 1917.

There is an American angle to this story. Among the Carmels set up in 
the Netherlands, a couple welcomed English Catholic ladies. In the 
British penal times, Catholics were forbidden to have convents in 
England. Some of the English women who took the veil here were from 
colonial Maryland. In 1790, at the request of Maryland Catholics and 
with the permission of Bishop John Carroll of Baltimore, four 
Carmelite nuns from Belgium, headed by the former Marylander Mother 
Bernardina Matthews, established the first American Carmel at Port 
Tobacco, Maryland. One of the "granddaughter" foundations out of this 
source was the Carmelite monastery at Rochester. Hence, all the "Port 
Tobacco" Carmels in the United States celebrated their bicentennial In 1990.

--Father Robert F. McNamara

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