Mexican bishop
In this
Spanish name, the first or paternal
surname is
Guízar and the second or maternal family name is
Valencia.
Rafael Guízar y Valencia (16 April 1878 – 6 June 1938)[2] was a Mexican bishop of the Roman Catholic Church who was persecuted during the Mexican Revolution. Named Bishop of Xalapa in 1919, he was driven out of his diocese and forced to live the remainder of his life in hiding in Mexico City. Pope Benedict XVI canonized Guízar on 15 October 2006.
Life
Rafael Guízar Valencia was born in Cotija in 1878. His parents, Prudencio and Natividad Guízar y Valencia had eleven children. When Rafael was nine years old, he lost his mother. He attended a catholic school where he got in touch with Jesuit priests. After some time he felt called to priesthood. In 1891 he entered the seminary in Cotija and was ordained in 1901.
In 1905 he became spiritual director of the seminary in Zamora. In 1911, he founded a religious newspaper in Mexico, but soon met with political persecution by the revolutionary movement in Mexico which lasted until his death. Guízar lived several times without a home and hid his priestly work under disguises as a street seller, a musician, and a doctor of homeopathic medicine, which allowed him to administer the sacraments in secrecy. At times he had to leave the country and lived in the South of the United States until 1915. In 1916 he went to Guatemala, in 1919 he cared for victims of the black plague.
In 1919 he was elected Bishop of Veracruz and was consecrated in the Cathedral of Saint Christopher in Havana on November 30, 1919. He maintained a clandestine seminary in Mexico, which changed location constantly.[3] Of the years in which Guízar was in charge of the diocese, he had to spend nine years in exile due to persecution.
In 1920, he participated in relief and recovery efforts for survivors and towns badly affected by an earthquake which struck Veracruz in January. He collaborated with government officials to raise funds, and conducted sermons in the region.[4]
In December 1937, while on a mission in Cordoba, he suffered a heart attack and died on 6 June 1938 in Mexico City. His tomb in the Catholic Cathedral of Xalapa attracts many worshipers who come for intercession.[5]
Veneration
Guízar was beatified by Pope John Paul II on 29 January 1995.[6] He was canonized on 15 October 2006 by Pope Benedict XVI.[7] In April 2006, Pope Benedict XVI confirmed a miracle that happened through the intercession of the Blessed, which opened the way to canonisation in 2006.
See also
References
External links
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