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Marcantonio Durando
(1801-1880)
Photo
Marcantonio was born in Mondově, on 22 May 1801, of the
distinguished Durando family, whose house overlooked the Main Square, near the
Cathedral and the Church of the Mission. In contrast to his mother, a very
pious person, who instilled religiosity and faith in the heart of her eight
children, his father had liberal ideas and was of lay and agnostic tendencies.
In particular, two sons absorbed his convictions, becoming involved in the
events of the Italian Revival (Risorgimento). They occupied high positions in
political and military life. Giacomo was Foreign Affairs Minister in the
Rattazzi government of 1862. In 1848, Giovanni, a general and head of the
pontifical troops, disobeyed the orders of Pius IX by taking the papal troops
beyond the Po River in order to bar the Austrians' way. Having reentered the
army of Piedmont, he participated together with Carlo Alberto in the Battle of
Novara, the expedition in Crimea and the war of independence.
The Missionary Passion
Marcantonio took more after his mother. At the age of 15 he
manifested a desire to go to China as a missionary. He entered the
Congregation of the Mission, which was being rebuilt in Italy at that time. At
the age of 18, he made his perpetual vows and on 12 June 1824 was ordained a
priest. He remained in Casale Monferrato for five years then, from 1829 until
his death, in the house of Turin, of which he became superior two years after
his arrival. Instead of China, his destination was the popular missions, into
which he infused the missionary passion of announcing Christ. He supported and
diffused the newly-born work of the Propagation of the Faith, instituted in
Lyon in 1822; and in the height of his responsibility as Visitor, in 1855, he
inaugurated the Brignole-Sale School for the foreign missions, with the
purpose of forming priests for the missions ad gentes.
In the early years of his priesthood, the missionary tension
was absorbed by the missions, which he preached in many towns of Piedmont.
Avoiding both the extremes of laxity and the rigorism of Jansenism, Fr.
Durando preached the mercy of God, attracting the populations to conversion:
"The people—according to a commentator on the mission of Bra—thronged
to hear him and were so silent and attentive they listened to him as if they
were a single man." During these missions, he did not limit himself
to preaching, but wherever he found grave situations of poverty, in agreement
with the confreres, he intervened in concrete ways. For example, at Locana, he
had "the entire legacy of the mission, consisting of 700 lire, converted
into corn flour for the poor of the country," thus putting into effect
the teaching of St. Vincent to intervene spiritually and corporally in favor
of the poor.
Love for the Poor Band First Director of the Daughters
of Charity in Italy
Concern for the poor was the other face of his missionary
passion. Shortly after he was elected superior, he saw the usefulness of
introducing into northern Italy the Daughters of Charity, born of the
charitable charism of St. Vincent de Paul and St. Louise de Marillac. The
sisters, after having been dispersed during the French Revolution, had just
begun to reorganize. The apparitions of the Miraculous Medal in 1830 to St.
Catherine Labouré, a novice among the Daughters of Charity, can be considered
the origin of the new flowering which the community was experiencing. It was
Fr. Durando's astuteness to recognize this. He wanted them in Piedmont. King
Carlo Alberto welcomed them in 1833 and they began by taking responsibility
for various hospitals, both the military ones in Turin and Genoa, and the
civil ones in Carignano, Castellamonte and Turin. In 1855, he had the courage
to send them to the front during the Crimean War in order to help the wounded.
At the same time, he spread the Marian Association of the Miraculous Medal
among the youth, and from that came new vocations: in a short period of ten
years 20 foundations were established and 260 sisters joined the community.
The number of vocations was overflowing to such an extent that in 1837 Carlo
Alberto placed at their disposal the convent of St. Salvario in Turin. With
the increase of sisters, Fr. Durando provided the city of Turin with a network
of charity centers, called Misericordie, from which the sisters with
the Ladies of Charity set off to serve the poor in their homes and to help
them in other ways. Around the Misericordie various works were formed,
like the first nursery schools for poor children, workplaces for young girls,
orphanages. Because of their works of assistance among the sick and the poor,
together with taking on various educational works, the Daughters of Charity
were precious collaborators in the development of social Catholicism in Italy.
Man of administration and Director of Conscience
In 1837, at only 36 years of age, he was appointed Visitor (or
major superior) of the Province of North Italy of the Vincentian Fathers, a
position which he occupied for 43 uninterrupted years, until his death.
Consequently, he had to reduce his participation in the missions. His time was
absorbed in organizing the Congregation of the Vincentian missionaries and
preaching spiritual retreats to priests and clerics of the Turin Diocese. The
quality of his spiritual direction attracted the attention even of new
foundations, which were being established in Turin. The Archbishop, Msgr.
Fransoni, entrusted to him the direction of the Sisters of St. Joseph, who had
just arrived in Italy. He contributed to the writing of the rules of the
Sisters of St. Ann. He became the spiritual guide of the Poor Clares in the
new St. Claire monastery. The Marchioness of Barolo, who had founded a
monastery for the recovery of lost girls, the Repentant Sisters of St.
Magdalene, wanted him as adviser for the constitution of the rules and
director of the work. But the work that distinguished him was the foundation
of the Nazarene Sisters.
At the School of Jesus Crucified, Founder of the
Nazarene Sisters
As happens with works of God, without having willed it, on 21
November 1865, the Feast of the Presentation of Mary, Fr. Durando was able to
entrust to the Servant of God, Luigia Borgiotti, the first postulants of the
new Company of the Passion of Jesus the Nazorean. They were young girls
who turned to him because, although desiring to consecrate themselves to God,
they were lacking some of the canonical requisites for entering religious
communities. He gave them the task of serving the sick as suffering members of
Christ crucified, going to assist them in their homes, day and night. The work
was innovative and original, so much so that a canon of the cathedral
exclaimed: "If Fr. Durando were to come to confess to me, I could not
in conscience absolve him." And yet, thanks to the charity of those
sisters, who knew how to accompany the dying with gentleness, discretion and
faith, because they contemplated in those suffering, the suffering of the
Lord, various excellent conversions occurred, such as those of Guido Gozzano,
Felice Raccagni, Sofia Graf, Annie Vivanti.
Death and Glorification
Father Durando died on 10 December 1880; he was 79 years old.
His mortal remains were buried, significantly, in that little sanctuary of
the Passion, annexed to the Church of the Visitation in Turin, where the
community of Nazarene Sisters was nourished on devotion to the passion of the
Lord in order to place itself, in a missionary spirit, at the service of the
suffering.
The cause of beatification, which began in Turin in 1928 and
continued in Rome with the apostolic process in 1940, concluded in 2001 with
the recognition of the miracle obtained through his intercession.
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