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Hannibal Mary Di Francia (1851-1927)
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Hannibal Mary Di Francia was born in Messina, Italy, on July 5, 1851. His father
Francis was a knight, the Marquises of St. Catherine of Jonio, Papal Vice-Consul
and Honorary Captain of the Navy. His mother, Anna Toscano, also belonged to an
aristocratic family. The third of four children, he lost his father when he was
only fifteen months old. The sad experience of losing a parent made him deeply
sensitive to the plight of children bereft of parents and this, influenced his
life and his educational system.
In childhood he developed such love for the Eucharist that he was allowed to
receive Communion daily, something quite exceptional in those days. He was only
seventeen when, at prayer in front of the Blessed Sacrament, he was given the
"revelation of Rogate", that is, he deeply felt that vocations in the
Church come only through prayer. Subsequently he found that such prayer is
commanded by Jesus in the Gospel when He says: "Ask [Rogate] the Lord of
the harvest to send out laborers to gather his harvest"
(Mt 9:38; Lk 10:2). These words became the fundamental insight to which he dedicated his entire
life.
Hannibal proved to be of lively intelligence with remarkable literary abilities.
As soon as he felt the call of God, he immediately responded by placing himself
and his talents at the service of God. After his theological studies, he was
ordained a priest on March 16, 1878. A few months before his ordination, he met
an almost blind beggar, Francesco Zancone, a providential encounter which led
him to discover the sad social and moral reality of one of the poorest
neighborhoods in the outskirts of Messina (Case Avignone). It was the beginning
of a long walk and his boundless love for the poor and the orphans was one of
the primary characteristic of his life.
With the permission and the encouragement of his bishop, Msgr. Joseph Guarino,
he made the Avignone ghetto his home and dedicated himself completely to the
redemption of its inhabitants. In accordance with the Gospel, he saw them as
"sheep without a shepherd". It was an experience strongly marked by
misunderstandings, difficulties and obstacles of every kind which he overcame by
great faith, seeing Jesus Christ in the poor and marginalized people. He was
carrying out what he defined as the "spirit of a twofold charity: the
evangelization of and the care for the poor". In 1882 he started his orphanages,
which were called "Anthonian Orphanages" because they were placed under the
patronage of St. Anthony of Padua. His concern was not only to provide the
children with food and occupation, but above all to assure that they were
brought up in a way that integrated the moral and religious aspects of their
lives, offering a family climate which helped lead them to discover and follow
God's plan for them.
With his missionary spirit he wanted to reach out to the orphans and the poor
all over the world. But how could he do it? He perceived that the "Rogate" was
the real answer. He wrote: "What are these few orphans we attend to, these few
people we bring the good news to, compared to the millions who are lost and
abandoned as sheep without a shepherd?... I looked for an answer and I found a
complete one in the words of Jesus: 'Ask the Lord of the harvest to send out
laborers to gather his harvest'. I concluded then that I had found the secret
key to all good works and to the salvation of all souls".
Hannibal felt that the Rogate was not simply the Lord's recommendation, but an
explicit command and an "infallible remedy". For this reason, his charism can be
considered as giving life to a providential foundation in the Church. He was
also a forerunner in considering the work of committed lay persons, like
parents, teachers, and even good government workers, as vocations.
To carry out his apostolic ideals in the Church and in the world, he founded two
religious Congregations: the Daughters of Divine Zeal, in 1887, and the
Rogationists ten years later. He wanted both institutions to live the Rogate as
a fourth vow. The institutions were canonically approved on August 6, 1926.
In a petition to St. Pious X, in 1909, Father Hannibal stated: "From my early
youth I have committed myself to that Holy Word of the Gospel: ‘Rogate ergo...'
From my small Institutes an unceasing daily prayer is raised by the orphans, the
poor, the priests and the consecrated virgins, to the most Sacred Hearts of
Jesus and Mary, to St. Joseph and the Apostles, that they may abundantly provide
the Church with holy and chosen priests and with evangelical workers for the
spiritual harvest of souls".
To spread the prayer for vocations he promoted several initiatives: he had
personal epistolary contacts with the Popes of his time, he instituted a "Holy
Alliance", a movement of prayer for vocations intended for the clergy, and the
"Pious Union of the Evangelical Rogation" for all the faithful. He published the
periodical "God and Neighbor", to involve everyone in these ideals.
"The entire Church must formally pray for this aim," he wrote, "because the
purpose of the prayer to gain vocations must concern all the faithful, every
Christian who has at heart the good of souls and, in a particular way, the
Bishops who are the shepherds of the spiritual flock and to whom souls are
entrusted. They are the living Apostles of Jesus Christ today." The annual World
Day of Prayer for Vocations instituted by Pope Paul VI in 1964 can be considered
a response to his intuition.
His love for the priesthood was great. He strongly believed that the world could
be redeemed only through the work of many holy priests. That is why he was
deeply concerned with the spiritual formation of the seminarians entrusted to
him by the Bishop of Messina. He used to say that without a lot of prayer and a
solid spiritual training, "all the efforts of bishops and of seminary educators
would only result in artificial priests". He strove to become himself a model of
the "good laborer" of the Gospels, and to be a priest according the Heart of
Jesus. His charity knew no bounds, and was directed towards all kinds of people
in need, including priests facing difficulties and cloistered nuns.
Even when he was still alive, his reputation as a saint was widespread on all
levels. When he died in Messina, on June 1st, 1927, people began to say: "Let us
go to see the sleeping saint". He died comforted by the vision of the Blessed
Virgin Mary, whom he had loved so much during his life.
His funeral, according to the chronicles and pictures in the newspapers of that
time, became a triumph. Civil authorities promptly granted permission for his
burial in the Shrine of the "Evangelical Rogation" which Fr. Hannibal himself
had built in Messina and wanted to be dedicated to the command of the Gospel:
"Ask, therefore, the Lord of the Harvest to send workers into his harvest...".
The religious families founded by Blessed Hannibal are currently present on all
the continents. According to the ideals of their founder, they dedicate
themselves to spreading the prayer for vocations through centers for vocations,
publishing houses and printing presses, institutions for orphans and abandoned
children, schools for deaf and mute, nutritional centers, homes for aged, homes
for single mothers, and professional and vocational schools.
The sanctity and mission of Fr. Hannibal as an "outstanding Apostle of the
prayer for vocations" are deeply felt in our time by all who are concerned with
the need for vocations in the Church. John Paul II proclaimed Father Hannibal a
Blessed on October 7, 1990 and defined him as the "authentic forerunner and
zealous master of the modern pastoral care for vocations".
Homily of John Paul II
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