She is the first U.S.
citizen to be an official saint. But it almost didn’t happen.
Saint
Frances Xavier Cabrini, MSC (1850-1917) and half a dozen others from the
Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart arrived in New York Harbor in March
1889, following a difficult Atlantic Ocean crossing. Italian priests serving in
New York, the story goes, sent disturbing reports back to Bishop Giovanni Battista
Scalabrini (1839-1905) of northern Italy. The U.S. church, largely populated by
Irish-Americans, treats Italian immigrants as second rate, those reports said. With
the blessing of Pope Leo XIII (1810-1903) Cabrini was thus dispatched to remedy
the situation. Church officials in New York promised her a house, a school and
an orphanage.
Upon
arrival, Cabrini met with New York’s Bishop Michael Corrigan (1839-1902) only
to learn no preparations were made for her. Paul Moses recounts the scene in
his illuminating study, An Unlikely
Union: the Love-Hate Story of New York’s Irish and Italians (New York
University Press, 2015). “I see no better solution to this question, Mother,
than that you and your sisters return to Italy,” Corrigan said. “No, not that,
your Excellency,” Cabrini replied. “I am here by order of the Holy See and here
I must stay.” Keep in mind that until the 1978 administration of Pope John Paul
II (1920-2005), the Holy See was an Italian-run operation.
Corrigan,
Moses explains, was not against the pastoral care of Italian immigrants; he
even spoke a little Italian. Corrigan and his Irish-American clergy simply
thought the new arrivals were a problem. They did not want to lose the loyalty
(and donations) of the slightly better established Irish-Americans who were
reluctant to share with the Italians.
The
half-hearted pastoral outreach in the U.S. church consequently reinforced the
Italians’ preference for household piety and popular devotions; expressions of
faith not dependent on approval of a local pastor. This popular religiosity
only spun the wheel round again. The Irish-American parish leaders faulted the
Italian immigrants for low Mass attendance, low financial giving, deficient
knowledge of doctrine and susceptibility to evangelical Protestant outreach.
Cabrini,
whose feast is celebrated each November, wasted no time
on discouragement. She moved forward, not only in New York but across the
country, including here in Chicago where she died. In total Cabrini founded 67
schools, orphanages and hospitals. Her Missionary Sisters, who are now
headquartered in Radnor, Pennsylvania, continue to serve in those types of
institutions plus in social service agencies, legal clinics, prisons and more.
The
tension during Cabrini’s time between established parishes and new immigrants
is similar in some respects to the situation with arrivals from Mexico—though
that wave of immigration, contrary to a stereotype, plateaued a decade or more
ago.
Mutual
respect between Irish-Americans and Italian-Americans came about as the new
arrivals developed leaders within the neighborhood, the parish and the
workplace. The Italians acquired confidence and public skills, but not
necessarily inside church settings. Local precincts, unions, schools and civic
institutions valued their contributions. The other dynamic, as Moses charmingly
shows, was intermarriage. Respect occurs organically as an Irish-American wife
enjoys the conviviality of an all-afternoon dinner at her in-laws, while her Italian-American
husband gives-and-takes at the rambunctious family gathering of his Irish
in-laws.
There
are unique pieces to this century’s Mexican-American story. The schools for
leadership—the unions, precincts and parochial schools—are not as strong as in
the past. Stable industrial jobs with benefits are few. Family culture has been
eroded by the superficiality of the pervasive individualistic culture,
fortified by mindless media content. Yet the Mexican-American plot line is the
same. The drama may well progress slower than it did for Irish-Americans and
Italian-Americans. Be assured there are still Cabrini-like saints among us,
people fighting daily for the safety and progress of our immigrants.
Droel edits INITIATIVES
(PO Box 291102, Chicago, IL 60629), a newsletter about faith and work.
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