Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
of the Holy Face
The launch of the new Web site "Léonie Martin, Disciple and Sister of St. Thérèse of Lisieux"
I am happy to announce the launch of my new Web site "Léonie Martin: Disciple and Sister of St. Thérèse of Lisieux." During her earthly life and for many years after her death, Léonie lived on the margin and in the shadows. Now Mgr Boulanger, the bishop of Bayeux and Lisieux, has granted the imprimatur for the prayer that she might be declared venerable; Father Sangalli, the vice-postulator for the cause of her parents, declared publicly that he hopes her cause for beatification and canonization can be opened soon, as so many letters request. More than seventy years after her death, Léonie is emerging into the light. Without destroying the hiddenness that was so much a part of her spirituality, and while still looking at her in the context of her relationships, I want to examine Léonie in her own right. I believe that, the more we study her, the more she will teach us about her pilgrimage on the way of confidence and love.
This new Web site contains all the information about Léonie that was on "Saint Therese of Lisieux: A Gateway." You can still access it from the link at left. It also has two jewels, never in English before, that are unique to it:
- My English translation of the new illustrated booklet "The Life of Léonie Martin," prepared in 2012 by Léonie's sisters at the Monastery of the Visitation of Caen. Copies of this booklet are offered to the pilgrims who come to pray at Leonie's tomb. Now this online copy offers English-speaking pilgrims the chance to make a "virtual pilgrimage" to Léonie's monastery and to her tomb. Please join me in thanking the present-day nuns of Léonie's community, who have been kindness itself to me, for their generous permission to translate and share this doorway to Léonie's world with her English-speaking disciples. May God bless them for it.
- With the very generous permission of Famille Chretienne, my Engish translation of the contemporary article "The hidden life of Léonie Martin, the rebel sister of St. Thérèse emerges from oblivion," which appeared in the June 8, 2013 issue. I thank Anne Slater for her help in translating this groundbreaking article, and I recommend it highly to those who want to learn about the rise of devotion to Léonie, the present state of her cause, and her influence on the lives of those who have received graces through her intercession.
To visit "Léonie Martin: Disciple and Sister of St. Thérèse of Lisieux" directly, please visit http://leoniemartin.org This is the first "daughter site" of "Saint Thérèse of Lisieux: A Gateway." Please God, it will not be the last.
Please join me in thanking my friend and benefactor Juan Marrero, a good friend and fervent devotee of Léonie, Thérèse, and Louis and Zélie, whose generous gift made Léonie's Web site possible. Please remember him gratefully in your prayers.




"Jesus, Therese, and Our Little Way" by James Martin, S.J.
[T]his French Carmelite nun who gloried in spiritual childhood, and who never published a word in her lifetime, never watched TV, and as far as we know never blogged, has great deal to teach us American adults in a media-saturated culture.
If you missed the article "Jesus, Therese, and Our Little Way," written by Jesuit James Martin for St. Therese's feast, please enjoy it now.




St. Therese of Lisieux travels with the Pope: the story of two black bags
When Pope Francis boarded the plane in Rome on Monday, July 22 to travel to Rio de Janeiro for World Youth Day, he was carrying a black leather bag. Since no recent Popes have carried their own bags, the story was widely reported (see the Catholic News Agency story).
[photo credit: ANSA/Telenews]
A week later, on Monday, July 29, when Pope Francis held a press conference on the plane that was returning to Rome, the black bag was still of such interest that journalist Andrea Tornielli asked him:
Holy Father, I have a question that is, perhaps, somewhat indiscreet: the photograph has gone around the world of you, when we left, going up the steps of the plane carrying a black bag, and there were articles throughout the world that commented on this novelty: yes, of the Pope going up ... it never happened, we said, that the Pope went up with his baggage in hand. So, there were even theories about what the black bag contained. Now, my questions are: one, why did you carry the black bag and why was it not carried by a collaborator, and two, can you tell us what was inside? Thank you.
Pope Francis:
It didn’t have the key of the atomic bomb! Alas! I carried it because I’ve always done so: when I travel, I carry it. What is inside? There is my razor, there is the Breviary, there is the agenda, there is a book to read – I took one on Saint Teresina to whom I am devoted. I have always carried the bag when I travel: it’s normal. But we must be normal … I don’t know .. what you are saying is a bit strange to me, that that photo has gone around the world. But we must get used to being normal, the normality of life.
[Courtesy of www.zenit.org].
How inspiring that Pope Francis took a book about St. Therese with him to World Youth Day, of which she is patron. Interestingly, in 1887, when Therese herself arrived in Rome on Sunday, November 13, 1887 for an audience with the Pope, and when she left Rome on Thursday, November 24, she was carrying a black bag, a traveling-bag which belonged to her father. She used it as hand luggage during the pilgrimage to Rome. See the image below. I wonder what it contained?
Louis Martin's traveling-bag; St. Therese used as hand luggage in Rome

On September 27, 2013, the title of the book about St. Therese which Pope Francis took with hiim to World Youth Day in Rio de Janeiro was disclosed in the press. It was titled Teresa di Lisieux. Il fascino della santità. I segreti di una dottrina ritrovata” (“Thérèse of Lisieux. The fascination of sainthood. Secrets of a rediscovered doctrine") published by Lindau. See the story "Pope Francis's white rose." For a review in English of this provocative book, see "The real Therese of Lisieux and those letters that were tampered with" by Andrea Tornielli in Vatican Insider.




Panoramic views of the sites of St. Therese at Alencon and Lisieux and spend a "virtual summer vacation" with St. Thérèse at Saint Ouen-le-Pin
Please visit the site "la petite Thérèse" to see its latest and most beautiful offering: a panoramic view of Alencon and Lisieux and of the sites associated with Therese in each. This opportunity to see the sites associated with Thérèse as they appear in the surrounding landscape is not to be missed. See Les Buissonnets, St. Pierre's Cathedral, the Lisieux Carmel, and the basilica in Lisieux; see Therese's birthplace in Alencon and the village of Semallè, where she was nursed.
This panoramic visit is the work of those who have created a beautiful "virtual museum" out of the house at Saint-Ouen-le-Pin where Thérèse spent several summer vacations. Their work is exquisite; I cannot presume to praise it. A webcam allows you to visit the house and garden 24 hours a day, seven days a week. See more about this pilgrimage site and about Therese's time at Saint-Ouen-le-Pin. What a beautiful way to create a pilgrimage site! How wonderful it would be if other places Therese visited could be similarly made available.




New photos of the pilgrimage at Alencon to celebrate the feast of the Martin spouses, July 13, 2013
At the site of the Shrine at Alençon, please see new photos of the pilgrimage at Alençon to mark the feast of Louis and Zelie Martin. You will see the pilgrims gathered on the bridge where the Martins first met, then in the countryside, including at the red brick house at Semalle where Thérèse lived with the wet nurse, Rose Taillé, in 1873-1874, and then the Mass at the Basilica of Notre-Dame in Alençon. Cardinal Barbarin, Primate of Gaul, delivered a conference and presided at the Mass. The newspaper Ouest-France remarked on June 4 that "the presence of the Primate of Gaul is a strong indication about the investigation of the dossier [of the presumed miracle] for the canonization of the Martin spouses."



