St. Vincent Pallotti (1795-1850) founded the Societas
Apostolatus Catholici (S.A.C.) in 1835. He was canonized
in 1963.
St. Vincent Pallotti was born in Rome, April 21, 1795, the third
child of ten. His parents were Peter-Paul Pallotti and his wife
Maddalena. From his earliest years his devout parents took him to
daily Mass and religious devotions in the many neighborhood
churches of Rome. For a time Vincent had trouble with his studies
until his mother sought the advice of a close friend, Father
Fazzini. He advised her to make a novena to the Holy Spirit with
Vincent. The Novena completed, something clicked in the boy's
head. He became the brightest student in his class. Vincent had an
innate desire to do what he could to help the poor. Before he
would give them a coin he would wash it in the nearby fountain.
"When I give to the poor," he would say, "I give the coin to
Christ. I want it to look nice." He felt called to do penance. He
ate little. When his parents informed Father Fazzini of the
penances, he replied, "Let us leave Vincent undisturbed. It
appears to be a higher call than we have been given. It seems to
come from God."Vincent's first registration in a religious
youth group was at his grade school of San Pantaleone, staffed by
the Piarist Fathers. The school had been hallowed by the presence
of its holy founder, St. Joseph Calasanz who formed a youth
apostolate in Counter-reformation Rome. Our Lady had appeared to
Joseph Calasanz when he was a teacher in the classroom where
Vincent now attended. Joseph had been instrumental in restoring
both eye and eyesight to a pupil whose eye had been jabbed out by
a pencil thrust into it by an angry classmate. Vincent's Marian
development was thus well nurtured in this school with the solemn
observances of our Lady's feasts and the devout use of a small
rosary of twelve Hail Mary's called the "Crown of Twelve Stars,"
which St. Calasanz had much promoted among the students of his
schools. Vincent was quite religious and of a serious nature. Yet,
he loved to play ball with his friends in front of his father's
grocery store. Early every morning he walked to Santa Maria in
Vallicella. There he put on his cassock and surplice as an altar
boy. Under the altar of this church there was reposed the remains
of the great youth worker, St. Philip Neri.
In the days before St. John Bosco, the name of St. Philip Neri
would first come to mind whenever any program was being instituted
for youth. Pallotti was often referred to in later life as the
"Second St. Philip Neri."
St. Vincent became a member of a more advanced youth group at
the Church of Santa Maria del Pianto. It met every Sunday
and Holy Day for catechetical instruction, Marian devotions and
recreation. It was under the direction of diocesan priests and
among them was St. Gaspar del Bufalo. Vincent as a major
seminarian and young priest succeeded St. Gaspar in the
directorship of the group. Once when he was on a summer vacation,
Father Pallotti wrote to his youth group reminding them that St.
Philip Neri had said: "The most insane thing in the whole world
was not to want to be a saint. Sanity is to take every means to
achieve sanctity and be pleasing to God. When we think of the
infinite reward God will give us for that - it is sheer insanity
to do the opposite!"
Vincent's high school studies were accomplished at the
world-famed Collegio Romano which had been established by
St. Ignatius Loyola. Among its graduates were the paragons of
youthful holiness, St. Aloysius Gonzaga and St. John Berchmans. In
Vincent's time the Jesuits had been suppressed for several years
and replaced by other clergy. The profound tradition of the
Jesuits who had taught there, and the magnificent altar tomb of
St. Gonzaga, could not be ignored and was very much kept alive.
Pallotti chose St. John Berchmans, a Jesuit seminarian, as his
role model to imitate on the path to holiness, particularly in his
love for Mary in her Immaculate Conception.
Collegio Romano, as all Jesuit schools once did, had a
distinctive youth organization known as the "Sodality of the
Blessed Virgin." Because the school's unit was the first Sodality,
it bore the distinguished title: "Prima Priaria." Vincent
cherished his membership in it and the group heightened his Marian
devotion all the more as he practiced it in union with his peers
who took their devotion to Mary very seriously. After his entrance
into the Sapienza University as a theology student, he
decided upon a very bold and daring move. Despite the very
negative reaction of many toward the clergy, now that he was a
seminarian, he chose to wear his cassock and collar in public. He
was clearly visible as a man of the Church when most diocesan and
non-monastic orders wore a garb that resembled very much what
comes to our minds when we think of Benjamin Franklin. For him it
was a sign and defiance of the secularized world and its
anti-clericalism.
One day Pallotti was leading his youth group at Santa Maria del
Pianto to some function elsewhere in Rome. An irate diocesan
priest, himself dressed in the "Benjamin Franklin" style garb,
sharply upbraided the seminarian as a hypocrite and phony for his
use of the cassock. Vincent let the priest rant and rave on. In a
few minutes he slipped away from the group and was found in a
corner of the sacristy of Santa Maria del Pianto on his knees
reciting the Te Deum in thanksgiving for this mistreatment for
what he believed was right.
As Vincent neared ordination he was introduced into apostolic
work among the farmers who brought their products to Rome from the
surrounding towns and villages to sell at the markets. Vincent was
assigned to the hay sellers. He organized the young farmers and
their children into classes in the evening and helped them to
learn how to read and write. He also prepared many of them for the
sacraments. From this experience of being a volunteer, he would
later encourage others to volunteer to spread the kingdom of God.
Vincent Pallotti was ordained in May, 1818, at the Lateran
Basilica. He said his first Mass on the following day in the
Jesuit Church in Frascati. He was not assigned to a specific
church or rectory. Instead, he lived at home with his family and
continued as a teacher at the Sapienza University. In the
world of college students he was very well liked. He offered
tutoring to those who had found their studies difficult. He began
a very successful apostolate of street preaching on the steps of
local churches and was able to attract large numbers of people
into church afterwards for confession.
In his travels Vincent became aware of a number of young
workers whose work hours prevented them from attending daytime
classes. He soon gathered these workers at a nearby parish hall
and recruited volunteer teachers to give them a basic education.
He and several others gave the religious instruction. In a matter
of a few years the project mushroomed into many other "night
schools" and was relocated to more spacious quarters. By now, 500
young workers were enrolled. At this point Pallotti turned over
his project to the supervision of the Christian Brothers to ensure
that it would be properly managed.
After ten years at the Sapienza University, the diocesan
authorities turned to Father Pallotti for assistance with a very
pressing youth problem in Trastevere. This section of Rome was a
difficult one. While it had produced saints as lovely as St.
Cecilia and St. Frances of Rome, it had also produced many rogues
and toughened people. It has been ever the spot where urchins and
ragamuffins run rampant.
There was now a great need for a kind, patient and sincere
priest who could see beyond brokenness and be capable of drawing
the best out of these disorderly youth. They needed to be given
the most elemental religious instruction. They needed to be
prepared for First Holy Communion. In those days First Communion
was received when a child was about twelve years old.
This new assignment would mean relinquishing his teaching
position at the University and saying goodbye to his favorite
youth group at Santa Maria del Pianto. Father Vincent knew that
the assignment would bring many souls to God and strengthen the
faith of these Trastevere urchins and so he accepted it willingly.
He was given space in the Ponterotto retreat house which had
formerly been the family home of St. Frances of Rome. The rough
Trastevere teens, who could have matched any scugnizzi that
Charles Dickens could describe with his pen, now got the attention
they deserved in order to set them in the right direction. They
responded with extraordinary cooperation. Pallotti did not neglect
the nobility nor the upper class and he provided retreats for them
at another retreat house nearby. His purpose was to inculcate into
these men who would be the leaders of the future, a love of
virtue, a sense of honor and integrity coupled with a sense of
responsibility for those who had less than they.
His knack for getting volunteers involved in his many projects,
expanded beyond his concern for youth when he began his broad
vision of the Union Of The Catholic Apostolate which strove to
accomplish a revival of the Catholic Faith among Catholics and a
rekindling of charity toward achieving the salvation of one's
neighbor. In his desired UNION, men and women of every social
strata, church folks of every rank and religious order would work
in harmonious collaboration for the missionary endeavors of the
Church. Moreover, the poor, the aged and ailing, the sick and
bedridden could offer their prayers and sufferings for the success
of the venture. Pope Gregory XVI heartily approved the new
movement and it soon had hundreds and hundreds of members.
Not long after its foundation and its first experience of the
Epiphany festival as the visible exemplification of its spiritual
ideals, philosophy and objectives, the UNION was confronted not by
ceremony but by calamity. Deadly cholera struck in 1837 and
decimated the population of the Eternal City. Not even Vincent's
father was spared. His director, Father Fazzini and his friend,
St. Gaspare del Buffalo died. In its wake hundreds were left
homeless and hungry.
Orphaned girls roamed the streets. It was their pitiable plight
that wounded the heart of Vincent Pallotti who was himself
strenuously working day and night and round the clock to care for
the destitute and abandoned. What grieved him most was that these
orphan girls were being taken advantage of by the unscrupulous. He
and a trusted friend, Mr. James Salvati, got the use of a small,
former seminarians' residence and fixed it up to receive the
orphan girls. A corps of carefully chosen volunteers looked after
the girls and taught them the domestic skills they would later
need in life. This home became known as the Pious House of St.
Agatha. It is still in operation today behind what is now the St.
Thomas Aquinas University in Rome. In its chapel Vincent placed
the large painting of the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
The Pious House of St. Agatha occupied much of the Saint's
attention and his visits there were a delight for the young girls
who loved him dearly. His lay volunteers later became the nucleus
of the Pallottine Sisters who would devote much time to the
education and Christian formation of young people. He began
another orphanage near the Vatican. Later on it was taken over by
another religious order, and a third, at Velletri, was already in
the planning stage just before Vincent died.
Not the least of St. Vincent's contributions to the apostolate
among the young was the magnificent care he gave to the students
preparing for the priesthood at the Roman Seminary, Propaganda
Fide (where the students from foreign lands came to study), the
national colleges of England, Scotland and those of the various
Eastern Churches whose students studied in Rome. His was a welcome
presence and many looked back at the guidance St. Vincent had
given them from as far away as Persia and Baltimore, Maryland,
whose Archbishop Martin J. Spalding was able to write forty years
later of his spiritual mentor that all Rome regarded him as a
saint and a man of profound faith in the divinity and humanity of
Jesus Christ. "No cross or aggravation could ruffle him and the
memory of his holiness clusters as a halo around my heart!"
John Henry Newman, much admired by the young students of
Oxford, had resigned his Anglican ministry and entered the
Catholic Church. He and several others were sent to Rome to
complete studies for ordination to the Catholic priesthood. Newman
believed Pallotti to be a very holy man and said the same to the
then Archdeacon of the Anglican Diocese of Chichester. Manning had
come on visit to Rome to examine its claims "on location."
Manning went to visit Pallotti and came away with the same
conviction. Manning spoke of hearing a group of young men singing
a Marian hymn as they passed through the street and was told that
it was one of the groups from Pallotti's Night Schools on their
way home. Both Newman and Manning later were made Cardinals of the
Roman Catholic Church.
Youth work was not the only part of Pallotti's apostolate
though there is more than enough of it to merit a consideration of
its own. He continued his duties as a diocesan priest and led his
Union of the Catholic Apostolate in its generous outreach to
provide for the local needs of the Church and for those of the
foreign missions. He was a great retreat master and preacher. Long
lines waited their turn outside his confessional. Yet Pallotti
made time for daily visits to the city hospitals and to the jails
and prisons where his smile and compassion brought a ray of
sunshine to those incarcerated there. He badgered the prison
officials incessantly until he had obtained the separation of the
youthful offenders from the adults in prison. "If you want to
rehabilitate youth and keep them out of jail in the future, then
give them the chance to do without a thorough training in
criminality they are sure to receive from their elders here!" And
he was listened to with respect by the prison authorities, and
with thankfulness from those who would now have a new lease on
life.
Vincent is still remembered for his unstinting generosity to
the prisoners condemned to death. He would spend the entire night
with them. He was their last friendly presence at the scaffold.
Amid the hubbub and hurry burly of such gruesome scenes, it was he
who calmly held the crucifix before their eyes as the headsman's
axe swiftly descended. Popes sought his advice and knelt for their
own confession before him. Soldiers in their military barracks
responded to their beloved priest with extraordinary respect. For
those at death's door he was an angel of mercy as he brought the
sacraments of the Church and encouragement to trust in God's
goodness until the very end.
Only once is it recorded that his contact with youth was a
failure. A group of loud, boisterous wise guys were standing
before a picture of Our Lady and their language was not of the
type one would expect to hear in a convent sacristy! Vincent went
up to them and asked them to stop out of respect for the Blessed
Mother's picture. The haughty braggarts who feared neither God,
man nor beast, stood up to the young priest in the mistaken hope
of besting him. The ringleader jeered: "Yeah, Father! What's she
going to do about it, kill us?" Suddenly a look of horror came
over Vincent's face as he saw into the near future. "Young man you
are a fool to continue like this. You will be dead in less than a
few minutes. Repent while there is time. At that the teenager let
out a stream of profanity that would have twisted the tail of a
stone lion. Suddenly he collapsed unconscious to the ground. His
astonished following of juvenile delinquents rushed to revive him.
They were shocked out of their wits. "He's dead, Father! My God,
he's dead!" By use of a clever disguise Vincent was able to get
near a young man who was a revolutionist and had promised to kill
any priest who came near him. When the man fell asleep with rifle
in hand and pistol beneath the pillow, Pallotti removed them and
put the cross in his hand. Later the man awoke, astonished and
made his confession to Father Vincent and died about a week later
reconciled to the Lord.
St. Vincent Pallotti died in 1850 surrounded by a handful of
followers which now numbers thousands of priests, brothers and
sisters and an even more vast number of lay people committed to
the apostolate. He was canonized in 1963 by Pope John XXIII as a
model for all active priests and for encouraging the lay people to
become more active in the mission of the Church. Also, he was
hailed by Popes Pius XI, Pius XII and John XXIII as the precursor
of Catholic Action and of the Second Vatican Council. |