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Eustáquio van Lieshout

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Eustáquio van Lieshout

Born(1890-11-03)3 November 1890
Aarle-Rixtel,North Brabant, Netherlands
Died30 August 1943(1943-08-30) (aged 52)
Belo Horizonte,Minas Gerais, Brazil
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church
Beatified15 June 2006,Belo Horizonte,Brazil byCardinalJosé Saraiva Martins,C.M.F., forPope Benedict XVI

Eustáquiovan Lieshout, SSCC (alsoEustachius orEustache; 3 November 1890 – 30 August 1943) was aDutch Catholic missionary priest inBrazil from theCongregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary.

He was beatified in 2006 by CardinalJosé Saraiva Martins on behalf ofPope Benedict XVI.

Life

[edit]

He was bornHuub van Lieshout on 3 November 1890 inAarle-Rixtel in the province ofBrabant, the eighth of eleven children. His family was a very Catholic rural family.[1] In 1903, he was enrolled in theLatin school inGemert. After reading the biography ofDamien de Veuster, van Lieshout transferred in 1905 to theminor seminary of thePicpus Fathers, becoming a member of the Congregation in 1913, at which time he received thereligious name ofEustachius.[2]

Upon completion of histheological studies in 1919, he was ordained a priest in August 1919. His first assignment was as assistant novice master for his order. He was then assigned to the towns ofMaassluis andRoelofarendsveen inSouth Holland, where he providedpastoral care for the many Belgian refugees. In recognition of his work, theKing of Belgium knighted him in theOrder of Leopold.[2] He then spent two years in Roelofarendsveen as a parochial vicar. In 1924 he was sent to Spain to learn Spanish, in anticipation of an assignment in Uruguay. However, he ended up being sent to Brazil, where the language was Portuguese.[3]

Career in Brazil

[edit]

Van Lieshout, along with two other Picpus priests and threelay brothers, was sent toBrazil, in response to an appeal for help by a local bishop. He arrived in Rio de Janeiro on 12 May 1925 and had to wait until 15 July when he was appointedpastor for the town of Agua Suja inRomaria.[2][1] The inhabitants in parish of Agua Suja, where he served as a pastor, were occupied in searching gold along the shores of the river Bagagem. These people being deeply Catholics didn't meet the Catholic behavior in their common life. Van Lieshout saw his apostolic aim to change them and, with the course of time, he managed to do this because people in his parish gradually acquired the taste to the virtuous life.[4]

In 1935 he was sent by hisreligious superiors toPoá. After news spread of van Lieshout's transfer, the population of the town started a bloodless uprising to stop him from leaving. Nevertheless, he left in obedience to his superiors for his new parish, where he worked to oppose the widespread practice ofCandomblé. His blessings and cures of the sick through the intercession of St. Joseph made the little village a noted center of pilgrimage.[3]

This, however, brought major problems to the town. Railroads were not able to furnish transportation for the great crowds; the lack of adequate housing meant that sanitary conditions were inadequate to the need. The police were no longer able to maintain order. Merchants sold bad food at high prices and thieves roamed the pilgrimage area preying on innocent victims. Van Lieshout was ordered to leave the parish to prevent these conditions from continuing. Despite this, tremendous crowds followed him everywhere. Brazilian authorities became so alarmed that they ordered him out of towns and villages. No one had anything against him, but they were afraid of the crowds and the commotion that would follow him.

TheCardinalArchbishop of Rio de Janeiro instructed van Lieshout to leave the capital by midnight. Subsequently, a fanatical crowd blocked traffic and invaded churchrectories looking for him. He left Poá in May 1941.[3]

Somehow, he managed to find a hiding place and passed a year in peace and happiness. His final appointment was as pastor ofBelo Horizonte, where he lived the last two years of his life. He was given an assistant who was able to control the crowds. No one was permitted to enter the rectory without a letter of introduction. In this fashion, van Lieshout was able to devote his complete energy to the work of his parish. After a week of sickness caused by an insect bite, he died on 30 August 1943. He spent his last years in the precincts of Celeste Império around Jardim Montanhês, where he served his masses in chapel Cristo Rei. He travelled a lot all around the area and resumed his mission in the following words "health and peace" towards the faith and charity.[5]

At his death, on his body was found a penitentialpointed iron chain, buried so deep in his flesh that it could not be removed without tearing the flesh.Miracles are attributed to him. At first he was buried at the church of Santo Domingo, Belo Horizonte. But then he was reinterred at the church of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary, Belo Horizonte in 1949.[6]

Beatification

[edit]

Eustáquio van Lieshout was venerated on 12 April 2003 by Pope John Paul II (decree of heroic virtues).[5] Following apapal rescript of 19 December 2005, which declared authentic a miracle attributed to his intercession, van Lieshout wasbeatified in Belo Horizonte on 15 June 2006, theFeast of Corpus Christi that year, at a service led by theArchbishop of Belo Horizonte,Walmor de Oliveira de Azevedo. It was presided over by CardinalJosé Saraiva Martins, Prefect of theCongregation for the Causes of Saints, acting on behalf ofPope Benedict XVI.

References

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  1. ^abEustaquio van Lieshout Retrieved on 18 Jan 2018
  2. ^abc"Eustáquio van Lieshout (1890-1943)", Vatican News Service
  3. ^abc"Blessed Eustaquio van Lieshout", Congregation of the Sacred Hearts of Jesus and Mary
  4. ^EustáquioArchived 2018-01-18 at theWayback Machine Retrieved on 18 Jan 2018
  5. ^abEustáquio van Lieshout Retrieved on 18 Jan 2018
  6. ^Eustáquio van Lieshout (1890-1943) Retrieved on 18 Jan 2018

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