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Traditional Catholic Faith => Art and Literature for Catholics => Topic started by: Matthew on March 05, 2024, 09:30:35 PM

Title: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Matthew on March 05, 2024, 09:30:35 PM
Did I miss it, or has there really not been a thread about this movie, coming out March 8th by Angel Studios?

Are there any good pre-Vatican II biographies about this saint? I don't think she made the cut for TAN Books back in the day, and unfortunately the old TAN Books is no more.

There's going to be a lot of talk about St. Francis Cabrini, since the movie is actually in theaters soon. A lot of people are going to watch it, and be introduced to this saint. I'd like to know something about her, her biography, so I can critique the movie if I go see it.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Miseremini on March 05, 2024, 10:48:58 PM
Actually Wikipedia didn't do a bad job.

Frances Xavier Cabrini


[th]Saint (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonization)

Frances Xavier Cabrini

MSC (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionary_Sisters_of_the_Sacred_Heart_of_Jesus)
[/th]

(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/74/Francesca_Cabrini.JPG/220px-Francesca_Cabrini.JPG) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Francesca_Cabrini.JPG)


[th]Virgin (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Virgin_(title))[/th]


[th]Born[/th]


Maria Francesca Cabrini
July 15, 1850
Sant'Angelo Lodigiano (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant'Angelo_Lodigiano), Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Lombardy–Venetia), Austrian Empire (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_Empire)
[th]Died[/th]


December 22, 1917 (aged 67)
Chicago, Illinois, United States
[th]Resting place[/th]


St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini_Shrine), Upper Manhattan (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Upper_Manhattan), New York, United States
[th]Venerated in[/th]


Catholic Church (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church)
[th]Beatified (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatification)[/th]


November 13, 1938, by Pope Pius XI (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Pius_XI)
[th]Canonized (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonization)[/th]


July 7, 1946 by Pope Pius XII (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Pius_XII)
[th]Major shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shrine)[/th]


  • National Shrine of Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Shrine_of_Saint_Frances_Xavier_Cabrini), Chicago
  • Mother Cabrini Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_Cabrini_Shrine), Golden, Colorado (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden,_Colorado)
  • St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini_Shrine), New York City
[th]Feast (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calendar_of_saints)[/th]


  • November 13 (US, 1961 to date),
  • December 22 (elsewhere)
[th]Patronage (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patron_saint)[/th]


Immigrants
Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini MSC (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionary_Sisters_of_the_Sacred_Heart_of_Jesus) (Italian (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_language): Francesca Saverio Cabrini; July 15, 1850 – December 22, 1917), also called Mother Cabrini, was an Italian-American (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italian_Americans) Catholic religious sister (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_sister) and saint (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint). She founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionary_Sisters_of_the_Sacred_Heart_of_Jesus), a religious institute (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_institute) that was a major support to her fellow Italian immigrants to the United States.[1] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-1) She was the first U.S. citizen to be canonized (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonized) a saint by the Catholic Church (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catholic_Church), on July 7, 1946.[a] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-2)[2] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Humanities-3)
Early life[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=1)]
She was born Maria Francesca Cabrini on July 15, 1850, in Sant'Angelo Lodigiano (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sant'Angelo_Lodigiano), in the Lombard (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lombardy) Province of Lodi (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Province_of_Lodi), then part of the Austrian Empire (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Austrian_Empire). She was the youngest of the thirteen children of farmers Agostino Cabrini and Stella Oldini.[3] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-SanJose-4) Only four of the thirteen survived beyond adolescence.
Born two months early, she was small and weak as a child and remained in delicate health throughout her life.[2] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Humanities-3) During her childhood, she visited an uncle, Don Luigi Oldini of Livagra, a priest who lived beside a swift canal. While there, she made little boats of paper, dropped violets in them, called the flowers "missionaries", and launched them to sail off to India and China. At thirteen, Francesca attended a school run by the Daughters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Daughters_of_the_Sacred_Heart_of_Jesus). Five years later she graduated cuм laude (https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/cuм_laude), with a teaching certificate.[4] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Crawley-5)
After her parents died in 1870, she applied for admission to the Daughters of the Sacred Heart at Arluno. These sisters were her former teachers, but reluctantly, they told her she was too frail for their life.[5] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-chss-6) She became the headmistress of the House of Providence orphanage in Codogno (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codogno), where she taught and drew a small community of women to live a religious way of life. Cabrini took religious vows (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_vows) in 1877 and added Xavier (Saverio) to her name to honor the Jesuit (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jesuit) saint, Francis Xavier (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_Xavier), the patron saint (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patron_saint) of missionary service. She had planned, like Francis Xavier, to be a missionary in the Far East.[6] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-stella-7)
Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=2)]
In November 1880, Cabrini and seven other women who had taken religious vows with her founded the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionary_Sisters_of_the_Sacred_Heart_of_Jesus) (MSC).[7] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Foley-8) She wrote the Rule and Constitutions of the religious institute (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_institute), and she continued as its superior general (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Superior_general) until her death. The sisters took in orphans and foundlings (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foundlings), opened a day school to help pay expenses, started classes in needlework (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Needlework) and sold their fine embroidery (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embroidery) to earn a little more money.[4] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Crawley-5) The institute established seven homes and a free school and nursery in its first five years. Its good works brought Cabrini to the attention of Giovanni Scalabrini (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Giovanni_Scalabrini), Bishop of Piacenza (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bishop_of_Piacenza), and of Pope Leo XIII (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Leo_XIII).
Mission to United States[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=3)]
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/a3/Saint_Stephen%2C_Martyr_Roman_Catholic_Church_%28Chesapeake%2C_Virginia%29_-_stained_glass%2C_St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini.jpg/220px-Saint_Stephen%2C_Martyr_Roman_Catholic_Church_%28Chesapeake%2C_Virginia%29_-_stained_glass%2C_St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini.jpg) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Saint_Stephen,_Martyr_Roman_Catholic_Church_(Chesapeake,_Virginia)_-_stained_glass,_St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini.jpg)Stained glass window in Chesapeake, Virginia, depicting Cabrini
In September 1887, Cabrini went to seek the pope's approval to establish missions in China. Instead, he urged that she go to the United States to help the Italian immigrants who were flooding to that nation, mostly in great poverty. "Not to the East, but to the West" was his advice.[7] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Foley-8)
Cabrini left for the United States, arriving in New York City on March 31, 1889, along with six other sisters.[8] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-9) In New York she encountered disappointment and difficulties.[7] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Foley-8) [2] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Humanities-3) Archbishop Michael Corrigan (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archbishop_Michael_Corrigan), who was not immediately supportive, found them housing at the convent of the Sisters of Charity (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sisters_of_Charity_of_New_York). She obtained the archbishop's permission to found the Sacred Heart Orphan Asylum in rural West Park, New York (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Park,_New_York), later renamed Saint Cabrini Home (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Cabrini_Home).
Cabrini organized catechism (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Catechism) and education classes for the Italian immigrants and provided for many orphans' needs. She established schools and orphanages despite tremendous odds. She was as resourceful as she was prayerful, finding people who would donate what she needed in money, time, labor, and support.[9] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-college-10) In New York City, she founded Columbus Hospital, which merged with Italian Hospital to become Cabrini Medical Center (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cabrini_Medical_Center) from 1973[10] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-11) until its closure in 2008.[11] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-12)
In Chicago, Illinois, the sisters opened Columbus Hospital[2] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Humanities-3) in Lincoln Park (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Park,_Chicago) and Columbus Extension Hospital (later renamed Saint Cabrini Hospital) in the heart of the city's Italian neighborhood on the Near West Side (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Near_West_Side,_Chicago). Both hospitals eventually closed in 2001–2002.[12] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-13) Their foundress's name lives on in Chicago's Cabrini Street.
She founded 67 missionary institutions to serve the sick and poor, long before government agencies provided extensive social services – in New York; Chicago and Des Plaines, Illinois; Seattle; New Orleans; Denver and Golden, Colorado; Los Angeles; Philadelphia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Philadelphia); and in countries throughout Latin America and Europe.[6] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-stella-7) In 1926, nine years after her death, the Missionary Sisters achieved Cabrini's original goal of becoming missionaries to China.[13] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-14)
Cabrini was naturalized (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_nationality_law) as a United States citizen in 1909.[6] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-stella-7)
Death[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=4)]
Cabrini died of complications from malaria (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Malaria) at age 67 in Columbus Hospital in Chicago on December 22, 1917,[3] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-SanJose-4) while preparing Christmas candy for local children.
Her body was initially interred at what became Saint Cabrini Home (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saint_Cabrini_Home), the orphanage she founded in West Park (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Park,_New_York), Ulster County (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ulster_County,_New_York), New York.
Veneration[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=5)]
In 1933, her body was exhumed and divided as part of the process toward sainthood. At that time, her head was removed and is preserved in the chapel of the congregation's international motherhouse (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motherhouse) in Rome. Her heart is preserved in Codogno, where she founded her missionary order. An arm bone is at her national shrine in Chicago (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Shrine_of_Saint_Frances_Xavier_Cabrini). Most of the rest of her body is at her major shrine in New York (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini_Shrine).[14] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-NYT2015-15)
Cabrini was beatified (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatified) on November 13, 1938, by Pope Pius XI (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Pius_XI), and canonized (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonized) on July 7, 1946, by Pope Pius XII (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Pius_XII).[9] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-college-10)[2] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-Humanities-3) Her beatification miracle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miracle) involved purportedly restoring the sight of a day-old baby who had been blinded by a 50% silver nitrate (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Silver_nitrate) solution instead of the normal 1% solution in the child's eyes. The child, named Peter Smith (1921–2002), would later be present at her beatification and become a priest.[15] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-16) Her canonization miracle involved the purported healing of a terminally ill member of her congregation. When Cabrini was canonized, an estimated 120,000 people filled Chicago's Soldier Field (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soldier_Field) for a Mass of thanksgiving.[16] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-17)
In the Roman Martyrology (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roman_Martyrology), her feast day (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feast_day) is December 22, the anniversary of her death, the day ordinarily chosen as a saint's feast day.[17] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-18) Following the reforms in Pope John XXIII (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_John_XXIII)'s Code of Rubrics (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_of_Rubrics), the United States since 1961 has celebrated Cabrini's feast on November 13, the anniversary of her beatification, to avoid conflicting with the greater ferias (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feria) of Advent (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Advent).
In 1950, Pope Pius XII named Frances Xavier Cabrini as the patron saint of immigrants, recognizing her efforts on their behalf across the Americas in schools, orphanages, hospitals, and prisons.[18] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-19)[19] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-20)
Cabrini is also informally recognized as an effective intercessor for finding a parking space. As one priest explained: "She lived in New York City. She understands traffic."[20] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-21)
Shrines[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=6)]
Chicago, Illinois (National Shrine)[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=7)]
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/a/ab/St._Frances_Cabrini_Shrine%2C_Lincoln_Park%2C_Chicago_%2810369122804%29.jpg/170px-St._Frances_Cabrini_Shrine%2C_Lincoln_Park%2C_Chicago_%2810369122804%29.jpg) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:St._Frances_Cabrini_Shrine,_Lincoln_Park,_Chicago_(10369122804).jpg)National Shrine in Chicago
Main article: National Shrine of Saint Frances Xavier Cabrini (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Shrine_of_Saint_Frances_Xavier_Cabrini)
After Cabrini's death, her convent room at Columbus Hospital, in Chicago's Lincoln Park (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lincoln_Park,_Chicago) neighborhood, became a popular destination for the faithful seeking personal healing and spiritual comfort. Due to the overwhelming number of pilgrims after her canonization in 1946, the Archbishop of Chicago (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archbishop_of_Chicago), Cardinal (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cardinal_(Catholic_Church)) Samuel Stritch (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Samuel_Stritch), commissioned a large National Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Shrine_of_Saint_Frances_Xavier_Cabrini) in her honor within the hospital complex. He dedicated the shrine in 1955.[21] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-national-22)
The hospital and shrine closed in 2002 to be replaced by a high-rise development on North Lakeview Avenue. Still, the shrine and Cabrini's room were preserved and refurbished during the long demolition and construction period. They were solemnly blessed and re-dedicated by Cardinal Francis George (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Francis_George) on September 30, 2012, and reopened to the public the next day. The shrine is an architectural gem of gold mosaics, Carrara marble, frescoes, and Florentine stained glass, functioning as a stand-alone center for prayer, worship, spiritual care, and pilgrimage.[21] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-national-22)
Golden, Colorado[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=8)]
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/70/Queen_of_Heaven_Orphanage_Summer_Camp.JPG/220px-Queen_of_Heaven_Orphanage_Summer_Camp.JPG) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Queen_of_Heaven_Orphanage_Summer_Camp.JPG)Stone House in Golden, Colorado
Main article: Mother Cabrini Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_Cabrini_Shrine)
In 1904, Cabrini established Denver (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Denver)'s Queen of Heaven Orphanage for girls, including many orphans of local Italian miners. In 1910, she purchased a rural property from the town of Golden (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Golden,_Colorado), on the east slope of Lookout Mountain (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lookout_Mountain_(Colorado)), as a summer camp for the girls. A small farming operation was established and maintained by three of the Sisters of the Sacred Heart. The camp dormitory, built of native rock and named the Stone House, was completed in 1914 and later listed on the National Register of Historic Places (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_Register_of_Historic_Places).[22] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-library-23)
Where Cabrini had once located an underground spring on the mountainside, a replica (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lourdes_grotto) of the Lourdes Grotto (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lourdes_Grotto) was built in 1929, later replaced by a simpler sandstone structure. After Cabrini's canonization, the campsite officially became a shrine. Extensive additions in 1954 included a long Stairway of Prayer for pilgrims following her footpath up the mountain, marked with the Stations of the Cross (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stations_of_the_Cross), leading to a 22-foot (7 m) Statue of Jesus at the highest point of the site.[23] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-golden-24)
Queen of Heaven Orphanage closed in 1967, replaced by a system of foster care. The summer campsite became a year-round facility for retreats and small prayer gatherings. A new convent building, completed in 1970, includes housing for the resident Sisters, overnight accommodations for visitors, a chapel dedicated to the Sacred Heart (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacred_Heart), and an exhibit of artifacts and clothing once used by Cabrini.[22] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-library-23) The statues and stained-glass windows of the chapel came from Villa Cabrini Academy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Villa_Cabrini_Academy) in Burbank, California, a former school founded by the Missionary Sisters.[23] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-golden-24)
Upper Manhattan, New York[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=9)]
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/2/2c/Cabrini_Shrine_wall_crop_jeh.jpg/220px-Cabrini_Shrine_wall_crop_jeh.jpg) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cabrini_Shrine_wall_crop_jeh.jpg)Cabrini Shrine in Manhattan
Main article: St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini_Shrine)
The St. Frances Xavier Cabrini Shrine (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Frances_Xavier_Cabrini_Shrine) in the Hudson Heights (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_Heights,_Manhattan) neighborhood of Upper Manhattan overlooks the Hudson River (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hudson_River), the George Washington Bridge (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Washington_Bridge), and the New Jersey Palisades (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Jersey_Palisades).
As Cabrini's cause for sainthood accelerated in 1933, the Missionary Sisters moved her remains from the Sacred Heart Orphanage (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Cabrini_Home) she had founded in rural West Park, New York (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Park,_New_York), to the chapel of Sacred Heart Villa, a Catholic school she had founded in Manhattan, freshly renamed Mother Cabrini High School (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mother_Cabrini_High_School). When it became a popular pilgrimage site with her beatification (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beatification) in 1938, the Sisters enshrined the major portion of her body in a glass-enclosed coffin under the altar of the school chapel. Her 1946 canonization (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Canonization) brought a further sustained level of public interest, so in 1957–1960 a larger shrine was built adjoining the school.
When the new shrine was near completion in 1959, her remains were transferred to a large bronze-and-glass reliquary (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reliquary) casket in the shrine's altar. She still rests in perpetual display for veneration, covered with her religious habit and a sculpted face mask and hands for more-lifelike viewing.[24] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-25)
In addition to accommodating the public, the new shrine also served Cabrini High School students as a place for their liturgies and prayer services until the school closed in 2014.[25] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-26) "Today, the shrine continues as a center of welcome for new immigrants and pilgrims of many nationalities who come to pray and reflect."[26] (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frances_Xavier_Cabrini#cite_note-27)
Other shrines[edit (https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Frances_Xavier_Cabrini&action=edit&section=10)]
(https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/3/3d/Cabrini_statue_in_St_George%27s_Cathedral.jpg/220px-Cabrini_statue_in_St_George%27s_Cathedral.jpg) (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Cabrini_statue_in_St_George's_Cathedral.jpg)Shrine in St George's Cathedral, Southwark










Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: SoldierofCtK on March 05, 2024, 10:53:53 PM
The 2 things I noticed from the trailer is the scandalous use of a Shania Twain song as the soundtrack (not actually in the movie, I hope) and the movie being released on "International Women's Day." I don't think this was accidental.

Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: MaterDominici on March 06, 2024, 02:31:51 AM
The 2 things I noticed from the trailer is the scandalous use of a Shania Twain song as the soundtrack (not actually in the movie, I hope) and the movie being released on "International Women's Day." I don't think this was accidental.
Certainly not an accident. They're trying to get people other than Catholics to go see it. I don't think it was necessary, though, as Angel Studios has already developed quite a loyal fan base.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Soubirous on March 06, 2024, 10:24:52 AM
Certainly not an accident. They're trying to get people other than Catholics to go see it. I don't think it was necessary, though, as Angel Studios has already developed quite a loyal fan base.

This is part of the reason that I don't think I will see the movie. I don't want its scenes to replace in my mind what I already know of her story.

I just saw an hour-long video (https://www.youtube.com/live/HyhWa_WuSPo?si=buJ1smTWpBwSzSNX) that was basically an infomercial by the director and the distributor. They were trying to drum up presales for opening day. While there was plenty about the aesthetics of the film and its production, all the talk about St. Frances Xavier Cabrini herself were of the "so strong, so brave" stealth feminism-lite sort. I'm almost expecting them to market a Mother Cabrini action figure (sans crucifix, of course). Nothing about God, nothing about how it was His graces that enabled this lone sickly woman to accomplish all that she did. I wonder whether this reissue by Ignatius Press will be much different: https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2024/02/25/cabrini-biography-rediscovered-to-be-re-published-by-ignatius-press/ (https://www.catholicworldreport.com/2024/02/25/cabrini-biography-rediscovered-to-be-re-published-by-ignatius-press/)
And Angel Studios is getting in on the print matter side too: https://www.angel.com/blog/cabrini/posts/walk-in-her-shoes-a-guide-to-the-new-cabrini-books (https://www.angel.com/blog/cabrini/posts/walk-in-her-shoes-a-guide-to-the-new-cabrini-books)

As to other biographies, Mother Cabrini gave us volumes of diaries covering long stretches of time. The question is whether subsequent editors allow this Saint's faith to remain central to those records. This is the book I read a few years ago that had a big role in helping me to revert. It's from the same order that St. FXC founded, though the publication date is post-V2. It relies heavily on her diaries and, while I don't know what editorial decisions were made, it did include almost daily accounts of seeking out the Eucharist in the many far-flung places where the sisters traveled. De Maria, Mother Saverio. Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini. Translated by Rose Basile Green. Chicago: Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus, 1984 (https://www.mothercabrini.org/news-and-publications/resource-libary/).

Then there is the current context of who "owns" Mother Cabrini. In NYC recently there were battles over a statue (https://www.catholicnewsagency.com/news/46187/mother-cabrini-gets-a-new-statue-in-new-york-city), first rejected by the evil wife of ex-Mayor DiBlasio, then taken up by Andrew Cuomo for his own cultural/political motivations, then finally given a place near Ellis Island. Just another local civic heroine split off from the religious roots of her story.

I really hope that the movie doesn't turn into a ploy for rhetoric over present-day "immigration", a redefinition of Christian charity, a reframing of the place of women in the Catholic Church, and so on.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: moneil on March 06, 2024, 08:58:30 PM
The last time I was hospitalized was in 1984 for a hernia repair at Cabrini Hospital in Seattle (since closed).  I was told that Mother Cabrini herself had purchased the land for the hospital.  From my room I could hear the Angelus rung from the bell towers of St. James Cathedral where she attended Mass during her time in Seattle.  I've read that her relics are in the altar at St. James.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: MaterDominici on March 07, 2024, 01:09:00 AM
And Angel Studios is getting in on the print matter side too: https://www.angel.com/blog/cabrini/posts/walk-in-her-shoes-a-guide-to-the-new-cabrini-books (https://www.angel.com/blog/cabrini/posts/walk-in-her-shoes-a-guide-to-the-new-cabrini-books)
Angel branded, but from Sophia Institute Press...

We are grateful for our partners at Sophia Institute Press, as well as our talented authors, for their tireless dedication in crafting literature that is accurate, respectful, and stirring to the soul. 
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Soubirous on March 07, 2024, 07:15:19 PM
An actual review below from Catholic Culture (https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/cabrini-secularizes-saint/), and not a positive one.


Quote
Cabrini secularizes a saint

By Thomas V. Mirus ( bio (https://www.catholicculture.org/about/authors/bio_thomas_v_mirus.cfm) - articles (https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/authors.cfm?authorid=54) - email (https://www.catholicculture.org/contact/index.cfm?aid=54&purpose=highlights&Subject=11878) ) | Mar 04, 2024 | In Reviews (https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/category/reviews/)
     
After I saw Cabrini, the new biopic of the great missionary saint who served the immigrant poor in New York, I perused some other Catholic reviews of the film, and something struck me as odd. The reviewers seemed to admit, tacitly or explicitly, what I observed in my own viewing: the film contains little about God, prayer, or the Catholic faith in general. Yet, strangely, many of these reviewers don’t conclude that this is a fatal flaw in a movie about a Catholic saint.

To be honest, despite the film’s executive producer and director being Catholic, I wasn’t really expecting the Mormon company Angel Studios to distribute an unreservedly Catholic film—one that would feature St. Frances’s deep devotion to the Sacred Heart, for instance. But while it admirably portrays Cabrini spending herself in service to the poor and winning the hearts of young ruffians (in impressive sets conveying old New York), the film is barely even generically Christian in its focus, stressing instead Cabrini’s personal drive (with a heavy feminist accent), social work, and the pervasiveness of anti-Italian discrimination in 19th-century New York (but nothing at all about the accompanying anti-Catholic bigotry).

The story’s trappings of priests, bishops, and habited nuns are, for the most part, mere trappings. Cabrini almost never mentions God even when trying to convince the clergy to support her work, and is virtually never seen praying, even when at a deathbed. At one point she tells her sisters that they can do “all things in Him Who strengthens us”, but far more emphasis is placed on her own strength as a woman.

Churches are a setting for conversation or confrontation rather than prayer. There is one scene that begins with the implication that Cabrini has been sitting in a chapel all night, and we can assume she has been praying, but even this is the starting point for a conversation that is totally focused on her own drive and determination, in which another character refers to Cabrini’s habit as a “suit of armor” which seems to refer more to her own womanly strength than to her consecration to God.

The film’s avoidance of religious content is particularly evident in two scenes. In the first, a former prostitute who has been helping the nuns comes to Cabrini after killing her pimp in self-defense. She weeps: “There’s not enough water in the world to make me clean.” Cabrini responds:
Quote
When I look at you, do you know what I see? I see a strong woman. I see courage. I see it glowing all around you. It takes a lot of courage to become who we’re meant to be. We have something in common....We are both survivors. We don’t get to choose how we come into the world, but God gave us the freedom to choose how we live in it.
There is a reference to God, but it is too little, too late after this clear opportunity for baptismal imagery has been whiffed in favor of the anachronistic language of survivorhood.

This is typical of the film’s humanistic slant on Cabrini’s social work: while we are told that Italian immigrants should be helped because they are human beings and indeed children of God, and even that at the hour of our death we will be asked what we did for the poor, there is very little about bringing them the Gospel.

Another particularly egregious moment occurs after the mayor has sent police to break up an Italian Heritage Festival put on by the nuns, and Cabrini has been arrested. (I leave it to historians to judge the accuracy of the film’s incidents; here I examine its spirit.) After her release she marches into City Hall and demands to see the mayor. One of his representatives barks, “Who the hell do you think you are?” In response, Cabrini screams, “I am a woman, and I am Italian, and I am done with little men like you!” She goes on to say something about how everyone is a human being and a child of God, but by then the force of her tirade is already dissipating, having been spent on the all-important zinger.

From the beginning, Cabrini’s relationship with the institutional Church is portrayed as adversarial; though it’s not that the film sets her up against the Church specifically so much as against male authority figures in general. At any rate, she plays the ecclesiastical bureaucracy against itself so she can get power to fulfill her charitable ambitions and prove herself as a woman. (At least the movie makes a point of her obedience to direct orders.)

To be sure, Cabrini is sometimes given reason to be combative; but often when she first meets someone she needs something from, there is a confrontational tension in her demeanor even before she has been offended. Particularly off-putting is her whole attitude during her first meeting with the archbishop of New York; she immediately attempts to play the Pope’s authority against his, and smirks when he correctly asserts that the Pope has given him the prerogative to make decisions for his own diocese.

(This tendency to immediately and unnecessarily jump to hostility rather than diplomacy and collaboration is not only a way of manufacturing drama, but is often part of the pop culture “strong woman” archetype—see also Galadriel’s bull-in-a-china-shop entrance into the Numenorean court in Amazon’s The Rings of Power. Or on second thought, don’t see it.)

Cabrini’s greatest struggles in the film are not of a spiritual nature, but bureaucratic, either in the Church or the state. Her final victory is gained not by her prayer or holiness, but by political machinations, promising votes, and threats. In the film’s final dialogue, as the music swells to the emotional climax of this victory, she looks almost at the camera and says, “Men could never do what we do.”

Now, some of the film’s Catholic reviewers have not pretended Cabrini is more religious than it really is. And I don’t begrudge any individual critic his honest opinion: for some, the film’s portrayal of a Catholic historical figure doing good deeds may be enough to recommend it. Perhaps, too, some Catholics have developed a taste for this kind of feminist messaging, or perhaps we have become desensitized to it by comparison with the downright hair-raising stuff that surrounds us today. Regardless of any individual critic’s reasons, surveying the critical response, I can’t help but think that we are asking too little of our religious films.

I’m not even talking about low artistic expectations. The lack of quality Catholic filmmaking has long been a truism, and few movie reviewers for mainstream Catholic publications are dedicated film lovers. What surprises me here is the low level of scrutiny directed at the religious and spiritual elements of a film such as Cabrini. My impression is that in our excitement that our little subculture is finally getting “real” movies (that is, Hollywood-level production quality), we are too willing to overlook the lack of a truly religious spirit.

When Catholics secularize a saint
It’s not only the critics, but the filmmakers whose sights seem to be set too low. I mentioned Angel Studios’ Mormon leadership above, but in truth, Cabrini’s Catholic deficits can’t be blamed on non-Catholic executives, since the film was not conceived with Angel in mind as a distributor. Instead, we must face the reality that this film was made by a Catholic team.

Cabrini is the brainchild of executive producer J. Eustace Wolfington, a Catholic businessman who was approached by a sister of Cabrini’s order with the request that he make a film about St. Frances. According to an article (https://franoi.com/profiles/cabrini-film-a-miracle-in-the-making/) about the film’s genesis, “Wolfington finally relented in 2018, but under two conditions: first, that he be allowed to make a movie about an extraordinary woman who just happened to be a nun, and second, that the film be a charity.”

If this were a faith-imbued movie, we might be able to interpret “just happened to be a nun” to mean that Wolfington wished to draw viewers’ attention to the universal call to holiness which St. Frances followed within her particular state in life. But given the humanist and secularizing result, it’s pretty clear that this project was from the outset conceived so that its protagonist’s religious identity would be pretty much incidental. But this is to fail before one has begun. It is quite obviously not how St. Frances Xavier Cabrini would have understood herself.

Lead producer Jonathan Sanger said that as he initially thought this would be movie about a saint, he was reluctant to make it because it would not be relatable. But Wolfington immediately disabused him: “No, this is a movie that is a woman empowerment story, in spite of the fact that she became a saint later.” Cabrini is a project conceived by a Catholic determined to avoid what was most important in the life of his subject.

Wolfington found a director for his project in Alejandro Monteverde, the Catholic director of Bella and Sound of Freedom, and a screenwriter in Rod Barr, whose religion is unknown to me. Monteverde too defends the choice to downplay specifically Catholic spiritual elements as a way to make the film accessible to a non-Catholic audience.

We can be sympathetic to the predicament of Catholic filmmakers. On both an evangelical and an artistic level, many artists do not want to preach to the choir. On a commercial level, making a movie is very expensive; one must convince producers and distributors that there is an audience for the project.

But there is only so far you can “adapt” to reach an audience before you end up falsifying your subject. To what end do you try to reach a broader audience, if not to say something that only you, a Catholic director, and only this, the story of a Catholic saint, could communicate? To make a movie about a saint that does not convey sanctity, that replaces spiritual motives with worldly ones, hardly seems worthwhile. It’s like making a movie about Jesus from Thomas Jefferson’s edit of the New Testament.

A comparison of Cabrini with Terrence Malick’s A Hidden Life gives the lie to the supposed necessity of downplaying the Faith so that one’s art will be relatable or authentic. Malick is an Episcopalian, and his portrayal of the Catholic martyr Blessed Franz Jaggerstater, like Monteverde’s Cabrini, left out many specifically Catholic elements, such as Bl. Franz’s practice of the First Fridays and his sacramental life more generally. Like Cabrini, A Hidden Life portrayed the saint interacting with unhelpful clergy (which was not false but incomplete), so that the emphasis was more on Bl. Franz’s personal spirituality and conscience. Yet while Malick can be accused (https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/episode-58-hidden-life-film-review-w-james-maJєωski/) of reducing his hero to a generic Christian, Bl. Franz’s sanctity is still unmistakable and the film is steeped in prayer. In the end, A Hidden Life, made by a Protestant for a secular arthouse audience, is a far more Christian film than Cabrini, made by a Catholic team and distributed by a studio that caters to the conservative Christian subculture.

At risk of hammering the point in, we might also ask: Would Cabrini have been much different had it been made by a non-Christian who admired Cabrini’s social work but didn’t care for her faith? Perhaps it would have been more offensive, but I think in general, such a production would have hit the same points as this one. There would be a few mentions of God, but the emphasis would have been on social do-gooding, racism against immigrants, and Cabrini as a pioneering woman. To emphasize this last point, the screenplay would have multiple men telling Cabrini to “stay where you belong”, just as we hear in Cabrini.

What we have in Cabrini, then, is not so much the failure to portray a saint well, as the choice barely to attempt to portray a saint at all. That this choice was made by a Catholic team, for reasons that will sound very familiar to any Catholic artist (because he has either heard or considered them himself), offers much food for reflection outside the scope of this article.

One’s judgment of this particular film aside, those concerned with this general question of making religious art that reaches a public will find wisdom in Henri de Lubac’s book (https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/beyond-our-ken-henri-de-lubacs-paradoxes-faith/) Paradoxes of Faith, specifically the chapters on “Witness” and “Adaptation”. In the latter he writes:
Quote
The first question is not “how to present” but “how to see” and “how to think.” …Setting out deliberately to popularize, to adapt, to reach the greatest number is not illegitimate or always useless. But it infallibly condemns you to mediocre, banal, insignificant, popular work. This law no more admits exception than the law of contradiction itself.
For the Catholic artist, our Lord’s warning about the salt losing its savor resonates at a double pitch.

(https://www.catholicculture.org/images/bg/54_th.png)Thomas V. Mirus is Director of Podcasts for CatholicCulture.org, hosts The Catholic Culture Podcast, and co-hosts Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast. See full bio. (https://www.catholicculture.org/about/authors/bio_thomas_v_mirus.cfm)
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Matthew on March 07, 2024, 11:46:37 PM
Thanks for that review -- it was very helpful.

I will repost it outside of a quote, however, as the quote requires a lot of scrolling.


Cabrini secularizes a saint

By Thomas V. Mirus | Mar 04, 2024 | In Reviews
   
After I saw Cabrini, the new biopic of the great missionary saint who served the immigrant poor in New York, I perused some other Catholic reviews of the film, and something struck me as odd. The reviewers seemed to admit, tacitly or explicitly, what I observed in my own viewing: the film contains little about God, prayer, or the Catholic faith in general. Yet, strangely, many of these reviewers don’t conclude that this is a fatal flaw in a movie about a Catholic saint.

To be honest, despite the film’s executive producer and director being Catholic, I wasn’t really expecting the Mormon company Angel Studios to distribute an unreservedly Catholic film—one that would feature St. Frances’s deep devotion to the Sacred Heart, for instance. But while it admirably portrays Cabrini spending herself in service to the poor and winning the hearts of young ruffians (in impressive sets conveying old New York), the film is barely even generically Christian in its focus, stressing instead Cabrini’s personal drive (with a heavy feminist accent), social work, and the pervasiveness of anti-Italian discrimination in 19th-century New York (but nothing at all about the accompanying anti-Catholic bigotry).

The story’s trappings of priests, bishops, and habited nuns are, for the most part, mere trappings. Cabrini almost never mentions God even when trying to convince the clergy to support her work, and is virtually never seen praying, even when at a deathbed. At one point she tells her sisters that they can do “all things in Him Who strengthens us”, but far more emphasis is placed on her own strength as a woman.

Churches are a setting for conversation or confrontation rather than prayer. There is one scene that begins with the implication that Cabrini has been sitting in a chapel all night, and we can assume she has been praying, but even this is the starting point for a conversation that is totally focused on her own drive and determination, in which another character refers to Cabrini’s habit as a “suit of armor” which seems to refer more to her own womanly strength than to her consecration to God.

The film’s avoidance of religious content is particularly evident in two scenes. In the first, a former prostitute who has been helping the nuns comes to Cabrini after killing her pimp in self-defense. She weeps: “There’s not enough water in the world to make me clean.” Cabrini responds:
Quote
When I look at you, do you know what I see? I see a strong woman. I see courage. I see it glowing all around you. It takes a lot of courage to become who we’re meant to be. We have something in common....We are both survivors. We don’t get to choose how we come into the world, but God gave us the freedom to choose how we live in it.
There is a reference to God, but it is too little, too late after this clear opportunity for baptismal imagery has been whiffed in favor of the anachronistic language of survivorhood.

This is typical of the film’s humanistic slant on Cabrini’s social work: while we are told that Italian immigrants should be helped because they are human beings and indeed children of God, and even that at the hour of our death we will be asked what we did for the poor, there is very little about bringing them the Gospel.

Another particularly egregious moment occurs after the mayor has sent police to break up an Italian Heritage Festival put on by the nuns, and Cabrini has been arrested. (I leave it to historians to judge the accuracy of the film’s incidents; here I examine its spirit.) After her release she marches into City Hall and demands to see the mayor. One of his representatives barks, “Who the hell do you think you are?” In response, Cabrini screams, “I am a woman, and I am Italian, and I am done with little men like you!” She goes on to say something about how everyone is a human being and a child of God, but by then the force of her tirade is already dissipating, having been spent on the all-important zinger.

From the beginning, Cabrini’s relationship with the institutional Church is portrayed as adversarial; though it’s not that the film sets her up against the Church specifically so much as against male authority figures in general. At any rate, she plays the ecclesiastical bureaucracy against itself so she can get power to fulfill her charitable ambitions and prove herself as a woman. (At least the movie makes a point of her obedience to direct orders.)

To be sure, Cabrini is sometimes given reason to be combative; but often when she first meets someone she needs something from, there is a confrontational tension in her demeanor even before she has been offended. Particularly off-putting is her whole attitude during her first meeting with the archbishop of New York; she immediately attempts to play the Pope’s authority against his, and smirks when he correctly asserts that the Pope has given him the prerogative to make decisions for his own diocese.

(This tendency to immediately and unnecessarily jump to hostility rather than diplomacy and collaboration is not only a way of manufacturing drama, but is often part of the pop culture “strong woman” archetype—see also Galadriel’s bull-in-a-china-shop entrance into the Numenorean court in Amazon’s The Rings of Power. Or on second thought, don’t see it.)

Cabrini’s greatest struggles in the film are not of a spiritual nature, but bureaucratic, either in the Church or the state. Her final victory is gained not by her prayer or holiness, but by political machinations, promising votes, and threats. In the film’s final dialogue, as the music swells to the emotional climax of this victory, she looks almost at the camera and says, “Men could never do what we do.”

Now, some of the film’s Catholic reviewers have not pretended Cabrini is more religious than it really is. And I don’t begrudge any individual critic his honest opinion: for some, the film’s portrayal of a Catholic historical figure doing good deeds may be enough to recommend it. Perhaps, too, some Catholics have developed a taste for this kind of feminist messaging, or perhaps we have become desensitized to it by comparison with the downright hair-raising stuff that surrounds us today. Regardless of any individual critic’s reasons, surveying the critical response, I can’t help but think that we are asking too little of our religious films.

I’m not even talking about low artistic expectations. The lack of quality Catholic filmmaking has long been a truism, and few movie reviewers for mainstream Catholic publications are dedicated film lovers. What surprises me here is the low level of scrutiny directed at the religious and spiritual elements of a film such as Cabrini. My impression is that in our excitement that our little subculture is finally getting “real” movies (that is, Hollywood-level production quality), we are too willing to overlook the lack of a truly religious spirit.

When Catholics secularize a saint
It’s not only the critics, but the filmmakers whose sights seem to be set too low. I mentioned Angel Studios’ Mormon leadership above, but in truth, Cabrini’s Catholic deficits can’t be blamed on non-Catholic executives, since the film was not conceived with Angel in mind as a distributor. Instead, we must face the reality that this film was made by a Catholic team.

Cabrini is the brainchild of executive producer J. Eustace Wolfington, a Catholic businessman who was approached by a sister of Cabrini’s order with the request that he make a film about St. Frances. According to an article about the film’s genesis, “Wolfington finally relented in 2018, but under two conditions: first, that he be allowed to make a movie about an extraordinary woman who just happened to be a nun, and second, that the film be a charity.”

If this were a faith-imbued movie, we might be able to interpret “just happened to be a nun” to mean that Wolfington wished to draw viewers’ attention to the universal call to holiness which St. Frances followed within her particular state in life. But given the humanist and secularizing result, it’s pretty clear that this project was from the outset conceived so that its protagonist’s religious identity would be pretty much incidental. But this is to fail before one has begun. It is quite obviously not how St. Frances Xavier Cabrini would have understood herself.

Lead producer Jonathan Sanger said that as he initially thought this would be movie about a saint, he was reluctant to make it because it would not be relatable. But Wolfington immediately disabused him: “No, this is a movie that is a woman empowerment story, in spite of the fact that she became a saint later.” Cabrini is a project conceived by a Catholic determined to avoid what was most important in the life of his subject.

Wolfington found a director for his project in Alejandro Monteverde, the Catholic director of Bella and Sound of Freedom, and a screenwriter in Rod Barr, whose religion is unknown to me. Monteverde too defends the choice to downplay specifically Catholic spiritual elements as a way to make the film accessible to a non-Catholic audience.

We can be sympathetic to the predicament of Catholic filmmakers. On both an evangelical and an artistic level, many artists do not want to preach to the choir. On a commercial level, making a movie is very expensive; one must convince producers and distributors that there is an audience for the project.

But there is only so far you can “adapt” to reach an audience before you end up falsifying your subject. To what end do you try to reach a broader audience, if not to say something that only you, a Catholic director, and only this, the story of a Catholic saint, could communicate? To make a movie about a saint that does not convey sanctity, that replaces spiritual motives with worldly ones, hardly seems worthwhile. It’s like making a movie about Jesus from Thomas Jefferson’s edit of the New Testament.

A comparison of Cabrini with Terrence Malick’s A Hidden Life gives the lie to the supposed necessity of downplaying the Faith so that one’s art will be relatable or authentic. Malick is an Episcopalian, and his portrayal of the Catholic martyr Blessed Franz Jaggerstater, like Monteverde’s Cabrini, left out many specifically Catholic elements, such as Bl. Franz’s practice of the First Fridays and his sacramental life more generally. Like Cabrini, A Hidden Life portrayed the saint interacting with unhelpful clergy (which was not false but incomplete), so that the emphasis was more on Bl. Franz’s personal spirituality and conscience. Yet while Malick can be accused of reducing his hero to a generic Christian, Bl. Franz’s sanctity is still unmistakable and the film is steeped in prayer. In the end, A Hidden Life, made by a Protestant for a secular arthouse audience, is a far more Christian film than Cabrini, made by a Catholic team and distributed by a studio that caters to the conservative Christian subculture.

At risk of hammering the point in, we might also ask: Would Cabrini have been much different had it been made by a non-Christian who admired Cabrini’s social work but didn’t care for her faith? Perhaps it would have been more offensive, but I think in general, such a production would have hit the same points as this one. There would be a few mentions of God, but the emphasis would have been on social do-gooding, racism against immigrants, and Cabrini as a pioneering woman. To emphasize this last point, the screenplay would have multiple men telling Cabrini to “stay where you belong”, just as we hear in Cabrini.

What we have in Cabrini, then, is not so much the failure to portray a saint well, as the choice barely to attempt to portray a saint at all. That this choice was made by a Catholic team, for reasons that will sound very familiar to any Catholic artist (because he has either heard or considered them himself), offers much food for reflection outside the scope of this article.

One’s judgment of this particular film aside, those concerned with this general question of making religious art that reaches a public will find wisdom in Henri de Lubac’s book Paradoxes of Faith, specifically the chapters on “Witness” and “Adaptation”. In the latter he writes:
Quote
The first question is not “how to present” but “how to see” and “how to think.” …Setting out deliberately to popularize, to adapt, to reach the greatest number is not illegitimate or always useless. But it infallibly condemns you to mediocre, banal, insignificant, popular work. This law no more admits exception than the law of contradiction itself.
For the Catholic artist, our Lord’s warning about the salt losing its savor resonates at a double pitch.

Thomas V. Mirus is Director of Podcasts for CatholicCulture.org, hosts The Catholic Culture Podcast, and co-hosts Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast. See full bio.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Asbury Fox on March 10, 2024, 01:30:31 AM
Are there any good pre-Vatican II biographies about this saint? I don't think she made the cut for TAN Books back in the day, and unfortunately the old TAN Books is no more.


The book I read and bought for my kindle last year was titled "Immigrant Saint: the life of Mother Cabrini." The kindle version was a reprint of an original 1960 book. It reads like a pre-Vatican II devotional biography of her life and faith. St. Frances Xavier Cabrini was a great missionary saint and one of my favorites alongside St. Francis Xavier.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: 2Vermont on March 10, 2024, 06:54:28 AM
FWIW, from what I've heard, there is no mention of the Catholic Church nor of Jesus Christ.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Viva Cristo Rey on March 10, 2024, 08:01:49 AM
(The title of movie is disrespectful.)  She is Saint Mother Cabrini.  

Communism is secularism. 


Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: moneil on March 10, 2024, 09:55:07 AM

Quote
(The title of movie is disrespectful.)  She is Saint Mother Cabrini. 

Communism is secularism.


I have never in my 72 years heard Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini referred to as "Saint Mother Cabrini" nor as "St. Francis Cabrini".  It has always been "Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini".  In a conversation or written piece, after beginning with her full title "Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini", some will continue with the simpler "Mother Cabrini". 
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: alaric on March 10, 2024, 10:12:34 AM

Quote
To be honest, despite the film’s executive producer and director being Catholic, I wasn’t really expecting the Mormon company Angel Studios to distribute an unreservedly Catholic film—one that would feature St. Frances’s deep devotion to the Sacred Heart, for instance. But while it admirably portrays Cabrini spending herself in service to the poor and winning the hearts of young ruffians (in impressive sets conveying old New York), the film is barely even generically Christian in its focus, stressing instead Cabrini’s personal drive (with a heavy feminist accent), social work, and the pervasiveness of anti-Italian discrimination in 19th-century New York (but nothing at all about the accompanying anti-Catholic bigotry).
Well, there you go, so typical. You didn't expect anything really authentic and Catholic being put out there by a Mormon company did you? No, they have no intention of shedding a good light on the one True Faith. 


Just another story about a social justice warrior, who just, ho-hum HAPPENS to be Catholic.

Don't trust too much these "christian" film producers (Mormons aren't even Christian btw) to ever give Catholicism a fair shake, even when it comes to the saints, actually Especially when it comes to the saints, that is when the real essence of the Faith shines through. We CAN"T have that now, can we?

I might check out the movie, because to be honest, I don't know too much about this saint, and that's being Italian, from NY and 9 years of Catholic school, so you see how much Catholic institutions have failed me, and that was over 40 yrs ago.

Now, you're lucky to get even Catholics to produce an accurate movie about Catholic Saints.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Soubirous on March 10, 2024, 11:59:07 AM
The upside is that the film reviews and random social media opinions provide a litmus test (not THE litmus test, but at the moment a useful one no less) of who among the Cath pundits are to be taken with a grain of salt on other matters in general. 

And if the boosters go dumping on the non-fans for being "bitter" or whatever, then they've taken themselves down a second notch.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Viva Cristo Rey on March 10, 2024, 12:01:58 PM

I have never in my 72 years heard Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini referred to as "Saint Mother Cabrini" nor as "St. Francis Cabrini".  It has always been "Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini".  In a conversation or written piece, after beginning with her full title "Saint Francis Xavier Cabrini", some will continue with the simpler "Mother Cabrini".
It really doesn’t matter because most places that she built has shut down.

Some of us never heard of her at all. 

The movie is just “Cabrini”. 


March 8th says it all.  Another communist holiday by the U-N international of brainwashed liberal women’s day.

Never heard of much of Catholic Church history, saints, religious orders.  Heard much about u-n and unicef etc.

Now why would we as Catholics collect for United Nations when we have our own Catholic Missionaries. 



Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Viva Cristo Rey on March 10, 2024, 12:11:52 PM
We go see it if it was a rainy day and an excuse to munch on popcorn.  
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: moneil on March 10, 2024, 01:19:47 PM
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I might check out the movie, because to be honest, I don't know too much about this saint, and that's being Italian, from NY and 9 years of Catholic school, so you see how much Catholic institutions have failed me, and that was over 40 yrs ago.

I'm looking forward to seeing the film sometime in the next week or so as I notice it is in a local theater.  I've not been to a cinema in probable 15 years or more, but I have four passes from my work's Christmas party and have been wondering what I would use them for.

As for those who don't recall hearing much about St. Francis Xavier Cabrini, she was just canonized in 1946 by Pope Pius XII.  I was born in 1951, she wouldn't have been included in the daily missal that most of the women religious and other adult's probable were using back in the 1950's.  Unless an area in the U.S. was having a population growth in the 1950's - 1960's requiring the erection of a new parish there wouldn't been many churches with her as their patron.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Viva Cristo Rey on March 10, 2024, 03:15:20 PM
One benefit of Cathinfo, we learn more about the faith. 
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Viva Cristo Rey on March 10, 2024, 08:40:49 PM
Sad to say, I was right. This article is from 1931 and it’s a U-N new holiday.  

(https://i.imgur.com/cR2s6lw.png)
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Viva Cristo Rey on March 10, 2024, 08:44:39 PM
The 2 things I noticed from the trailer is the scandalous use of a Shania Twain song as the soundtrack (not actually in the movie, I hope) and the movie being released on "International Women's Day." I don't think this was accidental.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Kephapaulos on March 10, 2024, 10:34:43 PM
I've seen at least part of the trailer of the movie in question.

I'd rather read about St. Francis Xavier Cabrini and visit her tomb (although I did little research and would have to somehow ignore the external odd and ugly look of the shrine). 

It's like with other movies. It is better to read about which it is based. 

Ryan Grant commented on the film on the Rundown yesterday and gives it an approval. Whether one agrees with him or not, he gave at least some good analysis and information on understanding artistry in film and the difficulty of capturing religion in it. I recall Charles Coulombe saying how even old movies fell short of expressing religious subject matter. Nothing beats the actual saint or event. 
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: josefamenendez on March 11, 2024, 08:54:23 PM
I've been to the shrine , probably over 15 years ago. She is in a glass coffin under the altar (table) of a Novus Ordo chapel inside of a Catholic school in upper Manhattan. The chapel had a very cafeteria/ gymnasium feel to it with fluorescent lighting and kids drawings tacked up on the walls. Her body must have been waxed or was all wax- it didn't look too good when I saw it. (But pictures online seem to look better than I remember )
I really don't want to say anything bad, but the whole atmosphere was really underwhelming.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: MaterDominici on March 12, 2024, 02:55:07 AM
Matthew and I went and saw Cabrini and I'll give you my 2c in relation to the review posted here. I don't think the quality of the film is in any dispute -- the acting, cinematography, etc is all very good -- but the question is does the downplay of religion and the hype of Cabrini as a female ruin the film or otherwise render it unCatholic. (I'd add a spoiler alert here, but if you've read the review above, he's already discussed all of the major scenes.)

For me, this choice of what to emphasize wasn't a deal-breaker. I realize that I'm not the target audience for this film and I didn't see anything that was outright offensive to Catholics. The creators obviously chose to emphasize certain elements, but I don't believe that they crossed any red lines in doing so. One scene did suggest that Cabrini might have skewed too strongly toward her own personal ambition, but whether or not this is true can not be known and was given only as an opinion in the film, not fact.


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The story’s trappings of priests, bishops, and habited nuns are, for the most part, mere trappings. Cabrini almost never mentions God even when trying to convince the clergy to support her work, and is virtually never seen praying, even when at a deathbed. At one point she tells her sisters that they can do “all things in Him Who strengthens us”, but far more emphasis is placed on her own strength as a woman.


I do not agree with the reviewer on this point. There are multiple scenes of Catholic burials including arranging of the burial of a child she'd never met before. When one of her own was dying, she was on her knees at the bedside. In most scenes like this, whether or not she was actually praying is left open, but she never acted in a manner unbecoming of her state in life. At her lowest point in the film, she goes to the chapel. I didn't feel like I needed the film makers to explain to me why she was there.


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another character refers to Cabrini’s habit as a “suit of armor” which seems to refer more to her own womanly strength than to her consecration to God.
This scene was very open to your own interpretation. They certainly could have gone many directions with this scene and chose to leave it pretty vague.


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In the first, a former prostitute who has been helping the nuns comes to Cabrini after killing her pimp in self-defense. She weeps: “There’s not enough water in the world to make me clean.” Cabrini responds:
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When I look at you, do you know what I see? I see a strong woman. I see courage. I see it glowing all around you. It takes a lot of courage to become who we’re meant to be. We have something in common....We are both survivors. We don’t get to choose how we come into the world, but God gave us the freedom to choose how we live in it.
There is a reference to God, but it is too little, too late after this clear opportunity for baptismal imagery has been whiffed in favor of the anachronistic language of survivorhood.

I agree here. If they didn't want to talk about confession and forgiveness, they should have excluded this scene altogether. To open up a clearly spiritual conversation and not have the Catholic nun provide her with strong spiritual direction is a stretch too far. I think this was one of the most problematic scenes not for what it says, but because opens the door to a very religious topic and then chooses to gloss over the obvious Catholic response.


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From the beginning, Cabrini’s relationship with the institutional Church is portrayed as adversarial; though it’s not that the film sets her up against the Church specifically so much as against male authority figures in general. At any rate, she plays the ecclesiastical bureaucracy against itself so she can get power to fulfill her charitable ambitions and prove herself as a woman. (At least the movie makes a point of her obedience to direct orders.)

To be sure, Cabrini is sometimes given reason to be combative; but often when she first meets someone she needs something from, there is a confrontational tension in her demeanor even before she has been offended. Particularly off-putting is her whole attitude during her first meeting with the archbishop of New York; she immediately attempts to play the Pope’s authority against his, and smirks when he correctly asserts that the Pope has given him the prerogative to make decisions for his own diocese.

I don't agree with the point he's making here. Often her meetings were after many letters had been sent back and forth, so rejection was on the table at the beginning of the encounters. In the specific scene he mentions here, she had already been told the archbishop's intentions before the meeting. And, she had good reason to say the Pope had sent her because that's exactly what had happened. If she wanted to just follow his orders without any push back, there would be no point to the meeting. The idea of Cabrini not taking "no" as a final answer is really the entire premise of the movie.


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as the music swells to the emotional climax of this victory, she looks almost at the camera and says, “Men could never do what we do.”


While this line is clearly meant to emphasize the power of women to accomplish great things and had a "girl power" vibe to it, in light of Cabrini's life's work, I don't think it was entirely inappropriate. She and her fellow sisters were running an orphanage (the hospital element had not come to fruition yet) and I don't disagree that orphanages full of small children are best run by women.

All in all, this was a mediocre film for a Catholic. The artistry is nice if you'd like to see it on that point alone. You're not going to walk away feeling very inspired unless you bring into it all of the religious elements that you already know to be true. Her fortitude and resilience are admirable, but you have to bring your own spiritual perspective as that appears only lightly in the movie. If your motivation is to learn all about St. Cabrini, this isn't going to get you there, but it might inspire you to pick up a real biography and learn more.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Asbury Fox on March 17, 2024, 11:10:42 PM
Thomas V. Mirus wrote a follow-up article to his review & a response to the director's criticism of his critics:

https://www.catholicculture.org/commentary/cabrini-and-denial-that-christ-is-for-everyone/

Cabrini and the denial that Christ is for everyone

"In a recent interview, Alejandro Monteverde, the director of the new movie Cabrini, defends his work against those who have criticized it for portraying St. Frances Xavier Cabrini as a strong woman and social worker with little to no reference to God, prayer, her religious vocation, or the Catholic faith in general. Expressing his displeasure with those he calls “complainers”, he says, “Well, thank God I’m not making a movie for you.” But it is not Monteverde’s ire that concerns me here; rather, I am troubled by the rationalizations he makes for his decisions, and their implications for both art and evangelization.

Now as I stressed in my review, the problems with Cabrini can’t be laid solely or perhaps even primarily at the feet of the director. This project was conceived by executive producer J. Eustace Wolfington, who in every interview repeats the same story about how this was always intended to be a movie about “a great woman who just happens to be a nun”. (As a 90-year-old Catholic, Wolfington himself may have been formed by the prevailing attitudes in the Church of the 60s and 70s, particularly the mandate to be relevant to the world.)

Thus the agenda was set before screenwriter and director were ever hired. Wolfington’s preconceived notion would, of necessity, have affected even the research stage, blocking new discoveries and adjustments that might have come from a truly open engagement with the historical subject. Therefore, while Monteverde is of course defending his own work as a director, he is also defending the job he was given to do by the producer.

Nonetheless, I would say the following to Monteverde, screenwriter Rod Barr and any other Catholic who made major decisions on Cabrini: It is natural to be upset by criticism of a project you have worked long and hard on. But it is Christian to be open to correction, and if that correction be truthful, to demand more of yourself.

I would say, too: I realize that Catholic artists are often frustrated by a subset of commenters who are high on suspicion and outrage at the slightest perceived deviation, and low on artistic sense and sympathy for the complexities and challenges artists face. So I should emphasize that I care deeply about Catholic artists, that Monteverde is my brother in Christ, and that I want him to succeed.

I write this follow-up to my review, then, not to beat a dead horse, but because I believe Monteverde’s comments, ostensibly defending his artistic prerogatives, are in their real implications discouraging to Catholic artists, leading them to curb their high artistic and evangelistic aspirations and settle instead for a circuмscribed, Hollywood-captive vision of what will “work” for a mass audience. Worse, his comments even do a disservice to our Catholic faith. And so I will be frank in examining the many facile assumptions, begged questions and worldly notions put forth by Monteverde in his interview.

Is “the power of a woman’s voice” more catholic than her Catholic faith?

Before getting to the director’s statements, though, it’s worth noting how interviewer Kate O’Hare sets the stage: “The fact that [Cabrini] did this in service of Christ and her vocation is … more implicit than explicit.” O’Hare’s ellipses highlight her generous intent, but it is worth noting that if something is not explicit, that does not mean it is implicit: it could simply be absent, which is closer to being the case in Cabrini. If the movie were simply implicit or vague about Cabrini’s deeper motivations, that would be one thing. But the film is indeed explicit in stating her motives, and as I illustrated in my review, they are to a large extent worldly, not spiritual ones.

Along the same lines, the director uses a hoary writing-workshop cliché to justify downplaying Cabrini’s faith in the film: “It’s show, don’t tell.” Forgive me if I call this a rationalization, seeing that the filmmakers exercised no such restraint when it comes to the film’s girlboss and pro-immigrant themes, which are spoken out loud and often by the fictionalized Cabrini. Indeed, as Paul Kengor points out, they went so far as to invent from whole cloth the film’s villain, the racist mayor of New York, as well as its climactic scene, just so their protagonist could, after putting this non-existent Mayor Gould in his place, turn towards the camera and tell us the film’s principal theme: “Men could never do what we do.”

Monteverde continues:

It’s a film that is not for one audience, it’s for everybody. It’s a universal story. This is a movie about a woman that happens to be a nun, a woman that happens to be the first American saint, but she’s a woman and she is very proud to be a woman.

And she built an empire with women, but she was also an immigrant woman. And that’s where I also connected with her.

She came to this country with nothing but just a couple of suitcases. And she was the first woman to lead a mission outside, an overseas mission, without the leadership of a man. And look what she built.

James MaJєωski, my co-host on Criteria: The Catholic Film Podcast, pointed out to me that the suppressed premise here is that Jesus Christ is not universal, that He is not for everybody. Incongruously, Monteverde later says the film “was also an opportunity to celebrate the power of the woman’s voice.” But why is “the power of the woman’s voice” more universal than the woman’s relationship with Christ? Is our culture’s inordinate preoccupation with female “firsts” (a preoccupation certainly not shared by St. Frances Xavier Cabrini) more catholic than Catholicism itself? Presenting a little something of Christianity might, it’s true, be a bit more challenging and less safe, artistically and spiritually, for the filmmakers and their audience—it would also be more intriguing and inspiring—but that is not the same as being less universal.

The director continues:

I knew exactly the movie I wanted to make, and I don’t like to make movies to preach to the choir. Those people are already going to church. OK, go.

So I like to make movies that bring people together, and the problem is that the minute we think we live in a bubble, that’s when we kind of exclude everybody else. And Cabrini didn’t do that. She’s a saint.

And:

The works of mercy are in the film. Look, her life is a prayer. So you want to pray, just watch her life. Do 1% of that. That’s her life.

Preaching to the choir: this cliché, too, obscures more than it illuminates. Does “already going to church” mean we don’t need beautiful and truthful religious art—do Catholics not need to be shown, in the stories of the saints, that our good works only have value when done for and by Christ? But if the film is instead intended for non-Catholics, then how can they be expected to read between the lines to see that the works of mercy portrayed in the film are, indeed, spiritual works of prayer? Surely those outside the choir would need even more, not less, explanation. (Of course, even saint movies need not be “preachy”, but artists who wish to portray a Christian subject adequately cannot avoid the necessity of conveying the Gospel.)

Is to specify Jesus Christ (whose name was removed from the traditional Latin table blessing that is the film’s one spoken prayer) automatically to “preach to the choir”? Was St. Paul preaching to the choir when he proclaimed “Jesus Christ, and Him Crucified”? Where did a Catholic artist learn this attitude toward evangelization? Surely it is not the strategy taught by Jesus in the Gospels.

This is not just a matter of evangelization, but of good art. Art, like the Incarnation, connects us to the universal by means of the particular. It is the artist’s task to lead his audience to connect with something outside them, something unfamiliar, and an abdication of that task to give them only what they already know. Monteverde rightly says, “my job as a director was going to be to break any prejudices that come with the character”, but rather than meet that challenge, the makers of Cabrini dodged it by removing most aspects that a modern audience would be prejudiced against in the first place. To do this and then claim to be boldly breaking barriers is an artistic and spiritual cheat.

And after all, if accessibility was the concern, was the task here so complicated? In a movie about St. Frances Xavier Cabrini, just as in her real life and the whole history of the Church, what wins the respect and love of a non-Catholic audience is her self-giving service to the poor. Step one complete; common ground established. Now for step two! Hearts opened by what they can already recognize as good, irreligious viewers will now be less resistant to the film’s portrayal of what is less familiar (but no less universal): her profession of faith in Jesus Christ and the deeper meaning of her vows as a Catholic religious. That’s not enough to make a good movie, of course—there would remain, for instance, the challenge of giving a saint real internal drama (absent in the film we got). But it’s not like they had to figure out how to portray a really unrelatable saint, like St. Simeon Stylites.

When, so to speak, “use words when necessary” becomes in practice “don’t use words because they’re unnecessary”, I have a sense of dawning recognition. Suddenly I am in familiar territory; this is the same misguided strategy that Church leaders have used for the past 70 years as the pews empty, now being marketed as cutting-edge Catholic filmmaking! It’s the same illusion of expedience: de-specify the Faith, focus on social work, and cater to the moral fads of the age. Since this is a period piece about a nun set in a time when nuns wore habits, we see Cabrini wearing one, and the movie even compares it to a suit of armor. Yet if it were set ninety years later, the sort of nun portrayed in this movie would have traded her habit for a pantsuit. Catholic artists like Monteverde and company can and should do better."
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: MaterDominici on March 18, 2024, 12:03:45 AM
Is to specify Jesus Christ (whose name was removed from the traditional Latin table blessing that is the film’s one spoken prayer) automatically to “preach to the choir”?
I had to look up what he's talking about here. They shortened the whole prayer, not just removed or changed a word as he's suggesting. Apparently they only said "Bless us, O Lord, and these Thy gifts. Amen."
As it was in Latin, the chances of even 0.1% of the audience noticing is slim.
Title: Re: St. Francis Cabrini movie
Post by: Cera on March 18, 2024, 03:49:20 PM
I cannot speak to the new movie, however we did watch an older film about her on EWTN (yes, I know, but lets leave that aside and just look at this movie.) Throughout this older film (and in this short clip below), Mother Cabrini consistently speaks of her devotion to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. I thought it was excellent and had none of the feminist claptrap. She was always respectful to Pope Leo XIII, her Bishop and her clergy. Her faith in the Sacred Heart of Jesus is powerfully portrayed throughout.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g9vyESxCquY

I saved it to our DVR, but it may be showing again. It can be rented or purchased here

https://ondemand.ewtn.com/paid/Home/Series/catalog/video/en/mother-cabrini