Religious

Ven. John of St. Samson

John of St. Samson

Ven. John of St. Samson had a very difficult childhood. He was blinded by an incompetent physician after contracting chicken pox and was orphaned at a young age. He was introduced to the Parisian Carmelites in Place Maubert in 1603 and joined the Order at Dol-de-Bretagne three years later. When he was transferred to Rennes in 1612, he became the spiritual soul of the Touraine reform.

Bl. Ángel M. Prat Hostench and companions

Nagasaki Martyrs

In July 1936, Angel Prat Hostench along with other religious were discovered while trying to escape persecution at the Tarrega railway station. Together with Prat were three priests, five students, one lay brother and two novices. Later in August, Carmelite nun Sister Maria del Patrocinio — after escaping her burning monastery — was shot by militia. Further Carmelites brothers and priests were killed in October and November following inhumane interrogations and treatment. These Carmelites were among 498 martyrs of the Spanish civil war, beatified by Pope Benedict XVI in 2007.

St. Simon Stock

St. Simon Stock

Saint Simon Stock, c. 1165–1265

Simon, an Englishman, died at Bordeaux in the mid-thirteenth century. He has been venerated in the Carmelite Order for his personal holiness and his devotion to Our Lady. A liturgical celebration in his honor was observed locally in the fifteenth century, and later extended to the whole Order.

St. Joachina de Vedruna de Mas

St. Joachina de Vedruna de Mas

Joachina was born in Barcelona in 1783. She married Theodore de Mas in 1799 and bore him nine children before being widowed in 1816. Then in 1826 she was prompted by God’s Spirit to found the Congregation of Carmelite Sisters of Charity, which spread throughout Catalonia, establishing houses for the care of the sick and the education of children, especially the poor.