Padre Cícero
Cícero Romão Batista | |
---|---|
Diocese | Diocese of Crato |
Orders | |
Ordination | 30 November 1870 |
Personal details | |
Born | |
Died | July 20, 1934 Juazeiro do Norte, Ceará, Brazil | (aged 90)
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
Cícero Romão Batista (24 March 1844 – 20 July 1934) also known as "Padre Cícero", was a Brazilian Catholic priest who became a spiritual leader to the people of Northeastern Brazil.
Batista has been declared a saint by the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church. He was listed in the Top 100 Greatest Brazilians of All Time in July 2012.[citation needed]
Despite many conflicts with the Church hierarchy during his life, official reconciliation with the Catholic occurred in December 2015. beatification process was opened on August 20, 2022 after the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" (no objections to the cause) edict and titled him as a servant of God.
Career
[edit]His relationship with politics began in 1901 with the visit of Count von de Brule, on a mission from the Secretariat of the Interior of Ceará, to land he owned in Crato, in the town of Taboca, where there was knowledge of oil shale outcrops of economic importance. Only in 1919, the then governor of Ceará, João Tomé de Saboia e Silva, would visit the outcrops and order the construction of galleries, who would later be named Mina Santa Rosa. Due to excessive heat and poor ventilation, work was interrupted for two years. In 1921, the Federal Inspectorate of Works against Drought financed drilling in this land and in October 1922, the chemist, geologist and mineralogist Sylvio Froes Abreu, then aged nineteen,[1] reported that the bituminous shale contained potential for the production of lubricating oils and fuels.[2]
Batista was actively involved in the politics of his time and was a member of the Conservative Republican Party of Brazil. When Juazeiro was raised to the status of a municipality in 1911, he was appointed its first mayor. He governed the city in this capacity for most of the next twenty years. In 1926 he was elected federal deputy, but he did not take office. On October 4, 1911, he and sixteen other political leaders from the region met in Juazeiro and signed a mutual cooperation agreement, as well as a commitment to support Governor Antônio Pinto Nogueira Accioli. The meeting was nicknamed the Pact of Colonels, being considered an important passage in the history of Brazilian coronelismo.[3][4]
In 1913, he was removed from office by Governor Marcos Franco Rabelo, returning to power in 1914, when Franco Rabelo was deposed in the event that became known as the Juazeiro Sedition.[5] He was also elected vice-governor of Ceará, in the Government of General Benjamin Liberato Barroso.[6]
At the end of the 1920s, Batista to lose his political strength, which practically ended after the Revolution of 1930. His prestige as a miracle worker however, would increase even more.[7]
Despite some attempts to relate Batista to communism and, much later, to liberation theology, he was deeply anti-communist. In an interview given in 1931, he stated: "Communism was started by the Devil. Lucifer is his name and the dissemination of his doctrine is the war of the Devil against God. I know communism and I know that it's evil. It's the continuation of the war of the fallen angels against the Creator and His children."[8]
In the course of his ministry, he was accused of heresy by Catholic Church officials, eventually becoming suspended but not formally excommunicated.
Legacy
[edit]Today, a large statue of Batista stands in Juazeiro do Norte, where he is considered to be the patron saint of the city. A pilgrimage to this statue takes place in his honour every November, attracting hundreds of thousands of followers.
Batista was canonized by the Brazilian Catholic Apostolic Church, an Independent Catholic church. He is not recognized as a saint by the Catholic Church, though Pope Benedict XVI proposed a study on Batista as a candidate for canonization.[9]
On 13 December 2015, as part of the opening ceremonies of the Holy Year proclaimed by Pope Francis, the Bishop of Crato, Fernando Panico, declared the rehabilitation of Batista's status with the Catholic Church. He further declared Batista to have been a man of extraordinary virtues, formally reconciling him with the church.[10]
Beatification process
[edit]On August 20, 2022, during a Mass held in Largo da Capela do Socorro, in Juazeiro do Norte, the bishop of the Diocese of Crato, Magnus Henrique Lopes , announced that he had received a letter from the Dicastery for the Causes of Saints, the Vatican body responsible for beatification and canonization processes, informing about the authorization of Pope Francis for the opening of the beatification process of Batista.[11]
References
[edit]- ^ "PIONEIROS DA QUÍMICA Ernesto Lopes da Fonseca Costa" (PDF).
- ^ "Schisto Bituminoso da Chapada do Araripe" (PDF).
- ^ "Finados: devoção a Padre Cícero deve levar 400 mil pessoas a Juazeiro do Norte — Rede Brasil Atual". 2010-03-13. Archived from the original on 2010-03-13. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
- ^ O Poder Político Em Juazeiro Do Norte – Mudanças e Permanências – as Eleições de 2000
- ^ "Sedição de Juazeiro | Atlas Histórico do Brasil - FGV". atlas.fgv.br. Retrieved 2022-12-28.
- ^ Cordeiro, Jaqueline Aragão (2011-05-17). "Liberato Barroso". Coisa de Cearense (in Brazilian Portuguese). Retrieved 2022-12-28.
- ^ Brito, Ênio (2016). "O santo que vive no sol: Padre Cícero". Revista Crítica Histórica. 7 (14): 1–9. doi:10.28998/rchvl7n14.2016.0011. ISSN 2177-9961.
- ^ "Na casa de Padre Cícero | O POVO Online". www20.opovo.com.br. Retrieved Apr 29, 2019.
- ^ "Padre Cícero - biography". www.visitfortaleza.com. Retrieved Apr 29, 2019.
- ^ "Nação Romeira em festa: Igreja se reconcilia com Padre Cícero". Portal de Juazeiro (in Portuguese). 13 December 2015.
- ^ Sena, Lena; Alves, Ednardo (20 August 2022). "Vaticano autoriza início de processo de beatificação de Padre Cícero, diz Diocese do Crato" [Vatican authorizes start of beatification process for Father Cicero, says Diocese of Crato]. Globo (in Portuguese). Retrieved 6 November 2022.
Further reading
[edit]- Pequena Biografia do Padre Cícero - O Cearense do Século (archived copy)
- 1844 births
- 1934 deaths
- Brazilian Servants of God
- Brazilian anti-communists
- People from Juazeiro do Norte
- Folk saints
- 19th-century Brazilian Roman Catholic priests
- 19th-century venerated Christians
- 20th-century Brazilian Roman Catholic priests
- 20th-century venerated Christians
- People from Crato, Ceará
- Roman Catholic mystics
- Brazilian saints