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Teresio Olivelli

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Venerable
Teresio Olivelli
Layman
Born(1916-01-07)7 January 1916
Bellagio, Como, Kingdom of Italy
Died12 January 1945(1945-01-12) (aged 29)
Hersbruck, Nürnberger Land, Nazi Germany
Venerated inRoman Catholic Church

Teresio Olivelli (7 January 1916 - 12 January 1945) was an Italian Roman Catholic soldier during World War II and part of the Italian Resistance movement to Fascism and the Nazi regime.[1] Olivelli graduated in law in Pavia in 1938 and went on to comment in papers on the legal and social issues of the time before he became a volunteer fighter in the Spanish Civil War and in World War II with a notable campaign fought in Russia. The war soured his views towards the Italian fascist regime of Benito Mussolini and his time in the resistance was marked with articles in a newspaper he founded dedicated to promoting the Christian message and attempting to improve upon aspects of fascism with a more Christian message.[2]

Olivelli's beatification cause started in 1988 under Pope John Paul II and he became titled as a Servant of God. The cause was first designed to demonstrate that Olivelli died in hatred of his faith - thus beatification would be quicker - but disagreements led to a prolonged cause designed instead to prove Olivelli led a life of heroic virtue which Pope Francis confirmed on 14 December 2015. This confirmation allowed for the pope to name him as Venerable.[3]

Life

Teresio Olivelli was born in 1916 in Como to Domenico Olivelli and Clelia Invernizzi. His maternal uncle was the priest Rocco Invernizzi - parish priest of Tremezzo - who served as Olivelli's spiritual and moral point of reference.[1] He moved with his parents in 1926 to Pavia and was good at Latin when he studied there.[3]

He studied at Mortara and at Vigevano before transferring his studies to Pavia in 1934 where he graduated in law with honors in 1938 from the Ghislieri College. Each week he went to confession and to receive the Eucharist in the parish of San Lorenzo. It was around this time that he was a member of Catholic Action as well as the F.U.C.I. and a Fascist student group.[1][3] In 1939 he became the assistant of administrative law at the Turin college and won a competition in Trieste in 1939 for oratorical skills and gave a thesis on human dignities for all irrespective of race. He also penned articles on the social and legal issues of the times in the college paper "Book and Musket" and in the journal "Fascist Civilization".[3] While in Turin he aided the poor and orphaned. He also learned to speak fluent German.

In 1936 he volunteered to fight in the Spanish Civil War and then moved for educational reasons to Berlin from 1939 to 1941. In 1941 he volunteered to go to Russia to fight in World War II where he contracted frostbite due to the severe cold weather. Olivelli did not want to swear allegiance to the new Italian Social Republic in 1943 and was thus deported to Innsbruck in Austria on 9 September 1943 until he managed to flee and settle in Milan in the evening of 20-21 October.[3] He started to become critical of the Italian regime and believed he could improve it through a more Christian message though later broke from it after seeing the situation with deporting Jewish people as per racial laws and the French invasion. Olivelli became part of the Italian resistance movement in Milan as part of the triangular resistance including Brescia and Cremona branches. He remained in touch with resistance members such as Peppino Pelosi and Fr. Carlo Manziana while he was in Brescia.[2] Olivelli worked hard to create the newspaper "Il ribelle" and the first issue published on 5 March 1944 was dedicated to Astolfo Lunardi and Ermanno Margheriti who were both executed not long before. His paper was the underground newspaper for the Green Flames Brigades partisan group.[1] Carlo Bianchi and Claudio Sartori helped him establish the paper in February 1944. Olivelli's codename at this time was "Agostino Gracchi".

The partisan was apprehended in Milan on 27 April 1944 and was at once taken to the prison of San Vitore where he was tortured and beaten before being moved to Fossoli on 8 June. On 11 July his name was added to a list of 70 inmates to be shot but fled and hid in a field until he was recaptured. He was then transferred to Bolzano (August 1944) before being sent to Flossenburg (September 1944) and then to Hersbruck.[3] He shared food rations with inmates and treated their injuries and even spent time with Blessed Odoardo Focherini to comfort him before the latter died.[1] Olivelli died from injuries he sustained in 1945 not long after defending a Ukrainian inmate from being attacked.[2] He was kicked in the stomach and intestines plus being struck 25 times. His remains were cremated at the camp's crematorium.

Beatification process

The beatification process opened in the Diocese of Vigevano in a diocesan process that Bishop Mario Rossi inaugurated on 29 March 1987 and that Bishop Giovanni Locatelli closed in a solemn Mass on 16 September 1989. The formal introduction to the cause came under Pope John Paul II on 19 January 1988 after the Congregation for the Causes of Saints issued the official "nihil obstat" and titled him as a Servant of God. The C.C.S. later validated the process on 27 March 1992 and received the Positio dossier in 2011. Historians - in a unanimous decision - voted in favor of the cause on 24 May 2011 while the theologians issued their approval - a majority verdict - on 17 December 2013 before the C.C.S. met to approve the cause (unanimous) on 1 December 2015. The confirmation of his life of heroic virtue allowed for Pope Francis to name Olivelli as Venerable.

The first postulator for the cause was Fr. Innocenzo Venchi (1986-2004) and then Fr. Abdul Rahman (2004-2011). The current postulator is Sr. Tiziana Adriana Conterbia (2011-present). The first relator for the cause was Fr. Cristoforo Bove from 3 April 1992 until his death on 4 October 2010 at which point Fr. Vincenzo Criscuolo was made the relator a month later on 12 November 2010.

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Teresio Olivelli, rebel for love". My Tremezzina. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  2. ^ a b c "Teresio Olivelli 1916-1945". Gariwo. Retrieved 2 November 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d e f "Venerable Teresio Olivelli". Santi e Beati. Retrieved 2 November 2016.