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2021 Who am I?

October 21, 2023 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 10 October, All Hallow's Eve, All Saints Day, Bl. Charles the Good, Fr. Emil Kapaun, St. Isaac Jogues Leave a Comment

*posted 2023, only a few years behind

This is one of the feastdays that we fully live out and spend a good amount of time preparing for — Hallowtide brings the way for two major feastdays.

We typically celebrate All Saints Day with festivities among family & friends on All Hallow’s Eve and assist at Holy Mass on the actual feast which is a Holy Day of Obligation. We try to start the Octave of All Souls with a visit to the cemetery for prayers of the deceased on Nov. 2.

One of the highlights is the Who Am I? presentations. The children present a bio of their saint. Many spend a great deal of time in researching the saints and getting to know their newfound patron.

We now have only 4 left to dress up. Below are the bios of our 2021 saint lineup. Orate pro nobis!

I was small and mighty.  I beat the beast by slinging a stone at his head.  

WHO AM I? 

I was an Earl who became a knight in the Second Crusade to recover the Holy Land from the Moors.   Upon my  return, I received the County of Flanders

I had a great love for justice.  I even forbade any of my subjects to blaspheme or take the name of God in vain. The punishment for blaspheming was to lose a hand or foot. My love for justice made me hated by many evildoers.

I declined to take over the throne because I wanted to focus on serving those in need.  I gave all I could and would even sell the clothes off my back if needed.  One day, I gave away 7,800 loaves.

I walked every morning barefoot to the church for my prayers and devotions.  I was warned that some were plotting against me.  I  answered:  “We are always surrounded by dangers, but we belong to God.  If it be his will, can we die in a better cause…. than that of justice and truth?” 

While I was reciting the penitential psalms before the altar, a mob rushed in and split open my head, in 1124.  

WHO AM I?

I was beatified in 1884.  

Patron of Crusaders

I became a priest in France in 1624.  I went to the new lands to work and share the Faith.  

I was kidnapped and held captive for over 1 year.   The natives tortured me be by fire, removed fingernails, gnawed away my fingers, and much more.  I even had to throw my finger in the woods so I wouldn’t be forced to eat it. 

I was rescued from martyrdom a number of times. And eventually, I returned home.  No one recognized me because my condition was so poor.  

The Pope gave me special permission to offer Holy Mass since my critical fingers were missing. 

I eagerly wanted to go back to the new lands in 1644. I told my friend, “I will go, but I will not return.”

Just two years later, on Oct. 18 1646, I was captured and tomahawked to death.  My head was placed on a stake as a trophy of sorts and thrown into the river.

WHO AM I?

I was torn between the priestly duties at home and the need to serve the brave men in the military fighting in World War II. My bishop recommended me for the U.S Army Chaplain Corps (KORZ). I joined the post-world war peacekeeping force and experienced firsthand the horrors of the Korean War. 

————————–

I was compelled to fight in the front lines with my troops. Due to the circumstances I offered Holy Mass on the hoods of our jeeps and prayed with my men in foxholes. I never carried a gun or fired a weapon.  One day we were ambushed by the communists, rather than retreating with the others I and a doctor stood behind to care for the dying and wounded. We became Prisoners of War.

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I risked my life every day by sneaking out to find food for the other prisoners.  When the Chinese guards discovered that I had a blood clot in my leg, they moved me to the death house. There, I died, alone on May 23, 1951.

I forgave my captors and told the prisoners of the camp “Don’t worry about me, I am going to where I always wanted to go and I will pray for you!”WHO AM I?

2021 Saint Line up in order: David (fought Goliath), Bl. Charles the Good, St. Issac Jogues, and Fr. Emil Kapaun

Veteran’s Day

November 11, 2020 by Lena {JOYfilledfamily} Filed Under: 11 November, Fr. Emil Kapaun, Veteran’s Day Leave a Comment

We give thanks & pray for our beloved family members and all others who have served the USA.

Papa
Grandpa Gilbert
Son-in-Love

Another Veteran that we pray for & give thanks for us Fr. Emil Kapaun.

After his ordination in 1940, Fr. Kapaun’s first assignment was as the assistant parish priest at St. John Nepomucene in his own town of Pilsen. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, Fr. Kapaun felt called enter the Chaplain Corps. Finally, his bishop gave permission and Fr. Kapaun joined the Army in August 1944.

Assigned to the 8th Cavalry Regiment of the famous 1st Cavalry Division, Fr. Kapaun shipped out in 1950 to Japan and then on to Korea where war against the Communists was raging. On the field, he was fearless in serving his men: he commonly braved machine gun fire to rescue the wounded and to move from foxhole to foxhole, providing comfort to hungry and cold soldiers. He continuously provided the sacraments in all conditions, becoming famous for constantly risking his life to save others.

The demands and privations of military life appealed to this son of a Kansas farmer; he loved caring for the spiritual and, at times, physical needs of “his boys,” as he called the men. He served in India and the Burma Theater and was promoted to the rank of Captain before being discharged in 1946. After earning his Masters in Education from the Catholic University of America in Washington, D.C., Father was permitted to rejoin the Army in 1948.

After repeatedly rejecting appeals to flee, he was captured along with the survivors of his unit by Chinese Communists on All Souls Day, 1950 near Unsan, North Korea. His ministry continued in a prisoner of war camp farther north.

In addition to doing all he could to help the men physically, his most important impact was supernatural: resisting the atheistic communist indoctrination, providing what sacraments he could, and openly defying his captors by holding a sunrise service on Easter Sunday, 1951. 

Finally crushed by blood clots, dysentery, and pneumonia, Fr. Kapaun died on May 23, 1951 and was buried in a mass grave.


He was awarded the Bronze Star with Valor Device in September 1950 and the Distinguished Service Cross posthumously in August 1951. After 60 years of petitions from those who served with him, on April 11, 2013, Fr. Kapaun was awarded the nation’s highest decoration: the Medal of Honor. – Andrew Clarendon

Hi! I'm Lena, mama of JOYfilledfamily.
We are a traditional Catholic family striving to live for Jesus Christ in everything we do. We pray to completely surrender our will to His and to become His servants. Our mission of this blog is to share our JOY.

This blog serves as a journal of us making good memories, living the liturgical year, and our spiritual journey.

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