Well, I've missed a few days of Saint posts - but seeing as the other big thing that happens in November is Thanksgiving, I hope you will be understanding. To make it up, today I give you three for the price of one. The three Blessed Carmelites of Guadalajara were the first of thousands of martyrs of the Spanish Civil War, most of whom will never be known.
Sister Mary Pilar of Saint Francis Borgia was born Jamie Martine Garcia in 1877. She loved life and had a kind and gentle disposition. Her older sister entered the Carmelite order when Jamie was 15, but Jamie had no desire at that time to join. Five years later, she was ready and followed her sister into religious life. In the cloister, she prayed constantly for those in the world and was devoted to the Sacred Heart of Jesus. She was 58 at the time of her martyrdom.
Sister Marie Angel of Saint Joseph was born Marciana Valtierra Tordesillas in 1905. Her mother died when she was three and she became her father's consolation. From the time of her First Communion, she desired to become a religious. But she was needed at home to care for her aging father and an invalid Aunt and so was not able to enter the cloister until she was 24. In the cloister, she desired to serve others unnoticed. She was known for her childlike simplicity and her ability to make the other sisters laugh. She made her solemn profession just two years before her death.
The youngest of the three, Sister Teresa of the Child Jesus. was born in 1909 and named Eusebia Garcia y Garcia. From the age of nine, her confessor allowed her to make a private vow of chastity for a year at a time. Having read St. Therese of Lisieux' autobiography , Eusebia was inspired to join the Carmelite order, which she did at the age of 16. She found it very difficult to be separated from close family ties, but she offered up this separation as a holocaust to the Lord. With a strong and ardent nature, she found it hard to be meek and patient, but she strove to emulate her patroness. She was only 27 . . .
On the evening of July 22, 1936, the priest who served the Carmelite Nuns of the Monastery of St. Joseph distributed communion to them telling them to receive it as Viaticum knowing that this could be their final communion. The city of Guadalajara had fallen into the hands of the Spanish Reds and the city had been turned into an inferno of violence, pillaging and bloodshed. The priest and the nuns hoped to find refuge with friends. These three sisters, along with their prioress and another nun, spent the night hiding in the basement of a local hotel. The next day, the two other sisters moved to a boarding house, but there was no room for Pilar, Angel and Teresa. They planned to make their way to the nearby home of friends. As they made their way through the city, they were somehow recognized by a group of Red Army members who opened fire on the sisters. Sister Mary Angel was hit through the heart and killed instantly. Sister Mary Pilar was severely injured. Police in the employ of the Republic took the injured nun to the Red Cross. She died later that day in the hospital, forgiving her killers with her final breath.
Sister Theresa was not hit by any of the bullets. She took refuge in a doorway where she was approached by a soldier pretending concern for her safety. The soldier and several companions led her away with intentions for more than just her death. Fearlessly she rebuked her tormentors and resisted their demands to pledge allegiance to the Republic and to Communism. She shouted, "Viva, Christo Rey!" before being shot in the back.
The feast day of the Blessed Martyrs of Guadalajara is celebrated by the Carmelite Order on July 24.