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Pope Francis canonizes two new saints: St Artemide Zatti and St Giovanni Battista Scalabrini
They were both born in Italy in the 19th century and ministered to others amid the massive emigration of hundreds
of thousands of Italians each year at the turn of the 20th century.
Pope Francis said in his homily “Bishop Scalabrini, who founded a congregation for the care of emigrants … used to say that in the shared
journeying of emigrants we should see not only problems but also a providential plan.” Scalabrini was once described by
Pope Pius IX as “the apostle of the Catechism.” The saint is also remembered for founding a diocesan newspaper,
for caring for the poor and elderly, for being a promoter of eucharistic adoration, and a protector of correct liturgical chant.
Pope Francis praised Zatti as “a living example of gratitude.” He highlighted how the immigrant nurse thanked God by “taking upon himself
the wounds of others. Cured of tuberculosis, he devoted his entire life to serving others, caring for the infirm with tender love...”. At the
age of 35, Zatti became the director of the Salesian-run hospital in Viedma, a city in central Argentina. Two years later he also became
the manager of the pharmacy and received his license as a professional nurse. He not only worked in the hospital but also traveled
to other areas to treat people in need, and his reputation as a saintly nurse spread throughout that area of Argentina. Zatti always saw
Jesus in each of his patients. Some people even recalled seeing him carry the body of a patient who had died during the night to
the mortuary as he recited the De Profundis — a prayer for the dead. People who knew him said that Zatti carried out his service to
the sick with heroic sacrifice and that he radiated the light of God, even bringing some unbelievers to faith.
He is the first Salesian coadjutor to be declared a saint.