CatholicSaints.Info » Blog Archive » Saint Rita of Cascia (original) (raw)
Also known as
- Margarita of Cascia
- Rita La Abogada de Imposibles
- Saint of the Impossible
Profile
Daughter of Antonio and Amata Lotti, a couple known as the Peacemakers of Jesus; they had Rita late in life. From her early youth, Rita visited the Augustinian nuns at Cascia, Italy, and showed interest in a religious life. However, when she was twelve, her parents betrothed her to Paolo Mancini, an ill-tempered, abusive individual who worked as town watchman, and who was dragged into the political disputes of the Guelphs and Ghibellines. Disappointed but obedient, Rita married him when she was 18, and was the mother of twin sons. She put up with Paolo’s abuses for eighteen years before he was ambushed and stabbed to death. Her sons swore vengeance on the killers of their father, but through the prayers and interventions of Rita, they forgave the offenders.
Upon the deaths of her sons, Rita again felt the call to religious life. However, some of the sisters at the Augustinian were relatives of her husband’s murderers, and she was denied entry for fear of causing dissension. Asking for the intervention of Saint John the Baptist, Saint Augustine of Hippo, and Saint Nicholas of Tolentino, she managed to bring the warring factions together, not completely, but sufficiently that there was peace, and she was admitted to the of Saint Mary Magdalen at age 36.
Rita lived 40 years in the , spending her time in and , and working for peace in the region. She was devoted to the Passion, and in response to a to suffer as Christ, she received a chronic head wound that appeared to have been caused by a crown of thorns, and which bled for 15 years.
Confined to her bed the last four years of her life, eating little more than the Eucharist, teaching and directing the younger sisters. Near the end she had a visitor from her home town who asked if she’d like anything; Rita’s only request was a from her family’s estate. The visitor went to the home, but it being January, knew there was no hope of finding a flower; there, sprouted on an otherwise bare bush, was a single blossom.
Among the other areas, Rita is well-known as a patron of desperate, seemingly impossible causes and situations. This is because she has been involved in so many stages of life – wife, mother, widow, and nun, she buried her family, helped bring peace to her city, saw her dreams denied and fulfilled – and never lost her faith in God, or her desire to be with Him.
Born
- 22 May 1457 at the Augustinian at Cascia, Italy of tuberculosis
- abuse victims
- against infertility
- against loneliness
- against sickness
- against sterility
- against wounds
- bodily ills
- desperate causes
- difficult marriages
- forgotten causes
- impossible causes
- lost causes
- parenthood
- sick people
- sterile people
- victims of physical spouse abuse
- widows
- wounded people
- –
- in Brazil
- in Italy
- in the Philippines
- Prayer to Saint Rita I
- Prayer to Saint Rita II
- Prayer to Saint Rita III
- Hymn to Saint Rita
- Novena to Saint Rita
- nun holding a crown of thorns
- nun holding roses
- nun holding roses and figs
- nun with a wound on her forehead
Additional Information
- Book of Saints, by Father Lawrence George Lovasik, S.V.D.
- Book of Saints, by the Monks of Ramsgate
- Catholic Encyclopedia
- Great Wives and Mothers, by Father Hugh Francis Blunt
- Life of Heroic Humility and Obedience, by Pope John Paul II
- New Catholic Dictionary
- Pictorial Lives of the Saints
- Roman Martyrology
- Saint Rita – Advocate of the Impossible
- Saints of the Day, by Katherine Rabenstein
- —
- Life of Saint Rita of Cascia, O.S.A, by Father Richard Connolly, O.S.A., D.D.
- Life of Sister Saint Rita of Cascia, by Father José Sicardo
- Saint Rita – Wife, Mother, Widow and Religious, by an unknown Augustinian
- books
- Devotions To Saint Rita: A Compendium Life of Saint Rita, Devotional Exercises, Novena And Triduum, Instructions On Novenas, etc.
- Our Sunday Visitor’s Encyclopedia of Saints
- Oxford Dictionary of Saints, by David Hugh Farmer
- Saint Rita: Saint of the Impossible: Prayers and Devotions to Saint
- Saints and Their Attributes, by Helen Roeder
- The Precious Pearl: The Story of Saint Rita of Cascia, by Michael Di Gregorio
- other sites in english
- 1001 Patron Saints and Their Feast Days, Australian Catholic Truth Society
- America Needs Fatima
- Catholic Culture
- Catholic Exchange
- Catholic Ireland
- Catholic News Agency
- Catholic Online
- Catholic Online
- Father Vincent F Kienberger
- Find a Grave
- Franciscan Media
- Independent Catholic News
- Midwest Augustinians
- National Shrine of Saint Rita of Cascia
- Novena
- Saint Nook
- Saint Rita of Cascia Parish, Sierra Madre, California
- Saints for Sinners
- Saints Project
- Saints Stories for All Ages
- Vultus Christi: Blessing of Roses
- Wikipedia
- images
- video
- sitios en español
- Martirologio Romano, 2001 edición
- sites en français
- fonti in italiano
MLA Citation
- “Saint Rita of Cascia“. CatholicSaints.Info. 5 April 2024. Web. 15 January 2025. <>