Today the dioceses here in the United States celebrate the memorial of St.  Frances Xavier Cabrini, virgin, born in Lombardy, Italy, one of  thirteen children.  She came to America as a missionary, founded the  Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart to care for poor children in  schools and hospitals. She is the first American citizen to be  canonized. 
Her parents were farmers in Italy.  She was the thirteenth child, born  when her mother was fifty-two years old.  The missionary spirit was  awakened in her as a little girl when her father read stories of the  missions to his children.  She received a good education, and at eighteen  was awarded the normal school certificate. 
For a while she  helped the pastor teach catechism and visited the sick and the poor.  She  also taught school in a nearby town, and for six years supervised an  orphanage assisted by a group of young women.  The bishop of Lodi heard  of this group and asked Frances to establish a missionary institute to  work in his diocese.  Frances did so, calling the community the  Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart.  An academy for girls was opened  and new houses quickly sprang up. 
One day Bishop Scalabrini,  founder of the Missionaries of Emigration, described to Mother Cabrini  the wretched economical and spiritual conditions of the many Italian  immigrants in the United States, and she was deeply moved.  An audience  with Pope Leo XIII changed her plans to go to the missions of the East.   "Not to the East, but to the West," the Pope said to her.  "Go to the  United States."  Mother Cabrini no longer hesitated.  She landed in New  York in 1889, established an orphanage, and then set out on a lifework  that comprised the alleviation of every human need.  For the children she  erected schools, kindergartens, clinics, orphanages, and foundling  homes, and numbers of hospitals for the needy sick.  At her death over  five thousand children were receiving care in her charitable  institutions, and at the same time her community had grown to five  hundred members in seventy houses in North and South America, France,  Spain, and England. 
The saint, frail and diminutive of stature,  showed such energy and enterprise that everyone marveled.  She crossed  the Atlantic twenty-five times to visit the various houses and  institutions.  In 1909 she adopted the United States as her country and  became a citizen.  After thirty-seven years of unflagging labor and  heroic charity she died alone in a chair in Columbus Hospital at  Chicago, Illinois, while making dolls for orphans in preparation for a  Christmas party.  Cardinal Mundelein of Chicago officiated at her funeral  and in 1938 also presided at her beatification by Pius XI.  She was  canonized by Pius XII in 1946.  She lies buried under the altar of the  chapel of Mother Cabrini High School in New York City. — A Saint A Day, Berchmans Bittle, O.F.M.Cap.
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