The suffering of St. Therese
St. Therese in July 1896. (Photo credit: Wikipedia). |
A short time after Therese’s first
communion, her sister Marie told her, “I think God will spare you from
having to suffer.” The irony is that Therese had already suffered more
than some people do in a lifetime. Throughout her life people discounted
her suffering. And even today some people see Therese as a saccharine
saint, simple-minded, sentimental, a saint for little girls. They are
ignorant of her suffering and reject her as irrelevant.
Mother loss
When Therese was two months old, she almost died of enteritis. Her mother Zelie–probably already suffering from breast cancer–could not nurse her. A wet-nurse saved Therese’s life. Therese had to live five miles away from her family for thirteen months. She became attached to her nurse, whom she then had to leave behind.
Zelie Martin died when Therese was 4. Therese hid her great sorrow from her father and sisters. But when Pauline, the sister who became her substitute mother, entered the Carmelite monastery, Therese’s grief overwhelmed her. She became so ill, she once again barely survived. A smile from the Virgin Mary cured her.
Only four years later, her godmother Marie, who had cared for her since Pauline left, joined Pauline in Carmel.
We could count these as five instances of losing her mother.
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