Our Lady of Banneux

(Redirected from Mariette Beco)

Our Lady of Banneux (French: Notre-Dame de Banneux), or Our Lady of the Poor, is the sobriquet given to the eight apparitions of the Virgin Mary to Mariette Beco, an adolescent girl living in Banneux, Liège Province, Belgium, between 15 January and 2 March 1933. Beco told her family and parish priest of seeing a Lady in white who declared herself to be the "Virgin of the Poor", saying "I come to relieve suffering" and "Believe in me and I will believe in you".

Our Lady of Banneux
The miraculous spring of Our Lady of Banneux, in Belgium
LocationBanneux, Belgium
Date15 January – 2 March 1933
WitnessMariette Beco
TypeMarian apparition
Approval22 August 1949[1]
Bishop Louis-Joseph Kerkhofs
Diocese of Liège
Venerated inCatholic Church
ShrineShrine of Our Lady of Banneux, Belgium

History

edit

Background

edit

Mariette Beco was 11 and a half years old when she reported eight Marian apparitions in 1933 in Banneux, Belgium, a hamlet about 15 kilometres (10 mi) southeast of the city of Liège.[2] She was the eldest of seven children and her family's living conditions were difficult. They lived in a modest working-class house on the outskirts of the village, near a large pine forest.[3]

The apparitions

edit

According to Mariette, she first saw the Blessed Virgin on the evening of Sunday 15 January 1933, as she was looking out the kitchen window. A woman in white stood in the garden of their house and called to her to come out with a wave of her hand. But her mother forbade her to go out.[2][3][4] She is described as a young lady in the yard smiling at her. The woman was bent slightly forward and wearing a long white gown with a blue sash, and a transparent white veil.

Three days later, on Wednesday 18 January 1933 around 7 p.m., Mariette had been praying on her knees in the garden of her house. Suddenly, the Lady appeared again and called her to leave the garden and head for the road. At some point, Mariette kneeled by a ditch, in front of a puddle of water coming from a spring. The Lady then told her : "Push your hands into the water" and "This spring is reserved for me".[3]

The next day, on 19 January 1933, the Lady appeared to Mariette while she was kneeling on the path in a bad weather. Mariette then asked her : "Who are you, beautiful Lady?" The Lady answered : "I am the Virgin of the Poor". Then, after having led Mariette along the path to the spring, the Virgin told her : “ This spring is reserved for all nations... to relieve the sick”.[2]

On 20 January 1933, Mariette went out around 6.45 p.m. and the Virgin appeared to her again. Mariette asked her: “What would you like, my beautiful Lady?" Smiling, the Virgin replied : "I would like a little chapel." The Virgin stretched out her hands, and with her right hand blessed Mariette.

On 11 February 1933, Mariette has once again been dragged to the spring by the Virgin. Three days later, on 15 February 1933, the Virgin appeared for the sixth time. That time, Mariette passed on Abbé Jamin's request for The Virgin to show them a sign. The lady replied : "Believe in me, I will believe in you." She also added for Mariette: "Pray a lot." The Virgin then gave her a secret and left.

On February 20, the Virgin told Mariette at the spring : "My dear child, pray a lot". Mariette then waited ten days before seeing the Virgin for the last time. On 2 March 1933, during a rainy day, Mariette was praying her third rosary when, around 7 p.m., it suddenly stopped raining and the Virgin appeared. That day, according to Mariette, Mary told her : "I am the Mother of the Savior, Mother of God. Pray much."[3]

The seer

edit

Mariette became at the time the object of local derision, with even her grandmother and aunt making fun of her. Boys followed her around, calling her "Bernadette", kneeling and asking for her blessing.[5]

After the apparitions, Mariette decided to remain a private person, married and led a quiet family life.[4] Mariette died on 2 December 2011, at the age of 90.[6] In 2008 she made a final statement about her role in the apparitions: "I was no more than a postman who delivers the mail. Once this has been done, the postman is of no importance any more".[4]

Church approval

edit

The claims of Mariette Beco were subject to an official investigation from 1935 to 1937 by an episcopal commission. The evidence collected was submitted to Rome for further analysis. Meanwhile, a hospital was built in 1938.[5]

In May 1942, Bishop Kerkhofs of Belgium's Diocese of Liege approved the veneration of Mary under the title of Our Lady of the Poor[7] and approved the apparitions themselves in 1949.[8][9] Although the Holy See gave the bishop permission to approve the apparition, the Holy See itself did not approve it.[10]

The sanctuary

edit

A small chapel stands where the Virgin of the Poor is said to have requested it to be built.

Over time the site drew pilgrims. Today, the small spring yields about 2,000 gallons of water a day with many reports of miraculous healings.[11]

On 21 May 1985, during his trip to Belgium, Pope John Paul II visited the sanctuary of Banneux and presided over a mass.[12]

Veneration

edit
 
The venerated image of Our Lady of the Poor of Taguig during a visit in the Manila Cathedral. This image was crowned in 2018.

As Our Lady of Banneux she has two titles: Our Lady of the Poor and Queen of Nations.[13] Her feast day under these titles is January 15.[14]

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ Pope John Paul II (1999-07-31). "On the 50th Anniversary of the Recognition of the Apparitions of Our Lady at Banneux". Letter to Bishop Albert Houssiau. Fifty years ago, on 22 August 1949, Bishop Louis-Joseph Kerkhofs, your predecessor in the see of Liège, definitively recognized the reality of the apparitions of Our Lady of the Poor in Banneux.
  2. ^ a b c "Apparitions after Beauraing", Catholic Herald, 15 November 1957
  3. ^ a b c d "Les apparitions (1933)". Banneux Notre-Dame (in French). Retrieved 2024-10-08.
  4. ^ a b c "Teahan, Madeleine. "Visionary who reported eight apparitions of Mary dies aged 90", Catholic Herald, 7 December 2011". Archived from the original on 12 December 2013. Retrieved 9 December 2013.
  5. ^ a b West, Ed. "Healing for all nations", Catholic Herald, 11 January 2008
  6. ^ KIPa News
  7. ^ van Houtryve, La Vierge des Pauvres, Banneux, 1947
  8. ^ Ann Ball, 2003 Encyclopedia of Catholic Devotions and Practices ISBN 0-87973-910-X page 641
  9. ^ Matthew Bunson, 2008, The Catholic Almanac, ISBN 978-1-59276-441-9 page 123
  10. ^ Rahner, Karl (1995). Visioni e profezie: mistica ed esperienza della trascendenza (in Italian). Translated by Dell'Oro, Roberto. p. 109. ISBN 9788834338766. è sorprendente che la Santa Sede abbia evitato nei casi di Beauraing e Banneaux di concedere l'autorizzazione come i vescovi volevano; per questo però diede il permesso, a che essi facessero ciò con la loro autorità episcopale
  11. ^ Peter Stravinskas, 1998, Our Sunday Visitor's Catholic Encyclopedia ISBN 0-87973-669-0 page 124
  12. ^ "Letter to the Bishop of Liège (Belgium) (July 31, 1999) | John Paul II". www.vatican.va. Retrieved 2024-10-08.
  13. ^ "Coronation At Banneux - from the Catholic Herald Archive". archive.is. 2014-08-16. Archived from the original on 2014-08-16. Retrieved 2019-01-15.
  14. ^ Staff, Women of Grace (12 May 2012). "Virgin of the Poor – Our Lady of Banneux – Feast Day January 15 | Women of Grace". Retrieved 2019-01-15.
edit

50°32′19.4″N 05°45′02.6″E / 50.538722°N 5.750722°E / 50.538722; 5.750722