Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
of the Holy Face
Entries in summer 1944 (2)
"How Lisieux Was Bombed: Little Flower's Sanctuaries, House, and Her Surviving Sisters Safe," by Maurice Desjardins. The Catholic Herald, October 6, 1944
A journalist reports on how the bombing of Lisieux affected the Carmelites and tells the circumstances of the deaths of many other nuns: he learned the story from the Pilgrimage Director, Mgr Germain, three weeks after Lisieux was liberated. Read the story of "How Lisieux Was Bombed."
"The Miracle of Lisieux: An eyewitness account by a Carmelite of Lisieux of the bombing of Lisieux on June 6, 1944 and of the nuns taking refuge in the crypt of the Basilica until the liberation
"Fire broke out in several places, and there was neither water to put it out nor firemen to fight it. We were surrounded by it and on the night of June 7 we were forced to evacuate and to find refuge in the crypt of the Basilica, where we remained until August 27."
These lines are from a letter dated September 8, 1944, written by Sister Anne of Jesus, a Carmelite nun of Lisieux, and addressed to the Carmelite community at Three Rivers, Quebec. The letter is quoted extensively in the story "Carmelites Reveal 'Miracle of Lisieux'": Petition to Mary and St. Therese Brings Protection of God," published by the Arkansas Catholic, November 3, 1944. Please click on the title to read this eyewitness account of the fate of the Carmelite nuns of Lisieux. During the terrible bombing of June 6-7, 63 nuns from various religious communities in Lisieux died. All the Carmelite nuns survived. We are most grateful to the archives of the Arkansas Catholic for the chance to share this historic account with you. Please do click to see a legible scan of the actual 1944 newspaper with this amazing story. This entry is in honor of the 70th annniverary of D-Day.
Thanks to the Southern Cross newspaper, I have been able to verify that the photograph above shows British troops standing amid the ruins of the parish church of St. Desir, which was next to the Benedictine Abbey of Notre Dame du Pre, where St. Therese made her First Communion on May 8, 1884, sixty years before.