Saint Therese of the Child Jesus
of the Holy Face
Entries in summer of 1944 (2)
"Residents of Lisieux View as 'Miracle' Sparing of Carmelite Convent and Basilica of 'The Little Flower' - September 30, 1944 - two Canadian war correspondents interviewed Carmelites at Lisieux
"Lisieux basilica". Licensed under CC BY-SA 2.0 via Wikimedia Commons
Immediately after the liberation of Lisieux on August 24, 1944, two Canadian newspapermen interviewed the Carmelites and other townspeople and cabled the story to Canada. Substantial excerpts from both stories about the "miracle of Lisieux" appeared in the Southern Cross, the newspaper of the diocese of Savannah, Georgia, on September 30, 1944. [Note: unfortunately, the archives of the Southern Cross have disappeared from the Web].
"[On the night of June 8, 1944] [f]lames roared and crackled over blocks of the town, creeping nearer and nearer to the convent. At the edge of the convent, perilously close to St. Therese's own chapel, the fire mysteriously slackened, then died out completely. The townsfolk observed this, and today they are convinced that St. Therese herself intervened . . . .
Devout brown-clad nuns of the Carmelite Order, to which Saint Therese belonged, today told me they believed the Saint had also intervened to spare the Basilica which bears her name. . . . I talked to Sister Anne of Jesus, aged 65 . . . to my surprise, I discovered the stooped, pale little nun was a Canadian, formerly Anne Goyer of Montreal . . . .
Tomorrow, a silent brown-garbed procession will walk quietly through the ruins of Lisieux, and the Carmelite nuns will once more step into silence and invisibility, which most will never leave again.
Richard Sanburn, writing from Lisieux for the Ottawa Citizen
I found the nuns eating a simple meal on benches in one of the little side chapels, the chapel of the Virgin of the Smile. In this and other side chapels of the crypt they have slept while men, women, and children have also been living and sleeping in close proximity, very different from the seclusion these women have known for years. There were mattresses even on the flagged floor on each side of the altar.
Frederick Griffin, writing from Lisieux for the Toronto Star
"Lisieux and the Allied Normandy Beach Landing 1944," courtesy of "Therese de Lisieux No. 845 - June 2004"
The Allied troops enter Lisieux in the summer of 1944. At the top, the Basilica of St. Therese
With thanks to the late Fr. J. Linus Ryan of Ireland, I am happy to present this excellent brief account of the bombing of Lisieux, a precise narrative of what happened to the town and to the Carmelite nuns in the summer of 1944, mentioning the public promise made on July 20, 1944 by curates of the town's three churches to celebrate the feast of St. Therese every year by bringing her relics in procession from St. Pierre's Cathedral to the Basilica. The article was translated by Teresa Geslin Sweeney from "Therese de Lisieux," the magazine published by the Shrine at Lisieux; it appeared in English on the Web site of the Irish National Office of St. Therese.