Black Catholic History Month was established in 1990 through the advocacy of the National Black Catholic Clergy Caucus. During the same year, the first celebration of Black Catholic History Month began in November in various cities in the United States with the celebration of St. Martin de Porres’ Feast Day. On November 3rd of that year, a liturgy celebrated the 150th anniversary of St. Martin’s transition to eternal life. In the world today there are more than 200 million people of African descent in the Roman Catholic Church. The reason for the selection of November to celebrate Black Catholic History is the number of important dates within this month: Nov. 1 – All Saints Day – an opportunity to review the lives of saints of African descent living in the first 300 years of Church history; Nov. 2 – All Souls Day – a time to remember the Africans lost in cruel treatment in the Middle passage crossing the Atlantic Ocean; Nov. 3 – Feast of St. Martin de Porres, the first saint of African descent in this hemisphere; Nov. 20 – the death of Zumbi Palmares in Brazil, the South American founder of a free state for blacks. Black Catholic History Month is a time for us to celebrate the contributions of black Catholics to the Roman Catholic tradition. Source: https://catholicreview.org/black-catholic-history-month-2019
St. Martín de Porres, in full Juan Martín de Porres Velázquez, was born in 1579 in Lima, . He died November 3, 1639 in Lima; was canonized 1962; and his feast day is November 3. Saint Martin dePorres was a Peruvian friar noted for his kindness, his nursing of the sick, his obedience, and his charity. He is the patron saint of social justice, racial harmony, and mixed-race people. He was born a mulatto, his father was a Spanish and his mother a free black woman, Martín de Porres was raised in poverty and bore the stigmas of both his illegitimate birth and his mixed race. He was placed to study with a barber-surgeon, where he learned bloodletting and the administration of medicines. Compassionate and eager to serve, he began to volunteer with the Dominicans at age 15 and helped care for the sick in the monastery infirmary. He became a Dominican oblate, or lay monastic, in 1601. Although it was not customary then to receive a mulatto into a religious order in Peru, Martín was considered an exception and became a Dominican lay brother in 1610. He was known for his devotion to the Eucharis and constant prayer, and he refrained from eating meat as an act of austerity. In addition to his work in the infirmary, Martín distributed food and alms to the poor and needy in Lima and was friends with St. Rose of Lima, another lay Dominican. For the youth of Lima, he established a school, considered by some to be his monument. His funeral was an occasion of public honor, and many miracles were said to have occurred after his death. He was beatified in 1837 by Pope Gregory XVI and canonized by Pope John XXIII.
Easy Fund Raising and all parishioners can participate! St. Joseph’s is officially registered as a Charitable Organization on Amazon Smile. Each time you make an Amazon purchase, do so via AmazonSmile and select St. Joseph’s as your charitable organization. The parish will receive 0.5% of each purchase from when St. Joseph’s is selected. If you’re an Amazon user, please make your purchases through AmazonSmile and the parish will benefit. More detail appears in the bulletin and you can contact Loretta Young for additional information.