Francesco Bonifacio was born in modern-day Slovenia in 1912. After elementary school, he entered the junior seminary at the age of 12, and at 24 he was ordained a priest. After assignment to a small group of rural villages, he started a chapter of Catholic Action, taught religion, visited families and the sick, and donated what little he had to the poor. During World War 2, Don Francesco served his parishioners with unfailing courage. He risked his life to bury the dead, hid teenagers who didn’t want to get drafted by Mussolini’s army, and quelled a peasant uprising. After the war he was accused by the Communist Yugoslavian government of being a subversive, and on this day in 1946, Don Francesco disappeared.
CHALLENGE
Blessed Francesco Bonifacio lived on mostly soup and eggs, his rectory had no electricity or running water, and he had chronic lung problems, but he didn’t let any of those things stop him from walking or bicycling to visit everyone in his parish. We often make the excuse, “If I had more, I could do more.” Today, for the good of God and neighbor, pray to the Holy Spirit to give you the gift of Fortitude to overcome your excuses.