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AVE
MARIA
Abbaye
Saint-Joseph de Clairval
21150 Flavigny sur Ozerain
France |
mail : englishspoken@clairval.com
October 7, 2003
Our Lady of the Holy Rosary
Dear Friend of Saint Joseph Abbey,
«Hey, dynamite!» joked
a student to her friend, one morning in 1973. The latter hid a
very rich interior life behind the outward appearance of a
fiery temperament. In 1975, a few days before the illness that
would strike her down at the age of 21, she confided to her
mother: «I am so happy that if I died now, I believe I would
go straight to Heaven, since Heaven means praising God, and
I'm already there!» The official investigation for her
beatification was opened in 1990.
Claire de Castelbajac was born on October 26, 1953, in Paris,
the youngest child in a family of five. Baptized three days
after her birth, she was placed under the protection of Saint
Claire and the Immaculate Virgin. With her family, she spent
the first five years of her life in Rabat, in Morocco, until
their permanent return to France in 1959. Her mother taught
her at a very early age to make the sign of the Cross and to
pray. During her errands and walks, she often went to the
church to say short prayers, because she knew well that the
church is «Jesus' house.» Her passionate nature manifested
itself at an early age: there were no limits to her love,
desire or generosity. When she was about three years old,
Claire often had temper tantrums, but these outbursts were
followed by immediate acts of contrition that were as intense
as her anger. Despite this liveliness, the child often
suffered the trial of illness—at the age of four, she nearly
died of toxicosis. Shortly thereafter, an intestinal
infection, followed by a viral angina, required a regimen of
injections. Every time she saw the nurse, she turned into a
wild thing, howling and getting agitated. It wasn't until the
following winter, before her First Communion, that she would
understand what it means to «offer one's sufferings to Jesus,»
and she would gradually learn to control herself so as to
endure the pain.
Returning to France was a psychological shock to Claire.
Leaving the charming villa in Rabat and its marvelous garden,
to go live in the old family home in Lauret (in southwest
France), «the big wrecked house,» as she would say, was
truly wrenching. She received Holy Eucharist for the first
time in June 1959, after having tried very hard to prepare for
it. Her generosity to offer herself to God in little things
lasted in the years that followed. She jotted down, for
example: «1) I didn't take water—2) Act of love—3) I
obeyed Mommy right away—4) I didn't complain about having a
stomach ache,» etc. For her first confession, Claire wanted
to make a careful self-examination. She took her children's
book and carefully considered «all the sins on the list.»
She then said to her mother: «I don't understand anything on
it, so I don't know if I've done these sins... But explain
them to me... If I knew all the sins, then I wouldn't do them
anymore, because I wouldn't want to hurt Jesus.»
So they all go to Heaven!
Claire was not yet six years old when one evening she
spontaneously composed the following prayer: «Jesus, make the
bad people, and those who don't love You, and those who don't
know You, become nice, and know You and love You, and make
them say their prayers three times a day, so that they all go
to Heaven.» Her mother asked her, «Did you think about
offering your heart and your day this morning?»—«Of
course! I always think about it! If I didn't, what good would
I be?» But this lively piety was not without battles. One day
she abruptly said to her mother: «Why did you have me? Why
did you have me make my First Communion so young?» And she
complained about the exertion this brought with it in her
life...
In her intense need to communicate, Claire addressed letters
to her parents that she deposited in great secrecy on their
plates or under their pillows. She had just turned nine when
she wrote these lines: «My most dear beloved mother, I shall
start by telling you that I love you very much, very much, the
most in the world. You are so nice!!! Then to beg your
forgiveness for all the faults I have committed you will
forgive me, you are so good, dear mother...» (sic). The
morning of her 10th birthday, despite being tired, Claire was
anxious to go to Mass. That evening, she confided to her
mother, «Do you know what I asked for this morning?... That I
will always stay pure, like I was after my baptism.» She made
a habit of invoking the Blessed Virgin every morning when she
first woke up: «O Immaculate Mary, I entrust to You my purity
of heart. Guard it always.» When she was eleven and a half,
she made her solemn Communion (French custom from the days
when children did not receive their First Communion until the
age of 11 or 12). While her boarding-school friends received
an avalanche of secular gifts, Claire thanked her parents for
not having given her any, but rather a souvenir holy card, on
which her mother had written a text that would hold great
importance for her: «Have an intimate desire that His Majesty
grant you what He knows you lack for His honor and glory.»
(Saint John of the Cross).
She completed her elementary school studies at home, under her
mother's direction. In 1964, she entered the boarding school
in Toulouse, run by the Sisters of the Sacred Heart. There she
displayed an intense joie de vivre, a passionate
generosity, and a special attraction for things of God: «It's
fabulous!» she wrote. «This morning, I went to Mass and I
received Communion... I thought of you, dear parents, who
taught me the Catholic faith, who taught me to pray, who had
me baptized. I owe you everything and I thank you more than I
can say or think.»
Children are asking
During the turmoil in France in May 1968, Claire
listened and thought a great deal. She keenly felt the
political and social disturbances she was witnessing, and saw
only one remedy: prayer to Our Lady, according to the requests
at Fatima. On her own initiative, she led the students in her
9th -grade class to write to all the bishops in France: «Your
Excellency, in 1917, Our Lady asked for: the daily Rosary,
consecration to Her Immaculate Heart, communion of reparation
on the first Saturdays of the month. 'If you hear my requests,
Russia will be converted and there will be peace; if not, she
will spread her errors throughout the world.' At this time,
Russia is spreading her errors and peace is far from complete.
It is likely that France and Catholic countries have not asked
the Blessed Virgin enough for the conversion of sinners...
This is why, Your Excellency, we are begging you to ask your
priests to transmit Our Lady's message to all their
parishioners... Your Excellency, we are children who are
asking you, as well as all the bishops in France, to make this
appeal to the Church of our homeland. We are certain that you
will consider it and we thank you for this.»
As a high-spirited fifteen-year-old, Claire was indignant at
the winds of protest blowing through the Church, and which
aimed at making a clean sweep of the past. She suffered from
this to the point that she fell ill and had to complete her
10th-grade year at home. Having noticed that the young people
in her town did not have the opportunity to meet to have fun
together, she first organized a choir. Then the group embarked
on two plays to entertain senior citizens in the nearby
nursing home, the handicapped, or simply the town residents.
Claire entered her 11th-grade year at the Dominican school in
Seilh, close to Toulouse. She was unenthusiastic, but her good
spirits won out. «It's funny,» she wrote to a friend, «when
I think about the reasons you can find for being happy! Life
is happiness! There are people who make it unhappiness.»
However, her struggles were ever present. On September 8,
1970, the Feast of the Birth of the Blessed Virgin, a feast
Claire loved very much, she refused to go with a very good
friend to Mass. Her impassive face betrayed another influence
that had overcome her that day. For her last school year
(1970-71), she moved into a private room in Toulouse, and
continued to pursue her studies at the Dominican school.
Difficult but beautiful
That year, her mother fell ill. She was hospitalized,
then had to remain bedridden for more than a year. Claire went
to see her every evening at the clinic. On Friday nights, she
returned to Lauret to keep her father company. This family
crisis made her suffer greatly: «I'm sick of it..., and still
sick of it...,» she wrote to one of her sisters, on February
15, 1971, but then she added, «Anyway, I have come out of
this sad time matured and grown-up, because I saw that we
didn't live for ourselves but for others, and that everyone is
made to live for others, and to make them happy. It's terribly
difficult, but when you manage to do it, it's beautiful.»
During the following April, Claire herself had to be
hospitalized for sciatica. On her bed, she wrote a great deal:
colorful letters about everything, but rarely of her illness.
She took advantage of opportunities that arose to evangelize.
To a night nurse who confided in her and claimed not to have
the time to bother with matters of God, she retorted, «But
Madame, don't you know that Faith helps you to act better? So
waste an hour finding it, and you will be happy and not empty
anymore, like you feel right now!»—«What a precious
treasure our Faith is!» she said to her parents. «How I wish
that this woman would discover it!»
In August, after five months of suffering, the doctors decided
to perform an operation on the spinal column. The procedure
was successful. Claire was soon back on her feet again, but
attacks of sciatica periodically returned. Three weeks after
leaving the hospital, she passed her baccalauréat (French
national high school exit examination), then decided to devote
herself to restoring painting and frescos. This profession
would provide an advantage that was very significant in her
eyes—independence in her work and the opportunity to remain
at home later on.
Claire decided to take the entrance exam for the Central
Institute of Restoration in Rome, a government-operated
institute that reserved three spots every year for foreign
candidates. The art history courses at the university in
Toulouse would prepare her. She set to work. A very sociable
person, she visited a lot of people, and went regularly to the
homes of the elderly and infirm in her neighborhood. Her
devotion did not weaken. «I decided last night to go to Mass
every day... I have just enough time to go to the university
as soon as it's over. I come out all good, all pure, all holy,
and getting on my bike, I go into exile in the crowd.»
Fear not
At Easter 1972, Claire decided to move to Rome to
better prepare for her exam. She was eighteen and a half years
old. Three months of work in the studio and the library, from
May to July 1972, then two months of study holiday in Lauret,
interrupted by the national pilgrimage to Lourdes on August
15, kept her busy until the fall. In October, Claire went to
Rome again, where two of her mother's brothers had lived for
some time. One was a Carmelite monk. The other, the father of
eight children, received her into his home often. In her diary
can be read: «Holiness is the Love to live ordinary things
for God and with God, with His grace and His strength» (October
17, 1972). She wrote to her parents: «I am terrified at the
thought that I might get in! I know that it says Fear not
366 times in the Bible, once for each day of the year, and
that the grace of state will be there, if need be. But I am
scared to death of starting my adult life in two months...»
This did not keep her from working so as to succeed.
The date of the exam, delayed by strikes, was set for December
1st. Claire was the third of the three foreign students
accepted. She was enthusiastic, but new battles loomed ahead.
«The hand of God never ceases to protect me,» she wrote to
her parents. «What annoys me is my success—completely
unintentional, believe me—with boys. One is totally in love
with me. And then, there is a Lebanese boy who is full of
consideration...; and I might add two Italians, who are
especially complimentary and faithful dogs. At the end of nine
days, it's a lot... It's true that they are soon going to know
me better!... It's terribly difficult to change your
disposition and keep yourself from laughing, from making a
joke out of everything and making plays on words all the
time... But I'm sure of the Divine, Virginal and Benedictine
protection (she wore a medal of Saint Benedict), not to
mention that of the Guardian Angels.»
A few days later, she added, «I can't wait to be really moved
in, so that I can write my letters and do a half hour of
spiritual reading every day. My rosary is said during the two
15 minutes, or four, that I spend in the subway. I really need
your prayers... the more I get to know people, the more it
depresses me. I thought Art for Art's sake and Beauty for
Beauty's sake, and therefore the sense of the gratuitousness
of things, gave people a profundity and something more...
Apparently, except for two or three snobs, everyone is
interested in what they are doing, and even passionate about
it, but after that, plop! The only thing that interests them
is pleasure in all its forms. So that depresses me and
disgusts me a little. I can't judge them, but all the people I
talk to, except for two, are like that. They all more or less
live with a «partner»... So I am disappointed... All the
boys chase me! Damn it! I don't wear miniskirts... And I even
sprinkle with coldness and nastiness those I must avoid. And
the more I sprinkle, the more they continue... But what I'm
afraid of right now is me, because I am going to tell you
everything. I am not encouraged at all by good people, like I
was in Toulouse. So sometimes, when I see the people around
me, I think to myself that it wouldn't be so bad to be like
them... Then I pray, I pray, to have the courage, I could even
say sometimes the heroism, to resist, to not have any «boyfriend»
before marriage...»
Playing the fool
All the same, Claire gradually allowed herself to be
carried away by her freedom. In mid-March 1973, she moved in
with two female friends, in a self-contained apartment. They
began to have people over and go out at night, having a really
good time doing a lot of «moronic things,» as she would say,
and not working very much. «I have so many things to tell you,»
she wrote to her parents... «I come back from class to find
the apartment full of friends, and we go to bed, totally
exhausted, at 12, 1 o'clock in the morning. My view of things
is changing—what will satisfy the thirst for life I have?...
Yesterday we went out to the seaside. It was fabulous! All by
ourselves to play the fool till the middle of the night... We
were so passionately full of life, of independence, of total
freedom and the intoxicating feeling of being outside of
civilization.»
At this rate, Claire's grades at the «Restauro» became
deplorable, and she was within an inch of getting herself
expelled. One of her uncles reprimanded her one day: «I am
sorry for your parents, especially your father, who is old,
that you are wasting your life...» She retorted, «In the
meantime, I'll be having a good time!» Nevertheless, she was
secretly unhappy with herself. Her keen sense of God, her
brush with failure in her studies and undoubtedly also a
comment by a student: «You will see, my poor girl, you will
be converted to our atheism. I don't give you a year before
you'll be like us...», brought about a healthy turnaround.
Summer brought with it a happy vacation in Lauret, interrupted
by the National Pilgrimage to Lourdes. At the beginning of
October, she left again for Rome with high spirits. She wrote
to her parents: «I realize the level of vanity and sheer
egoism I fell to, under the deceptive name of emancipation...»
The excellent mood that marked the beginning of this new year
would not flag again. God was again at the center of her life,
in spite of occasional «revolts of the spirit.»
One year later, on September 16, 1974, Claire left for three
weeks in the Holy Land, with a group of a dozen or so young
people, led by a Dominican priest. «Are in Bethlehem. Walking
in the desert for hours. Very tired and hungry. Asceticism:
Incomparable for purity, it's true.» She wrote to her
parents: «I am in the middle of making a complete conversion,
of examining my faith, of finding the real meaning of it, and
I am continuously learning the ABCs of my religion. I am
accumulating lots of elements of fervor, piety, for example,
poverty of spirit, so as to be able to arrange my life in Rome
the way I see it now, and not how I was living it before. I am
beginning to understand the meaning of the word «Love of God»:
I believe you don't have to have a passion for adjacent
matters, but point everything to God, and only to Him!»
A completely new happiness
A few days after she had returned from the Holy Land,
Claire received her outside duty for Assisi where she would
work on the restoration of the frescos in the Basilica. She
stayed with the Benedictines, and wrote to her parents: «I am
going to live a real monastic life: go to bed after dinner,
Mass every morning at 7:30 and to work at 8 o'clock... What we
are doing is the height for me! The Chapel of Saint Martin, by
Simone Martini. It's the most beautiful... This guy, Martini,
was a first-rate man of faith, you can see it even better up
close... I feel a totally new happiness going to Mass during
the week, reading Saint Ignatius of Antioch, Saint John and
even doing my 15 minutes of daily contemplation.»
On December 10, she wrote again: «I am more and more blessed
with bliss, since I can count the days that separate us. In
the meantime, I am suffocating with feverishness—the excess
that you know in me reigns in all its splendor... The dean
leaves me free to go everywhere, to the places where the
boards will be taken away the next day, to put the final
touches on things. And she doesn't even go later on to look,
which really bothers me, because the responsibility is greater
than I can take on. So what—I have carte blanche. It's a
great life, isn't it? Free, in one of the most beautiful
places in Europe...»
Claire arrived in Lauret on December 18 for her Christmas
vacation. Her relatives found her transfigured. She traveled
to Lourdes on Monday, December 30. Prostrate on her knees
before the Grotto, her forehead on the ground, she remained
motionless for a very long time. When she got up again, her
face was completely different, as if she were far away,
infinitely removed. Something had taken place between the
Blessed Virgin and her... On Saturday, January 4, she suddenly
came down with viral meningoencephalitis. On the 17th,
unconscious, she received the Sacrament of the Sick. On Sunday
the 19th, while she seemed to be sleeping, all of a sudden she
said, very clearly and very loudly: «Hail Mary, full of grace...»
then stopped, exhausted. Her mother continued the prayer. At
the end of every Hail Mary, Claire murmured, «and then... and
then...», to make the Rosary continue. The evening of the
20th, she sank more and more into a deep coma. On Wednesday,
January 22, 1975, at about five o'clock in the afternoon, she
entered into the eternity to which God was calling her. She
was 21 and three months.
Claire wanted «to go straight to Heaven.» She had spoken a
great deal with her uncle, Father Philip of the Trinity, about
the First Letter of Saint John: Our love is brought to
perfection in this, that we should have confidence on the day
of judgment (I John 4:17). In 1970, she had written to a
friend: «Do you really think that the ever-growing closeness
of death is frightening? I think it isn't. We shouldn't fear
death. Death is just the passage from one life—that is just
a test, in fact—of joys and little misfortunes... to
complete Happiness, in perpetual View of Him Who has given us
everything. Death frightening? No, it shouldn't be—but
rather, hoped and waited for (so prepared for...) Do you
remember that at the sisters of the Sacred Heart, several
girls (you were one of them) had predicted that I would die
young? Without having conferred about it. Oh well, I'll admit
to you that I don't care at all, since in eternity, what is 50
years more or 50 years less of earthly life?»
Following the example of Claire de Castelbajac, let us strive
to «point everything to God,» not seeking anything but to
please Him, and the Lord will reward us beyond all measure.
Dom Antoine Marie osb
P. S. We gratefully accept the addresses of other persons
who may enjoy receiving it.
- Also available free of charge are: tract about the Truths of
the Catholic Religion; scapular of Our Lady of Mount Carmel,
with explanatory notice; the promises of the Sacred Heart; the
mysteries of the Rosary.
Contributions may be sent to this address in France (Abbaye
Saint-Joseph de Clairval, F-21150 Flavigny sur Ozerain, France)
:
- From U. S. A., U. K. or Canada: by ordinary cheques
payable to «Abbaye Saint Joseph,» (no need to have special
international cheques) in U. S. $, Pounds Sterling or Can. $.
- From Irish Republic: by ordinary cheques in Irish Pou
nds. No formality up to 100 Irish Pounds; for more, ask your
bank.
- From other countries: by postal order, or bank drafts
in French Francs.
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or
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The monks pray for your intentions.
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