Gemma Galgani
Blagdan: April 11
Italian laywoman with stigmata who achieved sanctity through suffering and divine union.
Zaštitništvo
Lucca, pharmacists, suffering souls, young women, stigmatists
Vrline i osobine
Životopis
Saint Gemma Galgani (1878–1903) was an Italian laywoman of extraordinary mystical gifts and profound spiritual maturity achieved in just 25 years. Born in Lucca, Tuscany, she experienced severe illness, particularly spinal tuberculosis, which she embraced as redemptive suffering. Gemma received the stigmata—Christ's five wounds—repeatedly, visible to others though she preferred privacy. She experienced mystical visions, ecstatic states, and direct spiritual encounters with Christ and the Virgin Mary. Unable to enter religious life due to her poor health, Gemma lived as a private laywoman, serving her family and those in need while pursuing extraordinary interior holiness. Her spiritual director documented her experiences thoroughly. She practiced radical obedience and childlike trust in divine providence. Her brief life exemplified that sanctity transcends monastic vocation, accessible through suffering embraced with love. Gemma died of tuberculosis at 23 and was canonized in 1940, becoming a model of youthful holiness and redemptive suffering for contemporary Catholics.