Mother Ricarda Beauchamp Hambrough played a vital role in saving the lives of more than 60 Jews by smuggling them into her convent.
Her order, the Bridgettines, founded in the 14th century, has now sought permission from the Vatican to examine her life and writings for evidence of “heroic virtue”, the first step to beatification and, ultimately, canonisation.
She could join three other British women being considered by Rome for sainthood.
Ricarda’s case is in its earliest stages and requires evidence of two miracles.
Yet with successful progress,it could make her the first British female saint since 1970, when Pope Paul VI canonised three women among martyrs who died in the Protestant Reformation.
Ricarda was born Madaleina Catherine in London in September 1887 and was received into the Roman Catholic church in Brighton at the age of four after her parents’ conversion to the faith.
Little is known about her childhood, but as a young woman she was influenced by Father Benedict Williamson, a Benedictine monk, and in 1912, aged 24, she travelled to Rome to become a nun.
With the Bridgettines she took the religious name “Ricarda” and was soon chosen as the assistant to Blessed Mary Elizabeth, the abbess.
During the second world war, on hearing that the Germans were exterminating Jews, Pope Pius XII secretly ordered the religious houses of Rome to shelter them from persecution, according to Vatican records.
A spokeswoman for the Bridgettines confirmed yesterday that Ricarda was central to the hiding of refugees, including Italian Jews, communists and Poles: “We helped many during the war and Mother Ricarda helped Mother Elizabeth to hide them.”
Although Pius was criticised after his death for not speaking out against the Holocaust,Ricarda’s efforts to save Jews is likely to be viewed favourably by the Vatican, as it was a factor in her abbess’s own swift elevation to beatification.
A QUARTET OF GOODNESS
Mother Ricarda is one of four British women who are potential candidates for sainthood.
The others being considered by the Vatican are Elizabeth Prout, a 19th-century nun who worked in the slums of Manchester; Mary Potter, a Londoner who founded an order of nursing nuns in Nottingham during the same period; and Margaret Sinclair, a 20th-century nun who died of tuberculosis after tending to the poor of Edinburgh.
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(Source: TOUK)