Visionaries
The Spanish Republic and the Reign of Christ
William A. Christian Jr.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS
Berkeley · Los Angeles · Oxford
© 1996 The Regents of the University of California
PATTERNS
― 217 ―
8. Religious
Professionals
Selective
memory is no doubt essential to the human condition. The only way we can see
ourselves as coherent is to revise history continually. Some clerical
historians reorder the past by silencing the role of clergy in movements they
judge unorthodox. In recent times this tendency has coincided with the search
by lay historians of religion for truly nonclerical, "popular," or
even "pagan" traditions. But except when the clergy is of a different
caste or race, we are unlikely to find sharp divergence between their thinking
and that of the laity. This is particularly so in Catholic areas like the rural
north of Spain which produced their own clergy and even exported them. It is
not surprising that some priests and religious abetted the seers of Ezkioga.
Vocations
In 1931 there
were about 2,050 diocesan priests born in the diocese of Vitoria and by my
estimate about 2,700 other male religious and 5,550 female religious born
there. Some Basque families regularly produced
― 218 ―
clergy and
religious for generations. Consider, for instance, the family of David Esnal, a
priest living in San Sebastián who in 1932 and 1933 was in guarded contact with
Patxi Goicoechea. Esnal's brother was a Franciscan and his sister was a
Franciscan Conceptionist in a convent in Villasana de Mena (Burgos). His
brother Roque had married a woman who had a cousin who was a Franciscan
Conceptionist in the same convent. Of Roque's eight children, two sons were
diocesan priests and one a Franciscan and a daughter was a Franciscan Conceptionist
known for her holiness. In two generations, Esnal's and the next, seven out of
twelve persons became diocesan priests, nuns, and male religious.[1]
Families with
many vocations were at least moderately well-off, for prior to the end of the
nineteenth century the regular orders required dowries and it could be
expensive to educate a secular priest. Laypersons in these clans—the nieces and
nephews, brothers and sisters, or mothers and fathers of priests or
religious—came to have an easy familiarity with the profession. Such persons
were less easily cowed by their parish priest or bishop. They knew the inside
gossip, the politics of appointments at the diocesan, national, and Vatican
levels, and the currents of opinion within the church. They took full advantage
of the alternatives in liturgy and moral theology which different priests and
religious orders had to offer. Individuals like Carmen Medina, José María
Boada, and Pilar Arratia who had the resources and the inclination to found
orders and restore church buildings had direct social access to archbishops,
cardinals, nuncios, and the Roman Curia.
Not only
clans but entire towns became famous as nurseries for the clergy. Some places
specialized in male or female religious of a given order, others were more
diversified; some specialized in diocesan clergy. In 1935 Zeanuri, a mountain
town in Bizkaia with 2,500 inhabitants, was proud to be the birthplace of 53
living priests and seminarians, 106 male religious, and 109 female
religious.[2]
A survey of
clergy in the diocese of Vitoria in 1960 (by then essentially the province of
Alava) showed that some towns producing many religious did so irregularly.
These vocations seem to have corresponded to the efforts of particular priests
or recruiters. Members of religious orders have described to me friars who came
to their village, gave talks at the school, and convinced whole sets of friends
to join the order. The route to a vocation could also be through a parish
preceptoría . This was a school, generally free, that often prepared children
for the orders or seminaries favored by the particular priest who ran that
school. From 1902 until his death in 1961 Bruno Lezaun of Abárzuza (Navarra)
stimulated through his schools around a thousand vocations.[3]
But other
towns, presumably those like Zeanuri in which vocations became a family matter,
maintained their role over several generations. If we compare vocations by size
of town of origin, the diocesan priests of Vitoria in 1931 came far less from
the industrial areas around Bilbao, San Sebastián, Eibar, and Irun and the
fishing towns along the coast and more from the agricultural and pastoral
uplands.
― 219 ―
When we look
at the towns within the immediate zone of the Ezkioga visions which for their
size produced the most priests, we find those towns that stayed faithful to the
Virgin of Ezkioga the longest: Zegama (23 priests from a population of 2,119),
Albiztur (8 priests from a population of 805), and Ataun as well as Itsaso,
Ormaiztegi, Legorreta, and Ordizia.[4]
Ataun, the
home of two prominent Ezkioga seers, had 2,424 inhabitants in 1931. Thanks to a
careful count of its vocations we know that in that year it was the birthplace
of 26 living diocesan priests, 60 nuns, and 37 male religious, that is, about
four times as many male and female religious as secular priests. In 1931 Ataun
had approximately four hundred households. About one in six had a living member
who was a priest or religious, as follows:[5]
TOTAL
VOCATIONS
63 houses
with 1 vocation
63
6 houses with
2 vocations
12
4 houses with
3 vocations
12
4 houses with
4 vocations
16
4 houses with
5 vocations
20
Vocations in
Ataun often occurred in family clusters. One in three individuals with a
vocation had a sibling with a vocation. About one in five had an uncle or aunt
or niece or nephew on their father's side with a vocation. We do not know how
many had relatives through mothers, but there were probably as many as through
fathers. This would mean that a majority of Ataun's religious or clergy had a
close family relative in religion.[6]
The houses
with the most vocations were on the whole the more prosperous farms. Several of
their families, like Arín and Tellería, had produced religious and priests
regularly in previous centuries. The rise of active orders and the endowment of
scholarships at seminaries at the end of the nineteenth century opened up
clerical careers to more people, and it was from the 1890s that the boom in
vocations in Ataun occurred. The great revolution came not in the secular
clergy but in the religious orders. Prior to this period, the religious from
Ataun were concentrated more in contemplative orders, particularly Benedictine
monks and Cistercian Bernarda nuns. As more orders returned to Spain at the end
of the century, entrance became easier and vocations of religious jumped to a
high level in 1890–1909 and increased 50 percent more in 1910–1929.[7]
There was now
room in the secular and regular clergy for the wealthy and the humble, the
intellectual and the worker. In 1931 Ataun natives were seminary professors,
pastors of large and prosperous parishes, directors of schools, and mother superiors.
Others were coadjutants, a Jesuit tailor, a Passionist convent cook, and
Benedictine, Capuchin, and Franciscan lay brothers. Among the nuns there were
teachers and nurses but also cooks, ironers, cleaning women, and other lifelong
menials. The orders people chose were generally
― 220 ―
image
[Full Size]
Children of
Gernika dressed as Native Americans for mission procession, 1930.
From Nuestro
Misionero, January 1930. Courtesy Instituto Labayru, Derio
those with
houses closest to Ataun. Youths often entered the same order as their aunts,
uncles, or siblings (five brothers from Orlaza-aundia became Benedictines, four
sisters from Lauspelz became Daughters of Charity and their brother joined the
Vincentians), and there were families whose tradition was to provide secular
priests.
The religious
orders did not keep the youths of Ataun close to home. First, they sent them to
a novitiate, the most distant of which were in Paris and Madrid. Then they
assigned them according to their particular calling and the order's needs. In
1931 only those who had become secular priests or contemplative nuns or monks
were likely to return to the diocese. The active male religious were often
found working abroad, particularly in Latin America, and the active nuns mainly
elsewhere in Spain. In all, half of Ataun's vocations were posted out of the
diocese; one out of five was out of Spain.
If these
figures hold for the diocese as a whole, they should give us pause. The period
1918–1930 was a golden age of missionary propaganda, particularly in the north.
The heartland of conservative Catholic Spain was not a closed, ingrown society
but one with intimate family links throughout the world. In
― 221 ―
image
[Full Size]
Children
dressed as Chinese for mission pageant in Vitoria, 1932. From
Iluminare, 20
February 1932, p. 56. Courtesy Instituto Labayru, Derio
1931 there
were natives of Ataun in China, Jerusalem, the United States, many countries in
Latin America, and France in an ecclesiastical version of the great worldwide
diaspora of European peasants at the opening of the century. Through letters
and rare visits these religious kept in touch with their relatives at home.[8]
We have seen
that interest in missions extended even to children, who participated in the
conversion of heathens through monthly magazines and dressed in elaborate
costumes for annual mission pageants. In some of her visions Benita Aguirre
heard the Virgin ask her to pray for the conversion of the Chinese. Some of the
same families contributing alms and promises to the Ezkioga vision network had
brothers, sisters, uncles, and aunts who were missionaries.[9]
For women
especially missionary work offered the possibility of holy adventure in wild
contrast to life on the farm or in an urban apartment. Teresa de Avila dreamed
as a child of becoming a missionary. From around 1910 Basque and Navarrese
women could fulfill these age-old fantasies. María Recalde was from Berriz,
where a new missionary order of nuns had been founded in her lifetime; the
founder, Margarita María López de Maturana (d. 1934), was a
― 222 ―
image
[Full Size]
Women
missionaries: masthead of magazine from Mercedarians
of Berriz,
1932. Courtesy Instituto Labayru, Derio
candidate for
beatification. Some of the Mercedarian Sisters of Charity trained in Zumarraga
went overseas, and there was a new house for female missionaries in Astigarraga
as well. These orders depended on alms and new vocations to keep up their
mission work, so they kept the Basque public well informed of their activities.
The result was a region in which not just families—Esnals or Ayerbes—but entire
towns had a proprietary interest in the church.[10]
The
importance of locally born clergy becomes obvious in towns that produced many
religious. There virtually everyone was either related to or neighbor to the
family of a priest or other religious. Resistance to diocesan policy on Ezkioga
was strongest in towns like Zegama, Ataun, Itsaso, and Ormaiztegi precisely
because in such an intensely devout rural society only priests or religious, or
those who enjoyed their support, could resist the hierarchy. In the townships
that produced many vocations, a kind of kin-based ecclesiastical culture was
strong enough to allow some people to make up their own minds.
Sometimes
more important than the village parish priest were the sons or daughters of the
village who were priests or religious elsewhere but who returned to the village
for visits to their families. Among both kinds of priests, those most friendly
and open had the most influence in public opinion about the visions. José
Domingo Campos, the pastor of Ormaiztegi, was a native of the village but never
let on how he felt. "Nunca se supo [We never knew]," some of his most
assiduous parishioners told me. When parishes were deeply divided, such priests
found it
― 223 ―
prudent not
to express personal opinions or give sermons on the subject; they often limited
themselves to reading diocesan decrees. Priests or religious who came from the
village but practiced elsewhere might be less hesitant to speak their minds.
The Parish
Clergy
I know of no
diocesan priest who had visions at Ezkioga, but in the first months of the
summer of 1931 many priests expressed pride in their seers, accompanied them to
the vision site, stood with them as they saw what they saw, and debriefed them
afterward. There were also those who held back from the start. Consider the six
priests in Zumarraga. Two did not let their sympathies show. Antonio Amundarain
and Andrés Olaechea were enthusiastic organizers and participants. Juan
Bautista Otaegui sometimes led the rosary at the vision site in July 1931 and
until the fiasco in October believed his cousin Ramona Olazábal. Miguel Lasa,
the most approachable and best loved curate in Zumarraga, openly opposed the
visions. He was the son of a charcoal-maker in Ataun, and it was to him that
the Ezkioga milkmaid had taken the first girl seer. He spoke out against
Patxi's theatrical trances: "The Virgin does not come to scare
people." He warned at once that Ramona's wounds could have been faked. And
in 1932 he instructed parishioners not to participate in the stations of the
cross at Ezkioga.[11]
In March 1932
Juan Casares, the curate of Ezkioga in charge of Santa Lucía, sent a letter to
Justo de Echeguren, the vicar general, who at that time was actively planning
with Padre Laburu the talks that would discredit the visions. The letter is
evidence of division among local priests. It seems that the curate of nearby
Itsaso had been boasting that the vicar general had called him in and approved
of his stance (in Casares's words a stance "of credulity and encouragement")
toward the seers. In the Itsaso annex of Alegia down the road from Ezkioga
seers and believers could be sure of a friendly ear in confession. Obviously
peeved, Casares asked if the Ezkioga priests should change their policy:
Pray let us
know if we ought to favor and promote these apparitions, in which case we will
avoid the animosity of the people who, emboldened by this priest and a few
others, have got to the point of making our lives almost impossible and our
ministry unfruitful, and we will avoid as well letters complaining about us
being sent to you, although in any case if my conduct has not been as it should
be, you may shift me somewhere else, in which case you could count of course on
my obedience.
Perhaps the
vicar general was using the Itsaso priest as an unwitting informant or perhaps
he was trying to provide some kind of church outlet for the pilgrims. In any
case, his task as the head of a deeply divided and at times strong-headed
― 224 ―
clergy was
complicated, and one can understand why he let Laburu do the convincing.[12]
To understand
fully how the clergy made up their minds about Ezkioga, we need to know about
their internal, informal groupings. The clergy and seminarians were divided,
largely along linguistic lines, between those who cultivated a Basque identity
and those who cultivated a Spanish identity. Many of the more cultured younger
priests with Basque leanings, inside and outside the seminary, looked to the
teachers José Miguel de Barandiarán and Manuel Lecuona as their leaders. One of
these younger priests was Sinforoso de Ibarguren, the pastor of Ezkioga, who
participated in the Eusko-Folklore Society. From the vert start Barandiarán and
Lecuona, as they told me separately, felt that despite their curiosity about
the visions as a human phenomenon they as priests should not encourage or
validate them by going to the site. In all the years of visions, they never
did. A young member of their group did go and wrote one of the only negative
articles published about the visions in the summer of 1931. Yet other priests
with Basque Nationalist sympathies were swept up by the same hope for a divine
sign in favor of the race which moved the Nationalist writer Engracio de
Aranzadi and the newspapers Euzkadi, Argia , and El Día .[13]
But even in July
Basque Nationalist clergymen were not the key actors. The organizers of the
prayers seem to have been José Ramón Echezarreta, the brother of the owner of
the field, who had been in Latin America, and above all, the Zumarraga parish
priest Antonio Amundarain and the local directors of the Aliadas. Particularly
enthusiastic in this respect was the assistant priest of Zumaia, Julián
Azpiroz. But when the bishop forbade priests to go to the site, Amundarain and
his group obeyed, regardless of their private sympathies. After Echeguren's
verdict against Ramona, most of the Basque Nationalist clergy turned against
the visions. Those who stuck with the seers were Carlists, especially Integrist
Carlists. By 1934, except for one group of believers in Zaldibia, the Ezkioga
visions, to the extent that they were politically defined, were an affair of
the pro-Spanish right.[14]
Zegama in
particular was a stronghold of clerical sympathy for the visions. Of the
twenty-three priests in the diocese native to Zegama, at least seven were at
some point enthusiastic supporters. Foremost among them was the parish priest,
José Andrés Oyarbide Berástegui (b. 1868), who worked with Padre Burguera, took
down the Zegama vision messages, and forbade the seers there to tell the Ezkioga
priest what they saw. His sister Romana often accompanied the child seer Martín
Ayerbe to Ezkioga. In Zegama Oyarbide was assisted by a brother, and another
curate was also a believer.[15]
From the same
generation was José Antonio Larrea Ormazábal (b. 1869), Benita Aguirre's parish
priest in Legazpi. At first he accompanied her to Ezkioga and took her
statements; later he turned sharply against the visions. Francisco Aguirre
Aguirre (b. 1873) was a curate in Irun. Like Juan Bautista Ayerbe, he
― 225 ―
provided a
link to the earlier visions at Limpias. He had been on a pilgrimage there in
June 1919, and after his return to Irun he recovered from a chronic limp after
praying to the Christ and putting its picture to his leg. In the summer of 1931
he and his sister went several times to Ezkioga from Irun by train. On 8
September 1931 while he was saying mass, the Virgin told him to tell the vicar
general that it was she who was appearing at Ezkioga, that she wanted a church
built there, and that a miracle would take place soon. Aguirre went to Vitoria
the next day but was unable to see the vicar general. In May 1933 Evarista
Galdós had visions in Aguirre's house which convinced him to take down her
messages for Padre Burguera.[16]
Gregorio
Aracama Aguirre (b. 1884), the pastor of Albiztur, was Francisco Aguirre's
cousin. At the start of the visions Aracama's nephew, Juan José Aracama Ozcoidi
(b. 1909), was a seminarian. In 1933 he became curate of Urrestilla, where he
believed in and assisted the seer Rosario Gurruchaga. Two other believing
priests from Zegama, Doroteo Irízar Garralda (b. 1875), director of the Ave
María School in Bilbao, and Isidro Ormazábal Lasa (b. 1889), parish priest of
Orendain, saw and were convinced by Ramona's bloodletting.[17]
Soledad de la
Torre and the Priest-Children
Several of
these priests from Zegama were prestigious older rectors. Some had had
experience with a local mystic prior to the events at Ezkioga. For in the
mountains bordering Navarra and Gipuzkoa an extraordinary woman held influence
over diocesan priests. She was Soledad de la Torre Ricaurte (1885–1933), the
founder in Betelu (Navarra) of the Missionary Sisters of the Holy Eucharist and
its ancillary movement, La Obra de los Sacerdotes Niños, the Society of Priests
as Children. Like the visions at Ezkioga, La Madre Soledad has been expunged
from history. Much like Magdalena Aulina, she encroached on male territory,
extending the time-honored role of conventual mystic consultant to include overt
tutelage of priests.
My first clue
to her role was a Basque-baiting pamphlet by the priest Juan Tusquets. In
February 1937, soon after San Sebastián had been taken by Franco's troops and
Ezkioga believers imprisoned there, Tusquets delivered a lecture entitled
"Freemasonry and Separatism." In his talk he referred in passing to
"meetings of a spiritist nature in order to mislead and discredit the
Catholic faith, like those of Ezquioga and Betelu, organized by the Basque
Nationalists and visited by groups of Catalans." To him such meetings were
part of a general decline in moral order, manifest as well in the Masons, the
Rotary Club, and Jehovah's Witnesses.[18]
In Betelu and
Pamplona I learned about Madre Soledad and why some clergy would have thought
her subversive. Born in Colombia into a well-to-do family, at age thirty
Soledad was moved to go to Spain, where she arrived in 1915 a kind
― 226 ―
of missionary
in reverse, from New World to Old and from women to men. She had been
encouraged by her Jesuit confessor, and through him other Jesuits arranged for
her to use a large house in Betelu. Betelu was a prosperous Navarrese village
that like Ormaiztegi and Banyoles was a genteel summer resort. She eventually
obtained permission from the Augustinian bishop of Pamplona, José López y
Mendoza, to found her missionary order; the bishop in turn obtained Benedict
XV's oral permission.[19]
Madre Soledad
brought two women from Bogotá and found others locally to be missionaries. She
recruited other women as lay auxiliaries. Her aims were "to restore an
evangelical life, glorify the humanity of Christ, and popularize the Eucharist
that the Lord wants for the sanctification of souls" (in the house in
Betelu the Eucharist was always exposed), but in particular she sought "to
sanctify priests." Several associations to sanctify clergy had been
founded from 1850 on, and in 1908 Pius X had specifically called for more such
associations. Madre Soledad's innovation was to work toward this goal through
an order of women.[20]
In Betelu she
set up a school for the children of the rural elite and she offered adult
literacy classes on Sundays for servants and country folk. According to women
who attended her school, she was quick, good-hearted, and holy. "She had
something special, a gift; she solved your problem as if she was a
confessor." Betelu is in a Basque-speaking area, and although all the
teaching was in Spanish, she diligently acquired Basque. Villagers remembered
that she subsisted on fruit and milk.[21]
Madre Soledad
gathered around her a number of priests who supported her order, and she
created for them an association based on the concept of childlike innocence.
She published its rules in 1920. At its head was an "Older Brother"
and a governing council named by the bishop. The diocesan examiners who
approved the rules remarked on the novelty of her idea, noting that the priests
who joined would lead a kind of monastic life while in the world.[22] According
to her manual, El Libro de las Casitas (The Book of the Playhouses, or
Dollhouses), printed in 1921, the Sacerdotes Niños were supposed to be as open
and as generous as very young boys. In the manual she uses diminutives in
speaking to the priests and refers to supernatural beings or sentiments as if
they were characters in children's books, like Da. Pánfaga (Mrs. Bread-eater).
The Niños had to flagellate themselves six days a week and do other simple
exercises:
Stay five
minutes in a little corner of your room, very still, without moving, and as if
you have in your arms the baby Jesus, and kiss it five times….
Imagine that
the Virgin arrives, takes the little boy by the hand, and takes him to a
garden; there he enjoys seeing the most beautiful flowers (the virtues of the
Virgin). Noticing that he wants them, she picks him some, makes him a bouquet,
and gives them to him. Do this for five minutes.
― 227 ―
For special
penances she prescribed praying with arms outstretched, lying prostrate on the
floor, eating only half a dessert and offering the rest to the child Jesus,
contemplating the stations of the cross, writing the Lord a letter about one's
dominant passion and then burning it, "speaking for three minutes with the
Virgin in child talk," offering a bouquet of "posies" to Jesus,
or visiting for five minutes the Lord in his playhouse and speaking to him in
child talk.[23]
In all Madre
Soledad's work she applied the spirituality of female contemplatives to adult
males living in the world. But implicit in this program was the priests'
personal belief in her spirituality, since in the role of little boys they
accepted her as a kind of mother. A prerequisite for joining the association
was "to destroy oneself, renouncing in a certain way one's own personality
and abandoning oneself totally in the hands of God." A discipline of puerility
may have been particularly attractive for rural Basque and Navarrese clergy as
a kind of relief from their inordinate social and political power. We glimpse
this power in the rare republican newspaper reports from these villages, which
refer obliquely to the excessive influence of the jauntxos (literally
señoritos, but figuratively "honchos") in all aspects of daily life.
Humility in Madre Soledad's association balanced a heavy diet of daily
authority.[24]
What bishop
approved such a constitution? At the end of a long career, at the age of
seventy-two López y Mendoza was just then firmly suppressing all public
reference to the miraculous Christ of Piedramillera. But by the same token he
very much had a mind of his own. Like other bishops of his time, he took refuge
in convents when he needed a break, in particular with the Augustinian nuns of
Aldaz, ten kilometers from Betelu. He was also interested in the theme of holy
childhood. In 1919 he exhorted each parish to take up collections and enroll children
in the missionary club, Obra de la Santa Infancia. Madre Soledad's school and
literacy program would have appealed to his sympathies for Catholic social
action as well.[25]
From the
diocese of Navarra Madre Soledad's most important recruits were two cathedral
canons, Bienvenido Solabre and Nestor Zubeldia; they served as the diocesan
examiners for the rules. From 1922 to 1924 Zubeldia was rector of the diocesan
seminary. There he hung maxims of Madre Soledad on the walls, exposing entire
cohorts of priests to the Niño idea. Other adherents included priests in the
neighboring villages of Almándoz, Errazkin, Betelu, and Gaintza and a few from
as far away as Tudela, Granada, and La Coruña.[26]
Betelu is
just five kilometers from the border of Gipuzkoa, and some Gipuzkoan priests
became Niños. They included Gregorio Aracama of Albiztur, possibly some priests
from Zegama, and Juan Sesé of Tolosa. Manuel Aranzabe y Ormachea, a wealthy
priest from Lizartza, was a strong supporter; the nuns cared for his sister,
who was mentally ill.
The
priest-children considered that Madre Soledad had the gift of reading their
consciences, and she gave them sermonlike lectures. In the mid-1920s, when
― 228 ―
the Gipuzkoan
priest Pío Montoya was a seminarian, Juan Sesé took him, his sister, and their
father to see her. They were favorably impressed and remember her as a small
woman, very modest, who spoke much and brilliantly and referred to human pride
as "Señora Chatarra [Mrs. Junk]." The townspeople of Betelu understood
that Francis Xavier appeared to her in ecstasy and recall that the village was
sometimes crowded with visitors.[27]
By 1919 her
fame as a "saint" had spread widely, for several bishops had inquired
about her to the nuncio, and he wrote López y Mendoza. It may have been then
that she and the bishop of Pamplona decided that the wisest course was to
institute her order for nuns and her association for priests as diocesan
congregations. This the bishop did on 5 March 1920, pending Vatican approval.
López y Mendoza protected her until he died in 1923. His successor in Pamplona,
Mateo Múgica, did not like what he heard. The unusual submission of male
priests to a female had led to unfounded rumors of sexual license.[28] The same
rumors later circulated about the group of Magdalena Aulina, which also
associated males and females.
The Holy
Office condemned the Book of the Playhouses and the rules of the institute and
dissolved the association of priests as children altogether. On 23 February
1925, following the orders of the Vatican Congregation of Religious, Múgica
severely restricted the freedom and power of the women in Betelu. The erstwhile
Misionarias were to be strictly contemplative Adoratrices who renewed their
vows annually. They could found no more houses. Their goals could have nothing
to do with clergy, "only the sanctification of souls in general," and
the Niños could visit them no longer. The auxiliary laywomen could continue
provisionally, but only if they had no contact with the priests and were not
members of the convent.[29]
Madre Soledad
immediately went to Rome. There, accompanied by the superior general of the
Augustinian order, Eustasio Esteban, she appealed to Cardinal Laurenti, the
prefect of the Congregation of Religious. She protested that "if the Holy
Church does not permit us to have as our object the greater sanctification of
priests, we humbly request our secularization." She told him she would
appeal to the pope if necessary to avoid being cloistered. According to her,
Cardinal Laurenti allowed her to continue "the practices of the
past"—I assume she meant her contact with priests—as long as the rules
nowhere mentioned the sanctification of clergy.
Not
surprisingly, when Madre Soledad returned to Navarra Mateo Múgica rejected this
Mediterranean solution of doing one thing and saying another, so the entire
community petitioned the Congregation of Religious to return to secular life.
By 1928, when Múgica was transferred to Vitoria, Rome had not replied and the
community remained in a kind of limbo. In her explanation of the situation to
the new bishop, Tomás Muniz y Pablos, Madre Soledad listed nine professed nuns,
two novices, and a postulant.[30]
― 229 ―
In spite of
Muniz y Pablos's visit in 1929, neither he nor the Vatican acted; the nuns
remained contemplative. Theoretically at least, their priest followers could
not maintain any contact with them, although the auxiliaries continued to
operate the school. In fact, given Cardinal Laurenti's verbal consent to
Soledad's mission, she continued to have contact, direct or indirect, with the
priests. Women who lived near the convent and who attended the school
remembered that even after the nuns were cloistered, Soledad de la Torre
addressed the priests from behind bars on Thursdays. We may assume that contact
with laywomen was even easier.[31]
In July 1931
Madre Soledad and the nuns were living under this ambiguous, provisional
regime. Gregorio Aracama of Albiztur sent two of his sisters to ask if he
should go to Ezkioga. Her response was, "Go to Ezkioga and pray a
lot." This attitude confirmed his interest, that of his parishioners, and,
we may presume, that of other Niños with whom he was in contact. And the fervor
and mystical enthusiasm of the first years of her movement must have made other
people in the area receptive to the Ezkioga visions.[32]
Soledad de la
Torre died on the feast of the Immaculate Conception, 8 December 1933. Her
believers considered the date a portent, but thereafter the convent gradually
disintegrated.[33]La Constancia published a front-page obituary signed "A
Priest," and three weeks after Madre Soledad died, two women from Segura
presented the article to Conchita Mateos in vision. Conchita murmured,
"Now you are better off, but your daughters must be sad," and said
she saw the nun with a white habit and a crown of stars next to the Virgin.[34]
Similarly, Esperanza Aranda claimed that when she held up a picture of Madre
Soledad during a vision in 1949, Our Lady said the nun was then a saint in the
choir of virgins. Esperanza had experienced more than her share of ostracism
and ridicule and asked the Virgin how Madre Soledad could have been so
slandered in her lifetime. Aranda said the Virgin replied, "Do not place
your trust in men; they are like a hollow reed that even the wind can
break." Juan Bautista Ayerbe, who recorded the vision, noted that Soledad
de la Torre's "marvelous writings have now been collected to be sent to
Rome."[35]
Female
Religious
Madre
Soledad's attempt to assume formal authority over parish priests was daring and
ultimately fatal for her order, but the authority itself was ancient. Priestly
consulting with female mystics has a long history in Mediterranean Catholicism,
and indeed in pre-Christian times, as at Delphi and Dodona.[36] When the
Ezkioga visions began, it was natural to compare what the lay seers were saying
with what the "professional" nun seers like Madre Soledad said, for
convents were by design platforms for contact with God.
― 230 ―
It was easy
to pin divine rumors on anonymous nuns, like the one who on her deathbed
predicted prodigious events for 12 July 1931. On July 24 La Constancia cited
another unnamed nun in support of Ezkioga:
An
illustrious religious who occupies a high post in his order told us that a nun
who leads an extraordinary life whom he knows and talks to has announced for
this year great appearances of María Santísima. Would she be referring to
Ezquioga?
A
mimeographed letter that circulated among believers in 1933 referred to a nun
"directed by one of the highest eminences of the church" as "a
very holy soul with a very elevated spiritual life" and "a fervent
devotee of the Holy Christ of Limpias and his prodigies; she is very old and
burdened with crosses." In spite of the verdict against Ezkioga by the
bishop of Vitoria she counseled patience and happiness, saying, "All God's
works need persecution; otherwise they would not be true, and by it they gain
strength."[37]
In many
convents there were nuns thought to be especially spiritual. One nun in Zarautz
was thought to predict deaths accurately; she was also called in when houses
were bewitched. In Aldaz there was a visionary Augustinian nun who could see a
picture of the Christ of Limpias respond to her prayers or feelings.[38] In
female orders male religious already had mystical guides when they needed them.
The tradition of consulting holy people governed the response of male and
female religious to the visions at Ezkioga. They did not question whether such
visions were possible but rather how well the visions fit the criteria with
which they judged their own mystics.
The census of
December 1930 found 5,450 female and 2,251 male religious in the Basque
Country, about half of them in Gipuzkoa. The number in the province had
increased greatly when religious took refuge there after the separation of
church and state in France in 1905. The number of nuns continued to increase
between 1910 and 1930. Since the beginning of the century Gipuzkoa, Alava, and
Navarra had been first, second, and third among Spanish provinces in the number
of religious as a percentage of total inhabitants.[39]
About one in
four houses of female religious in Gipuzkoa and Bizkaia were contemplative.
This proportion declined as the active orders, particularly in San Sebastián
and Bilbao, took on more tasks in hospitals, social services, and schools.[40]
Male and female religious helped to ease the dislocation caused by an economy
that was shifting from agriculture to industry. Since many of the active orders
were French, they kept the Basques abreast of the latest developments in French
piety, including the great apparitions.
Religious
orders establish a rule, a way of life, and a set of devotions that make each
order an extended family different from other orders. Some orders, like the
Capuchins, regularly transferred members from house to house, creating a
certain homogeneity within the order in each province. Cloistered religious
― 231 ―
might spend
all their adult lives in the same small group; these houses, rather than the
orders they belonged to, were the group that determined belief or disbelief in
the visions. Orders varied widely in the source of their members, whether rural
or urban, wealthy or peasant; these factors could predispose them in favor of
or against the messages of the largely peasant seers. All of the orders in July
1931 were uneasy in a nation that had turned against its religious.
The orders
most active in the vicinity of Ezkioga had propagated many of the devotions
that showed up in the apparitions, thereby laying the groundwork for the
public's acceptance of the messages. Ezkioga seers saw religious in their
visions and attempted to win over religious houses to the cause. The laity
watched closely for the reactions of the religious to the apparitions.
Cloistered
religious were a major, long-term constituency for the visionaries, especially
the female seers. In 1930 there were at least thirty convents of contemplative
nuns in the Basque Country, particularly of Franciscans of various types,
Augustinians, and Carmelites. And Basque women entered convents in the rest of
Spain as well. These little societies developed their own criteria on matters
supernatural; at times they felt little bound by the church hierarchy. Nuns
might be enclosed, but they could write the seers with questions and requests
for the divine. Convents of believers transmitted news of Ezkioga to their
clerical and lay friends and benefactors. Some houses in Pamplona were
intensely interested; Tomás Imaz, the San Sebastián broker, took seers to the
Cistercian convent at Narvaja in Alava for visions, and in Oñati "those
inside the convent knew more about the visions than those outside."[41]
Maria
Maddalena Marcucci
Passionist
nuns shared the key devotions of the visions. According to their rule, the
Sorrowing Mother was the heavenly superior of all their convents. At Ezkioga
the Passion as experienced by the Virgin was the dominant visual metaphor.
The most
prominent Passionist nun in Spain was the Italian Maria Giuseppina Teresa
Marcucci, in religion known as Maria Maddalena de Gesú Sacramentato. From 1928
to 1935 she was superior of the house in Bilbao-Deusto. She had known Gemma
Galgani of Lucca by sight, as she herself was from a village near Lucca. Many
thought Maria Maddalena was a holy woman, and she herself had revelations and
visions. Starting in 1928 her writings were published by her director, Juan
González Arintero, the Dominican expert on spirituality, and his successors in
the magazines Vida Sobrenatural . In her letters and autobiography we see a
woman in close, obedient contact with Dominican guides.
In a letter
dated 15 October 1931 Maria Maddalena referred to the visions at Ezkioga:
"The apparitions of the Most Holy Virgin of the Sorrows seem intended to
show us the sufferings and anguish of the Heart of Jesus. Some souls
― 232 ―
believe they
have seen him as the Nazarene, carrying the cross." Marcucci attributed
Christ's anguish to Spain's rejection of him and worried about what she could
do to protect her community.[42]
Marcucci met
Evarista Galdós in early 1932 and afterward wrote her from Deusto with requests
to the Virgin to intensify the Passionist vocations of the community, to cure a
sick nun, and to take Marcucci herself directly to heaven when she died. Her
initial contact with Evarista may have come through male Passionists in Gabiria
or Irun. But it could also have come by way of Magdalena Aulina. In February of
1933 Salvador Cardús understood that Aulina was directing Marcucci spiritually.
Marcucci came from the same pious environment as Gemma Galgani and knew about
the surprising supernatural events that Gemma described. It was fitting that
she should believe both the visions of Ezkioga and Magdalena Aulina.[43]
This
independent abbess was accustomed to receiving spiritual help from other women
as well as from male guides, just as she gave such help to women in her
convents and readers of her writings. In her letters Marcucci refers to holy
women in the different convents in which she lives and others in her order
whose inspirations, revelations, or visions guided her and others in the order.
Women and men who felt as she did that they received particular communications
from the divine formed a community of mutual support. A permanent, hidden,
conventual mystical network thus underlay the more spectacular lay visions
known as apparitions.[44]
The
Franciscan nuns of Santa Isabel in Mondragón were firm believers in Ezkioga.
Magdalena Aulina was said to have served as spiritual director to their
superior, who had in the house a saintly lay sister. The priest Baudilio Sedano
de la Peña encouraged belief in the visions among the same nuns in Valladolid
and brought Cruz Lete to speak to them. One nun had visions of her own, and the
house was divided for decades between those who believed in her and Ezkioga and
those who did not. She warned the latter that they would go to hell.[45]
The seers
Pilar Ciordia, Gloria Viñals, and others attempted to sway houses by having
visions inside them, a kind of home delivery of grace. One young woman reported
that the Virgin told her, "I want you to be the tutelary angels of the
religious communities. Get them to pray, because many, not all, need it."
But it was not always easy to convince those whose chaplains or spiritual
guides did not believe. Evarista Galdós is said to have converted one convent
when she discovered in a vision that one of the sisters had a bad foot. And
Benita Aguirre said she had private messages from the Virgin for certain
cloistered religious.
about
internal practices that made them marvel, such as that [the Virgin] was very
happy with a rosary that they prayed secretly as it is prayed at Ezkioga, or
that they should not stop praying the three Hail Marys before
― 233 ―
the Litany,
or that, as in former times, they leave the keys with an image of the Virgin,
for she would protect them.
In Pamplona a
girl from Izurdiaga saw the Virgin threaten a community of nuns for not
believing. When the tide turned against the visions, clergy made every effort
to "deconvert" believing houses. Padre Burguera complained of
"instances of communities where a Father cast the spiritual exercises he
was leading so that when he finished, the religious ended up not believing
anything [about Ezkioga]."[46]
Several
Ezkioga seers eventually became cloistered nuns. One of the small dramas in the
vision dialogues was whether and when the seers, including the girl from Ataun,
Ramona Olazábal, and Benita Aguirre, would enter convents. In January 1942
Conchita Mateos claimed she received her vocation after seeing a nun who had
recently died in a Franciscan convent in a town of Castile. The spirit nun
dictated a letter for Conchita to send to the mother superior saying that
Conchita had her same playful nature and would take her place. This unusual
reference letter was successful, and Conchita and twelve other girls from five
families of believers entered the convent, where she continued to have
visions.[47]
The order of
active female religious with the most communities in the diocese, over sixty
houses in 1930, was the first female active institute, the Daughters of Charity
of Saint Vincent de Paul. Its members, who took temporary vows renewed every
three years, were in charge of the old-age home and the parish schools in
Urretxu as well as hospitals in Tolosa and Beasain. In the province of Gipuzkoa
alone they staffed at least thirty institutions.[48]
Given the large
number of active women religious in the region, they seem remarkably little
involved in the visions. Their activity and freedom to circulate, however, gave
them access to moments and places where the supernatural and the
"world" coincided. In the fall of 1931 a Daughter of Charity who was
a nurse in the Tolosa hospital was present when doctors diagnosed Marcelina
Eraso's sister as having an incurable cancer. The nurse asked Marcelina to ask
the Virgin to intercede and later signed a document describing the cure. One
seer, Esperanza Aranda, worked in San Sebastián in La Gota de Leche, an
establishment run by the Daughters of Charity which provided milk for babies
and pregnant mothers. Aranda held some of her visions with nuns present and
once pointed out in a vision a Daughter of Charity who had just died in
Urretxu.[49]
The women in
the Daughters of Charity led lives of a certain independence. An example is Sor
Antonia Garayalde Mendizábal, who died at age seventy-eight in Beasain in 1932.
Born in nearby Altzo, she entered the order in 1849 and worked in a home for
abandoned children in Córdoba before going to Beasain in 1896 to head the
clinic. Garayalde visited the sick in their homes and cared single-handed for
the ill of the nearby village of Garín when it was struck with typhoid fever in
1896. She also set up a nursery school, which at one point
― 234 ―
had three
hundred children, promoted the cult of souls in purgatory, took care of the
cemetery, and prepared the corpse of virtually every person who died in
Beasain. Sisters like Garayalde took on the work formerly done by women for
their extended kin; these sisters were especially needed in factory towns like
Beasain where immigrants had left their grandmothers, aunts, and sisters
behind.[50]
In Elorrio
the mother superior of the community at the old-age home and clinic was a faith
healer. When the doctor's guild complained to the bishop and he passed the
complaint on to the Spanish headquarters of the order in Madrid, the order
tried to transfer the nun, but the people of Elorrio protested so much that the
order backed down. The hands-on miracles of this nun, however, were quite
different from the holiness of the saint-as-victim, like Gemma Galgani, which
the seers of Ezkioga came to embrace. Sor Antonia Garayalde touched the bodies
of the living and the dead in Beasain; the Ezkioga seers were intermediaries
with the spirits in the other world.[51]
We can see
the contrast in contemplative and active stances as reflected in religious
devotions. In the first years of the century the Daughters of Charity began to
circulate little images of the Miraculous Mary. Groups of thirty households,
known as "choirs," pooled money to buy them and passed these boxed
images of a powerful Mary daily from one house to another. The people would
always light a candle or oil lamp before the image, and the boxes had a slot
for alms for masses for deceased members, the costs of the Association of the
Miraculous Medal, or the local poor. Images like these of different devotions circulated
(and still do) throughout Catholic Europe. The Passionists circulated ones of
their saints, as did the Carmelites the Infant Jesus of Prague, Our Lady of
Mount Carmel, and Thérèse de Lisieux. Some orders supplied printed prayers with
the image. In this period the Miraculous Mary was fresh and exciting. In
Beasain Sor Antonia established no less than twenty-four coros covering 720
families. In some places the devotion took on a life of its own.[52]
Not
surprisingly, from the start at Ezkioga this Mary was in a sort of competition
with La Dolorosa as the preeminent divine figure. The Beasain chauffeur Ignacio
Aguado saw the Miraculous Mary on July 8, and for a while others saw her as
well. A Daughter of Charity was present when the Bilbao engraver Jesús Elcoro
saw La Milagrosa on July 30.
[Elcoro]
tries to explain the stance that the Virgin took in her appearance, and begins
to hold out his arms the way the image of the Miraculous Mary does. The crowded
conditions do not permit this, and a Sister of Charity says, with extraordinary
excitement, "The Miraculous Mary! It's the Miraculous Mary! Isn't it true?
Make room, let him put his arms the way he has seen the sweet Virgin."
And as if
conjured by the outburst of faith of the little nun, the youth has an
apparition again. The nun says to him, "Tell the Virgin that we
― 235 ―
image
[Full Size]
Cover of home
visit manual of the Miraculous
Mary,
published by Vincentians in Madrid, ca. 1926
love her a
lot, and that we come to make up for the many offenses against her in
Spain."[53]
Eventually La
Dolorosa emerged as the dominant symbol of the visions, a symbol oriented more
toward contrition and penance. It was more suited to contemplative and
Passion-oriented orders, like the Passionists, Capuchins, Carmelites, and
Reparadoras. La Milagrosa, like Our Lady of Lourdes and the Sacred Heart of
Jesus, was a more active, optimistic image appropriate for orders involved in
good works or healing.
― 236 ―
Male
Religious
Nuns might be
believers or disbelievers, supplicants or sister seers of the visionaries. Male
religious could also be spiritual directors to the seers or expert examiners of
visions. Some clergymen, like Padre Burguera himself, thus had a professional
as well as a personal interest in the apparitions.
From their
junior seminary just over the hill in Gabiria, Passionist professors and
students could hear the hymn singing and prayers at Ezkioga and they were
inevitably embroiled. The Passionist order, founded in Italy in the eighteenth
century, had established its first house in Spain in Bilbao in 1880. In 1931
the north was still its stronghold. In the first weeks of general excitement at
Ezkioga the Passionists were "almost all in favor." Some individuals
converted at Ezkioga went to confess at the Passionist seminary. On 1 August
1931 two fathers were said to have seen one of Patxi's "levitations."
The seers tapped into Passionist interests with visions of the Passionist
Gabriele dell'Addolorata and the would-be Passionist, Gemma Galgani. The
Ezkioga farmer Ignacio Galdós had a vision of a Passionist preaching to more
than four thousand people; in the vision a star fell from the sky until it was
by the side of the preacher, who distributed parts among the crowd. Two-thirds
of the people disappeared into the darkness, while the remainder, brilliantly
lit, fell to their knees; the Passionist blessed them with his cross.[54]
The initial
enthusiasm of the Passionists is understandable given their devotional
aesthetic. Passionists had accompanied their sodalities to the visions of the
Christ in Anguish at Limpias, a kind of throwback to the Baroque devotions of
Holy Week that declined in the north in the nineteenth century. This kind of
devotion has revived in part because of parish missions. In their missions the
Passionists set up outdoor stages. A parish priest in Navarra commented on
their "special method":
preaching
from a stage or platform in an appropriate place and giving a brief talk on one
aspect of the Passion of Our Saviour after the principal sermons; they did the
apparition or entrance of the Most Holy Virgin, the descent from the Cross, and
the procession of the holy burial.
The visions
at Ezkioga also had as their central metaphor the Passions of Christ and the
Virgin, and Patxi's similar stages at Ezkioga served the same purpose, the
provocation of remorse by a kind of sacred theater. The order's magazine, El
Pasionario , carried almost no news of the apparitions, but issues published
before the visions started included depictions of the Passion in poses much
like those later struck by the Ezkioga seers and descriptions of the mystic
life of the German stigmatic Thérèse Neumann. The magazine was read in the
villages and towns around Ezkioga.[55]
― 237 ―
After the
exposé of Ramona's miracle, most of the Passionists turned against the visions.
Indeed, some, like Basilio Iraola, a friend of the Ezkioga pastor, were opposed
from the start. But a few remained firm in their belief. I spoke in 1982 to
Brother Rafael Beloqui, who said he had been to the visions thirty-nine times,
primarily because he enjoyed the praying so much. In June 1933 a certain Padre
Marcelino, based in Villanañe (Alava) and Deusto, was thrown from a horse when
returning from a remote village where he had celebrated mass. A rural doctor
told him he was in critical condition, and after his condition worsened he said
he saw the Virgin who told him he would recover. He attributed the cure to the
Virgin of Ezkioga. Rumors like this and one that a Passionist had seen Gemma
and San Gabriele at the site gave the believers hope that the order would be on
their side.[56]
In the first
flush of enthusiasm in the summer of 1931 Franciscans, Capuchins, Claretians,
and Dominicans went to the vision site and published their impressions, which
varied from noncommittal to guardedly enthusiastic. And as with the
Passionists, so with the other orders: after early enthusiasm for the visions
they eventually followed the diocese into opposition. Only a few individuals
persisted.
The
Franciscans carried the most weight in Gipuzkoa, with houses in Zarautz, Oñati,
and Aranzazu. The believers and friars I talked to agreed that the Franciscans
came to oppose the visions strongly; believers attributed this to a fear of
competition. A man in Tolosa claimed Aranzazu was the place Bishop Múgica met
to plot against the visions. Another rumor had it that a Franciscan outspoken
in his opposition to the visions had fallen to his death while directing the
construction of the church of Our Lady of Lourdes in San Sebastián.[57] The
Franciscans were from the same kinds of families as the seers and believers, so
their opposition was especially hard to bear. Indeed, of all the religious I
visited, it was among Franciscans at Aranzazu that I found most sympathy—not
for the seers, but for the believers. When the seer Martín Ayerbe of Zegama
became a religious, he joined this community.
In the 1920s
about thirty thousand pilgrims went to Aranzazu each year. This was a
relatively small number for that period, especially compared to the crowds at
Ezkioga. But Aranzazu was the major Marian shrine in the province and one to
which many of the believers in Ezkioga were devoted. They recognized the
apparition of the Virgin in Aranzazu as a local precedent, and when the Ezkioga
site was declared out-of-bounds, some believers went to Aranzazu to meet and
pray.[58]
In 1919
Capuchin preaching had sparked the visions in Limpias. The Capuchins had six
houses in the wider vision region but none close to Ezkioga. Some of the friars
involved with Limpias took an initial interest in Ezkioga, but many became
convinced that the visions at Ezkioga were a plot to embarrass Catholics.
― 238 ―
Pedro Balda,
the town secretary of Iraneta, told me that he and Luis Irurzun went to
Pamplona in an attempt to leave the notebooks of Luis's messages with Balda's
uncle, a Capuchin. Luis went into a vision, with Balda's uncle in prayer
alongside him, but as he came out of it the superior arrived and gave him a
kick. Balda and Luis decamped with the notebooks and Capuchin alms-gatherers
spread the word that Luis had been booted out of the house.[59]
Dominicans
went to Ezkioga from Montesclaros in Cantabria and nearby Bergara and reported
for El Santísimo Rosario , the magazine that first publicized Fatima in Spain.
But not all Dominicans were receptive. Luis Urbano, the man who single-handedly
discredited the visions at Limpias and Piedramillera in 1919 and 1920,
published in his magazine Rosas y Espinas the first negative article about
Ezkioga written by a religious. In this period Dominicans in Salamanca, Madrid,
and Pamplona had a kind of rival to Ezkioga: the divine messages relating to
Amor Misericordioso, Jesus of Merciful Love, received by Marie-Thérèse
Desandais (1877–1943). The abbess of a convent of Dreux-Vouvant in the Vendée,
Desandais published her revelations under the pseudonym P. M. Sulamitis.
González Arintero, the Dominican who published Maria Maddalena Marcucci, first
came across Desandais's writings in 1922. He dedicated much of the last seven
years of his life and the pages of his journal to spreading them. In the late
1920s a wealthy laywoman in Madrid, Juana Moreno de Lacasa, financed the
publication of the messages in pamphlet form by the hundreds of thousands. In
San Sebastián the count of Villafranca de Gaytán de Ayala persuaded a number of
bishops to allow leaflets to be inserted in diocesan bulletins. And Dominicans
spread the devotion with lectures and a special magazine and by installing
paintings of the Merciful Christ in their house in Madrid in 1926 and in
Pamplona in 1932. The Ezkioga seer Jesús Elcoro, given to seeing nuns, claimed
to see Sulamitis with the Virgin.[60]
The messages
of Merciful Love posed fewer problems for the church than those of Ezkioga.
Very little of their content was bound by time and place. They were the product
of a single visionary who could be silenced at any time; they came through a
respectable journalf and enjoyed ecclesiastical permission. They were not
propositions to the hierarchy from the lay public, much less from poor rural
children, housemaids, farmers, and workers. Inspired females could be heard
only if cloistered and directed. It helped to disguise their identity. Most
readers did not know that J. Pastor (Marcucci) and P. M. Sulamitis (Desandais)
were women. The Merciful Love messages too were quite different from those of
Ezkioga, emphasizing the mercy of God as good father, not the anger and
chastisement of God offended. In 1931, when events seemed to be going against
Catholics and Catholicism in Spain, the idea of a chastisement was perhaps more
in line with contemporary developments. Merciful Love had less appeal to the
Basque public than darker calls for penance, atonement, and sacrifice.
― 239 ―
image
[Full Size]
"I am
Merciful Love!" holy card, ca. 1932
Two orders
with influence in the area, the Benedictines and the Jesuits, kept their
distance from the visions. At the Benedictine monastery of Lazkao, eight
kilometers from Ezkioga, most monks strongly opposed the visions and told their
confessants not to go.[61] The Jesuits did not report the visions in their
magazines even in the first months. The elite male order in Spain, they
educated Spain's elite. They were largely an urban order and were less likely
to be related to the seers at Ezkioga. I know of few direct Jesuit links even
to believers.
But even
before Laburu got involved, the Jesuits could hardly ignore what was happening.
Their great shrine at Loyola was only twenty kilometers away, and the
confessionals periodically filled with people from the vision sessions.
Pilgrims
― 240 ―
to Ezkioga
from other parts of the country and abroad made detours to see Loyola and
inevitably commented to the fathers about the visions. Nonetheless, in the
summer and fall of 1931 the Jesuits were keeping a low profile. In May Jesuit
houses had been burned down in Madrid and elsewhere, and they knew most
republicans thought the order should be dissolved. Antonio de la Villa accused
them in the Cortes of promoting the Ezkioga visions, the accusations itself a
cause for prudence.[62]
Examples of
Jesuits speaking even guardedly in favor of Ezkioga were thus rare. A Jesuit at
Loyola told two French visitors from Tarbes that the purpose of the visions at
Ezkioga and Guadamur was not to set up a shrine like Lourdes but to warn of
impending persecution and to revive the faith of Spaniards. Salvador Cardús of
Terrassa corresponded with a Jesuit in India who was interested in Ezkioga and
Madre Rafols, but even this distant friend requested great discretion lest
"someone else, with indiscreet zeal, might later go around saying to
people, 'A Jesuit said this,' and many times it turns out that what was said
with the best of intentions is not interpreted in the same way."[63]
Believers
resented the Franciscans but held no grudge against the Jesuits, despite
Laburu's hand in their defeat. A Jesuit from Betelu was the key person
distributing the prophecies of Madre Rafols. And the ex-Jesuit Francisco Vallet
had prepared the followers of Magdalena Aulina. Male seers went to the Jesuits
for spiritual exercises. Even the Ezkioga souvenir shops of Vidal Castillo had
a Jesuit connection: they were owned by the Irazu family, who ran the stands at
Loyola and Limpias. So however much the Jesuits tried to keep their distance
from Ezkioga, they formed in fact a part of the context that nurtured the
visions.
Hence we find
visions in which the seers protest the expulsion of the Jesuits, settle into
stances that seem to replicate those of Ignacio de Loyola in paintings or in
the wax statue at Loyola, and report seeing Loyola himself giving Communion.
And, as in the case of the Benedictines, believers occasionally came across a
Jesuit they considered sympathetic. Nuns from Bilbao persuaded one Jesuit to go
see Gloria Viñals when he was in Pamplona, and López de Lerena alleged that he
subsequently had a vision of his own in the cathedral. After the war the Jesuit
confessor of a seer from Azkoitia introduced him to another Jesuit in a high
position in the Vatican. But the believers I talked to knew of no member of the
order who worked actively or spoke out publicly for their cause, and the
documents I have read mention no Jesuit other than Laburu who actually went to
Ezkioga.[64]
Carmelites
took more interest. Since the time of Teresa de Avila and Juan de la Cruz, the
Discalced Carmelites considered visions, revelations, and investigation of such
phenomena as their particular expertise. And although Basque and Navarrese
Carmelites were standoffish on the whole about Ezkioga, some individuals were
sympathetic. The order drew on rural and small-town Basques to
― 241 ―
supply
missions in South America and India. Children participated in this effort
through La Obra Máxima , based in San Sebastían.[65]
Believers
placed their hopes for a convincing public rebuttal of Padre Laburu on the
Carmelite Rainaldo de San Justo, for two decades a professor in Rome. I talked
to his nephews, the well-known Nationalist clergymen Domingo and Alberto de
Onaindía. He told them that one little element of truth in an apparition was
enough to give it great significance.[66] In Pamplona Padre Valeriano de Santa
Teresa, known for processions of children in honor of the Infant Jesus of
Prague, supported confessants who had attended vision sessions. And at Altzo
before the Civil War Padre Mamerto, a simple man from Bizkaia, a naturalist,
friend of animals, and healer, was a firm believer in the visions and was not
afraid to proselytize for them.[67]
The Carmelite
who took the task of testing seers most seriously was Doroteo de la Sagrada
Familia, born Isidro Barrutia in Eskoriatza, another enthusiast of the cult of
the Infant Jesus. From 1933 until 1936 he was the superior of the Carmelite
house in San Sebastían. Shortly after Bishop Múgica's edict against the
visions, Padre Doroteo attended one of the visions of a seer in Tolosa. He knew
Juan Bautista Ayerbe and let him know he was Patxi's spiritual director. When I
mentioned Doroteo's involvement to his brethren, they said it was in character.
He may have been the Carmelite who made Ramona swear that her messages were
true and one of those López de Lerena and others mentioned as having tested the
seers.
Many
religious, especially Carmelites, submitted the seers to mystical tests, such
as having them end their visions by mental command from their spiritual
superiors, and they assured us that the phenomenon that occurred in the seers
was, without a doubt, of a supernatural character.[68]
Burguera's
volumes on God and art were printed by the Carmelites of Valencia, and when he
went to Rome in 1934 he carried a letter of introduction to the general of the
order.[69]
The Carmelite
Luis de Santa Teresita was the brother of a child seer from Ormaiztegi. His
parents believed deeply in the visions, and the Catalan supporters often
stopped at their house. He was studying for the priesthood when the visions
started and was ordained in 1933. He eventually was named a bishop in Colombia
and died there in 1965. Two of his sisters became nuns. Brothers of other seers
became Jesuits, Dominicans, and Franciscans. Before and after the visions,
seers, believers, and the religious professionals around them were often
related to one another.[70]
A few
sympathetic members of the clergy can have a disproportionate effect on a
religious movement stigmatized as unorthodox. In the seers' search for
confessors and spiritual directors they were in a buyer's market. There were
priests
― 242 ―
in their own
towns and villages, priests in surrounding towns, priests in rural religious
houses, and finally priests in the cities and neighboring dioceses. These
clergymen offered a broad spectrum of attitudes toward the visions, and any of
them could dispense sacraments and absolution. So it was relatively easy for
seers to find sympathetic clergy and religious. At the beginning of 1933, in
spite of the Laburu lectures, Juan Bautista Ayerbe knew personally ten priests
who were open believers and another twenty who believed in private.[71]
Bishops could
not control what the laity, clergy, and religious did in private. Múgica could
make rules and decrees, but in the protected secrecy of the confessional
information and grace could flow in both directions. In selected female houses
the Ezkioga female seers found curiosity and goodwill as well as a clientele
for spiritual services. Some priests and members of orders found support for
their devotional agendas in the visions. But others had practical, personal
uses for direct contact with the divine. In the intimate communities of cloistered
nuns in particular these two modes of belief coincided, the interests of the
order and the interests of a specific set of human friends, living and dead.
Some houses became unanimous centers of belief.
There could
be many reasons for persons in religion to support the visions, if discreetly.
But there were few reasons to oppose them actively and vocally. Such opposition
would earn the enmity of fervent believers, who in Gipuzkoa and the Barranca
were virtually everywhere. Clergy opposed to the visions were generally more
than happy to leave the task of discrediting them to the vicar general, the
bishop, and Laburu. The Dominican Luis Urbano and the Carmelite Bruno de Sainte
Marie, sharply opposed to the visions, were safely distant in Valencia and Paris.
Republican ridicule was insubstantial. In Gipuzkoa only the layman Rafael
Picavea took up the thankless task of examining the visions critically. Even
Laburu did not publish his lectures in anything like their entirety. Only in
Tolosa, Legorreta, Zaldibia, Legazpi, and Ezkioga itself did parish priests
rigorously enforce diocesan orders to deny Communion to seers and believers.
It is not
difficult to be enthusiastic about alleged religious visions or miracles. As
long as the seers seem to act in good faith it is more difficult to work up a
strong head of indignation against them. For six months El Día , a newspaper
administered by priests, described the visions in detail. But after the diocese
spoke against the visions, El Día fell silent. Thereafter it provided almost no
new information or analysis of the phenomenon. If the apparitions were not
"true," how could they have come about? After Laburu's talks, Bishop
Múgica's circulars alone answered the articles and books in favor of the visions.
As in other spheres of public life in Spain, enforcement of rules was left to
the authorities.
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