Leonie Aviat
Saint Léonie Aviat, OSFS | |
---|---|
Mother Françoise de Sales Aviat, OSFS | |
Religious Sister, Educator, Foundress | |
Born |
Léonie Aviat 16 September 1844 Sézanne, France |
Died |
10 January 1914 69) Perugia, Italy | (aged
Venerated in | Roman Catholic Church |
Beatified | 27 September 1992, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II |
Canonized | 25 November 2001, Saint Peter's Square, Vatican City by Pope John Paul II |
Feast | 10 January |
Mother Françoise de Sales, OSFS | |
---|---|
Religion | Roman Catholicism |
Institute | [Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales]] |
Personal | |
Nationality | French |
Senior posting | |
Title | Superior general |
Period in office | 1871–1877 and 1893–1914 |
Saint Léonie Aviat (16 September 1844 in Sézanne, Marne, France – 10 January 1914 in Perugia, Italy) was a Roman Catholic religious sister who co-founded the congregation of the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales along with Blessed Father Louis Brisson.
Life
Childhood
Léonie Aviat, was born in Sézanne, on 16 September 1844, to shopkeepers, Theodore Aviat and Emilie Caillot, and was baptized the following day. At the age of 11, she attended the Convent School of the Visitation in Troyes, as a boarder.[1] While attending school there, she was taught and spiritually guided by the Venerable Mother Marie de Sales Chappuis and Father Louis Brisson.
The Foundation of the Oblate Sisters
Fr Brisson was concerned about all of the young men and women that had moved from the countryside to the city to find work in industrialized factories and textile mills. These young people usually were homeless, therefore, in 1858, he established shelters where he would welcome them so they may learn the truths of their Catholic faith, especially their human dignity, and avoid the moral pitfalls that surrounded their daily lives.
In 1866, Fr Brisson also established three new homes, in which young, working-class girls found a solid home. Together with Léonie, they founded the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales, who oversaw the education of these young girls. On 30 October 1868, with one of her former boarding school companions, she received the habit of the new congregation from Bishop Gaspard Mermillod of Geneva. At this time, she received her new name: Sister Françoise de Sales Aviat.[2] She became the first Superior General of this congregation.
Besides the social apostolate, she established parish schools and a girls' boarding school in Paris. Soon after, the development of her works started to flourish in other European countries, South Africa and Ecuador: Working to make others happy.
Mother Aviat‘s Final Years
The anti-clerical laws and complete secularization of France at the beginning of the 20th Century began with the secularization of the religious houses and exiling of the occupants. In 1904, Mother Aviat, along with her Oblate Sisters, transferred their Motherhouse to Perugia, Italy. In 1911, Pope Pius X approved the constitutions of the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales. During this exile, Mother Aviat died on 10 January 1914.
Beatification and Canonization
Mother Aviat was beatified 27 September 1992, by Pope John Paul II, who also canonized her on 25 November 2001.[3] Liturgically her feast is celebrated on January 10.
Patronage
Saint Léonie Aviat is a patron saint to the people of Southwest Marne, Aube, and Sézanne.
In addition, Mount Aviat Academy in Childs, Maryland was established by the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales in 1960, and named in her honor.[4]
In Manta, Manabí Province, Ecuador, Unidad Educativa Leonie Aviat was created by the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales by merging two institutions (Santa Esperanza School No. 2 & Frances de Sales Aviat College).
References
Further reading
- d'Esmonge, OSFS, Sr. Marie-Aimée (1993). Leonie Aviat, Mother Frances de Sales: The Foundress of the Oblates of St. Francis de Sales. Norden: Franz Sales Verlag.
External links
- Pedigree of the Salesian Family
- Lexicon of Francis De Sales and Salesian Spirituality
- Léonie Aviat (1844-1914)
- Oblate Sisters of St Francis de Sales (United States)