October 25, 2007
Italy Moved by Teen Who Offers Life for the Church and the Pope
Rome, Oct 24, 2007 / 03:22 pm (CNA).-
In October of 2006, Carlo Acutis was 15 years old and was fading fast
from leukemia. A native of Milan, Acutis touched family members and
friends with his witness of offering the sufferings of his illness for
the Church and the Pope. His testimony of faith, which could lead to
his beatification in the coming years, has moved Italy.
“The Eucharist: My Road to Heaven: A Biography of Carlo
Acutis” is the title of the book by Nicola Gori, a writer for
the L’Osservatore Romano, and published by Ediciones San
Pablo.
According to the publishers, Carlo “was a teen of our times,
like many others. He tried hard in school, with his friends, [and] he
loved computers. At the same time he was a great friend of Jesus
Christ, he was a daily communicant and he trusted in the Virgin Mary.
Succumbing to leukemia at the age of 15, he offered his life for the
Pope and for the Church. Those who have read about his life are moved
to profound admiration. The book was born of a desire to tell everyone
his simple and incredible human and profoundly Christian
story.”
“As a little boy, especially after his First Communion, he
never missed his daily appointment with the Holy Mass and the Rosary,
followed by a moment of Eucharistic adoration,” recalls his
mother, Antonia Acutis.
“With this intense spiritual life, Carlo has fully and
generously lived his fifteen years of life, leaving a profound impact
on those who knew him. He was an expert with computers, he read books
on computer engineering and left everyone in awe, but he put his gift
at the service of others and used it to help his friends,”
she added.
“His immense generosity made him interested in everyone: the
foreigners, the handicapped, children, beggars. To be close to Carlo
was to be close to a fountain of fresh water,” his mother
said.
Antonia recalls clearly that “shortly before his death, Carlo
offered his sufferings for the Pope and the Church. Surely the heroism
with which he faced his illness and death has convinced many that he
was truly somebody special. When the doctor that was treating him asked
him if he was suffering a lot, Carlo answered: ‘There are
people who suffer much more than me!”
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