“With Christ’s protection, a spider web can be stronger than a brick wall without his protection, a brick wall can be as flimsy as a spider’s web.”—Blessed Marie-Élisabeth Turgeon
Élisabeth was born in Beaumont, Quebec, Canada, in 1840 as one of nine children to Louis-Marc Turgeon and Angèle Labrecque.
As a child, she made frequent visits to the church and felt a religious call which solidified as she grew older. Turgeon's father died when she was 15 and she remained in the care of her mother during this time. She would graduate from the Laval Normal School in Quebec in 1862 and taught at several schools after her graduation in places like Saint-Romuald and Saint-Roch.
On 3 April 1875 at the invitation of Bishop Jean Langevin (first bishop of Rimouski) she entered the Sisters of the Little Schools and made her profession of vows alongside twelve others on 12 September 1879. She was known in religious life as Marie-Élisabeth.
Marie-Élisabeth formed a new religious community known as the Sisters of Our Lady of the Rosary. She wrote textbooks for her sisters to use in their classes and, today, the sisters are also involved in adult education and serve in number locations, including Newfoundland, Honduras, Peru, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Lebanon.
As she fell ill, she continued to direct the order and its functioning. Emergencies in her health on 23 March 1881 and 26 March led to her doctor and confessor being called in to perform medical examinations and the Anointing of the Sick. Bedridden, she was dying in August and the order led prayer vigils for her health. On 15 August, the Feast of the Assumption, she met with professed members of the order and the next day, she knew that her end was near. At 12:20am on 17 August, Turgeon died.
Turgeon was cleared for beatification in 2014 after a miracle that had found to have been attributed to her intercession was cleared. She was beatified on 26 April 2015 in Canada by Cardinal Angelo Amato on behalf of Pope Francis.
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