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JAKE FINKBONNER, WHOSE RECOVERY FROM RARE DISEASE WAS MIRACLE ATTRIBUTED TO INTERVENTION OF BLESSED KATERI TEKAKWITHA, PICTURED DURING INTERVIEW IN ROME

Posted in World Catholic News, on October 19th, 2012

Kateri and Jake: American Indians are joined in sainthood cause

By Cindy Wooden
Catholic News Service

VATICAN CITY (CNS) — Jake Finkbonner knows what it’s like to have kids tease him because of the way he looks, but one of his heroes also grew up being teased.

The 12-year-old boy said Kateri Tekakwitha, who was to become an official saint Oct. 21, was “an inspiration because I remember reading that many of the children in her tribe teased her because of her faith, but she continued to praise God and she made her own rosary.”

“One of the things she always tried to do was spread her faith, even though her uncle and aunt didn’t really approve of it,” he said.

Kateri was raised by her Mohawk father’s family after her parents died in a smallpox epidemic; Kateri survived, but with a scarred face and damaged vision.

Jake and his parents — Donny and Elsa — his two little sisters, all four of his grandparents and lots of aunts and uncles traveled to Rome for Kateri’s canonization.

The scars left on Jake’s face are all that remain of the flesh-eating bacteria that nearly took his life almost seven years ago. The sudden disappearance of the necrotizing fasciitis was recognized by the Vatican as the miracle needed for the canonization of Kateri, who Jake proudly explains “will be the first Native American saint.”

Jake’s dad, Donny, is a member of the Lummi Nation. The family lives in Sandy Point, Wash., on the Lummi reservation.

Jake was teased a lot, especially when he was younger and was first recovering, but “now I don’t really have problems with that,” he said.

Jake said he wants to be a plastic surgeon when he grows up so he can help other children; while he believes Kateri interceded to save his life, he also says his doctors “had a big part in my recovery.”

Jesuit Father Paolo Molinari, who has spent more than 50 years as Kateri’s postulator, promoting her canonization, said miracles are “the confirmation by God of a judgment made by human beings” that the potential saint really is in heaven.

Jake’s parents provided Father Molinari with Jake’s hospital records and photographs taken by his physicians documenting the boy’s condition. The material, including interviews of Jake’s doctors conducted by officials of the Archdiocese of Seattle, were turned over to the Vatican Congregation for Saints’ Causes.

Father Molinari said, “It’s really moving to see the declarations of the doctors who gave an account of what they went through for three weeks — the child really went between life and death, life and death.”

The Jesuit said he also was touched by what the Finkbonners’ parish priest reported the parents saying: “Father, we’ve decided to respond like Abraham, and if God wants to take our son, we’ll say, ‘yes.’”

But the priest told the parents that they could ask God to return their son to them, and he suggested they pray to Blessed Kateri, who died in 1680.

“That was the beginning of a movement of prayer that was extremely strong and solid,” Father Molinari said, describing how the praying spread from the family, to Jake’s classmates, the parish and the Tekakwitha Conference, which serves indigenous communities in North America.

Jake attended his first Tekakwitha Conference in July.

“They were all wanting to touch me and come and hug me and things like that,” he said. Jake said he was impressed by “how spiritual they were and how active they were in their faith.”

Jake’s dad said there was a statue of Kateri in the reservation church where he grew up, and that his own parents had told him Kateri’s story.

“It wasn’t like it was a daily thing,” he said; “it was just a story that was passed on.”

“For us, it’s like she’s a hero in the Catholic faith,” Donny Finkbonner explained. Kateri is “an example for us to follow, somebody who stood up for her faith even though it wasn’t a popular thing.”

Growing up, he said, Kateri’s story was “something we had pride over — she lived more than 300 years ago and her story’s still being told and, so, looking back on her story it’s kind of come full circle with Jake’s miracle.”

Father Scott Connolly is pastor of Assumption Parish where Jake and his sisters go to school. He traveled with dozens of his parishioners on a pilgrimage to Rome for the canonization.

“The saints are so important in our life as a Catholic people,” he said. “The fact that we actually have a miracle in our school — someone we can actually touch and see and talk to and enjoy” — has an impact on the community, but also on native peoples in the United States and Canada, and on the whole church.

Amid all the fuss, Father Connolly said, “one of the things I’ve realized is that miracles are happening all of the time and we don’t actually recognize that.”

Jake — who took a while to warm up to the idea of being surrounded by reporters, photographers and television cameras — said he is convinced that “Kateri truly did intercede and if it weren’t for her, I wouldn’t be here.”



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  • Father John Stokely distributes communion for the first time as a priest.Father John Stokely distributes communion for the first time as a priest.
  • Archbishop Charels Chaput annoints the hand of John Stokely with the oil of chrism.Archbishop Charels Chaput annoints the hand of John Stokely with the oil of chrism.
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  • Bishop Timothy Senior, rector of St. Charles Seminary, present the candidate to the Archbishop as he finds them worthy.Bishop Timothy Senior, rector of St. Charles Seminary, present the candidate to the Archbishop as he finds them worthy.
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  • Archbishop Charles Chaput lays his hands on the head of Thomas Viviano and silently prays to envoke the Holy Spirit.Archbishop Charles Chaput lays his hands on the head of Thomas Viviano and silently prays to envoke the Holy Spirit.
  • Thomas Viviano is deep in prayer during is ordination.Thomas Viviano is deep in prayer during is ordination.
  • Archbishop Charles Chaput extends his hands in prayer over the Thomas Viviano, John Stokely and Sean Loomis as he ordains them in to the preisthood.Archbishop Charles Chaput extends his hands in prayer over the Thomas Viviano, John Stokely and Sean Loomis as he ordains them in to the preisthood.
  • Archbishop Charels Chaput annoints the hand of Sean Loomis with the oil of chrism.Archbishop Charels Chaput annoints the hand of Sean Loomis with the oil of chrism.
  • Archbishop Charles Chaput hands over the bread and wine to John Stokely during his ordiantion.Archbishop Charles Chaput hands over the bread and wine to John Stokely during his ordiantion.
  • Thomas Viviano shares a fraternal kiss with Archbishop Charels Chaput after being ordained.Thomas Viviano shares a fraternal kiss with Archbishop Charels Chaput after being ordained.
  • The three newly ordained priests celebrate mass for the first time.The three newly ordained priests celebrate mass for the first time.

Three new priests ordained for Archdiocese

Archbishop Charles Chaput ordained Sean Loomis, John Patrick Stokely, and Thomas Viviano to the priesthood for the Archdiocese of Philadelphia on Saturday, May 18. All three men have completed their program of priestly formation and course of studies at Saint Charles Borromeo Seminary in Wynnewood, Montgomery County.

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