Current:Home > Scams'Cabrini' film tells origin of first US citizen saint: What to know about Mother Cabrini -ProsperityStream Academy
'Cabrini' film tells origin of first US citizen saint: What to know about Mother Cabrini
View
Date:2025-04-14 08:27:05
The film "Cabrini," in theaters Friday on International Women's Day, details the story of a woman many don't know by name.
But Mother Frances Xavier Cabrini should be more celebrated.
An Italian immigrant and missionary, she's credited with creating 67 institutions including orphanages, schools and hospitals and becoming the first U.S. citizen to be named a saint by the Catholic Church.
Alejandro Monteverde, who also directed last year's "Sound of Freedom," didn't know much about Cabrini when the opportunity to work on the film arrived, just as the COVID pandemic shutdown happened. "I had no idea about her life," he told USA TODAY.
International Women's Day 2024:What to know about the day and how to #InspireInclusion
As he learned about Cabrini – born in 1850, she immigrated to New York in 1889 – Monteverde "realized she was a warrior."
"This was a woman who came to a country where women had no rights, literally to vote or even to own land ... and was able to build, some say, an empire as big as any Rockefeller or Vanderbilt at a time when women were completely voiceless," Monteverde said. "I saw this story as the ultimate underdog story."
Here's what you should about "Cabrini," the woman and the film.
How to watch 'Cabrini'
"Cabrini" hits more than 3,000 theaters in North America on Friday, March 8. You can find theaters near you on the Angel Studios website.
The film stars Italian actress Cristiana Dell’Anna ("Toscana," "The Hand of God") as Mother Francesca Cabrini, John Lithgow ("Killers of the Flower Moon") as Mayor Gould, and David Morse ("The Last Thing He Told Me") as Archbishop Corrigan.
Who was Francesca Cabrini?
Maria Francesca Cabrini was born prematurely in northern Italy near Milan on July 15, 1850. As a slight of build and sickly child, she nearly drowned, which gave her a lifelong fear of water, the National Catholic Register reported.
Her health problems continued when as a schoolteacher, who also tended to the sick, she contracted smallpox. Her efforts to join a religious order were rebuffed, but in 1874 she took over an orphanage in nearby Codogno.
Six years later, the bishop asked her to start a new order, The Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus. "Its international mission would become her life’s work," reported Humanities, the magazine of the National Endowment for the Humanities in its Spring 2023 issue.
Cabrini, who envisioned an international religious caretaking network of the young and poor, wanted to begin in China. But Pope Leo XIII asked her to go "not to the East, but to the West,” to help Italian immigrants in New York, according to the website of the St. Frances Cabrini Shrine NYC.
What is 'Cabrini' about?
The film "Cabrini" details the challenges she and her fellow sisters faced upon arrival in New York in 1889. But they prevailed establishing an orphanage, schools and a hospital. The Columbus Hospital, opened by the religious order in 1896, would become a vital treatment facility. Eventually renamed the Cabrini Medical Center, it closed in 2008.
"It's a story about a very strong woman, powerful and strong-willed especially, who had such strong beliefs and ideals and vision for a different reality," Dell’Anna, who stars as Cabrini, told USA TODAY.
Cabrini's story should be a message to women to "trust our guts, to trust our instincts," she said. As women, "there's always someone, that's normally a man, who would have a stronger opinion about things and we should trust that instead of us. Cabrini is the proof of the opposite."
Cabrini's travels throughout the U.S. took her to cities including Chicago, Denver and New Orleans; internationally, she traveled to many countries including Argentina, Brazil Costa Rica, Panama, England and Spain.
Despite her fear of water, she crossed the Atlantic Ocean 23 times. She had tickets to sail on the Titanic, but her plans changed and she did not board the fated ship, the NCR reported.
How did Francesca Cabrini become a saint?
Mother Cabrini – who took the name Frances Xavier in 1877 when she took her vows to honor the saint – became a U.S. citizen in Seattle in 1909. At age 67, she died in Chicago on December 22, 1917 of chronic endocarditis. Over the years, hospitals, universities, schools and housing projects such as the Cabrini-Green development in Chicago have borne her name.
In 1946, Pope Pius XII waived the then-traditional 50-year canonization waiting period to make Cabrini – who was credited with several healing miracles – the first U.S. citizen to be named a saint.
“She gathered endangered youth in safe houses, and taught the holy and rightful principles. She consoled the spirit of the imprisoned, giving them the comfort of life eternal,” he said, notes the Missionary Sisters of the Sacred Heart of Jesus site. “She consoled the sick and the infirm gathered in hospitals, and cared for them assiduously. Especially towards immigrants, who had left their own homes ... did she extend a friendly hand, a sheltering refuge, relief and help.”
Her remains rest at the St. Francis Cabrini Shire in New York City and her heart is preserved in Codogno, Italy, according to the shrine.
Four years after Cabrini was canonized, she was named Patroness of Immigrants.
The issue of immigration makes this film timely, Monteverde admits.
But Mother Cabrini "was about the immigrant, the human being," he said. "Whether it's an immigrant or a homeless person, which is another thing that is very topical right now, it's very relevant. We're getting used to it and it's not normal. ... That loss of dignity is fortunately (what the movie) is pointing out."
Watch the 'Cabrini' trailer
Follow Mike Snider on X and Threads: @mikesnider & mikegsnider.
What's everyone talking about? Sign up for our trending newsletter to get the latest news of the day
veryGood! (8589)
Related
- Kylie Jenner Shows Off Sweet Notes From Nieces Dream Kardashian & Chicago West
- Why Bhad Bhabie Is Warning Against Facial Fillers After Dissolving Them
- Congress honors deceased Korean War hero with lying in honor ceremony
- They had the same name. The same childhood cancer. They lost touch – then reunited.
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- In unusual push, funders band together to get out grants around election work ‘early’
- Inside Kirsten Dunst's Road to Finding Love With Jesse Plemons
- Sean 'Diddy' Combs files motion to dismiss sex trafficking claim in sexual assault lawsuit
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Supporters, opponents of Minnesota trooper charged with murder confront each other at courthouse
Ranking
- 'No Good Deed': Who's the killer in the Netflix comedy? And will there be a Season 2?
- U.S. Soccer, Mexico will submit joint bid for 2031 Women's World Cup instead of 2027
- Supporters, opponents of Minnesota trooper charged with murder confront each other at courthouse
- Investors trying to take control of Norfolk Southern railroad pick up key support
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Mississippi lawmakers expected to vote on Medicaid expansion plan with work requirement
- An apple a day really can help keep the doctor away. Here's how.
- 'I like to move it': Zebras escape trailer, gallop on Washington highway: Watch video
Recommendation
Kourtney Kardashian Cradles 9-Month-Old Son Rocky in New Photo
Horoscopes Today, April 28, 2024
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao faces sentencing; US seeks 3-year term for allowing money laundering
Connecticut governor takes partial blame for illegal cutting of 186 trees on neighbor’s property
2024 Olympics: Gymnast Ana Barbosu Taking Social Media Break After Scoring Controversy
Shooting after prom kills 1 and injures 3 in south Georgia town
Binance founder Changpeng Zhao faces sentencing; US seeks 3-year term for allowing money laundering
Milestone: 1st container ship arrives since Baltimore's Francis Scott Key Bridge collapse