Our Lady of Aparecida

Feast:
October 12. On a certain day in 1716 three fishermen were at work on the
Paraiba River. There were no fish in the nets they lifted from the water.
Instead there was an artistic terracotta image of Our Lady of the Conception,
which they dubbed "Nossa Señnora Aparecida". The chronicles
relate that once the Virgin was placed in the boat, the catch was so great that
the frightened men returned to port because, the weight of the fish threatened
to sink their craft. It is not known how the small (less than three feet high)
statue came to rest at the bottom of the river, but its artist is known, Frei
Agostino de Jesus, a "carioca'' monk from Sao Paulo who created artistic
clay sculptures. The image was made around 1650 and must have stayed submerged
in the river for many years because it lost its original polychromy. The image
is now a brilliant dark brown color, and is covered by a stiff mantle of richly
embroidered thick cloth, allowing only her face and hands to be seen. She wears
on her head the imperial crown with precious stones with which she was crowned
in 1904. In 1930 Pope Pius XII proclaimed her principal patroness of Brazil.
Her feast on October 12 is a national holiday. Pope John Paul II visited the
Virgin "Aparecida" in her much frequented sanctuary and gave it the
title of Basilica. A few days before the visit someone got hold of the statue
and threw it forcibly on the floor. Although the frail image was broken into
many pieces, the loving and careful work of several artists put it together
again and the Virgin, "Aparecida" returned to her niche in the
Basilica.
With grateful thanks to the
Marian Library.