Our Lady of Charity of El Cobre

Feast: ?. Some time around the year 1600, two native Indians, Rodrigo and
Juan de Hoyos, together with a ten year old slave boy, Juan Moreno, went out
looking for the salt needed to preserve the meat of the Barajagua slaughter
house, which supplied the workers and inhabitants of "Santiago del
Prado", now known as "El Cobre." That day they were just able to
reach Cayo Francés, halfway across the Bay of Nipe, where they encamped
to escape the fury of a storm which would have torn their frail canoe to
pieces. Calm was restored with daybreak, and they took to the transparent sea.
In the distance, they saw a white bundle floating on the waves and approaching
them slowly. At first they took it for a sea bird. As it came closer, it seemed
to be a girl and at last they were able to determine that it was a statue of
the Virgin Mary holding the child on her right arm and with a gold cross in her
left hand. The statue was fastened to a board with the inscription, "I am
the Virgin of Charity." According to the sworn testimony of witnesses,
despite the recent storm and the motion of the waves, neither the figure of the
Virgin, nor her clothing, were wet. The head of the statue is of baked clay
covered with a polished coat of fine white powder, possibly rice paste, and the
recent thorough renovation of the image revealed the fine features which
countless paint coatings had deformed. A well shaped nose and a
well-proportioned face with large, loving eyes convey a gentleness that invites
trust and prayer. The Virgin is about 16 inches high and her feet rest on a
brilliant moon whose ends surround on both sides the silver cloud where three
cherubs spread their golden wings. The Child, at the left side of the statue,
raises a hand as if blessing, and in his other hand he holds a gold globe. The
entire figure is covered by a heavy cloak which gives it the typical triangular
shape. The image's original clothing was white, but the faithful have given her
gold and silver colored robes. Because Our Lady of Charity is a symbol of Cuban
nationality, popular statues give her a white robe, a blue cloak and have the
Child dressed in red: the colors of the Cuban flag. Nowadays the Virgin's
dress, a copy of a very early one, is of heavy lamé with gold threads,
and has the national Cuban shield embroidered on the skirt. The simple folk
have gotten used to the image of their "Cachita" with the small boat
at her feet and in it the "Three Juans" who found her floating on the
water. This detail is omitted in the oldest reproductions which copied the
original statue. At the request of the veterans of the War of Independence, Our
Lady of Charity was declared the patroness of Cuba by Benedict XV in 1916 and
solemnly crowned in the Eucharistic Congress held in Santiago de Cuba in 1936.
Pope Paul VI raised her sanctuary to the category of Basilica in 1977.
With grateful thanks to the
Mary Page.